Sunday, May 31, 2015

Betsy Palmer, '"Friday The 13th" Slasher Star, Dies At 88

Palmer was first known for her appearances on early television, but gained more notoriety in the ’80s as the murderous Mrs. Voorhees of Friday The 13th.

Mark Lennihan / AP

Actor Betsy Palmer, a television pioneer who went on to play one of film's first slashers, has died at age 88.

Her longtime manager told the Associated Press on Sunday that Palmer had died of natural causes on Friday at a Connecticut hospice care center.

Palmer played Mrs. Voorhees, the camp cook and mother of Jason Voorhees, in 1980's Friday the 13th.

Palmer played Mrs. Voorhees, the camp cook and mother of Jason Voorhees, in 1980's Friday the 13th.

Paramount Pictures / Via sodahead.com

She told reporters she never expected the film to become a cult classic; she had taken the role to pay for a new car.

"I'm the queen of the slashers," she said bemusedly in one 2005 interview.

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$100,000 Offered To Unknown Woman Who Donated Vintage Apple Computer

A recycling company sold the rare Apple 1 computer to a collector for $200,000 after it was donated by an unidentified woman. Less than 100 of the computers — which were built by hand — are known to still exist.

After a Bay Area woman dropped off boxes of old electronics to a recycling company last month, workers found a rarity mixed in with the keyboards and cables.

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Facebook: cleanbayarea

Clean Bay Area said the unknown woman dropped off several boxes of e-waste at their recycling center in Milpitas, California. She left without leaving her name, but she told workers she decided to clean the boxes of old equipment from her garage after her husband died.

Weeks later, a manager opened the boxes and found an Apple 1 computer inside.

"We really couldn't believe our eyes. We thought it was fake," Clean Bay Area Vice President Victor Gichun told NBC Bay Area.

The company sold the vintage computer to a collector for about $200,000, and now, they're looking for the woman to give her half of the proceeds.

Ben Margot / AP


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A Cop Who Had To Tell A Teen His Parents Had Been Killed Showed Up At His Graduation

Kazzie Portie’s parents were killed by a drunk driver less than a week before his graduation ceremony.

On May 24, an Orange, Texas couple named Riley and Emily Portie were riding their motorcycle when they were struck by a drunk driver. The parents of five died at the scene.

On May 24, an Orange, Texas couple named Riley and Emily Portie were riding their motorcycle when they were struck by a drunk driver. The parents of five died at the scene.

Facebook: emily.portie

Officer Eric Ellison of the Orange Police Department responded to the scene of the crash, and was tasked with breaking the news to the couple's next of kin.

Officer Eric Ellison of the Orange Police Department responded to the scene of the crash, and was tasked with breaking the news to the couple's next of kin.

When he arrived at the house, he found their youngest son Kazzie home alone.

Kazzie was set to graduate from Little Cypress-Mauriceville High School less than a week later.

"It was a very upsetting situation," Desiree Scales of the Orange Police Department told BuzzFeed News.

Facebook: kazziep18

The accident stayed with Ellison, and he decided he wanted to show Kazzie support by attending his high school graduation on Saturday.

The accident stayed with Ellison, and he decided he wanted to show Kazzie support by attending his high school graduation on Saturday.

"This accident really bothered [Ellison]," Scales, who also responded to the scene, said. "He took it pretty hard. He wanted him to know there are people there for him during this time and let him know he wasn’t alone."

Facebook: captcornmeal

When Kazzie accepted his diploma, Ellison was waiting for him at the end of the stage.

When Kazzie accepted his diploma, Ellison was waiting for him at the end of the stage.

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Taylor Swift Fans Say The Bracelets They Got At Her Concert Saved Their Lives

The three girls were able to signal for help using the bracelets after a car crash.

Unless you live under a rock, you must know Taylor Swift just kicked off her 1989 tour. All the lucky people who go to the concert get these cool light-up bracelets that synchronize with Taylor's songs.

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For one group of fans, the bracelets ending up being more than a cool accessory. They are crediting the bracelets with saving their lives after they got in a car crash following the concert.

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The car crashed, knocking Dazzio unconscious and trapping the two other young women in the car.

"You could smell the gas and smoke," Caroline Dazzio told WBRZ. "I was just thinking we need to get out of this car."

To make matters worse, two of their cell phones were dead. The women looked, but could not find the third cell phone in the car.

The girls then realized the bracelets they had gotten at the concert could be used as makeshift emergency flare. They began to flash them at the cars driving by, until one stopped.

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"Extensive Damage" After Crane Collapses Into Building In Midtown Manhattan

The crane was lifting an air conditioning unit onto the 30-story building when it collapsed.

The crane was lifting what appeared to be an air conditioning unit onto the roof of the building when it fell to the ground, an NYPD spokesman told BuzzFeed News.

As the crane fell, it hit the side of the building causing "extensive damage," the spokesman said.

The building is on the corner of Madison Avenue and West 38th Street.

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Veteran CBS Anchor Bob Schieffer Retires After Decades As A Newsman

Facebook: bobschieffer

Bob Schieffer, a veteran of broadcast television news who anchored the CBS program Face The Nation for almost a quarter of a century, retired Sunday with a final episode that balanced news and nostalgia.

Schieffer has been with the CBS network for 46 years, 24 of which he spent anchoring Face The Nation.

"I'm going to miss being in the middle of things," Schieffer told viewers Sunday morning, "but the one thing I'll never forget is the trust you placed in me and how nice you were to have me as guest in your home over so many years."

Facebook: bobschieffer

The 78-year-old said he first wanted to work in news after seeing his byline in his school newspaper as a student reporter.

"Maybe it's just because I love the news, but at the time I thought every job I ever had was the best job in the world," he said, reflecting on a career that saw him interview world leaders and work under his idol, Walter Cronkite.

Ever the newsman, Sunday's episode saw Schieffer interview former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush on his possible plans to seek the Republican presidential nomination, as well as CIA Director John Brennan on national security and the impending expiration of the Patriot Act.

During his reporting career, Schieffer won a suite of awards, including eight Emmys, and was named a "living legend" by the Library of Congress in 2008.

Having served as the CBS network's chief Washington correspondent since 1982, Schieffer is one of the few reporters to have covered the capital's four major "beats:" the White House, the Pentagon, the State Department, and the halls of Congress.

"Face The Nation was here long before I came to CBS. I know I'm leaving it in good hands," he said along side the show's crew and new host John Dickerson, who all farewelled Schieffer with a round of applause.

His retirement was acknowledged by many in the media industry, as well as some of the politicians he spent decades grilling on air.



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John Kerry Suffers Broken Leg In Bicycle Crash In The French Alps

The top U.S. diplomat was flown to a hospital in Switzerland and was said to be in a “stable condition.”

Fabrice Coffrini / Getty Images

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was hospitalized on Sunday, following a bicycle crash in the French Alps in which he broke his leg, according to a spokesperson.

Kerry, 71, suffered a leg injury and was flown by helicopter to a Swiss hospital in Geneva immediately after the accident.

The top U.S. diplomat did not lose consciousness and was said to be in a "stable condition," according to State Department spokesman John Kirby.

"Secretary Kerry is stable and likely suffered a leg injury," Kirby said.

Kirby later said on Twitter that Kerry had broken his leg and would be returning to Boston for medical treatment.

Kerry, who often cycles during diplomatic trips, was in Switzerland as part of a European trip.

On Saturday, he held talks with his Iranian counterpart, Mohammad Javad Zarif, as the two sides attempt to seal the nuclear deal agreed in principle between Iran and the six world powers in April.

Differences between the two sides still persist, however, and after six hours of talks little progress was reported to have been made.

On Sunday, Kerry was supposed to fly to Madrid for talks with Spanish king and the country's prime minister.

On Monday, he was due to be in Paris to attend a conference on how to combat the threat posed by ISIS.


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Saturday, May 30, 2015

Beau Biden, Son Of Vice President Joe Biden, Dies Of Brain Cancer

Joseph “Beau” Biden III served as the Attorney General of Delaware from 2007 through 2014.

