Archive for April, 2017

Animal control debate in Marana – Tucson Local Media

On April 4th the Marana Town Council voted not to renew a contract with Pima County for animal services (enforcement and licensing). This decision was made following nearly a year of research and discussions with Pima County administration on how to best serve our residents and their pets.

Leading up to this meeting were comments from concerned citizens, many of whom had worked directly for or as volunteers with PACC. They spoke passionately on behalf of Pima Animal Care Center (PACC), its no-kill policy, the compassionate care that animals received, and their frustration that the Countys new animal control shelter, paid for with a recent $22m bond voted on by county citizens, would now be unavailable to Marana residents. These are all valid concerns, and I want to explain why I voted for severance from the County in our animal control services.

Maranas relationship with PACC goes back to the Towns founding, but recent problems stem from cost increases the County has imposed partner communities. Pima Animal Control services are paid for with county taxes we all pay, but incorporated areas like Marana, Tucson, Sahuarita and Oro Valley are billed in addition to these taxes. The services that the County provides to Maranas residents are the same as those provided to county residents, but at an increased cost to our towns citizens as a result of this extra billing.

This County billing has increased from $10,000 per year in fiscal year 06-07 to around $230,000 for this year, an increase of over 2300%. During the same period, all County residents were billed through their property taxes. Maranas residents pay County taxes too, so for me this is about equality in what a tax payer is charged for services.

All local municipalities face this imbalanceCounty taxes plus extra billing, with no additional services. Our staff has appealed to the County for a more equitable system but they have been unwilling even to discuss the matter. For instance, when we asked County administration if we could reduce costs by managing individual elements of our contract, we were politely told no.

Under these circumstances, we decided to part ways and establish our own program, contracting with the Humane Society for sheltering, and hiring our own animal control staff to provide dedicated service for our citizens. Marana residents will not see any increase in the Towns expenditures, since these costs would have to be paid to the County anyway. And we know that we can provide better service for the same money.

The County priced itself to a level where Marana can consider running its own program, better, with the same dollars. I believe weve made the right decision and with vigilant oversight, we can look forward to providing excellent animal control services to the residents of Marana.

Dave Bowen

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Animal control debate in Marana - Tucson Local Media

Kashmir Shuts Down Social Networks for a Month – New York Times


New York Times
Kashmir Shuts Down Social Networks for a Month
New York Times
Students using the internet on their mobile phones in Srinagar, in Indian-controlled Kashmir, on Wednesday. The government in Jammu and Kashmir State has ordered service providers in the Kashmir valley to block social networking services. Credit Dar ...
Social Networking Sites BannedKashmir Observer
J&K government bans 22 social networking sites citing their misuseTimes of India
In search of peace, Govt bans social networking sitesGreater Kashmir
Aljazeera.com -Kashmir Watch
all 127 news articles »

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Kashmir Shuts Down Social Networks for a Month - New York Times

Considerations for youth and social networking Part 5: What is news? – Michigan State University Extension

Considerations for youth and social networking Part 5: What is news? Help youth take a critical look at the news they view online.

Posted on April 24, 2017 by Christine Heverly, Michigan State University Extension

According to a 2016 Pew Research, 62 percent of American adults get news through social media. In 2017, Common Sense Media found that 49 percent of youth 10-18 get news from online media sources including social media platforms and apps. Pair this with the fact that social networking is a hangout place for youth, it is important for adults to help youth understand what factual news is and what may not be 100 percent factual news.

From Common Sense Medias research in 2017, they found that 31 percent of youth have shared news in the last six months that turned out to not be 100 percent factual. Helping youth take a critical look at the news they view online is an important aspect that adults need to help youth understand.

Adults need to take the time to help youth understand what the credible sources are online. The world of online news sources floods social media. There is endless websites sharing news from sports, entertainment and the latest health update to your local news. Remember, just because someone states something, whether it is in person or via social media, that doesnt mean every source is accurate or credible.

Have youth look at the URL for the news story. Youth should easily be able to recognize the URL as a common one like, .com, .net, .gov, .org and .edu. If there is anything added to the end of the URL, it should raise a flag that it may not be believable or authentic source for information.

