truesee's Blog

Trial delayed due to defendant's T-shirt

Tasteless T-shirt irritates judge

Eileen Kelley

Cincinnati Enquirer

July 26, 2010

William Morse has been to court many times on an assortment of charges ranging from felonious assault to drug trafficking.

So when Morse, 28, stood before Hamilton County Municipal Court Judge Bernie Bouchard on Monday for what was to be a non-jury trial for misdemeanor criminal damaging, one would think the accused criminal would have an idea what was acceptable court attire.

At least that's the way Bouchard reasoned.

"Chucky," the evil-come-to-life doll featured in numerous slasher movies, is not proper attire, Bouchard told Morse.

The offending T-shirt was oversized to cover Morse's low-slung jean shorts. The image on the T-shirt was of Chucky holding knives. "Say good-bye to the killer," the shirt read.

"You think this is appropriate court attire?" the judge asked Morse.

Morse mumbled a no and told the judge that he just woke up.

It was nearly 11 a.m. and Bouchard wasn't buying the excuse.

Still, Bouchard asked Morse if that meant he came into court in his pajamas.

Morse again mumbled, "No."

The judge went on to explain to Morse that in a  matter of minutes he could have picked out something more appropriate for court.

 

"Five minutes,'' the judge said.  Morse mumbled that he understood.

Time will tell.

Because the trial was delayed, Bouchard said that if Morse isn't wearing something more acceptable for his next appearance, he would order him held in contempt of court and send him to jail for a day.

Entry #2,815

Man hopes to be crowned 'World's shortest man

  • 28 July 2010, 12:37

Man hopes to be crowned 'World's smallest'

A 40-year-old from a village in south west China is hoping to claim the title of world's shortest man.

At just 76cm (just under two foot, six inches) Huang Kaiquan is only 1.4cm higher than previous record holder He Pingping, who died in March aged 21. 

Huang, who smokes heavily and is a former magician, is the height and weight of an average three year old. 

In Sanjiang village, Huang is known to locals as 'Short Brother'. He still lives with his mother Cheng. 

She said: "He didn't grow at all one month after birth. We thought it's just late development and didn't pay enough attention. 

"When Huang was three, he still wore the clothes of a one-year-old. It was then we noticed his unusualness."

 

LINK TO PHOTO OF HUANG KAIQUAN   

http://web.orange.co.uk/article/quirkies/Man_hopes_to_be_crowned_Worlds_smallest

Entry #2,814

ER Worker admits to stealing rings off body

Cops: Hospital worker stole rings off body

DOWNERS GROVE | ER worker admits to crime, police say

 

July 28, 2010

 

FRANK MAIN
Staff Reporter
Sun Times 

During 53 years of marriage, Dolores Yukness of west suburban Lombard almost never removed the rings from her left hand.

But earlier this month, after she died at Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital in Downers Grove, an emergency-room worker allegedly slipped off the rings and sold them, police said.

Felony theft charges are pending against a 36-year-old Romeoville man, said Kurt Bluder, a deputy chief for the Downers Grove Police.

A spokeswoman for Good Samaritan Hospital said the worker acted alone and is no longer employed by the hospital or any affiliated site.

"We have extended our sincere apology to the Yukness family with regard to this unfortunate incident," said Jennifer Dooley, the spokeswoman.

The worker was previously convicted of misdemeanor theft in Cook County in 2001, court records show. He was accused of stealing property from a dead body at West Suburban Medical Center in Oak Park, a source said.

On July 2, Yukness, a cancer patient, was taken to Good Samaritan Hospital's emergency room and died after going into cardiac arrest. Her husband, William, a retired custodial worker for the village of Lombard, died in 2001.

Their daughter, Kristen Yukness, discovered that the rings were missing when she visited her mother at the funeral home in Lombard. She reported the theft to police.

Downers Grove detectives interviewed the worker, who admitted stealing the rings, Bluder said. The worker told detectives he sold them to a jewelry store in south suburban Lansing, officials said.

Police have recovered Dolores Yukness' wedding band and engagement ring, which were set with a total of six diamonds. The diamonds and rings had already been separated by the store, which was planning to melt down the rings for their gold, police said.

The theft has been traumatic for Kristen Yukness, who is a federal agent living in Georgia.

"She lost her dad about 10 years ago, then her only remaining parent, and now this?" said Adriana Gomez, a friend.

Cindy O'Keefe, an attorney for Kristen Yukness, praised detectives for identifying a suspect and tracking down the jewelry. But she accused the hospital of being uncooperative with her client.

"They were unsympathetic," said O'Keefe, adding that her client is considering a lawsuit against the hospital.

