truesee's Blog

Toddler, 20 months old found drunk on the parking lot

March 18, 2011 5:27 PM

Texas toddler found drunk on Four Loko, mother charged

Camille Mann 

Lashawnda Allen

(Credit: KHOU)

 

(CBS/KHOU) HOUSTON - A Houston mother was arrested and charged with child endangerment after her 20-month-old daughter was found drunk on Four Loko.

Police were called to Lashawnda Allen's apartment around 2 p.m. on Feb. 21 by Allen's roommate, who came home that afternoon to find Allen in the parking lot, talking to a neighbor while her children were inside their apartment unsupervised, reported CBS affiliate KHOU.

Allen told the roommate that the two kids were in the apartment and that her toddler was drunk. When the roommate rushed inside to check on the kids, she found Allen's 4-month-old baby hanging off the bed with the sheets tangled around her waist, turning blue. But, the 20-month-old was nowhere to be found, the station reported.

A neighbor told police she had found the toddler in the parking lot and the toddler appeared to be intoxicated. The roommate then called an ambulance, reports the station.

Allen admitted she'd been drinking Four Loko that day and had fallen asleep. When she woke up she said she saw the toddler on the floor with an empty Four Loko can, the station reports.

Allen told police she was afraid to call an ambulance because she didn't want to lose her kids, KHOU reports.

When the ambulance finally did arrive at Allen's home that day, the 20-month-old was taken to LBJ Hospital, where her blood alcohol level was found to be 0.09, court documents said.

Allen was being held Thursday in the Harris County Jail on $2,000 bond.

Entry #4,167

Arrested a dozen times now he's a prominent lawyer

Attorney Damon Chase: Arrested a dozen times, now he's a prominent lawyer

His clients include ousted GOP Chairman Jim Greer

 

Rene Stutzman

Orlando Sentinel

11:38 PM EDT, March 18, 2011

From criminal to prominent lawyer

Damon Chase, right, helped bail former Florida Republican Chairman Jim Greer, center, out of jail. Greer's wife, Lisa, is at left. (GEORGE SKENE, ORLANDO SENTINEL / June 2, 2010)

 

Damon Chase is one of the most prominent attorneys in Seminole County. His clients include Jim Greer, ousted chairman of the Florida GOP, and Rep. Chris Dorworth, the man slated to become Florida's House speaker in 2014.

But before Damon Chase became a lawyer with an office overlooking a golf course and 37-foot yacht, docked on the coast, he was a man with a different name and a long history of arrests — including armed robbery and fraud — that began when he was only 7.

When he was 24, he was arrested in Orlando for hitting his girlfriend. At 31, he beat up a man in a Gainesville bar during a fight over a World Series game.

His life story, said longtime friend Circuit Judge Nancy Alley, is one of redemption and hope.

"I'm quite ashamed of where I came from," said Chase, 44, of Winter Springs. "However, I am extremely proud of where I am."

For the first 31 years of his life, he was Floyd Lee Downs. He legally changed that in 1997, swearing to a Gainesville judge that he was not trying to hide his criminal past.

"I hated my name," Chase explained. He chose Damon Chase because it was unique and easy to spell.

By then, he had cleaned up his life, mostly. He was a full-time student at the University of Florida, working toward degrees in recreation and business and — his real goal — law school.

He disclosed to the UF college of law and the Florida Board of Bar Examiners — the group that decides whether one gets to be a lawyer — his whole life story.

For the bar examiners, it was not an easy sell. They treated him, for a time, like a criminal who could not be reformed. That's largely because of two criminal cases: Chase was arrested in Fort Lauderdale when he was 28, accused of using another man's Social Security card to try to get a fake drivers license.

And there was that Gainesville bar fight that left the other guy with a broken rib and a tooth knocked out.

In both instances, prosecutors decided there had been no crime.

Bar examiners reviewed copies of his arrest and court records, including those that showed he owed $20,000 in back child support and that during one six-year stretch, he hadn't filed federal tax returns.

Chase paid off the child support, filed his back taxes and, because the board demanded it, underwent a psychological evaluation and treatment. In 2003, one year after he passed the Bar exam, he was admitted to The Florida Bar at age 37.

He has not been arrested since nor disciplined by the Bar.

