truesee's Blog

Men arrested for robbing man in recliner

Two men charged with burglary, theft, and robbery in Milton

 

SR Press Gazette

April 27, 2011 1:19 PM
 

Monday night Santa Rosa County Deputies responded to a robbery on Reinsma Road in Milton.

According to Sgt. Scott Haines, the victim was sitting in his home when two men entered his residence without permission and took his wallet.

Charged in connection with the investigation were Mickey Allen Adkinson, 48, of Pace, and Michael Alan Goodyear, 46, of Milton.

Haines indicated one of the two suspects pinned the homeowner down in his recliner and grabbed his wallet off of a table next to the chair before both fled the home.

The victim called 911 and also drove around the neighborhood in search of the intruders.

Adkinson was located by deputies while walking down a nearby road and was arrested after being identified by the victim.

He is charged with burglary, grand theft, and robbery by sudden snatching. He bond was originally set at $22,500, but remains in the Santa Rosa County Jail.

According to Haines, Goodyear, the second suspect, was found standing in the backyard of his residence on Carroll Road.

Haines indicated that witnesses observed Goodyear running through his backyard and "acting crazy" making statements that he "didn't do anything wrong" and that he "didn't rob anyone".

The victim was brought to the scene and identified Goodyear, who was charged with burglary, grand theft, robbery by sudden snatching, possession of cocaine, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Goodyear was lodged in the Santa Rosa County Jail on a $30,250 bond, but it was later increased to $53,500.

Goodyear was found to be in possession of 1.7 grams of cocaine and drug paraphernalia when he was taken into custody.

According to Haines, deputies were not able to recover the wallet which was reported to contain $965.

 

 
Entry #4,491

Teacher Strips At School

POSTED: 4:48 pm EDT April 27, 2011

Police: Clayton Teacher Strips At School

UPDATED: 5:13 pm EDT April 27, 2011
 
 
CLAYTON COUNTY, Ga. --A Haynie Elementary School teacher has been arrested on charges of public indecency.

Reports said Clayton County teacher, Harlon Porter, removed his clothing and walked down the hall of the building on April 22. at 3:20 p.m.

Police said on April 20, Porter learned that his employment contract would not be renewed, effectively terminating his employment.

During Porter's arrest, he stated that he had reached a "new level of enlightenment" and "he wanted everybody to be free now that his third eye was open."

Porter had several books in his belongings that appeared to be on topics such as spirituality and transcendental meditation, according to reports.

Porter also said he wanted to teach on a new level, "with hands in the earth, gathering the essence and learning how to love one another and fully appreciate the spiritual realm."

 
All students had been dismissed when the event took place.
 
LINK TO PHOTO:
 
Entry #4,490

Wal-Mart: Our shoppers are 'running out of money'

Wal-Mart: Our shoppers are 'running out of money'

wal-mart, shopping, Mike Duke

Wal-Mart CEO Mike Duke (left) speaking to a gathering of industry watchers in New York on Wednesday.

Parija Kavilanz  senior writer April 27, 2011: 6:17 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Wal-Mart's core shoppers are running out of money much faster than a year ago due to rising gasoline prices, and the retail giant is worried, CEO Mike Duke said Wednesday.

"We're seeing core consumers under a lot of pressure," Duke said at an event in New York. "There's no doubt that rising fuel prices are having an impact."

Wal-Mart shoppers, many of whom live paycheck to paycheck, typically shop in bulk at the beginning of the month when their paychecks come in.

Lately, they're "running out of money" at a faster clip, he said.

Wal-Mart's ready to do battle on prices
 
"Purchases are really dropping off by the end of the month even more than last year," Duke said. "This end-of-month [purchases] cycle is growing to be a concern.

Wal-Mart (WMT, Fortune 500), which averages 140 million shoppers weekly to its stores in the United States, is considered a barometer of the health of the consumer and the economy.

To that end, Duke said he's not seeing signs of a recovery yet.

With food prices rising, Duke said Wal-Mart is charging customers more for some fresh groceries while reducing prices on other merchandise such as electronics.

Wal-Mart has struggled with seven straight quarters of sales declines in its stores.

Addressing that challenge, Duke said the company made mistakes by shrinking product variety and not being more aggressive on prices compared to its competitors.

"What's made Wal-Mart great over the decades is 'every day low prices' and our [product] assortment," he said. "We got away from it."

