truesee's Blog

What does Bill Clinton want to do before he dies

Mon Jul 19, 9:20 am ET

What does Bill Clinton want to do before he dies?

Andrew Golis

 

Mon Jul 19, 9:20 am ET

It sounds like Bill Clinton is thinking of taking his post-presidency in a more cinematic direction. 

At the 18th International AIDS Conference on Monday, Clinton noted that he is now old enough to join Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson's fictional characters from "The Bucket List" in making a list of things to do before he dies. Clinton says he has an A-list of important things, and a B-list of "fun" things he could do without. 

On his A-list:

 

  • "I would like to live to see my own grandchildren." (His daughter, Chelsea, is getting married at the end of the month, so he may be on his way there.)
  • "I'd like to live to know that all the grandchildren of the world will have the chance in the not-too-distant future to live their own dreams and not die before their time."

 Over 33 million people live with HIV, and each year another 2.7 million cases are reported. Clinton is at the Vienna conference to help raise awareness and money to battle a disease that, though less in the national consciousness than it has been in years past, continues to devastate large parts of the world. 

On Clinton's lighter B-list:

 

  • "I'd like to climb Kilimanjaro before the snows melt." (Studies predict that climate change will melt the snow on the famous mountain within 20 years.)
  • "I'd like to run a marathon before I give out." (Clinton, famously a jogger as president, has had heart troubles in the last decade.)
Entry #2,740

Michael Jordan shares his disappointment of Heat Big Three

Jordan shares his disappointment of Heat Big Three

July 18, 2010
Ken Berger
CBSSports.com Senior Writer

    LAS VEGAS -- The latest Big Three backlash came Sunday from none other than Michael Jordan, who contributed his weighty opinion to the debate about whether LeBron James should've teamed up with two superstars instead of trying to beat them.
Michael Jordan preferred to face off against superstars like Larry Bird -- not play alongside them. (Getty Images)  
Michael Jordan preferred to face off against superstars like Larry Bird -- not play alongside them. (Getty Images)  

"There's no way, with hindsight, I would've ever called up Larry, called up Magic and said, 'Hey, look, let's get together and play on one team,'" Jordan said after finishing tied for 22nd in the American Century Championship golf tournament in Stateline, Nev. "But that's ... things are different. I can't say that's a bad thing. It's an opportunity these kids have today. In all honesty, I was trying to beat those guys."

Those last few words, said in an interview with NBC Sports, will resonate and hang over James all season, the way Jordan's legacy has hovered over the first seven years of his career. Clearly, I am not alone in believing that James broke ranks in a legacy-damaging way by teaming up with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh instead of trying to go through them in the eternal struggle for championships that the great players have always faced.

"Mike and I are in 100 percent agreement on this," Charles Barkley told the Arizona Republic this week. "If you're the two-time defending NBA MVP, you don't leave anywhere. They come to you. That's ridiculous. I like LeBron. He's a great player. But I don't think in the history of sports you can find a two-time defending MVP leaving to go play with other people."

Disappointment from their elders is only part of the backlash James and Wade -- more so than Bosh -- will face as they embark on their magical mystery tour. The other is that the Heat will be a bull's-eye for criticism, and easy for the competition to root against. This is something Wade addressed in an article published Sunday by AOL Fanhouse -- one in which he made an unfortunate comparison between the Heat losing a couple of games in a row and the collapse of the World Trade Center.

"We enjoy the bull's-eye," Wade said. "Plus, there's going to be times when we lose 2-3 games in a row, and it seems like the world has crashed down. You all are going to make it seem like the World Trade is coming down again, but it's not going to be nothing but a couple basketball games."

I have to assume that Wade didn't intend to equate losing basketball games to a murderous act of war against innocent civilians, but these are the kind of tone-deaf quotes you get sometimes in sports. And you get them in any era. It was Jordan, remember, who came across as a shameless, out-of-touch shoe salesman when he explained not endorsing a black Democrat for U.S. Senate in his home state of North Carolina by saying, "Republicans buy sneakers, too."

The point Wade was trying to make, I think -- and one he made poorly -- is that anything less than a championship for the Heat will be considered a failure. Along those lines, several GMs and personnel people I spoke with during Las Vegas Summer League aren't convinced that the Larry O'Brien Trophy should be shipped to South Beach just yet.

"The Lakers are still the better team," one executive said. "The question is, how are those guys [in Miami] going to fit together?"

