Friday, January 20, 2012

For the Prosecution, Justice Clarence Thomas

Why does the justice usually side with cheating prosecutors, even when the evidence against them is clear and damning? 

thomas 2-body.jpg

http://www.theatlantic.com
Reuters
Decades from now, when Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is long gone from his post, historians will clamor to write about his remarkable tenure there. We'll see chapters on his confirmation hearings, which quickly devolved into chaos (and which raised questions that still have not been answered). There will be chapters on his rigid conservative ideology, his wife's commitment to political causes, and, I suspect, even a chapter or two on the fact that the Thomases like to  travel around the country in a motor home. 

All interesting stuff. But if true history is in the details, I hope Justice Thomas' future biographers will also take a long look at his dubious work in cases involving prosecutorial misconduct. At a time when Americans are just now awakening to the ugly truth about their justice systems, when dozens of capital defendants each year are exonerated, it's remarkable that Justice Thomas continues to adhere to a grim philosophy that justifies constitutional violations and excuses cheating on the part of prosecutors. 

Last year, for example, in Connick v. Thompson, Justice Thomas wrote a 5-4 opinion that protected the Orleans Parish District Attorney's Office from a civil lawsuit brought by a man who had been wrongfully convicted and spent 14 years on death row before investigators discovered that his prosecutors had failed to turn over to him a crime lab report. Justice Thomas  contorted both logic and justice  when he protected the cheating prosecutors from a $14 million jury verdict that had been affirmed by both lower federal courts.

On Tuesday, in Smith v. Cain, Justice Thomas was back at it again, coming to the defense of Orleans Parish and its  corroded brand of justice. Only this time, the justice was unable to convince any of his colleagues to indulge the notion that judges should bend over backwards to protect cheating prosecutors. In Smith v. Cain, an 8-1 ruling authored by Chief Justice John Roberts himself, Justice Thomas spoke alone. (The difference between Connick and Smith is easy to define: The first case was about money, the second about a man's freedom). 

It took the Chief Justice less than four pages to declare that the defendant's rights had been violated. Juan Smith was convicted of murder based upon the testimony of a lone witness, a man named Larry Boatner. A detective's notes, which included "statements by Boatner that conflict with his tes­timony identifying Smith as a perpetrator," were not turned over to Smith before his trial. This, Chief Justice Roberts wrote, violated the rule of  Brady v. Maryland  that requires prosecutors to turn over to the defense all potentially exculpatory information.

Here's what Chief Justice Roberts wrote:
The State and the dissent advance various reasons why the jury might have discounted Boatner's undisclosed statements. They stress, for example, that Boatner made other remarks on the night of the murder indicating that they could identify the first gunman to enter the house, but not the others. That merely leaves us to speculate about which of Boatner's contradictory declarations the jury would have believed. The State also contends that Boatner's statements made five days after the crime can be explained by fear of retaliation. Smith responds that the record contains no evidence of any such fear. Again, the State's argument offers a reason that the jury could have disbelieved Boatner's undisclosed statements, but gives us no confidence that it would have done so.
Case closed for the Chief Justice and all of his other colleagues save for Justice Thomas. For 19 pages -- nearly five times as long as the majority opinion -- Justice Thomas reconstructed the case against Smith by seeking to buttress Boatner's credibility. The dissent is remarkable because it reads like a crime novel or a brief written by a prosecutor or policeman. In Justice Thomas' world, the jury would have been so underwhelmed by the undisclosed evidence of Boatner's unreliability as a witness that it would have convicted Smith anyway.
The majority failed to properly apply the Brady test, Justice Thomas argued, because it failed to take into account other evidence at the trial that would have tended, in his view, to reduce the importance of the undisclosed notes about Boatner. After what amounted to an exhaustive closing argument on behalf of the prosecutors, and Boatner, and predicting jury minds more than most jurists would dare to try, Justice Thomas concluded that "Smith has not shown a reasonable probability that that the jury would have reached a different verdict." 
So, in Justice Thomas' world, a tie in a Brady case goes to the prosecutors, the same ones who were caught cheating and violating the constitutional rights of criminal defendants by withholding exculpatory evidence from defense attorneys. If he cannot get rid of the command of Brady outright, it's seems clear from the past two cases at least that he is going to try to undermine its premise and promise by subjecting it to tests and standards that would make its remedies meaningless. 
A single witness identified Smith. Prosecutors didn't tell the defense about problems with that witness. Could there be a simpler case of misconduct? Could there be a more textbook example of a Brady violation? That Justice Thomas would spend 19 pages in dissent, writing at times like Dashiell Hammett, trying to defend an indefensible conviction, is what his future biographers ought to write about. This, and heartless dissents like this one, are also what his contemporaries talk about when they talk about the jurisprudence of Clarence Thomas.

