main
iOS 2 years ago
parent 7e7e35a427
commit 4b05747330

@ -2,7 +2,6 @@
"templater-obsidian",
"obsidian-activity-history",
"obsidian-admonition",
"table-editor-obsidian",
"obsidian-advanced-uri",
"obsidian-auto-link-title",
"buttons",
@ -59,12 +58,12 @@
"markdown-table-editor",
"obsidian-book-search-plugin",
"obsidian-columns",
"notion-like-tables",
"obsidian-media-db-plugin",
"tasks-packrat-plugin",
"obsidian-tts",
"obsidian-chat-view",
"obsidian-bbcode",
"obsidian-style-settings",
"obsidian-camera"
"obsidian-camera",
"table-editor-obsidian"
]

@ -14,6 +14,5 @@
"markdown-importer",
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"audio-recorder",
"open-with-default-app",
"file-recovery"
]

File diff suppressed because one or more lines are too long

@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
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.page-header-button.titlebar-center{flex-grow:1;font-size:12px;height:100%;left:0;letter-spacing:.05em;opacity:.8;position:absolute;text-align:center;top:0;width:100%}body:not(.is-mobile) .view-actions{align-items:center}body:not(.is-mobile) .view-action,body:not(.is-mobile) .view-action.pane-relief{display:flex;position:unset}body:not(.is-mobile) .view-action.pane-relief.app\:go-back:before,body:not(.is-mobile) .view-action.pane-relief.app\:go-forward:after{display:inline;font-size:1em;line-height:1;vertical-align:text-top}body:not(.is-mobile) .view-action.pane-relief.app\:go-forward:after{content:var(--pane-relief-forward-count);padding-left:.4em}body:not(.is-mobile) .view-action.pane-relief.app\:go-back:before{content:var(--pane-relief-backward-count);padding-right:.4em}body:not(.is-mobile) .view-action:not(:last-child){margin-right:var(--page-header-spacing-desktop)}body:not(.is-mobile) .pane-relief body:not(.no-svg-replace) svg{vertical-align:top}.is-mobile .view-actions{align-items:center}.is-mobile .view-action:not(:last-child){margin-right:var(--page-header-spacing-mobile)}

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"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.02 Inbox/As El Salvadors president tries to silence free press, journalist brothers expose his ties to street gangs - Los Angeles Times.md\"> As El Salvadors president tries to silence free press, journalist brothers expose his ties to street gangs - Los Angeles Times </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.02 Inbox/Two Professors Found What Creates a Mass Shooter. Will Politicians Pay Attention.md\"> Two Professors Found What Creates a Mass Shooter. Will Politicians Pay Attention </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.02 Inbox/Hazing, fighting, sexual assaults How Valley Forge Military Academy devolved into “Lord of the Flies”.md\"> Hazing, fighting, sexual assaults How Valley Forge Military Academy devolved into “Lord of the Flies” </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.02 Inbox/What did the ancient Maya see in the stars Their descendants team up with scientists to find out.md\"> What did the ancient Maya see in the stars Their descendants team up with scientists to find out </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.02 Inbox/The Follower.md\"> The Follower </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.02 Inbox/Dianne Feinstein, the Institutionalist.md\"> Dianne Feinstein, the Institutionalist </a>"
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"Untitled.md\"> Untitled </a>"
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"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/Meet Richard Fritz, Americas Most Unelectable Elected Official Defector.md\"> Meet Richard Fritz, Americas Most Unelectable Elected Official Defector </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/He Had a Dark Secret. It Changed His Best Friends Life..md\"> He Had a Dark Secret. It Changed His Best Friends Life. </a>",
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@ -4684,16 +4756,16 @@
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"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.02 Inbox/The Mafia, The CIA and George Bush.md\"> The Mafia, The CIA and George Bush </a>",
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"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/When Cars Kill Pedestrians.md\"> When Cars Kill Pedestrians </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/The Incredible True Story of Jody Harris, Con Artist Extraordinaire..md\"> The Incredible True Story of Jody Harris, Con Artist Extraordinaire. </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/The Women Who Ran Genghis Khans Empire.md\"> The Women Who Ran Genghis Khans Empire </a>"
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"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/The Untold Story of the White Houses Record Collection.md\"> The Untold Story of the White Houses Record Collection </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/North Korea Hacked Him. So He Took Down Its Internet.md\"> North Korea Hacked Him. So He Took Down Its Internet </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.02 Inbox/How a billionaires boys club came to dominate the public square.md\"> How a billionaires boys club came to dominate the public square </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/There was an enormous amount of drugs being taken Graham Nash on groupies, feuds, divorce and ego.md\"> There was an enormous amount of drugs being taken Graham Nash on groupies, feuds, divorce and ego </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/Did Jesse James Bury Confederate Gold These Treasure Hunters Think So..md\"> Did Jesse James Bury Confederate Gold These Treasure Hunters Think So. </a>"
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@ -4843,6 +4908,29 @@
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"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-07-10.md\"> 2022-07-10 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-07-10.md\"> 2022-07-10 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-07-10.md\"> 2022-07-10 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-07-09.md\"> 2022-07-09 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"Ginger.md\"> Ginger </a>",
@ -4870,30 +4958,7 @@
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-07-02.md\"> 2022-07-02 </a>",
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"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-07-01.md\"> 2022-07-01 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-30.md\"> 2022-06-30 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/Jeff Bezoss Next Monopoly The Press.md\"> Jeff Bezoss Next Monopoly The Press </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-29.md\"> 2022-06-29 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-28.md\"> 2022-06-28 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/At 88, Poker Legend Doyle Brunson Is Still Bluffing. Or Is He.md\"> At 88, Poker Legend Doyle Brunson Is Still Bluffing. Or Is He </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-27.md\"> 2022-06-27 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"01.03 Family/Amélie Solanet.md\"> Amélie Solanet </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"03.02 Travels/@@Travels.md\"> @@Travels </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"03.02 Travels/Bahrein.md\"> Bahrein </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/The Biggest Change in Media Since Cable Is Happening Right Now.md\"> The Biggest Change in Media Since Cable Is Happening Right Now </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/At 88, Poker Legend Doyle Brunson Is Still Bluffing. Or Is He.md\"> At 88, Poker Legend Doyle Brunson Is Still Bluffing. Or Is He </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/Jeff Bezoss Next Monopoly The Press.md\"> Jeff Bezoss Next Monopoly The Press </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/The Biggest Change in Media Since Cable Is Happening Right Now.md\"> The Biggest Change in Media Since Cable Is Happening Right Now </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-26.md\"> 2022-06-26 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/Dianne Feinstein, the Institutionalist.md\"> Dianne Feinstein, the Institutionalist </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-25.md\"> 2022-06-25 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-25.md\"> 2022-06-25 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.03 News/Waiting for keys, unable to break down doors Uvalde schools police chief defends delay in confronting gunman.md\"> Waiting for keys, unable to break down doors Uvalde schools police chief defends delay in confronting gunman </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-25.md\"> 2022-06-25 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-25.md\"> 2022-06-25 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-21.md\"> 2022-06-21 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-24.md\"> 2022-06-24 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-25.md\"> 2022-06-25 </a>",
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"Bandes Dessinées.md\"> Bandes Dessinées </a>"
"<a class=\"internal-link\" href=\"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2022-06-30.md\"> 2022-06-30 </a>"
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File diff suppressed because one or more lines are too long

@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
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File diff suppressed because one or more lines are too long

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"time": "2022-07-12",
"rowNumber": 188
},
{
"title": ":camera: [[Storage and Syncing|Storage & Sync]]: Transfer pictures to ED",
"time": "2022-07-14",
"rowNumber": 207
"rowNumber": 208
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{
"title": ":cloud: [[Storage and Syncing|Storage & Sync]]: Backup Volumes to [[Sync|Sync.com]]",
"time": "2022-09-12",
"rowNumber": 200
"rowNumber": 201
},
{
"title": "Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for Anchor|Anchor Wallet]]",
@ -30,7 +25,12 @@
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"time": "2022-10-07",
"rowNumber": 193
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@ -100,19 +100,19 @@
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"time": "2023-12-31",
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"title": ":fleur_de_lis: [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#Backup procedure|backup]] the DB & Files",
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"title": "[[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#Backup procedure|backup]] the DB & Files",
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"title": ":fleur_de_lis: [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#PHP versioning|check the PHP version]] server-side",
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"title": "[[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: Explore the possibility of webhosting through [[Hosting Tasks#Decentralised hosting|decentralised services]] (Blockchain)",
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@ -189,7 +189,7 @@
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"time": "2023-07-14",
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@ -245,7 +245,7 @@
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"time": "2022-07-13",
"time": "2023-07-13",
"rowNumber": 100
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@ -341,30 +341,30 @@
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"time": "2022-07-11",
"rowNumber": 106
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@ -401,7 +401,7 @@
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@ -473,34 +473,34 @@
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"time": "2022-07-23",
"rowNumber": 239
},
{
"title": "🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]]: Update the Blocked IP list",
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"rowNumber": 257
"time": "2022-07-23",
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}
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@ -565,6 +565,20 @@
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"title": "18:14 :envelope: [[@Lifestyle]], [[2022-07-10|Memo]]: order address- printed bristols",
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"rowNumber": 91
}
],
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"title": "16:15 :iphone: [[@Computer Set Up]], [[2022-07-15|Memo]]: find a new media player",
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"rowNumber": 91
}
]
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@ -13,9 +13,9 @@ Stress: 30
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 35
BackHeadBar: 20
Water:
Coffee: 2
Steps:
Water: 3.3
Coffee: 3
Steps: 10585
Ski:
Riding:
Racket:
@ -89,6 +89,8 @@ This section does serve for quick memos.
%% ### %%
&emsp;
- [ ] 18:14 :envelope: [[@Lifestyle]], [[2022-07-10|Memo]]: order address- printed bristols 📆2022-07-31
- [x] 19:35 :racing_car: [[@Lifestyle]], [[2022-07-10|Memo]]: check with AXA if [[MRCK|Megan Rose]] is covered under the current insurance 📅 2022-07-15 ✅ 2022-07-12
---

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---
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Water: 2
Coffee: 3
Steps: 10331
Ski:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
title: "Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2022-07-11
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
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---
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```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2022-07-11Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2022-07-11NSave
&emsp;
# 2022-07-11
&emsp;
```ad-abstract
title: Summary
collapse: open
Note Description
```
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Memos
&emsp;
#### Memos
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% ### %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Notes
&emsp;
Loret ipsum
&emsp;
&emsp;

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---
Date: 2022-07-12
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: Yes
Sleep: 8
Happiness: 95
Gratefulness: 95
Stress: 30
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 35
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 2.9
Coffee: 4
Steps: 5002
Ski:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
title: "Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2022-07-12
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
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---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2022-07-12Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2022-07-12NSave
&emsp;
# 2022-07-12
&emsp;
```ad-abstract
title: Summary
collapse: open
Note Description
```
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Memos
&emsp;
#### Memos
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% ### %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Notes
&emsp;
Loret ipsum
&emsp;
&emsp;

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---
Date: 2022-07-13
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: Yes
Sleep: 8
Happiness: 95
Gratefulness: 95
Stress: 30
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 35
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 2.85
Coffee: 4
Steps: 4934
Ski:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
title: "Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2022-07-13
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
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---
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```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2022-07-13Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2022-07-13NSave
&emsp;
# 2022-07-13
&emsp;
```ad-abstract
title: Summary
collapse: open
Note Description
```
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Memos
&emsp;
#### Memos
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% ### %%
&emsp;
- [x] 12:04 :desktop_computer: [[Selfhosting]], [[2022-07-13|Memo]]: changer le port SSH 📅 2022-07-16 ✅ 2022-07-14
---
&emsp;
### Notes
&emsp;
Loret ipsum
&emsp;
&emsp;

