Craig Mcintire (mugshot originally posted by Elite Daily) reportedly threatened a police officer with his penis after he was caught urinating in public
Craig McIntire, a 21-year-old student at Miami University of Ohio, was arrested over the weekend when he refused to stop“urinating in an alleyway” after a police officer caught him in the act, Elite Daily reports.
According to the Miami Student, McIntire allegedly threatened the police officer with his penis while they were en route to the police department:
Officers reported McIntire as being heavily intoxicated, unsteady on his feet and uncooperative. After being processed and charged he was taken to Butler County Jail. During the ride there he told the officer to pull over so he could slap him across the face with his penis. McIntire was charged with resisting arrest, obstructing official business and public intoxication.
This, of course, is not the first time alcohol has reportedly played a role in odd incidents.
New York City Police Sgt. Lesly Charles may have a long penis but he’s short on brains, never realizing a suspect was video recording as he threatened to ram his lengthy penis in the suspect’s mouth.
Charles also threatened to ram his pistol inside the man’s anus before telling him he had a pretty face.
Charles also told the man, who was getting harassed for parking illegally, that he didn’t mind the “hustling” as long as he paid him respect.
The suspect, who was arrested for disorderly conduct, gave the video to the New York Post, which sparked an internal investigation.
Here is a sample of his tirade.
“I have the long d–k. You don’t,” the cop bragged.
“Your pretty face — I like it very much. My d–k will go in your mouth and come out your ear. Don’t f–k with me. All right?”
After the target of his tirade insisted, “I didn’t do anything,” Charles retorted, “Listen to me. When you see me, you look the other way. Tell your boys, I don’t f–k around. All right?”
“I’ll take my gun and put it up your a– and then I’ll call your mother afterwards. You understand that?”
English: Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee attends a news conference in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata September 7, 2008. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
There is a lot of wind over West BengalChief Minister Mamata Bannerjee’s observation that Court Judgements can be bought in India.
Mamata Bannerjee may not be correct in all her policies or her impulsive actions or at times adolescent behaviour.
That does not mean whatever she says is incorrect, as in this case.
Is it not a fact way back around late eighties Justice Veeraswamy of The Supreme Court was indicted for corruption and was forced to resign?
Is it not a fact a Judge of the CBI Court in Andhra Pradesh was caught red handed accepting a Four Crore bribe for granting bail in the Obalapuram Mining Case for Janardhan Reddy and that the High Court has dismissed the bail application of the judge?
*The High Court dismissed the bail application on 17th August.The Blog was posted on 16th.The particular portion on Bail Dismissal was incorporated on the 17th.
Was it not a Calcutta High Court Judge(or Supreme Court?) who escaped impeachment for misappropriating PF money?
Was not a warrant of arrest issued against the then President of India, APJ. Abdul Kalam by a Magistrate for a consideration with out even knowing who the accused was?
Litigants always hire a Lawyer who is close to the Judge trying the case.
Is it not a fact that the immediate past Supreme Court Judge observed that the majority of the Judiciary is corrupt?
New Delhi: A petition was on Thursday filed in the Supreme Court seeking contempt action against the West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee for her remarks that judgements are delivered for money.
The petition filed by J&K Panthers’ Party founder and senior advocate Bhim Singh alleged that Mamata’s comments has the inevitable effect of “undermining” the confidence of the public in the Indian judiciary as “it tends to lower the integrity, reputation and authority” of the judicial system.
Singh, in the petition filed through counsel D K Garg, has urged the court to direct the Union Government to produce the entire record relating to the speech and utterances of Mamata said to have been made by her on August 14 a the platinum jubilee celebrations of the State Legislature.
Quoting Article 129 of the Constitution, the petition said the Chief Minister’s comments “amounts to scandalising and have lowered the authority of the judiciary as a whole.”
He said Mamata being a popular Chief Minister the people tend to take her words seriously.
