Sunday, March 31, 2013

Swiss court jails "healer" for infecting 16 with HIV

ZURICH (Reuters) - A self-styled healer was sentenced to 12 years and nine months in jail on Friday after a Swiss court found the acupuncturist guilty of infecting 16 people with HIV.


A Berne court found the man guilty of causing bodily harm and spreading the virus which can cause Aids, court secretary Rene Graf told Reuters. He did not give any further details.


Prosecutors had sought a sentence of 15 years in jail, according to media reports.


"The accused and nobody else is responsible for infecting the 16 people," Swiss news agency SDA quoted court president Urs Herren as saying, adding the man's motive could have been to seek attention, exact revenge, or prove his omnipotence.


The 54-year-old from the Swiss capital Berne had consistently denied the charges, blaming the victims for contracting HIV through unprotected sex and intravenous drug use, Swiss media reported.


They did not reveal the man's identity or nationality, in accordance with rules on Swiss criminal proceedings.


The case came to the attention of the authorities after an HIV-positive patient told a hospital he suspected his infection was linked to acupuncture treatments he received from the man.


The majority of the infected individuals were students of a music school run by the man, who also had an acupuncture practice. Some of the victims told the court he stabbed them with a needle from behind during treatment, SDA reported.


Police stormed the man's home a week ago after he stopped coming to the trial. The man, who was free on bail, had barricaded himself inside and was armed with a knife, issuing threats to police, according to media reports.


(Reporting by Emma Thomasson; Editing by Clelia Oziel)


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Woman’s house burned down by snake she set on fire

 

One woman’s extreme reaction to finding a snake in her yard backfired in tragic fashion. After being set on fire, the flaming snake caused the woman’s home to burn down.


KSLA News reports that the house fire started in Bowie County, Texas, when the snake’s burning body came into contact with a nearby pile of brush.


“While cleaning up, she saw a snake, threw gasoline on the snake, lit the snake on fire,” Bowie County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Randall Baggett told the station. “The snake went into the brush pile, and the brush pile caught the home on fire.”


Oddly enough, a local fire department official says the incident isn’t as unique as one might think.


"Yes, it could happen with rabbits and big field mice,” Liberty Eylau Fire Chief David Wesslehoft told the station. “Once they start burning the grass, they get out of their hole. They have been known to catch fire and then take off."


Naturally, we prefer stories in which the nonhuman players are the heroes, not the victims. For instance, in December, one alert chicken reportedly saved the life of its owners when its clucking woke them up during a fire. Or, the hero rabbit that saved a family when their house went up in flames.


The resulting fire at the Texas home was so intense it completely destroyed the home and even burned part of the neighbor’s house. Even worse for the homeowner, local authorities reserve the right to file charges against her.


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Ukraine capital struggling with snow, scandal

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — residents of Ukraine capital suspect that the city is trying to pull a fast one over his efforts to clean up from a paralyzing blizzard on them.

A photo that appeared on the Web site of the Kiev administration Sunday after a snowfall of 20 inches (50 centimeters) shows three Snowplow clearing a road.

The trouble is — the road is actually in Moscow.

The Russian news agency ITAR-Tass said Monday that the Agency was a picture taken last November and retouched to remove the name of Russian Snowplow operator.

Kiev City Administration spokeswoman Kateryna Baranova said that the photo was a "regrettable technical error", but did not elaborate.

The photo has been removed from the site, but not before some frame grabs of it was posted on Facebook, prompting comments like "shame".


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Saturday, March 30, 2013

Police: Man found in cockpit at Philly airport

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A 61-year-old French man was arrested at Philadelphia International Airport and charged with impersonating a pilot after airline officials found him in the cockpit of a plane scheduled for takeoff, police said Friday.


The crew of a US Airways flight bound for West Palm Beach, Fla., found Philippe Jernnard of La Rochelle, France, in the jump seat behind the pilot on Wednesday evening and removed him after he became argumentative, police said.


Jernnard, who was a ticketed passenger, was wearing a white shirt with an Air France logo and had a black jacket with epaulets on the shoulders, police said. Officer Christine O'Brien said police also found him in possession of a counterfeit Air France crew member ID card.


It's not clear how Jernnard got into the cockpit, but police said there's no indication he meant any harm. A US Airways spokeswoman referred questions to the FBI, which confirmed it is investigating but declined to comment Friday.


O'Brien said Jernnard initially became upset at the gate when he asked to be upgraded to business class.


"The (US Airways) employee gate agent told the male there was no space left in business class. He became irate," then boarded the plane, O'Brien said.


Jernnard was charged with criminal trespass, forgery, records tampering, false impersonation of a person privately employed, and providing false identification to law enforcement. He remained behind bars pending a preliminary hearing scheduled for April 5. Federal charges are also expected.


Jernnard is represented by the Philadelphia public defender's office, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


In France, police in La Rochelle as well as the national police declined to comment, saying they are not allowed to disclose information about individuals.


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Goblin-proof chicken book wins odd-title prize

LONDON (AP) — A supernaturally tinged barnyard manual has won Britain's quirkiest literary award, the Diagram Prize for year's oddest book title.


"Goblinproofing One's Chicken Coop" by Reginald Bakeley was awarded the prize Friday by trade magazine The Bookseller.


The book took 38 percent of the votes in a public ballot, beating finalists including "How Tea Cosies Changed the World," ''Was Hitler Ill?" and "God's Doodle: The Life and Times of the Penis."


"Goblinproofing One's Chicken Coop" is subtitled "and other practical advice in our campaign against the fairy kingdom." It is described by its Massachusetts-based publisher, Conari Press, as "the essential primer for banishing the dark fairy creatures that are lurking in the dark corners and crevices of your life."


Diagram Prize overseer Horace Bent said it was no coincidence "in these austere times that a book aimed to assist members of the public frugally farming their own produce proved the most popular title."


The book's editor, Clint Marsh, said he and the author were honored to receive a prize that "celebrates the playfulness that is at the heart of much of the world's best book publishing."


"Reginald and I take this as a clear sign that people have had enough of goblins in their chicken coops," he said. "Our campaign against the fairy kingdom continues."


The prize was founded in 1978. Its rules say the books must be serious and their titles not merely a gimmick.


Previous winners of the quirky prize include "Bombproof Your Horse," ''Living With Crazy Buttocks" and "Managing a Dental Practice: The Genghis Khan Way."


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Friday, March 29, 2013

Groundhog Phil a furry felon over false forecast

CINCINNATI (AP) — A shadow of a different kind is hanging over Punxsutawney Phil.


Authorities in still-frigid Ohio have issued an "indictment" against the famed groundhog, who predicted an early spring when he didn't see his shadow after emerging from his lair in western Pennsylvania on Feb. 2.


Spring arrived Wednesday, and temperatures are still hovering in the 30s in the Buckeye state and much of the Northeast. While it's not the coldest spring on record, it's a good 5 degrees below normal, said Don Hughes, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Wilmington, Ohio.


So the heat is on against Phil, and the furry rodent has been charged with misrepresentation of spring, a felony "against the peace and dignity of the state of Ohio," wrote prosecutor Mike Gmoser in an official-looking indictment.


"Punxsutawney Phil did purposely, and with prior calculation and design, cause the people to believe that spring would come early," Gmoser declared.


So what's the penalty?


Death, Gmoser said, tongue firmly in cheek.


That's "very harsh," given the nature of the allegations, said Bill Deeley, president of the Punxsutawney club that organizes Groundhog Day.


The backlash to Phil's dead-wrong prognostication has not gone unnoticed in and around his hometown of Gobbler's Knob, Deeley said, and security precautions are in place.


"Right next to where Phil stays is the police station," he said. "They've been notified, and they said they will keep watching their monitors."


The chubby-cheeked animal also has his defenders. "Phree Phil!" declared one supporter on his Facebook page. "We're with you, Phil," wrote another.


As for spring, there's no relief in sight from the wintry conditions. A storm moving into the region Sunday could bring between 4 and 8 inches of snow, said meteorologist Hughes.


That might be particularly hard to swallow after last spring, when the U.S. saw the warmest March in recorded history.


While Gmoser's indictment made no mention of any co-conspirators in the false early spring prediction, the state's own groundhog forecaster, Buckeye Chuck, also failed to see his shadow when he emerged from his burrow.


___


Scolforo reported from Harrisburg, Pa.


Follow Amanda Lee Myers on Twitter at https://twitter.com/AmandaLeeAP


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Cobra Commander launches Kickstarter campaign

The new trailer for Brad Pitt's long-in-the-works zombie flick, World War Z, features a lot of Brad Pitt—and his flowing mane—trying to figure out how to battle the swarms of nondescript zombies we've seen in earlier trailers. In this refreshed look (watch the full clip below), we see Pitt asking a lot of questions about how to target the creatures and how to get into Russia, while they do things like attack planes (in a scene that Entertainment Weekly points out will seem familiar if you've seen some of the newest Iron Man trailers). ...


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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Deputy Sheriff fights alligator from middle school

Jessica McGregor and the alligator has caught (Sheriff's Office Lake County)

Florida Sheriff's Deputy took matters into their own hands last week when was spotted a seven-foot alligator trying to break through the fence of a local middle school.

