Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Hundreds Of Weapons Confiscated At Oakland County Courts

A woman was caught with this knife in the lobby of the 6th Circuit Court in Pontiac. (credit: Oakland County Sheriff's Office)
PONTIAC (WWJ/AP) – Authorities say hundreds of weapons have been confiscated from people entering courthouses in Oakland County in recent years.

The Oakland County Sheriff’s Office says more than 1,200 edged weapons, including throwing stars and a sword concealed in a cane, have been recovered since 2013 by officers at circuit and district courthouse security checkpoints. More than 170 were confiscated in a 15-day period last month, according to The Detroit News.

Capt. Doug Molinar, who oversees circuit court security, says explanations are “pretty weak.” He says it’s usually that people say they didn’t realize they couldn’t take something into court or forgot they had it.

Molinar says unless the items are illegal and seized, people are usually given the option to take them back to their vehicles or put them in a box to be destroyed.


Source : detroit.cbslocal.com

Sunday, 6 March 2016

Liverpool’s revenge mission continues as Klopp looks to channel anger

The Reds boss is a master at harnessing fury and Liverpool need to follow their manager's lead at Crystal Palace and against Manchester United



A month into his Liverpool tenure, Jurgen Klopp suffered his first defeat in his seventh fixture in charge. He had been informed of Crystal Palace’s reputation of ripping up the club’s script, but at Anfield on November 8, he experienced it.

Scott Dann’s header on 82 minutes handed the visitors a 2-1 win, and for weeks afterwards, the German admitted he couldn’t “get the f**king loss to Palace” out of his mind.

In Sunday’s early kick off at Selhurst Park, Klopp expects his side to avenge that result. “I didn't forget the first game. We should not have lost it,” he said. “We have to take points back.”


Those who know the manager best say it is not victories he holds on to, but failure. It teaches and triggers him more. He harnesses fury well and used it expertly to fire up his players at Borussia Dortmund. It is clear that he is now looking to do the same at Liverpool.



In midweek, Klopp made sure the Reds used their League Cup final shoot-out heartache against Manchester City at Wembley to punish them in the Premier League three days later.

They bossed every aspect of the encounter against Manuel Pellegrini’s men at Anfield and did not offer them an inch in a near-faultless 3-0 win.

Klopp wants Liverpool to replicate the anger and aggression they showed that night on Sunday afternoon. They have plenty of suffering at the hands of Palace to work with: it was the 3-3 draw at Selhurst Park which effectively ended the Reds' title tilt in 2014, with eight players who featured in the nine-minute collapse two years ago still at the club.

The Eagles have won all three league meetings since, one of those was Steven Gerrard’s Anfield farewell last May and the former captain was in the stands when they ruined Klopp’s unbeaten record as he marked a month in the job.

Liverpool owe Palace plenty and they are desperate to secure a third successive league win for the first time since March 2015. They would do well to transmit their manager’s burning desire for retribution.

“Anger in a sport is good,” he said. “Against Crystal Palace, there is a reason to strike back. There are a lot of reasons to be angry. Crystal Palace are a really physical side. They will give you, in the first two minutes, 500 reasons to be angry.”


Like Klopp, Liverpool have to use vexation to their advantage and ensure Alan Pardew’s team are still winless in the league for 2016 come late Sunday afternoon. Then the focus will switch to the Europa League last-16 test against Manchester United.

The two-legged tie offers yet another opportunity for revenge: Louis van Gaal’s men have done the double over their arch-rivals this season with Wayne Rooney’s late winner at Anfield in January coming completely against the run of play.

Klopp admitted he was desperate to draw United in the tournament to “clear something.” He explained: “We had a good game when I was here when we played against them, but we lost 1-0. It was not what we deserved on that day, but we got it.

“Life gives us the chance to make it better and that’s what we have to do, and what we’ll try.”

Klopp has ordered Liverpool to “stay angry” in both competitions for the rest of the season and they should listen. Success, after all, is the best revenge.


Source : goal.com

Saturday, 5 March 2016

OJ Simpson prosecutor Marcia Clark 'glad LAPD are taking knife discovery seriously' as she opens up about bombshell



Marcia Clark has opened up about the knife that was allegedly found on OJ Simpson’s estate, saying it's a "remarkable" development - if it's not a hoax.

Marcia, who was the lead prosecutor during the murder trial, has always maintained OJ was guilty of the murders of Nicole Simpson Brown and her friend Ron Goldman.

“I think it’s a remarkable development if it does turn out to be connected to the murders of Ron [Goldman] and Nicole [Simpson Brown],” she told Entertainment Tonight following the bombshell.

“It would be interesting if there was some evidence on that knife that pointed to who might have helped to bury it, if indeed someone else did.”



She said she couldn’t quite believe it and admitted it could just be a hoax.

“It might be a hoax, it might be somebody who planted it and then just pretended to find it and gave it to the off-duty police officer, you don’t know,” she continued.

“But, of course, I’m glad the LAPD is taking it seriously and subjecting it to testing so we can find out.”

Police said on Friday they were examining a knife purportedly found at the former home of O.J. Simpson, the one-time football star acquitted of stabbing to death his ex-wife and her friend in the "Trial of the Century” two decades ago.

