Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Congratulations Nancy Grace!

Well I retract any doubt I had earlier today. Nancy Grace announced tonight on her CNN show that she in fact is married and expecting twins. Above is a wedding photo.



NANCY'S SECRET WEDDING
AND SHE'S HAVING TWINS
By MICHAEL STARR

June 26, 2007 -- NANCY Grace is revealing that she was secretly married in April-and that she's expecting twins in January.

"I'm finally not keeping it a secret anymore," she told The Post.

Grace says she still hasn't told CNN that she's pregnant. She'll officially make the announcement tonight on her Headline News show, "Nancy Grace."

Grace married David Linch -an Atlanta investment banker she has known since they attended Mercer College together in the late 1970s.

"We've been in touch all these years and a lot of time we were separated by geography and time," she says. "It was a spur-of-the-moment decision to get married. I told my family only two days before [the wedding].

"We got married in April in Atlanta with just my family and his family there," she says. "It was a simple ceremony conducted by my longtime pastor from a little Methodist church in Macon.

"I walked down the aisle to my favorite song, 'Moon River,' and I did my own vows. I read from the Book of Ruth and I wore my sister's bridal veil.

"I never thought it would happen like this," she says. "I thought 'mother' and 'wife' was just not part of God's plan for me.

"This is such a blessing, and I just can't believe that, at my age, I would find such happiness."

She declined to say if she'd had fertility treatments in order to become pregnant at age 47.

"But you tell women out there that there is hope," she said.

Time will tell if motherhood and marriage mellows the cable news channel host's pit-bull disposition.

But her personal news does answer questions that arose when she left Court TV last month.

"I knew something had to go, and that [something] was Court TV," she says. "I was firm that I wanted out of my option, but I didn't reveal that I was carrying twins."

So how does Grace think CNN will react to the news? "They'll be thrilled," she says. "I don't think they'll be angry at all."

http://www.nypost.com/seven/06262007/tv/nancys_secret_wedding_tv_michael_starr.htm

Benoit strangled wife, smothered son

You will be missed, Chris. I hope you and your family are at peace now.



Benoit strangled wife, smothered son

By GREG BLUESTEIN, Associated Press Writer

ATLANTA - Pro wrestler Chris Benoit strangled his wife, suffocated his 7-year-old son and placed a Bible next to their bodies before hanging himself by the pulley of a weightlifting machine, authorities said Tuesday.

Investigators also found prescription anabolic steroids in the house, Lt. Tommy Pope of the Fayette County Sheriff's Department. He would not comment on Benoit's state of mind or possible motive.

Autopsies showed all three died of asphyxiation, Pope said.

Benoit's wife, Nancy, was killed Friday in an upstairs family room, her feet and wrists were bound and there was blood under her head, indicating a possible struggle, Fayette County District Attorney Scott Ballard said.

The son, Daniel, was likely killed late Saturday or early Sunday, the body found in his bed, Ballard said.

Benoit apparently killed himself several hours and as long as a day later, Ballard said. His body was found in a downstairs weight room, his body found hanging from the pulley of a piece of exercise equipment.

The prosecutor said he found it "bizarre" that the WWE wrestling star spread out the killings over a long weekend and appeared to remain in the house for up to a day with the bodies.

"I'm baffled about why anybody would kill a 7-year-old," Ballard said. "I don't think we'll ever be able wrap our head around that."

Earlier, a law enforcement official speaking on a condition of anonymity said Benoit strangled his wife and smothered his son.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070626/ap_on_re_us/wrestler_dead

Is Nancy Grace married and pregnant?

Supposedly this is the pregnant Nancy, I just don't buy it...



First Photo: CNN's Nancy Grace Pregnant With Twins! Tuesday June 26, 2007
Anchorwoman and lawyer Nancy Grace is known for exposing the truth on her self-titled program on CNN's Headline News, but she's been keeping a huge secret of her own: twins! Grace, 47, is revealing that she is four months pregnant.

(The father is her investment banker husband, David Linch, 48, whom she wed April 21.)

"I kept [the pregnancy] quiet because I wanted to make sure all would be healthy," Grace, a Georgia native, tells Us. "I've worn loose-fitting clothes and I guess [audiences] just thought I was getting heavier!"

Any crazy cravings? "Watermelon, peaches and my mother's southern fried chicken!"

http://www.usmagazine.com/cnn_s_nancy_grace_pregnant_with_twins

Monday, June 25, 2007

No matter how it happened, I will miss Chris Benoit.

Wrestler Benoit, wife and son found dead
By DEBBIE NEWBY, Associated Press Writer

FAYETTEVILLE, Ga. - WWE wrestler Chris Benoit, his wife, and son were found dead Monday and police said they were investigating the deaths as a murder-suicide.

Detective Bo Turner told television station WAGA that the case was being treated as a murder-suicide, but said that couldn't be confirmed until evidence was examined by a crime lab.

The station said that investigators believe the 40-year-old Benoit killed his wife, Nancy, and 7-year-old son, Daniel, over the weekend, then himself on Monday. A neighbor called police, and the bodies were found in three rooms.

Lead investigator Lt. Tommy Pope, of the Fayette County Sheriff's Department, told The Associated Press the deaths were being investigated as homicide, and that the causes of death awaited autopsy results on Tuesday. Pope said the bodies were discovered about 2:30 p.m., but refused to release details.

