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Safety

 
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Mr aL  

CEO/ MENTOR

to help teens without fathers,get people in the community to become mentors set up after school programs legal aid offices for people who could not get legal assistance. TRAIN OUR NEXT GENERATION HOW TO BE LEADERS,DO HEALTH SCREENING Details: set up and star community outreach skills,mentoring teaching our youth in building homes and their community developing skills usa
reply to Mr aL
removed  

"On-Line Innocence"

On-Line Innocence

It's a pretty serious object lesson, not to be taken lightly, and it can apply to adults as well, particularly single women. It's a bit long, but I think you'll agree that it's worth reading and passing on.

Shannon could hear the footsteps behind her as she walked toward home. The thought of being followed made her heart beat faster. "You're being silly," she told herself, "no one is following you." To be safe, she began to walk faster, but the footsteps kept up with her pace. She was afraid to look back and she was glad she was almost home. Shannon said a quick prayer, "God please get me home safe."

She saw the porch light burning and ran the rest of the way to her house. Once inside, she leaned against the door for a moment, relieved to be in the safety of her home. She glanced out the window to see if anyone was there. The sidewalk was empty. After tossing her books on the sofa, she decided to grab a snack and get on-line.

She logged on under her screen name Angel3. She checked her Buddy List and saw GoTo123 was on. She sent him an instant message:

Ange13: Hi I'm glad you are on! I thought someone was following me home today. It was really weird!

GoTo123: LOL You watch too much TV. Why would someone be following you? Don't you live in a safe neighborhood?

Ange13: Of course I do. LOL I guess it was my imagination cuz' I didn't see anybody when I looked out.

GoTo123: Unless you gave your name out on-line. You haven't done that have you?

Ange13: Of course not. I'm not stupid you know.

GoTo123: Did you have a softball game after school today?

Ange13:Yes and we won!!

GoTo123: That's great! Who did you play?

Ange13: We played the Hornets. LOL. Their uniforms are so gross! They look like bees. LOL

GoTo123: What is your team called?

Ange13: We are the Canton Cats. We have tiger paws on our uniforms. They are really kewl.

GoTo123: Did you pitch?

Ange13: No I play second base. I got to go. My homework has to be done before my parents get home. I don't want them mad at me. Bye!

GoTo123: Catch you later. Bye

Meanwhile..... GoTo123 went to the member menu and began to search for her profile. When it came up, he highlighted it and printed it out. He took out a pen and began to write down what he knew about Angel so far.

Her name: Shannon --Birthday: Jan. 3, 1985- Age:13 State where she lived: North Carolina Hobbies: softball, chorus, skating and going to the mall.

Besides this information, he knew she lived in Canton because she had just told him. He knew she stayed by herself until 6:30 p.m. every afternoon until her parents came home from work. He knew she played softball on Thursday afternoons on the school team, and the team was named the Canton Cats. Her favorite number 7 was printed on her jersey. He knew she was in the seventh grade at the Canton Junior High School. She had told him all this in the conversations they had on-line.

He had enough information to find her now. Shannon didn't tell her parents about the incident on the way home from the ball park that day. She didn't want them to make a scene and stop her from walking home from the softball games. Parents were always overreacting and hers were the worst. It made her wish she was not an only child. Maybe if she had brothers and sisters, her parents wouldn't be so overprotective.

By Thursday, Shannon had forgotten about the footsteps following her. Her game was in full swing when suddenly she felt someone staring at her. It was then that the memory came back. She glanced up from her second base position to see a man watching her closely. He was leaning against the fence behind first base and he smiled when she looked at him. He didn't look scary and she quickly dismissed the fear she had felt.

After the game, he sat on a bleacher while she talked to the coach. She noticed his smile once again as she walked past him. He nodded and she smiled back. He noticed her name on the back of her shirt. He knew he had found her.

Quietly, he walked a safe distance behind her. It was only a few blocks to Shannon's home, and once he saw where she lived he quickly returned to the park to get his car. Now he had to wait. He decided to get a bite to eat until the time came to go to Shannon's house. He drove to a fast food restaurant and sat there until time to make his move.

Shannon was in her room later that evening when she heard voices in the living room. "Shannon, come here," her father called. He sounded upset and she couldn't imagine why. She went into the room to see the man from the ballpark sitting on the sofa.

"Sit down," her father began, "this man has just told us a most interesting story about you." Shannon moved cautiously to a chair across from the man. How could he tell her parents anything? She had never seen him before today!

"Do you know who I am Shannon?" The man asked.

"No," Shannon answered. "I am a police officer and your online friend, GoTo123." Shannon was stunned.

"That's impossible! GoTo is a kid my age! He's 14 and he lives in Michigan!"

The man smiled. "I know I told you all that, but it wasn't true.You see, Shannon, there are people on-line who pretend to be kids; I was one of them. But while others do it to find kids and hurt them, I belong to a group of parents who do it to protect kids from predators. I came here to find you to teach you how dangerous it is to give out too much information to people on-line.

You told me enough about yourself to make it easy for me to find you. Your name, the school you went to, the name of your ball team and the position you played. The number and name on your jersey just made finding you a breeze."

Shannon was stunned. "You mean you don't live in Michigan?"

He laughed. "No, I live in Raleigh. It made you feel safe to think I was so far away, didn't it?" She nodded. "I had a friend whose daughter was like you. Only she wasn't as lucky. The guy found her and murdered her while she was home alone.

Kids are taught not to tell anyone when they are alone, yet they do it all the time on-line. The wrong people trick you into giving out information a little here and there on-line. Before you know it, you have told them enough for them to find you without even realizing you have done it. I hope you've learned a lesson from this and won't do it again.

"I won't," Shannon promised solemnly.

"Will you tell others about this so they will be safe too?"

"It's a promise!"

That night Shannon and her dad and Mom all knelt down together and prayed. They thanked God for protecting Shannon from what could have been a tragic situation.

Author Unknown
reply to removed
RMommyJulie  

Whats this world coming to ?

CINCINNATI, OH (FOX19) - A woman is going to jail for giving a dietary supplement to children at a day care in order to get them to sleep.

Pamela Hartley, 56, was convicted of three counts of child endangering and three counts of misrepresentation by child care provider after investigators found she was giving Melatonin to children at the Springfield Township Covenant Apostolic Church Day Care.

Hartley has been sentenced to six months in jail and three years of community control. As part of her sentence, she is not allowed to be employed as a child care provider and she has had her certification license revoked by the state of Ohio.

A second worker at the day care, Donna Scott, is facing the same charges. She will go to trial on Aug. 30.


reply to RMommyJulie
RMommyJulie  

Woman in Crisis help here

  • To provide immediate access to effective crisis intervention, support and personal attention to victims and survivors.
  • To sustain a safe and nurturing environment for adults and children traumatized by domestic violence, rape or sexual abuse.
  • To empower victims of rape, domestic violence or sexual abuse to gain self-esteem and self-sufficiency and to move beyond victimhood to become strong survivors.
  • To advocate for the safety, civil rights and health for our clients in political, judicial, law enforcement and other public welfare arenas.
  • To advance a society, through prevention education and public awareness programs, in which rape, sexual abuse and domestic violence are no longer tolerated.
  • reply to RMommyJulie
    RMommyJulie  

    Woman in Crisis help here

  • To provide immediate access to effective crisis intervention, support and personal attention to victims and survivors.
  • To sustain a safe and nurturing environment for adults and children traumatized by domestic violence, rape or sexual abuse.
  • To empower victims of rape, domestic violence or sexual abuse to gain self-esteem and self-sufficiency and to move beyond victimhood to become strong survivors.
  • To advocate for the safety, civil rights and health for our clients in political, judicial, law enforcement and other public welfare arenas.
  • To advance a society, through prevention education and public awareness programs, in which rape, sexual abuse and domestic violence are no longer tolerated. www.wccky.org
  • reply to RMommyJulie
    Starshine  

    Security for the elderly and anyone

     I just got word a friends mom who is 84 years old had her house broken into late last night through the door.They just broke the door down. She is physically ok but who knows the mental repercutions of the break in. 

    I googled about security and elderly and found an article which isn't bad I just wanted more and where you get wireless security. I know where to buy them at but I hoped they would have given more direction with that in mind in the article. I know of the alarm he is referring to as I have it. It is hand held white one with a battery in it and sends out 130 decibils of noise. But there are so many inexpensive ones in various catalogs that if you live alone ,have an elderly loved one or know of one these just may save a life. 

    I know there are a lot of personal alarm devices that butt up against a door to make it harder to get in. Window locks for windows and I never leave a window open at night but my mom would!

    I don't know my friends mom  had a dead bolted door or not.  I hava a person alarm and one General Electric use to make that I had turned placing at the front door on a chair as the apartment I use to live in had glass windows and no screen door. I still have the box alarm it must doesn't work well anymore. Too bad they stopped making it.

    So if you live alone or know others who do or even live with someone suggest to them about getting some better security for their home or apartment.  


    reply to Starshine
    missgee  

    About missgee

    reply to missgee
    phoenix3  

    Island Fever

      All is beautiful here in the Virgin Islands but like anywhere there is a down side.

    I have been giving thought to going back to the States for many reasons but the real inspiration to this thought is my son.Education is the factor I'm leary about down here.

    I haven't been stateside in 16yrs.{maybe that's the other inspiration}I do believe we live in an almost third world environment-although just like anywhere things are changing here as well.

    The economy is suffering and as that drifts down here without tourism there is less money flow.  People are lossing jobs and violence is increasing.I'm not saying it's ant more dangerous then anyplace else however we are confined to an island.I DON'T KNOW JUST SOME THOUGHTS i'M HAVING.Gotta put the little guy down for a nap.many blessings

    reply to phoenix3
    Anora Eldorath  

    Amber Alert

    The Amber Alert system is something new to our country but this website provides the criteria.

    http://www.amberalert.gov/

     The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children Website. The Foundation was founded by John Walsh after his son Adam Walsh was the victim of a kidnapping. Most children taken have only the first 24 hours to live, the percentages go down after that. So take time to research the site and learn the tips to keep your child safe.

    http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PublicHomeServlet?LanguageCountry=en_US

     

     

    reply to Anora Eldorath
    Anonymous  

    Missing Persons Board

    reply to Anonymous
    Evangelist  

    Evangelist

    Greetings,

    I am an internet evangelist telling everyone that...

    GOD'S WAY OF SALVATION IS THE BEST & ONLY WAY
     
    and invite everyone to visit link to Christian website with the message of God's way of salvation through Jesus Christ finished work at Calvary over 2,000 years ago. The site has comments and links to excellent Christian ministries and helpful links.
     

    "THANK YOU" for visiting, click links that will take you to another site, use your browser "Back" button to comeback here! God's blessings!

    " This site is for those seeking the truth of who Jesus really is. Here are links to sites with God's simple plan of salvation & daily following Jesus Christ

    "Today's Word" *    * "Who Jesus is" *  

    * "Who Jesus is JESUS MOVIE"

    * "Born-Again Christian Info" *    * "needprayer?" *   

    * "Japanese witness"

    * "College witness to Chinese students" *

    * "Bible answers to questions in many situations from A to Z" *

     


     

    Praise the Lord! For all born-again Christian, to witness to everyone the Truth, Way, & Life of God's salvation in Jesus Christ, in such a way that anyone will easily detect any counterfeit and heretical error... To offer a place that is for seekers, for nurturing & growth in your salvation: really, Jesus already did it at the Cross, you just have to receive His salvation by faith in Him & His Word, to repent -stop your wrong walk, turn around & go in the opposite direction to where you were going, follow Jesus way to the Father for Christians in any walk of life to continue to grow, worship the Lord, witness God's good news - that Jesus already did everything that is necessary for our salvation & Christian daily walk... to point references to excellent Christian ministries to help you in your growth... to help you, encourage you, pray for you & your needs...


    CHRISTIANITY IS NOT A RELIGION BUT A WAY OF LIFE:

    "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing" applies painfully to our Christian growth when we start to intellectualize our spiritual walk, we start concentrating on minor points non-essential for salvation or Christian growth, we neglect or misunderstand the 'doing' of what is required on our part, we continue to pray that God will do it instead of just practice His Word every day toward the mark [carrying our cross daily, so to speak]. We are not trying to re-invent the wheel, God already has simple & clear master plan: His written Word, the Bible, His love letter to each one of us, where we can find Who He is, How to Follow Him, Jesus salvation, how to live -not O.T. (yesterday, how it was before for other dispensation), nor Revelation times (what will happen in the future), but in His NOW (present, today) time!

    How to apply His promises for our lives on a daily basis. God's blessings as you prayerfully apply as your own this prayer: GOD BLESS YOU! Prayer is one of the best free gifts we receive. There is no cost but a lot of rewards. Let's continue praying for one anoter. Father, I ask you to bless my friends reading this right now. I am asking You to minister to their spirit at this very moment. Where there is pain, give them Your peace & mercy. Where there is self doubting, release a renewed confidence in Your ability to work through them. Where there is tiredness, or exaustion, I ask You to give them understanding, guidance, strength as they learn submission to Your leading & wisdom to resist the devil lies. Where there is spiritual stagnation, I ask You to renew them by revealing Your nearness, drawing them into greater intimacy with You. Amen!


    Everyone is cordially invited and welcome to visit Christian outreach websites witness * reaching souls in the internet one ‘CLICK’ at a time*

     * http://netministries.org/see/charmin/CM03656

    * http://netministries.org/see/charmin/CM03710

    * http://netministries.org/see/charmin/CM09067

    * http://netministries.org/see/charmin/CM10242

    * http://netministries.org/see/charmin/CM08315

    * http://netministries.org/see/charmin/CM09250

    * http://netministries.org/see/charmin/CM08176

    * http://netministries.org/see/charmin/CM08459

    * http://netministries.org/see/churches/ch32756

    * http://celebratejesusministries.yolasite.com

    * http://ministry-webs.com/ministry/celebratejesusministries/index.html

     

    Welcome to visit these Christian ministries:

    * http://vlmi.org

    * http://moorelife.org/freedownloads.php

    * http://www.kcm.org/index.php?p=daily_devotional

    * http://www.osborn.org/site/sections/1664

    * http://www.joycemeyer.org/OurMinistries/EverydayAnswers/dailydevotionals

    * http://www.billyebrim.org/

    * http://charlescapps.com

    * http://www.faithman.org

    * http://www.jdm.org

    * http://miriamhellman.org

    * http://www.jerrysavelle.org/

    * http://www.creflodollarministries.org

    * http://www.wmpress.org

    * http://www.rhema.org

    * http://www.pocketpower.org/umbrella

    * http://www.pocketpower.org/283302

     You are invited to visit these search engines helping us to be found in the web by souls seeking God's Peace:

    * http://freewebsubmission.com - FreeWebSubmission.com

    * http://www.addme.com/submission/free-submission-start.php

     Blessings,

    Internet Evangelist

     



    SHOWCASE CHRISTIAN EVANGELISTIC MINISTRY: THE POCKET TESTAMENT LEAGUE.

    Visit here to see how Christians can give out FREE Gospel of John, also visit links to find out how a 12 yrs old girl started this excellent outreach more than 110 yrs ago: "Visit us today!" Links will tell you present time stories, way to sign in for FREE Gospel of John to give out as silent witness or when talking to others one-on-one.



    WE PRAY THESE SCRIPTURES WILL MAKE YOU REFLECT:

    * "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you & not to harm you, plans to give you hope & a future." ~ Jer. 29:11.

    * "He who dwells in the secret place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the Lord, 'He is my refuge & my fortress; my God, in Him will I trust.' Because you have made the Lord who is my refuge, Even the Most High, your dwelling place, No evil shall befall you, Nor shall any plague come near your dwelling" ~ Ps 91:1-2.

    * "In this new life one's nationality or race or education or social position is unimportant; such things mean nothing. Whether a person has Christ is what matters, & He is equally available to all" ~ Col.3:11.

    * " For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God unto salvation for everyone who believes, for the Jew first & also for the [nations] For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith; as it is written,'The just shall live by faith'" ~ Rom. 1:16-17.

    * "The key to godliness is not more knowledge of God but more obedience to Him" ~ Rom.6:16.

    * "For this very reason, make every effort to add to your faith, goodness; & to goodness, knowledge; & to knowledge, self-control, & to self-control, perseverance; & to perseverance, godliness; & to godliness, brotherly kindness; & to brotherly kindness, love. For if you possess these qualities in increasing measure, they will keep you from being ineffective & unproductive in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ" ~ 2 Pet. 1: 5.

    * "So we are ambassadors for Christ" ~ 2 Cor.5:20.


    * SISTERS IN CHRIST/WOMAN TO WOMAN * "GOD'S KIND OF LIFE"

    * " Yahoo Christian group" * "MSN Christian group" * "For Parents/Youth Leaders"

    * "2-Fold Outreach" * "2-Fold Group" ** "GOD'S WORD ON MARRIAGE" * "ABOUT YOU"


    Visit Ministries NOT affiliated with Celebrate Jesus! Ministries:

    "Who Jesus is, in many languages" * Gen. Washington 'So Help me God' -Military Oath * "ATS"

    For further information on differences on Muslim and Christian faiths
    Comparing differences Koran & Christian Faith

    We are living times of great opportunities to share the true gospel of God's salvation with eager souls.

    * "Christian concept of Godhead" * "Interview with God ~ flashcard" * "Interview with God movie"

    * "Spanish Interview with God"

     


    reply to Evangelist
    Brighan  

    Theoretical Responses and Cost Analysis for Monitoring Sex Offenders in St. Paul.

