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Woman kills boyfriend with stiletto heel

Woman accused of killing boyfriend with stiletto heel

 

 

Thelma Carter, 46, struck her boyfriend with the shoe at their trailer park home in Augusta, Georgia, police said

 

Associated Press

For the AJC

8:20 p.m. Monday, August 1, 2011

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Authorities say an Augusta woman has been charged with murder after prosecutors said she struck her boyfriend in the head with a stiletto heel, killing him.

Richmond County Sheriff's Capt. Scott Peebles said 46-year-old Thelma Carter is being charged in connection with the death of 58-year-old Robert F. Higdon.

Authorities say they believe Higdon was killed sometime Sunday evening, after a dispute between the two inside their home in the Augusta Mobile Home Estates on Milledgeville Road.

Peebles told the Augusta Chronicle that the body was discovered Monday morning after Carter returned to the residence and notified police.

Authorities say an autopsy has been scheduled for Tuesday morning at the Augusta Crime Lab.

Jail records did not indicate whether Carter has an attorney in the case.

Entry #5,149

Jealous teen used Facebook in murder plot

Deputies: Jealous teen used Facebook in murder plot

Israel Nieves holds a gun.

Israel Nieves emailed this picture of himself to his girlfriend when she tried to leave him, Orange County court records show. (Orange County Courts / August 1, 2011)

Bianca Prieto

Orlando Sentinel

7:18 p.m. EDT, August 1, 2011

Jason Rodriguez, a handsome and talented Valencia Community College student, was caught in the cross hairs of a scorned teen's rage.

The 19-year-old amateur bodybuilder's life was cut short after he was shot in the head and neck Feb. 2. Eighteen-year-old Israel Nieves is charged with murder in the shooting that fatally injured Rodriguez — whom detectives say Nieves lured to an east Orange County neighborhood using Facebook.

Investigators said the motive was jealousy over Rodriguez's new relationship with Nieves' ex-girlfriend, who had broken up with him in November and filed a domestic-violence injunction against him.

Months after the shooting, Orange County sheriff's detectives unraveled the tangled technological web that led to Rodriguez's death.

The accused murderer — who is also a suspect in rape case and a lewd and lascivious case — is being held without bond at the Orange County Jail.

Rodriguez moved to Orlando from Gibsonton, south of Tampa, six months before his death to pursue an education in sports medicine and physical therapy. He worked at Publix and lived with a close friend he knew from East Bay Senior High School.

In his obituary Rodriguez was described as "very loving, outgoing, strong young man who struck the hearts of all who came across his path." Efforts to reach Rodriguez's family and friends were unsuccessful.

Court records show Rodriguez began dating a 20-year-old woman at the beginning of the year. It was her ex-boyfriend, Nieves, that investigators say is responsible for killing Rodriguez.

But while dating that woman, Rodriguez met another woman on Facebook. Or so he thought.

Her name was "Ty Ann," and in mid-January, they began texting and emailing. The two spoke once on the phone and had one video chat. Detectives interviewed a childhood friend of the suspect who said Nieves asked her to call and perform the video chat with Rodriguez as a prank and pretend she was "Ty Ann," adding validity to the online flirtation.

After almost two weeks of online communication, Rodriguez agreed to meet the woman at her house near the corner of Pavilion Drive and Holly Springs Circle.

Fatal 'date'

On Feb. 2 at around 10:15 p.m., Rodriguez pulled up to the house and waited in his green Honda Accord for "Ty Ann." He then sent a text message to his roommate about his impending date.

"Heading to the chick house ... by Valencia like right there I'll text for the I'm good," the message said, implying that Rodriguez would let his friend know everything was OK.

He was shot 12 minutes later.

A witness driving in the area at the time of the shooting told detectives the suspect stood next to the car and fired. The gunman saw the witness and began chasing after the vehicle, shooting at it at least twice, records show.

The witness told deputies the shooter was wearing a bandana over his face and a skull cap on his head and had on a red long-sleeved sweat shirt, dark pants and white shoes.

Rodriguez was rushed to Orlando Regional Medical Center where his family and friends stood vigil, hopeful that his strength and youth would overcome the injuries. He died a week later.

While Rodriguez was hospitalized, detectives worked feverishly to track down the suspect. After interviewing Rodriguez's closest friends and delving into phone and computer records, homicide Detective Brian Cross learned about "Ty Ann."

Elaborate ruse

Nieves went to great lengths to cover his technological tracks, detectives said.

He created a fake email address to make a phony Facebook profile using the name "Ty Ann." Nieves also used an iPod Touch software application to create a fake phone number that he used to exchange text messages with the victim, detectives found.

Computer-forensic investigators traced "Ty Ann" back to Nieves' cellphone, iPod Touch, email accounts and iTunes accounts, records show.

