2 Burst results for "Mister Canfield"

"mister canfield" Discussed on Northwest Newsradio

Northwest Newsradio

03:35 min | 4 months ago

"mister canfield" Discussed on Northwest Newsradio

"Connected stay informed i'm kelly blyer and here are the top local northwest stories it's primary election night in washington and we're getting initial some numbers in in king county for council position eight teresa mesqueda has a 15 lead over sofia aragon a difference of about four and a half thousand votes in seattle incumbent tammy trellis is barely holding a two percent lead over challenger tanya wu for the district two council seat andrew louis and dan straws have safer leads in their races straws has a twenty percent lead over challenger pete canning and louis leading bob kettles by thirty three percent poroski poroski owner olga sagan trailing at just fourteen percent of the vote the top two candidates in each race will face off in november the issue of rent control caused hours of frenzied public comment let's let mister canfield talk council member shama suwan introduced a that measure would have cap rent increases at the rate of inflation someone viewed her measure as a trigger law a law local that would be put that that could put pressure on the state legislature to lift a forty two -year -old and as vacancy control it limits rent increases to inflation and it covers all the rental housing in seattle regardless of type size or building date this sets a standard and it will put real pressure on the state democrats in olympia to lift the ban on rent control suan's proposal failed by a five to two vote council president deborah warris i'm hoping that you will still work with us to address this forty two -year -old unjust law after the meeting war has issued a statement denouncing what she described as the intimidation of the council members by the crowd any more speed enforcement cameras in seattle school zones received an unexpected welcome today before a city transportation committee northwest news radio's john lobortini reports estad chief safety officer venu namani told the committee traffic cameras reduced car crashes in seattle by fifty percent and seventy percent during school hours this finding is also backed up in the federal highway administration level automated speed enforcement do reduce speeding and do reduce collisions the plan doubles the number of speed enforcement cameras school in zones from nineteen to thirty eight but no increase in cameras in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods seems many are already located there estad's francesca stefan residents are asking us to look at alternatives because of neighbors and friends who are financially disadvantaged but members of the transportation committee struggled with that thinking councilmember tammy morales the solution to be is safe and for for this people district to stop being the district where almost sixty percent of the fatalities occur the project is complicated and expensive highly unlikely even if you started today if you could actually get this expansion done by the 2024 -2025 school year changes are already on the way john lobertini northwest news radio northwest news time is is natalie malinda's says she's in the high performance homes traffic center and bellevue over lake area there's roadwork that has 148th avenue down to one lane southbound near 520 during during five a .m you district left lane on both directions of 15th avenue blocked off by a crash at 45th and there is still some light traffic and sequela to bellevue some slowdowns on 405 north 15 minutes our next was traffic at 844 como for shannon o'donnell checks our forecast brought to you by northwest crawlspace services everybody either it is going to be a warmer round of august weather as we

"mister canfield" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:00 min | 1 year ago

