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BilboBargains , in Pittsburgh active shooter: What we know about the suspect, William Hardison Sr.

He was killed by other active shooters who turned up in their active shooter uniforms.

AllonzeeLV , in Over half of Americans say they're not even close to financial freedom

🎶 Day’s never finished, masta got me workin, someday massa set me free! 🎶

sadreality ,

Labour will set you free, indeed

SheeEttin ,

That’s a good slogan, we should put it up over the front gate

sadreality ,

Nobody wants to work anymore so a little encouragement is much needed.

DigitalTraveler42 , in Trump replaces top Georgia lawyer ahead of surrender

Oh this is the “lawyer of the stars” guy Trump had previously retained:

swtwlaw.com/steven-sadow

Representative High Profile Clients William Roberts, Jr., a/k/a Rick Ross Howard K. Stern Clifford J. Harris, Jr., a/k/a T.I. Ray Lewis/Joseph Sweeting Gold Club/Steve Kaplan “Mansion Madam”/Nicole Probert Michael Madlem/Smoke 911 International Follies/The Cheetah Isiah Crowell Usher Tyrone Griffen, a/k/a “TyDolla$”

Representative Appellate Cases Georgia v. Winfrey, 304 Ga. 94 (2018) Georgia v. Conzo, 239 Ga.App.72 (2008) Powell v. Georgia, 270 Ga.App. 327 (1998) In re Spruell, 227 Ga.App. 324 (1997) Mitsubishi Int. Corp. v. Cardinal Textile Sales, Inc., 14 F.3d 1507 (11th Cir. 1994) U.S. v. Williams, 954 F.2d 668 (11th Cir. 1992) In re Spruell, 200 Ga.App. 218 (1991) U.S. v. Cohen, 888 F.2d 770 (11th Cir. 1989) Garland v. Georgia, 253 Ga.App. 789 (1985)

zepheriths , in Heavy drinking, handgun-carrying linked among rural youth

I don’t think the to are related if it only presented itself in rural America and no where else. If a similar thing happened in either urban US, or rural Russia, it could be more easy to link it to it being drinking that causes that. This study has to many variables

Fredselfish , in Boston.com: Visitors blocked a Vermont road just to see this wooden troll. Now no one can view it.
@Fredselfish@lemmy.world avatar

People ruin everything.

dan1101 ,

Yeah the internet can cause too many people in the same place easily. I’ve often come to the conclusion if I find some interesting obscure thing to just shut up about it.

Fredselfish ,
@Fredselfish@lemmy.world avatar

Exactly take my pictures but don’t reveal the location. Or better don’t show them to anyone or even take pictures.

dan1101 ,

I re-save any pictures I post online in a very old image editing program that strips the metadata. It’s a hassle but I think worth it.

LanternEverywhere ,

Fyi there are apps and online tools just for removing metadata. Also many sites (but not all) automatically remove metadata from uploaded images. For example imgur does that. But if your way works and is no hassle then keep on keepin on.

dan1101 ,

Yeah mainly just remembering to remove the metadata is the hassle. Upload sites might say they do it but I will never 100% trust that they don’t keep some part of it.

GlitzyArmrest ,
@GlitzyArmrest@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, this is exactly what’s happening with national parks. People are going simply to post pictures to social media and causing overcrowding.

who8mydamnoreos , in Over half of Americans say they're not even close to financial freedom

Freedom is a subjective term, what do they mean?

Semi-Hemi-Demigod ,
@Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose

FormerlyChucks , in Mum calls out system over baby-faced rapist's light sentence

This is how you know the justice system is run by pedophiles. Guillotine. Now.

gowan , in Secret Service Agents Were in Contact With Far-Right Oath Keepers - A new report reveals members of the Secret Service were in communication with the group’s radical leader, Stewart Rhodes
@gowan@reddthat.com avatar

Then these agents need to be removed immediately and investigated for sedition.

SirSnufflelump , in When a Coke Plant Closed in Pittsburgh, Cardiovascular ER Visits Plunged

Can’t say that’s surprising, I’m sure Pittsburgh’s overall health has come a long way since they shifted away from the steel mills and factories that used to fill the city. I’d say it’s hard to pin it on this one factory when they’ve been working to clean up the city for decades.

cbarrick ,

deleted_by_author

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  • SirSnufflelump ,

    A while ago I saw that UPMC had more employees in PA than any other company, which I thought was pretty wild considering Pittsburgh isn’t nearly as big as Philly

    some_guy , (edited )
    @some_guy@kbin.social avatar

    UPMC also covers out to Johnstown, Indiana, and Altoona

    Crashumbc ,

    Yeah healthcare is becoming the latest consolidate and merge into mega corporations sector.

    Probably not a good thing but what are you going to do :/

    Replica , in Heavy drinking, handgun-carrying linked among rural youth
    @Replica@lemmy.world avatar

    Name a dumber and more dangerous combo. I’ll wait.

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Japanese cultists and ricin. But only a little bit dumber and more dangerous.

    darkstar , in Grand jury cites shoddy investigations by Brookhaven Police Dept. at center of mistrial

    I’m struggling to understand the role a grand jury played here and why they wrote a report. Maybe somebody with more legal experience can chime in and clear that up.

    It’s my understanding that a grand jury is convened prior to indictment and consulted as a step to strengthen the prosecution of a case. The grand jury chooses to indict and can compel the testimony of those involved. This, however, sounds like it was past pre-trial phases. So what was the purpose of convening a grand jury at this point?

