Total Pageviews

Lovitz Rips Obama on Taxes

Celebrities may have a reputation for being ardent supporters of President Obama, but don't count former “Saturday Night Live” comedian Jon Lovitz among them.

In fact, the comedian thinks he is a “f**king a**hole.”

In a podcast entitled “The ABC's of SNL” hosted by Lovitz and filmmaker Kevin Smith, Lovitz took on the president over taxes.

"This whole thing with Obama saying the rich don't pay their taxes is f**king bullsh**. And I voted for the guy, and I'm a Democrat. What a f**king a**hole. The rich don't pay their taxes? Let me tell you something, right. First they say to you, you're dead broke, 'the United States of America, you can do anything you want, go for it.' So then you go for it and then you make it, and everyone's like 'f**k you.'"

"I voted for the guy, and I'm a Democrat. What a f**king a**hole"

- Jon Lovitz on President Obama

He went on to say, “If I make a dollar and out of every dollar I'm taxed at 50, half, at 50 cents, I have to give, isn't that like enough? It's half. HALF!”

Click here to hear a clip from the podcast. 

Lovitz's co-host joked that the government would come in and shut his “Jon Lovitz Podcast Theatre” down for his comments.

“We heard that [in] the fourth f**kin episode, you won't leave Obama alone. This is an election year! They're gon come in and make an example of you man, the government can come in and take you sh*t away. Even your good memories.”

RELATED: Hottest celebrity photos of the week. 

The podcast was released last week, despite being recorded in January.

It wasn't the first time the comedian used a social networking site to express his thoughts. 

Earlier this month, Lovitz used Twitter to expose three teenage girls behind an anti-Semitic prank on his friend's daughter.

"Some coward & idiot left this on a friend's doorstep, yesterday. This is an insult to all of us," he tweeted on April 5, attaching a photo of the vandalism, which showed swastikas drawn with maple syrup on the sidewalk of his friend's house, and a pile of feces on his doorstep.

He then Tweeted a photo of the girls, saying “Let them be famous as Jew haters.”

The three girls were then permanently expelled from their school.



Article from FOXNEWS


Egyptian comedian gets jail time for insulting Islam

An Egyptian court has sentenced one of the Arab world's most famous comedic actors to jail for offending Islam in some of his most popular films.

Adel Imam was sentenced to three months in jail and fined 170 dollars for insulting Islam in roles he played.

It was latest such case against a high-profile figure, underlining concerns about freedom of expression in Egypt, where Islamist parties dominate the parliament after sweeping election victories.

Imam, 71, has acted in dozens of films in a career that spans nearly 50 years.

He was initially found guilty in February in a case brought by an ultraconservative Islamist lawyer. He was given a retrial since he was first tried in absentia.

Imam has the right to appeal.



Article from FOXNEWS


POWER PLAY: Obama brings claims of GOP war on poor to campus campaign swing

Obama Takes Different Tone With College Students than 2008

“76 percent”

-- Portion of North Carolina voters ages 25 to 29 that voted for Barack Obama in 2008  

In 2008, President Obama won voters under the age of 30 by a staggering 34 points and boosted turnout for the 18-to-29 set compared to the two previous elections.

Obama did more than twice as well with young voters and got more young voters to the polls than other recent Democratic candidates.

With Obama unlikely to fare so well with middle-aged voters this time, the youth vote has taken on new importance. Even if Obama can't recreate the magic of 2008, he needs to do at least as well with the 18-to-29 year olds as John Kerry and Al Gore.

-

Obama can credit his victory to having narrowly won with the 66 percent of voters between ages 30 and 64, but his awesome performance with young voters not only offset the opposition of roughly similar number of voters over the age of 65, but also provided Obama's cushion in the popular and electoral votes.

Consider North Carolina where Obama will today kick off a three-state, two-day campaign tour across swing-state university campuses. Obama won by three-tenths of a percent in the final tally, but pulled 74 percent of the 18 percent of voters under the age of 30.

Obama still would have won the presidency without North Carolina's 15 electoral votes and still would have won the popular vote without beating John McCain two-to-one with voters under 30, but young voters were also key to developing Obama's “cool” brand.

Who knows how many Baby Boomers were nudged into the Obama column by seeing the shining optimism and unalloyed enthusiasm of their college-student children? In youth-obsessed America, it's usually preferable to be standing with the youngsters and not the geezers.

The same kind of grassroots support Obama is now paying dearly to recreate stemmed naturally from young voters who believed that they were part of a movement that would forever change American politics.

Except that it didn't. The political discourse is worse, not better than when Obama took office. Race relations are worse, not better than when Obama took office. Obama blames Republicans for becoming more wicked and less worthy of efforts at compromise, but that itself sounds like something a typical politician would say.

These voters are also a big part of why Obama has been so anxious about his reversals on Bush administration war policies. Middle-aged voters may be relieved that Congress blocked Obama from closing the prison at Guantanamo Bay or that Obama has expanded the Bush administration's covert war efforts via drones, but those things didn't do much to keep youthful hopes alive.

Obama is more than two years into a limited Afghan surge that has gone very poorly and yielded many American casualties. That's probably not where a lot of young voters would have imagined Obama going when they cast their ballots for him in 2008.

The biggest problem for the president with young voters, though, has to be the fact that they have suffered the most in the puny economy since Obama took office.

An Associated Press study out this week found a 53.6 percent rate of unemployment and underemployment among adults under age 25 with college degrees. More American adults are living with parents than at any time since 1950 and student loan debt recently topped $1 trillion.

The 19-year-old senior who voted for Obama on a platform of hope and change who is now working as a barista, living with mom and unable to repay college loans at any rate may have trouble conjuring the same dewy idealism that Obama once tapped.

Obama will also campaign this week in Colorado and Iowa, states that like North Carolina, have large numbers of college students and young adults.

(He is able to have taxpayers cover the cost of the campaign swing because his topic, extending a $6 billion-per-year program that subsidizes student loans for lower-income college students. The stimulus provision is set to expire on July 1, and since Obama is talking about pending legislation, he can say he is on official business, not campaigning, and not have to pay for the travel from his re-election fund.)

As he rolls out, he finds his Gallup approval rating among voters under 30 running 10 points behind his 2008 election performance. Much worse, though, is the fact that voter enthusiasm for this group has cratered. In February, Gallup found voter enthusiasm for the under 30 set down 28 points to 48 percent as compared to the same point in 2008.

Obama will still win the youth vote, but it looks like he is unlikely to do so by the massive margins of 2008. But the more serious concern is that youth turnout may shrink and that these young voters won't be foot soldiers knocking on doors and leaning on their parents and grandparents to vote for that cool, transformative guy.

With Obama unlikely to fare so well with middle-aged voters this time, the youth vote has taken on new importance. Even if Obama can't recreate the magic of 2008, he needs to do at least as well with the 18-to-29 year olds as John Kerry and Al Gore.

That's why he's not out talking about transforming Washington and bringing hope to the nation this week. He's out with a narrow message tailored to lower-income students which says that Mitt Romney and the Republicans are trying to take away their subsidized tuitions and that they need to vote for Obama so that he protect that money.

Schumer and Senate Dems Defy Popular Opinion on Arizona Immigration Law in Pursuit of Wedge Issue for November

“If the court upholds the Arizona law, Congress can make it clear that what Arizona is doing goes beyond what the federal government and what Congress ever intended.”

-- Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., in an interview with the Washington Post explaining that Senate Democrats would put forward a bill targeting Arizona's illegal immigration crackdown.

The Supreme Court will hear arguments on Wednesday over Arizona's 2010 anti-illegal immigration law that has been mostly blocked by federal courts at the request of the Obama administration.

The most controversial provisions, particularly the one that requires police officers to determine the immigration status of those individuals detained for another crime, have never gone into effect.

It will be months before the high court renders a decision, but in advance of the arguments, Senate Democrats are seeking to increase the pressure on Republicans over the legislations. They believe the bill provides a good wedge issue that can harm Republican chances with already skeptical Hispanic voters, especially if the blue team can emphasize the complaints of some civil libertarians that the law is tantamount to racial profiling.

Today, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y, the lead man on messaging for the Senate Democrats, will hold a hearing in which one of the original sponsors of the bill, former state Sen. Russell Pearce, has been called to testify. Pearce was removed from office in a recall election last fall and replaced by a more moderate Republican, who though generally supportive of the illegal immigration crackdown, distanced himself from Pearce's sharp language and hard-line stances.

Pearce, a former deputy to Maricopa County's Sheriff Joe Arpaio, had plenty of controversy in his less than three years in the state senate and even more during his eight years as a state representative. He emailed, he says unknowingly, text from a white supremacist group to his supporters and endorsed, again, he says, unknowingly, a neo-Nazi for a slot on the Mesa city council.

