GAO report: Guantanamo detainees could be safely absorbed by US prisons

From [HERE] US Senator Dianne Feinstein released a report [text, PDF] by the Government Accountability Office [official website] on Wednesday which asserts that US prisons could safely absorb the 166 detainees currently being held at Guantanamo Bay military prison in the event the facility is closed and the detainees are brought to the US. The report identifies six Department of Defense (DOD) facilities and 98 Department of Justice (DOJ) [official websites] facilities that could hold the detainees and points out that there are already 373 prisoners convicted of terrorism in facilities throughout the US. While the DOD asserts that it has the legal authority under the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) [text] to maintain custody of the detainees, the DOJ does not consider itself to have such authority and would require additional statutory authority in order to do so. However, the DOJ maintains that it has the "correctional expertise to safely and securely house detainees with a history or nexus to terrorism."

Feinstein, who is chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, commissioned the report in 2008 and welcomed [AP report] its findings, stating that it "demonstrates that if the political will exists we could finally close Guantanamo without imperiling our national security." Last month, the ACLU called on [JURIST report] President Barack Obama to close the military prison during his second term. During his 2008 campaign for the presidency, Obama pledged to close the prison and during his second day in office he issued an executive order [text; JURIST report] directing the prison to be closed. However, in the face of congressional opposition [JURIST report] the Obama administration missed its self-imposed deadline to close Guantanamo military prison, and, following the 2010 mid-term congressional election, congress effectively halted [JURIST backgrounder] plans to close the facility. According to Forum contributor Jonathan Hafetz, Obama bears responsibility [JURIST op-ed] for the political missteps that prevented Guantanamo from closing and criticizes the president for embracing the "larger detention system that Guantanamo embodies." Conversely, Forum contributor David Frakt agrees that the Obama administration is partially responsible, but believes congress is largely to blame [JURIST op-ed] for passing a "series of increasingly stringent spending restrictions which have made it virtually impossible to transfer most detainees out of Guantanamo."

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Nobel peace laureates call for Israel military boycott over Gaza assault

Guardian 

A group of Nobel peace prize-winners, prominent artists and activists have issued a call for an international military boycott of Israel following its assault on the Gaza Strip this month.

The letter also denounces the US, EU and several developing countries for what it describes as their "complicity" through weapons sales and other military support in the attack that killed 160 Palestinians, many of them civilians, including about 35 children.

The 52 signatories include the Nobel peace laureates Mairead Maguire and Adolfo Pérez Esquivel; the film directors Mike Leigh and Ken Loach; the author Alice Walker; the US academic Noam Chomsky; Roger Waters of Pink Floyd; and Stéphane Hessel, a former French diplomat and Holocaust survivor who was co-author of the universal declaration of human rights.

"Horrified at the latest round of Israeli aggression against the 1.5 million Palestinians in the besieged and occupied Gaza Strip and conscious of the impunity that has enabled this new chapter in Israel's decades-old violations of international law and Palestinian rights, we believe there is an urgent need for international action towards a mandatory, comprehensive military embargo against Israel," the letter says.

"Such a measure has been subject to several UN resolutions and is similar to the arms embargo imposed against apartheid South Africa in the past."

The letter accuses several countries of providing important military support that facilitated the assault on Gaza. "While the United States has been the largest sponsor of Israel, supplying billions of dollars of advanced military hardware every year, the role of the European Union must not go unnoticed, in particular its hefty subsidies to Israel's military complex through its research programmes.

"Similarly, the growing military ties between Israel and the emerging economies of Brazil, India and South Korea are unconscionable given their nominal support for Palestinian freedom," it says.

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Documentary: Inmate may be involved in OJ case

Local10

A documentary says a Florida death-row inmate might have been involved in the murder of O.J. Simpson's ex-wife and her friend, a claim being criticized by one victim's family and being looked at skeptically by a detective and a prosecutor who dealt with the convict.

