The Delaware Gazette

Remembering the victims of crime

Appel­late cases in the crim­i­nal arena fre­quently focus on the rights of those accused of crimes. It is only log­i­cal that this would be the case. The accused has an attor­ney and is a party to the pro­ceed­ings. The sys­tem strives to ensure that those who are charged with crimes are treated fairly and that their Con­sti­tu­tional rights are protected.

A man of many firsts

Lucy Langston and Ralph Quar­les loved one another. Their rela­tion­ship had been going on for sev­eral years and Quar­les intended to have Lucy move in with him and expand their fam­ily. But Lucy and Ralph could not let neigh­bors know about their rela­tion­ship and they most cer­tainly could not marry.

Playing nice during recess

Pres­i­dent Obama was in Ohio this week, speak­ing in the Cleve­land area about the state of the nation’s econ­omy. He sur­prised reporters (and no doubt Con­gres­sional Repub­li­cans as well) when he announced that he was appoint­ing for­mer Ohio Attor­ney Gen­eral Richard Cor­dray as head of the new fed­eral con­sumer finan­cial pro­tec­tion bureau.

The season is upon us

Thanks­giv­ing is behind us and thus a new sea­son is upon us — Michi­gan sea­son. After all, Thanks­giv­ing was yes­ter­day and Advent doesn’t begin until Sun­day, so some­thing has to fill the gap. In Ohio, that some­thing is clearly focused on the foot­ball game to be played tomor­row in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

On the advice of my attorney…

Some­time dur­ing my first year of law school I received, as a gift, a sweat­shirt that says across the front of it, “On the advice of my attor­ney, my shirt has no com­ment at this time.” It’s a com­mon sen­ti­ment. Just about any time that a per­son is accused of a crime or involved in a sit­u­a­tion in which they might be the tar­get of a law­suit, they tell the media that they would really, really like to answer ques­tions, but their legal coun­sel has advised them not to. It hap­pens so fre­quently that it has acquired a slang name– ‘lawyer­ing up.’

A major epidemic

You know that you have a sub­stan­tial domes­tic prob­lem when news agen­cies an ocean away take note of it. It caught my atten­tion, there­fore, when the British Broad­cast­ing Cor­po­ra­tion recently com­pleted a report titled, “Major Epi­demic: The Untold Story of Child Abuse in the U.S.”

I did it! (Well … maybe not)

On May 5, 1993 three eight year-old boys went miss­ing in an Arkansas sub­urb. Rel­a­tives, friends and neigh­bors searched for them through­out the evening and overnight. In the morn­ing, under the light of day, law enforce­ment teams expanded the search. By mid-afternoon the bod­ies of the three boys had been located in a drainage ditch. One of the boys died of exten­sive blood loss. The other two had drowned. They had com­mit­ted no crime, done no wrong. They were the inno­cent vic­tim of the most heinous crime.

The law of enemy combatants

Isoruku Yamamoto was 59 years old when he died in April of 1943. For the pre­vi­ous four years he had served as com­man­der in chief of the com­bined fleet of Japan. In that capac­ity he had devel­oped a plan to make a pre-emptive strike on the United States to draw down Amer­i­can naval power. He planned and led the attack on Pearl Har­bor in Decem­ber 1941 in which 2,402 men were killed– the worst attack ever on Amer­i­can soil by a for­eign force. Amer­i­cans ral­lied to a com­mon cause, rebuilt and fought back.

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