Inside the Harsh Lives of Wild Carnivores: New at Reason

'The Hunt'Based on the approximately 1.2 zillion bugs-and-bunnies-avengers with Twitter and Facebook accounts who wanted to disembowel and eat a Minnesota hunter last year for killing Zimbabwe’s saintly Cecil the Lion last year, I’m guessing an eight-week documentary revealing that the animal kingdom is in large part composed of creatures who are neither pacifists nor vegans is going to come as a shocking and even traumatic surprise.

For misanthropes who still sport “NUKE THE WHALES” buttons from their last Fleshapoids concert, though, BBC’s The Hunt is likely to be a sublime experience. Orcas inflicting mass infanticide on humpbacks! South African falcons gorging on winged Indian termites! Ethiopian wolves ravaging giant mole rats! Nature in all its maniacal blood-drinking glory! Television critic Glenn Garvin explains more.

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New Baltimore Use of Force Policy Doesn’t Really Work Without ‘Reasonable’ Officers

The Baltimore Police Department unveiled a new use of force policy, crafted, the department said, with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland, the NAACP of Baltimore, and local attorneys, both prosecutors and public defenders.

The new document represents the first major revision of the use of force policy since 2003. Among the more important changes, all types of the use of force (including flashing a weapon at a suspect) now requires notifying a supervisor. The policy also stresses de-escalation, a “duty to intercede” by officers who see other cops use excessive force, and a duty to provide medical assistance when necessary or when requested by the suspect.

“Recognizing that mental illness, post-traumatic stress disorder, alcohol and/or drug addictions, or other health issues can cause individuals to behave erratically,” the policy reads, “members must try to de-escalate situations and minimize or avoid using force altogether, when possible, to prevent injuries to the subject, the public and the member.”

The document is available via the Baltimore Sun but does not yet appear to be on the Baltimore Police Department’s website. The BPD has not had an update on its news site since November 2015.

The policy outlines four types of aggression targets of police action could exhibit—passive resistance, active resistance, active aggression, and aggravated aggression. Lunging toward a police officer counts as “active aggression.”

As usual, “reasonableness of a particular use of force is based on the totality of the circumstances known by the officer at the time of the use of force,” according to the policy, which refers to the reasonable judgment of police officers (or “members” in the document’s vernacular) so often as to render itself worthless. “Reasonable must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene,” the use of force policy document declares, insisting the “reasonableness standard is an objective one… without regard to the member’s underlying intent or motivation.” Later: “Reasonableness is not capable of precise definition or mechanical application” and “must allow for the fact that members are often forced to make split-second decisions-in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, dynamic and rapidly evolving.”

Were Baltimore police officers all reasonable people, a simpler use of force policy would suffice. But Baltimore’s hiring policies, informed by the police union and cop-friendly big city politicians and hardly unique, don’t guarantee reasonable officers. Coupled with privileges extended to cops outside of the deference of the use of force policy—things like the 10-day waiting period to talk about a deadly use of force incident—this contributes to much of the problem of excessive police violence. Baltimore’s new use of force policy describes three levels of force. All require notifying a supervisor, but documentation is required only in the two lower levels, a function of the privileges within the Law Enforcement Officers’ Bill of Rights that police reformers in Maryland have been unable to reform or repeal.

The use of force policy permits the use of deadly force when “immediately necessary to protect a member or another person from imminent danger of death or serious physical injury.” Deadly force can also be used on fleeing suspects, provided that the officer believes “it is necessary,” that the suspect has committed or is committing a felony involving physical injury or death, that the suspect’s escape would threaten the cop or another person, and that, when possible, the officer “has given verbal warning to the suspect.”

“When practical, a member should identify himself/herself as a law enforcement officer and state his/her intention to use deadly force before using a friearm or employing deadly force,” the policy reads.

The policy prohibits deadly force to “subdue persons whose actions are a threat only to property” or “against persons whose conduct is a threat only to themselves.” Choke holds are prohibited “unless deadly force is authorized.” The policy prohibits warning shots and cops from shooting from or at moving vehicles except “to counter an imminent threat” or when a cop is “unavoidably in the path of the vehicle and cannot move safely.”

The new policy also deals with “dangerous animals,” permitting the use of deadly force against animals when “alternative options are not available or would likely be ineffective,” directing cops to look for dangerous animals in pre-raid surveillance as well as to develop “reasonably contingency plans” for dealing with dangerous animals.

