Tragic Mistakes in the Atlanta Courthouse

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the iron horse

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Why was this 200 lb plus six foot guy being escorted into
the court by a much smaller female deputy? (only one
deputy to guard this guy)

He had already tried to smuggle weapons into the courthouse.

The crimes he is commited are horrendous.

The warning signs were all over the this, yet nothing
was done.

This should not have happened.
 
reply

Hi!

I thought a lot of vehicles now have GPS tracking............perhaps not.

carol
wizard2c
:|
 
I live in Atlanta, and my mom had jury duty a few months ago. Her case was with Judge Barnes, and she said he was such a nice man. I'm really sad for his family and for the families of the deputy sheriff and court recorder who were killed.:( It was a little freaky earlier today, they were locking down the schools and everything. I didn't have school and was home alone with my younger brother, and I was being sort of paranoid and locking all the doors.:huh:

I too wonder why a female deputy was alone with a 200+ pound man, 6'1, who was on trial for sexual assault. I watched the press conference with the DA, and he defended that saying he believed that women were capable of everything men were. I'm all feminist and everything, but even I know that when it comes to brute force, we're not the best at it.

Of course the only one really to blame is this mad asshole, I just hope they consider security measures more in the future....
 
and may they never be forgotten:

[q]A Look at the Shooting Victims in Ga.


By The Associated Press

Brief profiles of the four people shot and killed in Georgia:



Rowland Barnes

Superior Court Judge Rowland Barnes could laugh at himself.

The 64-year-old would appear in skits at the Atlanta Bar Association's annual charity fund-raiser — sometimes wearing only his underwear.

"How many judges would do that? He could laugh at himself better than anybody," defense attorney Don Samuel said.

Barnes, of College Park, Ga., was also an adjunct professor at Emory University School of Law in Atlanta, where he earned a degree in 1972.

He maintained ties with Lebanon Valley College in Annville, Pa., where he received an economics degree in 1962 and was a backup quarterback on the school's football team. He recently helped raise money for a memorial to a teammate who suffered a fatal injury during a game in 1961.

Named to the Superior Court bench in 1998, Barnes previously worked as a part-time Fulton County magistrate and a city court judge in Hapeville and Fairburn.

His wife, Claudia, is a judicial assistant for another judge and was working in the courthouse when her husband was killed.

Barnes is survived by two daughters and four stepchildren.

Julie Brandau

Court reporter Julie Brandau was the type of person everyone wanted to work with.

She often brought homemade cookies, brownies and other sweets to the courthouse for colleagues and jurors serving in trials that Barnes presided over.

Brandau, 46, of Snellville, Ga., had been Barnes' court reporter for about 25 years. Her baking was featured in a 2002 Atlanta Journal-Constitution article.

"Every day of every trial, she creates something special for our jurors," the judge said in the article. "They have dined on everything from peach bread to the best oatmeal cookies, and on every concoction in between. Sometimes she invents a recipe and sometimes she doesn't, but she has never ceased to please the crowd."

In the article, Brandau was quoted as saying: "I have the privilege of working for Fulton County Superior Court Judge Rowland W. Barnes as his court reporter. He is always in my corner.

"There is never a dull moment with my job. I have heard it all," she added.



Brandau was born in Moncks Corner, S.C. She is survived by an 18-year-old daughter who is a freshman at Auburn University in Alabama.

Hoyt Teasley

Hoyt Teasley was known as a protector.

People recalled that when he was young, he once took off on his bike to help find a missing neighborhood girl.

The 44-year-old father was also protective of his two children.

"I think of him with those two children," former Fulton County Sheriff Jackie Barrett said at the hospital where Teasley was pronounced dead.

Teasley was trying to protect others when he was shot during his attempt to apprehend the gunman outside the courthouse.

David Wilhelm

David Wilhelm had been posted throughout the South during his nearly 18-year career with the federal government.

He had been stationed in South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia and had become assistant special agent-in-charge in Atlanta in November with the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, formerly the U.S. Customs Service.

"His death is a loss for the entire law enforcement community in Atlanta and around the country," said Russ Knocke, director of public affairs for the bureau. "Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family, friends and co-workers."

Wilhelm's brother is an agent with the Atlanta bureau, said a spokeswoman.

Wilhelm, 40, is survived by his wife.

[/q]
 
On the Today show this morning she talked about how she read to him from The Bible and A Purpose Driven Life.

Such a tragic waste that he made the choices he made to take four lives

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- The suspect in four Atlanta killings told the woman he held hostage for about seven hours that he thought she was an "angel sent from God," she said Sunday night.

The woman, Ashley Smith, told reporters that she spoke of religion and family -- including her 5-year-old daughter -- in a bid to win the sympathy of Brian Nichols, the 33-year-old suspect.

Nichols, meanwhile, could appear in court as soon as Monday, the U.S. Attorney's Office for northern Georgia said.

