Mr. Nice Guy
Eli Lehrer · February 9, 2018 If it takes a special talent to make a boring topic interesting, there’s an inverse talent possessed by those who take interesting topics and make them boring. In American Niceness, Carrie Tirado Bramen, associate professor of English at SUNY Buffalo, takes a fascinating topic—one long overdue for…
Star Trek: Its Continuing Mission
Eli Lehrer · November 10, 2017 When the series Enterprise went off the air in 2005, the consensus was that the whole Star Trek enterprise (so to speak) was exhausted: The show’s ratings were too low to keep it on the air and the franchise’s two most recent movies were critical stinkers that fared poorly at the box office.
Paths Not Taken
Eli Lehrer · July 7, 2017 If angst, lovesickness, and ennui alone made for half-decent poetry, just about every moody high school student would be in the running for the Pulitzer Prize. Although strong emotion has been vital to many artistic movements, from Romanticism on, simply placing emotions on a page almost never…
Taxi Deregulation HappenedWhere?
Eli Lehrer · May 19, 2017 Mary Cheh, who represents a leafy, affluent, embassy-filled section of Washington, doesn’t fit anyone’s image of a free-market reformer. A member of the D.C. Council since 2007, the sixty-something’s dress and manner are those of the Harvard-educated law professor she is. Many of her legislative…
Why Infrastructure Spending Is Not As Simple As It Seems
Eli Lehrer · March 8, 2017 In a deeply divided America, infrastructure investment appears to be a rare area of political consensus. Donald Trump called for a major road-and-bridge program in his victory speech. Even House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi—opposed to nearly everything else for which Trump stands—has promised to…
Fixing the Power Grid through Open Markets and New Technologies
Eli Lehrer · February 21, 2017 The electric power system makes our modern, mobile, information-age economy possible. But it is organized in much the same way it was in 1884, when Thomas Edison created the first system of power plants to light up homes and businesses in lower Manhattan. By way of comparison, the iPhone, which is…
The Opposition to Vaping is Vapid
Eli Lehrer · October 3, 2016 Senator Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) hates e-cigarettes. The devices, he says, are little more than an evil plot, "the new frontier in tobacco companies' quest to get kids addicted while they are young."
Do Less Harm.
Eli Lehrer · September 30, 2016 Senator Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) hates e-cigarettes. The devices, he says, are little more than an evil plot, "the new frontier in tobacco companies' quest to get kids addicted while they are young."
Under Control, for Now
Eli Lehrer · July 8, 2016 Is crime spiraling out of control in America? Are we letting too many dangerous people out of prison and jail? Is the nation retreating from the policies that lowered crime and restored public safety in the 1990s and 2000s?
FDA Moves to Kill E-Cigarettes
If Congress has any self-respect or desire to preserve its own prerogatives, it needs to overturn the FDA's new proposed regulations on e-cigarettes.
Better Than Regulation
Eli Lehrer · April 15, 2016 Despite growing support from some conservative policy wonks, the idea of taxing carbon dioxide emissions, even as an alternative to the sort of heavy-handed greenhouse regulations promulgated by the Obama administration, has failed to garner much enthusiasm on the right.
Cyber Insurance: A Functioning Free Market
Eli Lehrer · April 7, 2016 When a few high-profile hacking incidents hit household-name firms like Target and Home Depot in 2014 and 2015, some in the insurance industry – and more than a few in public life– said that cyber risk required an expensive new government solution.
Justice for Juniors
Eli Lehrer · March 4, 2016 How should we treat children who get into trouble with the law? For more than a century, American attitudes have shifted between sometimes-wild extremes.