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---
Date: 2022-07-14
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location:
CollapseMetaTable: Yes
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Stress: 30
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 35
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 4
Coffee: 3
Steps: 5961
Ski:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
title: "Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2022-07-14
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
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---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2022-07-14Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2022-07-14NSave
&emsp;
# 2022-07-14
&emsp;
```ad-abstract
title: Summary
collapse: open
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```
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Memos
&emsp;
#### Memos
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% ### %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Notes
&emsp;
Loret ipsum
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
---
Date: 2022-07-15
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: Yes
Sleep: 7.5
Happiness: 60
Gratefulness: 60
Stress: 30
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 35
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 3.83
Coffee: 3
Steps: 8425
Ski:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
title: "Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2022-07-15
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
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---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2022-07-15Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2022-07-15NSave
&emsp;
# 2022-07-15
&emsp;
```ad-abstract
title: Summary
collapse: open
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```
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Memos
&emsp;
#### Memos
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% ### %%
&emsp;
- [ ] 16:15 :iphone: [[@Computer Set Up]], [[2022-07-15|Memo]]: find a new media player 📆2022-07-31
---
&emsp;
### Notes
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Loret ipsum
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,104 @@
---
Date: 2022-07-16
DocType: Note
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TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: Yes
Sleep: 7
Happiness: 90
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 30
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 35
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 3.25
Coffee: 3
Steps:
Ski:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
title: "Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2022-07-16
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
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---
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```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2022-07-16Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2022-07-16NSave
&emsp;
# 2022-07-16
&emsp;
```ad-abstract
title: Summary
collapse: open
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```
&emsp;
```toc
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&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Memos
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#### Memos
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% ### %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Notes
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Loret ipsum
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,151 @@
---
Alias: [""]
Tag: ["Art", "Cinema", "Classic"]
Date: 2022-07-10
DocType: "WebClipping"
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp: 2022-07-10
Link: https://thenewbev.com/tarantinos-reviews/american-graffiti/
location:
CollapseMetaTable: Yes
---
Parent:: [[@News|News]]
Read:: No
---
&emsp;
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-AmericanGraffitiNSave
&emsp;
# American Graffiti | New Beverly Cinema
##### American Graffiti \- (1973)
Just as the decade of the seventies was getting underway, still trying to shake off the yoke of the late sixties, two nostalgia-oriented memory pieces were released in 1971 that proved tremendously popular with movie-going audiences. Peter Bogdanovichs *The Last Picture Show,* based on the novel by *Hud* writer Larry McMurtry, who based the novel on his youth growing up in the small Texas town of Anarene during the fifties. And Robert Mulligans *Summer of 42,* written as a screenplay by Herman Raucher and based on his own youth growing up in the forties.
The story of *The Last Picture Show* takes place in 1951 in the postage-stamp-size town of Anarene, Texas, and it follows a few of its citizens. *Sam the Lion* (Ben Johnson), the town patriarch.
*Lois Farrow* (Ellen Burstyn), the trophy wife of the local oil baron.
*Ruth Popper* (Cloris Leachman), the lonely wife of the local football coach.
*Genevieve* (Eileen Brennan), the waitress of the towns favorite diner.
But both the book and the film focus on two football-playing high school seniors, *Sonny Crawford* (Timothy Bottoms) and *Duane Jackson* (Jeff Bridges) as they chase, court, and fight over *Jacy Farrow* (Cybill Shepherd), the prettiest girl in Anarene and daughter of the richest man in the county (Burstyns Lois is her mother).
A description of the plot wouldnt amount to much more than a *TV Guide* synopsis of an episode of *Peyton Place.*
*Duane and Jacy go on a double date with Sonny and Charlene Duggs (*Sharon Taggart).
*Sonny starts an affair with the football coachs wife, Ruth Popper* (Cloris Leachman).
*Duane takes Jacy to Wichita Falls for their big date.*
*Sonny and Duane spend their night together before Duane ships off to Korea. They see The Last Picture Show.*
In fact, *Peyton Place* was a jumping-off point for novelist Larry McMurtry to write the book in the first place. Except instead of the ivy-covered walls, manicured green lawns, and huge oak trees of *Peyton Place,* you have the dusty, windy, practically deserted Texas town of Anarene, with its limited people living their limited lives. McMurtry writes the book from a more anthropological perspective than most *how I grew up to write the book-*books. Especially a Texas anthropological perspective. As opposed to Bogdanovichs film, McMurtrys novel has a decided lack of compassion when it comes to the citizens of Anarene. Its almost as if McMurtry is saying, *I grew up with these people, I know them, and I know theyre idiots.*
When Peters film was first released it was greeted as an instant classic. Not the least because it *looked* like a classic. A problem with shooting period movies in color is the motion pictures most vivid visual component could turn out to be the ugly colors of the costumes. A problem Bogdonovich avoided by shooting the film in widescreen black and white (its actually closer to black and grey).
Peters picture was the first studio film in years to be shot in black and white, not for financial reasons, but artistic ones.
While after Bogdanovich, a few other filmmakers shot feature-films in black and white, but with a few exceptions, Bob Fosses *Lenny* and Joan Micklin Silvers *Hester Street,* it was almost always done to better approximate the genre the film took place in. Mel Brooks shoots *Young Frankenstein* in black and white to invoke the Universal monster movies of the thirties. His buddy Carl Reiner shoots *Dead Men Dont Wear Plaid* in black and white to match up with the forties film noir clips they use. Even Martin Scorseses *Raging Bull* uses its black and white photography to invoke New York street classics of the thirties, forties, and fifties, as well as classic boxing pictures like *Body and Soul, The Champ,* and *The Set-Up* (*and* to make it look different from *Rocky*).
Bogdanovich shoots black and white on *The Last Picture Show* to invoke the period, realism, and loneliness of the story. But on the other hand, its shimmery monochromatic grey on black photography and classic George Stevens-like framing suggests, like Mel Brooks and Carl Reiners films do, the trappings of a film genre of another time.
But in this case, its not an obvious genre like horror films or private detective movies.
The look of *The Last Picture Show* suggests a prestige Hollywood picture of the fifties (*From Here to Eternity, A Place in the Sun, Home from the Hills*). The exact kind of film you can imagine *Sonny & Duane* watching at the towns lone movie theatre. And due to both Bogdanovich and McMurtrys old soul quality, the movie actually *feels* like a fifties film.
Yet the material, while never being explicit, deals with its subject of sexual repression and sexual exploration in an upfront straightforward manner that would have been impossible for a Hollywood movie in the fifties (not a Bergman Swedish film, or an Italian Fellini film, but a Hollywood movie? No fucking way). So while *The Last Picture Show* looked like a classic fifties Hollywood film, it didnt sound like one. When the characters talk about sex its not camouflaged in euphemisms. In an Otto Preminger film of the fifties, when Jeff Bridges takes Cybill Shepherd to a motel in Wichita Falls to have sex for the first time, they wouldnt have announced what theyre going to do (much to Ottos chagrin). But while the characters wouldnt just come out and state that theyre going to fuck, Preminger would imply it, and the adults in the audience would know (he hoped) what Preminger intended without it having to be spelled out.
In the fifties, almost everything involving Cybill Shepherds character Jacy would have had to be camouflaged.
But that was Hollywood filmmaking in the fifties.
All the best sellers and the big theatrical dramas of the day got the sex drained out of them when they inevitably received their big Hollywood screen adaptation (*From Here to Eternity*).
So, in its own way, *The Last Picture Show* demonstrated both the freedom of *New Hollywood,* but also the promise of what post-war Hollywood *could* have been all along if only Hollywood hadnt decided to be so stubbornly immature.
*The Last Picture Show* was the critical smash of the year (even more than the eventual Academy Award winner for best picture that year, *The French Connection*) and it did surprisingly well at the box office. While a lot of films in the seventies drew raves from New York and Los Angeles film critics, when they played outside of big cities, they tended to die in the lone small-town movie theatres that Bogdanovichs film is named after. But *The Last Picture Show* had a rural appeal that *Mean Streets* didnt. Garnering eight Academy Award nominations and two wins (Ben Johnson and Cloris Leachman for best-supporting actor and actress).
Nevertheless, it wasnt as popular as the other nostalgia-based remembrance of things past, Robert Mulligans *Summer of 42.
**Summer of 42* floored seventies audiences in a way the more austere *The Last Picture Show* could never hope to duplicate. The film tells the story of screenwriter Herman Rauchers summer vacation on Nantucket Island in 1942, just as World War Two was heating up for American soldiers. But the young boys vacationing on the Island *Hermie* (Gary Grimes), *Oscy* (Jerry Houser, one of the most beloved characters of early seventies cinema), and *Benjie* (Oliver Conant) have only one thing on their minds, and it isnt the war. The boys, whose age is never clarified, look to be 15 or 16. And at least Oscy and Hermie are bound and determined to leave their virginity behind by summers end.
No Hollywood film up to that time had ever dealt so frankly with the efforts of trying to get laid. Soon that would become the basic plot of every youth comedy to come out for the next two decades. But in 1971 audiences werent used to teenagers talking so realistically about sex. And the comedy exploits of the kids fumbling attempts to lose their virginity brought the house down in cinemas all over America. Audiences laughed uproariously at the naughty goings-on on-screen. At nine (when I saw the film) I was only able to decipher so much of Oscys *trim-hunt,* but the huge laughter from all the adults surrounding me clued me into the naughty-by-nature hijinxs (later when I found my stepfathers stash of filthy porno magazines, and told him about it, he mentioned that was like the scene in *Summer of 42* when Hermie, Oscy, and Benjie made the same find).
For the first three acts, Mulligans film is hysterical (then and now). In fact its so damn funny, little did audiences suspect the gut-punch waiting for them in the films powerful fourth act.
While on the island, Hermie becomes infatuated with the young bride of a soldier who has gone off to war named *Dorothy* (radiant Jennifer ONeill). Dorothy lives in the house she rented with her husband before he shipped out. Like the boys, we never learn exactly what Dorothys age is (Id estimate somewhere between 24-26). But one of the reasons we never learn her age, is because in real life Raucher never learned Dorothys real age, later stating she could have even been as young as twenty. Hermie introduces himself to the young (older) woman and a pleasant friendship develops between them. As he makes himself available to lug groceries from the local grocer to her house. And even stops by to assist her in chores that need doing. All the while harboring a fantasy that it will be Dorothy, not the other appropriate aged island pinheads, that will be his first sexual experience.
This far-fetched fantasy comes to pass, but in a far different context than the boy could have ever imagined. Im being cryptic because I want you to see the movie if you havent already. The slow dance that Hermie and Dorothy share at the climax of the film is quite simply one of the most devastating sequences Ive ever witnessed (apparently Kubrick felt the same). In 1971, while the comedy connected with me, the tragedy flew right over my head. I didnt understand why grown-ups around me were crying. I saw *Summer of 42* twice at the theatres when it came out (and later I saw the sequel *Class of 44* when it was released). But it wouldnt be until thirty-five years later, when I screened a 35mm film print I bought, that I would understand the meaning of the films ending. I cry easily in movies. But rarely have I wept like I wept while Hermie and Dorothy slow danced to Michel Legrands incredibly beautiful theme music.
*Summer of 42* is quite simply one of the most powerful film experiences Ive ever witnessed. And thats with full acknowledgment that Gary Grimes as our young lead is really only *okay* in the role (hes a far stronger a presence in the sequel *Class of 44).* Jennifer ONeill was so luminous in her role as Hermies object of affection, that she parlayed her success in that film to a leading lady career in Hollywood movies that would last till the end of the decade.
And Jerry Housers Oscy *should* have made him if not a movie star then at least a popular comedic character actor for the next twenty years. The thing that stands out about Rauchers screenplay is how achingly truthful it is. You can believe more or less that events played themselves out just the way Raucher claimed they did. He didnt even change the names, Hermie is Herman, Oscy is his best friend Oscar. He kept so much of the story the way it happened, that thirty years later when the film came out and was a hit, the real-life Dorothy saw the film and recognized Rauchers remembrance. Hermie never saw Dorothy again after she left Nantucket Island. But in 1971 he received a letter from her. In a 2002 interview he said; “*I recognized her handwriting. But were talking about 1971, which was almost 30 years after the incident, and I get this letter, and the postmark was Canton, Ohio, and she had remarried. And, interestingly enough, she was worried about what she had done to me and my psyche. And her last sentence was: The ghosts of that night 30 years ago are better left undisturbed. She didnt want to tell me who she was. (But) she was a grandmother. She had remarried. I hope shes still out there. Ive never heard from her again.”*
Rauchers screenplay, *initially,* wasnt meant to focus so much on the story of Dorothy and Hermie, but instead be a tribute to his best friend Oscy Seltzer who was killed in action in North Korea in 1952. But the writer in Raucher realized the incident with Dorothy was the real ending of his movie. Because the film was a hit, Raucher was able to write a sequel, *Class of 44,* that sees the two young men enter college, and eventually sends Oscy in uniform off to his doom overseas. *Class of 44* is pretty terrific, even though it cant really compete with the first movies devastating climax, or its initial sexual humor. In fact, the weirdest thing about the sequel is it doesnt really end, it just suddenly *stops.
*But where the film scores is in the more mature rendering of Hermie and Oscy (Benjies disposed of almost immediately). Grimes performance in the first film may have been standard-issue, but between *Summer of 42* and *Class of 44,* Grimes had starred in a few movies, including a very good seventies western *The Culpepper Cattle Co.,* and even in movies alongside John Wayne and Lee Marvin*.* So by the time Grimes encores his signature role, its a much more mature and confident actor at the helm. And as good as Houser was in the first film, hes even better in the second one. Herman Rauchers desire to honor his childhood best friend is beautifully realized in the films dramatic climax. Which just consists of Oscy in uniform, ready to ship out overseas in the morning. And the two buddies spend one last night together getting drunk. The devotion that Raucher feels for his long lost friend (Oscy died a hero) makes this sequence one of cinemas greatest statements on male love. When a drunken Oscy falls out of the passenger seat of a parked car, crumpled on the asphalt, laughing at himself, you realize that this is probably Rauchers last vivid memory of his old chum.
Heartbreaking.
God knows how many movies have been made that followed the template of boys in various eras trying to get laid. And almost all of them followed the Hermie (the sensitive boy) and Oscy (the more raunchy sexually wised one) dynamic. Even when Garry Marshalls TV series *Happy Days* first came on the air (before Fonzie took over), it copied the *Summer of 42* dynamic, with Ron Howards Richie filling the Hermie role, and Anson Williams Potsie channeling Oscy (Im sure Williams was cast due to his slight resemblance to Houser). One of the most successful Israeli movies ever made was Boaz Davidsons *Lemon Popsicle.* Which basically told the same story of the three boys (the exact same types as *Summer of 42*) trying to get laid, only the Israeli film took place in the early sixties, and it didnt have a Dorothy character. But the film was so successful that there really isnt any Israeli that hasnt seen it. So Im showing my Israeli fiancée my groovy 35mm print of *Summer of 42.* And about halfway through I remember the similarities between *Lemon Popsicle* and *Summer of 42.
*So I bring it up to her as shes watching. And my fiancée (now my wife) said; “*Really? You know, I was just thinking, this is sorta like Lemon Popsicle if Lemon Popsicle was a real movie.”*
But it was three years later when George Lucas would make the nostalgia piece that was to define the seventies, *American Graffiti.* The film deals with a group of teenagers on the last night of summer in 1962. Even though it was the sleeper success of *American Graffiti* that kicked off the whole wave of fifties nostalgia that threatened to overwhelm the entire decade, Lucas film was set in 62. Even though on the outside the early sixties just looked like *The Fifties Part 2,* underneath changes were brewing. The big cities had all moved on. But small towns, like the one in *American Graffiti,* were able to exist in a bubble at least until Kennedy was assassinated.
While the movie has a great cast of girls, director Lucas makes it abundantly clear, when it comes to narrative, hes only following the boys (Richard Dreyfuss, Ron Howard, Charles Martin Smith, and Paul Le Mat). Best buddies *Curt* (Dreyfuss) and *Steve* (Howard) are leaving their small hometown of Modesto California in the morning to fly to college back east. So the college that Curt and Steve are supposed to fly off to represents more than just a normal rite of passage for the two young men. The college represents the growing consciousness of the sixties that exists beyond the Brigadoon-ish town theyre escaping.
But Curt (who is Lucas stand-in, he wants to be a writer, and when he grows up he will write *American Graffiti*) is ambivalent about getting on the plane in the morning.
Hes starting to think he might not go.
Of all the characters Curt is clearly the most intellectual, so then why is he hesitating going off to college? Usually the budding writer in these types of stories cant leave their hometown fast enough. But Curts ambivalence suggests hes a deeper sort than just a cocksure kid full of piss and gage who cant wait to jump ship on his old hometown. Curts not really questioning going to college. Hes questioning the idea of leaving all the people hes ever known. But even more than the humans he leaves behind, Curts questioning leaving the rituals of community that the young people of Modesto partake in.
Hanging out at Mels the curb service diner that is the starting point of every youth in towns weekend night. Mels where the burgers are juicy, the shakes are thick, the neon is pink and green, the music is rock and roll, and the fancy faced waitresses in colorful uniforms wiz back and forth on roller skates, balancing trays of burgers, fries, and milkshakes.  Hanging out at high school dances, that even though hes graduated, he could probably get away with for another year without looking creepy.
What sets Dreyfuss Curt apart from his peers and the rest of the cast, is hes the only one who realizes how temporary these rituals are. Curt knows if he gets on that airplane tomorrow morning everything that the film so nostalgically celebrates he can kiss all that goodbye. The town and the life he leaves, wont be the town and the life he returns to. *If* he even does return, which in all likelihood, he wont. Curt seems to *know* once he leaves hes not coming back. Curt knows the boy who exists today will no longer exist even two years from now. Thats why hes contemplating staying too long at the party. But Lucas balances Curts resistance with the cautionary example of *Big John Milner* (Paul Le Mat). Milner *is* the guy who stayed too long at the sock hop. Milner acts and lives as if its 1958. Hes a few years older than the other boys. Big John chooses to hang out with kids who were probably freshmen in high school when he was the big shot senior, instead of contemporaries from his old class. He continues to cruise the boulevard on cruise night and try and pick up high school girls. He continues to live off the reputation he created for himself in high school (the fastest drag racer in town). And Lucas gives him a dandy of a dilemma. A new guy in town, Harrison Fords *Bob Falfa,* whos gunning to dethrone the king and take away the only thing Big John has left…his reputation.
This is a neat twist on the high school football star who always planned on going pro but didnt have the talent to go all the way, and lives in the glow of former gridiron glory.
In the sequel, *More American Graffiti,* we learn Big John Milner does move on to be a professional drag racer. His storyline in the sequel follows his attempt to secure sponsorship for his racing team and his attempt to romance a beautiful Norwegian girl who speaks practically no English, who he just met. The romance is light, yet meaningful since we in the audience know that Milner will die later that day. Maybe Big John will never experience life, but at least he can experience love.
As Bob Dylan sang, *The Times are a Changing,* but in the first movie Milner rejects even the small changes that have occurred in Modesto so far. When Mackenzie Phillips *Carol* asks him; “*Dont you think The Beach Boys are boss?”
*Big John proclaims; *“I hate all that surfin shit. Rock and roll aint been worth a shit since Buddy Holly died.”*
*American Graffiti* made George Lucas a directorial superstar and for good reason. Like a lot of great nostalgia pieces (*Meet Me in St. Louis, Summer of 42, Cooley High, New York New York, Dazed and Confused)* it seems to get better the further it gets from its original release date. With *The Last Picture Show* Bogdanovich and *Ben Hur* cinematographer Robert Surtees (father of *King of Darkness* Bruce Surtees) silky black and white photography had the effect of draining every modern aspect out of the movie. And in *Summer of 42,* the cinematographer *(again, Robert Surtees, in the same fucking year!)* doesnt just do a great approximation of fifties Technicolor (like Gordon Willis will later do in *September 30, 1955*), he *actually* shoots it in Technicolor (if you havent seen *Summer of 42* projected in an *I.B. Technicolor 35mm film print,* you havent seen *Summer of 42*).
But George Lucas goes the other way when it comes to capturing his memories on film. Lucas invokes the candy-colored pop ephemera of the fifties in *his* visual scheme. The green hues of the fluorescent bulbs that light the liquor stores, hamburger stands, and pinball arcades that the characters loiter around. The bright colors of the jukeboxes, diner neon signs, and the candy apple red and canary yellow of the hot rods that cruise up and down the main drag. Lucas poignantly parades all this in front of us with the added knowledge that all this glorious chrome and paint and pomade is about to go out of style and be replaced by space-age sixties chic.
George fills *Graffiti* with one clever stroke after another. One of the strokes that helped make the movie tremendously popular was the wall-to-wall fifties rock and roll soundtrack that can be heard in the film from beginning to end. Usually emanating from various car radios. Including in this radio soundscape the voice of all-night dis- jockey Wolfman Jack, who acts as the films de facto narrator. Lucas didnt invent the radio soundscape. Bogdanovich used it and used it vividly in his first two movies (*Targets* and *The Last Picture Show*), as well as in his new picture that year of 73, *Paper Moon.
*Writer/director Floyd Mutrux would also make the radio soundscape his own in all of his pictures (*Dusty and Sweets McGee, Aloha Bobby and Rose, American Hot Wax,* and *The Hollywood Knights*). And also the same year as *American Graffiti,* Martin Scorsese will create a jukebox soundscape emanating from the Little Italy cocktail lounges and pool halls in *Mean Streets.* But the reason every new movie featuring young people from 1974 to the present features a wall-to-wall soundtrack of pop tunes (not to mention a soundtrack album collection of hits) is due to the influence of *American Graffiti.
*But even more important to the success of the movie than all that boss radio was the fact that the whole movie takes place during the course of one night. And the film concludes when the sun comes up, Milner races Falfa, Curt finally talks to the blonde in the white T-Bird (Suzanne Somers), and then finally, boards the airplane (minus Ron Howards Steve) that will whisk him away from Modesto forever.
Personally, I think Curt always knew he was going to get on that airplane. He just wanted it to be *his* idea and not some pre-ordained destiny. His wandering around all over town all night was just Curts way of saying goodbye.
Many other films would come along that tried to duplicate *American Graffitis* one-night structure, telling a story with a gang of characters, and then cross-cutting back and forth between them all picture long. But in other films, the different pockets of characters were usually given proper storylines. But the different vignettes of the shenanigans the *Graffiti* gang gets into never really rises to the level of *story.* It just poses different questions to the audience about what will or will not happen to the different characters as the night progresses.
Whos the girl in the white T-Bird?
Will Curt finally meet her?
Will Curt leave in the morning?
Will Steve and Laurie (Cindy Williams, who may give the strongest characterization in the whole film) break up?
Will Big John beat Bob Falfa?
Will The Toad get lucky?
At the end of the night, what will Candy Clarks Debbie do? (Debbie really deserved a closing crawl wrap-up, but the sequel *More American Graffiti* provided Debbie with a 67 Haight-Ashbury future).
All these vignettes play great, and the film seamlessly cross-cuts between all of them. However, the one thats the least convincing is Curts encounter with the street gang The Pharaohs*.
*Its the only part of the movie where you feel that the screenplay is going out of its way to create hijinxs for the character. Even the comic vignette of The Toad trying to buy alcohol outside a liquor store seems organic to both the movie and Toads rite of passage.
But the whole gag where the cop car loses its wheels, today, seems contrived (it doesnt help that a dozen other movies have copied it verbatim). Now if George Lucas is reading this, Im sure his response would be; “*Sorry, Quentin, if you didnt care for that gag, but more than any other thing youve mentioned, that gag was the reason we were ultimately able to sell the movie and was an audience highlight.”*
Fair enough.
In 1973 the audience needed *that* big laugh at *that* moment in the picture. And the TV spot that sold the picture to audiences *really* needed it. That gag isnt my problem with The Pharaohs section. My problem is the outrageous miscasting of Bo Hopkins as Pharaohs gang leader *Joe.
*No dont get me wrong, Im a huge Bo Hopkins fan. And I dont just mean in Peckinpah films. I love him in *White Lightning* (for my money the best country-fried co-star Burt Reynolds ever had), *The Nickel Ride, Posse, A Small Town in Texas,* and *Tentacles.* And during a brief moment in the seventies, when it looked as if Hopkins might pull off a transition from interesting young character actor to interesting young leading man (it was mentioned by some he possessed *a McQueen quality)*, I was rooting for him and was disappointed when he drifted back into supporting character roles once again (In one of his arcane pop culture references, Dennis Miller once referred to him as, *The Poor mans Jerry Reed!”).* But in *American Graffiti* the entertaining performer is the one blatantly false note in the picture. The reason Hopkins seems so out of place (aside from the fact he looks like hes thirty-five) is its pretty fucking obvious Joe was written to be Latino. The rest of the gang are Latino (or look Latino at least). Whats cool about The Pharaohs sub-plot, is after watching all these Northern California white boys drive up and down the street in cars their parents (probably) helped them buy, The Pharaohs represent (in what I think is a Hollywood studio movie first) Low Ryder culture.
The films whole cast spends most of their time cruising in cars. And its almost cute how squeaky clean they are (their form of juvenile delinquency involves water balloons and cans of shaving cream).
But as soon as we get in the car with The Pharaohs, out comes the reefer and the forties of malt liquor, and they start riffing and talking shit like its *Boulevard Nights.
*But what the fuck is thirty-five-year-old, blonde hillbilly Bo Hopkins doing in that car?
Jesus Christ, he looks more out of place than Richard Dreyfuss does.
I suspect George Lucas was persuaded to make the leader of the gang white so as not to have the only featured minority in the cast be a hood. But the scene when Dreyfuss Curt is in the back seat of The Pharaohs car has a definite racial element to it. Its not just that The Pharaohs are from the wrong side of the tracks (the town seems too small to have different tracks or two competing High Schools). When Curt is trapped in the backseat of their car its obvious he doesnt belong there. And not just because hes not a street gang type or a tough guy, its because hes white. What saves the scene is Dreyfuss bemused reaction to being kidnapped.
     *Well, if nobody is telling me that Im being kidnapped, I dont really know for sure if I am being kidnapped.*
     *Well…rather than know for sure, lets just pretend Im hanging out with these guys because I want to.*
However just because I think Bo Hopkins doesnt work in *American Graffiti,* I dont really blame him, its Lucas and casting director Fred Roos fault for making such a disastrous casting decision (Id love to know who the second or third choice was? Sylvester Stallone? Henry Winkler? How about Pepe Serna? Or Rudy Ramos? No, hilllbilly Bo Hopkins was absolutely the perfect choice). But Im happy to report as a lifelong Bo Hopkins fan that Hopkins character shows up in the sequel during The Toads Vietnam sequence. And in *that* setting, Hopkins redeems the miscasting of the first film.     
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Tag: ["Crime", "Society", "US"]
Date: 2022-07-10
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Link: https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/interactive/2022/gay-dc-cop-parson-teen-florida-arrest/
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# Brett Parson, gay D.C. cop arrested in Florida, divides LGBTQ community
He had cinched cuffs around hundreds of wrists as a D.C. police officer, but now Brett Parsons own hands were being placed behind his back.
“So Ill let you know guys, right now, that until I talk to an attorney, I wont talk to anybody,” Parson said.
The police in Boca Raton, Fla., guided him toward their cruiser as their body cameras recorded the encounter.
“I think I know exactly what its about. Its a brand-new warrant, right?” Parson guessed. “Brand-new? Issued probably this morning?”
“Yep,” answered one officer. They were outside the condo where Parsons parents lived. Hed been staying with them to help his father recover from a surgery.
On this February morning, hed taken the trash out, not knowing detectives were waiting for him outside. They asked for the keys to his fathers red convertible. They asked him to turn over his phone.
Parson, 53, instructed them not to search anything without a warrant.
“I know what it is youre looking for,” he said.
Around 12:30 a.m. the night before, Parson had been pulled over by officers from Coconut Creek, whod seen him driving the red convertible near a quiet office park 20 minutes away. Police reported they watched as the convertible followed a gray sedan into a parking lot. Both cars made a U-turn and returned to the road. The gray sedan then pulled into a fenced-off area with an empty field and a Comcast tower. The gate, which should have been locked, was open. What were these drivers doing there in the middle of the night? The officers stopped both cars.
Parson told them they were mistaken. He wasnt following the gray sedan. He was just lost and looking for Interstate 95.
“Im a cop from D.C.,” he said. In reality, he had been retired and only a reserve officer for two years.
LEFT: D.C. Police Lt. Brett Parson speaks during a meeting of D.C.'s Hate Bias Task Force in 2019. (Michael E. Miller/TWP) RIGHT: Parson, shown here in 2005, was known nationally and internationally as a pioneer of gay rights in policing. (Carol Guzy/The Washington Post)
They let him drive away. Then they went to talk to the driver of the gray sedan.
The window rolled down to reveal a thin White boy. He said he had pulled over to text a friend. The officer told the boy he didnt believe him. In his report, he described what the teenager — who turned out to be 16 did next.
“He dropped his head, took a deep breath, and stated he met the guy who was following behind him online and they were meeting to hook up.
The teenager began to tell the officers the story he would repeat at least three times that night, including at the sexual assault treatment center where he was taken after his parents were called.
Hed met Parson on Growlr, a dating app for gay men that requires users to be 18. Hed lied about his birthday to use the app, claiming he was 18. He said he and Parson exchanged oral sex in the parking lot of a day care.
He said he knew Parson used to be a police officer.
What he didnt know was that Parson was not just any police officer. The man who had just driven away was known nationally and internationally as a pioneer of gay rights in policing.
In the nations capital, [Parson built an award-winning liaison unit](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/2005/03/28/the-stewards-of-gay-washington/c8cfcce2-1376-46c6-aa62-b563d134c50b/?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template) that investigated hate crimes, befriended advocates and marched in Pride parades, slowly revolutionizing the relationship between the police and the citys LGBTQ community. People saw him everywhere: dance clubs and book clubs, hospital bedsides and funeral homes, early-morning court hearings and late-night domestic disputes.
The citys [2019 guide to Pride](https://issuu.com/capitalpride/docs/guide_final_2019?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template) called Parson a “living legend.” The Department of Justice, the State Department, Amnesty International, the Southern Poverty Law Center and other police departments relied on his expertise.
Now, he was going to jail. The warrant for [his arrest](https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2022/02/16/parson-charged-dc-police/?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template) listed two counts of unlawful sexual activity. If convicted, he could face a prison sentence and a lifetime as a registered sex offender. Under Florida law, claiming to be misled about the age of a victim [cannot](http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&Search_String=&URL=0700-0799%2F0794%2FSections%2F0794.021.html&itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template) be used as a legal defense.
Parsons arrest stunned the legions of people who admired him, leaving them with questions about what exactly happened in Florida and whether it represented some sort of mistake or a serious betrayal.
Months later, they are still without answers. The case, which depends largely on the involvement of a 16-year-old identified only by his initials, is moving slowly. It will be months, and possibly years, before a judge or jury determines Parsons fate.
While the former lieutenant waits for his future to be decided, those who put their trust in him for so long are revisiting his past. This story is based on public records and interviews with more than three dozen people whose lives and work Parson influenced during his 26-year career. They are grappling with the person they thought they knew — and the power he wielded for so long.
Parson, who has pleaded not guilty to the charges, did not respond to repeated interview requests.
On the morning of his Feb. 12 arrest, Parson frequently reminded the officers taking him into custody that he, too, was a cop. He commented on their equipment, mentioned he was scheduled to teach at the FBI National Academy, mused about what his approach to this kind of warrant would be and joked about his own history of stuffing large men into cramped back seats.
“With all due — we know who you are, sir,” an officer informed him. “Your credentials dont matter. … Its nothing to do with how this is being handled.”
“I understand,” Parson said. He thanked them for being caring.
They confiscated his loaded Glock 26, explained to his parents what was happening and slammed the cruiser door.
“F---,” Parson said, “Its weird being on this side.”
### Ending fairy shaking
Parsons reputation as a gay hero began with a scandal. In the late 1990s, while Parson was building a career in narcotics investigations, another D.C. officer was stationing himself outside a gay club in Southeast Washington. He was watching for men leaving the club who were wearing wedding rings or getting into cars with baby seats. He wrote down their license plates, found their contact information and called them. Pay $10,000, he said, or hed expose them to their wives and employers.
The scheme was known as “[fairy shaking](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1997/11/30/lt-stowes-sudden-fall-from-grace/a6ac37f2-57d2-47fb-b6da-0f8f6a45dde8/?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template).”
It eventually led to an FBI investigation, a nearly two-year prison sentence for the officer and the resignation of the chief of police.
To those in the LGBTQ community, the extortion was just the latest example of mistreatment by a police force with a [decades-long history](http://www.glaa.org/archive/2003/rosendallmpdhistory1119.shtml?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template) of targeting [vulnerable queer people](https://outhistory.org/exhibits/show/glaa-of-washington-dc/item/1011?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template).
“There was an overall mistrust,” remembers Peter Newsham, who later became police chief. “There was a feeling that they couldnt call the police and ensure that the police officer who came to the door was going to treat them with dignity.”
The chief installed after the scandal, Charles Ramsey, saw a solution to that problem: bolstering and broadening a newly formed Gay and Lesbian Liaison Unit.
Parson, then in his early 30s, had been openly gay since he joined the force. Hed grown up in the area and, after working as a National Hockey League referee, became a police officer in 1994.
He didnt want the job as head of the unit. But Ramsey, as Parson told the story, didnt give him a choice.
\[[The victims of D.C.s record year of hatred](https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2019/local/dc-hate-crimes/?itid=lk_interstitial_enhanced-template) \]
“I was wearing plain clothes, driving an undercover car, growing my hair out, wearing my gun on my ankle, jumping out on felony drug dealers, and flipping them for homicide cases. It was the assignment of a lifetime,” Parson later told the Community Policing Dispatch newsletter. “I was really, really afraid that my reputation was going to change from being a good cop who happened to be gay, to being a gay cop that used to be a good cop.”
Instead, he became renowned for professionalizing the unit, balancing a law-and-order approach with what was then a relatively new idea: true community policing. Rather than raid gay clubs, Parson and the five to 15 members of his unit would announce themselves over the loudspeaker, then walk around, introduce themselves and pass out refrigerator magnets with their phone number on it. The number was the workaround for those in the community who needed help, but worried about the repercussions of calling 911: a gay man experiencing domestic abuse from his partner or a transgender woman wanting to report a hate crime.
“Nowadays, its not appreciated how ground-breaking and innovative it was,” said Kurt Vorndran, who served on the D.C. Police Complaints Board for 15 years. “Those of us who were advocates at the time, we were blown away. And Brett, his personality, his skill and his professionalism was a major factor in all of this.”
TOP LEFT: Parson regularly trained other officers on the force about LGBTQ issues. (Carol Guzy/The Washington Post) TOP RIGHT: Parson, right, walks into a funeral beside then-Chief Charles Ramsey in 2005. (Carol Guzy/The Washington Post) BOTTOM LEFT: Parson joins Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld of Ohev Sholom in Washington for a prayer service in 2018. (Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post) BOTTOM RIGHT: Parson provides comfort at a memorial service for LGBTQ activist Wanda Alston in 2005. (Carol Guzy/The Washington Post)
Within three years of Parsons being put in charge, the unit won a distinguished service award from the citys Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance, an organization formed in part to protest discrimination by law enforcement. [LGBTQ rights pioneer Frank Kameny](https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/retropolis/wp/2017/06/11/from-restrained-to-radical-to-raucous-a-history-of-pride-celebrations-in-the-u-s/?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template), who became a national icon after he was fired from his job for his sexuality, handed the award to Parson.
“No longer are the police our enemy,” Kameny [declared](https://www.metroweekly.com/2003/04/shaping-the-city/?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template).
In time, the unit and the LGBTQ community worked in tandem to aid the department in solving crimes, including the murders of several transgender women in the city.
“\[Brett\] would call me, you know, I dont care what time of morning it was,” remembers Earline Budd, a longtime advocate for the citys transgender and sex worker communities. “He would wake me up and he would say, Ms. Budd, we are on the scene of a double homicide.”
Budd would help identify the victims, then see Parson at every memorial and funeral that followed, and every community meeting about stopping the next act of violence. Though Parson did stints elsewhere in the department, he returned again and again to what was renamed the LGBTQ Liaison Unit, eventually overseeing the departments entire Special Liaison Branch. He trained recruits, retrained old-timers and consulted with departments across the country trying to replicate what he had built.
“He made me feel safe,” said Kisha Allure, who works in victims services at Casa Ruby, an LGBTQ support center.
But she knew that wasnt true for everyone.
When Parson walked into a support group unannounced, she saw the uneasiness in the eyes of transgender women, especially women of color, meeting him for the first time.
He looked to many like a TV version of a cop: White and male, big and burly, always armed and always in uniform. Parson boasted that, on a police force with few openly gay cops, his imposing figure earned him respect.
