Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Happy Thanksgiving!

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Family of missing boy's mother sues CNN, Nancy Grace

Family of missing boy's mother sues CNN, Nancy Grace

POSTED: 7:05 p.m. EST, November 21, 2006

TAVARES, Florida (CNN) -- Relatives of a missing boy's mother who committed suicide after taping an interview for Headline News' "Nancy Grace" show sued CNN and Grace on Tuesday, claiming the former prosecutor's questioning of the woman contributed to her death.
The wrongful-death suit was filed in Lake County, Florida by Bethann and Jerry Eubank, the parents of Melinda Duckett and the representatives of her estate. It seeks unspecified damages and funeral costs.
Duckett committed suicide September 8 after taping a telephone interview for Grace's show. The suit claims that Duckett agreed to appear on the show after being promised her appearance might help find her 2-year-old son, Trenton Duckett.
Those promises were made by Headline News employees, the suit said, "knowing that they intended to surprise Melinda Duckett with accusations, questions and verbal assaults clearly intending to intimate that she murdered her child."
"We've alleged that Nancy Grace and her producers deliberately misrepresented the reasons for wanting Melinda on the show," Eubank family attorney Jay Paul Deratany said in a written statement.
"Within minutes of Melinda's phone interview, it became quite obvious that Nancy's questions weren't about finding Trenton at all, but rather about impliedly accusing Melinda of murdering her beloved son."
Headline News, CNN's sister network, issued a statement saying that while it does not comment on pending litigation, "We stand by Nancy Grace and fully support her, as we have from the beginning of this case."
Grace previously said in an interview with MSNBC that allegations she contributed to Duckett's death "are hateful, they are spiteful and they are also ridiculous."
On her show in September, Grace asked Duckett where she was on the day Trenton went missing. Duckett said she did not want those details to be made public.
"Why aren't you telling us and giving us a clear picture of where you were before your son was kidnapped?" Grace asked. Later, she told Duckett she was not divulging her whereabouts "for a reason."
"The spitfire questioning, fist-pounding and cross-examination tactics, all in hopes of obtaining a public confession, were despicable," said Eubank attorney Kara Skorupa.

Just hours before the interview was supposed to air, Duckett shot herself in a closet of her grandparents' home, the attorneys said.
"Even after learning of Melinda's death, CNN and the show's producers made the decision to air the interview between Melinda and Nancy Grace," Deratany said. "It was with complete disregard for the family and without their consent or authorization, which is morally repugnant."

"Three or four hours after Mindy had died, I was still in a state of shock," Jerry Eubank told CNN affiliates WESH and WPTV. "I'm watching this woman banging the table and screaming about 'Why aren't you telling us this, or that.' She was judge, jury and executioner."
The suit says Grace's actions have caused the Eubank family "severe emotional distress for which they have sought psychological counseling and continue to suffer from emotional and debilitating distress."

Melinda Duckett left behind a note that appeared to blame the public for her actions. "I do not bleed my emotions to the public and throughout this situation you did not understand that," the note said in part. It also said that Duckett loved Trenton "dearly, and he is all I was breathing for. He was and always will be my essence and as he grows, I want him to know that."

Based on those comments, Florida authorities said last week they believe Trenton may still be alive.

The suit filed Tuesday also names Joshua Duckett, Trenton's father, as a defendant and asks for an accounting of money in a fund he set up, with Grace's assistance.

"We are certainly not accusing Joshua Duckett ... of anything inappropriate at this point," Deratany said in a written statement. "But there has been a lot of money going into the account to help find Trenton, and the reward being offered seems small in comparison. Melinda's family simply wants to ensure that the money being donated by concerned citizens is being used solely for the purpose of finding Trenton."

Monday, November 20, 2006

THE BUCKEYES WIN

Okay, so the post below didn't happen, I'll post this now. Some Buckeye fan I am, I forgot to post this here. Well, a win is a win and we're going to the National Championship game on January 8, 2007. HOORAY HOORAY HOORAY!!!

(1) Ohio St. 42, (2) Michigan 39

By RALPH D. RUSSO, AP Sports WriterNovember 18, 2006


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Troy Smith and his Ohio State teammates touched off a raucous celebration on the field, the national championship game squarely in their sights.
And when the No. 1 Buckeyes get to Arizona to play it, No. 2 Michigan might be waiting there for a rematch. Ohio State poured on all the offense it had Saturday, streaking into the title game with a dazzling 42-39 win. Though the Buckeyes scored more points in the first half than anyone pinned on Michigan in a whole game this year, the Wolverines stayed right on their heels.

And it appears that's where Michigan will stay in the championship picture -- at least for now.

"If this was boxing they'd definitely get a rematch," Ohio State defensive back Brandon Mitchell said.

Smith and the blazing Buckeyes put their speed on display with a barrage of big plays -- and they needed every one to beat an inspired Michigan team.

The "Game of the Century," the first 1 vs. 2 matchup in this storied rivalry, was played a day after the death of feisty former Michigan coach Bo Schembechler. The teams couldn't have honored his memory with a better game, although it certainly wasn't the brand of football he and Woody Hayes coached when they battled for a decade.
"There were a lot of good playmakers out there today," Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. "It was a fast-break game the whole way."

