NBey6's Blog

Search is on for kidnapped baby tossed off bridge

  
Posted on Wed, Feb. 17, 2010

Search is on for kidnapped baby tossed off bridge

By Peter Mucha

Inquirer Staff

 

Dogs, helicopters and more than 20 state police were searching this morning for a 3-month-old girl whose father said he tossed her off a Garden State Parkway bridge.

The baby was abducted by the father yesterday afternoon in Essex County, N.J., and he was arrested last evening at his father's house in Winslow Township, Camden County, according to New Jersey State Police.

 

Shamshiddin Abdur-Raheem, 21, told police he had thrown the baby off the parkway's Driscoll Bridge, which crosses the Raritan River in Middlesex County.

 

Shortly before 4:30 p.m., Abdur-Raheem forced his way into an apartment on South Harrison Street in East Orange, where the baby was being cared for by her maternal grandmother, according to State Police spokesman Sgt. Steve Jones.

 

Abdur-Raheem assaulted the grandmother, then struck her with his 2002 Dodge Caravan as the 60-year-old woman tried to preventing him from fleeing with the infant, Zura, Jones said.

 

The extent of her injuries and the whereabouts of the mother, he did not know.

 

About 8 p.m., Winslow Township police contacted the suspect's father, who lives on Maureen Court. Police apprehended the suspect at that location, Jones said.

 

Adbur-Raheem, who lives in Galloway, north of Atlantic City, admitted to authorities that he tossed the baby off the bridge, Jones said.

 

Before heading to his father's house, at about 6:30 p.m., the suspect visited an Atlantic City imam and told the religious leader what he had done, Jones said.

 

The search began about 9 p.m. last night with members of an array of State Police units, including canine, aviation, marine, missing persons, major crimes, and Technical Emergency and Mission Specialists (TEAMS), similar to a SWAT team.

 

Abdur-Raheem was transported to East Orange, where he was charged with attempted murder, kidnapping, aggravated assault and other offenses. He was being held in Essex County Jail.

 

A woman who answered the phone at the Winslow Township address sounded upset but declined to comment on the case.

Entry #2,057

Vision

Fire Day 2-16-10

703, 176, 148, 105, 060, 106, 713, 453, 770

446, 028, 735, 263, 620, 873, 177, 828, 733

813, 219, 052, 522, 899, 000, 444, 555, 777

2759, 6611, 7722, 0055, 1988, 1974, 4059

Entry #2,056

WTA Women's Singles Ranking

As of February 15, 2010

 WTA Rank

Player Country Race WTA Money
1 Serena Williams USA 2320 8995 $1,984,467
2 Dinara Safina RUS 400 6480 $90,657
3 Caroline Wozniacki DEN 281 5995 $82,413
4 Svetlana Kuznetsova RUS 340 5861 $95,235
5 Venus Williams USA 500 5526 $353,046
6 Victoria Azarenka BLR 700 4960 $207,767
7 Elena Dementieva RUS 1040 4855 $231,667
8 Jelena Jankovic SRB 161 3765 $54,772
9 Agnieszka Radwanska POL 220 3605 $98,040
10 Li Na CHN 961 3441 $342,328
Entry #2,055

ATP Men's Singles Rankings

ATP Rankings

As of February 15, 2010

ATP Rank Player Country ATP  Money
1 Roger Federer SUI 11350 $1,988,720
2 Novak Djokovic SRB 8310 $265,100
3 Rafael Nadal ESP 7370 $284,440
4 Andy Murray GBR 7300 $968,100
5 Juan Martin Del Potro ARG 6355 $82,058
6 Nikolay Davydenko RUS 5290 $450,950
7 Andy Roddick USA 4210 $299,010
8 Robin Soderling SWE 3855 $400,744
9 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga FRA 2985 $368,800
10 Marin Cilic CRO 2970 $532,108
Entry #2,054

Vision

Moon Day 2-15-10

379, 362, 350, 327, 715, 733, 599, 000, 052

160, 105, 627, 951, 438, 429, 663, 285, 564

735, 207, 801, 028, 317, 828, 733, 813, 657

397, 906, 780, 222, 888, 555, 024, 303, 681

0560, 1171, 1181, 8811, 7777, 1111, 8148

Entry #2,053

Murray withdraws from Open13 tournament

Open13 organiser hammers Murray for withdrawal

An angry French tennis official has called for Andy Murray to be suspended from the ATP Tour after the world No.3 withdrew from this week’s Open13 tournament in Marseille late last week.