Curious Fiscal Sense
Eli Lehrer · February 12, 2016 Politicians of both parties have learned in recent decades the perils of being seen handling a disaster poorly — as was the case with George W. Bush following Hurricane Katrina — as well as the potential dividends that come from handling a disaster well. Bill Clinton, after all, helped turn around…
A Cost Curve That Bent Way Down
Eli Lehrer · January 29, 2016 Warby Parker is the most celebrated of the online optical shops upending the traditional eyeglass business. In a market where the average price for a pair of prescription glasses has been near $300, Warby Parker sells hipster-chic frames, complete with lenses, for around $100. Fast Company calls…
New and Improved
Eli Lehrer · January 15, 2016 To the medieval Europeans who built magnificent cathedrals and oversaw the greatest flowering of Western culture since Rome, few stories had more resonance than that of Troilus and Criseyde. All three European languages that have given us significant medieval literatures—French, Italian, and…
Reform the Sex-Offender Registry
Eli Lehrer · January 8, 2016 In 1972, at the age of 21, Phillip Garrido had his first arrest. The charge: sexual assault of a minor. Four years later, he kidnapped and raped Katherine Callaway, a crime for which he received a 50-year sentence in the federal Leavenworth Penitentiary. During his trial, Garrido testified to…
Feds to Punish Public Housing Tenants for Smoking in Their Own Apartments
Eli Lehrer · November 16, 2015 Sometime in the next two years, if Obama administration bureaucrats get their way, public housing tenants who smoke in their own apartments will face sanctions, fines and perhaps even eviction. The proposed policy is deeply flawed. However, those who oppose it—as many conservatives will…
A Market Is Born
Eli Lehrer · November 9, 2015 In 1988, Robert Tappan Morris, then a graduate student at Cornell University, decided to write a computer program to measure the size of the still-nascent Internet. Morris’s effort, a cleverly written bit of code that exploited security weaknesses, quickly spread through the computer network,…
Study: E-Cig Bans on Minors Lead to Higher Smoking Rates
Eli Lehrer · October 27, 2015 As electronic cigarettes have proliferated and spawned a sub-culture of their own—vape shops, chai-latte flavored vaping fluid and even the “sport” of cloud chasing—few policies have seemed as intuitive as stopping children under 18 from buying them. As almost all e-cigarettes contain nicotine,…
Poll: Clean Energy Issues Pretty Popular Among Conservative Base
Eli Lehrer · October 2, 2015 Some new findings on how conservative voters think about energy issues from a bevvy of top-tier GOP pollsters ought to be required reading for the eventual Republican presidential nominee. While the new polls, commissioned by the ClearPath Foundation, offer some intuitive political messaging advice…
A Senseless Policy
Eli Lehrer · September 7, 2015 At age 10, Maya R. did something that would disturb just about anyone: “Me and my step-brothers, who were ages 8 and 5, ‘flashed’ each other and play-acted sex while fully clothed,” she told Human Rights Watch researcher Nicole Pittman. After copping to the incident in juvenile court, Maya’s…
A Misguided FDA Crusade
Eli Lehrer · July 20, 2015 From Brussels to Chicago to the headquarters of the Food and Drug Administration in White Oak, Maryland, public health officials, antismoking crusaders, and mayors are waging a battle against flavorings for both tobacco cigarettes and newer e-cigarettes.
Saving Atlantic City
Eli Lehrer · June 22, 2015 Atlantic City
Metric, Schmetric
Eli Lehrer · June 5, 2015 Presidential candidate and former Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee has promised he will switch the United States to the metric system in the exceedingly unlikely event he ends up in the White House. While the idea may help him among the Europhile segments of the Democratic base, it’s a truly…
Disruption Can Be a Good Thing
The ideal of a staid, heavily regulated industry that offers blue-collar jobs with respectable wages, pensions, and strong community ties—usually lamented as a thing of the past by observers on both the left (Elizabeth Warren, Paul Krugman) and the right (Pat Buchanan, Rick Santorum)—does still…
The ‘Sharing Economy’ Is Under Threat
Eli Lehrer · February 9, 2015 One of the underappreciated problems of the growth of the regulatory state is that rather than clarifying the rules of the road for companies and consumers, regulations often simply beget more regulations. A textbook example can be seen in the evolution of so-called "sharing economy" firms, and how…
Market Fine After Congress Fails to Reauthorize Fed-Backed Terrorism Risk Insurance
Eli Lehrer · December 23, 2014 When Congress headed home for the year last week without renewing the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) many in the real estate, tourism, and insurance business predicted disaster. The Coalition to Insure Against Terrorism—a broad grouping representing everyone from real estate investors to…
Poet of Understatement
Eli Lehrer · December 22, 2014 Before his death late last month at the age of 80, Mark Strand could claim one of the most varied careers of Americans active in the arts. Born on Prince Edward Island in 1934 and raised everywhere from Montreal to Brazil to pre-Castro Cuba, Strand was a painter, collage-maker, translator, writer,…
Revealed: Little-Known Mississippi Attorney General Go-To Man for Hollywood
Eli Lehrer · December 15, 2014 It’s easy to see how Mississippi attorney general Jim Hood—a Bible-reading, pro-gun, pro-life, Democrat—has survived in statewide office even as his already conservative state has turned a deeper shade of red. Quite simply, he’s a likeable, quotable guy who doesn’t seem to have forgotten his roots…
New York City's Hotel War Heats Up
Eli Lehrer · October 24, 2014 As any visitor to New York City discovers, the Big Apple isn’t the best place to get a hotel room. Rates top $300 per night, the highest in the country, and supply is quite limited.
Let’s Help the Strivers
Eli Lehrer · October 20, 2014 In 2009, Bryce Harper—then a sophomore at Las Vegas High School and already the best high school baseball player in the nation—made the unusual and controversial decision to forgo his final two years of high school, on the grounds that there was simply no effective competition for him at that…
Slowing the Rise of the Oceans
Eli Lehrer · September 8, 2014
New York Threatens to Fine Car Service $2,000 for GivingFreeRides
Eli Lehrer · July 11, 2014 As anyone who has visited New York City knows, getting a taxicab in the city can prove very, very difficult. And finding a driver that speaks English, has working air conditioning, will let a visitor pay by credit card, and knows directions to major landmarks can be even harder. That’s why it’s…
Diminishing Returns
Eli Lehrer · May 12, 2014 Still fresh from victories over both cigarettes and the secondhand smoke they emit, many public health advocates have turned their attention to new supposed hazards: e-cigarette “vapor” and “thirdhand” smoke. While the previous campaigns to prevent smoking have had positive results, the latest ones…
The Limits of Consumer Choice
Eli Lehrer · March 10, 2014 Most conservatives, and even some liberals of the dwindling “New Democrat” variety, put near-religious faith in the maxim that greater consumer choice would improve nearly every heavily regulated service. They’re usually right. But examining a case where the benefits of consumer choice haven’t…
The Netflix Effect
Eli Lehrer · March 3, 2014 Last fall, during an earnings conference call, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings made an announcement that landed him on the front page of every newspaper business section: His company had surpassed HBO to become America’s biggest pay-TV service. Today, about 30 million Netflix accounts exist, serving…
Let’s Move
Eli Lehrer · February 10, 2014 President Obama’s State of the Union speech brimmed with ideas to increase upward mobility and spur job creation—most of which have been tried previously, without good results. From calling on Congress to raise the minimum wage to announcing the creation of six new “high-tech manufacturing hubs”…
Doing the Wrong Thing
Eli Lehrer · December 16, 2013 After a decade-long run of bad weather that included Hurricanes Katrina, Sandy, and Ike, and a host of other river valley and storm-surge floods, the 45-year-old National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) owes taxpayers about $25 billion that no analyst believes it will ever pay back. Meanwhile, by…
Captain Bly
Eli Lehrer · December 2, 2013 In order to possess literary merit, poetry must do at least one of three things adequately: condense emotion, embody truths about the human condition, or enrapture readers with the poet’s ability to put words together in a beautiful way. Great poems can do all of these things. Adequate poetry…
With a Grain of Salt
Eli Lehrer · September 16, 2013 The show’s hero has huge muscles, wisecracking sidekicks, and a mysterious origin. In each episode, he performs feats beyond the abilities of mere mortals. He fights for values that just about everyone shares, and he dispenses common-sense wisdom in a way that seems profound. Each episode ends,…
Internet Access for Prisoners?
Eli Lehrer · July 22, 2013 It will draw howls of protest from politicians and the punditocracy, but the time has come to allow Internet access in jails and prisons. It would open a world of new opportunities for prisoners and improve the fraught process of reintegrating them into society, all at nearly no cost to taxpayers.
Climate Change for the GOP
Eli Lehrer · July 8, 2013 President Barack Obama’s climate agenda announced last week represents the latest of many Democratic party efforts to address climate change. Although it includes no new legislation, the president’s plan makes unprecedented use of executive branch powers and offers a great many things that appeal…
Reagan, the Environmentalist
Eli Lehrer · June 17, 2013 Mention Ronald Reagan to an avowed environmentalist, and you’ll generally elicit a groan. In the conventional telling, the Gipper appointed right-wing extremists to key environmental positions and proceeded to give timber companies and energy interests a free hand to despoil nature. Had Congress…
Disney’s America
Eli Lehrer · June 10, 2013 The Walt Disney World Resort, located outside of Orlando, has more than twice Manhattan’s land area and about the same number of hotel rooms as Philadelphia. It’s America’s largest single-site employer—over 60,000 people work there—and for many of the 17 million or so who visit each year, it is a…
Farmers with Benefits
Eli Lehrer · April 29, 2013
Less Is More
Eli Lehrer · April 15, 2013 Hardly anyone who takes a close look at the network of federal and state laws mandating minimum prison sentences for myriad offenses can doubt that they waste billions of dollars, destroy lives, and do a disservice to justice. Reading the stories assembled by groups like Families Against Mandatory…
The Party of Prison Reform
Eli Lehrer · March 18, 2013
Dead in the Water
Eli Lehrer · January 28, 2013 By almost any analysis, the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP)—the recipient of a $9.7 billion bailout in the wake of Hurricane Sandy—doesn’t work. It is poorly conceived, it’s terribly mismanaged, and it encourages harmful behavior.
Rebels with Cause
Eli Lehrer · January 14, 2013 NBC’s Revolution (Mondays, 10 p.m. ET/PT) features swordfights, gun-fights, and crossbow fights, chases on horseback, chases on trains, and chases on foot. It is gripping, loud, and entertaining. Who cares that its high-concept premise (all electricity in the world suddenly and mysteriously stops…
The ‘Open for Business’ Tax Plan
Eli Lehrer · December 31, 2012
By the Rivers of . . . Quebec?
Eli Lehrer · December 3, 2012
Pay Per Venue
Eli Lehrer · October 29, 2012
Kill the Farm Bill
Eli Lehrer · August 6, 2012 A major farm bill is now stalled in the House as members head back to their districts for their traditional break. This is a good thing. The measure approved by the Senate and by the House Agriculture committee with bipartisan support easily ranks as the worst major piece of domestic policy…
The Great Unmentionable
Eli Lehrer · July 30, 2012
A Civic Sitcom
Eli Lehrer · June 18, 2012 Parks and Recreation (NBC, Thursdays, 8:30 ET) offers every ingredient of a good television sitcom: It’s smart, laugh-out-loud funny, well acted, and nicely photographed. Despite good reviews, and a bevy of award nominations, the show, unlike its NBC Thursday night mates The Office and 30 Rock,…
A Health Insurance System that Works
Around the time Lisa Mulhearn’s Old English Sheepdog, Goober, turned 12, a veterinarian discovered a bone tumor in his nose. The doctors at Red Bank Veterinary Hospital in Tinton Falls, New Jersey, gave Mulhearn a grim prognosis. Without expensive chemotherapy treatment, her dog—the newly divorced…
The Wiki-Poet
A complete understanding of Michael Robbins’s poetry requires, in roughly equal measures, knowledge of modern academic poetry, its Romantic-era predecessors, seventies and eighties pop music, recent death metal, and au courant literary criticism. Knowing more than a little about hip-hop and Star…
One Rule at a Time
Eli Lehrer · March 26, 2012 Just about every poll on regulatory issues shows many Americans hold contradictory views. By growing majorities, Americans say they oppose “government regulation” (more than half tell Gallup that government regulates “too much”). However, when pollsters ask about broad areas of regulatory policy,…
Smoking, No, Nicotine, Maybe
Eli Lehrer · February 27, 2012 If there’s one perfectly safe conclusion to draw from nearly a century of public health research, it’s this: Cigarette smoking is really, really bad for your health. An unusually complete, if rather obvious, 2010 Surgeon General’s Report on the topic shows that inhaling tobacco smoke not only…
It Could Be Verse
Eli Lehrer · January 16, 2012 Based on his commercial success alone, Shel Silverstein (1932-1999) deserves a great deal of attention from those who care about American poetry. Consider the facts: Both the books of poems and drawings that Silverstein published during his life remain in demand more than a quarter century later.…
Mortgaging Our Future
Eli Lehrer · December 26, 2011 The conventional wisdom holds that a housing finance system built on the bedrock of long-term, fixed-rate mortgages—the sensible, historic, ostensibly free-market way to buy a home—is the key underpinning of the country’s residential real estate market and the economy as a whole. A closer look,…
A Test Drive for Obamacare
Eli Lehrer · November 21, 2011 When Sam Howell woke up a year after a car accident left him in a coma, doctors believed the St. Charles, Michigan, man would never walk, talk, or eat solid food again. They were wrong, the Saginaw News reports. With care from his mother, a nurse, and a team of specialists, the 25-year-old can now…
Let’s Start All Over Again
Eli Lehrer · October 17, 2011 About halfway through his 1984 State of the Union address, Ronald Reagan laid out the need for major tax reform. “There’s a better way,” he said. “Let us go forward with a historic reform for fairness, simplicity, and incentives for growth.” Reagan then proceeded to lay out an ambitious agenda:…
Cops at Sea
Eli Lehrer · September 26, 2011 NCIS (the title is short for “Naval Criminal Investigative Service”) is almost certainly the most popular television show in the world.
A Disaster Waiting to Happen
Eli Lehrer · August 15, 2011 Sometime late this summer—the Friday before Labor Day if historical patterns hold—the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will announce the beginning of something called Medicare Round Two of “the Competitive Bidding Program for certain Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,…
A Beverly Hills Bailout?
Eli Lehrer · July 25, 2011 Residents of California do not have nearly enough insurance to cover rebuilding costs following a big earthquake. One proposal to deal with this problem, a bill before Congress called the Earthquake Insurance Affordability Act, would not make things better and would drain billions from federal…
Pensions Aren't the Problem, cont.
Michael Warren · April 11, 2011 Tom Cross, the Republican minority leader in the Illinois state house of representatives, emailed this letter to the editor in response to Eli Lehrer's article, "Pensions Aren't the Problem," which appeared in the March 28th issue of THE WEEKLY STANDARD:
Pensions Aren’t the Problem
Eli Lehrer · March 28, 2011
Lone Economic Star
Eli Lehrer · August 2, 2010
The Beach House Bailout
Eli Lehrer · May 10, 2010 Those who think the federal government needs even more debt and more responsibilities will love Florida Democrat Ron Klein’s Homeowners’ Defense Act. Everyone else should treat the bill—currently moving forward in the House of Representatives—with a great deal of skepticism. The proposal, intended…
Tomorrowland
Eli Lehrer · March 15, 2010
The Mania of Central Planning
Eli Lehrer · October 12, 2009 Lansing, Mich.
A Lidless Eye
Eli Lehrer · September 21, 2009 The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun
The Meltdown Next Time
Eli Lehrer · September 21, 2009 When the insurance giant American International Group was threatened with collapse in late 2008, its credit default swap business and other international operations were cited as the heart of its troubles. But the largest consequence of AIG's uncontrolled failure on consumers' pocketbooks could…
Insurance Against Terrorism
Eli Lehrer · August 10, 2009 After hijackers destroyed the World Trade Center on 9/11, taxpayers ended up spending a lot of money to aid the injured, rebuild public infrastructure, improve security, and help the jobless. But the private firms with property and workers in lower Manhattan fell back on their private insurers. And…
Comedy Tonight?
Eli Lehrer · June 22, 2009 Conan O'Brien, the new host of The Tonight Show, is funny, witty, and possesses the sort of affable geekiness that makes him seem approachable. In its first weeks, his new version of Tonight--airing live-to-tape from a gorgeous purpose-built neo-art deco studio on Los Angeles's Universal lot--has…
How to Start a Trade War
Eli Lehrer · June 19, 2009 For much of the last decade, Massachusetts Democrat Richard Neal has banged away at proposals for vast tax increases on "offshore affiliated reinsurance"--coverage that insurance companies purchase from their own non-U.S. subsidiaries. As arcane as the issue sounds, the tax hike Neal wants could…
'Battlestar' Rules
Eli Lehrer · April 6, 2009 When it premiered to high ratings in 1978, the producers of Battlestar Galactica promised their show would bring feature-film standards to network television. It didn't. Although it offered state-of-the art special effects, cute kids, furry space pets, an over-the-top score from the London Symphony…
Verse Choice
Eli Lehrer · March 30, 2009 The Niagara River
A Distinctly American Poem
Eli Lehrer · January 21, 2009 Elizabeth Alexander's inaugural poem, "Praise Song for the Day," doesn't qualify as a great poem, but it might emerge as an important one. As a celebration of the commonplace and an exaltation of the personal over the political, the poem offers a distinctly American take on the concept of…
Natural Poet
Eli Lehrer · November 17, 2008 Red Bird
Gale Force Foolishness
Eli Lehrer · September 24, 2008 AS CONGRESS WINDS down its current session, there's little doubt that plenty of bad ideas will pop out of the woodwork as members put the finishing touches on legislation. Unfortunately, one of the worst ideas to come down the pike in quite some time--federal windstorm insurance--has gained some…
Biden's One Accomplishment
Eli Lehrer · September 15, 2008 When Joe Biden has taken an interest in domestic policy, it has mostly had to do with crime. Of the 31 substantive domestic policy bills the Democratic vice presidential nominee has introduced since 2006, 20 related to crime and policing. His single most significant legislative achievement--one…
Animated Aristophanes
Eli Lehrer · May 26, 2008 About half way through its 12th season, South Park (Comedy Central, Wednesdays, 10 P.M. ET) has attacked, to take just the first five letters of the alphabet, AIDS research, Britney Spears, Canadians, drug-related social panics, and Eliot Spitzer. Indeed, it's difficult to find an interest group,…
The Green Quest
Eli Lehrer · March 17, 2008 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
A Disaster in the Making
Eli Lehrer · February 11, 2008 Late last year, two recently elected southern Republican governors, Louisiana's Bobby Jindal and Florida's Charlie Crist, vowed to work together for a "national catastrophe fund" to reduce the soaring insurance premiums for owners of homes in disaster-prone areas. With the endorsement of the…
Bankrupting Florida
Eli Lehrer · August 20, 2007 If a catastrophic Katrina-like hurricane sweeps through the state of Florida, it may leave behind more than wrecked houses, damaged shops, and ruined roads: There's a real chance that Governor Charlie Crist's recent insurance reforms could bankrupt the state.