Jessica McGregor, Deputy Sheriff of Lake County, a 29-year-old mother of two, has answered the call, fashioned a noose from a 30 foot rope and "saw the would-be attacker," the Orlando Sentinel reports.

"I got it turned around, and began to spin and jump and flop," McGregor told the newspaper. "Once he got tired, he just laid there and wiggled his tail. I threw the rope above him and fall down with your knees behind the front legs. He jerked around a bit and just gave up.

The Congressman, who said she and her brother used to catch alligators for fun, explained that she didn't want to wait the two hours estimated for the professional trapper arrive.

"I lived in Lake County my entire life," McGregor told the newspaper. "Back in the day, you've got these things come on your land, and just took 'em and 'em threw back into the nearest drinker."

Not a big deal.

While alligator encounters are common in the State, attacks are less and even then are rarely fatal. Still, it can be frightening. Last summer, two teenagers in Florida were attacked by alligators in a span of five days. One of them lost the bottom half of his right arm in the near-fatal encounter.


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UK-Odd Lmbo

Punxsutawney Phil, accused of fraud for weather in early spring

CLEVELAND (Reuters)-with a snowstorm predicted to batter the Plains, the Midwest and the East Coast this weekend, an Ohio Prosecutor spring-deprived is taking his frustration with the long winter on a famous prognosticating Groundhog. "I decided it was about time we accused of fraud afor Punxsutawney Phil," said Mike Gmoser, Attorney of Butler County, Ohio, in an interview on Friday.

Harvard stripped of titles quiz tournament

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts (Reuters)-Harvard University will be stripped of four national quiz Championship titles after the organizers found a competitor of Ivy League school improperly accessed information on the questions used in the tournament. The national academic Quiz tournaments said that a security review found that Harvard competitor Andy Watkins access pages on its website just before the administrative 2009, 2010 and 2011 Intercollegiate championship tournaments or "Quiz Bowl".

Petition to 100,000 segno ex-Portuguese PM Socrates to keep out TV

Lisbon (Reuters)-Portuguese State television RTP channel to give former premier Jose Socrates a commentary spot week sparked outrage, with 100,000 people signing a petition citing his "mismanagement" that led the country to pick up a save in 2011. "We, citizens and taxpayers, declare that we reject the presence of former Prime Minister Jose Socrates on any program to RTP television paid for by public funds of taxpayers suffering from mismanagement of this gentleman," said the petition.

Swiss court jails "healer" to infect with HIV 16

Zurich (Reuters)-a self-styled healer was sentenced to 12 years and nine months in prison on Friday after a Swiss Court convicted the acupuncturist of 16 people with HIV to infect. A court in Bern have found the man guilty of causing bodily harm and spread of the virus that can cause Aids, the Court Secretary Rene Graf told Reuters. He did not give further details.

Tunisian Rapper gets jail time for police dogs called in song

Tunis (Reuters)-a Tunisian Court has convicted a rap singer to two years in prison in absentia for insulting police in a case likely to fuel debate over free speech under the Islamist Government. The singer, known as el Weld 15, is on the run. Two of his associates, Mohamed Hedi Belgueyed singers and Sabrine Klibi, were in court when they received suspended sentences of six months each, a source of the Ministry of Justice said Friday.

Russian serial killer sentenced to life for nine murders

Moscow (Reuters)-a Russian serial killer who slaughtered his nine victims with a knife and hammer and said he ate the hearts of two of them, was sentenced to life imprisonment on Friday. Prosecutors said Alexander Bychkov targeted alcoholics and the homeless out of contempt for their way of life, li has lured in deserted areas, killed, dismembered them and hid the body parts.

Instruction manual "goblinproofing" chicken coops named Oddest Book Title

London (Reuters)-a book that offers tips on how to protect the henhouses from Goblin Oddest title won Book of the Year award, the organisers of the contest said Friday. "Goblinproofing's a chicken coop" by Reginald Bakeley and Clint Marsh attracted 38 percent of online votes for 1,225 beat craft manual "Like tea Cosies changed the world" with 31 percent to win the annual diagram Prize 35a.

Yoko Ono tweets against guns showing bloody Lennon glasses

NEW YORK (Reuters)-Yoko Ono took up arms against gun violence with a raft of Twitter postings, including a photo of the blood-stained glass apparently worn by John Lennon when he was shot and killed more than 30 years ago. "Beyond 1,057,000 people were killed by firearms in the United States since John Lennon was shot and killed on December 8, 1980," Ono, the widow of the former Beatle Twitter.

Would-be thieves camped over the Toronto area Bank

TORONTO (Reuters)-Toronto-area police say they have foiled a robbery in Hollywood style, arresting five men they say camped out in vacant office space over a branch of the Bank and, under cover of night, cut through a thick concrete ceiling to access the underlying crypt. Halton Regional Police arrested men with C $ 300,000 (055.28, 193 pounds) seized in two hockey bags after they were discovered hiding in a field not far from a branch of the Toronto-Dominion Bank in Burlington, Ontario.

Museo Cancels heavy metal concert, fearing noise damage

London (Reuters)-the Victoria and Albert Museum (V &) has cancelled an experimental concert extreme metal band Napalm Death, fearing that the noise could harm the building 104-year-old. Ceramic artist Keith Harrison from V &, the world's largest Museum of decorative arts and design, he has worked with Napalm Death on a set to be played through a sculptural sound system that disintegrerebbe under stress of decibels.


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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

North Korean leader Kim praises military sings, oungum-style

SEOUL (Reuters)-forget "Hail to the Chief". In North Korea, the army sing their Praises leaders with a chorus of "we'll defend Gen. Kim Jong-un at the Cost of Our Lives", or the catchy accordion and Tap Dancing tune, "The Naval port in the evening".

Kim, the third of his rule in North Korea, praised musical instruments made from 1.2 million-strong army of the North on Sunday, the State News Agency KCNA reported.

Tensions have risen on the Korean peninsula as new UN sanctions were imposed after the North carried out its third nuclear test in February. Pyongyang has threatened to destroy the United States with nuclear weapons, bombing its bases Pacific and South Korea by shell in response.

Putting aside the rhetoric rising, Kim inspected guitars and drums made by the army and said it was important to make the quality tools so soldiers could "spend their days worth in the army filled with joy and militant optimism," said the KCNA.

Kim, "Supreme Commander" of the North's armed forces, inspected also coats for students at the best military schools in the country and suggested improvements, the KCNA reported.

According to independent observers, huge North Korea's military, believed to be the fourth largest in the world, spend most of their time in activities such as manufacture or for fishing for crabs because Drills are too expensive for the country impoverished and need feeding.

Kim field guide follows the example of his father, Kim Jong-il, who gave advice to factories and farmers, as well as the army.

Kim Jong-un, 30, still has some way to go in emulating the accomplishments reported by his father.

Feats of his father, according to the KCNA, including inventing the oungum, a musical instrument like banjo that is "popular" in North Korea and scored 11 holes-in-one in a single round of golf.

(Reporting by Somang Yang; Editing by Paul Tait)


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100,000 Portuguese sign petition to keep ex-PM Socrates off TV

LISBON (Reuters) - Portuguese state television channel RTP's plan to give former premier Jose Socrates a weekly commentary spot has sparked outrage, with 100,000 people signing a petition citing his "bad management" that led the country to take a bailout in 2011.


"We, citizens and tax-payers, declare that we reject the presence of former Prime Minister Jose Socrates on any programme at RTP, television paid for by public funds of taxpayers suffering from the bad management of this gentleman," the Internet petition said.


Many comments said the plan was "shameful".


A counter-petition in favour of Socrates' TV commentary, to start next month, and defending the democratic right to free expression, garnered around 5,300 signatures on Friday.


That view was also backed by RTP director Paulo Ferreira who said he understood the controversy but "the pluralism of opinions in public media" was an important democratic principle.


He would not reveal the details of the deal, but Diario de Noticias newspaper said Socrates would be working for free.


By gathering more than 4,000 signatures, both petitions will have to be discussed by parliament.


Socrates' Socialist government collapsed two years ago amid an escalating debt crisis, and one of his last decisions was to request a bailout from the European Union and IMF, forcing the country to implement tough austerity and structural reforms.


Since then, Socrates has mostly lived in Paris, attending a university course.


The big tax hikes and spending cuts applied by the present centre-right government of Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho as part of the bailout have pushed the country into its deepest recession since the 1970s and brought the new administration's popularity down towards record lows.


Although the main opposition Socialists are ahead in opinion polls, many Portuguese still associate them with the bailout and the party has largely failed to capitalise on the disappointment with the new administration. Opinion polls show the Socialists would not be able to form a majority government.


(Reporting By Andrei Khalip; Editing by Hugh Lawson)


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"Panda-monium" as giant pandas arrive in Canada from China

By Fred Thornhill

TORONTO (Reuters)-Canada has an international flavour Panda diplomacy Monday with the arrival of two "very important Pandas" at the start of a 10-year loan of two Canadian zoos.