The petition cited a number of apex court rulings to say that under Article 129 the Supreme Court has the power to punish for contempt of itself and under Article 143(2) it can investigate any such contempt.
PTI
The Lawyer’s behaviour in boycotting courts and executive orders concerning the Lawyers and the Court are on the increase.
In Tamil Nadu,Lawyers gave grouped themselves into two,one belonging to The DMK and the another to The AIADMK..
Whenever anything happens, the group belonging to the opposition takes out processions, boycott the Courts and often indulge in violence, including in the Courts.
The violence in the Court premises between the Lawyers and The Police in Tamil Nadu is still vivid in memory.
This has to be stopped.
It would not be a bad idea to ban the lawyers to have political affiliations as well,on the lines of the conduct for the Judges ,as some of thee Lawyers may become judges..
Story:
KOCHI: Fiat Justicia, an NGO working in the legal field, has approached the Kerala high court seeking a ban on strikes by lawyers. The strike by lawyers on July 11 and 12 led to gross miscarriage and delay of justice and is against the specific directions of the Supreme Court in the matter, the petition filed through advocate M R Hariraj said.
Lawyers in Kerala had stayed off courts on July 11 and 12 as a mark of protest against the High Education and Research Bill and alleging encroachment upon the functions of the Bar Council of India as well as the State Bar Councils by the ministry of human resources development. The decision to support the strike was adopted by the Bar Council of Kerala in a meeting of the state council and all bar associations on July 1.
According to the petition, the court must restrain lawyers from resorting to strike and impose penalty on those engaging in it. It is also alleged that the Centre, state and high court didn’t take any action to avert the strike. It resulted in adjournment of over 90% of cases and is a violation of the directions of the Supreme Court in various judgments, the NGO contends. The NGO also points out that a representation was made to the chief justice of India demanding initiation of suo motu proceedings against those who conducted the strike
The arrest , detention and subsequent release of 11 women on suspicion of prostitution has evoked strong protests.
The released women have sued for damage of Rs. One crore for wrongful detention.
By way of explanation the Commissioner Dhobe stated that the ‘Birth day party’ was a cover for prostitution.
The males were charged Rs. 3000 as entry fee while the it was free for women.
The times of India news report( 13 June 2012 page 11 Bangalore Edition) bemoans that the Free Admission for females is a marketing strategy!
I know of hotels (Five Star) fixing up entry fee for males and free entry to women for special occasions like New Year and for fixed programmes in the year.
Pray tell me why this concern?
In some cases, the courtesy is extended only to Single females.
I know a Five Star Hotel in the heart of Chennai conducts a Male Cabaret Show on fixed days and only Ladies are allowed.
This is also a marketing strategy?
For what?
The Hotel Industry is helping women to emancipate themselves?
Every one knows what happens in these parties.
If you mix with people of dubious character , you will be called as one.
How do you expect the Police to know who is a prostitute?
By visiting them personally in each case?
Circumstantial evidence, it is called.
Another grouse is that working women want to’ relax”in a bar!
Very well
Look at what happens to t women in a pub or near about?
“GURGAON: In yet another assault on a woman near a pub in Gurgaon, a 23-year-old mother was allegedly gangraped by seven men after being abducted from outside the Sahara Mall on M G Road at 2.30 am on Monday.
GURGAON: The curb on stag entry at pubs and night clubs in Gurgaon has spawned a new culture, which has served to corrupt more than cleanse. There are scores of women escorts hanging around pubs, waiting to help a ‘single’ man gain entry in return for big money. And the business is booming with police turning a blind eye.
The escorts ensure easy entry for single men who pay them anywhere between Rs 500 to Rs 5,000 depending on the services offered. They share the dance floor and even share a drink with their clients.
Again, we normally are not aware and are reluctant to admit our short comings in a relationship.
It is only when we enter into a new relationship do we find that we get the doubt that we have our own shortcomings.
So the maladjustment leaves a scar in our psyche.
