Sunday, December 19, 2010

Man shoots himself unloading handgun

A  local man was hospitalized after accidentally shooting himself while unloading his handgun on Wednesday.

According to a press release sent by the Maricopa Police Department, the man, an unidentified 25-year-old who lives on the 180000 block of N. Greenway Drive, was shot in the lower section of his arm while unloading his .45-caliber handgun.

The Maricopa Fire Department treated the man at his home, and he was taken later to a Phoenix area trauma center with non-life threatening injuries.

The department will not seek any criminal charges as a result of the incident.
 
Well..... he did manage to unload at least one round...

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Robbery suspect shot dead by store owner.... GOOD JOB!!!

PHOENIX -- When three men tried to rob a jewelry store this morning, one of the suspects didn't make it out alive, according to Phoenix police.

One of the men was armed and so was the shop owner.

Police said the owner pulled out his own gun and killed one of them, near 43rd Avenue and Indian School Road.

Phoenix police Sgt. Tommy Thompson said the store is owner is OK, but he's shaken up.

"Anytime that an individual is forced to use deadly force, it's not like the movies where you go have lunch. It's a traumatic experience.

The other two suspects got away.


Friday, October 8, 2010

11 Mexican mayors murdered this year

MEXICO CITY - When Gustavo Sánchez became mayor in January of Tancítaro, in the heart of Mexico's drug country, he knew the job made him a target of the violent drug cartels that have been targeting elected officials.

A tae kwon do instructor, he liked to joke that he had assembled a city council full of fighters.

"The fear is always there," he told The Arizona Republic in January. "But if you have courage and a desire to make a contribution, that outweighs the fear."

Last week, Sánchez's body was found by the side of a road, his head bashed in with rocks, his hands tied behind him. There were signs of torture.

He is the 11th mayor slain this year - the fifth since Aug. 16 - as the country's drug cartels tighten their control over rural Mexico. The violence is raising comparisons to war-torn Colombia, where dozens of mayors had to govern in exile during the 1990s after being run out of their towns by leftist guerillas who financed themselves with drug money.

"It's a show of force aimed at generating terror," said René Jiménez Ornelas, a crime expert at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

"By eliminating mayors like they did in Colombia, they can move on to even higher levels of violence."

Some killings may be linked to disputes between mayors and drug lords, or punishment for a mayor suspected of helping federal police, said Dante Haro, a criminology professor at the University of Guadalajara. But other murders may just be aimed at intimidating citizens, he said.

"It's a demonstration," Haro said. "They're carrying out these (killings) to exert pressure."

Murders in Mexico have soared since December 2006, when President Felipe Calderón ordered troops into smuggling hotspots to crack down on the cartels.

Since then, nearly 23,000 people have died in drug-related violence, according to an unofficial tally by the Reforma newspaper.

Until recently, most of the murdered officials have been from little-known villages.

But on Aug. 16, attackers kidnapped and killed the mayor of Santiago, a bedroom community just 15 miles from Monterrey, Mexico's wealthiest city. On Sept. 23, gunmen ambushed and killed the mayor of Doctor González, another Monterrey suburb, while he was driving to his ranch.

Tancítaro, population 26,000, is in the central Mexican state of Michoacán, where major marijuana fields and methamphetamine labs are located. In recent years, a drug gang known as the Familia Michoacana has been seizing control of the state's crime rackets, from prostitution to software piracy.

In December, gunmen kidnapped the fathers of Tancítaro's town administrator and the city council secretary. Within hours, both officials resigned, along with the mayor, the entire city council, two administrators, the police chief and all 60 police officers. The fathers were then released.

The Michoacán governor appointed Sánchez to run the town in January.

At the time, the 38-year-old mayor told The Republic he was concentrating on keeping the town services running and was steering clear of law-enforcement issues. With no town police left, fighting crime was the responsibility of federal police and troops, he said.

He was blunt when asked who ran the town.

"I can't tell you that it's me," he said. "Legally speaking, we're in charge. But no one is exempt from the pressure of those (criminal) groups."

In the weeks before he was killed, Sánchez showed no sign that he felt threatened, said town spokeswoman Marta López Lozano. The mayor had led several group horseback rides to celebrate Mexico's bicentennial and inaugurated a number of street-paving projects.

"I was with him the whole time taking pictures, and everything was totally normal," López said. "We didn't feel in danger."

On Sept. 26, Sánchez and the town's director for agricultural affairs, Rafael Equihua Cervantes, disappeared while driving back to Tancítaro from the nearby town of Apatzingan.

Their bodies were found the next day, next to four large rocks that had been used to kill them.

"Nobody understands why he was killed," López said.

No one has been convicted in any of the 11 murders of mayors this year, and federal police say the motives are unclear.

The killings are "something worrying and reprehensible," Calderón's national security adviser, Alejandro Poiré, said after Sánchez's death. Mexico's Public Safety Secretariat was launching a study to identify at-risk mayors and offer them extra security, he said.

The deaths come as experts are voicing concern about the government's ability to maintain order.

In September, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the situation in Mexico was "looking more and more like Colombia looked 20 years ago," with drug traffickers controlling "certain parts of the country."

To combat lawlessness in small towns, the Calderón administration on Wednesday filed a bill in Congress that would dissolve the country's municipal police and replace them with 32 state police forces.

"Many municipal police . . . are incapable of providing the confidence and the protection you need," Calderón said in a letter to citizens announcing the bill.

In the long term, the violence against town officials may hurt Mexican democracy because many smart and qualified people are afraid to run for office, said Haro, the criminology professor.

"Before, it used to be an attractive job, living on the public payroll," he said. "Now being a town mayor is very difficult, not just because of the economic problems but also this issue of obedience to organized crime."

Getting elected now, he said, "is like winning a tiger in a raffle."







 

 

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Gunfire Breaks Out In Store Parking Lot

PHOENIX -- Phoenix police were on scene of an unusual fight that ended with a shooting.

It happened in the K-Mart parking lot near Interstate 17 and Northern Avenue.

Police said three men got into a fight over bike parts.

At one point a man pulled out a gun and shot another man in the face.

That victim is expected to survive.

Investigators said the shooter took off on a seatless bike.

The third man in the fight also ran off, but police have not called him a suspect.
 
 
Seatless bike?