Rough early life

As a boy, he bounced between Louisville, Ky., where his mother lived, and South Florida, his father's home.He and his older brother had little adult supervision, he said.

He was first arrested at age 7, he says, for burglary, sneaking into and trashing a school on a Saturday.

He was arrested again at age 11, this time for armed robbery. He had tucked a crowbar inside his jacket and gone into a Louisville gas station with two older boys, according to Bar-examiner records. He demanded money from the clerk and then snatched more than $200 from the cash drawer.

His arrests sent him to foster homes, a juvenile-detention center, group homes and a work camp. At age 19, he married a woman who was expecting his child. They had a girl but separated a few months later. He was an ironworker at the time, drifting from job to job, state to state.

"I spent a lot of time in my early 20s just being homeless," he said.

He held a variety of jobs, mostly ironwork and bartender, he said, but he also tried to make it as lead guitarist in a heavy-metal band.

That last gig didn't work out, he joked,because although he had long, flowing hair — great heavy-metal hair — and looked really good dancing with a guitar, he has a lousy sense of rhythm.

He had scrapes with the law but was never convicted of a felony. One of his arrests came in Orange County in 1990, when he went to jail for hitting his girlfriend. He pleaded no contest and served a year of probation.

At age 29, living in a pay-by-the-week hotel in South Florida, he decided to turn his life around.

"I wanted to make money. I wanted to be a white-collar guy," he said.

His big break came from his grandmother, with whom he was not close, and Santa Fe Community College – now Santa Fe College -both in Gainesville.

She needed someone to take care of household chores and offered him a bedroom and an $8,500 college loan. The community college agreed to admit him, an eighth-grade dropout who had a GED.

His next big break came on the first day of law school, Jan. 3, 2000. That's the day he met and fell for another midlife law-school student, Melanie Freeman Carter, daughter of then-Circuit Judge Thomas G. Freeman, a politically powerful judge in Sanford.

"She's absolutely the best reward for changing my life," he said.

The following December, just after finals, they wed in a tiny ceremony at her family church, St. Mark's Presbyterian in Altamonte Springs.

Melanie Freeman Chase, 40, is his partner at the family firm, Chase Freeman in Lake Mary, which specializes in business law.

She has been his biggest advocate.

"In January, I watched him, in the pouring rain and wearing a suit and tie, stop to change a tire for an elderly couple on I-95," she wrote in a letter in 2003, urging the board to admit him to the Bar. "The truth is, the board would be hard pressed to find someone who has worked harder to overcome the mistakes of his or her youth. … He is an incredible success story."

Chase has two children, both now adults, from previous relationships.

'I was so proud of him'

To Martha Faircloth, a 76-year-old widow, Chase is a hero. One day six years ago she was pacing in her yard, upset because Seminole County wanted to condemn a 50-foot swath of land to widen a ditch that runs alongside her property west of Sanford. Bulldozers were going to destroy a dozen stately oak trees on her 4-acre lot, including one scientists said was 400 years old.

"This big black car pulled up in my yard, and a man stepped out in a black suit and white shirt," she said. It was Chase. He asked whether she had an attorney. "I said, 'No sir. I can't afford one.' He said, 'How'd you like to have a free one?' "

Chase then did something that's nearly unheard-of: He beat the government in an eminent-domain case. He saved her trees.

She breaks into tears as she tells the story.

"I was so proud of him," she said. "I had raked leaves and taken care of old people and cleaned their yards and things like that to pay for my corner lot. … He's a wonderful man."

Seminole County, which had sued her over the dispute, paid Chase's legal fees in her case.

Chase's most prominent client is Greer, the ousted chairman of the Florida GOP who awaits trial on grand-theft and conspiracy charges. On June 2, the day Greer was arrested, Chase was the lawyer who ran the gantlet of reporters and TV cameras outside the Seminole County Jail, helped post bail and then loaded Greer and his wife into his Range Rover and drove them away.

Two months earlier, Chase had sued the state party on Greer's behalf, accusing it of cheating Greer out of a $123,000 severance package. The suit has since been dismissed. Both men say they will refile once the criminal case is over.

"He's very aggressive, very meticulous," said Greer — and, most importantly, not afraid to take on an enormously powerful opponent: the state GOP.

