الجمعة، 31 أغسطس 2012

Former Lebanese minister arrested for planning attacks for Syria's Assad

Michel Samaha, a former Lebanese minister who is a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, has reportedly confessed to helping plan a series of bomb attacks against Sunni targets in north Lebanon at the behest of the Syrian leadership.

The discovery of the reported bomb plot will have significant political repercussions if confirmed and will harden fears in Lebanon that the embattled Assad regime is seeking to export its troubles to its tiny neighbor, which is split between supporters and opponents of the Syrian president.

Also, the detention in Lebanon of an influential pro-Syrian politician is highly unusual, suggesting that the Lebanese police had compelling evidence before detaining Mr. Samaha.

“No one would have dared to arrest Samaha, neither the security agencies nor the judiciary, if the [authorities] had no evidence proving Samaha’s involvement in the charges issued against him,” Khaled Daher, a Sunni parliamentarian from north Lebanon and outspoken critic of the Assad regime, told the Kuwaiti newspaper As-Seyassah in an interview published today.

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Officers from the information branch of Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces raided Samaha’s home in the village of Kinshara north of Beirut early yesterday, bundling the pajama-clad former minister into a car and seizing documents, CDs, and computers and reportedly $170,000 in cash. His bodyguard, secretary, and driver were also detained for questioning, although they were released later that day.

According to Lebanese media reports, the alleged bomb plot was discovered when a man identified only by his family name, Kfouri, became an informant for the police after Samaha allegedly attempted to recruit him for the operation. According to the reports, the most damning piece of evidence against Samaha is video footage shot in secret by Kfouri in which Samaha discusses the plot.

The video allegedly shows Samaha saying “this is what Bashar wants,” a reference to the Syrian president. The video also reportedly shows Samaha saying that he received the bombs from General Ali Mamlouk, the head of the Syrian General Security Directorate.

The targets were reported to be a series of iftars, the evening meal that breaks the daily fast during the Islamic month of Ramadan, that would have brought together Sunni notables in north Lebanon, an area of strong support for the Syrian opposition. One report claimed that the attacks would have coincided with a visit by the Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Beshara Rai, to north Lebanon between Aug. 13 and 18.

Although Samaha is no longer a minister nor member of parliament, he still has considerable political influence because of his close personal ties to Mr. Assad. In July 2008, when a small Lebanese delegation headed by President Michel Suleiman paid a visit to Assad at his hotel during a state visit to Paris, its members were surprised to see Samaha, a Lebanese, included in the Syrian delegation. The incident underlined Samaha’s influence with Damascus and, therefore, the significance of his arrest by the Lebanese police yesterday.

Mr. Assad was reported to have personally contacted senior Lebanese officials yesterday to demand his release.

In the first response by the powerful Shiite group Hezbollah, an ally of Samaha, Hezbollah lawmaker Mohammed Raad denounced the detention and claimed that it was a set-up.

“We have long experienced such security fabrications; some judges are connected to suspicious security services,” he said yesterday.

Wafik Safa, Hezbollah’s top security chief, reportedly visited the police headquarters where he was shown some of the evidence implicating Samaha.

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For Italy mafia fugitive, trip to the beach proves costly

ROME (Reuters) - Alleged mafia boss Roberto Matalone evaded the police for two years, but a trip to the beach in southern Italy on Thursday proved to be his undoing.

Accused of being part of the inner circle of the Pesce clan, one of the most powerful branches of the Calabria mob, he is married to the sister of boss Francesco Pesce, who was arrested last year hiding in an underground bunker.

But Matalone, 35, turned out to be less shy than his brother-in-law. Surveillance footage released to the media on Friday showed him heading to the beach in shorts and a baseball cap, with a towel over his shoulder.

Police arrested him as he raised his umbrella soon after arriving at the beach in Joppolo, in the toe of Italy, with his family.

The arrest is the latest in a crackdown by Italian police on the 'Ndrangheta mafia, which according to Italian authorities controls 80 percent of drug trafficking into Europe in a business worth 27 billion euros a year.

According to the website of Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, his beach reading material was prophetic - a book called "Mafia Hunters" about how Italian police track mafiosi.

(Reporting By Naomi O'Leary; Editing by Barry Moody and Andrew Osborn)


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Swiss algorithm tracks crime, rumours, epidemics to source

Scientists in Switzerland said on Friday they had devised software that can swiftly trace terror suspects, computer viruses, rumour-mongering and even infectious diseases back to their source.

"Using our method, we can find the source of all kinds of things circulating in a network just by 'listening' to a limited number of members of that network," said researcher Pedro Pinto of Lausanne's Federal Polytechnic (EPFL).

The programme, known as an algorithm, works by fast-tracking the route taken by the information to arrive back at its original source.

A key factor is using the time at which the data is passed from sender to recipient, to help investigators follow as the path as directly as possible and eliminate false trails.

Publishing in the scientific journal Physical Review Letters, Pinto's team tested the algorithm on a known data maze to see if the tool could pinpoint the individuals behind the September 11 attacks on the United States.

"By reconstructing the message exchange inside the 9/11 terrorist network extracted from publicly released news, our system spit out the names of three potential suspects -- one of whom was found to be the mastermind of the attacks, according to the official enquiry," he said.

Taking social networking sites as another example, Pinto said individuals could use the algorithm to find out who had started a rumour posted to 500 contacts by looking at posts received by just 15 to 20 of them.

The same algorithm could be used to identify the origin of unwanted online messages (spam) or a computer virus, said Pinto, post-doctorate researcher at EPFL's Laboratory for Audiovisual Communications.

The innovation can also be used to help epidemiologists, he said.

Pinto traced the source of a cholera outbreak in South Africa after applying the formula to water and transport networks.

The maths could also be harnessed by advertisers specialising in so-called viral online marketing campaigns, while also making it easier to spot them in advance, Pinto said.


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Shootings in Sikh temple and Colorado: Which crime is worse?

Last Sunday, Wade Michael Page killed six people at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin before being wounded by a police officer and taking his own life. Two days later, Jared Lee Loughner pleaded guilty to killing exactly the same number of people at an Arizona shopping mall last year.

Who committed a worse crime? At first glance, it seems like a ridiculous question: One murderer’s victims are as dead as the other’s. But under US state and federal “hate crime” laws, the answer is probably Page. And that might be the most ridiculous thing of all.

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An avowed white supremacist, Page most likely targeted his victims because they were of a different color or perhaps mistook them as Muslims. All but three states now have laws providing for enhanced penalties when a crime is motivated by racial, ethnic, or religious prejudice. So does the federal government, which broadened its hate-crime law in 2009 to include attacks based on sexual orientation.

Page, then, would be judged more harshly than Mr. Loughner – whose goal was to murder former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords – and possibly than James Holmes, who allegedly killed 12 moviegoers at a Colorado theater last month.

We still don’t know what may have motivated Mr. Holmes, whose victims seem to have been chosen at random. And that’s the key distinction here. If you deliberately aim to kill or injure a certain kind of person, we will penalize you more than if your targets are haphazard and arbitrary.

Why? In America, after all, we’re free to say and think whatever we want; we criminalize behavior, not belief. So how can we interdict some behaviors more strongly because of the belief that seemingly lies behind them?

Here defenders of hate-crime statutes invoke the principle of harm, which is deeply inscribed in criminal law: The greater the injury resulting from a given act, the more we punish it. So extra penalties for hate crimes reflect not their perpetrators’ noxious opinions – which are constitutionally protected – but rather the far-reaching effects of their crimes.

Or so the Supreme Court said in a 1993 decision upholding Wisconsin’s hate-crime law, under which Wade Page would probably have been prosecuted. Citing briefs by the American Civil Liberties Union and the Anti-Defamation League, then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist noted that bias-motivated crimes “inflict distinct emotional harms on their victims” and “incite community unrest.”

Rehnquist went on to quote the English jurist William Blackstone, whose “Commentaries” had an enormous influence on American law: “It is but reasonable that, among crimes of different natures, those should be most severely punished which are the most destructive of the public safety and happiness.”

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The same idea underscored federal hate-crime measures, which grew steadily after the 1998 murders of James Byrd and Matthew Shepard. Byrd was an African-American dragged to his death by whites who had ties to the Ku Klux Klan; Shepard was gay, lured out of a bar and beaten to death.