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The Inevitable Trends of Tech Progress: A review of Kevin Kelly’s new book

PervasiveScreensEdinburghNapierUniversityWhat technological wonders will the next 30 years bring? Answering that question is the task that Wired senior maverick and co-founding editor Kevin Kelly sets himself in his new book The Inevitable. In his visionary What Technology Wants, Kelly previously argued that technology is becoming in some sense autonomous, and that autonomous technology, or the “technium” in his terminology, “is now as great a force in our world as nature.” But you don’t have to buy into Kelly’s semi-teleological explanations of the trajectory of the modern technological project to recognize that he does a great deal of deep thinking about how technology evolves, and the ideas in his new work about what’s to come are also well worth pondering.

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More Obstacles to Prosecuting Police Misconduct Revealed in Police Union Contracts

He can get witnesses' addresses.Black Lives Matter’s Campaign Zero project has released a new analysis and interactive data visualization project based on information obtained through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests into the police union contracts of 81 of the U.S.’ 100 largest cities, as well as the “police bill of rights” enumerated in the 14 states where such laws exist.

The authors of the report wrote, “Working with legal experts, advocates, and academics with an expertise in this area, six major areas are identified wherein these contracts and bills of rights contribute to making it more difficult to hold police accountable for misconduct.”

Among the study’s findings:

25 cities and 4 states disqualify certain complaints from being investigated or resulting in discipline, for example if they are submitted too many days after an incident occurs or if an investigation takes too long to complete.

As an example, the Columbus PD requires a written complaint to the city within 60 days of any alleged misconduct or the complaint will not be investigated.

Regarding police interrogations:

50 cities and 13 states restrict interrogations by limiting how long an officer can be interrogated, who can interrogate them, the types of questions that can be asked, and when an interrogation can take place.

The study cites Louisiana’s Police Bill of Rights permitting officers to delay interrogations for up to 30 days. Officers are also often granted access to information prior to interrogations that would be unthinkable for ordinary citizens. For example, the Wichita PD’s union contract allows officers to have “access to the names and addresses of complainants prior to an interrogation,” and Florida’s Police Bill of Rights permits officers to review all evidence (including audio and video) which could be used against them before they are interrogated.

When it comes to disciplining police misconduct, “64 cities and 7 states limit disciplinary consequences for officers, for example preventing an officer’s history of past misconduct from being considered in future cases, and/or limit the capacity of civilian oversight structures or the broader public to hold police accountable.” Additionally, Austin’s police union contract forbids “Civilian Oversight” from exercising subpoena power.

Transparency is stymied by 43 cities and 3 states, which “erase records of misconduct, in some cases erasing records after 2 years or less.” Cleveland’s police union contract requires officers’ “disciplinary actions or penalties” to be “removed after two years from the date the discipline was administered.”

You can read my recent (and at times contentious) interview with Black Lives Matter organizer DeRay McKesson here, as well as other Reason coverage of BLM’s efforts to bring transparency to police use-of-force policies and earlier reports on police union contracts.

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Sonia Sotomayor Stands Up for the Fourth Amendment

Justice Sonia Sotomayor is fast becoming the Supreme Court’s biggest defender of the Fourth Amendment. After examining her record over the past few SCOTUS terms, including the term that just concluded this week, it’s clear that Sotomayor has emerged as a consistent and outspoken voice in favor of broad Fourth Amendment rights. Here’s a brief look at some of Sotomayor’s most notable actions in recent Fourth Amendment cases.

Missouri v. McNeely

At issue in this 2013 dispute is whether the Fourth Amendment stands in the way of the police obtaining a warrantless and nonconsensual blood test from a suspected drunk driver. Writing for the majority, Sotomayor held that the amendment is indeed such a bulwark. “In those drunk-driving investigations where police officers can reasonably obtain a warrant before a blood sample can be drawn without significantly undermining the efficacy of the search,” Sotomayor wrote, “the Fourth Amendment mandates that they do so.”

Navarette v. California

In this 2014 case a majority of the Supreme Court said that no Fourth Amendment violation took place when the police conducted a traffic stop and resulting drug bust based solely on information obtained from an anonymous telephone tip. “The Court’s opinion serves up a freedom-destroying cocktail,” Justice Antonin Scalia seethed in dissent. “All the malevolent 911 caller need do is assert a traffic violation, and the targeted car will be stopped, forcibly if necessary, by the police.” That troubling scenario, Scalia wrote, “is not my concept, and I am sure it would not be the Framers’, of a people secure from unreasonable searches and seizures.” Sotomayor signed on to Scalia’s dissent.

