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This Soldier’s Witness to the Iraq War Lie | by Frederic Wehrey | The New York Review of Books

Louis Proyect
 


Troubled Times at The Intercept - CounterPunch.org

Louis Proyect
 

On September 13, the New York Times ran a 2,900-word article on the biggest fuck-up in U.S. leftist media in a long time, perhaps ever.

The piece covered The Intercept’s fantastic and presumably unintentional sloppiness in handling the 2017 Reality Winner leak, the fallout from that sloppiness, and the unfortunate culture at The Intercept that seems to persist to this day, despite internal and at least quasi-external investigations into the monumental screw-up.

https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/09/16/troubled-times-at-the-intercept/


Unrest and strikes hit University of Michigan

Louis Proyect
 

Graduate students and RAs at the University of Michigan are on strike over the university's COVID-19 response.

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2020/09/16/unrest-and-strikes-hit-university-michigan


An ICE Facility Allegedly Performed Numerous Hysterectomies, and the Squad Wants Answers

Louis Proyect
 

https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/889jpk/an-ice-facility-allegedly-performed-numerous-hysterectomies-and-the-squad-wants-a-reckoning

California had the same racist practices for years as pointed out in a film I reviewed:

Belly of the Beast

In this film’s title, the belly refers to the womb of female prisoners, and the beast refers to the California prisons that subjected them to illegal sterilizations without their knowledge. The film focuses on two courageous women, just like Carmen Aristegui and Máxima Acuña. One is attorney Cynthia Chandler, the co-founder and director of Justice Now, the prison abolition legal aid organization. The other is Kelli Dillon, a black female prisoner, who at the age of 24 underwent a hysterectomy without her knowledge. The two teamed up to end a practice that was rooted in a eugenics plan to cut costs. Despite its liberal veneer, California saw poor women, and especially women of color, in prison as a burden on state finances. Politicians believed that they would have baby after baby to take advantage of the welfare system. When you remember that Ronald Reagan began his political career in California, that is no surprise.

Both Chandler and Dillon are riveting figures and deserving of the kind of big-budget film that Hollywood makes about a crusading attorney and a victimized client. You know the kind. Julia Roberts, George Clooney and all that. But, who knows, maybe Hollywood will stick to solidly bankable stories about Batman or Superman when the pandemic ends. In the meantime, you’ll find the heroic efforts of these two women far more interesting than any fiction.

https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/06/12/watch-this-years-human-rights-watch-film-festival-through-video-on-demand/



Re: presidential election: Roger Stone urges Trump to declare martial law if election stolen by Dems

Dayne Goodwin
 

i left out the middle 'Brooks Brothers riot' references:
Brooks Brothers Riot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooks_Brothers_riot

Roger Stone's dirty tricks helped sway the 2000 Florida recount
by Ion Sancho, Guest columnist, Tallahassee Democrat, Feb. 3, 2019
https://www.tallahassee.com/story/opinion/2019/02/03/ion-sancho-roger-stones-dirty-tricks-helped-sway-2000-florida-recount/2742713002/
Ion Sancho was the Leon County Supervisor of Elections during the 2000 recount and appointed by the Florida Supreme Court as the technical adviser to Judge Terry Lewis. This account is an excerpt from his upcoming book about the Florida 2000 recount.

The GOP House Thugs Followed the 2000 Brooks Brothers Riot Intimidation Playbook That Stopped the Florida Recount That Would Have Ended in Al Gore's Election

Mark Karlin, BuzzFlash, October 24, 2019
https://buzzflash.com/articles/the-gop-house-thugs-followed-the-brooks-brothers-riot-intimidation-playbook

On Tue, Sep 15, 2020 at 9:57 PM Dayne Goodwin via groups.io <daynegoodwin=gmail.com@groups.io> wrote:
Roger Stone calls for Trump to seize total power if he loses the election
by Timothy Johnson, Media Matters, Sept. 11
https://www.mediamatters.org/roger-stone/roger-stone-calls-trump-seize-total-power-if-he-loses-election
"Stone also said federal authorities should seize all Nevada ballots, federal agents and GOP state officials should “physically” block voting, that Trump should nationalize police forces, and that Trump should order widespread arrests."