Schumer and the Senate Democrats are hoping to make Pearce the face of the law and revive the flash of outrage that followed its initial passage when pro-amnesty groups and Hispanic activists were calling for boycotts of Arizona and the law was getting wall-to-wall press coverage.

The goal is to force Republican senators and Senate candidates to stake out a position against the Senate measure and perhaps get presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney to squirm a bit. President Obama's re-election hopes depend on repeating his huge advantage with Hispanic voters (67 percent in 2008 exit polls), and Senate Democrats, facing the danger of losing control of the upper chamber, are counting on similar showings with Hispanic voters in state races.

This looks good for a few swing states with contested Senate elections. If the Supreme Court upholds the Arizona law in whole or in part, Republican candidates in toss-up races in Florida and New Mexico, swing states with large Hispanic populations, might have to take difficult stances on the law.

But on the whole, the issue looks like a loser for Democrats. While public opinion on the Arizona law and ones like it that have since sprung up around the country was somewhat divided at the outset, public opinion is now solidly behind the idea of state-level crackdowns.

The latest FOX News poll found 65 percent support for the Arizona law among registered voters, identical to a Quinnipiac University poll for earlier this month. The Quinnipiac poll found 50 percent in support of Arizona's law two months after its passage in April 2010 with 32 percent opposed. Two years later, the opposition was essentially unchanged but support had grown by 15 percent.

If undecided voters swung so sharply in favor of the law despite years overwhelmingly negative coverage, one suspects that Schumer's messaging effort this week won't do much to change the mainstream thinking that Arizona did the right thing.

It's hard to see how for most of the seats Democrats are defending in competitive races â€" Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Missouri, Michigan and Ohio â€" it would be helpful to have Democratic candidates going on the record against a popular law. Most dangerous is probably Virginia, where Democrat Tim Kaine might please the growing Hispanic population with support of the Senate effort but Republican George Allen would surely gain more from the support of suburbanites anxious about the large number of illegal immigrants in their communities.

One reason the Arizona law and its imitators are so popular may be that voters have seen sharp declines in illegal immigration in recent years and an increase in the number of border jumpers who, in the word of Romney, “self-deport.”

A new Pew study says that between 2005 and 2010 about 1.4 million Mexican immigrants and their children moved from the United States to Mexico, twice as many as in the five years before. While much of that out-migration can be attributed to the continually anemic U.S. economy and job market, some must be attributed to increasing fears of deportation or arrest.

Ever since the defeat of the 2007 immigration proposal from then-President George W. Bush, states and localities have been ramping up pressure on illegal immigrants and public opinion has hardened against amnesty proposals. Lax laws and booming construction and service sectors drew illegal immigrants. A combination of more stringent laws and a shriveled economy seem to be repelling them.

Schumer's best hope is that the Supreme Court upholds the lower court decisions barring the law. Anger over the decision would be focused on the court and the president, and Democrats in Florida and New Mexico would still get a boost among Hispanics as they stand solidly with the administration. Schumer would have gotten to dangle Pearce before sympathetic media outlets and engaged in racism by association for Republican supporters of the law without forcing vulnerable incumbents to cast damaging votes.

The truth for Schumer, just as for President Obama, is that revving up pro-amnesty Hispanic groups is best done for a narrow audience. Romney's “self-deport” strategy and support for state-level solutions to the problem are political winners with the electorate at large.

And Now, A Word From Charles

“The numbers today talk about the difficulty of the entitlement programs in terms of years.  But the more accurate way I think that you look at it is how much is spent every year and how much is coming in?  

Medicare shells out $560 billion every year.  It covers less than half of that with premiums and with taxation. So more than half of that it comes from the Treasury, which has no money of its own.  That money comes from China. Every year, almost $300 billion every year it adds to the deficit. That is a quarter of the entire deficit on Medicare.”

-- Charles Krauthammer on “Special Report with Bret Baier.”


Chris Stirewalt is digital politics editor for Fox News, and his POWER PLAY column appears Monday-Friday on FoxNews.com.



Article from FOXNEWS


Mom in custody after baby stabbed in Baltimore

DEVELOPING:  Baltimore police say a mother has stabbed her infant child in the neck at a social services building.

The 8-week-old baby is critically injured at a hospital and the mother is in custody.

Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the stabbing occurred just before 10 a.m. Tuesday at a Department of Social Services building.

The baby's gender was not immediately known.

Detectives and child abuse investigators are continuing to investigate.



Article from FOXNEWS


After 25 years, man reportedly admits to killing

  • Clifford Eagle, 53, walked into the Billings Montana police station and reportedly confessed to a 25-year-old murder.Fox23.com

Clifford Eagle strolled into Billings, Mont., police station on April 18 and told police that he wanted to get something off his chest.

At around 10:30 p.m. as one of the officers was leaving the station house, Eagle allegedly told authorities that a quarter century ago, when he was 28 years old, he and another man got into a heated argument with a third man in Oklahoma about property, and he ended up shooting the man dead, Fox23.com reported.

He was then interviewed at the station and authorities in Oklahoma were alerted. The Billings Gazette reported that he stayed voluntarily until officers made the arrest.

The 1987 murder of Leo Reasnor, the long-time county commissioner had shaken the community of Lequire, Okla. 

Reasnor, who was 49 at the time, was shot dead on a rural stretch of road he owned. His son-in-law found his body inside his pickup truck with a gunshot wound to the head, and while at one point the killer's arrest seemed imminent, the case eventually went cold. 

But just because an investigation may putter out, seldom do the emotions of a victim's family. 

"There is not a day that goes through my mind that I don't think of my Daddy. Never,” Kim Stout, Reasnor's daughter said. The family keeps a scrapbook of all the local newspaper articles detailing his murder.

Eagle was convicted in Oklahoma of a child's rape in 2003 and released in 2007. He was then required to register as a sex offender, the Billings Gazette reported. 

He allegedly told investigators that he was with another man during the argument and the two thought Reasnor had a gun, so they fired.  Eagle implicated Vince Johnson in the shooting, but Johnson was executed in Oklahoma for another murder in 1991.

"Being able to reach a conclusion on a case even 25 years later, it brings a lot of hope for people who haven't had their case solved," Stan Florence, the director of the Oklahoma State Bureau of investigations said.

Eagle is facing a first-degree murder charge. He is awaiting extradition to Oklahoma.

"It would have not taken me 25 years to be burdened to the point to confess but maybe it just took him that long," Phyllis Reasnor-Arnett, Reasnor's widow said.

Please click here for more from Fox23.com

Please click here for more from The Billings Gazette



Article from FOXNEWS


Romney primed to shut out GOP rivals? - 2012 Elections Tracker- Boehner: Obama creating \'envy, division\' in 2012 bid

Already the presumptive nominee, Mitt Romney could effectively shut out his remaining Republican presidential rivals in the next round of primaries Tuesday and emerge the clear rival to President Obama in November. 

The five-state set of primaries Tuesday became decidedly less interesting after Rick Santorum, Romney's top primary opponent, suspended his campaign earlier this month. But the low-key race could set the field for the general election. 

On the Democratic side, Obama is expected to formally clinch his nomination on Tuesday -- achieving the needed 2,778 delegates by the time polls close Tuesday night. Not that there was ever any doubt, as the Democratic primary was uncontested. 

On the Republican side, Romney has the opportunity Tuesday to sideline both Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul. While Romney will not be able to clinch the nomination outright -- he needs 1,144 delegates to do that, and will not reach that threshold Tuesday -- he could make it mathematically impossible in most scenarios for either of his two remaining opponents to reach that number. 

If both Paul and Gingrich perform poorly on Tuesday night, the number of delegates they each need to pick up to reach 1,144 will exceed the number left on the table, based on numbers in the Associated Press tally. 

Asked for comment on the looming contests, the Gingrich campaign gave no indication it was considering an exit from the race. 

"Gingrich is conservatives' last hope in this primary. He remains committed to the conservative cause and this election," spokesman R.C. Hammond said. 

The Gingrich campaign hopes the delegate numbers reported in the AP tally are fluid -- the campaign, for instance, challenges the awarding of all Florida's and Arizona's delegates to Romney despite their violation of party rules in holding early elections. 

The Gingrich campaign has also predicted it will do well in at least one of Tuesday's contests -- the primary in Delaware. The other primaries are being held in New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Connecticut, states thought to be friendly territory for former Massachusetts governor Romney. 

A total of 209 delegates are at stake. 

The latest AP tally puts Romney at 697 delegates, Gingrich at 137 and Paul at 67. Santorum had 269 delegates before he suspended his campaign. 