Forensic investigators were conducting DNA tests on the blade, which was recently turned over to the Los Angeles Police Department by a retired motorcycle officer, Lieutenant Andrew Neiman told reporters at a news conference.


Neiman said the officer told investigators he was given the knife by a construction worker, who in turn claimed to have found it on Simpson's property in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles when the house was being torn down in 1998.

Simpson's former wife and her friend Ronald Goldman were stabbed to death on June 12, 1994, at her condominium a few miles away.

The murder weapon had not been recovered at the time of his sensational trial, which was carried live on major television networks in the United States and transfixed much of the nation.

A medical examiner testified for the prosecution at the time that Brown Simpson and Goldman were likely slain with a single-bladed, six-inch knife.

Police declined to elaborate on the timeline of when the knife was recovered but Neiman said it was possible that “the whole story is bogus from the get-go."

He also would not name the retired police officer or speculate on why the weapon had been given to police only in the past two months.

"We still don't know if that is an accurate account of how this item came into our possession," Neiman said, adding: “If you are the individual that provided that knife (to the police officer) we would love to have you contact our Robbery Homicide Division."

Authorities have not described the knife but the celebrity website TMZ reported it was a kind of folding knife typically used in hunting and fishing.

NBC News, citing unnamed law enforcement officials, reported that it was a smaller, relatively inexpensive utility-style blade typically carried by construction workers or other laborers and inconsistent with it being the murder weapon.

Legal experts said Simpson could not be put on trial for the murders again because of the doctrine of double jeopardy.

"There really are no exceptions. Once somebody has been found not guilty of a crime, he cannot be charged with that crime again, under any circumstances," said University of

Southern California law professor Michael Brennan, a former criminal defense attorney. "O.J. could confess to the crimes and he couldn't be charged again."

Simpson was found liable for the deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson and Goldman by a civil court jury in 1997 and ordered to pay $33.5 million in damages to the victims' families, a judgment that has remained largely unfulfilled.

He was convicted in Las Vegas in 2008 of kidnapping and robbery in a bungled attempt to recover memorabilia from his storied football career and was sentenced to a prison term of up to 33 years.

Highlighting the enduring fascination the case holds for the American public, there were roughly 150 tweets per minute about O.J. Simpson on Friday, according to social media analytics firm Zoomph.

Reports about the knife surfaced just as a popular new FX cable television drama series, "The People v. O.J. Simpson,” chronicling the trial, is airing.


Source : mirror.co.

Tennis will miss Bud Collins – and his fashion

In this June 30, 1993 file photo, NBC tennis commentator Bud Collins displays a pair of his brightly colored signature trousers as he sits overlooking the courts at Wimbledon. Collins died Friday, March 4, 2016 at home in Brookline, Mass. He was 86. GILL ALLEN The Associated Press
Dick Enberg only followed tennis casually before NBC sent him to Wimbledon in 1979 for the first live coverage of what would become “Breakfast at Wimbledon.”

A little nervous about tennis terminology, he quickly found a friend: Bud Collins.

“I might be rehearsing or maybe on my first take and he’d say, ‘No, no, that’s not what a tennis reporter would say. Here’s what you really mean,’ ” Enberg said Friday after learning that Collins, a tennis historian and American voice of the sport, had died. He was 86 and had been suffering from Parkinson’s disease and dementia.

Enberg and Collins soon became one of TV sports’ most recognizable couples, with Enberg’s “Oh my” trademark line combining with Collins’ stunningly colorful pants and personality to make “Breakfast at Wimbledon” destination viewing.

And about those pants. Collins had them custom-made from cloth he collected around the world. Yellow, violet and burgundy were among his favorite colors. He added strawberry embellishments for Wimbledon.

“He was as colorful as his trousers, which were his signature. And yet it was really misleading to the average fan,” Enberg said. “That was his MO for television. In person, he was the quietest guy in the room. He laughed the most at somebody else’s comment. He always had a smilie and never dominated the conversation.

“It’s a nice legacy to leave for all of this, to give back and share. He was more than generous.”


Source : sacbee.com

Thursday, 3 March 2016

Obama cites gains in health coverage during Milwaukee visit


President Barack Obama has lunch with Affordable Care Act (ACA) letter writers at Engine Company No 3 in Milwaukee, Thursday, March 3, 2016. Joining the president are Brent Brown, Karen George, Karen and Sharon Szyszko and Susan Campbell. The president's trip to Milwaukee is to celebrate the city’s victory in the Healthy Communities Challenge, a competition between 20 cities to increase the number of Americans with health insurance during the latest Health Insurance Marketplace open enrollment period. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

MILWAUKEE — President Barack Obama is trumpeting the nation's declining uninsured rate and says 20 million people have gained insurance as a result of his signature health coverage law.


Obama is visiting Milwaukee to congratulate local leaders for winning a national health insurance enrollment contest.

Obama acknowledges that millions more are eligible to enroll but have yet to do so. He attributes some of that to the acrimony over the law, saying people haven't always known what's true and what's not.

Obama was introduced at Thursday's event in Milwaukee by Brent Brown of Mosinee, Wisconsin, who says he was a Republican who never voted for Obama as president. But he says the president's health care law saved his life after he was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease and ran out of money for treatment.

