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Support for death penalty stable in US as Texas approaches 500th execution

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Texas is moving closer to an unflattering jubilee: the 500th execution since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976 – barring any last-minute stays or reprieves. This Wednesday, June 12, Texas will execute its 499th person, and execution no. 500 is scheduled for June 26. Texas uses the death penalty more than any other state, and the competition does not even come close.

No. 2 on the execution list is Virginia, which has killed 110 people – and only five since 2010. Texas has executed more people than the next six states (Virginia, Oklahoma, Florida, Missouri, Alabama and Georgia) combined. It wasn’t always so. Texas executed fewer than 10 people a year until 1992, when executions spiked under then-Governor Ann Richards. They peaked under George W. Bush, who sent 37 people to the death chamber in 1997 and 40 in 2000.

The Texans put to death are disproportionately African-American. Waiting to be executed on June 12 is Ellroy Chester. A jury condemned him after he pleaded guilty to the 1998 fatal shooting of a Port Arthur firefighter who was slain after arriving at his sister’s home during a robbery.
On February 6, 1998, in Port Arthur, Chester broke into the residence of Kim Ryman Deleon. Chester raped her 14-year-old and 16-year-old daughters. Willie Ryman III (uncle to the girls) entered the home. Chester shot him dead. He then helped himself to jewellery before fleeing the scene.

While in police custody, Chester confessed to this crime, two other murders, and three attempts to commit capital murder. Chester stated that he committed these offences because he was out his mind “with hate for white people.” There’d been a disagreement with a white staff member over a disciplinary report during a previous incarceration.
Chester’s lawyers argued on appeal that he is ineligible for execution because he is mentally impaired, but a divided federal appeals court upheld the sentence. Chester’s previous execution date of April 24, 2013, was delayed by the trial court in response to a motion he filed.

Americans’ support for the death penalty as punishment for murder has levelled off in recent years after several years in which support appeared to be falling. Sixty-three percent now favour the death penalty as the punishment for murder, similar to 61% in 2011 and 64% in 2010, according to polls conducted by Gallup.

Gallup first asked Americans for their views on the death penalty using this question in 1936, and has asked it at least once a year since 1999.

Although views on the death penalty have been fairly static since 2010, support had been on the wane since the high point in 1994, when approval was 80%. By 2001, roughly two-thirds were in favour, and since then it has edged closer to 60%.

Since the Boston bombings, the numbers have nudged up a bit. The majority or at least plurality of most demographic and political groups is in broad agreement about supporting the death penalty as punishment for murder.

One exception to that is adults who describe their political views as “liberal.” Just under half of liberals, 47%, favour the death penalty, while 50% oppose it. However, most conservatives and moderates support it, as do majorities of all party groups, including 51% of Democrats. Additionally, non-whites are closely divided on the issue, with 49% in favour and 45% opposed. That contrasts with whites, among whom 68% are in favour.

Despite the moral nature of the death penalty as a political issue, with teachings on it differing among the various faiths, Gallup finds virtually no difference in support on the basis of respondents’ religious background. Two-thirds of Protestants and Catholics, alike, are in favour of the death penalty as a punishment for murder, as are at least six in 10 adults regardless of whether they attend church weekly, monthly, or less often. Only among those who say they have no religious preference, which would include atheists and agnostics, is there a difference, with a slightly smaller 56% in favour of the death penalty.

There are, however, sharp differences in views about capital punishment with regards to gun ownership. Those who report personally owning a gun are much more likely than those who do not have a gun to favour the death penalty: 80% vs. 55%.

Useful links:
Death Penalty Information Center (USA)
Amnesty International on the death penalty in the USA

By Dr. Stefan Grobe
Washington Correspondent

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Navy considers 3D-printing future fleets of drones

