truesee's Blog

Man tries to rob undercover police

Undercover cop shoots, kills man who tried to rob him at gunpoint

Kerry Burke and Joe Kemp
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

Originally Published:Wednesday, May 11th 2011, 9:06 PM
Updated: Thursday, May 12th 2011, 1:05 AM

The scene where an undercover cop shot and killed a gunman trying to rob him.
 
Ken Murray/News
The scene where an undercover cop shot and killed a gunman trying to rob him.
 

An undercover cop on a gun-buy operation shot and killed a man who tried to rob him at gunpoint inside a Brooklyn building on Wednesday, police said.

The officer, working with the NYPD's firearms unit, was led into the three-story Knickerbocker Ave. building in Bushwick by a 22-year-old known gun dealer shortly before 8 p.m., police said.

As the two men stepped into the entrance, a 31-year-old man - pretending not to know the dealer - came down the stairs and aimed a loaded pistol at the officer in an attempt to rob him, cops said.

The undercover officer - who was carrying $4,200 in cash to buy a handful of weapons during the sting - pulled his gun and squeezed off three rounds at the crook, striking him in the side, police said.

"It was a preset robbery," said Deputy Inspector Kim Royster, an NYPD spokeswoman. "The firearm fell to the ground and was picked up by the unarmed guy."

The wounded bandit took to the stairs and collapsed on the second floor, where he died.

"We don't believe they fired," Royster said. "But [the officer] could have lost his life in such tight quarters."

The arms dealer ran to the third floor with the loaded, .380-caliber semiautomatic and tried to stash it near the roof, police said.

The elite backup team waiting outside saw the attempt to hide the pistol as it stormed into the building, cops said.

The man was arrested and taken into custody.

"I heard three shots," said neighbor Jackie Chow. "Three undercovers ran into the building - then, all the cops came. It's shocking. I never saw anything like that before."

Weapon of suspect who was shot and killed by undercover cop (DCPI).



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2011/05/11/2011-05-11_undercover_cop_shoots_dead_man_trying_to_rob_him_in_brooklyn_source.html#ixzz1M8E4SDCN
Entry #4,596

Donald Trump Lets His Hair Down

Donald Trump Lets His Hair Down

A conversation with the host of The Celebrity Apprentice

Rolling Stone Magazine

 

 
The Golden Throne: Trump in New York in April
Photograph by Peter Yang

Like you, we've always wondered what's inside Donald Trump's wallet.  So, on a recent visit to his office at the top of Trump Tower in Manhattan, the epicenter of his vast real estate empire and putative presidential ambitions, we ask him if we can take a look.  He pulls it out, dips it down and hides it behind his huge desk, peers inside, saying, "Let me just see if there's anything ... ," and then holds it out, fanning through it, revealing his Winged Foot Golf Club membership card and his very own gun permit, neither of which he apparently ever leaves home without.

"It's a Donald J. Trump wallet," he says, happily.  He's still a fairly big, fairly imposing guy at age 64, has hair that's the patriotic shade of amber waves of grain, dresses like men of the world used to dress, in a dark suit, with a crisp, white shirt and a tie that's the subtlest pink ever. "We sell them at Macy's. They sell great.  Hey — I have the number-one-selling tie in the country.  What color tie do you like?  Your tie looks like <snip>.  Do you want a tie?  It's not a bribe.  They're nothing.  I sell shirts, PVH, Phillips-Van Heusen.  Cuff links."  He waves his arms around, shoots his cuffs to show off glittering cuff links.  "Trump cuff links!" he shouts.  "They're magnificent!  Everybody's buying them!  If I said I got them at Harry Winston, for $100,000, you'd believe it!  Forty-nine dollars at Macy's!  Macy's doesn't even want to carry other brands!  We blow them out!"

That's pure Trump-speak — loud, over-the-top, just the kind of Ronco Veg-o-Matic, everyone's-a-mark, carny-barker, hard-sell ballyhoo that he hopes will also blow out the other presidential hopefuls, should he decide to run.  But will he run?  He says the world will know his answer by June — at which time, if he announces in the affirmative, he will also reveal the true size of his financials, which, he says, will shock the world, being around $7 billion, if not more, and make Mitt Romney, with his measly hundred millions, look like a floppy little fish indeed and certainly not the kind of guy who, for instance, could spin the roulette wheel on ties and cuff links and make gazillions.

