November 25, 2011

SandBox Comments: UK Telegraph "Criminals and cyber bullies to be banned from the web"

Just one more thing above and beyond the United States that law enforcement and justice get right over in the UK: 

"It calls for police and courts to make more use of existing “cyber sanctions” to restrict access to the social networks and instant messaging services in cases of hacking, fraud and online bullying. Sex offenders and those convicted of harrassment or anti-social behaviour also face more internet restrictions under the new strategy.

Similar orders have been imposed on those charged with involvement in a series of cyber attacks by the Anonymous and LulzSec groups earlier this year, while they await trial.

Cyber sanctions were also used following the riots this summer. Two teenagers in Dundee were banned from the web for inciting riots via Facebook.

Officials are now looking into whether "cyber tag" technology could be used to monitor offenders and report to authorities if break their bail or sentence conditions by using the internet.

"The Ministry of Justice and the Home Office will consider and scope the development of a new way of enforcing these orders, using ‘cyber-tags’ which are triggered by the offender breaching the conditions that have been put on their internet use, and which will automatically inform the police or probation service," cyber security strategy said...."
(Emma Barnett)

(Read more on how they're going to accomplish this without harm to free speech?  Click title.) 

SandBox Comments: Washington Post " What to say to ‘Thank you for your service’"

"Emerging into the sunlight, I’m leaving for work in Winchester, Va., in my Army combat uniform.

Coffee sloshes from my cup onto my bag; my patrol cap is in my hand, not on my head as it should be.

I’m a wreck. A woman I don’t know, a bit older than me, smiles. She looks as if she’s about to say, “Thank you for your service,” to which I’m never sure how to respond.

Six months ago I was in Baghdad, serving as operations chief of the Gulf Region District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Our unit oversees infrastructure rebuilding — a beautiful and expensive endeavor managing construction of schools, roads, hospitals and other big-ticket items. I was someone else six months ago, in charge of force protection, intelligence, security and combat movement across Iraq.

Then my older son, Nicholas, a charismatic and passionate 21-year-old in his third year of college, shot himself during my last week in theater.

Our unit suffered five fatalities during our year in Iraq. One individual was killed by a sniper’s single shot to the head. One person, also named Nicholas, was lost to a vehicle-borne suicide bomb. During my tenure, I learned how to receive such calls and to inform our commander. I had to be direct and calm and succinctly present the information he needed. Remaining professional during these events was difficult, especially because I was out of practice...."
(Jodi Jones Smith)

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Craig Daily Press "Army Ranger and MCHS grad back in Craig for holiday"

"Picture the wounded soldier returning to the place of his youth.

The familiar landmarks — schools, parks, streets — are dusted with snow. Thanksgiving is coming, and holiday lights twinkle in the storefronts.

Maybe he thinks of boyhood games he played here. Maybe he thinks of friends left behind.

He spends the holiday with family, who rejoice that their son, nephew and grandson has come home alive.

These images could easily belong to the realm of Hollywood and black-and-white celluloid film.

But for Casey Greene — a 2007 Moffat County High School graduate and recuperating U.S. Army Ranger specialist — this isn’t fantasy.

This homecoming is real...."
(Bridget Manley)

(Read more?  Click title.  Comment to discuss)

SandBox Comments: Grand Junction Daily Sentinel "Gessler proposing campaign finance changes"

Again, thank you to Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler for continuing to keep his word on his campaign promises.

Coloradans want election, campaign and voter reform in Colorado.  For far too long, cronyism has played a significant role in our election processes.

Thank you for staying the course.  Keep up the great work.

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Aspen Times/Maurice Emmer and Harvie Branscomb "Why insist on secrecy but dismiss anonymity?"

"We both write repeatedly about the importance of election transparency. We present facts. We don't make things up. Stories about revealing ballot “secrets” often sound like scary tales told to children. They are designed to frighten, not inform. Jack Johnson's scary story recently published in another paper might trigger your instinct to fight, but that's what fiction and political propaganda are intended to do.

