Sunday, October 31, 2010

Saudi clerics endorse ban on female cashiers


Posted on Sunday, 10.31.10

Saudi clerics endorse ban on female cashiers

The Associated Press

Saudi Arabia's top government-sanctioned board of senior Islamic clerics has endorsed a fatwa that calls for a ban on female vendors because it violates the kingdom's strict segregation of the sexes.
The powerful committee said in its ruling Sunday that the mixing of sexes is forbidden and women should not seek jobs where they could encounter men.
The decision comes after a conservative preacher was reprimanded in August for violating a government-mandated restriction on fatwas by calling for a boycott of supermarkets employing female cashiers.
Saudi King Abdullah has been trying to clamp down on ultraconservative ideology as part of his bid to modernize the kingdom. But his efforts appear to be challenged by the influential religious scholars, who play a key role in the monarch's legitimacy.


Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/10/31/1901457/saudi-clerics-endorse-ban-on-female.html#ixzz13yOk30Pp

Saturday, October 30, 2010

LGBT-friendly synagogue a target of intercepted packages, leader says

 
A small synagogue dedicated to serving Chicago's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered community was one of the destinations of two packages intercepted abroad packed with explosive material, a co-president for the house of worship said Saturday.
Or Chadash, a congregation of about 100 people, held its Sabbath services Friday with security out in full force.
"It was unnerving, [but] we carried on as normal," Or Chadash's co-president, Lilli Kornblum, told CNN.
Kornblum said Or Chadash was notified that it was a potential target by the rabbi of Temple Emmanuel - another synagogue from which Or Chadash leases space - who received word from authorities. Temple Emmanuel, however, was apparently not a target.
Synagogues across metropolitan Chicago began taking "appropriate precautions" Friday after receiving warning from security officials to watch out for suspicious packages from abroad, according to a Jewish Federation spokeswoman.
President Barack Obama said that two packages that apparently contained explosive materials were bound for "two places of Jewish worship in Chicago," but did not name them. U.S. authorities could not be immediately reached to confirm Kornblum's claim.
"[We were] surprised, because we're very, very small," Kornblum said, adding that the 35-year-old synagogue had been trying to get noticed to potentially gain more congregants. "This isn't what we had in mind."
Kornblum said she's "distressed" about the incident, but expressed gratitude for the authorities who were able to intercept the packages.
The Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago was contacted by federal officials Friday morning to urge the organization to be on alert for suspicious packages, spokeswoman Linda Haase said.
Lucille Price, a receptionist at Anshe Emet Synagogue, said Chicago police made them aware of the reports and asked them to keep an eye out for suspicious packages among any deliveries that arrived Friday.
But congregation leaders at two prominent Chicago synagogues, Temple Sholom and Chicago Sinai Congregation, said they were not made aware of any attempts to ship bombs or hazardous material to them.
Haase said she had not heard reports of Chicago congregations altering plans for services on Friday evening, the beginning of the Jewish Sabbath.
"Everything was fine. Services were held as usual with no signs of anxiety," said Rabbi Michael Sternfield, who leads Chicago Sinai, after services Friday night. "There is really nothing to report."
Steven Bob, the rabbi at a synagogue in the western Chicago suburbs, said Friday that he was not concerned about the exposed plot.
"We generally pay careful attention to packages coming to the synagogue, accepting only those we're expecting or from a known sender," he said. "Today we were extra careful."
Bob said that there was plenty of email and phone traffic among Chicago Jewish leaders responding to news of the plot on Friday but that he didn't think worshippers would be deterred from Friday services.
"We live in a world that contains some people that are hostile to us and we want to respond to that hostility with caution," said Bob, who leads Etz Chaim in Lombard, Illinois. "At the same time, we're not going to go hide in the basement."
"I may say a word or two about this tonight, but I don't think it's worthy of a sermon," he said Friday. "What am I going to say, that I'm opposed to terrorism?"
– CNN's Ross Levitt and Dan Gilgoff contributed to this report.

Official: Haiti cholera deaths rise above 330 as hurricane approaches

Official: Haiti cholera deaths rise above 330 as hurricane approaches

By the CNN Wire Staff
October 30, 2010 -- Updated 1855 GMT (0255 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • The death toll from a cholera outbreak is 337
  • Another 200 cases are suspected
  • Tomas is expected to near Haiti on Thursday
(CNN) -- The death toll from a cholera outbreak in Haiti has risen to more than 330, and officials believe Hurricane Tomas may worsen the situation as it approaches, a U.N. spokeswoman said Saturday.
The number of confirmed cholera cases has climbed to 4,764, with 337 deaths, said Imogen Wall, spokeswoman for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Haiti, citing information provided by the Haitian government. Those numbers represent the people that were able to make it to the hospital, she said.
Another 200 cases are suspected in the nation's West Department, or province, she said.
Tracking maps show Hurricane Tomas nearing Haiti on Thursday as a Category 3 hurricane.
U.N. peacekeepers said Thursday that preliminary tests on a suspected source of the cholera outbreak were negative.
The U.N. mission in Haiti is testing waste and sewage water at the back of a Nepalese military base that is part of the U.N. operations. The first tests showed no signs of cholera, officials said earlier this week.
The mission said it "has taken very seriously the allegations that sewage water coming from latrines at the back of the Nepalese military base in Mirebalais could be the source of the cholera outbreak in Haiti."
Suspicions about the Nepalese base arose from reports that water was collecting at the back of the base. It was believed to be overflow from the latrine or a septic tank.
U.N. engineers examined the base and concluded that the standing water was not from the latrine of septic tank, but from a soak pit that receives water from the kitchen and the shower area, the U.N mission said.
"This soak pit is located three meters from the latrines, hence misleading passers-by into believing that the soaked ground close to latrines is caused by the overspill of human waste," it said.
All human waste from the camp is collected in seven septic tanks that are emptied out and discharged in a local landfill as authorized by the local government, the United Nations said.
The agency also noted that all 710 Nepalese soldiers underwent medical tests, and tested negative for cholera, before deployment to Haiti earlier this month.