Just as 3D-printed organs, pizza and even firearms are being made with the post-modern machinery, the United States military is eyeing the up-and-coming technology as to further their upper-hand on the battlefield. Recently, a decorated member of the US Navy made an argument for adding unmanned aerial vehicles and even munitions to the list of items that can be made with little more than a well-equipped printer and a few clicks of a mouse. Hobbyists and engineering students have already toyed with the idea of using 3D printers to make unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, but the Navy could piggyback on that idea to ensure that UAVs made to withstand military operations are soon a reality. In an article published this month in the Armed Forces Journal, Lt. Cmdr. Michael Llenza discussed what could be next in the works for the Navy. “For the Navy, the technology promises to shift inventory from the physical world to the digital one,” Llenza wrote. “Instead of actual parts, a ship might carry 3D printers and bags of various powdered ingredients, and simply download the design files needed to print items as necessary.” What kind of items? According to Llenza, just about anything. “Today’s printers are generally limited to printing parts made of just one material, and variance is a big issue,” he said. “But the development of multiple-material devices is well underway, and the technology is racing ahead.” Llenza went on to site recent stories where college students at the University of Virginia printed a UAV that was controlled by a handheld smart phone. Scientists are still working out the kinks with that technology, but it’s expected to only be a short while before drones done entirely using digital blueprints, a printer and a moldable polymer or plastic soar through the sky. “The eventual goal is a drone that flies right out of the printer with electronics and motive power already in place,” Llenza wrote.  Soon enough, he said, the Navy could likely harness that into something fit for the world’s most powerful military. “An organic ability to print replaceable drones from ships, forward operating bases or during disaster relief operations to serve as targets or observation platforms could be a huge enabler for sailors and Marines,” he wrote.  A Texas college student recently made international headlines after his blueprints for a gun made almost exclusively with 3D-printed parts were distributed for free on the Web, prompting condemnation from the likes of the US State Department and congressional lawmakers. The “Liberator” handgun has since rekindled a discussion on the Second Amendment to the US Constitution, but an argument might not even arise of it if the Pentagon starts printing out weaponry of its own. And according to Llenza, that’s exactly what’s about to happen. Llenza said he started talking to an Army colleague at the Atlantic Council who formerly worked for the company that produces the nitrocellulose and propellants for much of the US arsenal and realized what exactly is in store for the future of weapons manufacturing. “We started talking about printing out ammunition, and he explained that printing casings would be relatively easy, but that the idea would be a nonstarter unless you could print the energetic component as well,” Llenza wrote. After chatting with researchers at a Virginia Tech laboratory that has more than just dabbled in drones as of late, Llenza said those experts agreed that 3D-printed ammunition is indeed an effort worth pursuing. And given that replacement body parts and even dinner is being done using the printers, it likely will be a reality sometime soon. The US Navy recently launched their first-ever drone from an aircraft carrier off Virginia’s Atlantic coast. Previously, all of the Pentagon’s UAV missions were carried out by the Air Force. Read More

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India leaders condemn ‘barbaric’ Maoist rebel attack on convoy

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The President of India’s ruling Congress Party Sonia Gandhi has said she is devastated after Saturday’s ambush by suspected Maoist rebels on a convoy carrying regional leaders.

More than 20 people were killed in the attack in dense forest in the eastern state of Chhattisgarh.

Some 200 rebels are thought to have been involved. They downed trees to block the convoy, detonated a landmine and raked the vehicles with gunfire.

The Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who described the attack as “barbaric”, and the Congress Party president travelled to the region on Sunday.

“We are all astounded, and shocked, and pained by what has happened,” Sonia Gandhi said.

More than 30 people were wounded in the ambush; many were treated in local hospitals.

Among those killed were the state’s Congress Party leader and his son, as well as a local leader who had set up an anti-Maoist militia group.

The rebels have fought a decades-long campaign in much of central India, saying they back the rights of the rural poor. Some areas are rich in minerals.

Both government and rebels have hardened their positions in recent years.

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US claims Chinese military is on new cyber offensive against America

