Ur Place

April 12, 2008

Girlfriend: Davidson said Christian was forced to shoot Newsom

Filed under: Lifestyle — halfevil @ 11:54 am

The girlfriend of the accused ringleader in a fatal carjacking told jurors this afternoon her now ex-beau claimed Channon Christian was forced to kill her boyfriend.

“He told me Channon shot Christopher (Newsom) … that they made her do it,” Daphne Sutton acknowledged under cross-examination by defense attorney Phil Lomonaco on behalf of Eric Dewayne “E” Boyd.

Lomonaco was trying to show that Sutton knew about the fatal carjacking and her boyfriend Lemaricus “Slim” Davidson’s involvement and yet harbored him and failed to notify police of what she knew.

Boyd is on trial for allegedly hiding out Davidson after Sutton would no longer allow him to stay with her in the days following the January 2007 torture/slayings of the University of Tennessee student and her boyfriend.

In opening statements earlier this week, Assistant U.S. Attorney David Jennings told jurors that Newsom was shot three times, one that he called a “kill shot” to the head by one of the four charged with kidnapping, raping and killing Christian and Newsom.

Jennings indicated in his questioning of Sutton that Davidson told several lies to Sutton in a bid to convince her to give him a place to stay.

Sutton, whose uncle is Knoxville Police Department Officer Dennis R. Bible, has not been charged, and Lomonaco has alleged she was spared prosecution, both because she is white and the remaining suspects black, and her uncle works for the lead investigative agency in the case.

Sutton admitted lying to police in the hours after Christian’s body was found inside the Chipman Street house she had shared with Davidson.

“We were scared,” Sutton said of her and two girlfriends she was staying with at the time. “We didn’t know what to do … I had just found out he (Davidson) had killed somebody.”

There has never been an indication in any court records or hearings that authorities believe Christian was forced to shoot Newsom.

However, prosecutors have repeatedly said that the only people who know what happened are either behind bars and keeping quiet or dead.

Lomonaco this morning demanded a mistrial, arguing federal prosecutors were trying to sneak in evidence implicating his client in a fatal carjacking when he is charged only with being an accessory.

“Clearly this is evidence of uncharged crimes that is only intended to inflame the jury and to suggest to the jury Mr. Boyd was involved in this carjacking,” Lomonaco said as the trial’s second full day of testimony began in U.S. District Court in Knoxville.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Tracy Stone countered that he and Jennings must prove that Boyd knew about the carjacking in order to prove he helped hide out one of the carjacking suspects, alleged ringleader Lemaricus “Slim” Davison.

“The United States did not create the facts in this case. They are what they are,” Stone said.

Judge Tom Varlan shot down the mistrial request, saying that the jury would be properly informed of the relevance of testimony yesterday that arguably could place Boyd at the scene of the slayings of Christian, 21, and Newsom, 23.

“The court does not find these motions to be well taken,” Varlan said.

This morning’s mistrial effort by Lomonaco comes after prosecutors Thursday mounted what sounded more like a case for murder than accessory to a fatal carjacking.

“We’ve got (some) evidence now,” Knoxville Police Department Investigator Todd Childress responded when unsuccessfully pressed by Boyd’s defense Thursday to label as lies statements implicating Boyd in the torture slayings of Christian and Newsom and the carjacking that preceded the deaths.

“There’s not enough at this time I can prove,” Childress continued, putting an emphasis on the words “at this time.”

Childress’ promise of a continued prosecutorial push to unearth evidence of Boyd’s alleged involvement in the slayings came in the first full day of testimony offered up by Jennings and Stone.

The investigator’s comments also came at the end of a day chock full of testimony laced with circumstantial proof that Boyd was alongside Davidson and at least two other suspects already charged in the slayings during the hours Christian and Newsom were held captive, raped and ultimately killed.

First came Waste Connections of Tennessee employee Xavier Jenkins, who was parked in the firm’s Chipman Street lot next to the house where the couple was, unbeknownst to him, being held captive. Jenkins said he immediately noticed something odd about that house.

“It was busy,” he said. “The porch light was on, looked like a couple of lights were on side. There were cars parked out front. It looked like there was traffic going in and out of the house.”