Monday, September 27, 2010

Never really been, now I sure don't wanna go.

Small-town mayor stoned to death in western Mexico
 
MEXICO CITY, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The mayor of a small town in western Mexico was found on Monday stoned to death in the third attack on a public official in the country in less than a week, local authorities said.

The bodies of Gustavo Sanchez, mayor of Tancitaro in Michoacan state, and an aide were found, officials said.

"It appears they stoned them to death," a source from the local prosecutor's office said on condition of anonymity.

Local media reported that the bodies were found in the back of a flat-bed truck.

There was no immediate indication whether the killings were related to drug violence. More than 29,000 people have been killed in violence between rival drug cartels and between cartels and state security forces since President Felipe Calderon launched his offensive on cartels in 2006.

On Friday, a mayor-elect in northern Chihuahua state was shot in the head and chest by suspected drug hitmen, leaving him in critical condition.

A day earlier, armed men killed the mayor of a town outside Mexico's northern business city of Monterrey.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

PD: Phoenix man shoots teen trying to break into home

PHOENIX - Phoenix police say a homeowner will probably not face charges after he shot a suspect trying to break into his home Tuesday.

Phoenix Police Sgt. Tommy Thompson said there had been two previous attempted break-ins at the home near 51st Avenue and Baseline. In one case the homeowner's wife scared the suspects away as they tried to knock down the door.

Thompson said in Tuesday's incident, the homeowner heard "aggressive" knocking at the front door and went to his bedroom for a gun.

The homeowner told police the suspects were trying to push down the door and as they broke through the homeowner fired his shotgun, striking one of the suspects in the lower back.

The 19-year-old suspect was taken to the hospital with a non-life-threatening injury, according to Thompson. He will face charges in the burglary.

The second suspect was able to get away and was described as wearing a long white t-shirt and black hat.

The 30-year-old homeowner has not been taken into custody and the investigation is ongoing, Thompson said

Friday, September 10, 2010

Fw: Amen bro


Chandler man shoots, kills 2 suspected gang members

The intruder who punched out a Chandler man while stealing beer at a keg party picked the wrong victim.
The man, who had been attempting to defend his wife during the beer theft, had a permit to carry a concealed weapon. Fearing for his life and under attack, he pulled out a gun and fatally shot two men believed by police to be gang members early Sunday morning.
"People in Arizona carry guns," said Detective David Ramer, a Chandler police spokesman. "You better be careful about who you are picking on."
Ramer said police have concluded the shooter, who fears reprisals and whose name is not being released, acted in self-defense and have cleared him of any potential wrongdoing in the shooting deaths.
The names of the two men who were shot to death also have not been released by police.
The shootings occurred early Sunday morning in the 600 block of North Sunland Drive. A group of men showed up as uninvited guests at the keg party, paid a $2 admission fee, then became angry when the organizers started to shut the bash down, Ramer said.
"They thought they weren't getting their money's worth," he said.
The intruders were stealing the beer when they were confronted by a woman who had been attending the party, Ramer said.
After the men started yelling at the woman, her husband attempted to come to her defense and was punched to the ground.
"This guy was punched, he was attacked," Ramer said.
When one of the intruders threatened the man with a gun, he pulled out his own gun and shot the two men to death, Ramer said. Police said they have documents confirming that the men are gang members.
Ramer said the husband showed restraint during the incident and only fired when he was threatened with a gun.
The man involved in the shooting had passed a concealed-weapons course, Ramer said. Although he had a permit, the Arizona Legislature passed a bill earlier this year to allow residents to carry concealed weapons without one.
Chandler police have arrested seven other men and plan to recommend that they be charged not only with robbery but with murder because the slayings occurred during the commission of another crime, Ramer said.

Saturday, August 14, 2010


Phoenix police arrest 3 men suspected of aggravated assault

Three men were arrested on suspicion of aggravated assault after threatening a Phoenix man with a shotgun after his sister broke up with one of them, police said. One man remained on the loose Friday night.
Four men, one armed with a shotgun, went to the victim's apartment near 19th and Glendale avenues and tried to goad him out, said Phoenix police Sgt. Steve Martos. The men had threatened him with a knife earlier in the day and threatened to damage his property earlier this week, Martos said.
The victim, who was inside the apartment with two of his nieces, refused to leave and called 911. When police arrived, the four men ran to a vehicle and drove to a nearby apartment complex, Martos said.
One man was arrested trying to get out of the car, but police set up a perimeter to catch the remaining three. Two more made it to a QuikTrip convenience store down the street, where they hid in the bathroom before employees called 911, Martos said. The fourth suspect was last seen at the complex and had not been found as of 10 p.m.
The two men fled the QuikTrip out a backdoor and into a nearby neighborhood. One was caught on the streets, but another forced his way into a woman's home and kept her from leaving, according to Martos.
A police officer searching the neighborhood saw her through the window and motioned for her to come outside so she could be interviewed. The officer found it suspicious when the woman ignored the officer's request, however, and police entered her home, arresting the man without incident.

Lesson in gun safety takes deadly turn of events in Mesa

PHOENIX – A young mother is dead and her boyfriend is behind bars after police say a lesson in gun safety took a deadly turn of events.

Initially the call came out as a possible suicide but police say the boyfriend changed his story and now they believe he is responsible.

Det. Steve Berry, with the Mesa Police Department, tells 3TV, "He had said that he had been somewhere else inside the home and heard a gunshot."

Police say 20-year-old Sheila Schurz was shot in the upper body although they would not say where or how many times. She was taken to the hospital where she later died.

Now police say her boyfriend, 21-year-old Bernardo Barraza is to blame.

Berry explains, "Some things in the story as to how it all occurred after she was transported away didn't seem to add up."

Police say Barraza gave them misleading information first claiming Schurz shot herself but then later changing his story.

Berry says, "They had recently purchased the handgun and he had apparently fallen asleep with it or something like that. There was some discussion as to the safety of the handgun…during the course of that discussion or whatever the gun discharged and she was struck."    

Barraza is charged with one count of second-degree murder, meaning it was not premeditated.

Investigators submitted second-degree charges instead of manslaughter or accidental death but have not explained why.

Police say there is no indication that the couple fought before Schurz was shot. The couple lived together in the apartment near McKellips Road and Mesa Drive with children from previous relationships although no kids were home at the time of the fatal shooting.