Photos Raise Copyright Issues When Going From Print To eBook

Photos Raise Copyright Issues When Going From Print To eBook


Publishers and authors looking to turn their print books into eBooks don’t just have to worry about the digital formatting, they also have to keep rights management in mind.
Just because you have the print rights to use an image doesn’t mean that you have the digital book rights. Your contract must stipulate that you have digital rights to use the image, or you have to go back to the copyright owner and extend the contract. “The first place to look is the contract between publisher and the photographer,” said Christopher Kenneally, Director of Business Development at Copyright Clearance.
Once you are clear that you have the right to use an image in a digital form, you may need to add in an extra stipulation if you want to enhance that image for an enhanced eBook. “If you are confused you are beginning to understand the problem,” said Christopher Kenneally, Director of Business Development at Copyright Clearance. “It is a confusing area.”
Publishers and authors signing contracts these days should keep digital rights in mind. While you may not have plans for an eBook version of a print title, eBooks are growing in popularity and it is best to get the digital rights ahead of time, so that you don’t have to go digging or trying to recreate images.
“Dealing with images opens up a can of worms,” said Kenneally. “I may be able to reshoot all of the images for a travel guide if I want to put out an eBook edition, because the sites are very common and everyone has taken a photo of them. But if I wanted to try to reshoot a special photographer’s style, then I might be infringing.”
For more information on copyright and publishing, the Copyright Clearance Center gives workshops on specific issues. Follow this link to find out more.

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24 Hours + 25 % Discount = Yay November

On November 1, we’re offering a 24 hour, 25 % discount on all our November courses. No big public announcements — just something special for our nearest and dearest (that’s you).
This is your chance to make money with  facebook marketing, become a multimedia journalism master, or stop fretting about your grammar.
So take a look now and get ready to sign up first thing Monday morning. We’ll post details here and on our Twitter feed, @mediabistro.

Hey, Twitter, Enough Of This Crap About "Here's How You Can Use The Word Tweet"

Hey, Twitter, Enough Of This Crap About "Here's How You Can Use The Word Tweet"

Twitter Bird
I used to be cool, but now I'm run by lawyers.
Twitter has issued new rules about how the rest of us can use the words "Twitter" and "Tweet," MG Siegler of TechCrunch tells us. And the rules are right out of a handbook on how to take yourself way too seriously.
For example:
  • Make sure that if mentioning “Tweet,” you include a direct reference to Twitter (for instance, “Tweet with Twitter”) or display the Twitter marks with the mention of “Tweet.”
And: 
Naming your Application or Product, Applying for a Domain
Do: Use Tweet in the name of your application only if it is designed to be used exclusively with the Twitter platform.
Don’t: Use Tweet in the name of your application if used with any other platform.
In other words, if you're TweetDeck, a company that was created shortly after the company called Twitter and helped to make Twitter the powerhouse that it is today, you have to change your name to, say, StatusUpdateDeck, because Twitter's lawyers now say they own the word "Tweet."
Now, Twitter's lawyers will no doubt say that what they're doing here is just laying claim to company property, the same way "Xerox" or "Kleenex" or "Google" might do.
But that's crap.
law school
Good news, Biz! I've found another five words we can say we own!
Image: flickr
Companies like "Xerox" and "Kleenex" and "Google" invented the names that later became generic nouns and verbs. In other words, the terms started as company trademarks and then entered the general lexicon. Twitter, meanwhile, just co-opted words that had existed happily for hundreds of years before its founders were even born, and it's now trying to convert these words into company property.
Yes, Twitter's lawyers will say here that they're only trying to control the CAPITALIZED forms of these words, but that's still weenie-like.  As MG Siegler notes: "This would seem to be all about Twitter gaining the trademark to the word “tweet”, which they’ve been trying unsuccessfully to do. They also later note, “Please remember to capitalize the T in Twitter and Tweet!” As a commenter notes, it’s funny that they don’t even capitalize it in their own logo!"
(And are Twitter's lawyers really going to be cool if "TweetDeck" changes its name to "tweetdeck"? Somehow we doubt it.)
More importantly, this whole "we own and can dictate how English words are used" thing just runs so counter to the grass-roots power-to-the-people "open" ethos that made Twitter what it is today.
Yes, by imposing ever-greater rules on how application providers can interact with the service, and by co-opting some of the most popular third-party applications, Twitter has already screwed over some of the folks who initially supported it and begun its transformation into a "CORPORATION." But those moves were foreshadowed and expected, and they were arguably necessary to the company's long-term financial success.
Trademarking the word "Tweet," meanwhile, has nothing to do with the company's long-term financial success (unless part of the financial model is expected to be suing people for trademark infringement.)  It's just annoying.
So, we urge you to rethink this one, Twitter.
If you want to trademark the company-name "Twitter," fine.  But lay off "Tweet."  And stop trying to dictate how people can and can't use words that have been communal property for centuries.  It's way too early--and your company is still way too cool--to let lawyers take over.
See Also: Here's Who Just Got Screwed By Twitter


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/twitter-trademarks-tweet#ixzz13sBLP4uK

18-year-old American Wins Miss World Title

18-year-old American Wins Miss World Title

Women from more than 100 countries participated.

Alexandria Mills, 18, crowned Miss World
Alexandria Mills, 18, crowned Miss World (Associated Press / October 30, 2010)



BEIJING -- The newest Miss World is from the United States.

Alexandria Mills, a soft-spoken 18-year-old, was named the winner in Saturday night's contest in southern China. The tall blonde was a relative surprise winner after speculation focused on other contestants.

Second place went to Emma Wareus of Botswana, and Adriana Vasini of Venezuela came third.

The host country's own contestant, Tang Xiao, also was among the final five.

According to a brief biography on the Miss World website, Mills calls Louisville, Kentucky, her hometown, and she recently graduated from high school. She would like to become a teacher.

"I've never met a stranger and enjoy meeting new people," she says in the bio.