Chase has a reputation for being generous and doing community work. He is president of the Seminole County Bar Association and a board member of an affiliated group, the Seminole County Legal Aid Society. In December, the society honored him for his pro bono work.

At that ceremony, he talked about having lived on the wrong side of the law. He did not go into detail.

Said friend and Altamonte Springs lawyer James DeKleva, "I don't know what he went through, but I can tell you, it's a remarkable change."

DeKleva called Chase a good lawyer, a good guy — a man who has transformed himself "like the phoenix rising from the ashes."

Entry #4,166

Free Rita's Italian ice

After a long, cold winter, Rita’s Italian Ice is predicting a “cool-ossal spring Ice storm.” On Sunday, the first day of spring, Rita’s Italian Ice will offer each customer one free, regular-sized (10 oz.) cup of Italian Ice in the available flavor of their choice. The deal will run from 12 p.m. to 9 p.m.

“For 19 years we’ve planned this annual, free event as a way to generate excitement for the season and to say ‘thank you’ to our loyal Rita’s Italian Ice lovers and the communities that support us year in and year out,” said Chief Executive Officer Jim Rudolph.

Nationwide, the company predicts it will scoop up more than 1.4 million cups of Ice. Last year, the number of people who visited a Rita’s Italian Ice location on the first day of spring totaled more than 30 times the average number of visitors to Disney World that the same day.

To find the location nearest you click the link below

 

http://www.ritasice.com/

Entry #4,165

Is YouTube Sensation Rebecca Black's "Friday" The Worst Song Ever?

Is YouTube Sensation Rebecca Black's "Friday" The Worst Song Ever?

 
Mon Mar 14, 2011 10:42am PDT
Lyndsey Parker
 

Hey kids! Guess what? Apparently awful is the new great. In an age when the music business is suffering dearly--when even vocal dynamos like Christina Aguilera can't sell albums or concert tickets anymore, and thousands of unsigned, undiscovered artists have to sell records out of their car trunks--a mind-meltingly horrific song called "Friday," by a previously unknown, marginally talented teen-pop singer named Rebecca Black, managed to rack up more than 2.2 million views on YouTube (yes, that's right, TWO-MILLION, TWO-HUNDRED-THOUSAND) just over this past weekend. (NOW HAS OVER 21 MILLION HITS)

It must be seen, and heard, to be believe:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CD2LRROpph0

 

The video got its first big promotion, perhaps not coincidentally, last Friday, when Comedy Central's Tosh.0 blog posted it under the headline "Songwriting Isn't For Everyone." And that was all it took. By the weekend's end, "Friday" had been Tumblr'd, Facebooked, blogged, and tweeted by countless baffled viewers--and dozens of covers and parodies had popped up on YouTube as well, including an amusingly Dylanesque one.

The virality of "Friday," a wannabe weekend-party anthem for the new generation, had nothing to with the song being any good, Rebecca being particularly attractive or gifted, or even with the fact that it was, well, the weekend. It's simply because it was so unbelievably BAD. ("A whole new level of bad," according to none other than Time magazine.) And it's because the song and video raised so many fascinating questions...such as:

Who the heck is this girl? How did she get a record deal? Why is she sitting at a bus stop, if her friends are picking her up in their car? Why is she so indecisive about whether to sit in the front or back seat? If the girl standing to her right is her friend, then is that girl on her left her frenemy? Did the general public REALLY need to be informed that Thursday comes before Friday, or that Sunday comes after Saturday? And, most importantly: Is this a real thing? Or is this an SNL Digital Short for which the Lonely Island are responsible?

Honestly, we're not sure if these questions will ever be properly answered. But we do know that "Friday" is the churned-out product of a Los Angeles-based company called the Ark Music Factory, which sends out casting calls looking for singers between the ages of 13 and 17 to record its songs and, if all goes well, become overnight YouTube stars (a la Justin Bieber). Rebecca Black's "Friday" is Ark's first major hit--and after this, we sincerely hope it's the company's last.