SHE SAYS: Guns scare me, why did you buy that, I don't want it in my house!!

HE SAYS: YO!! WASSUP BITCH? You think I don't know guns?  Lemme show you how I know guns (Puts his finger on the trigger, holds the gun on it side "gangster style", points it at her and shoots. DAMMIT BITCH!! Who put bullets in the gun??  Stop fuckin around and get up off the floor, you ain't hurt!!!  Get up Bitch!! oh Shit....

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Friday, July 9, 2010

Monday, June 28, 2010

Tired of this yet?

Mexican transit officials kidnapped
 

(CNN) -- Two city officials in Monterrey, Mexico, were kidnapped on Sunday and Monday, respectively, the state-run Notimex news agency reported.

The city's secretary of roadways and transit, Enrique Barrios Rodriguez, and the director of transit, Reynaldo Ramos Alvarado, were taken from their homes by gunmen, Nuevo Leon state officials said, according to Notimex.

According to initial reports, Barrios was kidnapped at his house where he was with his family in the early morning Monday, by a group of men who broke through the front door. His garage door was also knocked down.

Barrios had only been in his post since May 14, Notimex said.

The day before, Ramos was kidnapped in a similar fashion, authorities said.

At about 1:30 a.m. Sunday, the transit director was taken from his home, Notimex reported.

Police offered no motive and did not name any criminal organization as the perpetrators. The state of Nuevo Leon is known to have a lot of drug cartel activity.

Before being named roadways and transit secretary this month, Barrios was an adminstrative director for the city, and had previously served as a state congressman from 2003 to 2006 and a federal congressman from 2006 to 2009.

Thanks for Caring!!!! Blam.

Humanitarian workers killed in Mexico
 

Two human rights workers were killed in an ambush in the Mexican southern state of Oaxaca, authorities said Wednesday.

A Finnish citizen, Jyri Antero Jaakkola, and a Mexican activist, Beatriz Alberta Carino Trujillo were part of a caravan that was attacked Tuesday, the Oaxaca attorney general's office said, the state-run Notimex news agency reported.

The two victims were part of a group of activists from various organizations traveling to the city of San Juan Copala with members of Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca, or APPO by its Spanish initials.

Both died from gunshot wounds, the attorney general's office said. A third person was injured

The APPO is a leftist movement that seized control of the Oaxacan capital for months in 2006 in a bid to oust the governor.

Witnesses told authorities that the gunmen were members of a rival group, the Regional Union of Social Well-being, with whom the APPO has long had hostile relations, Notimex reported. There are other armed groups that are in dispute of the remote area, Notimex said.

The activists' caravan was heading to San Juan Copala on a humanitarian mission to deliver clothes and other goods to residents there, in addition to assessing the violence that has been recorded in the area, the news agency said

Mexico's youth: Hope for the Next Generation of Gravediggers.

10 people, ages 8-21, shot dead in Mexico
 

(CNN) -- Ten children, youths and young adults between the ages of 8 and 21 were gunned down, presumably by drug traffickers, in the northern Mexican state of Durango, the state's attorney general said Monday.

The incident happened Sunday on a road near the town of Pueblo Nuevo in southern Durango.

Attorney General Daniel Garcia Leal said that unknown gunmen who had set up a fake checkpoint on the road shot and even threw grenades at the victims, the state-run Notimex news agency reported.

The victims were in a pickup truck, returning to their homes after having traveled to pick up money to support their school as part of a government social program, Garcia Leal said.

The gunmen motioned the truck to stop but the victims, out of fear of being robbed or assaulted, did not comply, the attorney general said.

No arrests had been made in the incident, which is the latest in which children have found themselves caught in the middle of the country's violent drug wars.

In January, in a case of mistaken identity, 15 people, mostly teenagers, were killed when gunmen attacked a house party in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

Ahh, Peaceful Old Mexico

Gunmen kill Mexican singer on the way to concert
 

(CNN) -- A group of gunmen killed a well-known Mexican singer when he arrived at a toll booth in the western Mexican state of Sinaloa, state media said.

The Deputy Attorney General's Office said Sergio "El Shaka" Vega was on his way to perform at a village festival concert when gunmen ambushed the red Cadillac he was driving around 9:30 p.m. Saturday (12:30 a.m. Sunday ET), Mexican state news agency Notimex reported.

Authorities are still investigating the 40-year-old musician's death. They said they found 9 mm shell casings in the car's door, Notimex reported.

Musicians have been targets of Mexican drug gangs in the past.

Violence in Mexico has skyrocketed since President Felipe Calderon declared war on the nation's drug cartels shortly after taking office in December 2006. More than 22,000 people have died in drug violence during that time period, the government said recently.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Wow, strong words.


Prosecutors say the Mexican-American man was killed by a neighbor shouting racial epithets.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Just a thought......

 
If we Americans wanted to gear up with Hummers, guns, body armor and assorted militaria, and then just toddle our asses down to Guanajuato to do a little sight seeing and drug cartel hunting, do you think the Federales would post signs around the area to keep out the non criminal Mexicans? Afterall, we are just there because we want a better life... See More (in Arizona), and we are doing the work that Mexicans don't want to. So what if we crossed over illegally, it's a human right to immigrate willy nilly, isn't it? And besides, we aren't gonna stay forever: just until our video game enhanced bloodlust gets satisfied, or we make a few thousand dollars through kidnapping and smuggling.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

|

Arizona has a lot of gun lovers. Almost anyone in the state over 21 will be able to carry a concealed weapon without a permit starting June 29th, but some pro-gun advocates are already visiting local businesses with their weapons in plain sight in an attempt to make the practice more socially acceptable. Arizona lets businesses ban guns at their discretion, so this weekend the Arizona Star looked at how restaurants and bars are deciding who to piss off more: gun carriers or the people who feel uncomfortable around them.

"

Pro-gun arguments have worked with some Tucson restaurant owners. The Hungry Fox, a bustling diner at 4637 E. Broadway, put up a sign prohibiting guns last year but quickly heard protests from customers who, unknown to the restaurant's owners and employees, were concealed-weapon carriers. The restaurant's management quickly reversed the policy.

"We were going to lose a lot of customers, and we can't afford to lose even one," said Dene Little, the restaurant's manager.

