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Florida Extends 'Stand Your Ground' To Cover Warning Shots

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Florida Governor Rick Scott signed into law Friday an extension of the state's controversial "Stand Your Ground" law, which would cover warning shots.

According to Newsy, the bill was written with the case of Marissa Alexander in mind. Alexander, 33, was found guilty of aggravated assault and sentenced to 20 years in prison after firing what her defense claimed was a warning shot at the husband during a domestic dispute. An appellate court later overturned her conviction and ordered a retrial.

In a statement, Alexander's lawyers said they "are grateful for the governor's actions," according to ABC News. Prosecutors say the law won't help Alexander because it won't be applied retroactively, and there's evidence that suggests the shot she fired was not a warning.

"The new law, as it stands now, allows you to claim immunity from prosecution if you used or threatened deadly force," Attorney Anthony Rickman told WTVT. "The problem was that under Florida's Stand Your Ground laws, as it was originally, it only allowed you to use that defense if you used actual deadly force."

But gun owners interviewed by the station expressed concern that the law will allow people to pull out their guns and start shooting whenever they feel threatened.

"Bullets have to go somewhere," Jason Collazo told WTVT. "It's going to endanger people whether they're firing into the air, into the ground, at a tree, they don't know if that surface is going to ricochet, so it's just not well thought out."

Alexander is awaiting a retrial.




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Texas Day Care Under Investigation For Photo Showing Child Restrained With Duct Tape

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A Texas day care is under investigation for allegedly using duct tape to restrain unruly children.

After a photo surfaced this week that appears to show a child being tied down with the heavy-duty tape, parents called on authorities to investigate. The photo, which was circulated among the parents of children at Heart2Heart Montessori Academy in Willow Park, Texas, was purportedly taken by a former employee of the school.

(Story continues below.)





Lorrie Almquist, the mother of a 3-year-old child at the day care, told NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth this week that her son was duct-taped to a mat because he refused to take a nap. Almquist said that she received a call Wednesday from Pam Decker, the co-owner of the day care, who admitted to taping down Almquist's son and another boy because they would not go to sleep.

"I felt violated and I was irate," Almquist told ABC News. "I couldn't find any words to say to her. I was so hurt and saddened to think that my child had to go through that."

Decker "was very apologetic, and told me it was something that probably shouldn't have been done," Almquist told WFAA-TV in a separate interview.

After learning of the alleged incident, Almquist reportedly withdrew her son from the Montessori school and contacted police. The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services Child Care Licensing Division has since opened an investigation. Child Protective Services is also investigating a report of prohibited punishment, according to WFAA-TV.

In a statement, day care director Ashlea Pena said:

The staff and I have the best interest of the children and parents as our highest priority. The school has an exemplary performance history, and will work with childcare licensing authorities and cooperate fully with any investigation. We do not have any further comments at this time because we do not want to jeopardize the investigation or to break confidentiality.


WFAA-TV reports that Pena also sent an email to parents saying that "Mrs. Decker is devastated by a very foolish decision she made" and that the child in the photo was "in no way harmed or caused any distress."

This isn't the first time a day care has been accused of using duct tape as a child restraint. Last year, a facility in Pennsylvania was shut down following reports that a child there was duct-taped and mistreated.

Police Shoot And Kill Bear Inside Alaska Home

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JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — Alaska authorities say they have shot and killed a black bear that lumbered through the front door of a home in the state's capital while people were inside.

Juneau police say in statement Saturday that the residents were on the first floor, the same level where officers spotted the bear in the two-story home in the city's downtown. Police say the bear appeared briefly in a doorway, and an officer fired a shotgun twice at the animal. It ran behind the home and was later found dead.

Investigators determined the animal came in through the front door. The doorknob didn't work, so the door could be pushed open easily.

Last week, a bear tried to break into a kitchen in Sitka, south of Juneau, after the homeowner baked a pizza.

Man Dies After Attending Electric Daisy Carnival In Las Vegas

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — A California man attending a huge electronic music party in Las Vegas died Saturday morning after he was taken to a hospital.

The Clark County coroner's office identified the Electric Daisy Carnival attendee as 24-year-old Montomery Tsang of San Leandro. His cause of death wasn't immediately announced.

Event producer Insomniac issued a statement saying it was "deeply saddened" by the death and hoped attendees would do their part to keep the weekend-long gathering safe.

Organizers estimate 134,000 people attended the opening night Friday.

Las Vegas police say of nearly 250 mostly minor medical calls the first night, only five resulted in trips to the hospital.

They also reported 29 drug-related felony arrests.

The event was criticized in Los Angeles in 2010 after a 15-year-old girl's fatal drug overdose.

Lawyer: Hope Solo Did Not Assault Sister, Nephew

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SEATTLE (AP) — U.S. women's soccer star goalkeeper Hope Solo was arrested at a suburban Seattle home on suspicion of assaulting her sister and 17-year-old nephew, but her attorney insisted that Solo herself was a victim in the altercation.

"Hope is not guilty of any crime," attorney Todd Maybrown said in an email to The Associated Press Saturday. "In fact, our investigation reveals that Hope was assaulted and injured during this unfortunate incident. We look forward to the opportunity to present the true facts in court and to having this matter behind Hope very soon." Officers responded to her sister's home just before 1 a.m. Saturday after receiving a 911 call that a woman at the Kirkland residence was hitting people and that she refused to stop or leave, the Kirkland Police Department said in a news release.