According to the New York Times, computer security experts and US officials alike say the PLA’s sophisticated cyber squadron is attempting to hack American businesses after a brief hiatus.Earlier this year, the Times cited a report by Northern Virginia security firm Mandiant when they alleged that Chinese hackers targeted businesses and government agencies inside the US, as well as a Canadian utility company and others. Mandiant said in the February report that the PLA “Unit 61398” group compromised 141 companies across 20 major industries during the last few years, infecting the computers at Coca-Cola, the Canadian arm of Telvent and others.Earlier this month, the US Department of Defense threw its weight behind Mandiant’s claims, and for the first time ever the administration of President Barack Obama accused China of cybercrimes.“In 2012, numerous computer systems around the world, including those owned by the US government, continued to be targeted for intrusions, some of which appear to be attributable directly to the Chinese government and military,” the Pentagon wrote.Now, the chief executive at Mandiant and a number of US officials admit that China relaxed its campaign after the February report was published — only to have already returned to its hacking ways weeks later.“They dialed it back for a little while, though other groups that also wear uniforms didn’t even bother to do that,” CEO Kevin Mandia told the Times on Friday. “I think you have to view this as the new normal.”Mandia told the Times that hackers halted their operations back in February and attempted to wipe clean their digital fingerprints by scrubbing away spyware and other espionage tools used to surveil US businesses. Only one month after pausing, though, the hackers have resorted to once again using sophisticated means to carefully and clandestinely pilfer intelligence from American computers.According to Mandia, Unit 61398 is now operating at 60 to 70 percent of what their campaigns resembled before being exposed in the original New York Times article.Obama administration officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, did not react in disbelief. One senior official that spoke to the Times said, “this is something we are going to have to come back at time and again with the Chinese leadership,” who, he added, “have to be convinced there is a real cost to this kind of activity.”Mandiant declined to identify which computer systems have been allegedly targeted in the latest round of attacks, but claimed that many of the very same entities hit before their report was published are once again in trouble.“The hackers now use the same malicious software they used to break into the same organizations in the past, only with minor modifications to the code,” wrote David Sanger and Nicole Perlroth for the paper. “[T]hey have gradually begun attacking the same victims from new servers and have reinserted many of the tools that enable them to seek out data without detection.”So far, though, the Chinese have largely refused to buy into the claims that a top-secret PLA group is orchestrating some of the most serious cyberattacks ever waged at American entities. It was nearly one month after the February Mandiant report was released when Premier Li Keqiang called the claims “groundless accusations” and impractical.Hacking is a “worldwide problem and in fact China itself is a main victim of such attacks,” Li said in March. “China does not support — in fact it is opposed to – - hacking attacks.”At that meeting, a reporter asked Li, “Will China stop the cyber- hacking against the US since it has now become an issue of American national security?”“In your question I sensed the presumption of guilt,” the premier responded.Christopher Soghoian, a senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union, wrote on Twitter after this week’s Times article, “When the Chinese gov hacks into US computers, it is cyberwar. When the US gov does it, it is ‘installing software.’”It doesn’t hurt the cases brought up by both Li and Soghoian that perhaps the most destructive tool of cyberwar used yet by any nation-state — the worm Stuxnet — is largely considered to be a tool developed by scientists working for the US and Israel. Although the White House has yet to admit to those claims on the record, Obama administration officials speaking on condition of anonymity have attested that Washington ordered Stuxnet and other malicious codes to be used against Iranian nuclear facilities.Just days before Li’s remark, the head of the US Cyber Command told the Senate Armed Services Committee that his agency plans to have 13 separate units trained by 2015 specifically to launch offensive cyberattacks at foreign targets.“The teams are analogous to battalions in the Army and Marine Corps — or squadrons in the Navy and Air Force,” Gen. Keith Alexander said at the hearing. “In short, they will soon be capable of operating on their own, with a range of operational and intelligence skill sets, as well as a mix of military and civilian personnel.”“I would like to be clear that this team. . . is an offensive team,” he said.Speaking to the Wall Street Journal a month later, Geng Shuang, a spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, accused the US of “using cybersecurity as an excuse to take inappropriate actions against Chinese companies and individuals” without providing “proof and evidence.””China stands ready to carry out constructive cooperation with all countries, including the US, to safeguard peace and security of the cyberspace on the basis of mutual respect,” he said. Read More

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Tornadoes rip through central US

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One person is reported dead and several others injured after tornadoes tore through the US state of Oklahoma.

The powerful storm system left a trail of destruction in its wake – uprooting trees and damaging homes and other buildings.

A mobile home park was said to have been flattened.

Tornadoes also struck other states, including Kansas, as the extreme weather moved through the central US – stretching from north Texas to Minnesota.

Thousands were reportedly left without power.

As well as strong winds, hail stones the size of baseballs were also forecast.

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Two elite FBI agents killed during training

Special agents Christopher Lorek, 41, and Stephen Shaw, 40 died in off the coast of Virginia Beach area on Friday, the FBI said Sunday. The bureau offered few details of the deaths. The case remains under investigation.Local TV station WAVY quoted a Navy spokesman as saying that the accident happened aboard a Military Sealift Command ship that the FBI had leased for training.Both agents were brought by helicopter Friday to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital, the leading trauma center for the area, a spokesman for Sentara Healthcare said. He offered no details on their treatment or the injuries they sustained.An investigator in the Virginia medical examiner’s office for the Tidewater District, where the accident happened, said the cause of death may not be obtained before Monday.”We mourn the loss of two brave and courageous men,” FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III said in a statement. “Like all who serve on the Hostage Rescue Team, they accept the highest risk each and every day, when training and on operational missions, to keep our nation safe. Our hearts are with their wives, children, and other loved ones who feel their loss most deeply. And they will always be part of the FBI Family.”Lorek joined the FBI in 1996, the bureau said. He is survived by his wife and two daughters, aged 11 and eight. Shaw has been with the FBI since 2005. He is survived by his wife, a three-year-old daughter and a one-year-old son.The deaths bring to at least four the number of fatalities in the elite counterterrorism team during training since its creation in 1983 in preparation for the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. In April 1986, James K. McAllister died after falling from a helicopter and in December 2006, Gregory J. Rahoi was accidentally shot and killed during a live-fire training exercise.The Hostage Rescue Team is part of the Critical Incident Response Group based at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia, and is prepared to respond to the “most complex and urgent FBI cases in the United States and abroad,” the bureau’s website says. Over the three decades it has participated in hostage situations more than 800 times, in the US and elsewhere. Read More

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Briton admits killing children in France

Visit site: Briton admits killing children in France