 

 

UPDATE: LINK TO BLACK'S RESPONSE TO CYBER BULLYING

http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2011-03-17/rebecca-black-friday-and-cyberbullying/?cid=sexybeast:mainpromo1

Entry #4,164

Subway Riders Brawl Over Passenger Eating Spaghetti On The Train

Subway riders brawl over passenger eating spaghetti on the train

 

Jaime Uribarri
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

 

Originally Published:Friday, March 18th 2011, 2:41 PM
Updated: Friday, March 18th 2011, 5:13 PM

 
A pasta-loving subway rider got into a brawl with a fellow passenger over eating etiquette.
An argument over eating etiquette on the subway led to a fierce brawl between a pasta-loving passenger and a middle-aged straphanger, an online video shows.

A pasta-loving subway rider got into a brawl with a fellow passenger over eating etiquette.

 

The YouTube clip begins with a woman chowing down on spaghetti while trading barbs with another woman sitting across from her on a subway car.

The feud escalates a few minutes in when the middle-aged passenger asks the woman, "What kind of animals eat on the train?"

The diner responds, "What kind of fat ---- looks like you?"

After several more tense exchanges, the diner - with plate of food in hand - and her friend go face to face with the other woman, leading to the all-out brawl.

As onlookers try to calm the parties, the two women push each other, then start swinging - sending the spaghetti flying.

Multiple passengers eventually break up the fight, including a man who is scratched in the face as a result of his efforts.

"Y'all need to chill out!" he yells at one point.

"We the child, she grown," the passenger with the pasta responds.

"She need to chill out," she or her friend adds.

The clip was first reported Friday by NYC the Blog.

According to the user who uploaded the video, the incident took place on a Brooklyn train. No information was given on when it happened or whether anyone was arrested over the fight.

See the fight below (Warning: video contains offensive language)

 

http://www.nydailynews.com/video/index.html?eCode=1haDJ5Ohij8jJOnRkV5qeTMgTSGL7luj&dCode=Myc3JiMjq6uddeETrIg1zF-IXLU-NUK3

Entry #4,163

Professor fired for burlesque night job

Burlesque-Performing Professor Gets Fired

Erin Sherbert Thu., Mar. 10 2011 @ 12:59PM
 
work.4872864.1.flat,550x550,075,f.awards-show-poster-for-hubba-hubba-revue.jpg
You learn something new everyday
 
?A college professor was stripped of her teaching job after university officials found out she had a yen for performing burlesque shows.

Sheila M. Addison, an Alameda County resident, received a termination letter from John F. Kennedy University in Pleasant Hill last year for one offense: Performing in San Francisco's Hubba Hubba Revue, which provides political and social commentary on gender, sexuality, and body image stereotypes.

She has filed a claim against the university, saying that her termination was illegal and the result of gender discrimination.
Addison, who holds a PhD and teaches psychology, believed the content of the skits were pertinent; they revealed much about feminist theory and human sexuality.

Addison's defense is that the events took place off campus -- in San Francisco -- and she had not ever advertised them to her students. She also used a stage name -- so nobody would know it was her.

And here is the real show stopper: Addison says that a male professor also had participated in a show outside the university, and disrobed onstage, yet he was never fired from the university, according to her claim.

She filed a lawsuit in San Francisco Superior Court on Wednesday, challenging the university's actions. She claims that the stated and actual reasons for her termination "did not constitute 'good cause' or 'just cause'" under California or federal law, according to the complaint.

It wasn't as if she incorporated it into the college curriculum.
 
 
UPDATE: Read what JFK University officials told Addison in our latest storyand photo.
 
 
 
LINK TO VIDEO:
 
Entry #4,161

Weekend full moon the biggest in about 20 years

Weekend full moon the biggest in about 20 years

 
Ed Payne, CNN
March 18, 2011 3:06 a.m. EDT
 
The full moon this weekend will look close enough to touch, but it will still be some 211,600 miles from Earth.
 
The full moon this weekend will look close enough to touch, but it will still be some 211,600 miles from Earth.
 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • The last full moon so big and close to Earth occurred in March of 1993
  • Saturday's full moon will be the biggest in almost 20 years
  • Saturday's full moon will still be 211,600 miles away
  • This full moon will appear about 14% bigger and 30% brighter

(CNN)-- If the moon looks a little bit bigger and brighter this weekend, there's a reason for that. It is.

