Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
As of 2012, Michigan spent over $4.5 million through this program, and has trained over 100 local police officers to use social media sites to identify and target events. [2] In more recent years, a majority of police departments have some sort of social media-based strategy in place. [3]
In Michigan in recent years, inmates have bashed an officer in the head with a padlock wrapped in a sock, attacked a nurse with a thermometer, and stabbed a guard with a makeshift ice pick. The environment fosters a military-style loyalty among officers, a sense that nobody truly understands what they do for a living.
In Iceland, inmates in open environment prisons are allowed limited access to internet (social media and porn being barred) and browsing activity logged.Inmates in other classes of Icelandic prisons are banned from using the internet but use various methods to gain access, this is kindly overlooked by prison officers as long as inmates are not caught browsing or the prison does not receive ...
James v. Meow Media: video game responsibility for murders: Jenson v. Eveleth Taconite Co. sexual harassment, abusive language, threats, stalking and intimidation: Jewel v. NSA: surveillance: 2010 Lane v. Facebook, Inc. internet privacy and social media: United States District Court for the Northern District of California: 2010 Luévano v. Campbell
One institution on the Florida panhandle, the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys – then among the largest youth jails in the country – had gained a reputation for extraordinary brutality and neglect. In 1983, the ACLU joined with another juvenile rights group to sue the state for its treatment of inmates at Dozier and two other facilities.
A proposed change to U.S. federal prison rules that would punish inmates for using social media or directing others to do so on their behalf could infringe on the free speech rights of people who ...
University of Michigan – The Michigan Daily, The Michigan Review, The Michigan Every Three Weekly; University of Michigan–Dearborn – The Michigan Journal; University of Michigan–Flint – The Michigan Times; Washtenaw Community College – 'The Washtenaw Voice; Wayne State University – The South End and The Wayne Review
Jennifer Crumbley, who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in connection with the shooting her son carried out at a Michigan high school, is asking to be released from prison as her appeal ...