Royal Couple Visits California’s Notorious Skid Row Area

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Posted on : 11-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Prince William

AP

July 10: Prince William, the Duke of Cambridge, greets students as he arrives at Inner-City Arts during the royal tour of California in Los Angeles.

LOS ANGELES — The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge saw Los Angeles’s less-glamorous side Sunday when they visited an inner-city school in downtown’s notorious Skid Row area.

Prince William and his wife Catherine were welcomed to the Inner City Arts academy by six elementary-aged children holding a welcome banner while a crowd of about 150 people cheered and looked on, some waving British and American flags.

Kate, as she is better known, wore a navy-and-white crochet top and a white pleated skirt, both by U.K. fashion company Whistles.

Cynthia Harnisch, the academy’s president and chief executive officer, spoke to the couple about Skid Row and the challenges of poverty and homelessness faced by many students at the school.

The duke and duchess were then escorted to a visual arts studio where they donned art smocks and sat at easels. Fifth-graders helped them create mandalas, a type of Buddhist painting.

Next, the couple went to the ceramics studio where children were working on separate parts of a giant tortoise. The duchess joined the students who were creating the tortoise’s shell while the duke sat at another table where children were working on the reptile’s body.

After the visit, the clay tortoise will be fired in the studio’s kilns and placed in the school’s cactus garden.

Skid Row, with its intractable poverty and largely homeless population, could hardly stand in starker contrast to the more glitzy parts of Southern California that the couple has seen on their whirlwind visit.

On Saturday, William scored four goals at a charity polo match and earlier Sunday he attended a swanky reception to raise money for Tusk Trust, an African wildlife conservation group.

Their final stop before departing for the U.K. will be with the group ServiceNation: Mission Serve, which aims to help veterans find jobs.

Inside the event’s venue, Studio 15 on the Sony Pictures Studio lot in Culver City, giant U.S. and British flags hung behind a stage where the duke and duchess would later speak.

The soundstage hosted a job fair for military veterans, with employers such as Mattel, Walmart and entertainment industry companies such as Warner Bros. and CBS manning booths. The companies must have jobs in order to participate in the fair, said Ross Cohen, Mission Serve’s director.

Cohen, who served in Afghanistan and was an army paratrooper, events such as the job fair were crucial for returning veterans. Unemployment rates for young vets and their spouses are as high as 25 percent, Cohen said.

Kelly York, a 23-year Air Force veteran, came to the fair hoping to find a job that will allow her to remain in the Los Angeles area when she retires early next year.

“I’m sure that they had 50 million places they could go and see,” York said. “The fact that they even take five minutes to stop here and say something to the veterans, that’s huge.”

After arriving at the event and speaking with some veterans, the duke and duchess plan to help prepare care packages for veterans serving overseas and then depart Los Angeles.

Ohio Father Climbs Into Well to Save 3-Year-Old Son

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Posted on : 11-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

DadSavesSon

Fox8.com

A man is being credited with saving the life of his three-year-old son after climbing in a well to save him on Friday night.

Jake McCoy, of Stark County, Ohio, was at his home when his father had discovered that Jake’s son, Dylan, had fallen into the well.

McCoy, 28, explained that the rotting plywood on top of the well gave way when Dylan was jumping on it. He told Fox 8 News that he knew he had to react quickly to save his son when he saw him 40-feet down, struggling to keep his head above the 10-feet of water in the well.

McCoy and his father first tried to lower a ladder into the well but when that didn’t work, he decided to climb down the rock walls of the well from 1886.

“I just told [Dylan] to calm down. Told him ‘it’s going to be all right.’ That ‘daddy’s coming, stop crying, it’s going to be okay,’” McCoy told Fox 8 News.

Once McCoy reached Dylan and brought him to the side of the well where there was a ladder, father and son were then stuck at the bottom.

“My heart was down there with [Dylan], I didn’t know what to do… I didn’t know what to think,” Ashley McCoy, his mother, told Fox 8 News.

Firefighters from Canton Township came and used ropes to pull Dylan to safety. Jake climbed out on his own.

The family predicts the outcome would have been different had Dylan not learned to swim this summer.

“It’s amazing what you can do if your son or your daughter is strapped in a well, screaming your name,” said McCoy. “You’d pretty much do anything.”

The family has plans to put a concrete slab over the well.

Click here to read more and see a video at Fox8.com 

15 Oklahoma Air National Guard Members to Deploy

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Posted on : 11-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

15 Oklahoma Air National Guard Members to Deploy

Published July 10, 2011

| Associated Press



Family of 7 Dies in Alabama Plane Crash

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Family of 7 Dies in Alabama Plane Crash

Published July 10, 2011

| FoxNews.com

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A small plane crashed in Alabama after one of its engines failed, killing a family of seven onboard, authorities said Sunday.

The seven victims include a man, his wife and five young children.

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Holly Baker says the plane was flying from Gadsden, Ala., to Shreveport, La., when it encountered trouble Saturday night. Its pilot tried landing at an airport in Demopolis, but crashed about 2 miles away in a wooded area.

The Marengo County Coroner’s Office says the family were returning from a family reunion in Missouri.

Marengo County Coroner Stuart Eatmon identified the dead as: Fred Teutenberg, 42; his wife, Terresa, who was in her mid-30s; their daughter Emma, 2; their son Peyton, 4; their daughter Ellie, 6; their son Brendon, 9; and their son Will, 10. They are from the Destin area.

The coroner said that relatives told him the Teutenbergs were flying back Saturday so they could make it to church the next day.

Eatmon said the plane was upside-down and one of its wings had broken off, apparently as it crashed into trees.

FAA records show that the plane was built in 1978. It’s registered to Advanced Integrated Technology Solutions LLC in Niceville, Fla.

The plane was found at about 2:17 a.m. Sunday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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Boat Smacks Concrete, Sinks in N.Y.; 4 Die, 2 Hurt

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Posted on : 11-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

A powerboat struck a concrete abutment along the Hudson River and sank before sunrise Sunday, killing four occupants and seriously injuring two others, authorities said.

Six people were aboard the 19-foot boat when it rammed into concrete footing not far from the shore line near Red Hook, about 45 miles south of Albany, according to Lt. John Watterson of the Dutchess County sheriff’s office. The boat was seriously damaged and began to sink in the shallow water.

The body of 26-year-old John J. Uvino of Saugerties was found in the water, and it appeared he was thrown from the boat on impact, Watterson said. Divers recovered the bodies of three other boaters: Robert P. Macarthur, 27, of Kingston; Deena C. Cordero, 26, of Kingston; and Jay J. Bins, 41, of Kingston.

Two boaters, 23-year-old Joseph J. Vehnick of Kingston and 27-year-old Jessica K. Hotaling of Hyde Park, made it to shore. Vehnick, who was badly injured, found a landline in a barn near the crash site and called 911 just before 6:30 a.m., about two hours after investigators believe the crash occurred, Watterson said. Both suffered multiple fractures and were being treated at area hospitals.

It wasn’t immediately clear where the boat was coming from or headed and who was driving, Watterson said. The medical examiner was conducting autopsies Sunday to determine the victims’ cause of death, he said.

Authorities found beer bottles inside the boat and believe the occupants might have been drinking, Watterson said. The boat’s bow and underside were heavily damaged, leading authorities to believe the driver had been speeding.

Part of the boat was still sticking out of the water when rescuers arrived. Its bow had smashed into the concrete, which may have been part of a dock or other shoreline structure there previously. It was unclear if it was marked off by a buoy, Watterson said.

The boat was pulled from the water and brought to an impound lot.

The powerboat, which has a single deck with no quarters below, is known as a bow rider because its passengers generally ride up front while the driver sits behind them.

The boat was registered to Arthur Fiore in Kingston, who couldn’t be reached for comment Sunday night.

Jaycee Dugard Describes Surviving 18 Years in Captivity

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Posted on : 11-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

dugard_sawyer_interview_AP

AP/ABC News

In this July 1, 2011 photo released by ABC, ABC News’ Diane Sawyer, left, speaks with Jaycee Dugard in Ojai, Calif., during her first interview since being kidnapped near her California home in 1991, when she was 11.

Jaycee Dugard, the California woman kidnapped in 1991 and held captive for nearly two decades, talked through tears about both the pain and determination she felt as she gave birth to her captor’s child in his backyard while she was still just a girl.

Dugard was clear and composed throughout the interview with ABC News’ Diane Sawyer on her show “Primetime” that aired Sunday night, but grew emotional when she talked about seeing the first of two girls fathered by Phillip Garrido.