“Hate crimes are a form of terrorism,” the late Sen. Edward Kennedy told Congress in 1998. “They have a psychological and emotional impact which extends far beyond the victim.”

He was right, of course. Consider the Wisconsin murders and the toll they have taken on America’s Sikh community, which was already reeling from a long series of racist episodes. Four days after the 9/11 World Trade Center attacks, a turban-wearing Sikh was killed at his gas station by an assailant who apparently mistook him for a Muslim. Since then, the Washington-based Sikh Coalition has documented more than 700 incidents of anti-Sikh violence and intimidation.

But do these kinds of acts do greater harm to their targets than attacks that are not overtly motivated by prejudice? I doubt it. If anything, so-called random shootings terrorize a wider swath of people.

Indeed, these shootings remind us that anybody in America can be a target. Regardless of race or ethnicity – or sexual orientation – any one of us can be shot to death by a Jared Loughner or a James Holmes. They do not discriminate. And that is every bit as destructive to “public safety and happiness” – to quote Blackstone – as any racist attack.

So it’s time to get rid of hate-crime laws, which assume that an attack motivated by bigotry is somehow worse than one impelled by anger, greed, or anything else. Tell that to the parents, spouses, and children of the people who died in Arizona and Colorado.

THE MONITOR'S VIEW: Wisconsin shooting: a call to counter extremist fear

Ostensibly, hate-crime measures aim to safeguard minorities. But they thereby blind us to lone and anonymous shooters, who don’t advertise their anger or humiliations on racist websites or anywhere else. That’s the biggest danger right now, to all of us. Let’s stop pretending otherwise.

Jonathan Zimmerman is a professor of history and education at New York University. He is the author of “Small Wonder: The Little Red Schoolhouse in History and Memory” (Yale University Press).

ALSO BY THIS AUTHOR: Why is it OK to to be prejudiced against Mormons?

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Egypt military source "six terrorists" arrested in Sinai: TV

CAIRO (Reuters) - An Egyptian military source said on Friday that the armed forces had arrested six "terrorists" in the Sinai region, after an attack on a police station in the area earlier this week which killed 16 border guards, state television reported

Egypt poured troops into North Sinai on Thursday to tackle militants in the Israeli border region. Army commanders said as many as 20 people it considered terrorists were killed in the offensive.

Lawlessness has been growing in North Sinai, a region awash with guns and bristling with resentment against Cairo, since the overthrow of former President Hosni Mubarak in February last year.

(Reporting by Ahmed Tolba; Writing by Shaimaa Fayed; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)


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Uruguay wants to grow, sell marijuana to cut drug-related crime

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Uruguay's government has sent a bill to Congress that would allow the state to grow and sell marijuana, a move that President Jose Mujica says will cut crime associated with illegal drug trafficking.

The use of cannabis is already legal in Uruguay, one of Latin America's safest countries and a trailblazer on liberal lawmaking. The bill would regulate its sale and production.

Other countries in the region, like Colombia and Mexico, have struggled for years with killings and other violence linked to the narcotics trade. Mujica's government says the negative effects of pot smoking are less harmful than the violence associated with the black market, where it trades illegally.

Registered consumers would be limited to buying 30 grams (about 1 ounce) per month and foreigners would be banned from buying the drug to prevent the small country of 3.3 million people from becoming a hot spot for pot-smoking tourists.

The state's new role as official pot grower and distributor will be carried out "exclusively in the framework of a policy of damage reduction, while at the same time alerting the public to the dangers of using (the drug)," according to the bill.

Meeting the country's demand for marijuana will require annual production of about 27 tonnes, the government estimates.

(Reporting By Malena Castaldi, writing by Hugh Bronstein; Editing by Philip Barbara)


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الخميس، 30 أغسطس 2012

New Mexico finance officials arrested for faked audit

SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO (Reuters) - The New Mexico Finance Authority, which issues debt to help local government with public works, suspended two executives on Thursday following the arrest of the agency's chief operating officer and a former controller, an official said.

Chief Operating Officer John T. Duff and former Controller Greg Campbell were arrested on Wednesday by State Securities Division officers among charges of submitting a fake audit, misrepresenting financial statements, and covering up $40 million in losses to the state, State Auditor Hector Balderas said.

The New Mexico Finance Authority announced the discovery of the falsified audit in July, after it was notified by the state's auditor that no audit was filed, Balderas said. An investigation by the authority then found the audit to be falsified.

According to the arrest warrant filed in Santa Fe District Court, the two men face felony charges on eight counts of securities fraud, one count of racketeering and one count of conspiracy to commit racketeering.

Alongside Duff, who was suspended without pay, Rick May, the finance authority's chief executive officer, was suspended with pay, pending the outcome of the investigation. Brett Woods has been appointed interim director, New Mexico Finance Authority Board Chairwoman Nann Winter said.

"Time is of the essence, but I don't want to sacrifice quality findings for time," she said.

PricewatershouseCooper will audit the authority's financial results.

Winter added that the authority has roughly $35 million to $37 million cash on hand and felt confident that with more stringent loan requirements, the agency could function comfortably for another 6 months.

A bond sale originally planned for July 26 was delayed. The Series 2012B Senior Lien Public project Revolving Fund Revenue Bonds has been postponed until after the new audit is completed.

"We're confident that we have enough to continue lending, based on our new loan policy," Winter said.

In July, Moody's Investors Service put the authority's Public Project Revolving Fund Aa1 Senior Lien and Aa2 Subordinate Lien ratings under review for downgrade, a move affecting $1.26 billion in outstanding total debt.

"The implications are higher costs to do business for taxpayers in New Mexico and a crisis in confidence to investors," Balderas said. "Ultimately this hurts small villages and governments and systems. We're a poor state, so it's essential we have access to capital. We need to get to the bottom of this crisis so we can stabilize NMFA."

(Reporting by Zelie Pollon; Editing by Stacey Joyce)

(This story was refiled to correct the name of the audit firm and to clarify that Duff was suspended with no pay)


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AWOL soldier to be sentenced in Fort Hood plot

WACO, Texas (AP) — A federal judge will try again to sentence an AWOL soldier convicted of planning to blow up a Texas restaurant full of Fort Hood soldiers.

Army Pfc. Naser Jason Abdo faces up to life in prison. He has said he will represent himself in court at his Friday sentencing in Waco.

The original hearing set for Thursday afternoon was postponed after Abdo requested more time to prepare.

The 22-year-old Abdo said during an earlier hearing that he and his attorneys weren't communicating effectively. He was convicted in May on six federal charges, including attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction.

Abdo was absent without leave from Fort Campbell, Ky., when he was arrested last summer at a Fort Hood-area motel. Bomb-making materials were found in the room.


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Arrested illegals who were released charged with 16,226 subsequent crimes

President Barack Obama‘s decision not to deport some arrested illegal immigrants has enabled a crime wave — but no American or immigrant victims have been publicly identified, and GOP politicians have mostly remained mute.

Illegal aliens who have been released from custody between 2008 and mid-2011 have been charged with 16,226 subsequent crimes, including 19 murders, 142 sex crimes and thousands of drunk-driving offenses, drug-crimes and felonies, according to a new report from the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.

“Rather than protect the American people he was elected to serve, President Obama has imposed a policy that allows thousands of illegal immigrants to be released into our communities,” said a statement from Rep. Lamar Smith, the chairman of the House judiciary committee.

The criminals “were in the government’s custody, were identified as illegal immigrants and then let go because this administration has refused to request the resources to hold them and deport them,” said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies.

The White House press office did not respond to The Daily Caller’s questions.

The CRS study uses data subpoenaed from the federal government by House Committee on the Judiciary. The data details 159,286 cases where legal and illegal immigrants were arrested, identified via FBI databases and then let free, said the report.

Over a 33-month period, from October 2008 and July 2011, roughly one-sixth of those let go were later arrested for crimes.

The data shows that 26,412 of the 159,286 released legal and illegal immigrants were arrested later for 57,763 crimes, said the CRS.

The CRS found the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency “likely” had authority to deport only 7,283 — or 40 percent — of those repeat offenders. The other 19,129 had some form of legal status, and would not be liable for deportation until after conviction in a civil court.

After being released, the 7,283 deportable aliens were later charged with 16,226 crimes, including 19 murders, 142 sex crimes — such as rape or child molestation — almost 1,000 other major criminal offenses or violent crimes, plus 489 cases of theft, 551 traffic violations, 1,929 DUI violations and 156 parole violations.

