Thursday, September 30, 2010

WHICH IS IT ?

Justice eludes Hawaiians, OHA study says

By Gordon Y.K. Pang

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Sep 29, 2010

Not to detract from any of the statistics that clearly show disparity for Native Hawaiians, the story leaves me wondering about the statistics for the other ethnic and racial groups mentioned in the second paragraph.

 

I also wonder if Blacks were left out of the count again, being 1% of the population.

 

"The study featured statistics showing that the percentage of native Hawaiians incarcerated is significantly higher than the percentage of Hawaiians in the general population and that native Hawaiians are more likely to get prison sentences, and longer prison sentences, than other ethnic groups."

 

"Native Hawaiians receive longer prison sentences than most other racial or ethnic groups."

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

IN HAWAII ? GET THEE TO AN AUTOPSY

See how deep and wide that wound is and how far he could run with it.

Sounds suspicious to me. Only because, through personal experience, I know of false complaints used to bolster the defense of wrongful acts.

Self-defense ruling baffles victim's sister

By Rob Shikina
POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Sep 25, 2010

The younger sister of the 38-year-old homeless man killed Wednesday in Waikiki is upset that prosecutors have closed the case after determining the stabbing to be self-defense.

"I'm confused, really," Trina Grant said by phone from Texas. "He killed somebody."

Palolo resident Brandon Wright, 29, was cleared as a murder suspect at 3 p.m. yesterday but remained in police custody last night unable to post $100 bail for an unrelated warrant, police said.

He was originally booked on suspicion of second-degree murder.

Prosecutors dismissed the case after determining Wright acted in self-defense, said Prosecutor's Office spokesman Jim Fulton.

Wright had recently filed two complaints against the victim, Earl Grant III, bolstering his defense, said a source who disclosed the information on condition of anonymity.

Grant died Wednesday night after he was stabbed in the chest during a dispute at Kalakaua and Kapahulu avenues.

Without naming Wright, police said that at about 9:50 p.m. he pointed out three men to a security officer and said they had attacked him. The security officer chased one man, later identified as Grant, who collapsed to the ground. Grant was taken to the hospital, where he died of a stab wound to his heart, authorities said.

Police said they recovered the weapon.

Trina Grant, the victim's sister, wondered why the man had to stab her brother in the chest, and struggled with the idea that Wright was cleared.

"How is that self-defense when you have a weapon and the other person doesn't?" she asked. "I don't get that. It's like a puzzle that doesn't fit, pieces don't match up."
She was surprised by the claim that Wright had filed two cases against her brother, saying her brother "wouldn't start anything."

"If it's true, it's just a part of my brother that I never knew," she said.
While upset with the prosecutor's decision, she said her family will move forward and try to come to Hawaii next week to pick up her brother's remains.

"Whatever the law doesn't fix, it'll happen on Judgment Day," she said. "There's a reason for everything."
Grant came to Hawaii as a Marine after graduating in 1990 from John Jay High School in San Antonio. He left the Marines after four years and stayed in Honolulu. About 10 years ago he married a local woman, but the couple separated, his sister said.

"We've been trying to get him to move back to the (mainland), but he loved the islands," she said.

Paul Wilbourn, who is homeless, said he knew Grant only as "Easy" because he was easygoing.

He said Grant lived on the slopes of Diamond Head and would often play dominoes or throw a football with the guys at Kapiolani Park.

"He's a good, humble fellow, soft-spoken," he said. "I liked him."








HAWAII LOVES ANOTHER THIEF

Absent worker, alleged thief still got paid by the state

Sep 1, 2010 ... HST, Sep 01, 2010 The state Department of Transportation overpaid a Lihue airport worker who stopped reporting to work $5000 plus $2200 for ...
www.allvoices.com/.../6655971-absent-worker-alleged-thief-still-got-paid-by-the-state - Cached
 

Absent worker, alleged thief still got paid by the state | Hawaii News

Sep 1, 2010 ... The state Department of Transportation overpaid a Lihue airport worker who stopped reporting to work $5000 plus $2200 for unused vacation, ...
www.hawaiiinfonewspaper.com/absent-worker-alleged-thief-still-got-paid-by-the-state - Cached
 

Wednesday, September 01, 2010 September 1, 2010 News Read By ...

Sep 1, 2010 ... Absent worker, alleged thief still got paid by the state. The state Department of Transportation overpaid a Lihue airport worker who stopped ...
www.hawaiifreepress.com/main/.../Print.aspx?tabid=65... - Cached
 

Hawaii Free Press Front Page

Absent worker, alleged thief still got paid by the state. Army study: Radioactive residue is not a hazard. Neighbor is charged under hate crime law ...
www.hawaiifreepress.com/main/FrontPage/tabid/36/Default.aspx - Cached

 

HAWAII LOVES A THIEF

Nov 25, 2009 ... An indictment charged Gale Bracey with theft and money laundering in what officials said is a complex case involving several schemes to ...
www.kitv.comHonolulu News - Cached - Similar
 
