truesee's Blog

Woman fakes pregnancy stabs couple to kidnap baby

Indiana woman Stephanie Foster attempts to kidnap baby, stabs husband and wife

Aliyah Shahid
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

 

Thursday, June 24th 2010, 1:55 PM

 

Stephanie Foster, 34, of Terre Haute, Ind. stabbed a husband and wife in attempt to kidnap their son.
HANDOUT

Stephanie Foster, 34, of Terre Haute, Ind. stabbed a husband and wife in attempt to kidnap their son.

 

This is not what most people think of when they ask, “Where do babies come from?” 

An Indiana woman acted like she was pregnant for nine months, then stabbed a couple in an attempt to steal their newborn son and pass him off as her own, police said today. 

Stephanie Foster, 34, was arrested yesterday 10 miles from her hometown of Terre Haute after police received a phone call from Ashley Speers reporting she was being attacked. 

Foster, who had a history of miscarriages, pretended she was pregnant because she didn’t want her husband to know. As her faux due date approached, Foster decided to attack Spears after finding her birth announcement in a newspaper. 

Marvel said Foster showed up at the Speers’ home yesterday “with no intent to hurt the couple at all.” She asked to use their phone, dialed a random number and then hung up. She then went to her car, grabbed a toy pistol and came back to the house. 

Foster brandished a knife and began to stab Ashley, while her husband was asleep in the next room, police said. Her husband, Michael, heard the vicious attack, woke up and was stabbed himself before cops arrived. 

Ashley Speers was in stable condition and had stab wounds on her arms and back. Her husband was treated for cuts to his arms and legs and was eventually released. 

Foster was to appear in court this afternoon. She could face a slew of charges including attempted murder, aggravated battery and attempted criminal confinement. 

The Speers’ son was unharmed and slept in his crib throughout the attack.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2010/06/24/2010-06-24_indiana_woman_stephanie_foster_attempts_to_kidnap_baby_stabs_husband_and_wife_.html#ixzz0rnNSBlNU

Entry #2,545

Inmates illegally received $9,000,000 in home buyer credits

Thursday, 06.24.10

 

HOUSING

Inmates got home-buyer tax credits

 

Although they were in no position to buy homes, 1,300 inmates managed to take advantage of a popular federal tax credit.

STEPHEN OHLEMACHER

Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Living in prison didn't stop nearly 1,300 inmates -- 241 of them serving life sentences -- from cashing in on a popular tax break for first-time home buyers, a government investigator reported Wednesday. Their take: more than $9 million.

In all, more than 14,100 tax filers wrongly received at least $26.7 million in tax credits meant to boost the nation's slumping housing markets, said the report by J. Russell George, the Treasury Department's inspector general for tax administration.

A common scam had multiple taxpayers using the sale of a single home, with each claiming the credit. One home was used by 67 tax filers, the report said. In other cases, taxpayers got credit for sales that happened before the tax break started.

``This is very troubling,'' George said. ``Congress created and modified the home-buyer credit to stimulate the economy and help taxpayers achieve the American dream, not to line the pockets of wrongdoers.''

The Internal Revenue Service said it is taking steps to get the money back. The agency noted that more than 2.6 million taxpayers claimed the tax credit through April -- claiming $18.7 billion in credits -- with only a tiny fraction going to prison inmates or other scofflaws.

``The IRS will follow up on every instance of an improper prisoner payment and take swift and appropriate enforcement actions,'' the IRS said in a statement.

The report blemishes an otherwise popular tax break that was sweetened once by President Barack Obama's economic recovery package and again when Congress extended it into the spring. The National Association of Realtors said the tax credit has generated a million new home sales that wouldn't have happened otherwise.

``Last year, we learned that children and persons who did not purchase homes were fraudulently claiming the first-time home-buyer credit,'' said Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., chairman of the House Ways and Means oversight subcommittee. ``Although I am pleased that the fraud identified earlier does not continue, I am concerned about prisoners claiming the credit.''

The IG report estimates that 2,555 taxpayers wrongly received $17.6 million in tax credits for homes that were bought before the credit was enacted. An estimated 10,282 taxpayers wrongly received credits for homes that were also used by other taxpayers to claim the credit. Investigators were unable to quantify the amount they received, ``but all indications are that the total will be in the tens of millions of dollars,'' the IG's office said in a statement.

Investigators found 87 IRS employees who may have improperly claimed the credit; the review was ongoing.



Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/24/1697080/inmates-got-home-buyer-tax-credits.html#ixzz0rlw9LAT6

Entry #2,543

Burglar leaves behind birth certificate

Police say Pa. church burglar left behind birth certificate after break-in

 

June 23, 2010

 

Associated Press

 

YORK, Pa.

 

YORK, Pa. (AP) — Police said a man who stole petty cash from a central Pennsylvania church is in custody after leaving his birth certificate behind when he left. Authorities said 28-year-old Allen Larry Dawes has been extradited to York County to faces charges after being arrested earlier this month in New Jersey. 

Investigators said Dawes broke into First St. John's Church in York on May 11. Police said Dawes spent the night sleeping in a hallway and ate cereal from a pantry that holds food for the needy. 

Officials said Dawes has no fixed address. He was being held on $16,000 bail at York County Prison on charges including burglary and institutional vandalism. It was not clear if he had an attorney.

Entry #2,542

Shoplifting Charge Nets Life Sentence

Shoplifting Charge Nets Life Sentence

Habitual criminal off the streets permanently

Dennis Turner

 

June 23, 2010

 

Southaven, MS - FAST FACTS

  • Mississippi law requires life sentence after 3 felony convictions
  • 4 sent away in DeSoto so far in 2010
  • "Dozens" more awaiting same fate


Southaven, MS

6/23/2010

Life in prison for a shoplifting charge might sound a little extreme, but that's the sentence a Memphis man got after getting caught in the web of Mississippi's justice system.

His long record got him classified as a "habitual offender" and a judge sentenced him to three consecutive life terms.

Darnell Wilson made one trip to Mississippi and became a life-long resident. Not because he liked the area so much, it's because he committed three felonies, got caught, and faced a much less tolerant justice system that's putting him behind bars for good.

Darnell Wilson chose the wrong place to commit a crime. He'll soon be on a prison bus headed for a lifetime behind bars, on a shoplifting charge.
 
It's something that some find rather shocking. "I think that they should have to do quite a bit of time but I don't know about life sentence." said Jessica Riley of Olive Branch.

Law officers say Mississippi is far less tolerant than some places when it comes to repeat offenders.

Down here, it's three strikes and you're out. For good "No matter the cause if you have the three felonies prior, if you come here and you commit another felony, you're going to get life in prison in this state." said Southaven Police Chief Tom Long.

That's just the case with Darnell Wilson.

The road to Wilson's life sentence begins at the Kohl's store in Southaven. Employees reportedly spotted him shoplifting and called police.

Store surveillance cameras caught him in the act.

Police narrowly escaped injury as he got away, speeding down crowded Goodman and Airways roads during rush hour, before officers finally stopped him.

Police found stolen items in his car, charged him with three felonies and then learned about his long record in Tennessee.

"In this particular case, Darnell Wilson, between 1985 and 2009 had eighteen arrests, ten convictions, four felonies and six prior felonies that were reduced to misdemeanors to make up his ten convictions. Somebody, he should have learned by then." said Assistant District Attorney Smith Murphy.

So police and prosecutors made an example out of him, hoping to send a message to other criminals, and the public.

"So before they come to Mississippi, they think about it and that keeps crime away." "Does that make you feel safer?" "Makes me feel a lot safer." said Riley.

"The message is very simple. You know, if you're gonna commit a felony you better keep you stupid self in a state that lets you get away with 'em." added Long.

Wilson's not the first in DeSoto to face this fate. Four others went before him just this year, and Murphy tells me he's got dozens waiting in line to go before a judge, and maybe off to prison, for life.   


 

LINK TO VIDEO 

http://www.wreg.com/videobeta/049d1c21-e568-4bce-9924-ee51246ac6d1/News/Shoplifting-Life-Sentence

Entry #2,541

Lawyer arrested for bringing loaded gun to courthouse

ajc.com

 

Two people busted with guns at Fulton courthouse

 

Ty Tagami

 

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

 

5:33 p.m. Wednesday, June 23, 2010

 

Two people were arrested in separate and apparently unrelated incidents Wednesday when they tried to pass through Fulton County courthouse security with handguns. 

The first case involved an Atlanta lawyer who was toting a loaded .380 Sig Sauer in a leather bag. The second involved a woman with a handgun and bullets in her purse as she entered the courthouse to seek a temporary protection order. 

