truesee's Blog

Hairy Wolfboy to get reality show

Hairy guys need love, too. Reality show for “Wolfboy?”

Posted on Wednesday, June 10, 2009 1:32 PM PT

By Diane Mapes

It’s hard enough for anybody to find love, but what do you do if you have a genetic disorder that leaves you completely covered with hair?

In the case of circus star Larry Ramos Gomez, better known as “Wolfboy,” you get your own reality dating show. At least that’s the plan hatched by Zoo Productions, creators of such reality TV fare as “Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader?” and “Girls Behaving Badly.”
 
Recently divorced, the 31-year-old Mexican, who performs daredevil acrobat acts with his brother Danny, suffers from an extremely rare form of hypertrichosis, a genetic disorder that causes excessive hair growth in places you wouldn’t normally expect it, such as the face. The reality show, tentatively titled “Wolfboy: Divorced and Looking for Love,” will document Gomez’ search for a girlfriend and his quest to find acceptance as a normal guy.

Mary Altaffer / AP

 

Excessive hairiness and hirsutism, which affects women, can be relatively common and brought on by either family history or secondary factors like polycystic ovary syndrome. But the form of hypertrichosis Gomez suffers from is extremely rare, with only 50 described cases on record since the Middle Ages.

The condition, which Dr. Aires, director of the division of dermatology at the University of Kansas Hospital, characterizes as a “genetic puzzle that has not yet been solved,” can be inherited. But not always. Gomez’s son, for instance, is not excessively hairy. However, should he have a daughter, she would, based on recent genetic research, likely inherit the disorder since it appears that his particular form of hypertrichosis is “X-linked,” Aires says.

In the Gomez brothers, who have generalized congenital hypertrichosis, all of the normally invisible vellus hairs are replaced with thick coarse terminal hairs.

 

Hypertrichosis is a complex disorder, but it’s easier to understand if you first realize that all human beings are essentially covered in hair, Aires says.

“All of us are sort of wolf people, but the hair we’re covered with is invisible; it’s vellus hair,” he says. “After puberty, the hair on men’s faces and their chest transforms into the thicker terminal hair. But there are a very small number of people in whom all the areas of the body that would have vellus hair, have terminal hair.”

Another disorder known as congenital hypertrichosis lanuginosa (CHL), results in hair that is long and silky and stems not from vellus hair but from the lanugo hair that covers all infants in the womb.

“Everyone has lanugo hair and you’ll often see babies born with hairy shoulders and hairy backs and parents panic, but that hair comes out and it doesn’t mean anything,” says Dr. Aires. “There are some conditions, though, where the lanugo hair persists. That’s extremely rare.”

Not all hypertrichosis is as severe as that of “Wolfboy.”

Localized hypertrichosis, as the name suggests, is where people will experience abnormal hair growth in one or two odd places on their body, such as their elbows (known as hairy elbows syndrome or hypertrichosis cubiti), their ears (hairy pinna) or their tailbone, referred to as faun tail deformity. These forms can be associated with bone abnormalities.

Of course, that doesn’t explain sudden growths of ear and nose hairs which can be common among aging men.

There are also cases of acquired hypertrichosis, either due to some type of body trauma (an injury or inflammation) or certain medications.

“Acquired hypertrichosis is not generally going to give you the werewolf appearance but a lot of people will just look hairier than they should,” says Dr. Aires. For example, children taking immunosupressive medications for organ transplants will develop dark peach fuzz.

If Gomez gets his own reality dating show, he could become as legendary as Jo Jo, the Dog-faced Boy or The Bearded Lady. Jo-Jo, born Fedor Jeftichejev, was an extremely popular sideshow performer who toured the world with Barnum & Bailey’s Greatest Show on Earth in the early 20th century.  The woolly Julia Pastrana, also known as “The Marvelous Hybrid or Bear Woman” was widely exhibited in the U.S. and Europe before her death in childbirth in 1860. Her body was then mummified, along with that of her infant, and put on display by her husband-manager.

Then there was the Gonzales family — consisting of a hairy father, a “normal” mother and five excessively hairy children — who became the bewhiskered “Jon and Kate” of the 16th century and were celebrated throughout Europe.