The Investigation Discovery show, "My Brother the Serial Killer," will air Wednesday. The film is a look at Glen Rogers, a carnival worker whom Florida jurors convicted in 1997 of killing a woman in a Tampa motel room.

Rogers, who is now 50, was also convicted of murder in California and is a suspect in homicides in Mississippi, Louisiana and Kentucky — and possibly several other states.

Most of his victims were women he had met in bars while drifting across the country. All of his victims were stabbed to death. With blazing blue eyes, a scraggly beard and long, blond hair, Rogers was arrested in November 1995, near Waco, Ky., after a nationwide manhunt for the so-called "Cross-Country Killer" and a 100 mph chase.

Rogers, who is from Hamilton, Ohio, met Nicole Brown Simpson in 1994 when he was living in Southern California, his family says in the documentary.

A criminal profiler in the film says he received paintings by Rogers with clues possibly linking him to the 1994 murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend, Ronald Goldman. The profiler says that Rogers sent him a painting of the murder weapon used in the slayings.

"I believe that Glen believes he killed them," said Anthony Meoli, an Atlanta criminal profiler who has received more than 1,000 letters from Rogers and has interviewed him in prison.

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George Zimmerman Using His Autograph To Raise Funds

GlobalGrind

George Zimmerman, the 29-year-old white man charged with second-degree murder in the death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, will sell his signature to raise money for living expenses. 

The announcement was posted on his website on Wednesday, detailing how he will prioritize the funds he collects from signing thank you cards.  

The Miami Herald reports:

The announcement said Zimmerman’s fund – which has raised about $140,000 in seven months – will now have a new manager of the defendant’s choosing. And it makes clear that the legal defense fund doesn’t actually pay legal fees.

“Priority for the funds will be as it has always been, in this order: to pay for George's living expenses, to pay for costs associated with the defense, and then – only if funds remain – to pay appropriate legal fees,” the announcement said. “That has always been the priority plan, and we reassert it now. Once the fund is under new management, there will be more affirmative fund-raising efforts.”

Those efforts include a new website and disclosure of how the money has been spent.

The first time that Zimmerman asked for donations toward his legal defense fund, he spent large portions of it to pay off his personal debt and concealed the money from the court. Now he's back at it!

 

3 White Men charged with bias crime in year-old assault against Black Couple in Virginia

DuluthNews

Three men from the Iron Range have been charged with a bias crime in St. Louis County District Court after an investigation of a year-old incident in Virginia.

Gerald William Meagher Jr., 34, of Virginia; Chad James Stevens, 23, of Mountain Iron; and Lee Scott Randall, 23, of Aurora, were charged Monday in the assault of a couple in the early morning on Nov. 3, 2011. Their first court date is scheduled for Jan. 4.

The complaint in the case states that the three men harassed the couple while passing them in a pickup truck as the two stood near Second Avenue and Eighth Street South in Virginia. The report says the men targeted the male for his race, using racial epithets, including numerous utterings of the n-word.

The men are accused of later stopping the truck driven by Randall and attacking the couple, punching the woman and punching and kicking the male. Police were called at 2:28 a.m.

A hat and cell phone left at the scene led police to Stevens, and he was identified in a police lineup.

The men are charged with fourth-degree assault, a gross misdemeanor. The attack was characterized as based on the male’s race, making it a bias crime under state law.

The police report says the men admitted to fighting with the couple and witnesses also provided descriptions of the attack and the words used.

Assistant County Attorney Leah Stauber said the case originally went to the Department of Justice to see if it qualified under federal hate crime standards. After the federal department declined to charge in the case, the county went ahead, she said.

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Stephen Lendman: Israel's Genocidal War on Palestine

Indybay.org

Longstanding Israeli policy reflects slow-motion genocide. Non-Jews aren't wanted. Israel considers them subhuman. 

 

Peace, nonviolence, diplomacy, human and civil rights, as well as fundamental rule of law principles are systematically spurned. That's now rogue states operate. 

