Tuesday, September 26, 2006

The Wrap-up

A cop is dead, an innocent man may be on death row, and drug warriors keep knocking down doors. Radley Balko, the Cato policy analyst who may have saved a man’s life, gives the first full-fledged account of the Cory Maye case.

The WSJ recaps the piecemeal steps—and the loopholes therein—Congress has recently taken in the climb toward “antipork progress.”

Tim Carney unearths the evidence that the new CEO of Ford Motor Company, Alan Mulally, formerly of Boeing, was hired not for his business but for his political acumen, i.e., his ability to secure corporate welfare.

Glimpse “an intimate look at the administration through the eyes of Time’s press corps photographers,” via the magazine’s new White House photo blog.

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