Jacquelyn Martin / AP

In a statement released by the Vice President's office, the family said it was "saddened beyond words."

Read the full statement here:

It is with broken hearts that Hallie, Hunter, Ashley, Jill and I announce the passing of our husband, brother and son, Beau, after he battled brain cancer with the same integrity, courage and strength he demonstrated every day of his life.

The entire Biden family is saddened beyond words. We know that Beau's spirit will live on in all of us—especially through his brave wife, Hallie, and two remarkable children, Natalie and Hunter.

Beau's life was defined by service to others. As a young lawyer, he worked to establish the rule of law in war-torn Kosovo. A major in the Delaware National Guard, he was an Iraq War veteran and was awarded the Bronze Star. As Delaware's Attorney General, he fought for the powerless and made it his mission to protect children from abuse.

More than his professional accomplishments, Beau measured himself as a husband, father, son and brother. His absolute honor made him a role model for our family. Beau embodied my father's saying that a parent knows success when his child turns out better than he did.

In the words of the Biden family: Beau Biden was, quite simply, the finest man any of us have ever known.

President Barack Obama, center and Beau Biden right, watch as his father Joe Biden is sworn in at the ceremonial swearing-in at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 21, 2013.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

This is a developing story. Check back later and follow @BuzzFeedNews on Twitter for updates.


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Oklahoma Officer Fatally Shoots Man After Rescuing Him From Floods

Two officers tried to rescue a pair of men who were attempting to move a stranded vehicle, but an altercation led to a deadly shooting, officials said.

Vehicles are stranded by flood waters in south Houston, Texas May 26, 2015. Storms in Texas and Oklahoma have caused flooding in both states in the past week.

Reuters Photographer / Reuters

The two men appeared to be trying to move a stranded vehicle on the road in Okmulgee County, though water was continuing to rise, Capt. Paul Timmons told the Associated Press.

Timmons told the AP the troopers were worried the men would be swept away by the water, but the unidentified men seemed upset at leaving the vehicle behind.

Heavy rains and flooding have devastated communities in Texas and Oklahoma this week, with at least 28 deaths linked to the storms in the two states.

Details on how the shooting occurred were not immediately clear Saturday, but Timmons said at least one of the men attacked one of the troopers after getting to dry land.

Officials did not release details as to whether one or both troopers fired their weapons, or how many shots were fired.

BuzzFeed News reached out to the Oklahoma Highway Patrol but did not immediately hear back.

The second man was arrested for assault and public intoxication, Timmons told the AP. Neither of their names were released.

The two troopers were not injured in the incident.



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An 82-Year-Old Man Was Arrested For Allegedly Slashing An 88-Year-Old Woman's Tires Over A Bingo Game

The car owner was reportedly sitting in his favorite seat.

Ethel Britt was celebrating her 88th birthday at a weekly bingo game in Florida on Thursday, when a fellow bingo player stormed out and slashed her car's tires with an ice pick, according to police.

Ethel Britt was celebrating her 88th birthday at a weekly bingo game in Florida on Thursday, when a fellow bingo player stormed out and slashed her car's tires with an ice pick, according to police.

FOX News / Via myfoxtampabay.com

Smith reportedly told authorities that he had committed the crime as retribution for Britt sitting in his favorite bingo seat. He said he was now embarrassed and regretted his actions.

Smith has since been released, but could face a fine of $500 for tire damage and restitution.

Polk County Sheriff's Office / Via myfoxtampabay.com

Although she has no hard feelings, Britt said she remains a bit puzzled.

"I thought everybody was my friend, but undoubtedly I have one enemy," Britt said.

She said she hopes Smith pays for her tire repair as fixing them took "every dime [she] had in the bank."


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Hastert Indictment Casts Shadow Over All-American Town

The driveway leading to the residence of former House Speaker Dennis Hastert in Plano, Ilinois.

Andrew Nelles / AP

YORKVILLE, ILLINOIS — The Silver Dollar Restaurant sits near the crossroads of State Routes 41 and 71, which is just another way of saying it occupies the closest thing to a city center in this proud municipality.

The Silver Dollar is one of the few businesses that survived Yorkville’s transformation from farming community to diffuse exurb of Chicago. It serves watery coffee and a buttery Monte Cristo, but no alcohol. This is because, as proprietor Eddie Iljazi puts it, people here drink so little that liquor sales wouldn’t be enough to cover the cost of a license. “But everyone here is a Republican, if you know what I mean," he explained.

Today, 17,000 people live in Yorkville. It's a recent population boom. Old Yorkville, as people wistfully call it, consisted of 4,000 people and a single traffic light. It was in those days that John Dennis Hastert, a young educator from nearby Aurora, became something like the town's First Citizen.

Hastert went on to become one of the most powerful men in the United States, the Speaker of the House of Representatives. These days, at the Silver Dollar, people don’t call him Congressman or Speaker, but rather Mr. Hastert — as if he had never ceased to be the social studies teacher he was from 1965 to 1981.

The people who really knew him, though, call him Coach. And when they say that word, it sounds like the most honorable title in the world.

Hastert led Yorkville High School’s wrestling team to state championships in 1969 and 1976, bringing glory to the town and earning himself a place in the local pantheon. He also mentored countless young people, instilling in them the importance of honesty and hard work.

"That is what this town was all about — wrestling,” said Shawn Schumacher, a 1985 graduate of Yorkville High who spent his summers going to Hastert’s wrestling camp. “His team was more than a team, it was a community."

It is hard to emphasize how big of a deal Hastert is in Yorkville. People who knew him here told BuzzFeed News he was "motivational," "a positive influence," "a wonderful man," and "the foundation of many families."

In their telling, the Coach was an almost mythological figure: Yorkville’s own Cincinnatus, a farmer gone to Washington to bring a dose of simple virtue to a city corrupted by money and deceit.

All of which helps explain why everyone in Yorkville was so shocked on Thursday, when the Department of Justice charged Hastert with illegally structuring a $3.5 million payment to a person for "prior bad acts" he committed. Hastert reportedly sexually abused the person, one his teenaged wrestlers.

Hastert with the Yorkville High School wrestling team in the 1960s.

Yorkville High School Yearbook

Hastert was born in 1942 to a family that raised sheep and cattle in Aurora, Illinois, according to his autobiography. In his own telling, he became a teacher in order to become a coach — and he become a coach because he had failed at becoming a soldier.

“When I washed out of ROTC, I thought I’d give five years to coaching because some of the people I admired most — my old coach at Wheaton, George Olson, and Ken Pickerill, for example‚ had been coaches, and I really enjoyed it,” the former Congressman wrote in Speaker, his 2004 memoir. “But if you were going to coach, you also had to teach and that meant earning an advanced degree.”

He began teaching at Yorkville in 1965, almost by accident. He showed up at the local high school in jeans and a flannel shirt, not expecting a job interview because he hadn’t finished his teaching degree, according to his book. The superintendent, however, needed “a living body,” and was willing to overlook Hastert’s lack of qualifications. The future Speaker of the House walked out of the school with a job and a commitment to coach the football and wrestling teams. He was 24 years old.

Hastert appears to have thrown himself into his coaching duties. He didn’t just conduct practice; he drove the school bus and even redesigned the wrestling team’s uniforms, according to his autobiography. His emphasis on athletics might even have come at the expense of his academic duties.

“He was just the kind of teacher that would drive me crazy,” Maria Steiner, who taught French and Spanish at Yorkville High from 1976 to 1980, told BuzzFeed News. “He would show movies in his class while he worked on wrestling stuff. He was kind of a slacker teacher. He was big in wrestling and that was big in Yorkville, Illinois.”

Dennis Hastert as a young coach.

Yorkville High School Yearbook, 1966.

The yearbooks from Hastert’s early years at Yorkville High show him as a handsome young man in a dark suit, proudly standing in the back row of group photos full of muscular boys. The later yearbooks show an ever-heavier, ever-older Hastert wearing ever-less-formal clothes.

