Recently in the Cheap Shots Department:
May 5, 2006
They Certainly Are Accident-Prone
Police labor union officials asked acting Chief Christopher McGaffin this afternoon to allow a Capitol Police officer to complete his investigation into an early-morning car crash involving Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.), son of Sen. Ted Kennedy.
ROLL CALL reports: According to a letter sent by Officer Greg Baird, acting chairman of the USCP FOP, the wreck took place at approximately 2:45 a.m. Thursday when Kennedy's car, operating with its running lights turned off, narrowly missed colliding with a Capitol Police cruiser and smashed into a security barricade at First and C streets Southeast.
"The driver exited the vehicle and he was observed to be staggering," Baird's letter states. Officers approached the driver, who "declared to them he was a Congressman and was late to a vote. The House had adjourned nearly three hours before this incident. It was Congressman Patrick J. Kennedy from Rhode Island."
Baird wrote that Capitol Police Patrol Division units, who are trained in driving under the influence cases, were not allowed to perform basic field sobriety tests on the Congressman. Instead, two sergeants, who also responded to the accident, proceeded to confer with the Capitol Police watch commander on duty and then "ordered all of the Patrol Division Units to leave the scene and that they were taking over."
A source tells the DRUDGE REPORT: "It was apparent that the driver was intoxicated (stumbling) and claimed he was in a hurry to make a vote.
"When it became apparent who it was, instead of processing a normal DWI, the watch commander had the Patrol units clear the scene. The commander allowed other building officials drive Kennedy home."
This morning's incident comes just over two weeks after Kennedy was involved in a car accident in Rhode Island.
It sounds to me like Representative Kennedy was claiming he was late for a vote in order to invoke his privileges under Article I, Section 6 of the Constitution, which says that Members of Congress are "privileged from Arrest during their Attendance at the Session of their respective Houses, and in going to and returning from the same".
If we give the Capitol Police the benefit of the doubt, perhaps they have special rules to follow when a Congressman makes such a claim? It still shouldn't have happened, but perhaps this is business as usual rather than a special benefit for the Kennedys.
November 20, 2005
Yellow People
I'm not a fan of Michelle Malkin, but the kind of abuse she gets from the liberal left is disgusting. Liberalism is supposed to be about tolerance of differences. Yet some of her opponents seem to feel that because she is a conservative, it's okay to hurl racist and sexist slurs. Disgusting.