"This is highly unusual," said Tracy Flanagan, a spokeswoman for Fulton Sheriff Ted Jackson. "We are glad that our people are seeing these things when they come through." 

In both cases, courthouse security spotted the guns using scanning machines. 

The lawyer, Kirby Turnage, 74, placed his brown leather bag on the conveyor belt to the scanner Wednesday morning. He later told deputies that he forgot the gun was in the bag, Flanagan said. 

Later, around 2 p.m., Michelle Edwards-Webb, 39, was caught with an unloaded .380 Cobra and seven rounds in her purse, Flanagan said. The Douglasville woman was entering the courthouse to file for a temporary protection order, Flanagan said. 

Each will face the same felony charges, Flanagan said: carrying a concealed weapon, carrying a weapon into a public gathering and carrying a weapon without a license. Neither had a conceal carry permit, she added. 

Turnage is a member in "good standing" with the Georgia Bar Association, according to the organization's Web site. He was admitted to the Georgia Bar in 1964. 

Messages left at his Peachtree Street law office and on his cellphone were not returned. Edwards-Webb could not be reached for comment. 

The two incidents mark the second and third time since last month that courthouse security has captured someone trying to bring a handgun into the downtown Atlanta building. 

On May 13, Douglas Fitzgerald, 43, of Cantonment, Fla., was accused of placing a leather bag containing a .44-caliber Magnum with six hollow point bullets into the scanner. 

He was charged with carrying a concealed weapon, carrying a deadly weapon and carrying a pistol without a license, and was released from the county jail on an $8,000 bond. 

On June 3, there was another incident involving a man with multiple bladed weapons. 

Reuel D. Channey, 27, was charged with seven counts of bringing a deadly weapon to a public gathering, after he brought a bag into the courthouse loaded with four machetes, an exotic knife and a broken knife he was using to bookmark a Bible, Flanagan said. 

Channey, who remains in jail, reportedly asked a deputy at the security checkpoint to hold his bag while he entered the courthouse to determine whether he had any outstanding warrants. When the deputy refused, Channey put the bag through the scanner. 

Flanagan said Channey would not have faced charges had he left the courthouse instead. 

Courthouse security has been an issue in Fulton since 2005, when Brian Nichols, a suspect in custody, beat a deputy and grabbed her gun. He then killed a judge, a court reporter, another deputy and, later, a federal agent. 

The four arrests came soon after Jackson reopened several courthouse entrances that he had closed. The entrances were reopened after judges complained about long lines at one entry.

 

LINK TO PHOTO OF LAWYER

 http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/two-people-busted-with-555809.html

 

Entry #2,540

The longest game in tennis history has come to a stop -- for now at 59-59

 

Meena Hartenstein
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

 John Isner's Wimbledon marathon match suspended as American tied with Nicolas Mahut, 59-59

Wednesday, June 23rd 2010, 4:57 PM

 

The match between John Isner and Nicolas Mahut became the longest in Grand Slam history.
Finney/Getty

The match between John Isner and Nicolas Mahut became the longest in

Grand Slam history

 

 Mahut is exhausted after playing for 10 hours.

 

Alastair GrantMahut is exhausted after playing for 10 hours.

 

The longest game in tennis history has come to a stop -- for now. 

John Isner of Tampa, Fla., and Nicolas Mahut of France, who have been battling it out on the lawns at Wimbledown for over two days, will resume their epic match again Thursday. 

The match was suspended Wednesday night at 59-all, due to darkness.

This is the second time the match has been suspended – it was first paused on Tuesday night because of darkness after four sets, and resumed Wednesday. Isner and Mahut played more than 80 games in the fifth set alone. 

The first-round match, which has gone on more than 9 1/2 hours, broke the record of 6 hours, 33 minutes, set in a 2004 French Open match. 

Isner and Mahut have played a total of 118 games so far. 

With News Wire Service 

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/more_sports/2010/06/23/2010-06-23_longest_tennis_match_in_history_suspended_due_to_darkness_at_wimbledon.html#ixzz0riKaS6R3

Entry #2,537

President Obama fires Gen. McChrystal

washingtonpost.com

clear pixel
Obama relieves McChrystal of his duties

Michael D. Shear, William Branigin and Ernesto Londoño
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, June 23, 2010; 1:38 PM

 

President Obama on Wednesday fired Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal as commander of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan and replaced him with Gen. David H. Petraeus, a White House official said. 