“Im 6 foot, I weigh about 295 pounds, I have experience in professional athletics and ice hockey — there arent a lot of people lining up to f--- with me” he told a podcast interviewer in 2021.
What some took as Parson being direct and authoritative, others saw as arrogant and aggressive.
“He exerted his power. In some cases, he used it to stop hate, harm and death in our community, even when it wasnt popular to do so,” said June Crenshaw, director of the Wanda Alston Foundation. “But its hard to turn that power off.”
Parson was furious in 2017 when, following protests of police participation in the citys annual Pride parade, the LGBTQ Liaison Unit was asked not to march. He became so heated during a meeting with organizers that Sheila Alexander-Reid, the mayors director of LGBTQ affairs, had to calm him down.
“He was hurt that his own community would have the nerve to ask him not to be a part of the parade after all he had done,” Alexander-Reid remembered.
Parson reluctantly agreed to a compromise: He and his officers would wear D.C. police polos instead of full uniforms. But by 2019, he was ignoring the new policy, marching again in uniform down the parade route. That same week, when other members of his unit were asked to leave a Latinx Pride event, Parson returned with them 30 minutes later. He took the microphone and made a speech.
“He just walked up the church aisle, armed, this \[cisgender\] White man, all upset because somebody told his people not to be there,” remembered Nancy Cañas, who organized the event.
Some of Parsons fellow officers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media, said they were aware of concerns about his behavior.
An investigative report from the Office of Police Complaints describes a night in 2006 when Parson was monitoring 18th Street NW. A cabdriver did not properly pull over to the curb. Parsons solution: open the door, grab the driver by his shirt and rip him out of the vehicle. Parson took the taxi and drove it down the street.
“You cant do that,” the cabs stranded passengers told him. According to the complaint, Parson replied, “Shut the f--- up, b----, you dont know what youre talking about!”
Parson denied using foul language. But when asked by investigators about removing the driver from his cab, Parson replied that he had done this on “hundreds of occasions.”
The investigator found that Parson had engaged in harassment and use of excessive or unnecessary force. His punishment, a D.C. police spokesman said, was a letter in his personnel file.
On another night two years later, Parson stopped by the nightclub Town Danceboutique, where dozens of people were in line to get into what was advertised as “D.C.s biggest Pride party.” According to a deposition he gave after he was sued for his behavior that night, he was planning to pass out magnets. Instead, he chased down a woman who appeared to be putting something in her mouth. Once he stopped her and her friends, he saw a young White man walking away from the same area.
“Hey partner, come with me for a second,” Parson said, according to his 2009 deposition.
“What did I do?” the man replied as he kept walking.
Parson grabbed his arm. The man yanked it away. Parson grabbed him harder, turned and threw him through a plate-glass window.
Parsons explanation was that he was trying to pin the man up against a brick wall, and missed. The man, who declined to comment because he did not want to revisit that night, was crouched in the fetal position. He was covered in shattered glass and bleeding from his head. Parson was still trying to put him in handcuffs.
“Im yelling over and over again, Stop resisting, put your arms behind your back, ” Parson stated in the deposition. “The crowd is screaming at me. I cant hear him, but hes yelling and I, eventually, use my weight to, kind of, push my body weight down on top of him.”
Parson charged the man with assaulting a police officer.
After a trip to the hospital and a night in jail, the charges were dropped. Records show the city settled the case for $17,500.
But whether Parson was disciplined for this incident — and whether there are other use-of-force incidents are on his record — remains unclear.
Police officials declined to release Parsons disciplinary record or answer questions about it, citing the former lieutenants right to privacy. The department terminated Parson from its reserve force after his arrest in Florida. A spokesman said Parson is not under investigation in D.C., and there is nothing in his record to suggest he had inappropriate contact with anyone in the District.
As Parsons use-of-force cases were handled by police internally, his profile outside the city grew. He hosted and attended international conferences for LGBTQ law enforcement. He starred in a Justice Department training video on how police should treat the transgender community. He traveled to Vietnam and the Philippines for the State Department.
Eventually, those familiar with his decision said, he realized he could make far more money outside the department than the $121,000 records show he was making annually as a lieutenant. Parson retired in February 2020 to start his own consulting firm.
In the wake of George Floyds murder by a Minneapolis police officer, he began traveling around the country to train police on how to intervene when a fellow officer uses excessive force.
“Were not just policing others,” Parson [told NBC4](https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/we-have-to-police-ourselves-dc-program-trains-officers-to-intervene-and-prevent-harm/2444012/?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template). “We have to police ourselves.”
### I like younger
The teen messaged Parson first.
“Hey,” he wrote at 10:21 p.m., “how are you.”
Parsons Growlr profile identified him as a 53-year-old in an open relationship. His job was listed as LEO, an acronym for law enforcement officer.
“I like younger,” Parsons profile stated. “Just a regular guy looking for the same. Staying in Fort Lauderdale for the week.”
According to screenshots of Parsons messages with the teenager obtained through public records requests, Parson replied that night: “Good. U?”
The 16-year-olds profile listed his age as 18. It described him as 5-foot-7 and 140 pounds. From a list of words to describe himself, one he chose was “boy.” The term is sometimes used by adults in the gay community who identify or present as youthful.
Parson and the teenager unlocked the apps “private media” feature, allowing them to see revealing pictures of each other. Though the boys photos are not part of public records, he later told officers that they included pictures of his body and his face. In one explicit text message, Parson commented on how skinny he was.
“You know a place where we can meet thats not too far from you?” the 16-year-old asked Parson the next day.
We could definitely meet up after work. if you wanted to
I just brought dinner home to my parents. Let me get them fed, then we can chat
Why dont we meet someplace after your work. We can chat. See if we click. Then, figure out a plan from there. No pressure and no strings.
After a phone call between them, records show that the teen sent Parson the address of a Shell gas station. Around midnight, Parson pulled in driving his fathers red convertible. Its front license plate said “LIFES A BEACH.”
Looking for a more secluded place, the pair moved across the street to the parking lot of a day care.
Three hours later, at the countys sexual assault [treatment center](https://www.broward.org/NancyJCottermanCenter/Pages/Default.aspx?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template), the 16-year-old sat in a room intentionally painted in calming blues. He was handed a brochure that said, “A person 24 years of age or older … cannot receive consent from 16- and 17-year-old minors.”
“Being the victim of a crime can be overwhelming,” it read. “Your reactions are normal.”
On his phone, there was a new text from Parson: “You ok?”
“Yeah Im good,” the teenager replied. “Im home.”
Then he started talking to a detective.
“It just kinda happened,” the teenager said, according to a police transcript of the interview. “I dont really know how to explain it.”
The officer asked if he kissed back.
“I consented,” the boy said.
LEFT: An evidence photo shows the license plate of the vehicle Brett Parson drove to the gas station where he met the teenager. (Coconut Creek Police Department) RIGHT: Police say Parson and the teenager then moved to the parking lot of this day-care center in Coconut Creek, Fla. (Scott McIntyre For The Washington Post)
According to the transcript, the officer did not ask the teenager if Parson knew his real age.
Advocates who work with gay youth say its common for teenagers to explore on dating apps that allow them to meet strangers, especially if they dont feel safe expressing themselves at home or in school.
Some vulnerable kids also use dating apps to seek out adults who will pay them, though minors cannot legally consent to being purchased for sex. The officer questioning this teenager did not ask whether money was exchanged.
The boy described how he and Parson gave each other oral sex, then decided to move to another location because theyd seen someone walking in the distance.
“Did you feel like you wanted to continue what you guys are doing?” the detective asked.
“No,” the teen said. “I also didnt really feel like saying no either, but I didnt want to keep going.”
“Okay,” the detective said. “And then …”
“But I didnt show any signs either of like wanting to stop, so.”
“Okay. Did, um, did you feel scared?”
“I felt uncomfortable,” the boy said. “But I kinda went with it because I was already there.”
He told the detective Parson did not threaten him. And though he never showed him his badge or his weapon, he knew that Parson used to be a cop.
“I just didnt stop for some reason,” he said. “But I dont know why.”
After 20 minutes, the interview ended. It was 3:50 a.m. The boy, with his fathers permission, consented to give DNA to investigators. They had everything they needed to ask a judge for an arrest warrant.
### No, not Brett
Parson sat in a jail cell for nearly a week. He paid $5,000 to A Signature Only Bail Bonds, which insured the rest of his $50,000 bond. A judge ordered him to remain in Florida, stay away from all minors and live at his parents Boca Raton condo while he awaited trial.
Meanwhile, his mug shot had hit the news.
“I kept saying no, no, no, not Brett,” recalled Budd, who had helped Parson identify crime victims. “An underage young man? No.”
On Twitter and in text messages, members of D.C.s LGBTQ community quickly began taking sides. Many pointed out that while the age of consent in Florida is 18, in D.C. its 16. Parson could not have been arrested for the same set of circumstances here.
“I dont think a life should be destroyed over one foolish event late one night, especially when the contact was made on a site where everyone is supposed to be a minimum of 18,” said Rick Rosendall, former president of the Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance.
Nothing about the police reports, some argued, indicated that Parson had intentionally sought out a minor.
“To me, theres no victim, theres no predator in this story,” said transgender activist Taylor Lianne Chandler, who took to Twitter to defend Parson. “I cant fathom Brett risking his career for 20 minutes of fun.”
Others were disgusted, saying it was not acceptable even if Parson thought the person he was meeting was 18.
“Youre a police officer, you should know better,” said Tamika Spellman, a transgender advocate who has conducted training sessions alongside Parson. “You should know the differences between a grown-up and a child.”
Impossible to ignore was where the encounter happened: a state then on the verge of passing a bill to ban teachers from discussing sexual orientation and gender identity. Dubbed the [“dont say gay” law](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/04/01/what-is-florida-dont-say-gay-bill/?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template) by opponents, its supporters bandied about terms like “grooming” to create false links between homosexuality and child abuse, which is committed by people of all sexual orientations.
“Something like this just plays right into their narrative,” said John Guggenmos, owner of several gay nightclubs in D.C., including Town Danceboutique, which closed in 2018. “To me, it makes all our community look bad.”
Many who had crossed paths with Parson or invited him to speak at events said they feared that bringing any additional attention to his arrest could hurt LGBTQ progress.
But to those who put their trust in him again and again, the hurt was already done.
“For him to use his power to leave the scene, leaving this vulnerable youth to fend for himself, its devastating,” said Crenshaw, of the Wanda Alston Foundation.
Allure, at Casa Ruby, whod said Parson made her feel safe, couldnt help thinking of how vulnerable she had been as a teenager.
“Youre a leader. People look at you as a public figure. You have the nerve? The audacity? I cant. Thats where Im at,” she said.
Alexander-Reid, who was Parsons counterpart in the mayors office, said shes still waiting for some kind of explanation, maybe from Parson himself.
“If hes willing to be vulnerable and open as to what happened, Im definitely open to listen,” she said. “Hes earned my respect. And if hes made mistakes? You know what, hes not the first one.”
And then there were Parsons colleagues, officers who by training are inclined to believe that police in Florida are justified in the charges they filed.
Newsham, the former D.C. police chief, compared the situation to how he felt as a Catholic to learn of abuse in the church. To those who believed in community policing, he said, Parson was as revered as a priest.
“The trust, Ive got to tell you, its definitely fractured,” he said. “If its completely broken remains to be seen.”
### Prides missing fixture
On an overcast Saturday in June, D.C. staged its first full-fledged Pride parade since the pandemic began. The city and its people were draped in rainbows, jubilant to see the streets packed again.
On nearly every corner sat a D.C. police cruiser and a few officers, assigned to monitor the event for safety.
“Capital Pride, are you ready?” an announcer called, and onto the parade route walked another group of officers.
They too, were in uniform, wearing bulletproof vests and carrying guns. But the words “METROPOLITAN POLICE” across some of their backs were written in rainbow.
Members of the LGBTQ Liaison Unit walked alongside employees of the mayors office, shaking hands and posing for pictures. The officers were scheduled to stop by bars on U Street that night and run a tent at the Pride festival the next day — the kind of events where Parson was always a fixture.
He hadnt been seen in months. But two days before the parade, a judge granted Parsons request to leave Florida. As long as he reports to his probation officer by phone twice a week and Zooms into his court hearings, he has permission to spend the summer at his home in Provincetown, Mass. Come September, he told the court, he is planning to move back to the District.
He will return to a city where he is no longer a member of the police reserve force. His many speaking engagements have been canceled. The program that teaches police to stop unnecessary force terminated his contract.
The officers he once led kept moving down the parade route. They handed out rainbow bracelets stamped with a phone number, the direct line to the unit. Anyone who needed their help could call.
Some people slipped the bracelets onto their wrists. Some left them behind on the pavement.
*Razzan Nakhlawi and Peter Hermann contributed to this report.*
*Story editing by Lynda Robinson, photo editing by Mark Miller, copy editing by Thomas Heleba, video editing by Amber Ferguson, design and development by Alexis Arnold.*
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Tag: ["Society", "Homeless"]
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# He Had a Dark Secret. It Changed His Best Friends Life.
![Adrift in his own life, Tin Chin, left, found purpose in helping Mo Lin after they met at a homeless shelter.](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2022/07/10/nyregion/10tin-and-mo-11/08tin-and-mo-11-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale)
The Great Read
Tin Chin and Mo Lin were inseparable at the homeless shelter. But one of the men wasnt who he seemed to be.
Adrift in his own life, Tin Chin, left, found purpose in helping Mo Lin after they met at a homeless shelter.Credit...
- July 8, 2022
### Listen to This Article.
*To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times,* [*download Audm for iPhone or Android*](https://www.audm.com/?utm_source=nyt&utm_medium=embed&utm_campaign=)*.*
On his first night at the Brooklyn homeless shelter, Tin Chin met his best friend.
Estranged from his family, Mr. Chin was alone, stewing in anger and shame over all he had lost and how low he had fallen. The Chinatown restaurants he frequented with his wife and daughter, the elementary school drop-off routine, the friendly neighbors in Queens — these had been the trappings of a middle-class life that once seemed secure. A college graduate and former civil servant, Mr. Chin had to learn his city anew, and now — he could still hardly believe it — as a homeless person.
On that evening in 2012 in the Barbara Kleiman Residence in East Williamsburg, he saw only one other Chinese person in the room. The man was skinny, his ill-fitting clothes hanging loosely on his frame. Mr. Chin sized him up with an expert eye: an immigrant, most likely from Fujian Province; no family, no English, no documents.
“Im at the bottom,” Mr. Chin remembers thinking. “But Im better off than him.” 
The other man was named Mo Lin. Mr. Chin sensed that if they had met just a few years earlier, they would have had very little in common. “At the beginning, I cant say I liked him,” he said. “But we are the two Chinese people in the shelter, so we talk.”
Mr. Chin possessed little more than his closely guarded secrets, including a criminal record that haunted him. They ran through his mind on a loop, but he divulged them to no one, certainly not this new acquaintance, and instead shared his story in broad strokes — he was born in Hong Kong and had grown up in New York and was new to being homeless.
Mr. Lin was hesitant and didnt say much. It would be a while before he described his years scraping by in New York. He was indeed undocumented, and although he had worked in innumerable Chinatown kitchens, his poor health had long ago made steady work impossible, and he looked far older than his 46 years. He spent his days shuffling along the streets of Manhattans Chinatown, smoking cigarettes on the sidewalk, watching staticky TV in threadbare Fujianese community centers.
But the men soon began spending so much time together — always chatting in the shelter, strolling downtown streets, sharing plates of noodles — that acquaintances assumed they were family.
“We called them brothers,” said Mireille Massac, a Brooklyn food bank organizer who spent time with them. “He took care of Mo. What Mo needed, it went through Tin.”
Friendships can be hard to memorialize — relatives, partners, children often take pride of place. But a friendship can be the defining bond in a persons life, offering a kinship that family cannot, a refuge through lonely, hungry days.
And can a friendship offer redemption for your worst mistakes? A decade after their first night in the shelter, Mr. Chin wonders about that.
Image
![The Barbara Kleiman Residence in East Williamsburg, Brooklyn.](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2022/07/10/nyregion/10tin-and-mo-07/08tin-and-mo-07-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale)
Credit...
**The shelter rules** said everyone had to be out by 8 a.m., and Mr. Chin and Mr. Lin developed a routine. They headed to Chinatown together, where they would buy dim sum, dumplings — whatever Mr. Chin could afford on the $200 he received through public assistance every month. Mr. Lins favorite meal was the fish sandwich from McDonalds. He had unrelenting dental problems, and the soft filet was easy to chew.
They often ate in a leafy park on the edge of Chinatown, sharing a bench and watching the neighborhood swirl. Some days, they went to the library, where Mr. Chin introduced his friend to the internet and the bottomless well of YouTube. Mr. Lin was drawn to old Chinese war movies.
Adrift in his own life, Mr. Chin found purpose in helping his new friend. “Im playing a white knight role here,” he remembers thinking to himself as they became closer. It had been a long time since he had been anyones white knight.
Over time, it became clear Mr. Lin had hardly explored New York. Mr. Chin appointed himself personal tour guide.
Their first outing was Coney Island, Mr. Chin remembered. They took the subway to the end of the line to see the aquarium. Mr. Chin had been there for school trips as a kid, and he took his wife there on a date — sweet memories laced with an acrid burn he kept to himself. Now he focused on Mr. Lin, who had never seen an aquarium before. The sea creatures, the colorful fish, the calming quiet of the underwater world astonished his friend and delighted Mr. Chin. “His eyes were really amazed,” Mr. Chin said.
They walked along the boardwalk and bought hot dogs for lunch. For that afternoon, it felt like their lives extended beyond shelter curfews and park benches. They were New Yorkers, this was their city and maybe they would have another hot dog, why not. Mr. Chin was buying.
They kept exploring New York, two homeless men in a postcard-perfect montage. They took the Staten Island Ferry, where the view from the deck reduces the skyline to a Tinkertoy city you can scoop into your hands. They tried the Metropolitan Museum of Art, but Mr. Lin grew bored after a couple of floors and they quickly decamped for Central Park. But the Bronx Zoo was a hit.
 “Especially the tiger,” Mr. Chin recalled. “The tiger really came out, it was the first tiger he ever saw. Everything was the first thing he ever saw.”
New York adventures became part of their friendship, which deepened over time. Lawyers, aid workers and friends who met them marveled at their devotion to each other. Extensive details of their years together were also left behind in grainy snapshots, police reports, immigration forms, nonprofit records, court transcripts and old emails.
One December, they even went to Macys in Midtown to see Santa Claus.
They stood in line, two middle-aged homeless men towering above a sea of children. If any parents looked at them sideways, Mr. Chin didnt notice or care. They finally made it to the front for a photo with Santa. In it, Mr. Chin sits on the right, beaming. On the other side of Santa, Mr. Lin sits more stiffly, his hands clasped in his lap, his puffy coat zipped to his collar. He smiles slightly, unsure quite what to do.
Before they left, Mr. Chin translated his friends wish for Santa: a green card.
Image
Credit...An Rong Xu for The New York Times
**Over the next two years**, the men settled into life at the homeless shelter. As residents cycled in and out, they moved their cots closer together.
By then, Mr. Lin had picked up an old smartphone someone had left behind on a park bench. At night in bed, he used Mr. Chins hot spot connection to get online and watch his old movies.
Fights and robberies in the shelter were not uncommon, but Mr. Chin managed to deflect attention with a tough-guy mien. But around 11 p.m. on Aug. 1, 2014, while he was talking to a shelter administrator and Mr. Lin slept on his cot, a shelter resident with a history of arrests jumped Mr. Lin and beat him bloody. When Mr. Chin found his friend, Mr. Lins left eye was swollen shut, his mouth an open wound, blood trailing from his nose. Mr. Chin went with him to the hospital while the police arrested his assailant.
Mr. Lin had broken bones in his face and needed surgery. When he came to, Mr. Chin was by his side, trying to contain an odd, nervous excitement that seemed bizarrely out of place.
“I said: Lin! This is a once in a hundred-year opportunity! This is it!’” He knew his friend did not understand, but he didnt expect him to.
For all the time they spent together, Mr. Chin had deliberately kept his past a secret. He spoke of his wife and daughter, but he brushed past his career, and he never mentioned his arrests or the years he spent in prison.
Heres what he never shared: Early in the 1990s, Mr. Chin had been an immigration officer at John F. Kennedy International Airport. His job included interviewing Chinese people seeking asylum, desperate people seeking better lives. People like his own father, people like Mr. Lin.
He worked there for five years, through the years following Tiananmen Square, and he saw the surge of migrants that followed. Night after night, he listened to accounts of persecution — many of them surely true, many of them surely exaggerated. He was keenly aware that if his parents lives had gone differently, he could well have been one of those people in line looking for mercy.
Now, seeing his friend battered, Mr. Chin remembered that there was a special kind of visa — a U visa, was it? — that was granted to immigrant crime victims. He raced to the library, where he used the free computer to research immigration law.
It took a few sessions to confirm, but within two weeks, he wrote an email to [T.J. Mills](https://ny-jfon.org/our-team), a lawyer who worked on immigration cases in Chinatown.
“I wish that you can look into to see if U visa can work for Mr. Lin,” he wrote on Aug. 13, 2014. “With all due respect, Tin Chin.”
**Mr. Chin still** didnt say anything to Mr. Lin, Mr. Mills or anyone else about his career in immigration enforcement. “My background is ugly,” he said recently. “No need to talk about it.” He sighed. “They said I was a dirty cop.”
In 1993, Mr. Chin lost his immigration job when federal agents found $1,700 in his pocket, money he had extorted from a Chinese businessman. The man had landed at Kennedy and claimed political asylum. Mr. Chin said he would send him back to China unless he handed over his money. Hours later, federal agents arrested Mr. Chin. He pleaded guilty and spent nearly a year in prison.
Then, years later, he was arrested again, and this time for something far worse. In 2003, he was convicted as the leader of an international plot to swindle dozens of Chinese immigrants out of their life savings. Prosecutors said Mr. Chin set up phony offices across New York and promised visas to immigrants who wanted to bring their relatives to the United States. He claimed that he worked for the government and that through his connections he could get them visas and green cards, for exorbitant fees. Money in hand, they said, he vanished, only to change his name and address and do it all over again.
“Chin, a Chinese immigrant, preyed on a group of hardworking and unsophisticated Chinese immigrants who wanted desperately to bring their relatives from China to the United States,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing.
He was accused of stealing around $1 million, from grandmothers, farmers, seamstresses, husbands — people risking everything to build new lives in New York. A series of witnesses testified against him in a federal trial, repeatedly identifying him in court as the mastermind. He was the only person connected to the plot to be sent to prison.
To this day, Mr. Chin vigorously maintains that he was framed, and that authorities fingered him only because of his previous arrest. Clearing his name remains an animating desire, even as his long, handwritten letters to the judge and other federal officials have yielded no progress.
He spent about a decade in prison and was released in 2012. He tried to reunite with his wife and daughter, but it went badly. He washed up at the homeless shelter, desperate to start anew but without a clue how to do it. And then he met Mr. Lin.
“God or Buddha above sent me to help Mo,” he said. “Hes undocumented, and I was an ex-immigration officer. Its not really a coincidence that I met him.”
As his battered friend slowly began to recover, Mr. Chin pressed to help him get his visa.
Mr. Chin remembered Mr. Mills, the immigration lawyer, from a free legal clinic in a Chinatown church when Mr. Mills had once reviewed Mr. Lins case. In a letter sent to Mr. Lin at the homeless shelter two months before the attack, the lawyer had politely told him that obtaining legal status would be virtually impossible. “Since you apparently entered the U.S. with a fraudulent document, your inspection and admission are difficult to prove,” he wrote.
Mr. Mills and other caseworkers had nonetheless been struck by the two mens friendship. They didnt know about Mr. Chins past, but they admired his dedication to Mr. Lin. “Tin has been by his side the entire time,” Mr. Mills said. “Tin is his best friend.”
As Mr. Mills looked into Mr. Lins case, he quickly agreed that Mr. Chin was right about the U visa, which was created in 2000 to protect immigrants who have suffered abuse in the United States and are willing to cooperate with law enforcement. Mr. Mills began working on an application for Mr. Lin.
Mr. Chin became the go-between, helping Mr. Mills gather police records of the assault, hospital documents listing Mr. Lins injuries and a blizzard of application forms. The more Mr. Mills worked with Mr. Chin, the more his unusual perseverance and deep fluency in immigration law struck him.
“Ive honestly not known a better friend and advocate than you have been to your friend Mo,” Mr. Mills wrote to Mr. Chin.
As Mr. Lins case crawled through the immigration system, he eventually recounted his story to case workers.
In an interview he gave in 2019 to a volunteer who worked with Mr. Mills, he talked about growing up on his family farm in rural Fujian Province. As a young man, in the wake of the Tiananmen Square protests, he went to a rally in Fuzhou calling for more freedom and reforms — and found himself on the authorities list as a potential troublemaker. Fearing arrest, he said, he fled his home and began a grueling quest to find safety in America.
With the help of a network of sympathizers and a series of loans he couldnt afford, he ended up at the Thai border, he said, and eventually on an airplane to Los Angeles. When he landed, he retreated into an airport mens room, where he could be sure no one was watching him. He said he ripped up his passport and headed to customs with two letters memorized: P. A. Political asylum.
He was allowed temporary entry, but after a judge ordered his deportation, he spent the ensuing years hiding from the authorities, working grueling jobs for little pay, fearful of being noticed. “I found work in a kitchen and worked as hard as I could to pay for my bed, my debts, my wife,” he said in 2019 through an interpreter. “I did this for eight years and then my body gave up.”
He eventually made it to New York and bounced around from shelter to shelter. “I was so scared,” he said.
Mr. Mills was haunted by his story. “My whole sense of Mo, even though I didnt know him well — heres a guy who the entirety of his life was one of just survival,” he said. “Raw survival and getting beat up constantly.”
It took four years for the visa to come through, but it worked. On April 2, 2019 — 28 years after he first entered the United States — Mr. Lin received his visa. He and Mr. Chin were at their Chinatown park when the document — sent to Mr. Chins email address because Mr. Lin didnt have one — came through.
“Mo had the sweetest smile I ever saw on his face all these years,” Mr. Chin remembered. “He kept on asking me to read over and over every line to him.”
Now that he had a visa, it would be easier for Mr. Lin to visit the dentist and get his teeth fixed. Maybe he could finally get out of the shelter. In three years, as long as he stayed in the United States, he could apply for a green card. And he could finally bring his wife, Huo Mei Li, to New York. He hadnt seen her in nearly three decades.
“There is so much time we have lost,” Mr. Lin told the nonprofit volunteer in 2019.
Mr. Chin had changed his friends life without revealing his own secrets about his years working for the government or his arrests, but months after Mr. Lin got his visa, Mr. Lin confronted him one day with a direct question:Are you an immigration officer?
Someone at the park had clued him in. Now he wanted to know, had Mr. Chin been toying with him all along? Could he have helped secure his paperwork long ago?
As Mr. Chin remembers it, the confrontation quickly became tense. “You dont know how lucky you are,” he recalls saying to Mr. Lin. “How do you think you got your visa? You should be thanking me.”
An iciness slipped into their friendship, but Mr. Chin says they eventually moved past it. They continued spending time together, and Mr. Chin continued to help Mr. Lin navigate the city and find doctors and dentists.
They had shared countless meals together, and soon they had a third person join. Mr. Lins wife had made it to New York, and the pair were beginning to imagine how they could build a life together in America. Mr. Lin still lived in the homeless shelter while she stayed with a family friend, but he had dreams of securing an apartment for them.
“The most important thing is to find a place where we can be together,” he said in 2019.
In March 2020, Mr. Chin took Mr. Lin to Bellevue Hospital Center for treatment for stomach ailments. Doctors kept him overnight and then admitted him to the intensive care unit. It was the beginning of the pandemic, and the hospital had suspended all visits, but Mr. Chin said a social worker regularly called him from the hospital so the friends could chat on video.
Mr. Lin seemed weak and listless during their conversations. Mr. Chin was worried. Within a few days, the hospital said that Mr. Lin had tested positive for Covid.
Then, on the evening of April 17, Mr. Chin remembers the hospital called him. “This is not the usual time they would call me,” he said. “I already dont like it.”
Mo Biao Lin died at 7:33 p.m., an early victim of New Yorks first wave of Covid-19. He was 53 years old.
He was survived by his wife, Ms. Li, and an adult son who forged his own life in another American city. They could not be reached for this article. Mr. Lin is buried in a cemetery in Pennsylvania, near his sons home. Engraving on his coffin reads “Mr. Mo Biao Lin, 1966-2020.”
On the night his friend died, Mr. Chin stayed up past midnight writing his thoughts in a long email to Mr. Mills.
“Now I ask Heaven, you put me into helping him to get his dream, because I am the right person in this department,” he wrote. “Now you take him away.”
Mr. Chin, who is now 65, regularly flips through photos of his friend on a beat-up old cellphone. He is finally out of the shelter and lives alone in an apartment in Brownsville, Brooklyn, thats packed to the ceiling with overstuffed boxes and bulging plastic bags. Plenty of it belonged to Mr. Lin. He visits Chinatown regularly and volunteers at a food pantry. Hes fixated on his conviction and spends his nights poring through old transcripts of his trial.
He still sees Mr. Lin everywhere: at the Chinatown park where elderly men walk dutiful laps. On the B60 bus that Mr. Lin used to ride to visit him. In the endless Covid headlines. He sees him in his court case records, where his accusers quests for legal status resemble Mr. Lins.
Years later, people who spent time with the two friends remember their bond, and remember being struck by its depths.
“I feel like Mo gave him his sense of self back,” said Rebecca Cooney, the nonprofit volunteer who interviewed Mr. Lin in 2019 and spent time with them both. “It was as if Mo was part of his way back to feeling like a human being.”
Mr. Chin revealed almost nothing about his life to Ms. Cooney, but she remembered that both he and Mr. Lin seemed lost. “These are two people who were suffering so much, its amazing that they would have the reserves inside to give friendship to each other.”
This April, on the anniversary of Mr. Lins death, Mr. Chin took the subway to Bellevue, where he found a park bench nearby. The shared rituals of a close friendship never leave you, even if the friend does.
He lit a stick of incense and laid out a picnic of Mr. Lins favorite meal: French fries, Coke and a McDonalds fish sandwich. Mr. Chin had taken Mr. Lins dentures after the funeral — a reminder, no matter how macabre, of his friend — and now he placed them next to the food.
He called his friends name aloud a few times: “Lin, Lin, Lin.” Then he ate the sandwich. No one approached him as he finished his lunch — or, rather, Mr. Lins lunch.
He made no move to leave the bench.
Audio produced by Jack DIsidoro.
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Date: 2022-07-10
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Link: https://defector.com/meet-richard-fritz-americas-most-unelectable-elected-official/
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# Meet Richard Fritz, Americas Most Unelectable Elected Official | Defector
It takes a village to allow an incident as grotesque as the killing of 16-year-old Peyton Ham by Maryland State Police officer Joseph Azzari to be forgotten as quickly as it has in St. Marys County. But Richard Fritz, who has been the states attorney—the equivalent of a DA—in this rural Southern Maryland county since 1998, is as responsible as anybody for its going away.
After Defectors [coverage of the killing](https://defector.com/witnesses-to-killing-of-peyton-ham-by-maryland-cop-come-forward-call-it-murder/), several people from the region contacted me wanting to tell me that Fritz was as incompetent and powerful as the Ham case made him seem. They said that if I looked into Fritzs background Id be shocked that he ever won one election, let alone six. Given Fritzs role in the Ham case, and because hes now campaigning for a seventh term, I did look into his record. Turns out they didnt exaggerate. Put plainly: He should have been out of office long before he let Hams killer walk. (Fritz did not respond to Defectors requests to be interviewed about the Ham case and his campaign.)
Any reasonably complete get-to-know-your-candidate bio for Richard Fritz, which I will try to deliver here, would lead off with the incredible tale of his failed effort to prevent voters from learning of his record as a sex offender. Fritz used the county sheriffs office to stop a local newspaper from distributing its election day issue, with a front-page story headlined “Fritz Guilty of Rape.” A federal judge was so disgusted by Fritzs censoring news about his predatory past that he compared the prosecutor and his henchmen to “members of the \[Ku Klux\] Klan.” 
Then theres the heinous tale of Fritz conspiring with the sheriff to raid the office of a local lawyer who just one day earlier had filed to run against Fritz for states attorney. That rival was then indicted on more than 100 criminal counts of fraud and forgery. The case blew up when Fritzs office got caught withholding exculpatory evidence, but by then the rivals campaign was crippled financially and dead in the water.
Theres also the tale of Fritz mysteriously dropping all charges in a high-profile child abuse case brought against an elementary school teacher, after Fritz publicly said the teacher confessed to molesting his students. Now one of the teachers victims comes forward to tell Defector that Fritz dismissed the case and let the man who raped him go free just to settle a personal vendetta.
And then theres the story of the deputy states attorney publicly announcing that she had “an ethical and moral obligation” to resign from Fritzs office because she felt completely powerless to stop the corruption and legal abuses she saw in his operation. The powerless deputy prosecutors father is the governor of Maryland.
Ive never come across an elected official whos gotten away with more for longer than Richard Fritz has in St. Marys County. Then again, Id never come across a case handled as appallingly as Hams killing. A quick recap for now: In the early afternoon of April 13, 2021, Azzari shot Ham dead in a gravel driveway next to the teens home in Leonardtown, Md. Azzari told other cops on the scene that Ham “charged me” with a knife just before being killed. No witness supported Azzaris account. Three witnesses, however, told Defector that [Ham was on his knees](https://defector.com/42-seconds-after-this-photo-was-taken-police-shot-peyton-ham-dead/) and posed no threat to Azzari or anybody when they saw the officer fire four shots into his neck and chest, killing him.
The witnesses say they told authorities the same thing, but Fritz never showed interest in hearing anything about the killing from them, or from anybody but Azzari and other state police officers. 
“I guess \[Fritz\] doesnt want to take on the police when hes up for election,” said Kristee Boyle, Hams mother.
Fritz let the state police investigate one of their own. Fritzs office never asked that the St. Marys County Sheriffs department or the Maryland attorney generals office conduct their own investigations. Fritz also chose a curious figure to represent his office: Of [the dozen prosecutors on his staff](https://www.stmarysmd.com/sao/attorneys/), he assigned deputy states attorney Dan White to be the countys point man on the state polices investigation. White has one brother who is currently a high-ranking Maryland State Police officer and formerly served as commander of the Leonardtown state police barrack, where Azzari was stationed when he killed Ham, another brother who is a retired Maryland State Police detective, and a nephew who is commander of the Forestville state police barrack. Hams family said they took Whites attachment to the case as a sign from Fritz to the cops that they could have their way.
The state police didnt bother hiding the bias of their investigation. Azzari, for example, is identified as “The Victim” throughout the summary report of what was ostensibly a homicide investigation. That report also asserts that investigators found “multiple anti-authority/government items” while searching the dead kids bedroom, which refers to a copy of *Dead Or Alive*, a 2010 Tom Clancy thriller novel.
Defector recently obtained records from the states medical examiner, which show the coroner found that the four bullets fired in Azzaris final, fatal salvo were traveling “downward” through Hams body. That determination seems to support the witnesses sworn statements that Ham was killed while on his knees. This medical examiners report was sent to Fritz in July 2021.
Theres no hint that Fritz paid attention to witness testimony or to the autopsy. In October, Fritz ruled that Azzari was “in reasonable fear for his life” when he killed Ham, and therefore the state wouldnt be filing any charges against the officer. Fritz then declared the case closed. Azzari presently posted a [photograph on Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=723076921984885&set=a.126532264972690) showing he was back on the beat and fully armed, and appended a message that expressed no remorse for killing Ham, but did advise fellow cops to “get home to your families no matter what.” 
On April 12, 2022, a day before the one-year anniversary of the killing, Kristee Boyle filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Azzari in the U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, Md. The complaint contends that Azzaris actions were “extreme and outrageous and beyond the bounds of decency in society,” and violated the teens constitutional rights while killing him. The federal suit asks for $10 million in compensatory and punitive damages. According to court records, Azzari has not yet responded to the lawsuit. 
Mike Boyle, Hams father, told me that Fritz made it clear to the family that filing a lawsuit was the only way theyd ever find out what the state really knows about what happened when his son was killed. 
“Fritz still hasnt given us Peytons full autopsy,” he said. “And he wont even tell us why.” 
Hams survivors say getting Azzari off the streets is their primary goal. But the family believes the greater good would also be served by putting Fritz out of office. Keith Raley, Hams grandfather, has led occasional marches against Fritz in front of the county courthouse. The demonstrators carry placards with “MURDER” written beneath a photo that shows Ham on his knees, with Azzari standing over and behind him. The photo was taken by a neighbor 42 seconds before Azzari killed him. 
“Getting rid of Fritz might be our last chance to get justice for Peyton,” said Kristee Boyle. 
“He is a creep,” said Raley.
That case was already made long before Fritz let a killer cop walk.
---
“Fritz raped me when I was 15,” Carla Henning-Bailey told me. “He and two other guys held me down and raped me.” 
Of all the awful tales told with Fritz at the center, Henning-Bailey, now 73 years old, tells the worst. It goes back to November 1964, when Henning-Bailey was a 10th grader at Great Mills High School in St. Marys County. Her family had moved to the county a few years earlier when her father, who was in the Navy, was transferred to the nearby Patuxent River air base. She recalls not feeling connected to classmates or the community, and all she knew about Fritz was that he was an 18-year-old senior whom a friend of hers had gone on a few dates with. But when Fritz invited Henning-Bailey to a house on St. George Island in the Potomac River on that fateful fall day, she went. And thats where she said Fritz and his friends attacked her. 
Henning-Bailey said the alienation shed already felt before the attack, combined with dread over being called a liar and shame about what happened, caused her to not immediately report the gang rape: “This was at a time when nobody believed girls who said what I said.”
