I hear just fired 82 assistant DAs this morning. I'm sure this Soros pick just purged the department of its best law and order prosecutors. To add insult to injury, the week before Christmas and morning after the office party.
I also heard the 80's number from inside the DA's office.lunchbox said:
According to this, it was 37....which is still 37 too many!
http://abc13.com/news/newly-elected-harris-co-da-kim-ogg-fires-dozens-of-employees-via-email/1660034/
Oh, and she apparently did it via email.
I remember the thread well. We both tried to warn the folks BUT people be mad at Devon or something..... threw out the baby with the bath water...but we sure showed Devon......RoamingGnome said:
I tried to warn yall. The prosecutors fired today had a combined 687 years of service to the public.
We will be less safe moving forward. I pray for the families of murder victims who are about to have their cases tried by green prosecutors for no *********reason.
The cost of this will be in grief to crime victims and it will be very, very tangible.
A lot of the Devon hate stemmed from the PP case and the jailing of a rape victim (this one without a lot of the facts being released or understood by the general public). Rusty Hardin even went to bat for the DA's office.The Original AG 76 said:I remember the thread well. We both tried to warn the folks BUT people be mad at Devon or something..... threw out the baby with the bath water...but we sure showed Devon......RoamingGnome said:
I tried to warn yall. The prosecutors fired today had a combined 687 years of service to the public.
We will be less safe moving forward. I pray for the families of murder victims who are about to have their cases tried by green prosecutors for no *********reason.
The cost of this will be in grief to crime victims and it will be very, very tangible.
hope they are happy.
idiots
Devon was a helluva lot better prosecutor and DA than politician. She did mishandle the PR side of these cases and was late in responding to the jailing issue. BUT this is minor compared to the utter lack of experience and ultra liberal tendencies of Ogg. Our side is far too unforgiving in its witch hunts and crusades. We have lost a damn good law and order DA but...we sure showed ole Devon !!!!!The Wonderer said:A lot of the Devon hate stemmed from the PP case and the jailing of a rape victim (this one without a lot of the facts being released or understood by the general public). Rusty Hardin even went to bat for the DA's office.The Original AG 76 said:I remember the thread well. We both tried to warn the folks BUT people be mad at Devon or something..... threw out the baby with the bath water...but we sure showed Devon......RoamingGnome said:
I tried to warn yall. The prosecutors fired today had a combined 687 years of service to the public.
We will be less safe moving forward. I pray for the families of murder victims who are about to have their cases tried by green prosecutors for no *********reason.
The cost of this will be in grief to crime victims and it will be very, very tangible.
hope they are happy.
idiots
http://www.click2houston.com/news/investigates/attorney-defends-prosecutor-after-kprc2-investigation-into-jailed-rape-victim
Not disagreeing with you. I am far from impressed with Ogg as a lawyer and even more so as a DA. Those two cases being mishandled and the general straight Dem ticket that occurred within the CoH meant that Devon didn't stand a chance at reelection.The Original AG 76 said:Devon was a helluva lot better prosecutor and DA than politician. She did mishandle the PR side of these cases and was late in responding to the jailing issue. BUT this is minor compared to the utter lack of experience and ultra liberal tendencies of Ogg. Our side is far too unforgiving in its witch hunts and crusades. We have lost a damn good law and order DA but...we sure showed ole Devon !!!!!The Wonderer said:A lot of the Devon hate stemmed from the PP case and the jailing of a rape victim (this one without a lot of the facts being released or understood by the general public). Rusty Hardin even went to bat for the DA's office.The Original AG 76 said:I remember the thread well. We both tried to warn the folks BUT people be mad at Devon or something..... threw out the baby with the bath water...but we sure showed Devon......RoamingGnome said:
I tried to warn yall. The prosecutors fired today had a combined 687 years of service to the public.
We will be less safe moving forward. I pray for the families of murder victims who are about to have their cases tried by green prosecutors for no *********reason.
