Politics

Crime and politics go hand in hand in California.

RECENT POSTS

Veterans respond to Scott Olsen’s injury at Occupy Oakland

 

We spoke with Navy veteran Joshua Shepard on the front line of confrontation on October 25 and US Signal Corps Veteran Trent Buddle about the injury endured by Scott Olsen, 24, a Marine veteran of two tours of duty in Iraq. Olsen, who suffered a fractured skull and brain swelling after being struck with a projectile fired by an unidentified officer, has been upgraded from critical to fair condition at Highland Hospital.

Shepard’s video is above, Buddle’s comment is after the jump

Continue reading

Q&A: Candidates for district attorney, Part IV

One of the more important and most overlooked races going on in San Francisco right now is the campaign to be the city’s next district attorney. When Kamala Harris left the post for state office last year, outgoing Mayor Gavin Newsom appointed then-Police Chief George Gascon to take her place. Now, Gascon is running for a full four-year term, but faces stiff competition from four other candidates. Previously, we spoke with Bill FazioDavid Onek, and Sharmin Bock. Today, we sit down with the sitting District Attorney and former Police Chief George Gascon.

Continue reading

Q&A: Candidates for district attorney, Part III

Sharmin Bock

One of the more important and most overlooked races going on in San Francisco right now is the campaign to be the city’s next district attorney. When Kamala Harris left the post for state office last year, outgoing Mayor Gavin Newsom appointed then-Police Chief George Gascon to take her place. Now, Gascon is running for a full four-year term, but faces stiff competition from four other candidates. Previously, we spoke with Bill Fazio and David Onek. Today, courtesy of our partners on this project at the San Francisco Public Press, we feature Sharmin Bock, a San Francisco native and longtime prosecutor in Alameda County, known especially for her work on child sex trafficking. Bock sat down with the Public Press’ Jason Winshell and Hank Drew.

Continue reading

Proposition: Ending the death penalty in California

Julia Lundberg

Natasha Minsker speaks at San Francisco's City Hall on Tuesday morning.

By Julia Lundberg 

This morning, outside San Francisco’s City Hall, a campaign launched to gather enough signatures to place an initiative on the ballot in November 2012 that would replace the death penalty with life without parole.

This coming week SAFE California (“Savings, Accountability, and Full Enforcement for California Act”) will tour San Francisco, San Jose, Los Angeles and San Diego to gather signatures and inform people about the price justice and the community pay for the death penalty.

Among the speakers were law enforcement leaders, families of victims, and exonerated persons. One of them was Lorrain Taylor whose two sons, Albade and Obadiah, were gunned down in 2000 at the age of 22. In the clip above, Lorrain talks about why she is signing the petition.

Q&A: Candidates for district attorney, Part II

One of the more important and most overlooked races going on in San Francisco right now is the campaign to be the city’s next district attorney. When Kamala Harris left the post for state office last year, outgoing Mayor Gavin Newsom appointed then-Police Chief George Gascon to take her place. Now, Gascon is running for a full four-year term, but faces stiff competition from four other candidates. Yesterday, we spoke with Bill Fazio. Today, we turn to David Onek, a longtime criminal justice reformer and founding director of the Center for Criminal Justice at UC-Berkeley’s Law School.

Continue reading

Q&A: Candidates for district attorney, Part I

Bill Fazio

One of the more important and most overlooked races going on in San Francisco right now is the campaign to be the city’s next district attorney. When Kamala Harris left the post for state office last year, outgoing Mayor Gavin Newsom appointed then-Police Chief George Gascon to take her place. Now, Gascon is running for a full four-year term, but faces stiff competition from four other candidates. Why does this race matter so much? The district attorney is essentially the county’s top policy maker when it comes to criminal justice, deciding who gets charged with which crimes, and has an impact well beyond the courtroom. Theoretically, at least, a district attorney could choose to not make marijuana possession a local crime, or decide that police can or can’t engage in undercover operations, or decide that police should focus on murders and rapes above all else–all by virtue of being the one who decides whether or not to charge crimes. So how do the candidates stand on these issues? We’ll be posting interviews with all five of the candidates for district attorney this week. First up, Bill Fazio, a longtime prosecutor and defense attorney who grew up in San Francisco. [Note: an abridged transcript after the jump; full audio above]

Continue reading

Hacktivist participation in Occupy protests draw federal attention

Ali Winston

Two demonstrators in Anonymous' favored Guy Fawkes masks speak with a passerby in Downtown San Francisco on August 15, 2011

It’s not just San Francisco and Oakland law enforcement that are interested in the nationwide spin-off protests of Occupy Wall Street. Since demonstrators fed up with financial mismanagement, perceived corporate greed and socioeconomic inequality set up camp in Lower Manhattan on September 17, similar encampments have been set up with varying degrees of success in over eleven hundred cities.

Reports unearthed by the open source website Public Intelligence reveal that the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security are carefully studying the role of the loose-knit hacktivist group Anonymous in the nationwide Occupation movement. Continue reading