But word about what had happened still got around town fast, and her mind changed when a boy on the school bus taunted her about the encounter with Fritz just a day later. So Henning-Bailey went to the principals office and told of the gang rape. Her mother then took her to the hospital and the police station, where she named the two assailants she knew, Fritz and another Great Mills High student whose family owned a popular grocery store in the county. She didnt know the third assailant, other than that she was told he was 23 years old. 
“Everybody in town told me Fritz would get away with it because my family didnt have the connections that he did,” she said. “They were right.” 
Fritz, then 18, was allowed to plead guilty to a charge of “carnal knowledge of a female child,” commonly called statutory rape. According to [a *Washington Post*](https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/who-to-believe-its-just-another-day-of-secrets-andlies-in-st-marys-county/2014/04/18/f0102da8-c709-11e3-bf7a-be01a9b69cf1_story.html) report, Fritz was initially sentenced to 18 months in state prison, but the jail term was suspended and the judge let Fritz off with just probation. (The two other men will not be named in this story. Court records from federal lawsuits confirm Henning-Baileys account that there were multiple males involved, and Fritz has said there were two friends with him that day in the house on St. George Island. But Fritz is the only named assailant in those court records and in subsequent news reports about the rape. The juvenile friend of Fritzs named by Henning-Bailey whose family owned the grocery store grew up to be a deputy with the St. Marys County sheriffs office and once ran unsuccessfully for sheriff in the county. He is now retired. Defector could not confirm the identity of the attacker that Henning-Bailey said was 23 years old at the time of the rape.) 
Henning-Bailey got married as a high school junior at 17 years old, and said the rape likely played a part in that and also in her decision to leave St. Marys County for Pennsylvania. She said she tried to forget about Fritz and the horrors of that day on St. George Island. 
Fritz went off to college, eventually getting a law degree from the University of Baltimore School of Law in 1976. He came back home and took his first job in the St. Marys County states attorneys office in 1981 under characteristically sketchy circumstances. He was working as a public defender in the county at the time, and among his clients was accused robber Clarence Leo Young. Fritz [abandoned Young and accepted an offer to join the prosecution side](https://law.justia.com/cases/maryland/court-of-special-appeals/1982/102-september-term-1982-0.html) as Young was about to go to trial. Young was subsequently convicted, but appealed the verdict claiming that Fritzs abandonment created a conflict of interest in the St. Marys County states attorneys office, since hed told his lawyer “everything \[Young\] knew about the case” before Fritz switched sides. Youngs appeal was denied, however, as the appeals court ruled that “the mere appearance of impropriety, such as existed here” was not enough to overturn the conviction.
Fritz resigned as deputy states attorney in January 1993, amid humiliating accusations from states attorney Walter Dorsey, his boss, that Fritz tried taking the law into his own hands and was bad at his job. Dorsey told [*the Baltimore Sun*](https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1993-02-14-1993045041-story.html) in February 1993 that hed had enough of watching Fritz “dressing up as an undercover police officer” and “hiding behind trees and staying up until 3 oclock in the morning” on unsanctioned and bizarre searches for criminal activity in the county. 
So Fritz decided to take on Dorsey. He ran as a Democrat in 1994 and lost before switching parties before the 1998 race, around the time that St. Marys basically became a one-party county. (All members of the St. Marys County commission are Republicans, and no Democrats will even be on the [2022 ballot](https://www.elections.maryland.gov/elections/2022/primary_candidates/gen_cand_lists_2022_1_by_county_19.html) for states attorney or sheriff this year.)
The fact that Richard Fritz was a sex offender had been largely forgotten locally. But in 1998, it became a national story. All because Fritz, during his campaign as a Republican for the states attorney job, pulled an absurd scheme that the locals all came to know as his “Newspaper Caper.” 
As election day approached, Fritz had learned that *St. Marys Today*, a local weekly newspaper that had been savaging him throughout the campaign, was working on a story about his criminal record. Fearing the reporting would cost him the election and derail his political career, Fritz devised a plot to prevent news about his predatory past from reaching locals before they went to the polls. Around midnight on election day eve he [met with at least six St. Marys County sheriffs deputies](https://law.justia.com/cases/maryland/court-of-special-appeals/1982/102-september-term-1982-0.html) at the home of Lyle Long, one of the deputies. (In May 1998, five months before the meeting, Fritz had served as Longs criminal defense attorney when Long was charged with assaulting a minor and false imprisonment. A [*Washington Post report*](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1998/05/10/prosecutor-moves-to-delay-officers-assault-trial/b59da0d7-2d15-4fb3-a702-6f21023e809c/) said Long was accused with attacking a 15-year-old boy in Callaway, Md., and putting him in a headlock after the officer felt the kid wasnt paying proper attention to the anti-drug lecture Long was delivering. The charges were dropped in exchange for Long completing what the newspaper described as “a confrontation-training course called verbal judo.’”)
At Longs house, court records show, Fritzs posse mapped out how they would gather up every available copy of the paper, with its front-page story headlined “Fritz Guilty of Rape.” In the era before the internet, *St. Marys Today* was the primary chronicler of political corruption in the county. The group of lawmen went to convenience stores and newspaper vending boxes all over the county. Court records indicate at least 1,600 copies of *St. Marys Today* were seized in the pre-dawn mission. Ken Rossignol, the papers publisher and jack-of-all-trades and also a longtime nemesis of Fritz, said he knew something was up when he was out delivering his own paper throughout the night and began discovering that vending boxes hed filled mere hours earlier were already empty. Rossignol said that he replenished the supply at the boxes himself, only to learn that sheriffs deputies were following him around and re-emptying them. 
Fritz and the deputies claimed they stole no papers, and had instead acquired them through mass purchases from the retailers or boxes at 75 cents per copy of their own money. But [Maryland State Police initially announced](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1998/11/05/newspapers-with-negative-article-disappear-on-election-eve/fb427e23-5b05-48c3-8f1c-32b952d702ae/) on election day that hundreds of copies had been stolen overnight in stacks outside retail outlets. Rossignol said recently that there was no way Fritzs posse could have purchased the papers that had been left in front of closed stores in the middle of the night and disappeared before the businesses opened. According to a judges decision [from federal litigation](https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp2/199/279/2414704/): “It is undisputed, however, that the papers in \[the posses\] possession on the morning of November 3, 1998, were bundled and placed in a barn on property owned, at least in part, by Defendant Fritzs family.” 
Predictably, Fritzs scheme ended up bringing lots of attention to the very story he wanted suppressed. Fritzs sex-offender record and his unorthodox newsgathering technique were the talk of the county by the time the polls closed. So Fritz had to answer questions about both. He went on local radio a day after the election and denied being a rapist. He told an interviewer that authorities only arrested him because he was in a “relationship” with a girl who was “one month from legal age.” 
“I did what came natural when I was 18,” Fritz told the radio station, according to a [transcript of his 1998 post-election interview](https://www.the-chesapeake.com/2014/09/26/woman-says-forcibly-raped-states-attorney-richard-fritz-2-others/) run by *St. Marys Today*. “I was probably myself a virgin or close to being a virgin at the time. \[The newspaper\] says this was a gang situation. It wasnt, but Ill tell you this, there were several other persons out there who got themselves in trouble with the same thing. They were doing what comes natural to them, too. It would lead the public into the impression that it was a forceful act, which was complete baloney.”
The [*Washington Post*](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1998/11/05/newspapers-with-negative-article-disappear-on-election-eve/fb427e23-5b05-48c3-8f1c-32b952d702ae/) also reported right after the election that Fritz asserted his sexual encounter that got him the conviction was “consensual.” 
Henning-Bailey said she had no idea *St. Marys Today* was going to revisit the 1964 sexual assault before the election, and Fritz did not name her in interviews he did when news of the Newspaper Caper first broke after the election. But then she heard from old friends from the county, who remembered things differently and far more nefariously than what Fritz was saying had happened.
So Henning-Bailey called Rossignol up in early 1999 and told her story. She asked that the article about their interview in *St. Marys Today,* which was headlined “I Screamed the Whole Time,” include her maiden name, the one she had when she was Fritzs victim. She wanted the people in St. Marys County to remember her.
Henning-Bailey also spoke with reporter Annie Gowen of the *Washington Post*. Heres a portion of Gowens brutal [*Post*](https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/who-to-believe-its-just-another-day-of-secrets-andlies-in-st-marys-county/2014/04/18/f0102da8-c709-11e3-bf7a-be01a9b69cf1_story.html) piece from June 1999 describing the gang rape:
> The fat one went first. Then Fritz. Then the burly, acne-faced football player.
>
> “I screamed the whole time,” Bailey says. “It seemed like it lasted forever. They just held me down. I was just screaming, Help me.’” 
The national media picked up the rape and cover-up stories, too. In an interview that aired in January 2000 on ABCs newsmagazine show *[20/20](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Y-fjCyinfM)*[,](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Y-fjCyinfM) Fritz repeated to correspondent Chris Wallace that the act that landed him in trouble was “consensual.” The reporter, appearing incredulous and disturbed, asked Fritz why a 15-year-old girl “would willingly have sex” with him and two others “one after another.”
“Happens all the time,” Fritz said. “I dont want to speak poorly of the girl but three of us had sex with her and that should speak for itself.”
Henning-Bailey [also sat for the network show](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNHUfu67okE&ab_channel=SMTLover), telling Wallace and a national TV audience how Fritz raped her as a teenager, and now was hurting her all over again with his revisionist history.
“He makes me look like a piece of trash,” she said. “Like Im the one who said, Oh, yeah! Come on guys! But it wasnt that way!”
Henning-Bailey also told Wallace that Fritz had only been allowed to go free because he had ties to powerful people in St. Marys County. 
“He should have been punished for what he did,” she said.
Fritz told Wallace that he “assumed” Henning-Bailey only came forward with the gang rape story because she had been paid by Rossignol. Both Henning-Bailey and Rossignol denied any money was involved. Rossignol then challenged Fritz on national TV to take a lie detector test administered by the Maryland State Police to show if hes being truthful about what happened in 1964. Fritz refused the polygraph unless Rossignol would “put up $500,000.”
“It never was my intention to make her out to be trash,” Fritz told Wallace, as the interviews creepiness level redlined. “But if the facts of the case are the facts of the case, then so be it.”
Henning-Bailey told me recently she has no regrets about going public to counter the fictional account Fritz was giving to save his political career. 
“I came forward because I had done nothing wrong,” Henning-Bailey said. “And he was lying.”
An investigation into the midnight newspaper raid by the U.S. Department of Justice resulted in no criminal charges for Fritz or his cohorts. But Fritz did eventually get some legal comeuppance. That came when Rossignol sued Fritz and other county officials in U.S. District Court, saying that the conspiracy engineered by the prosecutor and carried out by officers of the law had violated his constitutional rights. Evidence showed that Fritz had not only been aware of the plot—hed also financed the endeavor. The defense made a motion to have Rossignols suit dismissed before trial, with Fritz claiming that he was not legally liable because he had gone home after the planning meeting and hadnt personally accompanied the sheriffs in their paper raid.
Chief Judge James Harvie Wilkinson III of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unloaded on Fritz while rejecting the defenses motion for summary judgment. Wilkinson painted Fritz and his law-enforcement pals in St. Marys County as out-of-control tyrants who conspired to perpetrate “errands of suppression.” The judge said the intimidation tactics used by the county prosecutor and his deputized henchmen harkened back to the lawless public servants in the Deep South in the mid-19th century during Reconstruction, whose conduct inspired the Civil Rights Act of 1871, also known as Ku Klux Klan Act. 
A section of Judge Wilkinsons order sending the case back for trial: 
> “In suppressing criticism of their official conduct and fitness for office on the very day that voters were heading to the polls, defendants did more than compromise some attenuated or penumbral First Amendment right; they struck at its heart.
>
> “Here, a local sheriff, joined by a candidate for States Attorney, actively encouraged and sanctioned the organized censorship of his political opponents by his subordinates, contributed money to support that censorship, and placed the blanket of his protection over the perpetrators. Sheriffs who removed their uniforms and acted as members of the Klan were not immune from §1983; the conduct here, while different, also cannot be absolved by the simple expedient of removing the badge.
>
> “The incident in this case may have taken place in America, but it belongs to a society much different and more oppressive than our own. If we were to sanction this conduct, we would point the way for other state officials to stifle public criticism of their policies and their performance. And we would leave particularly vulnerable this kind of paper in this kind of community.”
First-amendment watchdogs hailed the opinion and blasted Fritz in the wake of Wilkinsons powerhouse ruling. Lucy Dalglish, then the executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press (RCFP), accused Fritz of “trying to censor” the local newspaper, and of being a big baby.
“You would expect someone who is an elected official to be more mature than that,” Dalglish told the *Baltimore Sun*. “Elected officials cant go around intimidating newspaper reporters who do stories that are unfavorable or unflattering.”
Fritz appealed Wilkinsons decision to the Supreme Court, but the high court declined to hear the case in 2003. That meant Rossignols suit would be sent back for trial. Instead, Fritz et al. finally settled in April 2005 by paying the *St. Marys Today* publisher a total of $435,000, with Fritz having to shell out $10,000 of his own money.
“The taxpayers out there should be paying attention to the fact that one of their public employees cost them this much money,” Dalglish told *the Star-Democrat* of Easton, Md.
All the humiliation and financial penalties notwithstanding, if Fritzs goal was preserving his political career, its hard to say the Newspaper Caper was a failure. Theres no way to quantify the impact that Fritzs conspiracy to keep his rape conviction mum until the votes had been cast had on the 1998 election. But Fritz won his first term as states attorney with [54 percent of the vote](https://msa.maryland.gov/msa/mdmanual/36loc/sm/elect/general/sm1998.html). And has kept the job to this day. 
---
Fritz also used the sheriffs office to go after another local who dared challenge him in the 2010 campaign. 
This time, Fritzs target was Leonardtown lawyer John A. Mattingly Jr.
Mattingly had been talking for much of 2009 about taking on Fritz for the top prosecutors job in the next years election. Court records show that on September 23, 2009, Mattingly followed through and filed the official paperwork to get his name on the 2010 ballot as the Democratic Partys candidate for states attorney. 
On September 24, 2009—one day after the filing—St. Marys County Sheriffs [raided the Mattingly familys home](https://www.abajournal.com/news/article/lawyer_is_charged_in_practice-related_case_brought_by_opposing_candidates_o). Court records show that at least a dozen boxes of Mattinglys law papers were seized in the raid. Fritz, according to court documents, had provided “investigatory advice” to the sheriffs on what documents they should confiscate. 
Mattingly was subsequently arrested and [indicted on 140 counts](https://issuu.com/countytimes/docs/2010-01-14.county.times), including land fraud and witness tampering charges, mostly related to real-estate transactions he was involved in. Mattingly would later find out that Fritzs office had been investigating him for several months, or since around the time rumors first surfaced that hed run for states attorney.
“This is the broadest, deepest fraud Ive ever seen,” Dan White, assistant states attorney for St. Marys County, claimed to the [*County Times*](https://issuu.com/countytimes/docs/2010-01-14.county.times), a newspaper serving Southern Maryland. 
Fritz, alas, never proved anything close. Fritz and all St. Marys County prosecutors were removed from the case because of the blatant conflict of interest presented by indicting a political opponent of the boss. A special prosecutor from outside the county, Isabel Mercedes Cumming of the Prince Georges County states attorneys office, was appointed to handle the case. 
And Cumming discovered that Fritzs office had not provided Mattinglys attorney with all the reports from the sheriffs department investigation that might have cleared his client. So she turned over the exculpatory evidence to the defense. 
Mattinglys attorney, Clarke Ahlers, who has a criminal defense practice based in Columbia, Md., told me recently that hes still awed by the integrity Cumming showed after all the time and energy theyd spent preparing to do battle in a courtroom.
“Isabel Cumming found a police report that was consistent with \[Mattinglys\] innocence,” Ahlers said. “Shell always be my hero. She had to know this piece of evidence would hurt her \[case\], and we were going at it really hard then, but she did the ethical thing.”
Cumming then moved to drop all charges against Mattingly.
Fritz never apologized for whatever led to Mattingly not receiving the exculpatory evidence that cratered the case against him, or even acknowledged the oddness of using the powers of his office to go after a political rival. Instead, he publicly fumed. He issued a statement that both blasted Cumming for not getting a conviction of his rival, and compared Mattingly to a famous accused murderer.
“The prosecutor took a dive,” Fritzs statement said. “John Mattingly will now have the distinct pleasure of joining the ranks of O.J. Simpson and a few others who have escaped justice.”
Fritz was never sanctioned for the misdeeds that led to the failed prosecution. But at least three prosecutors in Fritzs office quit their jobs after the Mattingly debacle, and [local newspapers attributed the mass departures](https://www.somdnews.com/archives/4-prosecutors-leave-state-39-s-attorney-39-s-of-ce/article_6a8f0316-602a-55ef-a2ef-a5734091ebad.html) to displeasure over how Fritzs office handled the case. 
Attorney Kenneth Haber, a former FBI agent and federal prosecutor, represented Mattingly after the September 2009 raids in a civil case in which the candidate sued St. Marys County in an unsuccessful attempt to get the files seized by the sheriffs office returned before the trial. Contacted recently at his law offices in Derwood, Md., Haber said he remains dumbstruck by the level of power-drunkenness Fritz displayed in trying to crush a political rival. 
“The whole thing drops my jaw!” Haber told me. “And Ive seen just about everything you could see. This guy \[Fritz\] was just amazing in terms of all the shit that he could get away with. He got away with it here, too.”
Cumming is now the inspector general for the city of Baltimore. Reached recently at her office, Cumming said she “stands by” her handling of the Mattingly case, given the hand she was dealt by Fritz. 
“There was evidence that was never given to the defense attorney that was exculpatory that I subsequently provided,” she said. “And as a result of the review of the case I did with another assistant states attorney, the case was correctly dismissed by the prosecution.” 
Mattingly wasnt cleared until September 2010, or just two months before election day. Upon the last dismissal, Mattingly told the *Daily Record*, a Baltimore newspaper, that he and his campaign had both been bankrupted by the case. 
In the general election, Fritz crushed Mattingly, winning re-election with 63 percent of the vote. 
Asked recently if shes surprised that Fritz is still in office, knowing what she knows, Cumming said: “Yes, very. Yes.”
But after giving Fritzs survival some thought, Cummings theorized that maybe his longevity shouldnt surprise her or anybody, and should instead be taken as proof that the scheme paid long-term dividends for Fritz by warding off future challengers. She pointed out that in the last election for states attorney, in 2018, Fritz [ran unopposed](https://elections.maryland.gov/elections/2018/results/general/gen_results_2018_2_by_county_19-1.html).
“This \[Mattingly\] case was a front-page story in the county for a long time,” she said. “People there have seen what happens to people that try to stand up to him.”
---
Maryland State Police Officer Joseph Azzari was likely not the only guy to harm a child that Fritz let walk during his current term. Take the Theodore Bell case. 
Bell was a longtime teacher in Maryland. In 2018, a former student came forward with tales of being molested by Bell when he taught at White Marsh Elementary in Mechanicsville, Md., in the 1970s. 
Following a long investigation by the St. Marys County Sheriffs, Bell was charged in early 2019 with second-degree sex offense with an underage victim, perverted practice, and second-degree assault. The indictments and Bells arrest were reported by all major news organizations in the mid-Atlantic region, and Fritz was quoted in several of those reports saying that the teacher had “admitted to touching underage boys inappropriately.” 
Fritz, who has said through the years that he likes to personally handle the big cases, took the Bell case himself. On August 12, 2019, Fritz presented the county court with a plea deal hed worked out with Bell. That deal asked Bell to plead guilty to just one count of second-degree assault, a misdemeanor. All the other charges related to sexual assaults of a minor would be dropped. Bell would not be compelled to register as a sex offender. The prosecutor and defense told Circuit Court Judge Michael Stamm they agreed that the defendants age (73 years old) and physical frailty made incarceration difficult, so under the deal Bell would likely get no jail time. 
After hearing the proposed plea agreement, according to coverage in *Southern Maryland News*, Judge Stamm asked Bells primary accuser if he was satisfied with the deal Fritz had offered. The victim said that Fritz had led him to believe there would be a trial, and that he was blindsided and completely dissatisfied with Fritzs deal. He told Stamm that as an 11-year-old boy he was “sodomized” by an adult he trusted, and that letting Bell off with one misdemeanor count and no jail time would not reflect the crime. 
“He did not consider my health issues or my age when he raped me,” the victim, who was not named in news reports, told the judge, according to the *Southern Maryland News*. “He had no mercy on me.”
Judge Stamm then announced that he was “uncomfortable” accepting Fritzs deal and would not move forward with sentencing. The judge vacated the deal and said Bell should go to trial. 
But that trial never happened. *Southern Maryland News* learned in December 2019 that Fritz had quietly dropped all charges against Bell shortly after his plea deal was tossed out of court.
Wayne Williams recently told Defector that he was the unnamed victim who spoke up in court against the deal Fritz offered Bell. Williams said he had come forward a year earlier, and was impressed at the thoroughness of the investigation the countys investigators conducted. Williams said he was sure that Fritz was aware of at least one other victim of Bell whod also told his tale to investigators. 
“They knew everything. Fritz knew everything,” Williams told me recently. “I was shocked. I told the judge I never heard anything from Fritz about any plea bargain. I dont know why he didnt go to trial. I dont know if \[Fritz\] is lazy or \[the settlement offer\] was a favor for somebody. Nobody asked for my input on it. This wasnt a \[simple\] assault. This was a sexual assault!”
Williams said that Fritz “glared at” him but refused to speak to him as they left the courtroom after the hearing. He said during the walk outside the prosecutor muttered to others around him about how angry he was at Williams about what happened before Judge Stamm. 
“You could see how mad Fritz was with me, like Id shown him up,” Williams said. “And he got vindictive.” 
Williams said he never heard from Fritz again about the case. Fritz wouldnt respond to messages, Williams said. And then when hed called the court clerks office to find when Bells trial would be held, he was told that there would be no trial.
“Fritz turned on me, and just let the man go,” Williams said. “I couldnt believe hed just let him go.” 
The December 2019 report from the *Southern Maryland News* about Fritzs dismissing all charges repeated that the prosecutor had already declared that Bell confessed to molesting his accusers. But Fritz asserted that he didnt think as a prosecutor he could overcome the victims not reporting their assaults sooner. 
“The question in the jurys mind is,How come \[Williams\] didnt say anything?’” Fritz told the newspaper.
Williams said that he and his family contacted folks in the St. Marys County states attorneys office and the states attorney generals office in Annapolis to see if he and Bells other victims had any legal options after Fritz abandoned their case. Those talks went nowhere; Fritz was the decider.
“Everybody told me there was nothing I could do once he dropped the charges,” Williams said. “He has all the power in the county.” 
One of the people the Williamses contacted was Jaymi Sterling, who had been working for Fritz for just about a decade, and rose to be St. Marys County deputy states attorney. They knew that Sterling was the daughter of Maryland governor Larry Hogan and hoped that might have some sway. Sterling was aware that Fritz had botched the Bell case. But by October 2020, when a sister of Williams reached out to Sterling, it was too late for her to get involved.
A month earlier, Sterling had resigned from her job at the states attorney office, and had taken the odd step of putting out a press release explaining her departure. Sterlings statement identified Fritz not by name, but only as “the states attorney.” But her memo left no doubt what she thought about the countys top prosecutor. Sterling wrote that when she brought up the wrongs shed witnessed to Fritz, he “immediately demoted” her. So she had to quit.
“I am sad that I have no choice but to resign,” Sterling wrote. “I am hopeful my resignation is a touchpoint to start a culture change in the States Attorneys Office that makes it more accountable to the citizens of St. Marys County.”
Fritz lashed out. In June 2021, Wayne Jordan, a county resident who was in prison on [armed-robbery charges](https://www.somdnews.com/enterprise/crime_and_courts/hold-up-man-sentenced-to-20-years/article_cb6186fc-050f-5159-b17a-b588c9f231ff.html) after Sterling had successfully prosecuted him, petitioned the state for a new trial. Fritzs office subpoenaed Sterling as a witness in the case. Sterling was already working by then as a prosecutor for Anne Arundel County, as Fritz was well aware. For privacy and safety reasons, normal decorum would be to serve a witness with the subpoena at a work address or via an email invite, particularly in violent crime cases. But the subpoena from Fritzs office called for Sterling to be served at home, putting her private home address in the case file. Sterling, who regarded Fritzs tactic as a “doxxing” and an attempt to intimidate her into not talking any more about her former boss, petitioned the Maryland attorney generals office to remove her home address from the record. It was removed.
After that incident Sterling apparently tired of feeling powerless to stop Fritz: In March 2022, Sterling [filed to get her name on the ballot](https://thebaynet.com/jaymi-sterling-exploring-a-bid-for-st-marys-county-states-attorney/) for St. Marys County states attorney. Shes running as a Republican to put her old boss out of work. 
---
Three days before Peyton Ham was killed, legislators in Annapolis overrode Gov. Larry Hogans veto of the [Maryland Police Accountability Act of 2021](https://www.wbaltv.com/article/maryland-lawmakers-override-govenor-larry-hogans-veto-on-major-police-reform-bills/36081700#). 
The ambitious package of police reforms included a provision to [establish a task force inside the states attorney generals office](https://www.police1.com/legal/articles/maryland-police-reform-laws-begin-J98tbry891CJeDJn/) that could take over investigations of cases where cops kill civilians anywhere in Maryland. The lawmakers intended to prevent situations where a police department controls the investigation into one of its own officers. 
The reform measure, however, didnt go into effect until October 2021, about six months after Joseph Azzari killed Ham. And so the Maryland State Police, with Fritzs blessing, remains the only agency that investigated Azzari. 
No video of the killing has surfaced. The state police say Azzari was not wearing a body cam when he drove to Hams house in response to 911 calls of somebody “acting suspicious” who the caller “thinks has a gun.” (Police later determined that Ham had placed the 911 calls himself. ) The Maryland Police Accountability Act will eventually mandate that all state police officers be equipped with body cams, but that provision wont kick in until 2023. Azzaris police SUV was equipped with a dashboard camera, but, according to the state police reports, Azzari never activated the siren or police lights on the vehicle, so the dash cam was never activated. Azzari told investigators he left the siren and lights off “for tactical reasons.”
So Azzari is the only person alive to know what happened when he arrived on the scene. Police reports say Azzari said that as he got out of his SUV, he saw Ham walking toward him from his front lawn and pointing a gun at him. Police later said Ham actually had an airsoft gun, a non-lethal toy that shoots plastic pellets. 
An audio-only recording of the incident captured by a nearby home security system, combined with a photograph taken by a neighbor, witness accounts, police reports, autopsy results, bloodstains and other evidence from the scene, indicate that Azzari fired his 9mm Glock service weapon 11 times over seven seconds early in his encounter with Ham. Three of those shots struck Ham in the arms and a shoulder, while several others hit houses across the street. Azzari then waited about a minute before firing the last four bullets in his gun into Hams torso and neck, killing him.
“The clip in his gun holds 15 bullets,” said Mike Boyle, Hams father. “As far as we can tell he only stopped shooting because he ran out of bullets.”
Jean Kenney Combs lives across the street from Hams house. She said she didnt know Hams family but knew of the teen because he and her daughter were the same age and theyd been riding school buses together for years. “They didnt hang out, but she spoke highly of Peyton,” Combs said. Just before the killing, Combs was in front of her garage when she heard several seconds of “loud mumbling” coming from Hams property. She said her sightline across the street was obstructed by vehicles, bushes, and trees, so she started to move down her driveway toward the noise to improve her view. She didnt get far.
“Somebody yelled Fuck you! clear as day. And the firing started immediately,” Combs said. “Just so rapid and quick, a lot of gunfire. And it turns out I was dodging bullets.” 
At least three shots hit Combss garage. She said her immediate thought was that the screamed expletive and the gunfire were aimed at her. She ran to the front door of her home, and was screaming for her daughter inside to hit the floor just as the firing stopped. But about a minute later, as she and her daughter stood up after taking cover, the blasts started again. By the end of the day, they had learned they were listening to the killing of her daughters classmate.
Combs said she still “cant say for sure” if it was Azzari or Ham who yelled the expletive before the gunfire. But she described it as “the voice of an adult male.”
Combs said she was ignored by investigators, and remains angered by Richard Fritzs lack of curiosity about what she went through. She thought perhaps the angry screams could help explain the officers emotional state. She also figured the damage done by the wayward bullets that hit her garage, which was measured at more than 350 feet away from where Ham died, would have been of interest to the prosecutor. She later found out another neighbors front window, more than 450 feet from where Azzari was shooting, was hit by another wild shot. To Combs, Azzaris spraying the neighborhood with gunfire showed either a complete lack of training or an utter disregard for human lives, or both. Combs said she didnt speak with her neighbors across the street while waiting to hear from Fritz, thinking she didnt want her memories tainted by others recollections. But Fritz never reached out.
“Nobody \[from Fritzs office\] called me to see what I knew,” she said. “I had to keep calling to ask to talk before the grand jury.” 
When Defector spoke with Combs, Azzaris bullets were still embedded in her garage. 
The loud report of Azzaris first 11 shots caused Michelle Mills to run to a bedroom window inside their home, located next door to Hams house. Her daughter, Allison, was at home that day and ran to the same window after hearing the gunfire. Michelle Mills said she saw Ham, whom she only knew as “the kid next door,” kneeling in her gravel driveway with Azzari standing over him. She took a cellphone photo at the window that shows Ham on his knees with blood pouring down his right forearm from bullet wounds from Azzaris opening salvo. In the photo Azzari is standing over Ham. Ham is not holding the toy gun and appears to have nothing in his hands in the photo. A St. Marys County sheriffs deputys car, with its lights flashing, can be seen in the background, so Azzari knew back-up would be arriving imminently. 
![](https://lede-admin.defector.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/28/2021/10/Screen-Shot-2021-10-15-at-1.17.34-PM.png?w=710)**Credit:** Courtesy of the Raley Family
A zoomed-in version of Millss photo.
Michelle Mills said Azzari was circling the kneeling teen and yelling repeatedly to “show” him a knife, and that she thought Ham took something small out of his pocket with his left hand to comply. Police said a pocketknife with a 2.5 inch blade was found on the scene. The time stamps on the photo, combined with the time stamps from the home security system audio and the location of shell casings on the scene, indicate that about 40 seconds after Michelle took the photo Azzari stepped back to more than 10 feet away from Ham and opened fire again. She said Ham never got off his knees the whole time she was watching, and that he was still on his knees when Azzari fired the final four shots. 
“Peyton was on his knees and obviously wasnt a threat,” Allison Mills said. “What I saw, from start to finish, was just appalling.”
Both Michelle and Allison Mills said Fritz showed no interest in talking to them, even after Michelle turned over her photo to the police. Both say they were told by Fritzs office that the prosecutor would rely on conversations with Michelle that the state police had recorded without her knowledge immediately after the shooting. Allison Millss name does not even appear on the list of witnesses that was released by Fritz in his report exonerating Azzari, even though she watched Ham die. The mother and daughter each told Defector separately last fall that Fritzs failure to charge Azzari did not change their opinion of what they witnessed. 
“Peyton was murdered in my driveway,” Michelle Mills said.
Hams grandmother, Victoria Boyle, also witnessed the killing. She lives in a home on the same property as Hams house, and can be seen in the background of the photo Mills took of Ham. She told Defector that her grandson was on his knees the whole time. Victoria Boyle, who is in her 80s, said that the state police officers at the scene “interrogated” her for hours after the killing. She said they continued insisting that she saw things she didnt see, and repeatedly attempted to get her to say Ham was threatening Azzari when he was killed. 
“The first time the detectives threw that at me, it was, What would you say … if I told you we had witnesses that saw Peyton lunge?’” she said. “But I said, I dont know who your witnesses are but there was no lunge, nothing that could even be perceived as a lunge. It wasnt possible. It didnt happen.”
Mike Boyle, Hams father, said that from the start Fritz stalled or outright prevented the release of public documents related to Hams killing. Hams family said that months ago Fritz stopped taking their calls or even responding to their calls or requests for documents. The refusal to let the family see his sons autopsy was the most galling, Boyle said. He gave Defector copies of four form letters the family received from the Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner rejecting his familys request for copies of the autopsy. The excuse for keeping the document private was the same in each: “This case is associated with an ongoing investigation.” Two of the rejection letters were written several months after Fritz publicly closed the case in October 2021. Mike Boyle said the clerk in the medical examiners office told him Fritz still wouldnt authorize the release of the autopsy. 
Kristee Boyle said the family obtained a partial autopsy report and hundreds of pages of police reports from an unnamed staffer with the St. Marys Sheriffs Department. She said that after months of blanket rejections to every request, the staffer gave them a “document dump” of records.
![](https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/Wc3VhnHgO1rFN616UgIpHB5hGpYmLj4BmNWTDKM2s5zUTUOd9-6slfdgcv_t2zXLaqoDSoL8aGqEeaGmJyCGJ4gx_9ILcMQTU_uYC9tVZMdmGiPgugwBYFKkkseszhoOdM2yw10KX6vb9qWygw)
The preliminary autopsy report shows that the coroner determined that the bullets that entered Hams arms and left shoulder, which came during the first 11 shots from Azzari, were traveling “slightly upward.” The Boyles say their son was 6-foot-1. They also say they were told that Azzari is approximately 5-foot-8-inches tall, but Azzaris height is not included in any police reports Ive seen. However, police reports say Azzari cited Hams size advantage by way of justifying the use of deadly force on the teen. It would make sense that the shots with an upward trajectory would come when both the officer and the teenager were standing up. Azzari told investigators that Ham went to the ground after the first 11 shots. 
The report also says that the state medical examiners office concluded that the shots to the neck and torso, from Azzaris final, fatal salvo, traveled “downward” through Hams body. The Boyles are convinced this shows their son was killed while on his knees, just as witnesses have said, and not as Ham stood up and “charged” at his killer, as only Azzari has claimed.
“After what we know about what \[the coroner\] found, I think we know why Fritz doesnt want us to see the autopsy,” Mike Boyle said.“How do you not take that into account if youre the DA?” 
The document dump from the sheriffs department also included video recordings made by body cams worn by sheriffs deputies who arrived on the scene after the shooting. (St. Marys County Sheriffs deputies, unlike Maryland State Police, are required to wear body cams.) Kristee Boyle said that despite the devastating contents, her family has reviewed the body cam footage repeatedly over and over, in search of any morsel that might help them figure out what happened. 
“Mikes watched every minute of what we got,” she said.
The videos, some taken less than a minute after Azzaris final shots, capture Ham taking the labored last breaths an oxygen-deprived brain reflexively coaxes out of a dying humans lungs—Mike Boyle tells me he learned the medical term for the horror he watched is “agonal gasps.” Kristee Boyle asked if I would look at some of what shed seen, and I said I would. She gave me screengrabs showing her mortally wounded son laying facedown, his body twisted in the bloodstained gravel. 
For all the horrors, however, the screenings have convinced the Boyles even more that, just as Mills said, their son was murdered. She directed me to look at the bushes near his body.
“Peytons body is right where he was in the \[Mills\] photograph. You can tell from the bushes its the same place,” she said. “He didnt get up and charge anybody. He wouldnt be in the same place if he did.” 
The St. Marys County Office of the Sheriff rejected Defectors request for body cam footage. Clayton Safford, PIO for the county sheriff, said the video wouldnt be released because “Peyton Ham was a juvenile” and under the Maryland Public Information Act that means the records cannot be released. According to an attorney with the Reporters Committee for the Freedom of the Press, however, the Maryland records law cited by Safford is not applicable in this situation. The law was written to protect minors, the RCFP attorney said, and not to prevent the release of documents related to the killing of children by police officers.
---
Carla Henning-Bailey still lives in Pennsylvania. She told me recently that after the Newspaper Caper tumult died down she went back to trying not to think about Fritz or anything that happened in St. Marys County. That explains why, when I asked her if she was surprised that Fritz, about 20 years after he was exposed as a sex offender and compared to a klansman by a federal judge, was running yet again for re-election she responded with shock. 
“Hes still there? Youve got to be kidding me!” Henning-Bailey said. “When I came forward, I wanted them to throw that trash out. I guess that didnt happen. I guess people are just afraid.”
Fear isnt in short supply in St. Marys County these days. A cousin of Peyton Ham told me recently about being pulled over around midnight some months ago by a state trooper. The trooper told her hed seen her roll through a four-way stop intersection without stopping. She said that as she was listening to the trooper and looking in her wallet for her drivers license and registration, she was wondering whether itd be worth telling him that she really thought shed come to a full stop. She changed her mind as soon she handed over the requested documents and realized whod pulled her over.
“It was *him*,” she said. “I couldnt believe it.”
Shed encountered Joseph Azzari. “Seeing the face of the last person that my cousin saw alive, the person who took his life, was devastating,” she said. “I was shaking.”
She noticed Azzaris gun, too.
She said that she composed herself enough to tell Azzari that he killed her cousin. Azzari went back to his car after giving her a warning. Thats a more severe sanction than Fritz ever gave the cop for emptying his gun into a teenager who witnesses say was on his knees. 
At the end of our conversation, Hams cousin requested that her name not be used in this story. I asked why. 
“Im afraid,” she said.
The primary for St. Marys County states attorney will be [decided on July 19](https://www.somdnews.com/enterprise/news/local/st-marys-county-candidates-for-the-2022-primary-election/article_10d23ab8-9ba0-5838-be6e-8fda4cace579.html). 
*Correction: A previous version of the story inaccurately said that Richard Fritzs opponent in the 2010 campaign, John A. Mattingly Jr., previously worked alongside Fritz as a prosecutor in the St. Marys County states attorneys office. Actually, it was Fritzs opponent in the 1998 campaign, Joseph A. Mattingly Jr., who previously worked alongside Fritz as a prosecutor in that office.*
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---
`$= dv.el('center', 'Source: ' + dv.current().Link + ', ' + dv.current().Date.toLocaleString("fr-FR"))`