For the final, she was wearing a shimmering ivory-colored dress slit up the leg.

Mills takes over the title from Kaiane Aldorino of Gibraltar, who was named Miss World 2009 at a ceremony in South Africa last December.

Women from more than 100 countries participated in the contest, organizers said.

This is the 60th year of the Miss World Competition, and organizers brought back contestants from past decades to give the night a retrospective theme.

Friday, October 29, 2010

D.A.: Nude Cop Sexually Assaulted Woman in Pool While On-Duty

D.A.: Nude Cop Sexually Assaulted Woman in Pool While On-Duty

The Cathedral City police officer allegedly stripped down and jumped into a pool with 3 women.

 
  (Getty Images)


CATHEDRAL CITY, Calif. ( KTLA) -- A Cathedral City police officer is facing charges for allegedly stripping naked and sexually assaulting a woman in a swimming pool while on-duty.

The Riverside County District Attorney's office has charged John Fox Jr., 37, with one felony count of attempted sexual penetration, one felony count of assault under the color of authority, one misdemeanor count of indecent exposure and two misdemeanor counts of sexual battery in the September 29, 2010 incident.

Prosecutors say Fox responded to a noise complaint at a home in Cathedral City and found three women in a pool.

He allegedly stripped off his uniform and got into the pool where he sexually assaulted one of the women, prosecutors said.

The owner of the home, who was not swimming, called 911 to file a complaint.

Before Fox's supervisors arrived at the scene, he put his uniform back on and left the residence.

The D.A.'s office says it investigated the incident and "collected evidence sufficient to prove that Fox had committed the crimes."

Fox is scheduled to be arraigned on Nov. 1.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Facebook Blocks Moms Due to Excessive Message Posting

Facebook Blocks Moms Due to Excessive Message Posting 
 
It may sound unbelievable that a Facebook group for young mothers would have a near constant volley of messages careening through the popular social network's series of interconnected tubes, but it's true! Apparently they like to chat with one another on the order of "35 to 40 messages within a 1.5- to 2-hour period," according to PC World.
The problem is that Facebook's security software sees such rapid-fire posting as a sure sign of "abusive or spammy" behavior and, in some cases, restricted certain group members' accounts for 24 hours.
208756-facebook-warning_original
Lucy Berry told PC World, "We were just discussing our children. I got a message saying I may be annoying other people. Which I know isn't true." After that, Berry's account was locked down for 24 hours.
Facebook says its software sees the act of sending several messages in a short amount of time as a sign of suspicious activity, but the site has "recently tweaked the system for groups to allow people to post at a quicker rate."
More on Techland:
Study Reveals Facebook Could Be Outing Gay Users
When Does Life Without Facebook Become Unsustainable?
Two Minute Video: Quick and Easy Facebook Tricks


Read more: http://techland.com/2010/10/26/facebook-blocks-moms-due-to-excessive-message-posting/?xid=huffpo-direct#ixzz13hbiAHra

Vancouver Island teens admit to 'horrendous' planned sex slaying

Vancouver Island teens admit to 'horrendous' planned sex slaying

The two teens knew Proctor and planned her death and disposal of her body

Photo of murder victim Kimberly Proctor.
 

Photo of murder victim Kimberly Proctor.