"We need a businessman," Trump says, working himself into a lather of self-congratulation, "and I've been successful.  Right now, I have the greatest properties in the country.  I have great stuff.  The point is, I'm running for office in a country that's essentially bankrupt, and it needs a successful businessman, and, by the way, let me explain about one thing, might as well get that clear: I never went bankrupt."

 

He's drawing a distinction here, which is that while various of his businesses may have sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection over the past two decades, Trump the person never has.  In the early 1990s, for instance, after a decade of profligate spending — $3.8 billion worth, mainly financed by junk bonds and Trump-snookered banks — he came face to face with an economic downturn that forced four Trump properties — the Plaza Hotel and his three Atlantic City casinos — into bankruptcy.  It happened again in 2004, and also in 2009, when Trump Entertainment found itself $1.7 billion in debt.  Trump's way is to dismiss these financial catastrophes with a snarl and a shrug.  As he said in his 2007 book, Think BIG and Kick Ass in Business and Life, "I figured it was the bank's problem, not mine.   What the hell did I care?  I actually told one bank, 'I told you you shouldn't have loaned me that money.  I told you the god<snip> deal was no good.' " Or, as he casually says today, "I play with the bankruptcy."  Which is kind of a sad, dispiriting advertisement for his genius as a businessman.  Do we really want that kind of guy in office?  At least some people seem to think so.

"Look," Trump chuckles, "I'm number one in the polls already, and I haven't even done anything!"

Which is no longer true, since it was largely Trump's bellyaching that prompted the White House to release President Obama's so-called long-form birth certificate, proving once again that Obama was born in the U.S. (unless you're a birther, in which case it proves nothing).  "I'm very proud of myself," Trump crowed the day it happened.  Naturally, he made no mention of what his "investigators" in Hawaii discovered poking around about Obama's birth — "They cannot believe what they're finding!" he had said in early April — probably because they either didn't exist or they found nothing.  Instead, in his quest for ever-bigger headlines and even more attention, he stooped to new lows, by bringing up Obama's college education and playing the race card.  "How does a bad student go to Columbia and then to Harvard?" Trump said, the clear implication being that it was only thanks to affirmative action and never would have happened had Obama been white.  It's despicable stuff, and yet, coming from Trump, not all that surprising.  If nothing else, he's a master of smoke and mirrors, and so far has managed to keep anyone from focusing too tightly on his own past.  Those bankruptcies.  His marriage-wrecking affair and two divorces. His garish casinos that may or may not have had mob ties.  The time he referred to his current wife, Melania, as "a young and beautiful piece of ass" (which he now denies ever having said).  And let's not forget the whole abortion thing, where Trump has recently flipped to pro-life; the whole let's-invade-the-Middle-East-and-just-like-take-all-the-oil thing; and all the rest of those kooky things he spouts on a daily basis, keeping his name in the news in an effort, no doubt, to boost the ratings of his Celebrity Apprentice reality-TV show while appearing to be testing the presidential waters.  He's one top-notch novelty act and a Barnum-type showman with an unerring instinct for what to say to appeal to the loonier segment of the electorate.  He's good at catering to the lowest common denominator like that, decorum be <snip>ed.

But what about some Trump constants, some things that are unwavering in his character and nature?

For one thing, he goes to bed late, gets up early, usually wearing only "the undies," as he calls them, never "the formality" of pajamas, brushes his teeth first, takes a leak second, and only then steps into the shower, his hand reaching out through the steam to grab the shampoo and lather up that hair of his that has received so much attention over the years. How does he do it?

