Wednesday, April 25, 2012

From political schemer to prison reformer: The life of Chuck Colson remembered - Mike Nova's starred items

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Mike Nova's starred items

via prisons - Google News on 4/25/12

The Christian Institute

From political schemer to prison reformer: The life of Chuck Colson remembered
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
By (ARA) In 1974 the Watergate scandal sent Chuck Colson, White House special counsel and self-described "hatchet man," to federal prison. After experiencing a conversion to evangelical Christianity - a metamorphosis so improbable he later joked that ...
Religion: Why Colson spent Easter in prisonsThe Republic
Chuck Colson fought for the forgottenCNN
John J. Dilulio Jr.: Chuck Colson and Second ChancesWall Street Journal
Sacramento Bee -Washington Post (blog) -National Catholic Register
all 65 news articles »

via prisons - Google News on 4/25/12

The Christian Institute

Religion: Why Colson spent Easter in prisons
The Republic
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to release the oppressed." This isn't the sermon that many believers hear on Easter, but it's the one that prisoners need to hear, said Chuck Colson back in 1992, ...
Chuck Colson fought for the forgottenCNN
TBN Founder Paul Crouch Sr. Pays Tribute to Charles ColsonSacramento Bee
John J. Dilulio Jr.: Chuck Colson and Second ChancesWall Street Journal
National Catholic Register -Acton Institute (blog) -Gaston Gazette
all 53 news articles »


Chuck Colson fought for the forgotten
KESQ
If positive influences, like parents, teachers, and coaches, are missing, children will gravitate to something inferior, like drugs or gangs. Colson would often illustrate this with stories of convicts leaving prison only to be handed $100 by the ...

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Anders Breivik's World: How Sick Is Norway's Mass Murderer? - SPIEGEL ONLINE

Anders Breivik's World: How Sick Is Norway's Mass Murderer? - SPIEGEL ONLINE

04/24/2012

Anders Breivik's World

How Sick Is Norway's Mass Murderer?

Photo Gallery: How Sick is Anders Behring Breivik?
Photos
DPA
Seventy-seven people died in the attacks in Oslo and on the island of Utøya last July. The central question in the trial of the perpetrator, Anders Behring Breivik, is whether or not he is criminally liable. There is much to suggest that he is suffering from paranoid schizophrenia.
Can a delusional person be punished for their crimes?

Breivic Trial News Review - Mike Nova's starred items - 5:21 PM 4/25/2012

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Breivic Trial News Review - Mike Nova's starred items - 5:21 PM 4/25/2012


FRANCE 24

Breivik accuses experts of lies as he pleads for his sanity
FRANCE 24
Anders Behring Breivik, who wants to be found accountable for his massacre of 77 people in Norway last July, has accused a team of psychiatric experts of making things up to prove him insane. AFP - Anders Behring Breivik, who wants to be found ...


Prozess in Norwegen: Breivik: Aussagen in Gerichtsgutachten "erfunden"
Hamburger Abendblatt
Der norwegische Massenmörder Anders Behring Breivik hat ein Gerichtsgutachten zurückgewiesen, das ihn für unzurechnungsfähig erklärt. Angeblich von ihm getätigte Aussagen in Gesprächen mit Gerichtspsychiatern seien „erfunden“, erklärte der 33-jährige ...

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Norway killer to try to refute insanity diagnosis
Seattle Post Intelligencer
Anders Behring Breivik, right, has his handcuffs removed watched by defence lawyer Vibeke Hein Baera in the courtroom in Oslo Wednesday morning April 25, 2012. After testifying for five days, Anders Behring Breivik listened silently Tuesday as others ...