Rodriguez v. United States

At issue in this case was whether a police officer “unnecessarily prolonged” an otherwise legal traffic stop when he called for backup in order to walk a drug-sniffing dog around the stopped vehicle. During the January 2015 oral arguments, Justice Department lawyer Ginger Adams insisted that the police are entitled to broad leeway when it comes to determining the amount of time that’s “reasonably required” in that sort of situation. Justice Sotomayor took a decidedly different view. “We can’t keep bending the Fourth Amendment to the resources of law enforcement,” an exasperated Sotomayor lectured Adams. “What you’re proposing,” she told the government lawyer, is an approach that’s “purely to help the police get more criminals, yes. But then the Fourth Amendment becomes a useless piece of paper.” Three months later Sotomayor joined the majority in voiding the officer’s unconstitutional actions.

Mullenix v. Luna

This case centered on a whether or not a police officer was entitled to qualified immunity after using deadly force to end a high-speed car chase. In a 2015 per curiam opinion, the Supreme Court held that the officer was entitled to qualified immunity. In a lone dissent, Sotomayor faulted her colleagues for “sanctioning a ‘shoot first, think later’ approach to policing [that] renders the protections of the Fourth Amendment hollow.”

Utah v. Strieff

In this 2016 ruling the Supreme Court held that the Constitution does not prohibit law enforcement officials from using evidence that had been obtained as a result of an illegal police stop because it turned out that the man who was illegally stopped happened to be the subject of an outstanding traffic warrant. “This case allows the police to stop you on the street, demand your identification, and check it for outstanding traffic warrants–even if you are doing nothing wrong,” Sotomayor fumed in dissent. “If the officer discovers a warrant for a fine you forgot to pay, courts will now excuse his illegal stop and will admit into evidence anything he happens to find by searching you after arresting you on the warrant.” In her view, “the Fourth Amendment should prohibit, not permit, such misconduct” by the police.

Birchfield v. North Dakota

The final case in our list was decided just last week. At issue here was whether warrantless chemical tests for suspected drunk drivers violate the Fourth Amendment. In a divided opinion, the Court held that warrantless blood tests do violate the Constitution but warrantless breath tests do not. Writing separately, Justice Sotomayor insisted that both types of warrantless DUI tests should have been struck down as unconstitutional. “Because no governmental interest categorically makes it impractical for an officer to obtain a warrant before measuring a driver’s alcohol level,” Sotomayor wrote, “the Fourth Amendment prohibits such searches without a warrant, unless exigent circumstances exist in a particular case.”

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Secretive National Security Letters Can Help FBI More Easily Snoop on Journalists

LensRight around the same time in 2013 Edward Snowden was working to leak information about the federal government’s mass domestic surveillance of Americans, the Associated Press discovered that the Department of Justice had secretly collected months of phone call records of a pack of its reporters, all likely in an attempt to find the source of a leak about a foiled terrorist plot in Yemen.

It’s important to note that this secret investigation was all about trying to find a leaker, not, say, a suspected terrorist. The outrage over the Justice Department’s behavior led to some nominal reforms on how it would use subpoenas to get phone records of media outlets.

But, as The Intercept, points out this week, what happened to the Associated Press is merely one way that the federal government is able to quietly snoop on what the media is up to. The secretive National Security Letter (NSL) can also be used to collect communication data from media outlets. NSLs are orders through which the government demands that data companies or information service companies provide information about the communications of a targeted user. Furthermore, the companies are legally obligated to keep any information about the letters, including having received them at all, secret. The use of these letters expanded significantly after the Sept. 11 attack as a tool to try to track down information about terrorist plots.

The use of the letters has become controversial not just because the government attempts to keep their contents secret for as long as possible—secrecy they’ve finally started easing up on after lawsuits and post-Snowden reforms to surveillance rules. They’re also controversial due to a lack of oversight from the judicial branch. The Department of Justice is in complete control over their use. So how can we be sure they’ll actually be used to fight terrorism and not help perpetuate a war on leakers? The Intercept has been provided an unredacted copy of the classified rules for using NSL letters against journalists or media outlets and found that the FBI and Justice Department call all the shots. And in some cases, the FBI doesn’t even need to go to the Justice Department for authorization to use the letters:

The rules stipulate that obtaining a journalist’s records with a National Security Letter (or NSL) requires the sign-off of the FBI’s general counsel and the executive assistant director of the bureau’s National Security Branch, in addition to the regular chain of approval. Generally speaking, there are a variety of FBI officials, including the agents in charge of field offices, who can sign off that an NSL is “relevant” to a national security investigation.

