Preview

Summary: The Orquesta

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
372 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary: The Orquesta
Ignacio Mendoza, lawyer Jose Manuel Mireles, said the federal government denied the transfer of his client to Social Rehabilitation Center "David Franco Rodriguez", considering that has a clinical-criminological profile. At a press conference, the defense lawyer added that the Interior Ministry turned the office where appointment that meets Mireles personality characteristics and clinical-criminological profile to remain in a federal prison.
Lighting cigars with cash

12/04/16.
In a video made public by the news site The Orquesta.mx, you can see Oscar Bautista Villegas, son of local PRI deputy for San Luis Potosi, Oscar Bautista Alvarado, lighting cigars with cash.

No means No
13/04/16.
The BBC broadcast a report about the problem of sexual

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The Officers asked Rojas what was the issue was about. Rojas explained that she had been in a fight. When the officers stepped into the apartment they spotted the petitioner, who had a shaved head with a gang symbol tattooed on his head inside the kitchen wearing only boxer shorts and sweating. Assuming that the assault was recent they decided to separate them. Fernandez responded to the officers “you don't have any rights to come here, i know my rights.” The officers physically removed Fernandez despite his warning and took him into custody. After removing Fernandez from the property he was later identified as the lead assailant in the Lopez…

    • 780 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The police and prison officials were most often mentioned as drowning in deceit and hidden motives. Mario Escobedo, Jr. is one of the best examples of how far the state police would go. Escobedo was a defense attorney for bus driver Gustavo González Meza, one of the bus drivers arrested and charged with crimes related to eight women found killed in a cotton field after being kidnapped and raped. Meza had been arrested along with another bus driver, Javier “Víctor” García Uribe, and police stated that both had confessed to the crimes. Escobedo had taken Meza on as a client after much thought and consideration for his own safety. After receiving anonymous threats over the phone, Escobedo was shot and killed while driving home from work. Mario Escobedo Sr. worked tirelessly to prove the state police were behind his son’s death. Escobedo Sr. said, “I still didn’t know then that my son’s own executioners were the agents and comandante of the judicial police of the state.” (Rodriguez, Montané, and Pulitzer, 2007, p.…

    • 2961 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    He was accused of violating the national Act of 1940 section 401 (j), which is a law specifically for American citizens that avoided being drafted to go to war, and have their nationality be taken away. This law took effect on 1944, but Mendoza-Martinez flee the country on 1942, when he purposely evaded being drafted he was not aware of the law because it wasn’t taken into action at the time but two years later. However, it seem unconstitutional to strip away a nationality to an individual, mainly since Mendoza- Martinez had already did the penance for avoiding the war. He did commit a crime that he needed to pay and he admitted his crime and agreed to the sentence and served it, but taking him into trial and removing his nationality for something he did when the act wasn’t taken into place is unconstitutional and…

    • 1340 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This is a kind of client that case management has a strong track that is verified in virtually all other settings. In this management, there is the use of trained workers along with following of the old-fashioned management of mental health. Project action which is an intense case management program for the criminals who are mentally ill, constantly boosts five percent, both juvenile as well as adult offenders along with the accepted transfers from all pretrial as well as correctional settings. The probationers who are mentally challenged, in addition to those who did nonviolent crimes as well as are diagnosed with some psychological illnesses are generally qualified in the involvement of the offender with a mental sickness programs. (Hope,…

    • 868 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lyvador Ramirez Essay

    • 879 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Ricardo Leyva Muñoz Ramírez Was born the youngest of five children on February 29, 1960 in El Paso, Texas. He was born into a fairly poor family, his mother was a Mexican American and his father a Mexican immigrant. All of his siblings were born with health problems possibly from the rumoured nuclear testing nearby, or the chemicals his mother was exposed to at her work while she was pregnant. In the fifth grade Ramirez was diagnosed with temporal lobe epilepsy which caused him to have seizures a school, he later grew out of it in his teens. Early in his childhood he was greatly influenced by his cousin Michael who had returned from special forces in Vietnam. His cousin showed him violent photographs…