Brown is calling on Republicans to quit trying to repeal the health law.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

President Barack Obama will seek to highlight how his signature health insurance overhaul has helped millions of Americans gain coverage as he visits Wisconsin's largest city Thursday to congratulate local leaders for winning a national enrollment contest.

More than 38,000 Milwaukee-area residents newly signed up for health coverage. That's out of about 51,000 uninsured people who were eligible to enroll. The city's sign-up ratio was the highest among the 20 cities competing in the president's "Healthy Communities Challenge." The winning city was promised a visit by the president, who is also using the trip to promote the Affordable Care Act.

For the first time, more than 9 in 10 Americans have health insurance. And the number of uninsured has dropped from about 44.8 million in 2013, the year before the health care law's big coverage expansion, to about 28.8 million, according to the latest estimates.

An improving economy has also helped boost coverage, analysts say.

Still, polling continues to show that slightly more Americans view the law unfavorably than favorably. And repealing the law has been a mantra of Republicans running for federal office as critics argue that the law's mandates have increased coverage costs unnecessarily.

"Republicans and our critics have spent hundreds of millions of dollars distorting the truth about this law, fueling conspiracy theories about this law," White House deputy press secretary Eric Schultz told reporters traveling with the president. "There's no question that that's going to have an impact."



Obama is using part of his final year to visit communities that he says have benefited from his presidency. Obama hailed the rebound of the auto industry during a recent trip to Detroit. His visit to Milwaukee comes just before the sixth anniversary of his signing the Affordable Care Act on March 23, 2010.

During the latest enrollment period, Milwaukee officials held sign-up events at libraries, delivered thousands of fliers and participated in phone banks to walk residents through the process.

After arriving in Wisconsin, Obama went to lunch with a few people who wrote letters to him describing how the Affordable Care Act helped them.

One of the diners, Brent Brown of Mosinee, Wisconsin, told Obama he didn't vote for him in either election and, in fact, actively campaigned against him. But Brown credited the health care law with saving his life after he was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease and drained his bank account until he could no longer afford the care he needed, the White House said.


Source : bostonherald.com

Wednesday, 2 March 2016

Here’s the List of Sports Authority Stores on the Block


The Sports Authority Inc., which filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Wednesday, has earmarked about 140 of its 463 stores for closure or sale in the coming months, as well as two distribution centers.

Leases for 87 of those properties have already hit the block, 25 of them in Texas, according to a marketing document obtained by The Wall Street Journal. The retailer is also reducing its footprint in Florida and California, with eight and six leases up for grabs in those states, respectively.

Retailers often hawk leases in chapter 11 to raise money to repay creditors. These portfolios can offer value to buyers looking to pick up a handful of locations in one fell swoop. Sports Authority is working with real-estate consultant A&G Realty Partners to market the leases, according to the flyer.

The number of stores Sports Authority will close is still somewhat fluid. As it was preparing for bankruptcy, the company and its restructuring advisers identified “up to 200” underperforming locations it thought it might seek to close, according to court papers.

And the company’s bankruptcy financing package could force it to liquidate its entire footprint by the end of April if Sports Authority can’t find a suitable buyer for its core locations, The Wall Street Journal reported.


Source : wsj.com

Monday, 29 February 2016

Secret Service Agent Slams Down Photographer at Donald Trump Rally


RADFORD, Va.—An exceptionally raucous Donald Trump rally that was interrupted numerous times by protesters culminated in an altercation in which a Secret Service agent choked and threw down a photographer for Time magazine.

The rally, at Radford University on Monday, drew a crowd of about 3,000, most of them Trump supporters. But about 30 young supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement interrupted Mr. Trump’s remarks, chanting, “No more hate, let’s be great.”

Mr. Trump urged security guards to expel the protesters — “Get ‘em out.” As they were being removed, Christopher Morris, a veteran photographer for Time magazine, attempted to move out of a press holding area to take pictures of the protesters. As he did so, a Secret Service agent assigned to the Trump campaign told him to retreat. they scuffled, and the agent grabbed the photographer by the neck and threw him to the ground. From the ground, Mr. Morris kicked the agent.

In a statement, the Secret Service said it “is aware of an incident involving an employee of the Secret Service that occurred earlier today in Radford, Va. At this time, our local field office is working with their law enforcement partners to determine the exact circumstances that led up to this incident. The Secret Service will provide further details as warranted once additional facts surrounding the situation are known.”

Mr. Morris said he was there to shoot a cover photo for Time magazine of Mr. Trump. He said he had kept one foot in the press “pen” but moved slightly out to capture the protesters. Mr. Morris said when he and the agen​t ​got in a “shoving match,” he used an expletive. That’s when the agent grabbed him by the neck, and threw him to the ground.

“The Secret Service is there to protect the candidate, and I was never any threat to the candidate,” Mr. Morris said in an interview.

Before Mr. Trump spoke, an announcer had instructed members of the audience if they saw a protester they should “not touch or harm the protester” but instead draw the attention of security officers.

Mr. Trump’s rallies have often been loud and boisterous affairs, with tension between supporters and detractors, but Monday’s was among the most raucous yet.