The cost of this will be in grief to crime victims and it will be very, very tangible.
hope they are happy.
idiots
http://www.click2houston.com/news/investigates/attorney-defends-prosecutor-after-kprc2-investigation-into-jailed-rape-victim
If you think that there will not be 37 new hires, you don't know how this works...maroonout32 said:
Funny that the same people who complain about "big government" suddenly complain when government is downsized
well obviously it was straight D voters but we had a very sizable undervote for Devon and a significant drop off in R straights. Harris County still has a slight R majority and , with proper leadership and fewer litmus tests and crusading in the general ,can be won by the R's. The proper place to express your desire to change is in the primary. Staying home in Nov cause you didn't get your way 100% or you are all madded up at a few of the candidates results in a disaster like last month. I know that folks don't like this BUT it is clear fact that the worst R is far superior to ANY D.The Wonderer said:Not disagreeing with you. I am far from impressed with Ogg as a lawyer and even more so as a DA. Those two cases being mishandled and the general straight Dem ticket that occurred within the CoH meant that Devon didn't stand a chance at reelection.The Original AG 76 said:Devon was a helluva lot better prosecutor and DA than politician. She did mishandle the PR side of these cases and was late in responding to the jailing issue. BUT this is minor compared to the utter lack of experience and ultra liberal tendencies of Ogg. Our side is far too unforgiving in its witch hunts and crusades. We have lost a damn good law and order DA but...we sure showed ole Devon !!!!!The Wonderer said:A lot of the Devon hate stemmed from the PP case and the jailing of a rape victim (this one without a lot of the facts being released or understood by the general public). Rusty Hardin even went to bat for the DA's office.The Original AG 76 said:I remember the thread well. We both tried to warn the folks BUT people be mad at Devon or something..... threw out the baby with the bath water...but we sure showed Devon......RoamingGnome said:
I tried to warn yall. The prosecutors fired today had a combined 687 years of service to the public.
We will be less safe moving forward. I pray for the families of murder victims who are about to have their cases tried by green prosecutors for no *********reason.
The cost of this will be in grief to crime victims and it will be very, very tangible.
hope they are happy.
idiots
http://www.click2houston.com/news/investigates/attorney-defends-prosecutor-after-kprc2-investigation-into-jailed-rape-victim
37 is just the public number so far. I've heard there are a lot more. Minimum 50's probably close to 80.The Wonderer said:If you think that there will not be 37 new hires, you don't know how this works...maroonout32 said:
Funny that the same people who complain about "big government" suddenly complain when government is downsized
Ogg is booting Anderson's ADAs and replacing them with her own picks. Typical in public office changeovers; not typical to see that large of a number of accomplished ADAs given a pink slip.
It is typically destructive. She fired division chiefs, court chiefs, people who have made law enforcement their life's work. You can't just rehire the experience she let go. It doesn't exist.The Wonderer said:If you think that there will not be 37 new hires, you don't know how this works...maroonout32 said:
Funny that the same people who complain about "big government" suddenly complain when government is downsized
Ogg is booting Anderson's ADAs and replacing them with her own picks. Typical in public office changeovers; not typical to see that large of a number of accomplished ADAs given a pink slip.I was there for Lykos.
Absolutely agree. As previously posted, the 37 released had a combined 680+ years of prosecutorial experience. You can't just replicate that.RoamingGnome said:It is typically destructive. She fired division chiefs, court chiefs, people who have made law enforcement their life's work. You can't just rehire the experience she let go. It doesn't exist.The Wonderer said:If you think that there will not be 37 new hires, you don't know how this works...maroonout32 said:
Funny that the same people who complain about "big government" suddenly complain when government is downsized
Ogg is booting Anderson's ADAs and replacing them with her own picks. Typical in public office changeovers; not typical to see that large of a number of accomplished ADAs given a pink slip.I was there for Lykos.
She really must have cleaned house of every person there with substantive experience. I have not worked in the department, just have (had?) friends there, but there is significant annual turnover at the lower echelons. So in order to fire 37 personnel with an average experience of 18.5 years from an organization of 300 personnel already overly-reliant on 1st and 2nd year attorneys learning on the job- you've gotten rid pf the bulk of the institutional knowledge accumulated over numerous administrations. Disgusting.The Wonderer said:Absolutely agree. As previously posted, the 37 released had a combined 680+ years of prosecutorial experience. You can't just replicate that.RoamingGnome said:It is typically destructive. She fired division chiefs, court chiefs, people who have made law enforcement their life's work. You can't just rehire the experience she let go. It doesn't exist.The Wonderer said:If you think that there will not be 37 new hires, you don't know how this works...maroonout32 said:
Funny that the same people who complain about "big government" suddenly complain when government is downsized
Ogg is booting Anderson's ADAs and replacing them with her own picks. Typical in public office changeovers; not typical to see that large of a number of accomplished ADAs given a pink slip.I was there for Lykos.