0:00 /3:39Wal-Mart: green good for business

Now, with its strategy of low prices all the time back in place, Duke said making Wal-Mart a "one-stop shopping stop" is a critical response to dealing with the rising price of fuel.

Americans don't have the luxury of driving all over town to do their shopping.

Other than competing on prices and products, Duke said Wal-Mart is focused on leveraging technology -- especially social networking -- more aggressively to drive sales.

"Social networking is much more a part of the purchasing decision," he said. "Consumers are communicating with each other on Facebook about how they spend their money and what they're buying."

Elsewhere, Duke said Wal-Mart is exploring a number of e-commerce initiatives to grow the business such as testing an online groceries delivery business in San Jose. To top of page

Entry #4,488

Cardinal Suspends Outspoken Father Michael Pfleger

Cardinal suspends Pfleger: 'You are not able to pastor a Catholic parish'

Cardinal Francis George suspends Rev. Michael Pfleger

Cardinal Francis George (left) Rev. Michael Pfleger (Tribune photos / April 27, 2011)

 

 

Francis George

Staff report

7:28 p.m. CDT, April 27, 2011

 

Citing what he called threats from the Rev. Michael Pfleger to leave the church, Cardinal Francis George has removed the outspoken priest from St. Sabina parish and has suspended his "sacramental faculties as a priest."

Pfleger had publicly feuded with the cardinal about possibly being reassigned to Leo High School, telling a radio show recently that he would look outside the Catholic church if offered no other choice.

"If that is truly your attitude, you have already left the Catholic Church and are therefore not able to pastor a Catholic parish," George wrote in a letter dated today.

"A Catholic priest's inner life is governed by his promises, motivated by faith and love, to live chastely as a celibate man and to obey his bishop," the cardinal continued. "Breaking either promise destroys his vocation and wounds the Church.

"Many love and admire you because of your dedication to your people," the cardinal wrote. "Now, however, I am asking you to take a few weeks to pray over your priestly commitments in order to come to mutual agreement on how you understand personally the obligations that make you a member of the Chicago presbyterate and of the Catholic Church.

"With this letter, your ministry as pastor of Saint Sabina Parish and your sacramental faculties as a priest of the Archdiocese are suspended."

The cardinal ended the letter by saying, "This conflict is not between you and me; it's between you and the Church that ordained you a priest, between you and the faith that introduced you to Christ and gives you the right to preach and pastor in his name. If you now formally leave the Catholic Church and her priesthood, it's your choice and no one else's. You are not a victim of anyone or anything other than your own statements."

Kimberly Lymore, associate minister at St. Sabina Parish, read the following statement early tonight:

"On March 11, 2011, Father Pfleger met with Cardinal George, where he was asked to take over as president of Leo High School.

"On March 19, 2011, Father Pfleger sent a letter to Cardinal George saying he was neither qualified nor experienced being president of a high school, but that he was willing to help Leo High School in any way that he could.

"There has been no response by phone call or letter from the cardinal. Today Father Pfleger was called to a meeting at 4:30 at the Pastoral Center. At that meeting, Father Pfleger was given a letter that he was suspended and Cardinal George did not want to discuss it.

"The leadership of Saint Sabina will have an official response tomorrow. We are in shock. For your information, the press received this letter before Father Pfleger and the church heard about it through press calls."

Lymore said Pfleger was in the church tonight but he did not appear when the statement was read.

During the flap over his possible assignment to Leo, Pfleger appeared on the "Smiley & West" public radio program that he had been banned from speaking at events in the archdiocese and blamed pressure from conservative Catholics and the National Rifle Association for his most recent clash with George.

"I want to try to stay in the Catholic Church," Pfleger said. "If they say 'You either take this principalship of (Leo High) or pastorship there or leave,' then I'll have to look outside the church. I believe my calling is to be a pastor. I believe my calling is to be a voice for justice. I believe my calling is to preach the Gospel. In or out of the church, I'm going to continue to do that."

In a later interview with the Tribune, Pfleger clarified that he feels called to preach and push for social justice in a Catholic context. He said he loves the Catholic Church and prefers to stay there, but he would not go to Leo full time.

"I've always said I could not do something that I don't feel called or equipped to do," he told the Tribune. "A full-time position at Leo is not something I'm equipped to do. I think Leo has made it clear they don't see any need for me to come there. For both sides, it would be a lose-lose."

On the radio, Pfleger said conservative Catholics want to return St. Sabina, a mostly African-American parish, to the way it was before he got there nearly three decades ago and silence what they believe to be progressive messages from the pulpit.