Boston.com

Anders Behring Breivik Trial: Norway Killer Says Insane Diagnosis Based On ...
Huffington Post
By KARL RITTER and JULIA GRONNEVET 04/25/12 11:43 AM ET OSLO, Norway — Mass killer Anders Behring Breivik slammed a psychiatric report that declared him insane, insisting Wednesday it was based on "evil fabrications" meant to portray him as irrational ...
Breivik says psychiatric report deeming him insane is full of 'fabrications'Christian Science Monitor
Breivik's publicity at trial just what he wantedBoston.com
Breivik: Insane diagnosis based on 'fabrications'USA TODAY
The Guardian -New York Daily News
all 744 news articles »

via anders behring breivik - Google Blog Search by A. Rienstra on 4/25/12
Confessed Norwegian mass killer Anders Behring Breivik has claimed he is normally a nice person but dehumanisation himself to carry out attacks.

via anders behring breivik - Google Blog Search by The Huffington Post News Editors on 4/25/12
OSLO, Norway — Mass killer Anders Behring Breivik slammed a psychiatric report that declared him insane, insisting Wednesday it was based on "evil fabrications" meant to portray him as irrational and unintelligent. "It is not ...


Breivik says psychiatric experts lie as he pleads for his sanity
China Post
OSLO--Anders Behring Breivik, who wants to be found accountable for his massacre of 77 people in Norway last July, on Wednesday accused a team of psychiatric experts of making things up to prove him insane. Breivik is seeking to convince an Oslo court ...


Breivik, The Press And The Ongoing Myth Of The 'Violent Gamer'
Techdirt
Despite making two completely different comments about these games, the press lumped both games together, resulting in misleading headlines such as this one from the Montreal Times: Anders Behring Breivik trained on video games World of Warcraft, ...


CTV.ca

Breivik says insanity diagnosis based on 'fabrications'
CTV.ca
Anders Behring Breivik in conversation with member of his defence team Tord Jordet in the courtroom in Oslo Wednesday, April 25, 2012. (AP / Hakon Mosvold Larsen) Accused Anders Behring Breivik talks with a member of his defence team Tord Jordet, ...



Telegraph.co.uk

Norway killer to refute insanity diagnosis
Atlanta Journal Constitution
AP OSLO, Norway — Confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik is set to return the stand in an attempt to prove to the court trying him on terror charges that he is not insane. Anders Behring Breivik, right, has his handcuffs removed watched by ...
Norway killer to try to refute insanity diagnosisSeattle Post Intelligencer
Anders Behring Breivik trial: police describe 'chaos' after Oslo bombTelegraph.co.uk
Breivik to testify in attempt to prove himself sane in terror trialNewser
San Jose Mercury News
all 448 news articles »


Norwegians to protest Breivik, singing song he hates
Malaysia Star
OSLO (Reuters) - Thousands of Norwegians will take to the streets of Oslo on Thursday to sing a children's song calling for peace and fraternity, in a protest against mass killer Anders Behring Breivik who has called it Marxist brainwashing.


Breivik: Insane diagnosis based on 'fabrications'
DesMoinesRegister.com
Anders Behring Breivik has admitted killing 77 people on July 22. / Pool photo by Hakon Mosvold Larsen OSLO, Norway (AP) — Confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik on Wednesday slammed a psychiatric report that declared him insane as based on ...


Atlanta Journal Constitution

Breivik's publicity at trial just what he wanted
Atlanta Journal Constitution
By VANESSA GERA AP WARSAW, Poland — As Anders Behring Breivik has given shocking and remorseless accounts to a Norwegian court of how he massacred 77 people, his testimony has revived a debate about how much of a public platform mass-murderers should ...

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3,710
Anders Behring Breivik was on drugs when he massacred 76 innocent people -- and is ...

Anders Breivik's EDITED Facebook

This time it's in English and both Conservative (right-wing) and Christian have been added. This is what it looked like before they deleted.
TheTruthseeker55152 views

ANDER BEHRING BREIVEK // NORWAY KILLER // CLAIMS HE IS NOT INSANE

ANDER BEHRING BREIVEK // NORWAY KILLER // CLAIMS HE IS NOT INSANE , the Norwegian behind last summer's twin terror attacks
NewsOnVHS1 hour ago

Norwegian police reconstructs the terrorist bombing of July 22

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WakeUPtoYAHWEH Sheeple

Saints Row 3 Utøya massacre

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Oslo terroist attack reconstruction video! 950KG CAR BOMB DETONATION

bomb Ander Behring Breivik detonated in oslo last year. XDThe King King The XD "anders behring breivik" "anders breivik" 950kg bomb "950kg ...
XDTheKingKingTheXD6 hours ago
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Anders Behring Breivik trial: Oslo police were worried about more bombers