          The recommendations contained in this report are in response to concerns about sex offenders moving into the Payne-Phalen neighborhood, and the recent Eastside rapes at the hands of multiple sex offenders.
           I like to warn the readers who live in the Payne-Phalen neighborhoods there are no legal monitoring models in use that will provide 100 percent protection from predatory sex offenders. Besides, people must think about their morals and ethics for balancing the civil rights of convicted sex offenders between the greater good of public safety and its costs.
          Many legal analysts give their support and opinions that low-level sex offenders might clog the sex offender monitoring programs, in which case the current science of sexual offender risk assessment is faulty. Abner (2006) is a Justice Public Safety Analyst who writes “Waging War on Sexual Crimes” in the April 2006 issue of State News about the new police supervision role for monitoring and interacting with high-risk sex offenders (p. 13). Currently, Ramsey County uses the “Weed and Seed” program, which can screen high-risk sex offenders from moving into the Payne-Phalen neighborhoods.
           The U.S. Department of Justice's developed the Weed and Seed program to demonstrate an innovative and comprehensive approach to law enforcement and community revitalization, and to prevent and control violent crime, drug abuse, and gang activity in target areas. The program, initiated in 1991, attempts to weed out violent crime, gang activity, and drug use and trafficking in target areas, and then seed the target area by restoring the neighborhood through social and economic revitalization. Weed and Seed has three objectives: (1) develop a comprehensive, multi-agency strategy to control and prevent violent crime, drug trafficking, and drug-related crime in target neighborhoods; (2) coordinate and integrate existing and new initiatives to concentrate resources and maximize their impact on reducing and preventing violent crime, drug trafficking, and gang activity; and (3) mobilize community residents in the target areas to assist law enforcement in identifying and removing violent offenders and drug traffickers from the community and to assist other human service agencies in identifying and responding to service needs of the target area.
           “Weed and Seed” can help in the sex offender’s rehabilitation from their offense until they are unlikely to reoffend. In which case, Ramsey County and the St. Paul Police can work together for using Abner’s idea with Scotland’s supervision model by working with trained police inside appointed sex offender units enforcing sexual offense prevention orders, and supervising sex offenders (Scottish, 2005).
          Scottish (2005) posts their police model, which has a successful working partnership with community social service agencies (p. 1). Each offender has caseworkers, probation officers, and law enforcement assigned to him or her for the long-term goal that helps them assimilate back into society. In addition, Abner (2006) recognized that “in execution of such duties the police may, on occasion, act in an encouraging advisory capacity…” (p. 19). The police must help sex offenders regain public trust and self-control. Until then, court orders are the first line of defense.
           Court orders restrict offenders, for example, not to frequent public parks, playgrounds, child-care, or certain public events where vulnerable people may be present. The St. Paul Police must enforce any court order violations made by high-risk sex offenders. Barring a mistake, sex offenders should have three warnings before using GPS or civil commitment.
           Ramsey County can copy the Scottish Concordat agreement, which proposes that Eastern District police and others involved in monitoring teams should undertake nationally provided training on overseeing sex offenders and risk assessment. Law enforcement can learn to reassess the priority allowed to work with sex offenders, and evaluate contributing sex offending intelligence to wider crime prevention and detection databases (Scottish, 2005).
           However, there are problems with supervising sex offenders and enforcing laws in the Payne-Phalen area that I will discuss.
            First, the lack of community budget to pay overtime costs for St. Paul patrol officers to “baby-sit” sex offenders. To offset these costs, the City can apply for money at the Department of Justice Sex Offender Management Grant Program (CSOM, 2007). In addition, the sexual predator can help pay for his or her monitoring program through community service or by some other incentive programs.
           Second, many offenders leave their “zones” without registering or updating their information. This is where frequent monitoring by the Eastern District needs to verify if the offender is compliant. Finally, most offenders are using the Internet at home, which limits public scrutiny for monitoring the offender’s computer activities.
           With having said that, the Payne-Phalen neighborhoods want sex offenders to have proper supervision that identifies any changes of the offender, which could increase the risk of harm to others.
           The Eastern District police can help their sex offenders develop techniques for self-risk management through supervision and guidance with the help of frequent home visits by police units, social workers, and probation officers.
            On each compulsory interview, 1) the sex offender must receive a copy of the registration requirements; 2) asked to verify if his or her information is still valid and record any changes; and 3) have the right to choose a Sex Offenders Co-coordinator to link with and be a link for other police colleagues and proper agencies (Scottish, 2005).
            Following the Scottish lead, new requirements in the sex offender’s release agreement must allow the Eastern District police officers to use laptop computers with tracking software. The new computer software allows the police officer to preview any material stored on the offender’s personal computer during the home interview, which each program costs $35 and charged to the high-risk offender (E-School, 2002). Computer software tracking gives St. Paul police new investigative abilities for watching high-risk sex offenders. Electronic monitoring can also include satellite monitoring by GPS or RFID.
           Global Positioning System (GPS) is a small unit, which police officers can use satellite tracking. GPS mapping of the community can aid officers track high-risk sex predators. The high-risk offender can help pay for the GPS service used with the home monitoring program.
           Each GPS bracelet costs about $2,000 and the cost for daily monitoring via GPS costs about $8; in addition, agents who monitor sex offenders need to have acceptable training and salary (Nelson, 2007). The GPS supervision program exists in Wisconsin, in which case it already cost $1 billion+ to Wisconsin taxpayers with looming budget cuts (Marley, 2007).
            However, bulky ankle bracelets cause the offender a public stigma and the bracelets are susceptible to tampering and removal, which thirty-three States have not yet voted if microchipping may be an alternative. I will mention the RFID to show people how far people are willing to go to give up their civil rights or infringe on others.
            RFID— I showed a PowerPoint presentation about RFID in my Critical Issues of Law Enforcement class. I told the class the RFID is a small passive or active microchip the size of a grain of rice implanted under the skin of the sex offender for tracking and identification.
            The group project highlighted the microchip has health and civil rights issues, in which case seventeen States banned microchipping humans following the passage of 2005 Wisconsin Legislative Law 482. The ACLU and many legal analysts argue that microchipping and using GPS on humans violate the 4th , 5th, 8th, 9th, and 14th Amendments of the US Constitution. Minnesota legislation currently does not ban the use of GPS or RFID, which tracking indigent sex offenders with 80-cent microchips are cheaper than GPS bracelets.
           However, problems will occur if a sex offender moves out of Minnesota into the other seventeen States that banned microchipping of humans. Many States adopted Wisconsin law 482, which punishes the entity who injected the microchip with fines of $10,000 for each day the microchip remains inside the resident.
           Therefore, I believe the cost of remote monitoring should not trade public safety for definitive police work that supports the civil rights of the sex offender and the community. Electronic monitoring is expensive and brands the offender with public humiliation until the next argument presents itself that new technology makes the GPS bracelet discreet. Public opinions to use electronic devices for monitoring sex offenders who “might commit a crime” infringes their Eighth Amendment guarantee from “Cruel and Unusual Punishment.”      
           Sex offenders can challenge their Constitutional rights or public laws all the way to the US Supreme Court at costs to taxpayers. I believe it is cheaper for the Eastern District to monitor offenders with consistent judicial and citizen supervision with verbal and written warnings, and then civil commitment to psychiatric hospitals or prison if there is noncompliance.
           Scottish (2005) writes, “police officers must have supervising powers similar to social workers and probation officers, which directs a sex offender to end specific activities or undertake others, such as health clubs, public activities involving vulnerable people… If the offender rejects such a warning and after a suitable time has elapsed (at the discretion and recorded by the police officer) then the police can issue the offender a final warning.”      
          The commanding supervisor must give his or her approval before disclosing the sex offender’s personal information. The Commander must find out if citizens have any prior knowledge of the sex offender before disclosing any information;
           Second, people must know about confidentiality laws and the use of such information for public protection and specific purposes only (Scottish, 2005). If the warnings do not stop the offender’s high-risk behavior, then by law, it is possible to commit the unresponsive offender indefinitely to a psychiatric hospital.
          The US Supreme Court ruling in Kansas v. Crane 534 U.S. 407 (2002) said, “States retain considerable leeway in defining the mental abnormalities and personality disorders that make an individual eligible for commitment; and psychiatry, which informs but does not control ultimate legal determinations.” Crane cited Kansas v. Hendricks 117 S.Ct. 2072 (1997) that it had set “forth no requirement of total or complete lack of control, but the Constitution does not permit commitment of the type of dangerous sexual offender considered in Hendricks without any lack-of-control determination.” The Court stated that Hendricks referred to the [Sexual Predator] Act as requiring an abnormality or disorder that makes it “difficult, if not impossible, for the [dangerous] person to control his dangerous behavior.” Id., at 358 (emphasis added). The Court defined the word “difficult” suggests the lack of control was not absolute. The Court admitted-- “an absolutist approach is unworkable and would risk barring the civil commitment of highly dangerous persons suffering severe mental abnormalities.”
           In Hendricks, this Court said, “It is enough to say that there must be proof of serious difficulty in controlling behavior.”
           The Center for Sex Offender Management at www.csom.org said sex offenders have recidivism rates of 52 percent in twenty-five years, in which case society must think about balancing the civil rights of convicted sex offenders between the greater good of public safety and its monitoring costs.      
            Sex offenders may face a stigma of public scrutiny because of changing legislation, routine judicial supervision, and the fear of civil commitment, especially for the low-risk sex offenders. Besides, new legislation somehow entraps people and ruins their lives until there is a Supreme Court decision. With having said that, educating people about sex offenders is the key for mutual civil existence.
            The biggest benefit is that ideas are coming directly from fully invested community members helping the sworn monitoring staff to understand the community’s perspective on what they want and need to know. Both the community and the police department benefit from an increased awareness of an offender’s assigned risk level and helping each other with keeping accurate registration information. Find a core community group that is reflective of the city’s demographics and encourage them to meet with police departments to learn about sex offender management. Citizen volunteers are a visual extension of the law enforcement presence in the neighborhoods; neighbors know that they can approach the sex offender monitoring team with questions and ask for information.
         Costs are small to the judiciary. A large network of community and federal organizations can absorb most of the costs, such as grants from Foundations, our Department of Justice, and the offender or other people. High-risk sex offenders can rehabilitate themselves when they contribute community service or personal finances to help pay for the continuing help provided in the sex offender monitoring program. The message to sex offenders is that police departments are enforcing public monitoring.
          In conclusion, the public can help a sex offender change for becoming a productive member of society, in which Scotland, so far, has a high success rate of assimilating sex offenders back into society. Sex offenders supervised by the police, probation offices, and concerned citizens will work.
           However, some people say that electronic monitoring by GPS must be the final solution for noncompliant sex offenders. Legal analysts argue that 24-hour electronic monitoring is unconstitutional. Many conservative people believe if the offender recidivates or has three warnings under the judicial supervision model, then off to court to judge whether he or she will spend an indefinite time at a State Hospital or prison.
           Until legislation changes, I believe that before anyone thinks about depriving the sex offender’s civil rights, people should not forget about the wide berth of Minnesota laws that can trap consenting--but unmarried adults--with arrests for illegal sex. Someday, you too might be a convicted sex offender.

                                                            References

    Abner, Carrie. (April. 2006). Waging War on Sexual Crimes: States Target Sex  
                 Offenders through Policy and Practice. [Electronic Version] State News.
                 Retrieved from www.csg.org on February 25, 2007.

    CSOM (Center for Sex Offender Management). (Feb. 2007). FY 2006 Comprehensive 
                 Approaches to Sex Offender Management Grant Program Awards Announced.
                 Retrieved from http://www.csom.org/whatsnew/new.html on February 26, 2007.

    E-School News Staff. (Feb. 1, 2002). Probation officers use software to monitor sex   
                 offenders. Retrieved from
                  http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showstory.cfm?ArticleID=3489 on February  
                  25, 2007.

    Harrington, St. Paul Police Chief John M. (Spring. 2007). LAWE 301, Community
                  Policing Lecture notes Jan. 22, 2007. Metropolitan State University, St. Paul,
                  MN.
    Marley, Patrick. (Feb. 15, 2007). Doyle seeks less sex offender monitoring: Budget                                          
                   retreats from parts of plan he OK'd last year. [Electronic version] Journal 
                  Sentinel. Retrieved from             http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=566483 on February 25, 2007.


    Nelson, Joe. (2007). "City Sees Early Success in GPS Program.” San Bernardino County
                  Sun (CA) (02/26/07)


    Scottish Executive Publications. (November 24, 2005). Information Sharing Steering   
                   Group report - sharing information on sex offenders. ISBN # 0755948734.  
                   Retrieved from
                   http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2005/10/27174205/42063 on 
                   February 25, 2007.


     
     
     

     


     
     
     


     

    reply to Brighan
    Brighan  

    The Fourth Amendment Rights and Terry Stops: The Disadvantages of Socio-economic Strained Neighborhoods

         It was a cold Sunday morning in St. Paul back in February of 2005 when I awoke to the pounding on my doors and windows from every side of the duplex. I went to look at my security monitor while my girlfriend answered the door. Deb came back panicking when she said it was the police. The police acted just as cold as the weather when I answered the front door wearing only a blanket and a pair of pants. They accused me of running back into the house, while the other officers kept pounding on my house. I replied that I was making sure it was the police before I opened the door. They asked who I was and what floor I lived.
         The police wanted to search for a man related to the upstairs tenants. According to Minnesota law, I knew the police were misrepresenting their purpose for gaining entry into the house. The rule of Hot-pursuit enables the police to use warrantless entry if they were chasing a suspect. I did not hear anyone entering the duplex before the police arrived. I called for the upstairs tenants to come out because they had “guests” at the front door. I kept calling for my tenants and ringing their doorbell to wake them up. The police commenced my Fourth Amendment rights when they waited for me to turn my back so I could close my apartment door.
         At that moment, the officers went upstairs and opened the unlocked door to my tenant’s apartment. I believe the police illegally entered the house looking for a suspect that was not there. The police can argue the hallway is a commons area shared by a member of the household and I implied consent to enter. I did not imply consent for the police to enter the house when I stood guarding the door half-naked and freezing for four or five minutes because the police refused to let me shut the door. The consequential legality is that any evidence recovered from the upstairs apartment should be inadmissible in the court of law.
          The intrusion angered me although the police arrested the tenants for committing a crime against their lease and state law. By law, the police spotted a large bag of marijuana on the coffee table and “held” the upstairs apartment while they got a search warrant. The police charged the upstairs tenants and confiscated their drugs, paraphernalia, and weapons.
          The upstairs tenants plead guilty because their public defender did not want to fight the charges based on the reports given by the police officers. Simply, it is limited economics and time whether the lawyer has to fight for people in low-income brackets. I took this experience to apply my knowledge and wisdom for interpreting the laws and the Fourth Amendment rights erosion, which I gave a copy to the tenants and posted at Aidpage.com.
          I tell the story because most people understand only partly their rights within a warrantless search and seizure. The U.S. CONST. Amend. IV, § 6 secures the rights against searches and seizures without a warrant, except on probable cause supported by Oath describing the search. The US Supreme Court expressed a preference for searching under judicial issued warrants. The holding in Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 357 (1967) states the Constitution requires the deliberate, neutral judgment of an officer interposing on the citizens’ searches conducted without earlier approval by a judge or magistrate, are unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment—subject to a few specifically settled and well-delineated exceptions. The Fourth Amendment does not protect the property of foreign nationals and nonresident aliens. 
          The theory I shall argue is that some police officers use the Constitutional Fourth Amendment—search and seizure--against people stopped at a traffic stop, or “Terry Stop” in economically strained neighborhoods. According to the St. Paul crime maps, judicial records, and independent profiling studies, the low-income neighborhoods in St. Paul have more arrests. In my observations, people in upper and middle-class neighborhoods do not face the police as often.
          I remember the Albert Lea Police often used search and seizures in Terry stops against the poor, which I found some of the St. Paul police practicing when I moved here. According to my class instructor in Critical Issues of Policing, Officer Kris Sturgis said, “about 80% of the time the police do not find any evidence of a crime in Terry stops.”  Now, as a paralegal I am hoping to educate people about the police procedures used in traffic stops.
          My life mission as a legal student is fighting for justice and civil liberties. I volunteer to help many neighborhood organizations, such as ACORN—Minnesota, Heart of the City, and the St. Paul Police Federation at 2fewcops.com, and the neighborhood watch. The knowledge and experience I bring into this paper might answer why the Fourth Amendment affects the socio-economic strained neighborhoods when the police use traffic stops to solve crimes.
           
           It is difficult to answer the question of why the police use Terry stops. Is it true the police stop people equally? Do the police perform search and seizures against Eastsiders more often than citizens of Highland Park or citizens of St. Anthony Park? What is the police department doing to inhibit the practice of socio-economic profiling? The reader must understand that people take risks when they face the police because they can violate the suspect’s rights. I will show readers what their Fourth Amendment rights are and how to apply it at a Terry stop.


    Socio-economic strains.
           The police respond to service calls among the economic hierarchy with frequent Terry stops. The St. Paul police patrol all of St. Paul, but I chose three distinct neighborhoods that show the disparity of policing associated with graduated income levels-- Eastside, St. Anthony Park, and Highland Park.
          The police developed their Terry stop policy when the Supreme Court expanded on the circumstances of reasonable suspicion holds to where people live can color innocent conduct with suspicion. The chances for a Terry stop increases when you are traveling along the socio-economic strained neighborhoods and corridors, such as, University, Arcade, Payne, Minnehaha, and White Bear Avenues. The evidence of crimes and arrests in the 2005 St. Paul crime maps show the Eastside of St. Paul has six times more Schedule I crimes like Homicide, Armed Robbery, Aggravated Assaults, Drugs, Burglary, and Theft. In addition, the police stop people when they fit a suspect’s description near the area of a service call. The frequency of 911 calls in impoverished neighborhoods frustrate police officers trying to be proactive in crime prevention rather than being reactive.
         People feel threatened by crime and they report it more often in economically strained neighborhoods because of wealth and extreme poverty living next to each other. I learned from Professor Tom O’Connell in my social studies class about Social Reflective Anxiety, or “keeping up with the Joneses.” Social Reflective Anxiety creates friction among the socio-economic opportunities and life-chances in desperate neighborhoods. Barring basic needs, people want the same material possessions and lifestyle enjoyed by the more fortunate people. Notably, the police frequent areas of businesses, absentee-landlords, commercial rental properties, and illegal immigrants. Having said that, old “beaters” and foot traffic cruising around or cutting through wealthy neighborhoods becomes suspicious to the residents who stereotype the drivers and walkers.
        People driving vehicles with many equipment violations will also draw the police officer’s attention, that is, taillight out or a cracked windshield. Often, the police are apt to stop old cars for routine insurance and license checks. Sometimes the police stop an automobile that happens to stereotype the driver’s education and social status. Many poor families do not have the money to maintain their cars, have valid car insurance, or license tabs. The result is a plethora of hardships and lifestyles that exposes the poor to law enforcement more often than people from upper-income levels.
        People living in the upper-income neighborhoods do not share the same exposure as the poor for meeting the police. The upper income classes can afford new cars, insurance, and license tabs. In addition, the officer also knows the driver can afford to pay their traffic citation, or hire an attorney. Often, the dominant classes stay close to their homes, businesses, and friends, in which case the luxury car may not raise the officer’s suspicion if there was a crime committed.
        However, the Lexis driving around known high crime areas and drug houses at odd hours will provoke a Terry stop. Regardless of whatever transport you are using, each person must be aware of his or her rights if they should meet a police officer on the street.


    Rights of a suspect.
         Briefly, when a police officer signals you to stop, do so in a well-lit and public area regardless if you have to drive two blocks or more. Do not panic or try to flee. Pull over, relax, take the keys out of the ignition, and keep your hands visible on the steering wheel until the officer becomes comfortable with you. Also, be aware that you do not have to talk with the officer in idle conversation but be polite and respectful. Be also aware that you understand the difference when an officer is giving you an order or when he or she is asking you questions.
          Police officers face each Terry stop with their self-preservation first in mind. He or she will watch if you behave irrationally, and appear reaching for a weapon or hiding evidence. Police officers use their trained senses to explore for crimes while they are talking to the driver. Any suspicious conduct inferred by the officer’s senses gives him or her probable cause for a search. The police must tell you what traffic violation or crime you committed.
          The police officer cannot touch the suspect now because this would mean “seizure” under the Fourth Amendment, unless the officer asks the driver to step out of the car because he or she suspects a crime in progress and continues in further interrogative questioning. The Fourth Amendment protects you when the police give you an order, but the Fourth Amendment does not protect you if the police ask you questions at the Terry stop. People must remember the police have authority to detain and question you if they suspect a traffic violation or a crime committed.
         The officer has the right to ask for your driver’s license, insurance, place of address, automobile registration, and tell you the reason why they stopped you. The police officer can only detain the suspect within a reasonable amount of time required to effect either a citation or remedy the problem in the field—the reasonable standard of law says usually ten to fifteen minutes. The US Supreme Court said the police detainment at a Terry stop could be as long as 30 minutes if there is reasonable grounds to show excessive detainment. You can ask if you are free to go after the officer examines your license and insurance.
         However, a police officer can arrest, detain, and search a person in two ways. The first way happens when the police run your name through “warrants and checks.” Any detain order the officer receives motivates him or her to take the individual into custody and search the vehicle.
         The second way the officer may try to begin a search is if they sense any recoverable evidence of a criminal act. Probable cause is a reasonable belief of finding seizable items by balancing individual privacy against public policy.  The good faith doctrine limits the effects of probable cause. 
         The “good faith doctrine” excuses police misconduct when they believe the facts are valid in the warrant or there is evidence at the scene that provokes a search of the person and their property. Article I, Section 10, of the Minnesota State Constitution says that personal property is an “effect” and protected by the Fourth Amendment, which police officers cannot use to excuse their Fourth Amendment infringements.

         However, there is one exception to the good faith doctrine in Minnesota that people should be aware of is the "inevitable discovery doctrine." Inevitable discovery protects law enforcement from violating the good faith rule if they can show the confiscated evidence would have been found at a later time if they followed the proper procedure.

         The Vernado law protects people from the police using Terry stops to interrogate or investigate for crimes. The irony of probable cause within the good faith exception is difficult to prove when the police have 68 different violations they could use to pull you over.
         Thus, people might respond to the police officer’s Terry stop irrationally, which will trigger the officer’s suspicion to begin questioning the suspect. People make the common mistake by behaving rudely to the police, talking too much, and giving consent to a search. Often the police catch people with drugs and alcohol in their vehicles after the officer subdues the frantic or hostile person for safety reasons. If the police officer tells you to step out of the car, do so by rolling up the window and locking the door before closing it. Do not feel intimidated if you choose to exercise your rights, and do not argue with the officer.
         Regardless of income levels, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled in Harris, 590 N.W.2d at 98 that a “seizure” happens when a person, under the totality of the circumstances, would have believed that he or she was “neither free to ignore the police questions nor free to end the meeting.” You give up your Fourth Amendment right when you continue to talk with the police or answer their questions.

    Consenting to a search.
        If the police officer lacks evidence of a crime, he or she might ask you questions or try to gain consent to explore further. It is important that you vocally exert your rights to deny a search of yourself and property. In the court ruling of State v. George, 557 N.W.2d at 580, the absence of any protest does not necessarily mean the individual gave consent to a search voluntarily.
        One exception the Supreme Court recognizes to the warrant requirement is the individual consent given to the police officers. Consenting is the product of a person’s exercise of free will and often a common mistake made by citizens. Police rely on the person’s fear and ignorance of their right to deny the search, limit the search area, and withdraw their consent during the search.
         I believe some of the people in low- income neighborhoods when they answered that they feel intimidated or threatened by the officer’s presence or tone of voice, which compels the suspect to give consent to a search. Therefore, the police can use aggressive policing as a crime prevention tool in economically strained neighborhoods. In each case, the police might justify their reasonable suspicion to question the suspect and begin a search for any evidence of a crime on or near the suspect.
        The officer may then ask for consent to a search if it’s relevant to the Terry stop, and if the driver or a third party agrees, then that person has effectively waived their Fourth Amendment protection provided they did so with a full understanding of the waiver, voluntarily and intelligently without coercion or deception.
        Any contraband found gives the officer the right to arrest a suspect or give him or her citations. Police having consent do not need probable cause or articulable suspicion for searching the person or their belongings. Police entering by consent must prove the person consenting controls the property, such as their car or house. The person controlling the property can be anyone sharing the property with you, such as a passenger, roommate, a partner, or neighboring tenants-in-common. Any evidence found after consent is admissible in court. 
        However, if there is no evidence supporting a crime, then any evidence recovered is inadmissible in consent-to-search cases. A person can mistakenly give consent to a search when the police ignored to follow the laws of criminal and civil procedure.  In assessing voluntariness, the Courts look at the totality-of-circumstances surrounding the consent, examining the facts for pressure. The Courts will discount consent as voluntary when the officer asserts his or her official status and the individual yields. The person’s knowledge of the right to refuse consent is nonessential to voluntariness. Therefore, as a Fourth Amendment version of the Miranda warning the police do not tell people about their Fourth Amendment rights to refuse a search.    
         The Supreme Court ruled that consent by the suspect is an unknowing waiver. The police using noncoercive deceptions to get the suspect’s consent are lawful. Getting consent by deception is a useful law enforcement tool when it becomes impossible to gather facts to prove probable cause. Officers choosing noncoercive deception should document the supporting factual circumstances of consent given, the area searched, and the technique used. Consent gotten by misleading information voids the search and any infringements by police asserting a warrantless authority considers evidence inadmissible.  The latter case laws could have saved my tenants if they had money to fight the charges.
          However, every law might have some exceptions. Without getting consent, the police can use their physical senses within the circumstances of the “plain view doctrine” as a crime-fighting tool to detect and recover evidence of a crime.


    The “Plain view doctrine” rule.
          The plain view doctrine allows police officers to seize objects falling within their physical senses, not intuition, when the law allows the officers to position themselves at the scene. For example, a police officer standing on the street who witnesses a crime through an uncovered window is legal. However, a police officer trespassing on private property so he or she could witness a crime through the same window is illegal.
          Without the “plain view doctrine” or firsthand knowledge from informers, or another, the police officer is lacking facts for a warrant. Limiting the “plain view doctrine,” the officers must believe that any items they detect are contraband before seizing them. For example, police can seize evidence after they served a search warrant or when they detect contraband in open view. If the officer needs a warrant to search and seize the legitimate observation, it will provide grounds therefore, and known as “freezing the status quo.” 
           Freezing the status quo happens when the police protect and barricade the property or detain the vehicle to preserve the evidence until they get a legal search warrant. The police can impound the car instead of taking you to jail, which the police department has constitutional immunity for conducting inventory searches because they are preserving impounded property.
          The police use developing technology that raises the officer’s senses, which cause protests of unwarranted intrusions by infrared and contraband detection sensors. Some law enforcement agencies are now using the P.A.S. III “Sniffer,” (Passive Alcohol Sensor), which looks like a flashlight, but senses alcohol in the environmental air near the suspect. Therefore, the electronic “Sniffer” detecting alcohol allows the police officer to recover evidence under the “plain view doctrine.” 11
          The American Civil Liberties Union protested against the “Sniffer” saying this is an invasion of privacy and against the Fourth Amendment. Protesters say it violates the “plain sight doctrine” because officers are not using their own senses, but an electronic instrument. The fear of detecting windshield fluid and other innocent items containing alcohol will spark a probable cause to a search. The A.C.L.U. reminds us the “sensory impressions” gained by an officer are admissible evidence. However, the ruling in United States v. Kyllo (2001) could overturn the use of the P.A.S. “Sniffer” and other detection instruments. The Court held the use of surveillance or detection equipment against houses and automobiles violates people’s privacy unless the technology is available to the public.12 St. Paul police do not carry the “Sniffer,” but they do have sniffing dogs riding around with the windows open.
           The Supreme Court obviously dislikes the exclusionary rule, which releases the guilty rather than convicting an innocent person. The Court fears the Constitution will become a basis of tort liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 with matters best left to the states. Thus, illegally recovered evidence is inadmissible in the court of law. People must remember the exclusionary rule under the Fourth Amendment protects individuals against coercive and overzealous practices of law enforcement agencies, especially at traffic stops in Minnesota.


    Examining Police Responses to the Fourth Amendment.
           I am limited in my research efforts to support my observations because the St. Paul police dislike sharing their dirty laundry with the public. I could spend months researching the police department’s personnel files. Amy Brown from the St. Paul Police Statistics and Analysis Department said the difference between the wealthy and poor neighborhoods is the different priority calls the police receive.
             The police admit that some police officers do not live in St. Paul, which may lead to social conflicts because of their cultural unfamiliarity with the citizens. I watched many people standing in traffic court—from all income levels—fighting their citations, in which the lower income people out-number the stereotypical wealthier classes. The disparity of traffic citations given to people astounded me to ask people closer to home what they thought about the police and their behavior.
             I interviewed ten people at random by race, economic status, and age at the Eastside American Legion Post 577. The people I chose represented various backgrounds, including a homeless Ojibwa, the white, middle-aged working classes, retirees, and adolescents. The most common complaint is how the police mistreat people by talking down to them, searching for and seizing contraband, and barking out threats and orders. They sense the police are more likely to detain and question a person driving a beat-up car and search him or her and the vehicle without recovering any evidence of a crime. All people interviewed agree the police react to the suspect’s behavior by making an arrest, giving a citation, or releasing the suspect with a warning. Sometimes, the police officer having a bad day might misuse their authority of discretion to inconvenience the driver or walker.
          From the interviews, classes, and research there is a measurable belief in the lower-income neighborhoods of St. Paul that police do not give equitable treatment to minorities and teenagers. In my neighborhood, the minorities and teenagers discuss stories about their meetings with the police. The community may be right because the 2003 study conducted by the U of M Institute on Race and Poverty supports the public view that Minnesota police officers detain and search minorities more often than Caucasians. Overall, 24% of discretionary searches of Caucasians produced contraband compared to only 11% of African-Americans and 9% of searches against Latinos.13 The statistics show the people arrested follow this frequency pattern, African-Americans, Latinos, Asians, and Caucasians. The Terry stops also vary among the ethnic races and their treatment in the suburbs and rural areas. The metropolitan counties and its law enforcement administrations changed their policies to wrestle the public views of socio-economic and racial stereotyping. One of the ways to deal with the public opinion of economic stereotyping is to create a data collection file to find the solution to socio-economic profiling.
           In 2003, the metro area police departments began a volunteer data collection of traffic stops with 15+ different police departments in Minnesota. Now at each traffic stop in St. Paul, the police must make a written report. Each stop must include a list of information, such as the purpose of the stop, the officer’s badge number, the driver’s ethnicity, age of the driver, if there was a search, and the traffic stop resolution. In time, the collected data might show the “norm” for gauging police stops.
           However, three veteran St. Paul police officers interviewed--off the record-- will argue that each income class has a lifestyle pattern that favors a particular crime. Common stereotypes, such as a Harley-Davidson motorcycle rider might have methamphetamines after leaving a bar or riding near a known drug house. Maybe an African-American wearing “gangster” gear might have marijuana and crack cocaine. The Asians might receive traffic tickets based on their racing car stereotypes. Stereotypes do not cause traffic stops or an arrest unless there is unusual behavior suggesting a crime in progress.
         Minnesota law forbids police officers to stereotype people. The reality is the police can use policy loopholes to get past any arguments of socio-economic profiling. For example, the police officer could make a Terry stop without noting ethnicity if they radioed in a suspicious vehicle, an illegally parked car, or a suspicious person. It is difficult to know the statistics for sure because some police officers may not follow administration policies, especially the older veteran officers.


         Conclusion.
         The St. Paul police do not share their policy information and cultural practices with the public. For many people, the media portrays the police hiding behind a blue wall of silence. We will know in time if the police purposely use socio-economic stereotyping or if it is because the police often intercept low-income people committing crimes in economic strained neighborhoods. The Social Reflective Anxiety and socio-economic problems in low-income neighborhoods inhibit people’s life-chances and advancement. The result is more police calls serving the impoverished neighborhoods with already strained community services.
           Sensibly, people believe the wealthy do commit crimes at an equal pace parallel to the poor, although the wealthy limit their exposure to street policing. The media tells us that Enron and other fraud crimes usually involve people in the upper and middle-income levels. In traffic stops, the public may argue the middle and upper income classes receive more breaks from the police than the low-income class. If not, then the argument could support that upper and middle- income classes have a greater amount of economic and networking resources to fight the police in court.
           However, the poor have greater risks for a Terry stop because of their prolonged exposure to the police in public. In addition, the poor lack financial and social support for protecting their rights. Often, their public defenders have ridiculous numbers of cases, which they often choose to make a plea bargain instead of fighting the charges. Lawyers have to fight against police testimony and reports.  
          The police are human and they do make mistakes. Knowing your rights and the law can improve your chances from getting a ticket or arrested, especially if you live, work, or drive through the socio-economic strained neighborhoods. Low-income neighborhoods often contact the police as a pseudo-social service with calls for emergencies and dispute resolutions. Frustrating police work and its environmental influences cause cynicism in some of the police officers, which often the innocent becomes the focus of investigation.
           In conclusion, if you feel that you suffered from injustice at the Terry stop, you can file a police misconduct complaint with the police department and the civilian review board. This latter action will provide the St. Paul police an opportunity to review and improve their workforce policies and training. Consult with an attorney quickly with a copy of your citation and all police reports.

     

     

     

                                                                                                                              
                                                                   Notes
    1 Officer Kris Sturgis. Lecture notes. LAWE 330-01, Critical Issues in Policing. Metropolitan State University (Fall 2006).
    2 Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573, 590 (1980); Steagald v. United States, 451 U.S. 204, 212 (1981); Mincey v. Arizona, 437 U.S. 385 (1978).

    3 Minnesota v. Olsen, 110 S. Ct. 1687 (1990).


    4 United States v. Knights, 534 U.S. 112 (2001).


    5 United States v. Arvizu, 122 S. Ct. 744 (2002).


    6 United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 104 S.Ct. 3405 (1984).


    7 Beck v. Ohio, 379 U.S. 89, 85 S.Ct. 223 (1964).


    8 United States v. Matlock, 415 U.S. 164 (1974).


    9 Bumper v. North Carolina, 391 U.S. 543 (1968); Johnson v. United States, 333 U.S. 10, 13 (1948).

    10 Amos v. United States, 255 U.S. 313 (1921); Johnson, 333 U.S. 10 (1948); Bumper, 391 U.S. 543 (1968).

    11 Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218, 231-33 (1973).


    12 The distinction that “off-the-wall observations” could be permissible while “through the wall” surveillance could be impermissible would lead to a trap as technology advances. The Court held that any other approach, “[w]ould leave the homeowner at the mercy of advancing technology-including imaging technology that could discern all human activity in the home…where, as here, the Government uses a device that is not in general public use, to explore details of the home that would previously have been unknowable without physical intrusion, the surveillance is a ‘search’ and is presumptively unreasonable without a warrant.”

    13  Council on Crime and Justice, Institute on Race and Poverty, Minnesota Racial Profiling Study: All Jurisdictions Report in Summary of Findings, Sept. 24, 2003 (U of M, Minneapolis, MN), 1.


     
     
     
            
     
     
     

    reply to Brighan
    motherof5  

    Need help with finding safe, low-income housing

    I am a single mother of five currently living in public housing.  It is no longer safe for my children to go outside here.  We have been  stuck here for 2.5 years now.  I never thought we could make it here this long.  I don't see anyway out.  The highest paying job I have had since living here was 25,000.00 /year.  Seemed like enough that we could rent a small place or a regular apartment, but when income goes up, so does the rent here.  It's like a trap you get stuck in and can't get out.  I have tried section 8- the waiting lists are years long for anywhere in the Austin, TX area.  The Lord has lead me to this website.  I am asking for help and know that He will work through someone so that I may receive it.  God bless you all.

    reply to motherof5
    Brighan  

    Overview picture of our Juvenile Justice System in America.

    This is my Extra Credit for Soc. 1154-91 in 2005.

    This is a typical overview of our Juvenile Justice System (JJS) and the immediate need for society to take the initiative to share our values to our youth rather than locking them up. We must remember that all troubled youths are caused by the enviromental influences and the lack of guidance from our parents or society.

    One such text book that I read for my JJS course offers the insight of our JJS Courts in America and its problems among society and juveniles needing attention. Enjoy.

    1.) Confidentiality and Accountability of Juveniles in Secrecy.


           In the Juvenile Justice textbook by Humes, E. (1997), "No Matter How Loud I Shout", Judge Dorn wants the legislators to lift the veil of secrecy so the public can see the successes that the Juvenile Justice System (J.J.S.) of his jurisdictional model had accomplished and its need to be rebuilt instead of demolishing it (p. 354-56).
          Many Court Officers will argue over the confidentiality controversy that it should be preserved if the J.J.S. is going to be actively involved without causing stigma to the juvenile, instead of shelving him/her away to deal with later before it is too late for any salvageable chance of rehabilitation. A case on point is the twelve-year-old boy brought before Judge Dorn for his fourth violent outburst in the three previous months with an assault with a deadly weapon charge (p. 76). The probation department had failed to act to the prior instances, until first something else serious happens to endanger the public safety (p. 76). The secrecy of the J.J.S. had failed this juvenile and his problems.
           Judge Dorn often reminds his Court that all children from all lifestyles are deserving of the attention of a functional and working J.J.S. for help when they arrive into his Court (p.365). However, the climate of public opinion is angry and fearful for public safety when they hear or read of judges’ opinions in the treatment of sending juveniles to camps and rehabilitation facilities; asking for the recall and impeachment of the judges (p. 323).            
           For example, Jason, co-defendant as an accessory to Ronald Duncan’s armed robbery and murder trial; he was given an immunity agreement by the prosecution for his testimony against Ronald. The local newspaper bolsters the agreement in the story that Jason will go free. The public and the victims are fearful and outraged at the prospect that justice had failed (p. 280).
           The law of the J.J.S. in California will allow Ronald Duncan to leave the California Youth Authority (C.Y.A.) at age 25, unless he is eligible for his first aftercare hearing at age 23. When Ronald leaves the California jurisdiction, the public will not know of his past offenses or his rehabilitation efforts, nothing at all. He will walk with a clean slate as if nothing had happened. This will put the public safety and trust at risk of not knowing any of Ronald’s hidden, dangerous desires or compulsions he may have yet to resolve (p. 343-44). Another example of public outrage of the escalating juvenile violence in Humes is the armed robbery of Joseph Gutierrez.
             Joseph Gutierrez- the victim of John Sloan’s armed robbery- walked into the courtroom late to hear the juvenile disposition of John’s case to the C.Y.A., instead of an adult corrections facility. Humes (1997) wrote the quote of Joseph Gutierrez disbelief in the Judge’s opinion,

     “…That kid stuck a gun in someone’s face-my face —and he’s going to camp, he can even get out early if he’s a good boy. That’s not holding him responsible. That judge is guilty of exactly what he criticizes his parents for—being too lax. This is why everyone is so disillusioned with Juvenile court” (p.329-30).