They found Solo intoxicated and upset, saw injuries on her nephew and her sister, and arrested her after speaking with those present and determining that she was the primary aggressor, the release said.

She was booked into jail for investigation of two counts of fourth-degree domestic violence assault, and she was expected to remain in custody until an appearance Monday at Kirkland Municipal Court.

A telephone number listed for her was not accepting incoming calls Saturday, and the voice mail for a listing at the sister's home was full.

The sister was not identified by police, but in her memoir, Solo writes that she has a half sister named Terry.

Solo, 32, has won two Olympic gold medals for the U.S. women's national team. She also plays with the Seattle Reign of the National Women's Soccer League.

"We are aware of the situation with Hope and are now gathering information," the Reign posted on the team's Twitter feed.

In 2012, she married former Seattle Seahawks tight end Jerramy Stevens. He was arrested just before their wedding for investigation of assault after a disturbance involving her, but he was not charged. Maybrown represented Stevens in that case.

Solo said soon afterward that there never was an assault and that she and her new husband were happy.

"It's unfortunate what the media can do to judge before the facts are out there. It's hard to see, but it's a hard truth, and it's part of life," she said then. "I'm happy. I'm happily married. I would never stand for domestic violence. I've never been hit in my life."

In her last appearance for the U.S., Solo recorded her 71st career shutout, a 1-0 victory over France on June 14 in Tampa, Florida. She sat out the team's game against France on Thursday night in Connecticut.

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Follow Johnson at https://twitter.com/GeneAPseattle

Times Square Official Calls For Regulations After 'Spider-Man' Is Arrested

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Spider Man was arrested Friday in Times Square for allegedly groping a woman, according to CBS New York.

A man dressed as Spider Man, that is. According to CBS, police identified him as 22-year-old Moussa Rabaoui of Queens, one of the many costumed people who roam the tourist-heavy zone dressed as popular TV and comic book characters and ask for small fees in exchange for a photo.

According to a search of court records, Rabaoui was arrested on a misdemeanor charge of forcible touching. The Daily News also reported on his arrest.

The incident follows a slew of other cases in which panhandlers wearing iconic disguises have been arrested for inappropriate behavior. Last week, another Spider-Man imitator, Phillip Williams, was convicted of harassment following an incident with a mother in Times Square earlier this year. (Williams was acquitted of the more serious charge of assault.)

The president of the Times Square Alliance, a coalition of government officials and local business owners, is calling for regulations to govern the costumed characters in the New York tourist destination.

"In the last 10 days alone, we've seen two Statues of Liberty arrested, a Spider-Man convicted of harassing a tourist, and now a third character arrested for groping a woman in Times Square," Times Square Alliance head Tim Tompkins told CBS New York. "The situation is out of control and a licensing and regulatory scheme must be put in place."

Tompkins previously called for regulations in January, after a Woody character was arrested on sex abuse charges, CNN reported. And last year, a Cookie Monster allegedly shoved a child, police told CNN.

Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, told Reuters in 2013 that the ability to put on a costume and go to Times Square is likely protected under the First Amendment. One man who dressed as Elmo told Reuters for that article that he takes home $600 a week from the job. Another character told the AP in 2013 he has made as much as $280 in one six-hour period.

While Tompkins is recommending restrictions, he doesn't think a complete ban on costumed characters in Times Square is the answer. Instead, he is seeking to establish a licensing system -- including background checks -- for characters in disguise.

"Quirky in Times Square is OK, creepy is not," he told PIX11.

American Bar Association Gives Lawyers Green Light To Scan Jurors' Social Media Sites

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Lawyers have been given the green light to scan the social media sites of jurors.

The American Bar Association says it's ethical for lawyers to scour online for publicly available musings of citizens called for jury service — and even jurors in deliberations. But the ABA does warn lawyers against actively "following" or "friending" jurors or otherwise invading their private Internet areas.

Though judges now universally admonish jurors to refrain from discussing trials on social media, the nationwide lawyers group for the first time is addressing how deeply attorneys, their investigators and their consultants can probe for information that might signal leanings of potential jurors, or unearth juror misconduct during trials.

Jurors' online postings have disrupted many legal proceedings over the years, causing mistrials and special hearings over the effects of Facebook musings, tweets and blog writings about their trial experiences. Lawyers and judges have also been wrangling over how far attorneys can go in assembling a jury with help from online research of jurors' social media habits.

A few judges have denied lawyers permission to research social media sites as overly invasive while others have allowed it. One company has gone so far as to develop a software product that promises to create a juror profile through social media posts and monitor jurors during the trial.

The ABA's ethics committee began reviewing the issue about two years ago and concluded in April that looking at Facebook posts, Twitter tweets and other information gathered passively is ethical research.

"It's like any other publicly available information," said Donald Lundberg, an Indianapolis, Indiana, attorney who helped draft the ABA's opinion as an ethics committee member.

Lundberg said one of the thornier issues for the committee was whether lawyers could view LinkedIn and other social media sites that notify members that they have been searched.

Ultimately, the ABA committee decided a LinkedIn search was ethically sound, which runs counter to an opinion issued by the New York City Bar Association in 2010 that said any notice sent to a potential juror about a search amounts to an unauthorized communication.

"We stay away from LinkedIn and similar sites," said Leslie Ellis, a Washington D.C. jury consultant. "We don't want to do anything that would make them uncomfortable to serve."