Roger Stone to Donald Trump: bring in martial law if you lose election
by Martin Pengally, Guardian, Sept. 13
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/13/roger-stone-to-donald-trump-bring-in-martial-law-if-you-lose-election
 . . . [Stone said] “The ballots in Nevada on election night should be seized by federal marshals and taken from the state. They are completely corrupted. No votes should be counted from the state of Nevada if that turns out to be the provable case. Send federal marshals to the Clark county board of elections, Mr President!” . . .


I didn't know that Roger Stone was a leader of the 'Brooks Brothers Riot.'  I have been well aware since that 'riot' ended the legal and requisite 2000 recount proceedings in Florida that it was a dangerous use of undemocratic strong-arm tactics (proto-fascist) (along with Supreme Court, etc.) to put W. Bush in office and deprive Gore of the election victory later reviews/recounts showed that Gore had won.  An alarming part of that whole episode is that Gore and the Democrats basically surrendered to the Republican use of force, apparently choosing 'stability' over democratic process.

The next three references below go more deeply into the 'Brooks Brothers Riot' and a recent similar 'riot'.  The first is the brief wikipedia entry on the 'Brooks Brothers Riot', the second goes more deeply into who organized the 'riot' and how it was organized and succeeded, the third one is a report on how Republican congressmen used the same sort of tactic to disrupt the impeachment proceedings last fall.  The ideologically extreme right that has taken over the Republican party is obviously prepared to rely on riot tactics.

The next two references further below go into how Trump could take advantage of undemocratic U.S. constitutional provisions to pull out an electoral victory.  The last reference is to a mainstream analysis of the current U.S. political/electoral situation which impressed me.
Dayne


Here's how Trump will steal the 2020 election
interview with Greg Palast,  Salon, June 15
https://www.salon.com/2020/06/15/investigative-journalist-greg-palast-heres-how-trump-will-steal-the-2020-election/

Trump and Biden could face dramatic post-election battle — here’s what might happen

John Yoo on Fox News, September 5
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/trump-biden-election-john-yoo

Ron Brownstein (CNN) analysis of the general/electoral political situation in the U.S.
Why the stability of the 2020 race promises more volatility ahead
by Ronald Brownstein, CNN, Sept. 15
https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/15/politics/2020-election-american-voter-worldviews/index.html



presidential election: Roger Stone urges Trump to declare martial law if election stolen by Dems

Dayne Goodwin
 

Roger Stone calls for Trump to seize total power if he loses the election
by Timothy Johnson, Media Matters, Sept. 11
https://www.mediamatters.org/roger-stone/roger-stone-calls-trump-seize-total-power-if-he-loses-election
"Stone also said federal authorities should seize all Nevada ballots, federal agents and GOP state officials should “physically” block voting, that Trump should nationalize police forces, and that Trump should order widespread arrests."

Roger Stone to Donald Trump: bring in martial law if you lose election
by Martin Pengally, Guardian, Sept. 13
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/13/roger-stone-to-donald-trump-bring-in-martial-law-if-you-lose-election
 . . . [Stone said] “The ballots in Nevada on election night should be seized by federal marshals and taken from the state. They are completely corrupted. No votes should be counted from the state of Nevada if that turns out to be the provable case. Send federal marshals to the Clark county board of elections, Mr President!” . . .


I didn't know that Roger Stone was a leader of the 'Brooks Brothers Riot.'  I have been well aware since that 'riot' ended the legal and requisite 2000 recount proceedings in Florida that it was a dangerous use of undemocratic strong-arm tactics (proto-fascist) (along with Supreme Court, etc.) to put W. Bush in office and deprive Gore of the election victory later reviews/recounts showed that Gore had won.  An alarming part of that whole episode is that Gore and the Democrats basically surrendered to the Republican use of force, apparently choosing 'stability' over democratic process.

The next three references below go more deeply into the 'Brooks Brothers Riot' and a recent similar 'riot'.  The first is the brief wikipedia entry on the 'Brooks Brothers Riot', the second goes more deeply into who organized the 'riot' and how it was organized and succeeded, the third one is a report on how Republican congressmen used the same sort of tactic to disrupt the impeachment proceedings last fall.  The ideologically extreme right that has taken over the Republican party is obviously prepared to rely on riot tactics.

