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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Porn star tests positive for HIV, Wicked Pictures and Vivid Entertainment studios postpone filming



A XXX-film star in California has tested positive for HIV, sending those working in the multibillion-dollar porn industry into panic-mode and forcing two of the industry's largest studios to postpone filming.

Wicked Pictures and Vivid Entertainment have stopped production as a precaution, and now there's a scramble to test partners who may have worked with the actor.

The identity and gender of the actor has not been disclosed, in addition to what companies he or she worked for and when the person was tested.

The porn star tested positive for HIV at the Adult Industry Medical Healthcare Foundation, a San Fernando clinic that caters to those in the pornography industry.

This isn't the first time some studios in the porn industry have had to temporarily shutdown.

Last year, a woman tested positive for HIV immediately after making an adult film. And in 2004, an HIV outbreak spread through the adult film community, briefly halting filming at several California studios. Up to 14 people were said to have been infected during on-camera sex with a male actor.

Under law, porn actors are required to test negative for HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases within 30 days of filming.

Officials in L.A. have blasted the adult film industry for the lack of condom use on porn sets.

Darren James, the adult film actor at the center of the 2004 HIV scare criticized the industry for again failing to protect actors from being infected.

James tested negative days before being filmed. Later, a test came back positive, and James learned that he spread HIV to three actresses who he worked with.

"I knew it was going to happen," James told the Los Angeles Times. "And how many years has it been? Again. They went right back to the same habits."


Tuesday, February 8, 2011

TOWN UNDER SIEGE FROM KILLER WOLVES


A BLOODTHIRSTY "super-pack" of 400 killer wolves has gone on the rampage leaving villagers in fear for their lives after a four-day massacre.

Usually the fanged fiends hunt in packs of just six or seven but so far this wolf army has killed more than 30 horses and deer as they prey on one of Russia's smallest towns.

They prowl at the edge of Verkhoyansk in the north-east of the country where they are working their way up the food chain - and villagers fear they could be next.

Hunters have hurriedly organised themselves into 24 teams in a bid to resist the savage onslaught.

They patrol on snowmobiles and plan to take to the skies to shoot the ferocious beasts dead once daylight hours improve in the far-north region.

Baffled

Volunteers are being encouraged by local officials who are handing out rewards of £210 for each wolf skin brought in.

Local official Stepan Rozhin said: "Once the daylight increases, the hunters will start shooting predators from helicopters."

The rare sight of hundreds of the beasts coming together to feast has left wildlife experts baffled.

Behaviour expert Dr Valerius Geist believes a shortage of food thanks to the harsh Siberian winter can be the only explanation.

He said: "It is unusual for wolves to gather in such numbers or hunt large animals like horses.

"However, the population of their usual prey, rabbits, has decreased this year due to lack of food, so wolves have had to change their habits.

"Wolves are very careful to choose the most nutritious food source easiest obtained without danger - which in this case happens to be horses.

"They will start tackling dangerous prey when they run out of non-dangerous prey."

The town has a population of only 1,300 and is one of the remotest places in the northern hemisphere.

It is in a region known as Stalin's Death Ring because that is where the former dictator sent political exiles to suffer the extreme conditions as punishment.

source: The Sun.co.uk

No Felony Grand Theft Charge for Lindsay Lohan Yet


Lindsay Lohan isn't getting slapped with a felony grand theft charge or thrown in jail for up to three years. At least not just yet.

Despite contradictory reports, no charges were filed against LiLo Monday in connection with the disappearance of a $2,500 necklace from a Venice jewelry store. The starlet's lawyer, Shawn Chapman Holley, issued a statement over the weekend that said: "We vehemently deny these allegations and if charges are filed, we will fight them in court, not in the press."'

Now according to RadarOnline.com, a source claims "Lindsay's fate won't be decided for at least a day or more. The case is still under review, and Danette Meyers (the prosecutor in this case) is still deciding what charges, if any, Lindsay will be facing."

Lindsay's attorney, Shawn Chapman Holley, reportedly "had a very productive meeting with Meyers. Shawn had to leave town overnight (Monday) for business, and it's unlikely that Danette would charge Lindsay while Shawn was out of town. Shawn will be back in town (Tuesday) night."

It's even possible that this time, our favorite 'Mean Girls' starlet might just be off the hook. "Lindsay has a legit explanation," a source explained. "She was loaned the necklace. This happens all the time in the celebrity world."

"Remember, (Lindsay's lawyer) Shawn was part of the 'Dream Team' that got O.J. Simpson acquitted of murder charges," another source said. "Shawn is tops in what she does. If there is anyone that can get Lindsay out of this mess, it's Shawn."

Lindsay is still on probation and is due in court Feb. 25 for a status hearing

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Plea by 'crossbow cannibal' victim's father

The father of Shelley Armitage, who was murdered by "crossbow cannibal" Stephen Griffiths, has said he cannot rest until he finds out what happened to her body.