Unfortunately, others with this rare condition did not fare as well. Ruthlessly exploited, they were labeled as monsters or “wild men” or “human terriers” and said to be the result of a sexual union between human and ape. 

As for treatment, Dr. Aires says that while there are a number of hair removal options available — shaving, waxing, electrolysis, laser, and depilatories — there is no hypertrichosis cure. 

A spokesperson for Zoo Productions says Gomez does trim the hair on his face, but he doesn’t attempt to shave it off anymore since it “just grows back.”

“Obviously, people with skin conditions are not monsters,” Aires says. “Maybe the show will be good and will serve to humanize someone with this unusual condition.”

Entry #596

18-month-old baby taken to hospital high on pot

Last update - 20:15 11/06/2009
Baby brought to Safed hospital high on marijuana
By Eli Ashkenazi, Haaretz Correspondent
A one-and-a-half-year-old boy high on marijuana was brought to a children's intensive care unit for treatment on Thursday, after his parents noticed that he was overly sleepy, apathetic and walking unsteadily.

"The baby arrived at the hospital with his mother after repeated unsuccessful attempts on her part to wake him," said Dr. Yuri Viener, head of the children's intensive care unit at Ziv Medical Center in Safed.

The baby, who lives with his family in a northern Galilee community, underwent multiple tests after doctors suspected he ingested a toxic substance, and a urine test revealed evidence of marijuana in the boy's system.
The boy, who received respiratory treatment, along with Oxygen and fluids, woke up after five hours and is in stable condition.

Dr. Viener said it is rare that a baby would be exposed to large amounts of narcotic substances, but that even minimal exposure can cause respiratory problems, including cessation of breathing.

He stressed that parents must be extremely cautious with children of all ages when it comes to dangerous substances at home.
Entry #595

Parking space sells for $300,000

The Boston Globe 

$300,000 price sets record - for parking

Megan Woolhouse Globe Staff / June 11, 2009

 

Housing prices may be down, but the cost of a coveted parking space is up.

An unidentified buyer yesterday paid $300,000 for a private parking space in the Back Bay, making it the most expensive parking space in Boston, according to Listing Information Network, which tracks the city's real estate market.

Debra Sordillo, the Coldwell sales agent who brokered the deal, said several residents at 48 Commonwealth Ave. engaged in a bidding war for the space, driving the asking price of $250,000 up to the record-breaking $300,000. The winning bidder did not want to be identified, she said.

The price is more than what many people pay for a house, but Sordillo said prime parking spaces near the Public Garden are in short supply.

"There's only so many parking spaces in the city," said Sordillo. "And in this part, there's very few."

In the last year, parking spaces in the Back Bay and Beacon Hill have fetched an average selling price of $134,000, Listing Information Network said. A year earlier, the average cost of a parking spot in those areas was $127,000. The number of parking space sales has also increased in the last two years, from 18 in 2007 to 26 last year.

The owners who sold yesterday's record-breaking parking space live in the historic brownstone at 48 Commonwealth, a multi-unit building prominently located on the corner of Commonwealth Avenue and Berkeley Street. Sordillo said they are also attempting to sell their posh two-bedroom unit with direct elevator access. The $2.5 million price includes a parking space in the building's underground garage.

The $300,000 space came with few amenities other than the prime location; it is outdoors and uncovered.

The previous record for an open-air parking space was set in 2006, when a buyer paid $250,000 for a space behind 31-33 Commonwealth Ave.

Entry #594

Woman knocks out thief with 12-pack of beer

Beer Proves Once Again To Be Deterrent To Crime

Alcohol has been the downfall of many ne'er-do-wells,  but never quite like this. After a man stole Kayte Taylor's wallet near a Santa Rosa, Calif., market on Saturday, the 28-year-old did what most women would — she grabbed a 12-pack of Miller Lite and shot-putted it at the thief.

Shot putting Miller Lite

The tasty beer missile hit its mark — knocking the man off of his getaway bike, where Kayte's friends descended on him and retrieved the wallet. Boom goes the dynamite. It's Miller Time.