Wade himself has acknowledged that the Lakers are still the team to beat, which is the only respectful way to go about it. The two-time defending champions are the two-time defending champions until somebody changes that. Personnel people digesting the impact of the Heat's Big Three, and the supporting cast assembled around them so far, shared two overriding opinions: 1) As difficult as it was for Tom Thibodeau to create a defensive scheme to combat LeBron or Wade while serving as the Celtics' defensive architect in Boston, it's going to be infinitely more difficult to stop both of them; and 2) As impressive as some of Miami's complementary signings have been, the pressure on the supporting cast to deliver -- which all championship supporting casts must do -- will be immense.

What if the Heat need Joel Anthony to knock down a couple of free throws in the final seconds of a road playoff game? What if they need Mike Miller to hit a contested 3-pointer from the corner in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals against Boston or Orlando?

"Mike Miller has never played in a game like that," one of the personnel execs said.

But in the end, the pressure will fall on the shoulders of Wade and James. How evenly they share the responsibility and the glory remains to be seen.

As for Jordan, he couldn't have summed up my feelings any better when it comes to the Miami Big Three -- the Dream Team or the Scheme Team, depending on your perspective. One executive scouting Summer League games told me he hadn't heard Jordan utter those words about Bird and Magic, but he didn't need to.

"When I brought the subject up, he was just typing on his Blackberry," the executive said. "And he was just shaking his head; you know, like when you're disappointed? He didn't say anything. He was just pecking away on his Blackberry."

He didn't say anything because he didn't have to.

"Exactly," the executive said.

Entry #2,739

Female bank robber stuck in entrance door

July 19, 2010

Female suspected in 7 bank robberies arrested

Baltimore Sun

A woman who used heavy makeup as a disguise and is suspected of robbing seven Baltimore area banks was arrested on Saturday when a teller hit a panic button, trapping her inside a vestibule until police arrived.

Special Agent Richard J. Wolf, a spokeswoman for the Baltimore FBI office, said the 27-year-old suspect became "extremely agitated" while stuck Saturday between the entrance way doors of the Madison Bank in the 6800 block of Harford Road.

Wolf identified the suspect as Darion Randle of Landsdown. She had been sought since early July after the FBI says six banks were robbed by a woman wearing a long black wig and used notes to threaten tellers that bank employees and customers would be injured if she didn't get money. Authorities say that female bank robbers are "rare."

Police say that they've linked four bank robberies in Baltimore County and three in the city to the woman.

The latest occured Saturday about 11 a.m. at the Madison Bank on Harford Road. Wolf said the woman -- who sometimes wore an Arab head covering, but not this time -- handed a teller a note and got money. The teller pushed the alarm button as the suspect left, trapping her in the vestibule.

A city police officer said cops rushed to get a picture of her before her makeup came off. Wolf said her makeup was melting in theheat. "She was extremely agitated," he said. ""She tried to bang the glass off. She pulled some weather stripping. Her make-up was running because of the heat. There was a lot of make-up."

Entry #2,738

Man tries to shoot wife but shoots son instead

Man accused of shooting teen son in Ocoee to face judge today

Rafael Rodriguez

 

Ocoee man Rafael Rodriguez, who is accused of shooting his teenage son in the ear, appears before a judge at the Orange County Jail on Monday. He faces attempted first-degree murder charges. (Orange County Jail, Orange County Jail / July 19, 2010)

 

Walter Pacheco

Orlando Sentinel

8:53 a.m. EDT

July 19, 2010

The Ocoee man accused of shooting his teenage son in the ear after attempting to shoot his wife will appear before a judge Monday afternoon.

Rafael Rodríguez, 44, is at the Orange County Jail on a charge of attempted first-degree murder with a firearm as well as a count of attempted first-degree murder.

He is scheduled to appear before Orange County Judge Deb Blechman sometime after 1:30 p.m.

Although Rodríguez is currently being held without bond, his initial appearance before a judge today will determine if there was probable cause for the arrest and if he can be released on a bond. Jail records show he is considered a violent offender.

Ocoee police investigators said the incident started after a heated argument between Rodríguez and his wife at their Palastro Way home Saturday night.

Records show Rodríguez had been drinking heavily that day and had become intoxicated and argumentative.

For some reason, he pulled out a .22-caliber semi-automatic pistol and pointed it at his wife. He did not fire the weapon. But their 17-year-old son, who was at home with his girlfriend, witnessed the alleged act and rushed to help his mother.

She told her son to keep away, but Rodríguez allegedly fired the weapon — striking his son behind the ear, police said.

Investigators said the woman struggled with her husband after the shooting and took his gun. Rodríguez left the house in the family car and was found passed out on the side of the road near Apopka on Sunday at 12:40 a.m.