Source : wsj.com

Sunday, 28 February 2016

Il Duce Trump: Republican frontrunner defends retweeting ‘very good’ Mussolini quote


Undaunted by the backlash, Donald Trump has no regrets about retweeting a famous quote by Italian fascist Benito Mussolini.

A long-running online sting to get the presidential candidate to post a quote by the World War II dictator has finally paid off.

On Sunday morning, Trump retweeted a post which read: “It is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep.”

The words were attributed to Donald Trump from a parody account with the Twitter handle @IlDuce. While the sentence sounds like something Trump might say, the words were actually uttered by fascism’s founding father and Adolf Hitler ally, Benito Mussolini.

The gossip news website Gawker claim they set up the account, which sports a mocked-up image of the Italian dictator donning Trump’s famous comb over, to trick the Republican frontrunner.

But avid Twitter user Trump says he knew all along the quote was from Mussolini. In fact, he’s defended his retweet and admitted he likes the orator’s “very good quote”.

“It’s okay to know it is Mussolini… It’s a very a good quote, it’s a very interesting quote, and I know who said it,” a flustered Trump told NBC’s Chuck Todd.

“What difference does it make, whether it is Mussolini or somebody else, it’s certainly a very interesting quote.”




Source : rt.com

US lawmaker Tulsi Gabbard quits party post to endorse Bernie Sanders


Tulsi Gabbard, the first ever Hindu elected to the US Congress who has a sizeable following among Indian-Americans, on Sunday quit a senior Democratic party position to endorse Bernie Sanders as the US presidential candidate.

Gabbard's sudden endorsement comes ahead of the Super Tuesday in which front-runner Hillary Clinton is pitched in a tough battle against Sanders in the 11 States where the Democratic Party's presidential primaries are scheduled.

Appearing in a Sunday talk show on NBC News, Gabbard, 34, said she is stepping down as the vice chair of the Democratic National Committee and is endorsing Sanders, who is attracting thousands of people across the country for his views of health care and education.

"There is a clear contrast between our two candidates with regard to my strong belief that we must end the interventionist, regime change policies that have cost us so much. This is not just another issue... it's deeply personal to me," Gabbard said on NBC's Meet the Press. "As a veteran, as a soldier, I've seen firsthand the true cost of war... As we look at our choices as to who our next Commander-in-chief will be is to recognise the necessity to have a Commander-in-chief who has foresight. Who exercises good judgement," she said.

"Who looks beyond the consequences -- who looks at the consequences of the actions that they are willing to take before they take those actions. So that we don't continue to find ourselves in these failures that have resulted in chaos in the Middle East and so much loss of life," Gabbard said.Gabbard said.

Welcoming the endorsement, Sanders said: "Congresswoman Gabbard is one of the important voices of a new generation of leaders.As a veteran of the Iraq War, she understands the cost of war and is fighting to create a foreign policy that not only protects America but keeps us out of perpetual wars." Gabbard, an Iraq War veteran and member of the Hawaii Army National Guard, also released a video today explaining her decision to back Sanders.

"We need a commander in chief, who understands the need for a foreign policy which is robust in defending the safety and security of the American people. Who will not waste precious lives and money on interventionist wars of regime change," said Gabbard, a veteran of two deployments to the Middle East. "That's why today I am endorsing Bernie Sanders to be the next president and commander-in-chief of the US," she said.

Elected in 2012, Gabbard is the first Hindu member of the United States Congress.




Source : dnaindia.com

Saturday, 27 February 2016

UFC London Anderson Silva vs Michael Bisping LIVE: Follow all the action from the O2 Arena


The UFC returns to London for the first time in two years as Michael Bisping finally faces former middleweight champion Anderson Silva.

'The Count' has been chasing a fight with the Brazilian legend since he first began fighting at 185lbs in 2008 and would put himself right in the title picture for a potential rematch with Luke Rockhold with a win.

For 40-year-old Silva the bout sees him return to London where he made his name on the local mixed martial arts scene looking for redemption as he works towards regaining the UFC belt he held for more than six years.

Elsewhere on the card former middleweight title contender Thales Leites faces dangerous veteran Gegard Mousasi while English welterweight prospect Tom Breese fights Keita Nakamura.

London's own Brad Pickett also returns to the Octagon looking to break a three-fight losing streak against knockout artist Francisco Rivera.




Source : dailymail.co.uk

Friday, 26 February 2016

Washington state man shoots family then calls 911; police surround home in standoff


A Seattle-area man shot his wife and kids then alerted local police Friday morning, according to reports.

A SWAT team surrounded the home near Belfair, Wash., in a standoff with the yet-unidentified man who told a 911 dispatcher he shot four people, Mason County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Ryan Spurling said.

Negotiators spoke with the armed man and then got into the home as deputies try to confirm there are shooting victims in the home and capture him, Spurling said. The sheriff’s office posted a photo of squad cars lined up on a gravel roadway in the piney terrain roughly 25 miles southwest of Seattle.

“We’ve made entry, but there are 11 structures to clear,” Spurling told The Seattle Times. "The radio said he was down, but I don’t know what that means. We just have to wait till they secure the scene. They’re going to do a thorough search of everything to find out what we’ve got."