Together, the released 26,412 illegal and legal immigrants were charged with 59 murders, 542 sex crimes, 6,270 drug crimes and up to 5,342 “major criminal offenses … [or] other violent crimes.”

“It is amazing to me there hasn’t been more fallout … [but] it is the Messiah’s administration [and] the media isn’t making a fuss,” Krikorian said. “It’s appalling.”

So far, the GOP “is cowed and scared that Hispanics won’t vote for them if they highlight illegal-alien murders” of Hispanics, he said. “It is so ridiculous, because the victims of immigrant gang-members are other immigrants.”

Chairman Smith, however, has pushed the issue. Obama’s “unwillingness to enforce immigration laws puts our communities at risk and costs American lives. We elect leaders to protect us — not put us in danger,” he said.

The new data about crimes committed by released legal and illegal immigrants comes as the administration rolls out a variety of new measures to boost the administration’s support among Hispanic voters. (RELATED: Obama immigration policy loosens work permit requirements)

The administration has also boosted welfare programs for legal and illegal immigrants and has redefined nearly all welfare programs to bypass laws barring welfare-receiving immigrants from residency or citizenship.

The Internal Revenue Service has also rolled back oversight of fraud in a program intended to handle immigrants taxes and refunds, according to an investigation by the IRS inspector general. The program provided $6.8 billion in refunds to immigrants, said an Aug. 8 report in The Washington Times.

Illegal immigrants were fraudulently given $4.2 billion in 2010 child-support tax credits, according to a July 2011 report by the Treasury Department’s inspector general. In 2012, that illegal claims likely will reach $7.4 billion, said the report.

In 2012, top Senate Democrats blocked a reform of the refund process.

Administration officials have rolled back enforcement of immigration laws, and have directed immigration-officers to release illegals, including some who have been approved by judges for deportation.

In recent months, the administration has offered what conservatives call a de-facto amnesty to an estimated 1.76 million illegal immigrants, including an estimated 350,000 illegals with little or no high-school education. The policy will more easily grant work permits, and will allow them to compete for jobs against 23 million unemployed or under-employed Americans.

The two-year amnesty, dubbed “deferred action,” is being offered free to illegal immigrants, including people also schedule for deportation. However, the illegals will have to pay the standard cost of $465 for the work permit.

The amnesty will not include convicted felons, drunk drivers or people who committed a series of felonies.

However, immigrant officers will not try to find out if amnesty applicants have committed crimes, such as identity theft, an administration official said Aug. 6. “We want to maximize participation.”

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Arrested illegals who were released charged with 16,226 subsequent crimes

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Calif man arrested for message on Chick-fil-A

TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) — A 30-year-old man has been arrested for investigation of vandalism after police say he scrawled "tastes like hate" on the side of a Chick-fil-A restaurant in a Los Angeles suburb.

Torrance police say Manuel Castro was taken into custody Wednesday night after they found him in West Hollywood. Castro posted $20,000 bail and was released. It wasn't immediately known if he had retained an attorney.

The message, accompanied by a cow, was found last Friday as gay marriage supporters ramped up protests against the corporate owner's opposition to same-sex unions.

The flap began last month when Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy told a religious publication that the company backed "the biblical definition of a family."


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Jessica Simpson's Dad Joe Simpson Arrested For DUI

From the track to the ring to the sandpit, this crop of Olympians just can't stop the beat. The London Games have brought an outpouring of crazy, creative victory celebrations.


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Report warned that Loughner condition was fragile

PHOENIX (AP) — A psychological report released Thursday warned that while Jared Lee Loughner was competent to plead guilty in the Tucson mass shooting, he remained severely mentally ill and his mental condition could deteriorate under the stress of a trial.

The report was prepared in late April by a federal Bureau of Prisons psychologist who testified in court Tuesday before a judge allowed Loughner to plead guilty in the January 2011 mass shooting.

Psychologist Christina Pietz's report said Loughner's improved condition was due to medication.

But because his condition could "wax and wane, I recommend the court expeditiously address issues related to his situation," Pietz wrote. "Mr. Loughner is currently competent to proceed. However, because of his fragile mental state, there is no guarantee he will remain competent for an extended time."

Loughner pleaded guilty to 19 counts under a plea agreement that guarantees he will spend the rest of his life in prison. He is to be sentenced in November for the mass shooting that left six people dead and former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and 12 others wounded.

The report covering a period from late January to late April said Loughner generally was kept separate from other inmates at the Springfield, Mo., federal prison where he has been held nearly the entire time since the shooting.

However, the report said Loughner participated in competency restoration, group and recreational therapy with small numbers of fellow mentally ill inmates. He also met several times a week with members of his legal defense team, the report said.

Medication was controlling the psychotic symptoms of Loughner's schizophrenia, Pietz said.

And while he remained on suicide watch, his hygiene improved, he regularly worked with his lawyers and was an active participant in the group therapy, the report said.

Early on in his time at the Missouri facility, Loughner said he believed reports that Giffords survived the shooting were fake, Pietz wrote. But the medication helped him understand he was wrong, and on Jan. 23, 2012, Loughner told Pietz that he had seen Giffords recite the Pledge of Allegiance on television the previous night.

Loughner and Pietz discussed Giffords' resignation from Congress, and he didn't voice disbelief that she had survived.

The next day, however, he spoke about a TV news report of the January 2011 shooting. He told Pietz that Giffords was going to attend the State of the Union address, and described seeing other victims and the man who held him down after the shooting. This time, he was doubtful that Giffords really was alive.

"I swear to you that's not the woman I shot," he told Pietz, according to her report. "The woman I shot died instantly. No one could survive that gunshot wound to the head."

Pietz described that thinking as not irrational, since many people believe such a wound can't be survived. But she also wrote that Loughner's disbelief was a defense mechanism, because Giffords' survival was yet another indication that he's a failure.

Giffords' survival, he told Pietz, is "another failure if she's alive. Jared Loughner failed again."

One therapy group was devoted to restoration of competency to participate in court proceedings, and Loughner understood that accepting a plea agreement meant surrendering the right to a jury trial, the report said.

Loughner told Pietz he wanted "a favorable outcome (in his case) but acknowledged he would most likely be sentenced to life in prison," her report said.

U.S. District Court Judge Larry Burns has ordered Loughner returned to Springfield for continued treatment until his Nov. 15 sentencing.


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الأربعاء، 29 أغسطس 2012

Accused Denver shooter sought help for mental illness: lawyer

CENTENNIAL, Colorado (Reuters) - Accused Colorado shooter James Holmes, charged with murder over a shooting rampage last month at a movie theater in a Denver suburb, has a "mental illness" and tried to get help before the shooting, his defense attorney said in court on Thursday.

Holmes, who is accused of opening fire at a midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises" in the suburb of Aurora, was present in a hearing in which a judge weighed a request by 20 media organizations to unseal documents related to his case.

During the hearing, Holmes' public defender, Daniel King, repeatedly made references to his client's unspecified mental illness.

"He tried to get help with his mental illness," King said of his client, who appeared in court wearing maroon prison garb and shackled at his hands and ankles, with his dyed hair fading to pink in some places from its original reddish-orange.

Prosecutors charged Holmes, a 24-year-old former neuroscience graduate student at the University of Colorado, last week with 24 counts of first-degree murder and 116 counts of attempted murder over the rampage in which 12 people were killed and 58 others wounded.

Holmes, who appeared unshaven, seemed alert but disinterested in his third appearance in a Colorado courtroom since the July 20 mass shooting in the crowded theater. He mostly stared straight ahead and did not talk to his lawyers.

At one point during the hearing, a woman seated in the courtroom jumped up and said she had "information vital to the defense" of Holmes, and that defense attorneys would not speak with her. The judge had her escorted out of the hearing by deputies.

Judge William Sylvester said he would consider a request by news organizations to unseal documents detailing the murder case against Holmes, and would issue a written ruling later.

Lawyers representing some 20 news organizations went to court on Thursday seeking release of the court papers, saying in a written motion that sealing them "undermines our nation's firm commitment to the transparency and public accountability of the criminal justice system."

In the motion, lawyers for the media outlets, including The New York Times Co., The Associated Press, The Denver Post, and CBS News, argued that the U.S. Constitution and state case law requires a presumption of openness. Thomson Reuters is not a party to the motion.

