Trooper indicted for stealing marijuana

"A former Georgia State Patrol Trooper is indicted for stealing marijuana from the Post evidence locker, and giving it to teenage girls. Jaa Tucker was arrested by the Early County Sheriff's Office this morning. He posted bond and was released. He is charged with theft by government employee, distribution of marijuana, and violation of oath of office. The Thomasville GBI Post is handling the investigation. A GSP source says that Tucker was fired last year." Continue reading

Continue ReadingTrooper indicted for stealing marijuana

NYPD looks to GPS bottles to combat pill bandits

"The New York Police Department wants pharmacies in and around the city to fight prescription drug thefts by stocking pill bottles fitted with GPS tracking chips. Prescription drug abuse 'can serve as a gateway to criminal activities, especially among young people,' the commissioner says. The NYPD has begun creating a database of the roughly 6,000 pharmacies in the New York City area with plans to have officers visit them and recommend security measures like better alarm systems and lighting of storage areas. Kelly says it also will ask them to stock the GPS bottles containing fake oxycodone." Continue reading

Continue ReadingNYPD looks to GPS bottles to combat pill bandits

Parents Furious After Boys Suspended For Using Fingers As Guns

"Two 6-year-old boys were suspended while playing cops and robbers during recess and using their fingers to make an imaginary gun. This is the second time a Maryland child has been suspended for such play. Earlier this month, 6-year-old Rodney Lynch was suspended from his Montgomery County school after pretending to fire an imaginary gun more than once." Continue reading

Continue ReadingParents Furious After Boys Suspended For Using Fingers As Guns

Texas bank welcomes concealed handguns

"With a population of just 350 people, what Chappell Hill lacks in size -- it more than makes up for in flair. 'You never know who’s sitting in this bank,' said Ed Smith, president of the Chappell Hill Bank. 'If you’re coming in to rob it, I think you’re going to be in a world of hurt.' That’s because the person standing next to you could be packing heat. You see, the Chappell Hill Bank is the first in the nation that actually welcomes legally concealed handguns." Continue reading

Continue ReadingTexas bank welcomes concealed handguns

5-year-old kindergartner with pink bubble gun suspended from school

"A 5-year-old kindergartner who told classmates she was going to shoot them, and then herself, with her pink bubble gun, was grilled for three hours by Mount Carmel school officials without her mother’s knowledge, then suspended, a family attorney said. The girl was initially kicked out for 10 days in what the school categorized as a 'terroristic threat,' according to the kindergartner’s mother and confirmed by the family attorney. That suspension was reduced to two days and labeled as a 'threat to harm others.'" Continue reading

Continue Reading5-year-old kindergartner with pink bubble gun suspended from school

Supreme Court to consider if silence can be evidence of guilt

"The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to consider whether a suspect's refusal to answer police questions prior to being arrested and read his rights can be introduced as evidence of guilt at his subsequent murder trial. Salinas' lawyer argued that his client deserved a Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination, even though he had not been under arrest or read his rights under the landmark 1966 decision Miranda v. Arizona. Last April, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the conviction but noted that federal appeals courts are split as to whether 'pre-arrest, pre-Miranda silence is admissible as substantive evidence of guilt.'" Continue reading

Continue ReadingSupreme Court to consider if silence can be evidence of guilt

Kim Dotcom poised for return with Megaupload successor

"Internet tycoon Kim Dotcom will launch a new file-sharing site at his Auckland mansion on Sunday, exactly a year after armed police arrested him at the same venue in the world’s largest online piracy case. Dotcom’s new venture, mega.co.nz, aims to recreate the success of his Megaupload empire, which boasted 50 million daily visitors and accounted for four percent of all Internet traffic before it was shut down after the police raid. Details of the planned service are scarce, but the site promises to use state-of-the-art encryption methods that mean only users, not the site’s administrators, know what they are uploading." Continue reading

Continue ReadingKim Dotcom poised for return with Megaupload successor

U.S. attorney defends handling of Aaron Swartz case as ‘appropriate’

"A US prosecutor at the center of a controversy over the handling of a case involving an Internet activist who committed suicide has defended the government’s actions as 'appropriate.' Assistant US Attorney Carmen Ortiz expressed regret over the death of Aaron Swartz, who was accused of illegally copying and distributing millions of academic articles from a database but said prosecutors were merely doing their job." Continue reading

Continue ReadingU.S. attorney defends handling of Aaron Swartz case as ‘appropriate’

Officer convicted of stealing guns in Prince George’s County

"A Prince George’s County police officer accused of selling and giving away guns he had seized from criminals was found guilty Tuesday of theft and misconduct in office. Authorities had charged Carter with redistributing or selling guns that he obtained while working on a Maryland State Police-run gun task force in 2008 and 2009. Prosecutors say 21 guns never made it to the Prince George’s County police property room as they should have." Continue reading

Continue ReadingOfficer convicted of stealing guns in Prince George’s County

Rand Paul to push legislation nullifying Obama’s executive actions on guns

"Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul plans to introduce legislation in Congress soon nullifying the executive orders on guns announced by President Barack Obama on Wednesday, a source familiar with the plans confirmed to The Daily Caller. The Capitol Hill source told TheDC that Paul’s legislation is expected to do three things: nullify Obama’s executive orders, defund them and ask the Senate to file a court challenge to them." Continue reading

Continue ReadingRand Paul to push legislation nullifying Obama’s executive actions on guns