Johnson's column, and recent announcements by the city of Aspen, misconstrue election and open-records law as well as misrepresent the Marks v. Koch case and the Court of Appeals' unanimous opinion in favor of ballot transparency. As untrue assertions have become Aspen's norm, here we try to separate fact from fiction...."
(Maurice Emmer and Harvie Branscomb)

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

November 23, 2011

SandBox Comments: Aspen Daily News "Defendant in cocaine case to remain jailed"

"An Eastern European man will remain in jail despite the suppression of key evidence in his cocaine case, a judge said Monday.

Andrian Arapu, 25, of Moldova, has been in jail since his arrest in April on a felony count of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.

Earlier this month, Judge Gail Nichols of Pitkin County District Court ruled that evidence found in his former residence at the Copper Horse Apartments on Main Street cannot be used.

When he was originally detained by immigration agents for being in the country on an expired visa, Arapu gave a police detective permission to stay behind to collect the defendant’s personal effects and to lock up.

But Nichols ruled that the detective exceeded the scope of that authority when he remained in the residence, which other officers allegedly entered without Arapu’s permission, and eventually found nearly 1.5 ounces of cocaine, a scale, baggies and a loaded handgun.

After the ruling, Chief Deputy District Attorney Arnold Mordkin, who told Nichols that he cannot prosecute Arapu without that evidence, filed a notice of appeal with the Colorado Supreme Court. That automatically stays all proceedings in the case, including a potential motion to dismiss.

“I don’t have any choice. I have to wait” for the state Supreme Court’s decision, Nichols said...."
(Chad Abraham)

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Aspen Daily News "DA staff to get bonuses, not salary increase"

"District Attorney Martin Beeson has dropped a 2 percent staff salary increase from his 2012 budget, in response to a request from the Pitkin County commissioners.

He is instead budgeting for a 1.5 percent end-of-year bonus, if economic conditions allow. The county is on track to give a similar bonus to its own employees next year, lifting a salary freeze that has been in place since 2009.

Beeson’s request for a staff raise was met with varying responses in all three of the counties his office serves — Garfield, Pitkin and Rio Blanco.

Garfield County commissioners had OK’d the 2 percent salary increase. Rio Blanco had opposed a raise or any bonus, because it is poised to continue a salary freeze for its employees through 2012.

“The Rio Blanco County commissioners have declined to participate in this plan as they do not believe they can do so in good conscience while denying their own employees a compensation increase of any sort,” Beeson wrote last week in an updated budget memorandum to the Pitkin County commissioners.

The tri-county DA’s budget has to be approved by all three counties that fund its operations.

“That put the DA’s office in something of an awkward position,” Pitkin County Manager Jon Peacock told the commissioners Tuesday.

Beeson is moving forward with the bonuses, using funding from Garfield and Pitkin counties only. He has pledged to pay for Rio Blanco’s portion — $2,100 — out of his own salary...."
(Andrew Travers)

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Aspen Times/Letter to the Editor "Questions still unanswered"

Note from SandBox:   Comment ability is not blocked on this post.  However, comments will remain closely monitored on all Lofgren news.  Please recall all that SandBox has ever stated on Lofgren as to the reasons why.  Remember, the closure for the family and the respect all citizens we know of have shown by respectfully honoring the family at all times in their comments will be required if you wish to post here. Please also remember that with the preventable failure of prosecution to try these cases; SandBox now errs on the side of the family.  All the answers they need should be brought forward and in part, those answers cannot come unless citizenry requires them.  Nowhere, in the present culture of  the 9th Judicial District, is there freedom for the folks to speak up freely.  SandBox is not the depository for avatars trying to make up that deficit.  It is simply one of three regional blogs that believe the only current means your need to be heard has is through alternative media.  Maybe, just maybe, law enforcement and prosecutors in the 9th and in other Colorado districts where the citizenry has the same problem will finally set up safe, neutral means for the folks to express all of their concerns and knowledge.  Until then, out of the three we know of; SandBox Commentators moderates all incoming on these very sensitive issues.  Please stick to the areas in Lofgren that you control.  Which are:   the demand for accountability of what went wrong on Popcorn Lane that has forever shattered the hearts of surviving family, the preventable failure(s) that were the criminal allegations from the moment they were contemplated to be filed, and the power your vote holds in the politics of all elected officials involved from the day the Lofgrens were lost.