The Scot opted to skip the event, for the second time in the past two years, in order to rest after a long spell in Australia, where he reached the final of both the Hopman Cup alongside Laura Robson and the Australian Open, where he lost to Roger Federer in the final.

But tournament organiser Jean-Francois Caujolle has accused Murray, who had been installed as the top seed, of flaunting his responsibilities and going back on his word.

“Murray did the same thing to me last year,” Caujolle said. “He can’t know what it is to keep his word.

“A week ago, he asked me for a wildcard to play doubles with his brother Jamie and I gave him one,” he added.

“A few days ago he asked me for five hotel rooms and I gave him them. The No.1 seed of a tournament should have a sense of responsibility. If he does not respect his commitments, he should be suspended by the ATP.”

However, Caujolle later softened his stance. “I never said that he should be suspended,” he protested, “but it’s true I was really disappointed because he was my top player.

“There is a responsibility for the credibility of all the game when it’s a top player. Sometimes you have to force yourself and be responsible.

“I understand he’s quite young and it’s not a huge tournament but it’s quite disappointing and we had the same last year,” added the Open13 director, who shortly after receiving word of Murray’s withdrawal learned that Juan Martin del Potro was also pulling out with a wrist injury.

“Last year he played in Rotterdam and was a bit injured and I understand that. He sent me an email saying next year I will play.

“I lost my top two players. I think the top seed and marquee player – they have to not pull out because all the promotion is framed around them. There should be something [done about it] but the ATP is working on that, it’s not the fault of the ATP or even Andy. It’s just life.”

Ironically, Murray recently expressed an interest in following Novak Djokovic’s lead and establishing an ATP event in Scotland – with an indoor event in February the likeliest option.

Murray admitted that such plans were for the future, “when I’m not training so much,” but revealed he has sounded out the relevant parties.

“I think all the players would love to put on a tournament,” said Murray, who is also backing mother Judy’s plans to establish a performance centre in his home nation, which are on the verge of coming to fruition.

“They obviously know what the players need. You saw what a good job they did in Valencia,” he added, referring to Juan Carlos Ferrero and David Ferrer’s Valencia Open, which Murray won last year on his return from a wrist injury.

“I’ve spoken to a few people about it. If you’re going to do it you make sure you do it well. If I was to do something like that I would want to make sure I’m really involved in it.”

Murray is scheduled to play in Dubai next week before turning his attention to the first two Masters 1000 events of the year, where he has a huge number of rankings points to defend.

He was beaten in last year’s final of the BNP Paribas Masters in Indian Wells by Rafael Nadal before beating Djokovic to win the Sony Ericsson Open title in Miami, Florida.

Entry #2,052

Thought of the Day

"Only love interests me, and I am only in contact with things that revolve around love."

- Marc Chagall -

Entry #2,051

SC Pick 3

Evening 2-14-10 Evening

** until 2-21-10 **

052  054  061  063  072  074  081  083  092  094  160  162  164  180  182  184  250  254  261  263  270  274  281  283  290  294  360  362  364  380  382  384  450  452  461  463  470  472  481  483  490  492  502  504  520  524  540  542  601  603  610  612  614  621  623  630  632  634  641  643  702  704  720  724  740  742  801  803  810  812  814  821  823  830  832  834  841  843  902  904  920  924  940  942 

Valentine target

Entry #2,050

Fact of the Day

Roses are a traditional symbol of love and, depending on their color, can suggest different nuances of love. For example, red roses indicate passion and true love. Light pink suggests desire, passion, and energy; dark pink suggests gratitude. Yellow roses can mean friendship or jealousy. A lavender or thornless rose can mean love at first sight. White roses mean virtue or devotion. Some roses even combine colors to created more complicated meanings.