The boys, however, remain the same age. Their haircuts change, but they retain the quiet pride of teenagers who know they are a big deal among their peers. Judging from Hastert’s autobiography, nearly every boy at the school wanted to be in the wrestling team.

In the mid-sixties, he led YMCA trips to Colombia, Venezuela, and Japan, according to his biographical blurbs in several yearbooks. He organized canoeing trips to Canada and coordinated the Yorkville Explorer’s, a scouting club that once went as far as the Bahamas. During the summers, he ran a wrestling summer camp from the high school. He took his students on road trips to Virginia and Colorado.

Dave Millen, a wrestler who went on several of the outings, told BuzzFeed News that he “never witnessed any inappropriate behavior, or heard rumors of any.”

The coach came to care deeply about his students. “I felt a special bond with our wrestlers, and I think they felt one with me,” Hastert wrote in his memoir. “In my talks with them, I stressed how important it was that they learned to do a few things well. That was better than trying to do everything halfway. 'It’s work and not talk that wins championships,' I kept telling them. 'Perseverance is the key in whatever you do.'”

The team must have persevered, because they won the state championship twice, in 1969 and 1976. Yorkville rejoiced. The yearbooks for those years include several pages to photographs of the victorious boys — and, in the case of 1976, a poem immortalizing them, by a junior varsity wrestler called John Demetralis:

So there you are, out on the mat,
The time has all run out.
As the referee walks up to you
You can’t believe your eyes,
For he takes your weary hand
And raises it to the skies.

Hastert never forgot that day. He dedicated his autobiography to the 1976 wrestling team, calling the championship victory “one of the finest moments of my life.” He wrote that he was pleased to know that many of the members of that team had gone on to become coaches themselves.

Six years after that championship, Hastert resigned his position at Yorkville High to join the Illinois state legislature. And six years after that, he was voted into the U.S. House of Representatives. His former students became his most ardent political supporters.

"Nobody thought he would become a politician," said Iljazi at the Silver Dollar. "He was too honest for that."

"Some of us backed him politically," said Schumacher, the 1985 graduate of Yorkville High. "We didn't just vote for him — we made contributions to his campaigns."

"I was never a very good liar," Hastert wrote in his autobiography.

And Millen, the former wrestler, said, "despite being on the opposite side of the political spectrum, I have had nothing but respect for Speaker Hastert." He added, "He has actually been one of the few Republicans who have received my vote."

As an elected official, Hastert promoted the values of Yorkville. In the wake of the Lewinsky sex scandal, he voted to impeach President Bill Clinton for perjury and obstruction of justice. He pushed for legislation to ban early social networking sites from school computers to protect children from pedophiles lurking online.

All the while, he prided himself in his honesty. “I was never a very good liar,” he wrote in his autobiography, describing an episode in which he tried to hide a medical bill from his parents after a friend broke his nose in a fight. “Maybe I wasn’t smart enough. I could never get away with it, so I made up my mind as a kid to tell the truth and pay the consequences.”

The Speaker retired in 2007, trading politics for the contemporary equivalent of Cincinnatus’ return to the farm after his term expired: a fabulously profitable appointment as a lobbyist for Dickstein Shapiro, one of the country’s largest law firms.

He maintained a taxpayer-funded office in Yorkville, where he paid six-figure salaries to several staffers — at least one of whom had once wrestled for him. Legally, the office was only supposed to help Hastert with unfinished congressional business, but an ongoing lawsuit alleges that the former Speaker improperly misused those funds.

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

In December 2014, the FBI questioned the former coach about a suspicious series of cash withdrawals from his bank accounts. The former speaker defended the transactions, saying he made the withdrawals because he didn't trust the banking system.

The FBI was unconvinced. On Thursday, the Department of Justice announced that it was charging Hastert with lying to the FBI and of "structuring" his financial activity in an attempt to hide large cash withdrawals from the Internal Revenue Service.

The charges were serious. But the most shocking part of the case was not the charges themselves, but a vague allusion to the way Hastert allegedly used the money he withdrew.

According to a federal indictment, Hastert planned to pay $3.5 million to a person identified only as "Individual A." The indictment further alleged that Hastert made the payments in order to conceal his "prior bad acts."

The document did not go into details — in part, a source told BuzzFeed News, because Hastert's lawyers requested the U.S. Attorney keep the details of the allegations out of the indictment — but it did mention Hastert's career as a wrestling coach.

A day after the charges were made public, the Los Angeles Times reported that Hastert had sexually abused a man during his time as a wrestling coach and then paid him to keep quiet. Later that day, sources told BuzzFeed News that there had been at least one more victim — an Individual B — whom prosecutors had decided not to include in the indictment.

On Friday, as news of the accusations hit cable shows and spread like wildfire over the Internet, the mood at the Silver Dollar and elsewhere in town was one of shock. Reached by phone and email, seven of Hastert’s wrestlers said they had never heard or witnessed anything that would have lead them to suspect the coach was doing anything wrong.

“Nobody saw this coming,” said Iljazi, the restaurant’s proprietor. “With these things, sometimes there’s rumors, but here everyone is in shock.”

Anthony Houle, who was an assistant coach with Hastert, called him "a straight arrow, nothing was hidden." He added that "nothing ever happened" and if it did the people in the small town would have found out.

Some acknowledged that the allegations had made them rethink their image of Hastert.

“If it’s true, it would be very disappointing,” said Schumacher, the 1985 graduate of Yorkville High, who also teaches at DeVry University and coaches the football team at Yorkville High School. “As an educator, you know there are boundaries, and you simply don’t cross them.”

Everyone that BuzzFeed News asked said they didn't know who Individual A is. Some even took offense at the suggestion they would ever speculate about such matters. But some people at the Silver Dollar suggested that, behind closed doors, that is the only thing anyone in Yorkville is talking about.

“The thing is, this used to be a really small town,” Iljazi said. “If Individual A is local, then all of Old Yorkville probably knows him.”

Evan McMorris-Santoro, Christopher Massie, Ilan Ben-Meir, and Molly Ward contributed reporting.

LINK: House Speaker Dennis Hastert Is Indicted

LINK: Hastert Reportedly Sexually Abused Man While He Was A High School Wrestling Coach

LINK: Here’s A Creepy Phone Call Dennis Hastert Once Got From His Hometown On C-Span



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People Are Angered By A School's Sexist, Fat-Shaming Dress Code For Graduation

“We don’t want to see your ‘sausage rolls,’” the dress code memo told female students.

Many students at Biglerville High School in Adams County, Pennsylvania, were left upset at the language used on a memo detailing the dress code requirements at their upcoming graduation ceremony.

Many students at Biglerville High School in Adams County, Pennsylvania, were left upset at the language used on a memo detailing the dress code requirements at their upcoming graduation ceremony.

abc27.com

Biglerville senior Brianna Burtop posted the note on Facebook highlighting some of the choice language.

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Facebook: brianna.burtop

"Choose modest attire. No bellies showing, 'keep the girls' covered and supported, and make sure that nothing is so small that all your bits and pieces are hanging out. Please remember as you select an outfit for the awards assembly that we don't want to be looking at your 'sausage rolls' as Mrs. Elliot calls them. As you get dressed remember you can't put 10 pounds of mud in a five-pound sack. "

Burtop was angered at the stipulations which she saw as insulting. After she posted the memo to her Facebook, others also voiced their displeasure:

Burtop was angered at the stipulations which she saw as insulting. After she posted the memo to her Facebook, others also voiced their displeasure:

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People Are Outraged At United Airlines Over The Alleged Treatment Of A Muslim Female Passenger

Tahera Ahmad posted on Facebook that she faced discrimination and verbal abuse while she was on board a United Airlines flight on Friday.

This is Tahera Ahmad, an associate chaplain at Northwestern University.

This is Tahera Ahmad, an associate chaplain at Northwestern University.

Tahera Ahmad / Facebook

On Friday, Ahmad posted an emotional message on Facebook detailing alleged racial and Islamophobic abuse she faced while on board a United Airlines flight.

In the post, she wrote that she was refused an unopened can of Diet Coke. When she asked why, the air steward allegedly told her that crew members were "unauthorized to give unopened cans to people because they may use it as a weapon on the plane."