The Head of operations for Oslo police explains how he warned headquarters to be wary of more attacks on the city after set ...
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video lang: sv

Anders Behring Breivik - Norway Massace

A current documentary, now that the trial of this crazy man going on in Oslo. en.wikipedia.org
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Norway Suspect Insane [News]

Norway Suspect Anders Behring Breivik Insane
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declared "insane" by psychiatrists

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Bureau of Investigative Journalism

Dying on the inside
Bureau of Investigative Journalism
As the US Department of Justice mounts an investigation, journalist Matt Stroud describes how 'deplorable' prison conditions can not only exacerbate, but cause, life-threatening mental health problems. In America, the charity Human Rights Watch ...

via NYT > Anders Behring Breivik by By ALAN COWELL on 4/22/12
The trial of Anders Behring Breivik, who openly boasted of killing 77 people, seemed to redefine the banality of evil, recast for our time into images of the mundane.

via Google News on 4/20/12

In Chilling Detail, Norwegian Gunman Recounts Killings
Voice of America (blog)
In chilling detail, Norwegian gunman Anders Behring Breivik on Friday described how he hunted down and shot to death 69 people last July at a political youth camp on an island outside Oslo. Right-wing extremist Breivik told a court filled with ...

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New Straits Times

In grief, Norway shows its dignity
New Straits Times
By Karl Ritter 0 comments Anders Behring Breivik's (left) testimony was horrifying, but all present in court, including his lawyer Geir Lippestad (right), kept their composure. Reuters pic YOU would have forgiven Norwegians for showing more outrage ...

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Dying on the inside: TBIJ

Dying on the inside: TBIJ

Dying on the inside

April 25th, 2012 | by | Published in Bureau Recommends

Image courtesy of Shutterstock - www.shutterstock.com
Mentally ill inmates in the US are frequently put in solitary confinement, sometimes indefinitely.
Inmate abuse by prison staff in Pennsylvania has led to at least two suicides, an extensive report by magazine the Nation alleges. As the US Department of Justice mounts an investigation, journalist Matt Stroud describes how ‘deplorable’ prison conditions can not only exacerbate, but cause, life-threatening mental health problems.
In America, the charity Human Rights Watch estimates that up to 19 % of prisoners ‘have psychiatric disorders…and another 15 to 20% require some sort of psychiatric investigation.’
Psychological problems worsen, the charity stated in its 2009 report, Mental Illness, Human Rights and US Prisons, if inmates are placed in isolation for long periods:
‘The stress, lack of meaningful social contact, and unstructured days can exacerbate symptoms of illness or provoke a reoccurrence. Suicides occur proportionately more often in segregation units than elsewhere in prison. All too frequently, mentally ill prisoners decompensate in isolation, requiring crisis care or psychiatric hospitalization. Many simply will not get better as long as they are isolated,’ revealed the charity.
In his detailed and shocking report for the Nation, Stroud explains how the men who committed suicide at SCI Cresson, Pennsylvania, had a history of mental health problems, but neither was given medical treatment. Rather, prison sources say that the two, John McClellan Jr. and James Willett, were physically and mentally abused, held in solitary confinement, and, in the case of McClellan Jr, ‘goaded’ to kill himself.
He told his father that [corrections officers] had threatened to kill him and make it look like a hanging.
While Stroud’s article is a little light on statistics, he does provide strong case-based evidence of the issue. He explains how John McClellan Jr was found hung in his cell on May 6, 2011. His suicide was allegedly a result of years of abuse in prison, and long-term isolation. Word had spread, McClellan said before his death, that he was the son of a police officer. As a result, the inmate said he became a victim of abuse by corrections officers (COs) and other prisoners.
‘Every time he wrote up a grievance…They would come back, write him up for something and put him in the hole sixty days at a time.’ McClellan’s father told the Nation.
Stroud explains: ‘By the time the younger McClellan arrived at SCI Cresson…he was convinced he was going to die. He told his father that COs had threatened to kill him and make it look like a hanging. His mental state was gradually deteriorating, and he was reportedly on medication, although it is not clear what he was prescribed.’
According to the Nation’s sources, the prison authorities were notified of the suicide risk, but did nothing. ‘If he’s going to act on it, he’s going to act on it’, a ward manager allegedly told another inmate.
In March 2012, 24-year-old James Willett also died at SCI Cresson. He had ‘repeatedly requested’ mental health treatment but those requests were denied, claimed a prison source. If there is one criticism of Stroud’s article, it would be that it does not go into the details of Willett’s case, without explaining why.
SolitaryIn 2000, the Pennsylvania prison system introduced a new tactic to deal with delinquency: the Long Term Segregation Unit (LTSU). The LTSU was an isolation programme, to house the most dangerous and disobedient prisoners. The inmates of the LTSU stayed in their cells for 23 hours a day, for up to 36 months. In 2005, the LTSU was replaced with a new program: the Secure Special Needs Unit. Unlike the LTSU, the SSNU was, reportedly, designed to provide prisoners with psychological problems with a safe, secure environment, rather than to be used as a punishment.
However, Stroud says, there is evidence that while the name changed, the methods didn’t. One man kept in solitary confinement, Tracey Pietrovito, was allegedly held in the SSNU for months in conditions that could amount to torture. Stroud describes how Pietrovito had to sleep on concrete, as his mattress was removed.
Related: Deaths in Police Custody – a case to answer on the use of restraint.
Sources also alleged that the guards would ‘refuse to provide him with toilet paper for significant periods-forcing Pietrovito to wipe himself with his hand-and then refused to provide him with soap before he ate his meal, served without utensils.’
Following such claims of abuse, the US Department of Justice instigated an investigation into SCI Cresson and another prison – SCI Pittsburgh. The investigation will consider whether the institutions ‘provided inadequate mental health care to prisoners who have mental illness [and] failed to adequately protect such prisoners from harm’ and whether subjecting prisoners to excessive periods of isolation violated the US eighth amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
The Nation believes that the case could be a milestone in the fight to protect the human rights of prisoners, particularly those suffering from mental health problems.
‘The DOJ investigation has the potential to further expose the utter depravity…of the prison system’ Bret Grote of the Human Rights Coalition told the Nation. ‘Instances of cruelty and insanity are deliberately multiplied by government employees as a matter of policy,’ he said.
Read the full report in the Nation here.
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Arizona and Interposition - NYTimes.com

