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To: Brumar89 who wrote (315021)7/16/2009 7:42:15 AM
From: TideGlider  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793841
 
Another Democrat arrested for Sexual Assault

CRAWFORD COUNTY : Constable charged with sexual assault
BY DAVE HUGHES

Posted on Thursday, July 16, 2009

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FORT SMITH - A Crawford County constable is set to be arraigned today in Fort Smith District Court on a misdemeanor charge of fourth-degree sexual assault.

Milton R. Hendrix, 60, of Mountainburg, who was elected constable for District 11 in June 2008, was charged on a warrant Friday after police received an Arkansas State Police Child Abuse Hotline report that he abused a 15-year-old girl in Fort Smith.

Fourth-degree sexual assault is a Class A misdemeanor. A conviction is punishable by up to one year in the county jail and/or a fine of up to $1,000.

The girl told Fort Smith police detective Tammy De-Mier that Hendrix touched her breasts and genitals and had been touching her inappropriately whenever they were together since she was 5 years old.

Hendrix surrendered to Fort Smith police Monday and was freed from the Sebastian County jail after posting a $5,000 bond.

Contacted Wednesday, Hendrix declined to comment on the charges and whether he was continuing to serve as a constable.

He referred questions to his attorney, Joel Price of Fort Smith, who did not return a call Wednesday evening.

A police report on the Hendrix case said Price contacted investigators before Hendrix surrendered and denied the allegations on Hendrix's behalf.

The Crawford County sheriff 's office received word of Hendrix's arrest from Fort Smith police, Chief Deputy Ron Brown said Wednesday.

Brown said since Hendrix is an elected official, the sheriff's office does not have authority over whether he can continue to serve.

He said he was not sure who, if anyone, had the authority to stop Hendrix from carrying on with his constable duties after being charged.

Crawford County election officials said last year was Hendrix's first run for public office. Election records show Hendrix, a Democrat, finished second in a three-man primary for District 11 constable, which covers a part of the county mainly north of Alma.

In a runoff June 10, 2008, between Hendrix and incumbent Constable Robert Strouss, Hendrix won by one vote, 13 to 12, the records show.

He was unopposed in the general election.
nwanews.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (315021)7/16/2009 7:52:01 AM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 793841
 
Where do Democrats they find these people no less elect them?

Senate completes no business, as usual
Democrats squabble with each other, GOP
By Tom Precious
NEWS ALBANY BUREAU
Updated: July 16, 2009, 7:03 AM / Story tools:
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ALBANY — Despite last week’s conclusion of the brief, GOP-led coup, Senate Democrats spent their first full session back in power Wednesday wrangling with each other, bickering with Republicans over pork barrel funding and haggling over how the gridlocked-chamber should be run.

In the end, as midnight passed, the sides reported being close to a deal to change internal rules for the operation of the Senate to, lawmakers claim, make it more partisan-equitable and rank-and-file friendly.

But hundreds of bills already approved in the Assembly—from standardizing how wrongfully convicted individuals can obtain DNA evidence to toughening teen driving laws and banning texting while driving to providing tax credits to help places like Buffalo encourage rehabilitation of historic structures — were left languishing in the Senate.

Instead, plans were to try in the wee hours to pass a brief, bare-bones list of mostly minor bills — like renaming highways — and return today for another try on remaining matters.

Remarkably, the Democrats called the session knowing they would be down one member — Sen. Daniel Squadron of Brooklyn, who is off on his honeymoon — preventing their razor-thin majority from even getting a quorum to pass bills without the help of Republicans.

That help was not offered freely, as GOP senators then began seeking concessions that stalled action all day and night.

By nightfall, at least two more frustrated Democrats fled the Capitol and headed home to New York City as the sides continued to negotiate new rules on how the chamber will be run on everything from size of Senate staffs to how a bill makes it to the floor.

Republicans used their newfound— although temporary— power as leverage to negotiate changes to internal rules and to make pork barrel demands. Talks dragged on all day, but as midnight approached lawmakers said a deal was near on on rule changes to, for instance, allow controversial bills to more easily be considered by allowing bills to bypass the committee-stopping process if 38 senators agree to a floor vote.

The Senate did, with some difficulty, confirm more than a dozen judges —kept waiting all day at the Capitol as the senators battled behind closed doors —to various state judicial posts. Among the 15 judges confirmed was John Michalski, a former Amherst town prosecutor who was reappointed, at $136,700 annually, to the state’s Court of Claims with an assignment to Supreme Court duty.

Like the coup days, happy talk reigned even though inaction filled the day and left not just the judges, but lobbyists, staffers and rank-and-file senators clamoring for information.

“There’s no problem,” Sen. John Sampson of Brooklyn, the Democratic conference leader, said of the talks over the rules changes.

“Real good. You should come back in a little while. We’ll have real reform,” said a smiling Sen. Pedro Espada, the Bronx Democrat and one of the masterminds of the June 8 coup who last week was made majority leader for flipping back to the Democrats.

The Democrats, who wrestled back control of the 62- member chamber last Thursday, came back to town to potentially pass hundreds of bills already approved by the Assembly but kept waiting during the past month of gridlock. Chief on their agenda was a bill to continue mayoral control of the New York City school system.

Though the coup officially ended last Thursday, the fog continued, exacerbated by the narrow, 32-30 Democratic margin in the chamber — a slim lead that had Democrats again learning the lesson that every vote counts.

At one point in the internecine battling, three Democrats bolted from the building. Among those leaving was Sen. Hiram Monserrate, a Queens Democrat who has made headlines for various reasons in recent months.