- Provided by RandomHistory.com -

Entry #2,049

Thought of the Day

"Our life is what our thoughts make it."                                                      - Marcus Aurelius -

Entry #2,048

Robinson wins Slam dunk; Pierce nabs 3-Point; Nash wins Skills

Saturday, February 13, 2010
Pierce nabs 3-Point; Nash wins Skills


Associated Press

DALLAS -- Nate Robinson is the NBA's first three-time slam dunk champion, and that's enough for him. The 5-foot-9 New York Knicks guard says he's done with the marquee event of Saturday night's All-Star festivities.

 

"No, no, no, no, no. I don't think I can bear that anymore. I'm just happy with this third one," he said. "This is the last one."

 

Robinson barely won another title, garnering 51 percent of the fan vote to hold off Toronto rookie DeMar DeRozan in a largely forgettable dunk contest.

 

DeRozan advanced to the final round after getting a perfect score of 50 on his second dunk of the first round.

 

No, no, no, no, no. I don't think I can bear that anymore. I'm just happy with this third one. This is the last one.

” -- Slam dunk champion Nate Robinson

 

After bringing several Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders on the court with him, Robinson's final dunk came when he threw the ball off the backboard, grabbed it and turned midair for a two-handed backward slam.

 

"The best thing I brought with me, the Dallas cheerleaders of course," Robinson said. "I asked if they could help me out with the dunk. They did their job and I did mine."

 

While not using the cheerleaders as props -- "They're way too beautiful for that," he said -- Robinson celebrated his final dunk by grabbing a pair of silver and blue pompoms from one of them and waving them in the air.

 

Fan voting determined the final round after DeRozan advanced by getting five 10s from a judging panel that included former dunk champions Spud Webb and Dominique Wilkins. The 5-foot-7 Webb, a Dallas native, won the event the only other time it was held in his hometown in 1986.

 

Robinson won the dunk title as a rookie in 2006, then beat Dwight Howard to win again last year.

 

DeRozan's perfect score came after he caught a pass off the side of the backboard and slammed it with his right hand on the other side of the hoop.

 

DeRozan got a spot in the competition by winning the first-ever All-Star Slam Dunk-In, beating Los Angeles Clippers guard Eric Gordon at halftime of the rookie challenge on Friday night.

 

Charlotte's Gerald Wallace and Shannon Brown of the Los Angeles Lakers were eliminated after the first round in Saturday night's marquee event.

 

 

While Robinson reigned again, Boston's Paul Pierce arrived for All-Star Weekend wanting to make up for an embarrassing performance.

 

Consider it done.

 

Pierce won the 3-Point Shootout, proving his lackluster performance the last time he was in the competition was an aberration.

 

"I worked on it, I really took pride in it. In '02 I stunk it up. I wanted to come in here and put on a show," Pierce said. "I had to work on getting the technique down and knowing what side to pull the ball from, stuff like that. I knew if I got hot I could win it."

 

Pierce had 20 points in the final round, making all five of the 2-point money balls, to beat Golden State's Stephen Curry (17) and Denver's Chauncey Billups (14).

 

When Pierce last competed in the Shootout in 2002, he scored only eight points -- what he called leading into this week's competition "almost a record low."

 

Phoenix Suns guard Steve Nash also was a winner Saturday night, beating a trio of 20-somethings to capture another Skills Challenge title six days after he turned 36.

 

With a time of 29.9 seconds in the final round of the obstacle course-like skills competition, Nash beat Dallas native and 2008 champion Deron Williams of Utah, who is 11 years younger.

 

It's been quite a run this weekend for the Canadian, who helped light the Olympic cauldron at Friday's opening ceremonies in Vancouver, British Columbia. He also will be on the court Sunday for the All-Star Game in the same area where he played from 1998-2004.

 

"I got my second wind," said Nash, who jokingly asked his younger opponents before the competition if he could start from the second station instead of doing the entire course.