          The public does not cry out for a public reform of the J.J.S. or its rehabilitative efforts, instead they want to erode away the J.J.S in their ignorance of the need for the juvenile’s confidentiality and they do not care if they try to sentence a fourteen-year-old juvenile in an adult court (p. 311). The failure of the parents to take constructive efforts to involve themselves with their troubled youth and the interagency rivalries for possession of the juveniles have stalemated the J.J.S. for any agreements to work together as a successful unit of rehabilitation between the relationships of the juvenile, his/her parents, and society; straining further the J.J.S. to deal with only the more serious juvenile cases (p. 364).
           The view of this type of leniency and strain of the Courts is well known to most inner-city juveniles that each offender has a 25% chance of staying out on the street (p. 53). This offers the juvenile numerous opportunities of reoffending against the public without thinking about the relation between the consequences and the offense before detention is ever imposed (p. 333). Carla James and George Trevino both knew from their education from their street friends that the Court is mandated to impose the least restrictive sentence possible for the lesser crimes and status offenses (p. 53). Some of these juveniles will outgrow this behavior, but some will continue to reoffend regardless of the Courts efforts, these juveniles are known by the J.J.S. as the sixteen percenters (p. 176).
          The sixteen percenters committing low-grade misdemeanor offenses have failed to get the attention and services they require for rehabilitation at their introduction of the J.J.S. and slip away in time, undetected by the confidentiality agreements between the agencies of the courts. The Courts lackadaisical practice of overlooking the warning signals of the offenses and in its keeping of inaccurate or lost juvenile records have resulted with minimal chances for troubled youths to receive services, as it was in the case of George Trevino (p. 176).
          George Trevino was one of the juveniles that had fallen through the cracks of the system without any intense supervision or continued support of rehabilitative programs to help keep him on track. The J.J.S. did not know of George’s prior offenses or failed probation supervision and home life, allowing George to stray further into delinquent behavior (p. 111). Now George is being tried for armed robbery and he claims the J.J.S. had failed him. In Humes (1997) it is written the quote of George Trevino,

     “That’s how the system programs you. They let you go and they know that it encourages you, and then they can get you on something worse later on. It’s like, they set you up. Of course, I’m to blame too, for going along with it. I didn’t have to do those things, I know that …but the system didn’t have to make it so goddamn easy.” (p. 333).


          George was succeeding in many tasks for self-improvement, like acquiring his High School Diploma, his poetry writing, his work as a mentor and tutor to the other juveniles before his appearance at the trial (p. 331). The interagency juvenile confidentiality agreements did not permit his own attorney from finding out his exemplary record to bring before the judge, his last chance for mitigating his offense for a final shot at rehabilitation was lost (p. 331).
         Locking ourselves out of the secrecy of the J.J.S. is a detrimental and ignorant behavior for any successful benefits to come out of it. The best route to start with society is in the baby-steps of instituting educational and social programs of open awareness in the process of juvenile crime prevention, education, and involving all juveniles to participate as an equal standing member of society in fixing the problems from all levels of the government. Every person wants someone to care for them and that as a progressive society, if using this interaction and intervention to help the troubled and desperate, society will end up reversing the crises into a win-win situation. The juveniles crying out for help and attention may respond and terminate their delinquent behavior when peers and community are aware of the juvenile’s situation.
         The J.J.S. must reverse itself from treating juveniles as hardened adults and spend more time rebuilding the focus on the root issues and causes of juvenile delinquent behavior. Money is funneled into outdated systems of justice where some of the people do try to make a difference, but the system must focus on preventive and support programs instead of the endless building of correctional facilities. There will never be enough prisons built in America, never enough laws made or enforced, and the growing population of young adults learned behaviors would supersede all efforts to control the juvenile without first having responsible parenting. Society must be involved with the youths as mentors long before the J.J.S. becomes involved, a point driven previously by Judge Dorn’s model of intervention.
         The breadth of discretionary powers of the judge in the J.J.S. is the last chance effort for Parens Patriae for each case-by-case need basis for rehabilitation of the juvenile, but there is a chance for indiscretionary bias that can creep into the justice system and cause more harm than good. However, allowing a flat State statute will allow more juveniles to slip through the cracks of the J.J.S. without having the benefit of a tailored disposition to their case without the influence of the judge’s discretion. The confusion and argument stands to what do we do to change the course of our youth together as a whole, if society does not accept the change in attitudes needed.
       
     2.) When is it Appropriate to Use Waiver into Adult Criminal Court?


         The growing concern about how society treats its younger offenders has eluded the rights and responsibilities of the Courts decisions to deal with the expanding population of juvenile criminals by the use of waiver. In Kent v. United States, 383 U.S. 541 (1966), the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled that all States must provide with some procedural Due Process protections during the waiver hearings for the “formalities” in the adjudication hearings of all States to choose whether the juvenile is tried in Juvenile Justice System (J.J.S.), or transfer into the adult criminal system.
          In Humes, E. (1997), "No Matter How Loud I Shout", the California “fitness” law allows a waiver into criminal court for juveniles sixteen years of age and older, unless hard evidence shows that the crime was not grave nor sophisticated (p. 101). The prosecution must examine five categories of the fitness test: the juvenile’s past criminal record, the time left to rehabilitate him, the results of the past attempts at rehabilitation, his criminal sophistication, and the seriousness of the crime (p. 97). Sophistication of the crime and its seriousness is the only two needed, but failure of any one of these requirements can result in the judge’s order for waiver (p. 97). Many juveniles in California that are waived into adult criminal courts, except for murder cases, end up serving less time at the California Youth Authority (C.Y.A.) than the juveniles disposed of in the J.J.S. courts (p. 102).
           Judge Dorn foresaw the Gerri Gault decision affecting the treatment of juveniles to be same as adults since 1964, where the J.J.S. and adult criminal courts are different by terminology only (p. 358). This discretionary power of waiver in the hands of the court in some states leaves the juvenile without much of any protections and rights of due process without a hearing or an appeal. As the New Jersey Supreme Court had noted,

     “Waiver to the adult court is the single most serious act the juvenile court can perform ... because once waiver of jurisdiction occurs, the child loses all protective and rehabilitative possibilities available.” (Redding, 1999).

     
         Some States have transfer laws that increased the “net-widening” of juveniles out of the J.J.S. by lowering the age requirement and expanding the lists of transferable offenses, or by eliminating some of the safeguards and protections the judges must consider before transferring the juvenile (Redding, 1999).
          Many Court Officers know from experience that the acquittal of the juvenile cases in the J.J.S. may not be in the kid’s best interest against the hard-line waivers to lock away the more serious offenders for rehabilitation efforts (p. 77).
          The L.A. District Attorney Gil Garcetti’s wants a two-tiered system of treating the worst offenders as adults and reserving the rehabilitative services for the salvageable youth without the system being treated as an application for social services (p. 175).
          Peggy from the Prosecution Office believes that the current disciplinary measures of juveniles is not working and by pushing the J.J.S. back into the nineteenth-century model where juveniles are treated the same as adults (p.166). She also believes in however, that an adult crime deserves an adult sanction regardless of the age of the culprit and excusing their behavior because of their age is no longer an excuse from not protecting the public from the other “Ronald Duncans”, or “John Sloans” out there (p. 68). Waiver issues presented the question of deciding judicial waiver requirements by statute between juveniles within the cut-off line of their sixteenth birthday, like Ronald Duncan and John Sloan.
          Ronald Duncan’s double homicide and robbery case allows him by California law to use adult defenses because of his youth status; he had narrowly escaped the waiver into adult criminal court because he is only nine days shy of his sixteenth birthday (p. 63-4). However, John Sloan’s charge of armed robbery will face the adult criminal system because of his being over the age of sixteen where he may be facing worse sanctions than the Juvenile Justice System (J.J.S.). Besides the fact that the whole family of Joseph Gutierrez had been disillusioned and traumatized for their safety in public, John’s crime did not involve homicide (p. 69). The punishment should fit the degree of violence of the crimes if committed by adults, but mitigating circumstances should also reflect on the personality and accountability of the juvenile charged. John had been the typical juvenile caught on the wrong path with one foolish mistake made that could alter his life.                                                            
          John Sloan is a bright student, from a good middle-class family, but he had problems in school of racial bigotry, and he was easily susceptible to pressure by his peers, namely his new street friend Richard (p. 91). Judge Dorn knows that the two biggest predictors of juvenile delinquency are the one-parent home and a failed educational experience (p. 76).     
          The Court of Judge Dorn ruled that John had committed armed robbery against Joseph Gutierrez, which John had met one of the twenty-four serious crimes of the State of California legislation requirements to transfer John into adult court (p. 96). However, the law ties the hands of individual discretion of Judge Dorn in whether he can declare John as an “unfit” juvenile and keep him in the J.J.S.(p.96).                                                            
           John’s behavior was reprehensible since he came from a good background and the crime committed was more serious than a prank (p. 101). If John were to show any remorse during the commission of the crime or had demonstrated any juvenile behavior, then the judge may indiscreetly break away from the statutes to offer a chance of rehabilitation (p. 101). However, Judge Dorn’s illegal decision to keep John in the J.J.S. for his amenably to treatment had saved John from adult sanctions; the double-jeopardy attachment from Dorn’s ruling was a very lucky break for him (p. 102). The best efforts of Judge Dorn and the J.J.S. to rehabilitate juveniles have enraged and disillusioned the public (p. 330).
          The public fears have changed policies in jurisdictions throughout America, which society had adopted laws that limit or eliminate the rehabilitative effects of the J.J.S. (p. 358). This action will produce unfair results of waiver decisions based on chronological age and not on the needs of the offender (p. 359). Waiver will not decrease crime, nor will it solve any future problems of rehabilitative issues when the Department of Corrections releases the convicted Adult-youth back into a different world. Neither the juvenile, nor society will feel any safer when the waived juvenile has the stigma of a permanent criminal record. 
          The J.J.S. response to curb fears and find new avenues of rehabilitation that will keep within the discretion of the judge is to work with each juvenile on a case-by-case basis and to catch all of the individual details within the juvenile’s life. The new rehabilitative model in the J.J.S. that seems to work for both sides of the issue of waiver is the introduction of the Blended Sentencing disposition.
          Blended sentencing is a combination sentence of either adult sanctions or juvenile probation, but not both. Juveniles benefit of receiving the blended sentencing reforms that may be the only required remedy to help curb the growing delinquency trends perceived by society instead of giving up on the juvenile. The juvenile offender’s rehabilitation would include restitution, community service, and crime victims’ panels so the juvenile will become part of society that they are rebelling against, understand the consequences of their behavior, and heal the generation gap.
          The juvenile successfully completing the blended sentencing or E.J.J. sanctions leaves without the adult criminal record to haunt them throughout their life. The alternative sentencing reforms will give the young offenders a chance to rehabilitate themselves, which other juvenile offenders ten years ago did not have this option.

    In Minnesota, much of the same situations exist as in California and any youth may face the waiver into the Adult Court System at the young age of fourteen-years-old. Consult with your attorney on any matters of juvenile deliquency within your local jurisdiction. Society must participate equally with our younger generation.

     


                                                                  
     
                            Work Cited
     
     
    Redding, Richard E., “Examining Legal Issues: Juvenile Offenders in Criminal Court and Adult Prison.” Corrections Today Apr. 1999: Vol. 61 i2 pg. 92(9). InfoTracOneFile. InfoTrac. Inver Hills Community Coll. Lib. Inver Grove, MN. 15 Oct. 2004 http://infotrac.galegroup.com>. 
     
     
                                                                                                     
                                                                                                     
         
      3.) The most memorable characters in "No Matter How Loud I Shout." (Commentary)
        
          The most memorable characters that reflect the true operations of the Juvenile Justice System (J.J.S.) can be defined into three separate categories: successful, unsuccessful, and unknown.
         The J.J.S. has very few successes in California due to the large volume of cases coming into the Court system everyday. Downsized budgets, unavailable beds in the treatment facilities, and overworked caseworkers have lost track of their charges until another charge of delinquency was brought against them. Less than ten percent of the juveniles entering the J.J.S. have successfully completed the probation/aftercare since their Intake.
          The common knowledge of the street shared between the juveniles is the fact that the Court is mandated to impose the least restrictive sentence possible for the misdemeanor crimes and status offenses. This is said to be true of Carla James, a female gang-banger who runs with her “homeboys” for the thrill and respect of the young men to see that a girl can be so rough and play the games on the street and with her probation officer.
           The rarity of a female getting into trouble is not unheard of before in the J.J.S., but now it is becoming more of a commonplace occurrence and the Courts had seemed unaware of how to deal with them. It had seemed that Carla was given more chances by her probation officer to turn herself around than if she were instead a male. She had guidance counselors help her with continuing school and intensive, visitation contacts with her probation officer throughout her probation.
           
            The probation officer kept working with Carla to break down her barriers of emotional and self-esteem issues and gave her the resources to accomplish this task, which proved successful later in Carla’s life.
            However, juvenile rehabilitation in the J.J.S. is not easy for success if the system is unable or inept to provide the resources, or lost in the confusion of applying specific help needed by the troubled youth. Two such youths whom the odds are against them are John Sloan and George Trevino.
            John Sloan is a bright student, from a good middle-class family, but he had problems dealing with racial bigotry in school, and he was easily susceptible to pressure by his peers to join a gang, namely his new street friend Richard. Both had committed the act of armed robbery together for the thrill, but Judge Dorn had seen the amenability treatment potential of John. Judge Dorn disposed of John into the California Youth Authority (C.Y.A.) for a chance of education and self-esteem adjustment.
            John had accepted and participated successfully into his rehabilitation program through his introduction into the J.J.S.’s “shock therapy program” and he has not at the time of this book’s publishing been back into the system. The same could have been said true about George Trevino if the J.J.S. were to work properly for him, if it were not for fate stacked against him.
            George Trevino suffered a troubled childhood and became a ward of the court of California. The supervising agency of the Court had failed him. Problems became compounded for George when it had forced him to fend for himself in his developing years. Until he was introduced to, the J.J.S. George was one of the unlucky juveniles that had continued to fall through the cracks of the system, without any intense supervision or continued support of resources and rehabilitative programs to help keep him on track.     
           The J.J.S. did not know of George’s prior offenses or failed probation supervision and home life, allowing George to stray further into delinquent behavior. George was succeeding in many tasks for self-improvement, like acquiring his High School Diploma, his poetry writing, his work as a mentor and tutor to the other juveniles before his appearance at the trial. The interagency juvenile confidentiality agreements did not permit his own attorney from finding out his exemplary record to bring before the judge, his last chance for mitigating his offense for a final shot at rehabilitation was lost. This is a common theme and the focus of where the J.J.S. goes wrong to save good individuals needing the resources and supervision to succeed, leaving the juvenile to fall into a downward, unrecoverable spiral into a lifetime of misery.
          George, while at the C.Y.A., had shown himself to be resilient and driven to succeed by participating in his own rehabilitation efforts, but because of his environment, he had set himself back into gangs for his survival in the sub-culture of the detention hall and he was sent straight into adult corrections for the remainder of his sentence. This is a typical view of the everyday vicious cycle that males face in this system full of bias and ineptitude of tailoring the punishment to the person. One such person most deserving this kind of punishment given to George is Ronald Duncan. Ronald is the one juvenile in a class of the unknown sixteen percenters with a questionable future of recidivism, which it makes it more dangerous to society to have him released without a good profile of his background and a rehabilitative plan in place.
          Ronald Duncan’s double homicide and robbery case allows him by California law to use adult defenses because of his youth and juvenile offense status, and he narrowly escaped the waiver into adult criminal court, because he is only nine days shy of his sixteenth birthday. The law of the J.J.S. in California will allow Ronald Duncan to leave the California Youth Authority (C.Y.A.) at age 25, unless he is eligible for his first aftercare hearing at age 23. When Ronald leaves the California jurisdiction, the public will not know of his past offenses or his rehabilitation efforts, nothing at all. He will walk with a clean slate as if nothing had happened. This will put the trust of public safety at risk of not knowing any of Ronald’s hidden, emotional and psychological background of dangerous desires or compulsions he may have yet to resolve.
           Ronald Duncan still did not take any accountability for his actions or involve himself with any rehabilitative efforts provided by the C.Y.A. The J.J.S. will fail society by letting the offender walk out by statute at his twenty-third birthday at the earliest. Ronald is the textbook example of the person to keep inside the J.J.S., or adult corrections until he is proven non-threatening to public safety.
           The main problem of the system of all of the characters involved is the gamble that the punishment fits the offender, and that the rehabilitation efforts and resources are given appropriately and equally with continued supervision to carry on the juvenile throughout and beyond the process of successful completion.
     

    reply to Brighan
    Brighan  

    Universal Declaration Of Human Rights.

    If you are like me and wondering why Americans are worrying about other nation's human rights when we are experiencing the same fate as undeveloped countries. Whether your opinions or allegence are political or enduring for freedoms of others, read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the United Nations. Yes, the United States is violating much of our rights long before the USA Patriot Act became in effect. Read on below and count your violations.

    If you count the violations and your score is:  1-6= You have political influence.

                                                                        7-12= Average citizen.

                                                                       13-24= Did you immigrate from a Third-World country?

                                                                        25-48= I suggest booking the next flight to the Mir Space Station.