He also noticed a silver Toyota 4 Runner since identified as Christian’s carjacked vehicle parked in front of the house. The vehicle’s parking lights were on. He also saw parked behind the Toyota a white Pontiac Sunbird.

Jenkins later saw the Toyota headed toward him as he sat in his vehicle eating a snack.

“The truck, the SUV, it slowed down to look at me like, ‘Why are you here at 2 o’clock in the morning?’ I took the attitude, ‘Hey, I’m supposed to be here. Why are you here?’ They gave me attitude so I gave them one back. … It slowed down so much I could tell how many people were in that truck.”

Jenkins, who is black, said he saw four black men inside Christian’s 4 Runner. After the brief encounter, Jenkins said the driver essentially circled the block as if heading back to the Chipman Street house before he lost sight of it.

“It made me feel like they wanted to come by and see who I was and then go back,” he said.

Jenkins reported to work. A few hours later, he and some co-workers again saw the 4 Runner. It was parked in the firm’s lot.

“The car was out of place,” he said. “Initially we thought we were going to find some teenagers making out because it was kind of dark out there.”

The Toyota instead appeared abandoned. Authorities contend it would later be wiped down and distinctive stickers removed from its rear hatch.

In a bit of “Law & Order” style drama, Stone then showed Jenkins – in full view of the jury – a photographic lineup of white vehicles in search of a match of the Sunbird he also saw parked at the Chipman Street house during a time when authorities believe Christian and Newsom were being held captive and brutalized.

“That particular car with that pinstripe is the car,” Jenkins said, pointing out a particular photograph.

“How sure are you this was the car you saw in back of that 4 Runner?” Stone asked.

“One hundred percent sure,” Jenkins responded.

Stone then sent to the witness stand Adrienne Nicole Mathis, who is Boyd’s cousin.

“That’s my car,” she said when shown the same photograph.

When Stone asked her where her car had been on the weekend of the slayings, she answered, “Someone borrowed it.”

“Who borrowed your car?” Stone asked as the courtroom fell silent.

“Eric Boyd,” she said.

She said she next saw the car on Monday, Jan. 8, 2007. It was “broken down” in front of Boyd’s mother’s Ridgebrook apartment. Inside, she said she saw a sandwich bag of bullets and heard Boyd talking on a cellular phone, saying, “He might be in some trouble.”

Mathis confessed she had lied to police and a federal grand jury because of “pressure from my family,” which included a phone call Wednesday night from her sister warning her not to testify.

Defense attorney Phil Lomonaco has told jurors Mathis drove Boyd to the Chipman Street house sometime in the evening of Jan. 7, 2007, but that he never saw Christian or Newsom and was unaware of the fatal carjacking. Mathis denied that on the witness stand. Lomonaco tried to paint her a liar not then but now.

“This is the story prosecutors want you to tell, is it not?” he demanded.

“No,” she answered.

More details as they develop online and in Saturday’s News Sentinel.

Nude image of Carla Bruni sold

Filed under: Lajme --- News, Lifestyle — halfevil @ 8:30 am

http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_7340000/newsid_7342300/7342364.stm?bw=bb&mp=wm&asb=1&news=1&ms3=54&ms_javascript=true&bbcws=2

A nude photograph of France’s first lady, Carla Bruni, has been auctioned for $91,000 (£46,098) – more than 20 times the expected price.

The image was taken by photographer Michel Comte in 1993, when Ms Bruni was a highly sought-after model.

The picture was bought by an anonymous bidder on behalf of a collector, said Christie’s auction house in New York, which sold the image.

The office of French President Nicolas Sarkozy has declined to comment.

Christie’s said the photograph had been expected to fetch between $3,000 and $4,000.

The successful bid was for $75,000, but with commission the actual price paid rose to $91,000.

Rik Pike, a spokesman for the auction house, said “the media and the level of international interest for this photo” had “played their role” in the image being sold for a much higher sum.

Christie’s said money from the sale of the photograph will go to Swiss charity Sodis, which provides clean drinking water to developing countries.

The image was part of a selection of photographs auctioned by collector Gert Elfering.