When Sawyer asked how old she was at the time of the birth in the San Francisco Bay Area city of Antioch she said “14″ with a small, incredulous laugh and a shake of her head.

“It was very painful,” said Dugard, 31, as tears welled in her eyes. “She came out and then I saw her. She was beautiful. I felt like I wasn’t alone anymore. I had somebody who was mine.”

She said she didn’t know how she could protect the child, but said “I knew I could never let anything happen to her. I didn’t know how I was going to do that, but I did.”

Dugard appeared younger than her 31 years as she talked to Sawyer on a couch and on a porch at her California home. The blond hair she had in now-familiar photographs from her childhood is now reddish-brown, and she wore a red sweater and a necklace with a pinecone charm on it, representing the last thing she touched before her 18-year captivity.

The interview came on the eve of Dugard’s memoir about her time in captivity, “A Stolen Life,” which will be released Tuesday.

Dugard told Sawyer there was “a switch” she had to shut off to emotionally survive her rape and imprisonment. Asked by Sawyer how she stayed sane, Dugard said: “I don’t know. I can’t imagine being beaten to death, and you can’t imagine being kidnapped and raped. You just do what you have to do to survive.”

She described walking to the school bus stop on the day of a fifth-grade field trip and being zapped with a stun gun on a South Lake Tahoe street at age 11.

She said she heard Garrido laughing and telling his wife Nancy Garrido “I can’t believe we got away with it,” calling the moment “the most horrible moment in your life, times 10.”

“I lost control of my bladder,” Dugard told Sawyer in one of many moments in the interview where she appeared astounded she was talking about herself. “I wasn’t even embarrassed. There was no time to be embarrassed.”

Dugard said she tried to hold in her tears because of her cuffed hands.

“I tried not to cry because I couldn’t wipe them away,” she said, “and then they get itchy.”

She recalled the soundproof door of the backyard studio that Garrido shut and locked each time he left her.

“I can still hear it, consciously, when I’m awake,” Dugard said. “Some sounds and smells just don’t leave you.”

Without going into many details, Dugard talked about the long, drug-fueled sex sessions Garrido would put her through, and said that to her great confusion he would cry afterward.

“He would tell me what an awful man he was,” Dugard said. She said she would think that despite her own terrible pain, “I have to comfort him?”

Phillip Garrido, 60, a serial sex offender, was given the maximum possible sentence of 431 years to life in prison last month after pleading guilty to kidnapping and 13 sexual assault charges, including rape and committing lewd acts captured on video.

His plea was part of a deal with prosecutors that saw Nancy Garrido, 55, sentenced to 36 years to life after pleading guilty to kidnapping and rape.

Dugard told Sawyer of her strange relationship with Nancy Garrido, who she said was “very jealous of me for some reason, like I wanted her husband to rape me, very jealous, and sick.”

Dugard told Sawyer that in later years despite going out into public with her captors, she was just too scared to try to leave, especially for her daughters. The fear was fueled by what the Garridos told her about the world.

“What I knew was safe,” she said. “The unknown out there was terrifying, especially when thinking about the girls.”

Parole officers paid visits throughout the years to the home to check on Garrido and give him drug tests, but none reported any irregularities.

“I actually talked to one of the agents, and the agent proceeded to give Phillip his urine test and left,” Dugard said. “He made me feel like he didn’t really care.”

Dugard said she is not full of rage, that to be angry all the time would be to let Phillip Garrido win.

But her mother, Terry Probyn, who was interviewed by Sawyer alongside her daughter, said she was.

“I think I have enough hate in my heart for the both of us,” Probyn said. “I hate that he took her life away, I hate that he stole her from me, he ripped out a piece of my heart, and he stole my baby.”

She then looked to her daughter.

“He stole your childhood, he stole your adolescence, he stole your high school proms, and pictures and memories.”

Dugard’s reply: “But he didn’t get all of me.”

Authorities Investigate Stun Gun Found on JetBlue Plane

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Posted on : 11-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Authorities Investigate Stun Gun Found on JetBlue Plane

Published July 11, 2011

| FoxNews.com

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jet_blue_stun_gun_Fox5

Fox 5

This screengrab from Fox 5 shows the stun gun found by JetBlue employees.

Authorities are investigating how a stun gun managed to make it through security and onto a flight that landed at Newark Liberty International Airport, Fox 5 reported Sunday.

The FBI is investigating how the stun gun got aboard a JetBlue flight from Boson on Friday, a federal law enforcement source said.

According to sources, a striker 1800 stun gun was found by a cleaning crew inside the back pocked of a seat on Jet Blue flight 1179 after the passengers had disembarked, Fox 5 said.

After the gun was discovered, the workers called the Port Authority Police, Jet Blue and the PA said. The Transportation Safety Administration was also notified.

Sources suspect that the stun gun made it through screening at Boston’s Logan Airport.

JetBlue confirmed this information with Fox 5 News and said it was cooperation with the investigations.

Authorities are pursuing the identifies of everyone who had access to the seat pocket where the gun was found.

Click here for more on the stun gun stowaway from Fox 5.

Related Video



Stun Gun Found on JetBlue Plane

TSA investigates security breach


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Lawyer for Casey Anthony Worries About Her Safety After Release From Jail

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Posted on : 11-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Lawyer for Casey Anthony Worries About Her Safety After Release From Jail

Published July 11, 2011

| Associated Press

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Anthony sentenced for lying to police

Reuters

July 7: Casey Anthony sits in court during her sentencing at the Orange County Courthouse in Orlando, Florida.

ORLANDO, Florida — One of Casey Anthony’s defense lawyers says he’s worried about her safety once she’s released from jail after being acquitted of murdering her 2-year-old daughter.

Cheney Mason told NBC television Monday he doesn’t know where Anthony will go when she’s freed Sunday from a Florida jail. He said she would need time and counseling to re-enter society after being jailed for nearly three years before and during her high-profile trial. She was convicted of four counts of lying to law enforcement.

Mason said Anthony’s relations with her parents were “pretty well burned” after the trial, where her defense team contended she was sexually abused by her father. Her father, George Anthony, denied the claims.

Jail records show Casey Anthony refused a visit Friday from her mother, Cindy Anthony.


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Judge Finds Indiana Teen Guilty in School Shooting

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Judge Finds Indiana Teen Guilty in School Shooting

Published July 11, 2011

| Associated Press



Indianapolis Police Department Email Revealing Bra Sizes of Female Officers Prompts Investigation

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Indianapolis Police Department Email Revealing Bra Sizes of Female Officers Prompts Investigation

Published July 11, 2011

| FoxNews.com



Indianapolis Police Department Email Revealing Bra Sizes of Female Officers Prompts Investigation

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Indianapolis Police Department Email Revealing Bra Sizes of Female Officers Prompts Investigation

Published July 11, 2011

| FoxNews.com



Final Flight: The Last Space Shuttle Rockets Into Space

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

FoxNews.com

Wyoming Man Charged With Murder of His 3 Children and Brother

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Wyoming_Shooting7811.jpg

AP

July 8: A residence in Wheatland, Wyo., is shown where police say a man shot and killed four relatives in the house Thursday evening.

A man opened fire inside a Wyoming mobile home, killing his three sons and a brother and injuring his wife, authorities said Friday. One neighbor said the wounded woman ran from the home screaming, “He killed my babies!”

Everett E. Conant III surrendered without incident and was charged with first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder, battery and a weapons violation. The murder and attempted-murder charges carry sentences of death or life without parole.

Police found the bodies of the three boys and the brother, who was fatally wounded, inside the trailer home Thursday in Wheatland, about 70 miles north of Cheyenne. The woman was shot twice but was listed in good condition at a Cheyenne hospital.

“She kept screaming at me that her babies were dead. `He killed my babies!”‘ said Jessica Kornder, who lives in the same mobile home park. “I was in the kitchen doing some dishes after supper and I heard these two `pows,’ and I thought it was fireworks. And then I heard this awful screaming.”

Conant, whom police say was born in 1975, was ordered held without bail. His court-appointed lawyer, Eric Palen, declined to comment.

Conant’s wife, Suzette Ann Conant, was shot in the ankle and shoulder, said Wheatland Police Chief Randy Chesser.

Conant’s brother, Nacuma Roland Conant, 33, was taken to a Wheatland hospital where he was pronounced dead, Chesser said.

Authorities didn’t immediately release the names of the other victims. But a judge referred to one of the sons as Joseph, and a court document referred to the others as “C.C.” and “E.C.” Their dates of birth weren’t released, but the document indicates Joseph was 11 or 12, C.C. was 12 or 13 and E.C. was 17 or 18.

