The Arizona Growler

January 28, 2007

ASU professor to be arraigned on assault charges

Remember this?



ASU’s paper reported Monday that one of the professors is going to be arraigned for assault. I don’t have word on what happened to Mitchell’s charges for intimidation and harassment, but I’d imagine they were dropped for being baseless.




January 21, 2007

Law and Order: Comatose Intent

Posted by Garrett P. O'Hara
Filed under: greeks, privacy, podcast, humor, police, Facebook, satire

Reposted due to a server change.  I’m having to use university servers right now because I can’t use Archive.org when using copyrighted music and sound effects.  Please me know if you’d be willing to host a couple of mp3’s for me. Originally posted on September 8th, 2006.

We’re making more fun of Facebook on the podcast today.  Yes, I am a Law and Order fan.

How to listen:

Play episode | RSS 2.0 Feed (podcasts) | Subscribe with iTunes or other podcatcher

 




December 25, 2006

(updated) CHRISTMAS VIOLENCE AT UA: Police fatally shoot man brandishing shotgun at University Medical Center

Posted by Garrett P. O'Hara
Filed under: Christianity, crime, Second Amendment, police

The AP reports that a UAPD officer shot and killed a man brandishing a shotgun during a traffic stop this morning.  We don’t know much more than that, but expect some developments to come out later.

The Arizona Daily Wildcat has no updates on the story, as it is currently on winter hiatus until January 10th.

I guess the story makes this odd to say, but Merry Christmas to everybody, and remember that tomorrow is no less His day than today.  God bless.

Update: The Tucson Citizen reports that the traffic stop was for a stolen license plate.  Deceased is Raul Marquez Jr., 43.  Encounter initiated at 4:50 a.m.; Marquez pronounced dead 45 minutes later.  UA Phonebook indicates no such name being affiliated with the university.

Update (26 Dec): The Arizona Daily Star has more details, including details on the records of the officer and the suspect.  The suspect’s criminal record doesn’t surprise me.

Update 3: Marquez had a felony warrant out for DUI, but was being pulled over specifically for having stolen plates.  Please allow me to echo what the commenters said on the Star article and thank the good Lord this wasn’t the tragedy for the officer’s family that it could have been.

 




October 31, 2006

No fake weapons on campus…even for Halloween costumes

Posted by Garrett P. O'Hara
Filed under: racism, sexism (and then some), Second Amendment, university policy, police

Most of my regular readers know I’m a big advocate of the Second Amendment being applied to the college campus.  Another case in point of all the things we could possibly concoct: Halloween.

First off, we have to treat fake weapons as real weapons just in case

Romero said fake weapons are a big concern for UAPD.

UA policy prohibits weapons of any kind on campus, including fake or toy weapons that may be part of Halloween costumes.

If a caller reports that someone is on campus with a gun, even if the gun is just a prop, the UAPD will respond as if it were real.

"We will do whatever we have to do to keep everyone safe," Romero said.

I’m not saying police shouldn’t fire back if somebody points a fake gun at them.  I am saying that banning weapons period produces these kinds of sticky situations.  No word on whether tinfoil swords are weapons.  Perhaps witches brew is a form of biological warfare.

Of course, this is the University of Arizona, so discussions of Halloween would never be complete without mentioning race and gender

Halloween costumes are especially bothersome, making it hard for officers to identify whom they’re after. Even things like someone’s race or gender can be hidden behind a mask or under makeup.

"Somebody commits a crime, we’re looking for Richard Nixon or a Raggedy Ann and Andy duo," Romero said.

:sigh:

 




October 9, 2006

Voter Block Party interviews

Posted by Garrett P. O'Hara
Filed under: ASUA, elections, podcast, police, Raúl Grijalva

Here they are. The interviews other than the interview and subsequent incident with Raúl Grijalva. It is also my longest podcast ever by far.

Special thanks to ASUA for putting on the event, and to my guests:

  • Linda Lopez, Democratic candidate for State House, District 29 (incumbent)
  • Bob Walkup, Mayor of the City of Tucson (not up for reelection)
  • Randy Graf, Republican candidate for U.S. House, Arizona District 8
  • Lena Saradnik, Democratic candidate for State House, LD 26
  • Gene Chewning, Republican candidate for State House, LD 27
  • Ron Drake, Republican candidate for U.S. House, Arizona District 7

How to listen:

Play episode | RSS 2.0 Feed (podcasts) | Subscribe with iTunes or other podcatcher

The theme song is "Fresh Snow in the Valley" by Derek K. Miller of Penmachine.

Note: I misspelled Ms. Saradnik’s name when I was looking up the URL. Her website was probably up the entire time, and I will be contacting her and the other guests with the URL for this podcast.




October 4, 2006

Breaking: Conservative field rep assaulted, harassed by ASU professors

Update III: Followed up.

Emily Mitchell, a field representative for Leadership Institute, reports via email that two Arizona State University professors assaulted, injured, and harassed her yesterday over her support of Caucasian-American Men of ASU, an officially-recognized campus group.  Unfortunately for the assailants, she has video.



Mitchell’s hate crime report to the campus LBGTQ group, which is completely on her side on grounds of free speech, is as follows:

At ASU on Friday, September 29, I was verbally and physically assaulted by two professors who refused to reveal their names or departments.  Both told me my club, Caucasian American Men of ASU, “is a racist agenda.”  In truth, the club is about ENDING all forms of racial exclusion on campus by asking for equality.  When I prompted them to read my flyer to learn that we are trying to end racism and sexism, they both refused.  I was called “racist” by one professor “definitely racist,” by the other.  At this point, I pulled out the camera to get them saying this on tape, because I was sure no one would believe me without evidence.  Since my video camera is just a feature of a snapshot-style camera, they may not have realized they were being video taped.

I asked if I could record their viewpoint for educational purposes, and that our group encouraged open debate.  They said “OK,” but as soon as I began, one professor said I didn’t have her permission to take her picture.  She argued with me and then tried to steal my camera, wrangling me for it.  At this point, she managed to hit the big button that stops recording, but of course there is video of her snatching for it.  When she couldn’t pry it out of my hands, she deliberately took her thumb and tried to push the auto-extending lens back into the body of the camera, crunching the device that extends the lens.

I refuse to let go of my personal property, holding on tightly. She continues to crunch her thumb into my camera, and I’m now sure this is deliberate.  In the physical struggle to keep or damage my camera, she digs her hands in so hard her short fingernails scratch my hand until I bleed between my index and middle fingers.  I somehow manage to physically pry her fingers out of my skin and off my camera.

Shaking now, I was determined to get her and the other professor saying what they said to me on video.  I held the camera up while the assailant said, “You can’t take my picture because it’s illegal.  I work with indigenous peoples all the time, and they would never do that.”  After several other tidbits, two I remember verbatim as, “You have a racist agenda,” and “You have problems to work out.”  I realized the camera wasn’t running and I pressed the button harder this time.  Because she damaged the button, when I pressed it, it didn’t immediately begin recording (I now have to press it harder).  At this point, I try to get them to repeat their hate crime speech, and they don’t deny it.  They also refuse to reveal their identities.  The only information they would give me is that they are in “College of Fine Arts.”  I have the videos.

Epilogue:  I spent the rest of the afternoon with CAMASU students trying to make CAMASU a university-recognized group.  At almost 5:00, I went to the College of Fine Arts hoping a secretary could identify the faculty members for me.  A secretary was still there, Sherri Thompson (phone number removed –GPO), and, shaking like a leaf, I explained my situation.  I showed her the videos, and she was so appalled, she called cell phones to get the cell phone numbers of the people needed to immediately file an incident report.  I was advised to go to student health to clean up the wound and put some ice on it.  I have not heard back about the incident report, nor do I know what the consequences or procedures are for that, nor do I know if it’s different from reporting a hate crime.  But I figured I can use all the help I can get finding these women who hurt me so badly, physically and psychologically.

As Sherri was busily orchestrating the report, the Dean of the College of Fine Arts, Dean Kim, walked past us and into his office.  The secretary rushed after him to his office to explain the incident.  I followed.  Sheepishly entering his office, I showed him my injury and the videos.  He was apologetic and appalled, saying he was embarrassed and that it should be taken care of.  However, he didn’t recognize the faculty either.  He also explained that there are many, many faculty members in the College of Fine Arts.

So now I want to press charges, but I have no idea how.  And since I didn’t immediately call the police, and because by the time I would have, they had already vanished, I feel like now I have to get identification myself of these women.  But in order to do that, I will have to visit every department in the College of Fine Arts and ask the secretaries if they recognize the professors.

Should I just go department to department looking for their identification?  How do I find these people who hurt my feelings?  The whole point of our group is to END racism and sexism on campus.  Being called a racist is one of the most damaging insults I could have received, because racism is the very cause I’m trying to obliterate.

I REALLY NEED HELP!  Please help me find the women who accused me of a label without first even listening to me or reading my flyer.

12 News in Phoenix picked up on it and has this video about CAMASU, but not the violent incident.  Google News as of posting only makes mention of CAMASU, but not the incident, despite LI having put out a press release.

Emily has also been working very hard to promote change on the University of Arizona campus; I consider her a close associate.  At minimum, the professor who injured her ought to be fired on the spot.  The second surely doesn’t know anything about First Amendment freedom of the press: you have no right to privacy in your own conduct in a public area.  At least they weren’t political science professors.

Oddly enough, FIRE’s speech code rating of ASU is better than UA: a yellow as opposed to red.  Let’s see if they prove themselves worthy of yellow.


Update: Another press release. CAMASU students are now posting “Wanted” flyers for the two professors, but they are meeting resistance from the police, who contend that the flyers may “interfere in the investigation.” I’m not sure why the police have a problem; vandals are tearing down the flyers anyway.

TEMPE, AZ — Students at Arizona State University (ASU) posted “Wanted” flyers on campus yesterday in an attempt to identify two female professors who harassed and injured a female student recruiter at the Tempe campus.

But other members of the university community were not as willing to help find the two women.

“Within three hours someone had started taking down the flyers,” said Emily Mitchell, the Leadership Institute recruiter who was assaulted.

Members of the new, independent, student group, the Caucasian American Men of ASU (CAMASU), posted and handed out the flyers on Tuesday afternoon. The flyers pictured the two unknown professors who confronted Emily.

This morning ASU Police told Emily that they received “some complaints” about the flyers and requested that additional ones not be posted. And according to Laura Gill, an ASU police officer, the posters could “interfere with the investigation.”

Emily, a field representative for the Leadership Institute’s Campus Leadership Program, has filed a police report but is unable to press charges until she can identify her assailants.”

Emily also went to the College of Fine Arts, where the professors claimed to teach, and spoke with Dean Kwang-Wu Kim. Dean Kim said he did not recognize the pictures of the two faculty members, but was appalled at their behavior.

The initial confrontation occurred on Friday, September 29 while Emily recruited for the CAMASU group. The professors claimed Emily had “a racist agenda” and called her “a sexist.” One professor became aggressive, attempted to steal Emily’s camera, and scratched her, drawing blood.

Emily plans to press charges as soon as the assailant is identified.

To see images of the flyers click here: http://www.leadershipinstitute.org/press/

Update II: On the flip side of things, another Leadership Institute recruiter is being threatened with arrest for…uh…recruiting (without permission!).




September 29, 2006

Avoiding bathroom lines made easy

Posted by Garrett P. O'Hara
Filed under: Arizona State University, sexism (and then some), police

These students apparently didn’t read the Wildcat on Tuesday:

A female student was referred to the Dean of Students Office for violating the code of conduct after using a men’s restroom in the Arizona Stadium, 540 N. Vine Ave., Sept. 23, reports stated.

Police were responding to a report of a fight at the south end of the stadium. When they arrived there was no evidence of a fight, but they noticed several females in line for the men’s restroom.