"

There's even a website, www.gunburger.com, where pro-gun consumers can check out a restaurant's policy before deciding to visit.

One customer of an Italian restaurant where some of the advocates recently ate told the paper, "I found it was pretty hard to have fun and joke in a room where there's a large group of people who are heavily armed."

Groups want FCC to police hate speech on talk radio, cable news networks
 

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is being urged to monitor "hate speech" on talk radio and cable broadcast networks.

A coalition of more than 30 organizations argue in a letter to the FCC that the Internet has made it harder for the public to separate the facts from bigotry masquerading as news. 

The groups also charge that syndicated radio and cable television programs "masquerading as news" use hate as a profit model.

"As traditional media have become less diverse and less competitive, they have also grown less responsible and less responsive to the communities that they are supposed to serve," the organizations wrote to the FCC. "In this same atmosphere hate speech thrives, as hate has developed as a profit-model for syndicated radio and cable television program masquerading as 'news.'"

The organizations, which include Free Press, the Center for Media Justice, the Benton Foundation and Media Alliance, also argue that the anonymity of the Web gives ammunition to those that would spread hate.

The groups did not mention any specific programming on the right or the left in their letter, which supports a petition filed by the National Hispanic Media Coalition last year requesting a probe of the relationship between hate speech and hate crimes.

The groups argue the Internet has made it harder for the public to separate the facts from bigotry masquerading as news.

"The Internet gives the illusion that news sources have increased, but in fact there are fewer journalists employed now than ever before. Moreover, on the Internet, speakers can hide in the cloak of anonymity, emboldened to say things that they may not say in the public eye."

"For these reasons, as the Commission deliberates how the public interest will be served in the digital age, it should consider the extent of hate speech in media, and its effects."

It's always good to have the governments decide what is hate and what isn't.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Darwinian Weapons Training 101: How NOT to Carry a Gun.

Police: Man accidentally shoots self in testicles
 

SEATTLE (AP) - Police say a man accidentally shot himself in the testicles at a Lynnwood department store.

Police spokeswoman Shannon Sessions says the man was carrying his handgun in his waistband and it accidentally went off about noon Sunday.

She says he was wounded in the testicles and also in his leg and foot. No one else was hurt.

The man was rushed to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, but there was no immediate word on his condition.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Jail for man who shot girlfriend while posing for pic

Fri, 28 May 2010 11:00a.m.

A man who accidentally shot dead his girlfriend with a sawn-off shotgun last year has been jailed for three years four months.

Justin Paul Goldstone, 21, was sentenced in the High Court at Auckland today by Justice Forrest Miller.

Goldstone admitted the manslaughter of his partner of six months, Samantha Joanne Henderson, 20, when he appeared in North Shore District Court in February.

He also pleaded guilty to the unlawful possession of a cut-down shotgun. He was jailed for six months on this charge, to run concurrently.

Sentencing Goldstone, Justice Miller told him it was hard to imagine a more reckless act than pointing a gun at someone with your finger on the trigger.

"You acted recklessly by pointing the gun at the camera, which defies belief. You had your finger on the trigger when you were posing for photos and you didn't have the safety catch on.

"I'm satisfied that you didn't use the gun deliberately but you did know the gun was loaded," Justice Miller said.

Ms Henderson died on December 4 last year as Goldstone posed for a series of pictures with a sawn-off shotgun which police said he had acquired for their protection.

She had asked him to pose after he got the loaded shotgun from an attic space where it had been stored.

Ms Henderson took several pictures with her digital camera, showing Goldstone with his finger resting on the trigger as he pointed the shotgun at the camera.

The shotgun discharged and the blast hit Ms Henderson in the head with shotgun pellets going through the camera.

The blast caused "massive trauma to the left side of her head," said police in the summary of facts.

Goldstone dropped the shotgun and went to her aid, but Ms Henderson was unresponsive.

He put her in his car and took her to a medical centre but refused to give a statement to police for three days.

He said he believed his finger was outside the trigger guard and not resting on the trigger.

 

 

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Activists blast Mexico's immigration law

 

TULTITLN, Mexico — Arizona's new law forcing local police to take a greater role in enforcing immigration law has caused a lot of criticism from Mexico, the largest single source of illegal immigrants in the United States.

But in Mexico, illegal immigrants receive terrible treatment from corrupt Mexican authorities, say people involved in the system.

And Mexico has a law that is no different from Arizona's that empowers local police to check the immigration documents of people suspected of not being in the country legally.

"There (in the United States), they'll deport you," Hector Vázquez, an illegal immigrant from Honduras, said as he rested in a makeshift camp with other migrants under a highway bridge in Tultitlán. "In Mexico they'll probably let you go, but they'll beat you up and steal everything you've got first."

Mexican authorities have harshly criticized Arizona's SB1070, a law that requires local police to check the status of persons suspected of being illegal immigrants. The law provides that a check be done in connection with another law enforcement event, such as a traffic stop, and also permits Arizona citizens to file lawsuits against local authorities for not fully enforcing immigration laws.

Mexico's Foreign Ministry said the law "violates inalienable human rights" and Democrats in Congress applauded Mexican President Felipe Calderón's criticisms of the law in a speech he gave on Capitol Hill last week.

Yet Mexico's Arizona-style law requires local police to check IDs. And Mexican police freely engage in racial profiling and routinely harass Central American migrants, say immigration activists.

"The Mexican government should probably clean up its own house before looking at someone else's," said Melissa Vertíz, spokeswoman for the Fray Matías de Córdova Human Rights Center in Tapachula, Mexico.

In one six-month period from September 2008 through February 2009, at least 9,758 migrants were kidnapped and held for ransom in Mexico — 91 of them with the direct participation of Mexican police, a report by the National Human Rights Commission said. Other migrants are routinely stopped and shaken down for bribes, it said.

A separate survey conducted during one month in 2008 at 10 migrant shelters showed Mexican authorities were behind migrant attacks in 35 of 240 cases, or 15%.

Most migrants in Mexico are Central Americans who are simply passing through on their way to the United States, human rights groups say. Others are Guatemalans who live and work along Mexico's southern border, mainly as farm workers, as maids, or in bars and restaurants.

The Central American migrants headed to the United States travel mainly on freight trains, stopping to rest and beg for food at rail crossings like the one in Tultitlán, an industrial suburb of Mexico City.