Chesser said a motive for the shootings wasn’t immediately known.

He also said he didn’t know if the boys were Conant’s biological children.

Conant was shackled at the wrists and ankles during the court hearing. He whispered “yes” and “no” to the judge’s questions.

Wheatland police Officer Doug Wiggins wrote in a court document that he was responding to a report of a shooting at the home. Conant yelled at him from the doorway and had something black in his hand, Wiggins said, adding that he saw what appeared to be the lifeless body of a male child on a couch.

The officer said he spoke with Conant for about 10 minutes before he persuaded him to leave the house without a weapon. He was arrested without further incident.

As police officers wrapped up the crime scene, Chesser said at least one handgun — possibly more — was used in the shootings. Asked how many rounds were fired, he said simply, “a lot.”

Conant worked briefly at the Wyoming Premium Farms hog farm just north of Wheatland this spring but quit after mentioning problems arranging child care, said Doug Derouchey, the general manager.

“Kind of kept to himself,” Derouchey said. “He just mentioned something about he was having difficulties kind of working it out time-wise.”

“He was, I think, having problems elsewhere,” Derouchey said.

Suzette Conant works at an AW restaurant in Wheatland, said Beth Horsley, a co-worker there. “She is the nicest person in the world. She didn’t do anything to anybody,” Horsley said.

A collection jar was set up at the AW for donations for Suzette Conant’s medical care and the family’s funeral costs.

“It’s just a very tragic thing,” said Jean Dixon, mayor of this agricultural town of 3,600 people.

“It’s hard to comment on something that just never occurs around here. It’s like, `How can it happen?’ This is a small community. We all know each other.”

Wyoming, with about 560,000 residents, averages just under 11 murders a year, state officials said.

Notable Quotes on the Death of Betty Ford

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Notable Quotes on the Death of Betty Ford

Published July 08, 2011

| Associated Press

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Quotations from notable dignitaries on the passing of former First Lady Betty Ford:
“Throughout her long and active life, Elizabeth Anne Ford distinguished herself through her courage and compassion. As our nation’s First Lady, she was a powerful advocate for women’s health and women’s rights. After leaving the White House, Mrs. Ford helped reduce the social stigma surrounding addiction and inspired thousands to seek much-needed treatment. While her death is a cause for sadness, we know that organizations such as the Betty Ford Center will honor her legacy by giving countless Americans a new lease on life.”
– President Barack Obama
——–
“Barbara and I loved Betty Ford very much. She was a wonderful wife and mother; a great friend; and a courageous First Lady. No one confronted life’s struggles with more fortitude or honesty, and as a result, we all learned from the challenges she faced. The Betty Ford Center, which already has helped change the lives of thousands of people, will be her lasting legacy of care and concern. We were proud to know her. We were proud to call her a friend. We will miss her very much.”
– Former President George H. W. Bush
——–
“Rosalynn and I are saddened by the passing of Betty Ford, a close personal friend and our frequent partner in bipartisan efforts to improve mental health and substance abuse care in our nation. She was a remarkable political spouse, whose courageous candor helped forge a new era of openness after the divisiveness of the Vietnam War and Watergate. Also, as a tireless advocate for women’s rights and social justice, she helped to improve the lives and opportunities of countless women and children. We extend our deepest sympathy to her family at this difficult time.”
– Former President Jimmy Carter and former First Lady Rosalyn Carter
——
“We are deeply saddened by the passing of First Lady Betty Ford. As a staunch advocate for women’s and equal rights, Betty paved the way for generations of women to follow. Her courage, compassion, and commitment to helping our nation deal with drug and alcohol abuse and addiction helped thousands of people to a successful recovery and in the process she helped to save countless families. …. Betty was a remarkable woman whose legacy will live on in people around the country whose lives are longer and better because of her work. Our thoughts and prayers are with her children and grandchildren. We are grateful for her contributions, and for her kindness to us. We will miss her.”
– Former President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hilary Rodham Clinton
———-
“I was deeply saddened this afternoon when I heard of Betty Ford’s death. She has been an inspiration to so many through her efforts to educate women about breast cancer and her wonderful work at the Betty Ford Center. She was Jerry Ford’s strength through some very difficult days in our country’s history, and I admired her courage in facing and sharing her personal struggles with all of us. My love and deepest sympathy go out to the entire Ford family at this very sad time.”
– Former First Lady Nancy Reagan
———-
“It is with deep sadness that Jill and I learned of the loss of Betty Ford. Throughout her life, Betty displayed strength, courage and determination that provided hope for millions of Americans seeking a healthier, happier future. Her legacy and work will live on through the millions of lives she has touched and the many more who will continue to look to her for inspiration. Her family will remain in our thoughts and prayers in the coming days.”
– Vice President Joe Biden
———-
“Mrs. Ford was a courageous pioneer, a groundbreaking First Lady, and a forceful advocate for anyone suffering from addiction or breast cancer. America fought her struggles with her and learned alongside her. She was brave, outspoken and kind. As a journalist, I had the opportunity to interview her several times and she was just fascinating. She was a wonderful woman who stood up for any human being struggling in the shadows of their personal pain. One of my highlights as First Lady of California was to honor her with a Minerva Award in 2005. My heart goes out to her entire family. Her daughter Susan is a dear friend of mine and continues to carry on Mrs. Ford’s work in such a powerful way.”
– Former California First Lady Maria Shriver

                                                                                                                                                   


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Army Amputee Thrown From Roller Coaster, Dies

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Soldier.jpg

Fox News

James Thomas Hackemer, 29, died after he was ejected from the Ride of Steel roller coaster near Buffalo, N.Y.

A U.S. Army veteran who lost his legs while deployed in Iraq was thrown from a 200-foot-tall roller coaster at an upstate theme park on Friday and was killed.

James Thomas Hackemer, 29, was ejected from the Ride of Steel roller coaster at the Darien Lake Theme Park Resort, located between Buffalo and Rochester, at about 5:30 p.m., the Genesee County sheriff’s office said.

The park confirmed a guest “came out of the Ride of Steel roller coaster” and said it was “saddened to report that the guest has passed.” It said local authorities and its safety experts were investigating.

The park’s website describes the Ride of Steel as one of the tallest coasters east of the Mississippi River, climbing 208 feet and reaching speeds in excess of 70 mph.

The roller coaster and surrounding area were closed after the man’s death, park spokeswoman Cassandra Okon said.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the friends and the family of the guest,” she said.

The death was at least the second in the last couple of months at Northeast amusement parks. In early June, an 11-year-old girl on a class trip to Morey’s Mariner’s Landing Pier in Wildwood, N.J., fell about 150 feet from near the top of a Ferris wheel and was killed. A state report found the ride’s restraints to be working properly, and investigators haven’t been able to determine how the girl, who was riding alone, got out of the Giant Wheel gondola.

Hackemer, of Gowanda, lost his right leg below his knee and his left leg at his hip because of a roadside bomb while he was deployed in 2008, authorities said. He had been living with his parents.

“It’s going to help a little bit that he was happy,” his mother, Nancy Hackemer, told The Buffalo News. “We shouldn’t have had him for these last three years and four months.”

She said the family had recently returned from the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, in Washington, D.C., where her son got “a new set of legs.”

“He was assisted onto the ride,” she said. “He was doing what he wanted to do.”

Betty Ford Helped Pave Road to Recovery for Stars

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Long before it became reality show fodder, Betty Ford helped create the original celebrity rehab.

The center that bears her name has a legacy of rehabbing Hollywood’s elite. In the process it became a household name, a punchline, but — above all — a highly respected addiction treatment center.

Since its opening in Rancho Mirage, Calif., in 1982, stars such as Elizabeth Taylor, Johnny Cash and, most recently, Lindsay Lohan have been among the more than 90,000 people who have received treatment at the center.

Taylor met one of her husbands, Larry Fortensky, while in treatment. Kelsey Grammer credited his stay there with saving his life. So too did Oscar-winner Marlee Matlin, who paid tribute to the former first lady on social networking site Twitter on Friday evening.

“She Betty Ford Center helped me beat my addiction she was an angel to many,” Matlin wrote. Betty Ford died Friday at the nearby Eisenhower Medical Center at the age 93.

Located in the desert about two hours east of Hollywood, the Betty Ford Center is by no means the closest place offering addiction treatment. But its association with entertainment industry came from its reputation as a place where addicts — famous or not — could get top-notch care.

“One Day at a Time” actress Mackenzie Phillips, another Betty Ford alumna, wrote on the site, “RIP Betty Ford. A pioneer in treatment of addicts. We owe Mrs. Ford our gratitude and prayers. And love. She was one classy woman.”

