NBey6's Blog

Rapist gets 25 Life Sentences


Rapist made daughters pregnant 19 times

A father who made his two daughters pregnant 19 times during almost 30 years of repeated rape and physical abuse was given 25 life sentences last night, and will serve a minimum of 19-and-a-half-years in prison. The man, who cannot be named to protect the identity of his daughters, fathered nine children with them, two of whom died at birth. The other 10 pregnancies were miscarried or terminated.

He pleaded guilty last month to 25 counts of rape, dating from the early 1980s and continuing until this year, when the terrified women finally mustered the courage to seek help.

Jayne Ludlam, director of children's and young people's services at Sheffield city council, said social workers had become aware of the "harrowing" abuse in June, and that an independent review into the case had already been launched.

In a case with echoes of the Austrian man Josef Fritzl, who imprisoned his daughter in an underground dungeon for 24 years and fathered seven children with her, Sheffield crown court heard how the man, who is 56 and divorced, began abusing the sisters when they were between eight and 10, and that they were badly beaten to make them comply.

He "took pleasure" in assaulting the girls, the court had heard, and the violent attacks would stop only while the children were pregnant. "His younger daughter told of the frightening habit her father had of putting her head next to the flames of their gas fire and that when she struggled to get away on certain occasions she burnt her eyes," Nicholas Campbell QC, prosecuting, told the court. They were kept out of school when their injuries were visible, and the family moved repeatedly to avoid suspicion. The girls' mother left home in the early 1990s; a brother also lived with them until his teens.

The court heard that in 1988 suspicions were raised at the victims' school due to their injuries but these were blamed on bullying. On one occasion one of the women was asked by a doctor if her father was the father of her own children, which she flatly denied. They also called Childline, the court was told, and asked for a guarantee that their children would not be taken away, but hung up when this assurance could not be given.

Sentencing, Judge Alan Goldsack QC said: "The phrase 'it is difficult to imagine a worse case' is much overused and rarely, if ever, true. But I can say that in nearly 40 years of dealing with criminal cases and 14 as a family judge the combination of aggravating circumstances here is the worst I have come across."

Ludlam said: "Due to the seriousness of this case an independent review has already been launched which will look into the circumstances surrounding the case and the contact the agencies had with the victims."

Entry #559

Wizards Fire Jordan After 1-10 Start

Monday, November 24, 2008
Wizards fire Jordan after 1-10 start; Tapscott named as interim coach
ESPN.com news services

WASHINGTON -- Eddie Jordan was fired as coach of the Washington Wizards on Monday after opening the season 1-10 without injured starters Gilbert Arenas and Brendan Haywood.

 

The Wizards' record matches the worst start in franchise history; the only other time the team was 1-10 was in 1966, when it was called the Baltimore Bullets.

 

The final straw for Jordan appears to have been a 122-117 loss Saturday night to the undermanned New York Knicks, who had only seven players available.

 

Ed Tapscott, the Wizards' director of player development, will replace Jordan on an interim basis, running his first practice as the team's new head coach Monday morning, a team spokesman told The Associated Press.

 

Tapscott never has been an NBA head coach, although he has plenty of front-office experience, including as president and chief operating officer of the Charlotte Bobcats and, before that, as vice president of player personnel and basketball operations for the Knicks in the 1990s.

 

Assistant coach Mike O'Koren was also let go, and the Wizards named Randy Ayers as top assistant coach, a source told ESPN's Ric Bucher.

 

Jordan was in his sixth season with the Wizards and led the team to the playoffs each of the past four. In September, shortly before the start of training camp, the Wizards picked up a one-year option to keep him under contract through the 2009-10 season.

 

Jordan leaves as the Eastern Conference's longest-tenured coach and No. 3 in the NBA behind Jerry Sloan of the Utah Jazz and Gregg Popovich of the San Antonio Spurs.

 

 

Jordan came into this season with a 196-214 mark with the Wizards, but that included a rebuilding 25-57 record in his first season. Since then -- with a fast-paced offense built around Arenas and also featuring All-Star forwards Antawn Jamison and Caron Butler -- Jordan helped turn the Wizards around.

 

Jordan was the East's coach at the 2007 All-Star Game.