Why Black People Don’t Mind Spanking Their Kids

A recent survey taken on YourBlackWorld found that more than 80 percent of black respondents have no problem with the idea of giving spankings to their children.  Additionally, the same 78 percent of the respondents feel that the anti-spanking wave has gone too far.
As I reminisce on the spankings my mother gave me as a child, I wonder if there could have been a better way.   I remember the terror in my skull that emerged upon hearing the belt jingling as she walked down the steps, and I remember feeling that there was no purpose to the pain I felt whenever I did something wrong.
But then I think about my life.
I consider the fact that the sons of most of my mother’s friends didn’t do very much with their lives.  Many of them are in prison, unemployed, or even dead.   Starting as a 17-year-old single Mother in a housing project, my mother has raised a doctor, an Ivy league graduate and a university professor — not bad for a woman who allegedly “abused” her kids by spanking them.
I also think about the little kid that we all know in the supermarket.  The boy who tells his mother what to do, throws boxes of cereal across the aisle when he doesn’t get what he wants, calls his mother names in public because she pissed him off.  I think about his mother, feeling as helpless as a prison inmate, forced to live under the ruthless dictatorship of an angry 3 year old.  I think about how this child wouldn’t have lived past the age of four if he were born and raised in my mother’s house.
Unfortunately, we’ve becoming a country that has forgotten that sometimes learning to respect authority is not a comfortable process. Parents need a credible threat to support their ability to effectively run their households.  Spanking should not be the only way to maintain control, but it should certainly be a part of a good parental arsenal.
As it stands, our nation has an obesity problem, we are falling behind in education, and we are financially gluttonous.  We’ve raised our kids to enjoy the spoils of excess and instant gratification.  It only makes sense that in this kind of world, any kind of serious discipline is frowned upon, and parents feel the need to become best friends with their kids.
I’m not here to pretend to be an expert on parenting, but an examination of our parental outcomes might lead us to naturally conclude that strong, disciplined parenting is clearly a necessity.  Whether spanking is a part of the plan or not is up to the individual.  If your teenager is telling you what they will and won’t do or your 3-year-old is pulling rank on a regular basis, though, you might want to reconsider your options.

Books shine light on black history

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ARTICLE EXTRAS
When I taught fifth grade, one of my favorite lessons was a unit I did on American inventors. I tried to get kids to see that everything we use was created by someone, usually in steps.
This is Black History Month. Therefore, I was doubly excited to find “What Color Is My World?” by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Raymond Obstfeld. The book is subtitled “The Lost History of African-American Inventors.”
We learn about these fantastic scientists with Ella and her brother as they work with a magical handyman.
We start with the light bulb and Lewis Howard Latimer who worked with Thomas Edison. We go on to potato chips, illusions, blood bank, open heart surgery, food preservation and even the Super Soaker.
We read about the struggles these scientists had to get an education and get their inventions accepted with no hope of recognition.
Several of the inventors used white people as fronts so they could get their inventions publicized.
Race cars, cortisone and even the lowly ice cream scoop are included.
This bright and captivating volume needs to be a textbook or at least in the children’s department of every library.
‘White Water’
When I was little, we had relatives in Texas we went to visit periodically. Having grown up here in a diverse community, the segregation in the South was foreign to me.
In “White Water” by Michael S. Band and Eric Stein, we join Michael on a hot day excited about going to town with his grandmother. We watch as they can’t sit on the bus stop bench when whites arrive. We watch as they pay their bus fare in the front, get back off the bus and get on in the back.
We watch as he and a white boy head for the separate drinking fountains. The “colored water” trickled and was warm, rusty and gritty, but the “white water” appeared cool and clear and plentiful.
We watch as Michael obsesses over the “white water” and then as he plays hooky and goes alone to the white water fountain. Just as a white woman starts screaming at him, he discovers that the water is the same. He is so startled that he falls down and realizes that both fountains come from the same pipe. What else is fake?
We leave him realizing that he can do anything and that boundaries are in his mind.
My brother and I got into trouble in Texas on the bus when we tried to sit in the back like we did at home, and I got yelled at for wanting to see what color the “colored water” was. I really relate to Michael!

