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The Christian Civic League of Maine's Mike Hein calls Pam's House Blend:
"a leading source of radical homosexual propaganda, anti-Christian bigotry, and radical transgender advocacy."

He is "praying that Pam Spaulding will "turn away from her wicked and sinful promotion of homosexual behavior." (CCLM's web site, 10/15/07)


Ex-gay "Christian" activist James Hartline on Pam:
"I have been mocked over and over again by ungodly and unprincipled anti-christian lesbians."
(from "Six Years In Sodom: From The Journal Of James Hartline," 9/4/2006, written from the "homosexual stronghold" of Hillcrest in San Diego).

"Pam is a 'twisted lesbian sister' and an 'embittered lesbian' of the 'self-imposed gutteral experiences of the gay ghetto.'" -- 9/5/2008



Peter LaBarbera of Americans for Truth Against Homosexuality heartily endorses the Blend, calling Pam:

A "vicious anti-Christian lesbian activist."
(Concerned Women for America's radio show [9:15], 1/25/07)

"A nutty lesbian blogger."
(MassResistance radio show [16:25], 2/3/07)


Pam's House Blend always seems to find these sick f*cks. The area of the country she is in? The home state of her wife? I know, they are everywhere. Pam just does such a great job of bringing them out into the light.
--Impeach Bush


who monitors yours Bevis ?? Just thought I would drop you a line,so the rest of your life is not wasted.
--"Joe"

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Pam Spaulding

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NY: Brooklyn man tased, falls to death from fire escape

by: Pam Spaulding

Thu Sep 25, 2008 at 12:00:00 PM EDT


A break in the political action to to report on yet another example of our police state, this time from my old stomping grounds in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn. There is no reason for this to have gone down this way.
Racquel McDonald was standing on Tompkins Avenue in Bedford Stuyvesant, unknowingly recording the last moments of Iam Morales' life on her cell phone.

Dozens of people witnessed it, too. Some were taking photos of Morales as he jumped up and down on top of a 10-foot high roll-down gate, swinging a florescent light bulb around and poking officers standing on a nearby fire escape. An officer on the ground then raised his Taser gun and fired a 50,000-volt shock, immobilizing him.

"He wasn't hurting anybody. They could have just grabbed him and bring him down but they Tasered him instead and he fell to his death and it was real wrong," McDonald said.

Added a witness named "Kyle:" "The man was isolated for minute ... and then he just fell to the floor. They had about eight cops that could've break the fall. They just moved back."

Witnesses said police did nothing to break Morales' fall, and his mother was standing just a few yards away. She was the one who called police, according to family friends, because 35-year-old Morales had a chemical imbalance and she believed he was suffering from a bad reaction to new medication. "The mother was screaming, 'He's gonna fall!' And they said, 'Step back.' They wouldn't allow the mother to talk to him," witness Charlene Gayle-Gordon said.

The New York Post has the video. It's below the fold.
Pam Spaulding :: NY: Brooklyn man tased, falls to death from fire escape

More from the NYT:

City Councilman Peter F. Vallone Jr., chairman of the Public Safety Committee, said in a telephone interview that the situation could have been handled better by the police.

"My first take is that while I'm sure there are no experts out there on how to handle a crazy naked man with a weapon on top of a ledge, I'm also sure this wasn't the right way, " Mr. Vallone said on Wednesday evening.

"A situation like that is never going to end in a good way," Mr. Vallone said after watching the video. "The most important thing is that no innocent bystanders or police got hurt. But clearly, it could have been handled better."

Mr. Vallone said a public hearing on the department's use of Tasers might be needed to fine-tune its policy on using them.

The use of Tasers in New York has a troubled history. In the early 1980s, the police were condemned for using them to force drug suspects to confess. Mr. Kelly, then a deputy inspector, was assigned to reform the police practices.

..."His mother called 911," said Sharonnie Perry, a community advocate who lives down the street. "She called for assistance and the assistance she got was her son being killed."

UPDATE: This time, someone on the police force may actually be held accountable.
Deputy Commissioner Paul J. Browne, New York City Police Department notes that none of the "officers on the scene were positioned to break his fall, nor did they devise a plan in advance to do so."

"The order to employ the Taser under these circumstances appears to have violated guidelines, re-issued June 4, 2008, which specifically state that 'when possible, the CED should not be used...in situations where the subject may fall from an elevated surface,'" the statement continues.

"The lieutenant who directed the use of the Taser has been placed on modified assignment," Browne writes. "The officer has been assigned to administrative duties. The Brooklyn District Attorney has asked that neither officer be interviewed by the Police Department as the investigation into this incident continues."

Related:
* The Blend Taser files
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Well, it's one way to solve the mental health care crisis
Kill the mentally ill with "non-lethal" means.




Claim to fame: Posted first PHB diary to be demoted


They have a name for this...
 It's called Voluntary Manslaughter.