"Absent disclosure of the factual basis for the issuance of a warrant, the public cannot properly assess the propriety of the government's conduct," the motion said.

Both prosecutors and defense lawyers objected, saying that it was too early to open the file because the investigation was still ongoing.

"The harm, judge, is very real with the release of the file at this point," defense attorney Daniel King said.

Media lawyer Steven Zansberg argued in court that the decision to close the bulk of the file made it difficult for the public to understand what happened during the shooting, and why.

Judge Sylvester said he would issue a written ruling later on the issue. Holmes is being held without bond and in solitary confinement at the Arapahoe County jail.

(Writing by Mary Slosson and Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Anthony Boadle)


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Morocco security officials arrested in corruption swoop

HEFEI, China/BEIJING (Reuters) - The Chinese woman accused of murdering British businessman Neil Heywood admitted guilt and blamed a mental breakdown for the events that brought her to trial and toppled her once-powerful politician husband, Bo Xilai, state media said on Friday. The first extended public comments on the …


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Man sentenced to 311 years in barbecue shooting

CLEARLAKE, Calif. (AP) — A man convicted in a shooting at a backyard barbecue in Northern California that killed a 4-year-old boy and wounded five others has been sentenced to 311 years to life in prison.

Judge Doris Shockley called the shooting "callous" and "nonsensical," as she issued the sentence against 24-year-old Orlando Lopez on Tuesday in a Lake County courtroom.

Lopez was convicted of first-degree murder and other charges in the June 2011 shooting in Clearlake. Authorities say he and 22-year-old Paul Braden fired shotguns from a neighbor's yard at people attending the barbecue. Four-year-old Skyler Rapp died. Five adults, including the boy's mother, were wounded.

The shooting was apparently the culmination of a feud between two families.

Braden was convicted of the same charges as Lopez. The Lake County Record-Bee reports (http://bit.ly/Mvfwk7) that he is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday.


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Crime fears go viral in Malaysia

The fear of crime is soaring in Malaysia as personal tales of abduction, assault and robbery go viral online, upping pressure on authorities to respond and triggering scrutiny of official claims that offences are down.

Shopping malls and residents' groups have launched patrols, sales of security equipment are surging, newspapers offer tips on how to avoid becoming a victim and social media are abuzz with anguish over the situation.

Residents of the multi-ethnic Muslim-majority country -- one of the most developed and stable in Southeast Asia -- have long complained about bag-snatching and other petty crime.

But more serious recent incidents have gained wide attention on the Internet, channeling public concern in a country where nearly half the population of 28 million is on Facebook.

A day after two men tried to abduct Chin Xin-Ci at knifepoint in her car at an upscale Kuala Lumpur mall in May, she wrote about the ordeal on the social networking site, a post that was shared more than 51,000 times.

Fearing rape, she escaped by jumping from the vehicle as it slowed to exit the carpark. The attackers -- as in many cases -- got away.

"To me, it felt like one long nightmare. We never think it's going to happen to us... and then it does," the 24-year-old wrote.

Prime Minister Najib Razak pledged to reduce crime after taking power in 2009 and, with fresh elections due next year, his government claims progress, saying the crime problem is being hyped online.

It said the number of reported crimes fell 11.1 percent in 2011 and was down 10 percent in the first half of 2012, crediting stepped-up patrols in crime-hit areas and increased lighting in public.

But many victims say officers tell them there is little they can do to catch bag-snatchers and muggers, and critics say the drop in reported crimes could be due to the resulting apathy about seeking police help.

Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein admitted authorities were losing the "perception" battle.

"I'm not in denial. This is something that needs to be addressed," he said last month.

Malaysia's official crime rate appears relatively low when compared internationally.

According to the most recent government data, 740 crimes were reported per 100,000 people in 2009, compared to 665 in famously low-crime Singapore, but differing methods of data compilation make such comparisons imprecise.

Scepticism over the figures is rife, given that nearly every resident of Kuala Lumpur has been a victim -- or knows at least one -- of bag-snatching or "smash" thefts.

In the latter case, perpetrators on motorcycles will shatter a car window at a red light, snatch belongings, and utilise the capital's notorious traffic jams to speed off unpursued.

"There has been a spike over the past couple of weeks with regard to especially this snatch theft and crimes against women," said Lee Lam Thye, vice-chairman of the government-linked Malaysian Crime Prevention Foundation.

"When this goes on the Internet and YouTube the impact is very great."

Some blame illegal immigrants -- Malaysia has an estimated two million undocumented workers from its poorer neighbours in the region -- but victims of some of the most brazen crimes say the perpetrators were Malaysians.

Whatever the causes, Facebook users are trading stories of women assaulted in mall carparks, and knife-wielding robbers tying up families.

In April, a 12-year-old Dutch boy was kidnapped in broad daylight entering his international school in an upmarket Kuala Lumpur area, prompting other schools to ramp up security. He was freed a week later after a ransom was paid.

Malls, often jammed with people escaping the tropical heat, have seen a wave of reported car park attacks against women, prompting shopping centers to install "panic buttons".

National police chief Ismail Omar insisted last month that incidents were few, but conceded that people were becoming afraid of visiting shopping complexes.

Gated communities with guards are common. But unguarded neighbourhoods are also now increasingly taking security into their own hands amid the widely held view that Malaysian police are ineffective and corrupt.

Retiree Teoh Yan Sing, 65, and his neighbours have hired a security guard, started nightly walking patrols of their neighbourhood in a Kuala Lumpur suburb, and recently began blocking off streets at night.

One neighbour ringed his home with barbed wire after a robbery.

"The statistics don't matter at all. The fear is there. My wife and I, every time we want to go out, we look left and right," said Teoh, whose wife suffered a smash-and-grab attack earlier this year.

Jeffrey Tan, general manager of Centrix Security, said sales of closed-circuit television cameras -- which homeowners can monitor via mobile phones -- have jumped 40 percent in the last three months.

Fed-up citizens have launched online petitions demanding greater police action, and the political opposition has pounced, publicly questioning the official crime data.

"The number of cases may have gone down, but the perception is that it is still a serious problem," said Ibrahim Suffian, head of top polling firm Merdeka Center.


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Mexico's drug 'queen' extradited to US

US authorities extradited one of the most notorious women accused of links to Mexico's drug trade on Thursday, Mexican officials said.

Mexican police handed over Sandra Avila Beltran, a 52-year-old known as the "Queen of the Pacific," at an airport in the central city of Toluca.

Avila is expected to appear before a federal judge in Florida on charges of criminal conspiracy and drug trafficking.

From at least January 1999 to March 2004, she is accused of belonging to "a drug trafficking organization dedicated to buying and transporting between Colombia and the United States of America," Mexican prosecutors said in a statement.

Avila was arrested in September 28, 2007, south of Mexico City. Her lawyers had previously won three appeals to avoid her extradition.


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NM Finance Authority exec, ex-controller arrested

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — The current chief operating officer and a former controller at the New Mexico Finance Authority were arrested Wednesday on charges of state securities violations related to a fake audit that made the agency's revenue look stronger.

The Securities Division of New Mexico's Regulation and Licensing Department announced the arrests Wednesday of COO John Duff and former controller Greg Campbell, who left the agency in June.

The Finance Authority issues bonds and provides low-cost financing for capital projects by certain state agencies, cities, counties, schools and other New Mexico governmental organizations. The authority has more than $1 billion in outstanding loans.

Among the charges is that the two men agreed to an accounting change that made the authority's revenue appear greater than what it actually was in 2011.

According to the criminal complaint, Campbell faces securities fraud, forgery and racketeering charges. Investigators say Campbell has acknowledged that he forged the agency's audit report that provides financial statements about the agency and he falsely claimed that it had been audited by an outside firm.

Duff was charged as an accessory on eight counts of securities fraud and racketeering. Duff, who was Campbell's immediate supervisor, also has been charged with conspiring to engage in a pattern of racketeering by misrepresenting NMFA's financial statements to ratings agencies, investors that buy the agency's bonds, and the state.

The state's top securities regulator declined to speculate Wednesday on the motives of Campbell and Duff, and the finance authority's governing board members say it's uncertain whether any money is missing until a forensic audit of the agency is completed.