The man had said at 9:37 a.m. local time he had shot his wife and children and was holding a gun to his head, officials told KIRO-TV. Authorities said an emergency crew drove a responsive girl from the home to a nearby hospital for evaluation.

The sheriff’s office asked news helicopters to clear airspace around the home for a Washington State Patrol plane. WSP spokesman Kyle Moore told the Times a Cessna aircraft mounted with a surveillance camera is giving police a live video feed at the scene.

Area resident Jack Pigott told the newspaper he heard gunfire around 8:15 p.m. Thursday but "never thought more about it" because he figured it was just target practice.

The home is near Belfair, Wash., roughly 25 miles southwest of Seattle.


“I’m looking at the TV and there’s a picture of my road. I said, 'My god that’s my driveway. There’s SWAT cars … halfway down the road,'" he said. "I’m kind of surprised this happened up here in my paradise." 

“Stand off and negotiations ongoing,” the sheriff’s office tweeted.

With News Wire Services.

This is a developing story.

Check back for updates.




Source : nydailynews.com

San Jose House Fire Reaches 4th Alarm, Across Street From Fire Station


SAN JOSE (CBS SF) — A house fire in San Jose, directly across the street from a fire station, has spread to neighboring homes Friday afternoon

It was reported on the 400 block of Auzerais Ave. south of downtown, next to the Interstate 280 – Highway 87 interchange shortly after noon.

The fire reached a 4th alarm just before 1:00 p.m. Flames were spreading to at least 2 neighboring homes.

San Jose Fire Station 30 is across the street from the location of the fire.

Firefighters battle a house fire on the 400 block of Auzerais Ave., across the street from Fire Station 30, February 26, 2016. (CBS)




“We’re gonna have people suing you like you’ve never been sued before”: Trump threatens NYT, WaPo and the First Amendment


Trump swiftly squelched any notion of a post-debate, pre-Super Tuesday Rubio surge by flying in Chris Christie to Fort Worth, Texas on Friday where the governor not only endorsed the Donald, but stood stage left during the most theatrical campaign rally in history.

Sure, substantive debate might not be Trump’s strong suit, but after Friday’s media spectacle, it’s clear he more than makes up for it with an unmatched canniness for headline domination.

After accepting Christie’s endorsement and mocking Rubio by flinging water all over the stage (a la the Senator’s infamous 2013 SOTU-response gaffe), Trump took an ill-advised (for anyone else) swing at the First Amendment — more specifically libel laws, which he promised to “open up” as president.



Source : salon.com

University of Albany students who claimed to be victims of racist attack charged


Three black female college students who claimed to be victims of an assault by a group of white men and women have been charged themselves.

Officials at the University of Albany announced Thursday that two of the women, Ariel Agudio and Asha Burwell, have been charged with misdemeanor assault and falsely reporting an incident. The third woman, Alexis Briggs, has been charged with misdemeanor assault.

The women, all 20 years old, claimed they were attacked early on the morning of Jan. 30 while riding a bus. They claimed that they were called racial slurs and were physically attacked while bystanders looked on.

Investigators say a review of multiple videos of the incident showed no evidence the women were victims of a crime or subjected to racial slurs. In fact, police said the women were the aggressors, assaulting a 19-year-old white woman.

Police said surveillance and cellphone video, as well as eyewitness testimony, contradicted the women's account. The white men Agudio, Burwell and Briggs claimed assaulted them were actually trying to break up the fight.

"I especially want to point out that what happened on the bus was not a 'hate crime,'" University Police Chief Frank Wiley said in a statement, according to the Albany Times-Union.

The incident roiled tensions on campus and garnered extensive media attention, including a sympathetic tweet from Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton.



Source : foxnews.com

Thursday, 25 February 2016

AAA: 87 Percent Of Drivers Admit To Unsafe Behaviors While Behind The Wheel


DEARBORN (WWJ) – Do you text and drive? How about reading emails, or talking on your cell phone while behind the wheel?

New research from AAA shows 87-percent of drivers engaged in at least one risky behavior while driving within the past month. Two in three drivers say they’ve talked on a cell phone, just over 40-percent of drivers say they’ve read a text message or email while driving, and about one-third of drivers admit to texting and driving.

“There is a culture of indifference for far too many drivers when it comes to road safety,” Peter Kissinger, President and CEO of the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, said in a statement. “The vast majority of motorists believe they are more careful than others on the road, though most of them are not making safe decisions while behind the wheel.”

The report finds that 1 in 3 drivers have had a friend or relative seriously injured or killed in a crash, and 1 in 5 have been involved in a crash that was serious enough for someone to go to the hospital. The Michigan Department of Transportation says 118 people have died in traffic accidents already this year.

Common unsafe behaviors include:

Distracted Driving

More than 2 in 3 drivers (70 percent) report talking on a cell phone while driving within the past 30 days. Nearly 1 in 3 drivers (31 percent) report doing this fairly often or regularly.

More than 2 in 5 drivers (42 percent) admit to reading a text message or email while driving in the past 30 days, while 12 percent report doing this fairly often or regularly. Nearly 1 in 3 drivers (32 percent) admit to typing or sending a text or email over the past month, while eight percent say they do so fairly often or regularly.