When it comes to educating youth about taking time to consider the credibility of news found online, Michigan State University Extension has some questions parents or other adults should share with youth:

Finally, adults need to help youth think about the news stories they are seeing, reading, sharing online and possibly reposting. Remind youth that others can see everything they post online and they need to be taking time to think about what they share. Adults should also provide the following questions for youth to consider when thinking about sharing the news story with others online:

In addition, watch this short video with youth called Things to Ask Before Posting, and read the MSU Extension article, Things to consider when posting online Part 3: Questions to consider for more information.

Check out the previous articles in this series below, and watch for future articles that will continue to explore different areas of sharing information on social networks.

This article was published by Michigan State University Extension. For more information, visit http://www.msue.msu.edu. To have a digest of information delivered straight to your email inbox, visit http://www.msue.msu.edu/newsletters. To contact an expert in your area, visit http://expert.msue.msu.edu, or call 888-MSUE4MI (888-678-3464).

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Considerations for youth and social networking Part 5: What is news? - Michigan State University Extension

Police have not been able to crack Manjinder’s social networking … – Times of India

LUDHIANA: Khalistani terrorist Manjinder Singh, alias Nikka, arrested by the Punjab Police counter-intelligence wing in a joint operation with Ludhiana cops on Sunday night, was operating and recruiting youth for his new organisation through his Facebook account. So far, the police have not been able to crack his Facebook account. The terrorist, who was a suspect in Ambala and Patiala bomb blasts in 2010 and later acquitted due to lack of evidence, was arrested from Kakowal Road when he had come to meet his friend. The police said he was setting up a new organisation for anti-national activities. A country-made pistol of .315 bore, two live cartridges and a bike were recovered from him. A police official said, "After coming out of jail last year, Nikka was recruiting youth for his new Khalistani outfit through Facebook. He would post about previous famous Khalistani leaders and approach like-minded youngsters. At times, his Facebook ID was operated from Canada. We are trying to crack the account. He was getting funds from Canada. We have also recovered a Pakistani SIM from his possession and traced a Pakistan number on which he interacted some time ago. Besides, the Indian SIM that he was using was issued on a fake ID proof." He said the terrorist was hatching a plan in the city. Former police commissioner Kunwar Vijay Pratap Singh, who arrested the terrorist with counter-intelligence wing of the Punjab Police, said, "Many angles have been revealed during interrogation and we are exploring all of these."

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Police have not been able to crack Manjinder's social networking ... - Times of India

Swabbing a car door handle in a public lot to collect DNA is a Fourth Amendment trespass search – Washington Post

In United States v. Jones, 132 S.Ct. 945 (2012), the Supreme Court added a second test for what government action counts as a Fourth Amendment search. Since the 1970s, the Supreme Court had held that the government commits a search when it violates a persons reasonable expectation of privacy. Jones added that the government also commits a search when it trespasses on to a persons persons, houses, papers, and effects. As I explained in an article responding to Jones, it is hardly clear what kind of trespass test Jones adopts. Although Jones purports to restore a preexisting trespass test, no trespass test existed that the court could restore. As a result, the significance of Jones hinges on just what kind of trespass test courts interpret Jones to have adopted.

In light of that uncertainty, I was fascinated by a new decision, Schmidt v. Stassi, from the Eastern District of Louisiana last week. Michael Schmidt is a suspect in the 1997 murder of Eugenie Boisfontaine. You may have heard of the case, as the investigation is the subject of the Discovery Channel TV show Killing Fields. Investigators wanted to get a DNA sample from Schmidt, so they followed his car. When Schmidt drove to a local strip mall, parked and went inside a store, an agent used a cotton swab to wipe the exterior door handle on Schmidts Hummer to collect a DNA sample. Schmidt sued the officers, claiming that swabbing his car door handle was an unlawful Fourth Amendment search.

In the new decision, Judge Lance M. Africk holds that collecting the DNA from the door handle using the cotton swab was a Fourth Amendment search because it trespassed on to the car. From the opinion:

Here, the search involved the physical touching of Schmidts Hummer in a public parking lot. The search, however, did not damage the Hummer in any way. Accordingly, this Court has to make two determinations when evaluating whether a Fourth Amendment search occurred:

Does the trespass-trigger for Fourth Amendment coverage extend to a trespass to chattels? If so, was the physical touching a trespass to chattels even though the touching did not harm or otherwise affect the Hummer?