Daryl Armitage has been told by his solicitor that Griffiths is continuing to refuse food in Wakefield Prison.

He fears the murderer will die before revealing where his daughter's remains are hidden and Mr Armitage wants the chance to visit Griffiths in prison to ask him himself.

     "crossbow Canibal"

Griffiths, 41, was jailed for life in December after he admitted murdering Ms Armitage, Susan Rushworth and Suzanne Blamires.

Mr Armitage said he was tormented by the thought that only two parts of his daughter's body had been recovered from the River Aire in West Yorkshire.

He told the BBC he still thinks his daughter's body parts are in the river.

"crossbow canibal victim" 
He said: "I do feel there's not long left for him to live and I do not believe this human rights carry-on, where he's saying he's got the right to die. We have human rights, what do we have to say about it? Why can't he be kept alive just to give us our answers."                                                                  

Mr Armitage, who regularly visits the spot on the banks of the river where his daughter's remains were found, continued: "I can't rest until I know exactly what he's done. I need to know more about what happened to Shelley.

"If I don't find out it'll be preying on me for the rest of my life. I can't buy a grave because I've only got two pieces of Shelley. What happens if something else turns up? I can't move on from here."

He said until he was given the chance to visit Griffiths he was stuck with "nowhere to turn".

Griffiths was jailed for life and given a whole life tariff by a judge at Leeds Crown Court who heard shocking details of how he killed, dismembered and even ate parts of his victims at his flat near the centre of Bradford.

After arriving on remand at Wakefield Prison - home to some of Britain's most notorious killers - he was treated for a number of "self harm" incidents.

The dismembered body of Miss Blamires was found in the River Aire at Shipley, West Yorkshire, along with a small part of Miss Armitage. Miss Rushworth's body has not been found.


Friday, February 4, 2011

Woman: Father Made No Attempt to Stop Before Hitting 'Westernized' Daughter


PHOENIX –  A woman who survived being run over by a Jeep driven by an Iraqi immigrant testified in his murder trial Thursday that he ignored her screams for him to stop as he sped across a parking lot toward her and the man's daughter.


Amal Khalaf, 41, told jurors through an interpreter that she screamed "No! No! No! No!" at Faleh Almaleki and held up her hands before the two women were hit in October 2009.
Almaleki's 20-year-old daughter, Noor Almaleki, died 13 days later. Khalaf suffered a broken hip and thigh and spent about two months in the hospital.

Authorities accuse Almaleki, 50, of intentionally targeting his daughter because she had brought the family dishonor by becoming too Westernized. He has pleaded not guilty to charges of first-degree murder, attempted murder, aggravated assault and leaving the scene of an accident.

His lawyer said during opening statements that the truck driver from southern Iraq was angry at the older woman, who is the mother of Noor's boyfriend, and was trying to drive by and spit on her when she jumped in front of his Jeep.

He swerved, but could not avoid accidentally hitting her and running over his daughter, his lawyer said. He fled after the accident, making his way to Mexico and then to London, where he was detained by customs officials and returned to the U.S.

Prosecutors say he did not flee because he panicked, but because he wanted to avoid capture.

Khalaf left her native Iraq with her children in 1994 and came to the U.S. in 1997, when she said she first met Almaleki, his wife and their children in Michigan. Her family moved to Phoenix, and the Almalekis followed in 2004.

Faleh Almaleki, who is from a small southern Iraqi town near Basra, and his family were relocated by the U.S. military to Saudi Arabia and then the U.S. in the mid-1990s.
As Noor Almaleki entered her late teens, she became more and more estranged from her family, prosecutor Laura Rechart told jurors in her opening statement last week.

Faleh Almaleki wanted Noor to act like a traditional Iraqi woman. But at 17, she refused to stay in an arranged marriage, angering her father. He also wanted her to remain at home and take care of the younger children while the parents worked, the prosecutor said.

She moved into her own apartment at 19 and began working at a fast-food restaurant, but quit after her parents kept showing up at her work, insisting she return home, according to court documents. Later in 2009, she moved in with her boyfriend, Khalaf and Khalaf's husband Reikan, after saying her parents had hit her.

Khalaf had taken Noor in several times after she left home between 2007 and 2009, and that was a cause of increasing friction between the families, she testified. Once while Noor was staying with the family, police were called after Almaleki and his wife showed up at their home.

Noor moved in again about seven months before the incident on Oct. 20, 2009, outside a state Department of Economic Security office in the west Phoenix suburb of Peoria. She said Noor had gone with her to interpret and the women were waiting to be helped when Faleh Almaleki came into the office.

He left after a short time, and Khalaf said she was worried he might do something violent toward Noor, so she drove around the parking lot to make sure he had left. She testified that she was so nervous, she locked her keys in her van and had to call her son to bring another set.

They left the office to go to a nearby restaurant when the Jeep bore down on the women, she said.