Speaking as the two giant Pandas arrived in Toronto from China, Chinese Ambassador Zhang Junsai-that animals were given the designation of VIP-noted that when he started his speech in Canada two years ago, was greeted only by Canada of the Protocol.

But the pair of pandas, Er Shun, and Mao, 5 4, earned a personal welcome by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who has reached an agreement for the loan of pandas during a visit to China last year.

"I am delighted to officially welcome you to Canada ... a couple of China's national treasures," Harper said at the airport.

Officials hope that Er Shun, who is female, and by Mao, who is male, will partner during five years in Toronto and the next five years in Calgary, Alberta, to produce the first Canadian panda Cubs.

"China wants to be known for other than economic skills," Gordon Houlden, Director of the China Institute at the University of Alberta, told CTV television. "This helps serve that purpose."

China has often lent pandas to foreign zoos, in offerings that can be profitable for both parties. Fees paid by host countries Fund help panda research in China, but zoos hope to recover that extra visitors.

Other costs include large quantities of bamboo that you eat the two Panda-pass from 10 to 16 hours a day eating 20 to 14 kg (31-44 lbs) of bamboo.

FedEx Corp., which flew the pandas in Canada from China, will fly in 600 to 900 kilograms (1,320 to 1,980 pounds) of bamboo each week by the Memphis Zoo in Tennessee because "Pandas are picky eaters," he said.

(Written by Randall Palmer; Editing by Sandra Maler)


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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Soldier’s cat makes perilous journey from Afghanistan to Oregon

A decorated veteran took quite a risk in getting his new friend from the sandbox to the litter box.


And along the way, Staff Sgt. Jesse Knott found an unlikely ally in his elaborate plan to evacuate his adopted cat from the war zone in Afghanistan.


In an interview with KPTV, Knott explains that he met his pet cat, Koshka, at his base of operations inside the war-torn country. Koshka was a stray cat, serving a practical purpose as the unofficial mouse catcher. At first glance, Koshka was the "purrfect" weapon.


However, not having a real owner, the cat was often subjected to neglect and cruelty.


"He was showing some signs that people weren't taking very good care of him," Knott said. “I found paint in his fur a couple of times. And then, people took clippers and shaved his back.”


And as Koshka adapted to life inside Knott’s small workspace, the two formed a tight bond. In fact, it was in the aftermath of a bloody battle that Koshka provided Knott with some much-needed solace.


"I'd lost hope in myself. I'd lost faith. Then all of a sudden this cat came over, and it was like ‘hey, you are you,'" he said.


But that same act of kindness made it clear to Knott that if he wanted to do what was best for Koshka, then he had to get his beloved cat out of Afghanistan and to his family home in Oregon.


"He pulled me out of one of my darkest times, so I had to pull him out of one of his darkest places," he told the station.


That’s when Knott staged an elaborate and risky evacuation plan for his cat. First, he enlisted the help of a local Afghan interpreter who transported the cat to Kabul.


Both the cat and the interpreter were at risk. Knott had to trust that the man would take care of the cat, but he also knew that if the man were discovered to be helping an American, his own life would be at risk.


"The risk to him was immense," Knott said. “This is a cat with a purple collar and an American-brand cat carrier, going halfway across Afghanistan. Going across God knows how many Taliban checkpoints.”


But the interpreter did eventually get Koshka to the airport in Kabul. From there, Knott’s family spent $3,000 to fly Koshka to Oregon, detouring through Islamabad, Pakistan, and New York City.


Knott himself has since left Afghanistan and is now stationed in Washington state. His service in the military will soon be over, and he says he can’t wait to be permanently reunited with the animal that meant so much to him during a time of physical and emotional vulnerability.


"He was my saving grace," Knott told KPTV. "He kept me alive during that tour."


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Punxsutawney Phil 'indicted' over spring forecast

CINCINNATI (AP) — Famed groundhog Punxsutawney Phil might want to go back into hibernation.


Authorities in still-frigid Ohio have issued an "indictment" of the furry rodent, who predicted an early spring when he didn't see his shadow after emerging from his western Pennsylvania lair on Feb. 2.


"Punxsutawney Phil did purposely, and with prior calculation and design, cause the people to believe that spring would come early," Mike Gmoser, the prosecutor in southwestern Ohio's Butler County, wrote in an official-looking indictment.


Gmoser wrote that Punxsutawney Phil is charged with misrepresentation of spring, which constitutes a felony "against the peace and dignity of the state of Ohio."


The penalty Phil faces? Gmoser says — tongue firmly in cheek — is death.


Punxsutawney Phil does not have a listed phone number.


Bill Deeley, president of the Punxsutawney club that organizes Groundhog Day, said Phil has a lawyer and would fight any extradition attempt by Ohio authorities.


Deeley defended his fur-bearing associate and said the death penalty was "very harsh" given the nature of the allegations.


"We'll have to plead our case one way or the other, but I think we can beat the rap," Deeley said.


The vitriolic backlash on social media to Phil's dead-wrong prognostication has not gone unnoticed in and around Gobbler's Knob, Deeley said, and special security precautions were in place.


"Right next to where Phil stays is the police station," he said. "They've been notified and they said they will keep watching their monitors."


Winter has been dragging on in the Buckeye State and surrounding areas, with daily high temperatures this week hovering in the mid-30s and no end in sight for about 10 days, said Don Hughes, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Wilmington, Ohio.


A storm moving into the region Sunday could bring between 4 and 8 inches of snow, he said.


"It's taking too long," Hughes said, adding that he's hearing plenty of complaints from colleagues and neighbors about the late spring. "Most people I've talked to say they've had enough. They want spring. They're looking for colors and sunshine and Easter lilies."


The frigid temperatures and snow might be particularly hard to swallow after last spring, when the U.S. saw the warmest March in recorded history. Highs in the Cincinnati area, for instance, were well into the 80s.


Hughes said this spring isn't nearly the coldest on record but that the area is about 5 degrees below normal.


Gmoser's indictment made no mention of a possible co-conspirator in the false prediction of early spring, Ohio's own forecasting groundhog, Buckeye Chuck.


Chuck also failed to see his shadow when he emerged from his burrow on Feb. 2 in Marion in north-central Ohio.


___


Scolforo reported from Harrisburg, Pa.


Follow Amanda Lee Myers on Twitter at https://twitter.com/AmandaLeeAP


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Monday, March 25, 2013

Lick with a kick to offer stamps of Belgium chocolates

Brussels (AP) — feel like having Easter chocolate in Belgium? Well, send a letter and really licking that postmark chocolate flavored.

The Belgian Post Office released 538,000 stamps Monday, after their chocolate pictures on the front, but the essence of cocoa oil the glue on the back for the taste and the ink for odor.

Belgian stamp collector Marie-Claire Verstichel said while the taste was a bit disappointing, "smell good."

Easter is the season for chocolate in Belgium with Easter eggs and bunnies everywhere supermarkets and specialty stores.

A series of five stamps costs $ 6.2 million ($ 8), but could leave a customer hungry for more.


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More people have access to cell phones than toilets

A new United Nations report says that more people have access to more mobile toilets (original, AP images) a new United Nations study found that more people in the world have access to a mobile phone than a working Cabinet.

The study claim numbers of the estimated 7 billion world of 6 billion people have access to mobile phones. However, only 4.5 billion lack access to sanitation.

At a news conference announcing the report, UN Secretary-General Jan Eliasson has announced that the organization is launching a bid to halve the number of those who do not have access by the end of 2015.

"Let's face it, this is a problem that people don't like to talk about. But goes to the heart of ensuring good health, a clean environment and fundamental human dignity for billions of people, "Eliasson said at the press conference.

In August 2012, the Bill Gates Foundation began its effort to "reinvent the toilet" as a way to help curb the number of people worldwide without access to sanitary waste disposal.

Interestingly, the report states that India alone is responsible for 60 percent of the world's population that doesn't use a WC, 626 million individuals estimated. Yet, at the same time, there are an estimated 1 billion handsets in India.

On the contrary, in the most highly populated country in the world, China, only 14 million people lack access to sanitation. However, there are also less mobile phones in China, 986 million, according to the Daily Mail.

Driving the point home, more than 750,000 people die each year from diarrhoea and one of its primary causes is by unsanitary conditions created in the community without access to toilets.

And there are other benefits options installation of sanitation most modern that doesn't immediately come to mind.

"This can also improve the security of women and girls, who are often targeted when they are alone," said Martin Mogwanja, Deputy Executive Director of the children's Fund of the United Nations. And providing secure and private toilets can also help the girls to remain in school, we know that can increase their future earnings and help break the cycle of poverty.


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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Speeding dad Iowa ignores police with baby coming

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — an Iowa man who was pulled over for speeding as he rushed his pregnant wife to the Hospital says he was determined to go ahead in spite of flashing police lights behind him.

Tyler Rathjen designed to move forward as his wife, Ashley, began to give birth to their son in the passenger seat. But a red light with heavy traffic finally forced him to stop.

"I don't have to stop, I'm not going to, I'm going to get to the hospital," Tyler Rathjen recalled thinking in an interview with Cedar Rapids TV station KCRG (http://bit.ly/ZOaOiD).