Ellis said her firm has been asked on occasion to conduct social media searches of prospective jurors, but only when their names are available days before they arrive at the courthouse. Ellis said prospective juror names generally aren't available until the morning jury selections begins and that time-constraints limit what can be found online.

"Social media searches are time consuming and expensive," Ellis said. "What takes so long is confirming that you found the right person."

At least two state bar organizations have addressed online searches of potential jurors.

The Missouri Supreme Court requires lawyers to research potential jurors' litigation history on a Web site that tracks lawsuits in the state. The Oregon State Bar published an opinion last year that's in line with the ABA guidelines, saying lawyers can access publicly available social media information, but can't actively "follow" or "friend" potential jurors.

The California State Bar, the biggest state bar in the country, has not addressed the issue, spokeswoman Laura Ernde said.

Some lawyers are sold on social media searches and have been following the practice for some time.

Last year, New York defense attorney Barry Berke hired a jury consultant firm and instructed it to search social media sites of potential jurors in the insider-trading case of Michael Steinberg. The consultant was looking for anti-Wall Street comments or other signs of possible bias. Prospective jurors thought to be biased were removed from the pool. Still, the former SAC Capital Advisors executive was convicted of insider trading and sentenced to 3 ½ years in prison.

Other lawyers who haven't searched previously now say they will embrace the practice.

"I will be doing it for every trial," said Khalid Sheikh, a suburban Detroit, Michigan, defense attorney.

Late last month, a jury was deliberating whether Sheikh's client was guilty of first-degree murder when the lawyer's 26-year-old son wondered aloud what the jurors were saying on social media sites.

"I said they shouldn't be saying anything," Sheikh said, but decided to check anyway. He discovered a juror had made Facebook posts about the case before and after he was empaneled.

After his client was convicted of first-degree murder, Sheikh asked for a new trial, alleging that the posts violated the judge's rule against jurors discussing the case. "Not cool a young man is dead another young man will be in prison for long time maybe," the juror allegedly said.

On Monday, the judge denied Sheikh's motion for a new trial, ruling the posting was innocuous. Sheikh plans an appeal.

MIT Student Kaitlin Goldstein Dies After Falling Off Cliff In India

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — A Rhode Island native who was working on her doctorate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has died in India after she reportedly slipped while jogging and fell several hundred feet off a cliff.

MIT officials announced Sunday that 28-year-old Kaitlin Goldstein was found dead Saturday in a ravine below a trail in a remote area of northern India known as Ladakh where she went running on the morning of June 14. Her parents told MIT officials that Goldstein, known as Kate, apparently slipped on some loose rock. MIT says the Providence native was in India to participate in a workshop on energy and development workshop. She also was going to help install solar panels at a Buddhist monastery.

Goldstein was a fourth-year graduate student at MIT studying architecture.

'Real-Life Goldilocks' Chancy Layton Accused Of Burglary, Theft

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This ain't no fairytale.

Chancy Layton, dubbed the "real-life Goldilocks," is facing charges of burglary, criminal mischief and petty theft after police say the 19-year-old woman entered the home of a couple in St. Augustine Beach, Florida, where she took a shower, ate some food and fell asleep on their couch, First Coast News reports.

Layton allegedly told police that a friend informed her that the balcony door to the home would be unlocked. She entered around 9:30 p.m., Friday, while the couple was out.

The friend, who she knew only as "Jeremy," knew the balcony would be open because before Layton arrived, he allegedly broke in through the back door, stole two bottles of wine and left the door unlocked, according to News4Jax.

The residents allegedly found Layton sleeping on their couch around 2:30 a.m., Saturday, according to WCNC.

"Not what I expected to see when I walked into my house," homeowner Cheryl Petocz told News4Jax. "There was lots of bottles of wine that she drank. She was clearly not in a clear state. I told her I was calling police. As soon as I said that, she grabbed few things and ran out the house, out the back door."

However, the girl allegedly left her passport behind. When Layton was arrested, cops say she was wearing the clothes of one of the home's residents.

Layton allegedly told officers she went into the home so that she could "escape" and be alone without having to sleep outside.

Police noted that she was apologetic and wanted to return the homeowner's clothing.

H/T: Sun-Sentinel



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Fan Of 'Alaska State Troopers' TV Show Turns Himself In On Warrants

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Acting courteous, even when arresting someone, has paid dividends for the Alaska State Troopers.

KTVA reports (http://is.gd/BqTlLn) a 49-year-old Anchorage man wanted on several felony warrants decided to turn himself in to troopers Friday after watching an episode of the reality show "Alaska State Troopers" on the National Geographic Channel. Brian John Fahey approached two troopers in the parking lot of the Anchorage headquarters late Friday afternoon.

According to troopers, Fahey said he believed they "were more professional and courteous to the people they arrested than other law enforcement personnel he had dealt with."

Fahey has outstanding warrants for felony escape from an Anchorage halfway house and for failure to appear on original counts, including forgery and theft. He's being held on $20,000 bail ahead of an arraignment later Monday.

Christian Radio Personality John Balyo Charged In Child-Sex Assault Probe

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Authorities in Michigan say Christian radio personality John Balyo paid to have sexual encounters with minors.

Homeland Security agents and officers from the Michigan State Police and Battle Creek Police Department arrested Balyo, 35, Friday at a Christian music festival in Gaylord, Michigan.