There is an extra step under the rules if the NSL targets a journalist in order “to identify confidential news media sources.” In that case, the general counsel and the executive assistant director must first consult with the assistant attorney general for the Justice Department’s National Security Division.

But if the NSL is trying to identify a leaker by targeting the records of the potential source, and not the journalist, the Justice Department doesn’t need to be involved.

The guidelines also specify that the extra oversight layers do not apply if the journalist is believed to be a spy or is part of a news organization “associated with a foreign intelligence service” or “otherwise acting on behalf of a foreign power.” Unless, again, the purpose is to identify a leak, in which case, the general counsel and executive assistant director must approve the request.

Recall that during all the arguing over the ethics of Snowden’s leaks, there was plenty of debate from critics about whether Snowden was acting in such a way to benefit foreign governments (regardless of whether that makes any sense). Journalist Glenn Greenwald’s partner David Miranda was detained by the U.K. government briefly and questioned under the country’s Terrorist Act. The government would no doubt insist that these authorizations are in place to help the government track down terrorism, but what we see in practice is significantly different.

And as The Intercept also notes, the Department of Justice’s reforms say they’re not going to go after journalists themselves with subpoenas and prosecution for “newsgathering activities,” but those reforms have nothing to do with the use of NSLs and don’t affect them. (And is of little comfort to somebody turning to the media as a whistleblower in any event).

Also keep in mind that the FBI is also trying to expand what type of information they can get with NSLs to include more email metadata and online browser history. An attempt to get authority passed through the Senate failed just barely last month, but is likely to pass when it returns for another vote.

We do have one slight piece of good news on federal government transparency and the media this week. President Barack Obama signed into law a bill intended to reform the Freedom of Information Act to attempt to make federal agencies more open and responsive to requests and puts a 25 year limit on trying to withhold documents through exemptions. Though, as the Reporters Committee for the Freedom of the Press notes, some of this law is simply codifying what the president ordered via memo when he first took office, and yet his administration has done an absolutely terrible job at complying with FIOA requests.

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Ozone Hole Over Antarctica Is Closing, Reports Science

OzoneHoleNASAIn the 1980s, researchers discovered that the protective stratospheric ozone layer over Antarctica was thinning. Since stratospheric ozone reduces the amount of damaging ultraviolet light from the sun that reaches the surface, this was potentially very bad news. Scientists quickly identified chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) widely used as coolants in refrigerators, air conditioners, and as propellants in spray cans as the culprits. CFC molecules floated into the stratosphere where they destroyed ozone molecules. Environmental activist Al Gore famously, but inaccurately, asserted that rabbits and fish in Argentina were being blinded by increased ultraviolet light as a result of the thinning ozone layer. In 1987, countries producing CFCs agreed in the Montreal Protocol to phase out CFCs.

In my 1993 book, Eco-Scam I reported on the science and politics related to the problem of the ozone layer and concluded that an international ban on CFCs was merited. From Eco-Scam:

Despite a great deal of continuing scientific uncertainty, it appears that CFCs do contribute to the creation of the Antarctic ozone hole and perhaps a tiny amount of global ozone depletion. If CFCs were allowed to build up in the atmosphere during the next century, ozone depletion might eventually entail significant costs. More ultraviolet light reaching the surface would require adaptation-switching to new crop varieties, for example-and it might boost the incidence of nonfatal skin cancer. In light of these costs, it makes sense to phase out the use of CFCs. …

The normal processes of science and democratic decision-making have proved adequate to correct what might have become a significant problem. In 1990 our national and international institutions hammered out an agreement to control CFCs, the London Agreement to the Montreal Protocol, which takes the interests of all affected groups into account (though imperfectly).

This is in line with my general view that wherever anyone identifies something as an environmental problem, that problem is occurring in an open-access commons. There are two things one can do to address such problems; assign property rights (the preferred policy) or regulate the commons. Since atmospheric pollution presents significant barriers to assigning property rights, I concluded that the international treaty banning CFCs was the appropriate response. 

So the good news reported in Science this week is that ozone layer over Antarctica is in the process of healing:

Industrial chlorofluorocarbons that cause ozone depletion have been phased out under the Montreal Protocol. A chemically-driven increase in polar ozone (or “healing”) is expected in response to this historic agreement. Observations and model calculations taken together indicate that the onset of healing of Antarctic ozone loss has now emerged in September. Fingerprints of September healing since 2000 are identified through (i) increases in ozone column amounts, (ii) changes in the vertical profile of ozone concentration, and (iii) decreases in the areal extent of the ozone hole. Along with chemistry, dynamical and temperature changes contribute to the healing, but could represent feedbacks to chemistry. Volcanic eruptions episodically interfere with healing, particularly during 2015 (when a record October ozone hole occurred following the Calbuco eruption).