The next two references further below go into how Trump could take advantage of undemocratic U.S. constitutional provisions to pull out an electoral victory.  The last reference is to a mainstream analysis of the current U.S. political/electoral situation which impressed me.
Dayne


Here's how Trump will steal the 2020 election
interview with Greg Palast,  Salon, June 15
https://www.salon.com/2020/06/15/investigative-journalist-greg-palast-heres-how-trump-will-steal-the-2020-election/

Trump and Biden could face dramatic post-election battle — here’s what might happen

John Yoo on Fox News, September 5
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/trump-biden-election-john-yoo

Ron Brownstein (CNN) analysis of the general/electoral political situation in the U.S.
Why the stability of the 2020 race promises more volatility ahead
by Ronald Brownstein, CNN, Sept. 15
https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/15/politics/2020-election-american-voter-worldviews/index.html



Re: Division of Labor

R.O.
 

On Tue, Sep 15, 2020 at 11:56 PM, Andrew Stewart wrote:
Illich made a contribution but would it be correct to say it was about something that is rather different from chronic health issues that emerge from things like environmental racism and over-consumption of junk food caused by the food desert phenomenon?
Yes, Technology can certainly benefit many in chronic health issues, i suffer from it also. I would be dead a long time ago. But mass medicalisation has gone way too far according to Illich.
I have a certain skepticism about the Marxian polemic against anarchism, mostly because it strikes me as though it over-theorizes what was in reality a very shallow tactical squabble between Marx and Bakunin, but here Zerzan strikes me as a hyper-intellectual petit bourgeois academic whose notions suggest a certain doom.
One should avoid becoming a doom thinker like someone as Roy Scranton, because doom destroys human subjectivity and thus the capacity to act. I don't read Zerzan as a doom thinker, because he writes also about the notions of love and happiness in Future Primitive Revisited. He even names himself an optimist rather than a pessimist. I share the same birthday with him, i found out...

Ruth Kinna has written an excellent overview of anarchism in The Government of No One (2019). Myself, as part of no part, have the bad habit of oscillating between ideas of both currents.
Trotsky didn't like it. "who is going to operate the trains under anarchism?", he asked.

A good start for Dutch readers on the anarchist bubble is Thom Holtermans blog:
https://libertaireorde.wordpress.com/category/bladeren/page/30/



Afro-Poland: a revolutionary friendship, captured in rare photos from 1955-1989

Andrew Stewart
 


China: a socialist force for good or an imperial superpower in the making? An historical evaluation - long read - Counterfire

Louis Proyect
 


Income inequality: RAND study reveals shocking new numbers

Louis Proyect
 


Accused Killer Of California Cops Was Associated With Right-Wing 'Boogaloo Movement'

Louis Proyect
 


‘Extreme Option: Overthrow Allende’

Richard Modiano
 

Washington, D.C., September 15, 2020 – On September 15, 1970, during a twenty-minute meeting in the Oval Office between 3:25 pm and 3:45 pm, President Richard Nixon ordered the CIA to foment a military coup in Chile. According to handwritten notes taken by CIA Director Richard Helms, Nixon issued explicit instructions to prevent the newly elected president of Chile, Salvador Allende, from being inaugurated in November—or to create conditions to overthrow him if he did assume the presidency. “1 in 10 chance, perhaps, but save Chile.” “Not concerned [about] risks involved,” Helms jotted in his notes as the President demanded regime change in the South American nation that had become the first in the world to freely elect a Socialist candidate. “Full time job—best men we have.” “Make the economy scream.”  


A Secret Recording Reveals Oil Executives’ Private Views on Climate Change

Louis Proyect
 

NY Times, Sept. 15, 2020
A Secret Recording Reveals Oil Executives’ Private Views on Climate Change
By Hiroko Tabuchi

Last summer, oil and gas-industry groups were lobbying to overturn federal rules on leaks of natural gas, a major contributor to climate change. Their message: The companies had emissions under control.

In private, the lobbyists were saying something very different.

At a discussion convened last year by the Independent Petroleum Association of America, a group that represents energy companies, participants worried that producers were intentionally flaring, or burning off, far too much natural gas, threatening the industry’s image, according to a recording of the meeting reviewed by The New York Times.

“We’re just flaring a tremendous amount of gas,” said Ron Ness, president of the North Dakota Petroleum Council, at the June 2019 gathering, held in Colorado Springs. “This pesky natural gas,” he said. “The value of it is very minimal,” particularly to companies drilling mainly for oil.

A well can produce both oil and natural gas, but oil commands far higher prices. Flaring it is an inexpensive way of getting rid of the gas.