From the SANTA ROSA PRESS DEMOCRAT:

Taking chase, Kayte reached the sidewalk to see the guy pushing and trying to mount a bicycle. It dawned on Kayte there was something useful in her hand. A 12-pack of Miller Lite — bottles. Her friends' eyes widened as Kayte hoisted the box to shoulder height, reared back and shot-put the beer at the burglar maybe 12 feet away.

Pow. Down he went. Four women were on him like kids on a burst piñata. Kayte took back her wallet.

The police then showed up and were in a very arresty mood.

What onlookers failed to notice is that Taylor's throw of 11 feet, 2 inches was a woman's outdoor record for light beer (bottles). Be assured that the Chinese are assembling a women's beer shot putting team as you read this.

 

                                 UPDATED VERSION

This guy was lucky the beer was lite


By CHRIS SMITH
PRESS DEMOCRAT COLUMNIST

Published: Tuesday, June 9, 2009 at 4:03 a.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, June 9, 2009 at 4:03 a.m.

Dusk neared Saturday as 28-year-old Kayte Taylor and three girlfriends pulled up to Sam's Market on Santa Rosa Avenue to buy beer.

Kayte and the one pal who accompanied her inside chatted merrily as Kayte reached into the cooler. Just then a man strode up, bumped Kayte and snatched her wallet from her other hand.

"He's got my wallet!" Kayte yelled as the robber headed for the door.

Taking chase, Kayte reached the sidewalk to see the guy pushing and trying to mount a bicycle. It dawned on Kayte there was something useful in her hand.

A 12-pack of Miller Lite -- bottles. Her friends' eyes widened as Kayte hoisted the box to shoulder height, reared back and shot-put the beer at the burglar maybe 12 feet away.

Pow. Down he went. Four women were on him like kids on a burst piñata. Kayte took back her wallet.

Rather than keep wrestling with the crook, the women let him up but took hold of his bicycle. He demanded it, pleaded for it, but he wasn't getting it.

When he started down the avenue on foot, one of Kayte's friends -- the one who's a security guard and was in uniform -- tailed him until police arrived to arrest him.

The ladies observed while rehashing the incident that several male bystanders had just stood there, not one making a move to help. Maybe it was the shock of seeing a guy put down by a 12-pack.

Entry #593

Wrecking Company Demolishes Wrong House

Homeowner Says Crews Demolished Wrong House

Posted: 3:43 pm EDT June 10, 2009Updated: 6:00 pm EDT June 10, 2009

CARROLL COUNTY, Ga. -- This is a story that may leave you shaking your head.

 

A Sandy Springs man got a phone call Monday that his family home in Carroll County was gone. Torn down. Demolished.
“We had heirlooms in there…my mom’s dining room set…her hutch with her dishes in there,” said homeowner Al Byrd.

Byrd said he cannot believe his eyes.

The house his father built, brick by brick, with his own hands has been mysteriously demolished.

“You can’t imagine. It’s just incredulous that something like this can happen and no one contact the owner,” said Byrd.

Byrd grew up in the home with his nine brothers and sisters. It’s a three bedroom house on a little road bearing his family’s name.

“We were taught that you could do anything that you wanted to do as long as you were willing to work hard and pay the price,” said Byrd.

Byrd’s cousin shot video Monday of a bulldozer in the yard of the house with dumpsters loaded with rubble.

The demolition company said it had paperwork.

“I said, ‘Paperwork for what?’ and he said, ‘For the house, to demolish the house.’ I said, ‘I’m the owner of the house, I haven’t given anybody any authority to demolish this house,’” said Byrd.

Channel 2 Action News reporter Jovita Moore asked Byrd if the demolition company had an address.

“I said, ‘What address did you have?’ and he said, ‘They sent me some GPS coordinates.’ I said, ‘Don’t you have an address?’ (and) he said, ‘Yes, my GPS coordinates led me right to this address here and this house was described,’” said Byrd.

Byrd said he suspects the intended target was actually across the road.

Byrd said his house held decades of memories. While he was talking to Moore, the enormity of what is now gone appeared to set in. Byrd could hardly speak.