He steeples his fingers, purses his lips and launches right into it like it was some kind of major policy issue. "OK, what I do is, wash it with Head and Shoulders.  I don't dry it, though. I let it dry by itself.  It takes about an hour. Then I read papers and things.  This morning I read in the New York Post about Jerry Seinfeld backing out of his commitment to do a benefit for my son Eric's charity.  I've never been a big fan of Jerry Seinfeld — never dug him, in the true sense — but when I did The Marriage Ref, which was his show and a total disaster, I did him a big favor.  Then he did this.  It's a disgrace." He goes on, "I also watch TV.  I love Fox, I like Morning Joe, I like that the Today show did a beautiful piece on me yesterday — I mean, relatively speaking. OK, so I've done all that.  I then comb my hair.  Yes, I do use a comb." He pauses, frowning, casting his mind back to capture the details of the event. "Do I comb it forward?  No, I don't comb it forward."  He pushes the leading edge of the flying wing of his hair back, to show where the hairline is.  "I actually don't have a bad hairline.   When you think about it, it's not bad. I mean, I get a lot of credit for comb-overs.  But it's not really a comb-over.  It's sort of a little bit forward and back.  I've combed it the same way for years. Same thing, every time."

After that, he spends some time not saying what he doesn't want to say, in a very mulish, deeply parsed, Republican-president sort of way.

Does he have a Bible by his bed?

"I do," he says. Then: "I have a Bible near my bed."

Where near?

"It's up in my apartment." Silence.

When was the last time he went to church?

"Two weeks ago. A church in Palm Beach, Florida. What was the sermon about? I'd rather not get into it, frankly."

Where does he stand on gun control?

"I'm against gun control for the reason, it doesn't affect the bad guys, because they're going to have guns.  What kind of gun do I have? I'd rather not say.  I have a gun.  It's a handgun, OK?"

Is it Trump-sized?

"It's a gun. I have a gun.  It's a handgun." Silence.

All this talk seems to be making him thirsty.  He calls for a Coke, and a hot number in spike heels arrives with a Coke in a glass of ice. Trump sips, smacks his lips.

 

"I've never smoked a cigarette in my life," he goes on.  "I've never had a drink, never had a joint, never had any drugs, never even had a cup of coffee. So, those are some good things about me.  I probably have some bad things about me, too."  He pauses, as if waiting for some bad things to materialize out of thin air, but when a miracle occurs and they don't, he starts up again. "I will say, though, that I like a little caffeine.  People assume I'm a boiler ready to explode, but I actually have very low blood pressure, which is shocking to people.  I'll drink water.  Sometimes tomato juice, which I like. Sometimes orange juice, which I like.  I'll drink different things. But the Coke or Pepsi boosts you up a little."

And then he goes on about the ratings of Celebrity Apprentice and the ratings of himself in presidential polls, both of which are "very, very" high.  This is all well and good, but it's incredibly boring, and eventually you are forced to cut him off, with, like, is there one orgasm in his life that he would consider the most memorable?

He leans back in his chair, tilts his head up, takes a long time to think this over, his cherubic cheeks reddening either with the effort of recollection or the maintenance of a boiler about to explode. At last, very smoothly, he says, "Well, always the children. And this building. Trump Tower." A duller answer one cannot imagine. Maybe he'll take a shine to something larger, like naming the central problem of existence.

"Conflict," he says, snapping forward. "Conflict, if it's not resolved, leads to lots of bad things, and that's where this country is right now. We're in many, many conflicts that ultimately could end up in calamity."

But, seriously, has anyone ever loved conflict more than him?

He smiles. "Look, sometimes you need conflict in order to come up with a solution. Through weakness, oftentimes, you can't make the right sort of settlement, so I'm aggressive, but I also get things done, and in the end, everybody likes me."

Well, maybe not everyone.  He's been called some pretty terrible things recently, like "farcical," "an unpolished and graceless blowhard" and "a monstrous parody of entitled American wealth masquerading as skillful entrepreneurship."  Just days ago, Republican strategist Karl Rove pronounced him "a joke."  Trump shrugs most of these things off. They come with the territory, and, in fact, by shrugging them off, he is able to once again demonstrate the insane, over-the-top self-confidence and self-regard that seem to have caught the fancy of a certain segment of the population — probably the same folks who believe it when Charlie Sheen claims he is somehow "winning."  Trump didn't do so well at the White House Correspondents' Dinner last month, however.  While President Obama and host Seth Meyers poked fun at him and his hair, all Trump could do was stare straight ahead, with no expression whatsoever, betraying how utterly humorless he is about himself. Trump doesn't like Rove's "joke" comment, either.  "That was a very nasty thing for him to say," he mutters darkly.  "He shouldn't have said that. We'll have it out with Karl Rove.  I don't lose too often."

