Fair’s Fair

Posted on October 22nd, 2007 in Drugs, Military by Wayne
Ecuador’s leftist President Rafael Correa said Washington must let him open a military base in Miami if the United States wants to keep using an air base on Ecuador’s Pacific coast.

Correa has refused to renew Washington’s lease on the Manta air base, set to expire in 2009. U.S. officials say it is vital for counter-narcotics surveillance operations on Pacific drug-running routes.

“We’ll renew the base on one condition: that they let us put a base in Miami — an Ecuadorean base,” Correa said in an interview during a trip to Italy.

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Kid dealing drugs? Parents can lose their car (or cars!)

Posted on September 19th, 2007 in Drugs, Law by Victor

At least in Washington.

As drug dealers go, Thomas Roos was not very crafty.

During the summer of 2005, Roos, then 24, was arrested four times in four months, usually passed out behind the wheel in cars loaded with drugs, cash, cellphones and a drug-dealing ledger.

He was so blatant about it, in fact, that drug investigators in Snohomish County believed his parents should have yanked the keys to their cars. When the parents didn’t, the officers seized the vehicles under drug-forfeiture laws.

That action led to an unusual question for the state Court of Appeals: Should parents be punished for the actions of a wayward son?

The three-judge panel this week said yes, rejecting Alan and Stephne Roos’ argument that they were unwitting victims, and all but chastised them for not exercising more tough love.

The ruling cost the Rooses, of Bothell, their 2004 Nissan Sentra and a 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle “muscle car,” as well as more than $34,000 in attorney fees to fight what their attorney deemed a ruling that “stretches the bounds of logic.”

After one arrest his mom told him not to drive the Nissan and his dad bought steering locks for both the cars, but it wasn’t enough. In the next two months he was arrested twice - once in the Nissan and once in the Chevelle.

The court’s interpretation of drug-forfeiture laws could open up a Pandora’s box for future cases.

Drug-forfeiture laws, which are intended to take the profit motive out of drug-dealing, exempt “innocent owners” from property seizures. But that exemption doesn’t apply to people who “stick his/her head in the sand,” the appeals court ruled.

What is sticking your head in the sand? And will government officials get to make up a definition as they go along?

Sweet, I can’t wait.

UPDATE: Thanks to Derek in the comments for doing actual research and finding evidence that Thomas’ parents may not have been as innocent as they claimed. I’ll quote Derek in full here.

So here’s the court’s actually holding: “We hold that a claimant may not successfully invoke the innocent owner exception to prevent forfeiture of a vehicle where the claimant knew or should have known that the vehicle was being used to acquire possession of controlled substances.”

Here’s the evidence cited that they “should have known,” if not that they actually knew.

“If you know that your son was convicted of delivering a controlled substance as a juvenile, your son is being very secretive, your son is not living at home, your son has been stealing mail and erasing voice mail messages for over two years, your son is unemployed, and as of July 3, 2005, your son has been arrested twice since June 10th with drugs and large sums of cash on his person, how can you ignore the reality and claim to be an innocent owner when he is later arrested and your property is seized?”

Alan testified that he gave Thomas permission to use the vehicle. Thomas testified that he used the Nissan on a daily basis, and sometimes kept the vehicle for several weeks at a time. [A] registration renewal form for the Nissan, bearing the handwritten notation, “For Tom,” was recovered pursuant to a prior search.

At a minimum, the information Alan and Stephne did possess, including Thomas’s past and present problems with drugs and his unemployed status, would have led a reasonable person to further inquire into the Nissan’s use in order to ensure that the vehicle was not being used for an illegal purpose.

The important context is that property the drug dealer uses is forfeited by default, unless you prove the exception of an “innocent owner.”

Derek also makes a nice point that “sticking your head in the sand” is not the Pandora’s box I made it out to be.

Re: Hope on the Battlefield

Posted on August 8th, 2007 in Drugs, Ethics and Morality, Iraq, War by Will

I have to admit that I haven’t read Marshall, but I’ve seen him critiqued pretty heavily by the most recent generation of US WWII military historians (most notably Michael Doubler and Peter Mansoor), as part of the general effort to rehability the reputation of the US army in Europe. There’s apparently good evidence that Marshall was sloppy or maybe even dishonest in his research methodology (the argument is summed up here), and some WWII soldiers’ memoirs have explicitly said Marshall’s ratio didn’t apply to their units. (The only example I can remember is this one.) So I’m a little bit dubious of any argument that relies on Marshall. (From my reading of the critiques of Marshall, I think Grossman is right that soldiers more often just aim a little high, rather than not shooting at all as Marshall argued.)

And I agree with Joe that whatever inclination we have against killing (I think more societally conditioned than natural) is more easily overcome when dealing with those we know and who’ve offended us. A book I read recently argued that humans have been extremely violent throughout most of our history, and it’s only modern states that have managed to curb our tendency toward domestic violence. But when those states send people off to fight each other, isn’t there much less emotional motivation to kill?

Hope on the Battlefield

Posted on August 8th, 2007 in Drugs, Ethics and Morality, Iraq, War by Joe

I do not read much about military history because I usually find it boring, but Wayne found this article and it surprised me. I guess I do not know at all if what he is saying accurately represents the evidence, or if the studies he sites have any merit. However, he seems to consider a variety of arguments, so it appears plausable.

This stuck out to me as problematic:

“I have realized that there was one major factor missing from the common understanding of this process, a factor that answers this question and more: the simple and demonstrable fact that there is, within most men and women, an intense resistance to killing other people.”

“Indeed, the study of killing by military scientists, historians, and psychologists gives us good reason to feel optimistic about human nature, for it reveals that almost all of us are overwhelmingly reluctant to kill a member of our own species, under just about any circumstance.”

I could easily mistake these passages as stating that people have this same reluctance to violence at home, in regular society. Most murders, rapes and other violence are directed at people who know their attacker. On a battlefield you do not know the person you are harming, but if you know him, live with him, or have a grudge against him, you might feel compelled to hurt him. You may even feel justified.

There might be hope for less violence on a battlefield (although that seems to be self-defeating), but I do not think it applies at home, where we do not need to manufacture contempt against others.

Time for the free market in college athletics?

Posted on July 11th, 2007 in Drugs, NCAA, Sports by Victor

News broke today that the University of Oklahoma must forfeit its wins from the 2005 season because some of its players were paid by a car dealership for work they did not perform.

The NCAA said Oklahoma was guilty of a “failure to monitor” the employment of the players.

Are you kidding me? Failure to monitor its players employment? Now as a private organization I’m cool with the NCAA making whatever rules it wants, but does anyone not believe that are not thousands of collegiate athletes who are getting paid under the table some how?

What about this - schools are free to offer athletes up to $20,000 in addition to full scholarships as a stipend for their time. or better yet go for a complete competitive bidding situation - it may give top altheletes a real reason to stay in school longer. It would simply confirm what the sports world already knows. These aren’t really student athletes. They are athletes their school are making millions of dollars on. Give the kids a piece of the pie, they are already getting it anyway.

Hmmm, could this same argument be made about drugs? The government’s not able to stop it, just get in on the action by taxing and regulating it.