    Then there’s the petit jury, which is the jury of 12 everyone thinks of when they hear the word “jury”, which is the group of people responsible for making a formal, unanimous decision at the end of a trial, assuming the defendant didn’t waive their right to a jury trial. It almost sounds like the article is talking about the petit jury, but makes a mistake and calls them a grand jury. Confusingly, I still don’t understand why a petit jury would be writing a report, either.

    Since the jury is just made up of average people, who writes the report? How do they know what the format needs to be? The report sounds damning, but these people aren’t law enforcement or legal experts, so how much weight does their report carry? I think they’re right, mind you, especially given the judge’s admonishment of the police officer, but I’m just left with many more questions than answers.

    gAlienLifeform OP , (edited )
    @gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world avatar

    The grand jury issuing a report happened a few weeks ago (and for a different set of cases), the judge declaring a mistrial happened a few days ago. They’re separate things, but related because in both instances it’s the same set of police officers being caught screwing up in both cases.

    Also, a few small details about grand juries in general (this can vary from district to district and state to state, but this is generally true),

    It’s my understanding that a grand jury is convened prior to indictment myand consulted as a step to strengthen the prosecution of a case.

    Not exactly. In theory, Grand Juries are actually supposed to be an additional restraint on prosecutors. Before prosecutors can publicly announce serious charges they’ve got to convince a grand jury to give them an indictment. That’s not as hard as getting a petit jury to hand out a guilty plea because a) the grand jury usually doesn’t need to be unanimous, b) the grand jury usually only listens to the prosecutor and doesn’t hear from the potential defendant’s attorney, but in theory at least requiring a Grand Jury’s approval is a way to keep prosecutors from indicting whoever they want just to jam them up to.

    The grand jury chooses to indict

    Not exactly. The grand jury hears the prosecutor’s evidence and arguments and then issues a report (like, search the term “grand jury report” and you’ll see a bunch of them from all over the place) that will say something like, “we authorize you to issue an indictment against Mr. Bill for violating state statute 101 like you asked for, we don’t authorize you to issue an indictment against Mr Bill for violating state statute 102 like you asked for, and we also authorize you to issue an indictment against Mr Bill for violating state statute 103 which you didn’t ask for but seems like it fits here. We will explain our reasons below.”

    (Incidentally, it’s irrelevant here, but they only give the prosecutor permission to issue an indictment, issuing it and withdrawing it are all choices the prosecutor still gets to make (a lot of times a grand jury report authorizing an indictment is just what a prosecutor needs to show Mr Bill to get Mr Bill to testify against Mr Bob and Mr Bill gets to plead to something less than what the grand jury authorized in exchange for his cooperation)).

    Since the jury is just made up of average people, who writes the report?

    The average people do, albeit usually with a lot of assistance from court clerks when it comes to formatting and organizing evidence and things like that.

    You might be asking yourself, “So how do these average people know the difference between state statute 101, 102, and 103 and what’s supposed to apply to which situation?” Mostly, that’s something the prosecutor explains to them (which is maybe part of the reason it’s been said that a good prosecutors could get a grand jury to let them indict a ham sandwich), but they are also supposed to use their own eyes and layperson common sense, so if a majority of them say something like, “the statute says ‘serious bodily harm,’ and we just don’t think the victim’s injuries were serious enough to be called that” then that prosecutor just doesn’t get the indictment they were asking for.

    (I think there are also some jurisdictions where the grand jury can ask a judge questions, and in basically all of them the judge can jump in if the prosecutor starts just making stuff up, but generally the prosecutor gets to tell the GJ mostly whatever they want to).

    e; Phrasing things with clarity so they can be understood is a task I struggle with on occasion and sometimes need multiple attempts to do halfway good because legal nonsense make brain hurt

    darkstar ,

    Awesome! Thanks, I learned a lot. I appreciate the insight.

    AbidanYre , in Mum calls out system over baby-faced rapist's light sentence

    Fuck, I thought this was going to be a date rape or something like that (still bad), but he raped a 12 year old when he was 20.

    vlad76 ,
    @vlad76@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    At least we know that prizon will be a very bad time for him. Although 11 month… that’s very lenient

    Brunbrun6766 ,
    @Brunbrun6766@lemmy.world avatar

    How is that not violating some sort of minimum time law…

    vlad76 ,
    @vlad76@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    That probably is the minimum

    Astroturfed ,

    Because those are only for people who do something like buy deadly, scary marijuana, or look at a cop funny.

    Magister , in L.A. County sheriff’s deputy accused of trying to cover up DUI crash of fellow deputy
    @Magister@lemmy.world avatar

    If I understand how it works in the USA, the officer will just move to the next county to continue his carrer, right?

    Fredselfish ,
    @Fredselfish@lemmy.world avatar

    Yes and the cop covering up will be found that he was working within police policies and did nothing wrong.

    ACAB.

    linuxgator ,

    Nah, he’ll just transfer over to the city police instead. No moving required.

    JustZ , in Pittsburgh active shooter: What we know about the suspect, William Hardison Sr.
    @JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

    How are there absolute potatoes in this thread defending this dude?

    By this account he was an insane, anti-government nutjob, who fell for something citizen scams.

    Oh, is it because he’s anti government and shot it out with police over a tax lien foreclosure?

    PottedPlant , in Boston.com: Visitors blocked a Vermont road just to see this wooden troll. Now no one can view it.
    @PottedPlant@lemmy.world avatar

    Property owners trolling local community IRL.

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