Archive for the ‘legal’ Category

Willa Hu: The Clinton Effect

Thursday, November 8th, 2012

Clinton Rallies Upenn Crowd

Posted on November 7, 2012 by Willa Hu

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……….Monday evening, a crowd of Obama supporters eagerly awaited the arrival of former President Bill Clinton. The mostly young, college-aged crowd filled the University of Pennsylvania’s Palestra Gynasemium and nearly filled it to its maximum capacity of 9,000 people.

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After standing in the blistering cold for two hours, supporters became renergized as they came into the gym and jostled for Obama signs. With only 48 hours of the 2012 presidential campaign left, the crowd was eager to hear and cheer on one of President Obama’s biggest fans.

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The evening started off with a powerful rendition of the National Anthem. Then, notable speakers including former Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter all displayed a unified message of support for Barack Obama.

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National Anthem

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When President Clinton was introduced, the crowd jumped to its feet and proudly waved posters in the air. Clinton, his voice raspy from dozens of back-to-back campaign events, was eloquent in his acclaimation of Obama’s policies. Clinton praised Obama for accomplishments including job creation, equal pay for women, the automobile bailout, and healthcare.

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Well aware of his audience, President Clinton also spoke about the importance of education and student loans. He said “when people can pay it back as part of their income, no one will ever have to drop out of college again.”

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Forward!

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With the crowd fired up to vote blue in the 2012 Presidential election, Clinton’s closing message was simple. Go forward!

About The Author: Willa Hu is a Graduate candidate enrolled in the Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsyvlania.

PSA: New Obstacles For Voters in Pennsylvania

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Poster: Mikel Elam

Posted on August 20, 2012 – Art work by Mikel Elam, Copyright 2012

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Editor’s Note: To learn more about Mikel Elam’s art work, log on: www.MikelElam.com.

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Sunday, August 5th, 2012

Bob Shell: Letters From Prison

Friday, July 20th, 2012

Photo: Bob Shell

Posted on July 20, 2012 by Bob Shell

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HATE CRIME

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……….I believe that my prosecution was a hate crime. Radford, Virginia, for all its pretentions, is a small town. Because it is technically an independent city, it is not part of the surrounding counties, and has its own police force, sheriff, courts, prosecutor, etc. I’ve lived there since 1991 and had my photography studio there since 1981, right in downtown, for its last ten year right on Main Street, two blocks from the police department. I was fairly low profile because my clients were national and international, not local, but hardly invisible since regional newspapers and TV had done stories about me.

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In 2007 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, in Lawrence v. Texas, that private sexual activity of any sort between consenting adults was none of the government’s business, and was a constitutionally protected right. The whole case against me was based on the theory that Marion could not possibly have been a consenting participant in our sexual activities. But there was absolutely no evidence of this, and even their head detective stated under oath that he thought she was not only a willing, but an enthusiastic, participant.

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Simply put, Marion needed to be restrained to achieve a good orgasm and liked anal intercourse. Due to her early experiences she had trouble reaching orgasm unless she was, in her words, “ravished”. This bothered me at first and I had a hard time going along with her, but she showed up one time with a bunch of Polaroids taken by an old boyfriend that showed her tied up with rope, and she convinced me to try it. She also told me that her last boyfriend before me had also tied her up for sex, but complained that he tied her too tight. My first ventures into bondage photography were at her instigation, but I realized that we seemed to have a talent for it. Later when we worked with other models she was often the rigger.

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To put things in simple terms – we were different, and at least since the Salem witch trials in 1692, small town America does not tolerate those who are different. My trial was a modern-day witch trial, with predictable results. Had I been gay, I would have support from many organizations and groups, but I’m straight and heterosexual from birth. Throughout my career, though, I’ve been known for tolerance, hiring openly gay writers for the magazines I ran, even against opposition.

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In the U.S.A, even in the 21st Century, it’s still dangerous to be different. The great Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once said that in his long experience he had not found juries to be much interested in truth, that they were farm more interested in upholding community standards. My case proves this point.

Copyright 2012
To Be Continued……….
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About The Author: Bob Shell is a professional photographer, author and former editor in chief of Shutterbug Magazine. He is currently serving a 32-1/2 year sentence at Pocahontas State Correctional Center, Pocahontas, Virginia for involuntary manslaughter for the death of one of his models, Marion Franklin. At age 65, he has served 4 years and 10 months at the time of this posting. His mandatory release date in 2035. He is currently working on his appeal.
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Editor’s Note: To read more letters from prison by Bob Shell, go to the search bar at the top of the page: enter name and click the green icon. To learn more about the case log on to www.BobShellTruth.com.