(See related stories and comments here and here)

"Why was this home so lethal? Why was there no carbon monoxide detector in the home as required by law? Why did this home have a certificate of occupancy? Who is responsible for their deaths? Three years later, there are many unanswered questions. We had hoped that the criminal trials would give us some insight into what happened. We had hoped to hear the evidence that the grand jury heard, evidence that compelled them to issue indictments.

We want to understand the seeming cascade of failures that led to this tragedy. We want to understand how to prevent this from happening again. We want to educate people about carbon monoxide poisoning, and we want to influence legislation to make carbon monoxide detectors as ubiquitous as smoke detectors...."
(Christina Fedolfi, on behalf of the extended family of Caroline, Parker, Owen and Sophie Lofgren)

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

November 19, 2011

SandBox Comments: Commentary Magazine/Contentions "Optimistic or Pessimistic About America: R.R. Reno"

"Mark me down as an American optimist. True, we face many challenges: the fiscal crisis of the modern welfare state, the end of American military super-hegemony, an elite culture bent on dismantling the Judeo-Christian moral consensus. Add our present economic woes, which seem intractable, and only a naif can but conclude that we face real problems posing real threats. Nonetheless, I remain convinced that America will remain a vital, attractive, and immensely powerful nation in the coming decades...."
(R.R. Reno)

(Read more?  Click title.  Comment to discuss)

SandBox Comments: Scott Tipton "Tipton Statement on Failure of Balanced Budget Amendment "

"Tipton Statement on Failure of Balanced Budget Amendment

Washington, D.C. –Congressman Scott Tipton (R-CO) issued the following statement after the House failed to pass H.J. Res. 2: The Balanced Budget Amendment.

“We saw 261 Republicans and Democrats unite today to say ‘enough is enough’ to runaway spending, and I proudly joined in support of the Balanced Budget Amendment, which unfortunately fell short of the 2/3 majority needed to pass. Hearing cheers and applause on the floor at its failing says a lot—sadly.

“However, while this common sense solution failed today, there is still a significant opportunity to seriously address our country’s spending problem. We must meet our existing obligations, fulfilling the promise to our seniors and military, while fulfilling our obligation to ensure that our children and grandchildren have the opportunity to achieve the American dream....”
(Scott Tipton)

(Comment to start discussion)
"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Aspen Times "Marks to again view Pitkin County ballots"

"Marks, the Aspen resident embroiled in a legal battle with the city of Aspen and three other Colorado counties over the right to view election ballots, said her latest request to Pitkin County is intended to facilitate the establishment of policies and procedures for complying with such requests. Being able to view ballots cast in an election is a matter of election transparency, according to Marks...."
(Janet Urquhart)

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Aspen Times "Paul Nitze: Silence and stone-throwers"

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November 18, 2011

SandBox Comments: Aspen Daily News "Can we keep a secret?"

Poor Jeremy Madden.  That glaring typo in today's Aspen Daily News that put his name on what is really an opinion column from Jack Johnson...ouch.  So glad to see the Daily fixed that online by late morning.

SandBox is going to try a new form of posting some commentary.  Inserting annointed text commentary (in this case from Marks) into the actual article or column.  Since one can never really tell what Jack is going to deem respond to as a "All responsible and serious queries and emails"; this just might get a broader viewpoint out into the public eye.

Let Nanny know how you like it.  

"Election law is complex. It is also important. Marks v. Koch seeks to overturn a century’s worth of election law and should be reviewed by the Colorado Supreme Court." 

[The election law has not been overturned  in any way. The Open Records Law, in place for over 40 years, which allows ballots to be public records has merely been upheld. It is modeled after the same open records law that permitted the Bush/Gore ballots or the Coleman/Franken ballots to be reviewed by the press and public to reach their own conclusions.] 