Rescue crews transported the boy to Arnold Palmer Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, Det. David Gray of the Police Department said.

Court records show Rodríguez has a history of aggressive behavior and a domestic-violence arrest.

Ocoee police arrested him in 2009 on charges of aggravated assault with a firearm, domestic battery by strangulation and domestic violence battery.

The state dropped the case because his wife chose not to prosecute, court records show.

He also was arrested in 1998 on charges of resisting an officer without violence. The state also dropped that case.
Entry #2,736

Chicago police officer shot and killed 3rd in two months

Uniformed Chicago officer is shot, killed at South Side home after guarding Daley's house

Officer Michael Bailey — the third officer killed in two months — was cleaning his car at 6 a.m. when men approached and they exchanged gunfire, police say

 

 



Jeremy Gorner, Serena Maria Daniels and Caroline Kyungae Smith

Tribune reporters

10:09 p.m. CDT, July 18, 2010

 

The third Chicago police officer killed in the last two months was gunned down Sunday morning by attackers trying to rob him or steal his new Buick Regal, a gift the officer bought for himself in anticipation of his retirement, police said.

Officer Michael Bailey, 62, a 20-year veteran due to hang up his gun in weeks, was shot in front of his Park Manor home after an overnight shift guarding Mayor Richard Daley's house. Bailey, a married father of three, was about a month away from turning 63, the mandatory retirement age for Chicago police officers.

Bailey was in his uniform shining his prized black Buick when he was attacked about 6 a.m., a police source said. He identified himself as an officer before exchanging gunfire with at least one attacker, the source said, citing early reports.

Ryane and Angelece Cook, Bailey's neighbors, were already awake when they heard gunshots. She looked out the window but didn't see anything. Then the couple heard Bailey's daughter Jada screaming, "They shot my daddy! Somebody shot my daddy!"

Bailey's son, Michael, was home, grabbed one of his father's guns and ran outside to defend him, police said. It was unclear whether the son fired any shots at the attackers. A neighbor, Idella Jennings, said she saw him standing over his father yelling, "Daddy, get up!"

Bailey was lying on the ground in front of his car. Nearby was a bottle of Windex.

"He's had the car three weeks. Every time he came home, he wiped it down," said Angelece Cook, whose husband said he ran to Bailey after shooting and   felt his pulse.

The shooting took place about 6 a.m. in the 7400 block of South Evans Avenue, police said. Bailey was pronounced dead at 6:41 a.m. at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

At the scene later, there were as many as 17 police evidence markers, apparently showing the locations of shell casings and what appeared to be a handgun. Three guns were found at the scene, one of them belonging to Bailey, police said. Dozens of officers scoured the scene until early evening.

According to police bulletins, officers are seeking an older-model tan Ford pickup truck that may have bullet holes on the driver side. It was last seen heading south on Evans.

The killing marks the third shooting death of a Chicago officer in the last two months. On July 7, Officer Thor Soderberg was in uniform leaving a police facility in the Englewood neighborhood when he got into a struggle with a man who took his gun and shot him. On May 19, Officer Thomas Wortham IV, just back from a second tour in Iraq, was shot outside his parents' home in Chatham.

The Bailey and Wortham shootings have striking similarities. Wortham's killers also tried to rob him, attempting to steal his motorcycle. Wortham's father, a retired Chicago police officer, came to his son's aid. He retrieved his gun inside the home and shot at his son's assailants.

Ald. Freddrenna Lyle, 6th, who represents parts of Park Manor and the part of Chatham where Wortham was killed, said some residents have considered leaving the area.

"How do you convince people to stay in a community when you have armed police officers shot down?" Lyle said. "It's devastating. ... It's like a war out here. I never thought that in my life it would be this way."

Lyle said the problems in the community are a result of the loss of the blue-collar jobs and the inadvertent effects of tearing down public-housing high rises and sending their occupants into neighborhoods where they have fewer nearby resources.

Bailey was assigned to the Central District and had been stationed overnight at the mayor's home.

"This is a tragic, stunning reminder of the senseless violence that stalks too many of our neighborhoods," Daley said in a statement. "Another Chicago police officer gunned down, this time just weeks before leaving a long career of protecting Chicago. It's absolutely outrageous. … I knew him. He was a good man. He did not deserve this."

Bailey dedicated his life to public service, his family said, noting that he was a firefighter before he became an officer.

Friends and family described Bailey as a soft-spoken gentleman. He reportedly lived in his Park Manor home for more than 25 years and was considered an elder on the block.

