Posts Tagged ‘law’


20.01.2012

Police chiefs meet at WH on homegrown terror fight

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(AP) ? State and local law enforcement officials convened at the White House on Wednesday for a daylong discussion about how police can maintain the trust of their communities while identifying and preventing violent extremism and homegrown terrorism ? an effort the administration considers critical to national security.

It’s a delicate balance, as the violent extremism that has erupted across the U.S. in the past few years has been motivated by an ideology, whether a violent interpretation of Islam or white supremacist beliefs. Ideologies in and of themselves are not illegal. But police now find themselves struggling with identifying the ideologues who plan to commit violence among the many others who hold similar beliefs but have no intention of hurting anyone.

“Where do you draw the line between what they say and what they do,” Cambridge, Mass., Police Commissioner Robert Haas said in an interview during a break. Police can’t be seen as violating the trust they’ve built in local communities to ferret out information that potentially could prevent an attack, he said. Haas was one of the 46 senior federal, state and local law enforcement officials who participated in the event that was closed to the public.

The conference marked the first time the Obama administration hosted a meeting with so many of the nation’s top law enforcement executives on how to counter violent extremism.

“The important role of local law enforcement is a key part of the administration’s approach to countering violent extremism in the homeland,” President Barack Obama’s counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, said. “Law enforcement officials work with communities every day and understand how to build partnerships to address this tough challenge.”

There has been an uptick in attempted attacks by Americans and other legal U.S. residents in the past few years, prompting the Obama administration to place a priority on finding ways to stop this type of violence. The administration rolled out a thin strategy last year that put local communities ? not Washington ? in charge of countering violent extremism in the U.S.

Analysts from the FBI, Homeland Security Department and National Counterterrorism Center studied 62 cases of homegrown violent extremists and identified basic similarities that might help local law enforcement better understand and detect threats. The warning signs identified for police include someone joining a group advocating violence, receiving support from a network that plans attacks or seeking out charismatic leaders who encourage violence. An overview of the findings was shared with the AP.

In the 62 cases reviewed, the subjects increasingly spoke out against the government, blamed the government for perceived problems and did so in a way that caught the attention of other people in their communities, according to the senior counterterrorism official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private White House event. Subjects became active on the Internet to espouse extremist views. And in some cases, the subjects purchased weapons, ammunition or explosive materials.

Analysts also found that a person’s origin, ethnic background and socioeconomic status are not good indicators for potential violent extremist activity, the senior counterterrorism official said.

That finding is key, as the FBI came under fire last year for some controversial training sessions that focused on Islam and portrayed it as a violent religion. And the New York Police Department also has been criticized for singling out Muslim communities and collecting information about their daily lives, in some cases without any indication of criminal activity.

The White House has encouraged law enforcement to reach out to Muslim communities to build relationships, insisting that these communities are partners in the fight against terrorism. At the same time, law enforcement has stepped up investigative efforts to stave off attacks.

In the decade since the September 2001 attacks, New York government officials have done just that: They’ve met with Muslim leaders, exchanged cellphone numbers, attended religious services, dinners and teas, and spoken at community meetings. As the only U.S. city that al-Qaida has successfully attacked twice and continues to be the target of terror plots, New York also has the most aggressive local police department investigating terrorism, and this duality of missions has caused tension in the city’s Muslim communities, where many people have lost trust in the police and wonder whether they are partners in the fight against terrorism or terror suspects.

While the White House conference did not broach the issues between the NYPD and New York’s Muslim community, the consistent message was that police can’t violate public trust, Haas said. Communities that have solid relationships with the police feel empowered to come forward with tips about suspicious activity, Haas said.

“We don’t want to be seen as taking a step back and violating that trust that we have with folks,” he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-01-18-Violent%20Extremists/id-b8484bd3b90d4127a48e077f2fe2bb34

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22.10.2011

Okla. judge blocks abortion law from taking effect

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(AP) ? An Oklahoma judge on Wednesday temporarily blocked from taking effect a new law designed to reduce the number of abortions performed in the state by restricting the ways in which doctors can treat women with abortion-inducing drugs.

Oklahoma County District Judge Daniel Owens issued the ruling after a conference call with attorneys for both sides.

The temporary injunction prevents the bill from going into effect on Nov. 1. Passed earlier this year by the GOP-controlled Legislature and signed by Gov. Mary Fallin, the measure requires doctors to follow the strict guidelines and protocols authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and prohibits off-label uses of the drugs. It also requires doctors to examine the woman, document certain medical conditions and schedule a follow-up appointment.

Opponents of the measure say the off-label use of drugs ? such as changing a recommended dosage or prescribing it for different symptoms than the drug was initially approved for ? is common, and that the measure would prevent doctors from using their best medical judgment.

“We’re thrilled that women in Oklahoma will continue to be able to access medical care that accounts for scientific evidence, sound medical judgment and advancements in medicine,” said Michelle Movahed, an attorney for the New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights, which challenged the law on behalf of Nova Health Systems, a Tulsa-based abortion provider, and the Oklahoma Coalition for Reproductive Justice, a nonprofit abortion-rights group.

Similar laws approved in North Dakota and Ohio have been delayed pending legal challenges, Movahed said. The North Dakota lawsuit says that state’s law would prevent doctors from using the drug misoprostol because it’s labeled for treatment of stomach ulcers. It’s one of two drugs that are administered in combination to induce abortions.

Attorneys for Oklahoma contend that the drugs are dangerous and should be used only in strict accordance with FDA guidelines.

“To date, at least eight American women have died from mifepristone abortions,” Assistant Attorney General Victoria Tindall wrote in the state’s response to the center’s lawsuit. “The dangerous risks of mifepristone demand strict adherence to the FDA-approved protocol.”

Tindall declined to discuss the case after a hearing Tuesday, and the attorney general’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

Movahed said as many as 21 percent of all drugs are prescribed for off-label use. In the case of drug-induced abortions, she said a common regimen is to use one-third of the FDA-recommended amount of the abortion drug mifepristone in conjunction with misoprostol, which has been determined to be effective for a variety of other purposes than gastric ulcers. She said in the decade since the mifepristone FDA label was approved, numerous studies have shown that show the combination is safer and more effective.

“The evidence supporting these alternative regimens are of such high quality that the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists gave these alternative regiments their highest possible recommendation,” Movahed said.

Movahed also disputed the state’s assertion that abortion drugs caused the deaths of women.

“Those cases were investigated by both the FDA and the (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and there was absolutely no causal relationship found between those unfortunate deaths and the medications that had been used,” she said.

The author of the Oklahoma measure, Republican Rep. Randy Grau of Edmond, has said previously that the goal of the bill is to promote patient safety and any claim that it would make women less safe “is just ridiculous.” He did not immediately return a telephone message Wednesday.

Oklahoma also passed a law last year that would require women seeking abortions to first have an ultrasound and listen to a detailed description of the fetus. The Center for Reproductive Rights is challenging that law as well, and it also has been temporarily suspended while the case is ongoing.

“What we see is a Legislature that has time and again said that they want to score political points off of a very difficult and emotionally charged issue,” said Ryan Kiesel, a former state lawmaker and now the director of the Oklahoma chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. “And they’re willing to do so at the expense of women’s health and at the expense of taxpayers, who are on the hook to fund the defense of these pieces of legislation.”

___

Sean Murphy can be reached at www.twitter.com/apseanmurphy

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-19-Abortion%20Law%20Blocked/id-3ab98f8d087a47b8b8c9e9ac47b77b0f

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