No elected or appointed official in Aspen invented Colorado election law or the secret ballot. They are only charged — for our benefit and upon our behalf — with interpreting and implementing it. Average citizens, the press and even loud-mouthed local public policy columnists all very much take the secret ballot for granted. We have forgotten, if we ever knew, how hard it was to win the right to such because much of the intellectual thought regarding election law and the right to a secret ballot was settled in the 19th century.

[Actually “secret” ballots were allowed until 1947, and even the 20’s Colorado ballots were traceable if an official peeked at the concealed ballot number on the voted ballot. “Secrets” to be shared with and by election officials are subject to abuse. So, in 1947, the constitution was changed to guarantee that ballots are anonymous and the officials could obtain no “secrets” about how we vote. The only “secret” is your privacy  in the act of voting the anonymous ballot.]

In a nutshell, ballots are cast and then counted. Results are determined and announced. Some people celebrate and drink beer and cheer the results, others not so much. Later, audits are performed and tests for accuracy are conducted.

[ The first such audit in Aspen was in 2011. Counties have had years of post-election audits.]

This all occurs in public and at specific times and places determined by law.

[starting in 2011 in Aspen.]

Then there exists a “contest” period during which the results may be challenged. Anyone can request a recount and have one conducted. But when recounts are conducted they occur under very strict procedures and are overseen by a judge.

[No, the recount is performed by the election commission and local citizen election officials No court is involved.  Johnson has confused a “recount” with an “election contest.”]

After the contest period is over ballots are sealed in the ballot box for six months and then destroyed.

[No, the ballots are sealed on election night and the ballot box entered for various needed functions, including auditing, canvassing, recounts, election complaints, etc.  In municipal elections ONLY,  ballots  are destroyed 6 months after election day, not 6 months after the contest period ends, as Johnson incorrectly states. In county, state and federal elections the ballots are preserved for at least 25 months, and may  be maintained for years. ]

However, during these six months a judge can order a recount if sufficient proof of fraud can be shown.

[There are other criteria for a contest other than fraud.]

If one has evidence of fraud or corruption it should be produced, shown to the judge and if a recount is ordered it will be under court supervision.

[ No, recounts are NOT under court supervision. Johnson is referring to an election contest—a very different process.] 

That’s what the law prescribes and it does so to protect our right to both verify the outcome of an election while also protecting our right to a secret ballot.

[Johnson assumes that the public can verify any election by asking for a recount and/or mounting a court  supervised election contest. Both are expensive, barring most candidates or public from such an activity.  But, in county, state and federal elections in Colorado, ONLY the LOSING candidate may request a recount, thereby making “verification”  through a “recount”  off limits to all but a few well -funded losing candidates.. Even then, Colorado recount laws require recounting on the same machines, which may just replicate the error in the first count, and no real verification is possible.   Election contests are available only to those who can prove that the outcome of the election would change if the court considers the evidence. That is hardly a way to verify any election, even if the applicant had the scores of thousands of dollars to mount an election contest.  Jack is completely off base in his claim. ]

Secret ballots were an improvement in election law history because they made vote buying all but impossible and made it easier to vote one’s conscience without influence from others.

[Mail-in ballots make vote buying and selling quite easy and leave no trace of the nefarious activity.] 

There are other reasons but secret ballots, recounts overseen by courts,

[recounts are not overseen by the courts] 

employing uniform legal procedures and the eventual destruction of ballots are progressive improvements to our voting system and should be respected and strongly defended.

[Modern election law does not require destruction of those records. Aspen’s law does, and it should be changed. There is no reason to destroy anonymous ballots. Prior to 1947 there indeed was a reason to destroy marked, identifiable ballots. I would hope that the Florida 2000 ballots have been archived and well preserved as an important piece of history.]

Why not turn over the ballots for “public” inspection as Marks v. Koch seeks? There are at least two types of secrecy in voting — one is that of voting in private so that no one else knows how we are voting while we are actually voting. Privacy screens and sleeves, no identifying marks traceable to an individual voter, etc., preserve this type of secrecy. But there is another aspect of secrecy more difficult to explain but equally important.

[yes, it’s hard to explain because Johnson has it wrong. ]

Procedures for counting and the methods for the examination of ballots after they’ve been cast, counted, audited, certified — these were put into law to protect this sort of secrecy.