Romney has long been campaigning as a de facto general election candidate, focusing his stump speeches on Obama. He was glossing over his rivals even before Santorum dropped out. 

Gingrich, though, has continued to campaign. Despite a communication glitch that resulted in reports over the weekend that he was canceling a planned North Carolina trip, the campaign released a schedule on Saturday showing Newt and Callista Gingrich blanketing the state through the end of this week. North Carolina holds its primary May 8.



Article from FOXNEWS


Boehner: Obama Creating \'Envy, Division\' in 2012 Bid

House Speaker John Boehner, in an interview with Fox News, accused President Obama of employing the politics of "envy and division" in his bid for a second White House term. 

The speaker had unusually harsh words for the incumbent president as he described the stakes in the 2012 election. He said Americans "can't live" with Obama for another four years and that "his policies will turn America in a direction that we may never recover from" -- as he touted Mitt Romney's chances going into November. 

Though polls generally show the presumptive GOP nominee trailing a bit behind Obama in a general election match-up, Boehner said Romney is "doing fine" considering the "bruising primary" he's been through. He accused Obama's team of trying to distract from the issues that could harm them, like the economy. 

"The election's going to be a referendum on the president's economic policies, pure and simple," Boehner told Fox News, in an interview that aired Tuesday morning. 

The speaker said Obama's election team, with its "division" politics, is trying to make the election about "anything other than the president's failed economic policies." 

"They're going to look for every bogeyman known to man," Boehner said. 

Boehner was responding specifically to a recent comment from Obama strategist David Axelrod, who accused some congressional Republicans of waging a "reign of terror from the far right" that has pulled the entire party to their side. 

Boehner, though, showed a shred of doubt in the Fox News interview as he discussed the upcoming congressional elections. 

He gave his Republican Party a "2-in-3 chance" of holding control of the House after taking power in the 2010 elections. 

"But there's a 1-in-3 chance we could lose," Boehner added. "I'm being myself -- frank. We've got a big challenge, and we've got work to do." 

Democrats still face an uphill battle in their efforts to take back the House, where Republicans hold a 242-190 seat advantage. 

Control of the Senate could be up for grabs this year, too, with Democrats clinging to a fragile six-vote majority. 

Boehner said Romney is in good standing going into the presidential race. 

"For his numbers to be in close proximity to the president, I think is a very good sign," Boehner said.



Article from FOXNEWS


Ex-Edwards aide back on the witness stand at trial

BEIJING (Reuters) - North Korea has almost completed preparations for a third nuclear test, a senior source with close ties to Pyongyang and Beijing told Reuters, which will draw further international condemnation following a failed rocket launch if it goes ahead.

The isolated and impoverished state sacrificed the chance of closer ties with the United States when it launched the long-range rocket on April 13 and was censured by the U.N. Security Council, including the North's sole major ally, China.

Critics say the rocket launch was aimed at honing the North's ability to develop an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of hitting the United States, a move that would dramatically increase its military and diplomatic heft.

Now the North appears to be about to carry out a third nuclear test after two in 2006 and 2009.

"Soon. Preparations are almost complete," the source said when asked whether North Korea was planning to conduct a nuclear test.

This is the first time a senior official has confirmed the planned test and the source has correctly predicted events in the past, telling Reuters about the 2006 test days before it happened.

The rocket launch and nuclear test come as Kim Jong-un, the third of his line to rule North Korea, seeks to cement his grip on power.

Kim took office in December and has lauded the country's military might, reaffirming his father's "military first" policies that have stunted economic development and appearing to dash slim hopes of an opening to the outside world.

Washington, Seoul and Tokyo, which have most to fear from any North Korean nuclear threat, are watching events anxiously and many observers say that Pyongyang may have the capacity to conduct a test using highly enriched uranium for the first time.

Defense experts say that by successfully enriching uranium, to make bombs of the type dropped on Hiroshima nearly 70 years ago, the North would be able to significantly build up stocks of weapons-grade nuclear material.

It would also allow it more easily to manufacture a nuclear warhead to mount on a long-range missile.

The source did not specify whether the test would be a third test using plutonium, of which it has limited stocks, or whether Pyongyang would use uranium.

South Korean defense sources have been quoted in domestic media as saying a launch could come within two weeks and one North Korea analyst has suggested that it could come as early as the North's "Army Day" on Wednesday.

Other observers say that any date is pure speculation.

The rocket launch and the planned nuclear test have exposed the limits of China's hold over Pyongyang. Beijing is the North's sole major ally and props up the state with investment and fuel.

"China is like a chameleon toward North Korea," said Kim Young-soo, professor of political science at Sogang University in Seoul. "It says it objects to North Korea's provocative acts, but it does not participate in punishing the North."

Reports have suggested that a Chinese company may have supplied a rocket launcher shown off at a military parade to mark this month's centenary of the birth of Kim Il-sung, the state's founder, something that may be in breach of UN sanctions.

China has denied breaching sanctions.

YOUNGEST KIM STILL IN CHARGE DESPITE ROCKET FIASCO

The source said there was debate in North Korea's top leadership over whether to go ahead with the launch in the face of U.S. warnings and the possibility of further U.N. sanctions, but that hawks in the Korean People's Army had won the debate.

The source dismissed speculation that the failed launch had dealt a blow to Kim Jong-un, believed to be in his late 20s, who came to power after his father Kim Jong-il died following a 17-year rule that saw North Korea experience a famine in the 1990s.

"Kim Jong-un was named first secretary of the (ruling) Workers' Party and head of the National Defence Commission," the source said, adding that the titles further consolidated his grip on power.

North Korean media has recently upped its criticism of South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, who cut off aid to Pyongyang when he took power in 2008, calling him a "rat" and a "bastard" and threatening to turn the South Korean capital to ashes.

Pyongyang desperately wants recognition from the United States, the guarantor of the South's security. It claims sovereignty over the entire Korean peninsula, as does South Korea.

"North Korea may consider abandoning (the test) if the United States agrees to a peace treaty," the source said, reiterating a long-standing demand by Pyongyang for recognition by Washington and a treaty to end the 1950-1953 Korean War, which ended in a truce.

(Additional reporting by Ju-min Park; Writing by David Chance; Editing by Nick Macfie)



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Steve Doocy clarifies misquoting Obama\'s ‘silver spoon\' comment

Hugh Hefner is ready for war.

Not against his former wives or girlfriends, but against the conservative politicians thrusting their old-fashioned viewpoints into other people's bedrooms.

Click image for more photos

In a rare move, the founder of Playboy magazine picks up his pen and writes an editorial in the May issue of men's magazine. The politics web site Politico.com notes in his editorial, headlined "The War Against Sex," Hefner blasts "repressed conservatives ... [for] pounding on America's bedroom door."

"For months I have watched the rhetoric building," writes Hefner. "Last October, in an interview with an evangelical blogger, Rick Santorum promised to defund birth control on the grounds that contraception is 'a license to do things in a sexual realm that is counter to how things are supposed to be.'

"Ron Paul was no better, believing that the birth control pill did not cause immorality but that immorality creates the problem of wanting to use the pill. Mitt Romney vowed to see a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage and to overturn Roe v. Wade."

He also references Georgetown University law student Sandra Fluke, who was lambasted by conservative loudmouth Rush Limbaugh as "a slut" and "a prostitute" after testifying to congress about employers paying for birth control.

The Hef  promises to not let down his guard on America's sexual freedom: "We won't let that happen. … Welcome to the new sexual revolution."

But not everyone is eager to have Hefner waving a flag for women's rights. The women's business news site, TheJaneDough.com, noted that while it appreciated Hefner's defense of Fluke and his defense against GOP values, he's a "notorious girlfriend collector" and "hardly one to preach about women's rights."