Photograph by: Files, timescolonist.com

Click here to see more photos related to this story
Warning: Graphic content
VICTORIA — Two teenagers pleaded guilty Wednesday to the first-degree murder of 18-year-old Kimberly Proctor, whose burned body was found under a bridge on the Galloping Goose trail in March, admitting in chilling detail to planning and executing her rape and murder.
Under tight security, a 16-year-old and an 18-year-old — who was 17 at the time of Proctor’s killing — were led into a packed B.C. Supreme Court room and placed in separate booths. Both stood, lawyers by their side, and pleaded guilty to the crime that RCMP investigators had described as “horrendous” and “disturbing.”
The plea by the 16-year-old, a skinny teen who appeared nervous and subdued, was inaudible. His defence lawyer, Robert Jones, had to repeat it.
The teens also pleaded guilty to indignity to human remains. It is expected that charges of sexual assault and forcible confinement will be stayed by the Crown at their next appearance.
Neither of the boys can be named; their identities are shielded under the Youth Criminal Justice Act. Neither teen looked at the other during the 40-minute proceeding. Their families did not appear to be in the packed courtroom, nor did their usual group of friends.
Sheriffs had blocked off the front row of the courtroom for security reasons. The second row was filled with grim-faced investigators and members of Proctor’s family, including her mother Lucia, father Fred, her aunt Jo-Anne Landolt and both sets of her grandparents.
B.C. Supreme Court Justice Robert Johnston accepted the guilty pleas and ordered the teens detained in custody. Johnston issued a no-contact order, prohibiting the teens from contacting three people who could be called as witnesses at future hearings.
Johnston also ordered pre-sentence and psychiatric reports before sentencing. These will take about eight weeks to prepare and will be heard in court when a two-week sentencing hearing begins March 28. At previous court appearances, Crown prosecutor Peter Juk filed notice to have the 16-year-old and 18-year-old sentenced as adults, which would mean a stiffer penalty.
As part of the proceedings Wednesday, Juk read a five-page statement of agreed-upon facts into the court record, signed by both Crown and defence lawyers, that set out the gruesome facts of what happened to Proctor on March 18.
As Juk read the details, Fred Proctor began to cry, wiping tears from his eyes. Sitting pressed beside him, his wife bowed her head and held tightly to his hand.
The grim statement makes clear that the teenage boys planned Proctor’s death well in advance.
Through text messages and online chats, they created code words to initiate the attack, outlined how they would tie her up and assault her, discussed what types of fuel to use to burn her body, and drew up a map of possible places to dispose of her body.
After they raped and asphyxiated Proctor, and then mutilated and burned her body, the 16-year-old met up with his girlfriend and the 18-year-old went shopping and had brunch with his mother.
The statement was short on details for a motive. Proctor had flirted with both boys in the fall of 2009 before declining their advances, and they killed her four months later.
According to online chats with a female friend outlined in the statement, the 16-year-old offered two reasons for the murder. First, Proctor was “an easy target.” Second, “he had dreamed about killing someone ever since he was young,” although he admitted to the friend that “it didn’t feel like what he thought it would.”
Proctor, a Grade 12 student, was reported missing after she didn’t show up at a babysitting job the afternoon of March 18. She had last been seen at 10:30 a.m. at the bus exchange in Colwood, talking to the two boys who would later kill her.
When Proctor could not be reached on her cellphone and did not return home, friends and family members began a desperate search, putting up posters and handing out photos of her wearing a distinctive black sweatshirt with a large No. 13 decal on the front.
On the evening of March 19, a body was found beneath a bridge over Millstream Creek. The body had been burned beyond recognition, and it would take a few days to positively identify Proctor through dental records.
According to the agreed statement of facts, Proctor knew her killers through school. In the summer and fall of 2009, Proctor had dated one of the 16-year-old’s best friends. During that time, the 16-year-old talked to Proctor online through MSN chat and text messages. At times, their correspondence was “quite personal and intimate.” When Proctor broke off with her boyfriend, the 16-year-old asked her to go out with him. At first she accepted but, shortly after, she called it off.
From May to November, the 18-year-old was also chatting with Proctor on MSN. The chats were, at times, “quite flirtatious and suggestive,” according to the statement. Although she participated in the chats, Proctor declined his advances.
On March 16, two days before Proctor went missing, the 16-year-old sent a text message to a female friend, asking: “What would your opinion be on me if I killed, raped or brutalized someone?”
The next night, the 16-year-old sent Proctor a message, telling her he wanted to meet her in person the next day and explain why he, the 18-year-old and “everyone” had been mean to her lately.
They agreed to meet at 10 a.m. the next day. They exchanged phone numbers. Then Proctor and the 16-year-old had a long phone conversation that ended in the early morning of March 18. Without her knowledge, the 16-year-old had allowed the 18-year-old to listen in on the conversation. The two teens were communicating online.
“In their exchange of computer messages, they discussed their plan to lure her to the 16-year-old’s house, to seduce her, bind her, sexually assault her, murder her, then burn and dispose of her body. It was a plan they had discussed before,” according to the agreed statement of fact.
“Their plan, as detailed in their text messages, included specifically planning when and where to meet, how to get money and buy a specific brand of fuel with which to burn the body, how to get back to the 16-year-old’s house, whether to take the bus or walk, what buses to take, and what they would say and do to carry out their attack, including the use of code words to initiate the attack. Their text messages included graphic descriptions of how they would bind and sexually assault Kimberly Proctor over an extended period of time, and a discussion of various possible sites at which to dispose of her body, including making reference to a detailed annotated map they created for this purpose.”
On the morning of March 18, they met Proctor at the bus exchange. The 18-year-old went to a store to buy fuel, then the three went back to the 16-year-old’s house, arriving just after 11 a.m.
The boys bound and gagged Proctor, and over several hours repeatedly assaulted her both sexually and physically.
“She was choked and suffocated and eventually died. A knife was used to mutilate her body,” said the statement.
After the youths killed her, they placed her body in a freezer in the garage of the 16-year-old’s house.
At 6:24 p.m., the 16-year-old sent three text messages to Proctor’s phone: “Hey”/ “I thought you had babysitting”/ “Did you finish early.” Proctor would have been at his home at the time, although it’s not clear if she was alive or dead at the time it was sent.
Later that night, the 18-year-old sent text messages to another female high school student with whom he’d had a sexual relationship, trying to convince her to sneak out of her house and join him at the 16-year-old’s house. These messages were sent while Proctor’s body was at the house.
The next morning, the boys put Proctor’s body and the fuel from the house into a large duffel bag, boarded a bus and went to the bridge beneath the Galloping Goose Trail where her body was doused with fuel and set on fire. Investigators would later recover fabric, zippers, and grommets consistent with a duffel bag at the scene.
Later that morning, the 18-year-old’s mother bought him a video game and took him for brunch. The 16-year-old spent the day with his girlfriend at his house.
A week later, the 16-year-old sent a text message to a female friend — the same one he’d texted two days before Proctor went missing — asking her to meet him online on World of Warcraft, an Internet game, to chat because he needed “to tell her something he could not tell her over the MSN chat lines.”
In their online discussion, the 16-year-old told the girl that he had killed “Kim.” The girl knew he was talking about Proctor because he also sent her links to news articles about her death and said that was her.
The 16-year-old told the girl, in disturbing detail, what he and the 18-year-old had done to Proctor: raping her, strangling her and mutilating her body.
The girl asked if he “pre-planned it.” The 16-year-old said “yes.” The 16-year-old went on to say “he had dreamed about killing someone ever since he was young and it didn’t feel like he thought it would,” according to the statement of facts. He told the girl he thought he would get away with it and he didn’t feel bad.
The 18-year-old also sent messages to the same girl about the killing. He told the friend he was “aware” they were going to target Proctor. The 16-year-old had approached him and asked him if he wanted to do it.
“When she asked him if he felt bad about it, he said he felt bad he was going to get caught, but said he did not feel bad for Proctor’s family or friends.”
The youths will undergo psychiatric assessments before sentencing.
ldickson@timescolonist.com


Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/Vancouver+Island+teens+admit+horrendous+planned+slaying/3736346/story.html#ixzz13hHHT6ue

