Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Rodney King Chronicler Dies

 

Man who filmed Rodney King's 1991 beating by police dies of Covid-19, friend says

George Holliday, the man who shot the infamous video of Los Angeles Police Department officers beating Rodney King more than 30 years ago, has died, his friend tells CNN. He was 61.

Holliday died Sunday of Covid-19 in Simi Valley, California, according to longtime friend Robert Wollenweber.
"Unfortunately, he didn't want to get vaccinated. He wanted to get the Covid so he could build immunities and his wish came true about a month ago," said Wollenweber in a telephone interview with CNN. "He got sicker and sicker and was having trouble breathing, so they finally took him to the hospital. When his oxygen levels went down, they put them on a ventilator. And then he got pneumonia and his kidneys were shutting down and he had internal bleeding. And then he died Sunday."
      Wollenweber says he met Holliday in 1996 when they worked at the same plumbing company.
        They last saw each other about a month ago, before Holliday went into the hospital, he said.
          Wollenweber is not sure how Holliday caught Covid-19 but thinks their line of work exposed him.
          "We were both plumbers and we go to people's houses every day, so I'm assuming he picked it up from one of his customers," Wollenweber said.
          Wollenweber says the Rodney King beating video changed Holliday's life.
          "It's sad because the video brought him a lot of bad luck," Wollenweber said. "He was a working stiff, you know, just like all of us."
          Holliday shot the video early on the morning of March 3, 1991, from the balcony of his apartment. The video was seen on televisions around the world and was a key piece of evidence in the trial of four LAPD officers, who were acquitted on all charges connected to the beating.
          The April 29, 1992, acquittal sparked riots in Los Angeles.
          Two of the officers, Sergeant Stacey Koon and officer Laurence Michael Powell, were convicted in 1993 of violating King's civil rights.
          Rodney King died in 2012.
          Holliday holds the videocamera he used to capture the Rodney King beating after a 1991 news conference.
          King's daughter and CEO of the Rodney King Foundation, Lora Dene King, expressed her appreciation for Holliday in a statement to CNN.
          "The King family will forever be grateful to George Holliday who had the courage and conviction to hold the LAPD accountable in their brutal beating of my father, Rodney. Our condolences are extended to his family and friends," she said.
          "He was a great guy, and he was fair and he lived a clean life, he didn't drink, he didn't smoke," Wollenweber said of Holliday. "He believed in God and it's just unfortunate that this Covid took him."

            Wollenweber says Holliday is survived by his wife and a son from a previous relationship.

            Tuesday, September 21, 2021

            ALJ Hiring To Return To OPM

             


            In Washington

            Bill aiming to return ALJs to competitive service advances in House

            What’s the story? 

            The U.S. House Reform and Oversight Committee on July 20 voted 24-16 along party lines to advance legislation that would redesignate administrative law judges (ALJs) as members of the competitive civil service and reestablish the U.S. Office of Personnel Management’s authority over the ALJ hiring process. 

            President Donald Trump in 2018 moved ALJs from the competitive civil service to the excepted service via Executive Order 13843. The order aimed to align ALJ appointment practices with the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Lucia v. SEC, which held that the ALJs of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are are officers of the United States who must be appointed by the president, the courts, or agency heads rather than hired by agency staff. Prior to the order, OPM screened ALJ candidates through a merit-based selection process as part of the competitive service. Agencies could only hire ALJs from OPM’s pool of vetted candidates.

            Supporters of the legislation (the Administrative Law Judges Competitive Service Restoration Act) argue that E.O. 13843 threatens ALJ impartiality by allowing partisan agency heads to appoint ALJs based on their own standards.“This exposed impartial judges, who determined the outcome of disputes over labor-management relations, claims for Social Security and public health benefits, to political influence,” said the bill’s author, Representative Gerry Connolly (D-Va.).

            Opponents of the legislation argue that E.O. 13843 strengthens ALJ subject matter expertise by allowing agency heads to consider qualifications beyond the scope of OPM’s generalist vetting criteria. “By placing ALJs in the excepted service, it gave federal departments and agencies greater flexibility to assess prospective ALJ candidates,” said the committee’s ranking member, Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.).

            Want to go deeper?