Susan Murphy-Milano...

Moving Out Moving On" is a very practical resource to safety and sanity for all of our lives. The information you receive will take you from the State of Being Controlled to the State of Being in Control.

2007/4/30

Justice in some Crimes is a Joke

@ 03:26 AM (14 months, 12 days ago)

On Friday, in a Chicago courtroom Brian Gilbert, standing before a Judge, pleads for special treatment, asking that he be placed in a secluded and safe part of the jail as he awaits the next court date. "they will kill me your honor, please he begged, help me, help me." This piece of garbage murdered two innocent boys and was about to murder another, when he got scared and ran out of the home.  Jail is obviously too, good for this low life, wasting air at the tax payers expense.  He needs far more than a jail cell, how about a long boat ride to a deserted area in a third world country.  For certain crimes in this country, such as this, there should be no consideration for any justice, what so ever. 

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2007/4/28

Alex Baldwin is a Coward

@ 03:24 AM (14 months, 14 days ago)
However Mr. Baldwin's comments made it to the airwaves, it's time for us to stop buying movie tickets or watching television when individuals such as this, make statements filled with hatred towards a child.  Then to promote the future of an upcoming book and admit your bad behavior and say your on a mission to change the world, does not fly. He is a an aging coward.  Seeking the guidence of Dr. Phil is just more lip service. If you would like to comment on actor Alex Baldwin's upcoming appearance on talk shows, you can send a message on the website using a pre-written letter or your own. http://capwiz.com/sfvo/issues/alert/?alertid=9680516&type=CU.
 
Great Job to Irene Weiser of Stop Family Violence for putting this together so well. http://www.stopfamilyviolence.org/ocean/host.php?page=463
 

2007/4/27

When Police Use Poor Judgement Innocent Lives Are Lost

@ 04:36 AM (14 months, 15 days ago)
 

A grand jury indicted three current and former Atlanta police officers in the shooting death of a 92-year-old woman during a drug raid, according to the document late this afternoon.

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2007/4/26

New Study On Religion and Kids

@ 04:00 AM (14 months, 16 days ago)

Kids with religious parents are better behaved and adjusted than other children, according to a new study that is the first to look at the effects of religion on young child development.

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2007/4/25

Being Hungry Does Not Take A Holiday

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@ 04:08 AM (14 months, 17 days ago)

I work daily with people in our country who must survive on food stamps and public assistance in order to survive.  Yes, survive.  Poverty, Ladies and Gentlemen does not take a holiday.  While we all seem to be in the mood to give during times when we are about to gather with our  families in the comfort of our homes, it is important to remember those less fortunate on the other 362 days in the year.  They did not ask to live in poverty, usually circumstances beyond their control such as a medical event, or a company lay off, or carrying for a loved one with a terminal illiness was the cause of their homelessness.  So please gather with your church, school in your community and get involved with an organization making a difference in the lives of others.  I appauld what Gov. Kulongoski is doing, and hopefully his efforts will not fall upon deaf ears.

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2007/4/24

Same Sex Couples Will Be Able To Adpot With Ease in Denver

@ 02:46 AM (14 months, 18 days ago)
It looks as if Denver's Gov. Bill Ritter is having a brain malfunction these days.  The head of State is under the hot seat and now he is having to deal with the wrath from Catholics and other religious organizations to veto a bill that would allow same-sex couples and other unmarried partners to adopt children.

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2007/4/22

Angry Husband Gets Even

@ 02:30 PM (14 months, 20 days ago)

The activity of this angry soon to be ex-husband, seems a bit child like.  Not to mention that he ultimately pays for this in some way.  Probelms can not be solved when you believe getting even is the best solution. 

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2007/4/19

This is One Way To Be Heard

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@ 02:30 AM (14 months, 23 days ago)

 

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2007/4/18

Georgia Sergeant Fired After Explosives Found

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@ 03:25 AM (14 months, 24 days ago)
Police said Friday they found explosives in the work locker of the husband of Theresa Parker, missing since March 21.

Officials said that Sam Parker has been fired from his position as sergeant for the LaFayette police department because of the discovery.