Head and arms of the child was already out by the time that Iowa City officer Kevin Wolfe has reached the passenger door.

"We were all having a different experience," said Wolfe.

Ashley Rathjen gave to his third son, Owen, a few blocks from Mercy Hospital Iowa City on 10 March.

"I kept saying: there's no breakage (contractions) there is no rupture," he said. "It was coming at that time".

Wolfe helped with the final stages of delivery and then escorted the Williamsburg family in hospital. His dashboard camera captured the incident.

Owen is now home with her parents and two brothers.

Ashley Rathjen said that her infant son will probably tell the story for years to come.

"I'm sure it will be a life story to tell everyone (about) as he made his grand entrance," he said.


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Thief returns $800 from 1980s Michigan burglary

HASTINGS, Mich. (AP) — A burglar expressing guilt about stealing $800 from a western Michigan store three decades ago has repaid the money, plus some interest.


The anonymous thief sent a note and $1,200 in $100 bills to the Barry County sheriff's department in Hastings, and they arrived Monday, WOOD-TV reported (http://bit.ly/WzFNjS ).


The writer admitted breaking into the Middle Mart on Michigan 37 in Thornapple Township north of Middleville about 30 years ago.


In a letter packed with emotion and spelling errors, the writer asks for "help in locating a man" to whom the writer owes the money.


"Anyways, I did a very bad thing that I am shamed of and have lived with this guilt," the writer said. "I can't begin to say how sorry iam but have lived with this guilt too long," the letter went on to say. "If you do find him, please tell him that I was afoolish stupid man when I did that and iam sorrie."


The letter was unsigned and had no return address.


The $1,200, while it includes some interest, falls short of making up for the loss in the dollar's purchasing power over the intervening years. The stolen $800 would be worth about $1,800 today, based on changes in the consumer price index.


WOOD-TV said the former owner of the store, now called Greg's Get-N-Go, confirmed it was broken into in the 1980s. The store was sold in 1988.


Undersheriff Bob Baker said the letter and cash came as quite a surprise.


"This doesn't happen every day," Baker said. He said the department isn't interested in reopening the case because of the time that has passed.


___


Information from: WOOD-TV, http://www.woodtv.com


View the original article here

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Wanted: Scammer who squatted in luxury homes for 5 years

Washington State case in which Jessica Carde allegedly squatted. (County Attorney's Office of the King)

A Seattle woman faces felony charges alleging she played the role of a victim of identity theft and squatted in luxury homes of several million dollars for five years.

Online journal that Seattle PI reports that 58-year-old Jessica Carde is still great while facing 12 felony counts by the Office of the King County Prosecutor.

How, exactly, did the job of his alleged scheme? According to Seattle PI, "Carde presented itself as a wealthy entrepreneur with a significant line of credit that was interested in purchasing a home. ... But when the time came to make a deposit, Carde claimed to have had his identity stolen before pushing towards a lease-purchase.

"Hire-purchase agreements — also known as rent to buy plans — will allow a prospective purchaser to make payments to the homeowner over time," the site has continued. "After it was paid the amount of money, the House is signed for the tenant."

The court documents describe Carde as engaging in "deceptive acts of retaliation against the homeowner to prevent or delay eviction.»

A 2010 survey from MSNBC found that "mansion squatters" have become a significant problem in many large cities in the United States, including Seattle. The problem is that with so many homes in foreclosure thanks to the economic crisis, property managers are often able to closely monitor the houses under their jurisdiction.

Carde, which reportedly presented falsified documents showing that she was prequalified for a mortgage, had fake business cards which contained a mouthful of presumed expertise. He described his professional duties as international speaker, trainer and consultant, personal/professional/executive life coach, neurobiofeedback technical specialist/brain wave, mediation specialist, health educator and instructor. "

Seattle Weekly Profile Cards dating back to May 2011 makes the story even more shocking.

The weekly reported that, according to the financial institutions Department researcher Steven Sherman, Carde presumably convinced some private lenders for giving her large sums of money that he used to "support his lifestyle and ... maintain the illusion that she was rich."

In some cases, Carde made instalments with the owners, but did so while planning falter on the actual amount owed.

And he got even more damaging: when the rightful owners attempted to evict Carde, she would make false accusations against them, filing police reports that accused them of threatening his life.

Worst of all, Carde may have risked the health of one of his victims. In 2010, she presented herself as "specialist" brain wave to one of its creditors, saying that she could provide medical care for the man, who had suffered a stroke.

"He said she (he) could cure with ' brain ' and convinced his wife ... to try," Sherman told the Court when the charges were filed the 11 March. "Carde placed electrodes on (his) head to ' jump the clot on."

Carde is accused of presenting false credit lines, squatting and then ducking out on his debts after being evicted more than a half-dozen times. Prosecutors hope to put it on a $ 150,000 bond, but they bring first elusive would-be-House authority.


View the original article here

UK-Odd Lmbo

Burger ad poking fun at Torres not to the taste of the Council

London (Reuters)-the blushes of deflagration Chelsea striker Fernando Torres were spared after a local Council ordered the removal of an accumulation of advertising that has mocked his performances for the European champions. The ad for that Paddy Power bookmaker was erected on a building next to Stamford Bridge but Spanish International Fernando Torres, signed by Liverpool for a combined 50 million pounds ($ 75.58 million) in January 2011, has had the last laugh.

Highwire stuntman plans to traverse the Grand Canyon without a tether

PHOENIX (Reuters)-trapeze artist Nik Wallenda intends to cross the Grand Canyon in June on a tightrope 1,500 feet in the air, without a seatbelt-a feat that will be broadcast live. Wallenda said that he would go through a remote section of the Crimson canyon owned by the Navajo nation in what will be his first major stunt given that last year became the only person to walk a wire over the edge of Niagara falls.

Chinese Bowl found at garage sale fetches more than 1.46 million pounds at auction

NEW YORK (Reuters)-a bowl of 1,000-year-old Chinese who was bought for a few bucks at a garage sale in New York State sold for more than 1.46 million pounds at auction Tuesday. A family of unnamed New York bought the bowl "Ding", which is from the Northern Song Dynasty, for no more than 2 pounds in 2007 and displayed on a beam with no idea regarding its real value, said Sotheby 's.

Police arrest accused Switzerland "healer" to infect with HIV 16

Zurich (Reuters)-Switzerland police have arrested a self-styled healer after he stopped to attend a trial where he stands accused of infecting 16 people with HIV using Acupuncture needles. Switzerland said Friday police who stormed the home of 54-year-old man who had barricaded himself inside, was armed with a knife and had issued repeated threats. An unidentified woman with him was arrested.

Pope Francis actively selling trinkets near Vatican

Vatican City (Reuters)-less than 48 hours after his surprise election, the smiling face of Pope Francis adorns pendants and devotional souvenir cards packed with rosaries at the trinket stand near St. Peter's square. Small plastic bags containing a picture of Francis and a rosary-a string of prayer beads-sold for 7 euros (5.96 lbs) at the booth of Antonio Cardone and postcards that show new Pontifex were selling briskly at 50 cents.

Leonardo proposes to the partner TV presenter live on air

Rome (Reuters)-Paris St Germain club Director Leonardo has asked his partner presenter Sky Italy Anna Billo to marry him live on air after Friday's draw Champions League quarterfinals. Billo, who was presenting the Italian Sky coverage of the draw in Switzerland, was talking about Leonardo del PSG quarterfinals match with Barcelona when she asks him if he had questions for the study group.

Crawling with cockroaches turn bus to New York in roach-mobile

NEW YORK (Reuters)-Greyhound bus to ride in New York City Friday, turned into a spectacle of horror for passengers suddenly swarmed by an invasion of cockroaches that forced the driver to pull over and evacuate the vehicle. Beetles emerging about 15 minutes began after the bus departed from Atlantic City, New Jersey, on Friday morning, said a spokesman for Greyhound.

FDA closes New Jersey bakery treats of sugar "sugar free"

MONTCLAIR, New Jersey (Reuters)-Federal authorities closed a bakery in New Jersey after finding her "sugar sugar" goods and saturated fats in its "free" fatty treats, the Food and Drug Administration said Friday. Butterfly Bakery Inc., in Clifton, which advertised its products as "made with 100% Love", was closed Wednesday after a federal judge approved a permanent injunction against it.

The beach becomes the last clash on titans technology property

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters)-a prominent Silicon Valley venture capitalist has intensified in the middle of a long dispute over a California tradition: open access to famous beaches. In a lawsuit filed this week, the Surfrider Foundation, a group of coastal protection, claims that the owner of a property on the beach south of San Francisco has violated the law by closing an access road which was used extensively by local surfers and fishermen to get a spit of sandy beach called "s.Martino.

Lawsuit says two-year-old boy eating used condoms in Chicago McDonald

(Reuters)-McDonald's Corp. was sued by a woman who said her two-year-old son ate a used condom found on the playing field of one of its restaurants in Chicago. Anishi Spencer filed the complaint against the chain of fast-food restaurants Wednesday in Cook County Circuit Court on behalf of herself and her children, Jonathan Hines and Jacquel Hines.