@ -0,0 +1,75 @@
---
Tag: ["Human", "Philosophy", "Hedonism"]
Date: 2022-07-10
DocType: "WebClipping"
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp: 2022-07-10
Link: https://www.commonsense.news/p/the-holy-anarchy-of-fun
location:
CollapseMetaTable: Yes
---
Parent:: [[@News|News]]
Read:: [[2022-07-11]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-TheHolyAnarchyofFunNSave
&emsp;
# The Holy Anarchy of Fun
[![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F0eb0378a-61e5-4f32-b3bd-e46243e05f74_2200x1500.jpeg)](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F0eb0378a-61e5-4f32-b3bd-e46243e05f74_2200x1500.jpeg)
Fun: the other communicable illness! (Fiona Hanson/PA Images via Getty Images)
***No writer stokes more consistent envy among Common Sense editors than Walter Kirn. Two of his essays from last year—[The Bullshit](https://walterkirn.substack.com/p/the-bullshit) and [The Power and the Silence](https://walterkirn.substack.com/p/the-power-and-the-silence)—got our vote for the best of 2021. But we never miss anything he writes.***
***You might know Kirns name from his novels, including “Up in the Air” and “Blood Will Out.” We hope youll love his debut piece for us as much as we do. — BW***
So, a little late as always, because I like my pop culture to ferment some before I swill it down, I saw the sequel to *Top Gun*. I attended the movie in a theater equipped with so-called “4DX” technology. I didnt know what this was when I chose my tickets on my phone. I learned it cost more to watch the film this way and, since I see so few movies in cinemas—and because inflation has made me lazy about trying to save money thats growing worthless—I thought Id try it out.
I assumed it involved a wider screen or something. Maybe crisper sound. Not close. I learned when my wife and I sat down that 4DX is a suite of crude effects which include simulated wind from fans, squirting water, and seats that rock and vibrate. This commotion is linked to the drama up on screen, but confusingly so at times. For example, in the flying scenes vigorous gusts were directed at our faces despite there being no such turbulence inside the sealed cockpits of zooming fighter jets. The scenes which featured water—one set on a beach, another on a sailboat—seemed less than vital to the story and were maybe just there to exploit the squirting tech. 
I feared my wife would hate all this. Amanda has nerves like needles. But when the seats went wild she laughed and when the water sprayed she shrieked. It helped that the story wasnt hard to follow and easily absorbed these interruptions. The theme of the movie also harmonized with the rattling, spraying, blowing mayhem. “Dont think. Do,” Tom Cruise kept telling the kids, the kids being younger, less experienced pilots and, in their real lives, budding celebrities, which gave them good reason to heed his Zen-style wisdom in case it applied to becoming famous too. Tom Cruise is a marvel of advanced self-care and seems to be aging in reverse. Whatever his mantra is, one wants to know it, and when he repeats it several times as though hes afraid youll forget it, you try not to. “Dont think. Do.” And then the water droplets hit your face, shocking you into enlightenment like the loud hand-claps of a Buddhist monk. 
Life is rich enough, even in short stretches, that you can apply to it any proverb you wish and find supporting evidence close at hand. Amanda was smiling as we left our seats and crossed the candy- and Lysol-scented lobby, passing a poster of Cruise wearing a flight suit. His image stirred in me a sense of gratitude.
One reason I had to be thankful was that Amanda had been feeling sad about the world, yet here she was bouncing along on gummy carpet, her hair still mussed from artificial tempests. “I think it was all about aging and masculinity,” she observed as we exited onto the sidewalk. I nodded but offered no theory of my own, which is rare for me after a show. I happened to know the movie was controversial in certain thoughtful circles, derided as too patriotic and nostalgic, but I decided to take it as it was, perhaps as a way of snubbing these woke drones. My wife was no longer grim, thats all I cared about. The shaking seats, fast jets, and grinning movie star had cleansed her system of a long winter heralded by our downbeat president as a season of “severe illness and death.” 
After such prophecies, people can use some fun. 
Fun—when your rulers would rather you not have it, and when the agents of social programming insist on stirring nonstop apprehension over the current crisis and the next one, the better to keep you submissive and in suspense—is elementally subversive. Fun is ideologically neutral, advancing and empowering no cause. Fun is self-serving and without ambition. It wishes only to be. It produces nothing for the collective and may represent a withdrawal from the collective, temporarily at least. Your fun belongs to you alone.
But what do I mean by “fun”? Im not quite sure. I dont mean “pleasure” in the old sense, which usually is associated with eroticism or sensuality, and I dont mean “play,” which tends to refer to structured games. But fun, as such, is not competitive. No one wins at it. Nor is fun the leisure” of the ancients, which one is supposed to spend in contemplation or civic engagement or other worthy pursuits. I mean something bouncier, simpler, more mundane, a feeling of antic stimulation, the opposite of seriousness. Often there is risk involved in fun. Manageable, perhaps simulated risk. You round a tight curve in a sports car that can handle it. You careen down a snowy hill in a red saucer sled. Sometimes you take a tumble or scrape a knee. Sometimes you scream—a laughing sort of scream.
One thing I learned early about fun is that having it on command is hard. Fun is a child of accident and chaos, resistant to authoritys guiding hand. In grade school one day, in gym class, an eager teacher directed us to unfold a giant blue parachute obtained though some foundation or organization that wished to shape our childhood development. (These high-minded programs were easy to detect and often involved free movies with corporate sponsors.) After the parachute was all spread out, we stood in a circle and grasped its silky hem. Our teacher said, “Lets have fun cooperating!”
On her order, we lifted our little arms in unison and the parachute billowed upward toward the ceiling like some sort of puffed up monster of the deep. Then we were asked to step backwards and stretch it taut. A series of such exercises ensued, each of them supposedly remarkable and meant to prove the virtue of group effort. The teacher kept laughing as though in celebration, inviting us to join in her delight, but only the fearful ones among us obliged her. I felt bored, coerced, and isolated. But thats not how I felt another time at school, when a classroom hamster escaped its cage and scurried here and there under our desks as we scrambled and sprawled and tried to grab it, afraid it might nip us if we did. Now that was fun! For the hamster too, I hope.
We live in a rule-bound era of high vigilance. Its a time of emergency measures and vast decrees, of curbs on expression, behavior, and even movement. They are portrayed as serving the common good and some people obey them in this spirit, others so they can be seen obeying them. Fun, with its little anarchies, is suspect. Its regarded as selfish, wasteful, perhaps unsanitary. To some degree, it always has been this way here, at least since the frowning pilgrims came ashore. “Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy,” wrote the cigar-sucking cynic HL Mencken.  How else to explain the mentality of leaders who thought to combat a respiratory virus by dumping tons of sand from front-end loaders into a seaside California skate park?
I asked a philosopher and critic, my friend Ivan Kenneally, what the sages have said about fun as Ive defined it.
“Im very tempted—and Im riffing here—to say this is a very modern category. Off-the-cuff hypothesis: classically, talk of the smiling embrace of danger is martial. Nothing like thrill-seeking for its own sake. A deficit of martial adventure, combined with a loss of transcendent purpose, means a need to willfully induce a feeling of being alive, to yank oneself from a numb slumber.”
Numb slumber is an apt description of the reigning mood of recent times. Much of this slumber was induced by policies which fostered inactivity and solitude using much the same patriotic rhetoric applied to physical fitness and group play during my Cold War childhood. “Lets have fun cooperating—separately!” The key to this war on thrills and spontaneity was shutting down or subjecting to tight controls the spaces where fun was free to happen: playgrounds, theaters, even the open ocean, from which surfers were called back to the beach, in scenes caught on video and widely shared, by uniformed anti-joy patrols. Have fun, get sick. Get others sick. Fun, the other communicable illness. What else was the anxious hive mind to conclude? And while the worst of these strictures have been relaxed, tense and inhibiting memories remain. 
Fun is abandonment. “Dont think. Do.” Its a form of forgetting, of looseness and imbalance, which is why it cant be planned and why it threatens those who plan things for us. Fun is minor chaos enjoyed in safety and most genuine when it comes as a surprise, when water from hidden nozzles hits your face or when the class hamster, that poor imprisoned creature, has finally had enough and flees its cage.
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---
`$= dv.el('center', 'Source: ' + dv.current().Link + ', ' + dv.current().Date.toLocaleString("fr-FR"))`