On a recent afternoon, Victor Manuel Beltrán Rodríguez of Managua, Nicaragua, trudged between the cars at a stop light, his hand outstretched.

"Can you give me a peso? I'm from Nicaragua," he said. Every 10 cars or so, a motorist would roll down the window and hand him a few coins. In a half-hour he had collected 10 pesos, about 80 U.S. cents, enough for a taco.

Beltrán Rodríguez had arrived in Mexico with 950 pesos, about $76, enough to last him to the U.S. border. But near Tierra Blanca, Veracruz, he says municipal police had detained him, driven him to a deserted road and taken his money. He had been surviving since then by begging.

Abuses by Mexican authorities have persisted even as Mexico has relaxed its rules against illegal immigrants in recent years, according to the National Human Rights Commission.

In 2008, Mexico softened the punishment for illegal immigrants, from a maximum 10 years in prison to a maximum fine of $461. Most detainees are taken to detention centers and put on buses for home.

Mexican law calls for six to 12 years of prison and up to $46,000 in fines for anyone who shelters or transports illegal immigrants. The Supreme Court ruled in 2008 that the law applies only to people who do it for money.

For years, the Mexican government has allowed charity groups to openly operate migrant shelters, where travelers can rest for a few days on their journey north. The government also has a special unit of immigration agents, known as Grupo Beta, who patrol the countryside in orange pickups, helping immigrants who are in trouble.

At the same time, Article 67 of Mexico's immigration law requires that all authorities "whether federal, local or municipal" demand to see visas if approached by a foreigner and to hand over migrants to immigration authorities.

"In effect, this means that migrants who suffer crimes, including kidnapping, prefer not to report them to avoid … being detained by immigration authorities and returned to their country," the National Human Rights Commission said in a report last year.

As a result, the clause has strengthened gangs who abuse migrants, rights activists say.

"That Article 67 is an obstacle that urgently has to be removed," said Alberto Herrera, executive director of Amnesty International Mexico. "It has worsened this vicious cycle of abuse and impunity, and the same thing could happen (in Arizona)."

A bill passed by the Mexican Senate on Oct. 6 would eliminate the ID requirement in Article 67 and replace it with language saying "No attention in matters of human rights or the provision of justice shall be denied or restricted on any level (of government) to foreigners who require it, regardless of their migration status."

The Mexican House of Representatives approved a similar measure on March 16, but added a clause requiring the government to set aside funds to take care of foreigners during times of disaster. The revised bill has been stuck in the Senate's Population and Development Committee since then.

To discourage migrants from speaking out about abuse, Mexican authorities often tell detainees they will have to stay longer in detention centers if they file a complaint, Vertíz said.

A March 2007 order allows Mexican immigration agents to give "humanitarian visas" to migrants who have suffered crimes in Mexico. But the amnesty is not automatic, and most migrants don't know to ask for it, the commission said.

Hawley is Latin America correspondent for USA TODAY and The Arizona Republic

 

 

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

whoopee

ASU Report: Illegal Immigration Perceptions and Realities

Updated: Tuesday, 18 May 2010, 4:46 PM MDT
Published : Tuesday, 18 May 2010, 4:30 PM MDT

PHOENIX - A recent report is examining the truth of 9 common assertations regarding undocumented workers and their impact on everything from the economy to health-care to education.

The report, issued by ASU's Morrison Institute for Public Policy is entitled Illegal Immigration: Perceptions and Realities and looks at several myths and truths regarding illegal immigration in Arizona.

Some of those "assertions" include:

• Assertion: Most violent crime in Arizona is committed by undocumented immigrants.
Reality: The Americas Majority Foundation found that "between 1999 and 2006, states like Arizona with high numbers of immigrants witnessed a greater percentage drop in all types of crime than the national average.

Why does the "reality" quote not seem to address the "assertion" statement?  So what if the crime rate dropped; who committed the crimes?

• Assertion: Virtually all Arizonans consider undocumented immigration a major threat.
Reality: A Rasmussen report found that "most Arizona voters [57%] favor an immigration policy that welcomes all immigrants, 'except national security threats, criminals, and those who would come here to live off our welfare system.'"

Welcome is such a strong word.  How about tolerate?

• Assertion: Undocumented immigrants are a drain on Arizona's economy.
Reality: Undocumented immigrants create jobs and contribute to the economy through their labor, their purchase of goods and services and by their payment of sales and payroll taxes, user fees and other common revenue sources.

What about the drain on hospital revenues for ER visits?  How about driving without car insurance and having an accident?  And are you telling me that the vast herd of Yob-seekers at Home DepotLowes parking lots are paying income taxes, and obeying minimum OSHA safety standards? 

ASU is not affiliated with any particular political party.  But they are a bastion of liberal leaning hippy types.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

STRONG BREW

 

The term "tea-bagger" is like uttering the "n" word, some say. Though he aspires to promote civility, evidence has surfaced that President Obama has added "tea-bagger" to his public lexicon, though it's considered a cheap and tawdry insult by "tea party" activists. Watchdogs at Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) barked when they saw the proof, tucked in a sneak peak of Newsweek columnist Jonathan Alter's new book, "The Promise: President Obama, Year One," to be released May 18. Indeed, it appears the president joined certain partisan critics and the liberal media, and took the tea-bag plunge.

"This remark is the equivalent of using the 'n' word. It shows contempt for middle America, expressed knowingly, contemptuously, on purpose, and with a smirk. It is indefensible to use this word. The president knows what it means, and his people know what it means. The public thought we reached a new low of incivility during the Clinton administration. Well, the Obama administration has just outdone them," ATR president Grover Norquist tells Inside the Beltway.

There is not always parity in these situations. There were outraged calls for Rep. Dan Burton's resignation and massive press coverage after the Indiana Republican called President Clinton a "scumbag" during the Monica Lewinsky matter in 1998.

The offending passage that started the tea-bagger shuffle? Mr. Alter wrote, "Obama said that the unanimous House vote against the Recovery Act 'set the tenor for the whole year': 'That helped to create the tea-baggers and empowered that whole wing of the Republican Party to where it now controls the agenda for the Republicans.' "

Mr. Obama himself was recently ruing the contentious state of politics, noting Saturday at a college commencement speech, "We've got politicians calling each other all sorts of unflattering names. Pundits and talking heads shout at each other. The media tends to play up every hint of conflict, because it makes for a sexier story."