Ali McGraw, who was treated at the center in 1986, said in a statement Friday that she is grateful for what Ford has done for her.

“She changed so many of our lives with her courage and intelligence, her honesty and humility, and her deep grace,” McGraw said. “Her vision impacted my own life as few people have.”

Taylor’s first stay at the center came in 1983 and provided another high-profile face to those struggling with addiction.

Cash soon became a patient after he broke five ribs and relapsed into abuse of painkillers. “I ended up in the Betty Ford Center for 43 days,” Cash told The Associated Press in 1986. “I’ve had no drugs since then. It has been the best three years of my life, the most productive and the happiest.”

Other musicians, including Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler and jazz singer Etta James, who battled heroin addiction, also received treatment at Betty Ford.

One of Ford’s defining characteristics was her candor, and that included confronting her own addiction head-on. She revealed a longtime addiction to painkillers and alcohol 15 months after leaving the White House, and regularly welcomed new groups of patients to rehab with a speech that started, “Hello, my name’s Betty Ford, and I’m an alcoholic and drug addict.”

“People who get well often say, `You saved my life,’ and `You’ve turned my life around,”‘ Ford once said. “They don’t realize we merely provided the means for them to do it themselves, and that’s all.”

The center distinguished itself from later iterations of rehabs that catered to the wealthy, ones that resembled spas more than an environment to honestly confront one’s demons. In recent years the stigma of rehab has lessened to the point that it has become fodder for reality television, with shows such as VH1′s “Celebrity Rehab” and AE’s “Intervention” showing both the impact of drug abuse and offering some insight into its treatment.

But the Betty Ford Center wasn’t part of the trend. Ford was fine with famous patients discussing their treatment at the center — provided they stayed sober — but the facility keeps its clients confidential.

In 1996, Grammer described to Jay Leno how his treatment at Betty Ford helped restore his joy of living. The comedian also quipped about the center’s stature and its famous patients.

“When I was on my way to the Betty Ford Center, I turned to one of my friends and said, `You know, I’ve finally made it. I’m going to the Betty Ford Center,”‘ he said.

When a judge sent Lohan to the center for three months late last year, many experts said it would be her best shot at recovery.

“There’s no place that’s better with chemical dependency than Betty Ford,” Jeffrey C. Friedman, a substance abuse counselor at the Cottonwood Tucson center and a recovering heroin addict, said at the time.

Texas Officer Killed When Suspect Crashes Vehicle

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Texas Officer Killed When Suspect Crashes Vehicle

Published July 09, 2011

| Associated Press



Massachusetts Pool Inspectors to Face Panel in Pool Death

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Massachusetts Pool Inspectors to Face Panel in Pool Death

Published July 09, 2011

| Associated Press



N.Y. Teen Dies Trying to Hold Breath in Pennsylvania Pool

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N.Y. Teen Dies Trying to Hold Breath in Pennsylvania Pool

Published July 09, 2011

| Associated Press



Man Kills Wife and Toddler, Commits Suicide

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Man Kills Wife and Toddler, Commits Suicide

Published July 08, 2011

| FoxNews.com

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Fox 5 Atlanta

July 8: The apartment complex where a family of three were found dead on Friday in what appears to be a murder suicide.

A family of three were found dead in an apartment complex in Georgia on Friday in what appears to be a murder suicide, MyFoxAtlanta.com reported.

Lt. German Rivas told the station he believes a man in his early 30′s shot his wife and 2-year-old son before committing suicide.

The bodies were discovered at 5:45 a.m. by one of the victim’s brothers who told the Canton, GA police that the family were planning on moving due to financial woes.

Canton police visited the apartment last year after the men threatened to kill himself.

The names of the victims have not yet been released.

Click here for more on this story from MyFoxAtlana.com


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House votes to slow allowing gays in military

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House votes to slow allowing gays in military

Published July 08, 2011

| Associated Press



Police: Wyoming Man Accused of Killing His 3 Children

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Wyoming_Shooting7811.jpg

AP

July 8: A residence in Wheatland, Wyo., is shown where police say a man shot and killed four relatives in the house Thursday evening.

A man opened fire inside a Wyoming mobile home, killing his three sons and a brother and injuring his wife, authorities said Friday. One neighbor said the wounded woman ran from the home screaming, “He killed my babies!”

Everett E. Conant III surrendered without incident and was charged with first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder, battery and a weapons violation. The murder and attempted-murder charges carry sentences of death or life without parole.

Police found the bodies of the three boys and the brother, who was fatally wounded, inside the trailer home Thursday in Wheatland, about 70 miles north of Cheyenne. The woman was shot twice but was listed in good condition at a Cheyenne hospital.

“She kept screaming at me that her babies were dead. `He killed my babies!”‘ said Jessica Kornder, who lives in the same mobile home park. “I was in the kitchen doing some dishes after supper and I heard these two `pows,’ and I thought it was fireworks. And then I heard this awful screaming.”

Conant, whom police say was born in 1975, was ordered held without bail. His court-appointed lawyer, Eric Palen, declined to comment.

Conant’s wife, Suzette Ann Conant, was shot in the ankle and shoulder, said Wheatland Police Chief Randy Chesser.

Conant’s brother, Nacuma Roland Conant, 33, was taken to a Wheatland hospital where he was pronounced dead, Chesser said.

Authorities didn’t immediately release the names of the other victims. But a judge referred to one of the sons as Joseph, and a court document referred to the others as “C.C.” and “E.C.” Their dates of birth weren’t released, but the document indicates Joseph was 11 or 12, C.C. was 12 or 13 and E.C. was 17 or 18.

Chesser said a motive for the shootings wasn’t immediately known.

He also said he didn’t know if the boys were Conant’s biological children.

Conant was shackled at the wrists and ankles during the court hearing. He whispered “yes” and “no” to the judge’s questions.

Wheatland police Officer Doug Wiggins wrote in a court document that he was responding to a report of a shooting at the home. Conant yelled at him from the doorway and had something black in his hand, Wiggins said, adding that he saw what appeared to be the lifeless body of a male child on a couch.

The officer said he spoke with Conant for about 10 minutes before he persuaded him to leave the house without a weapon. He was arrested without further incident.

As police officers wrapped up the crime scene, Chesser said at least one handgun — possibly more — was used in the shootings. Asked how many rounds were fired, he said simply, “a lot.”

Conant worked briefly at the Wyoming Premium Farms hog farm just north of Wheatland this spring but quit after mentioning problems arranging child care, said Doug Derouchey, the general manager.

“Kind of kept to himself,” Derouchey said. “He just mentioned something about he was having difficulties kind of working it out time-wise.”

“He was, I think, having problems elsewhere,” Derouchey said.

Suzette Conant works at an AW restaurant in Wheatland, said Beth Horsley, a co-worker there. “She is the nicest person in the world. She didn’t do anything to anybody,” Horsley said.

A collection jar was set up at the AW for donations for Suzette Conant’s medical care and the family’s funeral costs.

“It’s just a very tragic thing,” said Jean Dixon, mayor of this agricultural town of 3,600 people.

“It’s hard to comment on something that just never occurs around here. It’s like, `How can it happen?’ This is a small community. We all know each other.”

Wyoming, with about 560,000 residents, averages just under 11 murders a year, state officials said.

Rockefeller Impostor Appears in California Murder Case

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A German immigrant who masqueraded as a member of the famous Rockefeller family appeared Friday in a Southern California court to face charges that he murdered his landlord more than a quarter-century ago then fled the state.

Not guilty pleas were entered by a judge for Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter, who spoke only to waive his right to speedy proceedings.

Prosecutors believe he murdered Jonathan Sohus, who disappeared along with his wife Linda in 1985. Gerhartsreiter rented the couple’s guesthouse in the wealthy enclave of San Marino, northeast of Los Angeles, and left town soon after they vanished.

Prosecutors, however, did not bring charges against Gerhartsreiter until March, after he had been convicted in a Massachusetts kidnapping case.

Outside court, Gerhartsreiter’s Boston lawyer, Jeffrey Denner, acknowledged it was unusual to have charges brought after such a long time, but said “old case, new case, he didn’t do it.”

Denner said that with the waiver, it could be a significant amount of time before the case comes to trial, but the defense would immediately be receiving 9,000 pages of discovery material from the prosecution.

“They’ve had 26 years to put it together and that’s just the beginning,” he said.

An Aug. 16 hearing was set in Los Angeles County Superior Court to determine a date for a preliminary hearing to determine if there is sufficient evidence to hold Gerhartsreiter for trial.