For a couple of years, he said he has been the target of petitions and letter-writing campaigns by the NRA. Letters are often copied to the cardinal, Pfleger said.

"The NRA ... says I've been much too vocal about assault weapons and much too vocal about guns being registered and being accountable to gun owners," Pfleger said on the radio. "So all that combined and I guess the cardinal didn't have anything to do one morning and decided he wanted to get rid of me again."

But in his letter, the cardinal said he had no ulterior motives in wanting Pfleger at Leo.

"As you know, this was an honest offer, not driven by pressure from any group but by a pastoral need in the Archdiocese," George wrote. "You promised to consider what was a proposal, not a demand, even as I urged you to accept it."

The cardinal says his private conversation with Pfleger "was misrepresented publicly as an attempt to 'remove' you from Saint Sabina's. You know that priests in the Archdiocese are 'removed' only because they have been found to have sexually abused a minor child or are guilty of financial malfeasance.

"In all other cases, priests are reassigned, moving from one pastoral office to another according to the policies in place for the last forty years," George wrote. "That process has now been short-circuited by your remarks on national radio and in local newspapers that you will leave the Catholic Church if you are told to accept an assignment other than as pastor of Saint Sabina Parish."

Entry #4,487

Man robbs Dunkin Donuts Drive-Thru on a Bicycle

Police: Man Robbed Dunkin' Donuts Drive-Thru On Bicycle, Pedaled Away With Cash Drawer

Vernon Lewis

Vernon Lewis (Courtesy Meriden Police Department / April 27, 2011)

 

STEPHEN BUSEMEYER,
The Hartford Courant

2:32 p.m. EDT, April 27, 2011 

MERIDEN—

A man with 45 previous arrests for robbery was arrested again Friday after allegedly bicycling up to a Dunkin' Donuts drive-through window, threatening the clerk and pedaling away with a register drawer full of cash, police said.

Vernon Lewis, 42, of 6 Lincoln Terrace, then nearly collided with a police officer near City Hall who was responding to another call, police said.

After learning that the Dunkin' Donuts at 255 East Main St. had been robbed, the officer found Lewis near the public library, police said. He was carrying $321 cash, police said.

Dunkin' Donuts employees and customers identified Lewis as the alleged robber, police said.

He faces charges of first-degree robbery, second-degree larceny, second-degree threatening, interfering with police and brandishing a facsimile firearm.

Entry #4,486

Police officer hits woman in face during late-night IHOP brawl

Atlanta cop slugs woman in face during late-night IHOP brawl; police dept. investigating (VIDEO)

Philip Caulfield
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Wednesday, April 27th 2011, 12:08 PM

An unidentified officer slugged a woman during a brawl at an Atlanta IHOP on Sunday. <b>WATCH VIDEO BELOW</b>
 
YouTube
An unidentified officer slugged a woman during a brawl at an Atlanta IHOP on Sunday.
 
The Atlanta Police Department has launched an internal investigation after a shocking video surfaced showing a cop slugging a woman in the face during a late-night scuffle at an IHOP.

In the video, reportedly shot at 4 a.m. on Sunday at one of the pancake chain's restaurants in the Buckhead neighborhood, two cops confront a young woman in a booth.

As one of the officers tries to yank the woman out of her seat, a girlfriend grabs the officer's shoulder, prompting him to swat her away with a smack to the face.

The woman then flies into a rage, swinging wildly at the officer's head. The officer ducks and then counters with a hard right cross to the woman's jaw.

Amazingly, the petite brunette says on her feet, and the two officers wrestle her to the ground, before cuffing her and hauling her away in front of dozens of stunned diners.

Roberte Caban, who said she was the woman cops were trying to drag out of the booth, told Atlanta's WSBTV television that she and her girlfriends were having coffee when an officer told them to keep it down.

"I felt so bad for her," Caban said. "It was very obvious that the first officer had contained her. We knew Cynthia didn't do anything. We didn't know who he was, he didn't say who he was." 

Caban said she was also arrested and that she and her friend spent more than a day in jail.

The woman took a swing at the cop after he smacked her during a confrontation with the friend.

Cops said they were investigating the incident.

"The matter has been referred to our Office of Professional Standards to determine whether department policies and procedures were followed. Further comment at this time would not be appropriate," the Atlanta Police Department said in a statement.

IHOPs around the country have been plagued by violence this year.

Also on Sunday, Los Angeles Lakers forward Derrick Caracter was arrested after allegedly hitting a waitress at an IHOP in New Orleans.  The team was in town for a playoff game.