The house is in a secluded neighborhood set back about 60 yards off a gravel road, surrounded by stacked stone wall and a double-iron gate. On Monday night, the house was dark except for a few outside lights. There was a police car in front, along with two uniformed officers.

Benoit was a former world heavyweight and Intercontinental champion. He also held several tag-team titles during his career.

"WWE extends its sincerest thoughts and prayers to the Benoit family's relatives and loved ones in this time of tragedy," the federation said in a statement on its Web site.

Benoit was scheduled to perform at the "Vengeance" pay-per-view event Sunday night in Houston, but was replaced at the last minute because of what announcer Jim Ross called "personal reasons."

The native of Canada maintained a home in metro Atlanta from the time he wrestled for the defunct World Championship Wrestling.

The WWE canceled its live "Monday Night RAW" card in Corpus Christi, Texas, and USA Network aired a three-hour tribute to Benoit in place of the scheduled wrestling telecast.

"My relationship with Chris has extended many years and I consider him a great friend," Carl DeMarco, the president of WWE Canada, said in a statement. "Chris was always first-class — warm, friendly, caring and professional one of the best in our business."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070626/ap_on_re_us/wrestler_dead

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Christopher Vaughn charged with murder

Yet another tragedy...



Man charged with killing wife, 3 kids
By CARLA K. JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer

JOLIET, Ill. - Just hours before a man was to attend a memorial service for his wife and three young children, authorities arrested him at a Missouri funeral home on charges of gunning down his family in their sport utility vehicle.

Police initially said Christopher Vaughn, 32, was not a suspect in the killings that were discovered June 14 after Vaughn flagged down a motorist on a service road in Channahon, about 40 miles southwest of Chicago.

Vaughn, who works as a computer forensic adviser, had been shot in the thigh. His wife, Kimberly, 34, was shot once, while each their children — Abigayle, 12; Cassandra, 11; and Blake, 8 — were shot twice.

His handgun was found at the scene, authorities said.

Prosecutor James Glasgow, who declined to discuss possible motives, said Vaughn with charged with two murder counts per victim.

One set of counts alleges he shot with intent to kill and the other alleges he shot knowing that it was likely to cause death or great bodily harm.

Before he was arrested, Vaughn had voluntarily met with investigators three times to answer questions.

Authorities would not say what evidence tipped the balance enough to allow them to seek an arrest warrant from a judge late Friday.

The charges were built from numerous interviews, forensic evidence, computer files and phone records, authorities said.

Glasgow said he has 120 days to decide whether to seek the death penalty."We are hopeful that with the issuance of these charges that Kimberly Vaughn and her three beautiful children can truly rest in peace," said Glasgow.

"Everyone who came in contact with this case was moved by what they saw."Word of Vaughn's arrest circulated among the mourners as the service, hundreds of miles away at New Hope Presbyterian Church in St. Charles, Mo., drew to a close.

"We should not be here today, but the events of this past week have been thrust upon us, events which are indescribable and unspeakable," said the Rev. Christopher James.

The church was a special place for Kimberly Vaughn and the children; she attended since its 1994 inception and it was the place the kids were later baptized.

Kimberly Vaughn's parents still attend the church.

The service included no caskets. Kimberly Vaughn and her children had been quietly buried in a nearby cemetery to avoid media attention.

Photographs showing the kids at play or their mother's days playing volleyball filled four poster boards at the church.

Only one of the roughly 100 pictures — a small snapshot of the family — showed Christopher Vaughn.

The Vaughns, who once lived in Missouri, moved from Washington state to the Chicago area about a year ago. They lived briefly in Aurora before relocating to a spacious home in Oswego.

Glasgow said he hoped Vaughn would be extradited from Missouri to Illinois soon. He said Vaughn indicated he intended to fight extradition.

Phone messages seeking comment were left Saturday at the offices of Christopher Vaughn's attorney in Missouri. Vaughn was being held without bond at St. Charles County Detention Center, authorities said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070624/ap_on_re_us/bodies_found

Saturday, June 23, 2007

More details in Jessie Davis case

Body reportedly recovered from Meyers Lake
UPDATE: 5:13 PM, Saturday, June 23, 2007

Investigators reportedly found a body in Meyers Lake believed to be that of Jessie Marie Davis.

A source close to the family of Bobby Cutts Jr. said the body was found earlier today.

Davis was nine-months pregnant with a child believed to be Cutts' and had a 2-year-old by him. The 26-year-old was last seen June 13, and Cutts was among the last people known to have talked with her.

Sources said Cutts is in custody, and the Stark County Sheriff's Department has a press conference scheduled for 6 p.m. today.

Cutts, 30, has been a Canton police officer since 2001.

http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=361502

Of course we know this was bogus, probably trying to throw off the investigation. Meyer's Lake is too far south of Cuyahoga Nat'l Park. If it is her that was found at the lake, then who was found at the park, and vice versa?

Above is a map. You can't see it on here but Meyer's Lake is between Canton and Akron. The park is north of Akron.

Jessie Marie Davis Found!

Family asks for peace and quiet
UPDATE: 6:32 PM, Saturday, June 23, 2007

Now that her body has been found, the family of Jessie Marie Davis is asking to be left alone to grieve.

Rick Pitinii, the attorney for the Porter-Davis familiy attended a press conference tonight, at which Stark County Chief Deputy Rick Perez announced the arrest of Bobby L. Cutts Jr. in the death of Davis and her unborn girl. Cutts is going to be charged with two counts of murder Monday in Canton Municipal Court.