Gerhartsreiter was already serving a prison term in Massachusetts following the 2009 conviction in the kidnapping of his 7-year-old daughter in an elaborate scheme in which he hired two people to drive them to New York.

At the time of his arrest in Baltimore in August 2008, Gerhartsreiter had been living under the Rockefeller name.

Detectives in California had long considered Gerhartsreiter a person of interest in the death of 27-year-old Sohus, who disappeared at the same time a man using the name Christopher Chichester was staying in a guest house on the property.

The man who called himself Chichester had quickly ingratiated himself into the community and told people he was a British aristocrat.

Over the years, Gerhartsreiter has morphed identities many times, telling people he was a physicist, art collector, ship captain and financial adviser who renegotiated debt for small countries.

At his kidnapping trial, prosecutors said Gerhartsreiter used aliases to move in wealthy circles in Boston, New York and Los Angeles. His strange story has become the subject of a TV movie.

Skeletal remains were found in the backyard of the Sohus home in 1994 when new owners were excavating for a swimming pool. Those bones were thought to belong to Jonathan Sohus. His wife is still missing

Gerhartsreiter’s lawyers claimed during the 2009 trial that he was suffering from a delusional disorder and was legally insane when he snatched his daughter during a supervised visit in Boston following a bitter divorce from his wife.

Court revives Indonesians’ claims vs. Exxon Mobil

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Court revives Indonesians’ claims vs. Exxon Mobil

Published July 08, 2011

| Associated Press



On the Job Hunt: If You Need a Job, Go to San Diego

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Known locally as “America’s finest city,” it might surprise you that San Diego is the eighth largest in the country. Even more interesting, the thriving border metropolis has about 8,000 high-paying jobs sitting wide open and waiting to be filled. 

According to Rory Moore CEO of CommNexus, a San Diego based non-profit technology industry association, says companies are offering big incentives to attract candidates. 

“Local companies are offering rewards even bounties to their employees for finding engineers to come on board,” says Moore.

The latest estimates in the area show about 2,000 job openings in mechanical and electrical engineering and at least another 6,000 in information-technology jobs. 

Some listings are from local San Diego area businesses. But others come from larger American firms, and lately larger multinational companies intent on making inroads into the U.S. market have joined the job hunt, too.

Reuben Barrales from the San Diego Chamber says, “A lot of people think of San Diego as a beach town, a border town, but what we really are is an innovation center. Really the innovative industries of the future are right here in San Diego..right now.”

Industry experts say that San Diego also has an emerging green job sector to go along with the well known bio-tech companies that have set up their bases just north of the city. But for all the need to hiring and openings, why can’t San Diego find the people to fill the need?

First off, the median salary in San Diego for these job openings is in the neighborhood of $94,000 a year, which is not so bad of a sum. However, when you consider the median home price in the area is around $330,000 and competing markets like Austin, Texas and Durham, North Carolina are $100,000 cheaper, choosing San Diego may not be so easy. Also the current housing crash has many homeowners under water and unwilling to lose the equity to move.

There’s also one more big reason. Many in the industry look for jobs in the Mecca of technology, about 500 miles north in the Silicon Valley, not in the beach atmosphere that slips under the radar in many instances. We found one person though willing to make the change.

“Everybody always talks about the Bay Area…the Silicon Valley this, the Silicon Valley that, but the opportunities here are just as good the jobs are fantastic and there’s a lot of support,” says Ariana Faustini who just joined an area software startup called NewBlue.

“The qualified applicants aren’t coming here because they are trying to get that sexy Silicon Valley job, but that’s here…Silicon Valley south.”

Questions remains if San Diego can become that next big hub or if it can stiff arm the draw of the more well-known Bay Area locale and take the plunge in warmer Pacific waters. Area industry associations and companies hope that’s the case as they launch recruiting efforts, pound the pavement at colleges, attend job fairs and hope the line sticks.  

So if you need a job, you might want to go to San Diego.

Michigan Resident Faces 93 Days in Jail For Vegetable Garden

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Michigan Resident Faces 93 Days in Jail For Vegetable Garden

Published July 08, 2011

| FoxNews.com

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Julie Bass’ vegetable garden in her front yard. (WJBK/myFOXDetroit.com)

A Michigan resident is facing up to 93 days in jail for planting a vegetable garden in her front yard, MyFoxDetroit.com reports.

Julie Bass, of Oak Park, Michigan was first given a warning followed by a ticket and now she is being charged with a misdemeanor for her simple front-yard garden.

“I think it’s sad that the City of Oak Park that’s already strapped for cash is paying a lot of money to have a prosecutor bothering us,” Bass told FOX 2′s Alexis Wiley.

The city is claiming that the garden violates a city code which states that front yards must consist of suitable, live plant material to which Bass responds, “We think it’s suitable.”

“They say, ‘Why should you grow things in the front?’ Well, why shouldn’t I? They’re fine. They’re pretty. They’re well maintained,” Bass told the station.

“I could sell out and save my own self and just not have them bother me anymore, but then there’s no telling what they’re going to harass the next person about,” continued Bass.

A pretrial is scheduled for July 26 and a jury trial could be next.

Click here for more on this story from MyFoxDetroit.com


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Critics Cast Doubts Over NASA’s Post-Shuttle Future

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Posted on : 09-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news


Space shuttle Atlantis is set for take off.

In the wake of NASA’s final shuttle launch Friday morning with the space shuttle Atlantis, many critics are expressing doubt over NASA’s future now that the 30 year shuttle program has come to an end.

“If God had meant for us to travel into deep space, he would have given us more money,” says space expert John Pike of globalsecurity.org.

Pike, a bespectacled, bearded self-described “space cadet” who is known for the rare qualities of being able to decipher both space science and Washington politics, is deeply pessimistic about the future of NASA and the loss of America’s pioneering spirit. “Americans are a pioneering people,” he said.

“For four centuries we were pioneering the horizontal frontier of the west, at the beginning of the 20th century we started to pioneer the vertical frontier and that took us from Kitty Hawk to Tranquility Base. I think that the piloted space flight program is about the American myth and without human space flight I think that the country would be impoverished and we’d really have to reexamine what it is to be Americans.”

Others are not so glum. In his Twitter town hall meeting this week, President Obama sounded a hopeful note about NASA’s future. “Rather than keep on doing the same thing, let’s invest in basic research around new technologies that can get us places faster, allow human space flight to last longer.”

In a dig at his critics who maintain NASA has no grand post-shuttle plans along the lines of an Apollo program, the President said, “What you’re seeing now is NASA, I think, redefining its mission. And we’ve set a goal to let’s ultimately get to Mars. A good pit stop is an asteroid.”

But critics maintain NASA’s wallet is much thinner than the president’s promises. “Human space flight is fiendishly expensive and thus far the payoff has been political rather than tangible,” Pike declared.

The administration is investing high hopes that the private sector will pick up some of the slack, left by the absence of the shuttle program. “We have to get out of the business of owning and operating low Earth orbit transportation systems and hand that off to the private sector exercising sufficient oversight of course to ensure the safety of our astronauts,” says NASA Administrator Charles Bolden.”We need to focus on deep space exploration, while empowering today’s innovators and entrepreneurs to carry out the rest.”

Companies including the Richard Branson backed Virgin Galactic and Spacex, which has already signed a contract with NASA to provide 12 cargo launches to the International Space Station, show promise in that regard.

Texas Woman Loses Iraq Rape Case Against Military Contractor KBR

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A jury Friday rejected claims against military contractor KBR Inc. by a Texas woman who said she was drugged and raped while working in Iraq.

A federal court jury returned its verdict after starting deliberations Thursday in the case of Jamie Leigh Jones.

Jones, 26, said she was raped in 2005 while working for KBR at Camp Hope, Baghdad. She sued KBR, its former parent Halliburton Co., and a former KBR firefighter, Charles Bortz, whom she identified as one of her rapists. The Houston-based companies and Bortz denied her allegations.

The alleged sexual assault was investigated by authorities but no criminal charges were filed.

Jurors rejected claims that Jones was raped and also her fraud claim against KBR. They agreed with Bortz, who said the sex was consensual.

“We’re very pleased with the verdict,” said Daniel Hedges, an attorney for KBR.

Jones was sobbing in the courtroom after the verdict was announced.

Jones’ attorney had asked jurors to award her as much as 5 percent of KBR’s net worth in actual or punitive damages. That would be more than $114 million, the Houston Chronicle reported.

Attorney Ron Estefan, in his closing arguments, accused KBR of neglecting to enforce its policies against sexual harassment for years by its contract workers in Iraq. The neglect facilitated Jones’ rape, he said.