Yet the practice of burning it off, producing dramatic flares and attracting criticism, represented a “huge, huge threat” to the industry’s efforts to portray natural gas as a cleaner and more climate-friendly energy source, he said, and that was damaging the industry’s image, particularly among younger generations.

“What’s our message going forward?” Mr. Ness said. “What’s going to stick with those young people and make them support oil and gas?”

The recording runs 1 hour 22 minutes, opening with a moderator’s remarks and concluding with a panel discussion that covered a wide range of issues including job creation, the threats posed by solar and wind energy, and the federal leasing of oil and gas rights. The audio was provided by an organization dedicated to tracking climate policy that said the recording had been made by an industry official who attended the meeting.

Neither the organization nor the official was willing to be identified, out of concerns for industry retaliation, but three people heard in the recording, including the event’s moderator, Ryan Ullman of the Independent Petroleum Association, said that it reflected their comments. Jennifer Pett Marsteller, an association spokeswoman, confirmed the meeting’s date, location and speakers’ list, which matched the recording. She declined to comment on the speakers’ remarks, saying there was no official recording.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Ness, Kristen Hamman, declined to confirm his remarks, saying that the Independent Petroleum Association had not produced an official transcript of the meeting that would allow her to do a comparison. Mr. Ness has publicly spoken against the need to strengthen regulation of methane, a major component in natural gas, calling stronger rules “an unnecessary burden” and saying the industry already produced “valuable energy resources in a responsible manner.”

The remarks reflect the concerns of an industry that has presented itself as part of the solution to climate change, and natural gas as an important “bridge fuel” that can help the world shift away from coal, the dirtiest-burning energy source, toward renewable energy.

Natural gas, when burned (whether in a flare, or to fuel a household oven), typically emits just half the planet-warming greenhouse gases that coal does. But by flaring off natural gas, rather than capturing it for use, companies are creating pollution without creating usable energy.

Many companies do directly drill for and capture natural gas for use. But researchers have warned that drilling for the gas also causes sizable leaks of methane directly into the atmosphere, which is even more damaging for the climate than flaring the gas. Methane can also escape faulty flares, and companies sometimes also deliberately release the gas from wells and pipelines in a practice known as venting.

Methane can trap more than 80 times more heat in the earth’s atmosphere than carbon dioxide, over the shorter term. Research has shown that methane emissions from oil and gas production are far larger than previously estimated.

To address the issue, the Obama administration had proposed new regulations that would have required, among other measures, that oil and gas companies install technology to detect and fix methane leaks from their wells, pipelines and storage facilities.

But a coalition of oil and gas companies pushed the Trump administration to abandon those rules. It said the industry was already regulated by state laws and was already equipped to plug leaks on its own without federal rules. Lobbyists argued that the companies were already incentivized to rein in methane emissions, given that gas is a valuable resource.

“The oil and natural gas industry has a pure economic incentive to prevent every molecule of ‘pollutant’ from escaping to the atmosphere,” wrote James D. Elliott, a lawyer representing a coalition of oil and gas groups led by the Independent Petroleum Association, including the North Dakota Petroleum Council, in a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency on Nov. 25, 2019.

But speaking a few months earlier, at the June 2019 meeting, Mr. Ness appeared to contradict that argument. There is such a glut of natural gas, he said, that some producers that drill primarily for oil have little use for the gas that comes up with it. Yet “you’ve got to manage your gas to produce your oil.”

The pushback against more stringent methane rules has been led by smaller, independent producers who argued the rules were unfairly burdensome for smaller drillers, because they could not afford to invest in costly leak-detection and capture technology.

Oil giants like BP, on the other hand, urged the federal government to keep methane regulations in place, saying it was “the right thing to do.”


Image
Ryan Flynn of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association said that a chief concern among young, female and Latino voters, when it comes to the industry, &ldquo;is always going to be environmental stewardship.&rdquo;
Ryan Flynn of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association said that a chief concern among young, female and Latino voters, when it comes to the industry, “is always going to be environmental stewardship.”
Credit...Susan Montoya Bryan/Associated Press
But ceding to the smaller operators’ demands, the Trump administration has proposed to eliminate federal methane rules in a move that would also reopen the question of whether the E.P.A. has the legal authority to regulate methane as a pollutant. The weakening of the methane standard is the latest in a long list of environmental-policy rollbacks under President Trump, who has vowed to loosen regulations on industry.