Authorities launched a wide-ranging manhunt for Nichols, a defendant in a rape trial, after he allegedly killed a judge, a sheriff's deputy and court reporter before escaping from a courthouse in downtown Atlanta about 9 a.m. Friday.

After 2 a.m. Saturday, Nichols forced his way into Smith's apartment in suburban Gwinnett County, tied her up and threatened her life, Smith said.

He drove to the apartment complex in a truck he stole from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent David Wilhelm after shooting Wilhelm to death in the Buckhead area of Atlanta, according to police.

Smith said Nichols eventually unbound her hands and feet.

"I basically just talked to him and tried to gain his trust," said Smith, who was widowed four years ago and had lived in the apartment for only two days.

Smith said she asked Nichols why he chose her and that apartment complex.

"He said he thought I was an angel sent from God," she said.

Smith said Nichols allowed her to leave to visit her daughter and that she dialed 911 about 9:50 a.m., law enforcement sources said.

As Smith was leaving, she said Nichols asked her: "'Is there anything I can do while you're gone, like hang your curtains or something?'"

"He just wanted some normalness to his life," she said.
 
This is just completely senseless. This guy was on trial for rape, shoots four people, and then gives himself up. So the guy winds up where he was before but with 4 additional crimes and facing life in prison if not the death penalty (don't know if Georgia has it). I'm frankly surprised that he didn't just shoot himself.

Crazy stuff going down in the US (this plus the shooting in Wisconsin). I'm rather glad that I'm not living over there anymore!
 
karls77 said:
This is just completely senseless. This guy was on trial for rape, shoots four people, and then gives himself up. So the guy winds up where he was before but with 4 additional crimes and facing life in prison if not the death penalty (don't know if Georgia has it). I'm frankly surprised that he didn't just shoot himself.



Senseless indeed, probably wouldn't have served that much time for the rape. :tsk:


I saw some interviews with the woman last night, I believe he was begging her to shoot him. I was surprised he didn't try to put himself in the position of making the police shoot him. :slant:


(Yes, GA has the death penalty...)
 
The interviews with the woman were pretty interesting on MSNBC/CNN. I just hope this guy comes to his senses, as they suggested that he had.
 
Ha, now I'm actually kinda glad my redneck state has the death penalty...bastard...:madspit:

They were looking for him ON MY STREET...

karls77...didn't some guy go on a stabbing spree in the UK a few months ago...sorry, but I hate it when people from other countries pretend to be so shocked at all the terrible crimes here, as if their countries are just crime-free.:huh:
 
According to Ann I guess it's all the "feminists'" fault.

I thought it was ultimately Nichols' fault :hmm:

FREEZE! I JUST HAD MY NAILS DONE!

Wed Mar 16, 7:58 PM ET


By Ann Coulter

How many people have to die before the country stops humoring feminists? Last week, a defendant in a rape case, Brian Nichols, wrested a gun from a female deputy in an Atlanta courthouse and went on a murderous rampage. Liberals have proffered every possible explanation for this breakdown in security except the giant elephant in the room -- who undoubtedly has an eating disorder and would appreciate a little support vis-a-vis her negative body image.:eyebrow:


The New York Times said the problem was not enough government spending on courthouse security ("Budgets Can Affect Safety Inside Many Courthouses"). Yes, it was tax-cuts-for-the-rich that somehow enabled a 200-pound former linebacker to take a gun from a 5-foot-tall grandmother.

Atlanta court officials dispensed with any spending issues the next time Nichols entered the courtroom when he was escorted by 17 guards and two police helicopters. He looked like P. Diddy showing up for a casual dinner party.

I think I have an idea that would save money and lives: Have large men escort violent criminals. Admittedly, this approach would risk another wave of nausea and vomiting by female professors at Harvard. But there are also advantages to not pretending women are as strong as men, such as fewer dead people. Even a female math professor at Harvard should be able to run the numbers on this one.

Of course, it's suspiciously difficult to find any hard data about the performance of female cops. Not as hard as finding the study showing New Jersey state troopers aren't racist, but still pretty hard to find.

Mostly what you find on Lexis-Nexis are news stories quoting police chiefs who have been browbeaten into submission, all uttering the identical mantra after every public safety disaster involving a girl cop. It seems that female officers compensate for a lack of strength with "other" abilities, such as cooperation, empathy and intuition.

There are lots of passing references to "studies" of uncertain provenance, but which always sound uncannily like a press release from the Feminist Majority Foundation. (Or maybe it was The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, which recently released a study claiming that despite Memogate, "Fahrenheit 911," the Richard Clarke show and the jihad against the Swift Boat Veterans, the press is being soft on Bush.)

The anonymous "studies" about female officers invariably demonstrate that women make excellent cops -- even better cops than men! One such study cited an episode of "She's the Sheriff," starring Suzanne Somers.

A 1993 news article in the Los Angeles Times, for example, referred to a "study" -- cited by an ACLU attorney -- allegedly proving that "female officers are more effective at making arrests without employing force because they are better at de-escalating confrontations with suspects." No, you can't see the study or have the name of the organization that performed it, and why would you ask?