"Everyone respected him," said Howard Davis, 34, who grew up on the street. "He was a cool, mellow guy."

Bailey, vice president of the 74th Street Evans block club, was helping plan a block party for senior citizens. Members of the club were concerned about the three abandoned two-story homes on the block.

Ryane Cook, the president of the club, said he and Bailey talked daily about how to respond to the area's recent violence and crime.

"Being a Chicago police officer, he gave us a lot of insight on getting trespassers arrested, filing complaints," Cook said.

Bailey also tried to keep kids in the neighborhood busy by teaching them martial arts in his yard, Cook said.

He was a "great Zen master" who practiced tai chi, said Stephanie Tatum, who has known Bailey since they were classmates at Chicago State University. He was the godfather of her two sons.

Other residents said Bailey was an inspiration in the community.

"Back in high school, I could have gone two different ways," said Vincent Dove, 32, of Dolton, who grew up a few houses away from Bailey. "He'd tell me that my mom worked too hard for me not to go to school."

Dove heeded the officer's advice and went to college.

Bailey's children and his wife, Pamela, called friends and family Sunday morning shortly after the shooting to tell them what happened. John Holmes, Pamela Bailey's cousin, said, "She's pretty torn up."

"It's a flip of the coin when you walk out of your house," said Holmes, a retired police officer. "Everyone's sad about this. This is happening too frequently."

Mark Donahue, president of the police union, called Bailey's death a "great loss."

"The frequency which we are experiencing this is extremely disturbing, but it does go along with what's happening in our communities," Donahue said. "It's unfortunate. Times have come where we have to readjust with how we police, to bring situations like this to an end."

Bailey's death was "heartbreaking," especially given Bailey's years on the force, Officer Kevin Brown told WGN-TV. The Central District already had plans under way for Bailey's retirement party.

Officers who worked with Bailey told WGN-TV that he loved his job so much that he would not have been retiring if he weren't required by law to do so. They said Bailey always went out of his way to pass along knowledge to younger officers — and he was affectionately known as "old-timer."

Police Superintendent Jody Weis was out of town Sunday tending to the affairs of a family member who recently died, a police spokesman said.

Beatrice Cuello, assistant police superintendent for administration, spoke Sunday morning outside Northwestern Memorial before a police motorcade took the officer's body to the medical examiner's office.

"Words cannot express the shock, sorrow and outrage we feel at the loss of a Chicago police officer. This is the third brave officer killed since May," she said. "The job of being a police officer is incredibly rewarding each day we have the opportunity to make a difference in the lives of others. At the same time, being a Chicago police officer is incredibly dangerous, and it is the risk we accept without hesitation because of the overwhelming commitment to public service."

She said the latest officers killed "embodied the commitment to public service and the willingness to sacrifice their lives protecting all of us."

 

LINK TO PHOTO GALLERY

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-100718-police-officer-killed-pictures,0,7949796.photogallery

Tribune reporters Hal Dardick, Carlos Sadovi, Annie Sweeney, Liam Ford, Andrew L. Wang, John Byrne, Daarel Burnette II and WGN-TV reporter Randi Belisomo contributed, and Tribune reporter Kristen Mack wrote this report.

Entry #2,735

Obama fears BP cap still leaking oil into Gulf

President Obama's man in Gulf of Mexico questions BP, sparking fear that oil well is still leaking

Helen Kennedy
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

 

Monday, July 19th 2010, 4:00 AM

 

The news that BP had successfully capped the well that had spewed millions of gallons of crude since a deadly April 20 rig explosion now seems premature.

 

Martin/APThe news that BP had successfully capped the well that had spewed millions of gallons of crude since a deadly April 20 rig explosion now seems premature.

 

 

The government's top official overseeing the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster sparked fears Sunday night that crude is continuing to seep from the crippled well. 

Retired U.S. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said tests revealed oil leaking a "distance from the well and undetermined anomalies at the wellhead." 

The news came just days after it appeared BP had successfully capped the well that had spewed millions of gallons of crude since a deadly April 20 rig explosion. 

In a letter to Bob Dudley,  BP managing director, Allen asked the petroleum giant to ready plans to reopen the 75-ton cap to relieve pressure on the well. 

"I direct you to provide me a written procedure for opening the choke valve as quickly as possible without damaging the well should hydrocarbon seepage near the wellhead be confirmed," Allen wrote in the letter. 

Opening the choke valve would cause oil to flow into the gulf again. But scientists say that opening it would prevent another major leak that might be even more difficult to seal. 