    On December 10, 1948 the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted and proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights the full text of which appears in the following pages. Following this historic act the Assembly called upon all Member countries to publicize the text of the Declaration and "to cause it to be disseminated, displayed, read and expounded principally in schools and other educational institutions, without distinction based on the political status of countries or territories."
    PREAMBLE
    Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world,

    Whereas disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind, and the advent of a world in which human beings shall enjoy freedom of speech and belief and freedom from fear and want has been proclaimed as the highest aspiration of the common people,

    Whereas it is essential, if man is not to be compelled to have recourse, as a last resort, to rebellion against tyranny and oppression, that human rights should be protected by the rule of law,

    Whereas it is essential to promote the development of friendly relations between nations,

    Whereas the peoples of the United Nations have in the Charter reaffirmed their faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person and in the equal rights of men and women and have determined to promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom,

    Whereas Member States have pledged themselves to achieve, in co-operation with the United Nations, the promotion of universal respect for and observance of human rights and fundamental freedoms,

    Whereas a common understanding of these rights and freedoms is of the greatest importance for the full realization of this pledge,

    Now, Therefore THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY proclaims THIS UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS as a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations, to the end that every individual and every organ of society, keeping this Declaration constantly in mind, shall strive by teaching and education to promote respect for these rights and freedoms and by progressive measures, national and international, to secure their universal and effective recognition and observance, both among the peoples of Member States themselves and among the peoples of territories under their jurisdiction.

    Article 1.
    All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

    Article 2.
    Everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration, without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status. Furthermore, no distinction shall be made on the basis of the political, jurisdictional or international status of the country or territory to which a person belongs, whether it be independent, trust, non-self-governing or under any other limitation of sovereignty.

    Article 3.
    Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person.

    Article 4.
    No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms.

    Article 5.
    No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

    Article 6.
    Everyone has the right to recognition everywhere as a person before the law.

    Article 7.
    All are equal before the law and are entitled without any discrimination to equal protection of the law. All are entitled to equal protection against any discrimination in violation of this Declaration and against any incitement to such discrimination.

    Article 8.
    Everyone has the right to an effective remedy by the competent national tribunals for acts violating the fundamental rights granted him by the constitution or by law.

    Article 9.
    No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.

    Article 10.
    Everyone is entitled in full equality to a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal, in the determination of his rights and obligations and of any criminal charge against him.

    Article 11.
    (1) Everyone charged with a penal offence has the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law in a public trial at which he has had all the guarantees necessary for his defence.

    (2) No one shall be held guilty of any penal offence on account of any act or omission which did not constitute a penal offence, under national or international law, at the time when it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be imposed than the one that was applicable at the time the penal offence was committed.

    Article 12.
    No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.

    Article 13.
    (1) Everyone has the right to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of each state.

    (2) Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.

    Article 14.
    (1) Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.

    (2) This right may not be invoked in the case of prosecutions genuinely arising from non-political crimes or from acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.

    Article 15.
    (1) Everyone has the right to a nationality.

    (2) No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality.

    Article 16.
    (1) Men and women of full age, without any limitation due to race, nationality or religion, have the right to marry and to found a family. They are entitled to equal rights as to marriage, during marriage and at its dissolution.

    (2) Marriage shall be entered into only with the free and full consent of the intending spouses.

    (3) The family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society and is entitled to protection by society and the State.

    Article 17.
    (1) Everyone has the right to own property alone as well as in association with others.

    (2) No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his property.

    Article 18.
    Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.

    Article 19.
    Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.

    Article 20.
    (1) Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.

    (2) No one may be compelled to belong to an association.

    Article 21.
    (1) Everyone has the right to take part in the government of his country, directly or through freely chosen representatives.

    (2) Everyone has the right of equal access to public service in his country.

    (3) The will of the people shall be the basis of the authority of government; this will shall be expressed in periodic and genuine elections which shall be by universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret vote or by equivalent free voting procedures.

    Article 22.
    Everyone, as a member of society, has the right to social security and is entitled to realization, through national effort and international co-operation and in accordance with the organization and resources of each State, of the economic, social and cultural rights indispensable for his dignity and the free development of his personality.

    Article 23.
    (1) Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment.

    (2) Everyone, without any discrimination, has the right to equal pay for equal work.

    (3) Everyone who works has the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other means of social protection.

    (4) Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.

    Article 24.
    Everyone has the right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours and periodic holidays with pay.

    Article 25.
    (1) Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.

    (2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.

    Article 26.
    (1) Everyone has the right to education. Education shall be free, at least in the elementary and fundamental stages. Elementary education shall be compulsory. Technical and professional education shall be made generally available and higher education shall be equally accessible to all on the basis of merit.

    (2) Education shall be directed to the full development of the human personality and to the strengthening of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. It shall promote understanding, tolerance and friendship among all nations, racial or religious groups, and shall further the activities of the United Nations for the maintenance of peace.

    (3) Parents have a prior right to choose the kind of education that shall be given to their children.

    Article 27.
    (1) Everyone has the right freely to participate in the cultural life of the community, to enjoy the arts and to share in scientific advancement and its benefits.

    (2) Everyone has the right to the protection of the moral and material interests resulting from any scientific, literary or artistic production of which he is the author.

    Article 28.
    Everyone is entitled to a social and international order in which the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration can be fully realized.

    Article 29.
    (1) Everyone has duties to the community in which alone the free and full development of his personality is possible.

    (2) In the exercise of his rights and freedoms, everyone shall be subject only to such limitations as are determined by law solely for the purpose of securing due recognition and respect for the rights and freedoms of others and of meeting the just requirements of morality, public order and the general welfare in a democratic society.

    (3) These rights and freedoms may in no case be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.

    Article 30.
    Nothing in this Declaration may be interpreted as implying for any State, group or person any right to engage in any activity or to perform any act aimed at the destruction of any of the rights and freedoms set forth herein.

     

    reply to Brighan
    Brighan  

    Operation: Save our Streets Neighborhood Project.

       
    S.AVE                                                              
               O.UR                                     
                         S.TREETS            
    _______________________

    Dear Neighbors on the 800 block,

    Do you have continuing problems in your back alley about:

    (1).  Unsavory characters trespassing through your property or hanging around dealing drugs or panhandling?

    (2).  High-speed traffic flying down the alley putting you and your family at risk for death or serious injury?

    (3).  Finding litter, illegally dumped garbage, drug paraphernalia, or other damaging foreign matter on your property and close to the alley?

    (4).  Have you seen an increase in property or personal crime occurring in the alley near the business’s on Arcade Street?

    If you have answered YES to any one of these questions, we want to hear your opinions and resolutions at a special neighborhood meeting. The neighborhood must enforce and resolve all of these issues about the back alley traffic connecting to the Walfoort Liquor store.

    The past two years, some residents of the 800 block have tried to educate and remove the problem of high-speed traffic to and from the Walfoort Liquor store. We need the efforts and opinions from the 800-block community sharing the alleyway with their support of enforcing ordinances and state laws for protecting our property and children.

    One neighbor on the 800 block is a paralegal and offers to remind the public the following:

    “The Minnesota Criminal statutes and Traffic laws of 2005 state:

     **Minn. § 169.14, Subd. 1. (1997). Duty to drive with care. No person shall drive a vehicle on a highway [roadway is defined as a highway, §169.01, subd. 31] at a speed greater than is reasonable for becoming and remaining aware of the actual and potential hazards then existing on the highway and must use due care in operating a motor vehicle. In every event speed shall be so restricted as may be necessary to avoid colliding with any person, vehicle or other conveyance on or entering the highway in compliance with legal requirements and the duty of all persons to use due care.

    **Minn. § 169.01, Subd. 67 (2000). Alleyway. “Alleyway” means a private or public passage or way located in a municipality  and which (1) is less than the usual width of a street (2) may be open to but is not designed primarily for general vehicular traffic (3) intersects or opens to a street, and (4) is primarily used for the ingress and egress or other convenience of two or more owners of abutting real properties.

    ** Minn. § 169.14, Subd. 5c. (2003). Speed zoning in alleyway. Local authorities may regulate speed limits for alleyways as defined in section 169.01 based on their own engineering and traffic investigations. Alleyway speed limits established at other than ten miles an hour shall be effective when proper signs are posted.”

    The regulated speed for our alley is 10 MILES AN HOUR.

    Therefore, the alleyway belongs to the residents of 800-block close to Walfoort Liquor store and excessive speeds, drunk driving, littering, and criminal activity associated with nonresident patrons endanger our property and children of the 800 block neighborhood.

    The businesses on Arcade Street have an agreement [a promise to avoid from becoming a nuisance] with the neighborhood or have penalties imposed on the business.

    If you have complaints, solutions, or extra comments to share about enforcement of unwanted traffic and criminal activity associated with nonresidents abusing the alleyway and our property, please respond by writing or calling to:

    Dan Bostrom, Council President Ward 6: (651) 266-8660
    Scott Renstrom, Legislative Aide to Dan Bostrom: (651) 266-8661.
    E-Mail: ward6@ci.stpaul.mn.us

    Leslie McMurray with District 5: (651) 774-5234. Her e-mail is: d5-director@visi.com

    Write to: City Council Offices        
                    310 City Hall
                    15 W Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul, MN  55102     

                                                
    The District Five Community Planning and Economic Development (CPED) meeting in December will include some discussion with St. Paul Public Works about options to address these issues. The CPED meeting will be held on:
     : 
                                                    December 6, 2005; And Also To Be Announced                  
                                                    Arlington Public Library
                                                    1105 Greenbrier Ave., St. Paul

    Possible legalities are found at my speech given to the City Planning meeting.

    http://st-paul-s-save-our-streets-neighborhood-project.app-brighan-1.aidpage.com/st-paul-s-save-our-streets-neighborhood-project/ 


    CC: The Neighborhood Block Watch, Ward 5&6; Council Member Dan Bostrom with Ward 6; Leslie McMurray with District 5; Mayor Randy Kelly.

    UPDATE:

                                              Memorandum

    Date: 12/21/2005
    Time: 12:09 PM

    ABOUT: Save Our Streets Neighborhood Project Traffic Count Records.

    Dear Monica:

    Thank you for showing up on December 20th 2005 and performing the traffic count in the alleyway next to Walfoort Liquor store. Tuesday nights in the winter is the slowest day for Walfoort Liquor store. As I said last night, it feels like having a doctor’s visit and the symptoms of the problem is not noticeable.

    However, I have only counted traffic that crosses my path adjoining to my property and not including the turnaround at the end of the alley next to Walfoort Liquor store.

    From December 8, 2005-December 20, 2005 I have stepped up enforcement with signs, cones, and a visual presence of taking down license plate information. Some people noticed and they have taken their route on the residential streets. However, on December 20, 2005 I did not post signs and cones because many drivers ignore any warnings and they feel it is a joke played against me in trying to resolve the traffic problem.

    In the summer months, more cars and foot traffic will double while the children play and residents are working around their property. I fear, as I stated in my letters posted to the City Council and its proper departments, that without proper and consistent traffic enforcement this problem will continue in strength. These are the facts of my current observations that I have recorded for you:

    • During the winter weekdays before 6:00 PM, I have counted an average of 30 cars rushing down the alleyway.
    • During the winter weekdays from 6:00 PM until 8:00 PM, I have counted an average of 35 cars rushing to Walfoort Liquor; especially nearing closing time.
    • During the winter weekends of Fridays and Saturdays from 6:00 PM until 10:00 PM, I have counted an average of 70+ cars rushing down the alleyway.
    • Other than speeding, many other crimes associate with Walfoort Liquor store; that is, Drivers without licenses, some drivers with active arrest warrants, muggings, thefts, and illegal dumping of trash going to and coming from Walfoort Liquor store. See the attached records of license plate information.

    In my winter estimations, we have an average of 360 cars of nonresidents violating traffic and legislative statutes in our neighborhood every week. I do not know of any residential alleyways with this volume of traffic seen in our backyard. This is a safety concern that must have a permanent solution before any loss of property or life.

    Please contact me again and I will continue this safety enforcement project in the summer when school allows me the time.

    Sincerely,

    CC: File, District 5 Planning Council, Dan Bostrom with Ward 6, St. Paul Police Department, Monica Beeman with City of St. Paul Traffic Engineering Department.

    *********************

    From Monica Beeman, City of St. Paul Traffic Engineer.

    Dec 20, 2005 from 6:00 to 8:00 pm I was out to the alley between Arcade, Mendota, Jessamine and Magnolia to count vehicles, check speeds and generally observe traffic.   The evening was cold, and there was snow on the alley surface but no precipitation. The alley, albeit winter, was reasonably clear.  Although we did not arrange to meet Mr. Wadding he happened to be in the alley and did speak with us briefly.  He has sent out a separate e-mail dated 12/21/05 expressing concern that the traffic was lighter than normal, that he has been placing cones and signs in the alley but had none in place while we were present, and indicating more traffic is typical from his general observations and definitely higher in non-winter seasons.
     
    Conditions Observed:
    The traffic volumes in the alley were relatively light, 24 vehs/hour for each of the two hours observed with 17 vehs/hour or 18 vehs/hours coming to and from the liquor store alley access point.  Approximately 6 to 7 of these cars came and went from Arcade.   The remaining 10 to 12 vehicles associated with the liquor store came and went through the alley to the Mendota end of the alley.  This is a small number of vehicles but reflects about 42 to 50 percent of the alley traffic.  There was only one car each hour that cut through the alley having no destination/origin in the alley.)  The remaining vehicles were residents.  The amount of traffic recorded in the alley for winter conditions is not significant but does clearly show that there is a draw from the liquor store.  The general travel patterns for the liquor store include the alley because the liquor store site is relatively small and parking dictates how entrance/exit to the site occurs.  There is no ability to turn around on-site without a significant maneuvering of the vehicle.  Also there appears to be a preference to use the alley eastbound when exiting from the alley to avoid the traffic signal at the intersection of Arcade/Magnolia.  See attached sketch. 
     
    There were no conflicts with pedestrians or observed immediate hazardous behaviors associated with DWI etc.  There was one non-traffic related conflict involving yelling between individuals associated with the liquor store.  We did observe a police car traveling the alley.
     
    The alley is relatively flat in grade and although was snow present the alley was relatively clear.  We also took speed information in the alley with a speed gun but discovered that the radar gun did not record speeds below 15 mph.  Speeds in the alley were taken at about the mid point, excluding those slowing to turn into residences.  We took the speeds of approximately 13 to 15 vehicles and saw 7 or 8 vehicles traveling above 15 mph, with an average for this group of 15mph in the first hour and 18 mph in the second hour.  The highest recorded speed was 25 mph which occurred just before 8:00 pm.   The officer traveling through the alley had a recorded speed of 18 mph.  85th percentile speed information could not be determine due to the limitations of the radar gun.
     
    Assessment:
    Winter is obviously not reflective of the extent of the conditions Mr. Wadding has referenced nor does it indicate an immediate hazard but it does confirm that the liquor store reflects 40-50% of traffic traveling down the alley toward Mendota and that the average speeds even in winter are above the legal speed of 10mph in an alley.  It is likely that traffic volumes and speeds are higher in non-winter seasons. There is also likely more potential for pedestrians to be present in better weather seasons. This location should be rechecked in spring.
     
    The information seems to indicate that the residents along this alley could install such things as speed signs, speed bumps or request a one-way alley via the city’s standard petitioning practice, however, each have varying levels of effectiveness and come with both positive and negative results. 
    • Posting the speed of an alley has very limited likelihood of affecting a driver’s choice in speed.
    • Recently a set of speed bumps were removed in a alley in another neighborhood due in part to the fact the speed control devices actually attracted more kids to be in the alley skateboarding so what controlled car speed actually increased the exposure to kids, a definite safety negative. 
    • And one-ways would penalize the mobility of residents on a daily basis with the potential to limit only half the liquor store traffic and with the potential to increase speeds, again not the intended result.
    Of course, it should be noted that the costs under City policy for any of the above are shared by the abutting property owners.
     
    Recommendation:
    This is an alley with both commercial and residential access, not a development practice typically allowed today, and as such has the potential for conflicts in use. Clearly, there is a perceived conflict in use by at least a few residents, a general concern for safety related to speeds and commercial access is not the preferred practice according to today’s development standards.
     
    Although dead-ending of the alley is the only way to eliminate all traffic non-residential traffic it does not seem a reasonable alternative given the restrictions imposed on residents travel patterns, and the physical space needed for a alley turn around. From the other perspective the liquor store parking area is not big enough to turn vehicles around on-site so full closure of their alley driveway alone is also not feasible. Therefore, I would recommend working with the liquor store to revise the traffic pattern so that their customers use Arcade or travel back out toward Arcade. See attached sketch.
     
    The elimination or modification of access to the alley from the liquor store would require working through LIEP to achieve. Traffic engineering can assist with the development of access alternatives some of which may be tried as temporary or could be worked out between/with others.
     
    In the mean time speed enforcement in the alley would seem the best overall approach and I will make a request to Police. Also Mr. Wadding should note that a private citizen should not place traffic control device in the public right of way.

    Monica M. Beeman, PE
    City of St Paul
    Department of Public Works
    Traffic Engineering
    800 City Hall Annex
    25 West Fourth Street
    Saint Paul, MN  55102-1660
    (651) 266-6214

    "You must be the change you wish to see in the world"  Gandhi

    ___________________________

    *12/29/2005

    (Replying to the Official Traffic Count Report-12/23/2005).

    Monica,
    Very thorough and thoughtful analysis.
    Thanks!
    Bruce
    *************************
     
    12/23/2005
    (Reply Message)

    Dear Monica:
     
    Thank you so much for your detailed report and your time in the traffic count.
     
    I do agree that your sketch is the right solution but the drawing that I would have presented for the solution would to cut the alleyway as a dead-end from the house next to the parking lot and across to the other side of the Food-shelf mission.
     
    This action would allow the businesses to use the alleyway as you proposed in the sketch and allows the safety of the neighborhood to occur when we use the west end for access. See sketch below.
     
    However, the added traffic block may deter people to use the access in the alley but who is going to enforce the traffic and break the habits of the liquor store owner?
     
    Do the citizens of the neighborhood try to work with Walfoort Liquor through the District 5 Planning Council or have the City of St. Paul write a letter of this situation? We could face strong opposition from the liquor store owner.
     
    I will mill it over during the winter months.
     
    Thank you,
     
    Shannon Wadding
    846 Jessamine Ave E
    St. Paul, MN 55106-2612

     TRAFFIC RECORDS OF THE BACK ALLEYWAY TO WALFOORT LIQUOR STORE.

    IS YOUR MINNESOTA AUTOMOBILE RECORDED HERE?

