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|    alt.activism    |    General non-specific activism discussion    |    157,361 messages    |
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|    Message 157,154 of 157,361    |
|    Activist Enemies to All    |
|    The Illegal Aid Society Is Making New Yo    |
|    26 Apr 25 09:33:34    |
      XPost: nyc.politics, sac.politics, alt.politics.republicans       XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns       From: usually@cpusa.org              You know the adage, “Don’t shoot yourself in the foot”? That’s exactly       what New Yorkers are doing by pouring their tax dollars into the Legal       Aid Society. It should be called the Illegal Aid Society. It’s 99%       publicly funded – with your state and local tax dollars – and its chief       business is litigating and lobbying to force changes in the law that       will benefit criminals and handcuff the police. Sadly, it’s been quite       successful.              I sat down with Gotham’s longest-serving police commissioner, Ray Kelly,       on Monday to get his take on the damage done.              “The Legal Aid Society seems hell-bent on ignoring the plight of the       victim while hampering the police at every turn,” says Kelly.              Andrew Cuomo, frontrunner in the Democratic primary for New York City       mayor, pledged on a candidate questionnaire published on Monday that he       will add 5,000 cops to the New York Police Department. Kelly laughs off       the pledge.              “With the rules in place, people don’t want the job,” Kelly says.       “Experienced cops are telling their sons and daughters not to enter the       force.”              Get ready for even more anti-policing ahead. Now Legal Aid is demanding       that police stop arresting people for what they call “low-level crimes”       like shoplifting. Legal Aid wants offenders merely issued summonses and       told to appear in court at a later date rather than hauled into the       police station. In 2021, more than half of people accused of petit       larceny got off with a mere summons, but now three-quarters are being       taken into custody.              That’s a good trend, says Kelly, not something to sue about. “Every       arrest should have an investigatory aspect to it,” he says. “Is the       suspect wanted for more serious crimes or violating parole? There is no       way to find that out except bringing the suspect into the police       station.”              Why should someone suspected of stealing $200 worth of goods at CVS be       set free without an arrest? The city is in the middle of a theft       epidemic. And city data show that suspects handed a summons fail to show       up for their court appearance more than half the time.              New Yorkers have had their fill of decriminalizing what the Left calls       “petty” acts.              Here’s another doozy Legal Aid goal – outlawing handcuffing the accused       for their initial court appearance. Legal Aid calls handcuffing       “dehumanizing.” It filed a class-action lawsuit against the NYPD last       November to block anyone from being handcuffed “without an       individualized judicial finding” that it’s necessary.              Ridiculous, says Kelly. Handcuffing “safeguards everybody, including       judges, court personnel and the police. It’s just common sense.”              Legal Aid opposes using weapons scanners to detect guns being carried       into the subway, deeming them “invasive.” Ridiculous.              Legal Aid wants the City Council to abolish the NYPD’s gang database,       calling it a “racist tool.” Nearly all the gang members ID’d are Black       or Latino, but Mayor Eric Adams, who sees the value of the database in       solving and even preventing gang shootings, points out that “96% of the       victims of shootings in the city are people of color. Let’s keep them in       mind.”              Legal Aid had the gall to demand that the NYPD turn over photographs and       tax identification numbers for all active-duty officers. It wanted a mug       book of cops instead of perps, to make it easier for Legal Aid’s clients       to identify and file complaints against cops.              Even Judge Arthur Engoron, famous for presiding over President Donald       Trump’s 2024 trial, saw the danger, ruling on March 29 that it would be       akin “to having a billboard in Times Square” targeting every police       officer.              Ensuring that the poor have adequate legal representation is a noble       goal, but Legal Aid goes way beyond that. It’s largely responsible for       the no-cash bail laws, the “Raise the Age” law and the 2019 discovery       “reforms” that require prosecutors to meet rigid deadlines for sharing       reams of largely irrelevant paperwork with the defense.              The discovery rules have enabled thousands of defendants to walk free.       “Cops risk their lives making arrests only to have cases dismissed on       hyper-technicalities brought by these ridiculous discovery rules,” says              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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