George was a wonderful man, so giving to all and so gracious. Our sincere condolences. Our thoughts and prayers are with you and your family. May your memories bring you comfort. George was a long-time, true friend of the small business owner, always thinking of how he could help his clients out.
George B. Larkin Jr. Obituary Services Memories and Condolences. May 9, — May 20, Do you believe there is a culture tolerant of excessive force within the Loveland Police Department? What changes, if any, do you believe should be implemented to improve the department? We have a situation that spans more than one police department. Our society fires officers that report misconduct, and we need to ask our culture in general why that is OK.
When I talked to the former mayor of Westminster a few months back, he told me that they spent a lot of time weeding out bully candidates for their department. Are we being that proactive? Two years ago, a lot of the City Council held a pro-police rally. Where are they now that our police need them? Treating our police as fair-weather props to get elected is wrong. I would not have a problem being seen with our police because they are good people doing an often thankless job. We could help them do their job better by taking care of our homeless and mentally challenged people better instead of dumping the problem on our public services.
There are only so many shares of water to go around. Climate change is showing us that we will have less water in snow and more in rain. A possible solution is to look at developing Eastern Plains reservoirs instead of scrapping for shares of water that are left. Time to be proactive.
Twin Peaks Liquor has got it going on! Another, from Hughes, accused the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles of violating his rights when they declined a clemency request filed by his lawyer but refused to consider a similar request from activist Ward Larkin.
And another raised civil rights violations in a lawsuit against the mayor of Houston, alleging improprieties and fraud in the Houston police crime lab that handled evidence in Hughes' case. Ellis McCullough, one of Hughes' trial lawyers, said this week he was convinced no evidence was planted or mishandled. He said Hughes, brought to a police station for interviews in the early morning hours after the slayings, made phone calls from the police interrogation room to acquaintances, including his probation officer, that "were pretty devastating taken as a whole.
Evidence examined for DNA testing after his conviction and at his request found traces of Charles' blood on Hughes' clothing. At his trial, prosecutors showed Charles' glasses were found on a couch in his apartment. Hughes, who knew Charles through a friend, said police took the evidence from the crime scene, planted it in his apartment, illegally searched the place, coerced his confessions and copied his signature to them from another document.
Hughes moved to Houston in from his native Buffalo, N. He testified at his capital murder trial that he pulled a knife on "a guy who came up to me from behind" and "stuck him twice" but denied it was Charles or the 3-year-old.
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