The man who cuts the grass told Byrd about a month ago that the power box was missing and there were holes punched into the walls. They both thought it was vandalism. Now, Byrd believes it was part of the preparation for the demolition.

The demolition was done by a Marietta company who told Byrd it was hired by a company out of Texas. Moore tried to contact the Texas company, but her calls have not been returned.

 

 

LINK TO SLIDESHOW:
LINK TO VIDEO:
Entry #592

Woman throws out mom's old mattress stuffed with $1,000,000

 
 

Woman throws out old mattress... with mother's $1m life savings stashed inside

Mail Foreign Service
Last updated at 8:17 AM

10th June 2009

 

An Israeli woman threw out an old mattress -  not realising it was stuffed with her mother's $1million life-savings.

The culprit, identified only as Anat, had bought the new bedding as surprise for her elderly relative.

But when her mother found out about her gift she 'almost fainted' before revealing the contents of the mattress.

Desperate search: The woman searches a landfill in Tel Aviv for the missing mattress

Desperate search: The woman scours a landfill in Tel Aviv for the missing mattress

Over the years, she had crammed it full with Israeli shekels and American dollars. Her stash amounted to $1m.

Anat ran outside to discover the bedding had already been taken away by rubbish men, sparking a frantic - and so far fruitless - search through tons of waste at three landfill sites in Tel Aviv. 

Yitzhak Borba, a manager at one of the dumps, said she appeared 'totally desperate' but the mattress was hard to find amid the 2,500 tonnes of rubbish left every day.

Workers search for the mattress that reportedly contains one million dollars on the landfill site of Efeh, Tel Aviv

 

Workers search for the mattress that reportedly contains one million dollars on the landfill site of Efeh, Tel Aviv

Workers search for the mattress that reportedly contains one million dollars on the landfill site of Efeh, Tel Aviv

He said he had increased security at the site to keep would-be treasure hunters at bay.

For her part, Anat said it could be worse. 'My mother told me that I should just leave it,' she todl Army Radio.

'It is a very, very sad story - but I've been through worse.

'It's a matter of proportion in life. People need to know how to accept the good and the bad.'

Entry #591

Facebook removes page of $232,000,000 Powerball winner

Facebook removes purported page of S.D. Powerball winner

Jeff Martin
USA TODAY
June 8, 2009
A Facebook profile set up in the name of a South Dakota rancher who won a $232 million Powerball jackpot recently has been disabled by the popular social networking site, Facebook spokesman Simon Axten said Tuesday.

The profile, set up soon after Neal Wanless collected his prize Friday, quickly collected more than 120 "friends."

"Must be nice! Being a single mom of 3 kids, I could definitely use a lottery win right now … maybe then I could actually afford a house … keep on dreaming … right?" one poster wrote.

The Facebook page was created using Wanless' real name, complete with a profile picture of a cowboy riding into the sunset — the cowboy's face was not clearly visible. On the profile's information page was: "Looking For: Dating."

"We've investigated this account and disabled it," Axten said in response to questions about whether the profile was legitimate.

"Facebook has always been based on a real-name culture," Axten said in a statement. "We think this leads to greater accountability and a safer and more trusted environment for our users.

"It's a violation of our policies to use a fake name or operate under another person's identity, and we encourage users to report anyone they think is doing this, either through the report links we provide on the site or through the contact forms on our Help page."

Axten did not identify who set up the profile. The Facebook spokesman said he couldn't comment on the possibility of charges, but the company generally doesn't press for them against people who build fake accounts.

"We feel that our resources are better spent building and improving our systems for detection and responding quickly to reports," Axten said.

Wanless couldn't be immediately reached for comment on the situation.

Before the profile was shut down, the page included several messages of well-wishes and an icon of a pink heart with the message "Neal is sending free hugs to friends."

There also are jubilant responses to winning the lottery from the person managing the profile, such as this one: "YESSSSSSSSSS!"

Mike Nitz, an associate professor of communication studies at Augustana College in Sioux Falls, S.D., says it is "certainly possible to create a false identity on Facebook.

"All you need is an e-mail, and that's really it," says Nitz, who uses Facebook for his classes.

But many issues — such as who owns the photos and other content posted to Facebook — are far from being resolved.