So, Rove might want to look out. And so might Jerry Seinfeld, for that matter.

"I don't want to ruin my image by saying this, but I'm a much nicer person than people understand," Trump says.  "I like to do the right thing and help people.  But when people are disloyal to me — I have a couple of instances of well-known people, where I'd help them out, but when I needed a favor, not a big favor in this one case, this guy didn't want to do it.  That's 15 years ago. I haven't spoken to him since.  He died.  He's dead mentally.  In other words, for me, they don't exist.  I hold a grudge.  I have the longest memory.  I always kick back. I believe in that."

It's kind of weird hearing Trump spit out his words with such rigid vehemence just like he does on his reality show, knowing how huge a constant that grudge-holding is with him and that you yourself might one day be on the receiving end of just such a grudge. You can always hope that age will lay him low first, but it's not likely, given how healthy he is. "I had a father who was 94," he says, "a mother who was 90, so, you know, I'm genetically lucky that way, too."

Also, he's got a big thing about germs, so he's a frequent hand-washer and goes everywhere with packets of hand sanitizer stuffed into his suit jacket. He pulls one out now, dangling it in the air. It's a Super Sani-Cloth Germicidal Disposable Wipe ("The two-minute germicidal wipe") — which isn't exactly the kind of market-share leader you might expect Trump to favor. He rubs his palms together. "I don't use Purell, Purell is too sticky, but this other stuff is great. I always carry a couple of them."

Leaning back, he goes on, "The question has come out, 'How can Donald Trump campaign if he doesn't shake hands?' Well, over the years, I've shaken many hands, and I have no problem shaking hands. But it's not a healthy thing. With the germs, it's not a question of 'maybe' — they have been proven, you catch colds. You catch problems. Frankly, the Japanese custom is a lot smarter."

One can just imagine Trump, then, his first big time out on the hustings, massively ambivalent, surrounded by his fellow man, the crush closing in on him, the panic that must arise as he finally confronts the great unwashed them, that hideous, germ-ridden, infection-spreading other that he has for so long tried to avoid in the flesh but that his attention-craving ego (not to mention his TV show) so needs. It would have to be unbearable. After an event like that, he probably couldn't get to his Super Sani-Cloths fast enough. So that's another thing we would maybe have to look forward to in a Trump presidency: less handshaking, more bowing, fewer colds, fewer "problems." And if it were just that, what's not to like?

Entry #4,595

Man flees security at courthouse only to run into...

Man flees from deputies at RI County Courthouse

 

Dustin Lemmon

The Quad-City Times

Wednesday, May 11, 2011 8:06 pm

buy this photoRock Island County deputies clean up a mess created by a man who fled from security at the courthouse this morning. The man slammed into two glass doors as he wrestled with court staff while trying to exit the building.

(Dustin Lemmon/Quad-City Times)

A man who fled security Wednesday at the Rock Island County Courthouse slammed into two large glass doors as he tried to get away and suffered significant injuries.

Demetrius C. Bateman, 25, was apprehended after a foot chase near the foot of the Centennial Bridge, Rock Island County Sheriff Jeff Boyd said.

Bateman was in court for a misdemeanor hearing when deputies went to arrest him on a warrant for failure to appear for a driving while revoked charge, the sheriff said.

Boyd said the suspect fled the courtroom and slammed into large glass exit doors on the west side of the courthouse. Boyd said Bateman apparently didn’t hit the bar to release the door and suffered severe cuts.

Rock Island County Sheriff’s Sgt. Mark Biscontine and Bailiff Russ Griffin caught up to Bateman at the courthouse exit, but he managed to get away. They continued to chase him until they caught him near the bridge, Boyd said.

Large holes and cracks were left in the two exit doors. Shortly after the incident, deputies were on the scene breaking out the remaining glass and sweeping up the mess.

Boyd said the deputy and bailiff suffered cuts and abrasions, and the bailiff might have broken a finger. They were being treated at an area hospital.

