Goin' Nowhere, Kristin Samet

Kristin Samet, "Goin' Nowhere"


Wednesday, September 30, 2009

The Mormon Church's Helpful New Sidewalk Rules for Adults Who Want to Make Out


The Mormon Church's Helpful New Sidewalk Rules for Adults Who Want to Make Out

When Matt Aune and Derek Jones were detained, and cited for trespassing, in July for kissing(!) on a pathway owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a whole helluva lot of controversy was started over whether the men were targeted because they were gay, which, duh, LDS doesn't appreciate. So how to keep future homo scofflaws off church property? Erect a sign!



Along Salt Lake City's Main Street Plaza, visitors will begin seeing signs like the above, reminding visitors they are on church property. And everyone from City Prosecutor Sim Gill (who opted not to charge Aune and Jones) to the American Civil Liberties Union of Utah is pleased with the move, since it'll provide clarity to passersby.

But the church still allows pedestrians on the pathway, and does not explicitly state what the rules are when on church property.




Gay incident reopens Salt Lake City's Main Street plaza wounds
Religious divide boils over again on church-owned square.
By Rosemary Winters

The Salt Lake Tribune


It's the wound that won't heal. The rift that won't close. And earlier this month, two gay lovers' purportedly innocuous late-night kiss -- though LDS Church officials insist it was far more amorous than that -- ripped it wide open.

Utah's simmering religious divide boiled over -- once again -- at the geographical and philosophical intersection of church and state: the Main Street Plaza in downtown Salt Lake City.

Matt Aune and Derek Jones say they held hands, kissed and then squabbled with security guards on the LDS Church-owned square. Salt Lake City police issued a ticket for trespassing. In protest, supporters of the couple staged a "kiss-in" last Sunday outside the plaza and plan another such demonstration today.




The LDS Church -- a faith to which 60 percent of Utahns belong -- defended its right to regulate "inappropriate behavior" on the plaza.

"What we're seeing now is a manifestation of what should have been obvious from the very beginning," says former Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson. "This block of Main Street never should have been conveyed to the LDS Church. It was a recipe for ongoing resentments between the LDS Church and those who are not members."

The church bought the strip of Main -- from North Temple to South Temple -- in 1999 . But the controversy burned for five more years as federal courts were asked to settle the prickly issue of whether the church could govern expression on the plaza and whether the city could retain a public right of way (as outlined in the original deal).

"It was meant to be for everybody," Eyer says. "Where people come and go their constitutional rights go with them."

In the end, he agreed to trade the public easement for cash and LDS land to build a west-side community center.

"What we were really swapping was a major division that wouldn't go away," Anderson says, for "the opportunity to really improve the lives of a lot of people over generations through the services and facilities that would be available at the [Sorenson] Unity Center."

"People, in general, have many more similarities than they do differences," says Elise Lazar, who is Jewish and has participated in bridge-building groups with Mormons and members of other faiths since 2004.

"Our guidelines have always been that we are not there to change anybody, but to understand each others' positions," she says. "We're friends now."

Still, she says, LDS views on homosexuality and efforts to thwart gay marriage remain among the "thorniest" issues.

"It's been hard for us to get past," she says. "I have respect for many of the values of the LDS Church, but this [plaza trespassing] incident highlights one of the most flagrant inconsistencies -- love thy neighbor, but only if he or she is heterosexual."





The LDS Church, in a statement, says Aune and Jones were asked to stop "behavior deemed inappropriate for any couple on the plaza," alleging the couple had been drinking (Aune and Jones acknowledge that) and engaged in "lewd language," "passionate kissing" and "groping." (Aune says there was nothing "pornographic," just a show of affection.)

"We hope the plaza will continue to be an asset to the community and enjoyed by the many that cross it each day," the church statement says. "We want it to be a place of beauty and serenity in downtown Salt Lake City for everyone."

Legally, there is not much anyone can do about the plaza, Anderson says. The Main Street sale is history.

"But certainly in terms of community dialogue, there's a lot that the mayor could, and I think should, be initiating," Anderson says. "You don't just let these things fester."

The Rev. Tom Goldsmith, leader of the First Unitarian Church, one of the plaintiffs the ACLU represented in the lawsuits, wants to see the issues of church and state, gay and straight discussed on a "grander scale."

"I would like to see dialogue not only among neighbors, but I'd also like to see the dialogue elevated more amongst community leaders and religious leaders."

For now, he hopes the LDS Church "lightens up" on plaza enforcement.

"The LDS Church responds very effectively to very overt cases of human pain and suffering," such as Hurricane Katrina or poverty in Africa, Goldsmith says. "For some reason, they just don't see the pain and suffering of people right here on their very doorsteps, people who are prevented from having their civil rights honored, their human integrity honored."