Obama's move came shortly after McChrystal met with him one-on-one at the White House to apologize personally for derogatory comments about top administration officials involved in the Afghan war. 

The general departed the White House immediately after the meeting, leaving his fate in doubt. 

Petraeus moves to take over the Afghan war effort from his post as head of the Central Command, where he has been in charge of all U.S. forces in the Middle East. He previously commanded U.S. forces in Iraq and was credited with implementing a strategy that turned the tide against insurgents and sectarian groups in that war. 

McChrystal, 55, who was named by Obama last year to run the war in Afghanistan, saw the president after conferring Wednesday morning at the Pentagon with Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 

The meeting with Obama began at 9:51 a.m. in the Oval Office and lasted about half an hour. It preceded a scheduled conference of Obama's national security team on Afghanistan and Pakistan in the White House Situation Room. Among the top officials slated to attend, according to the White House, were McChrystal and several of the people he and his aides had disparaged in biting remarks reported by Rolling Stone magazine. In addition to Obama, those attendees included Vice President Biden, National Security Adviser James L. Jones and, by video conference, special envoy Richard C. Holbrooke and U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Karl W. Eikenberry. 

Obama later postponed a previously scheduled lunch with senators and decided to skip a 2:50 p.m. event on physical fitness and nutrition, sending first lady Michelle Obama instead. 

In response to the disparaging comments, an angry Obama had left open the option of firing McChrystal, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Tuesday. 

But in Kabul, Afghan President Hamid Karzai cautioned Obama against replacing the commander of the U.S. and NATO war effort. 

In a video conference call with Obama on Tuesday night, Karzai said "that we are in a very sensitive juncture in our partnership and our war on terror," Karzai spokesman Waheed Omar said in a news conference Wednesday. "Any gaps in this process would not be helpful." 

During the call, Obama told Karzai that he would not rush to a decision on whether to fire McChrystal, Omar said. 

The endorsement illustrated what was seen as McChrystal's best shot at saving his job and legacy: The general was arguably the U.S. official who has the most influence over, and credibility with, the Afghan government. 

Omar called McChrystal a "great partner of the Afghan government," who has "increased the level of trust between the partners." 

The furor erupted on Tuesday after the Rolling Stone magazine profileof McChrystal, titled "The Runaway General," started circulating. 

Aides quoted anonymously in the article accused Obama of being uninformed and disengaged during his first solo meeting with the general, in spring 2009. And they described Karzai as being "locked up in his palace this past year" and out of the loop, even as the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan relied on making the Afghan government a strong and credible partner. 

The controversy over the article comes amid a U.S. troop surge requested by McChrystal and a spike in NATO casualties that has raised alarm in Washington and NATO capitals. 

On Wednesday, NATO announced that two American troops died the day before in bombings in southern Afghanistan, where the radical Islamist Taliban movement has stepped up attacks as the U.S.-led international force has attempted to wrest control of their strongholds. 

So far this month, at least 59 NATO troops, including 43 U.S. service members, have been killed in Afghanistan. That means June is on pace to become the deadliest month for NATO troops in the nearly nine-year war. 

The fallout of the McChrystal scandal is also being closely watched in Pakistan, where the general has established close ties with military commanders. 

McChrystal has paid several visits to Pakistan in an effort to win support for the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan. Many Afghan Taliban leaders and fighters have established sanctuaries in Pakistan's border regions, and the United States has been pressuring the nation to assist coalition forces by targeting those groups. Pakistan has resisted, arguing that its forces are already occupied fighting domestic insurgents. 

But officials from both nations say cooperation and intelligence-sharing between the two nations has improved. McChrystal has established a particularly good rapport with Pakistan's powerful army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, Pakistani officials said. 

McChrystal has held monthly meetings with Kayani, most recently on June 14 in Islamabad. Kayani visited the headquarters of coalition forces in Afghanistan last month with McChrystal and Karzai. In January, Kayani took McChrystal on a helicopter tour of the Swat Valley, where Pakistani forces launched an operation last summer to push out Pakistani Taliban fighters. 

As McChrystal's meeting with Obama approached, Pakistan -- which is extremely sensitive about allegations that it secretly tries to manage the conflict next door through ties to Afghan insurgents -- made no official statement about whether McChrystal should stay. On Wednesday, Holbrooke, the U.S. special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, met with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and other officials. 