 

Nash, whose other Skills Challenge title came in 2005, didn't have any practice on the course before the competition.

 

"I tried my best without my warmup," Nash said. "I missed the run-through because I was a little disjointed from the trip. ... I was kind of hoping for the best."

 

Nash completed every obstacle in the final round in one try -- save for a second shot from the top of the key. Williams was perfect until needing five shots at the outlet pass, when he had already exceeded Nash's winning time.

 

Milwaukee rookie guard Brandon Jennings and Oklahoma City's Russell Westbrook, who is 21, were eliminated after the first round. Westbrook replaced defending champion Derrick Rose of Chicago, who sat out with a bruised right hip.

 

Defending 3-point champion Daequan Cook of Miami was eliminated after the first round. His 15 points were the same as Phoenix's Channing Frye and New York's Danilo Gallinari. Curry had 18 points in the first round, while Pierce and Billups had 17.

 

In Saturday night's opening event, hometown favorite and former Nash teammate Dirk Nowitzki hit a shot from midcourt to cap Team Texas' victory in the Shooting Stars competition.

 

Texas, which also consisted of San Antonio Silver Stars player Becky Hammon and former Houston guard Kenny Smith, beat Team Los Angeles with a time of 34.3 in the finals. The Texas trio needed 13 shots to complete the final round.

 

Lakers All-Star Pau Gasol, former NBA player Brent Barry and Marie Ferdinand-Harris of the Los Angeles Sparks came in second, finishing in 55.2 seconds.

 

Los Angeles hit its first five shots in the finals in less than 30 seconds, but only had a couple of chances from midcourt to beat Texas' time.

 

Atlanta (Joe Johnson, former Hawks guard Steve Smith and Angel McCoughtry of the Atlanta Dream) and Sacramento (Tyreke Evans, former All-Star Chris Webber and former Sacramento Monarchs player Nicole Powell) were eliminated in the first round.

 

Saturday night's events were at the American Airlines Center, but Sunday's All-Star Game will be at Cowboys Stadium, where more than 90,000 people are expected to attend.

 

"The whole weekend is special because Dallas can showcase what we have. The new stadium is going to be amazing," Nowitzki said. "We'll all be part of history in the biggest crowd and this is a good way to start it off."

Entry #2,047

Kearney wins moguls for 1st U.S. gold medal in 2010 games

Saturday, February 13, 2010
Updated: February 14, 3:04 AM ET
Kearney, Bahrke of U.S. medal in moguls


Associated Press

WEST VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- Someday very soon, 'O Canada' will receive good air time at the Vancouver Olympics.

 

First, though, American Hannah Kearney gets to celebrate.

 

It's a party four years in the making for the 23-year-old from New Hampshire, who slashed through the rain and down the moguls Saturday night -- a remarkable run that gave America its first gold medal of these Olympics and denied Jenn Heil the honor of becoming the first Canadian to win gold on home turf.

 

"I know Canada hasn't won a gold medal on their home turf, but I have a feeling they'll do it these games," Kearney said. "But I'm pleased that I could stop that for now."

 

 

Heil came in as the favorite on paper -- winner of her last four World Cup events -- but this one really wasn't close. Kearney scored 26.63 points to win by .94 -- a wide margin in a sport often decided by tenths and hundredths.

 

She won in a blowout four years after entering Turin as the defending world champion but stumbled in qualifying for a 22nd-place finish that left her crying at the bottom.

 

This time, Kearney finished first after qualifying, then first again when it really counted -- the last run of the night, when the gold medal was on the line.

 

"I think the qualifying run was the key to my success today," Kearney said. "In some ways, it was redemption for the absolute failure I experienced in Torino."

 

Shannon Bahrke took bronze to add to her silver from 2002 and push America's medal total to four after the first full day of competition. Apolo Anton Ohno took silver and J.R. Celski won bronze in speedskating earlier.

 

But there was no bigger American performer on this day than Kearney, who insisted she was more mature, more able to turn her brain off and simply ski than she was four years ago in Italy, when she came in as a favorite and was out of the running before she reached full speed.