In April, investigators executed a search warrant at Nieves' parents home and found a black ski mask, black bandana, black gloves and a .32-caliber revolver in his bedroom.

That same day Nieves spoke with detectives and initially denied he had anything to do with the slaying. But soon Nieves began crying and admitted to creating the fake profile to "scare" Rodriguez and prove to his ex-girlfriend that Rodriguez was cheating on her, records show.

He claimed the night of the shooting he was drinking alcohol and smoked "embalming fluid," according to court records.

"I hope I never kill anybody. I don't know. I just had a blackout. I don't know what happened after that. I really don't," Nieves told detectives. "I never wanted him dead or anything. I don't remember shooting the gun. I was drinking a lot."

The relationship between Nieves and his former girlfriend was tumultuous from the start. Three months in, the woman said Nieves threw a punch at her, but missed and put his hand through the wall.

When she tried to break up with him, he emailed her a picture of himself with a gun in his hand. In October, Nieves forced her into his bedroom, put a knife to her neck and then traced the tip along her face, according to court records.

Then he raped her, she said. The Sentinel is not identifying the woman because she is the victim of a sex crime.

In November, Nieves threatened to hurt her family. Instead of acquiescing to his demands, she told her mother about the abuse and together they called the Sheriff's Office. Days later, an Orange County judge ordered Nieves to stay away.

Nieves is charged with her rape. He is also accused of having sex with a 14-year-old girl after sneaking into her home, records show. Nieves met that girl on Facebook as well.

He pleaded not guilty in both sex-crime cases. Nieves declined to be interviewed, and efforts to reach his parents were unsuccessful.

Digital dangers

Rodriguez's slaying was the fifth investigated by Orange County in 2011 and the first domestic-violence-related slaying, according to local advocates who track such crimes. Because Rodriguez was killed by a romantic rival, Harbor House of Central Florida counts his death in its tally.

"We are seeing the number of collateral victims rise over the years," said Harbor House CEO Carol Wick. "People think that in domestic violence that it's just the victim who is in danger, but the new boyfriend or girlfriend could also become targets of the batterer."

But the case also sheds light on the dangers of social media, and the way young people often trust that people are who they say they are in cyberspace.

Rodriguez could have safeguarded himself by meeting "Ty Ann" in a public place, instead of planning a one-on-one meeting, said Hemu Nigam, founder of SSP Blue, a California-based Internet-safety company.

"In a digital environment, individuals have to realize that everything that can happen in the real world can happen online as well," Nigam said. "What that teaches us is that you have to treat your online life like your real life."
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TV station takes 4-year -old's quote out of context about shooting

Chicago TV station takes four-year-old's quote out of context in story about shooting

Nina Mandell
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Monday, August 1st 2011, 5:43 PM

Chicago's CBS affiliate apologized for the ethical error.
 
YouTube
Chicago's CBS affiliate apologized for the ethical error

 

A Chicago television station is being slammed by journalists and civil rights leaders after it took a 4-year-old's quotes out of context in a report about a shooting in his neighborhood.

CBS local station WBBM reenforced negative racial stereotypes in its editing of a June 29 interview with a neighborhood kid about the shooting of two teens in the Park Manor section of Chicago, the NAACP and the Maynard Institute for Journalism charge.

In the story, a freelance photographer working for the station asked the boy about the shooting. When it aired, the boy said, "I'm not scared of nothing."
The photographer followed up with, "When you get older are you going to stay away from all these guns?"

The boy replied "no" and that's when the quote got edited on the aired version.

On the clip that aired, the freelancer asked "No? What are you going to do when you get older?" and the boy simply replied "I'm going to have me a gun!"

The anchors then commented in horror and the story moved on.

But, according to a clip of the whole interview, the freelancer asked "You are? Why do you want to do that?" and the boy then added, "I'm going to be the police!"

The discrepancy was first pointed out in a report by the Maynard Institute - and has since earned condemnation from the NAACP and professional journalism groups.

"Airing a video of the boy saying he wanted a gun that edits out the context simply reinforces stereotypes that African American males are violent, even preschoolers," Dori J. Maynard, President of the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, said in the article published by the institute.

Late last week, Jeff Kiernan, WBBM vice president and news director Jeff Kiernan apologized in an email to Poynter.org about the sound bite.

"We accept responsibility for the mistakes that were made, both in the reporting and editing of the story," he said. "The video of the child should not have aired. As soon as news management identified the problem, they took immediate steps to ensure that the video would not air in subsequent newscasts. In addition, we have followed up with our employees to make sure that we all have learned from the mistakes that were made."



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2011/08/01/2011-08-01_chicago_tv_station_takes_fouryearolds_quote_out_of_context_in_story_about_shooti.html#ixzz1TsW1Ov7W
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Man has hysterectomy after doctors discover he has a full female reproductive system

Indian man has hysterectomy after doctors find uterus

An Indian farmer and father of two had a hysterectomy after doctors discovered a "full female reproductive system" in his lower abdomen.