Amusingly whoever curates my wikipedia entry continues to assert: “In his 1993 book, Ecoscam, and other works, Bailey criticized claims that CFCs contribute to ozone depletion and that human activity was contributing to global warming.” Oh, well.

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Bernie Sanders’ Supporters Could Take Fight Over Democratic Party Platform to the Convention

Can't stop, won't stop.Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has made it clear that he intends to do everything he can to help the Democratic Party defeat Donald Trump and that he would vote for former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton if she were the nominee, but contrary to what Vice President Joe Biden said on NPR yesterday, Sanders told MSNBC’s Chris Hayes that “We are not there at this moment” regarding a full-throated endorsement of Clinton.

One possible reason for Sanders’ reluctance to go full-Clinton is the tepid support of some of his hand-picked representatives on the 15-person panel in charge with drafting the 2016 Democratic National Committee (DNC)’s platform. Although no one voted against the draft (one member reportedly abstained and another was absent for the vote), Sanders supporter and drafting committee member Bill McKibben wrote a scathing op-ed for Politico earlier this week titled, “The Clinton Campaign Is Obstructing Change to the Democratic Platform.”

McKibben’s main complaints centered around on environmental issues, of which he and other Sanders supporters feel Clinton is only interested in talking the talk:

We all agreed that America should be operating on 100 percent clean energy by 2050, but then I proposed, in one amendment after another, a series of ways we might actually get there. A carbon tax? Voted down 7-6 (one of the DNC delegates voted with each side). A ban on fracking? Voted down 7-6. An effort to keep fossils in the ground, at least on federal land? Voted down 7-6. A measure to mandate that federal agencies weigh the climate impact of their decisions? Voted down 7-6. Even a plan to keep fossil fuel companies from taking private land by eminent domain, voted down 7-6. (We did, however, reach unanimous consent on more bike paths!)

In other words, the Clinton campaign is at this point rhetorically committed to taking on our worst problems, but not willing to say how. Which is the slightly cynical way politicians have addressed issues for too long—and just the kind of slickness that the straightforward Sanders campaign rejected.

The approved platform draft will be voted on by a 187-member committee in Orlando, two weeks before the DNC begins in Philadelphia on July 25. Of those 187, 72 members are reportedly allied with Sanders, and they will likely advocate to have their previously voted-down initiatives included in the platform as amendments.

Sanders’ policy director Warren Gunnels told Politico, “If we don’t win on some of these amendments what will need to happen is there will need to be at least 40 members voting for those amendments and the same 40 members will also have to file a minority vote and that would give us an opportunity to take that minority vote to the floor of the convention in Philadelphia.”

He’s no longer campaigning, and his supporters are quietly coming to grips with the fact that he won’t be the nominee, but Sanders’ perhaps quixotic quest to radically transform the Democratic Party continues because he has thus far refused to hand over his last remaining piece of leverage: his endorsement of Clinton.

And while there won’t be a knock-down, drag-out fight on the floor of the convention over delegates, Sanders and his supporters could very well ensure that the typically dull cursory coronation of the nominee will be made more interesting, and perhaps even confrontational, by insisting that their “democratic socialist” revolution is significantly recognized by the Party and it’s “business as usual” presumptive nominee.

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Intern at Reason—Deadline Today!

The Burton C. Gray Memorial Internship program runs year-round in the Washington, D.C. office. Interns work for 12 weeks and receive a $5,000 stipend.

The job includes reporting and writing for Reason and Reason.com, helping with research, proofreading, and other tasks. Previous interns have gone on to work at such places as The Wall Street JournalForbes, ABC News, and Reason itself.

To apply, send your résumé, up to five writing samples (preferably published clips), and a cover letter by the deadline below to:

Gray Internship
Reason
1747 Connecticut Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20009

Electronic applications can be sent to intern@reason.com, please include “Gray Internship Application” and the season for which you are applying in the subject line.

Summer Internships begin in June, application deadline March 1

Fall Internships begin in September, application deadline July 1

Spring Internships begin in January, application deadline November 1

Internship dates are flexible.  

Looking for a full-time job at Reason? Go here.

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