@ -116,7 +116,8 @@ hide task count
&emsp;
- [ ] :heavy_dollar_sign: [[@Finances]]: update crypto prices within Obsidian 🔼 🔁 every month on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-07-12
- [ ] :heavy_dollar_sign: [[@Finances]]: update crypto prices within Obsidian 🔼 🔁 every month on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-08-09
- [x] :heavy_dollar_sign: [[@Finances]]: update crypto prices within Obsidian 🔼 🔁 every month on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-07-12 ✅ 2022-07-10
- [x] [[@Finances]]: update crypto prices within Obsidian 🔼 🔁 every month on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-06-14 ✅ 2022-06-14
- [x] [[@Finances]]: update crypto prices within Obsidian 🔼 🔁 every month on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-05-10 ✅ 2022-05-07
- [x] [[@Finances]]: update crypto prices within Obsidian 🔼 🔁 every month on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-04-12 ✅ 2022-04-11

@ -48,11 +48,62 @@ id Save
&emsp;
<center>not found: ⛅️ 🌡️-9°C 🌬️↖4km/h
<center>not found: ☀️ 🌡️+12°C 🌬️↘4km/h
</center>
&emsp;
```dataviewjs
const today = DateTime.now()
const endOfYear = {
year: today.year,
month: 12,
day: 31
}
const lifespan = { year: 85 }
const birthday = DateTime.fromObject({
year: 1984,
month: 7,
day: 7
});
const deathday = birthday.plus(lifespan)
function progress(type) {
let value;
switch(type) {
case "lifespan":
value = (today.year - birthday.year) / lifespan.year * 100;
break;
case "year":
value = today.month / 12 * 100
break;
case "month":
value = today.day / today.daysInMonth * 100
break;
case "day":
value = today.hour / 24 * 100
break;
}
return `<progress value="${parseInt(value)}" max="100"></progress> | ${parseInt(value)} %`
}
dv.span(`
| | | |
| --- | --- |:---:|
| **Life** | ${progress("lifespan")}
| | |
| **Year** | ${progress("year")}
| **Month**| ${progress("month")}
| **Day**| ${progress("day")}
`)
```
&emsp;
# Main dashboard
&emsp;

