It Is What It Is

You SO do not want to know who the old guy on his knees is.
Trust me on this.
You don’t.
You’re going to click the link aren’t you?
Okay.
Fine.
Don’t leave me nasty comments when all of your dreams die.
I mean it.
DON’T.

It’s Snowing…really….

It’s only 63 days till Summer- that’s what they said on the news.

I am SO going to have a talk with the Weatherman

Silver Lake Washington
April 18, 2008
I'm dreaming

 

It’s Funday at I.B.!

From LOL God.

Yep.

There most certainly is such a site.

Are you really surprised?

A bunch of Hillary people already hate my guts.

So

I thought I’d tick off Bonnie Tyler Fans Next:

This is a one-pound beefburger fried, topped with

 

  cheese and bacon and sandwiched between two
  Krispy Kreme doughnuts

Would I really eat one of those you might ask.

Yes.

Yes I would.

And then I’d have to reply

how could you eat just one?

 

 

This scares people.

Wussies.

Check it out HERE

 

So there you are, a few things to make you laugh as you go into the weekend.

Make the most of it.

They don’t happen everyday you know.

amm

To Protect And Serve…and that goes for you too

 

 

butterfly_girl1.jpg 

For years Non-Indians living or working on the Tulalip Reservation in Washington State have been beyond the reach of The Tribal Law Enforcement Agency- that has changed and for some reason it’s created a problem with Non-Tribal Members.

I wonder why?

Published: Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Tribal police to gain power to arrest non-Indians

 

TULALIP — Tulalip Tribal police officers soon will have the power to protect their community — all of it.

 

Newly minted Sheriff John Lovick plans to cross commission 17 of the 22 tribal officers on Friday. That act will give tribal officers authority to arrest non-Indians on the reservation, where the vast majority of people who live, work and visit aren’t tribal members.

 

This should leave no doubt that the tribal police have the right to stop, and arrest, all criminals on the reservation. It should also put an end to any debate about tribal police officers’ authority over non-Indians, Lovick said.

“It’s their jurisdiction. We’re going let them handle their jurisdiction,” he said.

The partnership is the first in Snohomish County.

Former Snohomish County Sheriff Rick Bart didn’t grant commissions to any tribal officers, except to former Tulalip Tribal Police Chief Jay Goss. He did not believe they met the qualifications of other sworn officers.

Over the years, a group of non-Indians living on the reservation have contested the tribal officers’ authority, leading to dangerous confrontations.

In one incident, a woman attempted to interfere with tribal police who stopped a suspected drunken driver from escaping into a house.

As they were putting the man in their cruiser, to wait for the State Patrol to arrest him, an agitated woman approached the officers, screaming “time out” and arguing that they didn’t have the right to stop the suspect because the man wasn’t a tribal member.

Sen. Val Stevens, R-Arlington, later suggested that non-Indian drivers flash a card during traffic stops made by Tulalip Tribal Police. The card was intended to serve as notice to the officers that the driver was not required to recognize their authority.

Snohomish County criminal justice officials publicly opposed the idea a nd urged anyone police stopped on the reservation to obey the officers’ commands and save arguments over jurisdiction for court.

Lovick believes giving tribal police officers the authority to arrest nontribal criminals will increase police protection on the reservation and relieve some of the workload for his deputies.

Approximately 80 percent of the people who live on the 22,000-acre reservation are non-Indian and the majority of the 20,000 to 30,000 people who visit the reservation each day aren’t tribal members.

Without the deputization, “I can’t protect my community, and that’s just ludicrous,” new Tulalip Tribal Police Chief Scott Smith said. Such agreements are not even necessary for city police officers.

“We’re as professional a police department as any other,” Smith said. “This isn’t going to be a haven for you because you’re not an Indian.”

Smith, who took over for Goss in January, was chief of police in Mountlake Terrac e for seven years.

Under the previous rules, tribal police could investigate any crime or stop anyone on the reservation. But if the suspect wasn’t a tribal member, the officers were required to call a sheriff’s deputy or Washington State Patrol trooper to make the arrest.

That meant waiting for a deputy to be free. As the clock ran, tribal officers knew they had only about an hour to detain someone before it could be considered an unlawful arrest.

“We’re at the mercy of their call load,” Smith said. “We have to kick them loose or hope the deputy gets there damn quick.”

Smith and Lovick worked together to make sure tribal officers met all of the same qualifications required for sheriff’s deputies. A sheriff’s lieutenant spent a week reviewing the officers’ backgrounds and training, Lovick said.

Tribal police officers must have completed training at the state academy, or equivalency training, and passed a polygraph and psychological evaluation.

“There’s nothing to worry about — these are well qualified, well-trained officers,” Lovick said. “I think people will be pleased with the level and quality of service they provide.”

Smith believes giving his officers expanded authority will make for more efficient policing. It’s not going to mean that his officers will be booking everyone into jail. If someone is arrested for investigation of a serious crime or one that requires a mandatory arrest, such as a domestic violence assault, or if officers can’t verify a person’s name, that person will be locked up, he said.