"I thought he was not going to hit me, but I was protecting her," Khalaf said. She described Faleh Almaleki as looking angry as she screamed at him to stop.

A detective testified earlier that Almaleki acknowledged under questioning by police that he intentionally ran over his daughter. But the transcript of the taped interview showed he repeatedly called the incident an accident.

Prosecutors were expected to call Reikan Khalaf and other police officers to testify next week.
  
source: http://www.foxnews.com/

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Swiss authorities: social worker admits to 114 sexual assaults

A prosecutor's statement says the man is from Argovie district in northern Switzerland.
A prosecutor's statement says the man is from Argovie 
district in northern Switzerland.

(CNN) -- A social worker in Switzerland has confessed to sexually assaulting more than 100 disabled children and adults, authorities said Tuesday.

The 54-year-old man, who was not identified, said the assaults took place over a 28-year span in nine institutions where he worked as a therapist. He is from Argovie district in northern Switzerland, according to a statement from the regional public prosecutor of Bern-Mittelland and Bern cantonal police.

He has confessed that since 1982, he abused people while he was employed in homes and institutions for people with mental and physical disabilities in Switzerland and Germany, authorities said. Most of the facilities where the alleged incidents occurred are in Bern canton.

The man has since been interviewed more than 50 times since his arrest last April, and has been "very cooperative" in revealing "further information on similar cases," the statement said.

He had been investigated in 2003 in connection with the alleged sexual assault of a 13-year-old girl, but the case was dropped because of insufficient evidence, authorities said.

In all, the man confessed to sexually abusing 114 people -- all of whom were mentally disabled and some of whom also had physical disabilities -- who have been identified by canton police. The man also confessed to eight attempted sexual assaults, authorities said.

Most of the victims were male; 42 of the victims were older than 18, authorities said. One of the victims was 1 year old at the time of the alleged assault.

Police said the man told investigators that some of the abuses occurred several times on the same day. In 18 cases, the abuses were photographed or filmed. Investigators determined that no images or videos had been posted to the internet.

The statute of limitations has passed for most of the offenses, authorities said, but the man can be prosecuted for 33 cases.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Jackson Doctor's Trial Set March 28


Image: Conrad Murray 

A trial for the doctor accused in pop singer Michael Jackson's death could begin within 60 days after his attorneys told the judge in the case they would be ready to go within the statutory time limit for a speedy trial. Dr. Conrad Murray entered a guilty plea during a court appearance before Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor.

"Your honor, I am an innocent man," Murray said. "I definitely plead not guilty."

Judge Pastor said the trial date for March 28 and said he would be inclined to allow the proceedings to be televised, but agreed to hear from the attorneys on the matter at a pre-trial hearing set for Feb. 7.

Attorneys for Murray previously said he would not be accepting a plea bargain in the case, in which he is accused of causing Jackson's death by giving him the anesthetic propofol along with other sedatives. Prosecutors have not indicated if a plea bargain has been offered in the case.

'We're Going to Trial'

If convicted of involuntary manslaughter, Murray would face a maximum of four years in prison.

Although prosecutor's presented strong evidence at an earlier preliminary hearing showing Murray's negligence, his attorneys believe he will be found not guilty at trial.

"We're going to go to trial," defense attorney J. Michael Flanagan told reporters. "I think our case is really solid. We were very pleased with the way the evidence went at the preliminary hearing... This should result in an acquittal."

source: About.com

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

UK Sikh cop wins discrimination case

gurmeal_singh_2_1482866c.jpg


A Sikh policeman has been awarded 10,000 pounds by a British tribunal after he complained his religious sentiments were hurt by an order to remove his turban during riot-training.

Gurmeal Singh, a police constable in the force serving Greater Manchester in northwest England, was awarded the compensation by an employment tribunal after a three-week hearing Friday.

Singh, who joined Greater Manchester Police (GMP) in 2004, sued the force, alleging that a sergeant told him during a meeting to discuss the riot training: “Can you not take that thing off ? this is what you signed up for.”

He was also asked whether he could modify his turban.

Singh, 31, said he suffered panic attacks, stress and palpitations and was off sick over the issue during the long-running dispute.

The tribunal rejected most of his allegations but upheld a claim of indirect racial and religious discrimination, after he was included on a group email Feb 8 last year, telling officers that riot training was mandatory and he would therefore have to remove his turban.

Two months later he had an “unpleasant” meeting with his sergeant and went off sick the next day - the panel ruled the meeting amounted to harassment.

After the ruling Singh, who is still employed by GMP on ‘recuperative duties’, said: “I’m looking to return to work and see how GMP accommodate me.”

Julia Rogers, GMP’s assistant chief officer, said: “We felt we acted in the officer’s best interests, but accept the findings from this tribunal and have already updated the policies this relates to.”

She said the force would be working with the newly formed British Police Sikh Association in an effort to resolve any ongoing issues.

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