[ [ [['A picture is worth a thousand words', 5]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/why-facebook-bought-instagram-4-theories-160400376.html', '[Related: Why Facebook bought Instagram: 4 theories]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 9]], 'http://contributor.yahoo.com/join/yahoonews_virginiabeach', '[Did you witness the jet crash? Share your story with Yahoo! News]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj', '[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Dick Clark', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/dick-clark-dies-at-82-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/c/21/c217c61aa2d5872244c08caa13c16ec5.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'Reuters', ], [ [['the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 15]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/white-house-stays-out-of-teen-s-killing-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120411/martinzimmermen.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['Titanic', 7]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/titanic-anniversary/', ' ', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/b/4e/b4e5ad9f00b5dfeeec2226d53e173569.jpeg', '550', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/navy-jet-crashes-in-virginia-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120406/jet_ap.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]

[ [ [[' the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 4]], '28924649', '0' ], [ [['because I know God protects me', 14], ['Brian Snow was at a nearby credit union', 5]], '28811216', '0' ], [ [['The state news agency RIA-Novosti quoted Rosaviatsiya', 6]], '28805461', '0' ], [ [['measure all but certain to fail in the face of bipartisan', 4]], '28771014', '0' ], [ [['matter what you do in this case', 5]], '28759848', '0' ], [ [['presume laws are constitutional', 7]], '28747556', '0' ], [ [['has destroyed 15 to 25 houses', 7]], '28744868', '0' ], [ [['short answer is yes', 7]], '28746030', '0' ], [ [['opportunity to tell the real story', 7]], '28731764', '0' ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 7]], '28723797', '0' ], [ [['point of my campaign is that big ideas matter', 9]], '28712293', '0' ], [ [['As the standoff dragged into a second day', 7]], '28687424', '0' ], [ [['French police stepped up the search', 17]], '28667224', '0' ], [ [['Seeking to elevate his candidacy back to a general', 8]], '28660934', '0' ], [ [['The tragic story of Trayvon Martin', 4]], '28647343', '0' ], [ [['Karzai will get a chance soon to express', 8]], '28630306', '0' ], [ [['powerful storms stretching', 8]], '28493546', '0' ], [ [['basic norm that death is private', 6]], '28413590', '0' ], [ [['songwriter also saw a surge in sales for her debut album', 6]], '28413590', '1', 'Watch music videos from Whitney Houston ', 'on Yahoo! Music', 'http://music.yahoo.com' ], [ [['keyword', 99999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Joran van der Sloot extradition underway

MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) - Mitt Romney is all but certain to sweep Tuesday's five presidential primaries, marking a nearly definitive end to the Republican nomination process.

Voters in New York, Connecticut, Delaware, Rhode Island and Pennsylvania will cast ballots Tuesday. But Romney won't be in any of those states Tuesday night. Instead, he'll return to New Hampshire, the state where a sweeping primary victory in January set him down the path to the GOP presidential nomination.

From the Radisson Hotel downtown, Romney plans a speech he's titled "A Better America Begins Tonight." The general election speech, aides say, will represent a definitive pivot away from the primary contest and toward Democratic President Barack Obama and the general election.

Romney has been the party's presumptive nominee since his closest rival, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, dropped out of the race earlier this month.

The former Massachusetts governor has turned toward the center in recent days, beginning the process of appealing to independent voters in the wake of a brutal primary season

Romney was drawn to the right on issues like immigration as he fought off challenges from other Republicans. On Monday, he signaled he was considering a wider range of immigration policies, including a proposal from Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., that would allow some young people a chance at visas to stay in the U.S.

Romney also embraced a temporary extension of lower rates for student loans, a policy opposed by House Republicans but backed by President Barack Obama.

Romney announced his support for that proposal as he campaigned in Pennsylvania a day before its GOP primary. While Pennsylvania is a battleground state in the fall, his campaign visits Sunday night and Monday were largely scheduled before Santorum left the race and the primary in Santorum's home state was still competitive.

There are a total of 209 delegates at stake Tuesday.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Maine named most peaceful state in America

OSLO (Reuters) - The Norwegian who massacred 77 people to protest against Muslim immigration to Europe said on Monday he had hoped to kill as many as 150 and kept on killing because police failed to respond urgently to his phone call.

Breivik has given a detailed account of his car bomb attack at government headquarters in Oslo on July 22, which killed eight people, followed hours later by his shooting of 69 people, mostly teenagers, at a Labour Party island camp.

He said on Monday his "gruesome" actions were to prevent a civil war caused, he said, by a Muslim takeover of Europe.

"This was a minor barbarity to prevent a larger one", he said on the sixth day of a trial that has transfixed Norway.

"I've never ever experienced such a horrendous ... gruesome act as this. But it was necessary," Breivik said in his usual tone, lacking emotion. "It was much more cruel than I expected."

Breivik said he thought that at least another 150 people had drowned in a lake as they fled his gunfire so he called police to surrender, only to find himself forced to leave a message.

"I said 'call me back when you got the right person'," Breivik said. "I told myself 'I will continue until the phone rings'. I thought, I will continue until I die. What would I have done, sat by the pier waiting?"

COLD, MATTER-OF-FACT

Breivik has denied criminal guilt, insisting his victims were "traitors" whose multiculturalist views facilitated what he saw as a de facto Muslim invasion of Europe.

Most Norwegians have reacted with horror to his testimony, delivered in a cold, matter-of-fact manner, while there is wide public acceptance of his right as a defendant to give it.

Breivik has had almost free rein to issue warnings against immigration and explain how he scoured the Internet for bomb-making information while writing a 1,500-page document declaring himself part of a secretive group that is Europe's answer to al Qaeda - a group the police have said likely does not exist.

Breivik said he spared some people, including a 10-year-old boy whose father was his first victim, and a Labour Party activist because he looked right-wing.

"Some people have the type of look that is associated with the leftist movement," Breivik said.

"This person, (Adrian) Pracon appeared right-wing, that was his appearance. That's the reason I didn't fire any shots at him," said Breivik, 33, whose sanity or lack of it is a prime issue to be determined in the trial.

The 22-year-old Labour party youth wing activist earlier told Reuters: "I remember him pointing the gun at me for quite a long time before he took it down, turned and walked away."

Breivik told how he used a fake police uniform to trick people into coming out of hiding and then shot them at close range.

"I started with ‘have you seen him, do you know where the shots came from?' ... then I said ‘there's a rescue boat that's going to take you to safety but you need to come out'," he said.

FIRST APOLOGY

Later in the rampage, which lasted more than an hour, Breivik came upon Pracon again as he played dead, and this time shot the son of Polish immigrants through the shoulder.

He said he spared the boy's life because "I could not understand what such a little boy was doing at a political indoctrination camp."

But he said he had no qualms about killing teenagers. His victims were as young as 14. "They were not children, under the legal definition only under 14 are children ... they were political activists," he said.

Breivik issued his first seeming apology, to innocent bystanders hurt or killed when his 950-kg fertilizer bomb went off in Oslo. More than 200 were injured.

"To all of those ... I want to say I am deeply sorry for what happened," he said. "But what happened, happened."

Ahead of the trial, which is expected to last 10 weeks, one court-appointed team of psychiatrists concluded that Breivik was psychotic while a second found him mentally capable.

If Breivik is deemed sane, as he hopes to be, he could face a 21-year prison sentence with indefinite extensions for as long as he is considered dangerous.

(Editing by Janet Lawrence)



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Report: Net migration from Mexico dips to zero

a report by the Pew Hispanic Center. This marks a dramatic change in the wave of Mexican migration that brought 12 million people to America in four decades.

About 1.4 million Mexicans immigrated to the United States between 2005 and 2010, which is roughly the same number of Mexicans who left over the same period.

The number of illegal immigrants from Mexico dropped from 7 million in 2007, a peak, to 6.1 million in 2011. The report attributes the drop to the drastic decline in birthrates in Mexico, the increasingly dangerous passage across the border, and the flagging American economy. A higher percentage of deported migrants now say in surveys that they will not attempt to come back into the United States (compared to 10 years ago).

The United States' estimated 12 million Mexican immigrants represent the largest chunk of immigrants in any country in the world. Mexico has sent the most immigrants to the States over the past four decades than any other nation.

According to the Mexican Census, 500,000 U.S. citizen children were living in Mexico in 2010, compared to 240,000 ten years earlier. Government data doesn't say how many of those children left the United States because their parents were deported.

