James McDonough took over the Florida
Department of Corrections in 2006 because of rampant mismanagement.
Former officials admitted to contract kickbacks and frequent
taxpayer-funded “orgies” (ultimately, 40 officials were charged with
crimes, 90 were fired and 280 were demoted). In February, McDonough
said that many of the problems stemmed from inter-department softball.
“I cannot explain how big an obsession softball had become,” McDonough
said. “People were promoted on the spot after a softball game…to high
positions in the department because they were able to hit a softball
out of the park … The connection between softball and the parties and
the corruption…was greatly intertwined.”
Inexplicable
Making artistic, themed scrapbooks is a $2.6 billion industry in the United States
(nearly one-fifth as large as the adult-video market). The scrapbook
industry even has a “Hall of Fame” that is as protective of its morals
as baseball’s, which has shunned gamblers and steroid-users. According
to a January Los Angeles Times report, one “superstar”
scrapbooker, Kristina Contes, was recently kicked out of the Hall of
Fame for violating etiquette by displaying another person’s photographs
inside her scrapbook in a competition. Contes said the oversight was
inadvertent, but that she is now shunned within the community for her
grave offense and called “label-whore.”
Brian Feldman, a public
artist in Orlando, Fla., celebrated Feb. 29 (Leap Day) by devoting
himself to “leaping,” according to a report on WOFL-TV. For the entire
24 hours, beginning at midnight, Feldman leaped off a 12-foot-high
platform every three minutes and 56 seconds (a total of 366 times). “I
thought it would be a good idea to get people to think how they spend
their day,” Feldman said.
Accidents Will Happen
(1)
Ernest Simmons was convicted of attempted murder of two sheriff’s
deputies despite his defense that he only “accidentally” shot at
them—11 times, using two guns (Orlando, Fla., January).
(2)
Accused purse-snatcher Derrick Dale, 21, said that the purse in
question fell on his foot and, according to the arrest report, “the
next thing he knew, (it) was in his hands” (Destin, Fla., January).
Least Competent Criminals
This
Getaway Plan Works Better in July: James Jett, 33, was arrested in
Blount County, Tenn., in February after attempting to evade police by
jumping into the Little River and submerging all but his face. However,
the high temperature that day was only 36 degrees Fahrenheit, and by
the time he was discovered, he was suffering from hypothermia.
Recurring Themes
More
People Having Sex with Inanimate Objects: (1) Art Price Jr., 40, was
charged with public indecency for several instances of walking naked
into his back yard and, according to videos made by neighbors,
simulating intercourse with a picnic table (Bellevue, Ohio,
March). (2) A 36-year-old man faced several charges after allegedly
masturbating on a woman’s bicycle seat. He explained that he felt “an
overwhelming calm” when he smelled the handlebars of a woman’s bike
(Ostersund, Sweden;
February). (3) A security guard caught a building contractor simulating
sex with a canister vacuum cleaner. The contractor claimed that he was
merely vacuuming his underpants, which he said was a “common practice”
in his native Poland (London; March).
People
continue to purposely maim themselves in various schemes. Daniel Kuch
allegedly had a friend shoot him in the shoulder so that he could avoid
taking a drug test at work (Pasco, Wash., February). And Elizabeth
Hingston, 24, let her boyfriend break her leg by jumping on it so that
the pair could claim insurance proceeds worth the equivalent of
$200,000 (Plymouth, England, November). And Zachary Booso, 19, shot
himself in the cheek, shoulder and thigh so that he could brag to his
friends and ex-girlfriend that he was involved with gangs (Brownsburg,
Ind., March).
Undignified Deaths
A
39-year-old man who had been cited 32 times for driving without a seat
belt (and who rigged a fake belt in his car to create the illusion that
he was belted in) was killed in a low-impact car crash that likely
would not have been fatal to a belted driver (Wellington, New Zealand;
coroner’s inquest, February). And a 74year-old man died of hypothermia
after sneaking out of a nursing home late at night to smoke (Winnipeg,
Manitoba; January). And several vehicles fatally struck a man and a
woman on the Trans- Canada Highway after they got out of a cab and fought in the middle of the road (Chilliwack, British Columbia; February).
© 2008 Chuck Shepherd