The attorney asked that the media leave the family alone for the next few days.

Cutts was arrested today in the deaths of Davis, 26, and the child she was to deliver July 3.

The body of Davis, who has not been seen since June 13, was recovered about 3:30 p.m. today in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park in Summit County. Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Rick Perez said he cannot say exactly where the body was recovered or what led investigators to the site because the case remains under investigation.

Stark County Prosecutor John Ferrero acknowledged there is lots he and investigators won’t say. “This case is still being investigated and a lot of items you people want to know we can’t disclose at this time because it still under invesigation. We ask for your patience.”

Cutts, 30, has been a Canton police officer since 2001. Canton Police Chief Dean McKimm joined tonight’s press conference. He said though he’s saddened by the outcome of the case, it also proves that “no matter who you are and what position you hold, law enforcement will pursue justice.”

“ While Canton PD has kept a major distance from this investigation, we stand ready able and anxious to continue our cooperation ... through the conclusion of this case,” he said. “No one wants a quicker resolution to this than law enforcement.”

Davis family gathered at the Stark County Sheriff’s Department shortly before the press conference began at 6 p.m.

Also at the sheriff’s office were people who lead a search by EquuSearch, who for three days combed area of Lake Township near Davis’ Essex Avenue NW duplex.

Authorities questioned Cutts several times over the past week and searched his Aryshire Avenue NE home on Monday and again on Wednesday.

Cutts had acknowledged he spoke to Davis on the night of June 13, though he had said it was by phone.

He had denied he had anything to do with her disappearance.

http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=361519&r=0&Category=9&subCategoryID=0



Authorities expected to question woman in Davis' murder case
UPDATE: 6:57 PM, Saturday, June 23, 2007
BY Todd Porter REPOSITORY STAFF WRITER

Investigators are expected to question a friend of Bobby Cutts Jr. who may have helped him take the body of Jessie Marie Davis from her Lake Township home to a wooded site in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park.

Cutts has been arrested and will be formally charged Monday with two counts of murder — that of Davis and of the girl she was to give birth to on July 3.

A source who has supported Cutts since Davis went missing on June 13 or 14 said Cutts told him he “came to the house and found her (Davis) lying on the floor. ... He called a girl he knows to help him move the body.”

The source said Cutts did not say he had caused Davis’ death, but said he moved the body because he feared no one would believe him.

The source had spoken with Cutts' mother Saturday afternoon.

Cutts told The Repository earlier this week that he had nothing to do with Davis’ disappearance.

Asked if he believed Davis would be found alive, he said, “Hopefully.”

Cutts was questioned and read his rights on June 15 by local authorities, his attorney Bradley Iams said. He was interviewed without being Mirandized by the FBI on Wednesday morning, Iams said.

The Repository spoke to a woman who said Cutts phoned her several times late Wednesday night into Thursday morning. The woman, who The Repository granted anonymity because she was romantically involved with Cutts and is married with children, said Cutts phoned her around 10:30 and asked her to join him at Champs, a bar in Canton where Cutts was seen until about 12:30.

The woman never joined him.

The woman's attorney said Cutts phoned her several times from the bar, based on background music, and then called her from his car after he left to meet with him. She said she did not hear from Cutts after 2 a.m. Thursday.

http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=361522&r=0&Category=9&subCategoryID=0

UPDATE: Jessie Davis case

Ohio sheriff: Found baby is not missing woman's

POSTED: 10:59 p.m. EDT, June 22, 2007

Story Highlights
• NEW: Pastor says he's praying with woman's boyfriend every day
• Adult admits leaving newborn on stranger's doorstep, sheriff says
• Missing woman's mom says she suspects boyfriend, a police officer
• Davis, 26, near term, hasn't been heard from since June 13

UNIONTOWN, Ohio (AP) -- A baby girl found on an Ohio doorstep does not belong to a missing pregnant woman, the Wayne County Sheriff's Department said Friday.

The baby was discovered about 45 miles from the home of Jessie Davis, who was nearly nine months pregnant with a girl when she disappeared last week.

A woman who said she concealed her pregnancy from her family admitted leaving the newborn on the doorstep, Wayne County Sheriff Thomas Maurer said. That case has been turned over to the county prosecutor's office.

"This incident is not related to the ongoing investigation by the Stark County Sheriff's Office in the disappearance of Jessie Davis," Maurer said in a news release.

Davis, 26, was reported missing one week ago Friday after her mother found the young woman's bedroom in disarray, the furniture overturned and Davis' young son home alone.

The 2-year-old boy, who may be the only witness to his mother's disappearance, told investigators: "Mommy was crying. Mommy broke the table. Mommy's in rug."

On Friday, some 250 volunteers lined up for a second day to help search surrounding fields and woods for any sign of Davis. More than 1,800 volunteers had turned up Thursday to scour backyards, vacant fields and a Christmas tree farm.

Davis' mother, Patricia Porter, was the last person to speak to Davis on June 13 and said she's focused on finding her daughter.

"We are not stopping, and whoever's done this, I hope they don't think that we're going home," she said Friday. "No one's going home and we are not stopping until we find her and find who did this to her."

When Porter was asked Friday by NBC's "Today" show if she considered Bobby Cutts Jr., the father of Davis' 2-year-old son and possibly of her unborn baby, a suspect, she replied: "Yes, he's a suspect."

"I still pray that it's not him," she said. "That doesn't mean that I don't think he's a suspect, as well."