 

Pillar of Cloud raged from November 14 - 21. Memorandum of understand terms ended eight terror bombing days. Israel violated its pledge multiple times. Its word isn't worth the paper it's written on. 

 

Less than 24 hours after conflict ended, Israeli soldiers killed one Palestinian. Another 19 were injured. 

 

On November 25, three more Palestinians were shot. They were wounded, not killed. On November 26, another four Palestinians were injured. Soldiers opened fire on them. They threatened no one. 

 

Since November 22, 15 fishermen were accosted at sea. Naval vessels used live fire. Israel claimed they exceeded a recently expanded zone. Believe nothing Israeli authorities say. They systematically lie. 

 

Boats were damaged and confiscated or destroyed. Fishermen on board were arrested, detained, and interrogated. At least most were released. 

 

No one assaulted did anything improper. Israeli claims were lies. Expect continued land and sea incidents ahead. 

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Media Promote White Party's (GOP) Witch Hunt Against Susan Rice

MediaMatters

Reports by major media outlets, including The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and CNN, are giving credence to Republicans' baseless attacks on Ambassador Susan Rice over statements she made in September appearances on Sunday morning political shows regarding an attack on U.S. facilities in Benghazi, Libya. In fact, Rice's remarks were based on the intelligence available at the time, and commentators from across the political spectrum agree that the attacks on Rice are inaccurate and driven by partisanship.

Susan Rice Meets With Senate Republican Critics To Discuss What She Said About Benghazi During Sunday Show Appearances

After An Attack On U.S. Facilities In Benghazi, Susan Rice Appeared On Sunday Shows To Discuss The Latest Intelligence Regarding The Attack. U.S. diplomatic facilities in Benghazi, Libya, came under attack on September 11. On September 16, Rice appeared on the Sunday morning political shows to explain the latest intelligence on the matter. She explained that an investigation was underway, so no definitive assessments could be made, but the latest intelligence showed that the attack began as a spontaneous response to outrage over an anti-Muslim video that had gained attention. Extremists arrived at the U.S. facilities, leading to the deaths of four Americans. [Media Matters, 10/11/12]

Republicans Responded With Months Of Criticizing Rice, But Suggested That If They Met Face-To-Face, Their Issues Might Be Resolved. As the Huffington Post reported, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), who had strongly criticized Rice over her comments about Benghazi, said on November 25 that he could be persuaded to stop his attacks if she met with him to discuss Benghazi. [Huffington Post, 11/25/12]

In Response, Rice Paid A "Conciliatory Call On Three Hostile Senate Republicans." The New York Times reported that Rice went to Capitol Hill to meet with McCain and other Republican critics in the Senate, including Sens. Lindsay Graham and Kelly Ayotte, to explain her Sunday political show statements regarding the attack on U.S. facilities in Benghazi, Libya. The Times reported that:

In a statement after the meeting, Ms. Rice said she incorrectly described the attack in Benghazi, which killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans, as a spontaneous protest gone awry rather than a premeditated terrorist attack. But she said she based her remarks on the intelligence then available  intelligence that changed over time.

"Neither I nor anyone else in the administration intended to mislead the American people at any stage in the process," said Ms. Rice. [The New York Times, 11/27/12]

On Sunday Shows, Rice Accurately Conveyed The View Of The Intelligence Community

Wash. Post's Ignatius: CIA Document Supported Rice's Description Of Attack As Reaction To Anti-Islam Video. Washington Post columnist David Ignatius reported that the CIA had confirmed that Rice's description of the Benghazi attack on the Sunday shows was accurate:

"Talking points" prepared by the CIA on Sept. 15, the same day that Rice taped three television appearances, support her description of the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Consulate as a reaction to Arab anger about an anti-Muslim video prepared in the United States. According to the CIA account, "The currently available information suggests that the demonstrations in Benghazi were spontaneously inspired by the protests at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and evolved into a direct assault against the U.S. Consulate and subsequently its annex. There are indications that extremists participated in the violent demonstrations." [Washington Post, 10/19/12]

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The Government Can Read Your Emails, But a New Law Might Stop Them

HuffingtonPost

If you're reading this article, chances are you have an email account. You might even have more than one. You probably also have a Facebook page and are listed on LinkedIn. And, if you're like me, you've saved lots of old emails relating to, among other things, your love life, your doctor and medications, and every book, iTunes song or sex toy you've ever bought online.

