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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Décembre 26, 2024, 01:56:07 am
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Mug shots of drunken driving suspects are landing on the Honolulu Police Department s Web site, creating a virtual wall of shame long before suspects get their day in court.Supporters say the experiment in public humiliation to be launched Wednesday should be used elsewhere in the nation if it reduces the number of drunks on the road.Critics counter the photo gallery is a heavy-handed tactic that threatens to violate constitutional rights and stain reputations without court convictions. We re not trying to embarrass anybody, said police Maj. Thomas Nitta, head of the traffic division. This is public record, and we want people to be aware of this. Defense attorneys doubt the strategy will stop intoxicated drivers from getting kubki stanley (https://www.stanleycups.pl) behind the whee stanley flask (https://www.stanleymugs.us) l. There s no empirical data to show it does anything other than embarrass them, said attorney Pat McPherson, who handles hundreds of DUI cases a year. There may be a good intent here, but it doesn t necessarily make it a good thing and really opens the police up to liability. Arrest records and photos are considered to be public records and have been published in newspapers and shown on TV for decades. The Honolulu program is different, however, because the police themselves are publicizing the images.Recently released DUI mug shots in Hawaii include lawmakers and several stars of the ABC drama Lost, which is filmed in the state.Only a few other law enforcement agencies across the country post DUI mug stanley cup (https://www.stanleycups.at) shots on their Web sites Cwsf Shooting Challenge: Headless People Doing Everyday Things
A million of anything is pretty much always an insanely impossible number. Winning a million dollars, having a million Twitter followers, selling a million products鈥攁nything done a million times is something to be proud of. But maybe not getting your song streamed on Pandora a million times. All you get sometimes is 16 measly do stanley becher (https://www.cup-stanley.de) llars. Or $16.89 to be exact. David Lowery, songwriter and musician, had his song he wrote Low streamed 1,159,000 times on Pandora in the past quarter. That a pretty huge number, right Certainly more than the 116,260 times Low was streamed on Spotify or the 179 times Sirius XM played the song. The difference was Spotify paid $12.05 for the 100,000 times and Sirius paid more than a dollar per play $181.94 . So how the heck did Pandora get away with just paying 16 bucks for a million plays It the government fault. No, seriously. Congress sets the rates of which artist royalties are paid. Lowery explains: For you civilians webcasting rates are compulsory rates. They are set by the stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.at) government crazy, right . Further since they are compulsory royalties, artists ca stanley cup (https://www.cup-stanley.es) n not opt out of a service like Pandora even if they think Pandora doesnt pay them enough. The majority of songwriters have their rates set by the government, too, in the form of the ASCAP and BMI rate courts鈥揳 single judge gets to decide the fate of songwriters technically not a compulsory but may as well be . Pandora is barely giv