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Celebrate Earth Day at Shelby Farms

Mother Earth is a little like your own mother. She brought you into this world, but now the tables are turned and she could use your help. But unlike your human mother, you can’t just stick the Earth in a nursing home (damn!).

Get started this Earth Day (Sunday, April 22) at Shelby Farms Park, where volunteers will be planting trees, painting fences, and working on other park improvement projects at Hip to Be Green Day. Local groups will be handing out information on how to get more involved in environmental stewardship. And for those who’d rather just lounge around with the buffalo, there’s live music all day long.

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Politics Politics Feature

GADFLY: Guns Are Not the Answer!

The carnage at the Virginia Tech campus this week has, inevitably, revived the arguments about gun ownership in this country. We are, without doubt, the most gun-crazy country in the world, and the statistics bear that out. 30,000 people die in this country every year at the business end of a firearm. Gun ownership advocates say guns prevent violence, but that’s like saying that alcohol is an antidote for a hangover. Only in mathematics does multiplying a negative by another negative create a positive.

There was a time, not too long ago, when I was the proud owner of several guns. I had lived my whole life in fear of guns, and in the belief that their use and ownership should be severely controlled. So, to confront my fears and prejudices, I embarked on an episode of my life that saw me accumulate, and familiarize myself with the use of, a variety of firearms. I was the proud owner of several exotic shotguns (for sport shooting purposes), and managed to acquire more than a few Glock, Beretta, Smith and Wesson, and lesser-known handguns. I even had the big daddy of handguns, a .357 Magnum (the kind Clint Eastwood made famous in his “go ahead, make my day” movie scene). I joined a local gun club where I could hone my skills as a “gun man.” I was living the fantasy every boy of my generation envisioned when he got his first toy gun. I even went to the trouble of being trained in the use of the handguns and getting a carry permit issued by the state. I carried a concealed weapon in the belief that, in this Wild West town, I needed protection from crazed criminals.

Then, I was robbed at gunpoint in front of a place of business, not 500 yards from a police station (a fact I throw in only to show no place is totally safe from a determined criminal). The robber surprised me as I was entering a store late at night, and already had his gun drawn and pointing at me from no more than five feet away, much the same way the assailant in Virginia was already brandishing one (or more) of his weapons when he confronted his victims. As it happens, I was “carrying,” and I gave a fleeting thought, during what seemed to me to be the longest few seconds of my life, to seeing whether I could, OK-corral-style, out-draw him. But I realized, thankfully, I probably couldn’t shoot him before he shot me (or worse, that we would both die in a hail of bullets), and I abandoned that thought as I threw him my wallet. Since I’m writing about the incident, I obviously did the right thing, not to mention that I’m not sure I could have shot another human being, even at the risk of my own life, and I’m not sure whether, in the heat of the moment, I could have hit my target in any event. I must admit, though, I still have moments, years later, when I regret not having at least tried to defend myself, but then I realize: I’m not Charles Bronson.

The advocates of arming the population as a means of preventing gun violence take the rather simplistic view that a gun in the hand of an untrained user (and most gun owners don’t go to the trouble of being properly trained in their use) will always be effective in neutralizing the threat posed by an armed assailant, when nothing could be further from the truth. Even law enforcement personnel, who are thoroughly trained in the use of firearms, will tell you that in the heat of the moment, the likelihood of hitting your target diminishes substantially. That’s why we see so many incidents in which law enforcement personnel shoot many rounds, few, if any of which, hit their intended target. Trained weapon carriers can’t even avoid accidental discharges, as the incident involving the Secret Service the other day demonstrates. Fear and adrenaline are powerful influences in the misdirection of lethal force. Senses and reflexes, even those that are highly trained in the use of a firearm, change dramatically in the midst of a situation where life and death enter into the equation. So, even assuming any of the students at Virginia State had been armed, it is highly unlikely they could have ended the reign of terror brought about by a determined assailant who had obviously planned far enough in advance to have purchased (and used) two weapons, ammunition to reload them, was (by some accounts) wearing a bullet-proof vest, and even had the presence of mind to file the serial numbers off the weapons he used.

The more likely scenario is that anyone who had tried to neutralize the threat represented by the shooter would have just compounded the situation, by enraging the shooter or worse, shooting someone else in the process, and might well have caused the death of more victims than were ultimately lost in the incident. The proponents of a ubiquitously- armed citizenry assume that merely carrying a gun equips the person carrying it to use it, effectively and rationally, when the fact is, increasing the number of guns being carried in the population will only make those guns available to be stolen or used for some unintended purpose (i.e., suicide, crimes of passion, accidental firing, bystander injury, etc.).

My gun-toting days are now behind me, primarily because of my recognition of the uselessness of doing so borne of my experience with an armed assailant. I don’t regret familiarizing myself with the world of firearms, but my experience taught me guns aren’t the solution to gun violence, they’re the problem.