An arrest warrant affidavit by a state securities regulator said Campbell, with the knowledge and permission of Duff, misrepresented about $40 million in NMFA's 2011 financial statements. At issue is money the authority provided to state government in 2010 and 2011 to plug shortfalls in New Mexico's operating budget for schools and general government programs. The authority receives a share of state tax revenues, and the Legislature tapped into idle funds held by agencies to help balance the state budget.

Instead of reporting the transfer of money as a $40 million revenue decline, the authority officials classified it as a "grant expense" in the fake audit. Regulators say that was improper.

"These two corporate officials had strong accounting backgrounds, yet they cooked the books to make their financial statements look stronger than they actually were," Daniel Tanaka, director of the Securities Division, said in a statement.

After a NMFA board meeting, Tanaka told reporters: "We have no reason to believe that the NMFA is in fiscal trouble at this point. But certainly steps were taken to falsely represent the financial condition and to make it appear stronger than it was."

The affidavit said the accounting reclassification of the transferred money was outlined to the board by Campbell during an August 2011 meeting and no questions were raised.

Duff has worked for the finance authority since 2005, starting as its chief investment officer. As chief operating officer, he supervised the accounting operations that Campbell headed as controller. Campbell also went to work for the authority in 2005 to perform accounting work and became controller in December 2007.

Campbell and Duff were booked into Santa Fe County Jail and were subject to a $20,000 cash or surety bond. Both men were released Wednesday afternoon, according to jail records.

A date for an arraignment at the First Judicial District Court in Santa Fe had not yet been set.

"The action of these two individuals has risked the credit rating of New Mexico," said J. Dee Dennis Jr., Superintendent of the State Regulation and Licensing Department. "We want to send a clear and strong message to Wall Street, rating agencies, bond purchasers and investors that we will get to the bottom of this as quickly as possible to once again restore their confidence in our state."

National credit rating agencies have said they're considering whether to downgrade the authority's bond ratings because of concerns about a lack of financial oversight within the organization. A drop in bond ratings will increase the cost to New Mexico taxpayers for governments to finance capital improvement projects.

Without audited financial statements, the authority is unable to issue new bonds, and its governing board has decided to temporarily scale back lending to local governments while the agency resolves problems stemming from the fake audit.

The authority's governing board voted Wednesday to limit low-cost loans that it provides to cities, counties and other local governments for projects such as sewers, government buildings, water rights acquisition and equipment including fire trucks.

The authority can make loans using $37 million in cash reserves, and the board is imposing a $5 million limit on loans for new projects.

The authority was created by the Legislature and receives about $26 million a year in tax revenues for its financing. Its workers and management are not state employees, but there is government oversight of its operations. The authority is governed by a 12-member board, and a majority of the members are the governor's appointees and members of the governor's administration.

___

Follow Barry Massey on Twitter at https://twitter.com/bmasseyAP .


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الثلاثاء، 28 أغسطس 2012

'Arrested Development' Set Pictures Hit the Web

The Bluth's are back -- for real this time! The first pictures taken from the set of the much-anticipated season four of Arrested Development have hit the web, thanks to tweets from cast members and fans.

Actor Jason Bateman recently turned to Twitter to release the first photo taken during filming, which is currently underway at the Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, Calif.

[More from Mashable: Social Media Connects London 2012 Athletes, Attendees [VIDEO]]

Netflix recently announced that it signed 10-episode commitment to host a new season of the series, which went off the air in 2006 after its third season. Since then, executive producer and narrator Ron Howard teased fans on Twitter with a picture of the script and star Jason Bateman tweeted photos from the writer’s room of the show.

Twitter member @Juse65 also tweeted a picture while the show filmed a scene on Tuesday.

Howard also tweeted pictures of the crew getting ready, including one of show creator Mitchell Hurwitz getting ready behind the scenes.

In addition, pictures posted on BuzzSugar.com are also making the rounds, enticing fans with more glimpses of the much-loved cast.

Actor David Cross might be wearing a sheet, but we spy some cut-offs underneath. We guess that means Tobias is still a "Never Nude."

Are you excited for the next season of Arrested Development? Which show do you wish would come back and do another season? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Image via BuzzSugar

This story originally published on Mashable here.


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Ex-girlfriend of Wisconsin gunman arrested on weapon charge

MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - An ex-girlfriend of the gunman who killed six worshippers at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin has been arrested and faces a weapon charge, investigators announced on Tuesday.

A charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm will be sought through the Milwaukee County District Attorney against Misty M. Cook, 31, according to a brief statement released by the South Milwaukee Police Department.

The statement did not say where or when Cook was arrested.

On Sunday, Wade Michael Page, her ex-boyfriend, gunned down six members of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin in Oak Creek, south of Milwaukee, before a police officer killed him. The 40-year-old U.S. Army veteran also wounded four people, including a police officer.

Federal authorities said they were treating the attack as a possible act of domestic terrorism. Page was involved in white supremacist groups and was a member of skinhead rock bands.

Cook and Page lived together in South Milwaukee before breaking up in June, according to neighbors.

(Editing by Corrie MacLaggan and Lisa Shumaker)


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Tucson gunman Loughner pleads guilty to rampage, spared death penalty

TUCSON, Arizona (Reuters) - A 23-year-old man pleaded guilty on Tuesday to killing six people and wounding 13 others, including then-U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords, in an Arizona shooting rampage last year and will be spared the death penalty in exchange.

Jared Loughner entered his guilty pleas in federal court in Tucson shortly after U.S. District Judge Larry Burns ruled that he was mentally competent to stand trial following over a year of treatment at a prison psychiatric hospital.

"I plead guilty," Loughner, dressed in a khaki prison jumpsuit with his hair trimmed short, said to each of the 19 counts read in court by Burns.

He was calm throughout the hearing and appeared to be following the proceedings closely, leaning forward slightly in his chair.

The plea deal calls for Loughner to be sentenced to seven consecutive life prison terms without the possibility of parole, sparing him the death penalty. A sentencing hearing was set for November 15.

Giffords, then a U.S. lawmaker from Arizona who was seen as a rising star in the Democratic Party, was meeting constituents at a Tucson supermarket on January 8 last year when she was shot through the head at close range.

She survived with severe injuries that left her with broken speech and a marked limp. But six other people were killed including U.S. District Judge John Roll and 9-year-old Christina-Taylor Green.

The 19 counts Loughner pleaded guilty to include murder, attempted murder and the attempted assassination of Giffords. Federal prosecutors had originally charged Loughner with 49 criminal counts and agreed to dismiss 30 of them.

During an exchange with the judge before formally entering his plea, Loughner admitted going to the "Congress On Your Corner" event hosted by Giffords armed with a loaded Glock 19 pistol and 60 additional rounds of ammunition with plans to kill the congresswoman.

He also admitted shooting other people there with the intention to kill them because they had attended the event.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said that in deciding against pursuing the death penalty, he took into consideration the views of victims and their families as well as the recommendations of prosecutors.

"It is my hope that this decision will allow the Tucson community, and the nation, to continue the healing process free of what would likely be extended trial and pre-trial proceedings that would not have a certain outcome," he said in a statement.

GIFFORDS SATISFIED WITH PLEA DEAL

Mark Kelly, Giffords' husband, said in a statement before the hearing that the couple had been in touch with prosecutors and were satisfied with the plea agreement.

"The pain and loss caused by the events of January 8, 2011 are incalculable. Avoiding a trial will allow us - and we hope the whole southern Arizona community - to continue with our recovery and move forward with our lives," Kelly said.

Giffords resigned from Congress in January to focus on her recovery. Her former aide, Ron Barber, who was also wounded in the shooting spree, won a special election to fill her seat in June and will face re-election in November to serve a full two-year term.

"It is important to me that this individual will never be in the position to harm anyone ever again," Barber, who attended the court hearing, said following the plea.

Giffords did not attend the hearing.

Loughner was determined unfit to stand trial in May 2011 after he disrupted court proceedings and was dragged out of the courtroom. Court-appointed experts said he suffered from schizophrenia, disordered thinking and delusions.

He has since been held at a U.S. Bureau of Prisons psychiatric hospital in Springfield, Missouri, where he has been medicated to treat psychosis and restore his fitness to face proceedings in his prosecution.

During the mental competency portion of the hearing, prison psychiatrist Christina Pietz testified that in July, Loughner had expressed remorse for the shooting and especially for Christina-Taylor Green's death.