Documentary on Iconic Black Models in Production

Versailles '73: An American Revolution will be completed by early March.


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Versailles Models of 1973

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When advertising executive Deborah Riley Draper first learned about the 11 Black models who helped bring worldwide attention to five American designers through an ABC news segment and NPR, she felt a pull to bring their story to the big screen. Her documentary, Versailles '73: An American Revolution, looks at a time when African-American models Pat Cleveland, Bethann Hardison, Billie Blair, Jennifer Brice, Alva Chinn, Norma Jean Darden, Charlene Dash, Barbara Jackson, China Machado, Ramona Saunders and Amina Warsuma strutted down the catwalk for Halston, Bill Blass, Anne Klein, Oscar de la Renta and African-American designer Stephen Burrows. In doing so, the now-icons ushered in a new ideal for beauty and style.

"I wanted to do something different — something positive. I wanted to tell a story about Black women that wasn't like The Real Housewives Of Atlanta," Draper tells HuffPost Black Voices. "The story is about more than just clothes. It's about economics, race and politics as well. And the fashion aspect simply encompasses all of those things."

Draper enlisted the help of Caralene Robinson, who works in marketing, and her husband Michael Draper, who works for the government, to be her co-executive producers. This will be Draper's first full-length film, though she has created commercials and 30-minute spots for television. Her film will feature archived items and documents from the show.

Versailles '73: An American Revolution
 is expected to be completed by early March.


BET.com always gives you the latest fashion and beauty trends, tips and news. We are committed to bringing you the best of Black lifestyle and celebrity culture.

(Photo: Mike Coppola/WireImage)