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At the Colorado meeting, executives also worried about a potential backlash against the industry, particularly among younger voters. Recent surveys have shown a sharp rise in the number of Americans who feel passionately about climate change, and the issue appears likely to play a more prominent role in this year’s presidential election than in previous ones.

“Young voters, female voters, Hispanic voters, really every sector except for older conservative male voters,” Ryan Flynn of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association said in the recording of the meeting, “their No. 1 issue when it comes to our industry is always going to be environmental stewardship, and concerns about what we’re doing with the environment.”

Dan Haley, president of the Colorado Oil and Gas Association, laid out the stakes.

“Hippies were going to change the world, until they wanted to get a job and buy a BMW,” Mr. Haley said in the meeting. “In Colorado, we’ve been kind of playing a game of whack-a-mole. We went from where fracking was the dirty word, and contaminated your water. And we inundated them with information about that and blitzed the TV airwaves,” he said. “Then slowly that changed into a health and safety messaging. And so we’re ramping up our health and safety messaging.”

Climate change was “the prism through which everything is being viewed,” Mr. Haley added. “We have to be comfortable talking about it, talking about how we are part of the solution through natural gas. And again, hitting people with emotions hitting them where they’re where their heart is.” 

“The activists are doing this when they talk about banning fracking in Colorado. They don’t show explosions. They don’t show rigs. They show women and children,” he said. “We have got to begin playing at that same emotional level or we will not win these battles.”

Scott Prestidge, a spokesman for Mr. Haley, said it was difficult to confirm the accuracy of a transcript from 2019, but said it was pretty clear that the remarks about the hippies were “said tongue-in-cheek."

He added: “In Colorado, the men and women of this industry live and work within the communities where oil and natural gas are being developed. They care about clean air, clean water, and in protecting their family’s safety and their community.”

In an interview, Mr. Flynn said that he had merely been expressing what he described as widely held concerns about oil and gas’s effects on the environment that he thought the industry needed to better address.

And he said attitudes toward regulations were changing, even among smaller oil and gas producers. For instance, during the Obama administration his organization opposed stronger federal methane regulations. However, it did not back the more recent efforts to repeal those rules.

“We absolutely need to address young people’s, all people’s, concerns about climate change,” Mr. Flynn said. “We’ve taken criticism at times from our peers that we are engaging on these issues,” he said. “But it’s critical for the future of our industry.”



'Compton Executioners' deputy gang-LA Times

John A Imani
 

'Compton Executioners' deputy gang lied about guns and hosted inking parties, deputy says

 

image.png
 
A Compton station tattoo.

(Sweeney Firm /Glickman & Glickman)

 

By Alene TchekmedyianStaff Writer

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-08-20/lasd-gangs-who-are-the-compton-executioners

Aug. 20, 2020

5:50 PM

UPDATEDAug. 21, 2020 | 6:34 PM

At the Compton sheriff’s station, it’s called a ghost gun: a weapon a deputy says he spots on a suspect but that is never found when colleagues respond to the scene and search for it.

That’s because the call-out is based on a lie. The deputy didn’t actually see a gun, but his suspect could turn out to be armed and an arrest or recovered firearm could pad his reputation.

It’s the kind of behavior that plays out regularly at the station, according to a whistleblower who worked there for five years and recounted other sensational allegations in a recent deposition obtained by The Times in a federal civil rights lawsuit.

“In reality, they’ve never seen the gun,” L.A. County Sheriff’s Deputy Austreberto Gonzalez said under oath. “And then at the end when their containments are set up, you know, the gun is never recovered. You know, they’ll call it a day and say, ‘Thank you for rolling. We’re going to call it,’ and a gun was never recovered.”

Gonzalez says the scheme is employed in Compton by tattooed deputies who call themselves the Executioners, the clandestine gang many say runs the station.

His allegations add to a growing body of information about the Compton clique, one of several tattooed deputy groups within the Sheriff’s Department with names such as the Grim Reapers, Banditos and Jump Out Boys.

The Sheriff’s Department has been aware of the groups for decades but has struggled to crack down, despite repeated internal and independent investigations and instances in which members are accused of misconduct.

Gonzalez’s statements were introduced in an excessive-force lawsuit filed against the Sheriff’s Department by Sheldon Lockett. The judge hearing the case cited the evidence when tentatively deciding to advance the case for trial.