View the original article here

Friday, March 22, 2013

Chinese Bowl found at garage sale fetches over $ 2.2 million at auction

By Clare Hutchison London (Reuters)-ten dresses worn by Princess Diana ended, including a velvet, Midnight-blue dress that famously danced with John Travolta at the White House in 1985, recovered more than $ 1.2 million at an auction in London on Tuesday. The creation of Victor Edelstein worn at the gala dinner of the United States was the top lot of the sale, held by fashion specialist Kerry Taylor auctions, sell for $ 362,470, within pre-sale estimates. ...


View the original article here

Scotland could allow Jedi celebrate wedding ceremonies

The Jedi wedding ceremony may soon be official in Scotland (Rik Henderson/Pocket Lint) the force is strong with the Jedi in Scotland. Free Church of Scotland is pushing a bill that would allow those who have literally made "Star Wars" a religion power to celebrate marriage ceremonies.

The BBC reports that the marriage and Civil Partnership Bill would apply to other nonreligious groups like the Flat Earth Society and society of Jedi Knights, aka Temple of the Jedi Order.

And while it may seem like a joke for the most part, the Jedi religion is quite popular in some parts of Europe. In England, is the second most popular "alternative religion" with more than 175,000 people listing themselves as Jedi in the last national census from 2012.

"Our current consultation covers not only the introduction of same-sex marriage but also details of important protections for religious institutions and clergy, freedom of speech and education," said a spokesman for the Scottish Government.

"At the moment, wedding ceremonies from bodies such as humanists have classified as religious, even if those beliefs are nonreligious organizations."

The move could be seen as a tad ironic, even among fans of "Star Wars", seeing how the Jedi of the saga of "Star Wars" generally are not allowed to marry.

The Jedi religion has spread beyond the borders of Europe. Recently, a group calling itself the that Golden Gate Knights began teaching a class of choreography of light saber in the San Francisco Bay Area.

The Scottish Government plans to hold a public consultation on the Bill and, of course, not all traditional religious groups are excited about creating a new category for the ceremonies that are by their very nature, without doubt, a religious practice.

"There are a lot of people in a diversified company like this so the belief can mean virtually anything — the Flat Earth Society and society Jedi knights — who knows?" the Rev. Iver Martin told the BBC.

"I'm not saying that we do not give rise to that kind of personal belief, but when you start to make allowances for marriages be performed within these categories, then you're all over the place."

For their part, the Jedi say the nature of their beliefs would prevent them to obscure any other religious institutions.

"We believe in peace, justice, love, learning and using our skills to well, so it is unlikely that the way conflict with your beliefs and traditions," reads a statement on the Group's Web site.

However, the Scottish Government spokesman said it would be implemented a more rigorous screening process to prevent any organization from dilute the traditions of marriage in the country.

"We are proposing the introduction of evidence that a religious body or conviction would have to meet before they could be authorized to solemnize the marriage," he said.


View the original article here

Thursday, March 21, 2013

He also uses the payments to relatives of civil war veterans

Juanita Tudor Lowrey received government benefits tied to his father, a civil war veteran (Charlie Riedel/AP) 10 years after the launch of the war in Iraq, a number of critics and analysts have been pointing to extravagant financial cost of the war – to say nothing of its toll on human lives. But a surprising report shows that nearly 150 years after its conclusion, the Government of the United States is still paying relatives of civil war veterans.

An analysis by the Associated Press found that more than $ 40 billion a year is being spent on veterans and survivors of wars dating back to the Spanish-American war of 1898 up through the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

There are actually only two recipients of the benefits of the civil war, both sons of veterans and receiving 876 $ per year.

Although their names are being kept private, the AP estimates that were both born between 1920 and 1930, meaning parents themselves were more than 80 years, when their children were born.

Juanita Tudor Lowrey, 86, received benefits of civil war linked to his father from age 2 until his eighteenth birthday.

Former Republican Senator Alan Simpson and veteran military and said the Government should consider evidence of veterans as the federal debt burden continues to grow.

"Without a doubt, would inflow-test all those people," Simpson told AP.

Simpson deficit reduction Committee co-chaired by President Obama in 2010, which offered a series of recommendations for the reduction of the federal budget defecit.

And while it would be natural to assume the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are more expensive, payments to veterans of the Viet Nam war almost doubles the cost of our two current wars, $ 22 billion of $ 12 billion, respectively.

Simpson said he was driving a number of new disorders added to the coverage of veterans, including heart disease, costs.

"It was terribly abused," he said.

Meanwhile, World War II is still costing the Federal Government about $ 5 billion a year. And the Korea war still costs taxpayers approximately 2.8 billion annually.

Surprisingly, $ 20 million is still to be paid each year to 2,289 family veterans from World War II, many of which are over 100 years old. But maybe even unknown, 47 benefit recipients are not even born until after the war.


View the original article here

Former NBA star has a new job as a crossing guard

SILVER SPRING, MD. (AP) — Former NBA star Adrian Dantley spent years guarding the opponents on the field. Now he is guarding schoolchildren crossing the road.

Radio station WTOP (http://bit.ly/YlNvyo) reports that Dantley, a hall of famer and former star for the Utah Jazz and Detroit Pistons, he began work as a crossing guard in September. Works one hour a day at school and Middle Eastern New Hampshire Estates Elementary School in Silver Spring, MD

THS 6-foot-5 Dantley grew up in the area and says he has taken the job for the health care benefits and to have something to do. Montgomery County civil service records show that he gets paid $ 14, 685.50 a year. Dantley said he didn't need money.

He says he likes to give children encouragement and high fives.

___

Information from: WTOP-FM, http://www.wtop.com


View the original article here

History Channel denies show’s Satan character resembles Obama

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Does the actor who portrayed Satan in a new miniseries too closely resemble Obama? (Twitter)

The History Channel miniseries “The Bible” has been generating heavenly ratings, with more than 14 million viewers tuning in to its debut episode. But the show generated some controversy with its Sunday night episode in which the character playing Satan made his debut. The controversy was not over anything happening on screen, but rather whether or not the actor playing Satan looks a little too much like President Barack Obama.

Conservative media figure Glenn Beck was the first big name to address the odd similarity, writing on his Twitter account, “Anyone else think the Devil in #TheBible Sunday on History Channel looks exactly like That Guy?”

Beck was not alone, with thousands of viewers and several media outlets jumping on the story. Many were quick to note the similarity reminded them of a recent controversy in which it was discovered that the makers of HBO’s “Game of Thrones” had used a prop of George W. Bush’s head in a grisly scene.

History Channel has been quick to deny any similarities between the two, issuing the following statement:

“HISTORY channel has the highest respect for President Obama. The series was produced with an international and diverse cast of respected actors. It's unfortunate that anyone made this false connection. HISTORY’s 'The Bible’ is meant to enlighten people on its rich stories and deep history.”

And honestly, while the actor does bear a striking resemblance to Obama in the image posted to Beck's Twitter account, he looks more like a Jedi from "Star Wars" that the president is always talking about than history's biggest villain.

Interestingly, Moroccan actor Mohamen Mehdi Ouazanni, who portrays Satan, has appeared in a number of film productions with religious connections over the years, including “The Satanic Angels,” “The Ten Commandments,” “In the Beginning” and “David.”

In other images, any similarity between Obama and Ouazanni is far less striking.

Even Beck has tried to brush off any hidden agendas, posting that his original tweet was a joke: “Media—relax. Actor has been in similar roles b4. Funny, nothing more. For different reasons, #TheBible is 1 of my fav shows. Keep watching”

“The Bible” executive producer, Roma Downey, also released a statement saying she and fellow producer Mark Burnett made no conscious effort to cast an actor resembling the president. "Both Mark and I have nothing but respect and love our President, who is a fellow Christian,” the statement reads. “False statements such as these are just designed as a foolish distraction to try and discredit the beauty of the story of The Bible.”


View the original article here

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Op should reduce arthritic pain of Tiger of Texas

WYLIE, Texas (AP) — a veterinarian hopes innovative surgery has alleviated the pain of arthritis of the hip of a Siberian Tiger to 13 years at a sanctuary in Texas.

Tacoma is one of 66 Big Cats In-Sync Exotics Wildlife Rescue and Education Center in suburban Dallas.

President Vicky Keahey (KAY '-hee) says Tacoma suffered from hip dysplasia for two years. The pain began to strike him four months ago, when she stopped exercising and his hind leg muscles began to wilt. All I did was sleep.

Dr. Toby Willis operated on Tacoma last week, cut the nerves that carry impulses of pain from his hip to his brain. Willis says the procedure, that never before has been executed in the United States, should ensure that the aging cat has less pain.

Watch the video here: http://bit.ly/1387QMq


View the original article here

Website thumbs & Ammo replaces guns with — you guessed it

Inch Han Solo laser (Courtesy of Thumbs & Ammo)

Stick 'em. Thumbs, that is.

Website The Thumbs & Ammo has created a stir thanks to its sending images from famous movie where guns were replaced with literal thumbs-up.