 

 

But the Wizards have struggled to even be competitive at times this season, with Arenas recovering from his third operation on his left knee in 1½ years, and with Haywood out for perhaps the entire season after surgery on his shooting wrist.

 

Washington opened 0-5, then beat the Jazz at home to avoid the first 0-6 start in franchise history. That victory, though, was followed by another five-game losing streak.

 

The only NBA team with a worse record is the Oklahoma City Thunder, which is 1-13 and fired coach P.J. Carlesimo over the weekend.

 

After Saturday's loss, the Wizards' locker room stayed closed for longer than usual before Jordan emerged.

 

"First of all, not in our wildest dreams did we think that we'd be 1-10. Now how do you handle that?" Jordan said. "I wish I could give them a manual and say this is how you keep your poise, this is how you suck it up, this is how you stay positive. I can't find a manual like that yet. But, again I reiterated that we don't have losing habits. That's a big thing for us."

 

Jamison also addressed the rough start to the season Saturday.

 

 

"As long as we continue to work hard and continue to believe that we can turn things around, it makes my job easy," said Jamison, the Wizards' captain. "When guys stop playing hard and giving their all is when it becomes difficult for me, but this is a learning curve."

 

 

Jordan discussed the difficulties of having to lean on young players such as Nick Young and Javale McGee late in games.

 

 

"They're playing in the guts of the game where veterans usually carry you, and we haven't made a big shot when we've needed to, especially tonight," he said.

 

Tapscott's debut will come Tuesday night, when Washington hosts the Golden State Warriors.

 

He joined the Wizards' front office in August 2007 after spending a year as an analyst for the team's television broadcasts. He was fired in 2006 by the Bobcats.

 

Tapscott was an assistant to current Maryland coach Gary Williams at American University in the 1970s and became head coach in 1982. In eight seasons at AU, Tapscott finished with 119 victories.

Entry #558

Daily Quote

Tough times never last. Tough people do.

                       ~~ Robert Schuller ~~

Entry #557

Vision

Monday 11-24-08

124, 170, 130, 210, 799, 290, 705, 935

219, 198, 415, 205, 259, 000, 444, 777

195, 649, 684, 3173, 8501, 1964, 1755

 Thanksgiving Greetings

Entry #556

NC/SC Pick 3

Midday & Evening

** until 11-25-08 **

019, 119, 219, 319, 419, 519, 619, 719, 819, 919

640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649

  Thanksgiving Ride Turkey

Entry #555

'Twilight' Takes A Big Bite

Nov 23 2008 9:58 PM EST

'Twilight' Takes A Big Bite Out Of The Box Office With Record-Breaking Opening Weekend

Miley Cyrus' animated flick 'Bolt' couldn't keep up, earning only $27 million.

By Larry Carroll

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A huge weekend for  "Twilight"  fans has drawn to a close, and star-crossed lovers Edward and Bella are now rolling around on top of a pile of $70.55 million instead of in a flowery field.

That estimated total is enough to nearly double the film's budget in its first three days, making it 2008's biggest surprise blockbuster. A sequel, in the form of Stephenie Meyer's best-selling "New Moon,"  has already been green-lit. The film opened at the top spot in the box-office race,  despite lukewarm reviews, capturing the fourth-best November opening of all time and the best opening weekend since"The Dark Knight"  this past July. "Twilight" is also on pace to become the highest-grossing vampire film of all time and has already set a record for  Catherine Hardwicke  as the biggest opening for a solo-directing female.

For those of you who've been living under a rock the size of  Bella Swan's '53 Chevy truck, "Twilight" is based on the best-selling novel by Meyer, which tells the story of a klutzy human (Kristen Stewart) and a sexy vampire (Robert Pattinson) who find themselves falling recklessly into a forbidden love affair. Fans have been breathlessly counting down the days to the film for more than a year, making headlines as they  swarmed the movie's young stars, launched  the film's soundtrack  to #1, and blew out eardrums last week at  the jam-packed premiere.

The "Twilight" opening is one of the most successful ever recorded for an independent film. The film's average Cinema Score grade was "A-." The audience skewed 75 percent female, and 55 percent of the moviegoers were under the age of 25. According to polling by Fandango.com, 63 percent of the "Twilight" audience plans to see the film again.