It also included nude photos of models Lauren Hutton, Gisele Bundchen and Kate Moss, and an image of actress Brigitte Bardot by American photographer Richard Avedon which fetched $181,000 (£91,600).

Mr Sarkozy married Ms Bruni in February, less than four months after the end of his volatile 11-year marriage to Cecilia Ciganer-Albeniz.

Woman found living with rats and snakes

Filed under: Lifestyle — halfevil @ 8:28 am

ROCHESTER, Wash. – Authorities say a woman has been found living with hundreds of rats and four malnourished snakes in a home outside Rochester.

Thurston County Animal Services Director Susanne Beauregard says an official from the Area Agency on Aging alerted authorities about a month ago, but the woman has been uncooperative. She says the woman calls the rats her friends.

On Wednesday a search warrant was obtained and officers found the floor covered with rat droppings and the carpets soggy with rat urine. Beauregard says two malnourished boa constrictors, a corn snake and a king snake were seized from cages.

Investigators believe the woman bought some rats to feed the boa constrictors, but they got loose and filled the house with their offspring.

When it’s OK to say “OH SH*T”…

Filed under: Pics --- Humour — halfevil @ 8:26 am

 

Washing produce doesn’t remove bacteria: report

Filed under: Health — halfevil @ 8:24 am

Washing fruits and vegetables with water is not enough to remove common bacteria that can cause severe illness, a new report says.

The researchers injected food-borne bacteria such as E. coli and salmonella into vegetables and then tried various common ways to clean them, including water and a sodium hypochlorite treatment.

Both the water and the chemical solution did not significantly reduce the bacteria levels. Only irradiation killed 99.9 per cent of harmful bacteria. Irradiation is an electron beam that alters a cell’s genetic material, thereby killing harmful parasites, germs and insects.

The research, conducted by scientists at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said that bacteria can sometimes be hard to wash away.

“When bacteria are protected — whether they’re inside a leaf or inside a biofilm — they’re not going to be as easy to kill,” Brendan A. Niemira, the study director and a microbiologist with the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service, said in a statement.

“This is the first study to look at the use of irradiation on bacteria that reside inside the inner spaces of a leaf or buried within a biofilm.”

However, irradiation is not yet approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and there is some concern that it compromises nutritional values.

But advocates say that using irradiation on fresh fruits and vegetables could help reduce incidence rates of food-borne illnesses. Salmonella and E. coli can cause severe vomiting and diarrhea.

Fruits and vegetables can become contaminated because they are usually grown outdoors, where they can be exposed to germs from animals, soil, manure and irrigation water.

The study was presented Thursday at an American Chemical Society meeting in New Orleans.

 


 

Abstract:

With the microbial safety of fresh produce of increasing concern, conventional sanitizing treatments need to be supplemented with effective new interventions to inactivate human pathogens. Our research group investigates physical and chemical treatments such as hot water pasteurization, gaseous chlorine dioxide, cold plasma and irradiation. Research in biological controls deals with the use of single or multiple isolates of antagonistic bacteria for inhibiting the outgrowth of bacterial human pathogens. Related research in microbial ecology determines how pathogen biofilm formation and interactions with native microflora may alter the efficacy of applied treatments and interventions. This presentation will summarize the advances made in these areas, as well as research results on the process of scaling up effective interventions from laboratory scale to pilot plant scale, including the critical process of evaluating the effects of the various interventions on sensory and nutritional quality attributes, yield, physiology, and shelf-life.

What Does Google Know About Us?

Filed under: Kuriozitete, Facts — halfevil @ 8:23 am

 

The better question might be, what doesn’t Google know about us, according to Gartner analysts.

LAS VEGAS — Google knows almost everything connected to the Web, but there is one major source of untapped data the company has scarcely touched to date. Can you guess that area?

If you cried “e-commerce transactions” you would be right, according to analysts at the Gartner Symposium ITexpo 2008 here April 10.

Thanks to a powerful database management system and corresponding technologies, the company is able to access just about anything that hasn’t been encrypted, said Gartner analyst Richard Hunter in his presentation on what kind of information Google corrals on the world.