The watchdogs, incidentally got their advance look at the book in Mike Allens "Playbook" in Politico.

Don't let it offend you.  He's just an inexperienced, half term former senator and one term uffish snob.  He hasn't filled out his Messiah shoes yet, and ilkely never will.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

 

 

Dear Friend:

 

You probably saw that the state of Arizona passed a very tough anti-illegal immigration last week.  This new law will strengthen law enforcement’s ability to identify, arrest and detain those who are in this country illegally. 

 

I support this new law 100%.  Even before this law was passed, I was the only law enforcement official in this state enforcing all the laws that our federal and state legislatures put in place to combat illegal immigration and human smuggling.

 

Because I have taken the lead over the years by enforcing existing state and federal laws against illegal immigration, I have become the target of attack by radical, left-wing, open-borders extremists.

 

I’ve been sued, picketed, burned in effigy and even had the Reverend Al Sharpton come to Phoenix to march on my headquarters.  Some have even gone so far as to call for my assassination!

 

Their anger and vitriol is clearly misdirected at me. If they don't like the laws of this state or they support Obama's water-downed approach on illegal immigration, then they need to work with their legislators to change the law. The biggest problem they have in taking that approach is that the vast majority of citizens of the United States don't want the laws changed and they certainly don't support amnesty for those who break the law.

 

What they really want is a Sheriff who will look the other way, be silent and allow the charade to continue, while ignoring the laws of our land. That, I promise, will never happen.

 

But I desperately need your help. It's going to take a lot of resources to combat these false allegations as well as the latest talk about a recall campaign against me. We anticipate the hardest campaign in Maricopa county history to remove me due to my unyielding stance on illegal immigration enforcement.

 

I cannot compete with the local and national media machines that distort my record and the job I’m doing to protect this country.  And, I don’t have the personal resources to defend myself from these vicious attacks.

 

That’s why I’m writing to you.  I have to go directly to the people for their support.  I need good people like you in this country to stand behind me and help me fight this fight.

 

Will you join me? I desperately need your help now. My election has been targeted as the frontline in the battle to end illegal immigration. We must win this battle.

 

Your financial support today is so critical. Please log on to http://www.reelectjoearpaio.com right now and make a much needed contribution. Any amount you can offer today is tremendously appreciated. I promise I will not let you down.

 

The fight starts now. Please help me. I pledge to you that I will never stop the fight. Thank you for your support.

 

Sincerely,

 

Sheriff Joe Arpaio

Maricopa County

 

P.S. In addition to making a contribution, please do me a favor and forward this email to your friends, family and other individuals who share our views. Together we can win this fight. Thank you.

 

Mexico acknowledges migrant abuse, pledges changes

 

By MARK STEVENSON, Associated Press Writer Mark Stevenson, Associated Press Writer Wed Apr 28, 8:04 pm ET

MEXICO CITYAmnesty International called the abuse of migrants in Mexico a major human rights crisis Wednesday, and accused some officials of turning a blind eye or even participating in the kidnapping, rape and murder of migrants.

The group's report comes at a sensitive time for Mexico, which is protesting the passage of a law in Arizona that criminalizes undocumented migrants.

The Interior Department acknowledged in a statement that the mainly Central American migrants who pass through Mexico on their way to the United States suffer abuses, but attributed the problem to criminal gangs branching out into kidnapping and extortion of migrants.

Rupert Knox, Amnesty's Mexico researcher, said in the report that the failure by authorities to tackle abuses against migrants has made their trip through Mexico one of the most dangerous in the world.

"Migrants in Mexico are facing a major human rights crisis leaving them with virtually no access to justice, fearing reprisals and deportation if they complain of abuses," Knox said.

Central American migrants are frequently pulled off trains, kidnapped en masse, held at gang hideouts and forced to call relatives in the U.S. to pay off the kidnappers. Such kidnappings affect thousands of migrants each year in Mexico, the report says.

Many are beaten, raped or killed in the process.

One of the main issues, Amnesty says, is that migrants fear they will be deported if they complain to Mexican authorities about abuses.

At present, Article 67 of Mexico's Population Law says, "Authorities, whether federal, state or municipal ... are required to demand that foreigners prove their legal presence in the country, before attending to any issues."

The Interior Department said the government has taken some steps to combat abuses and Mexico's legislature is working to repeal Article 67 "so that no one can deny or restrict foreigners' access to justice and human rights, whatever their migratory status."

The Amnesty report said one female migrant told researchers that Mexican federal police had forced her group off a train and stolen their belongings. Forced to walk, she said, she was subsequently attacked by a gang and raped.

The Interior Department said it shares Amnesty's concern, and called the report "a valuable contribution."

Mexico has long been offended by mistreatment of its own migrants in the United States.

The Arizona law — slated to take effect in late July or early August — makes it a state crime to be in the U.S. illegally and allows police to question anyone they suspect of being an illegal immigrant. Mexico has complained that the law would lend itself to racial profiling and discrimination.

 

Isn’t this the olla calling the kettle black?

 

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

How to Remove Your Head from Your Nether Regions:

 

People who haven't read the law and don't know anything about requirements that resident aliens already have to fulfill.
If you're a resident alien, you always have to have your 'papers'. It's federal law that you carry them.
Under this law, illegal immigration status is not a primary offense - they have to stop you for something else first. If you produce an AZ driver's license (or license from another state or some other official identification document), then you're presumed to be a citizen. If you produce the papers that the federal government makes you carry around, then you're presumed to be a legal resident alien. End of story - you get your speeding ticket and go on your way. Of course, if you're driving without a license, and without papers, you're in trouble. But then, you'd be in trouble anyway for driving without a license.
Link to the law, full text: http://www.azleg.gov/legtext/49leg/2r/bills/sb1070s.pdf

Monday, April 26, 2010

What would happen to me if I crossed into Mexico and got caught?

 

Mexican president slams Arizona immigration law

MEXICO CITY, April 26 (Reuters) - Mexican President Felipe Calderon on Monday slammed a tough new immigration law in the U.S. state of Arizona, which borders Mexico, saying it would breed hate and discrimination.

The law has raised fears that Hispanic immigrants could be racially profiled and reignited the hot-button political issue of immigration reform in the United States, which at times has touched off fierce criticism from some Latin American leaders.