After complaining to the crew member, and publicly, Ahmad claims that she was then subjected to verbal abuse, with one passenger saying, "You Moslem, you need to shut the fuck up."

Tahera Ahmad / Facebook


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Friday, May 29, 2015

Hundreds Attend "Draw Muhammad" Rally At Phoenix Mosque

Police kept opposing protesters separated, putting up barriers between the groups.

Demonstrators arrived armed with handguns and rifles visible as worshippers assembled for Friday evening prayers. But the event was more of a protest than art contest, as people crowded in front of the mosque holding signs and yelling chants.

The event's organizer, Jon Ritzheimer, encouraged attendees on Facebook to bring American Flags and "utilize there [sic] second amendment right at this event just incase [sic] our first amendment comes under the much anticipated attack."

An hour into the event, the crowd began to thin on both sides.

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"I'm a threat because I'm here with a gun?" Ritzheimer asked a reporter at the rally Friday. "They're the ones with the bad track record."

The rally comes just weeks after two gunmen from Phoenix, Arizona, opened fire at a similar event in Garland, Texas, organized by an anti-Islamic group.

Elton Simpson and Nadir Hamid Soofi opened fire and were killed outside the event May 3, an event that organizer Ritzheimer, said inspired him to hold Friday's contest.

Friday's rally, was held at the Islamic Community Center of Phoenix, which had been attended by the two shooters.


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James Holmes Targeted Theater Because "There'd Be A Lot Of People There"

Aurora theater shooting suspect James Holmes appears in court in Centennial, Colorado, on June 4, 2013.

Andy Cross / AP

In a recorded interview played in court Friday, James Holmes told a court-appointed psychiatrist that he chose to go on a rampage at the premiere of The Dark Knight Rises because he knew the movie would be a blockbuster, "so I knew there'd be a lot of people there."

Holmes made the comment in a videotaped interview with psychiatrist William Reid in 2014 — two years after the mass shooting at an Aurora, Colorado, movie theater that left 12 people dead. Holmes — charged with 12 counts of murder and 70 counts of attempted murder — has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.

Holmes as seen in court on July 23, 2012.

Rj Sangosti / AP

During parts of the interview that were played for jurors Friday, Reid asked Holmes about his appearance before and leading up to the attack. Holmes famously carried out the attack wearing black contact lenses and brightly dyed hair.

"I thought it would look better than green or blue," Holmes said of his fiery hair. Later he added that the dark contact lenses arrived the day of the attack, and said he could barely see out of them.

Reid then asked Holmes if he had taken on a "devilish look."

"I'd say that's accurate," Holmes replied. "It looks a little devilish."

Holmes later said that he chose to attack the local premiere of the Batman sequel because it would be a crowded theater, adding that if the storyline had any influence on his choices, "it was unconscious."

A video interview with Holmes recorded in 2014 plays in a Colorado courtroom Friday.

NBC News / Via nbcnews.com

Holmes also said in the video that he pushed away those close to him so he could focus on killing, the Associated Press reported. In response to questions from Reid, he explained that he ended a relationship as it was beginning because he didn't want the woman to be stigmatized for having dated a murderer.

Earlier, he talked about going to church with his parents, but said he was "never really a believer."

He also talked about feeling depressed and wondering if he was under FBI surveillance, the AP reported. At one point, Holmes told Reid he secretly hoped he would be "locked away before I did it."

Holmes' trial is expected to last several months.

Watch Friday's court proceedings here:

youtube.com

LINK: James Holmes Was Sane During The Aurora Movie Theater Shooting, Psychiatrist Says

LINK: Here’s What James Holmes Wrote In His Notebook Before The Aurora Theater Shooting




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Texas Lawmakers Approve Open Carry Handgun Bill

Police chiefs across the state had warned that a provision in the bill could endanger police officers, but a last minute change helped it pass Friday. The governor is expected to sign the bill into law.

A gun-rights advocate carries a rifle on his back and a cardboard cutout of pistol on his waist as a group protests outside the Texas Capitol.

Eric Gay / AP

The bill, which had sparked concern from police departments across the state, is expected to be signed into law by Gov. Greg Abbott.

Police departments in the nation's second most populous state had strongly opposed the bill, particularly a provision that would have made it illegal for officers to ask someone carrying a gun if they had a permit.

Local police chiefs had been urging Abbott to veto the bill, unless that provision was nixed, which lawmakers did at the last minute before the bill cleared the legislature Friday.


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Baltimore Cops: Rank And File Have Lost Confidence In Commissioner

At a union meeting on Tuesday, more than 400 officers raised their hands in support of a potential no-confidence vote against the top police official in the city. The vote came in the aftermath of protesting and riots in Baltimore following the death of a young black man in police custody.

Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts speaks at a press conference regarding the death of Freddie Gray on April 30, 2015, in Baltimore.

Andrew Burton / Getty Images

More than 400 Baltimore city police officers gathered at a union meeting on Tuesday raised their hands in support of a potential no-confidence vote against Police Commissioner Anthony Batts, a current officer in attendance and two former officers familiar with what happened told BuzzFeed News.

"When I looked around the room almost every hand I seen was up," said the current officer, who has been in the department for more than a decade and requested anonymity because he was not authorized by the department to speak to the media. "It caught me by surprise. I didn't know that many people were upset."

The cops at the meeting also almost unanimously backed "a change in command" — that all of Batts' high-level commanders be replaced, the officers said.

The votes were not official and were only intended to gauge the sentiments within the department. But the overwhelming opposition to Batts among rank-and-file officers had been building for weeks -- even years, said one current officer -- before reaching a new high-water mark in the weeks following the April 19 death of Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old who suffered a severe spinal cord injury while in police custody. And they came as the department faced rumors of a "slowdown," with a sharp rise in homicides and a sharp decline in arrests in the weeks following the arrests of six officers tied to Gray's death on charges ranging from reckless endangerment to second-degree murder.

"A lot of officers are upset and nervous," said the current officer. "They don't want to get in trouble for doing anything, and they definitely feel that the command does not back them up."

Many Baltimore cops felt that the department had been unprepared when the peaceful protests gave way to rioting, one current officer and two former officers said. During the Baltimore Fraternal Order of Police meeting at the union's North Baltimore hall, officers complained about orders they had received to stand down even as rocks and other projectiles rained down on them, the officer at the meeting said.

"If I'm told to stand there and take bricks to the skull and not do anything about that, if I'm only worthy of being here as a brick catcher, that's not an agency that I wanna be with," said a former officer, who retired a week after the riots and requested anonymity because of his ongoing relationship with current officers.

According to department personnel documents obtained by BuzzFeed News, at least nine officers retired within two weeks of Gray's death and five more resigned. Those numbers are not significantly different from a Baltimore pension report showing that the department averaged around 10 retirements a month from 1987 to 2006. There are currently around 3,200 employees in the Baltimore City Police Department.

One of the officers who retired and one of the officers who resigned told BuzzFeed News that their decisions were a direct consequence of Batts' style of leadership in the aftermath of Gray's death.

"This was just sort of a powder keg," said the officer who retired. "I would probably say about 80% of the people who left over the past few weeks left because of Batts."

One current officer told BuzzFeed that he expects an exodus of officers in the near future.

"A lot of people are already talking about jumping ship," the officer said. "They really don't feel the support of this agency. It's definitely been a strong consideration for me. I don't know if I wanna go through the continued stress."

One current and two former Baltimore cops told BuzzFeed News that Batts' handling of the riots and their aftermath reaffirmed their long-held suspicion that he was more concerned with his political standing and his relationship with Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake than with the well-being of the officers under his watch.

"He's pretty much lockstep with the mayor and her words about reforming police officers," said the current officer. "A lot of us don't really believe at the end of the day that he has our backs."

