Category Archives: Law and Order

Two women killed in Maine crash were immigration advocates | Bangor Daily News

Two women killed in crash were immigration advocates – Bangor Daily News.

Employer: Detainee from Maine said he knew bomb suspect | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Employer: Detainee said he knew bomb suspect | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Maine GOP apologizes for convention incident | Bangor Daily News

Maine GOP apologizes for convention incident – Bangor Daily News.

Call it class struggle: How politics went too far at a Maine school | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

[I’d like to say I’m surprised by the so-called adults who showed extremely bad manners while they were very temporary guests in the classroom in question, but more often than not, politicians take the low road. — KM]

Nemitz: Call it class struggle: How politics went too far at a Maine school | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Referendum mirrors divide on Maine tax reform | Bangor Daily News

Referendum mirrors divide on state tax reform – Bangor Daily News.

California man arrested in alleged assault | Bangor Daily News

Calif. man arrested in alleged assault – Bangor Daily News.

Suspect in Maine topless coffee shop arrested in S.C. | The Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME

Arson suspect arrested in S.C. | The Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME.

Two arrested as Matinicus feuding continues | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Two arrested as Matinicus feuding continues | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Logging forum scheduled in Fort Kent | Bangor Daily News

Logging forum scheduled in Fort Kent – Bangor Daily News.

Maine’s packing heat: More people are legally carrying concealed guns in Maine | Lewiston Sun Journal

Who are they? Lots of women and ‘more normal people than people might expect.’

It is, by her own admission, a worst-case scenario.

“Jane” wants to be able to protect herself if an intruder breaks into the house and gets the jump on her husband.

“If something happened and you drop the gun and you’re dead on the floor, I’ve got to know how to use it,” she told him.

So, last weekend, after a lot of thought, the couple attended a local five-hour gun safety course. On Tuesday, they applied for concealed firearms permits at the Lewiston Police Department. Jane’s husband used to target practice as a kid with his father. She’s never shot a gun in her life.

“It’s such a tough, tough decision, at least for me it was,” said Jane, who’s in her late 30s. “I still don’t know if it came down to it, shooting to wound or taking a life, if I can do it.”

Click on the link for the rest of today’s story by Kathryn Skelton in the Lewiston Sun Journal.

Topless march draws crowd, cameras, but remains peaceful | Lewiston Sun Journal

[FYI This version of the story includes video. – KM]

Topless march draws crowd, cameras, but remains peaceful | Lewiston Sun Journal

Let’s fight a fight that’s worthwhile | Bangor Daily News

I was terribly relieved to learn that no one was injured during Friday’s historic topless march through downtown Farmington.

Local police officials had spent much of the week assuring the media and the public at large that plans were in place “to keep people safe”!

Phew!

I also was glad to see that Michael Heath of the American Family Association of Maine finally weighed in on this critical occurrence of women showing their breasts to enlighten us all of its relationship to the homosexual rights movement.

“The promotion and presentation of public nudity is a staple of the homosexual rights movement,” he told reporters.

See there? I never would have made that connection.

Without Heath’s wise interpretation I would have thought the endeavor was simply a somewhat amusing effort put forth by a frustrated college student in desperate need of something to stand for.

Click on the link for the rest of this commentary by Renee Ordway in The Bangor Daily News.

New AR-15s give Maine State Police needed firepower: Assault weapons replace 9mm rifles that nobody believed in | Portland Press Herald

[I’m a little surprised Maine troopers didn’t already have the AR-15 given the kind of firepower criminals tend to pack. I hope these weapons cause people in a faceoff with troopers to simply give up and take the consequences of whatever it was that caused the troopers to be called in the first place. The AR-15 is an effective weapon in the hands of a trained police officer. By the way, a derivative of the AR-15 is the M-16 used by the U.S. military. — KM]

Maine State Police troopers will be issued 105 new assault weapons that are much more powerful than the rifles they have been using.

The Legislature approved the purchase of the AR-15 assault rifles, manufactured by Bushmaster at the company’s plant in Windham. The new weapons cost a total of $76,191.

Why the need for greater firepower? Mike Edes, president of the Maine State Troopers Association, said “almost nobody” in the department has confidence in their Ruger carbine rifles, the 9 mm weapons that the AR-15s are replacing.

“My analogy is this: I’m a deer hunter. I would not go hunting with a 9mm for deer,” Edes said. “So why would I want to be protected against a person that has another firearm, and wants to kill me and is coming after me, and rely on a gun I wouldn’t even go deer hunting with?”

The guns are being paid for with a combination of drug enforcement money and state funds, said Rep. Paulette Beaudoin, D-Biddeford.

Click on the lick for the rest of this story by Meredith Goad in today’s Portland Press Herald.

And here is a link to the Bangor Daily News version of the story, which seems to be better written. Here is the link to “State police to receive new AR-15 assault rifles” | Bangor Daily News

Topless march draws crowd in Maine college town | Bangor Daily News

Topless march draws crowd in college town – Bangor Daily News.

Peace prevails on both sides at Portland gun rally | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Peace prevails on both sides at gun rally | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Portland pro-gun rally gets response from foes | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Portland pro-gun rally gets response from foes | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Merrill Lynch settlement nets Maine $400K | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Merrill Lynch settlement nets Maine $400K | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

For French group, it’s no ordeal to be stranded in Maine | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

For French group, it’s no ordeal to be stranded in Maine | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Farmington board hears complaints about topless march | Lewiston Sun Journal

Farmington board hears complaints about topless march | Lewiston Sun Journal

The Economics of Wind II: Subsidies — the why and how much | Lewiston Sun Journal

[Here is the top of the second part in a two-part series by the Lewiston Sun Journal on wind energy. I’m disappointed in the series. The writing was not as clear and meaningful as it should have been for an issue of such importance and the editing seemed nonexistent. But I promised to post the link to the second of the two parts, so here it is. – KM]

Big wind developers receive substantial federal funds and whether they ought to or not is a major bone of contention as more wind farms pop up in Maine.

The arguments from both sides of the issue go something like:

Pro: Lots of other energy sources (coal, oil, nuclear) are subsidized, too.

Con: Wind, given the size, gets more than its fair share.

Pro: Subsidies are important to jump-start the industry.

Con: If it can’t stand on its own, tough. It shouldn’t stand at all.

And maybe trumping those arguments: Maine has said, in law, it wants more wind power — and, nationally, subsidy is simply part of how wind power gets paid for.

First Wind, for example, received $40.4 million last fall for putting up 38 wind turbines in eastern Maine, an upfront cash payment of the federal Production Tax Credit (PTC) stepped up through the stimulus funds.

“It’s a pretty established set of criteria you have to meet and if you happen to meet it you’ll receive this grant; if you don’t, you won’t,” said spokesman John Lamontagne in Boston.

In 2007, at the request of a Tennessee senator, the U.S. Energy Information Administration looked at federal energy subsidies by industry and found, in sheer dollars, refined coal got the most money and support at $2.1 billion, three times that of wind. Unrefined coal and nuclear both got more than wind as well. But compare all three by their ratio of subsidies-to-output and wind jumps to the top as most expensive.

Click on the link to the rest of today’s story by Kathryn Skelton in the Lewiston Sun Journal.

Here’s a link to the first of the two parts if you missed it yesterday.