Susan Hileman, who was shot alongside Green after bringing the child to the event to learn about the political process, said the plea has not brought her a sense of closure.

"There's never closure because Christina is never going to ring my doorbell again," she told reporters outside the courtroom.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis, Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb; Writing by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Xavier Briand)


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Three Hutaree militia members sentenced in Detroit to time served

(Reuters) - A federal judge in Detroit on Wednesday sentenced three members of a Midwest militia group known as the Hutaree to time served on weapons charges, ending attempts to prosecute them for violent revolt that collapsed at trial earlier this year.

David Brian Stone Sr., the leader of the group, and his son Joshua Stone, had pleaded guilty in March to a charge of possessing a machinegun after U.S. District Judge Victoria Roberts dismissed more serious charges against them and five other defendants.

An eighth defendant, Joshua John Clough, pleaded guilty to a weapons charge late last year.

Clough and the two Stones will be on supervised release for two years, a court spokeswoman said.

In all, nine members of the Hutaree, a self-styled Christian militia group, were arrested in March 2010 following an undercover operation by the FBI.

They were charged with plotting a violent revolt using weapons of mass destruction.

Prosecutors alleged the eight men and one woman planned to kill a law enforcement official and then ambush the funeral using homemade bombs. The arrest was seen as a sign of the FBI's determination to crack down on the growing threat of violence posed by homegrown, right-wing militias in the country.

Much of the evidence against the Hutaree consisted of audio and video recordings made by an undercover agent and a paid informant who infiltrated the group.

In the recordings, David Stone Sr. described law enforcement as the enemy, discussed killing police officers and argued for the need to go to war against the government.

Defense attorneys had argued that what the seven did was just talk and were protected by their free speech rights.

In March, two years after the Hutaree were arrested and several weeks into the trial, Judge Roberts agreed with the defense, rebuked prosecutors for bringing the case and dismissed the most serious charges against the remaining defendants.

The ninth man arrested in the 2010 FBI sting, Jacob Ward, was found not competent to face trial.

Wednesday's sentencing comes four days after a white supremacist gunman opened fire in a Sikh temple in Wisconsin, killing six worshippers and raising concerns once again about the threat posed by homegrown extremists.

Until the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington carried out by al Qaeda, the largest such attack on American soil was the 1995 bombing of a government building in Oklahoma City by anti-government zealot Timothy McVeigh that killed 168 people.

Earlier this year, on the eve of the Hutaree trial, the FBI warned that anti-government extremists posed a growing threat to local law enforcement officers.

As of late 2011, there were about 250 active militia groups in the United States, according to the Anti-Defamation League. The Hutaree is classified as a militia, the league said.

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)


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Not Getting Arrested at a Political Convention Just Got a Lot Tougher

At the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City, more than 1,800 protesters were kettled and arrested by NYPD—too many to hold in jail. Instead, hordes of people—often battered and bleeding from their interactions with police—were brought to a filthy, oil-stained warehouse on the West Side pier and left for prolonged periods of time, with no access to food, water or bathroom facilities.

H.R. 347 makes it a federal crime to disturb certain events of national or international significance—such as a political convention.

Eight years later, New York City is facing an armada of lawsuits for this treatment of protesters. But if you plan on exercising your Constitutionally guaranteed right of free assembly at one of the upcoming national political conventions in Tampa or Charlotte, and think New York’s legal woes stemming from 2004 will soften the police stance against protesters in these cities, you’d be dangerously wrong.

Since the New York Republican convention, municipalities and even the Federal government, have been passing legislation to essentially legalize the activities that the NYPD is being sued for today.

MORE: Military Internment in America; Dont Let It Happen

In March, the Federal government passed H.R. 347, also known as “The Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011.” Colloquially, the new law is generally referred to as the “anti-Occupy bill.”

Like many of the more draconian bills in recent memory, the true nature of the law is masked by its creepy Orwellian title. Let’s just say, this “grounds improvement” act has nothing to do with gardening.

H.R. 347 makes it a federal crime to disturb certain events of national or international significance—such as a political convention.

Here’s the relevant subsection of the bill:

‘‘§1752. Restricted building or grounds

‘‘(a) Whoever—

‘‘(1) knowingly enters or remains in any restricted building

or grounds without lawful authority to do so;

‘‘(2) knowingly, and with intent to impede or disrupt the

orderly conduct of Government business or official functions,

engages in disorderly or disruptive conduct in, or within such

proximity to, any restricted building or grounds when, or so

that, such conduct, in fact, impedes or disrupts the orderly

conduct of Government business or official functions;

‘‘(3) knowingly, and with the intent to impede or disrupt

the orderly conduct of Government business or official functions,

obstructs or impedes ingress or egress to or from any restricted

building or grounds; or

‘‘(4) knowingly engages in any act of physical violence

against any person or property in any restricted building or

grounds; or attempts or conspires to do so, shall be punished as provided

in subsection (b).

Violate this new law, and you could face up to 10 years in prison.

How this law will be enforced against protesters (and reporters) is anyone’s guess. The threat of serious prison time lingers, however, for anyone who plans on expressing their First Amendment rights too vigorously in Charlotte or Tampa during the Democratic and Republican political conventions.

For protesters looking to express themselves without the threat of arrest, the key is figuring out which zones throughout the city have been designated part of a National Special Security event, says Chris Brook, legal director of the ACLU’s North Carolina chapter.

“The breadth of these zones hasn’t been established yet,” says Brook. “I don’t think it would be constitutional to declare the entire downtown Charlotte area a security zone.”

Suffice it to say, you can expect that any areas that delegates pass through or where they congregate will be designated federally restricted grounds.

H.R. 347 isn’t the only concern for protestors. The Charlotte city government recently passed an “extraordinary event” ordinance in advance of the Democratic convention. The new ordinance forbids the carrying of backpacks, coolers, even helmets if those objects are in pursuit of concealing weapons or disturbing the peace.

“How does a police officer divine whether the helmet is because you rode a bike to work today?” asks Brook. “We feel the ordinance invites standardless searches.”

The constitutionality of the ordinance could one day come into question. For now, it’s on the books.

Protesters will face extraordinary danger of protracted prison sentences should they defy the ban on “disturbing” National Security Event zones. Perhaps even worse, these conventions could be paving the way for a style of policing that abandons probable cause as a pretext for police searches.

At convention time, when America is supposed to be exercising its democracy as an example to the rest of the world, U.S. lawmakers are seizing the opportunity to strangle longstanding constitutional freedoms.

Are you more or less afraid of exercising your Constitutional right of free assembly after reading this post? Talk about it in COMMENTS.

Related Stories on TakePart:

• If You Build It, They Will Protest

• New Yorkers Hold Million Big Gulp March to Protest Soda Ban

• Clip of the Day: Clooney Arrested at Sudan Embassy

Matthew Fleischer is a former LA Weekly staff writer and an award-winning social justice reporter in Los Angeles. Email Matt


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10 things you need to know today: August 8, 2012

Loughner pleads guilty in Tucson shooting, Curiosity beams back images of Mars, and more in our roundup of the stories that are making news and driving opinion 1. LOUGHNER PLEADS GUILTY IN TUCSON SHOOTING
Jared Lee Loughner pleaded guilty on Tuesday to the 2011 Tucson shooting rampage that left six people dead and 13 others, including then-congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, wounded. The plea was part of a deal with prosecutors that spares Loughner, 23, the death penalty, and calls for sending him to prison for life with no possibility of parole. The plea came after a psychiatrist told the court that Loughner, a diagnosed schizophrenic, was competent to enter a plea after being forcibly medicated for months. Giffords' husband, former astronaut Mark Kelly, said that avoiding a trial would allow Giffords, who left Congress to focus on her recovery from a gunshot to the head, and everyone else in Southern Arizona "to continue with our recovery and move forward with our lives." [Reuters]
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2. CURIOSITY BEAMS BACK COLOR IMAGES OF MARS
NASA's Curiosity rover beamed home its first color photographs of the surface of Mars on Tuesday, after thrilling scientists with its landing on Sunday. Curiosity had already sent back a gripping video of its dive through the planet's atmosphere, but the color images showed discarded pieces of spacecraft that preceded it. It also showed the pebbly landscape in the crater where it touched down, along with the crater's rim and a 3-mile-high mountain it is expected to climb. "Spectacular," mission deputy project scientist Joy Crisp said of the footage. "We've not had that before." [Associated Press]
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SEE ALSO: India's massive, record-setting blackout: 5 talking points