Pakistani sources said the topic of McChrystal was discussed but that Pakistan made no demands. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, several Pakistani officials said they strongly believed that the U.S. general should remain in place for the sake of continuity. 

"He shouldn't be changed midstream," a senior Pakistani intelligence official said before Obama's action. "It's never a good policy to change the military commanders." 

Speaking on the record, Farhatullah Babar, Zardari's spokesman, said, "We are not saying anything about this publicly." 

Londoño reported from Kabul. Karin Brulliard in Islamabad and Javed Hamdard in Kabul contributed to this report.

Entry #2,536

Ex-Giants Lawrence Taylor indicted on charges of rape...

Ex-Giants star Lawrence Taylor indicted on charges of rape, criminal sexual act, sexual abuse

Corky Siemaszko
Daily News Staff Writer

 

Wednesday, June 23rd 2010, 12:32 PM

 

Former NFL player Lawrence Taylor was also indicted on charges of endangering the welfare of a child and patronizing a prostitute.
Zelevansky/Getty

Former NFL player Lawrence Taylor was also indicted on charges of endangering the welfare of a child and patronizing a prostitute.

 

Former Giants great Lawrence Taylor was indicted Wednesday for having sex with a teenage prostitute.

The Hall of Famer was charged with rape, engaging in a criminal sexual act and sexual abuse of the Bronx teen by a Rockland County grand jury. 

He was also hit with charges of endangering the welfare of a child and patronizing a prostitute. Taylor was busted on May 6 at a Holiday Inn after the 16-year-old told cops he paid her $300 to have sex with him. 

Rockland County District Attorney Thomas Zugibe said the teen told them she'd been driven to the hotel by a Bronx pimp - and that she had been verbally threatened and physically assaulted. 

Taylor has denied the charges - and has reportedly come up with a dubious defense, namely that he pleasured himself and never touched the girl. 

But in an interview with The Daily News, the baby-faced teen insisted she and Taylor "definitely had intercourse." 

"If he's saying we didn't, that's not true," she said.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2010/06/23/2010-06-23_lawrence_taylor_indicted_on_charges_of_rape_criminal_sexual_act_sexual_abuse.html#ixzz0rhER145m

Entry #2,535

Hero Shot While Stopping Bank Robber Sues Bank

Long Beach

Hero Shot While Foiling Bank Robbery Presses His Case--Against the Bank

Matt Coker, Tuesday, Jun. 22 2010 @ 10:41AM 

 sports-bike-bandit_150.jpg

 

An Irvine lawyer and his client--a bank customer who was shot and wounded when he tackled the man believed to be the "Sports Bike Bandit"--have gone to the media to press their case, which is not against the alleged bank robber whose gun went off but the bank.

Lawyer Eric Dubin says Richard Camp has amassed $75,000 in medical bills as a result of his daring maneuver, but the only response he received from Farmers and Merchants Bank in Long Beach was flowers, a promised lunch and, eventually, an offer to settle for $10,000.

sports-bike-bandit.jpg?

Around 10:30 a.m. March 5, a man wearing a motorcycle helmet, leather jacket and leather pants walked into the bank in the 2300 block of Bellflower Boulevard.

Employees and customers say the man, who appeared to be wearing body armor under his get-up, whipped out a gun and announced, "This is a hold-up. I'm serious. I'm armed."

But, before he reached the tellers, the gunman was grabbed from behind and tackled by Camp. Shots rang out, and the bandit was wounded in the arm and Camp took a bullet to his upper leg.

Customer David Jones then jumped on the would-be robber and wrestled two guns away from him. Jones and Camp held the man down until security guards arrived. Another customer was shot during the melee. No one suffered life-threatening injuries.

The suspect was later identified as 51-year-old Robert Gordon Lockwood, who the FBI believes is the so-called "Sports Bike Bandit," a serial bank robber who has pulled heists in Los Alamitos, Long Beach and Rancho Palos Verdes before fleeing on a motorcycle.

A bright red motorcycle was found outside Farmers and Merchants Bank.

Camp filed suit against the bank in March and, according to court documents, Farmers and Merchants sent him some flowers and offered to take him and his wife to lunch.

However, the general contractor claims he has been unable to work and has no way to support his wife and daughter.

His suit further claims the bank's security guard was in the parking lot when the armed man entered the bank.