The cultural phenomenon simply proved to be too much for Disney's action-hero talking dog  "Bolt,"  whose film of the same name earned itself a disappointing $27 million. The movie, which features the vocal talents of  John Travolta  and  Miley Cyrus, was expected to open stronger but may have been caught up in the "Twilight" crossfire, as both films were counting heavily on attracting a teen audience.

The bad news for "Bolt" was good news for Bond, James Bond. In its second weekend, 007's  "Quantum of Solace"  was able to shake and stir $27.4 million from the box office, giving it a whisker-thin lead over the Disney flick for second place. With the gap between the two films being so close, however, the official silver medalist might not be sorted out for a few days.

Similarly holding strong in their follow-up weekends were the Ben Stiller cartoon"Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa"  ($16 million) and the  Paul Rudd/  Seann William Scott  comedy  "Role Models"  ($7.2 million). Other films filling out the top 10 were"Changeling"  ($2.6 million),  "High School Musical 3"  ($2 million) and  "The Secret Life of Bees"  ($1.2 million). Looking past "Twilight," however, the most eyebrows may have been raised by limited-release Oscar hopefuls  "The Boy in the Striped Pajamas"  ($1.6 million, ninth place) and Danny Boyle's "Slumdog Millionaire,"which should enter the top 10 next week after pulling in a huge per-screen average of $31,063 — nearly 50 percent more than the enormous total for "Twilight."

Entry #554

Vision

Sunday 11-23-08

189, 145, 700, 786, 67X, 37X, 17X, 444

308, 359, 398, 336, 881, 393, 848, 555

394, 219, 1727, 7276, 1894, 1445, 1118

Entry #553

Daily Quote

Enjoy the little things, for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things.
                                                                                            — Robert Brault

Entry #552

SAG Seek Strike Authorization Vote

Screen Actors Guild to seek strike authorization vote

09:55 AM PT, Nov 22 2008

The Screen Actors Guild said early this morning that it would seek a strike authorization vote from members after last-ditch efforts by a federal mediator to end a months-long stalemate in contract negotiations with the major studios sputtered.

"Management continues to insist on terms we cannot possibly accept on behalf of our members," the union said in a statement. "We remain committed to avoiding a strike but now more than ever we cannot allow our employers to experiment with our careers."

SAG, which represents 120,000 actors, said it would now begin a "full-scale education campaign" in support of a strike referendum, in which members would be asked to authorize a strike should their negotiators fail to reach a deal with the studios.

SAG members have been without a contact since June 30 and are sharply at odds with the studios over how actors are to be paid for work distributed over the Internet.

The guild's announcement came shortly after the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which negotiates on behalf of the major Hollywood studios, disclosed that the "parties were unable to reach an agreement" and that the mediator had "adjourned the process" after two days of meetings.

The outcome was not unexpected. Few pinned much hope that federal mediator Juan Carlos Gonzalez would be able to bridge the enormous gap between the parties. Gonzalez also was unable to mediate a contract dispute last year between writers and the studios.

What's more, the union's 71-member national board previously gave the guild's negotiating committee authority to seek a strike vote in the event that mediation efforts failed. Ultimately, the board will have final say on whether to call an actual walkout, which would shut down most major film and TV production. It's unclear whether newly elected moderates on the national board would seek to block such a drastic action.

Actors previously struck in 2000 in a six-month walkout over a commercials contract. If SAG strikes this time, it probably wouldn't be until early next year. A strike referendum takes several weeks and would probably not occur until after the guild conducts an aggressive campaign to muster support. SAG leaders are expected to time any walkout to disrupt the upcoming Academy Awards and Golden Globe award shows early next year and studio plans to ramp up production on movies set for release in 2010.

It is not uncommon for unions to seek such votes as a way to gain leverage in contract negotiations on the theory that employers would be more inclined to take their demands seriously when confronted with the threat of walkout.

But securing such a vote in the current climate could be difficult for SAG. The referendum would require 75% approval from members who vote in order to pass. Although union members typically grant strike authorizations to leaders in negotiations, that could be a difficult threshold to meet given the deteriorating economy and strike fatigue after a 100-day walkout earlier this year by the Writers Guild of America.

