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The French Powder Mystery

Since this was first published in 1930 there has been a huge revolution in crime scene investigation. Homicide detectives from that time would boggle at all the developments that have occurred, and detectives from today would be horrified by the lack of resources available in 1930. However, it appears that one thing has remained remarkably unchanged in the past 80 years.... the bureaucracy of inept managers. Sadly this is the one thing that can hinder an investigation more than the presence or absence of any technology. These comments from Inspector Richard Queen on the recently appointed Police Commissioner echo through to the present day in a disturbingly familiar way:

"The Inspector snorted. 'How long has he been in office? No, don't tell me--let me guess. Two days. . . . Well, here's what he's done to us in two days. Get your teeth into this.

'Number one--reorganized the Missing Persons Bureau. And why poor Parsons got the gate I don't know. . . . Number two--scrambled seven precinct-captains so thoroughly that they need road maps to get back to familiar territory. Why? You tell me. . . . Number three--shifted the make-up of Traffic B, C, and D. Number four--reduced a square two dozen second-grade detectives to pounding beats. Any reason? Certainly! Somebody whose grand-uncle's niece knows the Governor's fourth secretary is out for blood.. . . . Number five--raked over the Police School and changed the rules. And I know he has his eagle eye on my pet Homicide Squad. . . . '

'You'll burst a blood vessel,' said Cronin.

'You haven't heqrd anything yet' said the Inspector grimly. 'Every first-grade detective must now make out a daily report--in line of duty, mind you--a daily personal report direct to the Commissioner's office!'

'Well,' grinned Cronin, 'he's welcome to read 'em all. Half those babies can't spell homicide.'

'Read them nothing, Tim. Do you think he'd waste his time? Not by your Aunt Martha. No, sir! He sends them into my office by his shiny little secretary...."

 
The Case of the Cautious Coquette

Written by Erle Stanley Gardner in 1949, the following dedication predates some of the more horrendous outcomes of failed parole, but in many ways the underlying beliefs and his enthusiastic support of the parole system still ring true, even today. While I don't entirely believe in everything he's written this is, in my opinion at least, an example of the great lawyer at his very best. I wish I could have had an opportunity to hear him read this with all the passion and personality of which he was capable.

 

Foreword and dedication

All of my life I have fought for the underdog and tried to improve the administration of justice.

I am assuming that the readers of this book are interested in crime and in justice.

I am hoping that this foreword can call attention to one of the great injustices of our day.

When a criminal's sentence has expired he walks down the front steps of the penitentiary a free man. Theoretically he has paid his debt to society and is on his way to sin no more. Actually in far too many cases an embittred, deadly enemy of society is walking out without any restraining influence whatever, ready to start a new series of depredations.

Parole boards recognize this fact.

When a man is paroled before his sentence expires soceity has some control over him. He must report to his parole officer. He is placed in some position of gainful employment on his release, and she is supposed to remain on that job and report periodically. If he doesn't do that, he has violated his parole and can be returned ro prison.

It is, thereofore, patently obvious that even in the most depserate cases it is far better to place any prison inmate who shows any signs of rehabilitation on parole than to hold him to the last minute of his sentence and then let him vanish into our crowded civilization, subject to no restraining influence, to engage in activities over which the authorities can have no control, and about which they have no knowledge.

Therefore, parole boards, who understand these facts, try to use the power of parole which is vested in them to protect society as much as possible and at the same time give the prison inmate at least an opportunity to engage in legitimate, gainful employment when he is released.

When the parolee makes good the public never hears about the case. The public doesn't know that John Doe, who is giving them such courteous, efficient service in the filling station, is a man who made a mistake, paid his debt to sc ieity, and is now on his way up once more.

But when a parolee does commit another crime the public certainly does hear about it. Then there is a hue and cry, a clamor. The parole board is put on the grid and taken to pieces.

Undoubtedly there are many men paroled who shouldn't be paroled. For every such failure, however, there are a dozen successes.

The main point is, the public doesn't realize that virtually all of these men who have been paroled and again violate the law would have been discharged anyway within a relatively brief period.

In the face of this widespread public misunderstanding, in the face of this adverse, unfair smearing in the press, parole boards continue to exercise their best discretion, to study the cases carefully and do their duty as they see it.

Many times these parole boards have but little discretion because the prisons are filled to overflowing. With taxpayers indiffeerent to the problem, refusing to epand prison facilities, with law enforcement officers sending a constantly increasing stream o fnew inmates to prison, it is simply a mathematical necessity to let some men out in order to make way for the new men who are comin in. In some instances parole boards make costly mistakes. Human nature being what it is, human judgement being as fallible as human judgement must always be, the only wonder is that they don't make more.

By and large our parole boards are doing a good job.

So by this foreword I wish to pay tribute to a group of men who are courageously continuing to do their duty as they see it. I wish to dedicate this book to the greatest underdog of all in the field of public relations:

The Parole Board

 

 

 
FlickrSync
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FlickrSync

FlickrSync: http://www.codeplex.com/flickrsync

This is a little {tag open source} {tag utility} that lets you synchronize the pictures on your computer with {tag Flickr}. It can also be scheduled to automate the synchronization. If you’re a picture hoarder like me the setup is a bit onerous, since there isn’t much in the way of bulk setup, but once it’s done you’re set. It doesn’t yet do videos, but does promise that in a future release; you have to add a tag to any videos on Flickr so the sync skips them instead of choking on them.

It has a nice graphical interface with a number of options for embedded folders, and the ability to customize your preferences and save your configuration.
{tag website:} {tag download:}

 

 

 

 

 
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