"Criminalizing immigration, which is a social and economic phenomena, this way opens the door to intolerance, hate, and discrimination," Calderon told a meeting with Mexican immigrant groups.

"My government cannot and will not remain indifferent when these kinds of policies go against human rights," Calderon said, adding that he would bring up the new law when he meets with Obama next month during an official visit to Washington.

Arizona's Republican governor signed a bill into law last week requiring police to determine whether people are in the country legally and allowing them to detain suspected illegal immigrants.

The toughest immigration law in the United States, it triggered a chorus of criticism from leaders of the Democratic party, including President Barack Obama.

The majority of the 11 million people believed to be living illegally in the United States are immigrants from Mexico, which shares a lengthy border with its northern neighbor and has been pushing for years for comprehensive U.S. reform to improve immigrant rights.

Set to take effect 90 days after the current legislative session adjourns, the law requires state and local police with "reasonable suspicion" to determine if people are in the country illegally. It also makes it a crime to transport illegal immigrants and hire day laborers off the street.

 

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Just consider it "local culture"

In a bold predawn attack, gunmen stormed a hotel Wednesday in the heart of the northern city of Monterrey and kidnapped at least three people, officials said.

Mexican media said up to 50 hooded gunmen arrived in a convoy and burst into the downtown Holiday Inn, seizing guests and employees.

Law enforcement officials, offering only scant details by late afternoon, said it was not immediately clear whether a fourth person was seized or how many gunmen took part in the 3 a.m. attack. Authorities offered no motive for the kidnappings, but the attack bore the hallmarks of Mexico's drug gang violence.

Monterrey's mayor, Fernando Larrazabal, said police had trouble reaching the scene because the attackers commandeered cars and used them to block surrounding streets. Larrazabal told a radio interviewer that the kidnappers had disappeared in less than 20 minutes.

Authorities dismissed news reports that the kidnappers had seized another person from a hotel across the street. Initial news accounts here said seven people had been kidnapped.

Violence related to drug gangs has spiked in recent months in northeastern Mexico, including around Monterrey, a business hub that is Mexico's third-largest metropolitan area. Hit men have slain police officers and members of rival groups.

A shootout in Monterrey between gunmen and Mexican soldiers last month killed two university students outside their school, Monterrey Tech.

Much of the recent mayhem across the state of Nuevo Leon, of which Monterrey is the capital, and the nearby state of Tamaulipas stems from fighting between the Gulf cartel and former allies, known as the Zetas. That feud has drawn in other trafficking groups, spreading chaos along the U.S. border near the Gulf of Mexico.

The Holiday Inn, with 390 rooms, sits in a downtown zone with numerous high-rise hotels.

The website of the daily Reforma newspaper quoted an unidentified witness as saying the hotel erupted in shouts and the sound of people being beaten. It said gunmen fired when a captive tried to escape, but that it was not clear if the person was hit.

A security guard was reportedly pistol-whipped.

Calls to the hotel were not answered.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

 

 

I must admit, I am sick to death of the number of car insurance commercials, in their variety of forms, that permeate TV, radio, and print ads.  Flo, Erin, Cavemen, Gecko, Unknown Black Dude for Allstate….. please…. Go away…. NOW!!!!

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

But.... I thought you couldn't carry a gun in Washington? And isn't robbing people illegal? This can't be happening...

'Harold & Kumar' star, Kal Penn, robbed at gunpoint in D.C.

by Chris Nashawaty

Categories: Movies, News, Television

As TMZ first reported, actor Kal Penn was robbed at gunpoint in Washington, D.C., early this morning, his rep confirmed. The 32-year-old star of the 2004 stoner comedy Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle and its 2008 sequel has been working in the capital for the Obama administration. The D.C. police confirmed a robbery at 1:20 A.M. on the 1500 block of S Street to EW. The actor was accosted by a gunman, who walked up to him and took a wallet and other belongings. Penn gave up his role on the TV show House last year to take the position of an associate director in the White House’s Office of Public Engagement. He is scheduled to star in a third Harold & Kumar film later this year.

 

Nah, this didn’t really happen…. Not in Obama’s Washington…..

 

 

 

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Arizona to allow concealed weapons without permit

Governor Brewer signs legislation into law

Starting later this summer, U.S. citizens 21 and older can begin carrying a concealed firearm without a permit in Arizona.

Gov. Jan Brewer signed Senate Bill 1108 into law Friday afternoon. It eliminates the requirement for a concealed-carry weapons permit, but does require gun owners to accurately answer if an officer asks them if they are carrying weapon concealed. It also allows officers to temporarily confiscate a weapon while they are talking to an individual, including during a traffic stop.

"I believe strongly in the individual rights and responsibilities of a free society, and as governor I have pledged a solemn and important oath to protect and defend the Constitution," Brewer said in a news release. "I believe this legislation not only protects the Second Amendment rights of Arizona citizens, but restores those rights as well."

The law goes into effect 90 days after the Legislature adjourns for this session, which could happen in the next couple of weeks.

Arizona joins Vermont and Alaska in not requiring such permits.

"If you want to carry concealed, and you have no criminal history, you are a good guy, you can do it," bill sponsor Sen. Russell Pearce, R-Mesa, has said of his bill. "It's a freedom that poses no threat to the public."

National Rifle Association lobbyist Matt Dogali said the new state law would not violate any current federal requirements.

"There is no federal requirement for a permit or lack thereof," Dogali said.

The federal government oversees the background-check program required to purchase a weapon, which will still be required in Arizona in most cases.

Brewer last week did sign a separate law that exempts guns made and kept in Arizona from federal regulation, including background checks.

Arizona had 154,279 active permits as of April 4. Permit holders are spread across all ages, races and counties, but White males older than 30 in Maricopa and Pima counties hold the majority, according to the Arizona Department of Public Safety data.

The permits generated $1.8 million in revenue last fiscal year, according to DPS. The money is used to help cover costs for enforcing laws related to the Highway Patrol, operating the concealed-carry weapon-licensing program and impounding vehicles.

Arizona's permit process will remain in place, and many gun owners may still choose to get a permit. Permits would still be needed in order to carry a weapon into a restaurant or bar that serves alcohol. They would also be needed if an Arizonan wants to carry his or her gun concealed in most other states.