His department also will train with the sheriff’s office and call on sheriff’s deputies to assist with major crimes involving non-Indians. The FBI has jurisdiction in major criminal investigations on Indian reservations.

Friday’s cross commission will come just two weeks after Gov. Chris Gregoire signed legislation that allows tribal police to expand their authority on Indian reservations.

The legislation was sponsored by John McCoy, D-Tulalip. The law requires tribal police officers to be state certified. Tribes also must obtain liability insurance and waive sovereign nation immunity if the police department is sued or an officer is accused of misconduct.

“It’s landmark,” McCoy said. “The whole thing is that it’s equal justice for all. We can’t have a haven for people and not have them responsible for their actions.”

The law closes some important gaps, said Mike Lasnier, legislative chairman for the Northwest Association of Tribal Enforcement Officers and Suquamish tribal police chief on the Port Madison reservation near Poulsbo.

No longer will tribal police authority be completely dependant on the relationship between a tribal police chief and the county sheriff, he said.

Opponents don’t believe the legislation is constitutional.

“The tribe doesn’t have the right to do this,” said Tom Mitchell, president of the Marysville Tulalip Community Association. He testified in January against the legislation.

He isn’t opposed to greater police protection but the new law doesn’t protect the civil rights of nontribal members, Mitchell said.

Smith recognizes that his officers’ expanded authority may cause some unease among residents, but he encourages anyone with concerns to contact him.

“I know the whole world is watching, by that I mean those who might be skeptical about the authority granted to us,” he said. “It’s an issue and perception from the past but at some point we have to say ‘enough’ and give these guys a shot.”

Tulalip Tribal Police Sgt. Jeff Jira said the expanded authority is an honor that he and his fellow officers take seriously.

He believes he’ll be able to do his job more efficiently. There is no reason to burden a sheriff’s deputy with more work when tribal officers are already there to do the job, he said.

“I think the only ones who should be opposed are the criminals,” Jira said.

 

Odds And Ends

Just Some Cool Stuff I found on the Net when I was supposed to be writing.

Who would have thought you could write about Doctor Who and not drool?

Tony did and it’s a post as well written as the rest of his work HERE

My favorite new political hangout:

Roadkill Refuge

 A Ghost!

LOOK AT ME DADDY!

FROM B3TA

SNARKSNARKSNARKSNARKSNARKSNARKSNARKSNARKSNARKSNARK SNARK

hillaree kitteh haz no room for HOPE

How Many Faces Can You Find In This Picture?

optical-illusion

In All Of The World

This is an amazing story about a little girl who was born with two faces.

In a world that requires we all look the same and dress the same and think the same…

she is truly unique.

And beautiful.

amm

An Indian girl, born with four eyes, two noses and two mouths ...

Indian baby born with two faces doing well, say parents

by Parul GuptaSun Apr 6, 1:49 PM ET

The parents of an Indian infant girl born with two faces say that she is eating and breathing normally despite having two pairs of eyes and lips and two noses.

The baby, who is yet to be named, was born to factory worker Vinod Kumar and his wife Sushma three weeks ago in northern India and has been drawing a stream of curious observers and others who consider her a deity in this deeply religious Hindu-majority country.

“I had never seen something like this in my life so naturally I was a little scared when I first saw her,” her father said at the weekend at the family’s mud-and-brick house in Noida town, about 50 kilometres (30 miles) northeast of New Delhi.

The girl has found easy acceptance in Kumar’s large, extended family, who say they have no plans to consult doctors to check if the girl can receive treatment or corrective surgery.

“The doctor said everything is normal when she was born. So where’s the need to get medical help?” said the child’s father.

“She’s fed through one mouth and sucks her thumb with the other. We use whichever mouth is free to feed her,” the 24-year-old Kumar told AFP, adding she is eating and breathing normally.

Doctors said it was an extremely rare case, with the girl having two skulls joined together, and that separating them was out of the question.

“Since the heads are fused, separating them is not possible,” paediatrician D.K Gupta of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences told the Hindustan Times newspaper on the weekend.

But doctors said the girl should be examined thoroughly to study the possibility of complications.

“Clearly the child is in no immediate danger but it has to be checked whether the oral and nasal cavity and other passages” are functioning properly, paediatrician Gupta said.

The case comes just months after Indian doctors performed a rare, marathon surgery to remove the extra limbs of a girl born with four arms and legs.

Two-year-old Lakshmi Tatma’s case captivated the nation last year as domestic and international media focused on her complicated surgery performed in southern Bangalore city in November.

This year, Lakshmi started taking her first steps with the help of a baby walker, delighting her parents and doctors.

Lakshmi, named after the four-armed Hindu goddess of wealth, was born fused to the pelvis of a twin that had stopped developing in her mother’s womb — a condition that occurs once in 50,000 conjoined twin births.

Kumar said he had heard about Lakshmi, but did not want to change anything about his daughter’s features.

“Whatever God has given me is acceptable. What can we do about it?” he said, lifting the baby to take her away after allowing a brief glimpse of her as neighbours crowded around her cot.

“This child is very special to us,” the baby’s grandfather chimed in, gazing lovingly at the infant.