KTLA reports Camp amended his lawsuit last week to include allegations that the bank launched a smear campaign against him to destroy his public image. He says bank representatives lied when they told the news media that the bank offered to pay all of his medical bills but he decided to sue anyway. He claims Farmers and Merchants offered to pay only $10,000 of his $75,000 in medical bills.

As a result of the lawyer and client's media onslaught, bank representatives respond that flowers were sent to all bank customers and a luncheon was planned so that Camp and others could meet top executives, who would decide how to proceed after hearing from the hero.

If Camp's suit leads to a trial, required viewing will be the bank's surveillance video, which apparently shows the entire incident as it unfolded.

Entry #2,534

Woman and African-American pursue GOP nods and possibly history

Woman, black pursue GOP nods and possibly history

Posted 6/22/2010 3:56 PM ET

Liz Sidoti And Jim Davenport

Associated Press Writers

COLUMBIA, S.C. — An Indian-American woman and a black man pursued the Republican nominations for governor and Congress in South Carolina primary runoffs Tuesday in a measure of racial progress in the Deep South and the GOP.   Voters in Utah, North Carolina and Mississippi decided on their final nominees for November.   State lawmaker Nikki Haley brushed aside allegations of marital infidelity and an ethnic slur to come within a percentage point of winning the gubernatorial nod on June 8.   She's the odds-on favorite to win the runoff against Rep. Gresham Barrett and move a step closer to becoming the first female governor in the conservative-leaning state. 

Renee McKissick, 53, of Columbia, said she voted for Haley two weeks ago and felt coming out Tuesday would validate that decision. 

"I like Haley because she's firm in her convictions and she didn't let any of the attacks of the last weeks get to her," McKissick said. 

Tim Scott hoped to become the state's first black GOP congressman in more than a century. Scott, who has the backing of several Republican leaders in Washington, is in a runoff with Paul Thurmond, the son of the late U.S. Sen. and former segregationist Strom Thurmond. The GOP-leaning district stretches down the Carolina coast and includes Fort Sumter where the first shots of the Civil War were fired. 

If elected to the House, Scott would be the GOP's first black lawmaker since Oklahoma's J.C. Watts retired in 2003. 

Six-term Republican Rep. Bob Inglis was trying to hold onto his House seat in a runoff against prosecutor Trey Gowdy. 

In North Carolina, Democrats were deciding whether to nominate Secretary of State Elaine Marshall or state Sen. Cal Cunningham in the race to challenge GOP Sen. Richard Burr in the fall. And Utah Republicans were choosing a GOP primary successor to vanquished Utah Sen. Bob Bennett. 

Tuesday's runoffs and primaries played out across a handful of states, the latest cluster of contests to determine matchups for the fall's midterm congressional elections. Already, 2010 is shaping up to be an anti-establishment year with angry voters casting ballots against candidates with ties to Washington and the political parties. 

Perhaps no other contest illustrated that better than the runoff between Haley, a state legislator with the backing of tea party activists and Sarah Palin, and Barrett, a four-term congressman who has had to answer for his 2008 vote for the unpopular Wall Street bailout. 

Haley handily beat Barrett, two other Republicans and allegations of infidelity two weeks ago, but she didn't earn the 50 percent needed to win the nomination outright, triggering a runoff that has grown nastier by the day. 

Should she win the GOP nomination, she'll be considered the front-runner in the race against the Democratic gubernatorial candidate, state Sen. Vincent Sheheen. The disgraced GOP Gov. Mark Sanford is leaving the post because of term limits. 

Aside from Barrett, the bailout vote also could thwart Inglis' quest for another term in the 4th Congressional District. Spartanburg prosecutor Gowdy forced Inglis into a runoff after making the race a referendum on the incumbent's bailout vote and casting him as not conservative enough for the district. 

In Utah, Republicans chose between businessman Tim Bridgewater and attorney Mike Lee for the GOP Senate nomination. It's likely whoever wins will become the next Utah senator. A Democrat hasn't won a Senate race in Utah since 1970. 

Illustrating how fractured the tea party movement is in Utah, one of the founders of the state's tea party movement, David Kirkham, endorsed Bridgewater on Monday. But Lee had already picked up the support of the California-based Tea Party Express, which is weighing in on primary races nationwide. 

The victor will succeed Bennett, who lost his bid last month for a fourth term. Conservatives at the GOP state convention punished him for his support of the bailout, officially known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

Sidoti reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Pete Iacobelli contributed to this report.

Entry #2,531