Harrison Ford in "Star Wars". John Travolta and Samuel in "Pulp Fiction". Sylvester Stallone in "Bullet in the head." Are all there, but this time, they are without weapons. What makes a difference of one inch.

The blog tagline reads, "real tough guys don't need guns, they just need a positive, can-do attitude".

The hilarious tweaks for familiarity, gun-toting movie stars are getting some interest on the Web — and always collected on sites like Gawker and PetaPixel.

The creator of the blog, who prefers to remain anonymous, wrote in an email to Yahoo News, "it started as a game for me and my friends. It is powered by friendly competition to find and make better/funnier pictures. I think it can be enjoyed on a few levels. "

Readers with an image to add to the site can submit the website.

' Fiction ' thumb (courtesy of thumb & Ammo)

Daniel Craig's thumb (Courtesy of Thumbs & Ammo)

Thumb through my head (courtesy of thumb & Ammo)


View the original article here

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Lawsuit says two-year-old boy ate used condom at Chicago McDonald's

By Jonathan Stempel


(Reuters) - McDonald's Corp has been sued by a woman who said her two-year-old son ate a used condom he found in the play area of one of its restaurants in Chicago.


Anishi Spencer filed the complaint against the fast-food restaurant chain on Wednesday in Cook County Circuit Court on behalf of herself and her sons, Jonathan Hines and Jacquel Hines.


According to the complaint, Spencer and her sons were at a McDonald's restaurant in Chicago's South Side on February 4, 2012 when Jacquel picked up the used condom from the floor, and shortly thereafter coughed up a piece of it.


Both boys required medical care, and have suffered lasting injuries, pain and discomfort, the complaint said.


Spencer accused McDonald's of negligence for failing to clean hazardous debris from the play area, and failing to use appropriate security measures to help uncover "deviant activities." The lawsuit seeks at least $50,000 of damages.


"This is a very disgusting case," Jeffrey Deutschman, a lawyer for Spencer and her sons at Deutschman & Associates in Chicago, said in a phone interview.


He said he tried to settle, but was unable to do so after having to deal with "layers and layers" of bureaucracy at McDonald's, which is based in Oak Brook, Illinois.


McDonald's spokeswomen did not immediately respond to requests for comment.


Jonathan is now 4 and Jacquel is now 3.


The case is Hines et al v. McDonald's Restaurants of Illinois Inc et al, Cook County Circuit Court, No. 2013L002625.


(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Nick Zieminski)


View the original article here

Iowa officer stops speedy SUV, helps deliver baby

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa City police officer pulled over a speeding SUV — then helped the driver and his passenger deliver a baby.


When Officer Kevin Wolfe stopped the vehicle Sunday night, the driver jumped out and yelled, "Sir, we're delivering a baby right here, right now!"


Wolfe tells Cedar Rapids TV station KCRG (http://bit.ly/16urS2z ) that by the time he reached the passenger door of the SUV, the baby's head and arms were already out. He assisted in the final stages of the delivery and wrapped the child in a blanket before escorting the family to a hospital.


The episode was captured by Wolfe's dashboard camera.


Police spokeswoman Vicki Lalla (LAH'luh) says Wolfe didn't issue a speeding ticket and so did not take down the parents' names.


___


Information from: KCRG-TV, http://www.kcrg.com


View the original article here

Monday, March 18, 2013

Acquittal in Philly fight that cost man his eye

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Philadelphia jury has acquitted a man of assault in a bar parking lot fight that cost another man his left eye.


The Philadelphia Inquirer (http://bit.ly/10P7bhu ) says the Common Pleas panel on Wednesday acquitted Matthew Brunelli of aggravated assault.


Prosecutors alleged Brunelli punched John Huttick in the eye with an object that may have been a key in the August 2011 fight in the parking lot of the New Princeton Tavern.


Defense attorney Eileen Hurley says her client used only his fist to punch Huttick, who was trying to intervene in a fight between Brunelli and another bar patron.


Earlier proceedings ended in a mistrial after Huttick's $3,000 prosthetic blue eye popped out as he was testifying, startling jurors. The judge called that an "unfortunate" incident and granted the defense's mistrial motion.


___


Information from: The Philadelphia Inquirer, http://www.philly.com


View the original article here

Monkeys reject food from humans who behave selfishly, study finds

A white-headed Capuchin monkey (Wikicommons) a group of monkeys was found to show a selective form of behavior once thought limited to homo sapiens, in which primates reject humans who keep engage in selfish behavior.

The study, published in Nature Communications, explains:

"We find that the monkeys take less food from those who refuse stubbornly another is frequently calls for help. This negative effect of social assessment is robust through the conditions and tightly connected to explicit refusal to help. Evaluation of the potential availability based on third-party interactions so cannot be unique to humans. "

In the studio, two human beings acted out scenarios where one of them refused to help the other to open a glass jar containing a toy. A group of seven capuchin monkeys watched the interactions after having been instructed to receive food from only one person at a time.

When the two actors then offered food to monkeys, apes gravitated toward the man who showed cooperative behavior.

But why did the monkeys rejects food free human offer "selfish"? The study suggests that selfish behavior can be seen from monkeys as "dangerous" behavior.

"Explicit refusal to help is a signal that you are dangerous, you're negative," Kiley Hamlin, developmental psychologist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, said Scientific American.

Capuchin monkeys are highly social and cooperative, so the study's findings do not necessarily translate to all animals. But the possibility of measured behavior in other primates.

Another study published in January found that some chimpanzees have the ability to recognize the correctness, another trait previously thought limited to humans.


View the original article here

Sunday, March 17, 2013

106-year-old woman with high school diploma

The Mansfield News Journal reports that Reba Williams was presented the award on Wednesday from Mount Vernon Superintendent Steve Short.

Technically, the High school dropout rate in the nation just dropped a fraction. Although it is not clear whether that counts towards 1925 or 2013.

In 1925, Williams finished all 12 grades in Mount Vernon, but never received his diploma.

And it was a bureaucratic error. Williams was denied his diploma after she refused to read a book by one of his teachers. It turns out that Williams had already read the book, disliked and refused to dredge up again through its pages.

"I would like to tell them what happened to me," Williams told the newspaper. "If you expect to get anywhere in this world, they have to learn."

Actually, it was a recent profile of Williams from the Journal that helped finally get the diploma. A former teacher read the profile of Williams and presented his case to the board of education, which decided unanimously to award Williams a diploma.

Surprisingly, one of the Board members who helped make the case he had been awarded his diploma at the age of 95 years.

"Oh, for heaven's sake," said Williams. "Isn't that wonderful?"

Williams Junction for the occasion were a number of relatives, including his brother, 88-year-old "baby", Charles.

In fact, Williams has some distinct society. It was just last week that Massachusetts resident Fred Butler was awarded his high school diploma at the same age – 106. In fact, Butler expressed concern that he was not "earned" the degree, the ceremony in which they held a number of local figures including the Mayor.

And despite graduating late, Williams greatly praised the Mount Vernon school system saying that provided students the opportunity to embark on a lifetime of learning.

You can use it or not, "he said. "I was learning all the time."


View the original article here

Pope returns to Rome hotel - to pay bill

By Naomi O'Leary


VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis returned on Thursday to the Church-run residence where he was staying before becoming pontiff, and insisted on paying the bill, despite now effectively being in charge of the business, the Vatican said.


The morning after his election, Francis asked a driver to take him to the clerics' hotel, the Domus Internationalis Paulus VI, where he had stayed during the run-up to this week's secret electoral conclave.


"He wanted to get his luggage and the bags. He had left everything there," a Vatican spokesman told a news briefing.


"He then stopped in the office, greeted everyone and decided to pay the bill for the room ... because he was concerned about giving a good example of what priests and bishops should do."


The spokesman did not disclose the amount of the bill.


Jorge Bergoglio brought with him a reputation for frugality from his native Argentina. The first pope in 1,300 years born outside Europe, he is the first to take the name of St. Francis of Assisi - a gesture of solidarity with the poor from the new leader of an institution long associated with great wealth which is now battling to retain loyalty among its congregations.


Father Pawel Rytel-Andrianik, who lives in the central Rome boarding house where Bergoglio had stayed, told Reuters he was surprised the new pope had insisted on settling his account: "I don't think he needs to worry about the bill," he said.


"The house is part of the Church, and it's his Church now."


Rytel-Andrianik said Bergoglio had been a regular guest: "When we were eating at the table, you wouldn't realise he was a cardinal unless you already knew. He was just like any priest.


"He never asked for a car although he could have done," he recalled. "He always took the metro or walked."


(Additional reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Crispian Balmer and Alastair Macdonald)


View the original article here

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Railway excavation may have found lost graves "death star" in London

London (Reuters)-archeologists said Friday they had discovered a lost burial ground during excavations for a new massive railway project in London which may contain the bodies of about 50,000 people who were killed by the plague "death star" more than 650 years ago.

Thirteen skeletons, arranged in two rows, were found 2.5 meters (8.2 feet) below the road in the area of central London Farringdon by researchers working on the project of Crossrail 16 billion pound ($ 24 billion).