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2007/4/15

"The Chorito Hog Leg"

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@ 06:16 AM (14 months, 27 days ago)

With Father's Day Around the corner, here's a book for that man in your life who is into History and World War II. Or if your a Veteran yourself, this is one hell of a read !  I had the opportunity this evening to speak with the author, Pat Hickey, a fireball of man who knows how to tell a great story.  Book Highlights....Chorito is the name of a cliff overlooking the Asian beaches on Guam. In 1944, the 3rd Marines assaulted Chorito Cliff and Bundeschu Ridge. A Hog Leg is the nickname for an 1860  Colt .45 Revolver. 

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2007/4/13

18-year Veteran Deputy Will Stand Trial on Felony

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@ 12:30 PM (14 months, 29 days ago)

http://www.blogstream.com/gallery.mod?G=strangephraseindeed&RT=strangephraseindeed&PRID=18462&IID=24079&IMG=24079_18462.gif

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2007/4/12

Stay Away From This Officer's House

@ 02:54 AM (15 months, 17 hours ago)

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2007/4/11

How To Help Children Deal With Trauma

@ 04:20 AM (15 months, 1 day ago)

Disasters are upsetting to everyone involved. Children, older people, and/or people with disabilities are especially at risk. For a child, his or her view of the world as a safe and predictable place is temporarily lost. Children become afraid that the event will happen again and that they or their family will be injured or killed. The damage, injuries, and deaths that can result from an unexpected or uncontrollable event are difficult for most children to understand.

How a parent or other adult reacts to a child following any traumatic event can help children recover more quickly and more completely. This brochure contains general information to help you in this task.

Children's Reactions

Children's fear and anxiety are very real, even though to adults they may seem exaggerated. Children are afraid of what is strange. They fear being left alone. Following a disaster, they may begin acting younger than the age they are. Behaviors that were common at an earlier age, such as bedwetting, thumb sucking, clinging to parents or fear of strangers, may reappear. Older children who have shown some independence may want to spend more time with their families. Bedtime problems may appear. A child may begin to have night-mares; not want to sleep alone; and/or become afraid of the dark, falling asleep or remaining asleep.

Some children will show their fear by developing physical symptoms, such as stomachaches, headaches or feeling "sick." All children can experience thinking difficulties. They can become easily distracted, feel confused and disoriented and find it hard to concentrate. These reactions can be triggered by smells, objects or activities associated with the trauma. A child may be unaware of the triggers and of any of the behavioral changes that occur. They are not intentionally showing they are anxious or fearful.

Children of different ages react in different ways to trauma.

Birth to 2 years
Without the ability to speak, children cannot describe the event or their feelings. They can retain memories of particular sights, sounds, or smells. When they are older, these memories may emerge in their play. Babies may be more irritable, cry more often and need to be held and cuddled frequently. They will respond to the caring that is given to them by an adult.

Preschool and Kindergarten
In the face of an overwhelming event, very young children can feel helpless, powerless, and unable to protect themselves. When the safety of their world is threatened, they feel insecure and fearful. Children this age cannot understand the concept of permanent loss. They believe that consequences are reversible. They will repeatedly recreate parts of the disaster in their play. These are all normal reactions. Abandonment is a major childhood fear, so children need frequent reassurance they will be cared for and will not be left behind.

Activities for home or school: play acting, physical contact, puppets, art, stories, large muscle movement (throwing balls, etc.).

School age (7 to 11 years)
Children at this age have the ability to understand the permanence of loss from a trauma. They can become preoccupied with details of it and want to talk about it continually. They may not be able to concentrate in school and their grades drop. Since their thinking is more mature, their understanding of the disaster is more complete. This can result in a wide range of reactions: guilt, feelings of failure, and anger.

School age children can also slip back into earlier behaviors. As in younger children, sleep problems can appear. Their anxiety and fear may be seen in an increased number of physical complaints.

Activities for home or school: play acting, puppets, drawing and painting, sharing their experiences in groups, reading, creative writing or discussion.