Attorneys for Bortz and the companies argued Jones concocted her story out of fear of gossip among co-workers at the camp.

Jones testified she was drugged and then raped by a group of KBR firefighters. She said Bortz was in her room the next morning. During four days of testimony, she told jurors she has no memory of what happened because she believed she was drugged with Rohypnol, known as the “date rape drug,” just before she was sexually assaulted.

The Associated Press usually doesn’t identify people alleging sexual assault, but Jones’ face and name have been in media reports and she has promoted her case on her own website.

Bortz’s attorney tried to show that after the alleged rape, Jones did not appear to act like she had been attacked but instead went to work as normal, joked around and talked about camp gossip. Bortz no longer works for KBR.

Joanne Vorpahl, one of KBR’s attorneys, tried to portray Jones to jurors as someone with a history of being dishonest on resumes and job applications, including not disclosing in a medical questionnaire she filled out before leaving for Iraq that she had been treated in prior years for various things, including depression, dizziness and kidney and bladder problems. Jones said those were simply mistakes and she never intended to be dishonest.

Jones also accused KBR officials of locking her in a trailer after she told them about the rape and not letting her call her family. She testified she’s been treated for post-traumatic stress disorder, takes medications for anxiety and had to have reconstructive surgery for her breasts, which were disfigured in her attack.

KBR and Halliburton, which split in 2007, were unsuccessful in having Jones’ case settled through arbitration as stipulated in her contract.

Due in part to Jones’ case, federal lawmakers in 2009 approved a measure prohibiting contractors and subcontractors that receive $1 million in funds from the Department of Defense from requiring employees to resolve sexual assault allegations and other claims through arbitration.

William and Kate Arrive in Los Angeles for U.S. Trip

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William and Kate Arrive in Los Angeles for U.S. Trip

Published July 08, 2011

| Associated Press

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AP

July 8: Prince William and Kate, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, arrive at Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge arrived in Los Angeles on Friday to begin a whirlwind weekend in Tinseltown.

Prince William and his wife touched down at Los Angeles International Airport just before 4 p.m. aboard a grey Canadian military jet. On the tarmac, the pilot flipped open a cockpit window and waved William’s Canadian flag.

The royal couple had departed Calgary earlier in the day after wrapping up a nine-day trip to Canada, their first foreign visit since getting married in April.

The former Kate Middleton, who left Canada in a red satin and wool scarlet coat-dress by Catherine Walker, changed aboard the flight and emerged under sunny skies in Los Angeles wearing a light-colored cowl-neck knee-length dress. William wore a navy blue suit with a purple tie.

They were greeted by California Gov. Jerry Brown, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, the British ambassador and consul general and other officials.

They climbed into a black Range Rover and headed for their first event, a technology summit in Beverly Hills aimed at promoting U.S. investment in British tech firms.

Accompanied by a California Highway Patrol motorcade, the duke and duchess avoided rush-hour traffic on the 10-mile route by staying off the clogged freeways.

Though Prince William has been to America before, it will be Kate’s first trip to the U.S. William’s late mother, Princess Diana, who would have turned 50 this month, charmed Americans when she visited in the 1980s.

Authorities have put the paparazzi, known for their cutthroat tactics, on notice that aggressive actions will not be tolerated. Photographers were partly blamed for causing the Paris crash that killed Princess Diana in 1997.

Residents in Hancock Park, the exclusive neighborhood that is home to the British consul general where William and Kate will stay, have worked with police to create no-trespass notices for their homes. Any photographers standing on their driveways will be instantly arrested.


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Casey Anthony Writes of Wanting More Children in Jailhouse Letters

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Anthony sentenced for lying to police

Reuters

July 7: Casey Anthony sits in court during her sentencing at the Orange County Courthouse in Orlando, Florida.

Casey Anthony’s release from an Orlando jail next week has everyone wondering: What’s next for the Orlando mother who was acquitted of murdering her 2-year-old daughter?

According to letters written by Anthony to another inmate, the 25-year-old has dreamed of becoming pregnant again or adopting because “so many kids and teens are homeless and that’s something I want to target.” 

In the hand-written letters, obtained by MyFoxOrlando.com, Anthony writes: “I had a dream not too long ago that I was pregnant. It was like having Cays all over again.”

“I’ve thought about adopting, which even sounds weird to me saying it, but there are so many children that deserve to be loved,” she wrote to inmate Robyn Adams at the Orlando County Jail. “Let’s make a deal? Let’s get pregnant together?”

The letters were reportedly written between 2008 and 2009 and released some time last year. 

Anthony also confides that she’s interested in writing a “partial memoir” and says she’s looking forward to manicures, pedicures and underwear that “fits” when she re-enters society. 

“I could use a day at Target myself,” she wrote. “Just to walk around the store, to be a part of society. I want to go grocery shopping.”

“If you could change your name to any name, what would it be?” she went on to ask in another letter. “I’ve been thinking about that a lot lately.”

In the letters, Casey also identifies Caylee’s father as “Erik” — a subject of widespread speculation during trial as the child’s father was never named. 

It’s not clear yet what the future holds when Anthony is released. Threats have been made against her, and online she is being vilified. More than 17,000 people “liked” the “I hate Casey Anthony” page on Facebook, which included comments wishing her the same fate that befell little Caylee.

Prosecutors had claimed that Anthony suffocated Caylee with duct tape before dumping her body in a wooded area not far from her Orlando home. Defense attorneys countered that the toddler accidentally drowned in the family’s swimming pool. They said that when Anthony panicked, her father, a former police officer, decided to make the death look like a murder. They said he put duct tape on the girl’s mouth and then disposed of the body.

Click here to read the Casey Anthony jailhouse letters from MyFoxOrlando.com.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

 

Connecticut Begins Illegal Immigrant In-State Tuition

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Connecticut Begins Illegal Immigrant In-State Tuition

Published July 07, 2011

| Associated Press



Suspect in New York Pharmacy Massacre Called for Jury Duty

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Suspect in New York Pharmacy Massacre Called for Jury Duty

Published July 07, 2011

| Associated Press

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AP

June 22: David Laffer, a suspect in the shooting deaths of four people at a pharmacy during a botched weekend painkiller robbery, is escorted out of Suffolk County Police Headquarters in Yaphank, N.Y.

A New Yorker facing first-degree murder charges in the shooting of four people at a Long Island pharmacy has been excused from jury duty.

David Laffer wrote to the Suffolk County Commissioner of Jurors that he can’t comply with a recent jury notice. He is currently being held without bail, charged with killing two pharmacy workers and two customers during a holdup last month for painkillers. He has pleaded not guilty.

In a brief letter, Laffer explains: “I simply wished to relay this to you, so that I do not get into any further legal troubles.”

Commissioner of Jurors Michael O’Donohoe tells Newsday authorities will honor the request for a postponement.

O’Donohoe says if Laffer were out on bail, he would be eligible to serve on a jury.


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U.S. Citizen Guilty of Supporting Overseas Terror

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

BrooklynTerror.jpg

U.S. Attorney’s Office

Betim Kaziu seen in an undated picture.

A Brooklyn-born man was convicted Thursday of terror charges for traveling to the Middle East to avenge abuse of Muslims in a trial that featured the testimony of a would-be terrorist and childhood friend of the defendant who became a government cooperator.

The jury deliberated less than four hours before finding Betim Kaziu guilty of conspiracy to provide material support to a terrorist organization, conspiracy to commit murder and other charges. Kaziu had denied ever being a threat. He faces a maximum of life in prison at his Nov. 4 sentencing.

Unlike the cases of Najibullah Zazi, mastermind of a foiled suicide attack on New York City subways, or Faisal Shahzad, the failed Times Square bomber, Kaziu’s suspected exploits received little attention, in part because the plot didn’t get far. But his case had many of the same themes of homegrown terrorism.

Prosecutors alleged that Kaziu, 23, and star witness Sulejah Hadzovic — two U.S.-born sons of Islamic immigrants from the former Yugoslavia who met in sixth grade — traveled to Cairo in 2009 in hopes of taking up arms against U.S. troops.

“We were upset at what was happening in places like Abu Ghraib prison and Guantanamo Bay, how they were humiliating and torturing Muslims there,” Hadzovic testified. “It’s what ultimately made us want to go and fight in jihad.”

He also told jurors he grew to believe that he could no longer live in the United States because “being a Muslim, we’re stereotyped and somebody sees somebody with a beard, they automatically label him a terrorist.”

Hadzovic, 21, said that while they were in Egypt the pair attended school, sought to obtain AK-47s and considered whether to take up arms in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Palestine or Somalia.