The one area where Google isn’t particularly strong is in e-commerce transactions, where its Google Checkout platform sees only about 1 percent of what is sold on the Internet.

“This is obviously an area of great interest for them because so much of their current revenue is devised of advertising,” Hunter said.

The conversation shed a new light on the rumor that Google could buy online travel power Expedia. Some financial analysts applauded this notion, while others booed the premise. The naysayers claimed Google would be broadening its business too much, while the cheerleaders claimed Google would be able to tap a new world of advertising.

Both lines of reasoning are true, but after Hunter’s presentation it became clear that a major e-commerce buy is the missing link for Google’s massive data warehouses, which touched 100 exabytes of data in 2007.

Clearly, Google knows the behavior patterns of its users. Do a search and the company will tailor ads based on your searches. Do some more searches, open your Gmail account and you will find about four paid links related to those searches. The company also knows a lot about the computers where its Google Apps are installed.

Google Casts a Wide Web

Google sees 67 percent of searches, knows the traffic of more than 1.5 million Web sites, as well as the physical locations of several things thanks to its Google Earth application.

For example, Gartner analyst Mark Stahlman used his mobile phone and Google Earth to pinpoint the location of our conference room in the Mandalay Bay resort here. The search vendor is also trying to learn the physical location of any cell phone user, thanks to its Google My Location application.

In another example, Hunter showed how a fellow analyst was able to find a person’s name and address through Google’s Picasa photo album application.

“When you put together their understanding of a physical location with their understanding of the user and their knowledge of their users’ locations, you can derive a lot of meaningful information from the confluence of those things,” Hunter said.

Google’s information purview extends to businesses, of course. Hunter asked the audience of about 200 if their companies use Google Apps. A surprising 46 percent said they used them.

Indeed, for a company that corralled 100 exabytes of data in 2007, the better question might be: What doesn’t Google know?

And while you’re at it, think about what e-commerce giant Google might be inclined to target to fill out its information and online ad holes. Will it be Expedia? Amazon? eBay?

Space Is Full of Crap

Filed under: Kuriozitete, Facts, Shkence, teknologji --- Science — halfevil @ 8:22 am

The European Space Agency has just released images showing all the satellites and human-made debris now orbiting space as a result of 51 years of launching stuff since Sputnik. That’s about 6,000 satellites up there—of which only 800 remain operational—plus thousands of other objects from launches and accidents. According to their mindblowing simulations things are getting a lot worse:

About 50 percent of all trackable objects are due to in-orbit explosion events (about 200) or collision events (less than 10).

Yes, we knew that there was a lot of crap out there, but not to this extent. According to the ESA, this is really bad news and urgent measures are needed. Explosions in space are not disastrous on their own, but because of the aftermath. One example: a geostationary satellite travels at 6,213 miles per hour. If it explodes, all the debris stays near the orbit, forming a cloud around the Earth within a few days, as this simulation shows:

The ESA is urging to introduce measures to mitigate this problem, like the complete depletion of fuel in rocket stages (like some Delta launchers already do following NASA’s Procedural Requirements for Limiting Orbital Debris) or returning objects to Earth once their mission is complete (perhaps to destroy them on re-entry,) just like SES Americom is going to do with their brand-new AMC-14. This satellite failed to reach its projected altitude and now has to be splashed into the sea because of a dispute with Boeing, which won’t let SES Americom use their patented recovery method to put the satellite into the right geostationary orbit.

The impact of these measures could be huge, as reflected by this simulation of how things could look by the year 2112, with and without taking action:

While the idea of bringing back used stages and satellites back to Earth may seem too expensive, in the long run it’s clear that leaving all this trash up there is going to have huge consequences to the development of space exploration and colonization. Those concepts may still seem science fiction for many, but as these simulations show, the current and future problem is very real, and could be extremely dangerous.

This is how it looks when orbital debris hits a spaceship, simulated in a laboratory.

Kobe Bryant jumps over Aston Martin

Filed under: Kuriozitete, Facts, Lajme --- News, Sports — halfevil @ 8:16 am

I don’t trust that kid

Filed under: Pics --- Humour — halfevil @ 8:08 am

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