In February, a group of reporters were attacked in an IHOP parking lot after approaching relatives of a 27-year-old man who had recently been shot to death.

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Pw-bEwEUvI&feature=player_embedded#at=21

Entry #4,485

Man busted 48 times since 1992 for 'huffing' toxic vapors

Paint-huffing husband hauled to jail

Updated: Friday, 22 Apr 2011, 4:47 PM EDT
Published : Friday, 22 Apr 2011, 4:33 PM EDT

Myra McCain

FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) - A Fort Wayne man was charged with inhaling toxic vapors for the 48th time after his wife called police and told them he was huffing paint in their apartment last Thursday.

According to a Fort Wayne Police Department report, when an officer arrived at the 517 Lawton Place apartment, Elizabeth Gibson said she and her husband Kelly had been in an argument and he had gone upstairs to huff paint.

The report said since she was afraid to go inside, she handed the officer her keys and followed him up.

When the officer opened the door, the entire apartment smelled of paint fumes and Kelly was found sitting on the couch with his shirt off, and his hands, mouth, nose and chin covered in silver paint.

Police said Kelly had a can of silver spray paint in his right hand and a paint-covered plastic bag in his left.

The officer said Kelly had a dazed, glassy-eyed look about him and was unsteady on his feet.

Kelly was taken to the Allen County Jail and charged with inhaling toxic vapors.

This incident was the 48th time Kelly was charged with inhaling since 1992.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Entry #4,484

Waiter hands man food bill while being loaded into ambulance

St Kilda Chinese restaurant food bill handed to man in ambulance

Jessica Craven

Herald Sun

April 26, 2011 7:21PM

  • Man suffered seizure while dining at Chinese restaurant
  • Man given bill as he was being loaded into ambulance
  • Restaurant manager said someone had to pay for meal

A CHINESE restaurant that slapped a customer with the bill as he was being loaded into an ambulance has defended its actions.

Onlookers called paramedics when the man fell to the ground suffering an apparent seizure while enjoying dumplings with his friend at Shifu Dumpling Express in Acland St, St Kilda, at about 4.30pm today.

As the man was being loaded into the ambulance and his friend was climbing in to join him, a waiter came and handed the friend the bill.

Bella, who did not want her surname used, said she was disgusted at the restaurant's actions.

"I was so incredulous that it had happened,'' she said.

"It wasn't the most expensive restaurant in town, it's a dumpling house and their bill would not have been more than $30.

"It was just so inappropriate, I will never go there again.''

Manager Kevin Tian was remorseless about the gaffe and said he did not regret the money grab.

"My opinion is that they ate in our restaurant, they have to pay,'' he said.

An Ambulance Victoria spokesman confirmed a man in his 30s was taken to the Alfred Hospital in a stable condition.

 

UPDATE AND ONLINE DEBATE:

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/more-news/st-kilda-chinese-restaurant-food-bill-handed-to-man-in-ambulance/story-fn7x8me2-1226045177925

Entry #4,480

Finders keepers? The murky ethics of found money

Finders keepers? The murky ethics of found money

Rob Baedeker

Special to SF Gate

SFGate  04:00 AM 

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Rob <snip>erham

After finding $60 in the parking lot of a convenience store in Sacramento, Rob <snip>erham tried unsuccessfully to return the money to its rightful owner. He ended up keeping it.

You're walking through the city when you spot a $20 bill on the sidewalk. What's your first thought? Perhaps there's a rush of excitement over your good luck, or maybe a wave of sympathy for the poor soul who lost it.

Would it matter if the amount were, say, $500, or if it were on the floor of a casino? In a very small town instead of a big city? In your workplace? Would your own financial state at the time factor into whether or not to keep the cash? What about your mood?

The closer you look at that lost money on the sidewalk -- and at your own reactions -- the more the philosophical questions and moral dilemmas proliferate. What, then, is the right thing to do with found money that has no identification attached?

The law's answer is clear: California Penal Code Section 485 stipulates that if you find money you need to make "reasonable and just efforts to find the owner." Otherwise, you're "guilty of theft."

"If you find even a quarter, you're technically obligated to turn it in," says Sgt. Michael Andraychak of the San Francisco Police Department.

He acknowledges that no one at the department recalls any "significant amount" of cash being turned in, but that the property division has received found money in amounts ranging "from $1 to $200 or so."

Really, $1?