Pre-adolescence and adolescence (12 to 18 years)
In this age group, children have a great need to appear knowledgeable and experienced to the world, especially to their family and friends. When they live through a traumatic event they need to feel their anxieties and fears are shared by their peers and are appropriate. Because they survived the trauma, they may feel immortal. This can lead to reckless behavior and taking dangerous risks. Their reactions are a mixture of earlier age group reactions and reactions that are more adult. Teenage years are a period of moving outward into the world. However, experiencing a trauma can create a feeling that the world is unsafe. Even teenagers may return to earlier ways of behaving. Overwhelmed by intense reactions, teens may be unable to discuss them with their family members.

Activities at school: general classroom activities, literature or reading, peer helpers, health class, art class, speech/drama, social studies/government, history.

How To Help Children

Routines
Children of all ages can benefit from the family keeping their usual routines—meals, activities, and bedtimes—as close to normal as possible. This allows a child to feel more secure and in control. As much as possible, children should stay with people with whom they feel most familiar.

Special Needs
Accept the special needs of children by allowing them to be more dependent on you for a period of time. Give more hugs if they need them; let them keep the light on at night or not sleep alone or return to having their favorite teddy bear or blanket; don't mind their clinging behavior.

Media Coverage
Following a disaster, everyone is eager to hear the latest news about what happened. However, disaster research has shown that unexpected messages or images on television were frightening, causing a reappearance of stress-related problems. In addition, anyone who watches the disaster coverage can become what is called a "secondary victim" and can suffer emotional and physical problems. It is best to not allow children to watch news coverage of the disaster.

Feelings and Reactions
Children express their feelings and reactions in different ways. Your acceptance of this will make a difference to how your child recovers from the trauma. This means accepting that some children will react by becoming withdrawn and unable to talk about the event, while others will feel intensely sad and angry at times and at other times will act as if the disaster never happened. Children are often confused about what has happened and about their feelings. However, don't be surprised if some children don't seem to be affected by what they have seen and heard. Not everyone has immediate reactions; some have delayed reactions that show up days, weeks, or even months later, and some may never have a reaction.

Talking about what happened

  • Listen to and accept children's feelings.
  • Give honest, simple, brief answers to their questions.
  • Make sure they understand your answers and the meaning you intend.
  • Use words or phrases that won't confuse a child or make the world more frightening.
  • Create opportunities for children to talk with each other about what happened and how they are feeling.
  • Give your child an honest explanation if you are feeling so upset you don't want to talk about what happened. You may want to take "time out" and ask a trusted family friend to help.
  • If children keep asking the same question over and over again it is because they are trying to understand; trying to make sense out of the disruption and confusion in their world. Younger children will not understand that death is permanent, so their repeated inquiries are because they expect everything to return to normal.
  • If the child feels guilty, ask him or her to explain what happened. Listen carefully to whether he or she attaches a sense of responsibility to some part of the description. Explain the facts of the situation and emphasize that no one, least of all the child, could have prevented it.
  • Let the school help The child's teacher can be sensitive to changes in the child's behavior and will be able to respond in a helpful way.
  • Even if you feel the world is an unsafe place, you can reassure your child by saying, "The event is over. Now we'll do everything possible to stay safe, and together we can help get things back to normal."
  • Notice when children have questions and want to talk.
  • Be especially loving and supportive; children need you at this time.

When To Seek Professional Help
Children are amazingly flexible, even though they can be deeply affected by trauma or losses. Sometimes a child can be helped by a counselor who can provide a safe place to talk about what happened and their feelings. Getting professional help is a good idea if a child shows any of the following changes for longer than three months following the trauma:

  • Behavior or academic problems at school.
  • Angry outbursts.
  • Withdrawal from usual social activities or play with other children.
  • Frequent nightmares or other sleep disturbances.
  • Physical problems such as nausea, headaches, weight gain or loss.
  • Intense anxiety or avoidance behavior that is triggered by reminders of the event.
  • Depression or a sense of hopelessness about life or the future.
  • Alcohol or drug use problems.
  • Dangerous risk-taking behavior.
  • Continued worry about the event as a primary focus in life.

Certain events may make a child more vulnerable to having difficulty. If a child has experienced a recent loss such as a divorce, a death of someone who was close, or a move to a new neighborhood, he or she may feel particularly overwhelmed by the trauma. A traumatic event can reactivate the emotions associated with previous traumas, which can be overpowering.