The suspicions began early in Batts' tenure, which began in September 2012. He was an outsider to Baltimore, and many officers lost some faith in him when he told the Baltimore Sun that he had seen a man hand another man "red things in balloons" — "a dope deal right in front of me." According to multiple narcotics cops, nobody in Baltimore kept drugs in red balloons — only vials, gelcaps, or plastic baggies. (The department said that Batts was unable to provide comment on the no-confidence vote and the criticism from officers before press time but referred BuzzFeed News to some of Batts' recent public statements.)

An even greater sin, the recently retired officer said, came when Batts replaced the prior commanders with a new staff.

"He got rid of organically grown supervision within the department," he said. "Those guys were shown the door and suddenly we had a bunch of Kool-Aid drinkers."

Over the following years, Batts, who had deemed himself a "reform commissioner," made efforts to improve the department's reputation in the community. Locals had complained of excessive force and of arrests without probable cause. In 2006, the American Civil Liberties Union and NAACP sued the city for civil rights violations, winning an $870,000 settlement. A 2014 Baltimore Sun investigation revealed that the city had paid out $5.7 million to more than 100 plaintiffs in police brutality lawsuits from 2011 through 2014. Batts shifted away from the zero-tolerance policing strategy that led to thousands of questionable low-level arrests over the previous decade, and he fired around 50 officers who had committed misconduct.

The weeks following Gray's death cemented some officers' lack of trust in Batts. In addition to the complaints about Batts' handling of the riots, some officers believed Batts did not show enough support support for the six officers who faced criminal charges for Gray's death.

"It all just galvanized our opinions," said the recently retired officer. "Now with this not supporting the officers, the ones indicted, the ones who took bricks to the head, that tells the police department that your leadership will not support you."

Perhaps sensing declining support among his troops, Batts showed up at the Tuesday meeting and spoke for around five minutes, an officer in attendance said.

"I want to come here and tell you guys that I think I let you guys down," he said, according to the Baltimore Sun, which obtained a recording of Batts' speech. "I say that with a humble heart, I say that with honesty, and I say it coming from my heart."

The crowd -- of 400 to 450 cops, one officer estimated -- was much larger than most meetings, more than double the usual attendance, the current officer said. The protests, the charges against six officers tied to Gray's death, Batts' expected speech, and imminent negotiations for a new union contract brought out many more officers.

Batts did not take questions and left after speaking. Minutes later, a lieutenant in the crowd "started the conversation about no confidence," the officer in attendance said. "At least a half dozen people vocally got up. They were asking for a vote of no confidence to be made of him."

When a union leader asked the officers in attendance who would vote no confidence if such a vote took place, "almost everybody raised their hands," said the officer.

Union president Gene Ryan told those at the meeting that the union had opened an investigation into how Batts handled the riots, and that the union would not hold an official no-confidence vote until the investigation was complete, the officer said. (The Baltimore Fraternal Order of Police referred all questions to a public relations firm it hired, which did not respond to interview requests.)

Either way, some officers wonder how much time Batts has left as commissioner.

"He'll be gone by December," one former officer predicted.



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Everyone Wants A Marijuana Breathalyzer But No One Knows If That's Possible

Investors, state governments, employers — everyone wants a functional marijuana breathalyzer to test whether someone is high at a given moment. But that may not be possible.

Amanda Lewis / Via BuzzFeed News

Right now it's impossible to accurately enforce stoned driving laws, because there is no roadside test that can determine whether a driver is actually high.

Which is why many of the people checking out the Cannabix Technologies booth at the Marijuana Investor Summit in Denver last month were thrilled. Here, finally, in a hotel ballroom littered with men in suits hawking useless apps and grow-house accessories, was a product with real potential: a marijuana breathalyzer.

As medical and recreational marijuana become legal in more and more places, the need for an easy way to determine whether someone is acutely stoned, meaning high at the moment of testing, has become all the more imperative. For example, although stoned driving numbers are not tracked nationally, Washington has reported a significant increase in drivers testing positive for THC since the state legalized marijuana in 2013. Cops need to know if drivers are too stoned to be on the road. People of color who get disproportionately pulled over for routine traffic stops need to know they won't just be arrested for a joint smoked the day before. Employers want to know if their workers are toking up on breaks.

Stoned driving was one of three top policy priorities identified by California's Blue Ribbon Commission on Marijuana Policy, a two-year study of the most pressing pot-related issues chaired by the state's lieutenant governor, Gavin Newsom. "This is a challenge that needs to be addressed—yesterday," Newsom told BuzzFeed News. "No one wants to share the road with an impaired driver, but it's happening every day and yet no tangible effort has been made to raise our understanding of measuring marijuana impairment to the same level as we have with alcohol impairment."

The quest for a pot breathalyzer is one almost everyone can get behind. The only problem is that no one has figured out how to make one that works. That's where companies like Cannabix come in.

Not everyone who came to Cannabix's booth believes a marijuana breathalyzer is even possible. Cannabix CEO Rav Mlait said he knew as soon as he saw the smirking man in red-framed glasses bounding toward him that self-described "cannabis expert and educator" Max Montrose would not be a potential investor.

"So tell me about this," Montrose commanded in a nasal baritone, gesturing to the table full of leaflets and the monitor playing a promotional video on repeat.

"Sure, sure, sure," Mlait said. A plodding, middle-aged Canadian in dark jeans and a light blue button-up, he began explaining that a few days earlier his company had released images of their alpha prototype, a pistol-like device with a plastic breathing tube where the barrel would be.

Cannabix Technologies

"I dig that. So let's move a little faster in this conversation," Montrose said. "So what about the fact that the science for cannabis DUIs is like, the most untrue, fucked-up shit you've ever seen?"

Mlait stammered the beginning of a response but then trailed off, unsure of how to handle this politely. Montrose was more than happy to keep talking. "Your product could send sober people to jail," he said.

Here's what Montrose was talking about: Unlike alcohol, which is water soluble and surges in the bloodstream as you get drunker and then disappears as you sober up, THC, the ingredient in marijuana that gets you high, is fat soluble and therefore can remain in the body for several weeks. In 16 states, anyone who smokes pot over the weekend could be drug tested on the way to work on Monday and automatically be found guilty of driving under the influence, without a trial. In the other 34, those arrested for drugged driving will at least get a chance to tell their story to a jury, but a positive result on a biological test is a difficult piece of evidence to argue against.

This is exactly the problem that Mlait and his business partner, Kal Malhi, say they are trying to solve. The breathalyzer their team is working on would, in theory, be able to determine whether someone has smoked, vaped, or digested THC in the past two hours.

Mlait and Malhi, a mustachioed former Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer, assume people like Montrose just want to be allowed to drive while high, so they try not to engage when critics inevitably approach. Besides, their product sells itself. Or at least, the idea behind their product sells itself.

For now, in most of the country, suspected stoned drivers must be brought in for blood tests. If the person being pulled over has just smoked pot for the first time in months, the marijuana metabolites in their system could be below the legal limit by the time they get to a lab a few hours later. If the person being pulled over gets high several times a week, the metabolites in their system will likely be above the legal limit, regardless of whether they were driving under the influence.

Some states have begun using cheek swabs and spit tests for quick roadside screening, because saliva doesn't retain THC as long as blood does. But even infrequent smokers can test positive a full day after the munchies and euphoria have subsided. Medical marijuana patients and stoners who light up daily have almost no chance of passing a saliva test, though not all test brands are reliably accurate.

When it comes to breath tests, Cannabix isn't the only option out there. Early last fall, the state of Colorado gave a drug and alcohol testing company called Lifeloc Technologies a $250,000 grant to develop a weed breathalyzer. Within two months, researchers at Washington State University announced they were also working on one.

Even though almost no one has ever seen the Cannabix breathalyzer in action, Malhi and Malit's regular stream of upbeat press releases imply they are the ones closest to a final product, so everyone wants in: law enforcement, employers, government agencies, parole officers, and, of course, investors. Malhi and Mlait started Cannabix Technologies last summer. Since then, their stock has gone from 5 cents to as high as 62 cents, and is currently trading around 28 cents a share.