During meetings Thursday and Friday, Gonzalez expressed frustration that neither side appeared to back down from its positions. Among the chief sticking points is SAG's insistence that it should have jurisdiction over all shows created for the Internet, regardless of budget. The studios said that would limit their ability to experiment in new media and instead proposed limiting contracts only to shows above certain budgets levels or when professional actors are hired. They argued that SAG should accept the same new-media pay framework already negotiated by five other unions, including the smaller sister union the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and the WGA.

The studios have repeatedly touted how actors were losing out on contract gains negotiated by the other unions. But that argument came under fire this week when the WGA accused the studios of reneging on some of the key terms of its contract negotiated in February -- a point that was seized on by SAG in its statement.

The AMPTP had no immediate response.

Entry #551

3 Houston Officers Taken Off Street

3 Houston officers taken off street after claims of beating

  • Story Highlights
  • Bacilio Guzman, Gilberto Cruz, Matthew Marin get desk jobs amid inquiry
  • Marvin Driver Jr., father of Packers wide receiver Donald Driver, still in hospital
  • Driver said to have been beaten by officers during arrest for traffic warrants
  • Officers' fates will be decided after internal affairs inquiry, police chief says

(CNN) -- Three police officers in Houston, Texas, have been temporarily transferred from patrol duty to desk jobs after claims of assault against the father of Green Bay Packers wide receiver Donald Driver, authorities said Friday.

The fates of police officers Bacilio Guzman, Gilberto Cruz and Matthew Marin will be decided based on the findings of the department's internal affairs division, Police Chief Harold Hurtt said in a statement.

Marvin Driver Jr. was said to have been beaten early Monday as police were arresting him for outstanding traffic warrants. His relatives had asked that the officers accused in the incident be suspended or placed on administrative leave.

"Investigators are awaiting medical reports on Mr. Driver to determine what injuries he sustained," Hurtt said. "We take allegations such as these very seriously and will conduct a thorough investigation into the matter and be transparent in our findings, whatever the conclusion."

Driver was in good condition Friday at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center, a spokeswoman said.

"Chief Harold Hurtt took a positive step in the right direction today by removing those officers from the streets," community activist Quanell Evans, who identifies himself as Quanell X, said Friday afternoon.

"We believe it's in the best interest of this community until the conclusion of this IAD investigation that these officers not be allowed to patrol this area."

Evans did not mention the officers by name but placed more blame for the incident on the first two officers who arrived at the scene. The third man, he said, "was extremely concerned about the well-being of Mr. Driver."

"He wanted nothing to do with what had happened to him, but he wanted to make sure that he received medical treatment," Evans said. "And that is the officer that we believe has already spoken up, that resulted in these officers being removed from the street today."

Evans said Driver has been able to describe his experience in detail to investigators and his family.

Evans said doctors were still assessing Marvin Driver's condition, which the family described as blunt-force trauma.

"Right now, he's still in a lot of pain," Driver's sister, Mary Ann, said Friday.

One of Driver's sons, Michael, has said he thinks his father was beaten because he is black. According to family members, the officers stopped Driver in front of his mother's home, where an argument took place between relatives and police.

The officers explained to the family that Driver was being taken to jail for the outstanding warrants, relatives said.

Evans said paramedics told him that when they picked up Driver at the jail, he was injured, semiconscious and unresponsive.

Entry #550

Tennis Great Jimmy Connors Arrested Outside UCSB and UNC Game

Posted: Saturday November 22, 2008 10:56AM; Updated: Saturday November 22, 2008 11:41AM

Jimmy Connors arrested in Santa Barbara

SANTA BARBARA, California (AP) -- Tennis great Jimmy Connors was arrested outside the campus arena where UC Santa Barbara and top-ranked North Carolina were playing a basketball game.

The eight-time Grand Slam champion was taken into custody Friday night after refusing to comply with an order to leave an area near the entrance of the Thunderdome following a confrontation, police Sgt. Dan Massey said in a statement.

A police dispatcher said Connors was arrested at the beginning of the game.

A Santa Barbara County jail employee said Connors was booked and released but did not have details.

