Nazi Tweaker Worked as Orange County 911 Operator

lissa-marie-dominac-kinda-hot-nazi-tweaker.jpg
Who screens these people?

SANTA ANA — An Orange County sheriff’s 911 operator was arraigned Thursday on charges of soliciting violent crime and providing confidential police information to gang members.

Lissa Marie Domanic, 42, was also charged with gang enhancement, said Jim Amormino of the Orange County Sheriff’s Department. She is being held on $50,000 bail.

Domanic is alleged to have maintained ties with a white supremacist gang.

Amormino could not, however, confirm exactly what information she is accused of passing onto them.

Police searched Domanic’s home Sept. 3 and found letters and photographs tying her to criminal street gangs.

Domanic was indicted by a grand jury on Monday and arrested Tuesday.

She was allegedly under the influence of a controlled substance and in possession of methamphetamine when arrested, Amormino said.

Domanic — who has worked as a 911 operator since early 2007 — is now on administrative leave.

Wow. A Nazi with a meth habit was able to get a job working with law enforcement. Who watches the watchers?

h/t Crime Scene KC

Peter Frances Milosavjevic: The Case for Civil Commitments

Peter Frances Milosavjevic has a history of violent sexual assaults against women going back at least to 1983. One of his assaults on a mentally handicapped women left the victim in a coma for days. In 2000 he served only three years of a twelve year sentence and upon his release it should surprise no one that he continued his assaults on vulnerable women:

RIVERSIDE — Prosecutors say an ex-con with a history of violence toward women sexually brutalized as many as 11 mentally-impaired homeless women over a four-year span.

Peter Frances Milosavjevic is accused of inviting the women into his home on the pretext of giving them shelter and then attacked them.

But the 57- year old testified that all of the women he brought into his Rios Road duplex came by choice and engaged in sex with him consensually.

Milosavjevic faces 57 sexual assault-related charges involving 11 victims, between 2001 and 2005, according to a criminal complaint.

For more than an hour Wednesday afternoon, defense attorney Chris Jensen quizzed his client about the women the prosecution alleges he raped, sodomized and forced to stay in his home for weeks and — on a couple of occasions — months.

One of his alleged victims testified that she stayed with the defendant on two separate occasions in 2005, and that Milosavjevic routinely tied her up, raped, sodomized and sexually assaulted her with a foreign object.

According to prosecutors, the defendant cruised streets, bus stations and anywhere else he might find dispossessed, drug-addicted and developmentally disabled women to exploit.

Milosavjec shouldn’t have served less than a third of his sentence, in fact he shouldn’t have been out on the streets at all. He is a clear and present danger to society that authorities allowed to walk the streets even though they must have known that he would continue to abuse women.

Milosavjec proves that there are sex offenders that need to be committed to protect society. Milosevjec shows the need for common sense laws that take the worst of the worst and keep them from being in the position to hurt anyone else. Registries are key to this, but in the case of a man who once put a mentally ill woman in a coma a lifetime in a psyche ward would probably be in order.

Gas Shortages Hit Southern States

It’s TEOTWAWKI man! Well, not really but the panic level in some corners is about at end of the world levels:

Gasoline shortages hit towns across the southeastern United States this week, sparking panic buying, long lines and high prices at stations from the small towns of northeast Alabama to Charlotte in the wake of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike.

In Atlanta, half of the gasoline stations were closed, according to AAA, which said the supply disruptions had taken place along two major petroleum product pipelines that have operated well below capacity since the hurricanes knocked offshore oil production and several refineries out of service along the Gulf of Mexico.

Drivers in Charlotte reported lines with as many as 60 cars waiting to fill up late Wednesday night, and a community college in Asheville, N.C., where most of the 25,000 students commute, canceled classes and closed down Wednesday afternoon for the rest of the week. Shortages also hit Nashville, Knoxville and Spartanburg, S.C., AAA said.

Terrance Bragg, a chef in Charlotte, made it to work only because his grandfather drove from a town an hour away with a 5-gallon plastic container of fuel for him. Three of his co-workers called and said they couldn’t make it.

“I drove past nine or ten gasoline stations that were out of gas,” Bragg said. “I had my GPS up looking for any gas in the area, from the mom-and-pop places to the corporate gas stations. Nothing. They were all taped off.”

Liz Clasen-Kelly, associate director of a homeless assistance center in Charlotte, took the bus to work yesterday. On Wednesday night, she and her husband checked five stations that had no gas, passed a long line backed up onto the interstate highway and chose not to wait at an open gas station with 50 to 60 cars still lined up after 11 p.m.

“If we had waited in that line, our car wouldn’t have made it,” she said, adding that the gauge was pointing to empty. The bus yesterday took her 45 minutes longer than usual. “It makes you realize how addicted you are to convenience,” she said.

In Atlanta, Jonathan Tyson, a Douglasville, Ga., resident who works for a company that does training for auto and RV franchise dealerships, ran out of fuel while waiting an hour in a line about 60 cars long to fill up his Land Rover. A man from the car behind helped push Tyson’s vehicle down the road.

“It was crazy,” Tyson said. “People were standing on side of road with gas cans saying they’d pay the person to run a [credit] card through just to get gas so they didn’t run out before they got up to the pump themselves.”

The city government, which uses 10,000 gallons a day, barred the public from two stations to make sure it could keep municipal vehicles running. On Wednesday night with his fuel gauge at empty, Al T. Nottage, a senior communications specialist in the Atlanta mayor’s office, looked for fuel at six stations, all closed, then called AAA and said he had run out of gasoline. It brought him two gallons, enough to get to work yesterday.

Maybe people should have been getting rid of their Land Rovers when gas started going up. But the fact is it is the panic that is drying up the supplies. But don’t tell the bleating complainers that:

Public officials appealed for calm as it appeared that panic buying might exacerbate supply problems if motorists try to keep more fuel than usual in their tanks. The Environmental Protection Agency suspended regulations for antipollution additives to help ease the supply situation.

Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue provoked some angry comments on the Atlanta Journal Constitution Web site, which quoted him as saying that “there is ample fuel in the city” and that some of the panic was “self-induced.”

“Perdue says we got ample gas supplies,” wrote one reader. “Then why is it that every gas station in my area is out of gas. Some have been out for over 4 days.”

Prices were high in cities hurt by shortages, though not as high as they were immediately after the hurricanes. In Charlotte, price ranged from $3.84 to a high of $4.31 a gallon for regular gasoline. AAA’s Townsend said that travelers to the affected areas should “be prepared for sticker shock, Southern style.”

Yawn. Maybe after a big storm hitting the areas near refineries and price increases at the pump people should prepare for emergencies. You know, have extra food in the house if you’re out of gas, be able to get to work if your car breaks down. The things adults do. Except adults in America I guess.

Get your houses in order people. It’s time to be prepared.

Uh-Oh. China Tells Banks to Stop Lending to U.S.

From Reuters:

BEIJING, Sept 25 (Reuters) – Chinese regulators have told domestic banks to stop interbank lending to U.S. financial institutions to prevent possible losses during the financial crisis, the South China Morning Post reported on Thursday.

The Hong Kong newspaper cited unidentified industry sources as saying the instruction from the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) applied to interbank lending of all currencies to U.S. banks but not to banks from other countries.

How’s the Fed going to bail us out of that one?