Guess what? The government can get copies of most of those emails without telling you. Just ask David Petraeus, the former CIA Director and celebrated U.S. Army General. Scared? You should be.

The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 provides the means by which the FBI, the SEC, the Department of Homeland Security and a whole host of other governmental agencies can access your private electronic communications. Among other things, it says that the government can acquire copies of anyone's email without giving notice to the "subscriber or customer" if it gets a warrant and the emails are more than six months old.

Unfortunately, this law, like many others relating to digital communications, hasn't kept up with rapidly advancing technologies and the way people use them. Still, bedrock constitutional principles relating to privacy shouldn't be diminished just because those advances exist and have outpaced the law. As Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor recently noted in a case involving the constitutionality of GPS tracking devices, the laws on the books today are "ill suited to the digital age, in which people reveal a great deal of information about themselves to third parties in the course of carrying out mundane tasks." She "doubt[s]" anyone would, for instance, "accept without complaint the warrantless disclosure to the Government of a list of every Web site they had visited in the last week, or month, or year." As Justice Sotomayor astutely observes, more expansive laws that adequately protect privacy rights in today's digital landscape are long overdue and, perhaps more importantly, badly needed.

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Police Arrest Man For Planning to Shoot Up San Antonio Mosque

ThinkProgress

Yesterday, San Antonio police revealed that they had arrested a man named Christopher Bane, who had “intentions of going to a mosque in the Medical Center area and was going to shoot as many people as possible.” Bane, according to an unidentified witness, had “a .45 caliber handgun and ammunition.” Three mosques in the San Antonio area were told of the foiled plot; the president of one San Antonio mosque said it was “very bad news for us.” San Antonio police charged Bane with “making terroristic threats.”

White Party (GOP) Senator Criticizes Susan Rice For Not Revealing Classified Information

ThinkProgress

Not letting up on the GOP attack on Ambassador Susan Rice, Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) today wondered on MSNBC why Rice did not augment the unclassified talking points provided to her on the Benghazi attacks with classified information to which she had access.

Speaking with MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell, Ayotte pointed out that Rice had reviewed classified intelligence related to the Sept. 11 attack on a U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya which contained previously unreleased information. This access, in Ayotte’s opinion, should have been disclosed on live television during Rice’s now infamous Sunday news show appearances on Sept. 16:

AYOTTE: That’s one of the questions I have, and one of the questions that didn’t feel I get a satisfactory answer to. Which is if you knew that even though the classified version obviously had references to Al Qaeda in it — being involved or individuals with ties to Al Qaeda involved in it — then how could not know that when you go on every Sunday show and not include that fact that it would leave a very different impression to the American people. Particularly on two of those networks where she also said in an answer to another question that Al Qaeda had been decimated.

Former Israeli Prime Minister Endorses Palestinian U.N. Bid

ThinkProgress

Israel’s former leader, Ehud Olmert, today endorsed the Palestinian campaign for being recognized as a “non-member observer state” by the United Nations General Assembly. Olmert told Bernard Avishai, an Israeli writer and contributor to the Daily Beast’s Open Zion blog, that “I believe that the Palestinian request from the United Nations is congruent with the basic concept of the two-state solution…It is time to give a hand to, and encourage, the moderate forces amongst the Palestinians. Abu-Mazen and Salam Fayyad [Palestinian National Authority President and Prime Minister, respectively] need our help. It’s time to give it.”