Over 80 percent of drivers view distracted driving as a bigger problem than three years ago.

Previous research by NHTSA estimates that distracted driving is a factor in at least 3,000 deaths per year, though the actual number is likely much higher. Drivers who take their eyes off the road for more than two seconds can double their risk of being in a crash.

Speeding

Nearly half of all drivers (48 percent) report going 15 mph over the speed limit on a freeway in the past month, while 15 percent admit doing so fairly often or regularly.

About 45 percent of drivers report going 10 mph over the speed limit on a residential street in the past 30 days, and 11 percent admit doing so fairly often or regularly.

Previous research by NHTSA estimates that speed plays a factor in nearly 10,000 deaths per year. Drivers are more likely to be seriously injured or killed at higher speeds, and speeding increases the risk of being in a crash because there is less time and distance available to respond.

Drowsy Driving

Nearly 1 in 3 drivers (32 percent) say they have driven when they were so tired they had a hard time keeping their eyes open in the past 30 days. More than 1 in 5 (22 percent) admitted doing this more than once during that time.

Previous research by the AAA Foundation estimates that drowsy driving is a factor in an average of 328,000 crashes annually, including 109,000 crashes that result in injuries and 6,400 fatal crashes.

Red-light Running

More than 1 in 3 drivers (39 percent) admit to having driven through a light that had just turned red when they could have stopped safely during the past 30 days. About 1 in 4 drivers (26 percent) reported doing this more than once during that time.

Previous research by NHTSA estimates that 697 people were killed and 127,000 were injured in crashes that involved red-light running in 2013.

Seat Belt Use

Nearly 1 in 5 drivers (18 percent) report driving without a seat belt within the past 30 days, and more than 1 in 7 (15 percent) admit to doing this more than once.

Previous research by NHTSA estimates that nearly half of all vehicle occupants who died in a crash in 2013 were unrestrained at the time of the crash. Seat belts can reduce the risk of fatal injury by more than 45 percent.

Impaired Driving

More than 1 in 8 motorists (13 percent) report driving when their alcohol level might have been near or over the legal limit within the past 12 months. About nine percent of drivers report doing this more than once over the past year.

Previous research by NHTSA estimates that there are nearly 10,000 deaths a year from crashes involving drivers with a BAC of .08 or higher, and impaired-driving crashes cost the country more than $50 billion per year.

The survey results are part of the AAA Foundation’s annual Traffic Safety Culture Index, which identifies attitudes and behaviors related to driver safety. The survey data are from a sample of 2,442 licensed drivers ages 16 and older who reported driving in the past 30 days.




Source : detroit.cbslocal.com

Jimmy Savile report an 'expensive whitewash', says victims' lawyer


Victims of Jimmy Savile and Stuart Hall will feel let down by the Dame Janet Smith report and will see it as “an expensive whitewash”, according to a lawyer representing them.

Liz Dux, a specialist abuse lawyer at Slater and Gordon Lawyers, who represents 168 victims, said: “All the Savile and Hall victims have ever wanted from this report is truth and accountability.

“Despite millions having been spent on the inquiry, my clients will feel let down that the truth has still not been unearthed and many will feel it is nothing more than an expensive whitewash.


“It is unfortunate that Dame Janet had no power to compel senior managers to give evidence, giving the impression that the whole picture of who knew what has not been revealed.
“With 117 witnesses giving evidence of concerns and rumours, it’s implausible to suggest that this did not reach the upper echelons of the BBC.

“What’s apparent is that the senior managers only had to scratch at the very surface and a lot of Savile’s offending would have been revealed.


“There is real concern that the culture of fear and oppression referred to might have prevented more from speaking out more candidly and still exists today.”
NSPCC chief executive Peter Wanless said: “This report demonstrates just how disturbingly easy at the time it was for Savile to get away, unchallenged, with despicable acts against children at the BBC. The impact on his victims has been profound – as we have already witnessed from calls to our helpline.


“It is tragic that a culture existed at the BBC in which Savile became too powerful to confront, so allowing him to use his celebrity status to abuse at will, leaving a trail of devastation in his wake.
“The BBC must ensure staff can easily raise concerns and that robust safeguarding procedures are in place to effectively act on these so that a scandal of this kind, never mind this magnitude, is never repeated.”



Source : irishexaminer.com

Wednesday, 24 February 2016

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid endorses Hillary Clinton’s 2016 bid

(Hillary Clinton, who after a bruising loss to Sanders in the New Hampshire primary earlier this month, recovered with a solid win in Nevada, is likely to cruise to victory in this Saturday’s South Carolina Democratic primary.)



Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton picked up another significant endorsement Wednesday, earning the support of Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).

Reid remained neutral in his state's Democratic caucuses last weekend - which Clinton won handily - but his office confirmed Wednesday that the Silver State lawmaker would support the former secretary of state in the race for the party's nomination over Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Clinton, who after a bruising loss to Sanders in the New Hampshire primary earlier this month, recovered with a solid win in Nevada, is likely to cruise to victory in this Saturday's South Carolina Democratic primary.