[ [ [['A picture is worth a thousand words', 5]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/why-facebook-bought-instagram-4-theories-160400376.html', '[Related: Why Facebook bought Instagram: 4 theories]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 9]], 'http://contributor.yahoo.com/join/yahoonews_virginiabeach', '[Did you witness the jet crash? Share your story with Yahoo! News]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj', '[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Dick Clark', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/dick-clark-dies-at-82-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/c/21/c217c61aa2d5872244c08caa13c16ec5.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'Reuters', ], [ [['the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 15]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/white-house-stays-out-of-teen-s-killing-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120411/martinzimmermen.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['Titanic', 7]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/titanic-anniversary/', ' ', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/b/4e/b4e5ad9f00b5dfeeec2226d53e173569.jpeg', '550', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/navy-jet-crashes-in-virginia-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120406/jet_ap.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]

[ [ [[' the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 4]], '28924649', '0' ], [ [['because I know God protects me', 14], ['Brian Snow was at a nearby credit union', 5]], '28811216', '0' ], [ [['The state news agency RIA-Novosti quoted Rosaviatsiya', 6]], '28805461', '0' ], [ [['measure all but certain to fail in the face of bipartisan', 4]], '28771014', '0' ], [ [['matter what you do in this case', 5]], '28759848', '0' ], [ [['presume laws are constitutional', 7]], '28747556', '0' ], [ [['has destroyed 15 to 25 houses', 7]], '28744868', '0' ], [ [['short answer is yes', 7]], '28746030', '0' ], [ [['opportunity to tell the real story', 7]], '28731764', '0' ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 7]], '28723797', '0' ], [ [['point of my campaign is that big ideas matter', 9]], '28712293', '0' ], [ [['As the standoff dragged into a second day', 7]], '28687424', '0' ], [ [['French police stepped up the search', 17]], '28667224', '0' ], [ [['Seeking to elevate his candidacy back to a general', 8]], '28660934', '0' ], [ [['The tragic story of Trayvon Martin', 4]], '28647343', '0' ], [ [['Karzai will get a chance soon to express', 8]], '28630306', '0' ], [ [['powerful storms stretching', 8]], '28493546', '0' ], [ [['basic norm that death is private', 6]], '28413590', '0' ], [ [['songwriter also saw a surge in sales for her debut album', 6]], '28413590', '1', 'Watch music videos from Whitney Houston ', 'on Yahoo! Music', 'http://music.yahoo.com' ], [ [['keyword', 99999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Nugent Guilty in Bear Kill?

Rocker and gun rights advocate Ted Nugent was expected to plead guilty Tuesday to transporting a black bear he illegally killed in Alaska.

A plea agreement with federal prosecutors signed by Nugent says he illegally shot and killed the bear in May 2009 on Sukkwan Island in southeast Alaska after wounding another bear in a bow hunt. The bow incident counted toward a state seasonal limit of one bear.

Nugent was set to participate by telephone in Tuesday's U.S. District Court proceeding in the southeast Alaska town of Ketchikan, his lawyer said.

Nugent didn't know he was breaking the law, said his Anchorage attorney, Wayne Anthony Ross.

The agreement, filed in U.S. District Court last week, says Nugent knowingly possessed and transported the bear in misdemeanor violation of the Lacey Act.

According to the agreement, the hunt was filmed for Nugent's Outdoor Channel television show "Spirit of the Wild."

Nugent, who signed the document April 14, agreed to pay a $10,000 fine, according to the document, which says he also agreed to a two-year probation, including a special condition that he not hunt or fish in Alaska or Forest Service properties for one year. He also agreed to create a public service announcement that would be broadcast on his show every second week for one year, the document states.

Nugent also agreed to pay the state $600 for the bear that was taken illegally, according to the document.

A plea agreement would have to be approved by a judge.

Nugent briefly drew the attention of the Secret Service last week after he rallied support for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and said of the Obama administration: "We need to ride into that battlefield and chop their heads off in November." His comments were made during a National Rifle Association meeting in St. Louis.



Article from FOXNEWS


Are You Lovin\' the McCar?

Are you lovin' it?

First there was the LeCar, then speculation that there would one day be an iCar, but now there is the McCar.

Just don't expect to see any golden arches on the hood.

Designed by Chinese automaker Geely, and unveiled at the Beijing Auto Show this week, the name is short for MagiC Car and promises to be ten cars in one.

Technically the McCar-2, with a full set of folding and removable seats, the compact can be configured in a variety of configurations and accommodate a roll-on wheelchair or fold-up motorcycle and is destined for taxi duty in the crowded metropolises of China.

Nissan's Taxi of Tomorrow for New York City, however, probably doesn't have anything to worry about.



Article from FOXNEWS


Prosecutor: Roger Clemens told \'lies to cover up lies\'

  • April 23: Former pitcher Roger Clemens, leaves the Federal Courthouse in Washington.AP

The complexity of the Roger Clemens perjury retrial showed itself in many ways Monday -- before a jury that knows little about baseball.

The prosecutor's hour-long opening statement was a rambling hodgepodge of dates and anecdotes that attempted to portray the seven-time Cy Young Award winner as a man who told lies and "other lies to cover up lies." A ruling was issued about Clemens' former teammate Andy Pettitte: He can testify about taking human growth hormone, but can't say where he got it from.

In between, there were numerous motions as attorneys for both sides fussed over which words and facts can be used and which ones can't. Finally, as the clock passed 5 p.m., an impatient U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton admonished both sides for making their cases too complicated for a jury to understand.

"Keep it simple. ... Boom! Move on," said Walton, who then declared the slow-moving trial adjourned for the day as he abruptly left the bench. The opening defense statement was put off until Tuesday.

On the fifth day of the trial, the court finally seated 12 jurors and four alternates. The 10 women and six men mostly said they didn't follow baseball or know much about Clemens. In fact, seven said they'd never heard of him.

Their first task was to try to digest prosecutor Steven Durham's description of Clemens' 10-year relationship with strength trainer Brian McNamee, which Durham said became a "story of deceit and dishonesty and betrayal" because Clemens wouldn't acknowledge using steroids and human growth hormone.

"The end will show that he made his choice," Durham said, "and he was going to lie."

Clemens is accused of lying -- when he said he never used steroids or HGH during his 24-season career -- at a 2008 congressional hearing and at a deposition that preceded it. Last year's mistrial was called after the government showed the jury a portion of videotaped evidence that had been ruled inadmissible. The costly process of bringing the case back to court has drawn criticism from those who regard it as a waste of government money -- a point raised last week by some prospective jurors.

The case largely will hinge on the believability of the two principal figures in the case -- Clemens and McNamee. McNamee says he injected Clemens with steroids and human growth hormone; Clemens said he never used either.

The government's case suffered a blow when Walton made the ruling about Pettitte.

Pettitte is expected to say that he used HGH and that he had conversations with Clemens about HGH, but the judge ruled that Pettitte can't identify McNamee as a supplier because the jury might try to connect the dots and conclude that McNamee must have also supplied Clemens -- a case of "classic guilt by association," one of Clemens' lawyers said.

Wearing a pinstriped suit, white shirt and silver-striped tie, Clemens took notes throughout the day. His wife, Debbie, made her first appearance at the trial, sitting among the spectators and getting a hug from her husband during another delay -- the court waited 50 minutes for a late potential juror to show up.

Debbie Clemens remained in the courtroom for the conclusion of jury selection, but the judge ordered her -- along with any other potential witnesses -- to leave during opening statements.

Roger Clemens' lawyer objected, saying earlier word from the judge would have saved her a lot of time and travel, but Debbie Clemens was also excluded from opening statements at last year's first trial, because she was to be a witness later for her husband.

Walton did not resolve the lawyers' spat over how much the defense can challenge the validity of the congressional hearing at which Clemens testified. If the hearings are challenged, the government says it should be able to offer widespread evidence about performance-enhancing drug use in baseball to show why Congress was interested, something that Clemens wants to avoid.

Clemens' lawyer, Rusty Hardin, claims the hearing was merely "a show trial for Roger Clemens."

The judge put off making a ruling, saying instead he will deal with the matter if and when it comes up during testimony.

Among those in the jury are a Nuclear Regulatory Commission analyst who grew up down the street from a New Jersey house rented by Yankee stars Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris; a supermarket cashier; an occupational therapist who once saw a game at old Griffith Stadium; an environmental lawyer who ran track in high school; a roughly 80-year-old retired college professor who was born in Germany; and a Treasury Department official.



Article from FOXNEWS


Postcard\'s 60-Year TripEnds With Snail Mail Fail

Talk about snail mail!

The nearly 60-year journey of a postcard through at least four states is finally winding down, although the little Georgia boy whose parents wrote him during a trip to Chicago is now 71 years old. The postcard, with a picture of the Windy City's Shedd Aquarium on the front and a 2-cent stamp on the back, landed in the mailbox of Elizabeth Fulcher, of South Daytona, Fla., last week. 

“I looked at it and saw it had a 2-cent stamp and thought, 'Wow, this looks really old,'” Fulcher told FoxNews.com.

She posted a photo of the postcard on Facebook and her friends went to work tracking down its intended recipient, Scott McMurry, a Justice Department historian now living in Virginia.

“It's really my friends who just went to work and were able to track him down and get his phone number after I posted this on Facebook," Fulcher said. "My friends were pretty amazing.”

"I made my mailman pinkie swear it wouldn't get lost again.”

- Elizabeth Fulcher

That was only half of the mystery. Figuring out where the postcard had been all these years required even more sleuthing. Fulcher, a high school teacher, went to work. 

“I share a partial street address with the intended recipient, and this was sent at a time when postage was only 2 cents,” Fulcher said. “Then I went to Google and found out the 2-cent stamp was used in 1959 and again in the 1980s.”