[ No, the counting auditing and certification process is required to be in public---NOT in private. That is why we have citizen watchers and allow the press to observe the counting process.  Anonymous ballots create no need for secret counting of votes!] 

Eventual destruction of said ballots ensures secrecy forever.

[anonymous ballots do not need to be secret or destroyed. County, state and federal ballots are NOT required to be destroyed.]

The main issue in Marks v. Koch is whether or not ballots and their images (from 2009) are subject to Colorado’s sunshine laws. If so, they should be available for public inspection. District Judge Boyd ruled that ballots were constitutionally exempt from the sunshine laws and held there is no difference between a ballot and a copy of that ballot. The Colorado Court of Appeals recently ruled in effect that copies aren’t originals and since the constitution says nothing about copies the city of Aspen should make the copies available.

[ No, the Court reaffirmed that BOTH the paper ballots and their copies are both public records available to anyone who asks. ]

It is certainly true that copies aren’t originals or we wouldn’t call them copies, would we? So the letter of the law is being upheld but the spirit is completely and, wrongly, being ignored. Would the court rule your original tax return is secret but if someone in the IRS made a copy it could be published in the paper? If a copy were made of your medical records could they be read aloud over the airwaves? Of course not. This is sophistry.

[Johnson’s analogy fails in  that tax returns and medical records ARE confidential documents, for which copies are not materially different, and also confidential.  Ballots are NOT confidential records, so their copies are not confidential either. ]

The relevant section of the constitution was written in 1889 or something and never amended. So this flap rests on the notion of whether copies are originals and we have two conflicting opinions.  Of course the Supreme Court should hear it. The outcome is too important not to. Why? For one reason because the reactionary and (nosey) forces wishing to look at the image of your 2009 ballot are now doubling down and want to see your actual ballot from 2011.

Fortunately the city has denied this effort and proactively seeks a ruling from the District Court. I voted in that election and Elizabeth Milias and Harvie Branscomb seek to review ballots similar to mine — perhaps even my exact ballot for all I know.

[No one examining the ballots will ever know Jack’s ballot for anyone else’s anonymous ballot. ]

For the reasons I briefly outlined above, I believe I would suffer harm from their inspection of any ballots and most definitely from inspection of mine.

[What possible harm could that be for the inspection of ballots which cannot be traced to a voter?]

No one should be allowed to take the ballots home and come up with their own count over a box of wine while watching American Idol.

 [Why not? We can take other public records home and review them and even make false claims about them if we want.  Others can check our credibility.  By all means, we should be allowed to create our own accurate or inaccurate re-tabulations from COPIES, of course.  That is the American way. Would Johnson have blocked the Washington Post from recounting the Bush/Gore ballots?  Sounds like it.] 

I want the city to vigorously defend my right to a secret ballot as outlined in the state constitution. I ask the court to uphold my right to a secret ballot. The desire to personally count the ballots does not trump my right to a secret ballot.

[there is no need to have these rights compete to trump each other. Rights to an anonymous ballot in fact facilitate the right to have anyone count the ballots. ]

See how great this kind of chat posting is!!  The Bee's Knees!!

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Aspen Daily News "Local defendant reaches plea deal in DEA cocaine trafficking case"

And then there were two.


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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Aspen Daily News "Final cost of monoxide defense for county, city nearly $260,000"

"....Defense attorney Gerry Goldstein handled the case of Brian Pawl, another once-accused inspector, for free, Ely said. The misdemeanor reckless endangerment charges against him were dropped in January, also for statute-of-limitation reasons.

Hutt said after the felony dismissal that he had charged a reduced rate of $350 an hour; he also said the Boyd’s dismissing of the charges likely saved the city and the county at least $200,000 for additional attorney and expert time.

Beeson said his office has not formulated the expense involved in both convening the grand jury and its nearly year-long investigation into the Lofgrens’ deaths. Pitkin County pays a share of the budget for Beeson’s office, along with Garfield and Rio Blanco counties.

He said, though, that money does not factor into decisions to prosecute.

