Judge Jim Gray calls for Iraqi prison investigation
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Alicia Robinson
U.S. Senate candidate and Newport Beach resident Judge Jim Gray
weighed in Wednesday on recently discovered photos of American
soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners, calling for an independent
investigation into allegations of torture of captive Iraqis by
American forces.
“As a Vietnam-era veteran, I am sickened by photos purporting to
show American soldiers engaging in obvious abuse of detainees,” Gray
said in a statement Wednesday.
Gray, a Libertarian, faces incumbent Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer
and Republican candidate Bill Jones in November.
Business bullish on
Gov. Schwarzenegger
The business community, at least in Newport Beach, is feeling
positive about Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s recent actions to rescue
the state’s floundering economy.
Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce President Richard Luehrs came
away optimistic from a lobbying trip to Sacramento last week. Luehrs
visited with a host of legislators from both parties to discuss
business issues such as the state’s bankrupt unemployment insurance
system and an impending increase in California’s minimum wage, he
said.
While business owners are still wondering how the new worker’s
compensation legislation will play out, Luehrs said they’re
comfortable with it and they trust Schwarzenegger to hammer out the
details.
And right now in the capital, Luehrs said, it’s all about
Schwarzenegger.
“I’ve been going to Sacramento once or twice a year for the last
20 years, and I’ve never seen it as focused on one individual,
specifically the governor,” he said. “Both sides of the aisle are
just in awe of his tenacity, his ability to draw people together and
his focus on fixing the California economy.”
Assemblyman Maddox makes most of his bills
The state Assembly’s judiciary committee apparently liked three
bills 68th District Assemblyman Ken Maddox wrote, because it passed
them overwhelmingly, a statement from Maddox’s office said Wednesday.
The three bills will allow collection agencies to fully recoup the
cost of their services, prohibit cities and counties from using
zoning to block religious institutions from their communities and
amend the probate code to give a notice of proceedings to anyone with
an interest in the related trust.
The bills, which go next to the full Assembly, are part of a slate
of 15 pieces of legislation Maddox introduced for consideration in
February. They may be among his last bills, as he is termed out of
the Assembly at the end of the year and lost a primary bid for the
35th District Senate seat to 70th District Assemblyman John Campbell.
Plenty of suggestions
land with assemblymen
Campbell, Maddox and their fellow Republicans will have a number
of ideas to consider following last Friday’s Santa Ana stop of a GOP
“suggestion box tour” in search of ways to cut government waste. At
least 100 concerned residents showed up for the event, Campbell said.
“Many of [the suggestions] we’d heard before,” he said. “Some of
them weren’t actually on topic and they weren’t money-saving, and
there were some new ones we hadn’t heard before, so I think it was
worthwhile.”
The regional meetings will wrap up this week, then the ideas will
be compiled and submitted to the governor, Campbell said. He’s hoping
residents’ suggestions will get more traction than some of the saving
measures he has proposed.
After Schwarzenegger saved about $100,000 and 58,000 pounds of
paper by issuing the state budget on CD-ROM, Campbell tried to follow
that lead by suggesting the 1,200 reports legislators get each year
be delivered the same way. An apparently paper-loving Assembly
committee voted the idea down, however.
“My guess is that some employee union decided that someone might
lose their job if they didn’t have to Xerox this stuff,” Campbell
said.
His bill that would have cut two of the 14 holidays state
employees enjoy also crashed and burned in a committee last month.
A full crib and a full schedule for congressman
While it’s likely he was exhausted from changing diapers, Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher was back at work in Washington on Wednesday with a
full schedule, said Rohrabacher spokesman Aaron Lewis. Rohrabacher
became a father for the first, second and third times when his wife,
Rhonda Carmony, gave birth to triplets -- two daughters and a son --
on April 27.
The representative has some work ahead as well. He’s about to
begin round of media appearances on CNN, MSNBC, Los Angeles radio
station KFI-AM and the like to promote his controversial illegal
immigrant reporting bill. It’s the bill that reportedly earned
Rohrabacher death threats in January after a New York radio station
discussed the bill and gave out the phone number of the congressman’s
Huntington Beach office.
The bill would require hospitals that receive federal funding to
ask patients if they are legal U.S. residents and report any who
aren’t in a federal database.
Lewis said the bill is expected to come up for a House vote in the
next two weeks, but it’s too early to project the outcome.
“We have no idea how the other members feel about it,” Lewis said.
“Honestly, it could go either way.”
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