Saturday's full moon will be a super "perigee moon" -- the biggest in almost 20 years. This celestial event is far rarer than the famed blue moon, which happens once about every two-and-a-half years.

"The last full moon so big and close to Earth occurred in March of 1993," said Geoff Chester with the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington. "I'd say it's worth a look."

Full moons look different because of the elliptical shape of the moon's orbit. When it's at perigee, the moon is about 31,000 miles (50,000 km) closer to Earth than when it's at the farthest point of its orbit, also known as apogee.

"Nearby perigee moons are about 14% bigger and 30% brighter than lesser moons that occur on the apogee side of the moon's orbit," the NASA website says.

This full moon will rise in the east at sunset and should look especially big at that time because of what's known as the "moon illusion."

"For reasons not fully understood by astronomers or psychologists, low-hanging moons look unnaturally large when they beam through trees, buildings and other foreground objects," according to NASA.

Even though it may look close enough to touch, Saturday's full moon will still be at a healthy distance -- some 211,600 miles (356,577 km) away.

As rare as it is, it may be worth a look. Miss it and you'll have to wait until 2029 to see it again.

Entry #4,159

Elementary students hospitalized for cocaine use

Elementary students hospitalized for cocaine use

 

 

 
Scott McCabe
03/17/11 8:05 PM
Examiner Staff Writer
 
Andrew Harnik/Examiner
A Thomson Elementary School student brought cocaine to school and he, along with others in his class, ingested it.
Students at a Northwest Washington elementary school were hospitalized after ingesting cocaine Thursday, authorities said, and one child was charged with possession of a controlled substance.

Several students at Thomson Elementary became ill around noon after ingesting a powdery substance that turned out to be cocaine. The students, some in tears, were whisked to an area hospital, but none of the symptoms appeared to be serious, D.C. fire department spokesman Pete Piringer said.

D.C. Council member Jack Evans, whose district includes the school at 1200 L St., said the District should conduct a full investigation into how the drugs got into the students' hands.

"It's tragic. It's cocaine," Evans said. "It's an illegal substance, nobody ought to be playing with it."

One student brought the drug to the redbrick schoolhouse Thursday and passed it to his classmates, school officials said. Shortly after noon, several children complained that their throats hurt and told their teacher they had swallowed inhaled or the powdery substance through the nose, officials said.

The school nurse evaluated the children, and four students were taken away in ambulances. A fifth student was also transported by a parent. The student who brought the drug to school has been charged with possession of cocaine.

A spokesman for the D.C. Public Schools would not disclose information about the children involved, including their ages, because he said he was getting conflicting reports.

D.C. police and officials with the D.C. Child and Family Services Agency are investigating.

The newly renovated Thomas Elementary prides itself on its arts, academics and diversity, according to the school's Web site. It was the first D.C. public school to provide Chinese language instruction and it's the closest elementary public school to the White House.

Washington Post education columnist Jay Mathews touted Thomson and urged President Obama and the first lady to send their daughters there.

On Thursday, school officials notified the parents of the students involved and sent a note home with the school's more than 370 students explaining the incident.

Students were scheduled to be off Friday for a professional development day for teachers. Counselors will be on hand Monday to discuss the incident with students and teachers, said D.C. schools spokesman Fred Lewis. The counselors will use the case to educate the students about the dangers of drugs.



Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/local/crime-punishment/2011/03/elementary-students-hospitalized-cocaine-use#ixzz1GwczkmSj
Entry #4,158

GOP calls foul on Obama for focusing on bracket instead crises

President Obama slammed for March Madness bracket during budget, Japan, Libya turmoil

 Aliyah Shahid
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

Originally Published:Thursday, March 17th 2011, 2:20 PM
Updated: Thursday, March 17th 2011, 4:14 PM

President Barack Obama was criticized by conservatives for participating in a March Madness bracket.
 
Dunand/Getty
 
President Barack Obama was criticized by conservatives for participating in a March Madness bracket.
Conservatives are bouncing mad over what they called President Obama's obsession with March Madness, saying he's ignoring more pressing global issues.

Shortly after he announced his picks for the 2011 NCAA championship on ESPN Wednesday, critics took to the blogs, airwaves and social networking sites to denounce the President.