Balyo is facing charges of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, according to a press release by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

"Baylo allegedly paid a defendant, who is the subject of a separate ... child-exploitation investigation, to arrange sexual encounters with minor victims," investigators said in the press release.

The man Balyo allegedly paid to arrange the encounters has been identified by police as Ronald Lee Moser. The 42-year-old was indicted earlier this month in federal court on child exploitation and child pornography charges.

"They would meet in hotels in areas around Grand Rapids and Balyo would have sex with the children," a Homeland Security agent told Woodtv.com.

No further details in the investigation have been released.

According to Wzzm13.com, Balyo, who was married in April, was the morning host on WCSG Radio, a Grand Rapids Christian radio station owned by Cornerstone University.

"We are shocked and deeply saddened by the news as you might be as well," reads a press release posted to the radio stations website Friday.

The release states Balyo is "no longer affiliated with WCSG Radio."

Balyo's online bio has since been taken down from the station website, but a cache of it remains online. According to the bio, Balyo graduated from Cornerstone University in 2003 and began working in radio.

"The most important part of my story is how CHRIST found me when I was about 8-years-old as my mom led me down the Romans Road one night," the now defunct bio reads. "I'll never forget how excited I was while trying to evangelize all the neighbor kids! My walk with Him has been - and continues to be - a great journey."

WCSG General Manager Chris Lemke briefly addressed the allegations against Balyo during a Monday morning broadcast.

"We can't make sense of this," Lemke said, according to Mlive.com.

He added, "Did you ever have any doubt Satan was loose?"

According to the Calhoun Prosecutor's Office, Balyo is being held in the Calhoun County Jail on a $500,000 bond.





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Rikers Island Hosts Rock Concert With Drummer Carmine Appice

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There's only one road into Rikers Island. It takes visitors over a mile-long bridge, and standing before it, Officer Blackwell lists everything that can't be brought into New York City's largest prison.

“No cell phones, no electronic equipment not already checked in, no cigarettes, no lighters, no rubber bands,” Blackwell says in a rehearsed voice.

“Can I bring my drumsticks in?” asks Carmine Appice, twirling the tools of his trade nervously.

For almost anyone else, the answer would surely be no. But when you're a 67-year-old rock legend who's worked with Ozzy Osbourne, Rod Stewart, and countless other stars, you get special treatment.

Blackwell waves a dismissive hand as Appice and his 56-year-old brother, Vinny, make their way into one of the most dangerous prisons in the United States, home to 12,000 inmates.

The brothers are about to hold a rock concert for 80 female inmates. The performance on Friday was one of the thousands of free concerts organized around the world for Make Music Day, an event that celebrates artists and encourages people to get involved with music. The exclusive inmate event -- first started in 2011 -- is called Rhythm on Rikers.

Make Music Day organizers Aaron Friedman and Lora Bodmer don't think the day should exclude people in jail.

“Make Music Day is about bringing the community, people, and cultures together,” Bodmer says. “[Rikers’ inmates] are ignored and forgotten, but they’re still New Yorkers.”

'Jesus, That’s A Lot Of Razor Wire'

Packed onto a Department of Corrections bus, Carmine and crew begin the ride into the facility. Cruising down the massive bridge, the blue sparkling water surrounding them paints an almost serene picture.

Aside from his work backing some of rock's biggest stars, Carmine Appice is the force behind Vanilla Fudge and King Cobra. He's no stranger to the road. Today, the drive is pretty, but the final destination is not.

Vinny Appice, perhaps best known for drumming with Black Sabbath, can’t help but make jokes as the bus rumbles along.

“Ah, I forgot my pocket knife!” and “Better leave this file here!” he says, to a few nervous laughs.

But as the bus crests a hill, and the massive, 413-acre island truly comes into view, voices suddenly drop. There is awe in the complexity of it all –- a parking lot with hundreds of cars, officers and civilian workers bustling about, and buildings that appear to stretch desperately to every corner of the island, all covered in a forest of barbed wire that seems never-ending and endlessly dense.

“Jesus,” Vinny says almost under his breath. “That’s a lot of razor wire.”

After circling around the complex, the bus arrives to one of 11 facilities housing inmates. While some of the women here have been convicted, most of them are still going through the system and waiting for their day in court.

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Carmine (L) and Vinny Appice (R) pose for a photo before entering the facility.


Security is tight as everyone is ushered into the facility. The group now has to trade out both their civilian IDs and the ID badges Officer Blackwell gave them at the beginning of the journey for a new card that's specific to the housing unit.

After going through a metal detector, an officer stamps everyone’s hand with a black light-enabled letter. The visitors then make their way to a set of cell doors, which open and close at a glacial pace as they bring their hands under a black light to read the prints. Another set of cell doors slide open, and everyone passes the checkpoint.

“I’m getting anxious,” Carmine says, unable to stop himself from fidgeting and hitting his drum sticks on the prison walls behind him. Vinny, perhaps subconsciously, starts to join him. There’s an obvious sense of urgency in the rhythmic tappings.

For their part, the correctional officers all seem to be in good spirits, surprised and excited to see outsiders. Captain Sherry Peake and Deputy Commissioner of Public Information Eldin Villafane point out the painted murals adorning the prison walls and the rec area yard where inmates congregate.

Villafane says he wants to let people into Rikers to see a lighter, healthier side of a prison that in the past has been riddled with controversy. This year alone, 40 stabbings and slashings occurred at the facility, according to the New York Daily News. The prison has also recently come under fire after a mentally ill inmate killed himself only a week into his stay, and another died after a heating system malfunctioned and he was “basically baked to death,” according to a city official who spoke to the Associated Press.