Seeing a counselor does not mean that a child is "mentally ill" or that you have failed to support him or her. Following a trauma, many adults and children have found that it is helpful to talk with a counselor who has specialized training in post-traumatic reactions and can help them understand and deal with how they are feeling.



2007/4/8

Sam Zell: America's Landlord to the Elderly

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@ 07:07 PM (15 months, 4 days ago)
In a bold move, a Chicago Sun-Times Columnist and News Reporter took on one of the richest men in the country.  She travels a road, with a fire in her belly, that I have always admired.  I thought her words were important for you to read.  And whether you live in Arizona or New York, send her and the paper a letter of outrage over what Mr. Zell is doing to the elderly across the Country.
 
Dear Sam Zell, I haven't written in a while but thought this might be a good time to reach out to you again.

Last time around, because it was so darn hard to get a hold of you, I tried hand-delivering a letter requesting an interview, giving it to the doorman of your elegant apartment building downtown. You let my editors know pretty quickly that you weren't too happy about that. So I'm trying this new approach.

I feel that you and I have a kinship, Mr. Zell. We're in the same business now given your planned $8.2 billion acquisition of the Chicago Tribune. Though I work for the competing paper and though you and I operate on vastly different economic scales, we're both engaged in news.

The reason for this letter, and the last one too, is about a news story that affects 300,000 people here in Illinois and a few million across the country. The majority of them are around your age, 65, though some are older.

These seniors live in manufactured home communities, what we used to call mobile home parks. And you, Mr. Zell, through your Equity LifeStyle Properties, have in recent years become the country's biggest landlord for this type of housing.

A couple of years ago, I visited two of your properties, Willow Lake Estates in Elgin and Golf Vista in Monee. They are lovely places that challenge any negative stereotype of a "trailer park." The lawns are well kept, the homes are beautifully maintained, and the mostly elderly residents have a clear sense of community.                               

But boy, do they have a problem, Mr. Zell.    

You've got retired people like Phil Asplund, 80, a retired accountant, trapped. He and his wife Marian own their home, but you own the land underneath it, which your company rents to them. And since you took over, once-affordable rents tied to the consumer price index are now set at "market rate," which is whatever you say it is. Leases have gotten even more restrictive. And retirees, on fixed incomes, are depleting their savings trying to pay the increases. Many have been forced just to abandon their homes, turn the keys over to your managers, and go live with their kids.

When the Asplunds and others go to their legislators, like state Rep. Ruth Munson (R-Elgin), you have fleets of lobbyists and lawyers to outspend and outgun them. And when Munson and her colleagues, in spite of all that, manage to vote out even a small measure offering some consumer protection for those homeowners, you've got Gov. Blagojevich to veto it for you. After all, you and your wife have given him $82,000 since 2002. Not that there is necessarily a connection.

All across the country, the story is the same.

Your people claim any consumer bill to help protect these retirees is "rent control." It's not. That's a red herring, a scare tactic. Meanwhile, these residents are systematically being stripped of their rights as property owners with no means to appeal.

The Los Angeles Times, one of the papers in your new Tribune stable, last Monday reported that in one of your California communities, $600 rents are skyrocketing to between $2,000 and $5,000.

That's beyond sticker shock.

Last Wednesday you told the Tribune, "Everything I do is motivated by doing it best, doing it different, answering the questions no one else could."

Senior citizens in 25 states where you are their landlord have urgent questions for you. As small investors -- that investment being their homes -- they're hardly billionaires, but they've spent their lives working just as hard as you in order to have a dignified retirement.

On April 19, Illinois seniors will take buses to Springfield once again to plead with legislators to give them some small relief. Munson will try to persuade House Speaker Mike Madigan to let her modest consumer protection bill out of committee.

It would be great if you would take another look at the long-term implications of your company's strategy and reassess.