Her attorney, Rick Pitinii, said later that her comments about Cutts were based more on her emotions than on any evidence in the case.

Authorities have talked with Cutts, a Canton police officer, and searched his home, but investigators have repeatedly said he is not a suspect. Cutts, 30, says he had nothing to do with Davis' disappearance.

The pastor of the church Cutts attends has been praying with him every day, and said Friday that Cutts, as a police officer, understands why the boyfriend of a missing woman would be under scrutiny.

"He understands what goes with the territory," said the Rev. C.A. Richmond Sr., pastor at Logos Baptist Assembly. "Of course he is anxious for a resolution and disposition of the whole matter and he is confident they will find he had nothing to do with her disappearance."

One of the people searching for Davis on Friday, Karrin Herberghs, 38, of Plain Township, said Cutts was the assistant coach for her 5-year-old daughter's soccer team this year.

"He was at every game," Herberghs said. "He was very pleasant and very good with the kids."

One of Cutts' two children with his wife, Kelly, was also on the team. Cutts has said they are separated but have not filed for divorce and that his wife knew he had a relationship with Davis.

Davis' father searched with volunteers on Thursday, but her family is no longer participating.

"It's too stressful every time a dog comes across something," her sister Whitney said.

Scott Wheeler, 39, of East Canton, volunteered to search Friday for 2½ hours before work. He brought a flashlight and insect repellent, and organizers cautioned searchers to be ready for rough terrain, saying shorts and sandals would not be sufficient.

Some searchers had chest-high walking sticks and golf clubs to check the underbrush.

Porter said Friday that Davis' young son, Blake, was keeping everyone motivated and displaying many characteristics of his mother. She described Jessie Davis as her best friend, a woman without enemies who "always had a big smile on her face."

Blake "has periods where he just lays his head down on the couch and has this horrible look of sadness, and then the next moment he'll have this big, beautiful smile. He really is what keeps us going," Porter told ABC's "Good Morning America."

http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/06/22/missing.woman.ap/index.html

Thursday, June 21, 2007

BREAKING NEWS: JESSIE DAVIS

Jessie Marie Davis
Age: 26
Last seen: 6/16/07
Location: North Canton, OH
Please call: 330-430-3818
Reward: $15,000

Cadaver Dogs Focus on Mound of Dirt in Search for Missing Mom Jessie Davis
Thursday, June 21, 2007

UNIONTOWN, Ohio — Cadaver dogs searching for missing pregnant mom Jessie Davis have been put on the scent of a fresh mound of dirt in a waste area at Highland Park Street NW and Aultman Avenue, in Canton.

A sergeant with the Springfield Police Department called for the dogs around noon Thursday when the mound was discovered. Five dogs and their handlers are concentrated in an area off Highland Park, where a lot of trash has been dumped.

The search party with the group has been asked to wait on a grassy hill roughly 50 feet from where the cadaver dogs are concentrated.

Craig Cassidy was among the volunteers to discover the mound of dirt.

"We came across a mound that looked as though it had been freshly dug up," he told FOX News. "They brought in five or six dogs." He said the indication was that "there was something there," but he hasn't been back to the site since.

The dogs are still on the scene.

One of the volunteer searchers, a 10-year-old boy, found a green rug in the vicinity with a white pattern. The rug seemed to have been there for a lengthy period of time.

Meanwhile, the Stark County Sheriff's department has scheduled today's press conference for 5 p.m. at the sheriff's office.

MORE @ http://tinyurl.com/2dtws2

MISSING: JESSIE DAVIS, PREGNANT



Jessie Marie Davis
Age: 26
Last seen: 6/16/07
Location: North Canton, OH
Please call: 330-430-3818
Reward: $15,000

More Than 1,000 Search For Missing Pregnant Woman
Jun 21 2007 1:20PM

UNIONTOWN, Ohio - Several hundred people formed a line about two football fields long Thursday to get ready to help search for the neighborhood around the home of a missing woman who was 9 months pregnant when she disappeared.

Texas EquuSearch, an internationally active search team, brought in sonar equipment to northeast Ohio to check ponds and a remote-control airplane equipped with a camera to look for any sign of 26-year-old Jessie Davis.

SLIDESHOW: Images Of Woman, Case

Some of the approximately 500 volunteers waiting for the search to start brought their dogs or children. Many sipped donated bottles of water, and one man had a hiking stick. People continued to join the line along a sidewalk to sign up at a fire station to help.

"They're going to help us find Jessie, hopefully, bring her back safe," said the missing woman's younger sister, Whitney Davis.

"It's crazy. This is a high-profile case," she said.

Jessie Davis (pictured, left), whose baby is due July 3, was last heard from in a phone call with her mother on June 13. Two days later, her mother checked on her home in nearby Lake Township and found it in shambles, with the furniture overturned, a comforter missing and her 2-year-old grandson wandering around alone.

The little boy told investigators: "Mommy was crying. Mommy broke the table. Mommy's in rug." A pool of bleach was on the bedroom floor, and the contents of Davis' purse were scattered in the kitchen.

"We're holding onto that hope that maybe she's still alive out there," said EquuSearch director Tim Miller. "That would be the greatest thing in the world, but realistically, we know after a period of time that that normally doesn't happen."

Miller started EquuSearch his 16-year-old daughter, Laura, disappeared in Texas and was found dead 17 months later. Funded through donations, the group offers search-and-rescue training and uses specialized search equipment to help recover human remains around the world and search for missing children. It has worked on hundreds of missing persons cases, including the 2005 disappearance of Natalee Holloway, 18, in Aruba.

