Locally
The 5pm Post – Don’t Forget Vigil for Neil Michael Godleski 8:30pm Tonight – EL Haynes on CBS Evening News
The True Test of Transparency
Photo by furcafe. Metropolitan Police Department Chief Cathy Lanier was certainly on the offensive during a sit-down interview with TBD's Bruce DePuyt on Tuesday, vigorously defending her department's handling of crime statistics.
"[Fratenal Order of Police head Kris Baumann] just must not understand crime stats," Lanier claimed, in response to a question about the validity of MPD's numbers. (The FOP and Baumann have often accused MPD of underreporting crime statistics.) "The FBI just completed an audit of my crime statistics...we passed with flying colors," Lanier boasted, adding that MPD is "the most transparent police department in the country."
Scott McCabe at the Examiner was curious about the validity of Lanier's claims, especially light of the various statistical disagreements which have surfaced over the past few years. McCabe contacted Lanier's office for more information. His findings? "[Lanier's] spokeswoman said the report that purportedly supported the chief's claim of transparency was not available."
Update on Building at 3rd and P St, NW Plus Ozio Getting a Roof Deck
Library of Congress Partially Evacuated After Fire Alarm
The Library of Congress was partially evacuated around 9:10 a.m. today, after a fire alarm went off in a computer room inside the building. D.C. Fire and EMS reports that there was no fire found, but that emergency personnel are testing people for potential exposure to halon inhalation. No injuries have been reported. Traffic in the immediate area around the Library has been closed to vehicles. DCist contributor Elisabeth Grant captured these images as she walked near the buildings at 1st and 2nd Streets and Independence and C Street SE. Elisabeth reports that Library workers told her that the disruption was "just a fire drill."
UPDATE (10:40 a.m.): The Madison Building, which had been evacuated, has now been reopened.
Report: Strasburg Likely Done For the Season
Photo by philliefan99.Have yet to take the chance to get yourself to Nationals Park to catch a Stephen Strasburg pitching performance? Well, based on this report by Sports Illustrated's Jon Heyman, you'll have to wait until 2011:
Strasburg went on the disabled list for the second time this season on Monday.
It's a smart move by the team, who don't have much to play for the rest of this season, let alone something that would be worth risking more damage to their franchise pitcher. If his season is indeed over, Strasburg will finish with a 5-3 record, a 2.91 ERA and an impressive 92 strikeouts in only 68 innings.
Morning Roundup: Stick Out Your Tongue Edition
Photo by pablo.raw.Good morning, Washington. WMATA really buried the lede yesterday, didn't it? The revelation that riders would no longer be able to exit Metrorail stations with a negative SmarTrip balance (at least, not without using a cash-only machine to supplement said balance) is ostensibly to counter people who might abuse the system, but is quite annoying in our now mostly-cashless society. TBD reports that Metro is defending the move by calling it "a necessary step to make sure we have the same rules applying to paper [farecards] and SmarTrip," which certainly didn't win any points with the angry, Twittering masses. GGW's David Alpert finds the move hasty, and wonders why WMATA didn't "have someone run an analysis of the numbers of negative SmarTrips that get abandoned" before they made the decision. Of course, if WMATA ever got around to linking credit cards to SmarTrips, this wouldn't be such a big deal, now would it?
Like An Old Man Getting Out Of A Bath: "It's slow to boot up, like an old DOS computer, and it probably will take awhile to tabulate once the polls have closed." Not really the kind of lede you want to read about the District's new voting machines, but the Post says that the machines were at least working properly during a public test yesterday. For those expecting immediate results come Primary Day, well, you may be disappointed: BOEE executive director Rokey W. Suleman II said that machines will likely take 90 minutes to process information after the polls close on September 14. Factor in the paper vote counting and a tight race, and it could be a very long night indeed.
Back, and To The Left; Back, and To The Left: Did Nationals centerfielder Nyjer Morgan whip a ball into the stands at Philadelphia's Citizens Bank Park with the intention of hitting a Phillies fan? Major League Baseball certainly thinks so, handing the charismatic Morgan a seven-game suspension before last night's game. Morgan is appealing the punishment, but neither he nor manager Jim Riggleman nor Nats bloggers seem to know exactly what happened. Still, seven games? Here's hoping Morgan made it count.
Words To Live By: This week's Loose Lips' column tackles Ward 1 Councilmember Jim Graham, who apparently was again "pre-complaning" about how he would be portrayed in the story, just as he was when the Post's Paul Schwartzman profiled the Ward 1 race earlier this month. Writes Alan Suderman: "As it happens, Graham also called LL and LL's boss to pre-complain before the first word of this story you're reading now was written. What concerned Graham, he says, were reports that some "bitter" former staff members were speaking ill of him. Which is probably a valid concern, given that some of his former staffers are now working for his opponents." At least Graham went on the record this time, declaring that "[p]eople should know who they are voting for."
Briefly Noted: Vince Gray picks up Current endorsement, talks with WAMU's Patrick Madden...Parts of I-66 to close overnight for rail work...Leesburg serial stabber in court in Michigan today...The New York Avenue Metro station has big issues with bike security..."If you ever make it out to far Northwest, and happen to turn right off Reservoir Road on to Foxhall, you’ll notice a vast open hillside, veined with stone walls waiting to enclose gigantic new mansions, for all the world like a little piece of McLean had been transposed to Washington."
This Day in DCist: Last year, Washington remembered Ted Kennedy; in 2008, we reported on a cyclist who was run off the road by a driver -- MPD wasn't too concerned about it, though.
