Tag Archives: Appeal

Image new-orleans-suspect-picture.jpg

New Orleans police release pictures of suspected Mother’s Day Parade shooter (VIDEO)

Cellphone video obtained by police shows the Mother’s Day parade crowd suddenly scattering, and some falling to the ground, in front of a man wearing a white T-shirt and dark pants. He is seen running away from the crowd while shooting at people.Gunfire erupted in the Seventh Ward neighborhood at around 2:00pm local time (1900 GMT) during an annual Mother’s Day parade attended by up to 400 people. Based on a preliminary investigation, the FBI has confirmed that the shooting was likely related to street violence, not terrorism.Investigators are continuing to conduct interviews, and collect evidence and surveillance video from the scene. The image of the shooter is not clear, but police said they hope someone will recognize him.Police and local media have called for anyone who recognizes or may know the possible suspect to contact crime stoppers in the hope of tracing the gunman, or gunmen. Up to three gunmen are believed to be at large.”There were hundreds of people there, and somebody saw something,” New Orleans mayor Mitch Landrieu said in a public appeal.A $2,500 cash reward was initially offered, which was later raised to $10,000 amid a massive manhunt. The reward is being offered to anyone who can provide information that leads to an arrest.Former CIA agent Glenn Carle told RT that the violence did not resemble a terror attack: “It doesn’t have any of the hallmarks or modus operandi of terrorist groups that I ever worked against, that we know about in the intelligence community in the United States. It seems – knowing nothing more than the media reports – to have been either astoundingly amateurish by a terrorist, and I don’t think that’s the case, or more likely a gang-related kind of violent act.”The shooting victims – 10 men, seven women, a boy and a girl, both 10 years old – were taken to hospitals for non-life-threatening wounds; three remain in critical condition. Read More

Dead Boston bombing suspect finally buried: police

Slain Boston Marathon bomber suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev has finally been buried, ending a growing row over what to do with his body, police in the Massachusetts town of Worcester said Thursday. “As a result of our public appeal for help, a courageous and compassionate individual came forward…

Read More

Image mf.gif

“The Bible” mini-series to be released as movie

Mark Burnett’s popular mini-series, “The Bible,” which pulled in around 100 million U.S. viewers along its 10-episode stretch, is being re-cut into a movie. Speaking to the Hollywood Reporter, Burnett said, “We’re cutting a movie version right now, a three-hour version of Jesus and [we have] many, many offers from theaters globally.”Thanks to its broad international appeal, “The Bible” has become the fastest-selling DVD mini-series of all time. Of its unprecedented success, Burnett said: “It’s clearly a calling; clearly, we felt it was something we had to do, and too many things happened to explain it any other way. It’s a juggernaut, and it’s not going to slow down.”Although the film is not yet connected to a distributor, Burnett is aiming for a fall release.Continue Reading… Read More

Image presidential-hug.jpg

Putting Himself in the Other Person’s Shoes, Obama Says Gun Control Opponents Abet Murder

Speaking about gun control in Denver
yesterday, President Obama
declared, “We’ve got to get past some of the rhetoric that gets
perpetuated that breaks down trust and is so over the top that it
just shuts down all discussion.” I agree. Here is an example of
such debate-squelching rhetoric, drawn from the
speech surrounding the president’s call for calm and rational
discussion:

It’s now been just over 100 days since the murder of 20 innocent
children and six brave educators in Newtown, Connecticut—an event
that shocked this country and I think galvanized parents all across
the country to say, we’ve got to do something more to protect our
kids. But consider this: Over those 100 days or so, more than 100
times as many Americans have fallen victim to gun violence. More
than 2,000 of our fellow citizens, struck down, often because they
were just going about their daily round. They weren’t doing
anything special. Just doing what folks do every day—shopping,
going to school. Every day that we wait to do something about it,
even more of our fellow citizens are stolen from our lives by a
bullet from a gun.