    DATE of Speeding

    * Denotes prior moving violations. MN License Plate # ; NAME;  Date of Birth ; Address


    12/08/2005; LKL 434  


    12/08/2005; LMS 388   


    * 12/08/2005; ERE 457
    Active Misd. Warrant
    -frequent at 1081 Arcade St. upstairs apartments. Mark Anthony Hoff 
    9/24/1954 627 N 3 St Bayport MN 550031007

    (651) 351-2843
    Or;
    2453 Elkhart Lane, Maplewood, MN 55119


    * 12/08/2005; NHB 945-Currently SUSPENDED *Michel Diori Tillman;
    Angela Renee Dates 11/04/1977;

    12/11/1974 990 Lafond Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104


    * 12/08/2005; LEF 819 Quincy Terrel Lewis 02/26/1981 415 Jessamine Ave E.(Upstairs), St. Paul, MN    55106 (651) 493-7693
    12/08/2005
    12/09/2005


    12/15/2005; KLL 112 Terence Paul Primus 07/15/1964 
    12/08/2005


    12/10/2005; RJD 351-Anderson’s Perfect Pizza Delivery. Wayne Anderson  1098 Arcade St., St. Paul, MN 55105 (651) 774-3300
    12/08/2005
    12/13/2005


    12/16/2005;  PTT 696  


    12/08/2005; KHH 781 

      
    12/08/2005; LPP 471   


    12/08/2005; RLZ 720 

      
    * 12/08/2005
       12/14/2005;  PHM 071 Joyce Marie Imhoede  3584 Blue Jay Way, #101, Eagan, MN


    12/08/2005; RJO 351 

      
    12/08/2005; FTD 806  


    12/08/2005; ESS 812   
    12/08/2005
    12/12/2005


    12/16/2005; JEM 562   Lives on 900 Block of Magnolia Ave.


    12/08/2005; PHN 927

       
    12/08/2005; FMG 667   
    12/08/2005
    12/15/2005
    12/16/2005 


    12/17/2005;  GPT 841 Eva Emma Stites 02/06/1949 1099 Geranium Ave E St Paul MN 551062709 (651) 330-8083


    12/08/2005; YHN 245   


    * 12/08/2005; MMN 303 Janet M. Rennick- Thompson

      
    12/08/2005; CSG 963

       
    * 12/09/2005; PNT 901-current SUSPENSION. Jessie Jovon Smith 08/09/1977 845 Cook Ave, St.      Paul, MN 55101 (651) 776-8702
    12/09/2005
    12/16/2005


    12/16/2005;  NPF 469 John Lee Taylor, Jr. 09/12/1980 


    12/09/2005; GTN 234

       
    * 12/09/2005; GYS 265 Maria Alicia Orozco 11/27/1969 1017 Sims Ave. St. Paul, MN (651) 774-4506


    12/09/2005; PUL 255   


    12/09/2005; LXG 255

       
    12/09/2005
    12/16/2005
    12/19/2005
    12/20/2005;  KTY 701 

      
    12/09/2005
    12/13/2005 ; GBY 746-Blue & White Taxi.  


    12/09/2005; DVB 937   


    12/09/2005; LIG 762  


    12/09/2005; MED 361 

      
    * 12/09/2005
       12/13/2005 ;WT0649 

      
    12/09/2005; MAX 141 Joel Aviles Martinez 01/08/1978 1626 Sherwood St. Paul, Mn 55106


    12/09/2005; HCA 288 

      
    * 12/09/2005; JJH 604- Demetrius Dwayne Walker 10/25/1980 1026 Reaney, St. Paul, MN 55106


    12/09/2005; KGL 955 

      
    12/09/2005; LAD 922  


    12/09/2005; NGY 241 Joshua Michael Anderson 11/17/1983 378 Case Ave St. Paul MN 55101


    12/09/2005; JNF 346   
    12/09/2005
    12/16/2005
    12/16/2005
    12/20/2005

     PTU 341   
    12/09/2005
    12/12/2005


     KWR 579

       
    12/09/2005; NYP 527 

      
    12/09/2005; GTZ 607  


    12/09/2005; NZU 475 Tiffany Jaunice Reed 10/19/1971 1367 Reaney Ave, St. Paul  MN (651) 772-7490


    12/09/2005; HOY 976 

      
    12/09/2005; LXE 575 

      
    12/09/2005; DHE 372-throughway.   
    12/09/2005
    12/10/2005
    12/14/2005
    12/16/2005 

    NTP 956 -Top Ten Car Detail.  


    12/09/2005
    12/15/2005; EHS 698 -Debbie’s Doghouse   805 Hudson Rd. St. Paul, MN 55106
    (651) 776-4080


    12/09/2005; KTX 067  


    12/09/2005; FBM 700  


    12/09/2005; JWA 200 Queta Lilian Curtis 03/28/1983 
    12/09/2005
    12/12/2005
    12/15/2005


    12/20/2005;  NWY 663

       
    12/09/2005; NWZ 323 

      
    12/09/2005

    12/20/2005;  PTU 341-(Comes around before 6PM) 

      
    12/09/2005; JZJ 758 Dawn Maurean Hyland 06/28/1966 6843 Sandlewood Rd. Woodbury (651) 714-0929


    * 12/09/2005; HBM 136-Active WARRANT for DAS Bonnie Estrada Martinez 10/04/1967 2072 Mississippi St. #201, Maplewood MN 55117


    * 12/09/2005
       12/10/2005
    12/16/2005
      DXL 983 Angela Jean Crudo;

    Howard Elmer Frahm Jr. 05/27/1982


    04/13/1949 
    12/09/2005
    12/10/2005
    12/12/2005  LCC 683 Jason Anthony Khemraj;

    Tywana Victoria Price 01/01/1979;


    06/29/1978 800 W. Co. Rd. D #206, New Brighton, MN;
    Or
     6124 Kyle Ave. N., Brooklyn Center, MN 55429;
    (Tywana):294 Thomas Ave., St. Paul, Mn 55119


    12/09/2005; IBZ 687   


    * 12/09/2005; KDT 534-Active
    WARRANT and Suspension. Marilyn Claire Frenchik;

    Ronald Hill;

     

    Jerry Lavell Thomas;

     

     

    Darius Rafeal Range 03/09/1937;


    12/13/1958;

     

    03/18/1958;

     

     


    02/19/1983 Not found;

    167 N. McKnight #207
    St. Paul 55109;

    3425 W. Harrison St. Chicago IL. 60624;

     

    3104 E. 65th St., #310, Inver Grove Heights, MN 55076


    12/09/2005; PDK 603   
    12/09/2005
    12/16/2005
    12/17/2005
    12/20/2005  

    GVK 822, Nicole Rene Mortenson 04/21/1983 


    12/09/2005  NHL 141   


    12/09/2005 Wisconsin-too fast to get info.   


    * 12/10/2005
       12/10/2005;  NMV 612- Currently SUSPENDED Quincy Lamont Gee 03/14/1971 1199 Glendon St., Maplewood, MN 55119


    12/10/2005;  EYK 303   
    12/10/2005
    12/10/2005
    12/19/2005


    12/20/2005;    REM 851


    12/20/2005-slowed down.   


    12/10/2005; GHP 503   


    12/10/2005 ; Wisconsin- 319 HBG

       
    * 12/10/2005;  NHA 327-Currently SUSPENDED Willie Terrell Smith 02/10/1971 2192 Mohawk, North St. Paul, MN 55109
    12/10/2005


    12/15/2005;  NYC 131 Linda Marie Kania  
        
    12/10/2005;  PKP 443  


    12/10/2005; Wisconsin- KXX 795

       
    12/10/2005;  PML 448- Putting on make-up while speeding. 

      
    12/10/2005;  GCT 257  


    12/10/2005;  LWU 763 Maiyia Yang 06/30/1986 1894 Ivy Ave E., St. Paul MN 55119 (651) 776-8326


    12/10/2005;  PTU 761-throughway 

      
    12/10/2005; MVV 220

       
    12/10/2005; GSJ 041

       
    * 12/10/2005; MTZ 861 Sotho Phea 02/08/1983 


    12/10/2005; EPW 084 Jennifer Marie Mastel;
    Todd Patrick Mortenson 12/15/1978;

    12/12/1970 


    12/10/2005; NZY 540   
    12/10/2005


    12/10/2005;
     CAH 039-Younger driver almost hit pedestrian in alley. Kevin Cyril Kronquist 08/02/1950 


    12/10/2005;  Nebraska-440 NEP 

      
    12/10/2005;  NTS 230 

      
    * 12/10/2005
       12/19/2005;   NYC 657-Currently SUSPENDED John Henry Bellaphant 08/04/1955 1915 Arcade St., St. Paul, MN 55106


    12/10/2005; NHB 830 

      
    12/10/2005; HPH 610

       
    * 12/10/2005;  GCF 286- Currently SUSPENDED and ACTIVE FELONY WARRANTS Martin John Johnson;

     

    Debra Ann Paterson
     10/22/1980;

     


    01/19/1958

     13001 Harriet Ave., Burnsville, MN 55337;

    1125 Lane Pl., St. Paul, MN 55106


    12/10/2005
    12/10/2005
    12/10/2005
    12/13/2005
    12/15/2005
    12/16/2005; GUX 446-Food shelf delivery; using as
    throughway.

       
    * 12/10/2005; NSU 986-Currently SUSPENDED John Louis Black, Jr. 01/22/1971 495 Stryker Ave., St. Paul, MN 55107


    12/10/2005;  NBJ 524

       
    DATE of Speeding * Denotes prior moving violations.  MN License Plate #  NAME  Date of Birth  Address


    12/10/2005; RDL 587

       
    12/10/2005; PHX 124

       
    12/10/2005; LBC 400 

      
    12/10/2005; GRY 743

        
    * 12/10/2005; GFK 748
    -Currently SUSPENDED License Sarai Markiea Watkins;
    Ontaria Rosalyn Hester
     07/07/1982;

    04/15/1972

     1465 Klainert St., #B St. Paul, MN 55117
    12/10/2005 EXE 657   
        
    * 12/10/2005;  GGP 919  Brett Thomas Koscienko 02/21/1965 979 Lawson E, St. Paul, MN 55106


    12/10/2005;  PXY 868 Cedric Dwyon Mitchell 05/23/1956 902 Aurora Ave., St. Paul MN 55104 (651) 225-0717


    12/10/2005; PKB 372

       
    12/10/2005;  GRU 786    


    12/12/2005;  MHS 580-(Food shelf volunteer) speeding/almost hit pedestrian. Robert William Spratt 09/11/1970


    12/12/2005;  RJG 262

       
    * 12/12/2005
       12/20/2005;   PHN 245 Laura Phyullis-Marie Tolbert 06/15/1979 871 Case Av St Paul MN 551063860
    (651) 771-1279


    * 12/12/2005;  LSJ 534-Currently SUSPENDED Jeffrey Rayshawn Wilson 04/09/1982 780 Rose Ave., St. Paul MN 55106


    12/12/2005
    12/20/2005;  NWY 614

       
    12/12/2005; DBZ 192

       
    12/12/2005; Wisconsin- 103 KGJ 

      
    12/12/2005;  NVA 386 

      
    * 12/12/2005; DZZ 454-currently SUSPENDED Roger Allan Andrews ,04/28/1954.


    * 12/12/2005
       12/13/2005
       12/19/2005 ; MVP 699-currently SUSPENDED George Francis Hruza, 01/21/1982, 1234 Mclean Ave St Paul MN 551066417
    (651) 776-0428


    12/12/2005;  JZC 216 

      
    12/12/2005; KRINCKLE 

      
    12/12/2005;  PXU 423

       
    * 12/12/2005; KWE 652 Maria Dejesus-Muniz Lamas, 10/01/1975.


    12/12/2005; LMT 898

       
    * 12/12/2005
       12/16/2005;  MLP 246 Kenneth Ray Linsy, 01/14/1971, 910 Forest St. #G 5, St. Paul, MN, 55106;
    Or
    37 Shannon Dr., Hastings MN 55033


    12/12/2005; HHB 961

       
    12/12/2005;  NYA 216 Vanessa Butts, 11/16/1972.


    12/12/2005; DAB 110  


    12/12/2005;  PUJ 394   
    12/12/2005
    12/16/2005  

    JNC 997   
    12/12/2005
    12/17/2005  

    NWY 663 

      
    12/12/2005; FYH 330

       
    12/12/2005, 12/13/2005;  NXB 257 

      
    12/12/2005; GZR 170

       
    * 12/12/2005  FJT 347 Albert Nels Bjerke Jr., 08/07/1965 


    12/12/2005;  LCC 031-Throughway 

      
    12/13/2005;  NZS 142 

      
    12/13/2005;  PTT 542 

      
    12/13/2005; LEB 817

       
    12/13/2005;  PPA 170 

      
    * 12/13/2005
       12/17/2005;  HVD 828-Currently SUSPENDED Celia Trinidad, 08/28/1969, 1086 York Ave., St. Paul, Mn 55106


    * 12/13/2005
       12/15/2005
       12/16/2005
       12/16/2005
       12/20/2005 ;  FRJ 463 Irretrievable case 


    12/13/2005; EJK 958 Leslie Elayne Junemann, 12/10/1972 .


    12/13/2005;  PHL 353 Case # TMD-T9-05-023313  


    12/13/2005; FWH 866   

    12/13/2005;  PHX 717

       
    12/13/2005; PZT 567 

      
    12/13/2005;  JKC 946-almost hit
    pedestrian/throughway use. 

      
    12/13/2005; NSP 612 Dorothy Lynn Moore, 04/01/1978 3711, Gershwin Ave N Oakdale MN 551283005
    651) 770-7269


    ***12/13/2005
          12/16/2005
          12/16/2005
          12/19/2005;   KHH 748-All Current SUSPENSION

     

    Dom Abuse & firearm poss. 
    Betty J. Shavers;
    Latoya Lashawn Shavers;
    Leonard Maine Shavers 

    09/05/1965;


    06/27/1986;

    05/20/1985. 911 Lawson Ave E St Paul MN 551063218
    (651) 793-6951


    12/13/2005
    12/14/2005; MTH 658 

      
    * 12/13/2005;  FWH 886-Currently SUSPENDED-almost hit panhandler. Paul Todd Jackson;
    Althea June Toliver 11/28/1965;

    12/29/1956 949 Hague Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104


    12/13/2005; GUX 804 

      
    * 12/13/2005;  PLV 248-Currently SUSPENDED John Casanova Jackson 11/12/1967 1086 York Ave. #7, St. Paul, MN 55106.


    * 12/13/2005; HTS 952-Currently SUSPENDED Makiesha Edwina Mayo 11/03/1981. 


    * 12/13/2005  LKL 334-Currently SUSPENDED Dianne Marie Homich  12/30/1958
     942 Rose Ave. (Lower), St. Paul, MN 55106.


    * 12/13/2005 MFV 031-Currently SUSPENDED  * Robert Morris Cook;

     

    Lynette Robinson 02/20/1973;

     


    01/15/1955 3146 Portland Ave. S., MPLS, MN 55407;

    2040 Yorkshire Ave. #2, St. Paul, MN 55116


    12/13/2005
    12/19/2005;  GMH 586 Christine Marie Todora;
    Michael Anthony Todora 12/18/1968;

    08/30/1966  
    12/13/2005;  MKZ 647 

      
    DATE of Speeding * Denotes prior moving violations.  MN License Plate #  NAME  Date of Birth  Address


    12/14/2005; JXR 544

       
    * 12/14/2005
       12/14/2005;
     MVY 156 Amber Marie Ukes, 09/05/1982.


    * 12/14/2005; LFR 326-Two prior D.W.I.’s Lalita Diane Stevenson 05/07/1957 932 Sims Ave., St. Paul, Mn 55106
    (651) 771-8942.


    12/14/2005; NLC 561   
    12/14/2005
    12/20/2005   

    NZJ 611   
    12/14/2005
    12/19/2005  

    NTN 205   
    12/14/2005
    12/16/2005 

    PWN 377-Snow removal truck.   
    12/14/2005 NYO 640   
    12/14/2005  DHM 893 Michael Matthew Haga 05/16/1981 
    12/14/2005  REL 674   
    12/14/2005 HCK 906-Alley as throughway.   
    12/14/2005
    12/19/2005  GVF 678 Joanne Lynn Gibson 02/24/1956 
    * 12/14/2005 NHL 425-Currently SUSPENDED Allison Caron Krogh 04/14/1984 966 Hawthorne, St. Paul, Mn 55106
    12/14/2005  HFZ 301   
    12/14/2005  LFB 618   
    12/14/2005 LXV 981   
    12/14/2005 NWZ 956   
    12/14/2005 PDN 600   
    * 12/14/2005  HHS 047-Currently SUSPENDED; Out on recognizance for Felony Drug Poss. Guy Curtis Hall 12/19/1985 643 Linden St., St. Paul, MN 55101
    12/14/2005  NAY 072   
    * 12/14/2005 NGZ 046 Steven John Berger 07/11/1981 990 Lawson Ave. E., St. Paul, MN 55106
    12/14/2005  NZT 663-City Wide Taxi   
    12/14/2005 PYE 324   
    DATE of Speeding

    * Denotes prior moving violations. MN License Plate #  NAME  Date of Birth Address
    12/15/2005 HDL 587   
    12/15/2005  LGV 247   
    12/15/2005 HCZ 912   
    12/15/2005 LUK 239   
    12/15/2005 RLZ 219   
    12/15/2005  EXU 044   
    12/15/2005 ETP 977   
    12/15/2005 LAG 762 Name and address requested.  
    12/15/2005
    12/16/2005  PHK 188-Victim of mugging at Walfoort Liquor (12/16/2005).   
    12/15/2005 GLV 368   
    * 12/15/2005 CRG 848 Sue Her;
    Chia Chue Her
     07/23/1981
    03/05/1954 1737 Idaho Av St Paul MN 551061332
    (651) 330-8896
    12/15/2005 NHL 428   
    12/15/2005 CEJ 884 Name and address requested.  
    12/15/2005 JCZ 214   
    12/15/2005 MUX 634   
    12/15/2005 RJG 626   
    12/15/2005 RDL 958   
    12/15/2005 DMF 627   
    12/15/2005  LRV 013   
    12/15/2005 FVR 292   
    12/15/2005
    12/17/2005 MMN 058   
    12/15/2005  HFZ 301   
    12/15/2005 NZJ 811   
    12/15/2005
    12/16/2005  MXW 342   
    * 12/15/2005
       12/16/2005 LUK 901 Casarae Elliott Anderson 08/28/1983 
    12/15/2005  ETX 264   
    12/15/2005  PHP 043   
    12/16/2005
    12/17/2005  Wisconsin-188 ERC William Bruen  
    12/16/2005 JND 807 Diane Lo Duachong  08/20/1986 
    12/16/2005 FFL 018-City Wide Taxi. Anthony William Decarlo;
    James Arthur Chevre 12/01/1971