After being elected last November, Monserrate was arrested for allegedly slashing his girlfriend’s face with a broken glass. After joining Espada in the coup, he then retreated to the Democrats.

A couple weeks after he flipped back, a decision was quietly made by Senate leaders to give back to Monserrate his Consumer Affairs Committee chairmanship. That post was stripped from him earlier this year while his criminal legal problems are resolved. The restoration of the committee job also pays Monserrate a $12,500 stipend on top of his $79,500 base salary.

“That’s not nice,” a fleeing Monserrate said to a television reporter who asked how he was able to get the post back while he is still facing criminal charges in the assault case.


By Wednesday night, Monserrate was back in his chair, voting to confirm the judges.

Watching over the festivities all day was Florida businessman and Buffalo Sabres owner

B. Thomas Golisano, who helped back the June 8 coup by the Republicans and two renegade Democrats.

Golisano, trying to pick up the pieces from the monthlong stalemate and eventual political status quo that returned last Thursday, was holed up in Espada’s office for much of the day, delaying a return flight on his private jet to South Florida as the talks dragged on into the night.

Golisano declined to comment until the issues were resolved, but Steven Pigeon, his political adviser, who last week was given a job as counsel to Espada, sought to give advance credit to Golisano for playing a key role in the discussions to change the Senate rules.

The partisan relations were not cozy. Sen. William Stachowski, D-Lake View, said Republicans were blocking a deal to get their hands on more state money for capital projects back in their districts. He said there was about $400 million on the table under discussion. What did the GOP want to spend it on? “For whatever they want,” he said.

Asked why the Democrats would return since they were one vote short of being able to get a quorum and therefore would give a strong negotiating position to the GOP, Stachowski said, “Because we thought there was going to be a spirit of cooperation because we were going to make the rule changes that they so desperately based everything on.”

He added, admittedly with a healthy dose of sarcasm, “It wasn’t a fight about money. It was all about reform.”

But Sen. Thomas Libous, a Binghamton Republican, said the changes in the internal rules will make it fairer to the minority party Republicans and their constituents while still keeping Democrats “in their always good place” in the majority.

tprecious@buffnews.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (315021)7/16/2009 1:49:43 PM
From: KLP1 Recommendation  Respond to of 793841
 
Liberalism is like a plague, isn't it. That would make a good bumper sticker...



To: Brumar89 who wrote (315021)7/16/2009 2:21:10 PM
From: goldworldnet2 Recommendations  Respond to of 793841
 
The Plague Of Liberalism
Paul Ibbetson
RightBias.com
June 20, 2009

rightbias.com

For the people of Europe who faced the Black Death in the middle 1300s, their lives before the plague appeared in many respects the same as for modern people today. People worked in the city shops, or the rural fields, in order to sell their goods to provide for their families and loved ones.

People had desires, passions, unfulfilled dreams, and all the disastrously wonderful things that kept the people of those times, as well as folks today, from getting to bed at night or from thinking straight throughout the day. We like to think that we, as a technologically advanced people, are a world away from those Europeans of old. But, in reality, we are very much the same.

Trade the modern day car for the horse and cart and, before long, we can find historical equivalents from the past to today for everything, right down to the iPod. In short, when we cut through the glossy coverings of the period, from then to now, people are people, plague is plague, and death is death. The truth is that simple - and that deadly.

I say this because America today faces another “Black Death” that is as elusive and evasive as the plague of Europe. However, this plague does not attack the glands and rot the flesh, as did the Black Death, but instead it clouds the mind and hardens the heart.

This plague is none other than the disease of liberalism. As with the stories of the diseased and flea-ridden rats, nestled quietly in trade ships traveling to Europe from the Crimean port of Caffa, we see that terrible things often come in little packages. Liberalism is often portrayed as the small harmless aggression that should be allowed to fester in the corner of the room. After all, if we just spread a few flowers, no one will notice.

As with America today, Europe was ill-prepared to deal with the disease at hand. The Black Death, as with liberalism today, served to build individual distrust and division among the people, which weakened everyone’s ability to find a true cure.

In Europe, as panic began to build among the populace, friends and family members broke from one another, as each individual was considered a potential carrier.

Blame for the disease was reduced to a vile finger-pointing game and the participation in wild and dangerous miracle cures. In the end, desperation walked hand in hand with apathy, and the Black Death ate its fill of Europe before lurching to parts unknown.

People are people, plague is plague, and death is death. Today, liberalism has spread its foothold in America and has expanded itself to the point where it now literally blows in the wind. It burns the eyes of what few patriots remain, and fills the lungs of the next generation with reckless disregard, as did the Black Death of old.

For most of those struck with the Black Death of Europe, death was painful and certain. For those whose minds have been infected with the disease of liberalism, there is no sweet release of death, as liberalism is the gift that keeps on giving.

That is, in part, how the disease has grown to its current epidemic stage. You see, people infected with liberalism become “carriers,” and most often for life. In America, it now has become fashionable to be a “carrier” of liberalism, and we have come to the point where it is all but necessary to test “positive” to gain inclusion into financial, social, and educational circles. I know that is a painful statement, but it’s painfully true.

Today’s society is now dangerously close to the brink of disaster. Inevitably, if we do not address our own fleas and rats, the “black death” of our age will knock upon each and every door in this country, and it’s knocking now.

Paul A. Ibbetson is a former Chief of Police of Cherryvale, Kansas, and member of the Montgomery County Drug Task Force. Paul is the author of the books Living Under The Patriot Act: Educating A Society and Feeding Lions: Sharing The Conservative Philosophy In A Politically Hostile World.

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