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Dyer’s “To Die For”

The May issue of Esquire explores the “60 Things Worth Shortening Your Life For.” And — drum roll please — the deep-fried burger at Dyer’s in Memphis made the list at number 48. For the other 59, items that include bullfighting, tackle football, and punching Barry Bonds in the face, click here.

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News

Feds Still Presenting Case Friday in Week Two of Ford Trial


BY
JOHN BRANSTON
 
|
APR 20, 2007

Jurors got a civics lesson Friday as prosecutors began wrapping up their case against former senator John Ford at the end of the second week of the trial in U.S. District Court.

Meanwhile, Ford’s attorney, Michael Scholl, was laying the groundwork for a “consultant defense” next week that will also be important if and when Ford is tried in Nashville on more corruption charges in a different federal case.

Most of Friday’s testimony was far less dramatic than the guns-and-tapes action earlier in the week. Prosecution witness Russell Humphrey, the clerk of court for the Tennessee Senate, explained the legislative process and the actions that would have been necessary for E-Cycle Management’s pet legislation to become law. Jurors heard an audiotape of Ford introducing the bill in committee and members voting to approve it. The FBI made sure the bill was scuttled before it could be voted on by the entire Senate, however. In the afternoon session jurors heard a long explanation from an official with the General Services division of what the costs would have been had the bill gone through.

As part of its sting operation, FBI agents posing as E-Cycle executives paid Ford $55,000 to introduce, amend, then withdraw the bill.

Also Friday, U.S. District Judge Daniel Breen ruled that prosecutors may use a chart and timeline when they question their final witness to help summarize their case.

In his cross-examination of Humphrey, Scholl focused on Ford’s consulting work. Like Roscoe Dixon and Kathryn Bowers, who were also indicted in Tennessee Waltz, Ford listed his occupation as “consultant” in the 2005-2006 edition of the Tennessee Blue Book. He also added “consultant” to his 2005 financial interest statement along with funerals, insurance, and real estate as a source of income.

“There is nothing illegal about a senator being a consultant is there?” Scholl asked Humphrey, who replied, “correct.”

Earlier this week, assistant U.S. Attorney Tim DiScenza asked undercover FBI agent L.C. McNeil a series of questions aimed at refuting suggestions by the defense that Ford was being paid for anything related to movies, music, or office decorating.

Ford’s consulting work for United American Health Care and Doral Dental is at the heart of the indictment filed against him by federal prosecutors in Nashville in December of 2006. That case is set for trial in May but will obviously be pushed back.

The cases are separate, but the math favors the government. To keep his liberty, Ford must win twice. To send him to prison, the government only has to win once.

The consultant defense appears to be one of two prongs of Scholl’s strategy along with the argument that Ford was targeted without predication and entrapped by overzealous prosecutors who were out to get him.

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Politics Politics Feature

GADFLY: Guns Are Not the Answer!

The carnage at the Virginia Tech campus this week has, inevitably, revived the arguments about gun ownership in this country. Gun ownership advocates say guns prevent violence, but that’s like saying that alcohol is an antidote for a hangover.

In his inimitable way, The Gadfly goes into detail on the point. Go see at “Political Beat”,

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News

MLGW Gives Money Back!!!

According to a release sent out yesterday by MLGW, consumers will be receiving a one-time credit on their bills in June or July. The credit will be an estimated $50 per customer and comes from part of a charge on the bill that is used for gas storage.

The release reads: “During the months of June or July 2007, MLGW customers will receive a one-time credit adjustment on their bills. The average credit adjustment will be about $50 per residential customer and will be reflected in customers’ gas charges.

“This adjustment is the result of non-cost charges that were added to the Purchased Gas Adjustment (PGA) component of customers’ bills from September 2006 to April 2007. The charge proceeds were used to pay for initial inventories at a gas storage site.

“The PGA is a cost recovery mechanism. Monthly gas bills reflect the cost of the natural gas MLGW purchases, as well as the cost of gas storage, transportation, delivery. These costs fluctuate due to the deregulated, competitive marketplace. Like virtually all natural gas utilities, MLGW uses a PGA to pass along these increases and decreases in gas costs to its customers. The maintenance of a gas inventory is in line with the strategic mission of the utility to ‘provide cost effective utility services to the Greater Memphis community’.”

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It’s 4:20!

Not that we here at the Flyer approve of drug use, but just a friendly reminder that today is (unofficially) National Marijuana Day.

Though the old “4:20 festival” at the Overton Park Shell is no more, your friends at The Complex have got you covered. “Dank,” an Earth Day/4:20 celebration, features home-spun electronica from DJs Halo, Sam-me, Irie, and Saturna.

But we’re pretty sure the management at the Complex would prefer you leave your smoke-ables at home.

For tickets, go here.