Allen demanded BP fork over records and documentation of tests the company is running on the cap it put on the damaged wellhead last week. 

"Monitoring of the seabed is of paramount importance during the test period," Allen wrote. "As the national incident commander, I must remain abreast of the status of your source control efforts." 

BP officials had no comment on Allen's letter except to say the company is "continuing to work very closely with the government." 

Earlier yesterday, Doug Suttles, BP's chief operating officer, said the company planned to keep the cap in place, stopping the flow of oil, until the drilling of a relief well is finished next month. The relief well is supposed to kill the troubled well for good. 

Meanwhile, a British newspaper reported yesterday that BP is discussing plans to downsize. 

The Sunday Times of London reported that directors at the oil giant once known as British Petroleum had been discussing a dramatic restructuring of the company with major shareholders. 

Options reportedly include selling off the firm's refineries and gas stations, turning it into a far smaller company that would focus primarily on exploration in emerging oil regions in Africa and Latin America.

 http://www.nydailynews.com/video/index.html?eCode=5zczRnMToYBSUoW9vNPuuE8OzU0Dkbst&dCode=Z1eDRoMTodOdEAi3c25NXTAv31YkNSeX

Entry #2,733

Glenn Beck: Michelle Obama's Oil Spill Outfit Was An 'Outrage'

Glenn Beck: Michelle Obama's Oil Spill Outfit Was An 'Outrage' (VIDEO)


First Posted: 07-16-10 07:24 AM   |   Updated: 07-16-10 08:09 AM

Glenn Beck chided First Lady Michelle Obama for her recent oil spill outfit on Thursday's "The O'Reilly Factor." FLOTUS wore a white top with black splotches on it and white capris, which was, according to Beck, "the most Marie Antoinette of anything with Michelle Obama....Who pulls this dress out of the closet and is like, 'you know, I think I'm going to do a tour of the oil spill?'" We didn't think much of it because that type of print is incidentally in this season and for fall, but Beck, a budding fashionista, called Michelle's outfit an "outrage."

Thanks to Daily Intel!

WATCH:  http://videos.nymag.com/video/Glenn-Beck-Calls-Michelle-Obama

Entry #2,731

Tea Party Express leader kicked out over 'Colored People' letter

Tea Party Express leader Mark Williams kicked out over 'Colored People' letter

Helen Kennedy
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

 

Sunday, July 18th 2010, 4:18 PM

 

Tea Party Express leader Mark Williams has offered up insulting rants regarding the proposed mosque at Ground Zero.

Nelson/APTea Party Express leader Mark Williams has offered up insulting rants regarding the proposed mosque at Ground Zero.

Mark Williams, the flamethrower leading the battle against the Ground Zero mosque, was kicked out of the National Tea Party Federation Saturday for a racist blog post. 

He shrugged off the diss, calling it "grandstanding" from a "minor player on the fringe." 

A California radio host and leader of the Tea Party Express, Williams had labeled the Manhattan boro president a "Jewish Uncle Tom" and President Obama an "Indonesian Muslim turned welfare thug." 

But when he posted a satirical letter supposedly from "the Colored People" to President Lincoln praising slavery, that apparently crossed the line. 

The federation, an umbrella organization that claims to represent 85 Tea Party groups, kicked out Williams' group when it wouldn't fire him.

"We have expelled Tea Party Express and Mark Williams from the National Tea Party Federation because of the letter that he wrote," federation spokesman David Webb said on CBS's "Face the Nation." 

He called the letter - written after the NAACP called on Tea Party leaders to oust racists from their ranks - "clearly offensive." 

In the voice of slaves, Williams wrote: "Mr. Lincoln, you were the greatest racist ever. We had a great gig. Three squares, room and board, all our decisions made by the massa in the house. 

"We Coloreds have taken a vote and decided that we don't cotton to that whole emancipation thing. Freedom means having to work for real, think for ourselves, and take consequences along with the rewards. That is just far too much to ask of us Colored People and we demand that it stop!" 

He went on to say blacks don't want taxes cut because "how will we Colored People ever get a wide screen TV in every room if non-coloreds get to keep what they earn?" 

In a press release, the National Tea Party Federation says it ordered the Tea Party Express to kick Williams out and say so "prominently" on their Website. They did not.

Williams' response: who's the National Tea Party Federation anyway?
 
"There are internal political dramas amongst the various self-anointed tea party 'leaders' and some of the minor players on the fringes see the Tea Party Express and Mark Williams as tickets to a booking on Face the Nation," he said. 
"There is no tea party leadership; every tea partier is a tea party leader." 