May 13, 2010 ... Gale Bracey, 38, was a parking lot manager who worked for Standard Parking Corporation and Republic Parking Northwest. ...
www.kitv.com/news/23550620/detail.html - Cached

May 14, 2010 ... Gale Bracey pleaded guilty to four counts of first-degree theft and two counts of money laundering Thursday. Republic Parking Northwest and ...
www.hawaiinewsnow.com/global/story.asp?s=12480697
 
Aug 3, 2010 ... Gale Bracey wept as her motion was denied. A deferral would have given her an opportunity to keep her criminal record clean. Luxury cars. ...
www.hawaiinewsnow.com/global/story.asp?s=12916006
 

Thursday, June 17, 2010

THE UNWANTED

Posted on: Friday, May 28, 2010          
                                                                           
Court told of suspect's 'vision'
By Jim Dooley
Advertiser Staff Writer

Jason Lee McCormick, the man accused last week in a 14-year-old murder case,
confessed to the crime in August 2008, telling police he "had a vision" of the homicide,
defense lawyer Michael Green said yesterday.

McCormick, 36, is charged with second-degree murder in the July 1996 death of Robert
Henderson, a University of Pittsburgh professor who was visiting here.

McCormick was arraigned on the charge yesterday morning in Circuit Court via a video
link to O'ahu Community Correctional Center, where he is being held in lieu of $500,000 bail.
He pleaded not guilty to the charge.

Green said McCormick has a history of mental and alcohol abuse problems and first
confessed to the Henderson murder to medical personnel and police when he was being
treated in 2008 at The Queen's Medical Center's Kekela Ward, a psychiatric treatment unit.

"They didn't believe him, so when he was released he went straight to police and
confessed again," Green said.

McCormick knew details of the Henderson murder that had not been released publicly,
the lawyer said.

He could not explain why police and prosecutors took nearly two more years to bring the
murder charge.


"It's a very interesting case," Green said. "It's the kind of thing they make movies out of."

Monday, April 26, 2010

THINGS THAT MAKE A JURY GO HMM


2 men indicted in killing over drugs and money
Prosecutors describe a gory scene as the suspects sought to get rid of the victim's body
By Star-Bulletin staff
POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Apr 23, 2010   0 Comments
Khan's family told police they last saw him on April 7, the date the indictment says Williams and Connolly killed him. A police affidavit says Williams told an acquaintance that Williams and Connolly beat Khan unconscious and then cut his throat. Khan's body has not been found.
 
 In a written statement, family members disputed statements made to investigators about Khan, saying they are not consistent with Khan's modest lifestyle. His family members expressed their devastation over Khan's death, which they described as a "senseless killing." They requested privacy as they grieve for Khan.
"Many people believe that Jamil's outspoken manners against inequities and his tendency to right those wrongs might have cost him his life, but unfortunately, the truth will never be known as it has been silenced forever by these vicious killers," family members said in the statement.
Honolulu StarBulletin
Corrections:
>> Jamil Kahn, the 24-year-old man who police believe was murdered, was last seen by his family of April 7.
A friend saw him in the early morning of April 8, police said. A page 8 article yesterday, reported that he was last seen on April 7.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

DOWN IN SMOKE

Isles warned over medical marijuana - Mauinews.com | News, Sports ...
Mar 18, 2010 ... WAILUKU - Hawaii could see an increase in crime and other .... English said he didn't see much difference between marijuana and legal drugs, ...
www.mauinews.com/page/content.detail/id/529632.html?nav=10 - Cached
 
Bill to ease access to marijuana for registered patients advances ...
Mar 7, 2010 ... Licensed medical marijuana users in Hawaii are allowed to smoke ... Police are fighting medical marijuana expansion, arguing that crime would increase ... "We've already legalized medical marijuana, and now we have to ...
www.starbulletin.com/.../20100307_Bill_to_ease_access_to_marijuana_for_registered_patients_advances.html - Cached
 
Do they do a test for marijuana intoxicaton when someone is arrested for a crime?
 
Benjamin Davis apparently smoked some marijuana that had been spiked with LSD before he allegedly stabbed two hikers at Koko Head Crater on Feb. 1, says a friend.
 
 
Hawaii man who stabbed hikers acquitted by reason of insanity ...
Feb 26, 2010 ... Hawaii man who stabbed hikers acquitted by reason of insanity. Man who attacked 2 Koko Crater hikers ... Photo gallery: Benjamin Davis trial ...
www.honoluluadvertiser.com/.../Hawaii-man-who-stabbed-hikers-acquitted-by-reason-of-insanity - Cached
 
Like the man said, "Some people can't take aspirin.
At the University of Mississippi's Potency Monitoring Project, where thousands of samples of seized marijuana are tested every year, project director Mahmoud ElSohly said some samples have THC levels exceeding 30 percent.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

THESE TWO




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

HE DIDN'T DO ANYTHING FOR ME


BUT HE'S GOT A LOT OF BOATS FLOATIN...HMM  http://tiny.cc/GHDaP
2 former staffers oppose Kubo
I wonder what was done with the information I sent to the women above.