Villafane says he hopes to nurture a relationship between prison officials and journalists hoping to gain access to the facility. He’s also pretty jazzed that he was recently able to meet the cast of Orange Is the New Black, which filmed at a Queens facility.

“I got to meet Piper!” he boasts.

'She Didn't Think She Could Play Sober'

Walking through the halls of Rikers, a sickly sweet smell reminiscent of a high school cafeteria fills the air. Colorful plastic chairs line the walls of a small, cramped gymnasium with three basketball hoops -- only one missing its netting.

“This is the biggest show I’ve ever played,” Carmine jokes, before turning his attention to the large fans blasting humid air at him. There’s no central air conditioning, and Carmine quickly accepts that his set is going to be a sweaty one.

During some down time, Carmine talks in detail about his drumming style. Unlike most drummers, both Carmine and Vinny play with their sticks backwards, and have added carved tips to allow the sticks to bounce off the drums more seamlessly. The backwards playing is partly to produce a "thicker sound," Carmine says, and to combat the booming noises that amplifiers and new-age speakers produce -- which both men admit have left them a bit deaf. Playing backwards also keeps the brothers from breaking too many sticks.

Carmine also touches on his relationship with former bandmates.

"When I see Rod Stewart, he always gives me a hug," Carmine says affectionately. "But that doesn't mean he'll return my phone calls."

As Ludwig drum kits are set up, Carmine and Vinny meet three volunteers from the Rhythm on Rikers program who have taught the five inmates who will perform with the band.

Amy Garapic, Carson Moody, and John Colpitts taught men and women at Rikers to play the African bongos as part of a 10-week course that included music theory and information on outlets to contact once they've been released. The inmates were chosen for the class based on their behavior and willingness to learn the new skill.

“One of the [female participants] used to get high on the street and play drums,” Captain Peake says. “She was worried about this program because she didn’t think she could play sober. But she can, she definitely can.”

The women participating in the drum clinic beam in their aspen green uniforms as they walk into the gym to meet Carmine and Vinny. The once-nervous drumming duo now can't stop chatting up the ladies.

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Vinny Appice shakes the hand of inmate Alitha Jackson. Also pictured are inmates Vanessa Boomer, Tiffany Champagne, and Maribel Adorno (L-R), and Rhythm on Rikers volunteer John Colpitts (behind).


Alithia Jackson softly tells the drummers that the group met in the breakfast line. Her foot is bandaged, and she walks with a limp after a recent surgery. The other women were worried she wouldn’t be able to play, she says, but the operation wasn’t going to stop her.

“I just came from an operation [on Monday], and now I’m here,” Jackson says. “I didn’t want to miss it.”

Vanessa Boomer, whose voice raises with optimism when she talks about her September 26 release date, credits programs like Make Music Day and Rhythm on Rikers for helping her get through her time in prison.

“It’s about always learning to stay on a straight path,” Boomer says simply.

As dozens of other female inmates shuffle into the gym and take their seats, Carmine and Vinny go over a game plan for the show.

“When I point at you, you do a solo,” Carmine says encouragingly to the inmates, before pausing. “Can they solo?”

Before the inmates can answer, volunteer Moody says very matter-of-factly, “Oh, they can solo.”

'The Response Says It All'

As the inmates begin to play their drums, the volunteers playing with them attempt to get the crowd involved, leading them in chants and claps through cultural music inspired by African nations like Nigeria.

The crowd seems relatively unimpressed, shuffling in their colorful chairs. Carmine is sitting with Vinny in the bleachers at the very back of the gym to get a better view, but he suddenly jumps up and hustles over to the drums. Applause and cheers fill the room, and hands suddenly shoot up in the air, twisting into raised index and pinky fingers -- the international sign for rock n’ roll.

As Vinny mans the drums, putting down hard, powerful beats, the inmates play along enthusiastically on their bongos.

Like some crazed conductor, Carmine thrusts his arms out at the crowd and begins clapping, encouraging the other inmates to join him. Almost in unison, they do, and any anxiety the group felt seems to evaporate into the humid gym.

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The mood has changed. Carmine is leading the crowd, pointing at the inmates playing bongos to take over solos. Most of the women cheer and applaud, though one woman rocks back and forth with her hands over her head, clearly perturbed by the loud music.

By the time Carmine himself gets on the drums, its pure pandemonium. Women sway and dance in their seats, and a few of them stand up to see Carmine and Vinny’s hands moving at speeds lesser drummers can't fathom.

A female correctional officer walks in and starts dancing, eliciting some of the loudest cheers yet. Other officers sway and clap along to the beat.

“I think the response says it all,” Peake says. “When we have programs like this, it helps bring down some of the tension. It becomes really harmonious.”

'They’re Gonna Be Back … You Won’t Be'

At the end of the show, Carmine and Vinny quickly hustle out to perform their next set for the male inmates, but the volunteers and drumming women keep the party going a while longer. This time, during an African-influenced song that requires a back and forth with the audience, the inmates are much more receptive.

The performing inmates receive a standing ovation at the end of their set, as they clap in unison and chant back and forth with the group. Many of the women call for an encore.

Peake says its programs like this -- along with other opportunities like talent shows and poetry seminars -- that create an atmosphere for inmates to better themselves.

