That letter was from a different case, but it does illustrate Huckabee's flippant attitude about clemency and pardons. Not the type of response you'd expect from someone who weighing such important matters. Huckabee has long been accused by prosecutors of not considering their input when it comes to clemencies and pardons.Wildcat,
If you letter is true then that will be another lie that Huckabee told in his interview with Hannity. He claimed that nobody from the prosecutor's office had objected to his clemency.
http://durangoherald.com/sections/N...seek_gunman_who_allegedly_shot_four_officers/Two members of the state parole board said Huckabee pressured them to show DuMond mercy
Not exactly a model prisoner, nor the type typically granted parole on their first hearing.Between 1989 and 1998, Clemmons broke prison rules more than two dozen times – sometimes violently, said state prison system spokeswoman Dina Tyler.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2009/12/02/MN0J1AT88D.DTL#ixzz0YcGDVRScIn 2004, Huckabee commuted the sentence of convicted murderer Denver Witham after prosecuting attorney Robert Herzfeld revealed that Witham had omitted some of his convictions on his pardon application. When Herzfeld wrote a letter to Huckabee suggesting that the governor accept more public input on clemency issues, and explain his reasons for each decision, an aide responded that the governor laughed out loud at Herzfeld's letter, closing, "I wish you success as you cut down on your caffeine consumption."
This may not make sense to you, but it is possible that the cops being cops was exacerbated in the mind of the assailant by being white. Depends on who the cops were who had most recently arrested him.Why think that they were attacked because they were white and not because they were cops?
This may not make sense to you, but it is possible that the cops being cops was exacerbated in the mind of the assailant by being white. Depends on who the cops were who had most recently arrested him.
Again, I may be wrong.
I don't think it's either or, I think that if race was a factor it was a factor in combination with another factor. Single cause theories are IMO too simplistic, so my initial "might have been racially motivated" was far too reductionist. More likely is the mixture of both issues, "some white guys and a gal" and them being cops as a possible internal trigger. We probably won't know, since he's dead, so I'll stop with the speculation.The thing is that it is speculation about the mind of a someone who seems to have likely not had the firmest grasp on reality.
But if he just wanted to shoot some white guys, it seems strange to pick the police for this. So it would seem likely that his desire to shoot police was more significant than his desire to shoot any white guy.
Thank you, Lefty.The local radio stations have been mentioning the fact that acquaintances mention Clemmons' having stated that he intended to shoot a few cops.
The coffee shop where it happenmed is run by a retired cop.
That they were all white cops is no surprise. I rarelty see a black Pierce County cop. The black population in the whole state of Washignton is rather small, percentage-wise.
I see no racial element here. It is a matter of mental illness.
The New York Times has published the letter Herzfeld wrote to Huckabee questioning his clemency policies: http://documents.nytimes.com/01huckabee/page/28
I see nothing in there to LOL about.
Inexcusable.
Apparently Mike Huckabee commuted the sentence of the suspect in the Washington Police shooting.
I would have.
The guy was 16 with a 108 year sentence.
It is fun how the left rewrites history. Good ol' Stalinasation. I hear now they say that the war in Iraq that they protested on an hourly basis is a success and a model for what they want in Afghanistan.
And he had over 2 dozen infractions while in prison, some of which were violent infractions.I would have.
The guy was 16 with a 108 year sentence.
Well of course he was.You also have to consider that the source for that story might be a backstabber.
Besides what Wildcat said, it's not really about just this one case. It's about the overall pattern.I would have.
The guy was 16 with a 108 year sentence.
It is too easy to say after the fact that you wouldn't. It is fun how the left rewrites history. Good ol' Stalinasation. I hear now they say that the war in Iraq that they protested on an hourly basis is a success and a model for what they want in Afghanistan.