    • 879 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ashley Smith Inhumane

    • 962 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Such is the case given the prominent roles played by the various stakeholders in this instance. The propagators include but not limited to the frontline managers of the prison (prison warden and the deputy), correctional officers and the psychotherapists. The important lessons drawn from this case are the recommendations that have been put forward since the incidence. An example befitting of these recommendations is the availing psychotherapy services for the mentally ill persons within the initial 72 hours of admission. Also, the jury came up with a proposition of treating mentally ill individuals in a treatment facility as opposed to a prison as a criminal. With such measures in place, an instance like Ashley's case will not be observed anytime soon. Thus, using this scenario as a reference point, the society should change its perspective about mental illness, if such instances are to become avoidable in the…

    • 962 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Orleanna simply said it best: “We can only speak of the things we carried with us, and the things we took away.”(10) The five Price woman enter the Congo with certain things, materialistic mindsets, Betty Crocker cake mixes, white privilege, ivory hand mirrors, and American ignorance, to name a few. The things that they left with were significantly different. They took away experience, enlightenment, balance, guilt, and shame from Africa, and, most importantly, they lost Ruth May. The Congo molded the Price women, it shaped their souls. Orleanna, Rachel, Leah, Adah, and Ruth May were all affected by their time in the Congo, and they vary greatly in their philosophical perceptions of it— they lie on a spectrum of apathy…

    • 1409 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Luis Rodriguez, Grillo, lived a long life of violence and drug abuse. But, there are three major events that lead Grillo to want to live a better life are when he first hurt someone with a weapon, almost committed suicide, and had enough of the verbal and mental abuse his school would put him through. Grillo’s first violent attack with a weapon changed him. In addition, before the incident, he use to just fight, with his hands.…

    • 543 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Escobedo Vs Illinois Case

    • 984 Words
    • 4 Pages

    They asserted that Escobedo was never formally arrested; therefore, he was never considered an accused personal and did not legally have the right to an attorney. And since “the investigation took place en route to the police station,” (4) the police claimed that the questioning could have never surpassed the level of a general inquiry. The contrast between Escobedo’s and the police’s stories was so drastic that it created much controversy changing the verdict four times.…

    • 984 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Naysayers

    • 803 Words
    • 4 Pages

    6. “‘Well, of course law informant should be stopping, searching, and frisk him. Of course they should be keeping an eyes on him, he is a drug felon.’ And we knew we couldn’t put a criminal on the stand because they would be inevitable cross examine in front of a jury about their prior criminal history, their whole credibility would be challenged. So I tried to explain to him ‘I’m sorry, there is just no way I can represent you if you have a criminal record”…

    • 803 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Odyssey Thesis

    • 1374 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In the Odyssey, temptation is defined as hunger- both literal hunger (temptation for food) and figurative hunger i.e. temptation for luxury, ambition, wealth, women, power, glory etc. This “hunger”, whether literal or figurative keeps Odysseus’s men from reaching their homes and uniting with their families. However, longing for family or grief for loved ones drives away “hunger”. Odysseus is the only man among his crew to reach home to Ithaca because his longing for his family and native land surpasses the “hungers” he encounters and experiences.…

    • 1374 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Inmates In Jail

    • 952 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Prison is a building in which people are legally held as a punishment for crimes they have committed or while awaiting trial. Today, persons look at prison in different way, the Time Magazine article, “Criminals Should Be Cured Not Caged”, claims in 1968. However, people and management are still experiencing disturbing tactics, which used in the most American public. In the U.S., there were more people recorded reports of police misconduct and fatalities linked to misconduct, according to the article statistics and reporting. Although the occurrence of police brutality is acknowledged by establishments as persistent problem, intentions for it are the best qualified as theories. A prisoner has the right to sue prison guards. Inmates in jail have the right to many resources, including medical care. Prisoners have to get…

    • 952 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Llaid And The Odyssey

    • 307 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Do you think you could compose two great works of art? Well Homer did. He was the composer of the Llaid and the Odyssey. Many places claim to be his birth place. People also think that he didn’t write the Odyssey or the Llaid by his self.…

    • 307 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    This letter is about stopping the human rights violations of severely mentally ill immigrants by detaining them in prisons for an unspecified amounts of time. The Canadian Border Services Agency and the Immigration and Refugee Board are claiming incarceration is being used to prevent “flight risks” or “a threat to public safety”. The effects on the incarcerated are not even considered even though The national institute of mental health status “Most Severely Mentally ill are not violent” and “Most violence is not done by the mentally ill, and are more likely to be the victims”…

    • 473 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    2. Does Atwood’s framework of two intersecting narratives work, or does the reader find the short sections and constant change confusing and/or distracting? Explain why or why not you like the construction of the novel?…

    • 876 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays