Bibles stop bullets, as do breast implants…

Bruce posted a story a few days ago about a “retired veteran and candidate for Oklahoma State School Superintendent” who thinks books are a good way keep school kids from getting shot — by putting the books between the bullet and the kid, literally (pun intended).

The advocate for this plan did not seem to be saying that children should put their faith in school books and thus carry them around with them everywhere they go, as one suggestion was to have a special armor-plated book stored under every desk.

On that note, I can not help but take this one step further and post a recent story that bibles (two small ones, to be exact) also stop bullets:

A 54-year-old Orange Park man credits two small Bibles in his shirt pocket for saving his life when they stopped a bullet.

You know what that means? Schools should be regulated so noone can use any firearm/bullet that is able to penetrate two New Testament shirt-pocket sized bibles. No armor-piercing rounds would be allowed anymore at Wal-Mart, sorry. Ok, but seriously, how unlikely is it that someone aiming at a person carrying trash bags would hit a shirt-pocket sized bible? Would the trash bags have stopped the bullet? And the fact that it took two bibles to stop a bullet might actually suggest that bibles are in need of some improvement.

I probably should not joke about this as it seems the “bibles stop bullets” theory is seriously sought after (hey, the person paid $4!), probably to demonstrate proof of something greater than the physics of transferred energy.

No one seems to have documented how many people carrying bibles were hit by bullets, or even died, in spite of having one (or two) with them. Nevermind that, even the guy in the Oklahoma story describes the scientific method as “just two or three people who had been in the military…took to an open field near Minco to see if a text book could stop a bullet during a school shooting”. What more evidence or data do you need than a few friends from the military shooting stuff out in an open field?

Incidentally, if you read the list of answers to the person looking for “proof” you might notice that someone has provided a list of examples at the end that show things like breast implants, lighters, coins, cell phones, and a few other things also seem to do the job.

So, given the recently revealed harmful nature of breast implants, maybe they can be repurposed to schools. All students would get implants to protect against gunfire, and the breast implant industry could be saved from the financial disaster of releasing products to the public that turn out to be hazardous. Or course Mr. Crozier should probably setup another “scientific test” to verify what size implants would give people the best “fighting chance”. If he does not choose to believe in the implants, maybe he could adopt a pro-environmental approach and mandate children in school wear clothes covered in pockets filled with old phones. Keeps the landfills empty and keeps kids safe; who can argue with that?

Alas, it seems the possibilities for believing in personal safety are endless if you lower expectations far enough.

Security Eval of J2ME CLDC Embedded Java Platform

The Journal of Object Technology has posted a document with some in-depth information on the security of Java 2 Micro-Edition Connected Limited Device Configuration (J2ME CLDC). With so many mobile devices, including phones, running this platform expect to see more and more analysis and attacks in this area.

Problems already found show that the usual suspects (buffer overflow, input validation, confidentiality, session control, etc.) linger and should not be overlooked:

We showed that the J2ME CLDC security model needs some refinements (e.g. permissions and protection domains). Moreover, we demonstrated the presence of some vulnerabilities exist in the RI of MIDP 2.0 (e.g. SSL implementation). Some phones were also shown to be vulnerable to security attacks like the Siemens SMS attack, while other phones followed a restrictive approach in implementing the J2ME CLDC platform.

Chicago gangs use web for ‘hits’

New meaning for “web hits”? Report by the Chicago police dept on how violent gangs are using the web to plan violent attacks:

Work by Special Gang Task Force Foils Murder Plot by Members of New Breed Street Gang: A special gang task force formed by Chicago Police helped disrupt escalating violence between two rival Chicago street gangs as well as foil a murder plot by one of the gangs earlier this week, police reported Thursday.

The full text of the report has several interesting points, including the use of wiretap by the police, the use of anti-forensics measures by the gangs, and how information on the web fit into the gang’s plans:

[Supt. Philip] Cline said the gang members used sophisticated means as they plotted the hit, including accessing the Illinois Department of Correction Web site for photos of rival gang members so they would have an exact description of their target.

Fugitive found due to poetry, community work

It seems to me that this story tells how a wanted man was actually found because he had become a well-known member of a community/church and was actively publishing poetry:

At some point last month, FBI investigators running Porter’s fingerprints through a database came up with a match to the 1993 theft arrest, according to the law enforcement official. FBI investigators notified the Massachusetts Department of Correction, which notified State Police, and the hunt for Porter began anew.

After running Porter’s alias, Jameson, through Internet searches, investigators discovered their fugitive was an established poet who also had ties to a progressive Unitarian church on Chicago’s West Side.

Horton, the State Police Investigator, was at a loss yesterday to explain why, after trying to run Porter’s prints for all these years, authorities finally got a match.

”We don’t know,” he said. Illinois officials could not immediately say yesterday when the state began putting fingerprints of all known criminals into a nationwide database.

Three Massachusetts State Police investigators and three Department of Correction officials arrived in Chicago Sunday and turned up nothing. Yesterday, they decided to go to the Third Unitarian Church.

”Honest to God, he just walked in,” Horton said.

Interesting choice of words.