The federation says it represents more than a million activists in 85 groups.

Williams' Tea Party Express is one of the most influential in the conservative movement. It has reportedly raised $2.3 million this year, helped elect Sen. Scott Brown in Massachusetts and organized a rally in Nevada that featured a rare Sarah Palin speech. 

Williams stepped down as chairman last month to concentrate on leading the fight against the proposed Lower Manhattan mosque, which he called a monument to the 9/11 attackers to "worship the terrorists' monkey-god." 

He called Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, who backs building the mosque, a "Jewish Uncle Tom who would have turned rat on Anne Frank." 

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2010/07/18/2010-07-18_tea_party_express_leader_mark_williams_expelled_over_colored_people_letter.html#ixzz0u5BaBVcD

Entry #2,730

Handcuffed prisoner opens police car and escapes

Search continues for handcuffed man who escaped from police car

Ridgh Genesis Achille, 19, had just been arrested on a charge of shoplifting a pair of sunglasses from Altamonte Mall.

Ridgh Achille

Ridgh Achille, 19, escaped from the back of a police car as he was being transported to the SEminole County Jail. (Seminole County Sheriff's Office / July 17, 2010)

 

 

 



Susan Jacobson,

Orlando Sentinel 7:09 p.m. EDT, July 17, 2010

Law enforcement officers have called off the dogs and the helicopter, but they continue to search for a man who escaped from a police car Friday evening as he was being transported to jail.

A handcuffed Ridgh Genesis Achille, 19, escaped from the car after telling the officer behind the wheel that he was claustrophobic and couldn't breathe, Altamonte Springs police said. It's not uncommon for the air to get stuffy in the back of a patrol car, they said.

Achille had been arrested on a shoplifting charge at the Altamonte Mall about 8 p.m. and was being taken to the Seminole County Jail when the officer opened the window slightly, Altamonte Springs Lt. Derrick Becton said.

Somehow, the prisoner opened the door from the outside and ran off at County Home Road, near Flea World and the jail in Sanford 

Seminole County deputies and Altamonte Springs police officers, aided by dogs and a helicopter, looked in vain for Achille into Saturday morning. He will be rearrested on an escape charge, Becton said.

Achille was caught on the outskirts of the mall after he stole a pair of sunglasses from Solstice Sunglass Boutique, police said. There also is a warrant for his arrest out of Orange County on a burglary charge, they said.

Achille is awaiting trial on 2009 Orange County charges of burglary of a dwelling, theft and resisting arrest, court records show. In January, he pleaded no contest to resisting arrest in Orange County after initially being charged with aggravated battery on a pregnant woman, witness tampering, false imprisonment and resisting arrest.

When he escaped, Achille was wearing a blue plaid or checked shirt with tight black jeans and tennis shoes. He is black, has a shaved head and a goatee, Becton said.
Entry #2,729

Sarah Palin Puts Stamp on G.O.P. Primaries

July 17, 2010

Palin Puts Stamp on G.O.P. Primaries

 

 

JEFF ZELENY 

NY TIMES

 

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. — The latest candidate to win the most coveted Republican prize of the election year stood on the steps of a gazebo here and reminded voters of a new reason to support her in the crowded race for Georgia governor. 

“Sarah Palin has come on board,” the candidate, Karen Handel, told a group of supporters who gathered Friday on the grounds of the Gwinnett Historic Courthouse. As they broke into applause, she added: “It means one thing. We’re winning.” 

Last week, Ms. Handel became at least the 50th candidate to win the Palin seal of approval. Through a breezy 194 words posted on Ms. Palin’s Facebook page — calling Ms. Handel a “pro-life, pro-Constitutionalist with a can-do attitude” — a four-way Republican primary came alive, the latest in a number of races across the country that have been influenced by Ms. Palin. 

One year after leaving public office behind, defiantly stepping down as governor of Alaska to become a best-selling author and a television celebrity, Ms. Palin has waded deeply back into electoral politics, and she plans to increase her visibility on the campaign trail after Labor Day. 

That she is leaving a major footprint on the 2010 midterm elections is not disputed, but less clear is whether the endorsements are rooted in an effort to amplify her image or to create a political strategy for the future. 

When her organization, SarahPAC, filed its quarterly financial report last week, it prompted renewed speculation about her political ambitions for 2012. She raised $866,000 and donated $87,500 to Republican candidates — the biggest tallies in both categories since she opened the political action committee last year, but hardly exceptional for a prospective presidential candidate. 

