LOTTOMIKE's Blog

Man Who Documented Meth Use Dies

ST. LOUIS (March 27) - A southeast Missouri man who drew global attention for his documentary about how methamphetamine hopelessly ravaged his body died Monday still optimistic his film steers others from the highly addictive stimulant.

"He was extremely satisfied, wanting to do more in getting the word out and showing kids what meth harm does. We didn't get to that point," his father, Jack Bridges, said in a telephone interview hours after his son Shawn's death at age 35. "He didn't want anyone to go through what he did."

Shawn Bridges died shortly after 11:30 a.m. at a hospital in Cape Girardeau, Mo., his father by his side.

"We wanted to keep him with us a lot longer, but we appreciate God's good grace," Jack Bridges said, saying his son's crusade presses on. "We'll still be trying to drive home the point that these drugs are poison, and that people using them are heading the same place Shawn has gone."

Shawn Bridges drew global attention last year with publicity surrounding "No More Sunsets," a 29-minute film shot by a former southern Illinois television videographer at the request of Bridges, a former trucker who sought to immortalize his slow, agonizing decline.

By his family's account, Bridges already had died at least twice well before Monday, his heart so ravaged over the years by meth - a concoction that can include toxic chemicals such as battery acid, drain cleaner and fertilizer - that it stopped and had to be shocked back into beating.

The documentary shows Bridges largely bedridden, his constant companions the catheter that funneled urine out of his body and the feeding tube that stuck from his stomach - fallout from the poor decisions he admitted he made.

"I'd say he's got a 34-year-old body on the outside with 70- to 80-year-old man on the inside," his father told the AP in May of last year.

Roughly 28,000 people sought treatment for meth addiction across the country in 1993, accounting for nearly 2 percent of admissions for drug-abuse care, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. But just a decade later, the meth-related admissions numbered nearly 136,000 - more than 7 percent of the national total for drug-abuse treatment.

Family members have said Shawn Bridges forever was haunted by the dreary day in 1976 when younger brother Jason, barely a year old, died in a car wreck. Shawn was just 4 and nowhere near the accident but inexplicably blamed himself, wanting to trade places with his dead sibling, his father has said.

Jack Bridges says Shawn's lenient upbringing set him on the road to becoming "a little monster. By 16, the kid was a high school dropout and partier." Twice, he tried to kill himself, family members have said.

At 26, Shawn had a heart attack his father has blamed on meth, famous for fatally damaging a chronic user's heart and other internal organs.

Chip Rossetti, who filmed the documentary, said 500 to 600 copies have been sold, with copies sent everywhere from Australia and Canada. Bridges also was profiled on German public television.

Rossetti said Monday he plans a sequel, chronicling Bridge's final year and testimonials by people touched by his awareness push.

"I don't think people will forget what got him to this point," said Rossetti, now a sales manager for an indoor football team in Evansville, Ind. "But what he did with his condition is really the amazing thing."
By JIM SUHR
AP

 
Entry #1,035

Iran Says Sailors May Face Charges

LONDON (March 26) - Iran  warned that 15 British sailors and marines could face charges for allegedly entering Iranian waters and rejected British requests to meet with the servicemen detained off the coast of Iraq .

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki threatened unspecified consequences for the Royal Navy crew in comments to reporters in New York on Sunday. He described the charge against them as "illegal entrance into Iranian waters."

"In terms of legal issues, it's under investigation," Mottaki said.

The capture and detention of the British service personnel increased tensions between Iran and the West that already were high over Tehran's nuclear program and allegations that Iran is interfering with the U.S.-led war in Iraq.

The U.N. Security Council agreed Saturday to tougher sanctions against Iran for its refusal to meet U.N. demands that it halt uranium enrichment. Many in the West fear the country's civilian nuclear research is cover for a weapons program, a claim Iran denies.

Britain and the United States have said the sailors and marines were intercepted Friday just after they completed a search of a civilian vessel in the Iraqi part of the Shatt al-Arab waterway, where the border with Iran has historically been disputed.

Prime Minister Tony Blair  on Sunday called the detentions "unjustified and wrong," and insisted during a European Union  meeting that Royal Navy crew was in Iraqi waters.

"It is simply not true that they went into Iranian territorial waters, and I hope the Iranian government understands how fundamental an issue this is for us," he said.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice  insisted during a trip to the Middle East that the Britons be released, saying "we all fully trust the British" account.

Mottaki gave no firm commitment on their release during a telephone conversation with British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett late Sunday.

Beckett reiterated that the sailors and marines had been searching for smugglers in Iraqi waters under an agreement with the Baghdad  government when they were seized by the naval forces of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, the Foreign Office said.