Connors could not immediately be reached for comment early Saturday.

Connors lives in the Santa Barbara area and attends a handful of the Gauchos' games each season.

Connors was ranked No. 1 for five consecutive years in the 1970s, and had a fiery temperament on the court. Earlier this year, he resigned as Andy Roddick's coach after working together for nearly two years.

Entry #549

Thunder Fire Carlesimo After 1-12 Start

Thunder fire coach P.J. Carlesimo after 1-12 start

 

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The Oklahoma City Thunder fired coach P.J. Carlesimo, with the team off to an NBA-worst 1-12 start in its new city.

Assistant Scott Brooks was appointed interim coach Saturday, hours after the Thunder lost their 10th straight game.

"This was a very difficult decision to make," general manager Sam Presti said in a statement. "It is one that I felt was necessary at this time. I am very appreciative of the hard work and effort that P.J. gave to this team and we wish him the best in his future endeavors."

The firing — the first of an NBA coach this season — followed a 105-80 defeat to the New Orleans Hornets on Friday night. The Hornets played for two seasons in Oklahoma City and rebuilt themselves into a playoff contender. A similar scenario hardly seemed in the making following the relocation of the Seattle SuperSonics to Oklahoma City.

Brooks' debut was to come Saturday night in a rematch against the Hornets in New Orleans.

The Thunder also let go assistant coach Paul Westhead, who led the Phoenix Mercury to the 2007 WNBA title. He had successful stay at Loyola Marymount in a coaching career spanning more than 30 years.

Brooks, an 11-year NBA veteran, played on the Houston Rockets' 1994 NBA championship team and bounced around with seven teams before becoming a Denver Nuggets assistant in 2003. Brooks also worked for the Sacramento Kings and joined Carlesimo's staff last season in Seattle.

Carlesimo had questioned his team in recent games for failing to give full effort, performances resulting in a string of blowouts.

The last six losses were by double-digits, and most of those were even more out of hand before the Thunder rallied. The Hornets were up 32 in the opening minute of the fourth quarter, and stars Chris Paul and David West joined the rest of the starters on the bench.

Many fans also called it an early night, leaving the stands mostly empty by the time the final horn sounded. Despite the team's full allotment of season tickets selling out in five days, only three of the eight home games have sold out so far — opening night, a visit from the NBA champion Boston Celtics and the return of the beloved Hornets.

This marks the second time Carlesimo has been fired early in a season. He took the Portland Trail Blazers to three straight playoff appearances in the 1990s before moving to Golden State. His time there was marked by the Latrell Sprewell choking episode during his first season with the team. He was fired after a 6-21 start in 2000, his third season.

He got another chance after serving as an assistant on three NBA championship teams with the San Antonio Spurs, whom Thunder owner Clay Bennett once represented on the Board of Governors.

In Oklahoma City, this was expected to be another season of rebuilding around Rookie of the Year Kevin Durant and fellow All-Rookie Team selection Jeff Green. Veterans Desmond Mason and Joe Smith were brought in to provide leadership, and salary flexibility following this season, and the team added No. 4 overall pick Russell Westbrook as another potential building block.

But the result was an even slower start than last season, when the SuperSonics lost their first eight games before winning two straight. That season, which featured all the wrangling about a potential move to Oklahoma City, ended with a franchise-worst 20 wins.

Presti stuck with Carlesimo after that season, but it didn't last long. Carlesimo finished with a 21-74 record in just more than one season with the franchise.

Entry #548

SC Pick 3

Evening 11-22-08 Evening

** until 11-26-08 **

071, 172, 273, 374, 475, 576, 778, 879

170, 271, 372, 473, 574, 675, 877, 978

 Thanksgiving Leaves

Entry #547

Teen Commits Suicide w/Live Web Audience

Fla. teen commits suicide with live Web audience
Nov 21 06:28 PM US/Eastern
By RASHA MADKOUR
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI (AP) - A college student committed suicide by taking a drug overdose in front of a live webcam as some computer users egged him on, others tried to talk him out of it, and another messaged OMG in horror when it became clear it was no joke.

Some watchers contacted the Web site to notify police, but by the time officers entered Abraham Biggs' home—a scene also captured on the Internet—it was too late.