Meanwhile, Bateman underwent surgery at the hospital, the sheriff said, but his injuries were not considered life-threatening. He was to be taken into custody once released.

Boyd said the sheriff’s department is seeking two counts of aggravated battery and a charge of criminal damage to property against Bateman in connection with the incident.

Entry #4,594

Burglar left paralyzed in escape attempt

Burglar left paralyzed in escape, police say

 
Bianca Cain
The Augusta Chronicle
Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
 

Police say a 43-year-old burglar trying to flee a weekend break-in in Hephzibah broke his neck while jumping from a deck and is now paralyzed.

Richmond County sheriff's Sgt. Dan Carrier said Carl Thur­mond was in the middle of a burglary on Daisy Lane about 9 p.m. when someone came home.

In an attempt to get away, the Hephzibah man jumped from the deck but landed on his head. He was taken to a hospital with broken vertebrae.

When authorities arrived, Thurmond still had a remote from a TV he was attempting to steal in his pocket, police said.

Entry #4,592

Woman Had 47 Balloons of Heroin in Her Body

Woman Had 47 Balloons of Heroin in Her Body

Woman Had 47 Balloons of Heroin in Her Body
 
Dan Jovic 
Fox8.com Reporter

11:45 a.m. EDT, May 10, 2011

DELAWARE COUNTY, Ohio -- A woman from Willard, Ohio was arrested last week after police found 47 heroin filled balloons inside her body cavity.

According to officials, a Delaware County Sheriffs Deputy received a tip that Tiffany Giummo, 20, of Willard, would be traveling to the Columbus area in an effort to purchase heroin on May 5.

Deputies began surveillance on Giummo and followed her as she exited a vehicle she was traveling in and enter another vehicle.

Police say she drove around the block in the second car and then got back into the original vehicle.

A traffic stop was initiated because of the suspicious behavior and Giummo was questioned if she was concealing drugs. According to authorities she admitted that she had heroin inside her body.

After being placed under arrest Giummo was taken to the Delaware County Jail where 47 balloons filled with heroin were removed from her body.

She is currently being held on a felony charge of possession of drugs at the Delaware County Jail.
Entry #4,591

Thieves Now Using Tow Trucks To Steal Cars

Towed Away: Thieves Using Tow Trucks To Steal Cars

 
Scott Noll

12:45 a.m. CDT, May 11, 2011

FAST FACTS:
  • Victims say thieves using tow trucks to help steal cars
  • Midtown apartment manager says four tow truck drivers have come to her complex in recent weeks
  • Police urge people to be on the lookout for people scouting parking lots looking for cars

(Memphis 5/10/2011) It's a new twist to an old crime, and it's happening in broad daylight, right under the noses of unsuspecting victims and their Mid-South neighbors.

Kathy Lambert couldn't believe what she saw on her security cameras.

"They're not discriminatory," explained Lambert, manager of Broadmoor Apartments in Midtown. "They're just taking them really."

Four times in the last three weeks tow truck drivers showed up outside her Midtown apartment complex ready to take cars.

"They're simply taking them because they can," said Lambert.

She says she didn't call for the wreckers.

Puzzled, Lambert turned to her video surveillance system.

It showed a group of guys scouting out her parking lot then waving in a tow truck in to take away cars the scouts don't own.

"They're very aggressive in what they're doing," said Lambert. "They come in with a team, they don't come alone."

Eric Bonner couldn't believe it when he looked out his window and spotted a tow truck back up to his 2007 Ford Five Hundred.

"Man, my heart's racing like, 'why is this guy, looks like he's fixing to tow my car," recalled Bonner.

Irate, he ran and confronted the driver.

"By the time I got down here, he's screaming and hollering, saying he wasn't fixing to pull my car," Bonner explained.

He doesn't believe the driver's story. It came just days after his neighbor's Jeep was hauled away from the complex.

A security camera picture shows it on the back of a flatbed tow truck.

A police report verifies the SUV was not repossessed.

"People that are doing it need to be where they need to be which is locked up," said Bonner.

Memphis police say it's too soon to tell if the cases are connected.