“When seeking justice, we do not consider cost, for it is not the cost of the case that determines whether or not a crime has been committed. It is the evidence,” Beeson said in an email. “The tragedy is not the cost and effort put into this case. The tragedy is that an entire family died unnecessarily. Let us not forget that.”

That evidence led to a prosecution that was deemed “unprecedented” in American law by a friend-of-the-court brief filed by the city and the county, along with the International Code Council and the Colorado Municipal League. The brief was filed in support of a motion to dismiss by Hutt that cited immunity usually granted to public employees. The only similar case the defense could find arose in the 1920s and was dismissed, Hutt wrote.

The day before the criminal charges were dropped against Peltonen and Brown, a federal judge dismissed the civil lawsuit filed by Lofgren relatives against Pitkin County, Peltonen and Pawl. The civil case against Brown and several other contractors who worked on the residence before the tragedy, along with the owner of the home, is proceeding in Denver District Court....."
(Chad Abraham)

See the related Lofgren story D.A. Beeson is referring to here.

Note from SandBox: 
Previous posts and commentary on the Lofgren cases, from avatars all over the state including all the commentary done on the Aspen Times and Glenwood Springs Post Independent since the tragic loss and in the case of SandBox's news summary blog over the past 16 months of our existence; have contained a great deal of information into the public's mindset about these cases. 

The range of debate ran from the construction industry ramifications to political concerns to concerns over the case handling itself. 

Never was there ever, in our memory, any comment made that had anything but concern over how the families were affected.  In fact, the general public and reporters in all the nationwide reporting that has been done on these cases in 9th Judicial, have shown as the primary voices of concern for the families. There is an accumulation out there of incredibly insightful, compassionate and caring people who have spoken up from all sides of the issue. 

SandBox, gave very clear (and rare) commentary on Lofgren when the criminal cases were dismissed, via the link above that holds prosecutor Paul Nitze's column and again when Erik Peltonen recently wrote his appreciation for the community support letter in the Aspen Daily. 

 In that commentary, some of which is now hard-copy archived, SandBox expressed concern that neither the families or the former accused would be able to find closure.  Solely because of the political and policy ramifications that have been at the forefront from the key dates that the 9th decided to not take the findings of law enforcement, convene the Grand Jury and then lash the high-profile aspects of Lofgren and Bebb-Jones to the reasoning for D.A. Beeson dropping out of the race for 3rd Congressional

All of those things were very publically promoted by the 9th.  And have always struck us as highly inflammatory, given the mindset of what the folks were saying in commentary since the family passed.

Today, Chad Abraham once again shows very steady hands on the reins of reporting the next phases of Lofgren. Which, due to the nature of politics playing a very strong hand in local law enforcement; is going to begin to escalate simply because we are entering another election cycle. 

Chad has now done two articles, clearly showing that the media is not going to forget the details and the facts. 

D.A. Beeson, in this article, appears to be responding in what has always been seen as his demeanor and personal beliefs.

With nowhere else to go except now out into national media spotlight, which is a place commentators have never appreciated being thrust when it comes to Lofgren.  And with the Aspen Times now being so strongly rebelled against for their use of the most invasive to privacy social network there is in Facebook; that leaves only three regional blogs where comment ability is available.  

SandBox Commentators not only being one of them but also being the least provocative.  

Based on how both entities, in D.A. Beeson and the Daily have clearly postured themselves in the last two Daily articles on Lofgren; here's how SandBox is going to handle what looks like the shaping up to be a clash of culture and philosophy from the D.A.'s end (and) the hard answers the folks are already wanting as they move forward and unfortunately for timing, into an election cycle.

"If" she feels there is media insensitivity to any individual involved, 'SandBox Nanny' will be pulling the plug on comment ability.  Politics or no.

Otherwise, SandBox will stand on the commentary made on Nitze's column on Lofgren as the only comment we feel needs to be made.  Public commentary will not be given any further special and considerate moderating and will be allowed to run in the same manner as all other public information.

With that said, please heed D.A. Beeson's caution in this article, albeit whether you personally feel differently than the tone he gives that caution in, to remember that a family lost their lives.  Stick to the factors that the family and survivors had no control over.  Which are the only relevant at this point factors.