"It's really kind of a wild, wild West out there with the legal issues," Nitz says.

Martin reports for the Argus Leader in Sioux Falls, S.D.

Entry #590

Pregnant Man Gives Birth to Second Child

'Pregnant man' Thomas Beatie gives birth to second child

A US man who was born a woman before undergoing gender realignment surgery has given birth to a second child, ABC News reported on its website on Tuesday.

Telegraph-UK

Published: 11:02AM BST 10 Jun 2009

Thomas Beatie and Susan Juliette Beatie: 'Pregnant man' gives birth to second child
Thomas Beatie and Susan Juliette Beatie Photo: GETTY

Thomas Beatie, who is legally male but decided to keep his female sex organs during chest reconstruction surgery and testosterone therapy, attracted worldwide headlines last year after revealing his pregnancy.

The 35-year-old gave birth to a baby girl in Oregon last July and on Tuesday celebrated the arrival of a second child, a baby boy, ABC News reported.

Mr Beatie was last year dubbed the 'pregnant man' after appearing on Oprah Winfrey's television talkshow to discuss his pregnancy.

"I feel it's not a male or female desire to have a child. It's a human need. I'm a person and I have the right to have a biological child," he said.

Mr Beatie revealed that he'd been "shocked" by the amount of publicity the couple had received, insisting they were just like any other family.

"We are a man, woman and child. It's ironic that we are so different but yet, we're just a family, just the same as anyone else," he said.

When asked why he made many people uneasy, he said, "I think that people are not used to seeing the image of a pregnant man.

"And it's causing a lot of people to think. … I used my female reproductive organs to become a father."

Entry #589

Girl, 10, arrested for fighting sister, 13

Girl, 10, arrested for fighting sister

Published: June 9, 2009 at 7:55 PM
FLOWER MOUND, Texas, June 9 (UPI) -- A 10-year-old girl was arrested and charged for fighting in a park with her 13-year-old sister, police in Texas said.

 

The older sister said the fight broke out after her younger sister refused to follow her instructions, KDFW-TV in Dallas/Fort Worth reported Tuesday.

"She pushed me, so I just walked away from it," the 13-year-old said. "The third time she pushed me, we just started fighting."

The girls, who were visiting family in Flower Mound with their mother, returned to the family home with a police officer in tow.

"'This is criminal, and one of them is going to have to go to jail and it's probably going to have to be your younger one because she was the aggressor,'" their mother quoted the officer as saying. "And I said, 'Are you kidding me?' and he said, 'No, no.'"

Lt. Clay Pierce of the Flower Mound Police said it was being treated as a case of family violence. The girl was charged with Class A misdemeanor assault.

"By state law we are required to take action and what we did, we detained the youngest one," he said.

"Both of them had some injuries. The one showed more serious injuries, so the other one was detained."

The case has been turned over to the Denton County district attorney for further review.

The girls' names are not being reported by UPI because they are juveniles.

 

                             UPDATE:

 The girls have been identified as Reagan Green, 10 and 13-year-old Desiree Green.

Entry #588

ATM stolen from bank falls off trailer

ATM stolen from bank falls off trailer

Ledger-Enquirer

Monday June 8, 2009

PHENIX CITY, Ala. -- Ripping an ATM from its concrete base isn't easy. Losing it seems even harder. Thieves at an Alabama bank managed to do both.

Phenix City Police Chief Ray Smith says the thieves used a stolen backhoe, a pickup truck and a flatbed trailer to pull off the job at a Wachovia branch in the eastern Alabama city early Monday.

Smith says the thieves loaded the ATM onto the trailer and headed north on Summerville Road. He says that along the way, the ATM fell off the trailer.

Smith says the thieves had abandoned the backhoe at the bank and had no way to load the ATM back onto the trailer, so they drove away without it.

Smith says the backhoe and the ATM have been processed for evidence.

                                                  UPDATE

Tuesday, Jun. 09, 2009

Thieves abandon stolen backhoe, ATM

Machine, still full, found in street

Ledger Enquirer
Alan Riquelmy -
Here’s the plan — take a stolen backhoe, pickup truck and flatbed trailer, rip an ATM off its concrete base in downtown Phenix City and head north on Summerville Road.