How 401(k)s Make Many Americans Poorer


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GETTY IMAGES
TIME
One of the most widely dispensed and universally accepted pieces of financial advice is that you should contribute at least enough to your 401(k) to get the full match from your company. If you don’t, so the wisdom goes, you will be giving up free money. Well, it turns out that money isn’t exactly “free.” In a sense, it’s coming right out of your paycheck.
That is among the findings of a study by the Urban Institute’s Eric Toder and Karen Smith, which was published last month by the Center for Retirement Research. Traditional pension plans tended to be an extra perk that employers provided on top of salary. In the past decade or so, though, many companies closed those plans in favor of 401(k) savings plans. As part of that switch, it has been well understood that workers need to put more of their income into retirement accounts. What is less understood is that even the money that employers contribute to those accounts is really coming from workers as well.
Toder and Smith looked at a Census database on pay and pension plans, and how much employers contribute. They looked at workers who had 401(k) plans in which their employers contributed to retirement savings automatically or by matching employee contributions and compared them with workers who had either a 401(k) with no employer contribution or no 401(k) at all. All else being equal, they found that workers at companies that contributed to their employees’ 401(k) accounts tended to have lower salaries than those at companies that gave no retirement contribution. In fact, for many employees, the salary dip was roughly equal to the size of their employer’s potential contribution.
I should point out that I am not entirely objective when it comes to retirement accounts. I have studied our nation’s 401(k) system and generally come away with the feeling that it doesn’t work all that well. A little over two years ago, I wrote the TIME cover story “Why It’s Time to Retire the 401(k).” Nonetheless, the popularity of 401(k) plans continues. Investors deposited an additional $200 billion in 401(k) plans in 2010 (2011 data isn’t out yet). And Fidelity recently said that 84% of the participants in the plans it manages contributed to their 401(k)s in 2011, the highest level in two years.
What’s more, the conclusion that Toder and Smith draw from their data is that for low-wage workers, 401(k) plans might actually be better than is thought. That’s because when you factor in the contributions that employers make and the changes in salary, low-wage workers seem to do considerably better than their higher-earning peers. For example, the average salary of a high-earning female (Toder and Smith break the data out by gender) tends to drop 99 cents for every dollar her company contributes to a retirement plan. A low-wage female-worker salary drops by only 11 cents for every dollar of company match. The salary of a low-income male worker drops by 29 cents. Combined 401(k) contributions and compensation of a low-wage worker at a firm that provides a 401(k) match is higher than that of a peer at a firm that doesn’t offer 401(k) contributions.
The problem with Toder and Smith’s analysis is that not everyone participates in their company’s 401(k) plan. And low-wage workers tend to have much lower participation rates than high earners. A recent study from Vanguard found that of workers who make $30,000 or less, just 50% participated in their company’s 401(k) plan. On the other hand, nearly 90% of all workers who make $100,000 or more contributed. Nonetheless, according to Toder and Smith’s findings, everyone who works at a company that offers a 401(k) employer contribution receives a lower salary, whether you participate in the 401(k) plan or not.
That means for nearly all workers making $100,000 or more, the 401(k) trade-off is a wash. They get the money they aren’t getting in their paycheck deposited in their 401(k) plans. In the long haul, that will probably make them richer. That’s not the case for many low-income workers. For the half who don’t participate, working at a company with a generous 401(k) plan will actually make them poorer. I pointed all this out to Toder, who agreed that even considering the different impacts on wages, the benefits of our nation’s 401(k) system still go overwhelming to the rich.
It’s tempting to dismiss all this and say that if low-wage workers don’t take advantage of their company’s matching 401(k) plan, it’s their fault. But that’s living in fantasyland. Many low-wage workers can’t afford to defer a portion of their salary for later. Also, Social Security, assuming it’s still around when they retire, may be all they need. So not participating in a 401(k) might be a rational choice. The bottom line is that 401(k)s for many poor workers are not a better deal than we had thought. They’re worse.


Read more: http://moneyland.time.com/2012/01/12/how-401ks-make-many-americans-poorer/#ixzz1jLenSiWw

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Dundee: Ali was, still is 'The Greatest'


By Carlos Irusta
ESPNdeportes.com
AAngelo Dundee, considered by many to be the best trainer in history, once explained to me a few secrets about his relationship with Muhammad Ali.
A few years have gone by, but I remember it like it was yesterday -- because being face to face with Angelo Dundee meant more than the pleasure of listening to a great man. It was a great life experience, as well.
Dundee's given last name is Mirena. He is the son of Italian immigrants who arrived on the shores of the U.S. in a steamer while clinging to the classic aspirations of "making it big" in America. The family soon settled in Philadelphia, but in time both Angelo and his older brother Chris moved to New York. And then they conquered Miami.
The brothers adopted their new Irish surname when they began in boxing because it "sold" more than the Italian name. Chris was a great promoter, and Angelo started to learn the technical nuances of the game.

How did you meet Muhammad Alí?
Let's not rush. First, I had to train great fighters like Luis Manuel Rodriguez, for example. And then I had a great world champion like Willie Pastrano.
So you had a certain reputation already.
Exactly. I remember very precisely the date in which Ali arrived in my life. Do you know why?
No.
Because we were with Willie in Louisville, Kent. On the next day, Pastrano was fighting John Holman, whom he beat. So the day before, on Feb. 19, 1957, we were in our hotel room when the phone rang: "I am Mr. Cassius Clay, and I will be the heavyweight champion of the world. I would like to talk to you." I covered the phone with my hand and told Willie, "There's a madman who wants to talk to me. Should I invite him up?" Willie, who was very laconic, said, "Sure, we have nothing better to do."
So, did you realize right then that you were in front of a future star?
No, buddy, don't exaggerate. I found a charming, extroverted talker, full of life, who wanted to talk about boxing, and above all about himself&
Which means that …
I had forgotten that conversation on the very next day!

