Monthly Archives: June 2009

Lancaster Pennsylvania’s “Private” Eyes

This historic town, where America’s founding fathers plotted during the Revolution and Milton Hershey later crafted his first chocolates, now boasts another distinction. It may become the nation’s most closely watched small city.

Some 165 closed-circuit TV cameras soon will provide live, round-the-clock scrutiny of nearly every street, park and other public space used by the 55,000 residents and the town’s many tourists. That’s more outdoor cameras than are used by many major cities, including San Francisco and Boston.

Unlike anywhere else, cash-strapped Lancaster outsourced its surveillance to a private nonprofit group that hires civilians to tilt, pan and zoom the cameras — and to call police if they spot suspicious activity. No government agency is directly involved.

Perhaps most surprising, the near-saturation surveillance of a community that saw four murders last year has sparked little public debate about whether the benefits for law enforcement outweigh the loss of privacy.

“Years ago, there’s no way we could do this,” said Keith Sadler, Lancaster’s police chief. “It brings to mind Big Brother, George Orwell and ’1984.’ It’s just funny how Americans have softened on these issues.”

“No one talks about it,” agreed Scott Martin, a Lancaster County commissioner who wants to expand the program. “Because people feel safer. Those who are law-abiding citizens, they don’t have anything to worry about.”

A few dozen people attended four community meetings held last spring to discuss what sponsors called “this exciting public safety initiative.” But opposition has grown since big red bulbs, which shield the video cameras, began appearing on corner after corner.

Mary Pat Donnellon, head of Mission Research, a local software company, vowed to move if she finds one on her block. “I don’t want to live like that,” she said. “I’m not afraid. And I don’t need to be under surveillance.”

“No one has the right to know who goes in and out my front door,” agreed David Mowrer, a laborer for a company that supplies quarry pits. “That’s my business. That’s not what America is about.”

Hundreds of municipalities — including Los Angeles and at least 36 other California cities — have built or expanded camera networks since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. In most cases, Department of Homeland Security grants helped cover the cost.

In the most ambitious project, New York City police announced plans several years ago to link 3,000 public and private security cameras across Lower Manhattan designed to help deter, track and detect terrorists. The network is not yet complete.

How they affect crime is open to debate. In the largest U.S. study, researchers at UC Berkeley evaluated 71 cameras that San Francisco put in high-crime areas starting in 2005. Their final report, released in December, found “no evidence” of a drop in violent crime but “substantial declines” in property crime near the cameras.

Only a few communities have said no. In February, the city council in Cambridge, Mass., voted not to use eight cameras already purchased with federal funds for fear police would improperly spy on residents. Officials in nearby Brookline are considering switching off a dozen cameras for the same reason.

Lancaster is different, and not just because it sits amid the rolling hills and rich farms of Pennsylvania Dutch country.

Laid out in 1730, the whole town is 4 square miles around a central square. Amish families still sell quilts in the nation’s oldest public market, and the Wal-Mart provides a hitching post to park a horse and buggy. Tourists flock to art galleries and Colonial-era churches near a glitzy new convention center.

But poverty is double the state’s average, and public school records list more than 900 children as homeless. Police blame most of last year’s 3,638 felony crimes, chiefly thefts, on gangs that use Lancaster as a way station to move cocaine, heroin and other illegal drugs along the Eastern Seaboard.

“It’s not like we’re making headlines as the worst crime-ridden city in the country,” said Craig Stedman, the county’s district attorney. “We have an average amount of crime for our size.”

In 2001, a local crime commission concluded that cameras might make the city safer. Business owners, civic boosters and city officials formed the Lancaster Community Safety Coalition, and the nonprofit organization installed its first camera downtown in 2004.

Raising money from private donors and foundations, the coalition had set up 70 cameras by last year. And the crime rate rose.

Officials explained the increase by saying cameras caught lesser offenses, such as prostitution and drunkenness, that otherwise often escape prosecution. The cameras also helped police capture and convict a murderer, and solve several other violent crimes.

Another local crime meeting last year urged an expansion of the video network, and the city and county governments agreed to share the $3-million cost with the coalition. Work crews are trying to connect 95 additional high-resolution cameras by mid-July.