    10/12/1933 2602 2nd Ave, No. St. Paul, MN55109
    * 12/16/2005 GUJ 062- Currently SUSPENDED Carthell Lamont Smith;
    Michael Conrad Doffing, Jr. 10/16/1978

    01/22/1983 8260 W. River Rd., Brooklyn Park, MN 55444

    (651) 734-1992

    12/16/2005
    12/20/2005  PRJ 822   
    12/16/2005 JNC 351-Almost hit Pedestrian.   
    * 12/16/2005  HEK 570-Currently SUSPENDED Shauna Renea Lewis 04/06/1983 1854 Beebe RD. #334, Maplewood, MN 55109
    12/16/2005 MHT 431 Alfredo Gayton Capetillo 08/12/1972 
    12/16/2005  KBM 174   
    12/16/2005 PTU 738   
    12/16/2005 PWL 257   
    12/16/2005 NCY 043   
    12/16/2005 EEU 369 Kaipo Lee 04/15/1981 737 Jessamine Ave E St Paul MN 551062505
    (651) 776-8826
    12/16/2005 NXZ 529   
    12/16/2005 MXG 842 Jose Manuel Baez 07/06/1971 
     
    12/16/2005 KWW 343   
    12/16/2005 Wisconsin-919 JZV   
    12/16/2005 GYT 407   
    12/16/2005 NGX 105   
    12/16/2005 CPV 658 Lee Thao 05/02/1959 Case Av St Paul MN 551063703
    * 12/16/2005 EPU 286 Mark Anthony Solis, Jr. 02/15/1984 
    * 12/16/2005 MXZ 730 Jose Peraza;
    Manuel Dejesus Villeda 02/02/1965;
    02/26/1934 
    1045 Charlton St West ST Paul MN 551181220
    (651) 455-9721
    12/16/2005 JFT 709   
    12/16/2005 RFP 688   
    * 12/16/2005
       12/17/2005  KXT 455 Andre Charles Wesley 06/30/1961 1025 York Ave 10 St Paul MN 551063977
    (651) 330-2365
        
    12/16/2005 NXC 020   
    12/16/2005  NXV 520-Pass through.   
    12/16/2005 HKX 183   
    * 12/16/2005 LFY 570 Jeffrey Roland Hehn 03/28/1966 2365 Hillwood Dr., Maplewood, MN 55119
    12/16/2005 PUJ 947   
    12/16/2005 LMT 545   
    * 12/16/2005  CRY 265 Jennie Michelle Gorbunow 01/04/1980 
    12/16/2005 PHM 286   
    12/16/2005
    12/16/2005 PXY 681-No front plate.   
    * 12/16/2005 JUR 355 Nickyia Laverne Cogshell 02/01/1973 
    12/16/2005  KHD 193   
    12/16/2005 DKJ 213   
    12/16/2005 NDT 887   
    12/16/2005 FPL 820   
    12/16/2005 JWJ 757   
    12/16/2005 MEZ 538   
    * 12/16/2005  DMM 533-Currently SUSPENDED Liliana Vazquezsuao;
    Victor Manuel  Cardona 05/10/1985;

    12/15/1947 

    53 Atwater St., St. Paul, MN 55117
    * 12/16/2005  MFS 965 Silvia Jeanneth Cardona 09/25/1974 1503 Hazelwood St., St. Paul, MN 55106
    12/16/2005  MLA 603   
        
    12/16/2005 JKN 787   
    DATE of Speeding

    * Denotes prior moving violations.  MN License Plate #  NAME  Date of Birth  Address
    12/17/2005 DENIZ Sergio E. Deniz 01/30/1981 2011 Arkwright St Maplewood MN 551172036
    (651) 330-1546
    12/17/2005  LXF 287   
    12/17/2005  CSC 474   
    12/17/2005  GCF 286   
    * 12/17/2005 LFZ 616 Thomas Andrew Blakstad;
    Crystall Lee Tusa 07/14/1982;


    05/31/1984 
    12/17/2005  NZV 736 Nackia Maurine Galbreath 09/01/1982 
    12/17/2005 JTZ 995   
    12/17/2005 NPP 291   
        
    * 12/17/2005  KCF 909-Almost hit pedestrian. James Robert Woller 10/07/1967  741 Sims Ave St Paul MN 551063714
    (651) 207-8729
    12/17/2005 PKP 443   
    12/17/2005 NSO 726   
    12/17/2005
    12/17/2005  GFG 721   
    12/17/2005 JHW 640 Daniel Evert Olson 11/02/1942 
    12/17/2005 RKK 799   
    12/17/2005 UOO89   
    12/17/2005
    12/17/2005  FEN 294 Shannon Michael Tabbert 01/18/1979 
    12/17/2005 MTG 245   
    12/17/2005 JGT 568   
    * 12/17/2005 EZB 544 Raymond Lee Saul 02/31/1949 1061 Reaney, St. Paul, MN 55106
    12/17/2005 JTZ 995-Illegal dumping of trash/Going to liquor store.   
    12/17/2005  NMS 264-Food shelf delivery.   
    12/17/2005 DYE 655   
    12/17/2005 DVW 375-Pass through.   
    * 12/17/2005  NDV 333 Larry Danal Harris 05/18/1956 1296 West 7th St., #1, St. Paul, MN 55102
    12/17/2005 PHT 223   
    12/17/2005
    12/20/2005  MTG 271 Paul Gary Gillen 09/09/1956 9300 Tewsbury Gate N Maple Grove MN 553111137
    (763) 416-2201
    12/17/2005 NYU 640 Juan Alvarez Marichal 04/13/1963 
    * 12/19/2005
       12/20/2005  CGB 817-Currently SUSPENDED John Marshall MacAfee 10/18/1970 1247 St. Anthony #1309 St. Paul, MN 55101
    12/19/2005 HCE 614   
    12/19/2005 Wisconsin-490 DFK Nichole A. Marcyan 12/15/1980 
    * 12/19/2005  NGZ 467 Dan Quy Nguyen 09/20/1962 9417 Preserve Tr., Woodbury, MN 55125
    12/19/2005 Wisconsin-144 JXF   
    12/19/2005 DSD 369-Food shelf delivery/fail to yield pedestrian.   
    12/19/2005 PXT 195-Food shelf delivery/fail to yield pedestrian.   
    12/19/2005  KZY 305-Food shelf delivery/fail to yield pedestrian.   
    12/19/2005 CTN 062   
    12/19/2005  JT 053   
    12/19/2005 MLP 360   
        
    12/20/2005 LSL 999   
    12/20/2005 Wisconsin-455 JNS   
    12/20/2005 WT7403-Pass through to other block/814 Jessamine Ave E   
    12/20/2005 KZZ 293-Food shelf delivery. Anthony August Holte 10/14/1974 
    12/20/2005  PHT 514 Christopher Jon Vallant 05/10/1984 
    * 12/20/2005 LUT 346 Kim Yang 02/29/1980 
    12/20/2005 FYS 461   
    12/20/2005  PYB 425   
    12/20/2005 LRT 881   
    12/20/2005  ENU 218   
    12/20/2005 NKK 407-Almost hit the Vue’s backing out of garage.   
    12/20/2005  DOM 480   
    12/20/2005 RGK 118   
    12/20/2005  DBZ 192   
    12/20/2005 DAJ 460   
    12/20/2005  GUA 642   
    12/20/2005 KXB 359 Janet Latate Washington 09/17/1980 942 E 6 St 2 St Paul MN 551064506
    (651) 702-4149
    12/20/2005  MLP 249   
    * 12/20/2005 HWZ 344 Karen Kaye Edens 08/04/1944 
        
        
        
        
        
      
      Operation: Save Our Streets Neighborhood Safety Project.

    Winter traffic count for December 8, 2005-December 20, 2005 for the alleyway traffic between Arcade St. and Mendota Ave. to the Walfoort Liquor store between Jessamine and Magnolia Avenues.
     
     

     

     

                                             Memorandum

    Date: 8/15/2006
    Time: 11:53 AM

    RE: Save Our Streets Neighborhood Project Traffic Summer Count Records.

    Dear Monica:

    I have only counted traffic that crosses my path adjoining to my property and not including the turnaround at the end of the alley next to Walfoort Liquor store.

    This summer, car and foot traffic doubled. I fear, as I stated in my letters posted to the City Council and its proper departments, that without proper and consistent traffic enforcement this problem will continue in strength. We already had incidences of property damage and rising criminal nuisances. These are the facts of my current observations that I have recorded for you:

    •         Summer weekdays before 6:00 PM, I have counted an average of 50+ cars rushing down the alleyway.
    •         Summer weekdays from 6:00 PM until 8:00 PM, I have counted an average of 42+ cars rushing to Walfoort Liquor; especially nearing closing time.
    •         Summer weekends of Fridays and Saturdays from 6:00 PM until 10:00 PM, I have counted an average of 93+ cars rushing down the alleyway.
    •         Other than speeding, many other crimes associate with Walfoort Liquor store; that is, Drivers without licenses, some drivers with active arrest warrants, muggings, thefts, and illegal dumping of trash going to and coming from Walfoort Liquor store.

    In my summer estimations, we have an average of 554+ cars of nonresidents violating traffic and legislative statutes in our neighborhood every week. This is an increase of 194+ cars a week during the summer. I do not know of any residential alleyways with this volume of traffic seen in our backyard. This is a continuing safety concern that must have a permanent solution before any more loss of property or life.

    Please contact me again and I will continue this safety enforcement project in the summer when school allows me the time. I will be at the Eastside Neighborhood Rally tomorrow at Trinity Lutheran Mission House at 10:30 AM.

     

    CC: File, District 5 Planning Council, Dan Bostrom with Ward 6, St. Paul Police Department: Payne-Arcade Enforcement, Monica Beeman with City of St. Paul Traffic Engineering Department.
     
     
     Shannon Wadding
    Paralegal-Legal Advocate
    Familiar with Constitutional, Juvenile, Criminal, Civil, Family, Probate, Conciliation, Landowner & Tenant Rights.
     
     __________________________ 
    8/9/2006

    Dear Hmong-American Partnership:

    “When compassion is lacking, people become destructive and insensitive because people ignore the foresight of our actions on the well-being of others”—Dali Lama.

    There was an incident yesterday at the City Park at Mendota Ave. and Magnolia Ave. involving many Hmong juvenile males fighting with other neighborhood children, in which the police arrested several juveniles.

    For the past three years, some people living in this neighborhood feel threatened or ignored from the Hmong community. Many of the East Side Hmong neighbors are turning into individualists, or becoming more xenophobic in their cultural community, and ignoring the ideas of their social connections with others for being a “good neighbor.” Many Hmong juveniles behave as a gang for promoting their violent policy of “No niggers allowed in our park,” or excluding other cultures from using City property.

    Please, people must learn to discard useless ideologies, and use a comparative, new cultural perspective to include everyone’s story for a collective American history. Your help in promoting equitable social services and multicultural education may reduce some of the racism, the feelings of powerlessness, and the fighting among one another.

    I spoke on the phone this morning with the St. Paul Parks & Recreation operations manager, Rich Lallier (651) 632-2402. He commented about the futility of picking up hazardous litter in the park.

    St. Paul Parks & Recreation propose to replace the field with community gardens so the Hmong elders would find favor of the youth to stop their bad behaviors and watching the neighborhood for drug dealers. I agree that this proposal will benefit the neighborhood.

    Please contact me if you have any questions.

    Sincerely,
    Mr. Shannon Wadding
    Paralegal, Neighborhood Watch

    CC: File, Leslie McMurray at District 5 Planning Council, Dan Bostrom at Ward 6, St. Paul Police, Payne-Phalen Enforcement Unit.

    reply to Brighan
    Brighan  

    St. Paul's Save our Streets neighborhood project.

    11/20/2005

    Dear Council Members, Distinguished guests and Neighbors:

    The question I ask is, Do the needs of human life outweigh our tax dollars?

    I witnessed for the past years the problems I have written in the flyer, http://operation-save-our-streets-neighborhood-project.app-brighan-1.aidpage.com/operation-save-our-streets-neighborhood-project/.

    The main issue this evening is the high-speed traffic in the alleyway to Walfoort Liquor. My neighbors and I tried to curb the traffic by our presence and telling nonresidents of the traffic laws with their ignoring of our actions when passing through the alley. Tonight, I am giving the City proper notice on record of the dangers to our property and personal safety connected to the businesses on the alley between Magnolia and Jessamine Avenues. We need to close off the alley, install speed bumps, or make it undesirable for nonresidents to traverse the alley near our homes.

    History shows the City’s plan outweighs the needs of the neighborhood. There are precedents when people tried to stop unnecessary traffic and the evaluation plan already conducted in the neighborhood. Don Telin of 835 Magnolia Avenue states, “We have tried to stop people in the neighborhood since the 1970’s. The City received complaints and they did their traffic studies with nothing done to solve the problem [because of discretionary immunity].” The result is the City is lucky that people did not suffer serious injuries or property damage since giving notice to the City in the 1970’s.

    Today, the City will incur civil liability, God forbid if someone injures or kills a child or damages property because the City of St. Paul does not enforce the Traffic statutes or by correcting the problem permanently. I will cite the authoritive cases of Nusbaum v. Blue Earth Co., 422 N.W. 2d 713 (Minn. Ct. App., 2004); Minn. §466.01 (2004) (The City must protect its citizens from harm that is able to cure-quoting  Hansen v. City of St. Paul, 214 N.W. 2d 346 (Minn., 1974) (Constructive notice given to the City of public safety hazards of stray dogs running loose and biting people)).

    The City will not have the defense of discretionary immunity from liability because of policy decisions about public finances, impact, or planning ruled in Nguyen v. Nguyen, 565 N.W. 2d 721 (1997), which relies on Minn. § 466.02 (1976) and Minn. § 466.03, Subd. 6 (2002), (Discretionary acts for investigative planning or fiscal determinations).

    In this case, discretionary immunity from torts [Civil Lawsuit] does not apply. Minn. § 466.03, Subd. 5 (2002) is an exception that forbids immunity from tort liability for any injuries suffered or personal property damage (Section 466.03, Subd. 8 (2002)) after already given the City notice of the public safety issues and the City’s failure to enforce legislative traffic statutes.

    Therefore, the Court can construe liability when the City failed to enforce mandated public safety statutes and the City Council can fail in their claims that discretionary immunity applies because of planning. Consult with an attorney before taking action.

    Solutions that I present tonight are cutting the alleyway off from the businesses to the rest of the neighborhood. Examples of local precedent’s are Forest and Orange is a dead-end residential alley. Hyacinth and Wheelock Parkway has blocked off traffic except for emergency traffic. Magnolia and Arcade Street at the Hmong-American Partnership cuts the alleyway with a one-way sign.

    Another solution is to reform the alleyway with speed bumps designed to allow the water flow into the storm sewers. Or;

    Volunteers armed with radar guns can rotate and record license plates with the speed driven and warning notices delivered to the offender of their possible liabilities. If the City fails the neighborhood, then the next election will reflect the differences of opinions.

    One neighbor on the 800 block is a paralegal and offers to remind the public the following:

    “The Minnesota Criminal statutes and Traffic laws of 2005 state:

     **Minn. § 169.14, Subd. 1. (1997). Duty to drive with care. No person shall drive a vehicle on a highway [roadway is defined as a highway, §169.01, subd. 31] at a speed greater than is reasonable for becoming and remaining aware of the actual and potential hazards then existing on the highway and must use due care in operating a motor vehicle. In every event speed shall be so restricted as may be necessary to avoid colliding with any person, vehicle or other conveyance on or entering the highway in compliance with legal requirements and the duty of all persons to use due care.

    **Minn. § 169.01, Subd. 67 (2000). Alleyway. “Alleyway” means a private or public passage or way located in a municipality  and which (1) is less than the usual width of a street (2) may be open to but is not designed primarily for general vehicular traffic (3) intersects or opens to a street, and (4) is primarily used for the ingress and egress or other convenience of two or more owners of abutting real properties.

    ** Minn. § 169.14, Subd. 5c. (2003). Speed zoning in alleyway. Local authorities may regulate speed limits for alleyways as defined in section 169.01 based on their own engineering and traffic investigations. Alleyway speed limits established at other than ten miles an hour shall be effective when proper signs are posted.”

    The regulated speed for our alley is 10 MILES AN HOUR.

    Therefore, the alleyway belongs to the residents of 800-block close to Walfoort Liquor store and excessive speeds, drunk driving, littering, and criminal activity associated with nonresident patrons endanger our property and children of the 800 block neighborhood.

    The businesses on Arcade Street have an agreement [a promise to avoid from becoming a nuisance] with the neighborhood or have penalties imposed on the business.

    If you have complaints, solutions, or extra comments to share about enforcement of unwanted traffic and criminal activity associated with nonresidents abusing the alleyway and our property, please respond by writing or calling to:

    Dan Bostrom, Council President Ward 6: (651) 266-8660
    Scott Renstrom, Legislative Aide to Dan Bostrom: (651) 266-8661.
    E-Mail: ward6@ci.stpaul.mn.us

    Leslie McMurray with District 5: (651) 774-5234. Her e-mail is: d5-director@visi.com

    Write to: City Council Offices        
                    310 City Hall
                    15 W Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul, MN  55102                                                 

    12/8/2005

    Dear Honorable Citizens:
     
    Thank you all for your response at the December 6, 2005 CPED meeting on this alleyway issue.
     
    Monica Beeman is working with me in resolving the issues of high-speed traffic in the alleyway connected to Walfoort Liquor store. She will be doing her traffic count this winter and again in the summer. I, myself, will collect license plate information from offending parties.
     
    The issue now is continued enforcement of mandated traffic statutes in the neighborhood and to teach others of the dangers of pedestrian and property damage liabilities and its legalities.
     
    However, I lost some sleep in thinking about how the City is liable for tort actions for injuries or personal property damage resulting from the City's lack of remedy to cure the problems once given the notice to resolve the issues.
     
    I am also disheartened to imagine that impoverished absentee landowners and homeowners must pay up front out of personal pockets for any traffic signage or devices to be placed on City alleyways or property. Would it not be more difficult to obtain money and signatures for the petition from absentee landowners? Also, what about people such as myself lacking funds to pay for this needed project; resulting from the lack of foresight of the City of St. Paul?
     
    I thought the City has the responsibility to protect its own citizens under public safety statutes. If not, where can we apply for a foundation grant to pay for traffic devices installed whereas the City of St. Paul is supposed to be responsible?
     
    I would like to ask the aid of any Legislative Official in helping to untangle this web of bureaucracy in saving our citizens and property.
     