Accepting the deputy’s testimony, there is evidence that the clique existed in Compton and that it routinely violated the rights of suspects,” Magistrate Judge Patrick J. Walsh said in his ruling. “The testimony also establishes that the command staff at the station knew about it and not only did not stop it but it encouraged the behavior and placed its members in positions of authority where they could help other members.”

The Sheriff’s Department said the FBI is now involved in an investigation of the Executioners. Following The Times’ reporting, Compton officials issued formal requests to the state and federal attorney generals to investigate allegations of pervasive civil rights violations.

In his deposition, Gonzalez identified Miguel Vega, the Compton station deputy who killed 18-year-old Andres Guardado in a shooting in June that sparked weeks of protests, and his partner, Chris Hernandez, as prospective members of the Executioners. Their attorneys said Wednesday that those allegations are false.

“Deputy Vega does not have one single tattoo on his body, much less a deputy gang tattoo,” his attorney Adam Marangell said. “He doesn’t have one, nor does he plan on getting one.”

The Sheriff’s Department said in a statement that it had not yet received the transcript of Gonzalez’s testimony. “Once we do, counsel will review and we can respond appropriately,” a spokesman said. County attorneys have argued that Gonzalez’s testimony about the Executioners was nothing more than speculation and conjecture, as he’s not in the group and has no personal knowledge about it.

Lockett alleges he was targeted by deputies “chasing ink” when he was beaten and falsely arrested for attempted murder in 2016, his attorneys said. He sued in 2018.

Deputies that day pulled up to Lockett outside his godmother’s home and jumped out of their car with their guns drawn because they said he matched the description of a shooting suspect. Lockett froze, then ran. The deputies, Samuel Aldama and Mizrain Orrego, radioed that Lockett had a gun, which he says was a lie. No gun was found.

They chased him until they found him hiding in a backyard, where Lockett says he surrendered. Even so, he says, Aldama punched him in the head five times while using the N-word. He alleged that one of the deputies rammed the end of a police baton into his eye socket, which caused permanent damage, and that he was kicked in the back of the head. The county has denied the allegations.

Lockett was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and other gun charges and spent eight months in jail. In August, prosecutors dropped charges because of insufficient evidence and after a witness testified that she was mistaken when she identified him, according to a district attorney’s office spokeswoman.

After the arrest, Lockett’s mother filed a complaint to the Sheriff’s Department.

“They did nothing,” Lockett’s attorney John Sweeney said during a hearing this week. Instead, he says, they served a search warrant on her home in retaliation. Several months after Lockett’s arrest and three weeks after charges were dropped, Aldama and Orrego shot at and killed Donta Taylor, 31, during a foot chase. Deputies said Taylor had a handgun, but no weapon was found.

“Had that been investigated ... Donta Taylor would still be alive,” Sweeney said. “This was nothing more than a sport kill and an attempt to getting into this gang. And instead of being prosecuted, what happened? There were inking parties and celebrations.”

Aldama admitted under oath to having a tattoo on his calf depicting a skull with a rifle and a military-style helmet emerging from flames. The letters “CPT,” for Compton, appear on the helmet. Aldama said he was one of as many as 20 deputies selected to get the same tattoo after “working hard” by making arrests and answering calls. He denied being part of a club.

L.A. County settled a lawsuit brought by Taylor’s family for $7 million. Deputies with alleged ties to these cliques, which are accused of using violent and aggressive tactics similar to those of criminal street gangs, have cost taxpayers $55 million in settlements and payouts in incidents that date to the 1990s, according to county records obtained by The Times.

Walsh said three Compton deputies, including Aldama and Orrego, have denied in other court proceedings that they were part of a clique and attributed their matching tattoos to “serendipity.”

The depositions of those three deputies are under seal, but Lockett’s attorney Steven Glickman argued during a court hearing Thursday that their tattoos are numbered. In their depositions, Glickman said Aldama testified that his tattoo’s No. 38 was a nod to his first gun; Orrego’s said his tattoo, which was covered up, was never numbered and he got it in solidarity with Aldama, his friend who had cancer; and Deputy Rogelio Benzor’s tattoo has a No. 40, which he explained as a reference to his retirement in 2040.

The county had argued that Lockett’s attorneys failed to produce evidence that there was a clique and show that the county knew about it.