Yes, says Andraychak, who recalls being approached once when he was working in the Tenderloin by a citizen who turned in a $1 bill.

"If the finder is willing to stay and talk to the officer and fill out a report, we book it," he explains, adding that if no one's claimed the cash after 120 days, the finder is entitled to get the money back.

And what about those "reasonable efforts" the law says you need to make to find the money's owner?

"You'll sometimes see folks putting an ad in the newspaper," Andraychak says, which legally satisfies the reasonable-effort clause.

When Rob <snip>erham, 42, a Web editor for Medi-Cal in Sacramento, happened upon $60 in a SaveMart parking lot about three years ago, his first thought was, "Hey, this is fantastic."

Then he remembers thinking, "It's tragic losing money. And it's also extremely satisfying to give money back to people."

<snip>erham decided to leave his phone number with the supermarket manager in case anyone inquired about the lost cash. He also posted an ad on Craigslist asking respondents to identify particulars (the exact amount and location, or the fact that the money was folded into a wad), so that he could return it to its rightful owner.

Three people replied. None provided particulars. In other words, they were lying.

"It's a little dance that happens between you and someone who's interested in taking the money," he says. "They try to describe the money in a way that will not be ruled out by what you know."

After none of the responders to his Craigslist post were able to identify the cash, <snip>erham ended up keeping it. He spent the found money at Chipotle and on helium balloons. "I remember because I earmarked it for non-essentials," he says.

Unlike <snip>erham, Leigh Young of Grand Rapids, Mich. reunited an owner with her lost cash -- some $400 that Young found when she was in high school.

This happened in the 1970s, but she clearly remembers the exhilaration she felt after picking the money up off the sidewalk.

"I was on pins and needles as I placed the [lost and found] ad in the newspaper" she says.

She decided to wait a month before claiming the cash as her own. In the meantime, though, she overheard someone at school telling a friend how her mother had lost her entire paycheck and couldn't buy groceries.

"I begrudgingly let the other student know that the money had been found and it was safe," Young says.

She had mixed feelings when she found the actual owner, "knowing most families really couldn't afford a loss like that, but that my family could have used the cash, too."

Still, "I was glad to see them so joyous when they had the money back in hand," she says. "I remember seeing them cry as they recouped the funds -- and the look on their faces, the relaxing of their shoulders."

A few hundred bucks may compel one to seek out the owner of lost money, but what about not reporting a few dollars of errant cash? It's "theft" by the letter of the California law, but is it really the moral equivalent of stealing?

Christi Foist, 32, who works in downtown San Francisco, has found money several times on her bike commute along the Embarcadero. She also recently found $10 in a meeting room at work, which a co-worker reclaimed after Foist sent out a group e-mail.

When it comes to the cash she's found on the street (the largest amount was $21), Foist reasons, "There's really no possible way of returning it to the owner, and it's too small an amount to matter."

"It's weird whenever you have something that's good fortune," she says, "but you know that it's happened at someone else's expense."

To resolve this dilemma, Foist once treated a friend to a cup of hot chocolate with money that she had found. "I'm a person of faith," she says. "And I believe that when grace has been extended to you, you share that with others."

James Cummings, 57, a freelance accountant who lives in San Francisco's Russian Hill neighborhood, has been sharing the money he finds on the street during his morning jogs for the past 20 years.

"I had slipped during a run, so I was looking where I was placing my feet, and I saw four or five pennies," he says. "I don't know why I picked them up, but I did. Only a couple days later, entirely coincidentally, I got a solicitation from UNICEF. It talked about medicine for bringing a child back from diarrheal sickness, and the tablet that they give the child cost three cents."

A light bulb went on: He decided to donate his found money to charity. "I had a pint-sized, old-time milk jar, and I just started throwing the money that I found on my morning run into the jar," he says.

As soon as the bottle fills up, Cummings tallies it and sends donations to his favorite charities, which include the San Francisco Food Bank.

His annual donations have ranged from $27 to $123. "It's the kind of thing I do because I can," he says. "I make a good living, and I don't need to augment my earnings this way."

But he says his mother is "aghast" at her son's practice.

"She's Italian," he laughs. "She thinks that if it comes your way, it's supposed to. She thinks it's God saying, 'Hey you idiot, pay attention. Here's your $20!'"

If you don't subscribe to such a philosophy of predestination, though, the moral dimensions of the found, unidentified money dilemma seem to boil down to the dollar amount.