When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
No it's not.Michael Barnhart said:When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
Actually, it is. Notice I said "evidence", not absolute fact.The Wonderer said:No it's not.Michael Barnhart said:When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
Evidence in hiring maybe; but that's an awful long reach to show connection to terminations. Especially in civil service jobs like these that are known for higher than normal turnover with a change in regime.Michael Barnhart said:Actually, it is. Notice I said "evidence", not absolute fact.The Wonderer said:No it's not.Michael Barnhart said:When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
Okay, you win, my law degree and years in practice mean absolutely nothing.The Wonderer said:Evidence in hiring maybe; but that's an awful long reach to show connection to terminations. Especially in civil service jobs like these that are known for higher than normal turnover with a change in regime.Michael Barnhart said:Actually, it is. Notice I said "evidence", not absolute fact.The Wonderer said:No it's not.Michael Barnhart said:When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
H
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
I'll defer to your experience, I just can't see how these types of jobs in an at-will state would hold. I can see the arguments you are making and I'd make similar if trying to bring action. It's just common to see these types of turnovers all the time in civil service jobs of this nature.Michael Barnhart said:Okay, you win, my law degree and years in practice mean absolutely nothing.The Wonderer said:Evidence in hiring maybe; but that's an awful long reach to show connection to terminations. Especially in civil service jobs like these that are known for higher than normal turnover with a change in regime.Michael Barnhart said:Actually, it is. Notice I said "evidence", not absolute fact.The Wonderer said:No it's not.Michael Barnhart said:When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
H
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
Hiring replacements in a discriminatory fashion is evidence the firings were discriminatory. If she really fires 80 plus, then her management team excuse starts to wear thin.The Wonderer said:I'll defer to your experience, I just can't see how these types of jobs in an at-will state would hold. I can see the arguments you are making and I'd make similar if trying to bring action. It's just common to see these types of turnovers all the time in civil service jobs.Michael Barnhart said:Okay, you win, my law degree and years in practice mean absolutely nothing.The Wonderer said:Evidence in hiring maybe; but that's an awful long reach to show connection to terminations. Especially in civil service jobs like these that are known for higher than normal turnover with a change in regime.Michael Barnhart said:Actually, it is. Notice I said "evidence", not absolute fact.The Wonderer said:No it's not.Michael Barnhart said:When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
H
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
Would said argument hold if she hired a wide swath of replacements (males and females, homo- and heterosexuals, young and old (think this would be interesting given the reported tenure of those released today), wide array of races, etc.)?Michael Barnhart said:Hiring replacements in a discriminatory fashion is evidence the firings were discriminatory. If she really fires 80 plus, then her management team excuse starts to wear thin.The Wonderer said:I'll defer to your experience, I just can't see how these types of jobs in an at-will state would hold. I can see the arguments you are making and I'd make similar if trying to bring action. It's just common to see these types of turnovers all the time in civil service jobs.Michael Barnhart said:Okay, you win, my law degree and years in practice mean absolutely nothing.The Wonderer said:Evidence in hiring maybe; but that's an awful long reach to show connection to terminations. Especially in civil service jobs like these that are known for higher than normal turnover with a change in regime.Michael Barnhart said:Actually, it is. Notice I said "evidence", not absolute fact.The Wonderer said:No it's not.Michael Barnhart said:When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
H
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
No. that's just politicsThe Wonderer said:Would said argument hold if she hired a wide swath of replacements (males and females, homo- and heterosexuals, young and old (think this would be interesting given the reported tenure of those released today), wide array of races, etc.)?Michael Barnhart said:Hiring replacements in a discriminatory fashion is evidence the firings were discriminatory. If she really fires 80 plus, then her management team excuse starts to wear thin.The Wonderer said:I'll defer to your experience, I just can't see how these types of jobs in an at-will state would hold. I can see the arguments you are making and I'd make similar if trying to bring action. It's just common to see these types of turnovers all the time in civil service jobs.Michael Barnhart said:Okay, you win, my law degree and years in practice mean absolutely nothing.The Wonderer said:Evidence in hiring maybe; but that's an awful long reach to show connection to terminations. Especially in civil service jobs like these that are known for higher than normal turnover with a change in regime.Michael Barnhart said:Actually, it is. Notice I said "evidence", not absolute fact.The Wonderer said:No it's not.Michael Barnhart said:When she hires a disproportionate percentage of particular classes, that is evidence of discrimination.The Wonderer said:On what grounds? Texas being an at-will state makes it harder to establish a cause of action. Your new boss not liking you isn't grounds unless they fired you for specific reasons other than just not liking you.Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
H
Wrongful termination suit, anyone?
Genuinely curious.