Tweet of the day:
My coworker brought in some biscuits from Germany called Choco Leibniz and I asked if there'd been a dispute over whether them or Fig Newtons had been invented first and nobody got it 🙁
— Robin Johnson (@rdouglasjohnson) August 26, 2019
Michael Drejka was convicted of manslaughter. (Previously.) You can call me lazy, but I’m going to point to Andrew Branca again, who is an actual lawyer and knows something about use of force and the law:
This case is an excellent example of how tiny changes in the fact pattern could lead to drastically different legal outcomes. If McGlockton had made any apparent movement consistent with re-engaging Drejka, Drejka’s perception of an imminent attack would likely have been unquestionably reasonable. Even a mere shift of McGlockton’s body weight toward, rather than away from, Drejka might have been sufficient. Such evidence was not in the case, however.
Also extremely unhelpful to Drejka was his post-event interrogation by police, to which he voluntarily consented, without legal counsel present. In that interrogation a happily compliant Drejka, believing he’s just helping the police understand why his shooting of McGlockton was no problem, hardly an inconvenience, as the internet meme puts it, agrees to conduct a re-enactment of the shooting.
“Really, seriously, just shut the f–k up.”
Interesting post from Stephen Wolfram’s blog that sits at a couple of intersections: rare book geekery, computer science (the rare book belonged to Turing), and detective work.
Actual headline from the Austin American-Statesman:
The article goes on to state that, according to industry experts, all of the Statesman reporters are intelligent, attractive, and all of their bodily functions smell like apple cinnamon Glade plug-ins.
Perhaps slightly more interesting: this column about the Texas State Cemetery, tied to Cedric Benson’s burial there. While the writing is slightly grating, it does answer some questions I had about who gets in and how.
Your tweet of the day made me laugh out loud. Of course, Sheldon Cooper tells us that the Fig Newton is named after the town in Massachusetts. So what town is Choco Leibnitz named after?
I checked a couple of things. There is not, as far as I can tell, a German town named “Leibniz”.
But there are other flavors of Leibniz: beyond Choco, there’s the plain one (Leibniz-Keks), Leibniz Milch & Honig, Leibniz Zoo, and Leibniz Vollkorn. I was kind of hoping for Roter Samt Leibniz or Double Fudge Leibniz, but I guess (much like Germany itself has learned) you can’t have everything…