@ -84,7 +84,8 @@ This section on different household obligations.
- [x] [[Household]]: *Paper* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-02-15 ✅ 2022-02-14
- [x] [[Household]]: *Paper* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-02-01 ✅ 2022-01-31
- [x] [[Household]]: *Paper* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-01-18 ✅ 2022-01-17
- [ ] ♻ [[Household]]: *Cardboard* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-07-12
- [ ] ♻ [[Household]]: *Cardboard* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-07-26
- [x] ♻ [[Household]]: *Cardboard* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-07-12 ✅ 2022-07-10
- [x] ♻ [[Household]]: *Cardboard* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-06-28 ✅ 2022-06-27
- [x] ♻ [[Household]]: *Cardboard* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-06-14 ✅ 2022-06-10
- [x] ♻ [[Household]]: *Cardboard* recycling collection 🔁 every 2 weeks on Tuesday 📅 2022-05-31 ✅ 2022-05-30
@ -104,7 +105,9 @@ This section on different household obligations.
- [ ] 🛎 🛍 REMINDER [[Household]]: Monthly shop in France 🔁 every month on the last Saturday 🛫 2022-07-04 📅 2022-07-30
- [x] 🛎 🛍 REMINDER [[Household]]: Monthly shop in France 🔁 every month on the last Saturday 🛫 2022-05-30 📅 2022-06-25 ✅ 2022-06-24
- [ ] 🛎 🧻 REMINDER [[Household]]: check need for toilet paper 🔁 every week 📅 2022-07-11
- [ ] 🛎 🧻 REMINDER [[Household]]: check need for toilet paper 🔁 every week 📅 2022-07-25
- [x] 🛎 🧻 REMINDER [[Household]]: check need for toilet paper 🔁 every week 📅 2022-07-18 ✅ 2022-07-15
- [x] 🛎 🧻 REMINDER [[Household]]: check need for toilet paper 🔁 every week 📅 2022-07-11 ✅ 2022-07-10
- [x] 🛎 🧻 REMINDER [[Household]]: check need for toilet paper 🔁 every week 📅 2022-07-04 ✅ 2022-07-02
- [x] 🛎 🧻 REMINDER [[Household]]: check need for toilet paper 🔁 every week 📅 2022-06-27 ✅ 2022-06-24
- [x] 🛎 🧻 REMINDER [[Household]]: check need for toilet paper 🔁 every week 📅 2022-06-20 ✅ 2022-06-20