Black Banks in Decline

HuffPost

After more than a century of delivering financial resources to underserved communities, black-owned banks are struggling to remain relevant -- and solvent -- in an economic environment full of pitfalls.

Their traditional customer base -- lower and middle class blacks, small business owners and churches -- has been disproportionately affected by high unemployment, leaving customers with less money to deposit and, in turn, leaving many of these smaller financial institutions with less capital to reinvest in their communities. As customers have fallen on hard times or fallen behind in their loan repayments or mortgages, home foreclosures have become a nagging issue, hamstringing banks' portfolios with toxic loans. Meanwhile, many customers with big savings and healthy checking accounts opt for the flexibility of larger banks, which offer more branches and a wider variety of services.

"This minority bank community is really catching hell," said Michael Grant, the president of the National Banker's Association, an 84-year-old trade group that represents minority-owned banks. "They have survived everything, including world wars and Jim Crow, but this has been one of the most difficult periods of all."

Black banks have functioned mainly as "mission-based" institutions, born not long after slavery to help build black wealth. (The first African-American-owned and -operated bank was Capital Savings Bank in Washington, D.C., established in 1888. It spurred a boom in black businesses and offered blacks a resource they had been previously denied.) They are traditionally conservative, with close ties to local churches, families and businesses. When the community suffers, it's felt more acutely, with little wiggle room for mistakes.

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Israel Plays Down Importance of U.N. Bid by Palestinians

NY Times

With Western support swelling in favor of a Palestinian bid for enhanced status at the United Nations, Israel engaged in damage control on Wednesday, a day before the vote.

Israeli officials began to play down the significance of a draft resolution that calls for the upgrading of the Palestinian status to nonmember observer state from observer, a change that is also opposed by the United States but that is virtually certain to pass. Additionally, Israel has toned down its threats of countermeasures after the vote, aware that a harsh reaction would only isolate it further.

“The United Nations General Assembly will pass a one-sided anti-Israel resolution that should come as a surprise to nobody, and certainly not to anyone in Israel,” said Mark Regev, a spokesman for the Israeli government. “We always said that the reality was that the Palestinians have an automatic majority in the General Assembly.”

While Mr. Regev acknowledged “a certain amount of disappointment” over the decision of some friendly European countries to support the Palestinians or to abstain from the vote, he said: “Ultimately, what we will see at the United Nations is diplomatic theater. It will in no way affect the realities on the ground.”

Israel’s response, he said, will be “proportionate” to how the Palestinians act after the vote.

At first, Israel had hoped to deter the Palestinians from pursuing the vote. Officials warned that such a step could result in Israeli responses as drastic as the cancellation of the Israeli-Palestinian peace accords or the collapse of the Palestinian Authority.

When that effort failed, Israel focused on ensuring what it called a “moral majority” in the vote, meaning that even if a majority of nations voted in favor of the Palestinian bid, the major world powers and most European countries would not.

But France announced Tuesday that it would support the Palestinian bid. Other European nations, including Switzerland, Denmark and Norway, have followed.

Britain, which had previously lobbied along with the United States to try to get the Palestinians to at least postpone their maneuver, said it would consider voting for the resolution pending certain amendments and public assurances, including a clear commitment from the Palestinians that they would return immediately to negotiations with Israel without preconditions and that they would not pursue Israel for war crimes in the International Criminal Court. Otherwise, Britain says, it will abstain.

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200+ communities around the nation reject prison-based gerrymandering

PrisonersoftheCensus

How do officials in cities or counties that contain large prisons draw their electoral districts? Do they accept Census Bureau data that artificially inflates the population of the area containing the prison, or do they reject the Census Bureau’s prison counts in order to draw fair districts?

We’ve been reaching out to cities and counties across the country, first to bring the problem of prison-based gerrymandering — and the solutions — to their attention, and then more recently following up to see what they decided to do. We're happy to report that most of these cities and counties exclude the prison populations in order to give all of their actual residents the same access to government.