The No. 1 Buckeyes (12-0, 8-0) have their first outright Big Ten title since 1984, but they might not have seen the last of Michigan (11-1, 7-1) this season. The Wolverines can still make it to the title game in Arizona if the Bowl Championship Series standings break their way.

"I guarantee if we play, it would be a whole different game," Michigan running back Mike Hart said. "We should have got them the first time around. We didn't. If it doesn't happen, that's our fault."

Two defenses that came in allowing 20 points per game combined were unable to stop each other's attack. It was the second highest-scoring game in the 103-game series, which dates to 1897; the most points scored was 86 in 1902, the fourth meeting, which Michigan won 86-0.

This one was surely more entertaining.

"The national championship was something aside, was something different from this," Smith said. "This is The Ohio State University-Michigan game. It's the biggest game in college football. And today the best team won."

Smith played a near perfect first half and finished 29-for-41 for 316 yards, a third straight magical performance against Michigan that might have just locked up the Heisman Trophy for the senior.

"I would think he clinched the Heisman Trophy, I don't think there'd be any question about that," Tressel said.

While Smith and the Buckeyes twice jumped out to 14-point leads, the Wolverines wouldn't stay down, led by Hart's 142 yards and three touchdowns.

When Smith tossed his fourth touchdown pass -- a 13-yarder to Brian Robiskie with 5:38 left on a drive aided by a Michigan roughing-the-passer penalty -- Ohio State was up 42-31, but the Buckeyes still couldn't rest.

Chad Henne connected with Tyler Ecker for a 16-yard TD and with Steve Breaston on a 2-point conversion to make it 42-39 with 2:16 to go. Michigan's onside kick was caught by Ohio State's Ted Ginn Jr., maybe the biggest of the day for a guy who had eight reception for 104 yards, and all that was left was for Ohio State to run out the clock.
With 22 seconds left the Buckeyes sideline emptied onto the field, and the fans followed from the stands, joining in for a rousing rendition of the alma mater.

On Jan. 8 in Glendale, Ariz., Tressel's Buckeyes will play for the national championship for the second time since the 2002 season. Who they will play will be determined in the next two weeks.

Will it be USC? Florida? What about Notre Dame or Arkansas?
On Saturday, Michigan made quite a good case to be that team.
"Michigan's a great football team everyone saw that, they weren't going to give up because that's the way they're built," Tressel said.

Though that's probably little solace for Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, a Schembechler protege, who has now lost five of six to Tressel and Ohio State.

"We gave up too many big plays," said Carr, who bit his lip and held back tears during his postgame news conference. "Those are mistakes in a game like this, in any game, that will get you beat."

A video tribute to Schembechler, an Ohio State alum, was shown on the scoreboard before kickoff and the crowd of 105,708 responded with a respectful and loud ovation.
"Michigan has lost a coach and patriarch," the public-address announcer read. "The Big Ten has lost a legend and icon. Ohio State has lost an alumnus and friend."
"Win it for Bo!" read a sign held aloft by a Wolverines fan.

"It was definitely difficult for us," Henne said. "Coach Carr loves him dearly and so do we. .. It's sad to see him go. We dearly miss him. We tried to fight for him today."
Schembechler's death tempered some of the animosity that usually goes with this rivalry -- but not the intensity.

Hart plowed in from a yard out on third-and-goal on the second play of the fourth quarter to cut the Ohio State lead to 35-31 after Ohio State fumbled the ball away at its own 9 with a high snap.

Only the Buckeyes could stop the Buckeyes on this day. Ohio State turned the ball over three times, but gouged Michigan's defense -- a unit that was allowing 231 yards a game-- for 503 yards. Chris Wells had a 52-yard touchdown run in the second quarter. Antonio Pittman broke one for 56 yards in the third to make it 35-24.

The anticipation for this showdown of unbeatens had been building for more than a month, when it became apparent that only a huge upset would keep the Big Ten rivals from entering the game with perfect records for first time since 1973.

For the Buckeyes, who've been No. 1 all season, it was the second time this season they beat the No. 2 team -- and with Smith leading the way. Smith has been the Heisman front-runner since September, when he led Ohio State to 24-7 victory at No. 2 Texas.
The offenses started fast, each scoring on its opening drive and doing it by going to the air. Mario Manningham, who missed three games with knee surgery, showed he was back in shape with three receptions for 58 yards that helped set up Hart's easy 1-yard TD run.

Smith responded by going 9-for-11 for 68 yards, capping the drive with a 1-yard TD pass to Roy Hall.

"I thought it would be a low-scoring game," said Michigan's star defensive end LaMarr Woodley, who couldn't add to his team-high 11 sacks. "It kind of shocked everybody."
Smith tacked on his second TD pass with a deep strike off play-action down the middle to Ginn from 39 yards out to make it 21-7. For a moment, it looked as if the Buckeyes were primed to pull away.

No way.

And now the question is: Should they play it again?

"That is really not up to us," Ginn said. "Today, it was just two really great teams giving it everything they could to win."

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