 

She owned that failure and spent a lot of time and effort trying to make sure she wouldn't repeat it. As a reminder, her trainer put a note in her bag before the meet with a lightning bolt on the front. Inside, he calculated the hundreds of hours of conditioning work on the bike, the thousands of training exercises, water jumps and practice trips on snow.

 

In some ways, it was redemption for the absolute failure I experienced in Torino.

” -- American Hannah Kearney

 

"It's there because it's part of what got me here today," Kearney said of her 2006 failure. "Everything happens for a reason. If I had known I was going to win a gold medal four years ago, I wouldn't have cried so much."

 

Indeed, it all worked out in the end.

 

She pulled off a back flip on her top jump and a 360-degree spin on her second, her legs knitted tightly together on both, the perfect example of the form and function judges love to see when they're handing out Olympic gold.

 

Same scene as she tore through the slushy, rain-soaked moguls -- knees pointed forward and down the hill and hands moving in rhythm as she dipped through the bumps.

 

Logging the fastest time -- 27.86 seconds -- didn't hurt either, and when Kearney made it across the finish line, she knew it -- pumping her fists and waiting for the score that would prove to be a blowout over Heil, the defending Olympic champ.

 

When Kearney's score popped up, it brought a huge gasp from the heavily Canadian crowd.

 

It put a red, white and blue tinge on what was supposed to be a big day for Canada. Prime Minister Stephen Harper was in the house to watch Heil, the top-ranked moguls skier in the world, who was given a great shot at becoming the first to get 'O Canada' played at a medals ceremony in Canada.

 

Instead, she'll go down with figure skater Brian Orser, who lost the famous "Battle of the Brians" to Brian Boitano back in Calgary in 1988, settling for silver in what was Canada's last, best chance to take that gold on home turf.

 

Canada also failed to win at the Summer Games in 1976 in Montreal, though Vancouver certainly will be a different story. The host country poured $110 million into its "Own the Podium" program, the goal of which was to win more medals than anyone else over these 17 days.

 

"I know how much hard work goes into winning any Olympic medal," Heil said. "For me, I didn't see the difference in the value of what date a medal is won. Canadians can be assured that that medal is coming on home soil."

 

Although Heil's medal got Canada on the board for these games, well, there's no disputing that Canada lost this contest 2-1.

 

OK, so maybe Canada can get some partial credit for Kearney's medal: Her mother grew up in Montreal, and she has an aunt and uncle and cousins who live in Vancouver and were on hand for her victory.

 

"I'm half-Canadian," Kearney said, "so this is my home soil, too."

 

Meanwhile, Bahrke's bronze will look good next to the silver from 2002, to say nothing of those pink streaks in her blonde hair. The veteran landed the 360 and back-flip jumps that were the most popular combo in the competition, overcame a slight bobble after her first jump and watched her score of 25.43 hold up for a spot on the medal stand.

 

Unhappy after her qualifying run, and knowing this is her Olympic finale, Bahrke thought she had one special run left in her.

 

"I thought, it's not over, it's not over yet," she said. "So I actually went in and listened to a little tape and let it rip."

 

After Bahrke's run, another Canadian hopeful, Kristi Richards, picked up too much speed between the jumps and fell. Heather McPhie, an up-and-coming American with decent medal hopes, fell after her final jump.

 

Japan's Aiko Uemura finished fourth, which left Bahrke down at the bottom to hug it out with Kearney after her winning run.

 

American Michelle Roark finished 17th after falling on the landing of her risky, 720-degree spin on the top -- a move that can win a gold, or leave you close to last.

 

What was most unbelievable about Kearney's 22nd-place finish in Italy was that the mistake didn't come doing anything difficult. She caught an edge on her second turn, never got her bearings and was out of it before she reached the finish line.

 

She was crying at the bottom that day.

 

On this night, too, but for a much different reason.

 

Best race she's ever run?

 

"Certainly close to it," she said. "And the best prize ever."

