By Ralph R. Reiland on 12.2.08 @ 6:05AM
Courts need to put a stop to their revolving door policy.
I intended to write about why workers making $18 an hour (the
median wage of the nation's 107 million full-time wage and salary
workers in the third quarter of 2008, according the latest report
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics) should not be expected to
give a blank check to automobile companies that drove themselves
into a ditch by producing fuel-inefficient vehicles with
uncompetitive wage/benefit costs that averaged $73 per hour.
But then the news broke that a young FBI agent has been shot and
killed during a 6:00 a.m. drug raid in the outskirts of
Pittsburgh. The agent, Samuel Hicks, 33, was part of a task force
executing search warrants associated with a drug operation that
allegedly distributed powder cocaine and crack cocaine throughout
the greater Pittsburgh area.
Hicks, a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, was a former
school teacher in Maryland and an officer until February 2007 in
the Organized Crime Division of the Baltimore City Police
Department. He joined the FBI in March 2007 and was assigned to
the Pittsburgh office in August 2007. He leaves behind his wife
and a 2-year-old son.
The killing of agent Hicks happened at the residence of Robert
and Christina Korbe.
Robert Korbe, 39, a convicted felon, was back on the streets
after going through the revolving doors at local courthouses for
nearly two decades.
Court records show that Korbe was arrested in September 1991 by
Pittsburgh police on drug and weapons charges. After pleading
guilty, he was given two years probation.
Arrested again in September 1995 on multiple drug charges, Korbe
pleaded guilty and was given three years of probation and five
years of probation for the offenses.
In May of this year, police in the Sharpsburg section of
Pittsburgh reported that Korbe fought with officers when he was
stopped after leaving a fight at Pod's Landing Bar. Police
reported that Korbe was carrying 130 grams of powder cocaine and
pills including Cialis, Viagra and Vicodin. Federal sentencing
laws require a five-year mandatory minimum jail sentence for
possessing or dealing 500 grams of powder cocaine or 5 grams of
crack cocaine.
Three months later, on August 6, 2008, Korbe waived a hearing on
charges of possession of a controlled substance, possession with
intent to deliver, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct, criminal
mischief, recklessly endangering another person, and aggravated
assault.
Korbe was free on $25,000 bond on the morning when FBI agent
Samuel Hicks was killed. He was scheduled for arraignment the
next morning.
The local TV news is reporting that Korbe's mother said that her
son had been involved with drugs for years and that she hadn't
seen him in three years because he and his wife got a
protection-from-abuse order against her.
Imagine that. A guy is allegedly pushing a poison that's killing
our kids and he calls the cops to protect him from his
mother.
The aforementioned poisoning of our kids refers to the fact that
deaths from overdoses of illegal drugs outnumber drug-related
murders by more than 10-to-1.
In other legal news as a I write, J. J. Gumberg Company, the
operator of the upscale Waterworks Mall in the Pittsburgh suburb
of Fox Chapel, has agreed to a monetary settlement with a rape
victim and her husband who had sued the company because of
allegedly inadequate security.
The rape victim and her 16-month-old daughter were kidnapped at
knifepoint from the mall's parking lot by Jimmy Lee Tayse, 29, at
10:30 on the morning of April 7, 2007. The victim testified that
Tayse jumped into her back seat after she had loaded groceries
into her vehicle and placed her child in a car seat.
"Drive or I'll cut her," demanded Tayse, holding a knife to the
child's neck, according to court testimony.Tayse then forced the
woman to drive to Ohio, where he robbed and repeatedly raped her.
Tayse had prior convictions for sexually assaulting a 12-year-old
and raping an 11-year-old multiple times. At the time of the
Waterworks kidnapping, Tayse was also a wanted fugitive in nearby
Cambria County for not showing up for a June 2006 trial.
William Pietragallo, the lawyer for the rape victim and her
husband, maintained that Gumberg was Tayse's "enabler," citing
the lack of security cameras and guards in the parking lot.
Down at the courthouse, unsurprisingly, they'll blame the parking
lots rather than their own revolving door. Similarly, true to
form regarding the killing of agent Hicks, no one at the
courthouse will be sued for being the "enabler" who repeatedly
put Korbe back on the streets.
topics:
Crime