“Per capita, we’re the most watched city in the state, if not the entire United States,” said Joseph Morales, a city councilman who is executive director of the coalition. “There are very few public streets that are not visible to our cameras.”

The digital video is transmitted to a bank of flat-screen TVs at coalition headquarters, several dingy offices beside a gas company depot. A small sign hangs outside.

On a recent afternoon, camera operator Doug Winglewich sat at a console and watched several dozen incoming video feeds plus a computer linked to the county 911 dispatcher. The cameras have no audio, so he works in silence.

Each time police logged a new 911 call, he punched up the camera closest to the address, and pushed a joystick to maneuver in for a closer look.

A license plate could be read a block away, and a face even farther could be identified. After four years in the job, Winglewich said, he “can pretty much tell right away if someone’s up to no good.”

He called up another feed and focused on a woman sitting on the curb. “You get to know people’s faces,” he said. “She’s been arrested for prostitution.”

Moments later, he called police when he spotted a man drinking beer in trouble-prone Farnum Park. Two police officers soon appeared on the screen, and as the camera watched, issued the man a ticket for violating a local ordinance.

“Lots of times, the police find outstanding warrants and the guy winds up in jail,” said Winglewich, 49, who works from a wheelchair on account of a spinal injury.

If a camera records a crime in progress, the video is given to police and prosecutors, and may be subpoenaed by defense lawyers in a criminal case. More than 300 tapes were handed over last year, records show.

Morales says he refuses all other requests. “The divorce lawyer who wants video of a husband coming out of a bar with his mistress, we won’t do it,” he said.

No state or federal law governs use of public cameras, so Morales is drafting ethical guidelines for the coalition’s 10 staffers and dozen volunteers. Training has been “informal” until now, he said, but will be stiffened.

read more;

http://www.sott.net/articles/show/187681-Lancaster-Pennsylvania-extensively-surveilled-by-private-company

Oklahoma State Senate 2009 Legislative Summary and FY’10 Budget Review

Just Released

 

2009_legislative_summary

Lawmakers Demand Governor and PennDOT Cease and Desist Unauthorized Implementation of REAL ID Act and Collection of PA Citizens’ Biometric Data

 

Lawmakers Demand Governor and PennDOT Cease and Desist Unauthorized Implementation of REAL ID Act and Collection of PA Citizens’ Biometric Data

Monday, June 16, 2008

A bipartisan coalition of state lawmakers led by Representative Sam Rohrer (R-Berks) publicly confronted both Governor Ed Rendell and PennDOT during a Capitol press conference today regarding their controversial actions to begin implementing Real ID driver’s license technology and collecting biometric data (i.e. fingerprints, face prints, retinal scans, or DNA) of Pennsylvania citizens without legislative approval.  
 
“Today we are here to draw a non-negotiable line in the sand to reveal the significant findings and to re-make public our demand to both the Rendell administration and PennDOT to cease and desist from implementing any provision of the federal government’s REAL ID program, or more accurately, a ‘national insecurity’ personal identification collection scheme without public knowledge, legislative approval or constitutional authority,” said Rohrer. “Due to these very real and significant dangers to our most cherished constitutional freedoms and personal privacy, REAL ID must be immediately and effectively opposed. If the Pennsylvania legislature fails to act now, the machinery already set into motion by our state government’s Executive Branch and Department of Transportation will prove impossible to stop later.” 
 
Touted as a counterterrorism measure by the 9-11 Commission, President Bush signed into law the REAL ID Act of 2005 to establish national standards for state-issued drivers’ licenses, require all motor vehicle departments to keep copies of personal identity documents and force states to link their databases of individual driver information both nationally and internationally.  
 
If left unchecked, the REAL ID Act of 2005 could begin impacting the everyday activities of Pennsylvania citizens as early as 2011. On Jan. 1 of that year, countless American citizens will be required to present a REAL ID compliant, state-issued driver’s license or other approved form of photo identification in order to visit a national park, enter a court house or even to board an airplane. 
 
In conjunction with Gordon Denlinger (R-Lancaster), John Siptroth (D-Monroe/Pike), and Tom Yewcic (D-Cambria/Somerset), Rohrer has exchanged written communication with the governor over the past several weeks to urge both the administration and PennDOT to cease and desist with any further collection or conversion of Pennsylvanians’ biometric data.   
 
Most notably, today’s press conference exposed the unauthorized $45 million two-year state contract with privately owned Viisage Technology to create facial recognition templates from PA driver’s license photos. Initiated under the guise of eliminating duplicate licenses, the personal biometric information of all new and renewing Pennsylvania drivers’ license applicants is already being stored in a database updated by Viisage, even though they have not been informed of this “non-evasive” process. 
 
“Although the governor has promptly responded to each of our communications, his request for additional time to gather further information regarding the impact of REAL ID is unquestionably not the answer the people of Pennsylvania want to hear,” said Rohrer.   “Most likely the governor’s attempt to buy more time not to act will logically be viewed as yet another smoke screen or stall tactic to keep the wheels in motion to implement REAL ID in Pennsylvania with or without legislative approval.”    
 
Furthermore, the lawmakers urged PennDOT to convert all currently stored database images to a non-biometric standard which is sufficient for personal identification and verification and, most importantly, does not infringe upon significant privacy and other related constitutional interests directly linked to the current FaceEXPLORER driver identification program.
 
“Having no formal statutory directive, some may say that our activist executive branch and PennDOT have only done what they perhaps thought they should do – which would be to move forward with REAL ID implementation,” said Rohrer.   “Now, however, the people are speaking. For example, there was a time not long ago that this legislature did not know that small technology improvement line-items in the larger PennDOT budget reflected contracts and agreements that pushed all of Pennsylvania toward Real ID. We do know it now, and we, the original sponsors of House Bill 1351, are demanding immediate Legislative action so that the most personal information of Pennsylvania citizens whether it be fingerprints, retinal scans, or DNA never falls prey to the very real national and international dangers of identity theft, global tracking and beyond Orwellian science fiction government surveillance.” 
 
With the strongest REAL ID repeal language introduced in the nation to date, immediate passage of Rohrer’s legislation (House Bill 1351) would strictly prohibit the governor, the Department of Transportation or any other state agency from complying with any: 
  • Provision of the REAL ID Act of 2005, or the provision of any other federal law, regulation or policy that requires compliance with the REAL ID Act of 2005.
  • Federal law, regulation, or policy that would compromise the economic privacy or biometric data for any Pennsylvania resident. 
  • Finally, House Bill 1351 would grant either the governor or the state attorney general the authority to file an action in the appropriate court of jurisdiction to challenge the constitutionality or legality of the REAL ID Act of 2005. 
For more information, view Representative Rohrer’s special REAL ID Alert newsletter at SamRohrer.com.
 
Rep. Samuel Rohrer
128th District
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
(610) 775-5130
(717) 787-8550
SamRohrer.com
Contact: Ty McCauslin
House Republican Public Relations
(717) 772-9979

You Ready for NO LIE MRI?

http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5119805n&tag=cbsnewsMainColumnArea.6

 Where’s my Reynolds Wrap?!

Mind Reading

Traffic Stop Fingerprinting

By Eric Peters, Automotive Columnist

Now they’ll be fingerprinting us for jaywalking. Or “speeding.” Just about any (formerly minor) traffic violation.

Beginning in the once-fine state of Tennessee. Southerners, it appears, are becoming just as statist as the Yankee carpetbaggers they used to (rightly) despise.

Two bills have made their way through the rancid colon of the TN House and Senate, HB2220 and SB2153, respectively, that would “… authorize(s) use of fingerprints as (a) form of acknowledgement, in lieu of, or in addition to, a person’s signature for citations and certain other notices and documents.” (See http://www.capitol.tn.gov and type in the bill numbers.)

In plain language, when you get pulled over or stopped by a cop for some trivial reason such as doing 5 mph over the limit in a Radar Trap Zone, the cop — at his discretion — may compel you, the offender, to submit to being fingerprinted “in lieu of, or in addition to” your signature on the summons.

Tennessee’s tyranny is the first such action of its kind in these forcibly united States — and has aroused a popular groundswell of resentment and resistance. Understandably.

Fingerprinting starts with an “F” — because generally, the accepted practice has been that only felons, or those accused of committing felonies, get inked. Fingerprints go into a national criminal database, so that in the future it will be easier and simpler to track and identify the activities of felons.

But jaywalkers, U-turn bandits and speeders?

Hell, under TN’s new cornpone jackbootery, a person could be fingerprinted merely for spitting on the sidewalk, in violation of town ordinance Barney Fife 5, Section 3a.

It would be humorous, maybe a little bit, if it weren’t so obnoxious to common sense and civil liberties.

http://www.motorists.org/blog/tennessee-tyranny-fingerprinting-during-routine-traffic-stops/

 

hey!  They got a database to build;

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/21/AR2007122102544_pf.html

Gilchrist, Macy Settlement. Read Depositions

Sunday June 28, 2009

I have often wondered aloud what ever happened to Joyce Gilchrist, the OCPD forensics “expert” famed for shoddy, botched or outright fictionalized lab results that resulted in innocent people being convivted of heinous crimes and sentenced to prison or worse-death. 

Now I wonder-Is this it?

David Johns Bryson spent 17 years behind bars for a crime he did not commit.

A settlement was reached in his case against former DA Macy and Joyce Gilchrist

 Gilchrist agreed to pay out 16.5 million to Bryson but claims that the city should pay.  That issue will have to be resolved.

background;

Bryson appeal overview

http://www.oscn.net/applications/oscn/DeliverDocument.asp?CiteID=6271When the Evidence Lies

TIME

2001

Fowler has been struck twice by lightning. A retired house painter in Oklahoma City, Okla., Fowler lived through his 19-year-old son Mark’s arrest in 1985 for murdering three people in a grocery-store holdup. Mark was sentenced to death. A year later Fowler’s mother Anne Laura was raped and murdered, and a man named Robert Lee Miller Jr. was sentenced to die for the crime. The same Oklahoma City police department forensic scientist, Joyce Gilchrist, testified at both trials. But DNA evidence later proved she was wrong about Miller. He was released after 10 years on death row, and a man previously cleared by Gilchrist was charged with the crime. Fowler can’t help wondering if Gilchrist’s testimony was equally inept at the trial of his son Mark, who was executed in January.

Last week gave Fowler even more reason to wonder. A state judge ordered a man named Jeffrey Pierce released after serving 15 years of a 65-year sentence for rape. Gilchrist placed him at the scene of the crime, but DNA evidence proved he was not the rapist. In response, Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating launched a review of every one of the thousands of cases Gilchrist touched between 1980 and 1993, starting with 12 in which death sentences were handed down. But in another 11 of her cases, the defendants have already been put to death. The state is giving the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System $725,000 to hire two attorneys and conduct DNA testing of any evidence analyzed by Gilchrist that led to a conviction. A preliminary FBI study of eight cases found that in at least five, she had made outright errors or overstepped “the acceptable limits of forensic science.” Gilchrist got convictions by matching hair samples with a certainty other forensic scientists found impossible to achieve. She also appears to have withheld evidence from the defense and failed to perform tests that could have cleared defendants.

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,109568,00.html

Stomach turning story about the goings-on in the lab of Joyce Gilchrist, her unethical practices and testimonies, destroying and hiding of evidence and more.

http://books.google.com/books?id=BtY4-YryxZsC&lpg=PA87&ots=9tAZVae-U8&dq=Joyce%20Gilchrist&pg=PA115

It is nothing less than chilling to know that this went on for so long in spite of the fact that people knew and even tried to get something done about it.

 

 

On June 17th 2009 Scott Cooper reports on the settlement reached by Joyce Gilchrist and ex-DA Bob Macy.  You can also read the depositions;

http://www.okgazette.com/p/12776/a/4138/Default.aspx

 

AxXiom

Deweese Cuts to the Chase-Total Surveillance Society

Government Gone Mad in a Total Surveillance Society

Author

Tom Deweese  Bio

Send a friendEmail Article
broken watermains

 By Tom Deweese  Thursday, June 25, 2009

I’ve heard it all- the cries, the pleas, the whines, the double speak and the lies. “We need the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to protect us from terrorists.” “We must have Real ID to protect us from illegal immigration.” “We must have E-Verify to protect American jobs.” “Traffic light cameras are necessary to make the streets safer.” “Security cameras on street corners make our neighborhoods safer.” “I’m glad the TSA is there at the airport – I feel so much safer getting on an airplane.” And my favorite lie of them all – “If you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear.”