Lt. James Grigsby from MPD's Auto Theft Unit says it's rare to see tow trucks stealing cars from parking lots.

"There are a few cases we've had where the tow truck drivers unwittingly, unwillingly participated in this because they just didn't simply know," said Grigsby.

WREG On Your Side Investigators tracked down the owner of TCJ's Towing.

He says he was called to the same parking lot last month by a man named Bobby.

"He called me, said he'd done some work at that apartment complex," said tow truck driver Tim Sisco. "They gave him the Jeep and I could buy it for $50."

Suspicious, Sisco called Lambert, the apartment manager.

"I own the company and we've never employed anyone named Bobby," said Lambert.

Sisco says it's not the only time Bobby has called offering a parked car.

"It's not been that same apartment complex, it's been other apartment complexes," said Sisco. We showed the tow company owner the pictures from Lambert's lot.

He easily identified one of the lookouts caught on camera.

"That's Bobby," said Sisco as he looked at the picture.

Then we showed Sisco a mugshot of Bobby White Jr.

White was in jail after he was busted trying to sell a stolen car.

"Same person," said Sisco. He says he's known White for seven years.

There's no doubt in Sisco's mind what's going on.

"He was stealing the car, he had to be," said Sisco. "I probably ain't the only one he called about buying it."

Sisco says he won't take a car without a bill of sale or title.

He says other tow truck drivers, who he wouldn't name, aren't as careful.

Sisco believes they're lured in by the chance to buy a car from a spotter, then turn around and sell it for parts or scrap.

"So no doubt in your mind thieves are using tow truck companies to try and steal cars," asked WREG On Your Side Investigator Scott Noll.

"Tow trucks, yes," said Sisco. "That, or they'll hook a chain to it themselves."

He says most people don't question a tow truck taking a car from a parking lot.

That's why police urge people to be aware of what's happening around them.

If you spot a group of people who don't belong just hanging out or checking out cars, pick up the phone.

"If it doesn't look right, it's probably not right," said Lt. Grigsby. "Call us and we'll come out, let us come out and check out what's going on."

Already, Lambert says one renter is moving out because of concerns about her safety.

Now the apartment manager hopes that by letting people know what's happening, they'll be able to push back before another car gets pulled right out from under its owner.
 
"You're paying for a vehicle that might not be there tomorrow morning just because someone wants $50," said Lambert.

Today, weeks after we started our investigation, Memphis Police arrested and charged Bobby White and another man with using the tow truck to steal the white Jeep from the apartment complex. But that may not be the end of this story. Lambert, the apartment manager says her cameras have caught at least two different sets of scouts working her parking lot scoping out cars. Citywide, more than 900 cars have been reported stolen in Memphis so far this year.

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.wreg.com/videobeta/39fedfc7-2599-491c-83e6-4ce02ed5ed22/News/A-New-Kind-of-Car-Thief

Entry #4,590

Instant Heart Attack sandwich under fire

Instant Heart Attack sandwich under fire

GRACE MILLIMACI
LIFE+STYLE EDITOR with AP
The West Australian
May 11, 2011, 9:27 am
 
Instant Heart Attack sandwich under fire

Wayne Parham Photography

A popular New York City deli says a potential legal challenge to its Instant Heart Attack sandwich isn't kosher.

A lawsuit filed on Tuesday in the federal court says the Heart Attack Grill restaurant chain has accused the 2nd Avenue Deli of stealing its idea to spoof healthy eating with calorie-bomb entrees like the three-patty Triple Bypass Burger.

It asks the court to block Arizona-based Heart Attack Grill from pursuing a trademark infringement case.

The deli's Instant Heart Attack sandwich is made up of two potato pancakes and a piled-high choice of corned beef, pastrami, turkey or salami. The 2nd Avenue Deli Instant Heart Attack costs $US23.95 ($22).

The Manhattan deli also has plans for a Triple Bypass sandwich.

2nd Avenue Deli says it is "home to the finest Jewish culinary creations in New York City". It serves only kosher meat, poultry and fish.

Meanwhile, Heart Attack Grill is a hospital-themed restaurant with chains in Arizona and Texas.