Bob Shell: Letters From Prison

Monday, July 16th, 2012

Photo: Bob Shell

Posted on July 16, 2012

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……….One thing people ask me is why photography is so important to me. The answer is that it is not photography, per se, but visual creativity. I didn’t start out to be a photographer, even though I learned the mechanics and technical aspects at a young age. I thought I’d be like my father, doing something for a living and having photography/cinematography as a hobby. My dad was a TV news reporter, anchorman for the local NBC news in Roanoke, Virginia. But he always had cameras around, still and cinema. And he had a darkroom in our basement which housed an old Federal enlarger and developing trays. I was shooting with his cameras by my early teens. He had Exakta and Leica still cameras and Bell & Howell spring-wound 16mm cine cameras, as well as a very nice Bolex at one time. I learned to use them all.

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I’ve always been very interested in time. What it is now, how it works. The flow from future to present to past. What physicists call causality has never made sense to me. Causality is the proposition that cause must precede effect in time. That never made sense to me. Maybe it’s genetic from my Native American ancestry. One of my great grandmothers was 100% Cherokee, a shaman, what they used to call a “yard doctor”. Anyway, I’ve always felt that the past is just as fluid, as mutable, as the future. Neither is fixed, and it is only the instant of present that is real and fixed.

Copyright 2012
To Be Continued……….
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About The Author: Bob Shell is a professional photographer, author and former editor in chief of Shutterbug Magazine. He is currently serving a 32-1/2 year sentence at Pocahontas State Correctional Center, Pocahontas, Virginia for involuntary manslaughter for the death of one of his models, Marion Franklin. At age 65, he has served 4 years and 10 months at the time of this posting. His mandatory release date in 2035. He is currently working on his appeal.
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Editor’s Note: To read more letters from prison by Bob Shell, go to the search bar at the top of the page: enter name and click the green icon. To learn more about the case log on to www.BobShellTruth.com.

Bob Shell: Letters From Prison

Sunday, July 8th, 2012

Photos: Bob Shell

Posted on July 8, 2012 by Bob Shell

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………..If you’ll look at page 48 of the July/August issue of Playboy magazine you’ll see part of a letter I wrote to them about the idiocy of the US’s current policy on drugs. The original letter, of course, was longer, but they used one of the more important paragraphs. I’m sorry they couldn’t use the whole letter, but from being in the magazine business I fully understand space limitations. My point was that it makes no sense to lock someone up for twenty years at massive expense to the governments for simple possession of two pills. Ten years per OxyContin pill is ridiculous overkill, and an unsustainable burden to the taxpayers.

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Marion

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It’s time for us to come to our senses and realize that the “war on drugs” was lost a long time ago, and no matter how many people we lock up it’s not going to change that simple fact. It’s time to begin to see this as a medical and social problem, not a criminal problem. Locking up nonviolent drug abusers with violent hardened criminals, as the current system is doing, is just creating schools for crime where impressionable, mostly young, people are immersed in the lifestyle and philosophy of professional criminals. No wonder so many come back to prison after release, when they receive no treatment for the underlying problem – the sheer hopelessness of their lives.

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Please post the above in my Letters From Prison. I’ve become very passionate about this problem, even though it doesn’t directly impact me. No one has ever accused me of being a drug user.


Copyright 2012

To Be Continued……….

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About The Author: Bob Shell is a professional photographer, author and former editor in chief of Shutterbug Magazine. He is currently serving a 35 year sentence at Pocahontas State Correctional Center, Pocahontas, Virginia for involuntary manslaughter for the death of one of his models, Marion Franklin. He is currently working on his appeal.
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Editor’s Note: To read more letters from prison by Bob Shell, go to the search bar at the top of the page: enter name and click the green icon. To learn more about the case log on to www.BobShellTruth.com.

Bob Shell: Letters From Prison

Tuesday, June 5th, 2012

Photo: Bob Shell

Posted on June 4, 2012 by Bob Shell

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………..Did you know that the USA passed an important landmark recently? We now have more than six million people in prison. That’s more people than were imprisoned by Stalin during the old Soviet Union’s gulag. Somehow we have to stop this insanity.