Historical records had indicated the area, described as a "no man's land", once hosted a hastily established cemetery for victims of the bubonic plague which killed about a third of the population of England after its outbreak in 1348.

"At this early stage, depth of burial, pottery found with the skeletons and the way that the skeletons were set out, all this part of the 14th century burial ground emergency," said Jay Carver, lead archaeologist of Crossrail.

Limited records suggest up to 50,000 victims were buried in less than three years in the Farringdon cemetery, as the plague devastated the capital.

Archaeologists hope that the skeletons, which were taken by scientific evidence, will shed light on the DNA signature of the plague and confirm the dates of burials.

Find the cemetery would be the second major discovery in medieval England recently, after which archaeologists have confirmed last month that it had discovered the remains of King Richard III, who died in battle in 1485, under a car park in Central England.

Construction works for Crossrail, a new rail link to Central London and Europe's biggest infrastructure project, have already discovered over 300 skeletons burials in a cemetery near the site of the infamous Bedlam hospital psychiatric London in the heart of the city of London.

(Reported by Michael Holden; Editing by Alistair Lyon)


View the original article here

Ohio woman, 106, finally gets high school diploma

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A 106-year-old central Ohio woman who completed classes but didn't graduate in a dispute over a book has received her high school diploma.

The News Journal in Mansfield (http://ohne.ws/15OcL2x ) reports the Mount Vernon superintendent presented Reba Williams with the diploma Wednesday at her apartment in Columbus. She even got to wear a traditional graduation cap brought by the retired Mount Vernon English teacher who urged the school board to award the diploma.

Williams has said she completed high school in Mount Vernon but was denied her diploma because she refused to read a final book assigned by a teacher. She'd read the book once and didn't want to read it again.

Williams says she hopes current students realize that learning is important and that they probably shouldn't follow her example.

___

Information from: News Journal, http://www.mansfieldnewsjournal.com


View the original article here

UK-Odd Lmbo

The beach becomes the last clash on titans technology property

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters)-a prominent Silicon Valley venture capitalist has intensified in the middle of a long dispute over a California tradition: open access to famous beaches. In a lawsuit filed this week, the Surfrider Foundation, a group of coastal protection, claims that the owner of a property on the beach south of San Francisco has violated the law by closing an access road which was used extensively by local surfers and fishermen to get a spit of sandy beach called "s.Martino.

Lawsuit says two-year-old boy eating used condoms in Chicago McDonald

(Reuters)-McDonald's Corp. was sued by a woman who said her two-year-old son ate a used condom found on the playing field of one of its restaurants in Chicago. Anishi Spencer filed the complaint against the chain of fast-food restaurants Wednesday in Cook County Circuit Court on behalf of herself and her children, Jonathan Hines and Jacquel Hines.

Pope returns to Rome hotel – to pay your Bill

Vatican City (Reuters)-Pope Francis returned on Thursday to the church-run Residences where he was before he became Pope and insisted on paying the Bill, despite effectively is now responsible for the business, the Vatican said. The morning after his election, Francis asked a driver to take him to the hotel of the clerics, the Domus Internationalis Paulus VI, where he had slept during the run-up to the secret election conclave this week.

Shark brought to Los Angeles for shopping Kmart dies

LOS ANGELES (Reuters)-a white tip shark sent from New York and inserted into an outdoor swimming pool for a Kmart commercial in Los Angeles died after showing signs of suffering, said an official of the animal welfare group that has monitored the production Thursday. The American Humane Association (AHA), which certifies films and television productions with animals, has had a representative at the scene of the shooting on March 6 and it is said that everything possible was done to ensure the security of the shark 5-foot (1.5 meters).

"Hand of God" Pope Argentina-Maradona port

Rome (Reuters)-the same "hand of God" brought the papacy in how it helped Argentina to 1986 World Cup, says Diego Maradona, the soccer legend whose notoriously managed, goals against England still excites passions at home and abroad. In a letter to the newspaper Il Messaggero of Rome on Wednesday from his base in Dubai, Maradona, 52, describes himself as a devout Catholic and he rejoiced at the election of his countryman Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio as Francis Pope, said.

Italian Bishops thank God for Pope wrong

Vatican City (Reuters)-Italian Bishops were so convinced that one of them would become Pope who sent a congratulatory message to the media by thanking God for the election of a prelate from Milan. The problem was that the new Pope had already been named as cardinal Jorge Bergoglio in Argentina.

Vettel puts his faith in "Heidi hungry»

(Reuters)-Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel is hoping ' Heidi ' Hungry will lead him to a fourth Formula 1 World Championship after this season. 25-Year-old German gave a feminine name in all its Red Bull cars over the years and the last moniker announced on its website (www.sebastianvettel.de) with a photo and the words «Heidi hungry so far known to you as RB9».

Did Chavez of Venezuela push Christ to take South American Pope?

CARACAS (Reuters)-Venezuelan leader influence Late Hugo Chavez could have stretched into the afterlife and had a hand in the decision of Christ to opt for a Latin American Pope, Acting President Nicolas Maduro said Wednesday. "We know that our Commander ascended to the heights and is face to face with Christ," Martini said at a book fair in Caracas. "Something influenced the choice of an American Pope, someone new came alongside Christ and told him: ' well, we think South America is now. '"

European legislators leave "green fairy" out of Absinthe

Brussels (Reuters)-Charles Baudelaire and Ernest Hemingway can turn in their graves. Absinthe, the green-tinted alcohol fuelled by poets, writers and artists of the 19th century, France must not contain its most important ingredient to be labelled "absinthe", the European Parliament decided on Wednesday.

New York City policeman cannibal ' accused of plot to kidnap women

NEW YORK (Reuters)-A New York City police officer was convicted Tuesday of plotting to kidnap, cooking and eating women after a trial that shed light on an underworld of people who derive pleasure from fantasize online of cannibalism. A Federal Court jury also found Gilberto Valle, 28, guilty of a lesser loads improperly accessing a database of law enforcement to collect personal information about potential targets, including his now-estranged wife.


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Friday, March 15, 2013

Shark wrestler's heroics land him in hot water

LONDON (AP) — A 62-year-old British man who became an Internet sensation after wrestling with a shark on an Australian beach says he was fired after his employer discovered he'd been abroad while on sick leave.


Paul Marshallsea was filmed yanking a six-foot- (1.8-meter-) long shark away from waders at Caloundra beach near Brisbane in January.


But his intervention also caught the eye of his employer, the Pant and Dowlais Boys & Girls Club, a Welsh charity. Marshallsea had been on leave since April after saying he was suffering from work-related stress.


Marshallsea told local news website WalesOnline he was unhappy at his treatment, adding that his doctor had advised him to take a vacation.


A man who answered the phone at the charity Wednesday said no one was immediately available for comment.


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Shark brought to Los Angeles for shopping Kmart dies

By Alex Dobuzinskis

LOS ANGELES (Reuters)-a white tip shark sent from New York and inserted into an outdoor swimming pool for a Kmart commercial in Los Angeles died after showing signs of suffering, said an official of the animal welfare group that has monitored the production Thursday.

The American Humane Association (AHA), which certifies films and television productions with animals, has had a representative at the scene of the shooting on March 6 and it is said that everything possible was done to ensure the security of the shark 5-foot (1.5 meters).

The shark's death follows lengthy criticism of the use of animals in Hollywood productions. Last year, the spectacle of horse racing "Luck" on HBO was excluded after the death of three horses used in drama series.

The animal rights group people for the ethical treatment of animals (PETA), who said he received details about the death of sharks by two informers on the set, has criticized the American Humane Association in a letter to the Group on the shark's death.

"Sharks are sensitive animals who, in captivity, require highly specialized and controlled environment," read the letter from PETA. "Given the delicate nature of this species, because the AHA would approve the carriage and use of this animal?"

The shark was placed in an outdoor tub of 60,000 gallons (227 liters) in the suburb of Los Angeles, Van Nuys, said Karen Rosa, senior consultant for the film and television units of the American Humane Association. He added that it was a good amount of water for fish.

"I honestly don't know why the animal is dead. Was not being mistreated. It has not been damaged, "said Rosa.

In the morning, the shark seemed to be in good condition, but at one point the Association representative noticed that showed signs of distress, rose said.

"As far as I know, had immediately insisted that receiving specialized care animal aquatic veterinarian," he said.

Oxygen was pumped into the tank and the shark was given a shot of adrenaline to try to stabilize it before it was moved to a compound for water treatment, where he died the same day, rose said.

Filming for a Kmart commercial, but a representative for the retailer couldn't reveal the concept behind the TV spot.

"We take this matter seriously and security is always our primary concern," Howard Riefs, a spokesman for Kmart owner Sears Holdings, said in a statement.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Cynthia Johnston)


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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Opposition uses tablet to speak out in parliament

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — In Poland, speaking out in parliament is a privilege mostly reserved for lawmakers, but the opposition has skirted that regulation with the help of a hand-held tablet computer.


Nationalist opposition party leader and lawmaker Jaroslaw Kaczynski has introduced a non-confidence motion against the Cabinet of Prime Minister Donald Tusk, and a vote is expected Friday.