Biggs, a 19-year-old Broward College student who suffered from what his family said was bipolar disorder, or manic depression, lay dead on his bed in his father's Pembroke Pines house Wednesday afternoon, the camera still running 12 hours after Biggs announced his intentions online around 3 a.m.

It was unclear how many people watched it unfold.

Biggs was not the first person to commit suicide with a webcam rolling. But the drawn-out drama—and the reaction of those watching—was seen as an extreme example of young people's penchant for sharing intimate details about themselves over the Internet.

Biggs' family was infuriated that no one acted sooner to save him, neither the viewers nor the Web site that hosted the live video, Justin.tv. The Web site shows a video image, with a space alongside where computer users can instantly post comments.

Only when police arrived did the Web feed stop, "so that's 12 hours of watching," said the victim's sister, Rosalind Bigg. "They got hits, they got viewers, nothing happened for hours."

She added: "It didn't have to be."

An autopsy concluded Biggs died from a combination of opiates and benzodiazepine, which his family said was prescribed for his bipolar disorder.

Biggs announced his plans to kill himself over a Web site for bodybuilders, authorities said. But some users told investigators they did not take him seriously because he had threatened suicide on the site before.

Some members of his virtual audience encouraged him to do it, others tried to talk him out of it, and some discussed whether he was taking a dose big enough to kill himself, said Wendy Crane, an investigator with the Broward County medical examiner's office.

A computer user who claimed to have watched said that after swallowing some pills, Biggs went to sleep and appeared to be breathing for a few hours while others cracked jokes.

Someone notified the moderator of the bodybuilding site, who traced Biggs' location and called police, Crane said.

As police entered the room, the audience's reaction was filled with Internet shorthand: "OMFG," one wrote, meaning "Oh, my God." Others, either not knowing what they were seeing, or not caring, wrote "lol," which means "laughing out loud," and "hahahah."

An online video purportedly from Biggs' webcam shows a gun-wielding officer entering a bedroom, where a man is lying on a bed, his face turned away from the camera. The officer begins to examine him, as the camera lens is covered. Authorities could not immediately verify the authenticity of the video, though it matched their description of what occurred.

Montana Miller, an assistant professor of popular culture at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, said Biggs' very public suicide was not shocking, given the way teenagers chronicle every facet of their lives on sites like Facebook and MySpace.

"If it's not recorded or documented then it doesn't even seem worthwhile," she said. "For today's generation it might seem, `What's the point of doing it if everyone isn't going to see it?'"

She likened Biggs' death to other public ways of committing suicide, like jumping off a bridge.

Crane said she knows of a case in which a Florida man shot himself in the head in front of an online audience, though she didn't know how much viewers saw. In Britain last year, a man hanged himself while chatting online.

In a statement, Justin.tv CEO Michael Seibel said: "We regret that this has occurred and want to respect the privacy of the broadcaster and his family during this time."

The Web site would not say how many people were watching the broadcast. The site as a whole had 672,000 unique visitors in October, according to Nielsen.

Miami lawyer William Hill said there is probably nothing that could be done legally to those who watched and did not act. As for whether the Web site could be held liable, Hill said there doesn't seem to be much of a case for negligence.

"There could conceivably be some liability if they knew this was happening and they had some ability to intervene and didn't take action," said Hill, who does business litigation and has represented a number of Internet-based clients. But "I think it would be a stretch."

Condolences poured into Biggs' MySpace page, where the mostly unsmiling teen is seen posing in a series of pictures with various young women. On the bodybuilding Web site, Biggs used the screen name CandyJunkie. His Justin.tv alias was "feels_like_ecstacy."

Rosalind Bigg described her brother as an outgoing person who struck up conversations with Starbucks baristas and enjoyed taking his young nieces to Chuck E. Cheese. He was health-conscious and exercised but was not a bodybuilder, she said.

"This is very, very sudden and unexpected for us," the sister said. "It boggles the mind. We don't understand."

Entry #546

Vision

Friday 11-21-08

632, 932, 566, 556, 526, 596, 106, 000, 130

706, 605, 342, 2660, 2844, 2111, 1122, 5577

Entry #545