Joneswhich addressed a trespass against a carsettles that a trespass to chattles can constitute a Fourth Amendment search regardless of whether there is a reasonable expectation of privacy. See 565 U.S. at 410 (observing that officers trespassorily inserted the GPS tracker on the Jeep); see also id. at 419 & n.2 (Alito, J., concurring) (implying Court was concluding that search was a trespass to chattles). Thus, just as a trespass to land can constitute a Fourth Amendment search, a trespass to chattles may as well. See, e.g., United States v. Ackerman, 831 F.3d 1292, 1307-08 (10th Cir. 2016). And there is no question that an automobileunlike an open fieldis protected by the Fourth Amendment: an automobile is an effect as that term is used in the Fourth Amendment. Jones, 565 U.S. at 404.4

But was this a trespass to chattles? That is a trickier issue. As Justice Alitos Jones concurrence explained, the elements of the tort have changed since the founding. At common law, a suit for trespass to chattels could be maintained if there was a violation of the dignitary interest in the inviolability of chattels. 565 U.S. at 419 & n.2 (Alito, J., concurring) (internal quotation marks omitted). Meanwhile, today there must be some actual damage to the chattel before the action can be maintained. Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). So the choice of a particular understanding of trespass can be outcome determinative when applying Jones if a search does not damage or otherwise affect a particular chattel.

The Court concludes that it should follow the view that an officer need not cause damage before committing a trespass to chattels. Not only is that the view of the Second Restatement of Torts, see Restatement (Second) of Torts 217,5 but it also has the added advantage of not making the scope of the Fourth Amendment turn on whether someone scratches the paint.

The officers argued that Schmidt had abandoned his DNA by leaving it out in public for anyone to collect, analogizing the DNA to the trash left by the side of the road in California v. Greenwood. The court reasoned that Greenwood is inapplicable because the facts here involved a trespass:

[W]hatever the constitutionality of searching Schmidts curbside garbage for his abandoned DNA (a question on which the Court expresses no opinion), the officers argument that they may trespass to acquire abandoned property is not viable post-Jardines. See 133 S. Ct. at 1417 (That the officers learned what they learned only by physically intruding on [defendants] property to gather evidence is enough to establish that a search occurred.).

The Court concludes that the undisputed facts of this case establish that the officers committed a trespass to chattels when they swabbed Schmidts Hummer. Under Jones that trespass also constituted a Fourth Amendment search. Thus, Schmidt is entitled to partial summary judgment in that the swabbing constituted a search under the Fourth Amendment.

The opinion then stresses that given the present procedural posturethe parties addressed only the threshold issue of whether the swabbing was a Fourth Amendment searchthe Court expresses no opinion on whether the search was reasonable. Instead, Africk concludes that qualified immunity applies either way because the law is unsettled:

[T]he law is simply too unsettled after Jones for the Court to conclude that it is beyond debate, Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731, 741 (2011), that the officers performed a Fourth Amendment search. Neither Jones nor Jardines is precise as to the body of property law this Court is supposed to follow when applying Joness trespass test. That unanswered question at the time of the swabbing would permit a reasonable officer to conclude that the swabbing did not constitute a Fourth Amendment search.

For example, a reasonable officer could have concludedjust as the Supreme Court has in the Fifth Amendment contextthat Jones-triggering trespasses are determined by reference to existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law. Georgia v. Randolph, 547 U.S. 103, 144 (2006) (Scalia, J., dissenting). A reasonable officer could then pivot from that understanding of the Fourth Amendment, and conclude that because the brief, harmless, nearly imperceptible touching would not constitute an actionable trespass under certain understandings of modern tort law, see 565 U.S. at 419 & n.2 (Alito, J., concurring), it did not constitute a Jones-triggering trespass. Therefore qualified immunity is proper: an officer should not be denied qualified immunity simply because he or she looked to what an actionable trespass was as opposed to the more technical definition of a trespass.

Notably, the idea here is that collecting the DNA was a search because it interfered with Schmidts rights in the car, not in the DNA itself. Thats different from the reasonable-expectation-of-privacy cases on collecting DNA, which generally focus on the potential privacy invasion in the testing of the DNA sample to reveal sensitive information.

For related issues, see the petition for certiorari I filed in Arzola v. Massachusetts in 2015, together with the states brief in opposition and our reply brief. The Supreme Court denied the petition in Arzola, but I think its a useful starting point to see how the trespass framework may change Fourth Amendment rights in the context of DNA collection and analysis.

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Swabbing a car door handle in a public lot to collect DNA is a Fourth Amendment trespass search - Washington Post