Contributing: Dan Rozek

 

 

Dolores Yukness, seen here on her wedding day, rarely took off her rings. 
Entry #2,813

Mom of 1-year-old charged after baby ingests Cocaine and PCP

Woman Charged After Baby Ingests Cocaine, PCP

Yolanda Beck Charged With Endangering Child's Life

CHICAGO (CBS)

 

A woman has been charged after a 1-year-old child was found to have cocaine and PCP in his system early Sunday at her East Garfield Park neighborhood home, police said.

Yolanda Beck, 37, of the 3600 block of West Fifth Avenue, was charged with misdemeanor endangering the life and health of a child, according to police.

About 3:20 a.m. Sunday, the ill 1-year-old boy was brought to Mount Sinai Hospital where it was discovered that there was PCP and cocaine in the baby's system, according to a Harrison District police captain.

Beck allegedly left multiple aluminum foil wrappers containing a white powder residue suspected to be cocaine and PCP on top of a television stand at the woman's home, according to a police report. The 1-year-old found the foil wrappers and sucked on them, ingesting drug residue.

The child was taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital after he was "acting lethargic," police said. After hospital officials called police, investigators went to the house and found the drug paraphernalia.

The child was treated for a drug overdose, but he was in good condition, according to the report.

Beck allegedly admitted to smoking the drugs on the day of the incident and leaving the wrappers behind, where they were easily accessible to the child, the report said.

The relationship between the woman and the child is not known.

Beck was taken into custody Monday at 4:35 p.m. at Harrison Area police headquarters, 3151 W. Harrison St.

She is scheduled to appear in Domestic Violence Court (Br. 60), 555 W. Harrison St., on Aug. 10.

The Sun-Times Media Wire contributed to this report.

Entry #2,812

Jeb Bush says no to 2012 run

Jeb Bush says no to 2012 run
Andy Barr
July 27, 2010 12:31 PM EDT

 

Jeb Bush is pictured at a convention. | AP Photo
Jeb Bush ruled out a 2012 presidential run on Tuesday. AP

 

Former Florida GOP Gov. Jeb Bush said Tuesday that he is “not running” for president in 2012.

In a wide-open presidential primary field, Bush’s name has been floated as one of the few potential Republicans who might be able to attract voters beyond the typical GOP ranks. Proponents of a Bush run frequently note his moderate stance on immigration as well as his advocacy for education reform as chief selling points.

Bush had provided fuel to the speculation by recently taking a more active role in current campaigns, endorsing New York GOP House candidate Chris Cox and attending a fundraiser for Kentucky Republican Senate nominee Rand Paul.

But asked Tuesday by Louisville’s ABC affiliate WHAS following an event with Paul whether he was eyeing a challenge to President Barack Obama, Bush responded flatly: “I am not running for president.”

Bush, the son of former President George H.W. Bush and brother of former President George W. Bush, had  weighed a run in this year's Senate race but decided against it.

During his appearance with Paul, Bush repeatedly hit on education reform, his pet issue. “If kids aren't learning, the fault is with the adults not the students,” Bush said, according to WHAS. “All kids can learn. Period.”

Entry #2,808

Poll Shows A few cracks in Obama's Hispanic support

Poll: A few cracks in Obama's Hispanic support

 

 

LIZ SIDOTI

AP National Political Writer

 

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

 

 

(07-27) 08:48 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --

 

President Barack Obama's once solid support among Hispanics is showing a few cracks, a troubling sign for Democrats desperate to get this critical constituency excited about helping the party hold onto Congress this fall. 

Hispanics still overwhelmingly favor the Democratic Party over the GOP, and a majority still think Obama is doing a good job, according to an Associated Press-Univision poll of more than 1,500 Hispanics. 

But the survey, also sponsored by The Nielsen Company and Stanford University, shows Obama gets only lukewarm ratings on issues important to Hispanics — and that could bode poorly for the president and his party. 

For a group that supported Obama so heavily in 2008 and in his first year in office, only 43 percent of Hispanics surveyed said Obama is adequately addressing their needs, with the economy a major concern. Another 32 percent were uncertain, while 21 percent said he'd done a poor job. 

That's somewhat understandable, given that far more Hispanics have faced job losses and financial stress than the U.S. population in general. 

An unfulfilled promise to overhaul the nation's patchwork immigration system, which most Hispanics want to see fixed, also may be to blame. That's despite the fact that Obama is challenging an Arizona law that requires police, while enforcing other laws, to question a person's immigration status if officers have a reasonable suspicion he or she is in the country illegally. 

Still, 57 percent of Hispanics approve of the president's overall job performance compared with 44 percent among the general population in the latest AP national polling. 

"It's been tough, but I think he's been doing a fair job," says Tony Marte, 33, a physical education teacher in Miami who is a Nicaraguan native. He voted for Obama in 2008 and, so far, likes how Obama has handled the economy. 