Meanwhile, Fulcher's friends had located McMurry, allowing her to send him an e-mail -- which arrived immediately . She emailed him a photo of the postcard and he wrote back: “Yes, that's my mother's handwriting!”

On Friday, just as Fulcher was trying to figure out how she would get McMurry his postcard, there was a knock at her door. It was the mail carrier, and he wanted the postcard.

“They said it was their property," Fulcher told FoxNews.com. "I was a little hesitant to give it back to them, obviously, but they said it's their property, so I had to give it to them. I love my mailman, but I was concerned about sending it in the mail to Dr. McMurry. I made my mailman pinkie swear it wouldn't get lost again.”

The feds took over the mystery along with the actual postcard, possibly clearing their own name in the process. The big clue? A recent postmark from Michigan.

“The postcard has a postmark that is 60 years old, but it also has a postmark of April 12, 2012,” United States Postal Service spokeswoman Enola Rice told FoxNews.com via email.

“The likely scenario is that the postcard was correctly delivered 60 years ago and discovered recently and placed in a mailbox. This often occurs when someone purchases an older home, or moves from a residence, and finds mail.  They do not want to hold on to someone else's mail, so they place it in a mailbox.

“We will ensure that the postcard is delivered to Mr. McMurry,” Rice added.

But as Fulcher pointed out, one never knows for sure until it arrives. McMurry's mother would have never believed it would take 60 years for her postcard to get to her son. The first line of the long lost card, written by Mrs. McMurry to her son Scott 60 years ago, reads:

“We'll probably be home before this gets there!”



Article from FOXNEWS


Boehner sets odds on 2012 House elections

Spinners and Winners

It costs about 100 times more than an old fashioned one, but a new $50 light bulb is not as crazy as it sounds -- the new bulb can last up to 30 years, is just as bright as the old-fashioned kind, and use a fraction of the electricity.

But even if you do not buy one, you have already helped pay for it. The Department of Energy awarded the bulb's maker, Philips, a $10 million prize for developing the "affordable" light bulb of the future.

The new LED will eventually save you money, even at 50 bucks a pop, both because it lasts longer than other bulbs, and because it uses just 10 watts of electricity to give off as much light as a 60 watt incandescent.

And even the most frugal bulb buyers will eventually have to part ways with that 50-cent light bulb, because congressional-mandated efficiency standards aim to phase out production of traditional incandescents by 2014.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Volcano Behind Atlantis Awakes

FoxNews.com


Article from FOXNEWS


City rejects police chief\'s resignation in Martin case

Susan Sarandon, almost as well-known for her liberal activism as she is for making movies, is claiming that she was recently denied a security clearance to visit the White House, and that the government has tapped her phone.

“We know we're under surveillance, I've had my phone tapped,” Sarandon told the audience during a question and answer session at New York's Tribeca Film Festival. She also said she had twice seen a file the government holds on her by filing Freedom of Information requests.

A rep for Sarandon did not respond to FoxNews.com's request for further comment, and government officials are staying mum on the matter, too. So why, as Sarandon claims, would the feds would want to keep the Oscar-winner on close watch, and out of the White House all together?

"We know we're under surveillance, I've had my phone tapped"

- Susan Sarandon

“Based on her history of activism and outspoken nature in pursuing her agenda, it makes sense that the White House would be leery about her motives for a White House visit,” Michael Wildes, an immigration lawyer at New York-based Wildes & Weinberg, told FOX411's Pop Tarts. “Her motivation to bring this out is more than likely about her political agenda more so than it is her looking for attention. But, wire taps do not necessarily have to be indicative of someone that is a serious security threat, especially in the Patriot Act era.”

Sarandon's liberal activism has spanned over four decades. She has also put her celebrity behind several Democratic presidential hopefuls, including John Kerry and John Edwards; called for elections to be monitored by international authorities; vehemently protested against the invasion of Iraq; and rallied for the withdrawal of U.S. troops overseas.

Most recently, Sarandon came under fire for referring to Pope Benedict XVI as a ‘Nazi,' and spoke out in support of the Occupy Wall Street movement. But given that President Obama is running for reelection, some say it is in his best interests to distance himself from the “Dead Man Walking” star.

“By any objective standard, Susan is an extremist. Her far-left activism would have resulted in her being labeled a ‘subversive' in decades past, and she is not someone Mr. Obama and his administration are likely to want to associate with given the upcoming election,” said California-based attorney, David Wohl. “Sarandon's recent labeling of the Pope as a ‘Nazi' could result in severe damage to the President's re-election prospects with Catholic voters should he invite her to the White House."

Sarandon may also conside her self-suggested status as a security threat a boon to her activist reputation.

“If true, it's a badge of honor in her circles,” noted Jason Maloni of Levick Strategic Communications. “Plus I expect she's not applying for a government job anytime soon."
 



Article from FOXNEWS


Wikileaks: McCain staff knew of Dem voter fraud

  • April 24, 2012: Former News International chairman James Murdoch appears at Lord Justice Brian Leveson's inquiry in London.AP

James Murdoch has begun giving evidence to the Leveson Inquiry into press standards later, to be followed by his father, Rupert, on Wednesday.

The inquiry is moving into a new phase, focusing on the relationship between the press and politicians.

But both men can expect further questions about phone hacking at the now-defunct News Of The World (NOTW), as well as questions about their dealings with senior political figures.

James Murdoch, who is appearing at the Royal Courts of Justice, is only the second witness - after the information commissioner, Richard Thomas - to have a full day set aside for his testimony.

Click here for live updates from Sky News.



Article from FOXNEWS


Scientists clone sheep using fat from worm

Did Democrats hack the 2008 Obama election?

Stratfor, the US-based private intelligence company, says that Senator John McCain's campaign knew that electoral fraud was going on in 2008 but chose to do nothing. What is going on now as President Obama faces changed circumstances?

By Martin Barillas, Spero News

According to emails obtained by WikiLeaks, which is led by the embattled Julian Assange, Republican Senator John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign staff allegedly had evidence that Democrats stuffed ballot boxes in Pennsylvania and Ohio on election night. However, the candidate chose not to pursue voter fraud, according to internal emails obtained from the private intelligence and analysis firm, Stratfor.

Stratfor regularly reports on geopolitics, narcotics, security and terrorism, particularly overseas. The company, which was founded by George Friedman, has high-level subscribers including at least one former U.S. Secretary of State, various foreign governments, and intelligence agencies. The U.S. Marines and the Department of Homeland Security are also customers.  In recent months, Stratfor was in the news because a still unknown party hacked the Stratfor website and obtained subscribers' names.

The internal emails in this case provided insight into Stratfor's interest in U.S. politics. In an email sent on November 7, 2008, entitled " Insight - The Dems & Dirty Tricks ** Internal Use Only - Pls Do Not Forward **," Stratfor vice president of intelligence Fred Burton wrote...

1) The black Dems were caught stuffing the ballot boxes in Philly and Ohio as reported the night of the election and Sen. McCain chose not to fight. The matter is not dead inside the party. It now becomes a matter of sequence now as to how and when to "out"...



Article from FOXNEWS


Pittsburgh armored car murder suspect caught in Fla.

  • June 4, 2010: In this file photo, Joran Van der Sloot, top, is escorted by police officers outside a Peruvian police station, near the border with Chile in Tacna, Peru.AP

A lawyer for Joran van der Sloot says Peru is evaluating a request by the United States to extradite the jailed Dutchman, who is the main suspect in the 2005 disappearance of Natalee Holloway in Aruba.

Van der Sloot is serving a 28-year sentence in Peru for killing a woman he met in a Lima casino.

The 24-year-old also faces extortion charges in Alabama for allegedly receiving $25,000 from Holloway's mother to tell her where to find the remains of her daughter, who was 18 when she disappeared while on vacation.

Attorney Maximo Altez said Monday the U.S. extradition request "is in the process of being evaluated" by Peruvian authorities.

The lawyer says his client fears extradition because U.S. prisons have a reputation for being "very hard" on inmates.



Article from FOXNEWS


Detroit judge texts shirtless photo to bailiff

A federal prosecutor says a man wanted on charges he stole more than $2 million from an armored car he was paid to guard in Pittsburgh, murdering his partner in the process, has been arrested in Florida.

U.S. Attorney David Hickton of Pittsburgh tells The Associated Press that 22-year-old Kenneth Konias Jr. has been arrested in Pompano Beach, Fla. on Tuesday morning.

KDKA-TV first reported Konias' arrest, saying he had been found at a crack house. Broward County, Fla. sheriff's officials say they could not immediately confirm the arrest.