"The Iranian authorities intercepted these sailors and marines in Iranian waters and detained them in Iranian waters. This has happened in the past, as well," Mottaki said.

The Iranian state news agency IRNA said that Ibrahim Rahimpour, the foreign ministry official in charge of western Europe, had told British Ambassador Geoffrey Adams that the British sailors and marines were "well and sound" and that "legal proceedings" were under way.

On Saturday, Iran's top military official, Gen. Ali Reza Afshar, said the seized Britons were taken to Tehran for questioning and had confessed to what he called an "aggression into the Islamic Republic of Iran's waters."

British, Israeli and Saudi media reports on Sunday suggested that Iran was hoping to trade them for Iranian officials it claims have been abducted by the West in recent months.

Ali Askari, former head of an elite unit of the Revolutionary Guard, disappeared in Turkey six weeks ago; several months earlier, six Iranian officials were captured by U.S. forces at an Iranian liaison office in Irbil, the capital of the Kurdish self-ruled region of Iraq. One was later released.

Iran said it was a government liaison office. The U.S. military said those detained were connected to an Iranian Revolutionary Guard unit that funds and arms insurgents in Iraq.

Ahmad Bakhshaysh, a political analyst and professor in politics in Tehran's Allameh University, said a prisoner swap was not what Iran wanted.

"Iran is not after retaliation regarding abduction of its diplomats. ... However, Iran will use this opportunity to show to the world public opinion that Britons were (the) invader and Iran was victim of the Westerners bullying policy," he said.

The capture of the British sailors and marines was not the first time Iranians have taken Western forces by surprise in the border area.

In June 2004, six British marines and two sailors were captured, then paraded blindfolded on Iranian television. They admitted they had entered Iranian waters illegally but were released unharmed after three days.

U.S. News and World Report, citing a U.S. Army report out of Iraq, said American troops working with Iraqi border guards within Iraq were attacked by a much larger Iranian military unit in September. U.S. News said no Americans were hurt in the incident, but four Iraqi soldiers, an interpreter, and an Iraqi border policeman remain missing.

The U.S. military said the account was accurate, adding that the incident with the American troops, who were training, advising and helping the Iraqi border police, could have been a result of confusion in the vast desert area along the border.

"There is a lot of open terrain," military spokesman Lt. Col. Mike Donnelly said in an e-mail. "Visual sighting and happenstance encounters from a distance occur routinely."

By DAVID STRINGER
AP


 

Entry #1,034

who will win the 2007 NCAA basketball final four?

north carolina,georgetown,ohio state,memphis.....or

unlv runnin rebels.i remember watching these guys in the late 80's/early 90's and they were bad top the bone.just now getting back in the thick of things after some very troublesome times.

Entry #1,032

ohio state (33-3) vs. memphis (33-3) winner goes to the final four

ohio state (33-3) vs. memphis (33-3) winner goes to the final four in the south region of the NCAA men basketball tournament.both have the longest winning streaks in the nation here as well as championship aspirations.the game of the year in my opinion.don't miss a great basketball game saturday afternoon.....

Entry #1,031

classic movies-back to the future trilogy

First start off with "Back to the Future" which is the story of Marty Mcfly (Michael J. Fox) who's your average teenager as his mentor Professor Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) helps him with an experiment involving time traveling using a time-machine vehicle which uses plutonium that he stole from Libyians as Brown gets killed. Marty travels back in time so he can save his life as he's in the year 1955, his future mother (Lea Thompson) and future father (Crispin Glover) are teens that didn't know each other in high school for Marty creates some serious time damage even with his presence such as his future mom falling for him instead of his future dad, only Doc Brown of the past can help him repair the damage and return back to 1985.

"Back to the Future 2" is set after the day when Marty arrived back from the past, Doc has warned Marty and his girlfriend (Elizabeth Shue) that their future children will be in danger in the future and they must go to the future to fix the problem. However after the assignment in the world of tommorow, future Biff (Thomas Wilson) stowsaway on the Deloren back to 1955 to give his younger self a stolen futuristic almanac that has all the sport events and statistics. His younger self soon makes a bet that makes him a future success, Marty must repair the time and space damage by going back to 1955 to find & destroy the book.

Finally "Back to the Future 3" has Marty spending time at 1955's Doc Brown's house for the night as the future self of Doc settles down in the year 1885. He decides to go back in time to save his mentor from being dead in the past, however Biff's anchester Mad-Dog is causing big trouble in town and Doc has fallen for a teacher named Clair (Mary Steenburgen) but can Marty save Doc from danger or will history be erased?