Indian man has hysterectomy after doctors find uterus
 
Photo: ALAMY
 
Dean Nelson

New Delhi

1:31PM BST 01 Aug 2011

 

The Indian man, identified as Ryalu, was admitted to a hospital near Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, after complaining of severe stomach pains.

Doctors suspected a normal hernia, but when they carried out an exploratory operation they were shocked to discover it had been caused by a female uterus, ovaries, Fallopian tubes, a cervix and underdeveloped vaginal tissue.

Dr Pramod Kumar Shrivastava, a surgeon at the Chhindwara district hospital said the patient had external male organs, was fit from working in the fields, and lived a normal life.

"Usually the contents of the Hernia Sac are abdomen organs like large intestines and small intestines but when we operated on the patient we were surprised to find female reproductive organs. We have removed the organs through a hysterectomy and repaired the hernia.

"The sac contained quite developed uterus, both the ovaries, Fallopian tubes, cervix and a tissue which is undeveloped but apparently looks like vaginal tissue," he explained.

The man had not suffered any problems until the stomach pains which led him to hospital. Although he is medically a hermaphrodite, his hormones and sexuality are clearly male, he said.

"The external reproductive organs of the patient were masculine and he has no problems whatsoever with his sexuality. He had functional male genitals and there was no formation of breasts in the patient. It's an embryological accident at the time of embryonic formation," he said.

The patient, who was said to be as "stunned" as his doctors at the discovery, is recovering in hospital and is being supported by his family.

Entry #5,145

United States approves free birth control for women

United States approves free birth control for women

 

  (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

 

 

 Alina Selyukh Reuters

12:43 p.m. EDT, August 1, 2011


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. health insurance companies must offer women free birth control and other preventive health care services under Obama administration rules released on Monday, a historic decision supported by family planning groups and opposed by conservative groups.

The rules from the Health and Human Services Department are part of the nation's healthcare overhaul and largely follow recommendations from an advisory group released last month.

The U.S. Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, commissioned by the Obama administration, recommended that all U.S.-approved birth control methods -- including the "morning-after pill," taken shortly after intercourse to stop a pregnancy -- be added to the list of preventive health services.

The recommendation faced opposition from conservative and religious groups that balked at using taxpayer money to cover birth control, especially the "morning-after pill."

The guidelines go into effect on Monday, requiring insurers to provide free coverage of preventive care services for women in all new plans beginning in August 2012.

"These historic guidelines are based on science and existing literature and will help ensure women get the preventive health benefits they need," HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said in a statement.

The HHS added an amendment allowing religious institutions to choose whether to cover contraception services in their insurance. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops had urged the HHS to exclude birth control as a service.

The adoption of the recommendations is a win for organizations such as the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and Planned Parenthood.

"Eliminating cost sharing for these crucial preventive services will make needed care more accessible and will improve the health of millions of women," said Iowa Democratic Senator Tom Harkin, who had urged HHS to accept the report's guidelines.

The health department's guidelines followed the IOM's recommendations to require free screening for gestational diabetes, testing for human papillomavirus in women over 30, counseling for HIV and sexually transmitted infections, lactation counseling, screening for domestic violence and yearly wellness visits.

Research suggests that the public supports adding birth control to the list of services.

A Thomson Reuters/NPR survey in May found 76.6 percent of respondents believe private insurance plans, without government assistance, should cover some or all costs associated with birth control pills.

The HHS will hold a press conference on the new guidelines on Monday. To read the guidelines, visit http://www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines .

(Additional reporting by Andrew Seaman and Anna Yukhananov. Editing by Maureen Bavdek and Robert MacMillan)
 
 
RELATED STORY

No co-pay required for birth control new U.S. guidelines:

 
Entry #5,144

Man Tricked Nurse Into Changing His Diaper By Faking Brain Injury

Man Tricked Nurse Into Changing His Diaper By Faking Brain Injury, According To Police


First Posted: 6/10/11 03:01 PM ET  Updated: 7/11/11 11:17 PM ET

 

Eric Carrier
 
Police in New Hampshire say Eric Carrier, 23, tricked a nurse into changing his adult diaper by pretending he suffered from a mental disability.
 
New Hampshire man is accused of faking a severe brain injury to trick a nurse into changing his soiled adult diaper.

Investigators in Hooksett say Eric Carrier impersonated his own father and posted classified advertisements on Craigslist seeking an in-home caregiver to assist his son, who Carrier claimed had been injured in a car accident.

"He had no disability. He wasn’t in a car accident," Hooksett Police Detective Janet Bouchard told the Union Leader.

When a nurse arrived at the house in March to discuss future care arrangements, she couldn't find the man who she thought had hired her -- only the 23-year-old suspect who was behaving as though he was suffering from a mental disability, according to police.