But Marte's not satisfied with Obama's work on immigration reform. "Nothing has been done," he says, adding that between now and 2012, Obama should "be looking out for the groups that put him up there. The Latinos. The minorities." He says he'll probably back Obama again but "we'll see."

The political power of Hispanics now and in the future cannot be overstated. They are the nation's fastest-growing minority group and the government projects they will account for 30 percent of the population by 2050, doubling in size from today. 

Democrats long have had an advantage among Hispanics and maintained it even as George W. Bush chipped away at that support. Obama erased the GOP inroads during his 2008 campaign, winning 67 percent of their vote to 31 percent for Republican nominee John McCain. And Hispanics consistently gave Obama exceptionally strong marks in his first year as president. 

With the first midterm congressional elections of Obama's presidency in three months, the poll shows a whopping 50 percent of Hispanics citizens call themselves Democrats, while just 15 percent say they are Republicans. 

Among Hispanics, 42 percent rate the economy and the recession as the country's biggest problem; unemployment and a lack of jobs come in at 23 percent. 

Ascencion Menjivar, a Honduran native who is a cook in Washington, isn't sold on the administration's approach to creating jobs and is waiting for a solution to get the economy back on track. "I think it'll be a long process," says Menjivar, 30. Still, he says Obama — "a genius" — eventually will make it happen. 

Patricia Hernandez Blanco of Miami, 38, is less confident that recovery is under way. "I'm not sure it's improving," she says. Even so, this Cuban who voted for McCain says she would now cast a ballot for Obama. 

Re-electing Obama would be "really stupid," counters Carlos Toledo of Puerto Rico, an independent voter, clothing store manager and self-defense instructor in Washington. Toledo, 35, disagrees with Obama's economic policies and says he worries about joblessness as budgets are cut and money is spent on wars despite the country's debt. 

Behind economic woes, immigration comes in second in importance. 

Since the controversy over the Arizona law erupted in April, Hispanics who mostly speak English at home gave Obama higher marks on his handling of their top issues than did Hispanics who primarily speak Spanish and who tend to be more recent immigrants or non-citizens.

Analysts say it's possible that the more English-dominant Hispanics rallied around the president following the enactment of the Arizona law and his challenge to it; some 40 percent of them approved of his performance on their key issues before Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed the law in April, but the figure rose to 52 percent in the weeks after.

On Monday, Brewer asked a judge to throw out the U.S. Justice Department's challenge. 

The poll also showed that two years after witnessing Hillary Rodham Clinton's White House bid, Hispanics are twice as likely to expect to see a woman than a fellow Hispanic become president. 

Some 59 percent said it is likely that a woman will be elected president sometime in the next two decades, while just 29 percent thought it likely that a Hispanic will be elected president over that period. And, 34 percent of non-citizen Hispanics thought the country is likely to have a Hispanic president, compared with 27 percent of citizens. 

A significant percentage of Latinos — 41 percent — said they are more likely to vote for a candidate who is Hispanic. 

The AP-Univision Poll was conducted from March 11 to June 3 by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago. Using a sample of Hispanic households provided by The Nielsen Company, 1,521 Hispanics were interviewed in English and Spanish, mostly by mail but also by telephone and the Internet. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Stanford University's participation in the study was made possible by a grant from The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Associated Press Polling Director Trevor Tompson, AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and AP writers Alan Fram and Ileana Morales in Washington and Christine Armario in Miami contributed to this report.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2010/07/27/politics/p000112D65.DTL

Entry #2,807

Man tries to open a grenade and boom

Man blows himself up trying to pry open grenade

July 27, 2010 • 11:06 am

Diana Fasanella

 

A Croatian man blew himself up after trying to pry apart a hand grenade he found while out walking.

The man, identified only as Marko S., found the grenade left from the 1991-95 Homeland War while walking in a field near his Knin home and decided to take it home to sell for scrap metal, the Croatian Times reports. 

The 53-year-old man was hacking into the live device with a grinder in his garage when it exploded.   

He was listed in serious condition after being taken to a local hospital.   

Stupidity blows.

Entry #2,805

Man hit by six meteorites is being 'targeted by aliens'

Tom Phillips - 19th July, 2010

Daily Mail

Man hit by six meteorites is being 'targeted by aliens'

A Bosnian man who claims he is being targeted by extraterrestrials after a series of meteorite strikes on his house has now been hit by a sixth space rock in the space of a few years.

Radivoje Lajic and one of the many space rocks of doom to have rained down upon his housed Radivoje Lajic and one of the many space rocks of doom to have rained down upon his house

 

Radivoje Lajic first came to international attention in 2008, shortly after the fifth meteorite had crashed into the roof of his house in the northern village of Gornji Lajici.

And now, within the past month, another rock has hit the roof of his house, in defiance of all the odds - making it six strikes since the plague of meteorites began in 2007.