Despite their clash with Montrose, Malhi and Mlait were in high demand at the Marijuana Investor Summit. A few hours before being confronted by Montrose, they ate breakfast with the head of HR from a major oil and gas company in Texas. And just before the two headed off to lunch with representatives from the Colorado Department of Transportation, an enthusiastic investor, Alaskan fisher Peter DeJongh, stopped by.


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Silk Road Mastermind Reportedly Sentenced Life In Prison

Ross Ulbricht

Facebook / Via Facebook: Free-Ross

Ross Ulbricht, 31, the mastermind behind the darknet marketplace Silk Road, was sentenced to life in prison in federal court Friday.

Silk Road

What is the Silk Road?

In 2011, Ulbricht created the website as an online marketplace where people could buy whatever they wanted anonymously. He managed the website under a number of anonymous handles, the most well known being “Dread Pirate Roberts” after the popular character from the movie The Princess Bride.

The site operated on the anonymous internet or “darknet,” only accessible by using the encryption software TOR — an acronym for the program standing for “The Onion Router” to reflect the layers of security. All transactions on the Silk Road were completed using Bitcoin, the well known crypto-currency.

In a journal entry introduced in court, Ulbricht wrote, “In 2011, I am creating a year of prosperity and power beyond what I have ever experienced before. Silk Road is going to become a phenomenon and at least one person is going to tell me about it, unknowing that I was its creator.”

How Silk Road Blew Up

The online bazaar became like an Amazon for dealing drugs and other illicit goods. Several thousand vendors sold LSD, heroin, cocaine, marijuana and other drugs anonymously.

In a June 2011 profile of the site, Gawker’s Adrian Chen wrote, “Making small talk with your pot dealer sucks. Buying cocaine can get you shot. What if you could buy and sell drugs online like books or light bulbs? Now you can: Welcome to the Silk Road.”

Federal investigators said there were more than 1.5 million transactions on the site; evidence presented by the government at trial showed that Silk Road generated more than $213 million in revenue between January 2011 and October 2013.

Vocativ reports that marijuana sales accounted for more than $46 million on Silk Road, while heroin sales were worth about $8.9 million.

Ulbricht himself took commission on every deal, amassing a fortune of more than $18 million in Bitcoins before the feds started to close in.

Ross Ulbricht

Facebook / Via Facebook: Free-Ross

The Bust of Dread Pirate Roberts

In October 2013, Ulbricht was arrested by the F.B.I. He was apprehended in a San Francisco library and his laptop was seized while logged in to the Silk Road as Dread Pirate Roberts.

He was charged with seven federal counts including narcotics trafficking, computer hacking and money laundering.

He was also accused of soliciting the murders of six people he believed were threats to the site’s business. At trial, the prosecution said there is no evidence that the murders actually took place or anyone was harmed.

Lyn and Kirk Ulbricht (back R), parents of Ross Ulbricht, speak to journalists after his conviction in Lower Manhattan, New York February 4, 2015.

Reuters Staff / Reuters

The Trial of Ross Ulbricht

At trial, Ulbricht pleaded not guilty to all the charges.

His lawyer argued that Ulbricht created the Silk Road as an “economic experiment” but then turned the site over to others when it became too popular for him to manage.

“He created it as a completely freewheeling, free-market site that could sell anything except a couple items were harmful,” Dratel told the jury.

Dratel said that after giving up the site Ulbricht was eventually lured back as a “fall guy” when the investigation heated up.

The prosecution said that the Silk Road was Ulbricht’s “baby” and promised to show the jury “a mountain of evidence” that proved that he was the owner and operator of the site.

“His idea was to make illegal drug deals as quick and easy as ordinary online shopping,” the government told the jury.

After Ulbricht was busted, the office of Preet Bharara, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, said that private messages from Dread Pirate Roberts matched evidence recovered from Ulbricht’s laptop. “This evidence, therefore, connects Ulbricht in the real world with Dread Pirate Roberts in Cyberspace.”

In court, the prosecution cited the journal entries that Ulbricht kept while building and running the site and a college friend of Ulbricht, Richard Bates, testified that he told Bates about the project after seeking his help with programming.

“He shared with me that he created and ran the Silk Road website,” Bates said.

The prosecution illustrated the alleged murder-for-hire plots during the trial. They argued Ulbricht solicited the murders, “to retaliate against a former staff member who he believed had stolen Bitcoins from the site and who he feared would provide information about the site to law enforcement, and to eliminate the threats posed by others who were threatening to publicly leak the names and addresses of Silk Road users and vendors.”

In one example, prosecutors said that in 2013, Ulbricht paid Silk Road user Redandwhite to kill user FriendlyChemist, who had threatened to publicize real names and addresses of site vendors and customers unless Ulbricht gave him $500,000.

In his closing argument, prosecutor Serrin Turner told the jury that Ulbricht use his “dark corner of the internet” and “made it easier for drug dealers to get users hooked, users from all over the world.”

In February 2015, Ulbricht was found guilty on all seven counts. The jury deliberated for three-and-a-half hours. The charges against him demanded a sentence of at least 20 years.

Ulbricht didn’t testify at the trial. Prior to sentencing, he broke his silence in a letter to the judge.

“I’ve had my youth, and I know you must take away my middle years, but please leave me my old age,” Ulbricht wrote, pleading for leniency.

“Please leave a small light at the end of the tunnel, an excuse to stay healthy, and excuse to dream of better days ahead, and a chance to redeem myself in the free world before I meet my maker.”

Max Dickstein stands with other supporters of Ross Ulbricht, the alleged creator and operator of the Silk Road underground market, in front of a Manhattan federal court house on the first day of jury selection for his trial on January 13, 2015 in New York City.

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

What Happens Now

After Ulbricht was found guilty, Bharara said the verdict, “should send a clear message to anyone attempting to operate an online criminal enterprise.”

“The supposed anonymity of the dark web is not a protective shield from arrest and prosecution.”

In a bizarre twist in the story, two governments agents involved in the investigation of Silk Road were indicted on federal charges from the bust of Ulbricht.

DEA agent Carl Mark Force and Shaun Bridges, who worked for the Secret Service, stand accused of money laundering and wire fraud in connection with actions during the investigation.

Both men were part of a Baltimore-based task force that investigated Ulbricht separately from the Manhattan group. Following their indictments, Bharara said that their operation was separate from his office. The defense attempted but was unable to introduce details of the Force investigation at Ulbricht’s trial.

During the Baltimore group’s investigation, Force allegedly made contact with Dread Pirate Roberts under several fictitious user names not sanctioned by the government, communicated with him using encrypted messaging, and attempted to extort $250,000 from Ulbricht in exchange for withholding secret information from the government.

According to the complaint, during the investigation Force deposited $776,000 in misappropriated Bitcoins into his personal accounts and Bridges diverted $800,000 in his.



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Abortion Restrictions Ruled Unconstitutional In Idaho

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that three of Idaho’s abortion laws, which regulate when and where a woman can terminate a pregnancy, are unconstitutional. The ruling was spurred by a case dating back to 2010.

Idaho senators introduced a bill requiring doctors who perform abortions to obtain admitting privileges at a local hospital.

Kimberlee Kruesi / AP

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday announced that laws in Idaho restricting women's access to abortion were unconstitutional and placed an "undue burden" on women seeking to terminate their pregnancies.

The ruling out of San Francisco stated specifically that Idaho did not have the right to determine when women could terminate their pregnancies based on which trimester they were in.

According to the state laws, first trimester pregnancies in Idaho had to be aborted in a "properly staffed" medical facility, and required the doctor to "make satisfactory arrangements with an acute care hospital in care of complications or emergencies." Second trimester pregnancies had to be aborted in a hospital. After 20 weeks, all abortions were illegal.

The court ruled that all three laws were unconstitutional, noting that the section on first trimester abortions was "unconstitutionally vague."

Protesters opposed to legislation requiring women seeking an abortion to undergo an ultrasound demonstrate in Boise, Idaho, in 2012.

Jessie L. Bonner / AP

A case involving an Idaho woman who medically induced her abortion in 2010 spurred the appeal that was decided by the 9th Circuit.

