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The
Below Comments Relate to this Newslink:
Congressmen Sound Constitutional Alarm Saying Kalief Browder’s 6th Amendment Rights Were Violated
Submitted by:
Mark A. Taff
Website: http://www.marktaff.com
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Kalief Browder faced regular beatings and solitary confinement when he spent three years at Rikers Island, a set of prison complexes floating between the Bronx and Queens in New York City, while waiting for trial for allegedly stealing a backpack at the age of 17.
Last Saturday, two years after his release from prison, he committed suicide just a few days before he had to make a court appearance.
Now members of Congress are speaking out and calling his treatment unconstitutional.
Senator Rand Paul (R-KY), a 2016 presidential candidate, is one of the right’s most vocal prison reform advocates. After the news of Browder’s suicide, according to Al Jazeera, Paul spoke out: |
Comment by:
Millwright66
(6/13/2015)
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Mr. Browder is dead. What purpose - besides self-serving ones - does all this 'political concern' amount to ? The injustices and inequities of places like Rikers, or most of our 'intake facilities' and court systems aren't new. And Browder's death wouldn't have been even noted by any of his political representatives until it became "news".
How long are we - as controlling authority via our vote - going to put up with the increasing bureaucratic contempt for our rights and laws ? Its long past time we took both our elected representatives and their bureaucratic savants 'to the woodshed'. |
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QUOTES
TO REMEMBER |
I do believe that where there is a choice only between cowardice and violence, I would advise violence. Thus when my eldest son asked me what he should have done had he been present when I was almost fatally assaulted in 1908 [by an Indian extremist opposed to Gandhi's agreement with Smuts], whether he should have run away and seen me killed or whether he should have used his physical force which he could and wanted to use, and defend me, I told him it was his duty to defend me even by using violence. Hence it was that I took part in the Boer War, the so-called Zulu Rebellion and [World War I]. Hence also do I advocate training in arms for those who believe in the method of violence. I would rather have India resort to arms in order to defend her honor than that she should in a cowardly manner become or remain a helpless witness to her own dishonor. — Mohandas K. Gandhi, Young India, August 11, 1920 from Fischer, Louis ed.,The Essential Gandhi, 1962 |
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