“We’re gonna keep it going,” Peake says, joking around with inmates not to “mess up my hair” as pictures are snapped.

“I’m not gonna forget this day,” Maribel Adorno, one of the inmate drummers, says. “I’m not. [Carmine and Vinny] are legends. I had to be in prison just to meet them.”

Before the 80-plus inmates are ushered back to their cells, Captain Peake shouts out boisterously:

“They’re all gonna be back here next year. Hopefully you won’t be!”

And that gets the loudest, most walloping cheers yet.

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From left to right: Inmates Maribel Adorno, Tiffany Champagne, Vanessa Boomer, Diana Marreo and Alithia Jackson




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Donations Pour In For 'Hot Convict.' America, Get A Hold Of Yourself

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With that chiseled jaw line and those dreamy blue eyes, Jeremy Meeks, the convicted felon who’s considered to be "one of the most violent criminals" in the Stockton, California, region is definitely hot.

So hot that his mug shot has collected more than 95,000 likes on the Stockton Police Department’s Facebook page since it was posted on Wednesday. He’s so hot that the Internet Photoshopped his face into Hugo Boss and Calvin Klein ads.




He’s so hot people are emptying their pockets to help him after he was arrested on five weapons charges and one gang charge.

Meeks inadvertently started stealing hearts on Wednesday when, in an effort to educate the public on its efforts to reduce gun violence, Stockton police posted a photo of the 30-year-old, alongside three other men who were arrested for felony weapon charges, to its Facebook page. The arrests came on the heels of the force’s "Operation Ceasefire Enforcement" mission, which aims to curb the recent increase of shootings and robberies.

At his arraignment, the dreamboat felon’s bail was set at $1 million and he was appointed a public defender.




Capitalizing on his quick rise to Internet fame, Meeks’ mom, Katherine Angier, set up an online fundraising campaign on Thursday for her son titled, Free Jeremy Meeks.

As of Monday afternoon, the GoFundMe drive had raised more than $3,500.

Angier hopes to raise $25,000.

"He has a job and ... He was on his way to work. With no gang affiliations as per two of the charges," Angier wrote on his fundraising page. "He has old tattoos..which causes him to be stereotyped. He's my son and I'm just trying to raise funds to help him in anyway. Please help him to get a fair trial or else he'll be railroaded."

h/t Think Progress

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Oregon Finds 3 Basketball Players Guilty Of Sexual Assault, Will Remove Them From Campus

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The University of Oregon found three former basketball players responsible for sexual misconduct and will remove them from campus for up to 10 years.

Dominic Artis, Damyean Dotson and Brandon Austin were accused of sexually assaulting an intoxicated female undergraduate overnight from March 8 to 9 at multiple off-campus locations. The university faced criticism for allowing the men to continue playing in the NCAA March Madness tournament after receiving a report from the victim's family, as well as for not disclosing anything about the case until May when local media obtained a police report.

The victim's lawyer, John Clune, told The Huffington Post on Monday that the three men were found responsible for sexual misconduct and suspended for a minimum of four years, "or longer if my client is still on campus after four years." The maximum time for the suspension is 10 years.

The men were already suspended indefinitely from the men's basketball team at the school. Eugene, Oregon, prosecutors declined to pursue the case because Lane County District Attorney Alex Gardner determined there was insufficient evidence to "prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt."

In the victim's only statement so far, published in the student newspaper earlier this month, she thanked the Office of the Dean of Students for its support but ripped the athletic department for bringing Austin to the University of Oregon.

Austin, a sophomore, had been suspended from the basketball team at Providence College in Rhode Island because of an accusation of sexual assault in November, before transferring to Oregon in January. At Providence, an adjudication panel found Austin responsible for "non-consensual sexual penetration" and voted to suspend him, but a college vice president overturned that decision.

"I am angry with the culture that appears to exist in our athletic department that prioritizes winning over safety of our students," the victim wrote. "I cannot fathom how our basketball coach recruited someone who was in the middle of a suspension for another sexual assault to come to Eugene."

University of Oregon spokeswoman Julie Brown said Monday that in cases of sexual misconduct, the university provides information about the outcome of a campus adjudication only to the complainant and the accused. But Brown confirmed the news about the suspensions.

"It appears that the information released by Mr. Clune is accurate," Brown said, going on to note that the three students' potential transfers to other colleges was not something the university could speak to. "As has been said before, each young man had previously been given their full release and permission to contact any school. Any inquiries related to transfers should be directed to the individual," Brown said.

The University of Oregon found 11 students guilty of sexual misconduct in 2011-12 and 2012-13, according to information provided to The Huffington Post through an open records request. However, the university declined to explain what the sanctions were for those cases.

This story has been updated with comment from University of Oregon spokeswoman Julie Brown.

Missouri School Districts Start Training Teachers To Carry Concealed Weapons In Classroom

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In response to the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012 that left 20 children and six staff members dead, some school districts in Missouri have started training teachers to carry concealed weapons in classrooms.

For a $17,500 fee, districts that opt in to the 40-hour program receive training for two staffers from current law enforcement officers through the Shield Solutions training school. Teachers are required to spend five hours in a classroom and 35 hours on the range with the required firearm, a Glock 19 semi-automatic pistol. Ten districts have undergone the training thus far, with three more having signed contracts and even more in negotiations, according to The Kansas City Star.

After completing the program, qualified teachers then technically become Shield Solutions employees and receive a "nominal stipend," Don Crowley, training supervisor for Shield Solutions, told The Huffington Post on Monday.