In 2010, Jennie Linn McCormack allegedly terminated her pregnancy in Pocatello, Idaho, using abortion pills she ordered online at the suggestion of a doctor who practiced out of state.

After police found the 5-month-old fetus in a box in McCormack's backyard, she was arrested and charged with a felony. Two years later, a judge dropped the charge due to a lack of evidence, but in July 2014, her new attorney (who is also a physician) filed a complaint urging the court to reconsider the constitutionality of Idaho's abortion laws.

In the ruling issued Friday, Judge Harry Pregerson wrote:

Although the state may ensure that the woman's choice is informed, and protect the health and safety of a woman seeking an abortion, the state may not prohibit a woman from making the "ultimate decision" to undergo an abortion.

The judge added that Idaho's abortion laws placed an "undue burden" on women seeking to terminate their pregnancies.

Read the full opinion below.


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U.S. Formally Drops Cuba From Terrorism List

Syria, Iran, Sudan, remain on the list of state sponsors of terrorism.

President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro, left, during their meeting at the Summit of the Americas in Panama City in April.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

The United States on Friday formally dropped Cuba from its list of state sponsors of terrorism, the U.S. State Department said in a statement.

In December, President Obama and Cuban President RaĆŗl Castro announced the normalization of diplomatic relations after a year and a half of secret negotiations. Cuba released American contractor Alan Gross, who had been jailed for five years, and the U.S. released three intelligence agents who had become national heroes in Cuba.

In December 2014, the President instructed the Secretary of State to immediately launch a review of Cuba's designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism, and provide a report to him within six months regarding Cuba's support for international terrorism. On April 8, 2015, the Secretary of State completed that review and recommended to the President that Cuba no longer be designated as a State Sponsor of Terrorism.

Accordingly, on April 14, the President submitted to Congress the statutorily required report indicating the Administration's intent to rescind Cuba's State Sponsor of Terrorism designation, including the certification that Cuba has not provided any support for international terrorism during the previous six-months; and that Cuba has provided assurances that it will not support acts of international terrorism in the future. The 45-day Congressional pre-notification period has expired, and the Secretary of State has made the final decision to rescind Cuba's designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism, effective today, May 29, 2015.

The rescission of Cuba's designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism reflects our assessment that Cuba meets the statutory criteria for rescission. While the United States has significant concerns and disagreements with a wide range of Cuba's policies and actions, these fall outside the criteria relevant to the rescission of a State Sponsor of Terrorism designation

LINK: Cuba’s Removal From List Of State Sponsors Of Terrorism Draws Praise And Criticism


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Here's A Creepy Phone Call Dennis Hastert Once Got From His Hometown On C-Span

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Former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert – who was indicted Thursday for reporting evasion charges and lying to the FBI in an effort to conceal payments to a victim of “prior bad acts” – got a creepy call during an appearance on C-SPAN's Washington Journal in November 2014.

"Bruce" from Illinois rang into a discussion about the midterm elections.

"Hello Denny," Bruce opens.

"Hey, how are you doing," Hastert says.

"Pretty good," Bruce says. "Remember me from Yorkville?"

When Hastert and the show's host ask him to ask a question, "Bruce" laughs and hangs up.

The very beginning of the indictment against Hastert references his time as a a "high school teacher and coach in Yorkville,
Illinois." Hastert coached the wrestling team at Yorkville High School. It's unclear if the caller really knew Hastert from the town outside Chicago.

LINK: Sources: Hastert Lawyers Asked U.S. Attorney To Withhold Details Of Alleged “Misconduct”

LINK: Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert Indicted On Federal Charges



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Thursday, May 28, 2015

National Spelling Bee Ends In Tie For Second Year In A Row

Not even “myrmotherine,” “cypseline,” or “bruxellois” could throw off these two eighth-graders.

Scripps National Spelling Bee champions Vanya Shivashankar, 13, left, Gokul Venkatachalam, 14.

Andrew Harnik / AP

Vanya Shivashankar, of Kansas, and Gokul Venkatachalam, of Missouri, were declared the winners after correctly spelling every word judges threw at the middle-schoolers.

It was the second year in a row that the national competition ended in a tie. Both the students have competed in the Scripps National Spelling Bee for several years, finally grabbing the title as eighth-graders on Thursday.

Vanya Shivashankar.

Cliff Owen / AP

Vanya was the contender in this year's spelling bee to have attended the most competitions, with a total of five under her belt.

This year, she hung on during the final round by spelling out words that included "myrmotherine," "hippocrepiform," and "bruxellois."

Her family was in the audience, cheering her on and trying to hold on as it came down to the final two in a heart-stopping face-off.


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James Holmes Was Sane During The Aurora Movie Theater Shooting, Psychiatrist Says

POOL / Reuters

A court-appointed psychiatrist testified Thursday that while James Holmes suffers from severe mental illness, he met the legal definition of sanity when he entered an Aurora, Colorado, movie theater in 2012 and began shooting, killing 12 people.

"My opinion is that whatever he suffered from, it did not prevent him from forming the intent and knowing what he was doing, and the consequences of what he was doing," William Reid said.

Reid's assessment was unexpected in court; defense attorneys unsuccessfully moved for the judge to call a mistrial. Ultimately, the judge reviewed the legal definition of insanity with the jury, and District Attorney George Brauchler said prosecutors would be careful to avoid any "missteps" in future testimony.

Reid was the first psychiatrist to testify in the trial of Holmes, who has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to 12 counts of murder and 70 counts of attempted murder. In coming to his conclusion, Reid said he spent 22 hours interviewing Holmes, spoke with his friends and family, and reviewed the reports of other doctors. Reid said he also pored over jail logs and other written documents connected with the 27-year-old's life.

Brauchler has said he intends to show all 22 hours Reid's interviews with Holmes, but on Thursday, the jury only heard the first hour-and-a-half.

After inquiring about his family's reaction to visiting him in prison, Reid asked Holmes, "What brings tears to your eyes sometimes?"

"Uh, just regrets," Holmes said.

"Usually before I go to sleep."

"About the shooting."

Colorado Judicial Department

Reid did not meet Holmes in person until two years after the shooting massacre, and during their interviews, Holmes was taking medication that included an anti-psychotic drug and an anti-depressant.

"Lots of things had happened between the shootings and the time I saw him and the time the videos were made," Reid said.

Instead, Reid said he focused his attention on Holmes' behavior before the shooting and the first seven to 10 days in jail, using logs and soundless surveillance video.

"He was pretty much like other inmates might appear," Reid said. "There was nothing unusual psychiatrically going on."

To find Holmes guilty, prosecutors must show he was capable of distinguishing right from wrong, and that he had the capacity to form a "culpable mental state," or to know what he was doing.

Reid said he was most interested in determining what Holmes was capable of on July 19-20, 2012.

"Diagnosis is not the important thing in my view," he said. "It’s how is he functioning, what is he capable of."

In his interviews, Reid starts by asking Holmes what he thinks people should know about him.

"I'm kinda shy, I guess," Holmes said, adding, "I don't like to talk a lot."

Arlene and Robert Holmes, the parents of Aurora theater shooting suspect James Holmes.

Doug Pensinger / Getty Images


He described his family and a normal, suburban upbringing, first in Salinas, California, then in San Diego. He ran cross country and played soccer; his father was the coach. With his mother and little sister, he'd do craft projects and helped cook spaghetti. He made friends with other boys, and they'd play capture the flag, then as they got older, video games.

Holmes also did well academically in high school and at UC Riverside. Dorm life made it easier for him to make friends, and he spent the summer between sophomore and junior year as a counselor at a camp for underprivileged kids.

He lived at home for a year after getting his bachelor's degree, working for several months in a repetitive job at a vitamin factory. Finally, he got into the University of Colorado's prestigious neuroscience program, where he also met his first girlfriend.

Holmes told Reid he liked pop and techno music, specifically naming Tiesto. Prosecutors previously described how Holmes wore bluetooth headphones during the shooting rampage to listen to electronic music at full volume turned as he fired.

"It kind of helps me focus," Holmes told Reid. "I'd use it a lot when I was reading academic journals to wash out excess sounds."