Take note: every single one of these issues results in bigger, more invasive government, and not a single one will do anything to solve the intended problem. Every single one will make you less free, less happy and less safe. Here is my guarantee – put each and every one of these programs fully into place and learn the hard way that it isn’t the final solution – but only the beginning. The government has much more in store for Americans and their privacy and personal security – and you are not going to be happy. Get ready, Americans. Here it comes like a freight train. And if you’ve uttered one of the whines listed above, then you have no one to blame but yourself.

I’ve argued that the Department of Homeland Security is the greatest threat to liberty Americans have ever faced. It began with 170,000 employees by combining 22 existing federal agencies, including Border Patrol, Coast Guard, Secret Service, FEMA, Transportation Security Agency (TSA), Immigration and Naturalization, Customs Service, Animal and Plant Health Inspection, Federal Protective Service, FBI’s Domestic Preparedness, Federal Computer Incident Response Center, and several more lesser agencies of the same type.

All of these agencies are under the control of one manager, the Secretary of Homeland Security. As a result of provisions in the Patriot Act (a monstrous law, passed in the panic of 911 and admittedly never read by a single member of Congress before it was passed) the DHS Secretary – one person – has the power to send federal law enforcement into private homes without a search warrant. Records and materials may be taken from private homes, computer records searched, phones tapped and e-mails monitored, without the knowledge of the suspect.

Now, some may argue that all of that is necessary to catch a terrorist and that it is not intended to affect innocent citizens. Again, it’s the -”IF YOU HAVE NOTHING TO HIDE – YOU HAVE NOTHING TO FEAR” excuse. Before moving forward, let’s get rid of this naive utterance once and for all.

First, that statement really says that government always gets it right. So fear of searches is just nonsense – if you are innocent. Well, have you heard the recording of Campaign for Liberty employee Steve Bierfeldt when he was detained by the TSA simply because he was carrying less than $2,000 in cash from a conference? All young Steve did was ask the TSA agents to show him the law that said they had a right to ask him why he was carrying the money. The checks in the same metal box as the cash were made out to the Campaign for Liberty. Any moron could have figured out where the money came from and what it was for. But the TSA didn’t care – they wanted to show their authority. Biefeldt presented the entire box to TSA agents, not trying to conceal it in any way. TSA tried to bully him and threatened to turn him over to drug enforcement authorities, as an attempt to make it appear he was carrying the cash from drug deals. Steve’s reply was basically, “Fine – will they be able to show me the law?” Innocent Steve had nothing to hide and plenty to fear from TSA thugs.

Second, that statement says that the Bill of Rights was only created to protect the guilty. You see, if you have nothing to hide, then you obviously don’t need to be protected from government. The Constitution was written by men who feared government – even the one they were creating – and they put safeguards in it to force government to recognize and respect our property and our right to be innocent until proven guilty. DHS and the Patriot Act, and those who use the mantra “If you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear,” reject and ignore those guarantees. Under the Patriot Act and it’s agents in the DHS and TSA, you are not secure in your home or your person, you are not innocent until proven guilty and you are not allowed to face your accusers. That means tyranny, not the Constitution, is in control.

Supposedly, the DHS mission is to be our frontline against terrorism. An added bonus, say its supporters, is to help reduce illegal immigration. Yet the department has opposed the most obvious element of “homeland security” – securing the nation’s borders. DHS has blocked building the wall. It’s done nothing about enforcing Visa violators. And sometimes it even blocks local law enforcement from arresting and deporting known illegals.

Instead, DHS has been on a rampage to impose rules, regulations and projects, all designed to put legal, law abiding Americans in a massive straight jacket.

Real ID is not a tool to fight illegal immigration

First there was the Real ID Act. Unfortunately, some misguided Conservative leaders, both in the grassroots and in Congress continue to support this terrible Act as a safeguard to stop illegal immigration. They are horribly wrong.

Real ID is argued to be an attempt to standardize the process and format for the creation of all state drivers’ licenses to achieve increased security. Proponents argue that now we will know that anyone carrying a driver’s license is legal in this country and therefore not a threat. What most Americans do not know is that Real ID did not originate in the United States, but in the backrooms of a UN organization called the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).