But when Kaczynski stood up to speak in the lower Chamber on Thursday, he surprised lawmakers by taking out his tablet and playing a pre-recorded policy speech by Piotr Glinski, his Law and Justice party's shadow prime minister, a non-elected official.


The public-relations stunt was apparently aimed at showing Glinski's leadership potential.


Poland's Cabinet is expected to survive Friday's vote.


Special permission is required for non-members to take the floor in parliament.


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Mich. LaughFest breaks record _ for fake mustaches

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — Magnum P.I., Ron Burgundy and Ron Swanson would be impressed.


Organizers of an annual laugh festival in Michigan say they've broken the world record for the most people wearing fake mustaches.


Gilda's LaughFest is reporting that 1,544 people donned various shapes and sizes of dark 'staches on Thursday, the Grand Rapids festival's opening day.


The record is awaiting Guinness World Record certification.


If it sticks, the record would be the third set at the festival in as many years. Last year the festival broke the record for the most people wearing fake animal noses. The year before, it was people tossing rubber chickens.


LaughFest officials say the previous fake mustache record of 648 participants was set in September at a St. Louis Rams event.


Watch the video here: http://bit.ly/W9VUo1


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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Applebee’s waitress asks patron for ID, gets own stolen driver’s license in return

 Priddy's Colorado driver's license (9NEWS)


Imagine you're a waitress, out with friends on a night off, when you lose your wallet. Cash, credit cards, driver's license—all gone. Your bank later informs you that checks are being issued in your name.


It's a pain, but you carry on. Two weeks later, you're at work when four people walk in and sit in your section. They start ordering drinks. You ask to see their IDs. A woman in the group hands a driver's license to you. You look down, and it's yours.


That is precisely what police in Colorado say happened to Brianna Priddy, a server at a Lakewood Applebee's.


Priddy, though, didn't panic.


"I handed it back to her and said, 'Sure, I'll be right back with your margarita,'" she told Denver's NBC affiliate.


[Related: Applebee’s fires waitress who posted receipt from pastor]


Priddy called the police, and tried to act normal while waiting for them to arrive.


"I put on my server smile and tried to take care of them, but I was shaking like crazy," she said.


When police arrived, the woman, whose name has not been released, was arrested on suspicion of theft, identity theft and criminal impersonation. Police also found narcotics in her possession.


"Dumb criminal," Lakewood police spokesman Steve Davis told Denver's 9NEWS. "That's the first thing that comes to mind."


Even dumber: the suspect is 26, Davis said.


Watch a local television interview with Priddy below:


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New York mother arraigned for hiring strippers for teen's party

(Reuters) - An upstate New York woman pleaded not guilty on Thursday to five counts of child endangerment after other parents complained that she hired female strippers for her son's 16th birthday party.


Judy Viger, 33, of Gansevoort, New York, denied the charges of endangering the welfare of a child at her arraignment in the Town of Moreau Court, according to a court spokesperson. If convicted, she would face up to one year in jail.


Viger was arrested after parents of five teenage partygoers saw Facebook pictures of the scantily clad dancers performing intimate routines at the bash last November 3 at Spare Time Bowling Center in South Glens Falls, New York, about 50 miles north of Albany.


"The parents of the children who attended had no idea that the adult female entertainers would be present and were shocked and stunned when they discovered what had occurred," the Saratoga County district attorney, James A. Murphy, III, said in a statement released at the time of Viger's arrest.


"Pictures of the event and the dancers first surfaced in media accounts of the story once they were posted to one of the attendees' Facebook page," Murphy said.


Viger was accused of hiring adult female entertainers from Tops In Bottoms Entertainment, of Albany, who performed at the birthday party.


Her attorney, Joseph Brennan of Queensbury, New York, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


If convicted of any or all of the five counts of endangering the welfare of a child, Viger faces a maximum of one year behind bars as any sentence would run concurrently since the counts stem from a single incident, according to a court spokesperson.


Viger was due back in court on April 4.


(Reporting by Caurie Putnam in Rochester; Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Leslie Adler)


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Taken to hospital with Flathead screwdriver palo

Warsaw, Poland (AP) — Polish doctors say a 25-year-old man underwent a three-hour operation to remove a screwdriver lodged about five centimeters (two inches) in the lead.

Dr. Jan Kochanowicz, one of the doctors who treated the man in the Polish city of Bialystok, said the man apparently fell and lost consciousness, but I don't remember that.

When he regained consciousness was at first aware only of pain in your hand before you realize something else was wrong. He walked to his car, looked in a mirror and noticed the screwdriver, penetrating her forehead just above his right eye.

Kochanowicz said the station TVN24 that man smoked a cigarette before calling a neighbor who got him to the hospital.

The screwdriver did not damage the eyes or brain of man.


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Monday, March 11, 2013

Man accused of stealing $19,000 worth of Girl Scout Cookies

In response to the increased attention and concern for America's rising rates of obesity and diabetes, the food industry has responded by creating what they often refer to as "better-for-you" foods. These include, among other things: bags of dried fruit slices, organic bars and cookies, yogurts, smoothies, vegetable crisps, and, of course, baked, not fried, potato chips. In turn, these items have begun to replace the more traditional junk food found in our children's school vending machines.


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Woman killed by caged lion in California died suddenly of broken neck

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A 24-year-old intern killed by an African lion at a California wildlife sanctuary died almost instantly after the big cat broke her neck, a coroner said on Thursday, amid media reports that the animal may have escaped from its pen to attack her.


The Cat Haven, a private sanctuary east of Fresno, remained closed on Thursday, a day after Dianna Hanson was killed by a 350-lb (160-kg) male Barbary lion named Cous Cous that attacked her inside an enclosure. Hanson was from the Seattle area.


"The young lady did not suffer because she died almost instantly from a fractured neck," Fresno County Coroner Dr. David Hadden told Reuters.


An autopsy conducted on Thursday showed bite and claw marks on Hanson from "the lion playing with the body like a cat would play with a mouse," Hadden said.


Hadden told several news organizations, including CNN and the Fresno Bee newspaper, that the lion may have used its paw to pry open a gate separating its pen from the larger enclosure to attack Hanson while she was cleaning it. But that could not be immediately confirmed by Reuters.


Hanson's death was the latest in a handful of high-profile incidents involving big cats in captivity in the United States in recent years, and comes less than six months after a man leapt into a tiger's den at the Bronx Zoo, sustaining multiple injuries.


Hanson's Facebook page showed pictures of her standing or sitting next to big cats, apparently in enclosures, and she had worked on a wild feline reserve in Africa. Her father has told a television station she liked to get close to big cats.


"I've always had a premonition this would happen," Paul Hanson told Seattle television station KING 5. "She really loved getting up close and personal with the animals."


The California Division of Occupational Safety and Health sent two inspectors with questions such as whether the sanctuary allowed the woman to enter the enclosure, agency spokesman Peter Melton said.


"We'll find out exactly what she was doing and what her job duties were and whether she was following the procedures as they were supposed to be done," Melton said.


Cat Haven is a 100-acre (16-hectare) sanctuary in Dunlap, California, run by the group Project Survival. It was founded "to exhibit a variety of wild cats and engage public support for their conservation in the wild via specific projects," according to the park's website.


'IT'S DEVASTATING'


Dale Anderson, founder of the facility, told reporters outside the gates of his facility that he could not comment on the circumstances of Hanson's death or the safety protocols at Cat Haven. "Our whole staff is just ... it's devastating," he said as he broke down in tears.


Hanson, who graduated in 2011 from Western Washington University with a degree in biology, had spent six months in Kenya last year working on a wild feline reserve.


In 2011 and 2012, Hanson also volunteered in Seattle for the Snow Leopard Trust, which seeks ways to protect the endangered species, the organization said.


The 4-year-old Barbary lion that killed Hanson was of a species that is extinct in the wild, said Janice Mackey, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, which oversaw the permit that allows the sanctuary to operate.


The lion had been handled by humans since it was weeks old, and was one of two Barbary lions at the facility. Several years ago, when it was a cub, Cous Cous also made an appearance on the talk show "Ellen," Mackey said.


The lion was shot and killed by sheriff's deputies as they tried to reach Hanson, authorities said. On Thursday, a necropsy was performed on the lion to determine if it suffered from any health problems that could have led to the attack, Mackey said.


Anderson, Cat Haven's founder, said the facility has been "incident free" since it opened in 1998, and California officials confirmed they had never responded to any emergency at the facility similar to Wednesday's death.


In 2010, a lion attacked a trainer at a glass-encased enclosure at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. The trainer survived.


In another high-profile incident involving captive cats in 2011, the owner of a private menagerie released dozens of tigers, lions and other animals in Ohio, and then killed himself. The case led some animal welfare groups to call for a ban on private ownership of exotic animals.


The California Department of Fish and Game permits private animal sanctuaries only if their goal is scientific research or public education, Mackey said.


(Additional reporting by Stephen Keleher in Dunlap, California; Laura L. Myers in Seattle and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Writing by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, David Gregorio and Lisa Shumaker)


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