Here Obama is not-so-subtly charging his political opponents
with complicity in murder. If Congress passes his “common-sense
proposals,” the president avers, fewer people will be killed by
guns. Therefore if legislators refuse to “do something,” they have
the blood of innocent children on their hands. This is the same
emotional appeal Obama has been making since December, when he

said that if you don’t agree with him about gun control you are
in effect saying “we’re powerless in the face of such carnage”
because “the politics are too hard.” ;
Why would anyone oppose new gun controls? Not for any decent,
honorable, or principled reason that the president is willing to
concede:

There’s no reason we can’t do this unless politics is getting in
the way. ; There’s no reason we can’t do this….
Most of these ideas are not controversial….
There are already some senators back in Washington floating the
idea that they might use obscure procedural stunts to prevent or
delay any of these votes on reform.
Think about that. They’re not just saying they’ll vote “no” on
the proposal that most Americans support. They’re saying they’ll do
everything they can to avoid even allowing a vote on a proposal
that the overwhelming majority of the American people support.
They’re saying your opinion doesn’t matter. ;
We knew from the beginning that change wouldn’t be easy. And we
knew that there would be powerful voices that would do everything
they could to run out the clock, change the subject, ignore the
majority of the American people. We knew they’d try to make any
progress collapse under the weight of fear and frustration, or
maybe people would just stop paying attention.

Obama refuses to entertain the possibility that his opponents
have any comprehensible motivation at all, aside perhaps from sheer
partisan perversity, let alone that they might be doing what they
believe to be right. This demonization of the opposition sits
rather uneasily with Obama’s comment in the same speech that “there
are good people on both sides of this thing, but we have to be able
to put ourselves in the other person’s shoes.” He worries that
“both sides of the debate sometimes don’t listen to each other,”
that “people who take absolute positions on these issues, on both
sides, sometimes aren’t willing to concede even an inch of ground.”
And he wonders, “How do you build trust?”
Here is a good way to start: Stop assuming that you have a
monopoly on virtue or empathy and stop arguing, whether implicitly
or
explicitly, that people who disagree with you about the merits
of particular gun policies simply don’t care enough about the mass
murder of children. At the top of the White House website right now is a link to
“The
President’s Plan to Reduce Gun Violence.” The headline over the
link: “We Have Not Forgotten.” The implication: The people on the
other side of the debate have,
A New York Times ;story
about Connecticut’s recently enacted
hodpodge of gun controls illustrates what Obama is trying to
achieve through his heart-tugging campaign of moral
intimidation:

Senator Michael McLachlan, a Danbury Republican, said that much
in the bill made him uncomfortable, but that the Newtown shooting
“changed a lot of people’s viewpoints on a lot of things, on the
preciousness of life, on the priority of our lives, and it
certainly affected me in a very great way.”
“Under different circumstances, I would look at this bill very
differently,” he said, “But today I’m supporting this bill in hopes
that I am properly honoring Caroline Phoebe Previdi.”

In other words, McLachlan supported what he concedes is a bad
law because he felt a need to “do something,” as the president puts
it. Surely there is a better way to honor the dead. Read More

Image mf.gif

Amanda Knox saga reopens

British tabloid press, rejoice! — The Amanda Knox saga has returned. Italy’s highest appeal court has overturned the acquittals of now-25-year-old Knox and Raffaele Sollecito, 29, ordering a retrial in the case of the murder of British student Meredith Kercher and paving the way for a potential extradition  battle between Italy and the U.S.The appellate court’s new ruling came after prosecutors argued that the court, which acquitted Knox and her former lover in 2011, had not conducted proceedings properly. According to the AP, “Italian law cannot compel Knox to return for the new trial, and her lawyer said she had no plans to do so. The appellate court hearing the new case could declare her in contempt of court but that carries no additional penalties.”Knox’s original trial fueled a media frenzy, especially in Italy and Britain, with salacious accusations of student group sex gone murderously awry. The rumors, although headline gold, infected public perception and — commentators noted — the court proceedings. The foreign exchange student, who was studying in Italy and shared a Perugia apartment with Kercher, earned the epithet “Foxy Knoxy” from the ravenous paparazzi.Continue Reading… Read More

Italian court orders murder retrial for American college student Amanda Knox

Italy’s highest court of appeal overturned the acquittal of US student Amanda Knox on Tuesday and ordered a retrial over the murder of her British housemate in what prosecutors said was a drug-fuelled sex attack. Knox and her Italian former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito — originally…

Read More

88-year-old peaceful activist wins surveillance database fight

John Catt, who has no criminal record, wins legal action to have records deleted from police database of suspected extremists Three appeal court judges have ruled that police violated the human rights of an 88-year-old peaceful campaigner when they secretly labelled him a “domestic…

Read More