"The LDS Church responds very effectively to very overt cases of human pain and suffering," such as Hurricane Katrina or poverty in Africa, Goldsmith says. "For some reason, they just don't see the pain and suffering of people right here on their very doorsteps, people who are prevented from having their civil rights honored, their human integrity honored."




A still from LDS Plaza security camera footage shows security guards confronting Matt Aune and Derek Jones on July 9. The two were apprehended and arrested on suspicion of trespassing on the plaza. They claim they were harassed because they are gay and they had kissed on the plaza. The Salt Lake County District Attorney s Office did not charge the two men.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Springtime Shmingtime - We're getting NAILED by a blizzard!

Current weather: 29°F/-2°C with Freezing Fog & Snow. Windchill: 18°F/-8°C
Winter weather advisory in effect. A combination of heavy snow and strong winds will result in local white-out conditions, as well as rapid snow accumulations along area roadways. Caution: Windy with areas of blowing snow. Snowfall totals of 10-16in/25-40cm expected with local amounts of up to 20in/51 cm possible.

Wonderful views from the local weather cams:

Salt Lake City: White-out



American Fork, Utah: White-out


Huntsville, Utah


Park City, Utah - Canyons Resort


Riverton, Utah


Salt Lake City, Utah - Solitude Resort


West Jordan, Utah

World of Warcraft game gets UGLY

Your Daily Jury Duty
"In America, a person is presumed innocent until the mug shot is released"


R. Lavern Davison, 48, charged with convincing a 13-yr-old girl in Centerville, Utah, to hop on a bus and come see him. (She assumed he was a World of Warcraft pal; he wanted you-know-what.) The crime's ugly, but we must be fair and observe Davison on the perp walk before we judge him.



The 48-year-old, also known as ‘Bear’, likes to play World of Warcraft. In June 2008 he started chatting with a 13-year-old girl during game play. The chatting then moved to instant messaging, where it became more and more sexual. Eventually, Davison sent the girl a cell phone and communicated with her that way.

When the girl’s mother called police to report her daughter didn’t make it to school one day officials learned she was planning on going to California to live with her boyfriend. It was then that the FBI and Utah’s Internet Crimes Against Children task force got involved. Agents performed a scan on her computer and cell phone and found that Davison was engaging in sexually explicit conversations and intended to have the girl travel to California for sexually related purposes.

On a hunch, detectives headed for the Greyhound bus station. They arrived just in time…the girl was to board the bus in less than an hour. It then became obvious the girl had been fooled. When shown a real picture of her ‘boyfriend’ the kid freaked out.

Officers wanted to reel in Davison…they picked up where the girl left off and continued to chat with him. Centerville Police said the chats became more sexual in nature. ‘The things he wanted to do to her were graphic and violent.’ FBI agents arrested Davison.

Davison was transported by the US Marshal’s Office to his Utah court appearances where he was ordered detained until trial. Robert Lavern Davison Jr. faces one count of coercion and enticement, which carries a potential maximum penalty of life in federal prison with a 10-year mandatory minimum sentence.

Oh, and if you're wondering what that nasty, festering sore on his stomach is? It might be a large and inoperable hernia on the verge of bursting. Or, it *could be* ... a desk sore! Maybe he got it from sitting for hours and hours, days and days, his belly rubbing up against the edge of the desk while playing WoW and chatting up the girls?

UPDATE California man sentenced to 10 years for luring a Utah girl online By Anne Forester November 23rd, 2009 @ 3:27pm SALT LAKE CITY -- A federal judge sentenced a California man to 10 years in prison for luring a Utah girl into a sexual relationship online. Robert Lavern Davison Jr. 41, caught the attention of local authorities last November when the girl disappeared from school. "It's really important in this case that we got the 10-year sentence," said Assistant United States Attorney Trina Higgins. Prosecutors left federal court pleased that an online predator would be locked up for a long time. Davison, from Northern California, was sentenced to 10 years for luring a 13-year-old Utah girl into a sexual relationship. Davison met the girl online while playing the game "World of Warcraft." The two started instant messaging. Following Robert Lavern Davison's arrest, investigators want to warn parents about these games becoming forums for child predators. "This is a real girl who had been talking to him online, he had coerced her to go out and meet him," said Higgins. Authorities said Davison convinced the girl to travel to California; he even bought her a one-way bus ticket. Last November the 13-year-old disappeared from school. The Centerville Police Department, the Utah Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force and the FBI found her at a Salt Lake City bus stop. "She was just a few hours away from getting on a bus and going to California, and who knows what would have happened when she got off the bus in California," said Lt. Paul Child of the Centerville Police Department. Davidson was arrested in California and brought to Utah to face the charges. "We work together as a team, local state and federal agencies worked together very well to bring this to an arrest and I think saving this girl's life," said Child. http://www.ksl.com/?sid=8780945

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Dog Shoplifter - Murray, Uah

Dog Shoplifter Steals Rawhide at a Murray, Utah Grocery Store.
surveillance camera video


Press play to start video