Or check out the Flyer’s searchable listings.

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Memphis Virginia Tech Benefit

Fox and Hound English Pub and Grill, and 730 AM ESPN radio are co-sponsoring a benefit for the Virginia Tech Foundation and Family Fund Monday April 23rd from 6-8 p.m. at the Cordova Fox and Hound at 847 Exocet Drive.

Rick Chandra, a local doctor and member of the Memphis chapter of the Virginia Tech alumni association, says that donations will fund a broad range of services for students and families of students affected by the massacre Monday at the university’s Blacksburg, Virginia campus.

Fox and Hound bartenders will donate a percentage of their tips earned during the benefit to the fund, but Chandra encourages direct donations to the fund. Donors at the Fox and Hound benefit will be entered into prize raffles that night. Those unable to attend, but interested in giving can do so through the Virginia Tech Web site.

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News The Fly-By

What To Watch

Earlier this month, while walking to her car, a University of Memphis graduate student was stabbed in the thigh and robbed. Campus security cameras caught the attack on tape, and a few days later, Zachariah Judge and his girlfriend/accomplice Valerie Jones were arrested.

Though the camera was installed by the U of M, that crime-fighting tactic may soon spread across the city. Last week, Memphis mayor Willie Herenton requested the City Council earmark $700,000 in next year’s budget for a Memphis Police Department (MPD) Real Time Crime Center. The center would combine video surveillance with sophisticated data systems and software.

“We’ll have Sky Cop cameras, which have the capability of triangulating gunshots,” says MPD spokesperson Vince Higgins. “Say there’s a camera posted on Tennessee Street and a shooting occurs within a block of the Flyer office. A Sky Cop camera would sense where that shot came from. It would then turn to that area and that video would feed into the Real Time Crime Center.”

Officers stationed in the crime center headquarters, to be located at the Urban Child Institute at 600 Jefferson, will be able to watch the footage on a large video wall. Officers could even be dispatched to the location before anyone calls to report the shooting.

“The cameras are totally mobile. They’ll be posted throughout the city where the need is greatest,” says Higgins. “That will be determined at our weekly Blue Crush meetings when we’re pinning down crime hotspots.”

Other cameras designed to spot stolen car tags will be placed on patrol cars.

“The camera will read tags as it passes cars, so even if the officer is preoccupied, the cameras will notify the officer that the car or tag is stolen,” says Higgins.

But the Real Time Crime Center encompasses more than video surveillance. Using special software, police will receive instant information on recent criminal activity in a radius around a crime, existing crime patterns in the neighborhood, and a history of people with arrest records who may frequent the area.

“Investigators headed to the scene will have the ability to take that real-time information gathered from all those sources,” says Higgins.

The New York City Police Department (NYPD) has been operating its $11 million Real Time Crime Center since 2005. The center draws information from New York state criminal records, parole and probation files, as well as city criminal complaints, arrest records, and 911 calls. MPD director Larry Godwin toured the NYPD facility last December.

With Blue Crush databases already in place, Higgins says much of the work for the local Real Time Crime Center is complete.

“Instead of buying someone’s software to get this started, we have people on our staff who are able to write the software specific to Memphis,” says Higgins. “We’re not buying a system that was used in New York and then trying to make it work in Memphis.”

Though Herenton requested $700,000 from the city, additional funding for the center is expected to come from grants.

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News The Fly-By

Fit To Be Fried

Since its invention seven years ago, the Big Mouth Billy Bass has annoyed thousands. Mounted like a real fishing trophy, the animatronic fish seems innocuous enough, but walk past it and you’ll wish you hadn’t. That is, unless you like cheesy recordings of “Take Me to the River.”

Shannon Wynne, owner of the Flying Saucer and its sister restaurant, the Flying Fish, says he was given about six of the singing fish when the product was at its peak.

“People would get them and think they were the first person who’d ever seen them,” he says. “Nearly everyone that bass fishes got one. Now that the craze is over, people have got all these fish sitting up in their attics.”

This is where the Flying Fish comes in. As a Billy Bass Adoption Center, the restaurant has roughly 20 singing fish hanging on the wall (don’t worry; they take the batteries out first). Patrons bring their Billy Bass with them, sign adoption papers giving them to the restaurant, and in return, get a free basket of catfish.

Wynne founded the restaurant with a country fishing shack in mind. The walls are adorned with mementos from fishing trips, and there’s even an entire wall dedicated to the amazing catches that customers have made over the years, aptly named “The Liars’ Wall.”

Memphis isn’t the first location for the Flying Fish. There are three Flying Fish in Texas and one in Arkansas, smack dab in the heart of fishing country. “The one in Little Rock is just a mecca,” says Wynne. “They love it, they really do.”

No word on whether anyone has started adopting Kung Fu Karate Hamster or Buck the Singing Deer yet.