Just the other day, we hit a big milestone in the project when we verified the 200th county or city that refused to engage in prison-based gerrymandering: Prison Policy Initiative Legal Director Aleks Kajstura found that Howard County, Texas refused to use the 5,000+ people in private and federal prisons when drawing its new County Commissioner precincts. Had they engaged in prison-based gerrymandering, the First Precinct would have been more than 60% incarcerated, giving every four residents of that precinct the same influence in county government as ten residents in any other part of the county.

This milestone in our research is further evidence that the national trend away from prison-based gerrymandering is gaining momentum. And even more exciting is the fact that 200 is a significant underestimate of the number of local governments that avoid prison-based gerrymandering. We know that the actual number is much higher in part because we’re still calling counties and because redistricting is not yet complete in some locations, but especially because we’ve largely skipped following up in states that require counties and municipalities to exclude prison populations. Instead, we’ve focused on the places that must independently choose whether or not to avoid prison-based gerrymandering. And there, the trend is clear: prison-based gerrymandering is on the decline.

To celebrate reaching 200, we’ve updated our map of national progress towards ending prison-based gerrymandering:[MORE

Ashdod Sudanese urge Israeli neighbors: Vote for leaders who won't deport us

Haaretz.com

About 2,000 Sudanese and Eritreans live in Ashdod; they say they are the ones who are afraid to go out at night, because local residents attack them for no reason.

Sudanese migrants sent a letter tmigrants areo their neighbors in Ashdod's Rova Bet neighborhood this week asking them to vote for candidates in the upcoming Knesset and mayoral elections who support granting asylum to African migrants.

Top African American Lawmaker Says GOP Attacks On Susan Rice Use Racial ‘Code Words’

ThinkProgress

Rep. James Clyburn (D-SC) this morning defended U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice, calling out Republican use of “code words” in attacking Rice’s professional capabilities.

Appearing on CNN, Clyburn, the number three Democrat in the House of Representatives and the highest-ranking African-American in Congress, added his voice to a growing number of lawmakers concerned with the appearance of the Republican Party potentially blocking a minority nominee to the President’s cabinet so soon after a bruising electoral loss among minorities.

In particular, Clyburn focused on a letter circulated by more than 90 House Republicans that uses terms like “incompetent” to describe Rice’s performance at the U.N. in discouraging Obama from nominating Rice to take over as Secretary of State:

CLYBURN: You know, these are code words. We heard them during the campaign. During this recent campaign, we heard [Romney surrogate John] Sununu calling our President ‘lazy’, ‘incompetent.’ These kinds of terms that those of us, especially those of us that who were born and raised in the South, we’ve been hearing these little words and phrases all of our lives. And we get insulted by them. Susan Rice is as competent as anyone you will find. And to place that word on her causes problems with people like Marcia Fudge and it certainly causes a problem with me. I don’t like those words. Say that she was wrong for doing it, but don’t call her incompetent.

Clyburn isn’t alone in his assessment of the issues the Republican Party is running up again in their pursuit of Rice. The hosts of MSNBC’s Morning Joe also were incredulous that the GOP would be looking for this fight, against a highly regarded woman of color, so quickly. Host Joe Scarborough, a Republican himself, was struck by how his party seemed unwilling to moderate its tone, with his co-host Mika Brzezinski saying, “It looks like a bunch of old white men running women out of Washington.”

Rice is currently being targeted by House and Senate Republicans for her role in the Obama administration’s response to the Sept. 11 attack against a U.S. diplomatic mission in Libya. While the intelligence community has provided ample evidence that the talking points that Rice delivered on Sept. 16 were accurate at the time, this has not stopped Republicans from preemptively seeking to block a Rice appointment to take over for out-going Secretary Hillary Clinton.

