You are here

Diana Nyad Might Swim for 48 Hours But True Heroes Are 'People Who Pick Up and Start Over'

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Tue, 10/08/2013 - 15:05

Marathon swimmer Diana Nyad made her record-breaking swim from Cuba to Florida just recently. This morning, she started a 48-hour charitable swim to raise funds for Hurricane Sandy survivors. But, as her coach said, “I can’t imagine what it would be like to lose everything — everything you’ve worked for and strived for in your life, gone. It’s not easy. These are the people who become heroes. These are the people who pick up and start over.”

My piece for Hearst's Connecticut News Group starts: "When Lindsay O’Brien’s 15 minutes are up, she’s not going to linger one second longer than she has to in a 120-foot, two-lane pool that is going to be installed in New York City’s Herald Square.
'The minute that clock hits the 15 minutes I am jumping out of there,' said O’Brien, the project manager for Hurricane Sandy relief at Stamford-based AmeriCares, a nonprofit global health and disaster-relief organization.
When she and others from AmeriCares undertake 15 minutes of nonstop swimming as part of a fundraiser for Hurricane Sandy relief, it will challenge their endurance. But the true endurance test will be undertaken by marathon swimmer Diana Nyad, who plans to swim for 48 hours straight — from 8:30 a.m. Tuesday to 8:30 a.m. Thursday — in an effort to raise money to help Sandy survivors.
Nyad, who is fresh off her record-breaking, 53-hour ocean swim from Cuba to Florida, said in an email that she wanted to help her hometown of New York City raise storm-relief money after Sandy hit. After a conversation with Carol A. Robles-Roman, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s deputy mayor for legal affairs and counsel, Nyad came up with the idea of constructing a pool in 'in the heart of Manhattan, where I would swim for 48 continuous hours, in solidarity with those who had suffered great loss, and invite guest swimmers to shadow swim with me in the next lane' she wrote."

The rest of the story: http://blog.ctnews.com/stamford411/2013/10/08/stamfords-americares-swims...
 

Prosecutors: Former PA Supreme Court Justice Should Apologize-Or Go to Prison

When former Pennsylvania Justice Joan Orie Melvin was sentenced for politicial corruption, the judge fashioned an unusual sentence:

* three years of house arrest;

* orders to send a picture of herself with an apology written on it to every member of the Pennsylvania judiciary;

* orders to send letters of apology to every member of the staff of her sister, a former state senator also convicted of using taxpayer resources on political campaigns;

* orders to send apologies to every member of her staff ordered to conduct political work even though it is not allowed under the law for government employees to do so;

* orders to send an apology to every member of her family;

* orders to serve in a soup kitchen three times a week, pay a $55,000 fine, and to not use the honorific of justice for the three years she will be on house arrest and for the two years she will be on probation.

The former justice is appealing her sentence, but Allegheny County prosecutors are arguing she could face prison time for violating her probation sentence by not yet sending the letters of apology to the Pennsylvania judiciary, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports.


 

Aereo's Intellectual Property Fight Now Involves Patents

The Hollywood Reporter has this story: the broadcasters who allege Aereo's retransmission over the Internet of their free broadcast TV programmising is "copyright infringement want to find out why Aereo's patent applications state there is no simple way to access TV programming on digital devices." As a result, a judge is "allowing TV broadcasters to spend an hour deposing Aereo CEO Chet Kanojia and CTO Joseph Lipowski over statements made in patent applications," The Hollywood Reporter also reports.

Supreme Court Seeks Solicitor General's POV in Medical Device Preemption Case

While the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled FDA approval of medical devices preempts tort lawsuits over medical-device injuries, plaintiff "Arizonan Richard Stengel says federal law regulating medical devices does not trump his claims under state law because Medtronic Inc failed to alert the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to known risks associated with the pain medication pump and catheter that was implanted in his abdomen," Reuters reports. The high court has asked for input from President Obama's administration before making a decision on granting certiorari on hearing the appeal.

GMO Strict-Liability Rule Halts Adoption of New Crops

Genectically modified crops have been adapted to climatic conditions in Africa that can otherwise cause crop failure and then famine, The Washington Post reports. But under Tanzania's "'strict liability' rule, anyone associated with importing, moving, storing or using GM products is liable if someone makes a claim of harm, injury or loss caused by the products. Such a claim could reach beyond personal loss or injury to include damage to the environment and to biological diversity," The Washington Post reports. The pros are protection from any unknown dangers of GMO crops, but the cons are lack of access to crops that could prevent hunger and starvation.

 

Questions Raised Over For-Profit Indigent Defense During Phila. City Council Hearing

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 10/07/2013 - 22:39

Several witnesses during a Philadelphia City Council hearing Monday morning questioned how a for-profit law firm could provide adequate representation to poor Philadelphians whose constitutional rights are at stake in criminal and family cases.

The city of Philadelphia is preparing to contract with one law firm to handle the cases in which the Defender Association of Philadelphia has a conflict.

Attorney Jeffrey Lindy, who is involved with the appointment of defense counsel in federal criminal cases, testified he supports Mayor Michael Nutter. But Lindy said “this is not a good idea. Good people can make bad decisions and this is one of those bad decisions.”

Philadelphia Bar Association Chancellor Kathleen Wilkinson said that adequate representation can't be provided if $10 million would be expended for 22,000 cases. That would work out to be about $450 per case, Wilkinson said.

The Nutter administration is reportedly close to contracting with Daniel-Paul Alva to form a new law firm, but Everett Gillison, Nutter's chief of staff and deputy mayor for public safety, said during his public testimony that he would not comment on a contract that is still being negotiated.

But Gillison said that there is an opportunity to provide additional services by going to a consolidated model of legal representation for conflict cases.