To remain in a relationship trying to bear with a partner who is incompatible and cruel is also a pain.
Is this why people say ‘Marriages are made in Heaven?” ,for better or worse-substitute relationship for marriage.
If the relationship is parents/siblings, children?
You can not divorce these.
In Sanskrit there are two words to describe these relationships.
One is Sondham, the other is Bandham.
Sondham is a relationship which is not your choosing-parents,siblings and children. You are stuck with it.
Bandham is what we choose( this might be wrong as well)-wife, acquaintances-you may be able to discard them.
Here’s how most of us who are thinking about leaving our marriage imagine divorce will be like: We’ve had it with our partner (or perhaps he’s decided the same about us and casts us aside, but let’s just say we’re the ones who want out and let’s say we’re the woman because women ask for divorce two-thirds of the time). We think — finally, freedom.
Now we no longer have to feel the brunt of his anger and criticism; we can stop nagging about how he doesn’t pull his weight around the house; we won’t have to fake being in the mood when we’re not, and we get to do and eat and watch whatever we want whenever we want to.
And, we have the kids, so we don’t have to bicker anymore over whose turn it is to bathe them or whether they can have ice cream for dessert if they didn’t finish everything on their dinner plate.
Not so fast.
Maybe that was what divorce was like back in the day when moms were almost always awarded full custody and dads could “visit” their kids. But those days are rapidly disappearing, according to University of Sydney law professor Patrick Parkinson, whose new book, “Family Law and the Indissolubility of Parenthood” (Cambridge University Press, 2011), details the major shift in family law and the incredible challenges ahead.
“Many of the conflicts about family law in the Western world today derive from the breakdown of the model on which divorce reform was predicated in the late 1960s and early 1970s,” he writes. The model he discusses assumed that divorce was a clean break; husband went his way, wife went hers and all was good. “The assumption was that once the property and the children had been allocated to one household or the other, each parent was autonomous. The divorce freed him or her from being entangled with the life of the other parent, except to a limited extent,” Parkinson writes.
But rarely has that been true. Most divorcees learn relatively quickly that although we’re no longer married and living together, we still have to deal with our former spouse in their continuing role as our kids’ mom or dad. He or she still has a say, and can nix our plans to move away for a new job or a new love. Divorce is no longer the end of a relationship; it’s a “restructuring of a continuing relationship.”
Which has made some of us as miserable divorced as we were in our marriage.
“People in unhappy marriages do not look to divorce as a way to restructure the relationship with their partners. They look to divorce to end that relationships, to set them free to start a new life, perhaps to move to a new location and to form new relationships,” Parkinson says.
But, not if you have kids. As Parkinson notes, “The experience of the last forty years has shown that whereas marriage may be freely dissoluble, parenthood is not.”
And a huge reason for the battles in family courts has been the “problem” of fatherhood, he says. It used to be that dads were mostly absent; now, he notes, we can’t get rid of dads: “Separation motivates some fathers to rethink their priorities and to try to maintain their connections to children even if this means struggle and conflict. Because fathers demand a greater involvement in their children’s lives after separation, there has been increasing conflict both at a policy level and at the individual level of litigated cases.” And it’s happening globally.
This is, of course, something to celebrate — dads wanting to be with their kids. Who wouldn’t want dads to be hands-on in a shared-parenting arrangement instead of mom having sole custody? Well, a lot of people, according to Parkinson. Although national statistics are hard to come by, a 2008 study of seven states he cites in his book indicates a dramatic increase in custody filings — 44 percent between 1997 and 2006 — at the same time that divorces had decreased in the U.S. by 3 percent.
Throw into the mix all sorts of new ways of partnering — from cohabitation to same-sex civil unions — and already convoluted and outdated family laws are being stretched in ways they can no longer handle, he says.
Unfortunately, whatever legal changes have occurred so far haven’t been driven by a “philosophical shift in the meaning of divorce,” but piecemeal and too often driven by “destructive gender conflict.”
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