But Hadzovic said he began to waver after hearing President Barack Obama’s speech in Cairo in 2009 that extended a hand of friendship to Islam. Kaziu, he said, told him: “Don’t let (the speech) fool you. It’s like throwing sand in your eyes to blind you from the truth.”

Defying his friend, Hadzovic returned to New York. About three week later, federal authorities approached him and demanded answers about his travels.

He eventually agreed to plead guilty and cooperate to avoid charges carrying a potential life sentence. He now faces a maximum 15 years in prison.

Prosecutors say that once on his own, Kaziu tried, but failed, to join al-Qaida groups in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Balkans. He eventually made his way to Kosovo.

On the Albanian coast, he recorded a video that a prosecutor described as “his goodbye, contemplating how he would soon depart for paradise — a reward for those who die a martyr.” But authorities said he was captured before he could do any harm.

The defense claimed the alleged martyr video and other home videos shot by Kaziu were made in jest. His lawyers also argued that most of evidence against their client was widely distributed anti-American propaganda.

Study: Americans Tighten Belt and Skip the Morning Coffee

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Study: Americans Tighten Belt and Skip the Morning Coffee

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Published July 07, 2011

| FoxNews.com

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Reuters

A recent poll shows more than 21 percent of Americans are willing to ditch the morning coffee in order to save money.

Americans, fearing that the economy is getting worse, are pinching pennies on a whole host of things, including buying their morning coffee.  According to a recent Harris Poll, more than 21 percent of those polled say that morning caffeine blast has now become too much of a financial burden.

But that’s just the start. More people are brown-bagging lunch, with 46 percent of Americans taking lunch to work instead of buying it, as well as 40 percent of people using refillable water bottles and filling them up with tap water.

The Harris poll also reported that over three quarters of shoppers driven by the “cutting back” mentality are now buying generic brand products.

Americans are going for the slightly longer hair, and wrinklier clothes look, too. Respondents say 43 percent are cutting back on barber shop trips, and 21 percent are cutting back on their dry cleaning, as other cash-saving strategies.  Another 22 percent of people are forgoing cable tv service, and with the 31 percent who have cancelled their magazine subscriptions.

These poll findings are based on the input of 2,163 adults of different age, sex, race, region and income.

Yet, the poll revealed that are two things where Americans weren’t prepared to give up, just yet; cell phone service and driving their own cars to work. While fewer than one-in-five say they have done each of these things, pollsters say it wasn’t a top priority, than say coffee.   


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Mexican National Executed in Texas, Despite International Pressure

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

As the lethal injection began taking effect, the Mexican National convicted of the brutal rape and killing of a teenage girl in 1995 shouted, “Viva Mexico!” just before he died at a Texas prison. 

Efforts by Humberto Leal’s attorneys to halt the execution fell short, with the U.S. Supreme Court turning back a stay request and Texas Gov. Rick Perry refusing to grant a pardon. He was pronounced dead at 6:21 p.m. local time.

In his last minutes, Leal repeatedly said he was sorry and accepted responsibility.

“I have hurt a lot of people. … I take full blame for everything. I am sorry for what I did,” he said in the death chamber.

 ”One more thing,” he said as the drugs began taking effect. Then he shouted twice, “Viva Mexico!” at a Texas prison. 

President Obama, the State Department and Mexican authorities asked Texas for a last-minute reprieve, citing the U.N.-enforced 1963 Vienna Treaty, which requires foreign nationals who are arrested in foreign countries the right to access their consulates.

The U.S. Supreme Court denied Leal’s request, calling his argument meritless.

In a 5-4 decision an hour before the execution, the majority wrote, “We have no authority to stay an execution in light of an ‘appeal of the President,’ presenting free-ranging assertions of foreign policy consequences, when those assertions come unaccompanied by a persuasive legal claim.”

After the decision, Sandra L. Babcock, an attorney for Leal, issued a statement linked to Twitter, saying her client will “suffer the consequences” of the U.S. stumbling on its commitment to rule of law.

“He will be executed tonight,” she writes.”Despite the fact that his right to consular assistance was violated.”

Leal, who moved to the U.S. as a toddler, contended police never told him he could seek legal assistance from the Mexican government under the treaty — and that such assistance would have helped his defense.

Details of the murder were particularly gruesome.

Adria Sauceda, 16, his victim, was found naked by authorities, according to court documents.

“There was a 30- to 40-pound asphalt rock roughly twice the size of the victim’s skull lying partially on the victim’s left arm,” court documents read. “Blood was underneath this rock. A smaller rock with blood on it was located near the victim’s right thigh.”

A “bloody and broken” stick roughly 15 inches long with a screw at the end of it was also protruding from the girl’s vagina, according to the documents.

In his first statement to police, Leal said Sauceda bolted from his car and ran off. After he was told his brother had given detectives a statement, he changed his story, saying Sauceda attacked him and fell to the ground after he fought back. He said when he couldn’t wake her and saw bubbles in her nose, he got scared and went home.

Last Friday, the Obama administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court to stop Texas from executing Leal, asking the court to delay the execution for up to six months to give Congress time to consider legislation that would enforce the U.N. treaty.

Congress had three years to pass the bill but did not. Hence, it was impossible to pass a bill that would spare Leal unless a stay is ordered.

Mexico’s foreign ministry said in a statement that the government condemned Leal’s execution and sent a note of protest to the U.S. State Department. The ministry also said Mexican ambassador Arturo Sarukhan attempted to contact the Texas governor, who refused to speak on the phone.

The governor’s office declined to comment on the execution Thursday, but his office appeared to bristle at the idea of an international body influencing the state’s sovereignty. 

For 16 years, Leal has exercised his right to file appeals and motions so extensively, one judge in federal district court called his case “one of the most procedurally convoluted and complex habeas corpus proceedings” he ever reviewed.

Meanwhile, in San Antonio, Adria’s father, Rene Sauceda, reportedly begins each morning by reading a South San Antonio High School newspaper clipping from May 25, 1995 — just after the first anniversary of his daughter’s death.

“I look at that every day,” Sauceda, 64, told the San Antonio Express-News.

FoxNews.com’s Edmund DeMarche and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

3rd Victim in Pa. Shooting Rampage Dies of Wounds

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

3rd Victim in Pa. Shooting Rampage Dies of Wounds

Published July 07, 2011

| Associated Press

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Suburban Philly Shooting

AP

July 3, 2011: A police officer walks near vehicles on Renninger Road in Douglass Township, Pa., as he arrives near the scene of a fatal shooting.

A woman who was among five people shot during a rampage at her weekend home in eastern Pennsylvania died Thursday, the third victim in a home invasion that police said was orchestrated by an ex-convict later shot dead in a standoff.

The Lehigh County coroner’s office said 58-year-old Monica Shay of New York City died of her injuries at a hospital in Allentown. Her nephew, 43-year-old Joseph Shay, and 2-year-old Gregory Erdmann, were killed in the shooting.

Monica Shay’s husband, Paul, and the toddler’s mother, 37-year-old Kathryn Erdmann of Fall River, Mass., were also shot but survived. Erdmann was the nephew’s girlfriend.

Paul Shay owns a plumbing company in New York City. Monica Shay worked as the director of the arts and cultural management program at Pratt Institute.

“The Pratt Institute community is shocked and deeply saddened by Professor Monica Shay’s untimely death,” said Pratt Institute President Thomas F. Schutte. “Professor Shay was an esteemed educator who demonstrated inspiring leadership as head of the Institute’s arts and cultural management program. Our heartfelt sympathy goes out to her family and friends and to all of those at the Institute whose lives she touched.”

Police said ex-convict Mark Geisenheyner stormed the vacation house in Douglass Township on July 2 to seek revenge on Shay’s husband. Authorities said this week that Geisenheyner, who died Monday in a standoff with police, claimed Paul Shay had cheated him in an insurance scam.

Since leaving prison last year, the 51-year-old Geisenheyner had been vowing revenge on Shay. He broke into the Shays’ home late Saturday and said, “Guess you never thought you’d see me again,” before shooting Shay in the head. Geisenheyner then shot the four others.

Paul Shay and Kathryn Erdmann are still hospitalized but have been talking to investigators.

Geisenheyner told friends that he had taken the rap and been cut out of the profits for an insurance scam he and Shay had concocted, investigators said earlier this week.

Geisenheyner was arrested for possessing artwork that had been reported stolen from the Shays’ home in 2006 and was sent back to prison on a parole violation, Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Ferman said. Paul Shay was not apparently charged, and Ferman said she didn’t know if there was any truth to Geisenheyner’s account. Shay filed an insurance claim on the painting, which went missing about a month after a fire at his home.


