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The USDB

Thursday, 4 December 2008 12:28 P GMT-08

Fort Leavenworth

There are two kinds of Soldiers at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. — the ones with no rank or pay, and those with keys. Unofficially called "The Castle," Fort Leavenworth is the only maximum-security prison within the Department of Defense and has operated since 1875.

Thew are two maximum security prisons at Leavenworth, the other is the private Lansing Correctional Facility.

Of 440 male inmates at the USDB, 9 are currently on death row and 10 are serving life without parole. Female felons are locked away at the Naval Consolidated Brig in San Diego, Calif.

Though military executions have become increasingly rare, an estimated 465 soldiers have been executed since the Civil War, most for desertion in wartime and mutiny.

The prison benefits from the fact that every inmate has had some military discipline before he arrives. With the rare exception, they aren't career criminals found in civilian prisons. Sexual offenses currently account for more than half of inmate’s crimes.

It's called the special housing unit at the place known as The Castle. But for the nine soldiers on the military's Death Row at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., life is no fairy tale. Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the commander-in-chief must personally approve all death sentences.

The last execution was conducted April 13, 1961. Only 10 members of the military have been executed since 1951, when the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the military's modern-day legal system, was enacted.

President Eisenhower was the last president to approve a military execution. Since the last military execution, the method of death has changed twice. Army Private John Bennett, convicted of the 1955 rape and attempted murder of an 11-year-old Austrian girl, was hanged at Fort Leavenworth in 1961.

On Feb. 12, 1962, President Kennedy commuted the death sentence of Jimmy Henderson, a Navy seaman, to confinement for life.

President Bush on July 8, 2008 authorized the execution of Army Private Ronald A. Gray be who has been on Leavenworth's death row for 13 years. Former North Carolina Ronald A. Gray, 43, a former Army cook convicted of multiple rapes and murders is scheduled to be executed Dec. 10 at the federal prison complex in Terre Haute, Ind. in what would be the U.S. military's first execution in nearly 50 years.

Ronald A. Gray's crimes include:

* Raping and killing Army Pvt. Laura Lee Vickery-Clay of Fayetteville on Dec. 15, 1986. She was shot four times with a .22-caliber pistol that Gray confessed to stealing. She also suffered blunt force trauma over much of her body.

* Raping and killing Kimberly Ann Ruggles, a civilian cab driver in Fayetteville. She was bound, gagged, stabbed repeatedly and had bruises and lacerations on her face. Her body was found on the base.

* Raping, robbing and attempting to kill an Army private in her barracks at Fort Bragg on Jan. 3, 1987. The victim testified against Gray and identified him as her assailant. Gray raped her and stabbed her several times in the neck and side.

Army Secretary Pete Geren set the execution date and ordered that Gray be put to death by injection. There are eight other members of the military including — two soldiers, a Marine and one Air Force airman — all under sentence of death.

Gray was arrested in connection with four slaying's and eight rapes in the Fayetteville, N.C., area between April 1986 and January 1987, while he was stationed at Fort Bragg.

The current inmates on Fort Leavenworth's Death Row are enlisted men. Before Army Pvt. Dwight Loving of Rochester, the next scheduled to die, can be put to death, President Bush and the Supreme Court must affirm his sentence.

Also on death row are a total of 9 (as of 1/1/2008)
Names of the condemned are:

1. * Kenneth G. Parker, USMC / LCpl / 76500-92-03 A black Marine - Convicted in 1993 of premeditated murder at Camp Lajeune, N.C.

2. * Wade L. Walker, / USMC / USMC / LCpl / 76499-92-03 A black Marine -Convicted in 1993 of premeditated murder at Camp Lajeune, N.C. Convicted in the same incident as Parker. His retrial is pending.

3. * Jessie A. Quintanilla, / USMC / SGT / 76951-96-03 An Asian Marine - convicted October 1996 at Camp Pendleton, California, for murder of one officer and attempted murder of another. His retrial is pending.