"We're probably looking at somewhat of a miracle in this case," Miller said. "We also know if that person is deceased out there it's very important we find them as quickly as we can find them so they can determine cause of death."

On Wednesday, for the second time in three days, investigators searched the home of the man who fathered Davis' 2-year-old son and unborn daughter, although authorities have repeatedly said Canton police officer Bobby Cutts Jr. is not a suspect.

Cutts, 30, told The (Canton) Repository he had nothing to do with Davis' disappearance, and that he has slept little and had no appetite since she vanished.

Sheriff's investigators and FBI agents carried out more than a dozen white cardboard boxes, a few brown bags and three large black plastic bags during a search that lasted more than three hours.

A legal order allowed investigators to obtain some of Davis' cell phone records, which are being reviewed, Stark County sheriff's Chief Deputy Rick Perez said at a news conference Wednesday.

Cutts, who also has two children with his wife, Kelly, said they are separated but have not filed for divorce and that his wife knew he had a relationship with Davis.

He said he last spoke with Davis at 8 p.m. on June 13, about 90 minutes before she last spoke with her mother.

Cutts' mother, Renee Horne, told the Repository that agents at her son's home were looking for Davis' cell phone and a quilt missing from the Davis's home.

Horne said FBI agents questioned her son twice Wednesday, and read him his Miranda rights during the second interview. Investigators also took Cutts' two cell phones, Horne said.

Meanwhile, authorities said DNA tests would not be finished until next week on a newborn girl left on a porch about 45 miles away from Davis' home.

Authorities are trying to determine if the infant, less than 24 hours old when it was found Monday evening in Wooster, is related to Davis. A bottle and can of formula left in the basket with the newborn were sent to be tested for fingerprints or any other evidence.

On its Web site, the FBI lists the case as a kidnapping. But FBI spokesman Scott Wilson in Cleveland said the label is standard whenever foul play is a possibility, and the agency doesn't know if Davis was abducted or not.

The FBI is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to Davis' whereabouts. EquuSearch added a $5,000 reward.

Thursday morning, the volunteers gathered at the firehouse near a sign that read, "Pray for Jessie," to help EquuSearch's efforts.

"My heart goes out to them," said Lisa Dillon, 47, who took a vacation day from her state job to aid in the search. "I just want to help."

Stay with 10TV News and refresh 10TV.com for continuing coverage.
Previous Stories:

June 20, 2007: FBI Conducts New Search, Offers $10K Reward In Missing Mom Case
June 19, 2007: Foul Play Suspected In Pregnant Woman's Disappearance

(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
http://www.10tv.com/?sec=&story=sites/10tv/content/pool/200706/1300067200.html

What would Jack Bauer do?

Thank you HQ for bringing this to my attention.


Canadian jurist prompts international justice panel to debate TV drama 24's use of torture

COLIN FREEZE
June 16, 2007

OTTAWA -- Justice Antonin Scalia is one of the most powerful judges on the planet.

The job of the veteran U.S. Supreme Court judge is to ensure that the superpower lives up to its Constitution. But in his free time, he is a fan of 24, the popular TV drama where the maverick federal agent Jack Bauer routinely tortures terrorists to save American lives. This much was made clear at a legal conference in Ottawa this week.

Senior judges from North America and Europe were in the midst of a panel discussion about torture and terrorism law, when a Canadian judge's passing remark - "Thankfully, security agencies in all our countries do not subscribe to the mantra 'What would Jack Bauer do?' " - got the legal bulldog in Judge Scalia barking.

The conservative jurist stuck up for Agent Bauer, arguing that fictional or not, federal agents require latitude in times of great crisis. "Jack Bauer saved Los Angeles. ... He saved hundreds of thousands of lives," Judge Scalia said. Then, recalling Season 2, where the agent's rough interrogation tactics saved California from a terrorist nuke, the Supreme Court judge etched a line in the sand.

"Are you going to convict Jack Bauer?" Judge Scalia challenged his fellow judges. "Say that criminal law is against him? 'You have the right to a jury trial?' Is any jury going to convict Jack Bauer? I don't think so.

"So the question is really whether we believe in these absolutes. And ought we believe in these absolutes."

What happened next was like watching the National Security Judges International All-Star Team set into a high-minded version of a conversation that has raged across countless bars and dinner tables, ever since 24 began broadcasting six seasons ago.

Jack Bauer, played by Canadian Kiefer Sutherland, gets meaner as he lurches from crisis to crisis, acting under few legal constraints. "You are going to tell me what I want to know, it's just a matter of how much you want it to hurt," is one of his catchphrases. Every episode poses an implicit question to its viewers: Does the end justify the means if national security is at stake? On 24, the answer is, invariably, yes.

But sometimes this message proves a little too persuasive. Last November, a U.S. Army brigadier-general, Patrick Finnegan, of West Point, went to California to meet with the show's producers. He asked if the writers would consider reining in Agent Bauer. "The kids see it, and say, 'If torture is wrong, what about 24?" he told The New Yorker in February.

He argued that "they should do a show where torture backfires." It's not just the military that's watching 24. It turns out that the judges who struggle to square the Guantanamo Bay prison camp experiment with the British Habeas Corpus Act of 1679 are watching the show, too. It was Mr. Justice Richard Mosley of the Federal Court of Canada who inadvertently started the debate, with his derogatory drive-by slight against Jack Bauer, the one that so provoked Judge Scalia.