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Suspected Gunman in Deadly Mich. Shooting Spree Kills Self

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

A brazen midday shooting spree that left seven people dead and turned into an hours-long standoff with Michigan police finally ended late Thursday night when the suspected gunman shot and killed himself. Two people he was holding hostage escaped unharmed.

The manhunt for Rodrick Shonte Dantzler, 34, began after four people were found dead in a Grand Rapids, Mich., home and three were discovered in another across town. Two of the dead were children.

Police said the daughter and an ex-girlfriend of Dantzler are among the victims, but that it had been some time since he had any sort of relationship with his ex-girlfriend.

Following the discovery of the bodies, Dantzler led officers on a chase, crashed his car and then took three hostages, police said.

Dantzler released a 53-year-old woman at the residence after he received a bottle of Gatorade and cigarettes from police, The Grand Rapids Press reported.

State police Lt. Col. Gary Gorski warned residents to stay in their homes as the standoff developed. Gorski said the suspect, who led officers on a chase that tore through the city’s downtown, had proven to be very mobile.

At one point during the chase the suspect crossed a wide grass median on I-96 and drove the wrong way down the highway while more than a dozen police cars pursued him. The highway remained closed down hours later.

Grand Rapids Police Chief Kevin Belk said two other people were shot when the suspect fired at police during the chase but neither suffered life-threatening injuries. Some of the gunshots struck the windshield of a police cruiser in downtown Grand Rapids, but no officers were injured.

The highway chase ended when Dantzler crashed his vehicle in a ditch and fled on foot while he was pursued by Special Response Team members, the Grand Rapids Press reported.

Some friends of Dantzler told The Grand Rapids Press that he was possibly bipolar, with one man describing him as “crazy.”

“He’s known to be crazy is all I’ll say,” the man told the media outlet . “I’ve had a few run-ins with him.”

Lisa Schenden lives with her husband and their children two blocks from the home where four people were killed. She said the homeowners are a couple whose daughter has a daughter with the suspect.

Schenden said she did not hear the shooting either, but she saw the suspect and his daughter drive up to the house earlier in the day.

“Just last night, my kids went over there swimming, and I went over with them,” she said.

Outside the two-story, wood-sided home where the three people were killed, neighbors stood in clumps Thursday evening, quietly talking as investigators scoured the house. As officers left, people disappeared indoors and a single police car remained on the block.

The only indication of anything unusual was three bouquets of flowers on the porch steps.

Powney said she had been at home all day and didn’t realize anyone had been killed until police converged on the cul-de-sac about 3 p.m.

“For a while we couldn’t come outside,” she said. “They didn’t know if there was someone still inside the house.”

A friend of a victim told The Grand Rapids Press that the shootings likely stemmed from domestic issues.

Dantzler has previous felonies that include felony burglary, felony damage to property in 1997, and felony assault with intent to do great bodily harm in 2000.

Records show Dantzler was released from state prison in 2005 after serving time for assault less than murder. A spokesman for the prison system said he had not been under state supervision since then.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Small Plane Crashes Into Hospital in California

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

Small Plane Crashes Into Hospital in California

Published July 08, 2011

| Associated Press



Former Cop Says He Didn’t Kill Girl in ’57

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

A former police officer arrested in the 1957 murder of an Illinois girl told The Associated Press in a jailhouse interview Thursday night that he has an “iron-clad alibi” and had nothing to do with her disappearance or death.

Jack Daniel McCullough, 71, insisted that he wants justice to be done for 7-year-old Maria Ridulph, whose disappearance terrified the small farming town of Sycamore, about 50 miles west of Chicago. But in an interview conducted through glass at a King County Jail visiting room, he stuck to the same alibi he gave when first questioned by investigators more than half a century ago, when he was 18: that he could not have committed the murder because he had traveled to Chicago that day for military medical exams before enlisting in the Air Force.

“I have an iron-clad alibi,” he said. “I did not commit a murder.”

McCullough lived near the girl and matched the description of the suspect given by Ridulph’s 8-year-old friend, Cathy Sigman, who last saw her on Dec. 3, 1957, at about 6 p.m. Sigman said she left Maria with a young man and ran home to get some mittens; when she returned 15 minutes later, the two were gone.

Maria’s remains were found the following April, about 120 miles away.

McCullough was arrested in Seattle last week after investigators said new evidence undermined that story. He’s being held on a fugitive charge pending his return to Illinois.

According to a police affidavit in the case, last year, McCullough’s high school girlfriend discovered his train ticket to Chicago behind a framed photograph of them — and it was unused. In the affidavit, detectives wrote that when he was questioned in 1957, he claimed he had traveled to Chicago by train.

Though Sigman was never asked to identify McCullough as the suspect at the time, she picked his photo out of a montage detectives showed her last September, the affidavit said.

The affidavit also alleged that McCullough has a history of molesting girls. McCullough declined to discuss the topic with the AP.

McCullough said he didn’t remember every detail of what he told the FBI at the time, but he said there’s a good reason his train ticket was unused — he never used it. He says his stepfather gave him a ride to Chicago, and after a long day of physical and psychological tests, he hitched a ride with someone he’d just met to Rockford. From Rockford, a drive of more than 40 miles from Sycamore, he called home to ask his step father to come pick him up.

Investigators wrote in the affidavit that they have verified that a collect call was made from a Rockford pay phone to McCullough’s childhood home that night, lasting from 6:57 to 6:59 p.m. If he made that call, he said, “How am I involved in a kidnapping at 6 p.m. in Sycamore? A fifth-grader can figure this out.”

He said he didn’t believe investigators had ever tried to verify that he was in Chicago that day for medical tests — and records of that day should still exist at the National Archives repository of military personnel records in St. Louis, he said.

“St. Louis will have records of everything,” he said. “If somebody would go there, it would exonerate me.”

Prosecutor Jeff Ashton: ‘I Can Only Assume … Jurors Didn’t See What I Saw’

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Posted on : 08-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, fox news, fox news national, us headlines, us news

AshtonSad.jpg

POOL

July 5: Prosecutor Jeff Ashton leaves the courtroom after Casey Anthony was found not guilty.

EXCLUSIVE: There was not a moment during the trial where prosecutor Jeff Ashton entertained the notion that he’d lose the case, “Not until I heard ‘not guilty,’” he said, in an exclusive interview with FoxNews.com. “I thought it went pretty well.”

“I was completely shocked and stunned.”

Ashton spent three years preparing for the trial, and received rave reviews for his powerful closing argument. He said he tried to portray a young mother who murdered her daughter because she wanted to have a “good life.”

It took the jury 11 hours to find Anthony not guilty of first degree murder, aggravated child abuse and aggravated manslaughter. She will be sentenced Thursday morning for four guilty counts of lying to law enforcement. 

Ashton and his team argued that Caylee was suffocated with duct tape by her mother, who lied to mislead investigators.

The most compelling piece of evidence the prosecution had, he said, was Caylee’s remains. “I can only assume that the jurors didn’t see what I saw in the pictures of the remains,” Ashton said.

A high profile trial often means tough criticism from peers.

“He focused on the defense not proving their case, when it was the prosecution’s burden. They had no story and relied on throwing a bunch of stuff at the wall,” Tamara Holder, a criminal defense attorney, said.

What’s more, prosecutors could not determine the exact cause of death.

“In order to convict, jurors feel more comfortable knowing how it happened,” Joey Jackson, a former prosecutor and defense attorney, said.

Ashton, who has been a prosecutor for 30 years, says he wouldn’t do anything differently in the case. But he says one piece of evidence he was missing, “would obviously be if the remains had been found within a week and not 6 months later,” and laughed that a confession would have been nice, too.

While some pundits have criticized Ashton and his team for going for the death penalty, Ashton still believes it was the right charge. “The charges were what they were based on the evidence, if she did what we argued to the jury she did, that is first degree murder,” 

Ashton said. And when asked if a conviction would have been assured if a lesser charge like negligent or reckless homicide was pursued he clarified that those options were given and rejected by the grand jury.

Ashton plans to announce his retirement at the end of the week, a decision he says he made before taking on the Anthony case.

“I have known Jeff Ashton for many years, both as an opponent and a well respected colleague,” said Diana Tennis, an Orlando criminal defense attorney. “Although we have butted heads in the court room, his passion, determination and intellect demand admiration. He should be very proud of this most challenging end to a career of service to our community.”

FoxNews.com asked Ashton if there was one question he could have asked Casey (excluding whether or not she killed her daughter) Ashton said he would have asked, “ Why did you get the tattoo, what is up with that?”

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