@ -98,7 +98,8 @@ style: number
&emsp;
- [ ] :birthday: **[[Jacqueline Bédier|Bonne Maman]]** 🔁 every year 📅 2022-07-13
- [ ] :birthday: **[[Jacqueline Bédier|Bonne Maman]]** 🔁 every year 📅 2023-07-13
- [x] :birthday: **[[Jacqueline Bédier|Bonne Maman]]** 🔁 every year 📅 2022-07-13 ✅ 2022-07-13
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -98,7 +98,8 @@ style: number
&emsp;
- [ ] :birthday: **[[Opportune de Villeneuve|Opportune]]** 🔁 every year 📅 2022-07-14
- [ ] :birthday: **[[Opportune de Villeneuve|Opportune]]** 🔁 every year 📅 2023-07-14
- [x] :birthday: **[[Opportune de Villeneuve|Opportune]]** 🔁 every year 📅 2022-07-14 ✅ 2022-07-14
- [x] :birthday: Opportune 🔁 every year 📅 2021-07-14 ✅ 2021-10-01
&emsp;

@ -141,6 +141,14 @@ dv.view("00.01 Admin/dv-views/query_place", {country: "CH", placetype: "Restaura
```dataviewjs
dv.view("00.01 Admin/dv-views/query_place", {country: "CH", placetype: "Restaurant", area: "Industriequartier"})
```
&emsp;
#### Wipkingen
[[#^Top|TOP]]
```dataviewjs
dv.view("00.01 Admin/dv-views/query_place", {country: "CH", placetype: "Restaurant", area: "Wipkingen"})
```
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,96 @@
---
Tag: ["Healthy", "Vegan"]
Date: 2022-07-16
DocType: "Place"
Hierarchy: "NonRoot"
TimeStamp:
location: [47.3631314,8.5123238]
Place:
Type: Restaurant
SubType: Healthy
Style: Modern
Location: Wiedikon
Country: CH
Status: Tested
CollapseMetaTable: yes
---
Parent:: [[@@Zürich|Zürich]], [[@Restaurants Zürich|Restaurants in Zürich]]
&emsp;
`= elink("https://waze.com/ul?ll=" + this.location[0] + "%2C" + this.location[1] + "&navigate=yes", "Launch Waze")`
---
&emsp;
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-DaizySave
&emsp;
# Daizy
&emsp;
```ad-abstract
title: Summary
collapse: open
Note Description
```
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Contact
&emsp;
```ad-address
~~~
Räffelstrasse 28
8045 Zürich
Switzerland
~~~
```
&emsp;
Phone:: <a href="tel:+41433330328">043 333 03 28</a>
Email:: [info@daizy.ch](readdle-spark://compose?recipient=info@daizy.ch&subject=Reservierung)
Website:: [Daizy](https://daizy.ch/)
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Notes
&emsp;
Tested with [[MRCK|Meggi-mo]] on [[2022-07-15|15th July 2022]].
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,95 @@
---
Tag: ["Fresh"]
Date: 2022-07-16
DocType: "Place"
Hierarchy: "NonRoot"
TimeStamp:
location: [47.3953343,8.5183082]
Place:
Type: Restaurant
SubType: Pizza
Style: Italian
Location: Wipkingen
Country: CH
Status: Visited
CollapseMetaTable: yes
---
Parent:: [[@@Zürich|Zürich]], [[@Restaurants Zürich|Restaurants in Zürich]]
&emsp;
`= elink("https://waze.com/ul?ll=" + this.location[0] + "%2C" + this.location[1] + "&navigate=yes", "Launch Waze")`
---
&emsp;
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-ModoSave
&emsp;
# Modo
&emsp;
```ad-abstract
title: Summary
collapse: open
Note Description
```
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Contact
&emsp;
```ad-address
~~~
Breitensteinstrasse 14
8037 Zürich
Switzerland
~~~
```
&emsp;
Phone:: <a href="tel:+41774314758">+41 77 431 47 58</a>
Email:: [kontakt@modo.fm](readdle-spark://compose?recipient=kontakt@modo.fm&subject=Reservierung)
Website:: [Modo](https://www.modo.fm/)
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Notes
&emsp;
Tested with [[MRCK|Meggi-mo]] on [[2022-07-16|16th July 2022]].
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -72,8 +72,10 @@ Tasks and potential enhancements for the webhosting of lebv.org
- [x] [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: Explore the possibility to [[Hosting Tasks#Self-hosting|self-host]] ✅ 2021-09-16
- [ ] [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: Explore the possibility of webhosting through [[Hosting Tasks#Decentralised hosting|decentralised services]] (Blockchain) 📅 2023-12-31
- [ ] [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#Backup procedure|backup]] the DB & Files 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Wednesday 📅 2022-07-14
- [ ] [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#PHP versioning|check the PHP version]] server-side 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Wednesday 🛫 2022-01-14 📅 2022-07-14
- [ ] :fleur_de_lis: [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#Backup procedure|backup]] the DB & Files 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Wednesday 📅 2022-10-05
- [x] :fleur_de_lis: [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#Backup procedure|backup]] the DB & Files 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Wednesday 📅 2022-07-14 ✅ 2022-07-14
- [ ] :fleur_de_lis: [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#PHP versioning|check the PHP version]] server-side 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Wednesday 🛫 2022-04-07 📅 2022-10-05
- [x] :fleur_de_lis: [[Hosting Tasks|Hosting]]: [[Hosting Tasks#PHP versioning|check the PHP version]] server-side 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Wednesday 🛫 2022-01-14 📅 2022-07-14 ✅ 2022-07-14
&emsp;

@ -186,7 +186,8 @@ The following Apps require a manual backup:
- [x] Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for Anchor|Anchor Wallet]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Thursday 📅 2022-01-06 ✅ 2022-01-08
- [x] Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for Anchor|Anchor Wallet]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Thursday 📅 2021-10-14 ✅ 2022-01-08
- [x] Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for Anchor|Anchor Wallet]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 1st Thursday ✅ 2021-10-13
- [ ] :iphone: Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for iPhone|iPhone]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-07-12
- [ ] :iphone: Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for iPhone|iPhone]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-10-11
- [x] :iphone: Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for iPhone|iPhone]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-07-12 ✅ 2022-07-10
- [x] Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for iPhone|iPhone]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-04-12 ✅ 2022-04-11
- [x] Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for iPhone|iPhone]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2022-01-11 ✅ 2022-01-11
- [x] Backup [[Storage and Syncing#Instructions for iPhone|iPhone]] 🔁 every 3 months on the 2nd Tuesday 📅 2021-10-14 ✅ 2022-01-08

@ -237,7 +237,8 @@ sudo bash /etc/addip4ban/addip4ban.sh
#### Ban List Tasks
- [ ] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-07-16
- [ ] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-07-23
- [x] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-07-16 ✅ 2022-07-15
- [x] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-07-09 ✅ 2022-07-08
- [x] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-07-02 ✅ 2022-07-03
- [x] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-06-25 ✅ 2022-06-24
@ -255,7 +256,8 @@ sudo bash /etc/addip4ban/addip4ban.sh
- [x] [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-04-02 ✅ 2022-04-02
- [x] [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-03-26 ✅ 2022-03-26
- [x] [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]] Get IP addresses caught by Postfix 🔁 every week on Saturday 📅 2022-03-19 ✅ 2022-03-18
- [ ] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]]: Update the Blocked IP list 🔁 every month on Saturday 📅 2022-07-16
- [ ] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]]: Update the Blocked IP list 🔁 every month on Saturday 📅 2022-07-23
- [x] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]]: Update the Blocked IP list 🔁 every month on Saturday 📅 2022-07-16 ✅ 2022-07-15
- [x] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]]: Update the Blocked IP list 🔁 every month on Saturday 📅 2022-07-09 ✅ 2022-07-08
- [x] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]]: Update the Blocked IP list 🔁 every month on Saturday 📅 2022-07-02 ✅ 2022-07-03
- [x] 🖥 [[Selfhosting]], [[Configuring UFW|Firewall]]: Update the Blocked IP list 🔁 every month on Saturday 📅 2022-06-25 ✅ 2022-06-24

@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ All dependencies for running the alias service.
| Program name | Type | Description
|----------------|------|-------------
| **[[Configuring Fail2ban|fail2ban]]** | Deamon | Blocks suspicious attempts to login
| **[[Configuring Fail2ban\|fail2ban]]** | Deamon | Blocks suspicious attempts to login
| **unattended-upgrades** | Program | Enables automatic updates of installed programs and OS
| **logwatch** | Deamon | Monitors activity on server and sends activity logs

@ -72,7 +72,8 @@ All tasks and to-dos Crypto-related.
[[#^Top|TOP]]
&emsp;
- [ ] 💰[[Crypto Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Crypto news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-15
- [ ] 💰[[Crypto Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Crypto news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-22
- [x] 💰[[Crypto Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Crypto news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-15 ✅ 2022-07-15
- [x] 💰[[Crypto Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Crypto news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-08 ✅ 2022-07-09
- [x] 💰[[Crypto Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Crypto news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-01 ✅ 2022-07-01
- [x] 💰[[Crypto Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Crypto news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-06-24 ✅ 2022-06-24

@ -72,7 +72,8 @@ Note summarising all tasks and to-dos for Listed Equity investments.
[[#^Top|TOP]]
&emsp;
- [ ] 💰[[Equity Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Equity news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-15
- [ ] 💰[[Equity Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Equity news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-22
- [x] 💰[[Equity Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Equity news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-15 ✅ 2022-07-15
- [x] 💰[[Equity Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Equity news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-08 ✅ 2022-07-09
- [x] 💰[[Equity Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Equity news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-01 ✅ 2022-07-01
- [x] 💰[[Equity Tasks#internet alerts|monitor Equity news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-06-24 ✅ 2022-06-24

@ -72,7 +72,8 @@ Tasks and to-dos for VC investments.
[[#^Top|TOP]]
&emsp;
- [ ] 💰[[VC Tasks#internet alerts|monitor VC news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-15
- [ ] 💰[[VC Tasks#internet alerts|monitor VC news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-22
- [x] 💰[[VC Tasks#internet alerts|monitor VC news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-15 ✅ 2022-07-15
- [x] 💰[[VC Tasks#internet alerts|monitor VC news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-08 ✅ 2022-07-09
- [x] 💰[[VC Tasks#internet alerts|monitor VC news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-07-01 ✅ 2022-07-01
- [x] 💰[[VC Tasks#internet alerts|monitor VC news and publications]] 🔁 every week on Friday 📅 2022-06-24 ✅ 2022-06-24

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