Dems closing the gap with White Party (GOP) in South

Standard.net

Late on election night, a small melee erupted at the University of Mississippi here when a group of white students frustrated by the reelection of President Obama marched outside and began shouting racial slurs at African-American students. Several hundred people gathered to watch as two white students were arrested.

"Mississippi still has a lot of work to do in race relations," said Kimbrely Dandridge, an African-American Obama voter and president of the student body.

Yet even as that incident evoked ugly memories of an earlier era, Election Day in the South also told a newer and more surprising story: The nation’s first African-American president finished more strongly in the region than any Democratic nominee in three decades, underscoring a fresh challenge for Republicans who rely on Southern whites as their base of national support.

Obama won Virginia and Florida and narrowly missed victory in North Carolina. But he also polled as well in Georgia as any Democrat since Jimmy Carter, grabbed 44 percent of the vote in deep-red South Carolina and just under that in Mississippi - despite doing no substantive campaigning in any of those states.

Much of the post-election analysis has focused on the demographic crisis facing Republicans among Hispanic voters, particularly in Texas. But the results across other parts of the South, where Latinos remain a single-digit minority, point to separate trends among blacks and whites that may also have big implications for the GOP’s future.

The results show a region cleaving apart electorally along new fault lines. In the region’s center, clustered along the Mississippi River, the GOP remains largely unchallenged and the voting divide between blacks and whites is deepening. Nearly nine of 10 of white voters in Mississippi, for instance, went for Republican nominee Mitt Romney this year, according to exit polls. About 96 percent of black voters in the state supported Obama.

The pattern is markedly different in the five states that hug the Atlantic coast from Virginia to Florida, which together hold 82 of the South’s 160 electoral votes. A combination of a growing black population, urban expansion, oceanfront development and in-migration from outside the region has opened up increasing opportunities for Democrats in those states.

"Georgia is an achievable target for Democrats in 2016," said Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, a frequent Obama surrogate during the campaign. "What you’re going to see is the Democratic party making a drive through the geography from Virginia to Florida."

That will be easier said than done - particularly when the Democratic nominee is not Obama - but powerful forces in the region are clearly eroding GOP dominance. The trends pose difficulties for a Republican Party that has been shifting toward Dixie since the "Southern strategy" of the Nixon era, which sought to encourage white flight from the Democratic Party.

In every Southern state except Louisiana, the population of African-Americans grew substantially faster than that of whites over the past decade. The growth is fueled by black retirees from the North and rising numbers of young, well-educated blacks in prosperous cities such as Atlanta, Norfolk, Charlotte, and Charleston, S.C.

The influx also includes fast-growing, but still smaller, Hispanic populations and an infusion of less-conservative outsiders attracted to popular coastal areas. Together, the shifts are making the electoral landscape from Virginia to the Carolinas look increasingly like the swing state of Florida.

Obama’s 2012 numbers in the Southern coastal states outperformed every Democratic nominee since Carter and significantly narrowed past gaps between Democratic and Republican candidates. The lone possible exception is Georgia in 1996, which gave Arkansas native Bill Clinton 45.8 percent in 1996; Obama fell 0.4 percent short of that mark in tentative 2012 results, but ongoing revisions could close the gap.

The proportion of white voters in the South is also shrinking. Southern whites voted overwhelmingly for Romney, but in six Southern states, far fewer of them appear to have gone to the polls on Nov. 6 than the number who voted for Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., in 2008.

In Florida, the portion of all votes cast by whites this year fell to 66 percent, down from 73 percent in 2000. In Georgia, the number of white voters declined while African-American registrations increased nearly 6 percent and Hispanic voters grew by 36 percent.

"Republicans can focus all they want on Hispanics," said John Anzalone, a Montgomery, Ala., pollster who helped analyze swing states for the Obama campaign. "But they also have a problem with whites, in this election cycle, just showing up."