"The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down nearly 300 right now," Rush Limbaugh said. "My guess is that the street really doesn't like Obama's NCAA bracket."

Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich tweeted Thursday that America needs "a commander in chief not a spectator in chief," insisting Obama was "hiding from his job behind NCAA picks."

Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus tweeted, "How can @BarackObama say he is leading when he puts his NCAA bracket over the budget & other pressing issues?"

And Fox News ripped the President in an editorial on the Web titled "March Madness -- Obama Fills Out NCAA Bracket But Is Missing In Action on Japan, Libya and the Budget."

For the third year in a row, the President filled out an NCAA Tournament bracket for ESPN. He predicted Duke, Kansas, Ohio State and Pittsburgh would make it to the Final Four. He picked the Kansas Jayhawks over the Ohio State Buckeyes for the championship.

White House spokesman Jay Carney defended the President after a reporter asked whether it was appropriate for the President to spend time making tournament picks.

"There are crises all the time, and for every President," Carney said. "And again, this one is happening halfway around the world, and it is severe, and it is important, and it is the focus of a great deal of the President's attention, as are the events in the Middle East, as are the agenda items that he is pursuing to grow the economy and increase jobs in America and make sure we outinnovate, outbuild and outeducate the competition in the 21st century."

He noted that the ESPN interview was very brief and the President asked viewers to donate to Japanese relief efforts.

"So, yes, I do think it was appropriate," Carney said

 

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://landing.newsinc.com/shared/video.html?freewheel=69016&sitesection=ndnsubss&VID=23366206

Entry #4,156

The Palin Implosion

The Palin Implosion

 

March 17, 2011 | 7:00am

John Avlon

Sarah Palin has gone from the most divisive figure in politics to the most polarizing within the GOP. John Avlon on the polls that show her path to the nomination keeps getting steeper.

Call off the coronation—the media’s caught on to the slow motion implosion of Sarah Palin’s popularity, and with it her prospective presidential campaign.

A new Washington Post/ABC News poll found that Palin’s approval ratings among Republicans had declined by double digits since October, while her “strongly unfavorable” rating reached 17 percent among the GOP and 28 percent among Republican-leaning independents. This shift in the conservative populist tide provoked a series of memorable (and frankly enviable) headlines like “The Incredible Shrinking Sarah Palin” from Politico and other outlets.

Article - Avlon Palin Popularity 

Sarah Palin pauses during a speech at a campaign rally for U.S. Senator John McCain at Dobson High School in Mesa, Arizona on March 27, 2010. (Joshua Lott, Reuters / Landov)

But the real story is the continued erosion of support for Sarah Palin. By the end of her three-month stint as John McCain’s VP nominee, 59 percent of American voters believed that Sarah Palin was not ready for the job, and 47 percent of self-described centrists said they were actually less likely to vote for McCain because of Palin’s presence on the ticket.

There was no doubt that she was beloved by the conservative base, but one year after the election, with Palin acting as voice of the opposition, 63 percent of Americans already said that they would “not seriously consider” her for president.

By April 2010, even 47 percent of Tea Party supporters said that Sarah Palin would not “have the ability to be an effective president”—while only 40 percent believed she would. At the height of Tea Party enthusiasm, Palin’s conservative populist base was saying “thanks, but no thanks” to a prospective presidential campaign. It was a judgment call by the people who knew her best.

Sarah Palin runs the risk of being little more than the thinking man’s Michele Bachmann.

But media fascination with Palin helped prop her up by keeping her in the public eye and in the 2012 consideration set. Her Tweets and Facebook posts made news, aiding her promotions for books and a reality TV show. Her undeserved omnipresence prompted comedian, Sirius radio host and fellow CNN contributor Pete Dominick to propose the “Sarah Palin Sneeze Rule”—a protest against shoe-horning her into political segments virtually every time she sneezed.

Beneath the enabled self-promotion was a startling lack of preparation for a serious presidential campaign. Quitting her job as the governor of Alaska after 32-months, certainly gave Palin the opportunity to cash in on her notoriety but it also gave her the opportunity to begin studying for the presidency. But she has so far declined to build the defined outlines of a campaign apparatus or participate in the usual conservative cattle calls like CPAC. One year’s absence could be seen as strategic, three years starts to look like a snub.