One problem, as some would-be thieves discovered early Monday, is that the ATM just might spill off the trailer into the middle of the road.

That’s where police found it — worse for the wear, but still full of cash.

 “It sounded like a good plan at the time,” said Police Chief Ray Smith. “Lucky for us, it fell apart.”

About 3 a.m. Monday, officers responded to an alarm at the 13th Street Wachovia Bank, where they found the stolen backhoe. They then fanned out some patrols, eventually finding the machine near South and North Railroad streets on Summerville Road, Smith said.

The suspects were gone by then, though it doesn’t appear they got anything for their trouble.

Smith said the thieves apparently towed the backhoe to the bank, unloaded it and used it to get the ATM onto the flatbed trailer. Leaving the backhoe, they drove north on Summerville Road, pulling the ATM until it tumbled off.

That’s when the suspects, realizing they couldn’t get the heavy machine back on the trailer, left, Smith said.

Police already have processed the ATM and backhoe for evidence, the police chief said. Smith said he intends to release photo and video evidence, if recovered.

Entry #587

Coach teaches boys to steal

Published: Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Arlington coach put Little League boys up to burglary, police say

Diana Hefley
Herald Writer

ARLINGTON -- An Arlington Little League coach is accused of showing some of his players how to steal more than second base.

Investigators allege that George Spady Jr. was with his son, a nephew and another player from his baseball team when he broke into a vacant shop and took overhead lights and bolts. The boys were encouraged to assist with the break-in, Snohomish County deputy prosecutor Edirin Okoloko wrote in court documents.

Spady, 31, was charged Monday with second-degree burglary, a felony.

Snohomish County sheriff's deputies were called to one of the players' homes after the boy told his stepfather that his coach had taken him along to break into a shop in Arlington, Okoloko wrote.

The stepfather was angry that an adult would use the boys to commit a crime, and, even worse, "that the adult was his son's baseball coach," Okoloko wrote.

The boy told investigators that Spady's son crawled through a vent on the back side of the shop and unlocked the door for his father. Spady, his son and Spady's nephew then went inside and came out with light fixtures and some other items, according to court documents.

The boy told investigators that Spady yelled at him to go inside and grab more from the shop, and told him to hurry up because he saw a truck drive by, Okoloko wrote.

The boy told police he didn't take anything from the shop.

Spady told police he'd driven onto the property to go "four-wheeling" with the boys, Okoloko wrote. He told the sheriff's deputy he didn't see the numerous "No Trespassing" signs posted on the shop, near the driveway and in other locations on the property.

Investigators reported that Spady told them the front door to the shop was unlocked and he couldn't recall if anyone went through a vent to get inside, Okoloko wrote.

Spady was apologetic, the deputy reported.

He admitted taking shop lights and bolts but didn't take anything else; he handed over the lights to the sheriff's deputy. He said he didn't have the bolts with him, according to court documents.

The boys are not expected to be charged with a crime.

Entry #586

Top Ten Dead Celebs That People Want To Meet

Top Ten Dead Celebs That People Want To Meet; The Survey Says:

June 9, 2009 7:10 a.m. EST

Celebrity News Service Staff

Britain's Princess Diana is second only to Jesus Christ as the dead person people would most like to meet.

The former wife of Prince Charles - who was killed in a car crash in 1997 - came ahead of playwright William Shakespeare, scientist Albert Einstein and actress Marilyn Monroe in the poll, bur couldn't match the 33 per cent of the vote given to the son of God.

A spokesperson for TV dinosaur drama 'Primeval', who conducted the survey of 3,000 people to mark the launch of the DVD release of the show's third series, said: These results show that Jesus Christ will always be the British Public's 'Superstar'.

"But we were fully expecting Princess Diana to top the poll as she won the hearts of the nation and no-one has ever really forgotten her place within the Royal family or the impact she made on ordinary people."

 

Other famous people appearing in the top 10 were artist Leonardo da Vinci, in sixth place, musicians Elvis Presley and Freddie Mercury in seventh and ninth, and children's author Roald Dahl in eighth.