Believing that Carrier had been left home alone and was unable to care for himself, the nurse changed his diaper.

Story continues below

But she became suspicious when no one called her back to arrange for future visits and then alerted police.

Carrier has been charged with indecent exposure.

"He exposed himself and it caused alarm to this nurse," Bouchard said. "He brought her there under false pretenses."

This isn't the first time a man in diapers has allegedly taken advantage of healthcare workers.

In a similar incident last year, 40-year-old Florida resident Sean Kelly pleaded guilty after being caught faking a mental disability that left him with the maturity of a 5-year-old. He told healthcare workers that he needed them to change his diapers -- and failed to pay them for their work.

The so-called "Diaper Man" was sentenced to one year of house arrest and four years of probation.

 

 

 

Diaper suspect faces more charges: 

http://www.unionleader.com/article/20110727/NEWS03/110729893

Entry #5,141

Computer marries couple

My big fat geek wedding! Web guru creates program that will let computer conduct ceremony

Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 6:23 AM on 30th July 2011

 

When Miguel Hanson and Diana Wesley get married today, they won't stand before a gray haired minister holding a Bible.

Instead, they'll be looking at a 30-inch monitor.

Mr Hanson, a Houston, Texas web developer and IT consultant, created a  minister software program when the couple couldn't get a friend to serve as the minister at their wedding.



 
Miguel Hanson, right, kisses his fiancee Diana Wesley by the computer Thursday, July 28, 2011, in Humble, Texas. The couple couldn't get a friend to serve as the minister at their wedding, so they decided to create their own. When Miguel Hanson and his fiancée Diana Wesley get married on Saturday, a computer will conduct the ceremony. AP Photo/David J. Phillip
 
AP Photo/David J. Phillip
Miguel Hanson, right, kisses his fiancee Diana Wesley by the computer Thursday, July 28, 2011, in Humble, Texas. The couple couldn't get a friend to serve as the minister at their wedding, so they decided to create their own. When Miguel Hanson and his fiancée Diana Wesley get married on Saturday, a computer will conduct the ceremony.
 
 

On one half of the screen, they'll see a virtual minister with an animated, square face with blue eyes and thin, oval glasses.

His voice will be heard over a sound system while the text of what he's saying will show up on the other half of the screen.

'I was like, you know I'm going to write my own minister,' Mr Hanson said.

Ms Wesley, a high school sign language teacher, said she's aware of the nerd jokes that might come the couple's way once more people hear about the wedding. But the couple says being married by a computer fits who they are. They met through a website called 'Sweet on Geeks' and love science fiction and fantasy.

'That's kind of our thing,' Ms Wesley said. 'In fact, my maid of honour, she's making my cake and she's making it with Nerds (candy) as the topping and not icing. That's kind of the theme, the geeked out wedding.'

Next best thing: The couple couldn't get a friend to serve as the minister at their wedding, so they decided to create their own

Next best thing: The couple couldn't get a friend to serve as the minister at their wedding, so they decided to create their own

The ceremony will take place in Mr Hanson's parents' backyard in Houston. Ms Wesley, 30, said she wanted a small wedding, and the couple started planning it after Mr Hanson, 33, proposed in May.

The computer will greet the couple's 30 or so guests in a mechanical, robotic voice, give a little history about how they met and then go through the ceremony. The virtual minister, nicknamed 'Rev. Bit,' also will crack a joke or two.

'If anyone here has anything to say that might change their minds or has any objections, they do not want to hear it and I will not recognise your objections since Miguel has programmed me to only recognizeshis commands,' said the program during a preview that Hanson played on his home computer.

While Hanson wrote the software program, the couple collaborated on the text the computer will recite during the ceremony.

They said their friends instantly like the idea. But some family members took a little longer to warm up to it.

'A couple members of the family were like, "Really? A computer?" I think once they see it... It's novel and so it's something they haven't seen,' Ms Wesley said.

While performing weddings might not be the next logical step in the evolution of computers, Mr Hanson and Ms Wesley are not alone in wanting holy matrimony to be more high tech.

A robot officiated a wedding last year in Japan, but in that ceremony, the robot was remotely controlled by a man sitting a few feet away.

Mr Hanson said while he will use a wireless mouse to move the computer program forward after it pauses to let people speak, it will for the most part run on its own once the ceremony begins.

The computer-officiated wedding won't be legally binding. Mr Hanson and Ms Wesley still have to get a justice of the peace to sign their paperwork to make the marriage official. They plan to do that shortly after the ceremony.

'We're both friends of the computer. So it's kind of like our best friend is still marrying us,' Ms Wesley said. 'The computer is a huge part of our lives, so why not be a huge part of this?'



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2020438/Computer-serve-minister-Texas-wedding.html#ixzz1TlqfMG3L

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