Real ID mandates a certain picture quality for all drivers’ licenses that are to be compliant with the ICAO’s Document 9303 biometric format. Your photo taken by a local DMV is run thorough special software which measures and analyzes the unique personally identifiable characteristics of your face. The process results in a unique numeric code which identifies a person according to facial measurements. In other words, under Real ID, your face is reduced to a number code – a number which is read by computer, tracked by surveillance cameras and distributed worldwide by the ICAO. Take a look at your drivers’ license – if it has a blue background, it is ICAO-compliant.

Real ID is not a national ID card designed to protect us from terrorism and illegal immigration – it is an INTERNATIONAL ID card designed to track the movements of everyone wherever they go – anywhere in the world. As you read on you will find that it will get much worse, for Real ID is only the first step.

The Obama Administration is now talking about repealing Real ID because there is such opposition to it. Do not be fooled. They know they are caught with this monster and so the flimflam is on – repeal Real ID and replace it with something much worse. That’s how they play the game.

read the rest;

http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/12325

No High Tech can Correct for Stupid

Too busy collecting and sharing information to actually act on it?

Just like a high dollar doctor with all the machines, beams, tests and gadgets money can buy won’t do you a bit of good if he hasn’t got good sense.

You’d do better going to a vet that actually knows the simple principles of medicine.

Ax

Abortion Clinic Manager Reveals He Warned FBI of Suspect in Murder of Dr. George Tiller, Says Killing Could Have Been Avoided

 

We speak to the manager of a Kansas City abortion clinic who says he twice told the FBI last week about the suspect in the murder of abortion provider Dr. George Tiller, including the day before the killing. The suspect, Scott Roeder, vandalized the Aid for Women clinic by locking its doors shut. Using the pseudonym “Jeff Pederson” to protect his identity, the clinic manager says Tiller’s death could have been avoided had the FBI acted on his warnings.

http://www.democracynow.org/2009/6/3/jeff

Holy Motorola! Abu Dhabi’s Got the Control-a

Burka’s anyone??

burka_angle

 

Aren’t you relieved to live in America?  Our government would never do this sort of thing to us. . . .would they?

Sure as God made little green apples, you bet they would. . .are. . have.

AxXiom

  • Motorola selected to provide portfolio MOTOA4 wireless mission critical solutions to Abu Dhabi police

Motorola Inc. (NYSE: MOT), leader in the development and deployment of mission critical communication solutions, today announced a contract win with the Abu Dhabi police force, to provide an end to end wireless mobile video surveillance solution for the force’s vehicles and personnel. The contract, which will be signed at IDEX 2009, will see Motorola supplying the latest from its MOTOA4 mission critical portfolio and delivering innovative and reliable wireless solutions.

The new service will enable control room operators to interact with the video system that delivers real time streaming of video from police vehicles and personnel; in contrast to previous solutions that used recorded video. Not only will the service allow live streaming of video, it will also provide local recording of high resolution video. The recorded video will allow future investigation and analysis of footage by the police and assist in solving crimes. The videos can also be presented as evidence in a court of law. Videos sent from the vehicles and personnel will be made available to the five command and control centres throughout the Abu Dhabi and Mussafah area. To aid the police further, mobile command and control will also be provided. Motorola is delivering the solution with their UAE authorised distributor Safeer Integrated Systems.

Motorola’s advanced suite of applications deliver actionable, accurate, real-time information from the field to the command room. The new contract will enable the Abu Dhabi police force to respond to situations as they happen and make decisions on the basis of the information fed back in real time. A core aspect of the new contract is the provision of the MotoLocator service, the primary purpose of which is to provide location-based video surveillance from police in the field back to the control room. The service, which also shows all the force vehicles on a map, will enable control room operators and management to have real-time knowledge of what is happening in the field and allow them to respond on that basis.

“We’re excited to have been selected to provide the deployment of this cutting edge technology to the Abu Dhabi police force,” said Manuel Torres, vice president and general manager, Motorola Government & Public Safety, EMEA. “At Motorola we pride ourselves on delivering ultra reliable mission critical communications anywhere and at anytime. We hope the strong relationship we have with the Abu Dhabi force grows and deepens in the future”

The new video system can also be used to cost effectively connect other applications used by the Abu Dhabi police, including fixed camera installations, automated speed tracking of vehicles, facial recognition and automatic number plate recognition. In future National ID, electronic passports and fingerprint reading capabilities will be added.