The AP story made me laugh bitterly:
"NEW YORK - An officer appears to have violated police department guidelines when he used a Taser stun gun on a naked, distraught man teetering on a building ledge, officials said Thursday."

Ya think?

Guidelines for Taser use don't include 'wWhen you encounter a naked guy ranting on a ledge, zap him', I guess.

The police state, it's a riot.

But wait, there's more!


Why don't the police just go ahead and skip the tasers....
...and go to using electric cattle prongs?!!!

(Better be quiet, since I might give them ideas.)


They are waiting until...
...we are desensitized to the Tasers.  Then we get prodded.  Metaphorically speaking.  Or not.

[ Parent ]
Hey it might've been worse, they could've used a tranquilizer gun
What's up with all this Tazering going on? Have they taking away the police's guns because they had to have a real reason to discharge them? I guess they think the Tazer is more humane and let's the Junior College dropouts in blue disregard restraint in the use of force.

Bullets do tend to make a mess at times, with the blood and potential property damage not to mention the expense. Have you seen the price of a box of .380 shells with a full metal jacket? Sheesh!

I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me. Hunter S.


[ Parent ]
Well, they can't really...
...whip em out, so they have to do something that shows how big they are.  

Guess guns just weren't doing it anymore.

I'm serious.  I have a lot of cops in my family.  ALL OF THEM were f**ked up BEFORE they became cops.

Pardon my generalizations, but until the sane and professional cops start corralling the cowboys, all cops deserve every bit of condescension, suspicion,  and derision they get.


[ Parent ]
His poor mother!
OMG, this is so tragic and heartbreaking. There isn't enough money in any lawsuit to erase her anguish today, no measure of justice will ever give her back her son.

Please let us all live long enough to see a day when these devices banned from even being PRODUCED...

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Stop Hating Cops
It's easy to sit on your couches and judge the choices made by police officers in difficult situations. The NYPD respond to 80,000 EDP calls per year and 99.9% of them never make the paper because there is never a problem. The NYPD should be commended for that success rate. What other profession can claim that level of good conduct?

My domestic partner is NYPD and is often in pain because of the damage to his spine which occurred when he was thrown into an entertainment center while responding to an EDP call. A Taser would have been a welcome alternative to the physical danger he faced on our behalf to help subdue and hospitalize a mentally ill person who was a danger to himself and his community.

I never see articles posted on this blog when, for example, a cop runs into a burning elevator to save trapped passengers (my partner has a commendation for this), or gets shot to death in the line of duty. You ignore the thousands of acts of simple heroism done every day by cops and seem to take some kind of cynical glee when you believe you can tag cops with misconduct. It mystifies me.

I'm hope I'm as progressive as any regular reader of the Blend, but I don't understand this reflexive anti-police attitude. They work long hours, protect your safety, risk their lives and die for you.

You might want to cut them a little slack.

Sincerely, Stu


a have a relative who was in law enforcement
Please. The fact is that the majority of law enforcement officers do their jobs, risk their lives and follow the law themselves. You can read about heroic acts of the type you describe every day in the media. However, the bill of goods sold to the public about the safety and proper use of Tasers is BS, is way underreported, and Tasers are disproportionally used against minorities.

There is little or no mandatory training or firm policies in place in most departments on the use of Tasers, and it's clear some officers, way too many, based on the number of these incidents that are mounting, are using Tasers as compliance devices, torture instruments and as a substitute to communication and negotiation. I can't cut slack on that.  


[ Parent ]
I also have family
who either are actively law enforcement, retired, or deceased career law enforcement. 2 state troopers and one (my deceased great-uncle) who was 30+ year police officer/chief for a city near Philadelphia.

I also support my local police in our little town; they work hard and do a very good job.

Last year, they dealt with a set of very upset parents who awoke to find that their 12 year old daughter, who was having a hard time with her grades and was unable to tell her parents, had impulsively run away in the middle fo the night. It was November- hunting season here and cold- the girl was found less than 3 hours later, scared but fine.

The mom was signing release forms so bloodhounds, game wardens and state troopers could be called in to help when the chief, who came in on his day off to lead the search, radioed the officer with the mom that the child was found. Chief and the father (contacted via cell phone; he was out driving up and down every dirt road, looking for the girl) brought her home, safe and sound.

The police were compassionate, professional, and supportive. They are also parents, and they knew the fear the parents were trying to contain.

How do I know all this? IT WAS OUR DAUGHTER. So believe me, I DO support good police officers, committed to being professionals and doing an incredibly difficult job. I DO hate that they and their profession get sullied by thugs, wearing the same uniforms and badges they wear.

I understand your point, Stu- but that aside, there are increased numbers of stories where police have abused their authority and committed criminal acts like this. And they need to be brought up and discussed, in hopes of eventually removing those who would abuse the public from those who would protect.  

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[ Parent ]
Some of the hate is well deserved.
Maybe if the police were attempting to institute justice they might be heralded for their bravery. But all I see (with OUT the newspapers) are people on a power trip who hold the keys.

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