The company says it has become internationally famous for "embracing and promoting an unhealthy diet of incredibly large hamburgers".

"Customers are referred to as 'patients', orders as 'prescriptions', and the waitresses as 'nurses'," HAG says.

Items on the company's menu include Single, Double, Triple and Quadruple Bypass Burgers, Flatliner Fries (which are "deep fried in pure lard"), Lucky Strike no-filter cigarettes for the adults and Candy Cigarettes "for the kids".

Its Butterfat Shake has the world's highest butter fat content, HAG says.

"The menu names imply coronary artery bypass surgery and refer to the danger of developing atherosclerosis from the food's high proportion of saturated fat and excessive caloric content," the company says.

"The Quadruple Bypass Burger has been quoted by the media at around 8000 calories.

The Instant Heart Attack Sandwich from 2nd Avenue Deli.

 

"One of the restaurant's most celebrated (and widely publicised) gimmicks is the free wheelchair service provided to those 'patients' who successfully finish the Quadruple Bypass Burger. Amidst a flurry of photography from tourist bystanders the 'patients' are pushed in a wheelchair out to their cars."

Heart Attack Grill was created in 2005 by "Dr Jon".

The company says Dr Jon is a "non-American Medical Association recognised physician" who was arrested after threatening to set a fire hose on a group of picketing nurses.

"He has been glorified as the freedom-fighting archenemy of political correctness by some, and demonised as a charlatan 'nutritional pornographer' by others," the company says.

"Dr Jon can be found each day at the griddle, actually flipping hamburgers in his white doctor's lab coat and stethoscope.

"The restaurant has found itself in a continual state of self-defence against various activist groups and branches of state government."

HAG says diners who reach the 350 pound (160kg) "goal weight" will be treated to free meals.

Dr Jon's fitness book Heart Attack Grill Diet attempts to teach readers how to eat, drink and smoke their way to better health, the company says.

HAG is not short of fans, with tens of thousands of people enjoying the restaurant chain's Facebook page.

Dr Jon, aka Jon Basso, told Fox News presenter Neil Cavuto in 2007 that Heart Attack Grill was "like every restaurant should be - a place to enjoy one's life, eat to the fullest (and) have fun".

"Don't worry about what people are telling you," Basso told Cavuto.

"I am an American citizen. My customers, or patients, as I call them, are American citizens. And we will eat what we want to."

A Heart Attack Grill lawyer did not respond to an Associated Press request for a comment. A 260kg man who served as the company's spokesman died in March.

Entry #4,589

Judge calls defendant 'gayer than a sweet-smelling jockstrap'

Wis. judge calls defendant ‘gayer than a sweet-smelling jockstrap’

 

Louis Weisberg
May 10, 2011 

 

Before sentencing a former school bus driver to prison for molesting young boys, the judge ridiculed the defendant for claiming to be a heterosexual.

“I think you were born gayer than a sweet smelling jock strap,” Judge Philip Kirk of Waupaca told Delton Gorges, 71, before sending him to prison for seven years on counts of sexual assault of a child, repeated sexual assault of a child and two misdemeanor counts of fourth-degree sexual assault. Gorges will serve 15 years of extended supervision after his prison release.

Kirk said he believes Gorges was the victim of a homophobic society in the 1940s and 1950s.

“No one knew there was a closet to come out of in those days,” the judge said. “You know you had to be very careful, because you could have found your penis floating in the Wolf as walleye bait. It was a terrible life to have to live.”

But Kirk added, “I think that if anyone believes that in the last 10 years or 15 years all of a sudden you developed an interest in homosexuality and young boys, then I must have looked ravishing in my prom dress this year.”

Although the judge’s rant sounded sympathetic toward gay people, critics told Fox 11 they were concerned that it linked homosexuality with pedophilia.

“Sometimes people don’t say the right thing, but they potentially mean well,” said Andrew DeBaker, co-chair of the gay rights group New Pride. “The thing that concerns me is the linking homosexuality, linking being gay with, in this case, child molestation.”

Gorges, who drove a school bus for 33 years, pleaded no contest to the charges.

 

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.fox11online.com/dpp/news/video-judge-philip-kirks-remarks

Entry #4,587