Konias allegedly fatally shot fellow Garda Cash Logistics guard Michael Haines before fleeing with money from the truck they were guarding on Feb. 28 in Pittsburgh.



Article from FOXNEWS


House Democrats probe alleged bribery at Wal-Mart- Senate debating measure to nullify union rules

Vance Terrell offered encouraging words to his pregnant sister during visits to a western Michigan hospital. It didn't matter that she couldn't see or hear him, and would never hold her twin sons.

Christine Bolden, 26, was already brain dead from aneurysms, but doctors kept her on a respirator for a month to allow for the development of babies who were born prematurely at 25 weeks. It was a rare procedure: In 2010, German researchers found just 30 similar cases worldwide dating back to 1982.

"It was hard to go up there and walk down the hallway and go into her room," Terrell said Monday in a phone interview from Muskegon, Mich. "I knew she wouldn't be talking to me. I'd rub her belly every time, and I'd rub her hands and kiss her and let her know I was there."

Nicholas and Alexander Bolden weighed less than 2 pounds when they were born by cesarean section on April 5, and remain on ventilators at Helen DeVos Children's Hospital in Grand Rapids.

"Almost every parent would give their life for their child. But you need to get truly independent opinions: Are we sure we're not causing harm to the mom?"

- Dr. Cosmas Vandeven, who specializes in high-risk pregnancies at University of Michigan hospital

The Muskegon woman collapsed in a parking lot due to aneurysms on March 1 and was declared brain dead five days later at the hospital next door, Spectrum Health Butterworth.

Bolden's family asked doctors "to drop everything we could to save these babies. It wasn't that difficult a call," spokesman Bruce Rossman said. "It required a lot of evaluations and discussions among our staff. They had to at least get to 24 weeks before we could consider delivery."

He declined to make doctors available for an interview to discuss Bolden's case.

Dr. Cosmas Vandeven, who specializes in high-risk pregnancies at University of Michigan hospital, said Bolden's case is a "very exceptional scenario." He said an important ethical issue in cases like these is whether a brain-dead woman would suffer by being kept on a respirator and undergoing a C-section.

"Almost every parent would give their life for their child," Vandeven said. "But you need to get truly independent opinions: Are we sure we're not causing harm to the mom?"

He said 70 percent of babies born at 25 weeks survive, but the risk for long-term health problems is high. Rossman acknowledged that chronic conditions are possible even if the boys pull through.

"We certainly hope they make it, but at this time they're too young to make a confident prognosis," he said.

Bolden had two other children, an 11-year-old daughter and a 3-year-old son. Relatives said it was heartbreaking to see her die, but a relief to see the twins survive.

"Every week was a good sign," said an aunt, Danyell Bolden, referring to March when her niece was being sustained by machines. "We felt like we lost her but, God willing, we'll have something of hers. There's a lot of prayer."

Terrell recalled the phone call from his sister announcing that she was having twins.

"She said, 'You're going be there for your nephews when I have them.' I just went crazy," Terrell said of his excitement. "I know she wants the babies to be with us. This has brought our family together."



Article from FOXNEWS


Edwards Aide a \'Risk\' For Prosecution in Trial?

The prosecution's key witness in the case against John Edwards prepared to take the stand for the second day Tuesday, even as the former Edwards confidante began to pose potential problems for the government's case. 

The testimony of former aide Andrew Young is supposed to be a linchpin in the government's claim that Edwards knew two wealthy donors had contributed nearly $1 million to hide his pregnant mistress -- and in doing so violated federal campaign finance law. Young hinted at this narrative when he took the stand Monday on the opening day of arguments. 

But U.S. District Court Judge Catherine Eagles disclosed Monday that the former Edwards aide had recently contacted three other witnesses in the trial to ask what they planned to say. In a meeting with lawyers before the jury entered the room, Eagles also noted that Young had a one-night stand with an unidentified witness in 2007 -- the judge ruled the lawyers could not mention the one-night stand to the jury, but could mention the improper witness contact provided they didn't describe it as "witness tampering." 

Young already was entering the trial with some questions in his background -- he was the aide who initially and falsely claimed he was the father of Edwards' illegitimate child. 

Kieran Shanahan, a Raleigh lawyer and former federal prosecutor who is attending the trial, said the prosecution is "taking a bit of a risk" by putting their star witness on first. 

"If in cross-examination they're able to destroy his credibility, it'll be very difficult for the government to recover," Shanahan said. 

Prosecutors are trying to prove that the funds in question were not just private gifts to hide Edwards' affair from his cancer-stricken wife, but actual campaign contributions intended to prevent the affair from damaging his bid for president. They plan to play voicemails Edwards left on Young's phone during the campaign. 

The defense claims the secret payments were not intended to influence the outcome of the election, but to spare Edwards' family pain and embarrassment. Edwards' lawyers also allege that Young used much of the money to build an upscale house for himself in Chapel Hill, N.C.

Young began to spill details Monday of the people who surrounded Edwards and put their faith in him. 

The former campaign worker, who testified in exchange for immunity, told the court Monday about a meeting he attended with one of the two wealthy Edwards supporters, Rachel "Bunny" Mellon. 

"I'm going to do everything I can to help you become president of the United States," Mellon told Edwards, according to Young. 

Young also said Mellon thought Edwards would be the country's "savior." 

On the witness stand Monday, Young recounted how he met Edwards in 1998, as the Raleigh trial lawyer and political neophyte was campaigning for the Senate. 

"My father was a minister, so I had seen a lot of great speakers," Young recounted. "He was really `on' that day." 

Young said he immediately told his future wife, Cheri Young, that Edwards had the potential to become president and that he wanted to work for him. Young quickly rose from a junior campaign staffer to working on the senator's North Carolina staff following the election. When no one else wanted to pick up Edwards at the airport, Young leaped at the opportunity. He eventually became special assistant to the senator, a gatekeeper who got phone calls and face time with Edwards. 

Young also testified about first meeting Rielle Hunter as she traveled with Edwards in 2006. 

That same year, Young first spoke with Mellon and put her in touch with Edwards. 

The Youngs later invited the pregnant Hunter to live in their home near Chapel Hill and embarked with her on a cross-country odyssey as they sought to elude tabloid reporters trying to expose the candidate's extramarital affair. 

The day of opening arguments comes more than four years after Edwards ended his Democratic presidential bid and went on to watch his reputation crumble under the weight of the emerging scandal. He has gone from battling reporters to battling prosecutors who seized upon the scheme as an alleged campaign finance breach. While the lurid details of his affair dominated the headlines going into the summer of 2008, the focus of the trial is the money trail. 

Edwards faces six criminal counts of campaign finance violations for allegedly accepting, and failing to report, campaign donations in excess of the $2,300 limit for individual contributions. If convicted, he could face up to 30 years in prison and $1.5 million in fines. 

Fox News' Jonathan Serrie and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Article from FOXNEWS


Obama courts young voters with student loan push

It gets better: "Greene's attorney, Atlanta lawyer L. Lin Wood..."

Article from YAHOO NEWS


Deion Sanders\' estranged wife accused of assault

McKINNEY, Texas (AP) - Police have arrested Deion Sanders' estranged wife on an assault charge that the Hall of Fame cornerback claims was for breaking into his room and attacking him in front of their children.

Pilar (pee-lar) Sanders was arrested Monday and booked into Collin County Jail on a misdemeanor domestic violence charge.

Jail records did not give details about the alleged attack or list an attorney for Pilar Sanders. But Deion Sanders tweeted Monday that his children "just witnessed their mother and a friend jump me in my room."

Prosper police declined to discuss the case Tuesday and records didn't say if anyone else had been arrested in the alleged attack.

The former Dallas Cowboy filed for divorce in December. He now works as an analyst for the NFL Network.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Armored car murder suspect nabbed in Florida

PITTSBURGH (AP) - A man wanted on charges he stole more than $2 million from an armored car he was paid to guard in Pittsburgh, murdering his partner in the process, was arrested Tuesday morning in Florida, an attorney and a federal prosecutor said.

U.S. Attorney David Hickton of Pittsburgh told The Associated Press that 22-year-old Kenneth Konias Jr. had been arrested in Pompano Beach, Fla.

KDKA-TV, which first reported the arrest, cited unnamed police sources as saying that Konias had been found at a crack house. Hickton and Konias' attorney, Charles LoPresti, could not immediately provide details of his arrest.

Konias' parents, Kenneth Sr. and Renee, were briefed about 6:30 a.m. Tuesday by local law enforcement officials that their son was now in FBI custody somewhere in Florida, LoPresti said, but they weren't given any further information.

