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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (68682)7/16/2009 10:06:37 AM
From: TideGlider1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224755
 
There is an assumption that those incomes will be avail;able for taxation. When the government fall short they will come after the rest of us. Don't be a putz with the stupid talking points.

Only the highest earning 1.2 percent of American households will pay a surcharge for health care reform. That leaves 98.8 percent of American households who will not pay any surcharge at all.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (68682)7/16/2009 10:43:43 AM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 224755
 
Democrat goes on Trial for Assaulting Police

Indy council member goes to trial today
By Jon Murray
Posted: July 15, 2009. Read Comments(10) RecommendE-mailPrintShare.A

A .A trial is set this afternoon for a City-County Council member accused of shoving a police officer outside her home last year.
Doris Minton-McNeill, 52, who has denied the accusation, is charged with one felony count of battery and three misdemeanor counts of resisting law enforcement in a case handled by a special prosecutor from Southern Indiana.

The Democrat represents District 15, which stretches north and west from Downtown Indianapolis.
Minton-McNeill's trial is set for 1:30 p.m. in Marion Superior Court, Room 24. If convicted of the felony, she would be disqualified from holding elected office.
The incident, which led to Minton-McNeill's arrest, occurred in June 2008 in Minton-McNeill's backyard in the 2000 block of Medford Avenue.
A police affidavit says Minton-McNeill swore at officers, called them racists and told them she couldn't be arrested because she was on the council. Police said Minton-McNeill pushed officer Emily Perkins, causing her to fall back and strike her left hand on the house. Her injuries were minor.
"I was angry and I was upset, but I did not batter anybody," Minton-McNeill said in October after Special Prosecutor James Oliver, the Brown County prosecutor, filed charges.
Minton-McNeill had called 911 to report an unwanted visitor carrying a knife. She later argued with police as they asked repeatedly for the location of the man, who apparently was gone, the affidavit says. Officers sent to her home said they smelled alcohol on her breath.

indystar.com




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (68682)7/16/2009 10:49:21 AM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 224755
 
Glastonbury Councilwoman Granted Admission To Alcohol Education Program
Topics
Wages and Pensions Soccer Police Arrests See more topics »
XDrunk Driving
By DAVID OWENS

The Hartford Courant

July 14, 2009
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MANCHESTER — - A Glastonbury town councilwoman arrested in June on a DUI charge who told the police officers booking her that she approves their salaries, was granted admission to a special program for first-time offenders that could allow her record to be wiped clean.

Barbara C. Wagner, 59, a four-term Democrat, was granted admission to the alcohol education program. If she successfully completes a number of classes, the charge against her will be dismissed.

Neither Wagner nor her lawyer, Kathleen Kowalyshyn, responded to a request for comment.

Wagner was arrested June 2 after she was stopped for driving erratically on New London Turnpike, police said. While being processed at police headquarters she told the officers she was on the town council.

"I am a member of the Glastonbury Town Council, and I approve your salaries," she says at one point. Her comments, and those of the officers, were captured on the police department's video and audio monitoring system.

Later in the video, Wagner again mentions her position on the council.

"I approve your salaries. I approve your salaries," she said.

The officer in the booking area responds, "Ma'am, that's not really going to get you anywhere."


Wagner then laughs and says, "I'm just kidding."

Wagner wrote a letter to Police Chief Thomas J. Sweeney on June 16, the day The Courant obtained the video, saying she was "frightened, embarrassed and not thinking very clearly at the time."

"I would like to apologize to the Glastonbury Police Department if I engaged in any inappropriate conduct at the station. Obviously, the entire episode was inappropriate, and I deeply regret my conduct and can assure you that I've stayed out of trouble for my first 33 years living in Glastonbury up to now and hope to have several more decades to redeem myself," she wrote.

Wagner had earlier apologized for her arrest and said she takes full responsibility for her actions.

Wagner's arrest was the second time in a year that a public official was caught on Glastonbury police videotape making demeaning remarks to officers. In October, Superior Court Judge E. Curtissa Cofield, also of Glastonbury, made racist remarks to police officers during her arrest on drunken-driving charges.

The state Judicial Review Council punished Cofield in February with an eight-month suspension with no pay or benefits. Copyright © 2009, The Hartford Courant
courant.com