Crime's Up
Eli Lehrer · June 18, 2007 During the late 1990s, police superintendent Edward F. Davis III presided over epic crime reductions in Lowell, Massachusetts. Under his leadership, the city's crime rate fell almost 60 percent from 1995 to 1999. An economic revival followed, and the city, once among the most dangerous in New…
Reaping the Whirlwind
Eli Lehrer · March 26, 2007 More than 18 months after Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, the state of Mississippi finds itself in a legal battle over homeowners' insurance that may take longer to clean up than the hurricane debris. Thousands of Mississippians have seen their houses reduced to concrete slabs and want…
Jail House Blues
Eli Lehrer · June 14, 2004 American Gulag
Money Can't Buy You Safety
Eli Lehrer · June 7, 2004 FROM MASSACHUSETTS mill towns to Southern California suburbs, local police, fire, and emergency management agencies are using a cascade of new federal homeland security grants to go shopping. They've bought some $6 billion worth of chemical weapons suits, emergency command centers, laser-assisted…
Do We Need More Firefighters?
Eli Lehrer · April 12, 2004 FIREFIGHTERS love John Kerry, and the Massachusetts senator loves them back. The International Association of Firefighters endorsed the presumptive Democratic nominee in September 2003, when other unions had flocked to Howard Dean's banner. When the Bush campaign aired commercials featuring…
The Secret to Homeland Security
Eli Lehrer · December 8, 2003 LESS THAN AN HOUR after hijacked jetliners hit the World Trade Center towers on September 11, 2001, the Coast Guard called "all available boats" to the New York City waterfront. Fishing trawlers, ferries, cargo ships, and luxury yachts came in droves. By day's end, over 300,000 people had left the…
Soft Cell
Eli Lehrer · June 16, 2003 Harsh Justice
Showdown at the Voucher Corral
Eli Lehrer · March 24, 2003 MILWAUKEE SCHOOL BOARD member John Gardner has a deep voice, a short temper, plenty of enemies, and left-leaning political views. He also has a bevy of support from nationally prominent conservatives and is fighting a broad spectrum of left-wing forces that want to end his political career.
Two Cheers for Leaks
Eli Lehrer · November 25, 2002 AROUND 1:00 A.M. on Thursday, October 24, with the manhunt for the Beltway sniper entering its third week, trucker Ronald Lanz--his radio tuned to the "Truckin' Bozo" network--spotted a blue 1990 Chevy Caprice at a rest stop along I-70, a few miles from the Maryland-Pennsylvania border. He saw the…
Profiles in Confusion
Eli Lehrer · November 4, 2002 A MYSTERIOUS PHONE CALL, a fingerprint, a composite sketch, and spent ammunition from an unsolved Alabama killing finally led the police to sniper suspects John Allen Muhammad and John Lee Malvo. In the end, all the scientific-sounding speculation offered by the bevy of professional profilers who…
Crime After Punishment
Eli Lehrer · October 21, 2002 THANKS TO A COALITION of evangelicals, left-wing prison reformers, and human rights activists, Congress is on the verge of tackling America's most ignored crime problem, prison rape. A measure that would apply various types of pressure to shape up lax prison systems is now working its way towards…
Free at Last
Eli Lehrer · September 9, 2002 JOE ARPAIO, sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona, has some interesting ideas about running prisons: His inmates sleep in tents in the desert, work on chain gangs when they misbehave, wear pink underwear, and eat green baloney sandwiches that cost less than dog food. Smoking, skin mags, and coffee…
What Cops Can Teach the FBI
Eli Lehrer · July 29, 2002 AS AMERICA'S best-educated, best-equipped, and best-known law enforcement agency, the FBI runs the world's most sophisticated law enforcement labs, keeps national crime statistics, and gives police all over the country plenty of advice on everything from child abuse to credit card fraud. The…
Crime Without Punishment
Eli Lehrer · May 27, 2002 AFTER HE BEAT an 80-year-old grandmother, took a mother with a stroller hostage, and robbed 11 London banks in broad daylight, Michael Wheatley was finally nabbed by British police late last month. Dubbed the Skull Cracker for his habit of pistol-whipping victims, Wheatley had transfixed the London…