Clinton is also far ahead in polls in many of the states that will vote on "Super Tuesday" next week, when nearly 1,000 delegates will be at stake. To win the Democratic nomination, Clinton must notch 2,383 delegates.

(Sen. Harry Reid’s (D-Nev.) office said Wednesday that the Silver State lawmaker would support the former secretary of state in the race for the party’s nomination over Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.)



Reid's endorsement follows those of a group of mothers who lost their children to gun violence or police brutality.

At an emotional event Tuesday night in Columbia, S.C., the mothers of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Dontre Hamilton, Jordan Davis and Sandra Bland all offered their support to Clinton.

"I endorse her, because she endorsed us first," Gwen Carr, the mother of Staten Island police chokehold victim Eric Garner, said at the event.

(At an emotional event Tuesday night in Columbia, S.C., the mothers of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Dontre Hamilton, Jordan Davis and Sandra Bland all offered their support to Clinton.)


Garner's daughter Erica Garner has endorsed Sanders.

Clinton and Sanders have been vying aggressively for the support of influential African-Americans - a critical Democratic voting bloc in South Carolina and in many of the southeastern states that will vote on "Super Tuesday."



Source : nydailynews.com

1 Colorado sheriff's deputy killed, 2 injured while serving eviction notice


One Park County, Colo. sheriff's deputy was fatally shot and two others were injured Wednesday morning while trying to serve an eviction notice.

KDVR-TV reported a suspect fired a rifle at the deputies when they approached the man's residence in Bailey, Colo. at around 9:30 a.m.

One deputy, a 10-year member of the sheriff's office, died at the scene. Another deputy, who has served 12 years, suffered life-threatening injuries and underwent surgery. The third deputy, a 20-year veteran of the force, suffered non-life threatening injuries.

The bomb squad and SWAT team were sent out to assist deputies after the shootout began.

The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene, KDVR reported. It's unclear if he was shot by the deputies, or if he took his own life.

The Denver Post reported that property records listed the home's resident as Martin Wirth, who once ran for state Senate and was an Occupy Denver activist.

The Colorado Foreclosure Resistance Coalition website had posted Wirth faced eviction on Monday and urged people to go to the home to support him.


Taking Off The Kid Gloves To Address Peyton Manning's Sexual Assault Allegations


Peyton Manning has likely played his final NFL game. Sure, there's a chance he'll try to run it back, but most agree he should send his starting defense some very nice thank-you gifts and call it a career on a high note.

If he's on the fence, he may be getting a gentle push toward retirement from a handful of scandals that seem to be coming to a head all at once: first, the NFL's investigation into allegations of HGH use; second, a renewed interest in a 1997 alleged sexual-assault settlement while he was at the University of Tennessee; and third, his inclusion in a recently filed lawsuit alleging that UT has violated Title IX regulations and created a "hostile sexual environment."

After years as the league's golden boy, why is Manning suddenly under fire? Vols fans (and Colts fans and Broncos fans and lovers of bad pizza) will tell you that it's all a counter-reaction to the Cam Newton contempt. Manning's Broncos upset Newton's favored Panthers in the Super Bowl, Newton was a "spoiled brat" in the postgame presser, and now all the bitter billies are looking for someone at whom to lash out. Trust me, I've seen every version of that narrative over the past few days on Twitter, where simply sharing an article someone else wrote about Manning is enough to get you outed as a "hater."

Thing is, the real reason this Manning stuff is news again 20 years later is because people are just now learning the extent of the allegations -- and just now realizing that for years the story had been treated with kid gloves.

I remember hearing about Manning's so-called college "prank" a year or so ago. It was a footnote in a larger story, an almost throwaway mention of an alleged 1996 "mooning" incident when he was a junior quarterback at UT. I'm never one to shrug off reports of alleged sexual assault, but this seemed like just a joke gone wrong, an immature student-athlete who accidentally mooned a female trainer while attempting to bare his backside to a fellow male athlete. That's how Manning spun the incident, that's how most writers reported at it the time, and that's how most writers have reported it ever since.

Then a few days before the Super Bowl, The Daily Beast released a much more detailed story, one which led to the re-emergence of a USA Today piece from 2003. And on Saturday came a story in the New York Daily News, one that features a 74-page court document submitted to the Polk County court in Florida in 2002 by the lawyers for Dr. Jamie Naughright, the trainer at the heart of the alleged incident. With each new piece of information, it became increasingly clear that Manning's youthful "prank" was far more insidious and drawn-out than the public had been led to believe.

Most initial reports of the alleged incident mirrored Manning's assertion that it was a "mooning" gone wrong. However, Naughright said in a court deposition she was treating Manning's foot when he began asking her personal questions. When she refused to answer, she heard laughter and looked up to find that Manning had dropped his pants and she claims he put "the gluteus maximus, the rectum, the testicles and the area in between the testicles" on her face. The male student that Manning later claimed he had been mooning, track athlete Malcolm Saxon, wrote a letter saying he was not the intended recipient of any mooning and urged Manning to "maintain some dignity and admit to what happened.... Your celebrity doesn't mean you can treat folks this way.... Do the right thing here." The letter was included in the 74-page court filing.