Obviously, these rogue officers are not going to simply admit that they had formed an unlawful group bent on assaulting minorities,” the judge wrote. “And, presumably, the clique would not be issuing membership cards, or taking minutes at membership meetings, or doing anything else that normal, lawful organizations do. Thus, it would seem impossible for a plaintiff to find tangible evidence to prove that the officers were lying when they denied the existence of their group.”

Just last week, Sheriff Alex Villanueva said he was moving to discipline 26 employees with firings or suspensions for their roles in a fight at an off-duty East L.A. station party at Kennedy Hall, a nearby event space, where deputies say they were attacked by inked members of the Banditos, who allegedly wielded power at the station. But he denied that gangs exist within the Sheriff’s Department.

“There is zero evidence of three or more deputies engaged in criminal activity with a unifying symbol whose primary purpose is to commit crime,” Villanueva said.

Two deputies who said they were assaulted and knocked unconscious are among those facing discipline for policy violations that include failing to report the Kennedy Hall incident to superiors, their attorney Vincent Miller said.

My guys are in trouble for not reporting the Banditos to the Banditos,” Miller said, adding that his clients did report the incident right away to a lieutenant they trusted.

Prosecutors declined to file criminal charges against the deputies who Miller says attacked his clients. But an administrative investigation found that some employees at the East L.A. station were acting as so-called shot callers, controlling scheduling and events at the station, Cmdr. April Tardy said, using a term often used to describe top leaders in prisons and gangs.

In Compton, the Executioners ruled the station using a similar structure, Gonzalez testified. About 15 to 20 deputies are Executioners, he said, and at least a handful more are prospective members who are “chasing ink.” He said “it’s the word out” that only two deputies are inked each year — women and Black people aren’t allowed. A vast majority of members and prospects, he said, have been involved in high-profile shootings or beatings.

After a shooting, members will have a party at a bar and call it a “998 debrief,” referencing the code for a deputy-involved shooting. Some say it’s to celebrate that a deputy survived, he said. But often, Gonzalez said, after the party, the deputy and his partner will get inked. Gonzalez said he’d never been invited to nor attended one.

“I think it is some type of reward,” Gonzalez testified. He added later: “So we call it ‘ink chasers’ because they’re out there trying to show the rest of the members, the rest of the inked members that, you know, they’re worthy of that tattoo.”

Gonzalez, 42, joined the department as a deputy in 2008. He was investigated by Los Angeles police in 2012 on an allegation of sexual misconduct. The district attorney’s office declined to file charges. He said in his deposition that he was relieved of duty for the off-duty incident but that the allegation was unfounded and he was not disciplined.

Gonzalez’s attorney Alan Romero said that disclosing the allegation about his client “is totally irrelevant to the heroism of his coming forward to protect the public, and only serves to deter and frighten future whistleblowers from coming forward.”

“The L.A. Times would be sending a clear message: If you want to blow the whistle on public corruption, be warned that we will dig into your history and disclose any false allegations that [were] ever made against you.”

Gonzalez said in the deposition that Jaime Juarez, a deputy he identified as the Executioners’ shot caller, carried out a work slowdown last year when the acting captain refused to install a member as scheduling deputy. The powerful position, which Juarez had previously held, controls scheduling, days off and overtime, Gonzalez said.

“There was nobody being arrested. Very minimal arrests were being done at that time,” Gonzalez said of the work slowdown. “We have a booking line. We would hardly ever see a unit in the booking line with, you know — you know, with suspects in their back seats. It was so obvious that, you know, we all noticed that.”

The Times has requested arrest records from the Compton station to determine whether such a slowdown occurred. Juarez did not respond to a request for comment. Elizabeth Gibbons, an attorney representing Juarez, denied the allegations against him on Friday but declined to comment further, citing the ongoing Sheriff’s Department investigation.

In 2017, Gonzalez said, the Compton station captain at the time had turned to that deputy to boost arrest statistics after the captain was reprimanded for low numbers at the station. Monthly arrests per deputy more than doubled and that captain was eventually promoted, he said.

Gonzalez testified that he faced blowback earlier this year after anonymously reporting an Executioner to the Internal Affairs Bureau for assaulting a fellow deputy. After Gonzalez made his report, graffiti appeared at the station calling him a rat. He was warned by another deputy to be careful.

“They know it was you,” Gonzalez recalled being told. He filed a legal claim against the county in June alleging retaliation.

One deputy told Gonzalez he didn’t want to partner with him out of fear of getting “screwed with,” he said.