Today’s announcement is a further demonstration of Motorola’s leading role in the delivery of mission critical communications for public safety bodies and its commitment to meeting their evolving needs. Motorola’s mission critical MOTOA4 portfolio provides technology that is second nature by enabling seamless connectivity and putting real time information into the hands of users.


You can find this page on internet at :

http://www.eyeofdubai.com/v1/news/newsdetail-28119.htm

The Shameful Eight-Republican Wash Outs-Cap and Trade

**UPDATED**
Contact info
The following 8 Republicans voted YES today (6/26/09) on H.R. 2454, the massive  American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 (aka the Waxman-Markey) bill:
 
  1. Bono Mack - Ca
  2. Castle – DE
  3. Kirk – IL
  4. Lance – NJ
  5. LoBiondo – NJ
  6. McHugh – NY
  7. Reichert – WA
  8. Smith – NJ
 
The final House vote was 219-212; if 4 of these 8 ’Republicans’ had voted NO, this costly bill would have failed.
Contact info
The Shameful Eight
Mary Bono Mack, California

* PALM SPRINGS, CA
* 707 E. Tahquitz Canyon Way, Ste 9
* Palm Springs, CA 92262
* T (760) 320-1076
* F (760) 320-0596

* HEMET, CA
* 1600 E. Florida Ave, Ste 301
* Hemet, CA 92544
* T (951) 658-2312
* F (951) 652-2562

Michael Castle, Delaware

Wilmington Office 201 N. Walnut Street, Suite 107
Wilmington, DE 19801-3970
p: 302.428.1902
f: 302.428.1950

Dover Office 300 South New Street
Dover, DE 19904
p: 302.736.1666
f: 302.736.6580

Georgetown Office p: 302.856.3334

Mark Kirk, Illinois

Northbrook Office
707 Skokie Boulevard, Suite 350
Northbrook, IL 60062
Phone: 847-940-0202
Fax: 847-940-7143

Leonard Lance, New Jersey

Westfield Office
Congressman Leonard Lance 425 North Avenue
Westfield, NJ 07090
Phone: (908)-518-7733
Fax: (908) 518-7751

Frank LoBiondo, New Jersey

District Office

5914 Main Street
Mays Landing, New Jersey 08330
1 (800) 471-4450 or (609) 625-5008 (phone),
(609) 625-5071 (fax)

John McHugh, New York

WATERTOWN OFFICE
120 Washington Street, Suite 200 Watertown,
NY 13601-3370 T (
315) 782-3150 F (315) 782-1291 1

PLATTSBURGH OFFICE 14 Durkee Street,
Suite 320 Plattsburgh,
NY 12901 T (518) 563-1406 F
(518) 561-9723

MAYFIELD OFFICE 28 N. School St.,
P.O. Box 800 Mayfield,
NY 12117-0800 T
(518) 661-6486 F (518) 661-5704

CANASTOTA OFFICE
205 South Peterboro Street
Canastota, NY 13032-1312 T
(315) 697-2063 F (315) 697-2064

Dave Reichert, Washington State

District Office
2737 78th Avenue, S.E.
Suite 202
Mercer Island, WA 98040
(206) 275-3438
(206) 275-3437 Fax
(877) 920-9208 Toll free

Chris Smith, New Jersey

Hamilton District Office
1540 Kuser Rd Suite A-9
Hamilton, NJ 08619
p 609-585-7878
f 609-585-9155

Whiting District Office
108 Lacey Road
Suite 38 A
Whiting Shopping Center
Whiting NJ 08759
p 732-350-2300
f 732-350-6260

 _________________________________
also see Contact Congress http://www.visi.com/juan/congress/
_______________________________

Liberty Maven;

As I write this right now, Republican Minority Leader John Boehner (who also is a cosponsor of HR1207) has been talking on the House Floor for about 50 minutes. He is stepping through (almost page by page) the 300+ page addition to the Cap and Trade (Climate Bill) that was added around 3am this morning.

He’s actually making many great points about the horrible details in the bill.

What he is doing right now is giving great ammunition for supporting the “Read the Bills” Act in the near future.

“Is there anything that we aren’t regulating in this bill?”, Boehner yells.

http://libertymaven.com/2009/06/26/apparently-john-boehner-supports-the-read-the-bills-act/6261/