After parting ways with Senator John McCain following the 2008 presidential race, Ms. Palin did not receive the list of campaign donors she had helped build, so her aides have been creating her own roster, a critical ingredient to a future political bid. More than half of her contributions have come from California, Florida, New York, Tennessee and Texas, but she received donations from all 50 states. 

She has extended many of her endorsements to women, whom she refers to as “Mama Grizzlies.” (One exception is Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, whose male opponent Ms. Palin endorsed.) But some of her decisions have been met with resistance from social conservatives who argue that her selections are guided by politics over principle. 

In Iowa, conservative Christians criticized her for passing over their candidate in favor of a former governor, Terry Branstad. 

And the biggest furor so far has erupted here, with a leader of an anti-abortion group, Georgia Right to Life, accusing Ms. Palin of “endorsing any female Republican candidate that she could find.” Rival candidates complained that Ms. Palin was backing the most liberal Republican in the race. 

Ms. Handel, a former Georgia secretary of state, dismissed the matter as petty politics on Friday as her bus tour passed through Lawrenceville, about 30 miles east of Atlanta. She said her fellow Republicans “would be equally as thrilled to have Sarah Palin’s endorsement as I have been.” 

But worried about the fallout in the days leading up to the primary on Tuesday, she turned to Ms. Palin for validation.

“The primary is really close, so Karen’s opponents are kind of saying those crazy things about her,” Ms. Palin said in a phone message to thousands of Georgia voters. “Please just get the truth for yourself.” 

Ms. Palin has offered her long-distance support to Ms. Handel and other candidates, but her campaign appearances have been rare. She has delivered a few policy addresses in recent months and seemed to be moving beyond the family drama that often enveloped her. 

That changed last week, when her daughter Bristol announced on the cover of Us Weekly that she was engaged to her former boyfriend, Levi Johnston, stirring a reminder of the circus-like atmosphere that accompanied the Palins’ arrival on the national scene two years ago. 

Ms. Palin devotes the majority of her time to her own projects, including appearances as a commentator on Fox News and work on a second book, “America by Heart: Reflections on Family, Faith and Flag,” to be released in November. She is in a position to exert tremendous influence at the grass-roots level without engaging in the give and take of regular campaigning or relinquishing her earning power. 

Still, Republican candidates across the country continue to clamor for her support, even if it is unlikely that she will ever arrive in their districts for a rally. 

Like other national political figures, Ms. Palin has been supporting candidates all year, a mix of Tea Party enthusiasts like Rand Paul of Kentucky and establishment Republicans. But her endorsements did not gain much notice until she weighed in on the South Carolina governor’s race, helping to vault Nikki Haley from the bottom rung of candidates to the winner of the Republican nomination last month. 

For most candidates, Palin endorsements arrive as if they are a gift from a secret Santa, with words of support suddenly popping up on Facebook without notice. She reached a New York Congressional candidate, Ann Marie Buerkle, at home last week, telling her that an endorsement had been posted online. 

“She was just lovely,” recalled Ms. Buerkle, whose race has been ignored by party leaders. “She made us legitimate.” 

When Ms. Palin announced her backing of Mary Fallin in the Oklahoma governor’s contest, the other Republican in the race testily denounced the endorsement. That candidate, Randy Brogdon, declared, “Stop acting like you are owed the governor’s mansion, and stop hiding behind the skirt of Sarah Palin.” 

Ms. Fallin, a two-term member of Congress who would be the first woman to be governor of Oklahoma, dismissed the criticism from her opponent as sexist. 

“Sarah is at the top of my list to receive an endorsement from,” Ms. Fallin said in an interview. “Even a lot of Democrats and independents admire her spunk and her willingness to stand up for what she believes and say what’s on her mind.” 

While the endorsements often land as a surprise — in Iowa, Mr. Branstad did not get the word until Ms. Palin called his campaign headquarters — increasingly the decisions are less spontaneous than they may appear. 

Her choices in governors’ races have hewed closely to preferred candidates of the Republican Governors Association, including in Iowa, where the presidential race begins. And after a long stretch in which most Republican operatives had no idea how to reach Ms. Palin, a formal structure has taken shape and a researcher on her staff reviews information candidates provide in a quest to earn her support. 

“SarahPAC is trying to be in a position to have the resources for the governor to do whatever she wants between now and November 2010,” said Tim Crawford, treasurer of the committee. 

Fred Malek, a Republican fund-raiser who is a friend and supporter of Ms. Palin, said it would be incorrect to view her role in the midterm elections through the prism of the 2012 presidential race. 