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

November 17, 2011

SandBox Comments: Aspen Times "Aspen city attorney says opinion to commission is confidential"

Good grief.

First, Mitzi Rapkin's disingenuous column from the city the other day.

And now this load of bunk on his personal definition of confidentiality and who he represents from Aspen City Attorney John Worchester.

(whisper...whisper...sheesh...wonder if the City of Aspen is ever going to figure out who they really represent out here....whisper...whisper....could there be any greater lengths for them to go to in their effort to redefine the word "secrets"?)

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."

SandBox Comments: Crested Butte News "CBMR ready to open for a new season of skiing "

SandBox Nanny remembers Crested Butte when it was no bigger than a couple blocks.  Had Tony Stefanic's store where you could buy (5) cinnamon bears and last month's comic books (with the cover torn off) for a dime...

Congratulations to the folks up there as they open the season.  May Ullr be generous.

"Ski resort planning big party for opening day
As if skiing for free on opening day weren’t enough, Crested Butte Mountain Resort is turning this year’s opening day into a birthday bash. The final hurrah after a year-long 50th anniversary celebration, the festivities will begin in time for the first chair on November 23 and continue throughout the day..."
(Crested Butte News)

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November 16, 2011

SandBox Comments: Vail Daily: "Andy Daly becomes Vail's new mayor"

Congratulations to Powderhorn CEO Andy Daly on his appointment for Mayor of Vail.

Former CEO of Vail Resorts, Andy and partners purchased Powderhorn last year and has been busy making improvements and getting ready for the 2011-2012 season.

Why would the folks over in Vail not think that is a conflict of interest?

Because, he is Andy Daly.

"After the council voted against electing Kurz as mayor, the council voted unanimously for Daly.

“I think it was appropriate once Andy was nominated, and I did not get the votes; it was appropriate for me to vote on behalf of Andy,” Kurz said later. “I think he'll do a great job.”

Outgoing mayor Dick Cleveland, who did not seek re-election, said he has confidence in Daly's ability to take over as mayor. He said he'll have his hands full, though, just as Cleveland did when he first stepped into the role.

There will be a learning curve, and he'll have to figure out the best way to moderate discussions, Cleveland said, by “trying to figure out at what point either council comments or public comment has gone on too long.”

Daly has studied how the town works and how the council interacts and is confident in himself as mayor.

“I'm committed to keeping Vail a cutting-edge, world-class resort, and I think I'm in a better position to do that as mayor,” Daly said."
(Lauren Glendenning)

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SandBox Comments: KKCO 11 News "Grand Junction Rockies look ahead, excited to join community "

Congrats to Grand Junction!

Their new minor league baseball team "Grand Junction Rockies" are in town making plans for the big move to Mesa County, Colorado.

In just around a month, owners are pleased to see 404 season pass sales . 

"Grand Junction is Rockies country," said Monfort."

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November 15, 2011

SandBox Comments: Aspen Daily News "City fighting a 
losing ballot battle"

Maurice Emmer:

"I am a conservative for election transparency. I naively thought citizens usually could trust elected officials to honor transparency, as it enhances their legitimacy and public trust; it makes their jobs easier. I was wrong and our liberty is threatened by what I have learned.

Unlike at least one member of City Council, according to news reports, I read the entire unanimous opinion of the Colorado Court of Appeals in Marks v. Koch. It didn’t take long — it is only 16 double-spaced pages. Did council members read it before hastily voting to proceed with a further costly appeal? The city had 45 days to appeal, and yet rushed an unannounced private meeting and vote to move ahead with an appeal to the Colorado Supreme Court without any open hearings from the public.

The Court of Appeals opinion is well reasoned and thorough. As with any good judicial opinion, it summarizes key facts, states the arguments, analyzes each argument applying relevant law and states a conclusion on each argument. It is not complicated; it is not based on anyone’s political viewpoint or vendetta. It is a straightforward legal analysis and opinion. I recommend it to anyone who is interested in the issues on either side...."

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"Truth goes through three stages. First it is ridiculed. Then it is violently opposed. Finally, it is accepted as self-evident."