For those who do choose to get a permit, the education requirements do change under the new law. Classes are no longer required to be a set number of hours or include any hands-on use of the weapon. Those who don't get a permit would not be required to get any training or education.

Retired Mesa police officer Dan Furbee runs a business teaching permit and other gun safety classes. He said if most people choose not to get a permit, it will put several hundred Arizona firearms instructors out of business.

"It's going to hurt," he said.

But he said what really concerns him is that the new law will allow people who have had no education about Arizona's laws and no training on the shooting range to carry a concealed gun. The eight-hour class currently required to get a permit includes information on state law and gun safety, as well as requires students to be able to hit a target 14 out of 20 times. Furbee said his class at Mesa-based Ultimate Accessories costs $79, plus $60 for the five-year permit.

"I fully agree that we have a right to keep and bear arms," Furbee said. "But if you are not responsible enough to take a class and learn the laws, you are worse than part of the problem."

He said it's not uncommon for students to walk into his classroom and pull a new gun out of a box with no idea how to hold it and no understanding of the laws surrounding it.

"If you are going to carry a concealed weapon, you should have some kind of training and show that you are at least competent to know how the gun works and be able to hit a target," he said. "You owe the people around you a measure of responsibility."

This new law is the latest of several that have passed over the past year since Brewer took over the office from former Gov. Janet Napolitano, a Democrat.

Napolitano vetoed at least a dozen weapons bills that crossed her desk during her seven years in office, all of which would have loosened gun restrictions. In 2005, Napolitano rejected a bill that would have allowed patrons to carry loaded guns into bars and restaurants. In 2008, she also vetoed a bill that would have allowed people to have a hidden gun in vehicles without a concealed-carry permit.

In January 2009, Napolitano resigned to become U.S. Homeland Security secretary and Republican Secretary of State Brewer became governor.

During her first year in office, Brewer signed a bill allowing loaded guns in bars and restaurants, as well as another that prohibits property owners from banning guns from parking areas, so long as the weapons are kept locked in vehicles.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Of course he bowed. Kissing the Ass is Best Done Behind Closed Doors.

 

Police: Man Left Puppies Locked in Trunk

Updated: Monday, 12 Apr 2010, 6:31 PM MDT
Published : Monday, 12 Apr 2010, 3:56 PM MDT

PHOENIX - Phoenix Police have arrested a man after they say he left six puppies in the trunk of a car for over an hour without ventilation, food, or water -- and outside temperatures were in the 80s.

34-year-old Daniel Suarez Lujan is facing animal cruelty charges after police say he locked six puppies in a car while inside Desert Sky Mall on Sunday afternoon.

About 1 p.m., mall security was alerted to the car by passerbys who said they could hear an animal crying inside the trunk. A Phoenix Police officer who also worked security for the mall came to assist and heard yelping from the trunk.

The officer contacted the Humane Society and requested a lock-pick. At this point, Lujan walked out of the mall towards the car and deactivated the car alarm.

Police say Lujan opened the trunk to reveal six very small puppies in a metal cage. The puppies were not moving and were sprawled across the cage.

They were drenched in sweat, and there was no food or water in the cage. Lujan allegedly told the officer his cousin put them there.

Officers brought the puppies into the mall and gave them water. They had been inside the trunk for an hour. Outside temperatures were in the 80s.

AHS workers arrived at the mall to bring the puppies to their facility for treatment. They suffered heat stress and all are expected to survive.

Punishment: lock his ass in the trunk, one hour for each puppy.  Agreed?  I'd make such a good judge.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

No, bad Idea.

Gun advocates divided over proposed bill on concealed weapons
 
PHOENIX -- Even among gun advocates, opinions are mixed over the bill that would allow Arizonans to carry concealed weapons without a permit or hands-on training.

At Shooter's World in  Phoenix, some, like Susette Tenney, voiced support for the bill that Brewer is expected to sign into law next week. She said gun owners should not have to buy a permit from the government to carry concealed weapons.

"I'm carrying a gun and it's going in my purse and I want the right to do that," she said.

Firearms instructor Dave Gushert said that training was important, and that the new bill might be a problem. In addition to safety, he said people carrying firearms should also know the laws about when it is legal to use a gun for self defense.

"Everybody thinks Arizona is the wild west and that you can just draw from the hip and go, and this is going to get a lot of people hurt or in trouble," Gushert said.

Nonetheless, advocates of the bill said they did not need the government to mandate training.

"I don't like the idea of anyone telling me I have to do anything," Tenney said.

If signed, the new bill will still require gun owners to get a permit to carry a concealed weapon inside of restaurants that serve alcohol and outside of Arizona.

Alaska and Vermont are the only other states that have similar laws.
 
Untrained idiots with no familiarity with the rules of escalation of force.  Gap toothed, mouth breathers now can hide their guns under their sweat stained, chicken grease covered t shirts.  I feel so much better.  I think with the injuries and discharging of guns that is soon to come, this with be a litigation cash cow for the state.

Oy.

Man shoots round into ceiling at el Mirage Walmart in front of people

 

EL MIRAGE – Police took a man into custody who reportedly accidentally fired one round into the ceiling of a Walmart in front of several people.

El Mirage officers responded to the store located at 12900 W. Thunderbird after receiving reports of shots fired. When police arrived at the store the manager was standing with the suspect.

During the investigation, witnesses told officers 30-year-old David Walter, of Surprise, entered the store with a semi-automatic pistol in a holster. He would reportedly holster the gun and un-holster it as he walked through the store. Witnesses say the suspect 'continually messed with' and was manipulating the gun.

Walter was standing at the electronics counter talking to the clerk when he reportedly pulled the gun out of the
holster, removed the magazine and put it back in. The clerk got scared and said she was afraid he was going to rob her and notified the store manager.

Walter again allegedly approached a checkout lane and stood near several customers and workers as he pulled the gun from his holster. As he pulled the gun out it magazine dislodged and fell to the floor.

Walter re-inserted the magazine into the pistol and manipulated it as if loading it when the gun discharged.

The suspect was arrested and booked on six counts of endangerment, disorderly conduct and discharging a weapon within the city limits.

Yes, I am all for the right to keep and bear arms, but just like children, some folks should not be allowed toown a gun.  Especially after a dumb ass stunt like this.