    Below is a copy of the e-mail from Monica Beeman and Shannon Wadding for the State Legislature and Attorneys to mull it over. I request help in this matter for a successful resolution. I have posted my letter and notice on http://aidpage.com in hopes of finding charitable funding or advice.
     
    Thank you for your help and concern.
    ***************************

    Bob,
     
    Last night, December 6, 2005, I attended the Payne Phalen District 5 Planning Council as the Public Works representative to hear and help address the concerns voiced by Shannon Wadding regarding traffic in the alley directly behind his house, bounded by Arcade, Mendota, Jessamine and Magnolia.,  Mr. Wadding and one other neighbor spoke to District 5 about speeding in the alley, a high volume of traffic using the alley including those he thinks that are cutting through the alley, and many poor driving behaviors/activities.  Much of the traffic activities he traces back to the Walfoort liquor store, which has access to the alley and fronts on Arcade. He is concerned with safety to children and property in the neighborhood.
     
    I did not have any speed or volume information to share with the group but suggested that both pieces of information would be helpful in determining the best course of action and the level of concerns. Unfortunately, with winter conditions automated data collection is difficult so I did agree to collecting data in the alley from 6-8pm on a week night to see what conditions are out there. 
     
    I explained that Public Works does regularly address such concerns in alleys and has a petitioning process where by neighbors can work together, agree on an approach, collect signatures and install signs or other devices to address different traffic issues. The cost of the signs and other devices are the responsibility of the abutting property owners, and is collected up front (not assessed) before installation. I also requested that Mr. Wadding call so that we might speak more specifically to concerns and observations he has made.
     
    We spoke this morning. He and I both had an opportunity to mill over what was said and might be added. I spoke very frankly to Mr. Wadding as I grew up living in north Minneapolis behind a liquor store with our garage abutting the alley connected to the liquor store parking lot. As a kid I saw many of the things he was trying to describe including people who regularly used the store who were heavily inebriated traveling the alley to avoid city streets. As a result my suggestion is this. No amount of signs or devices can be fully effective if the underlying issue is alcohol, drugs or crime, so, we should: 
    • collect the initial data we need,
    • then try to do some heavy enforcement to address the underlying issue
    • then we can regroup and see what can be done for alley traffic with signs and devices knowing that all require petitioning for overall agreement and have an associated cost to bear. 
    I told Mr. Wadding I would also try to look at what might be worked out in cooperation with the liquor store that could reduce the cost burden or restriction to residents but that might address the issue just in a different manner.

    Monica M. Beeman, PE
    City of St Paul
    Department of Public Works
    Traffic Engineering
    800 City Hall Annex
    25 West Fourth Street
    Saint Paul, MN  55102-1660
    (651) 266-6214


    "You must be the change you wish to see in the world"  Gandhi
    _______________________

                                              Memorandum

    Date: 12/7/2005
    Time: 9:35-10:35 AM

    RE: Telephone conversation about the neighborhood alleyway safety and traffic with St. Paul Traffic Engineer, Monica M. Beeman and Shannon Wadding (resident).


    Dear Monica:

    Thank you for the City apology and your response to the concerns of our neighborhood safety. I tried to enlist the aid of City government and neighborhood organizations for the longest time for preventive action.

    We have strong-arm robberies, thefts, prostitution, drug dealing, reckless driving, trash, and nuisances from nonresident foot and automobile traffic threatening the neighborhood public safety and peace. According to the phone call this morning, we agree the neighborhood needs a police officer to deter crimes related to the foot and automobile traffic with the business “Fronts” around and including Walfoort Liquor store. This is a continuing problem and now more important because of new families with naive, younger children are moving into the neighborhood.

    However, as a good citizen, I must remind the City of St. Paul that it has constructive notice to enforce these Minnesota Legislative Traffic Statutes, section 169.14, Subd. 1 (1997)- Duty of care when driving, and Subd. 2 (6) (2003), Speed zoning -residential alleyways are 10 miles an hour. Any studies or planning of this issue does not resolve the City of any liabilities for personal or property damage.  Nusbaum v. Blue Earth Co., 422 N.W. 2d 713 (Minn. Ct. App., 2004); M.S.A. §466.01 (2004) (The City must protect its citizens from harm that is able to cure-quoting  Hansen v. City of St. Paul, 214 N.W. 2d 346 (Minn., 1974) (Constructive notice given to the City of public safety hazards of stray dogs running loose and biting people)). The neighborhood residents adjoining the alleyway are aware that they must contact an attorney before moving on any legal action against the City of St. Paul.

    Our police officers can use the latter traffic laws and Minnesota Statutes Annotated, section 169.13, Subd. 1 (1984), Reckless driving; and Subd. 2, Careless driving (1984) (Speeding in a residential alleyway) to issue drivers traffic violation citations. These traffic violations can construe probable cause to detain the driver for further investigation of public safety and statute violations. In doing so, we agree this action may resolve some of the traffic issues to Walfoort Liquor store.

    I think, and I hope that this crime prevention measure of using law enforcement presence in traffic enforcement “stings” in the winter and summer will work. However, complacency and habit is a hard teacher and this fact, I fear, will only be a temporary solution and the problems returning later. I do hope that I am wrong, but I stood outside with my neighbors and watched the neighborhood since 1999 and I fear the revolving renters and nonresident citizens will need consistent traffic enforcement.

    At the CPED neighborhood meeting you have stated that no traffic reports are existing. However, I did not think that my neighbor, Don Telmin of 835 Jessamine Ave E, was in any way deceitful to me. Don lived in this neighborhood since the 1970’s. In criminal law, after 15 years, Court clerks destroy old records for storage concerns. We agree that this is the same administrative action to why the Traffic Engineering Department could not find any records of traffic studies. The traffic may decrease during the winter months, but I would not bet on this assumption. During the week from 6-8 PM, Friday and Saturday from 12:00-10:00 PM is common for traffic violations in the alley. However, speeding occurs at all hours of any day in the alleyway.

    In conclusion, I fear that if the City becomes involved in a civil action our property taxes will rise, again, to cover any compensatory judgments. I do not want to see anybody harmed or lose property in this impoverished neighborhood. Many absentee landowners have neglected properties and they are collecting Section 8 benefits from their renters. They do not care about rising property taxes because welfare picks up the rest of the rent, while other homeowners are struggling to keep their homes.

    The owner of Walfoort Liquor is a temperamental man and he bans service to neighbors that criticize about these problems. I think he fears about losing his store by violating any more laws. There is a tough balance between tort actions by injured people in the alley and the tax revenues gained by the City of St. Paul. All it takes is one death or collision with personal property to set the legal wheels in motion.

    Thank you for your time and interest spent in finding a permanent solution into this matter of our need to enforce mandated traffic statutes in the alleyway between Arcade and Mendota Avenues. I will continue to work with the City of St. Paul to find a permanent solution, which is still the idea of speed bumps or closing off the alley.

    I would like to have a copy of your telephone conversation report sent to the District 5 Planning Council for clarity.

    Sincerely,

     

    Shannon Wadding
    846 Jessamine Ave E
    St. Paul, MN  55106-2612

    CC: File
            The Neighborhood Block Watch, Ward 5&6; Council Member Dan Bostrom 
            with Ward 6; Leslie McMurray with District 5; Mayor of Saint Paul.

    Any charitable grants and donations are greatly appreciated and I would ask for any help or informative advice directed towards: 

    Monica M. Beeman, PE
    City of St Paul
    Department of Public Works
    Traffic Engineering
    800 City Hall Annex
    25 West Fourth Street
    Saint Paul, MN  55102-1660
    (651) 266-6214

    *********************

                                                            MEMORANDUM

    (There are Three Pages to this Memorandum).


    RE: Saint Paul Traffic Engineering Department placed a traffic-counter in the alleyway but, Would it have an accurate traffic count?   


    January 24, 2006


    Today, 01/24/2006, my neighbor told me that he witnessed a man in a white truck placing the traffic-counter in the alleyway.

    On January 23, 2006, I faced a shorthaired blonde, Caucasian man with clear blue eyes, weighing around 210 lbs. He asked me strange questions and that he knew me as the paralegal for “Save Our Streets.” The only way he knew was from the Internet postings, from the Traffic Department, or law enforcement.

    The man dressed in a new jogging outfit stood out from the neighborhood and I thought he was either the police or somebody bound for trouble. He commented about his observation there is not any distinct traffic lately.

    I answered the “word” got around and people are behaving themselves so far, and it will get worse in the summer, in which his reply was—“It is almost summer out!” This is my memory of what the traffic counter jogged.

    I have taken photos below of the pathways and the traffic counter on 1/25/2006. (See Attached Pictures #A-C). I noticed the counter and the sensors stretched across the alley (Picture #A). In addition, I want your attention to the vehicles bypassing around the sensors and trespassing onto personal property (Picture #A & B).

    This response concerns me with questions:
    • What standards of administration law does the City Traffic Engineer follow?
    •  How long will the Saint Paul Traffic Department be recording the alleyway traffic data?
    •  Will the City of St. Paul Traffic Department consider the January 24-27, 2006 traffic count as the summer traffic study?
    •  Will the traffic count continue during the summer months when people are racing to Walfoort liquor store to quench their thirst with a buzz?
    •  Does anyone value or devalue the 800-block neighborhood concern of threats to children and property? Feedback is helpful.
     
    Last winter’s traffic count by the Traffic Engineering Department on January 20, 2006 lasted for a single evening of observation with a faulty radar gun. Then, I posted my thirteen days of observations on the web and a copy given to the Saint Paul Payne & Arcade Enforcement Unit. I did not witness any increased presence of traffic enforcement in the back alleyway during the rush hours for Walfoort liquor store. However, there is a strong police presence on Arcade, Maryland, and 7th Avenue lately.

    I am concerned about any enforcement action of the decades-old alleyway traffic nuisances. I noticed the traffic-counter gone on noon of Friday, January 27, 2006. I know different City departments are aware of these traffic patterns. The forty-eight hour traffic count did not count traffic associated with the most important hours of Walfoort Liquor; namely, Fridays and Saturday evenings, and especially on the first of the month. These are the riskiest times to public safety.

    Shannon Wadding,
    Paralegal AS
    Save Our Streets Neighborhood Project


    Picture #A

    Picture #B
     
    Picture #C

     

     

    4/26/2006

          To the authorities of the City of St. Paul:

          Below are some photos of property damage to 847 Magnolia E., St. Paul, MN caused by reckless driving in the alleyway sometime after 10:00 PM on 4/25/2006. I am concerned about the police pursuing a stolen vehicle without apprehending the perpetrator. Please at what cost does selective law enforcement provide if there is disregard for safety or the lack of police presence in this infamous alleyway? The police and I are aware that people covertly use the alleyways to hide from law enforcement. I commend the efforts of St. Paul’s law enforcement officers.

          However, on 11/20/2005, I gave constructive notice at the District 5 Planning Council meeting about the dangerous traffic and criminal activity in the alleyway bound by Mendota and Arcade Street between East Jessamine and Magnolia Avenues. The City will incur civil liability when there is property damage, injury, or death because the City of St. Paul does not enforce nor comply with the traffic statutes by correcting the criminal nuisances permanently. 
         Again, I must caution the City of St. Paul of its hazards citing the legal case of Nusbaum v. Blue Earth Co., 422 N.W. 2d 713 (Minn. Ct. App., 2004); Minn. §466.01, in which the City must protect its citizens from harm that is able to cure (quoting  Hansen v. City of St. Paul, 214 N.W. 2d 346 (Minn., 1974) constructive notice given to the City of public safety hazards of stray dogs running loose and biting people)).

         The City will not have the defense of discretionary immunity from liability ruled in Nguyen v. Nguyen, 565 N.W. 2d 721, which relies on Minn. § 466.02 and Minn. § 466.03, Subd. 6. (Discretionary acts for investigative planning or fiscal determinations).

         Here, discretionary immunity from torts does not apply. M.S.A. § 466.03, Subd. 5, is an exception that forbids immunity from tort liability for any injuries suffered or personal property damage (Section 466.03, Subd. 8) after already given the City notice of the public safety issues and the City’s failure to enforce legislative traffic and criminal statutes.

        Therefore, the Court can construe liability when the City failed to enforce mandated public safety statutes and the City Council can fail in their claims that discretionary immunity applies. Please consult with an attorney about the current laws.

    Thank you.

    Shannon Wadding
    846 Jessamine Ave E
    Neighborhood Watch
    wadding@usfamily.net
     
     
      Skid marks leading into damaged property.
     ***********************

    Dear Shannon:
     
    We hope you are continuing to communicate with Monica Beeman of Traffic Engineering on the traffic speeding issue and possible solutions. As we all discussed, Ms. Beeman will be invited back to a CPED Land Use meeting to discuss findings and possible solutions. At the neighborhood's request, it made sense that a traffic study be conducted over the summer months when people report that the problem increases.  We'd advanced the idea of putting out lawn signs in the alleyway with traffic calming messages. This requires the agreement of people on your block. Not much enthusiasm was registered for this idea.  If you feel this would be helpful, please ask your neighbors if they are willing to post a sign and we'll get some printed up for your alley.
     
    Was a police report filed on the incident that you photographed? If you have the number that would be helpful. Feel free to contact me at any time at 774-5234.  I am copying A.L. Brown who is chair of District Five's Community Planning and Economic Development Committee and Monica Beeman, who you have worked with previously.  Thank you for your concern about safety in our neighborhoods.
     
    Leslie McMurray
    Executive Director/Organizer

    District 5 Planning Council

    1014 Payne Avenue

    Saint Paul, Minnesota 55101 

     

    d5-director@visi.com

     

    Phone: (651) 774-5234

    Fax: (651) 774-9745

    www.neighborhoodlink.com/stpaul/payne-phalen

     

    To improve our Payne Phalen District Five neighborhoods by engaging, educating and empowering all residents in our diverse community.

    .

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Scott Renstrom [mailto:Scott.Renstrom@ci.stpaul.mn.us]
    Sent: Friday, July 28, 2006 11:28 AM
    To: wadding
    Cc: Beese, Bruce; Choi, John; Martinez, Bill; McMurray, Leslie
    Subject: Re: In need of traffic enforcement in our alleyway.


    Dear Mr. Wadding,
     
    I've taken the liberty of forwarding all three of your e-mails to our City Attorney's Office for review.  With that in mind, I encourage you to continue working with and through District 5 and the Saint Paul Public Works, and Police Departments on the  steps you've outlined to help resolve the situation in your alley.
     
    If you feel that your property was damaged as a result of the City's actions or inactions, please contact our Citizen Service Office at 266-8989 and request a claims form.  Our staff will review your request and act accordingly.
     
    If this office can be of further assistance, please don't hesitate to contact us.
     
    Respectfully yours,
     
    Scott Renstrom
    Legislative Aide to Councilmember Bostrom

     

    reply to Brighan
    Brighan  

    Brighan

    Accomplished Phi Theta Kappa pre-law student graduated from an American Bar Association approved college at Inver Hills Community College and Metropolitan State University. I am proficient in all areas related to the practice of pre-law for supporting legal staff and attorneys.

    I am trained in multiple areas of pre-law; Criminal, Domestic Relations, Probate, Business, Contract, Real Estate, Constitution, Juvenile, Litigation, Civil, Family, Conciliation, and Landowner & Tenant Rights.

    I am looking for help in employment and college tuition in St. Paul, MN. I want to help others within the local and global communities in helping myself to find my way to law school.

    I have two children in need of support by their father to find work. I appreciate any attorneys in the Twin Cities to contact me at wadding@usfamily.net. Please do not e-mail me ridiculous things, such as penis enhancement pills.

           My civic duty is defending human rights, and curbing overzealous, law enforcement practices. My legal education and the internship with the Ramsey County Public Defenders Office provide the tools for upholding constitutional rights for the accused and their victims. I went to Metropolitan State University to expand my knowledge of conscientious thinking for needy individuals. I can make a difference by communicating their civic responsibilities through the continuing criminal, procedural laws and social education. People must learn to correlate their behavior patterns together as a responsible, unified community.
           My lifelong social and legal education goals will benefit society as well as me. I created my Legal Advocacy & Criminal Justice Degree, and I want to apply it towards the disadvantaged population. Many people are ignorant of the laws, and nobody is above the law. There is no excusable defense of ignorance when law enforcement intrudes on civil liberties without society intervening. Americans must practice their liberties without the government’s interference of exaggerated fears about security and policy. For example, the Patriot Act is dividing America by eroding the First, Fourth, and Fifth Amendment rights. The present political environment is remindful of the fascist qualities of J. Edgar Hoover’s administration in the 1950s, and Hitler’s in 1930s Germany. People must remember the US Constitution is a contract among the federal government reserving the power of its citizens to govern their elected representatives.
           The political divisions among Americans and their policies give the elected representatives the misperceived power over their voters. For example, educated people must take the civic accountability and initiative for teaching the younger generations of the misguided nature of American pop culture. Unresolved social problems reveal itself as a negative act of aggression looking for direction, and the national consensus wants misguided juveniles treated as adults and imprisoned. This “Idea of shame” existed during the Dark Ages with negative results. Thus, responsible people active in local politics must address America’s problems for solutions by organizing and educating the community.    
            My participation in politics, law, and community development is my way of learning for completing my Individualized Bachelor Degree. For example, I like to share my experiences of the volunteer project, Save Our Streets. It is a creative, continuing, neighborhood initiative for reducing criminal nuisances in the residential, alleyway connected to Walfoort Liquor store. The project posted on the web page is the result of my educational experiences and vocational goals for helping the public. More information of this project is at http://aidpage.com with comments and information. I even took part in Campus Camp Wellstone to learn about political organizing and leadership skills. I am hoping to draw the attention of attorneys employing my search for leading a better community.
            In conclusion, I am working to improve my social position and the community where I live. I am realizing the positive reinforcement from the faculty and administration offering me the chance for success. The Legal Advocacy & Criminal Justice Degree will provide me the skills for reaching my financial, educational, and self-realization goals. Thank you.

    Here is a link for the St. Paul's Eastside Rallies at http://www.2fewcops.com/index.htm.
     

    reply to Brighan
    litehouse630  

    litehouse630

      Born again Christian,Going through a rough storm, Praying for God to step in and calm the waves, And guide me to safety!!!

      I've held several good jobs, that have lasted just long enough to make me think I'm finally getting a hold on things... Then my health problems flair up, and I wind up losing what I've got built up.

      I'm one of those people who has fallen between the cracks of government assistance for one reason, or another.

      I own the mobile home that we need to relocate, but the owner of the park  dosen't want us in it while we try to find another place for it, and look for a place to stay.

      Sorry to sound so sobb storyish. I just beleive in telling the truth, even though it seem to get me in more trouble than streching, or leaving something out of it.

    reply to litehouse630