Naughright also wasn't just some kid trainer caught up in a classmate's antics. As is carefully detailed in the New York Daily News story, she held a B.A., a master's and a doctorate and was the Director of Health and Wellness for the entire men's athletic program at UT. And, perhaps most troubling, the incident didn't end when she accepted a $300,000 settlement from UT and agreed to leave the school to which she had devoted her entire career.

In 2002 Naughright took Manning to court on defamation charges, claiming he misrepresented the 1996 incident in his book "Manning: A Father, His Sons and a Football Legacy," and falsely characterized her, causing her to lose her job at Florida Southern College. They agreed to an out-of-court settlement, part of which was an agreement that neither party would publicly discuss the settlement or each other. But Naughright again took  legal action against Manning in 2005, when he spoke about the 1996 incident in an ESPN documentary.

By 2002 Manning was already a three-time Pro Bowler, and by 2005 he'd been named an NFL Most Valuable Player twice. You might try to pin an alleged despicable act of a 19-year-old Manning on immaturity, but defying court orders and continuing to disparage Naughright for years to follow reveals a deeper, darker kind of entitlement. Somewhere beyond the Papa John's pitchman, "Saturday Night Live" standout and Hall of Fame quarterback appears to be a man led by arrogance and vengeance.

The continued shots at Naughright are reminiscent of Lance Armstrong, who stopped at nothing to tarnish those who spoke out against him. Rather than apologize for the incident, recognize it as a low moment and move on, Manning allegedly rewrote the story, invented false claims about Naughright and defied court orders to get the last word on the subject.

If reporters can write about Manning's alleged 1996 sexual assault incident with so much detail 20 years later, why wasn't the same care and attention given to it years ago? And why weren't those more-detailed allegations made clear until now, when he may have already played his final game? Was Manning's incredible football pedigree too intimidating? Was it simply easier to ignore athletes behaving badly before the days of social media? Was the "boys will be boys" mentality of that era so pervasive that women like Naughright were simply expected to keep quiet and take it? Did both fans and reporters create a narrative for Manning they were too scared to disrupt?

The truth is, it's probably a combination of all of those things. Manning was, to fans and media alike, one of the good guys. His football legacy, "aw shucks" attitude, legendary football IQ and fantastic comedic timing made him an easy guy to root for. And once the book has been written on a guy, no one wants to take the time to rewrite it, especially if the edits spoil the happy ending. It's easier to deny, deny, deny than to admit that a player might be great at football, great on TV, great at children's hospitals and charity events, but still be very flawed.

Of course when it comes to legendary athletes, the defense is even more passionate and irrational.

With musicians and actors, there's a certain distance between the artist and the art. Many feel OK about watching a Woody Allen movie or enjoying an R. Kelly song, believing that the art that's been created is somehow distinctly different from its creator. Athletes, on the other hand, are an extension of our cities and of ourselves. When fans describe a big win they say "we won," not "they won," because the team represents the fan, the city and the community in a way that a song or a movie never could. The fan's connection is almost patriotic, the athlete's contribution decidedly civic.

The conversation we're having about Manning isn't a decades-delayed witch hunt, nor is it a movement designed to incite punishment. Manning won't be stripped of his Super Bowl ring due to a renewed interest in an alleged 20-year-old assault and its aftermath. And if he wants to play next year, it's not like he'll be fined or suspended for conduct detrimental to the team. No, this conversation is important because, 20 years later, schools and reporters alike still have the power to determine whose voices are heard, whose stories are told and whose word matters most.

Twenty years later, a lawsuit has been filed alleging that UT is still favoring prominent male athletes and still ignoring and covering up the stories of the women being harassed on campus. If we don't unpack the reasons why Manning's version of the alleged sexual assault was the only version told the first time around, we're doomed to make the same mistake the next time an athlete with an "aw shucks" attitude and a laser-rocket arm does something that defies his narrative. Deny, deny, deny, all while the Naughrights of the world pay the price.



Source ; abcnews.go.com

Tuesday, 23 February 2016

Viacom says it seeks minority investor in Paramount


FILE - In this July 8, 2015, file photo, people pass by the main gate to Paramount Pictures on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles. Embattled media company Viacom says it has begun a process to find a minority investor for its Paramount Pictures movie studio, heeding calls from activist investors frustrated at the Viacom’s sagging performance. Shares immediately rose about 3 percent to $38.06 in midday trading Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2015. less.

NEW YORK (AP) — Embattled media company Viacom says it's searching for a minority investor for Paramount Pictures, heeding calls from investors frustrated at the sagging performance of its movie studio.
Shares immediately rose about 3 percent Tuesday.
CEO Philippe Dauman says he'll pursue discussions with a select group of potential investors.

There has been speculation about interest from Chinese firms, including e-commerce giant Alibaba. Last month, Legendary Entertainment, the U.S. studio behind hit films such as "Batman" and "Inception," was acquired for $3.5 billion by the Chinese theater chain owner Dalian Wanda.
Paramount, the Hollywood studio behind franchises like the rebooted "Star Trek" series, has had a rough slog lately. In the most recent quarter, its losses more than doubled to $146 million while revenue sank 15 percent.



Source : seattlepi.com