Mr. Malek said she does not seek his counsel — nor that of any other Republican establishment figure — in deciding whether to support a candidate. “She carefully watches what’s going on in the political world and makes decisions based on who she thinks deserves support,” he said. 

Indeed, the endorsements provide little evidence that she is moving closer to a presidential run. A willingness to inject herself into so many primary fights and frustrate the supporters of the candidates she overlooks is a risky way of building establishment support.

In conversations with Republicans in recent months — including at a rally Ms. Palin held with Mr. McCain in Arizona, at the Southern Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans and at campaign events here in Georgia — voters often give Ms. Palin high marks. But asked whether they believe she should run for president, few say yes. 

Judy Pruitt, a 70-year-old retiree in Lawrenceville, said she came to see Ms. Handel partly because of the Palin endorsement. But she had a swift answer when asked if she would welcome a 2012 Palin campaign. 

“I’m not sure she’s ready for the presidency,” she said. “I do like listening to her, and I respect her views on things. But I think she can have more of an impact if she’s not running. I really do.” 

 

Derek Willis contributed research. 

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Obama: Hold me accountable for high unemployment

Obama: Hold me accountable for high unemployment

 

Jordan Fabian
The Hill
07/16/10 11:05 AM ET
 

President Obama said in an interview Friday that voters should hold him accountable for the struggling economy, but that his policies are restoring it to health. 

Obama welcomed voters to judge his administration’s work on the economy as the November midterm elections approach. The economy and jobs consistently poll as the number one issue for voters. 

“If somebody’s out of work right now, the only answer that I’m going to have for them is when they get a job. Up until that point, from their perspective, the economic policies aren’t working well enough,” he said in an interview with NBC News. “That’s my job — as president — is to take responsibility for moving us in the right direction.” 

Though polls show that the voters are worried about the state of the economy and high unemployment, Obama used the interview to express confidence about his policies and contrast them with Republican ideas. 

Obama said he is responsible for instilling the recovery, but stressed that policies enacted by previous GOP-controlled Republicans and former President George W. Bush left the economy in a recession.

“What I’m absolutely convinced of is that we’re going to have a choice, not just in November but for years to come,” he said. “We can go back to all the same policies that got us into this mess, where we basically provide special interest loopholes, we don’t regulate Wall Street, we have a healthcare system that’s out of control, we provide tax cuts to folks who don’t need them and weren’t asking for them.”

Democrats are stepping up efforts to draw a sharp contrast between themselves and the Republicans as they head into a challengeing election. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs stirred up his own party this week when he acknowledged a GOP takeover of Congress was possible.

Asked about Gibbs’s comments, Obama said: “This is going to be a choice between the policies that got us into this mess and my policies that are getting us out of this mess.”

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) responded on Twitter "POTUS on NBC News: 'I expect to be held accountable on jobs'; Where are the jobs?"

With unemployment still hovering at 9.5 percent, Obama said he would not be surprised if there is a backlash at the polls.

“What I’m prepared is to be held accountable for the policies that I put in place. But Americans don’t have selective memory here. They’re going to remember the policies that got us into this mess, as well. And they sure as heck don’t want to go back to those.”

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Police wins week off for time he spends dressing

Cop wins week off work for time spent dressing

German police officer says he lost 15 minutes a day putting on his uniform

 
MSNBC
updated 7/14/2010 11:59:34 AM ET
A police officer in Germany has won an extra week off work every year because of the 15 minutes it takes him to dress for duty each day, according to news reports.

Martin Schauder, 44, worked out how long he spent putting on his undershirt, overshirt, trousers, belt, handcuffs, weapon and gas canister, tunic, boots, protective kneepads — when on riot control — hat and gloves, the U.K.'s Daily Telegraph reported. 

The officer, who joined the force at 16, is said to have argued with his superior officers for a number of months, asking for time off or a pay increase to compensate him for 45 hours spent dressing each year. 

They refused, but he won the argument when he took his case to an administrative court in Munster, north-west Germany, the Telegraph said. 

The U.K.'s Guardian newspaper, citing Germany's Münstersche Zeitung, said Schauder told the court: "If my shift starts at 1 p.m., say, I'm expected to be completely fitted out by then, including my pistol, handcuffs and reserve weapon, otherwise I face being cautioned." 

Test case for hundreds
His case was was a test complaint for more than 120 police officers in Munster and a further 1,000 in North Rhine-Westphalia, the Guardian said, but Schauder's employers will be able to appeal to a higher court. 

The Guardian said it was unclear whether Schauder would receive back payment for his 28 years in the force or a holiday of six months.

 

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