In his day job, the Canadian judge wrestles with the implications of torture. Last winter, for example, Judge Mosley ordered an Osama bin Laden associate freed from seven years prison and into strict house arrest in Toronto.

Judge Mosley told the panel that rights-respecting governments can't take part in torture or encourage it in any way. "The agents of the state, and the agents of the Canadian state, under the Criminal Code, are very much subject to severe criminal sanction if they would engage in torture," he said.

But the U.S. Supreme Court judge choked on that position, saying it would be folly for laws to dictate that counterterrorism agents must wear kid gloves all the time. While Judge Scalia argued that doomsday scenarios may well lead to the reconsideration of rights, in his legal decisions he has also said that catastrophic attacks and intelligence imperatives do not automatically give the U.S. president a blank cheque - the people have to decide. "If civil rights are to be curtailed during wartime, it must be done openly and democratically, as the Constitution requires, rather than by silent erosion through an opinion of this court," he dissented in a 2004 decision. The judicial majority ruled that a presidential order meant that an American "enemy combatant" wasn't entitled to challenge the conditions of his detention, which happened to be aboard a naval brig.

As they discussed torture in Ottawa, the judicial panelists from outside the United States argued that any implicit or explicit sanction of torture is a slippery slope.

Some said that legal systems might do well to enforce anti-torture laws, even if it meant prosecuting rogue agents. "What if the guy is not the guy who's going to blow up Los Angeles? But some kind of innocent?" asked Lord Carlile of Berriew, a Welshman who acts as the independent reviewer of Britain's terrorism laws.

Torture can lead to false confessions, he said. "How do you protect that person's civil rights from the risk of very serious wrongful conviction?" But Lord Carlile, a barrister by training, added that he was also concerned with Jack Bauer's rights. "I'm sure I could get him off," he said.

One panelist deadpanned that saving Los Angeles from a nuke would likely be a mitigating factor during any sentencing of Jack Bauer.

When the panel opened to questions and commentary from the floor, a senior Canadian government lawyer said: "Maybe saving L.A. is an easy question. How many people are we going to torture to save L.A.?" asked Stanley Cohen, a senior counsel for the Justice Department, who specializes in human rights law. "How much certainty do we get to have that we have the right person in front of us?" Then Lorne Waldman, the lawyer for the famously wronged engineer Maher Arar, emerged from the crowd to say that very little of the conversation sounded hypothetical to him.

Mr. Arar was among a series of Canadian Arabs who emerged from lengthy ordeals in Syrian jails to complain of torture. Their common complaint is that Syrian torture - including beatings with electric cables - flowed from a wrongly premised Canadian investigation after 9/11.

A host of security agents, Mr. Waldman argued, acted with utmost urgency against innocents, after wrongly fearing a bomb plot was afoot.

Generally, the jurists in the room agreed that coerced confessions carry little weight, given that they might be false and almost never accepted into evidence. But the U.S. Supreme Court judge stressed that he was not speaking about putting together pristine prosecutions, but rather, about allowing agents the freedom to thwart immediate attacks.

"I don't care about holding people. I really don't," Judge Scalia said.

Even if a real terrorist who suffered mistreatment is released because of complaints of abuse, Judge Scalia said, the interruption to the terrorist's plot would have ensured "in Los Angeles everyone is safe." During a break from the panel, Judge Scalia specifically mentioned the segment in Season 2 when Jack Bauer finally figures out how to break the die-hard terrorist intent on nuking L.A. The real genius, the judge said, is that this is primarily done with mental leverage. "There's a great scene where he told a guy that he was going to have his family killed," Judge Scalia said. "They had it on closed circuit television - and it was all staged. ... They really didn't kill the family."

Gospel according to Jack

"Tell me where the bomb is or I will kill your son."

"I don't want to bypass the Constitution, but these are extraordinary circumstances."

"I need to use every advantage I've got."

"If we want to procure any information from this suspect, we're going to have to do it behind closed doors."

"I'm talking about doing what's necessary to stop this warhead from being used against us."

"When I'm finished with you, you're gonna wish that you felt this good again."

"You don't have any more useful information, do you?"

Sources: New Yorker, IMDB
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20070616.BAUER16/TPStory/TPNational/Television/

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Trenton Duckett’s Father Continues Search For Missing Son

Friday, June 15, 2007 10:42:42 PM

It's been nearly a year since Trenton Duckett vanished from his Lake County home, and still no clues as to where the toddler is.

But Trenton father, Josh Duckett is holding out hope that this will be his last Father's Day without his son.

The 22-year-old has been looking for his two year old son since August when he disappeared. The boy's mother, Melinda, said the boy was snatched from her apartment. Josh is staying optimistic and focused.

If you have any information, you are asked to call 1-877-Trent-65, or the Leesburg Police Department.

http://www.cfnews13.com/News/Local/2007/6/15/trenton_duckett_search_continues.html

Slain Boy's Mother Has Child Endangerment Conviction

POSTED: 4:55 pm EDT June 15, 2007
UPDATED: 6:49 pm EDT June 15, 2007

Court documents released Friday show a toddler found slain was placed in his father's custody in April after the boy's mother was convicted of permitting drug abuse and child endangerment.

The boy's father, Fred Roman, was arrested and charged with murder on Thursday accused of killing 16-month-old Jacob Fleischer by blunt force trauma to the head.