"mister canfield" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Death penalty case at the Supreme Court, Arizona did end runs around Supreme Court precedent, leaving a procedural maze that blocked a death row inmate's relief at every turn, leading justice Elena Kagan to compare it to the works of Kafka. Mister canfield, that bad faith or not. I think Kafka would have loved this. Cruz loses his Simmons claims on direct appeal because the Arizona courts say point blank, Simmons has never applied in Arizona. And then he loses the next time around because the Arizona court say sim is always applied in California. I mean, tells you when, as I lose, whatever that expression is, I mean, how can you run a railroad that way? Arizona ignored Supreme Court precedent set in the Simmons case in 1994, which gave defendants the right to tell juries that their ineligible to get parole if their sentence to life in prison instead of death. And then Arizona ignored a case in 2016, the lynch case in which the Supreme Court said the state had to apply Simmons. An innate on Arizona's death row is asking for a new trial because he wasn't allowed to tell the jury that he couldn't get parole. Joining me is Jordan Rubin, Bloomberg law reporter. This appeal is not about the defendant's guilt, but about his scent and tell us a little about the case and what happened during the penalty phase. Sure. So John Cruz was convicted in Arizona state court, a first degree murder for shooting Tucson police officer Patrick Harvey in 2003, but it wasn't cruise as guilt by defendants that prompted the issue at the Supreme Court. So at the sentencing phase, Cruz wanted the jury to know that he would have been ineligible for parole if he was sentenced to life instead of death. And that actually wound up being a really important issue because we know that the jury foreman actually later said that they are looking for a reason to be lenient, but Arizona didn't allow that at the time. And that was despite an earlier U.S. Supreme Court precedent from 1994 called Simmons, which said that defendants have the right to inform juries of their parole ineligibility in that situation when their future danger is an issue. Arizona just refuses, they are not following this Supreme Court case, Simmons, and then in another case, the Supreme Court says basically you have to follow Simmons. That's right. So the Simmons case happened at the Supreme Court in 1994. Cruz was prosecuted in Arizona after that. But then there was an Arizona case that went to the Supreme Court after Cruz was sentenced called lynch against Arizona in 2016 where the U.S. Supreme Court basically told Arizona you have to apply this precedent simmonds. And so Cruz had previously raised a challenge before the lich case trying to argue that he should have been able to tell the jury about his parole and eligibility status based on Simmons, then after lynch, after the use of Supreme Court told Arizona, you have to apply our precedent, Cruz tried again, but he was rejected again in state court, and that's what prompted this U.S. Supreme Court appeal this kind of ping ponging back and forth and cruises repeated attempts and repeated rejections to try and get the benefit of this U.S. Supreme Court precedent in the sentence case. So that's why justice Elena Kagan said Kafka would have loved this case. Exactly. So the way she put it, she says, Costco would have loved this because Cruz loses his Simmons claim on direct appeal in the first instance before the lynch case. And then he tries again and the reason he loses according to the state is because no, Simmons is actually always applied. It was just that lynch told Arizona that it had to then apply the law. So it wasn't what's called a significant change in the law, according to Arizona, and that's super important for this case because it all comes down to this state procedural rule, which says that on post conviction, like what Cruz was trying to raise. He can only get the benefit if there was a significant change in law. And according to Arizona, the lynch holding wasn't a significant change. What was, I thought, odd, the state was still arguing in its briefs that those cases Simmons and lynch were wrongly decided. Here's justice Kagan. And then in this case, you're still saying my lynch is wrongly decided Simmons is wrongly decided we can't really we just really hate all this stuff. It sounds like your thumb and your nose at us. What did Arizona say about that? So Arizona takes this sort of hyper technical reading. They're saying it's just a state issue that in the first instance, it shouldn't even get to the U.S. Supreme Court because it's a state court dealing with the state procedural rule. And so there is this kind of threshold issue at the U.S. Supreme Court of whether the justices can even really take a look at this because it's a state issue. And so there's this initial argument of whether we're even getting into the territory of dealing with the type of federal issue that the U.S. Supreme Court can grapple with. And so that's one of Arizona's arguments that the U.S. Supreme Court really shouldn't even be getting involved. That's part of it. Another part is, according to this they procedural rule, they're saying it wasn't a significant change in law, despite how much that might seem to fly in the face of common sense as justice Kagan was pointing out during the argument. They're saying it's not a significant change. It's just now an application of the law. And so that's what brings up this situation where Kagan is pointing out that Cruz is blocked in this procedural maze, no matter in which direction he turns. Coming up next, I'll continue this conversation with Bloomberg law reporter Jordan Rubin and we'll talk about how the Supreme Court may come out in this case. I'm June grass when you're listening to Bloomberg

Arizona Simmons Supreme Court Cruz Kafka Mister canfield justice Kagan Arizona court lynch Jordan Rubin John Cruz Arizona state court Patrick Harvey Bloomberg Tucson simmonds California Costco Kagan