"They become an employee of Shield Solutions in that if they are called upon to dispatch a threat, then that is when they hold a duty to Shield Solutions to do so," Crowley explained.

Moreover, only school district administrators, fellow program members and local law enforcement will be privy to the identities of the teachers trained to carry concealed weapons.

In an effort to avoid harming the wrong students, teachers will also be armed with a special type of bullet designed to lodge inside the first body it makes contact with.

Young school children will also be prohibited from hugging their teachers if they are carrying concealed weapons in order to avoid detection of the firearm.

“Kids in elementary age like to hug their teachers, but students cannot put their hands on you,” Crowley added. “They can knuckle bump, they can shake hands, but hugs are no longer appropriate.”

Since Sandy Hook, at least 74 school shootings have occurred, averaging more than one each week that school was in session.

In response, the Missouri Legislature passed a bill last month permitting trained teachers or administrators to carry concealed weapons in the classroom. The bill, which awaits Gov. Jay Nixon’s (D) signature, would also lower the age requirement for a concealed carry permit from 21 to 19.

Crowley viewed the legislation as unnecessary, however, calling the bill a “reiteration of a law that already exists under [Missouri Revised Statutes] Chapter 571, which says concealed weapons are unlawful unless the school board or the governing body of that school district okays it.”

Several states have approved similar legislation, despite opposition from many school administrators.

G.A. Buie, principal of Eudora High School in Kansas and president-elect of the National Association of Secondary School Principals, opposes arming teachers.

“We would be asking school officials, trained as educators, to make a quick transition from teacher to SWAT member, arrive on the scene, assess the situation, overcome the severe nervousness that naturally accompanies a deadly force incident and take immediate action before blood is shed,” he told the Star on Sunday. “It’s a bit more than you can cover in a typical teacher in-service.”

'Porn Diva' Bianca Byndloss Allegedly Had Group Sex With Underage Girls

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A self-proclaimed 'porn diva' in Miami was arrested after authorities said she participated in a filmed underage sex video.

Bianca Byndloss, 19, was arrested on Thursday with her alleged co-conspirators, Christian Hernandez and Bryan Yanes, both 18, according to CBS Miami.

In May, police said Byndloss picked up the three underage girl victims, ages 12, 13 and 14 and took them to Hernandez's home, where the alleged sex was filmed.

An arrest report for Hernandez obtained by the Huffington Post said video footage on one of the victim's cellphones showed the victims engaging in sex with all three suspects while Hernandez filmed.

Police said some of the footage was uploaded online by Hernandez. That's when cops got involved.

Byndloss and Hernandez were charged with lewd and lascivious battery, possession of sexual performance by a child and promoting sexual performance of a child. Yanes was charged with lewd and lascivious battery on a child.

Photos like this one on Byndloss' NSFW Tumblr devoted to her feet show her sucking on her toes.

foot fetish crime

mugshot
Booking photo of Christian Hernandez

underage porn bust
Booking photo of Bryan Yanes

bianca mug
Booking photo of Bianca Byndloss


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NSA Defender Under Investigation For Alleged X-Rated Pictures

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A prominent defender of the National Security Agency, Naval War College professor John Schindler, is under investigation for allegedly creating "inappropriate content" that appeared on social media, a college official told The Huffington Post in a statement on Monday.

Schindler and his wife abruptly shut down their social media accounts on Monday, with Schindler telling readers of his blog he was taking a break because of harassment from critics of the NSA. He has long been a controversial and outspoken voice in the debate over surveillance; he has referred to journalist Glenn Greenwald as "Glenda" and has disparaged WikiLeaks source Chelsea Manning for coming out as transgender.

The very unsafe for work photos, along with an accompanying note, can be seen here. Their provenance is unclear, as is who originally posted them.

Schindler, a former NSA counterintelligence officer, has appeared regularly on TV as a defender of the agency. He has spoken out on MSNBC, CNN and CNBC, stressing that surveillance by internet corporations is more threatening than surveillance by the government.

"I'll bet you today Google knows more about me than NSA does," he said.

On Monday, Schindler deleted an explanation for his sudden departure from the conversation and replaced it with something much vaguer. His first dispatch said, "Things have now taken an ugly, indeed sordid turn. The attacks are now not just against me, but against my family, to include my children, who are minors. They deserve none of this. This fills me with disgust and it’s time to take a break."

A cached version of that post was recovered online. The new explanation reads simply: "Because of issues in my personal life I’m taking a break from social media. Thanks for all your words of support, I’m well and doing fine. I’ll be back, taking a strategic pause here, thanks for being such great followers and readers — more soon!"

Commander Kelly Brannon of the Naval War College said that the college's president has assigned an investigation, and that Schindler has been placed on administrative leave pending its outcome.

"The Naval War College received a complaint about inappropriate content allegedly created by a NWC faculty member and posted on social media," Brannon said.

"In response to this complaint, Rear Admiral Walter E. 'Ted' Carter Jr., President, NWC, directed an investigation to inquire into the facts and circumstances surrounding the allegation. The investigation team is currently investigating the alleged misconduct and will submit a report upon completion of their review. To protect the integrity of an ongoing investigation, the NWC has no further comment at this time."

Soccer Star Hope Solo Enters Not Guilty Plea In Domestic Violence Arrest

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KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) — U.S. women's soccer team goalkeeper Hope Solo has entered a not guilty plea following her domestic violence arrest at her sister's home in suburban Seattle.