3. EGYPT LAUNCHES AIRSTRIKES IN SINAI
Egyptian attack helicopters fired missiles at suspected Islamist militants in the Sinai Peninsula close to the Israel-Gaza border on Wednesday, killing roughly 20 people. It was Egypt's biggest show of force in the region since the 1973 Yom Kippur War. The airstrikes came after a series of apparently coordinated attacks on checkpoints, including one on Sunday that killed 16 border guards. Security officials have blamed that attack, in which three dozen gunmen sprayed the checkpoint with machine-gun fire, on Palestinian militants who allegedly infiltrated Egyptian territory using smuggling tunnels from Gaza. [Associated Press, New York Times]
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4. POLICE ARREST SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTING SUSPECT'S EX
Police on Tuesday arrested the former girlfriend of Wade Michael Page — the man who allegedly killed six people at a Sikh temple near Milwaukee — on gun charges. The woman, Misty Cook, has not been accused of having any connection to the shooting spree, but the Anti-Defamation League has identified her as participating, along with Page, in white supremacist online forums. As the Wisconsin Sikh community continued to mourn the dead, survivors heralded two children, Amanat and Abhay Singh, as heroes because they ran into the temple to warn others after the shooting began outside. [CNN]
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SEE ALSO: 10 things you need to know today: August 6, 2012

5. TEXAS EXECUTES MILDLY RETARDED MAN
Texas executed Marvin Wilson, 54, on Tuesday for the 1992 killing of a police informant. Wilson received a lethal injection less than two hours after the Supreme Court denied his appeal for clemency. Wilson's lawyers had argued that his IQ, placed at 61 in a 2004 test, was so low that his life should have been spared under a 2002 Supreme Court ruling outlawing the execution of mentally retarded prisoners. The justices, however, left it up to the states to determine what constitutes mental impairment. Texas prosecutors, backed by lower courts, said only one test supported Wilson's mental impairment claim, while other assessments concluded that his IQ was above the generally accepted minimum of 70. [Associated Press]
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6. GOP PICKS AKIN TO CHALLENGE MCCASKILL
Tea Party–backed conservative Rep. Todd Akin has won the GOP primary for the right to challenge Sen. Claire McCaskill in a key election battle in Missouri. McCaskill is a first-term Democrat considered vulnerable in November because of the state's slow rightward shift. Her seat is considered one of the GOP's potential pick-ups in a year when the party needs to gain four seats to win back control of the Senate from Democrats. [Washington Post]
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SEE ALSO: 10 things you need to know today: July 26, 2012

7. OSCAR-WINNING COMPOSER MARVIN HAMLISCH DIES
Academy Award—winning composer Marvin Hamlisch has died in Los Angeles at 68. Hamlisch, who composed the scores for more than 40 films, including Ordinary People, Take the Money and Run, and The Sting — for which he won one of his three Oscars — also won a Pulitzer prize for scoring Broadway's A Chorus Line. Hamlisch collapsed and died after a brief illness, a statement said. [New York Times]
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8. U.S. GYMNAST WINS GOLD IN FLOOR EXERCISE
Shortly after taking home a bronze medal in the balance beam, Team USA's Aly Raisman won the gold medal in the floor exercise with a score of 15.600. Romania's Catalina Ponor took silver with a score of 15.200, and Russia's Aliya Mustafina took bronze with a 14.900. Raisman's teammate and World Champion in the floor exercise Jordyn Wieber came in 7th. [ESPN]
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SEE ALSO: 10 things you need to know today: August 2, 2012

9. THOUSANDS FLEE FLOODS IN THE PHILIPPINES
Floodwaters on Tuesday engulfed at least a third of Manila, the Filipino capital, forcing thousands of residents to flee the city. Manila has been buffeted by a week's worth of monsoon rains and flooding, which has killed about 50 people and forced some 250,000 others to evacuate. Images of the storm-wracked city show survivors clinging to ropes and poles to avoid being swept away by the water, and evacuees forging through waist-high water. It is Manila's worst storm since 2009, when two storms killed 900 people. [New York Times]
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10. MADONNA STANDS UP FOR JAILED RUSSIAN SINGERS
During a Tuesday concert, Madonna appealed for the freedom of three members of an all-female Russian punk band, Pussy Riot, who are facing prosecution for a protest against Russian President Vladimir Putin. "I think that these three girls — Masha, Katya, Nadya — I think that they have done something courageous," Madonna said in a Moscow concert. "They have paid a price for this act. I pray for their freedom." The U.S. government also has condemned the government's case against the Pussy Riot band members. [Bloomberg]

SEE ALSO: 10 things you need to know today: August 4, 2012

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الاثنين، 27 أغسطس 2012

Targeting Philadelphia Area Gun Crime

ATF & CBS Outdoors Partner in Ad Campaign Encourages Citizens to Report Firearm-Related Crimes

PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 8, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Sheree L. Mixell, Special Agent in Charge of the Philadelphia Field Division of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) today announced the launching of an advertising campaign in Philadelphia, PA., in an attempt to encourage the public to report firearm-related crimes.

Several billboards in the Philadelphia area, displaying the message pictured below, provide the public with a phone number, 1-800-ATF-GUNS, which can be utilized to report gun crime 24/7. Individuals providing information may remain anonymous. Depending on the level of assistance, citizens may be eligible for monetary awards if the information leads to a successful prosecution.

The goal of the campaign is to increase citizen involvement in making communities safer and remind the public that it can report gun crime anonymously.

ATF has worked in conjunction with CBS Outdoors Advertising, which donated a substantial amount of the advertising space on both electronic and stationary billboards throughout the city of Philadelphia and outlying areas.

More information on ATF and its programs may be located at www.atf.gov.

Contact Special Agent Robert Schmidt, PIO-ATF
Office (215) 446-7800
www.atf.gov

SOURCE Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives


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Vermont man arrested after crushing police cruisers with tractor

LITTLETON, New Hampshire (Reuters) - A Vermont man was arrested after allegedly running over seven police cruisers with a tractor, police said on Friday.

Roger Pion, 34, of Newport, Vermont now faces seven counts of unlawful mischief and three other charges after being arrested by state police for crushing cruisers belonging to the Orleans County Sheriff's Department in the town of Derby on Thursday.

"I felt like I was in a monster jam rally or something," said Rene Morris, an eyewitness told local television station WCAX. "I just couldn't believe it, just backing up going over it, turns around makes his way to the other vehicles smashes those up."

State police estimated the damages at $250,000. The motive for the crushing is still under investigation, police said in a statement.

(Editing by Paul Thomasch and Andrew Hay)


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Kan. lawyer sentenced 3 years for Ponzi scheme

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas attorney faces three years in prison for his role in a scheme that bilked investors out of about $52 million.

James Scott Brown of Leawood, Kan. pleaded guilty earlier to participating in a conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud. He was sentenced Tuesday to three years in prison without parole and ordered to pay $34 million in restitution.

The U.S. Attorney's Office in Kansas City says investors loaned about $52.5 million through the scheme known as the British Lending Program. Victims thought they were loaning money for real estate projects, but Brown and two other men kept most of the money.

Martin Sigillito of Webster Groves, Mo., is awaiting sentencing after being convicted of leading the conspiracy. Derek Smith, of Oxfordshire, England, pleaded guilty and awaits sentencing.


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University of Montana quarterback pleads not guilty to rape

(Reuters) - Attorneys for a University of Montana quarterback who pleaded not guilty to charges of rape said in court papers filed on Tuesday that text messages sent by his accuser after the sexual encounter undermine her allegations of assault.

Defense attorneys have asked a state judge in Missoula to dismiss the rape charge against suspended quarterback Jordan Johnson and said the sexual encounter was consensual.

Johnson, the school's former football team captain, is the second member of his squad facing rape charges amid federal investigations into the handling of sexual assault reports by university and local authorities.

Missoula County Attorney Fred Van Valkenburg charged Johnson, 20, last week based on claims by a fellow student - identified in court papers as Jane Doe - that Johnson raped her while they were watching a movie in her bedroom in February.