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Baltimore Police Union Now Says Officers Afraid To Do Their Jobs After Freddie Gray Case

The six Baltimore police officers indicted in the death of Freddie Gray.

Handout . / Reuters

Baltimore's police union this week offered differing accounts for why violent crime has spiked in the wake of six officers being indicted in the homicide of Freddie Gray.

Police statistics show Baltimore officers have made far fewer arrests in the weeks since the charges were filed, raising questions about whether they are engaged in a work slowdown as a result of the indictment.

There have been 38 homicides in Baltimore in the past 28 days, making May the city's most violent month in 15 years, the Associated Press reported. Police statistics show there have been 111 homicides in the first five months of 2015 — 32 more than in the same period last year.

The spike in violence comes in the wake of protests demanding justice for Gray, a 25-year-old black man who died after suffering spinal injuries while in police custody. Earlier this month, a grand jury indicted six police officers involved in Gray's arrest on criminal charges ranging from second-degree murder to manslaughter.

On Tuesday, the union's president went on the defensive, insisting officers were "doing their jobs" normally and were not engaged in a work slowdown — a labor organizing technique in which workers do less of their job to protest unfair or unsafe conditions.

"It's not because our officers not working," Gene Ryan, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, told ABC. "They are out there on the streets, they are doing their jobs."

On Thursday, however, the union issued a new statement blaming the crime spike on anti-police sentiment, saying officers are "afraid of going to jail for doing their jobs."

"The criminals are taking advantage of the situation in Baltimore since the unrest," Ryan said in the statement. "Police are under siege in every quarter. They are more afraid of going to jail for doing their jobs properly than they are of getting shot on duty."

Activists criticized the union's statements, calling them inflammatory and selfish.

"The Baltimore City Police will do and say anything to avoid accountability," DeRay McKesson, a civil rights activist, told BuzzFeed News. "With the latest [Fraternal Order of Police] statement, Baltimore police aim to instill fear into citizens to gain support. Today, Baltimore police reminded us that they aim only to protect and serve their selfish interests and not the interests of public safety or the public good."

Clapp Communications, the public relations firm that now represents the Fraternal Order of Police, told BuzzFeed News on Thursday that Ryan was not available for an interview.

LINK: These Are The Charges Filed Against The Cops Who Arrested Freddie Gray

LINK: Freddie Gray Case Heats Up As Baltimore Prosecutor Responds To Officers In Court

LINK: Arrests In Baltimore Plunge Even As The Murder Rate Soars



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"Serial" Is Officially Returning For Two More Seasons

So everyone can just CALM DOWN.

After five months of silence, the creators of the popular true-crime podcast Serial have announced that it will in fact be coming back for a second – and third – season.

After five months of silence, the creators of the popular true-crime podcast Serial have announced that it will in fact be coming back for a second – and third – season.

serialpodcast.org

Other than these basic facts, the creators, Sarah Koenig and Julie Snyder, haven't revealed much about the upcoming seasons.

In a newsletter to Serial fans, Koenig said tantalizingly, "Sorry — we can't tell you details about the new stories yet." But added, "They're very different from Season One, but no less interesting to us."

Provided by Serial

They'll be talking about the first season and answering questions from the audience in Texas, Connecticut, Virginia, Ohio, and New York.


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ACLU: Minorities In Minneapolis Nearly Nine Times More Likely To Be Arrested For Petty Crimes

The results have one local community organizer saying that the Twin Cities area is quickly becoming “the new South.”

Demonstrators in Minneapolis protesting for Michael Brown.

Jim Mone / AP

A new study from the ACLU said that black or Native American people in Minneapolis are almost nine times more likely to be arrested for a petty crime than a white person.

The study, released on Thursday, looked at a 33-month period of arrests to determine which racial groups were arrested most often for low-level crimes.

The results have one local community organizer saying that the Twin Cities area is quickly becoming "the new South."

"We've become the new premiere example of how to systematically oppress people of color," Anthony Newby, executive director of Neighborhoods Organizing for Change, said in an ACLU press release. "And again, it's done through our legal system, and so low-level offenses, as an example, are just one of the many, many ways that Minnesota has perfected the art of suppressing and subjugating people of color."

The study examined arrest records from January 1, 2012, and September 30, 2014. In that time frame they found 96,975 people were arrested for petty crimes like trespassing and disorderly conduct.

Of that group, an average of 20,543 black residents each year were arrested for a low-level crime. An average of 2,163 Native Americans each year were arrested for these types of crimes and an average of 8,069 white people were arrested each year.

Minneapolis Police Chief Janee Harteau and Mayor R.T. Rybak

Jim Mone / AP

These numbers are significant, according to the study, because white people make up 64% of the population of Minneapolis while black people make up 19%. Therefore, black people make up 59% of the low-level arrests in the city, while white people make up 23%.

The ACLU found that black people are being arrested for low-level crimes at a rate of 8.7% more than white people, while Native American residents are being arrested 8.6% more than white people.

"This is a staggering difference," the study said.

The study's authors said they sought to include the Latino community, but there was not enough reliable data from police officers.

Black residents interviewed by the ACLU said the study came as no surprise.

"You see that most of the time … that [the police] target only this community," said Omar Ali, an employment counselor.

In one example, a young man named Hamza Jeylani told the ACLU he and some friends were pulled over after making a U-Turn in a parking lot earlier this year. They were told they was suspected of grand theft auto.

The 17-year-old recorded the encounter on his cell phone. In the video, provided by the ACLU, Jeylani asks why he is being arrested.

"Because I feel like arresting you," said the officer.


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New Harvard Survey Reveals 74% Of Black Graduating Students Felt Racially Marginalized

The survey also found that 14.4% of women said they were sexually assaulted.

This year the Crimson staff devoted much of the survey to addressing particular topics of controversy the school has been facing, such as academic dishonesty, grade inflation, racism, and sexual assault.

The Crimson reported that 760 people, nearly half the Harvard College graduating class, completed the anonymous survey.

Robert Spencer / Getty Images

74% of black students reported feeling marginalized due to their race, while 67% of students whose families made less than $80,000 a year "felt marginalized because of their socioeconomic status."

45% of students in the graduating class who identified as lesbian, gay, or bisexual reportedly said they "felt marginalized" due to their sexual orientation.


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Unarmed Black Man Beaten By Michigan Police Settles For $1.4 Million

Floyd Dent’s brutal beating by police for driving through a stop sign was caught on video. He sustained serious head injuries and now suffers memory loss.

Floyd Dent, who was beaten by police in Inkster, Michigan for running a stop sign on Jan. 28, settled a lawsuit with the city for $1.4 million on Wednesday, his attorney's office told BuzzFeed News.

Floyd Dent, who was beaten by police in Inkster, Michigan for running a stop sign on Jan. 28, settled a lawsuit with the city for $1.4 million on Wednesday, his attorney's office told BuzzFeed News.

Floyd Dent, center, stands with protesters in front of the Inkster police station on April 3.

Larry Edsall / AP

Dent was pulled over by the police for running a stop sign. When he got out of his 2011 Cadillac, he was thrown to the ground, place in a chokehold, and struck in the head 16 times by Inkster Officer William Melendez, his lawyer said.

Another officer attempted to place handcuffs on Dent while he was being hit, and a third used a Taser on him three times.

The whole incident was caught on video by the police car's dashboard camera, which was first released in March by Local 4 Defenders, a news station based in Detroit.

The video shows Dent reaching up with one arm while Melendez apprehended him. Police allege that Dent was resisting arrest and that they were protecting themselves.

When he testified in court, Dent described the effects of the incident.

"Sometimes I have loss of memory. I can't really think straight, and I forget things to say," he said.

clickondetroit.com

On April 21, Melendez was fired from the police department, and charged with misconduct in office and assault with the intent to do bodily harm. If convicted, he faces up to 15 years in prison.

The next day, Inkster Police Chief resigned.

Dent told the Local 4 Defenders how he felt about the settlement.

"Money isn't everything," he said. "It can't buy happiness."


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