The females in line were told to leave immediately. An unidentified man notified police that there were two women in the restroom also.

Police waited outside for the women to exit the restroom.

A female UA student and a female Arizona State University student were approached by police and asked why they used the men’s restroom. The UA student said it was an emergency and the line for the women’s restroom was too long.

Police warned the women for criminal trespassing.

You know gals, you could have just claimed to be transsexual and you would have been fine. 




September 10, 2006

UAPD is no alternative to the Second Amendment

Posted by Garrett P. O'Hara
Filed under: greeks, crime, Second Amendment, media bias, university policy, police

I saw this earlier, but didn’t know whether to post until something was confirmed.  News sources now confirm that a 18-year-old female UA student was shot early yesterday in a drive-by shooting.  Some students on Facebook had already started a group entitled "Wildcats Against Violence," but the group lists the time as the night of the day before.

Time errors notwithstanding, it’s definitely the same party as FIJI is the same fraternity as Phi Gamma Delta.  The Facebook group reports that Theta Tau and Alpha Chi Omega are also within the vicinity.

Here’s what they didn’t tell you: 

FIJI and UAPD

Looking on Google Earth, FIJI is a dirt lot, so the picture is clearly old.  But notice what’s just southwest of that position.  FIJI, 1801 E First St, is just across the street from UAPD, 1852 E. First StThis is further evidence that citizens cannot trust police as an alternative to the right to bear arms.

This is the second frat shooting this year and the third gun-related incident on university-related property to my knowledge.  Kappa Alpha was trying to remove an unwelcome guest when he pulled out a gun and shot an 18-year-old pledge.  And last semester on University and Park, a group of friends (including a good friend of mine) were mugged, with some of them getting pistol-whipped.

We had three at the nursing school killed back in 2002.  This year, we’ve had 22 aggravated assaults, including, at minimum, the University/Park mugging and FIJI.  How long will it take before we get our rights back?

Update: KVOA’s website thankfully does mention the vicinity to UAPD and notes that an officer heard the shots.  I also just remembered that back when I was in the fifth grade, my family and I were attacked by a raged driver…just near the Honolulu Police Department.  Go figure.




August 27, 2006

Enforcing code of conduct off-campus may conflict with code itself (updated with explanation)

Posted by Garrett P. O'Hara
Filed under: crime, conduct, television, university policy, police

The Wildcat reported Friday that UAPD would still use a "standard deployment plan" used every weekend rather than increase patrols for a possible big-party weekend.  Then this bombshell came in from the AP: the student code of conduct will be enforced off-campus.

This one has me scratching my head.  The code as it stands online contains few instances of the term "off-campus" (with or without the hyphen).


The portion concerning Jurisdiction and Authority notes:

Violators may be accountable to both civil and criminal authorities and to the university for acts of misconduct that constitute violations of the Student Code of Conduct. At the discretion of university officials, disciplinary action at the university may proceed during the pendency of other proceedings. Sanctions may be imposed for acts of misconduct that occur on university property or at any university sponsored activity. As further prescribed in these rules, off-campus conduct may also be subject to discipline. With respect to student organizations, and their members, university jurisdiction extends to premises used or controlled by the organizations.

A "university-sponsored activity" is "any activity on or off campus initiated, approved, or supervised by the university."

Prohibited conduct on the part of all students includes

"Off-campus conduct involving sale or distribution of illegal drugs or controlled substances, or violence that may present a danger to the safety of the university community"

[and]

"Off-campus conduct related to gambling associated with any university event or activity."

Moreover, university policy outside the code of conduct notes that an alcoholic beverage permit "is not required for off-campus events in private homes, restaurants, or establishments with liquor licenses."


What I feel that ultimately means is that the university has no power to judge against individual students’ activities (other than gambling and illegal drugs) so long as they are not organized by a university-recognized student organization.  Let’s see if this works.

Update: The Arizona Daily Star has more details.  I get it now; the Dean of Students is writing up a new code.  Click "read more" to see the entire code here (especially if the Star link goes dead).

Read more…




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