![]() | therealjoshross: Dancing sign-holders - Trying to make money, or still chasing that Broadway dream? This guy is stoked. about 3 minutes ago |
![]() | smashwilson: @psumommy Didn't those toys have lead paint or something? about 11 minutes ago |
![]() | Ironmask: @hburgcook may wanna wait till broadway or all the way to the burg. Traffic looks a bit thick still till the burg on trafficland cameras... about 47 minutes ago |
![]() | megaSAS: @AmberMarion:Catch my foreign whip doing a buck down broadway or amsterdam just know@mayhemsas,@megasas,@hazethatruth are all in the CD deck about 55 minutes ago |
![]() | carlhenderson: The quality of the entertainment on The Oasis of Seas was outstanding! Shows you would pay good money for in Vegas or Broadway. about 2 hours ago |
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Under the proposed rule change, large cattle feeding operations would no longer have to report hazardous releases of toxic gases. |
| By Doug Hissom Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Doug Hissom |
| Published April 9, 2008 at 5:07 a.m. |
|
(page 2)
Reviewing the Review Commission: The city's Homicide Review Commission will get reviewed itself. The commission takes a novel approach to murders in Milwaukee, looking into socio-economic factors as well has the victim's relationship to the perpetrator.
The cost has a few aldermen asking questions, but they gave the commission another $25,000 to have the commission's work reviewed. Who's doing the review? None other than commission director Mallory O'Brien.
"I hope we could evaluate their accomplishments by having fewer homicides," said Ald. Robert Donovan.
Legal Scrutiny: Even though special interest groups spent millions on one side or the other in the state Supreme Court race, a recent survey found that most voters still didn't know who the candidates were. When asked to name a candidate or sitting justice, 69 percent could not name anybody.
Louis Butler was named by 20 percent; Mike Gableman, 13 percent; Shirley Abrahamson, 10 percent; Annette Ziegler, 4 percent; Patrick Crooks, 2 percent; David Prosser, 2 percent; Ann Walsh Bradley, 1 percent; and Patience Roggensack, 1 percent.
More Legal Scrutiny: The state Supreme Court will take up search and seizure issues in the near future. A police officer in Pepin County came upon a car parked on the side of the road and asked its driver, Christopher Pickering, if he needed help.
Upon running a license plate check, the officer discovered the plates on the vehicle did not belong to Pickering's car. When the officer returned to the car, he smelled marijuana and eventually found drug paraphernalia and marijuana.
After arresting Pickering, the officer walked around to the passenger side of the car, where he saw a small eyeglass case on the ground in the vicinity where the passenger, Jordan A. Denk, was standing. Denk conceded the eyeglass case belonged to him and placed the case on the hood of the car at the officer's request. Denk denied owning the contents, which turned out to be a glass "methamphetamine pipe" and "some cleaning tools." The officer arrested Denk and searched him, finding a baggie of marijuana, two marijuana pipes and a baggie containing methamphetamine.
The circuit court denied Denk's motion to suppress the results of the search of his eyeglass case and his person, concluding the officer was justified in his search incident to Pickering's arrest. The circuit court also concluded that Denk had consented to the search of the eyeglass case.
After the circuit court denied the suppression motion, Denk reached a plea agreement and the state agreed to dismiss more serious felony and the two misdemeanor charges. Denk filed a post-conviction motion to withdraw his guilty plea, contending the state could not have legally charged him.
The state argues that searches of drivers should include the area around the car, since suspects can throw contraband out of the car.
Lead in the Way: The Supreme Court will also hear a case that could have implications for 30 other cases currently in the courts. It deals with that sticky issue of what to do about lead paint poisoning cases.
Lower courts have dismissed a contention that big lead paint interests be held responsible for having lead in their paint, saying lead is inherent in paint and manufacturers can't be held liable for defective products. It could reverse a previous decision in which the court said a person could sue lead paint manufacturers even if they didn't make the paint in the first place.
DuPont, one of three defendants in this case, contends the defective design argument is "akin to alleging that a manufacturer of knives should have made spoons instead."
Two-way Street: Downtown's Broadway thoroughfare will finally get two-way traffic between Michigan and Clybourn Streets. The change will "improve circulation," says Ald. Bob Bauman, who noted that property owners say the one-way traffic is an impediment to development.
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