In April, police raided a handful of homes in Toronto. One of the people arrested on drug charges was Channe Fleischer, the boy's mother.

Fleischer was later convicted of permitting drug abuse and child endangerment.
She is currently on probation and was offered to check into a rehabilitation program, but officials said she never did. Police said for that reason, the boy was staying with Roman.

Both parents were scheduled to settle their custody agreements in July.

Roman remains in the Jefferson County Justice Center on $1 million bond.

http://www.wtov9.com/news/13512635/detail.html

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Heavy snow falls in Australia

Heavy snow falls in southern NSW

June 14, 2007 - 2:49PM
Up to 15 cm of snow has fallen in parts of southern NSW in what the Bureau of Meteorology says is a once in 20 year event.

The bureau said the heaviest snowfalls were in areas east of Canberra, including the NSW towns of Bungendore and Captains Flat.

Braidwood, southeast of the ACT, received a 22mm fall between 5am and 9am on Thursday.

A BoM spokesman said the extremely rare event resulted from a low pressure system off NSW's mid north coast.

He said it had triggered a combination of high precipitation and low temperatures in areas south of Sydney and the state's central tablelands.

As the system deepened and moved south, it was expected to bring severe weather to the eastern seaboard, including Sydney, within the next 48 hours, the spokesman said.

Very heavy rain was expected and gale warnings were issued for coastal waters.
The cold and rainy conditions in Sydney were expected to continue until at least early next week.

Wednesday's minimum temperature of 6.5 degrees celsius in Sydney was the city's coldest recorded minimum so far this year.

The BoM said the current persistent weather pattern was unusual.

"I can't recall the last time we had one event after another after another," the spokesman said.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Heavy-snow-falls-in-southern-NSW/2007/06/14/1181414440614.html

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Oh Great Spirit!

Oh Great Spirit,
Whose voice I hear in the winds,
And whose breath gives life to all the world,
hear me!
I am small and weak,
I need your strength and wisdom.
Let me walk in beauty,
and make my eyes ever behold the red and purple sunset.
Make my hands respect the things you have made
and my ears sharp to hear your voice.
Make me wise so that I may understand the things you have taught my people.
Let me learn the lessons you have hidden in every leaf and rock.
I seek strength, not to be greater than my brother,
but to fight my greatest enemy - myself.
Make me always ready to come to you with clean hands and straight eyes.
So when life fades,
as the fading sunset my spirit may come to you without shame.
--Chief Yellow Lark, Lakota Tribe

Prober: CIA ran secret jails in Europe

By ELAINE GANLEY, Associated Press Writer

PARIS - The CIA ran secret jails in Poland and Romania to interrogate key terror suspects, shackling and handcuffing inmates, keeping some naked for weeks and reducing contact with the outer world to masked and silent guards, a European investigator said Friday.

The CIA called the report "distorted," but stopped short of denying the existence of prisons in the two countries — the agency said it does not discuss the location of its overseas facilities. Poland and Romania also vehemently denied the allegations.

"High value detainees" like self-proclaimed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and suspected senior al-Qaida operative Abu Zubaydah were held in Poland, said the report, which cited CIA sources. It said lesser detainees, but still of "remarkable importance," were taken to Romania.

Top officials in both countries knew of the detention centers, said the report by Swiss Sen. Dick Marty, a former prosecutor asked by the Council of Europe, a human rights watchdog, to investigate CIA activities after media reports of secret prisons emerged in 2005.

Marty did not rule out the CIA having more such prisons in Europe, but told reporters he did not include that in his report because his sourcing was insufficient. He accused Germany and Italy of obstructing investigations into secret detentions.

The report said its conclusions about the clandestine prisons relied on "multiple sources which validate and corroborate one another." Marty said his team spoke with "over 30 one-time members of intelligence services in the United States and Europe" as well as former or current detainees and human rights activists.

While conceding at a news conference that sources for the report were limited, Marty said they were "well placed," including some who "were implicated."
The alleged prisons were at the center of a "spider's web" of purported human rights abuses that Marty outlined in his initial investigation a year ago. That report focused on flights to spirit detainees to CIA hideouts with landing points in at least 14 nations.

He said he saw his reports as a "dynamic of truth" and hoped they will stir debate over what he charges were blatant abuses of human rights.

Clandestine prisons and secret CIA flights involving European countries would breach the continent's human rights treaties, although the Council of Europe has no power to punish countries. The council, which is separate from the European Union, was set up four years after World War II to promote democracy, human rights and the rule of law in Europe.

Officials at the EU have said previously that they trust the denials of Poland and Romania about hosting secret jails.

CIA spokesman Paul Gimigliano did not address whether there were secret detention centers, but he disputed the report's characterization of the agency's activities.

"When you see words like apartheid and torture in the document, that tells you it's biased and distorted," he said. "The CIA's counterterror operations have been lawful, effective, closely reviewed and of benefit to many people — including Europeans — in disrupting plots and saving lives. Our counterterror partnerships in Europe are very strong."

Following a meeting with President Bush in Gdansk, Polish President Lech Kaczynski told reporters: "I know nothing about any CIA prisons in Poland." His predecessor, Aleksander Kwasniewski, who was president in 2001-05, said: "I deny it. I've said as much several times."

Former Romanian President Ion Iliescu, mentioned in a list of ranking officials who allegedly had knowledge of the prisons, dismissed Marty's report as "stupid."