4. * James T. Murphy, / USArmy / SGT / ? A black Soldier -Convicted of killing his wife and drowning their two children. His retrial is pending.

5. * Ronald A. Gray, / USArmy / SPC / 733786-88-01 A black Soldier-Convicted in April 1988 at Fort Bragg, N.C. on charges of rape, forcible sodomy and murder of two women and attempted murder of a third woman. Scheduled for December 10.

6. * Dwight J. Loving, / USArmy / PVT / 74276-88-01 A black Soldier-convicted in April 1989 at Fort Hood, Texas, on two counts of murder and one attempted murder of three taxi drivers.

7. * William J. Kreutzer, / USARMY / SGT / 76651-95-01 A white Soldier-Convicted June 1996 at Ft. Bragg, N.C.on charges of one specification of premeditated murder and 18 specifications of attempted murder, as well as one specification of violating a general order by transporting weapons on post and one specification of larceny of government property. His retrial is pending.

8. * Hasan Akbar, / US Army / SGT / ? A black Soldier -Convicted in April 2005 on charges of first degree-murder and attempted first-degree murder after attacking troops in command tents with grenades and a rifle in Kuwait in 2003. Sgt.

9. * Andrew P. Witt, / USAF / SrA / ? A white Airman - convicted in October 2005 of premeditated murder and attempted premeditated murder in the deaths of another airman and his wife and the wounding of another airman at Robbins Air Force Base, Ga.

The military of the United States executed 160 soldiers and other members of the armed forces between 1942 and 1961 (these figures do not include German prisoners of war, war criminals and saboteurs executed by military authorities between 1942 and 1951).

There have been no military executions since 1961 although the death penalty is still a possible punishment for several crimes under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

Of these executions, 157 were carried out by the United States Army.

The United States Air Force conducted the three remaining executions, one in 1950 and two in 1954.

The U.S. Navy has not executed anyone since 1849.

It should also be noted that the United States Army had previously executed a total of 36 soldiers during the First World War, eleven of these executions taking place between 5 November 1917 and 20 June 1919 in France and 25 hangings being carried out in the continental United States over the same time period.

Of the total, 106 were executed for murder (including 21 involving rape), 53 for rape and one for desertion (Eddie Slovik).

Time is getting short for  Ronald A Gray, will some slick ACLU lawyer prevail or will he get his just due on December 10, 2008 as scheduled?

 

Another Socialist Failure

posted Thursday, 24 July 2008

 

As of January 1, 2008, 64,473,140 people lived in the French Republic. 61,875,822 of these lived in metropolitan France, whereas 2,597,318 lived in the French overseas departments and territories.

France has a sizeable population of Arabs and Africans from its former colonies, the proportion of immigrants in France is on par with other European nations such as the United Kingdom (8%), Germany (9%), the Netherlands (18%), Sweden (13%) and Switzerland (19%). Outside of Europe and North Africa, the highest rate of immigration is from Vietnam, Cambodia and Senegal.

The large-scale immigration from Islamic countries sparked controversy in France, as some demographers state "the third world Neo-colonization of Europe" might make France an "outpost of the Arab world".

Maybe that's why Paris is Burning?

On the other hand, over one million Afro-French (or "black French"), descendants of sub-Saharan African and West Indian immigrants, have enjoyed better cultural and social integration, though some have dealt with issues of racism in French society.

Widespread opposition to labor reform has in recent years hampered the government's ability to revitalize the economy. In 2007, the government launched divisive labor reform efforts that will continue into 2008.

France's tax burden remains one of the highest in Europe (nearly 50% of GDP in 2005). France brought the budget deficit within the eurozone's 3%-of-GDP limit for the first time in 2007 and has reduced unemployment to roughly 8%.