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Senator Jim Webb tried to pass a law to establish a commission to investigate the USA’s criminal justice system and recommend reforms, but when it came to the floor for vote it was filibustered and died. And this was just a proposal to study the problem. Recommendations of the commission would have been non-binding. Even that was too much for our “law and order” Congress. I guess that until the brownshirts start knocking down their doors most people will be complacent about this. I hope everyone I write to realizes that if it could happen to me, it could happen to them.

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I just heard recently from one of the models I worked with on the bondage book. She got to wondering what ever happened to me and did a Google search on my name and found the address of the prison. I last photographed her in 2003/4. She’s now a professor of English at a college in Michigan! I told her to check out TWS. When I write to her again I’ll ask her if she still has any of the outtakes from our shoots that I emailed her at the time. I’ll write to the other models I am still in touch with and see if they have any photos TWS can publish.

To Be Continued……….

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About The Author: Bob Shell is a professional photographer, author and former editor in chief of Shutterbug Magazine. He is currently serving a 35 year sentence at Pocahontas State Correctional Center, Pocahontas, Virginia for involuntary manslaughter for the death of one of his models, Marion Franklin. He is currently working on his appeal.
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Editor’s Note: To read more letters from prison by Bob Shell, go to the search bar at the top of the page: enter name and click the green icon. To learn more about the case log on to www.BobShellTruth.com.

TW: Summer Readings

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

Photo: Harvey Finkle


Copyright 2012

Posted on May 31, 2012 by Tony Ward

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SUMMER READINGS

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History of Art, H.W. Janson
The History of Photography, Beaumont Newhall
The Diary of Frida Kahlo, Introduction by Carlos Fuentes
Regarding the Pain of Others, Susan Sontag
Self-Reliance, Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Catcher In The Rye, J.D. Salinger
To Kill A Mockingbird, Harper Lee
Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramahansa Yogananda

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Photo: Harvey Finkle

Editor’s Note: To learn more about Harvey Finkle Photography, log on: www.HarveyFinkle.com.

Bob Shell: Letters From Prison

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

Photo: Bob Shell

Posted on May 16, 2012 by Bob Shell

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……….Nothing new to report on my case. But I really don’t expect to get a ruling from the court until around the middle of the year. Courts move at their own speed, and the general rule seems to be the longer the better, because that means they are actually considering everything. My case generated a massive amount of paperwork, and the court must go through all of it to consider my claims.

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I got a letter the other day from one of the models who worked with me on the bondage book back in 2003-04. She said she got to wondering about what had happened to me and did a Google search and found out where I am. Like every model I ever worked with, she knows that I am not guilty. I told her about TWS and suggested that she post here about what it was like to work with me, so maybe she will.

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One lawyer I know made the point that the cops and prosecution had from June 2003 until my trial in August of 2007 to search for any model I worked with who would say anything negative about me. They couldn’t find anyone. If I really had been the serial molestor they portrayed me as being, they ought to have been able to find at least one of my earlier victims, but they found no one. That should have meant something to the jury. I don’t think they really thought things through and simply voted with a knee-jerk reaction.

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I also don’t think the jury understood how sentencing works. Not one of the sentences they gave me was very long, and I believe they assumed that all of them would run concurrently. Indeed, running sentences concurrently is the norm. But in Virginia the judge makes that decision, not the jury, and the jury can’t even be told that they have the option to recommend concurrent sentences. My judge ignored the VA sentencing guidelines and ran my sentences consecutively. The guidelines called for 1 1/2 to 3 years. But the Virginia guidelines are merely recommendations, they carry no force, and judges routinely ignore them. I don’t know why they even bother to have guidelines.

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If the jury in a state of Virginia case asks the judge if sentences will be run concurrently or consecutively, the judge will tell them that it is none of their concern! The jury is not allowed to know!! But the law requires that jurors be fully informed prior to their deliberations. None of this makes any sense, since a jury can intend a light sentence and a judge can arbitrarily convert it into a very long sentence. The more research I do on this, the less sense it makes.

About The Author: Bob Shell is a professional photographer, author and former editor in chief of Shutterbug Magazine. He is currently serving a 35 year sentence at Pocahontas State Correctional Center, Pocahontas, Virginia for involuntary manslaughter for the death of one of his models, Marion Franklin. He is currently working on his appeal.
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Editor’s Note: To read more letters from prison by Bob Shell, go to the search bar at the top of the page: enter name and click the green icon. To learn more about the case log on to www.BobShellTruth.com.

UPenn: Class of 2012

Thursday, May 10th, 2012

The University of Pennsylvania