Arizona and Interposition - NYTimes.com

Editorial

Arizona and Interposition

An important verb appears on page 14 of the government’s brief in Arizona v. the United States, the case about four provisions of that state’s immigration law that will be argued on Wednesday in the Supreme Court. The government says Arizona is trying to “interpose” its own judgments on “national security, law enforcement, foreign policy, humanitarian considerations and the rights of law-abiding citizens and aliens.” It says the Constitution and Congress, in the Immigration and Nationality Act, give the executive branch authority to handle those issues.
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The word “interpose” is a yellow flag in the history of state and federal relations. The southern states claimed a right of “interposition” as a basis for secession before the Civil War, and they resurrected the idea in the 1950s. Just as they claimed the right to interpose their power between the federal government and their populations over slavery and other issues in the 19th century, the southern states claimed the right to ignore the Supreme Court’s desegregation order in Brown v. Board of Education.
In 1958, in Cooper v. Aaron, the court scorched this idea and reaffirmed that Arkansas had a duty to follow federal law. The governor had contended he was not bound by the court decision and ordered the National Guard to bar nine African-American students from Little Rock’s Central High School, causing violence and disorder. In a unanimous opinion that they all signed, the nine justices said that the “chaos, bedlam and turmoil” caused by the governor’s disobedience was “intolerable.”
Arizona’s argument is somewhat different. Arizona contends that it has the power to make its own immigration policy even though the federal government has authority over immigration as part of foreign policy. It says its statute merely empowers law enforcement to cooperate with federal officers.
That is extremely disingenuous, to put it politely. The law transforms a federal policy that allows discretion in seeking serious criminals among illegal immigrants into a state mandate to single out everyone in Arizona illegally. The four provisions of the statute at issue essentially turn all Hispanics, including American citizens and legal residents, into criminal suspects. They require racial profiling, and, because their purpose is “attrition through enforcement,” their goal effectively is separation by race.
Just as racial equality was the law of the land during the desegregation era, it is the law of the land today. It is imperative that there be “a single, national approach” to immigration, as the government’s brief explains, and that any state law fulfills America’s hard-won commitment to racial equality. Arizona’s anti-immigrant statute emphatically does not.
A version of this editorial appeared in print on April 25, 2012, on page A24 of the New York edition with the headline: Arizona and Interposition.