"I can tell you that the parents are both relieved that he's now in custody, that the search is over for him, and they want the wheels of justice to turn fairly," he said. LoPresti and Konias' parents had made a public appeal for him to surrender on Pittsburgh TV news stations on March 21.

"They're very relieved that nobody, including their own son, is in danger now that the search is done," LoPresti said.

FBI officials in Pittsburgh and Florida did not immediately comment.

Konias allegedly fatally shot fellow Garda Cash Logistics guard Michael Haines before fleeing with money from the truck they were guarding on Feb. 28 in Pittsburgh, and is charged with criminal homicide, theft by unlawful taking and robbery. Authorities have said they recovered about $275,000 left behind, including about $250,000 stashed under a car at the Dravosburg home he shared with his parents and about $24,000 found a day earlier at the grave of a family member.

Officials say Konias called friends and family after the killing, and asked one person about extradition laws in Canada and Mexico.

A Pittsburgh Fugitive Task Force member told the AP on condition of anonymity that the search for Konias was complicated by the fact that the stolen money was untraceable and in smaller denominations, mostly $20 bills and below. The money was shrink-wrapped and, despite the fact that about $2.3 million is believed stolen, it could likely fit in a container about the size of a foot locker. The source spoke anonymously because those details had not been publicly released by investigators.

April 24 is National Scoop of the Poop Week, Pigs in a Blanket, Teach Children to Save Day: http://t.co/Y1qzij3Z
Newt Gingrich hints he may drop presidential bid if he performs poorly in Tuesday's primaries. http://t.co/GVCsF82f
The trust funds that support Social Security will run dry in 2033 -- 3 years earlier than previously projected: http://t.co/Rpb14h0z


Article from YAHOO NEWS


U.S. home prices drop for sixth straight month

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Home prices dropped in February in most major U.S. cities for a sixth straight month, a sign that modest sales gains haven't been enough to boost prices.

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home-price index shows that prices dropped in February from January in 16 of the 20 cities it tracks.

The steepest declines were in Atlanta, Chicago and Cleveland. Prices rose in Phoenix, San Diego and Miami. They were unchanged in Dallas.

The declines partly reflect typical offseason sales. The month-to-month prices aren't adjusted for seasonal factors.

Still, prices fell in 15 of the 20 cities in February compared with the same month in 2011. That indicates that the housing market remains far from healthy despite the best winter for sales in five years.

The steady price declines have brought the nationwide index to its late 2002 level. Home prices have fallen 35 percent since the housing bust.

Prices in nine cities fell to their lowest levels since the housing bust. The average price in Atlanta fell 17.3 percent in February compared with a year earlier. That's the biggest annual drop in the history of the index for any city.

Still, there were some positive signs in the report: Phoenix, one of the cities hit hardest by the housing bust, has seen five straight monthly gains. And most cities are reporting smaller annual declines than in previous months.

The S&P/Case-Shiller monthly index covers half of all U.S. homes. It measures prices compared with those in January 2000 and creates a three-month moving average. The February figures are the latest available.

Stan Humphries, chief economist for housing website Zillow.com, attributed the declines in part to heavy sales of foreclosed homes, which are usually sold at super-low prices. Foreclosures made up about one-fifth of February's sales.

"We think home sales will continue to trend upward, which ultimately will result in a slower rate of home value depreciation," Humphries said. "But any housing recovery will be dependent on job growth."

Job growth has slowed but is still occurring at faster pace than last year. Employers added an average of 212,000 jobs a month from January through March. That helped push down the unemployment rate to 8.2 percent from 9.1 percent last August.

Some recent reports suggest that the housing market is slowly improving.

January and February made up the best winter for sales of previously occupied homes in five years, when the housing crisis began. The 4.63 million annual sales pace in January was the highest since May 2010, the last month that buyers could qualify for a federal home-buying tax credit.

Builders are laying plans to construct more homes in 2012 than at any other point in past 3 1/2 years. More jobs and a better outlook among buyers could also make 2012 the first year since 2008 that construction adds to the U.S. economy.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Power Players: The $50 light bulb you\'ve already paid for

Spinners and Winners

It costs about 100 times more than an old fashioned one, but a new $50 light bulb is not as crazy as it sounds -- the new bulb can last up to 30 years, is just as bright as the old-fashioned kind, and use a fraction of the electricity.

But even if you do not buy one, you have already helped pay for it. The Department of Energy awarded the bulb's maker, Philips, a $10 million prize for developing the "affordable" light bulb of the future.

The new LED will eventually save you money, even at 50 bucks a pop, both because it lasts longer than other bulbs, and because it uses just 10 watts of electricity to give off as much light as a 60 watt incandescent.

And even the most frugal bulb buyers will eventually have to part ways with that 50-cent light bulb, because congressional-mandated efficiency standards aim to phase out production of traditional incandescents by 2014.



Article from YAHOO NEWS


Hugh Hefner declares war on bedroom politics

Hugh Hefner is ready for war.

Not against his former wives or girlfriends, but against the conservative politicians thrusting their old-fashioned viewpoints into other people's bedrooms.

In a rare move, the founder of Playboy magazine picks up his pen and writes an editorial in the May issue of men's magazine. The politics web site Politico.com notes in his editorial, headlined "The War Against Sex," Hefner blasts "repressed conservatives ... [for] pounding on America's bedroom door."

"For months I have watched the rhetoric building," writes Hefner. "Last October, in an interview with an evangelical blogger, Rick Santorum promised to defund birth control on the grounds that contraception is 'a license to do things in a sexual realm that is counter to how things are supposed to be.'

"Ron Paul was no better, believing that the birth control pill did not cause immorality but that immorality creates the problem of wanting to use the pill. Mitt Romney vowed to see a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage and to overturn Roe v. Wade."

He also references Georgetown University law student Sandra Fluke, who was lambasted by conservative loudmouth Rush Limbaugh as "a slut" and "a prostitute" after testifying to congress about employers paying for birth control.

The Hef  promises to not let down his guard on America's sexual freedom: "We won't let that happen. … Welcome to the new sexual revolution."

But not everyone is eager to have Hefner waving a flag for women's rights. The women's business news site, TheJaneDough.com, noted that while it appreciated Hefner's defense of Fluke and his defense against GOP values, he's a "notorious girlfriend collector" and "hardly one to preach about women's rights."

[ [ [['A picture is worth a thousand words', 5]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/why-facebook-bought-instagram-4-theories-160400376.html', '[Related: Why Facebook bought Instagram: 4 theories]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 9]], 'http://contributor.yahoo.com/join/yahoonews_virginiabeach', '[Did you witness the jet crash? Share your story with Yahoo! News]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj', '[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Dick Clark', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/dick-clark-dies-at-82-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/c/21/c217c61aa2d5872244c08caa13c16ec5.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'Reuters', ], [ [['the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 15]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/white-house-stays-out-of-teen-s-killing-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120411/martinzimmermen.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['Titanic', 7]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/titanic-anniversary/', ' ', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/b/4e/b4e5ad9f00b5dfeeec2226d53e173569.jpeg', '550', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/navy-jet-crashes-in-virginia-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120406/jet_ap.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]

[ [ [[' the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 4]], '28924649', '0' ], [ [['because I know God protects me', 14], ['Brian Snow was at a nearby credit union', 5]], '28811216', '0' ], [ [['The state news agency RIA-Novosti quoted Rosaviatsiya', 6]], '28805461', '0' ], [ [['measure all but certain to fail in the face of bipartisan', 4]], '28771014', '0' ], [ [['matter what you do in this case', 5]], '28759848', '0' ], [ [['presume laws are constitutional', 7]], '28747556', '0' ], [ [['has destroyed 15 to 25 houses', 7]], '28744868', '0' ], [ [['short answer is yes', 7]], '28746030', '0' ], [ [['opportunity to tell the real story', 7]], '28731764', '0' ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 7]], '28723797', '0' ], [ [['point of my campaign is that big ideas matter', 9]], '28712293', '0' ], [ [['As the standoff dragged into a second day', 7]], '28687424', '0' ], [ [['French police stepped up the search', 17]], '28667224', '0' ], [ [['Seeking to elevate his candidacy back to a general', 8]], '28660934', '0' ], [ [['The tragic story of Trayvon Martin', 4]], '28647343', '0' ], [ [['Karzai will get a chance soon to express', 8]], '28630306', '0' ], [ [['powerful storms stretching', 8]], '28493546', '0' ], [ [['basic norm that death is private', 6]], '28413590', '0' ], [ [['songwriter also saw a surge in sales for her debut album', 6]], '28413590', '1', 'Watch music videos from Whitney Houston ', 'on Yahoo! Music', 'http://music.yahoo.com' ], [ [['keyword', 99999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]



Article from YAHOO NEWS