"Right now the opportunity before me is to raise the level of practice and have the services that need to be had for the next party,” Gillison said.

Due to “economies of scale,” more resources could be provided to poor Philadelphians guaranteed to have their lawyers paid for by city government, Gillison said.

He also said that dependency practice in which parents' rights to their children can be terminated for neglect or abuse “is completely and totally in need of additional rescues.” One law firm could staff courtrooms and have social workers and investigators available on cases, Gillison said.

"Right now quite frankly, we as a city and we as a state, don't provide the kinds of resources we're supposed to provide,” Gillison said ”I'm not trying to boil the ocean here. I'm trying to get something additional and better."

Any defendants with which the Defender Association or the proposed conflict-counsel law firm would have a conflict would still be represented by court-appointed counsel, Gillison said. The city does not have the ability to provide additional services for those defendants right now, he said.

Gillison also questioned the argument that the for-profit legal model would be problematic. Currently, the city has “the equivalent of many hundreds of private law firms doing the work” instead of one law firm.

Gillison said that he has tried to answer questions about the conflict-counsel proposition openly and honestly, but Councilmen Dennis M. O'Brien, joined by Councilman Bill Greenlee, argued that their questions about the proposal have not received responses from the administration. They also questioned why the contract was being negotiated as a one-year contract with the option to renew; otherwise a multi-year contract would necessitate City Council approval. Both councilmen co-sponsored the resolution for the hearing Monday.

Legal representation for Philadelphians who don't get public defenders is woefully inadequate, Wilkinson said, including because they do not get the resources of investigators, social workers and  paralegals.

Other issues with the new model include ensuring that there are not potential conflicts of interest for part-time lawyers who have their own practices on the side or conflicts of interest from criminal or family-law clients being “mined” to make referrals in civil lawsuits or other legal work, Wilkinson said. She did not take a position on whether a for-profit law firm was per se a bad idea.

Lindy called it impossible to protect criminal defendants' Sixth Amendment rights to effective assistance for counsel if $9.5 million is expended on 22,000 cases by the city of Philadelphia. In comparison, the federal government expended $5 million for 580 cases, Lindy said.

Lindy also said that the current model was not working well in Philadelphia because some attorneys are trying to make a living on court-appointed cases, resulting in corners being cut, defendants not being visited in the Philadelphia Prison System, defendants' parents' phone calls not being returned or crime scenes not being investigated in person.

"You're not going to be doing that stuff if you're handling a heavy diet of court-appointed cases," Lindy said.

Chief Public Defender Ellen Greenlee testified that the amount paid for conflict-counsel lawyers, including for dependency counsel is an “absolute disgrace.”

There also was some disagreement during the hearing on whether the First Judicial District had given up its power to appoint counsel along with its unilateral decision that it would no longer pay counsel out of its budget. The Philadelphia courts did not send a representative to testify, Gillison said that the court had given up its appointment power, and O'Brien said that it was only the responsibility to pay court-appointed counsel that the courts surrendered.

Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge John W. Herron, administrative judge of the trial division, said in a September 24 e-mail to me that “the court will no longer receive or disburse funds for court appointed counsel, but the court will continue to review and approve fee petitions and refer these to the city for payment.”

In his opening remarks, O'Brien said that in 2013, which marks a half-century since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled those too poor to afford their own lawyers must be provided government-paid counsel in order to protect their constitutional rights, that City Council is working to preserve those rights by questioning the administration's conflict-counsel proposition.

U.S. Supreme Court 'Term Is Deeper in Important Cases'

The New York Times' Adam Liptak reports on the U.S. Supreme Court's momentous docket this fall: the "court’s new term, which starts Monday, will feature an extraordinary series of cases on consequential constitutional issues, including campaign contributions, abortion rights, affirmative action, public prayer and presidential power."

Federal Shutdown Will Affect Mortgage Lending

The federal government shutdown will affect the housing market in several ways, The Washington Post reports:

1. Buyers won't be able to get approvals for their mortgages, including those backed by the Federal Housing Administration;

2. Lenders will be less willing to make loans or even unable to make loans without paperwork from the IRS, FHA and the Social Security Administration.

"The approval of mortgage applications requires several interactions with the federal government that many home buyers may not know about. Lenders have become much more meticulous about following federal rules after the housing crisis that began in 2007, and are now more thorough in verifying the information on loan applications. These concerns were far less common when the government last shut down in 1995," The Washington Post also reports.

CT News Junkie: New Law Puts Connecticut In The Minority On Disclosure

Connecticut is only one of nine states restricting the public disclosure of crime scene photos, Connecticut News Junkie reports on a survey conducted by the Connecticut Office of Legislative Research. Connecticut also is only one of 11 states restricting the public disclosure of 911 calls.

"Over the past few weeks the legislature’s research staff has been compiling reports for a task force convened by lawmakers to weigh the privacy of crime victims against the public’s right to know under the state’s Freedom of Information Act," Conneticut News Junkie reports. "The panel was created by a law that carved out new disclosure restrictions on the release of some law enforcement records pertaining to homicide victims and victims who are children" in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shootings.

President Obama Suggests Name Change for Washington Redskins

After the tizzy caused by President Obama's suggestion that law schools should be two years, not three years, for full-time students, what will come of the president's suggestion that the Washington Redskins football team should perhaps get a less controversial moniker? Obama made that suggestion in an interview with the Associated Press, The Washington Post reports.

There has been long-running litigation by several American Indian groups or individual American Indian plaintiffs to challenge the registered trademarks that the Washington Redskins hold as disparaging and racist to American Indians. National Public Radio reported on that litigation this spring: http://www.npr.org/blogs/codeswitch/2013/05/31/187636561/What-A-Lawsuit-...

Pages

Subscribe to Cultivated Compendium RSS