The top 10 was rounded off by famed rights campaigner Martin Luther King.

Top 10 dead celebrities people would most like to meet:

  1. Jesus
  2. Princess Diana
  3. William Shakespeare
  4. Albert Einstein
  5. Marilyn Monroe
  6. Leonardo da Vinci
  7. Elvis Presley
  8. Roald Dahl
  9. Freddie Mercury
  10. Martin Luther King
Entry #585

House boarded up with resident inside

House boarded up with resident inside

JAMES ELI SHIFFER

Star Tribune

Last update: June 8, 2009 - 8:10 AM

 

On May 12, the day the city inspector came to board up his house, Ted Poetsch was eating lunch. After living all of his 53 years at 823 Penn Av. N., Poetsch had an hour left to pack his stuff and get out.

Cane in hand, he lurched around, throwing a few things in bags, putting Kitty in the carrier. He heard the contractor outside starting to drill into the door frame.

Poetsch made his way down his narrow stairway, resigned to the end he had resisted for three years, through personal financial missteps, the false promise of a foreclosure "rescue" and a court victory that gave him short-lived hope.

He came to the door and realized that he was too late. A truck had driven away from the house, prompting those outside to think the tenants were gone. Poetsch had been boarded up inside his house.

City officials say Poetsch had ample warning that they were coming that day, but they say his brief incarceration was an unprecedented mistake. In many ways, Poetsch's experience is emblematic of the forces that have fastened plywood over so much of the North Side and urban neighborhoods across America.

The house at 823 Penn, vacant and already a target for thieves, is now owned by Fannie Mae. In September, the federal government took over the mortgage giant in a multibillion-dollar bailout after it was brought to the brink of collapse by the housing meltdown.

Poetsch got no such assistance. The city determined that the house was potentially unsafe and that Poetsch was essentially a squatter in the only home he had ever known. Now this North Side neighborhood has one fewer neighbor and one more boarded house.

"Everybody loses," said Poetsch's onetime attorney, Josh DuBois, who helped Poetsch get out of his boarded house that day in May.

 

 

Link to Video:

http://www.startribune.com/local/47167767.html?elr=KArksUUUU

Entry #584

Daughter breaks mom's legs while learning how to drive

Springfield mother struck by daughter learning how to drive

The Republican Newsroom

Saturday June 06, 2009, 3:34 PM

LORI STABILE

SPRINGFIELD - A 17-year-old girl who was practicing how to drive in a cinema parking lot struck her mother and broke her legs, Springfield police said.

Sgt. Thomas E. Long said the mother was sitting on a fence when she was struck with the 2001 Ford Windstar van Saturday morning.

"She was stopped, but not being familiar with the vehicle, she accelerated and hit her mom," Long said.

He said the girl was trying to put the car in park. The mother was brought to Baystate Medical Center. The accident was reported at 10:48 a.m. at 1250 St. James Ave., the movie theater parking lot behind Springfield Plaza, he said.

The owner of the car, the girl's father, Treavor Blair, 39, of 181 Nursery St., was cited for allowing an unlicensed operator to operate the vehicle, Long said.

Entry #583

Man caught speeding tells police someone stole his pot

Posted: June 8
Updated: Today at 6:40 AM

Cops: Speeder said he was chasing pot thief

Times Leader staff

 

WEST HAZLETON – Police say a man they arrested in a traffic stop told them he was speeding because he was chasing someone who stole marijuana from him.

 

 

While borough police were conducting “Buckle Up” – a special grant program to target drivers not using seat belts late Friday night, they stopped a vehicle they said was driving at an extremely high rate of speed and switching lanes without using turn signals.

During a traffic stop, police say they observed a glass bowl used for smoking marijuana on the front seat in plain view. Police also found 15 individually packaged baggies of marijuana and 13 ecstasy pills during a search of the vehicle.

Police say the driver, Ryah Neaus, 21, of 824 Seybert St., Hazleton, told them he was speeding “because he was chasing the person who just robbed him of his Apple iPhone and three bags of marijuana.”Neaus was charged with possession with intent to deliver, possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia, police said.

He was also cited with careless driving and failure to wear a seatbelt.

Entry #582