Entry #1,029

memphis wins and goes to the elite eight

my hometwon memphis tigers when a nailbiter 65-64 to go to the elite eight in basketball.they play the winner of my home state tennessee and ohio state and that should be big game too.

Entry #1,028

your favorite decade

do you like the....

1930's?

1940's?

1950's?

1960's?

1970's?

1980's?

1990's?

2000's?

i tend to like the 80's myself.when i went to high school and i first started getting into music and movies.

Entry #1,027

ready for spring

i'm ready for spring.love the nice weather during this season.once summer hits i stay indoors if i'm not working.too much crime plus i can't breathe the air is so humid here.so i'll be fine until june through september.that took a lot out of me last year.wasn't one of my better summers but probably one of the worst.i love winter,spring and fall but summer just doesn't move me.....

Entry #1,026

tennessee in the sweet sixteen

tennessee vs. ohio state for a trip to the elite eight.

vandy is from tennessee and also in the sweet sixteen

memphis plays nevada today also for a trip to the sweet sixteen.

Entry #1,024

Confederate Flag Exhibit Ignites Uproar

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (March 17) - When artist John Sims sees the Confederate flag, he sees "visual terrorism ," and a symbol of a racist past. When Robert Hurst sees the flag, he is filled with pride as the descendant of a soldier who fought for the South during the Civil War.

Their differences have flared into a war of words, catching a local museum in the middle.

Hurst walked into the Mary Brogan Museum of Art and Science this past week and saw an exhibit by Sims, including a Confederate flag hung from a noose on a 13-foot gallows in a display titled "The Proper Way to Hang a Confederate Flag."

Hurst asked the museum to remove the display, along with 13 other pieces by Sims.

The museum, however, announced Friday it is standing by Sims' work, on display since Feb. 26, because it wants to inspire dialogue in the community about a symbol that engenders a diversity of strong responses.

"There's a balance between the nature of the art that we show and the outcome that we seek, which is to promote dialogue and conversation, and have you maybe think of something in a slightly different way," said Chucha Barber, the museum's executive director.

Hurst, commander of the local Sons of Confederate Veterans chapter, said Friday he has lost respect for the museum, calling the display of Sims' work "offensive, objectionable and tasteless."

"They're alienating a large portion of the population around here," Hurst said. "Maybe they just wanted to cause some controversy."

He called Sims an "irrelevant individual" with no artistic talent.

"There are some people who have great talent, and they rely on that talent to be successful. There are others who don't have great talent, and they have to rely on a gimmick," Hurst said.

Sims responded that he's about as irrelevant as the Constitution.

This is not the first time that Sims and the Sons of Confederate Veterans have sparred. In 2004, Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania drew protests from the group when it displayed the same gallows.

Barber said she was not aware of the confrontation in Gettysburg, but said it probably would not have changed her museum's decision.

Hurst says he has discussed the possibility of taking legal action against the museum, although he's reluctant to give Sims more publicity.

Florida statutes say it's unlawful to "deface, defile or contemptuously abuse" the Confederate flag, but say it's also illegal to prevent the display of the flag "for decorative or patriotic purposes."

"I think that we're well within the statute," Barber said.

By STEPHEN MAJORS
AP
Entry #1,023

playing birthdays

i played 5 days worth of picks at betslips and played my birthday numbers straight like this 3875,3785 for 50 cents apiece.10 dollars total investment.my stock could earn me up to 4,500 dollars if the right balls drop......

Entry #1,022

ROAD TO FINAL 4 Memphis Tigers Down Mean Green for 23rd Straight Win

the tigers beat North Texas 73-58 on Friday and showed why the Tigers believe they'll be ready to play the big boys when they finally get a chance.

Backup guards Andre Allen and Jeremy Hunt found themselves running the offense after two starters got in foul trouble midway through the first half. With big men Robert Dozier and Joey Dorsey getting physical, and freshman reserve Doneal Mack hitting some big shots, Memphis not only hung tough it went from being down by a few to being ahead by a lot.

The Tigers (31-3) were hardly tested again on the way to their national-best 23rd straight win.

"We did what we had to," Memphis coach John Calipari said.

Chris Douglas-Roberts led the Tigers in scoring with 16 points, but 13 came in the second half. He missed the last 9:58 of the first half after picking up a technical foul that counted as his third personal.

Antonio Anderson was on the bench, too, partly because of two fouls and partly because of how well Allen was playing. Allen ended up staying in for a career-high 36 minutes, scoring 14 points and handing out four assists. He also was the driving force in a 14-4 run midway through the second half that ended any hopes North Texas (23-11) had of an upset.

Entry #1,021