Gonzalez testified that he feared for his safety from the clique.

“I think that I now call them a gang because that’s what gangs do. They beat up other people,” he said. " I call that a gang. Their focus is not the station, their focus is not the department, and their focus is not their job. Their focus is their group.”

 
 
   


Re: Division of Labor

Andrew Stewart
 

Illich made a contribution but would it be correct to say it was about something that is rather different from chronic health issues that emerge from things like environmental racism and over-consumption of junk food caused by the food desert phenomenon? I have a certain skepticism about the Marxian polemic against anarchism, mostly because it strikes me as though it over-theorizes what was in reality a very shallow tactical squabble between Marx and Bakunin, but here Zerzan strikes me as a hyper-intellectual petit bourgeois academic whose notions suggest a certain doom.


Re: Modertor's note

Louis Proyect
 

On 9/15/20 3:38 PM, John Edmundson wrote:
This may be a downside of the .io hosting. The list is probably much higher profile,  which is mostly a good thing but brings that exposure also.

Comradely,
John

This is not where "Max Power" came from. He trolled my blog for a couple of years until I put him in a trash filter. For Les and I, there's a bit of a learning curve in weeding out his messages on this platform but with our combined DP experience of about 60 years, we'll succeed.


Re: Modertor's note

Les Schaffer
 

I may have inadvertently helped the cause by circumventing .io's built-in moderation process. When new people are subscribed to the list they are automatically put into a moderation queue. I was taking most all of the new subscribers out of that queue and into normal posting privileges. I won't do that for a while and we will see how that works. 

Les


On Tue, Sep 15, 2020, 3:38 PM John Edmundson <johnedmundson4@...> wrote:
This may be a downside of the .io hosting. The list is probably much higher profile,  which is mostly a good thing but brings that exposure also.

Comradely,
John



Re: Modertor's note

John Edmundson
 

This may be a downside of the .io hosting. The list is probably much higher profile,  which is mostly a good thing but brings that exposure also.

Comradely,
John

On Wed, 16 Sep 2020, 07:30 Louis Proyect, <lnp3@...> wrote:

Apparently, "Max Power" is using multiple sock puppets to post to the list. In the last one with the heading "The Deeply Pessimistic Intellectual Roots of Black Lives Matter, the '1619 Project' and Much Else in Woke America" comes from an openly rightwing website connected to RealClearPolitics that The Daily Beast describes:

"The company behind the non-partisan news site RealClearPolitics has been secretly running a Facebook page filled with far-right memes and Islamophobic smears, The Daily Beast has learned."

I now see that I was giving this troll the benefit of the doubt by assuming he was some kind of contrarian leftist. His willful attempt to post inflammatory material on Marxmail suggests something more sinister.




Modertor's note

Louis Proyect
 

Apparently, "Max Power" is using multiple sock puppets to post to the list. In the last one with the heading "The Deeply Pessimistic Intellectual Roots of Black Lives Matter, the '1619 Project' and Much Else in Woke America" comes from an openly rightwing website connected to RealClearPolitics that The Daily Beast describes:

"The company behind the non-partisan news site RealClearPolitics has been secretly running a Facebook page filled with far-right memes and Islamophobic smears, The Daily Beast has learned."

I now see that I was giving this troll the benefit of the doubt by assuming he was some kind of contrarian leftist. His willful attempt to post inflammatory material on Marxmail suggests something more sinister.




Re: Division of Labor

R.O.
 

On Tue, Sep 15, 2020 at 04:47 PM, Andrew Stewart wrote:
Can one even tabulate the number of fatalities that would result from abandoning chronic healthcare technologies like dialysis machines, iron lungs, oxygen tanks for asthmatics, or premature infant incubators?
The problem with life-saving or successfull technologies in general is that once it is introduced it can not be stopped and abandoned. Not in an ethical way. It is what Ronald Wright in A Short History of Progress calls a progress trap.
Some primitivists call for abandoning large-scale organisation technologies which i don't endorse.

The philosopher and social critic Ivan Illich is highly critical of the medical industry in his book Medical Nemesis. He calls hospitals, prisons, schools etc.. 'total institutions'.
  "The medical establishment has become a major threat to health." with this opening assertion, Ivan Illich - one of the most brilliant social critics of our time - launches a devastating analysis into "iatrogenesis" (doctor-made illness), examing what medicine really does, as opposed to the myth that has been built around it."