Councilmember Sue Greenwald responds on Courthouse Construction Issue
Davis City Councilmember Sue Greenwald finds herself in the middle of an unusual debate, in the sense that the Yolo County Courthouse on the surface does not directly involve her elected position with the City of Davis.
Nevertheless, in Thursday’s Davis Enterprise, the councilmember argued, “My concern is not merely with the $173 million cost of the replacement courthouse. It is with the entire $5 billion cost of the statewide courthouse construction bonds, which are currently under the radar screen.”
On Thursday, the ACLU of California sent an open letter to Governor Jerry Brown, Senate President Darrell Steinberg and Assembly Speaker John Perez, asking that two key reforms targeting waste in prison spending are included in the May revised budget.
A man is arrested for the rape of his daughter over a nine-year period of time. He is taken into an interrogation room at six p.m., he is told he can freely leave but then not allowed to exit, he may or may not know that he should contact an attorney, and somewhere around nine hours later he confessions to something short of raping his daughter, but nevertheless incriminating enough to be arrested and convicted.
Judge Knocks Charges Down to Misdemeanor Over DA’s Objection –
Asian Rival Gangs Selling Drugs Together – Or Overreach by Authorities?
Exactly two weeks ago today, Judge Janet Gaard of the Yolo County Superior Court was to hear the case of People vs. Oscar Arreola in her courtroom, Department 8, at 9 am.
In January of 2010, the Vanguard created its Vanguard Court Watch. The idea behind YJW was to monitor and report on what was occurring in the Yolo County courts.
Governor Jerry Brown, in a quick stroke of the pen, has undone one of the more perplexing moves that Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger made, which was to take 65 million out of the state’s general fund to construct a new wing with 1152 beds for San Quentin’s death row – at a time when the state was not executing new condemned prisoners and at a time when there are only 700 inmates on death row awaiting death sentences.
Nicholas Benson pled no contest to all remaining charges against him, stemming from the January 21, 2011, incident that captured regional headlines after he was arrested for making threats to harm himself and others, and carrying an assault rifle with over 100 rounds of ammunition in his vehicle.
Hearing Punctuated by Snarky Exchange Between DA and Defense Counsel –
Defendant May Still Be Guilty – But We Need to Be Sure He Got a Fair Trial –
Back in early March, a Yolo County Jury convicted Bennie Moses of 62 counts for the molestation and rape of his daughter from the time she was 12 until she turned 21.