The woman repeatedly responded to Johnson's sexual advances by saying, "No, not tonight," according to a sworn statement by prosecutors. She said Johnson later raped her.

"She felt scared and 'shut down.' She stopped resisting at this point," according to the affidavit.

Johnson's attorneys said the woman, intoxicated, had approached him the day before the encounter and flirted with him.

The charges against Johnson came as the U.S. Justice Department is investigating the handling of more than 80 reported rapes in Missoula, many of them not related to the campus, during the past three years. The investigation is tied to complaints by unnamed sources that authorities were failing to aggressively investigate sexual assault claims.

That probe and an investigation by the U.S. Department of Education is set to examine how officials at the 15,600-student campus in western Montana responded to at least 11 student-related sexual assaults reported there since 2010.

The spate of alleged rapes, the implication of student athletes in some of them, and the abrupt dismissal in March of the football coach and athletic director has shaken the campus and battered the image of a school celebrated for its Big Sky Conference championship football team, the Montana Grizzlies.

TEXT MESSAGES

At least three of those involved rape accusations against University of Montana Grizzly players, including Johnson and running back Beau Donaldson, who was charged in January with raping a woman at his residence while she slept.

He, too, has pleaded not guilty. Both players have been suspended from the team pending the outcome of criminal proceedings.

In the Johnson case, defense attorneys described the sexual encounter as consensual.

Afterward, when Johnson went into the bathroom, the woman texted a roommate in an adjoining room that she was raped, prosecutors said in the affidavit.

Prosecutors said the woman was in shock and wanted Johnson out of her house, so she drove Johnson home afterwards. Defense attorneys said she did so only "after fixing herself a snack in her kitchen and eating it."

She sent text messages to a friend three days later, according to defense attorneys, in which she describes Johnson's likely reaction to rape allegations: "It will hit him like a ton of bricks which I'm okay with... I don't think he did anything wrong to be honest... he didn't show any remorse or anything."

U.S. authorities have said they are seeking to determine if gender discrimination was at issue in the handling of sexual assault reports by the university and in Missoula as a whole.

In January, the governing body of U.S. college sports, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, notified the university it was conducting an investigation of the football program.

(Editing by Mary Slosson, Cynthia Johnston and Lisa Shumaker)


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Loughner listens calmly while psychologist speaks

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Jared Loughner listened calmly and without expression while a court-appointed psychologist told a judge he was competent to plead guilty to killing six people in a rampage that wounded then-Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords.

Loughner's arms were crossed over his stomach, and he looked straight at Christina Pietz as she testified for an hour.

At one point he smiled and nodded when psychologist mentioned he had a special bond with one of the prison guards.

The judge agreed he was competent, and Loughner pleaded guilty in the attack.


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Court reduces Khodorkovsky partner's prison term

MOSCOW (AP) — A Russian court on Wednesday reduced the 13-year prison sentence of jailed oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky's business partner, scheduling Platon Lebedev for release early next year.

The court in the northwestern town of Velsk, near where Lebedev is serving time, ordered that his sentence be reduced by three years and four months. Judge Viktor Ivanov said the decision was based on a change in Russian laws, the RIA Novosti news agency reported.

It was not yet clear whether Khodorkovsky's sentence would be shortened as well. He would need to appeal to a separate court near where he is imprisoned in Karelia, also in northwestern Russia.

Both men were arrested in 2003 in a case widely seen as politically motivated after Khodorkovsky, then Russia's richest man, challenged the power of Vladimir Putin early in his presidency.

Khodorkovsky and Lebedev were convicted in 2005 of evading taxes on the Yukos oil company. They were tried together again in a second case and convicted in 2010 of stealing oil from Yukos and laundering the proceeds.

Lebedev has been in jail since July 2003 and is now set to be released in March 2013.

"It seems to me that this is one of the good signs that society has long awaited," said Mikhail Fedotov, who heads a presidential advisory council on human rights and civil society, RIA Novosti reported.

Wednesday's decision came as a Moscow court prepares to issue a verdict in the controversial case of three feminist punk rockers who were arrested after an anti-Putin protest in Moscow's main cathedral. Prosecutors have asked the court to send them to prison for three years.


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الأحد، 26 أغسطس 2012

NM Finance Authority COO, ex-controller arrested

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — The current chief operating officer and a former controller at the New Mexico Finance Authority were arrested Wednesday for state securities violations related to a fake financial audit that was distributed to investors earlier this year.

New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department's Securities Division announced the arrests Wednesday of Chief Operating Officer John Duff and former controller Greg Campbell, who left the agency in June.

The Finance Authority issues bonds and provides low-cost financing for capital projects by certain state agencies, cities, counties, schools and other New Mexico governmental organizations.

According to the criminal complaint, Campbell is facing securities fraud, forgery and racketeering charges. Investigators say Campbell has admitted to forging the agency's 2011 audit report that provides financial statements about the agency and falsely claiming that it had been audited by an outside firm.

Duff was charged as an accessory on eight counts of securities fraud and racketeering. Duff, who was the immediate supervisor of Campbell, also has been charged with allegedly conspiring to engage in a pattern of racketeering by misrepresenting NMFA's financial statements to ratings agencies, investors that buy the agency's bonds and the state.

An arrest warrant affidavit by a state securities regulator said Campbell, with the knowledge and permission of Duff, misrepresented about $40 million in NMFA's financial statements after the agency agreed to provide that amount of revenue in 2010 and 2011 to state government to plug shortfalls in New Mexico's operating budget for schools and general government programs.

Instead of reporting a $40 million revenue decline, the officials are accused of concealing that by fraudulently reporting it under grant expenses.

"These two corporate officials had strong accounting backgrounds yet they cooked the books to make their financial statements look stronger than they actually were," said Daniel Tanaka, director of the Securities Division.

Campbell and Duff were booked into Santa Fe County Jail and are subject to a $20,000 cash or surety bond.

A date for an arraignment at the First Judicial District Court in Santa Fe has not yet been set. It was unclear if either had attorneys.

"The action of these two individuals has risked the credit rating of New Mexico," said J. Dee Dennis Jr., Superintendent of the State Regulation and Licensing Department. "We want to send a clear and strong message to the Wall Street, rating agencies, bond purchasers and investors that we will get to the bottom of this as quickly as possible to once again restore their confidence in our state."

National credit rating agencies have said they're considering whether to downgrade the authority's bond ratings because of concerns about a lack of financial oversight within the organization. A drop in bond ratings will increase the cost to New Mexico taxpayers for governments to finance capital improvement projects.

Without audited financial statements, the authority is unable to issue new bonds and its governing board had decided to temporarily scale back lending to local governments while the agency resolves problems stemming from a fake financial audit.

The authority's governing board voted Wednesday to limit low-cost loans that it provides to cities, counties and other local governments for projects such as sewers, government buildings, water rights acquisition and equipment including fire trucks.

The authority can make loans using $37 million in cash reserves and the board is imposing a $5 million limit on loans for new projects.

The authority has more than $1 billion in outstanding loans.

The authority was created by the Legislature and receives a share of tax revenues for its financing. The authority's workers and management are not state employees, but there is government oversight of its operations. The authority is governed by a 12-member board and a majority of the members are the governor's appointees and members of the governor's administration.

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Follow Barry Massey on Twitter at https://twitter.com/bmasseyAP


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Top Colombian drug trafficker arrested: authorities

The leader of a major drug trafficking organization known as the "Oficina de Envigado" was arrested Wednesday in the northeastern city of Medellin, Colombian authorities said.

Calling the arrest of Erikson Vargas a "death blow" to the crime group, President Juan Manuel Santos said at a news conference that he would be extradited to the United States.

Police said he was taken into custody at a farm near Medellin in an operation in which another member of Vargas' group was killed and several others were also arrested.

He was wanted on charges of conspiracy to murder, drug trafficking, and extortion.

Vargas assumed leadership of the Envigado organization after the November 2011 arrest of its previous leader, Maximiliano Bonilla, in Venezuela. Bonilla, known as Valenciano, was extradited to the United States in December 2011.

Based in the northeastern region of Antioquia, the Envigado crime group is considered one of the most potent of Colombia's drug trafficking organizations.

The group was formed in the 1980s by Pablo Escobar, the notorious leader of the Medellin cartel.

After his death, control of the group passed to the Self-Defense Units of Colombia, a rightwing paramilitary group that was later disbanded as part of a peace process.


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