Prominent conservatives in the region are acutely aware of the danger posed by the trends. "We’ve got to go out and sell our ideas not just to the choir, but the whole church," said Henry Barbour, a Republican National Committee member from Mississippi and a top Romney fundraiser (and nephew of former Gov. Haley Barbour). "We’re not going to get 25 percent of the black vote in four years, but we’ve got to figure out which African-Americans share our core beliefs."

Some Republicans had hoped to make at least small inroads among black voters in 2012 given lower African-American turnout in the 2010 midterms, high black unemployment and the modest success of presidential candidate Herman Cain in the Republican primaries. They reasoned that winning over just a few percentage points of black voters in key states such as Virginia, North Carolina and Florida could alter the outcome of the race.

Rev. C.L. Bryant, an African-American tea party activist from DeSoto Parish, La., helped lead a spirited effort by some of the most conservative GOP-aligned groups to use Obama’s support for gay marriage as an opening to appeal to socially conservative black voters.

He produced a feature-length film titled "Runaway Slave" that urged African-Americans to flee the Democratic Party. It was shown in more than 20 cities, while he and other conservative African-Americans toured the country to blast Obama’s support for abortion rights and gay issues.

But the issues had little apparent impact on Obama’s support within the black community. Black pastors - some of whom had preached against gay marriage in the past - rallied to the president. Romney also hit a number of sour notes with minorities during the campaign, including his apparent suggestion that blacks who support Obama want "more free stuff" from government.

"Romney was real disrespectful," said Rodney Collier, 58, a black stylist at Haywood’s Barber Shop in Richmond. "How can you be so negative and nasty to a sitting president?"

By the closing stage of the campaign, gay marriage had largely disappeared from the conversation among African-American voters. "We don’t see any of that," said Tiara Moore, 23, a biology student, after a day of canvassing before the election at historically black Hampton University in Hampton, Va. "They talk about health care and student loans."

Contrary to the expectations of many Republican pollsters, black voters came out in droves on Election Day and voted overwhelmingly for Obama - near or above 95 percent in most parts of the South.

"We were all basically stunned at the results," said Bryant. "It is very clear that the direction of the Republican Party - the conservative movement - is necessarily going to have to include the changing face of America and address the concerns of minorities, blacks, Latinos, and even younger white women, all young people. . . . It has to happen or we’re going to be insignificant."

US Justice Department says it is investigating Albuquerque police over abuse

WashPost

The U.S. Justice Department will investigate the Albuquerque Police Department after a string of officer-involved shootings and a number of high-profile abuse cases, Justice officials confirmed Tuesday.

The announcement, first reported by the Albuquerque Journal, comes months after the police department in New Mexico’s biggest city was the target of protests, lawsuits and demands for wide-scale agency overhaul from civil rights advocates amid 25 officer-involved shootings — 17 of them fatal — since 2010.

In addition, the Albuquerque Police Department has been plagued in recent months by a number of high-profile cases alleging excessive force by officers, including some cases caught on video.

One video showed officers giving each other celebratory “belly bumps” after beating a suspected car thief in a parking garage. Another clip showed an officer illegally entering an apartment and using a stun gun on one suspect, then punching another suspect after he had surrendered.

The department also was forced to change its social media policy involving officers after a detective shot and killed a man last year and listed his occupation as “human waste disposal” on his Facebook page. The detective was later suspended and transferred out of the department’s gang unit to field services.

A press conference was scheduled Tuesday to announce the details of the pending probe following a visit by federal officials to Albuquerque more than a year ago. Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Thomas Perez and U.S. Attorney for New Mexico Kenneth Gonzales are scheduled to give more information about the pending investigation.

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Arraignment Delayed for White Terrorists in Easter Weekend Hate Attacks on Black Victims

GreenwichTimes

The arraignment for two men accused in an April shooting spree that left three people dead and two more wounded has been postponed until Jan. 9.

Jake England and Alvin Watts face murder and hate crime charges from the spree.

All five of their victims were black.

Arraignment for the pair was reset Monday after prosecutors asked for more time to determine whether to seek the death penalty for one or both men. [MORE