******************************************************************************
VICTORIA — Her favourite nickname was Kimmie. She loved music, chatting on her computer, sewing clothes, watching Japanese cartoons and playing with her many pets. And she talked a lot.
“Our home is quiet now,” Fred and Lucia Proctor said in a video statement to police in June following the brutal killing of their 18-year-old daughter in March.
Kimberly Patricia Proctor was a Grade 12 student at Pacific Secondary School in the Victoria suburb of Colwood when she was murdered. The horrendous details of her death, however, shed little light on who she was in life.
By most accounts, Proctor had a fairly ordinary childhood. She loved her floppy-eared bunny, Sunny, her dog, Miko, and all cats. As a child, she also owned hamsters and mice.
She had tickle fights with the children she babysat, played games on Facebook and chatted to her friends on the Internet. She loved the music of Canadian singer Avril Lavigne.
Among her friends, Proctor was seen as the peacemaker and problem-solver. However, on the Internet she complained of being bullied and having problems with boyfriends.
“She was a great kid with a big heart who was gentle — gentle to a fault,” Fred Proctor said in his statement to police in June.
She was deprived of the chance to graduate, grow into a woman, get married, have children and maybe one day look back and laugh over the ups and downs of her teenage years, said her family.
“This has left a huge void in our lives. We don’t know what she could have become, or would have been, or what future we would have had with her,” said Fred Proctor.
At the time of her death, Proctor’s mother was a personnel manager at Walmart and her father was the president of Wilson and Proctor Ltd., which repairs and rebuilds industrial, logging and marine diesel engines. Her 20-year-old brother Rob, attended a Victoria college and worked at Walmart.
Proctor was looking forward to graduating, sewing her prom dress with her grandmother, and “growing up so to speak,” said her father.
Her best friend, Melissa Hadju, imagined Proctor might try modelling or sewing clothes in the future.
“She was rambunctious and talkative, and she liked to have a good time,” the 19-year-old said Wednesday. “She had a great sense of humour — really silly.”
Best friends since Grade 7, Hadju and Proctor watched videos on YouTube and laughed — “rolling over” at times, Hadju said.
At Proctor’s 16th birthday party, the girls stayed up until sunrise, dancing, watching movies and eating popcorn.
The best kind of day for the pair would be finishing school on a Friday and going on a shopping spree, telling each other jokes and “just hanging out,” Hadju said. No outing was complete without iced cappuccinos from Tim Hortons.
If Proctor was shy, it was only in front of boys, Hadju said.
“She was very social and cared deeply for her friends and family,” reads Proctor’s obituary. “Kim was always willing to help people in need.”
To reflect her love of animals, donations upon her death were sent to Wild Arc, which offers rehabilitation services to wild animals on Vancouver Island.
If anything upset or scared Proctor, it was cruelty to animals, Hadju said.
Hadju thinks of her best friend every day. But rather than it being a burden of sorrow, she sees it as a way to pay tribute.
“I don’t let her disappear. I keep her always in the back of my mind,” Hadju said. “I wish everyone knew how much we cherished her and miss her so much. Basically, she was loved and still is loved by so many people.”
Proctor is survived by her parents, brother, her paternal and maternal grandparents and a host of relatives.
In a video statement to police, Lucia Proctor said only one thing: “All we can hope for now is justice to be done for Kimberly.”


Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/Gentle+fault+family+friends+remember+slain+teen+Kimberly+Proctor/3737220/story.html#ixzz13hRSiFMk
*****************************************************************************
VICTORIA — One of the teens who raped and killed 18-year-old Kimberly Proctor was a self-described “nihilistic atheist” whose father was a convicted criminal, while the other was an avid gamer who lived with his parents.
Neither showed any remorse when they bragged to a friend about the brutal beating, murder and mutilation.
The agreed-upon statement of facts about the case, read in B.C. Supreme Court in Victoria Wednesday as the pair pleaded guilty, offered a glimpse into the lives of the two killers.
Details of the teens’ identities, where they live, or what they look like are banned from publication under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
The court heard that Proctor met them at school in a Victoria suburb, where she was set to have graduated in June — three months after her murder.
Both teens expressed interest in Proctor, sending her flirtatious texts and instant messages online until she turned them down. Both stopped texting her in November 2009.
The younger offender — the admitted mastermind of the crime — is 16, slightly built, with collar-length light brown hair.
He lived with his mother in Langford, B.C., and it was there that he and his 18-year-old accomplice raped and killed Proctor and put her body in a freezer until they took it to a creek under a popular walking trail to burn the next morning.
On his Facebook profile, which has since been deleted from the website, he calls himself a “nihilistic atheist” whose interests include misanthropy — hatred of human beings or society. He also had a black-and-white sketch of a naked woman, her organs drawn in blood red.
Among his favourite quotes are those from the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche.
Shortly after his arrest on June 18, the boy’s mother proclaimed her son’s innocence and asked his friends for support through a post on his Facebook.
She wrote: “I’m (his) mother, and I believe he is innocent. If you think kindly of (him), then I encourage you to speak up and spread the truth. Testify in court if you have to. (He) needs it. Please do the right thing.
“Don’t listen to the lies, don’t believe everything you hear without some proof. Some people have said my son was a sociopath, but I don’t believe so.”
A friend of the 16-year-old said he was much smarter than the average high-school student.
“(He) was the type that could easily get passing grades on every subject, but wasn’t very enthusiastic about it,” the friend wrote in an email. “When we were together, we talked about several subjects or just did mild clowning (around). We also used drugs for recreational purposes, but he mostly stuck with marijuana.”
The mother of a friend of Proctor’s said her son had been attacked by the 16-year-old near the school last year. The 16-year-old was threatening to kill her son’s ex-girlfriend, so her son stepped in to defend the girl, the mother said.
“My son did have an altercation with him and it was about him harming another young lady,” she said. “To me, this seems like this is this kid’s MO.”
Most of what is known about the 18-year-old killer is contained in the statement of fact sworn in court Wednesday.
The teen, who is tall with short hair, lives with his parents, who are married and who are both working professionals.
Unlike the 16-year-old, he didn’t have an open Facebook profile page.
On the night of the murder, he tried to lure another female high school student, with whom he had had a sexual relationship, to the home where they had just killed Proctor.
The morning after, the 18-year-old met up with his mother and grandmother for brunch and his mother bought him a video game.
Both teens were avid players of the online role-playing game World of Warcraft. It was on that website that the 16-year-old confessed to a female friend that he had sexually assaulted and strangled “Kim,” sending news articles about the murder and including horrifying details.
The 18-year-old also told the same girl about the murder, saying it was the 16-year-old’s idea.
According to the statement of facts, when the girl asked the 18-year-old if he felt bad about it, “(he) said he felt bad that he was going to get caught, but he did not feel bad for Kimberly Proctor’s family or friends.”
Raymond Corrado, a youth violence expert and Simon Fraser University criminologist, said the crime shows a level of planning and callousness rare among young offenders.
“It’s so rare,” he said. “I mean statistically it’s a complete aberration. Sexual offending, serious sexual assault generally among children and adolescents is very low. This level of brutality is even more rare.”


Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/Killers+were+avid+gamers+self+described+nihilistic+atheist/3737206/story.html#ixzz13hTD4M86
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Family ‘anguished’ as details of teen’s slaying read in court

Kimberly Proctor was kiled at 18 years of age.

Kimberly Proctor was kiled at 18 years of age.

Photograph by: Files, timescolonist.com

VICTORIA — The family of Kimberly Proctor filled the front row at B.C. Supreme Court in Victoria Wednesday to hear details of how, on March 18, the 18-year-old was raped and smothered before her body was brutalized, burned and left under a bridge near a popular walking trail.
It was the second time in less than 24 hours they’d heard the horrifying events of Proctor’s death. On Tuesday night, they met RCMP investigators to listen to the disturbing details contained in the agreed statement of facts.
On Wednesday, they sat less than two metres behind the prisoners’ dock, with only Plexiglas separating them from the 16-year-old boy and 18-year-old man who, for the first time, admitted to first-degree murder and committing an indignity to human remains.
The two teens sat in silence, other than to rise and say “guilty” to the charges. Both wore dress shirts and dark pants. They made no eye contact with Proctor’s family during the hearing.
The rest of the gallery was filled with the public, police and media representatives.
After the hearing was over, the Proctor family was ushered out of the courthouse while RCMP spokesman Cpl. Darren Lagan spoke to media on their behalf.
“This is a day of anguish for them,” said Lagan.
The core group of 10 RCMP investigators knew four months ago they had Proctor’s killers in their sights. But there was nothing to celebrate Wednesday when the teens avoided a trial and entered surprise guilty pleas.
And while the agreed statement of facts entered into evidence as part of the pleas goes into great detail about how the teens planned and executed the murder, one question has so far gone unanswered — why?
Those answers may come at the sentencing hearing set for March 28, said Lagan. The hearing will also be an opportunity for the family to face the killers and, through victim-impact statements, talk about the extent of their grief and loss.
It’s not just the family that needs time to heal, said Lagan.
“This is a crime which will haunt the community, the investigators and her family for the rest of our lives,” he said.
Seasoned investigators were shocked by the brutality of the crime and some received counselling, he said. The investigation at times moved Lagan to tears during news conferences.
“As a human, as a father, as a member of the community, to have dealt with the file we dealt with . . . it’s certainly challenging,” he said.
Both the community and the media were of great assistance to the investigation, Lagan said.
******************************************************************************

Langford teens charged with first-degree murder, sexual assault, confinement of Kimberly Proctor

 
 
 
 
 
Two Langford teens were arrested Friday and later charged in the murder of Kimberly Proctor.
 
 

Two Langford teens were arrested Friday and later charged in the murder of Kimberly Proctor.

Photograph by: from Facebook, timescolonist.com

Three months after Kimberly Proctor’s badly burned body was found by the edge of a creek, two Langford teens have been charged with the 18-year-old’s murder.
The males, ages 16 and 18, have been charged with first-degree murder, sexual assault, forcible confinement and indignity to human remains.
In a news conference Saturday morning, a visibly upset Cpl. Darren Lagan, spokesman for Island district RCMP, said the murder is the worst he’s seen in a decade on the force.
“Investigators have used the words ‘horrendous,’ ‘disturbing,’ ” Lagan said.
The RCMP remain tight-lipped on any details that might identify the two. They were both under the age of 18 at the time of the murder and their identities are protected under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
However, Lagan did say that Proctor was familiar with her killers.
“This was not a random act. Kimberly, for whatever reason... was the intended victim.”
Proctor was last seen at a bus stop the morning of March 18. Her badly burned body was found the next day on a rock ledge next to Millstream Creek, beneath a bridge on the Galloping Goose Trail. It took police three days to identify her remains.
Both the investigation and media coverage of the murder ranged well beyond B.C., even reaching television news south of the border because of the role social networking sites played in revealing personal information about Proctor and fueling speculation about her murder.
Comments Proctor made on her profile on vampirefreaks.com — a website dedicated to the goth subculture that has been connected with the Dawson College shooting in Montreal in 2006 — fueled speculation that Proctor’s death was related to bullying.
Lagan, though, said while Proctor had been bullied in the past, there was no indication that it was an important factor in her death. He also warned against singling out any one aspect of the teen’s life.
“This could have been anyone’s daughter,” he said. “Her family deserves Kimberly to be seen as who she was and vampirefreaks.com is not a true representation of who she was.”
West Shore RCMP inspector Mark Fisher added that there was no way the family could have avoided the tragedy.
“Kim walked into this unknowingly and she didn’t deserve this.”
Friends and family have described Proctor as a typical teen who raised dozens of animals and was sewing her prom dress with her grandmother.
While Proctor’s family is asking for privacy, her parents released a videotaped statement Saturday morning.
Clutching his wife’s hand, Fred Proctor’s choked back tears as he tried to explain what the tragedy meant.
“Our home is quiet now,” he said. “This has left a huge void in our lives. We’ll never know what she could have become or would have been or what future we would have had with her.”
Discovery of the teen’s body kicked off a massive investigation. A core of 40 RCMP investigators and additional officers from other forces logged 20,000 hours trying to determine who was responsible.
While some investigators will continue to work on the case, Lagan said police expect no further arrests.
“Our investigators are confident they have arrested the individuals responsible for Kimberly’s homicide,” Lagan said.
That will come as some comfort for Proctor’s mother, Lucia, who remained silent through most of the videotaped statement, but managed just one thought.
“All we can hope for now is for justice to be done for Kimberly.”
The accused have been remanded into custody and are expected to appear in Victoria Youth Court Monday morning.


Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/Langford+teens+charged+with+first+degree+murder+sexual+assault/3176593/story.html#ixzz13hXXL8pL

Baby killed for interrupting mom's Facebook time

Baby killed for interrupting mom's Facebook time

She told officials she shook the boy, smoked a cigarette to compose herself and then shook him again



Image: Alexandra V. Tobias
Jacksonville Sheriff's Dept.  /  AFP - Getty Images
Alexandra Tobias, seen here in a booking photo.
The Associated Press
updated 2 hours 51 minutes ago 2010-10-28T19:41:48


A north Florida mother has pleaded guilty to shaking her baby to death after the boy's crying interrupted her game on Facebook.
Alexandra V. Tobias pleaded guilty to second-degree murder on Wednesday and remains jailed.


The Florida Times-Union reports that she told investigators she was angered because the boy was crying while she was playing the game FarmVille.
The paper also reports that she told investigators she shook the boy, smoked a cigarette to compose herself and then shook him again.
She will be sentenced in December. State guidelines call for 25 to 50 years, but a prosecutor said it could be shorter than that.
A telephone message and an e-mail sent by The Associated Press to her attorney weren't immediately returned.

Actor Randy Quaid claims death plot by 'monstrous ring of accountants'

Actor Randy Quaid claims death plot by 'monstrous ring of accountants'

 
 
Evi Quaid (left) celebrates with her husband Randy Quaid, as they walk happily out of Canadian citizen court in Vancouver on Oct 27, 2010.  Turns out Evi is a Canadian citizen. Her lawyer Catherine Sas (left) will be at the Immigration and Refugee Board fighting for her release.
 
 

Evi Quaid (left) celebrates with her husband Randy Quaid, as they walk happily out of Canadian citizen court in Vancouver on Oct 27, 2010. Turns out Evi is a Canadian citizen. Her lawyer Catherine Sas (left) will be at the Immigration and Refugee Board fighting for her release.

Photograph by: Mark van Manen, PNG

VANCOUVER — Hollywood actor Randy Quaid accused a network of Hollywood lawyers and business managers Thursday of conspiring to steal money and royalties from him, of sabotaging his career and orchestrating "false arrests" of him and his wife — even plotting to have him killed.
"I'm being embezzled by this monstrous ring of accountants, estate planners and lawyers who are mercilessly slandering me and trying to kill my career and, I believe, murder me in order to gain control of my royalties," Quaid said in a prepared statement Thursday following a short hearing before the Immigration and Refugee Board.
He insisted that neither he nor his wife, Evi, are criminals.
"We are not criminals, nor are we fugitives from justice, nor are we crazy," he said. "We are simply artists and filmmakers who are being racketeered on."
Quaid became emotional before a bevy of television cameras when he spoke of eight personal friends, who, he claims, have fallen victim to "star whackers" — a cabal of killers he says are targeting Hollywood celebrities.
He cited actors Heath Ledger, David Carradine and Chris Penn among them.
Quaid also said he believes other celebrities who've faced hard times, including Britney Spears, Lindsay Lohan and Mel Gibson, are "being played" to get at their money.
He said one of his former lawyers has joined the "tribe of bottom-feeders" by creating his own celebrity gossip website.
Quaid said he wants to return to only one thing — work.
"I would like to announce my availability and desire to do so immediately — legally of course."
But Quaid will have to wait until next month to find out whether he can stay in Canada; an admissibility hearing before the IRB in Vancouver on Thursday was carried over until Nov. 8, to allow Quaid's lawyer time to prepare.
Quaid appeared at Thursday's hearing in a dark suit and blue tie. His wife did not appear.
The couple have become the butt of late-night TV jokes after first telling an immigration board hearing in Vancouver last week that they were seeking asylum in Canada to escape a shadowy group of assassins they say has been killing Hollywood celebrities.
U.S. bench warrants were issued for the couple when they failed to appear in a California court to answer to felony vandalism and misdemeanour trespass charges. They are accused of causing more than $5,000 in damage at a home they once owned.
Quaid was released Wednesday after posting a $10,000 bond. His wife was released unconditionally after the federal government determined she has a claim to Canadian citizenship through her father.
It was not immediately clear whether that could mean Evi Quaid could sponsor her husband.
Quaid is perhaps best known for his role as Cousin Eddie in the National Lampoon's Vacation movies, but he has also appeared in such films as Brokeback Mountain, Kingpin and Independence Day.


Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/Actor+Randy+Quaid+claims+death+plot+monstrous+ring+accountants/3742273/story.html#ixzz13hDsel00