Few would argue that, despite the letter of the law, keeping a found quarter without searching for its rightful owner is ethically dubious. But what about $10 dollars, or $1,000?

<snip>erham says anything greater than $5 would be worth seeking out the owner, while Foist says she'd think about contacting the police office if she found $100 or more.

Cummings says that for big sums or valuable lost objects he'd wait and look around the neighborhood for "lost" signs before channeling them to good causes.

But once you make theamountpart of your decision to seek out an owner, does the whole moral house of cards start to fall? Why would it be OK to keep quiet about $25 you found on the street, but make an effort to track down the owner of $2,500? Conceivably, that $25 could be much more significant to its owner than the larger amount.

One answer is that it's just too much of a hassle to bother looking for the owner of a small sum, especially since the chances of finding the person are so slim.

But our decisions about found money also bring up a deeper issue about moral character and what it means to do the right thing. Some philosophers describe the problem in terms of "virtue ethics" (thinking of people in terms of broad characteristics like "honest," "hardworking," "kind," etc.) versus "situationists," who emphasize how contextual forces in a given moment override broad moral traits.

For example, a 1972 study found that subjects who discovered a dime that experimenters had planted in a phone booth were 22 times more likely to help a woman (also planted by the experimenters) who "dropped" her papers nearby. In other words, the brief emotional high that followed finding the free dime affected the subjects' moral behavior (compassion) in the moment.

"Situational virtue" could mean that your decision about what to with the $20 dollar bill you find on the street might spring from whatever's going on in the moment rather than whether you're an "honest" person.

Take, for example, the New York Times' reporter's husband, who decided to keep a $100 bill he found in a doctor's office after considering it in light of the sums of money he'd been paying his doctor in recent visits.

In other words, found money can become the perfect missing piece to whatever moral puzzle you've constructed in your own mind.

So what's the right thing to do, readers, and when does discovering lost cash turn into a metaphysical quandary instead of a stroke of good luck?

What's the most money you've ever found, what did you do with it, and why?



Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2011/04/26/moneytales042611.DTL&ao=all#ixzz1KgO1noH3
Entry #4,479

NFL in 'chaos' after ruling ending lockout

Apr 26, 2011

NFL in 'chaos' as players, league seek clarity in judge's ruling

10:49 AM

 

Sean Leahy
USA TODAY
 

The NFL remained in a labor fight-induced holding pattern on Tuesday as players reported for work and the league sought to clarify its responsibilities of its post-Nelson ruling reality.

But DeMaurice Smith, the executive director of the NFL Players Association, chided the league for tolerating a day of "chaos" with players being denied full access to team facilities.

In an appearance on ESPN Radio, Smith alleged that some players had been turned away from team facilities.

"To be in a world where guys are showing up ... and being told to go home... it's petty and small at best," Smith said.

Players reported to work at multiple teams on Tuesday -- including the Carolina Panthers, Cleveland Browns, New York Jets and Dallas Cowboys -- but the NFL instructed teams not to allow them to work out or conduct any football activities.

That came one day after U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson invalidated the lockout that was imposed on March 11. The NFL immediately appealed, and has asked Nelson to stay her ruling pending appeal. A ruling on that stay won't come until Wednesday at the earliest.

Also, the NFLPA asked Smith for further clarity about Monday's ruling, perhaps seeking to force the NFL to start the league year. The judge told the NFL to respond to the NFLPA's request by 6 p.m. ET on Wednesday.

Still, to Smith, Monday's ruling was clear that NFL players once again should have access to do their jobs.

"The court ruled yesterday that the lockout was illegal and it's lifted," he said.

"It's not a question of 'Should?' But a question of what's the law of the land and whether the NFL will comply with it."

NFL general counsel Jeff Pash said on ESPN that the league would adhere to the judge's ruling "in an orderly way."

"We anticipated this as a possible outcome," Pash said. "When we have rulings on the scope of the order, on the stay ... we will take all steps we need to take to comply with court orders."

But, in a scene reminiscent of the bickering that has typified the NFL labor struggle for months, Pash disputed Smith's characterization of Monday's ruling.

"I think it's quite a stretch to say what the judge did was say we broke the law," Pash said. He added the league expects to win on appeal.

Many players who reported on Tuesday were mindful of offseason workout bonuses included in their contracts that have been frozen and gone unpaid during the lockout.

Those bonuses were on Smith's mind, and he sounded an alarm of what could be yet another dividing point for the sides in the coming months.

"We expect those bonuses to be paid," Smith said.

Entry #4,477