Experts at Belgrade University have confirmed that all the falling rocks he has handed over were meteorites. They are now trying to work out what exactly it is about his house that particularly attracts them. The strikes always happen when it is raining heavily, he says, never when there are clear skies.

Lajic has his own explanation, of course. After the fifth rock struck his house, he said: 'I am obviously being targeted by extraterrestrials. I don't know what I have done to annoy them but there is no other explanation that makes sense. The chance of being hit by a meteorite is so small that getting hit six times has to be deliberate.'

50-year-old Lajic has had a steel girder reinforced roof put on the house to protect it from the alien bombardment - which he funded by selling one of the meteorites to a university in the Netherlands.

'I have no doubt I am being targeted by aliens,' he adds. 'They are playing games with me. I don't know why they are doing this. When it rains I can't sleep for worrying about another strike.'

Entry #2,804

Pentagon can't account for how it spent $2.6 billion in Iraqi funds

Pentagon can't account for how it spent $2.6 billion in Iraqi funds, audit finds

 

Ernesto Londoño
Washington Post staff writer
Tuesday, July 27, 2010

 

BAGHDAD -- Because of poor record-keeping and lax oversight, the Department of Defense cannot account for how it spent $2.6 billion that belonged to the Iraqi government, according to the inspector general for Iraq reconstruction. 

An audit of a $9.1 billion fund of Iraqi oil proceeds showed that most American military agencies entrusted with spending the money on reconstruction projects failed to adhere to U.S. rules on how such money must be tracked and spent, the inspector general found. 

U.S. officials failed to create bank accounts for $8.7 billion in the Development Fund for Iraq, as mandated by the Department of Treasury, creating "breakdowns in controls [that] left the funds vulnerable to inappropriate uses and undetected loss," according to the report, which is scheduled to be released Tuesday. 

The audit is the latest probe to fault the U.S. government for mismanagement of Iraqi funds in the years following the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003, which led to an insurgency and a years-long occupation. 

"Weak oversight is directly correlated to increased numbers of cases of theft and abuse, with the majority of convictions to date being traceable to the 2003-2004 time-frame where accounting practices were weakest," Stuart W. Bowen Jr., the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, said in an e-mail. 

The report also said the U.S. military continues to hold at least $34.3 million of the fund, even though it was required to return it to the Iraqi government in December 2007. 

In a written response to a draft of the audit, the Pentagon vowed to act on the inspector general's three recommendations to strengthen accounting mechanisms and dispose of the Iraqi money not yet relinquished. 

The Department of Defense comptroller promised to report back to the inspector general's office by November on progress made. 

"We look forward to seeing real results," Bowen said. 

The alleged mismanagement of the fund has angered Iraqi officials, who have raised the possibility of taking legal action against the United States, Bowen said. 

American officials with the Coalition Provisional Authority, the U.S.-led occupation administration, took control in 2003 of $20 billion of Iraqi government funds and obtained permission through a U.N. Security Council resolution to use the money for humanitarian assistance and reconstruction. 

After the June 2004 dissolution of the CPA, the Iraqi government agreed to let the U.S. military control the remaining funds. 

It revoked the authority on Dec. 31, 2007. 

The inspector general in 2005 criticized the CPA's management of an $8.8 billion fund that belonged to the Iraqi government. A criminal probe conducted by the inspector general then led to the conviction of eight U.S. officials on bribery, fraud and money-laundering charges. 

The latest audit does not include allegations of criminal conduct. 

The United States also has spent more than $50 billion in taxpayer money for reconstruction projects in Iraq.

Entry #2,803

Man tried to trade drugs for cheese

Palm Harbor man tried to trade drugs for cheeseburgers, deputies say

 

 

Martine Powers

Times Staff Writer

Jul 23, 2010 07:20 PM

 

mug_lemke.jpeg

Pinellas County Jail Alexander M. Lemke stole a car to go to McDonald's drive-through, where he tried to trade marijuana and pills for cheeseburgers. Nice plan, Alex.

 

PALM HARBOR — Alexander M. Lemke went for a drive to get some cheeseburgers from McDonald's early Friday, the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office says.

Trouble was, deputies said, the 20-year-old Palm Harbor resident broke into a neighbor's home and stole their 2005 Toyota Solara at about 1:25 a.m. Then, he headed to the McDonald's drive-through window at 33830 US 19 N, where he tried to trade marijuana and prescription drugs for the burgers, deputies said.

Authorities were called quickly and Lemke was arrested at 1:40 a.m. at McDonald's.

Deputies found a collection of drugs in the center console of the car, the arrest report said.

Lemke was charged with grand theft of a motor vehicle, driving with a license that is suspended or revoked and eight drug-related charges. On Friday evening, he was being held in the Pinellas County Jail in lieu of $18,550 bail.

ronald-mcdonald-is-arrested-in.jpeg

Entry #2,801