BBC News - Anders Behring Breivik says insanity report '80% lies'

BBC News - Anders Behring Breivik says insanity report '80% lies'

Anders Behring Breivik says insanity report '80% lies'

Anders Behring Breivik, in court in Oslo, 25 April Breivik has argued he should either be put to death or acquitted
Anders Behring Breivik has told his trial in Oslo that "80%" of a psychiatric report that found him insane in relation to his 77 killings in two attacks last July is "lies".
Breivik has returned to the stand to argue he is sane and should not be committed to a mental institution.
The court is discussing two psychiatric reports that came to opposing views on his sanity.
The court earlier heard more testimony from victims of the Oslo bombing.
Breivik, 33, admits to killing 77 people in Oslo and on Utoeya island but denies criminal responsibility.
'Death or acquittal' The BBC's Lars Bevanger in Oslo says Wednesday's evidence is crucial from Breivik's point of view.
The decision on Breivik's sanity will determine whether he is sent to jail or a psychiatric institution. The five-strong panel of judges will make the ruling at the verdict in July.
Breivik is arguing against the first psychiatric report, which found him legally insane and suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, and in favour of the second, which concluded he was accountable for his actions.
He told the court that the psychiatrists compiling the first study had failed to understand he had deliberately suppressed his emotions to prepare for attacks.

At the scene

The first of Anders Behring Breivik's surviving victims has given evidence in court. Eivind Dahl Thoresen, a 26-year old-law student, recalled how he was blown over as he walked only metres from the car bomb in Oslo while chatting about the Tour de France with a friend on his mobile phone.
He told the court how he came to be covered in blood. The paramedics who took him away in an ambulance were worried there might be another bomb about to go off. Nine months on, Mr Thoresen still needs crutches and has reduced use of one arm.
Earlier the court heard coroner's reports of those who died in the blast outside the government buildings. The details have been too gruesome for media here to report, but spoke of the extreme violence caused by the bomb. Families of the dead have been listening to all this in court, while Breivik has remained largely motionless and appearing interested yet emotionless throughout.
He said: "It is not me who is described in that report... Everything I presented was entirely logical. I don't see the slightest possibility I will be judged insane."
Our correspondent says this is a key issue for Breivik, who wants to show his actions were motivated by a political ideology.
Breivik has said committal to a psychiatric ward would be a fate worse than death and he would do "anything to prevent" it.
Breivik himself has argued he should either be put to death or acquitted.
Our correspondent says most people in Norway who have been following the trial expect Breivik to be found sane, given the way he has conducted himself in court.
If so he could face 21 years in jail, which can be extended if he is thought a continuing danger to society. He would face compulsory psychiatric care if found insane.
Earlier, the court heard more testimony from those injured in the Oslo blast and more forensic evidence of the explosion.
Passer-by Eivind Dahl Thoresen described seeing flames out of the corner of his right eye, lifting his hands to his face and being thrown backwards.
Deafened, he said he tried to help another injured man before noticing he was himself bleeding heavily and lay down, shouting for help.
The prosecution also read a statement on behalf of another blast victim, who lost a limb.
Our correspondent says these are some of the first tales of the many victims of the July attacks and over the next eight and a half weeks of the trial, there are sure to be many more harrowing stories to come.
He says that in a few weeks time there will be 69 more coroner's reports - one for each of the deaths at the Labour Party youth camp on Utoeya island.
Relatives of victims sobbed during the evidence on both Tuesday and Wednesday.
Breivik watched the witnesses without any visible emotion.
On Wednesday he said if anyone should apologise for the killings it should be the ruling Labour Party.
"But instead they continue in the same direction, so the grounds for struggle are unfortunately even more relevant now than before July 22."
Breivik spent the first week of the trial giving his own version of events, saying his plan was to kill as many people as possible.
He says he was defending Norway from multiculturalism.

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