A revealing Des Moines Register poll from late last month found that likely Iowa Republican caucus-goers who had a “very favorable” opinion of Palin declined from 27 percent to 18 percent since November ‘09—while her “very unfavorable” numbers doubled from 5 to 10 percent. This trend is not her friend.

In the next primary stop, New Hampshire, Palin fares even less well. Fully 50 percent of likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters view her unfavorably, according to a Granite State poll this February while only 33 percent view her favorably.

Any hope of avoiding a negative narrative tidal wave at this stage would have to come from a victory in conservative South Carolina or delegate-rich Florida. But Palin’s overall numbers are upside down in both states, with disapproval ratings in the high-fifties and approval ratings in the mid-thirties.

Even in John McCain’s home state of Arizona, Sarah Palin is trailing President Obama in a hypothetical 2012 general election match-up, 49 percent to 41 percent.

The clear portrait that emerges is of a conservative populist icon who has chosen celebrity over statesmanship, and is being judged accordingly. Palin has gone from being the most polarizing figure in American politics to an increasingly polarizing figure within the Republican Party. She was never likely to win a general election, but now there are statistical reasons to seriously doubt her ability to win the presidential nomination.

“She went from being a political figure to being a celebrity—all of which kept her popular. But in the course of those two years she added no substance,” says Ed Rollins, the legendary Republican campaign manager who traces his career from Reagan ‘84 to Huckabee ‘08. “People now judge her against other players in the next campaign—they might like her personally but think that she’s less serious, less ready to be president. Is that irreversible? Maybe not. But her books aren’t selling—the last one bombed.”

"Sarah Palin's numbers may be falling due to overexposure,” concurred nationally syndicated columnist and National Review Contributing Editor Deroy Murdock. “Also, and more important, she unfortunately seems to spend more time in the great outdoors with cable-TV cameras than in the great indoors with books and research papers on the serious issues that face this country and our world. Rather than well-reasoned policy addresses, she gives us breathless 'tweets.' Palin is charismatic and easily draws a crowd. She would have a lot more to offer, however, if it were not for her unbearable lightness of being."

It’s tempting to say that if Sarah Palin planned to side-step a 2012 presidential campaign all along, she has played her hand well. But the truth is that she has emerged from the past two and a half years considerably diminished. Palin is not taken seriously as presidential material, even by her fellow populist conservatives. In part, her support seems to have been eaten up by a more seasoned social conservative, Mike Huckabee, who won Iowa last time around. Palin’s schtick has spawned a legion of imitators who now compete to claim her mantle as the person most likely to inflame the base with calculated irresponsibility. Some of these pretenders may even be considering a run for president themselves. It’s a sobering prospect when you consider the full Republican field. Sarah Palin runs the risk of being little more than the thinking man’s Michele Bachmann.

John Avlon's new book Wingnuts: How the Lunatic Fringe Is Hijacking America is available now by Beast Books both on the Web and in paperback. He is also the author of Independent Nation: How Centrists Can Change American Politics and a CNN contributor. Previously, he served as chief speechwriter for New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and was a columnist and associate editor for The New York Sun.

Entry #4,155

Woman Escapes From Police Car, Calls Cab

Police: Woman Escapes From Police Car, Calls Cab

K-9 Unit Helps Track Wanted Woman

Akili Franklin
WYFF News 4 Producer

POSTED: 11:22 pm EDT March 16, 2011
UPDATED: 8:12 am EDT March 17, 2011

 
GREER, S.C. -- A woman is accused of jumping out the back of a police car and running off Wednesday night, Greer police said. 
 
It happened shortly after 8 p.m. on Wade Hampton Boulevard. 
Police said the woman called them complaining about a domestic situation. 
 
Investigators soon found out she was wanted on multiple warrants in North Carolina. 
 
They handcuffed her and put her in the back of a police car. 
 
Officers were waiting for the woman's car to be towed when she jumped out the back and took off, police said. They say she somehow got out of her handcuffs. 
 
The Greenville County Sheriff's Office K-9 unit helped track the woman down a quarter of a mile away at a restaurant. 
 
Police say she had called a cab and was waiting for it when police got there. She was then arrested again and taken into custody.
 
 
 
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