Solo appeared in court Monday and was released without bail. She was ordered not to have contact with the alleged victims and to not drink alcohol. Authorities say Solo was intoxicated early Saturday when she was accused of assaulting her sister and 17-year-old nephew. But her lawyer, Todd Maybrown, said she was a victim in the altercation.

Solo was booked into jail for investigation of two counts of fourth-degree domestic violence assault. Kirkland police said in a report on the incident that a caller reported a female at the residence was hitting people and they could not get her to stop or leave the house.

Solo did not speak in court except to answer the judge's questions.

Maybrown entered the plea and argued against the city of Kirkland's request for bail, noting that Solo does not have a criminal history and her status as a public figure makes it unlikely that she would not appear when called back to court.

"There's going to be a very strong defense in this case," Maybrown added. He did not object to the city prosecutor's request for a noncontact order.

Solo's next court appearance is scheduled for Aug. 11.

Solo's 17-year-old nephew told police she was upset and appeared to have been drinking when she arrived at a family gathering. She and her nephew got into a fistfight after arguing about his acting aspirations and she called him fat and crazy, according to court documents. When the boy's mother tried to break up the confrontation, Solo punched her in the face, the documents said.

The nephew broke a broom over Solo's head and the teen pointed a broken BB gun at her and tried to get her to leave, the documents said.

The boy told police, "We just let her back into our lives," and said Solo "always does this."

"Hope is not guilty of any crime," Maybrown said in an email to The Associated Press on Saturday. "In fact, our investigation reveals that Hope was assaulted and injured during this unfortunate incident. We look forward to the opportunity to present the true facts in court and to having this matter behind Hope very soon."

Solo's husband, former Seattle Seahawks tight end Jerramy Stevens, was also in the courtroom Monday but declined to speak to the media.

Stevens and Solo were married in 2012. He was arrested just before their wedding for investigation of assault after a disturbance involving Solo, but he was not charged. Maybrown represented Stevens in that case.

Solo said soon afterward that there never was an assault and that she and her new husband were happy.

The 32-year-old Solo has won two Olympic gold medals with the U.S. women's national team and also plays with the Seattle Reign of the National Women's Soccer League.

Statements from both the team and U.S. soccer said they were aware of the situation but did not have any further comment.

Solo most recently appeared in goal for the U.S. women's team in an exhibition against France on June 14 in Tampa, Florida.

Solo had her fourth shutout of the year and the 71st of her career in the 1-0 U.S. victory, matching the national team record set by Briana Scurry.

She did not appear in the team's second match against France on Thursday night in East Hartford, Connecticut, because of a "family commitment" the team said. Ashlyn Harris started in Solo's place for the 2-all draw.

The U.S. women's team does not have any additional matches planned at this time before October's CONCACAF qualifying tournament for the 2015 World Cup in Canada.

Despite the team's success on the international stage in recent years, the U.S. women haven't won a World Cup title since 1999

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AP Sports Writer Anne Peterson contributed to this story from Portland, Oregon.

168 Children Rescued In Sex-Trafficking Crackdown: FBI

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly 170 victims of child sex trafficking, many of whom had never been reported missing, were rescued in the last week as part of an annual nationwide crackdown, the FBI said Monday.

Besides the 168 children rescued from the sex trade, 281 pimps were arrested during the same period on state and federal charges. "These are not faraway kids in faraway lands," FBI Director James Comey said in announcing the annual enforcement push known as Operation Cross Country. Instead, he added, "These are America's children."

This is the eighth such week-long operation, which this year unfolded in 106 cities. The FBI says nearly 3,600 children have so far been recovered from the street.

"I hate that we have to do this work — hate it," Comey said. "I love the people who've devoted their lives to doing this work. There is no more meaningful work that the FBI participates in than rescuing children."

He said the operations were designed to "crush these pimps" and show that children are not for sale. They are also intended to rescue children who are being trafficked on street corners, in truck stops and, increasingly, on the Internet, where pimps advertise and arrange sexual encounters.

One challenge, officials said, is that many of the children who were recovered were never reported missing in the first place — by parents, guardians and the entire child welfare system designed to protect them.

"No one is reporting them missing. Hence, no one is looking for them," said John Ryan, CEO of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. "But for operations like this, these children likely would never have been found."

He said better laws were needed to require child welfare service to report children who disappear. Right now, he said, only two states have laws requiring agencies to report children missing from their care. There is no national, uniform standard.

"We cannot find them if no one reports them missing," Ryan said.

Though this operation is the FBI's eighth of its kind, Comey said this year featured the highest number of participating cities. But he said the biggest change was the increasing prevalence of children being sold online rather than on street corners.

James Holmes Lawyers Seek Disciplinary Records Of Officer Joshua Schol

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DENVER (AP) — Defense attorneys in the Colorado theater shootings want to see disciplinary records of a police officer from Aurora, the Denver suburb where the attack took place.

A subpoena, made public Monday, seeks documents from a 2008 internal affairs investigation of officer Joshua Schol. The subpoena says that investigation concluded Schol was untruthful in a police report that is apparently unrelated to the theater shootings. It wasn't immediately clear why the defense wants the records, but it could be to discredit Schol if he is a witness in the upcoming trial.

James Holmes is charged with murder and attempted murder in the July 20, 2012, theater shootings, which killed 12 people and injured 70. He pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.
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