I've read that your favorite columnist is Charles Krauthammer. I'm no Charles Krauthammer, but on the off chance you ever read this, and want to hop on your Harley and take a ride, there are some people in Elgin and Monee I'd love for you to meet. BY CAROL MARIN Sun-Times Columnist

Best wishes,

Carol Marin

2007/4/7

Kent State Univeristy in for Awakening

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@ 03:34 PM (15 months, 5 days ago)

The Easter Bunny is not the only one hiding in a basket.  During this Holiday and spring break, let us remember, Kent State University and their nutty Professor, Julio Pino, hiding, like cowards, as this man, funded by tax payer dollars, at the moment, out of site, like cowards. Pino cheers and supports Osma and the killing of the men and women who are at war protecting our freedom. The University and Professor Pino are in for a Rude Awakening.  And with your help, we can do it.More insight's : http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/186736.php

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Drunk Former Officer pleads guilty to vehicular manslaughter

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@ 12:28 AM (15 months, 5 days ago)
His name is Jeffery "Chip" Stockton, an ex-Cortland (NY) police officer who has pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter, vehicular assault, and DWI. Stockton was driving drunk when he hit two women in a crosswalk back in November. One woman, Lynn Briggs, died. Beside he got behind the wheel, the scumbag was drunk.

In court, his lawyer went back and forth with the district attorney about the seriousness of the living victim's injuries before Stockton entered his plea.

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2007/4/4

Finally, Arrest in Made in 911 Dispatcher Case

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@ 03:32 AM (15 months, 8 days ago)

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,263642,00.html#

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2007/4/2

Wacky Cop with a Gun and a Badge

@ 03:03 AM (15 months, 10 days ago)

 

BAD HIRE, BAD FIRE: Accused shooter Alison Spicer-Jamison has a violent past - and the NYPD knew it, the suit claims.
BAD HIRE, BAD FIRE: Accused shooter Alison Spicer-Jamison has a violent past - and the NYPD knew it, the suit claims.

 The "Casanova" cop who was allegedly shot by his wife, a fellow officer, as payback for his wandering eye is suing the NYPD for $3 million, claiming they should have known she was too nuts to carry a gun.

The lawsuit claims the NYPD knew Alison Spicer-Jamison, 42, "required continuous counseling and supervision in order to tame "her violent propensities towards others."

She was "violent, unstable, and too dangerous to continue to possess an NYPD issued firearm," Todd Jamison's lawsuit, filed this week in Brooklyn federal court, claims.

Alison is charged with shooting Todd, 44, in a jealous rage last April 10 when she learned he'd strayed from their marital bed less than a year after they married.

The vengeful woman tailed her philandering husband's car through East New York, then pulled her rental alongside his Mercedes and fired her police-issue firearm, cops say. He was hit three times in the chest and once in the arm.

Spicer-Jamison, who had been a cop since 1994, was arrested a few hours later at a Newark Airport car rental and charged with attempted murder.

The scorned woman had a bad history - and the NYPD knew that, said Todd Jamison's attorney, Michael Mays.

"There were allegations that she had violence against men. She may have tried to hit someone in a car," Mays said, but declined to elaborate.

The Post reported last year that Spicer-Jamison was suspected of nearly mowing down a romantic rival using her squad car in 1998.

At the time, she was having an affair with the victim's fiancé, who was also her patrol partner. The victim said she reported the incident to the NYPD, and as a result, Spicer-Jamison was moved from Staten Island to the 70th Precinct in Brooklyn.

A police official said last year that there had been an Internal Affairs investigation into the Incident, but said there was no allegation that Spicer-Jamison had tried to run anyone down.

Todd Jamison's suit also names the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, the City of New York, the NYPD, and his wife, who's currently incarcerated at Rikers Island, awaiting a trial date.

Jamison, who had retired from the force in 2005, was working as a basketball coach at the time of the incident.

He lost use of one of his arms due to the attack and has not been able to return to work, said Mays. "He's coping. He's like any victim, trying to bounce back," he said.

Spokesman for the NYPD and the PBA both said they knew nothing of the lawsuit.

The Jamisons had been married for less than a year when Todd began having an affair with an Onondaga County deputy sherriff. But his third wife couldn't claim she didn't know what she was getting into - she stole him away from his second wife, Nina. (source New York Post)