Anna Nicole Smith's boyfriend convicted in drug conspiracy

Anna Nicole Smith's boyfriend convicted in drug conspiracy

By Alan Duke, CNN
October 28, 2010 5:38 p.m. EDT
Anna Nicole Smith died in 2007 from what a Florida medical examiner ruled was "acute combined drug intoxication."
Anna Nicole Smith died in 2007 from what a Florida medical examiner ruled was "acute combined drug intoxication."
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Dr. Eroshevich was found guilty of two conspiracy charges and two other counts
  • NEW: Dr. Kapoor was acquitted on all charges
  • NEW: Stern was found guilty on two charges
  • NEW: The judge set sentencing for January 6
Los Angeles, California (CNN) -- Anna Nicole Smith's boyfriend-lawyer Howard K. Stern and Dr. Khristine Eroshevich were found guilty on two charges of conspiring to provide drugs to a known addict and using false names to obtain them Thursday.
Dr. Sandeep Kapoor was acquitted on all counts against him.
Eroshevich, a psychiatrist who flew to Smith's side in the Bahamas after her son's death in 2006, was also convicted on two other charges relating to a Vicodin prescription given to Smith.
The jury deliberated for 12 days before returned its verdicts in the trial that included two months of testimony,
Stern and the doctors were charged with conspiring to feed the reality TV star and Playboy model's drug addiction, and using false names to obtain the drugs over the last three years of her life.
Video: Smith appears drugged in video
Video: Anna Nicole Smith trial may set precedent
The three defendants were not charged in Smith's February 2007 death in a Florida hotel, which a medical examiner ruled was an accidental overdose of a sleep aid combined with the effects of a viral flu.
The case raised questions about ethical boundaries in a doctor-patient relationship, the prescribing of painkillers and anti-anxiety medicines and the use of fake names when treating celebrities.
The defense called only one witness -- an expert who concluded that Smith suffered from chronic pain, depression and anxiety, not drug addiction.
Her drug dependency was legal since it was for legitimate medical purposes, including for treatment of her pain and anxiety, defense lawyers argued.
The prosecution said the doctors never said no to Smith's drug-seeking because they wanted to be part of her celebrity entourage.
False names were used by Stern and the doctors to hide excessive prescriptions from the state's computer system that monitors drug usage, prosecutors argued. The defense said it is a common practice in Hollywood, used to protect celebrities' privacy from prying tabloid reporters.
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Robert Perry hinted before the verdicts were returned that if any defendants were found guilty, he would consider "possible selective prosecution issues" when sentencing them. He would have the power to reduce most of the felony charges to misdemeanors.
After the verdicts were returned, Perry set sentencing for January 6. Stern and Eroshvich could face a maximum of three years each in prison, according to the prosecutor's office.

Lloyd Webber sells 4 London theatres to cut debt

Lloyd Webber sells 4 London theatres to cut debt

British composer Andrew Lloyd Webber poses for photographs at his piano in front of works by Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones, William Morris and Henry Dearle at the Royal Academy in London September 16, 2003.REUTERS/Russell Boyce
LONDON | Thu Oct 28, 2010 7:09pm BST
LONDON (Reuters) - British composer and impresario Andrew Lloyd Webber is selling four of his company's seven London musical theatres in order to reduce debt, he said Thursday.
Webber's Really Useful Group (RUG) will sell the Palace, Her Majesty's, the Cambridge and the New London, with a combined seating capacity of 4,900 seats.
The group described them as "mid-sized" music houses. It will retain the larger Palladium, Theatre Royal Drury Lane and its 50 percent interest in the Adelphi, which together represent 6,100 seats.
"It has been a totally gut-wrenching decision for me to decide to sell the four theatres," Lloyd Webber, the creator of "Cats" and "The Phantom of the Opera," said in a statement. "However, following my illness last year I was advised to reduce the debt in the family company."
The award-winning 62-year-old had surgery for prostate cancer in 2009. Post-operative complications contributed to the delay of the Broadway opening of the new musical "Love Never Dies" until 2011.
"It is particularly difficult for me as the New London was Cats' home for 21 years," he added. "For nearly 25 years Her Majesty's has been and still is the home of 'The Phantom of the Opera.'
"I have agreed that the purchase price be reduced by five million pounds to enable GradeLinnit to invest this sum in the theatres, principally in the Palace. My commitment to composing, producing and Theatre ownership remains as strong as ever."
The buyer GradeLinnit includes Michael Grade, former chairman of BBC and ITV.
Mark Wordsworth, chairman of the Really Useful Group, added: "Following Andrew's illness last year both Andrew and his family felt that de-gearing RUG would make it easier for him to concentrate on composing and allow him the time to produce shows such as 'The Wizard of Oz' and "Love Never Dies' internationally without any financial worries."
Proceeds of the sale, details of which were not given, will be used to invest in and develop the Palladium and the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, as well as cutting debt. A major reconstruction of the Palladium's front of house is already underway.
The deal is expected to be finalised in January 2011.
(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Patricia Reaney)

Silvio Berlusconi denounces furore over links with 17-year-old girl

Silvio Berlusconi denounces furore over links with 17-year-old girl

La Repubblica claims Moroccan girl suspected of theft was released after direct intervention from prime minister
  • guardian.co.uk,

  • Silvio Berlusconi
     
     
    Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has denounced a growing controversy over his links with a 17-year-old Moroccan girl. Photograph: Carlo Hermann/AFP/Getty Images Silvio Berlusconi today denounced as "media trash" a rapidly growing controversy over his links with a 17 year-old Moroccan girl. Three close associates of the Italian prime minister were earlier reported to have been made suspects in an investigation into the alleged aiding and abetting of juvenile prostitution. One of the three, a nationally famous television newscaster, Emilio Fede, said he was unaware of being under investigation, but said he had met the girl at the centre of the affair at Berlusconi's home. According to the daily La Repubblica, the girl – known as "Ruby" – was released from a police station in Milan in May, following a direct intervention by the prime minister's office. She had been detained on suspicion of theft, but was allowed to go after the police were apparently told that she was the niece of the Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak. Questioned at a press conference today, Berlusconi said: "I am a person with a heart, and so I take an interest in people's problems. But I do not take an interest in media trash." La Repubblica said Ruby was met outside the police station by the second reported suspect, Berlusconi's former dental hygienist, an ex-showgirl called Nicole Minetti, who was elected this year as a regional MP for the prime minister's party. The third alleged suspect is Dario "Lele" Mora, a showbusiness manager and talent scout who is claimed to have taken "Ruby" – a runaway – under his wing when she arrived in Milan. Mora said he had "nothing to say" about the reports. The news agency AGI quoted "Ruby" as saying her version of events had been "manipulated". According to La Repubblica, she told investigators she had attended three social events at Berlusconi's villa outside Milan, but had never had sexual relations with him. She had been taken to the first – a Valentine's Day party – in an official car with a police escort and, when she arrived, she found that Fede and the then 73-year-old Berlusconi were the only men among some 20 women. The paper quoted her as saying a second party had ended in an erotic game known to those present as "bunga bunga". According to different newspaper accounts, Ruby claimed to have received ¤30,000 or ¤150,000 from the prime minister. An opposition spokesman called for Berlusconi to make a statement to parliament.