There are roughly 118 million men in this country who would take exception to that notion. I wonder if women officers "de-escalate" by mentioning how much more money their last suspect made.

These aren't unascertainable facts, like Pinch Sulzberger's SAT scores. The U.S. Department of Justice (news - web sites) regularly performs comprehensive surveys of state and local law enforcement agencies, collected in volumes called "Law Enforcement Management and Administrative Statistics."

The inestimable economist John Lott has looked at the actual data. (And I'll give you the citation! John R. Lott Jr., "Does a Helping Hand Put Others at Risk? Affirmative Action, Police Departments and Crime," Economic Inquiry, April 1, 2000.)

It turns out that, far from "de-escalating force" through their superior listening skills, female law enforcement officers vastly are more likely to shoot civilians than their male counterparts. (Especially when perps won't reveal where they bought a particularly darling pair of shoes.)

Unable to use intermediate force, like a bop on the nose, female officers quickly go to fatal force. According to Lott's analysis, each 1 percent increase in the number of white female officers in a police force increases the number of shootings of civilians by 2.7 percent.

Adding males to a police force decreases the number of civilians accidentally shot by police. Adding black males decreases civilian shootings by police even more. By contrast, adding white female officers increases accidental shootings. (And for my Handgun Control Inc. readers: Private citizens are much less likely to accidentally shoot someone than are the police, presumably because they do not have to approach the suspect and make an arrest.)

In addition to accidentally shooting people, female law enforcement officers are also more likely to be assaulted than male officers -- as the whole country saw in Atlanta last week. Lott says: "Increasing the number of female officers by 1 percentage point appears to increase the number of assaults on police by 15 percent to 19 percent."

In addition to the obvious explanations for why female cops are more likely to be assaulted and to accidentally shoot people -- such as that our society encourages girls to play with dolls -- there is also the fact that women are smaller and weaker than men.


In a study of public safety officers -- not even the general population -- female officers were found to have 32 percent to 56 percent less upper body strength and 18 percent to 45 percent less lower body strength than male officers -- although their outfits were 43 percent more coordinated. (Here's the cite! Frank J. Landy, "Alternatives to Chronological Age in Determining Standards of Suitability for Public Safety Jobs," Technical Report, Vol. 1, Jan. 31, 1992.)

Another study I've devised involves asking a woman to open a jar of pickles. :rolleyes:

There is also the telling fact that feminists demand that strength tests be watered down so that women can pass them. Feminists simultaneously demand that no one suggest women are not as strong as men and then turn around and demand that all the strength tests be changed. It's one thing to waste everyone's time by allowing women to try out for police and fire departments under the same tests given to men. It's quite another to demand that the tests be brawned-down so no one ever has to tell female Harvard professors that women aren't as strong as men.

Acknowledging reality wouldn't be all bad for women. For one thing, they won't have to confront violent felons on methamphetamine. So that's good. Also, while a sane world would not employ 5-foot-tall grandmothers as law enforcement officers, a sane world would also not give full body-cavity searches to 5-foot-tall grandmothers at airports.
 
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*tries to distill valid discussion from Coulter's inflamatory writing style*


Two issues to discuss:

1. Should there be minimum physical requirements (height, weight, strength, whatever) for law enforcement officials?

2. If such studies are valid, how do you address the studies that show that for "each 1 percent increase in the number of white female officers in a police force increases the number of shootings of civilians by 2.7 percent"?
 
"Feminists simultaneously demand that no one suggest women are not as strong as men and then turn around and demand that all the strength tests be changed. It's one thing to waste everyone's time by allowing women to try out for police and fire departments under the same tests given to men. It's quite another to demand that the tests be brawned-down so no one ever has to tell female Harvard professors that women aren't as strong as men."


I think she has a lot of courage to write what she thinks.
 
Yes security guards should be able to pass certain physical requirements. They have a physically demanding job and need to be able to do certain things. For example they may need to be able to run a mile, subdue an attacker, etc. But these things aren't qualified by sex or even size. I know small men and women who were very trained in matial arts and could easily subdue an attacker twice their size.

Yes there needs to be a set of standards. This may eliminate some women, but it will also eliminate some fat ass men.
 
"Yes there needs to be a set of standards. This may eliminate some women, but it will also eliminate some fat ass men."


I agree.

I also think think that ther are some physical, mental, and spiritual differences between males and females.

We are, I think, different.

This difference, I believe, is something God created.

Our differences do make one superior or inferior, but equal to balance and compliment each other.

I don't understand this feud.

Did I say that right?
 
I agree, it has nothing to do w/ male/female

Some of the police officers in my town are so out of shape I think I could possibly outrun them and subdue someone better than they could, and I'm not in perfect shape myself.

I know Ann Coulter is purposefully inflammatory, but it makes me a little bit ill and angry to see a woman say things the way she did here.

It sure seems to me she's taking the onus off of Nichols - I mean come on, "how many more people have to die"
 
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