Entry #2,046

51-year-old man gives 7,777 hugs in 24hrs

Embracing history: Man sets hugs record in Vegas

By OSKAR GARCIA, Associated Press Writer

Associated Press Writer 51 mins ago

LAS VEGAS – A 51-year-old Ohio man has embraced the Valentine's Day spirit faster than anyone before, giving 7,777 hugs in 24 hours for a new world record.

Jeff Ondash, who sought the squeezes under the costumed alter ego Teddy McHuggin, broke the record Saturday night outside the Paris Las Vegas hotel-casino on the Las Vegas Strip.

Ondash says he hoped to become the world's hugging champion to raise money for the American Heart Association during American Heart month. Ondash says the cause is important to him because his brother and father both died because of heart problems.

Guinness World Records says the previous record of 5,000 hugs in one day was set last year by Siobhan O'Connor in Dublin, Ireland.

Ondash also holds the one-hour hugs record with 1,205.

Entry #2,045

Vision

Saturday 2-13-10 New Moon

367, 074, 851, 481, 974, 894, 873, 268, 024

735, 503, 370, 937, 715, 182, 405, 492, 892

132, 906, 532, 509, 774, 733, 773, 230, 001

404, 151, 313, 446, 995, 5993, 9225, 9332

0953, 9164, 6778, 0578, 4246, 8213, 8205

Entry #2,044

Butler to Mavs, Wiz get Howard

Saturday, February 13, 2010
Butler to Mavs, Wiz get Howard


By Marc Stein
ESPN.com

The Washington Wizards and Dallas Mavericks have completed a seven-player trade that launches Washington's long-anticipated rebuilding project in earnest and sends Wizards mainstays Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood to the Mavericks.

 

 

 

The teams agreed on the principal pieces Friday: Butler, Haywood and DeShawn Stevenson to Dallas for Josh Howard and Drew Gooden. Mavericks reserves Quinton Ross and James Singleton were added to the deal Saturday and are also Washington-bound, with Dallas due to receive cash considerations in addition to the three players.

 

Washington and Dallas have completed a trade call with the league office to secure the NBA's required approval and will formally announce the trade later Saturday, sources said.

 

The Wizards have been talking to several teams for weeks about deals involving Butler and Haywood, most notably Houston with Tracy McGrady's $22.5 million expiring contract. But talks with Dallas had stalled in the past week, partly because of Washington's insistence that the Mavericks take guard Stevenson in any Butler deal.

 

When Washington agreed late in the week that it would add Haywood to the deal, talks picked up Thursday night and only grew more serious Friday, resulting in the trade that is widely regarded as the first major domino needed to loosen things up on the trade market in advance of Thursday's annual trading deadline.

 

The acquisitions of Butler and Haywood, meanwhile, would be a welcome spark for the sputtering Mavericks, with Butler moving into the spot vacated by Howard and Haywood arriving as another rim-protecting defensive anchor in the wake of a knee injury that has compromised the effectiveness of Mavs center Erick Dampier.

 

Acquiring Haywood and having the chance to re-sign him this summer would likely fill the void Dallas thought it filled last summer, when the Mavs signed Orlando center Marcin Gortat to a lucrative offer sheet, only for the Magic to unexpectedly match the offer to the restricted free agent.

 

Washington inevitably wanted Beaubois added to the deal, but Mavs owner Mark Cuban said earlier this week that his young point guard is "pretty much untouchable" as Thursday's trade deadline approaches. But sources say the Wizards are gaining so much payroll and luxury-tax relief -- while also keeping Jamison to either keep or move in a separate deal before Thursday's deadline -- that they couldn't pass on Dallas' offer.

 

The potential for acquiring two front-line players -- since Butler and Haywood would immediately become key rotation players for Dallas -- renewed the Mavs' interest and convinced them to relent on Stevenson.

 

Speaking to a group of reporters Thursday, Cuban said: "We kind of know the parameters [under] which we would make a deal. If somebody meets our parameters, we'll pull the trigger. But if not, we're not going to do it. I don't see us doing something just to do something because that'll kill our flexibility this summer. But in the event that there's somebody that really upgrades our talent and really makes our team better, then maybe we'll do it."

Entry #2,043