The report, which did not give specific locations for the alleged jails, provided graphic descriptions of conditions.

It told of prisoners being kept naked for weeks, sometimes attached to a "shackling ring" in cells. Buckets served as toilets. Masked guards who never spoke were the only contact for those consigned to four-month isolation regimes.

Cells, sometimes equipped with video cameras, were cramped and kept extremely hot or cold, the report said. Prisoners had to listen to irritating noises, including "torture music," rock or rap as well as "distorted" verses of the Quran, it said.

Bush acknowledged the existence of a secret detention program last September, when he announced the CIA had moved Sheikh Mohammed and 13 other suspected terrorists to the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay.

Marty's report said Poland and Romania hosted secret prisons under a special post-Sept. 11 CIA program to "kill, capture and detain" key terrorist suspects. It said the jails grew out of a secret pact within NATO shortly after the terror attacks on the U.S.

The pact "allowed the CIA to be able to move around Europe unobstructed, without undergoing any control and, especially, the NATO (security) protocol on secrecy was applied," Marty said.

In Italy, the first trial stemming from the CIA's detention program opened Friday without the presence of any of the 26 Americans charged with the 2003 kidnapping of a Muslim cleric suspected of terrorist ties. The trial has irritated U.S.-Italian relations and its opening coincided with Bush's arrival in Rome.

Associated Press writers John Leicester and Jan Sliva contributed to this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070609/ap_on_re_eu/cia_secret_prisons_11;_ylt=AkK3rihw0fN.2JXpCEK7G7sL1vAI

Friday, June 08, 2007

Acropolis, Chichen Itza lead New 7 Wonders contest

Thu Jun 7, 10:24 AM ET

LISBON (Reuters) - The Acropolis in Athens and Mexico's Mayan ruins at Chichen Itza are among the leaders in a competition, ending in one month, to choose the New Seven Wonders of the World, the organizers said on Thursday.

The winners will be chosen through a global online and phone vote, organizers of the New 7 Wonders of the World (www.new7wonders.com) competition said, a far cry from the methods used by the Greeks who chose the original Seven Wonders more than 2,000 years ago.

Some 50 million people have voted so far in the competition designed to produce a 21st century list of the world's greatest man-made heritage sites, but Tia Viering, a spokeswoman for the organization, said the result is wide open.
The winning list will be announced in Lisbon on July 7.

Many countries are carrying out special events to encourage people to vote for their sites, Viering said. "There are some really creative, phenomenal things going on in the last four weeks that will influence the final result."

These include an Indian singer dedicating a song to the Taj Mahal and Brazil's soccer team urging Brazilians to vote for Christ Redeemer, the statue that adorns Rio de Janeiro's skyline.

The most popular 10 sites so far include both the Taj Mahal and Christ Redeemer, along with the Colosseum in Rome, the Eiffel Tower, the Great Wall of China, Peru's Machu Picchu, Petra in Jordan, and the statues of Easter Island.

Viering said the number of votes so far for each site will not be divulged as it could influence the final result.

The organization running the competition, which could become the largest ever global poll, was established by Swiss/Canadian filmmaker Bernard Weber.

Only one of the seven wonders of the ancient world remains standing today -- the Pyramids of Giza. The originals, located in the Mediterranean region, also included the Lighthouse of Alexandria and the Hanging Gardens of Babylon.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070607/sc_nm/wonders_vote_dc;_ylt=AoHZDGNmug5sch.eBcU4JJbMWM0F

Scientists find gene link to Alzheimer's

Thu Jun 7, 6:47 PM ET

PHOENIX - A team of Arizona researchers think they've found a gene that could help better predict a person's risk of developing Alzheimer's disease"

The gene — called GAB2 — seems to affect the odds that some people will get the progressive neurological disease that afflicts about 5 million Americans, according to the research team led by the Translational Genomics Research Institute and Banner Alzheimer's Institute.

"This is a major breakthrough in Alzheimer's genetic research that will have an impact on the clinical treatment of the disease," said Dr. Dietrich Stephan, director of TGen's neurogenomics division.

Researchers here believe the study marks a new milestone for genetic research of Alzheimer's disease because it used a high-powered computer chip to measure more than a half-million genetic variations, the most robust such study to date.

Alzheimer's triggers memory lapses, clouds the thought process and leads to confusion and death in older adults.

About 78,000 Arizonans suffered from Alzheimer's in 2000, a number expected to jump to 130,000 by 2025, according to Banner Alzheimer's Institute.

Researchers worldwide are not sure what causes the disease. They do know that sufferers' brains are harmed by plaques and tangles that block signals and ultimately cause cells to shrink and die.

TGen's Stephan began investigating the possibility of conducting an ambitious study of the disease three years ago.

He sought funding from the Kronos Science Laboratory in Phoenix, which provided most of the money for the $5 million project.

In turn, Kronos secured the intellectual property rights from the Arizona study and is seeking patent protection for the GAB2 gene and its role in the onset of Alzheimer's.

The study is the latest to draw national attention for the gene investigators at TGen, which launched here five years ago as part of a push to build Arizona's research prowess.

Other significant studies conducted by TGen and collaborators in Arizona include genetic tests relating to pancreatic cancer and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.

Information from: The Arizona Republic, http://www.azcentral.com

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070607/ap_on_he_me/alzheimer_s_link;_ylt=AhYqSAuXkrUBE0oh5pI3APHMWM0F