The 35-hour working week was a measure adopted first in France, in February 2000, the main stated objectives of the law were two-fold:

 

  • To reduce unemployment and yield a better division of labor, in a context where some people work long hours while some others are unemployed. A 10.2% decrease in the hours extracted from each worker would, theoretically, require firms to hire correspondingly more workers, a remedy for unemployment.
  • To take advantage of improvements in productivity of modern society in order to give workers some more personal time in order to enhance their quality of life.

That doesn't seem to have been the case, like most Socialist programs where the Utopians calculate a free ride in all social needs it hasn't quite worked out that well, their labor unions are like our labor unions, they want the deep pockets of the employer to bear the burden of the Socialist programs and at the same time salve the employees grievances of being over worked.

That's the answer, reduce the workweek, give more paid vacations to the workers and hold those wages artificially high.

Seems that there has been an economic change of heart, and the French parliament was set Wednesday to adopt a major economic reform promised by President Nicolas Sarkozy, which amounts to a defacto end to the country's much disputed 35-hour working week.

Wow, have they finally figured out that their nation has to compete in a global market? French senators have already adopted other key reforms which change rules on strikes, tighten criteria for unemployment payments, and free up the economy with plans aimed at bringing down the cost of living by boosting competition. Competition, a novel approach to solving their slumping economy and high unemployment rate.

The new measures were approved by the National Assembly lower house earlier in July and will become law with the backing of the Senate, where Sarkozy's right-wing UMP party has a majority.

Who is opposing the new measures? The reform most contested by the opposition Socialists and by trades unions is the move to let companies ditch the 35-hour work week, a measure brought in by a Socialist government 10 years ago and denounced by conservatives as a drag on France's competitivity.

This reminds me of my last ten years at the company I worked for, my department in maintenance was taken over by the production department as a move to reduce duplicate management, the production department needed the skilled labor but never entered us into their operating budget, only budgeting for their operators. Our funding as well as that of outside labor was managed as cost overruns to the operations budget. No matter what we did to cut costs it was impossible to balance the budget, that didn't stop management from using that as a cudgel to beat us over the head.

Overtime, we were held to an 80 hour week in a possible 168 hour 7 day time frame per shift, they wouldn't hire new help to cover the shortages, we worked a lot of overtime, especially on 14 day shifts, I personally have worked over 128 hours in one 7 day shift, that gets expensive for the company in two ways, employee burnout and the lack of new trainees.

The company was stepping over dollars to save penny's, that last ten years was hell on earth, I left four years before the company folded.

Labor costs are the first thing a company cuts to save money, but limiting hours usually costs more, the only true savings for the corporation is that they base retirement benefits on the standard work week, in our case it's based on and limited to 40 hours, overtime doesn't accrue.

France not only carries the health and retirement benefits costs it also carries the health costs and the unemployment stipends, if you can't compete on the global market the entire Socialist infrastructure collapses.

This is the promise of change we are being sold, just look at Canada and Europe for the results of that change.

The future French law would maintain the working week at 35 hours but give businesses the right to negotiate directly with employees to decide their working hours. While the 35-hour week was aimed at cutting unemployment and the French statistics institute INSEE said it created 350,000 new jobs between 1998 and 2002, but at the cost of billions of euros in state aid to companies.

The bill concerning the unemployed which passed the French Senate Wednesday night obliges job seekers to accept the third "reasonable" job offer made to them, failing which their unemployment benefits would be stopped.

That should piss off the Labor Unions, another controversial measure approved by senators forces schools to look after children in school premises when teachers are on strike. It also obliges workers to hold "preliminary negotiations" with employers before launching strike action. Critics(Unions) say the law undermines the right to strike.

Sarkozy announced the proposed reform on 15 May, the day of national education mobilization to protest against cutting 11,200 positions at the start of the next school term.

After their accusation that Americans are lazy and non productive I see it as a step in the right direction for France but you can bet your sweet ass I'm not going out and buy some French Brie and Champagne.