Angelo Dundee was enshrined in the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1994. On Aug. 30 of last year, on his 90th birthday, he got back to the legendary 5th Street Gym, where some great fighters have trained and where Ali prepared for the majority of his most important fights.
[+] EnlargeAngelo Dundee & Muhammad Ali
AP PhotoMuhammad Ali "was robbed of the best years of his life" because of his beliefs, according to trainer Angelo Dundee.
Ali was extraordinary. He came to me after winning the Olympic Games in Rome, in 1964, and obviously -- no joking this time -- I remembered him very well.
I assume you probably taught him a lot of things?
Don't get me wrong. Clay, and then Ali, were two similar fighters but not the same guy. But he did it all by himself. I don't want to get credit for something I didn't do. I always knew how to encourage him, obviously.
For example?
If I saw that he was using his jab inappropriately or too little, for example, I told him, "Your jab is coming out really nice," and then he would go out and practice until he really got it working.
Was it hard to earn his confidence? You and Dr. Ferdie Pacheco were the only white members of the team.
There was no problem with that because I was always very honest with him. And him with me. When he started to go crazy, predicting the round in which he would score a knockout and all that, I realized that I had not only a great champ on my hands but also a fighter who was going to change history.
Can you define the differences you mention between Clay and Ali?
Due to his beliefs, he was robbed of the best years of his life -- that's a subject that we must not forget, ever. Clay was speed, harmony in motion, an extraordinary sight to see. It seemed impossible to hit him. Ali, the guy that came back after his inactivity, was more flat-footed; he had to go in and fight and take more punishment. And nevertheless, he was so great that he still was the best among all of his opponents, which is something that must be taken into account when talking about Ali: He was robbed of his best years, his prime years.
What was your best moment with him?
All of them. But that first title, when he beat [Sonny] Liston in Miami, to me, it was something extraordinary. Nobody believed in him.
How about the worst moment?
When we lost in Las Vegas against Larry Holmes, when I told the referee that Ali would not continue fighting. It was very painful to me, but even though I didn't want him to continue boxing, I couldn't let him do it alone.
You say "he beat" and then "we lost." It's funny …
When a fighter wins, it's him who wins, but in defeat, I have to be next to him, no matter what.

The night Muhammad Ali fought Joe Frazier for the third and final time, outlasting Smokin' Joe in the Thrilla in Manila, Dundee played an essential role by asking Ali to at least stand up when the last round was about to begin.
I've always looked at the opposite corner because I already know the strengths and weaknesses of my fighter and I have to be aware of what's going on in the other corner. Eddie Futch, a great trainer, knew that Joe was hurt. That's why I felt something could be happening, and that's why I asked Ali to stand up. And I was right, because Futch didn't let Joe continue, just as I did several years later with Ali when he faced Larry Holmes.
Can you compare Muhammad Ali and Sugar Ray Leonard, another of your great fighters?
Leonard went to see Ali before a fight. I was there. Muhammad said: "If you ever become a professional, you should work with this guy, he's the best." And that's how it happened. I don't know whether I am the best or not, but I love what I do. I worked with Leonard on his strategy for most of his fights, although he was trained by [Dave] Jacobs and [Janks] Morton.
Everyone remembers his fight with Thomas Hearns, when he was behind in the scorecards and you called him out: "You're blowing it, son!"
There are moments in which a trainer or cornerman has to make a decision. But there are moments in which the corner has to take charge, push the man beyond his limits. But don't be fooled: You need a great fighter in order to do that. Sugar was just that. He was a true fighter, and he showed it that night. It was all his personal merit.
Where can we find the merit of your work, then, especially in the career of Muhammad Ali?
I simply feel the need to thank God every day for putting me in Ali's path. He was "The Greatest," he was the best, the No. 1, and he continues to be. I simply dedicated myself to accompanying him, offering him everything I know about this sport and being by his side at all times. What more can I say?
Carlos Irusta is an ESPNdeportes.com boxing columnist and one of Argentina's most respected boxing reporters. He's the host of Ring Side LIVE on 910 AM La Red and the voice of "Noche de Combates" on ESPN TV. Follow him on Twiiter: @carlosirusta.