Tag Archives: csi

100 foot long Narco Sub seized in S. America

The U.S. government announced on Saturday afternoon that for the first time ever a fully operational submarine used by drug traffickers has been seized in the waters of South America. The craft, which could move multi-ton loads of cocaine, was seized in a jungle tributary of Ecuador leading to the Pacific Ocean by Ecuadoran authorities using Drug Enforcement Administration intelligence. The sub is diesel-powered, has a periscope and air conditioning and measures 100 feet long and 9 feet tall. At least one person was arrested and an investigation continues, according to a news release from DEA. Although traffickers have used so-called “narco subs,” low-slung boats that are fully covered and ride low in the water, this is the first full-on submarine ever found in their hands. added by: Stoneyroad

‘Eclipse’ Fans Camp Out For Days Before L.A. Premiere

Twilighters make new friends outside the Nokia Theatre as they wait for Thursday’s red-carpet premiere. By Joel Hanek, with reporting by James Lacsina “Twilight” fans at the “Eclipse” premiere Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images While the werewolf-vampire cold war wages on, the armies of Team Edward and Team Jacob have temporarily set aside their differences to come together to celebrate one momentous occasion: the premiere of “Eclipse”! Earlier this week, Twilighters began camping out in the California sun outside of the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles where the third “Twilight” installment will premiere this Thursday. “We’ve been here for three days, and we are braving the sun, which is kind of evil,” Cherylyn from Littlerock, California, told MTV News on Tuesday. (Those of you not camping out can still get a great view of the red-carpet action when MTV News live-streams the premiere Thursday at 9:30 p.m. ET.) One Twilighter admitted that things got off to a rough start, as everyone jockeyed for position. “The first day, the vibe was very negative,” Jaylyn Sachette said. “Everybody was pushing and shoving and yelling at each other. But once we got wristbands and our spot in line, everything kind of chilled out, and now we’re all making friends.” But fans from all over the world were willing to tough it out, sleeping on the hard ground while being bombarded all night and day by ads from the surrounding Jumbotrons. “I flew all the way from Sweden to L.A. just to be here and support Kristen and Rob and ‘Eclipse,’ ” Sara Mendoza said. Though they’re excited for the movie, many are holding out hope that they’ll get a glimpse of their favorite stars on the red carpet. “We’re going to try and get autographs,” Sarah Freas said. “I would love to talk to them, be like, ‘We love you!’ ” Her friend Ben Williams agreed. “Yeah, just get autographs, basically. [Getting] a picture would be cool, but I don’t think we’ll be close enough.” And although the Twi-hards have been obsessing over the chance to meet their idols for days, many confessed they might get too overwhelmed to speak if they actually got the chance. “If I saw Edward, or Robert,” said fan Molly Jank, as she held a life-size cutout of RPattz, “I would cry. Then I would make him sign something, and then I would tell him that I would see him later because I’m marrying him.” What would you say to your favorite “Twilight” stars if you met them? Talk about it in the comments. We’ll be

Allan McGregor will not face charges after sexual assault allegations

• Rangers goalkeeper had described claims as ‘a vile lie’ • Crown Office says there was insufficient evidence The Rangers goalkeeper Allan McGregor will not face charges following allegations of a sexual assault on a woman, prosecutors said today. McGregor, 28, had been accused of sexual assault and questioned along with the Big Brother contestant Kenneth Tong and the former St Johnstone player Filipe Morais in Glasgow last November. Strathclyde Police launched an investigation after the allegation was made but the Crown Office said today there was “insufficient evidence” to prosecute the three men. A Crown Office spokeswoman said: “A report was submitted to the procurator fiscal at Glasgow concerning Kenneth Tong, Allan McGregor and Filipe Morais in connection with an alleged sexual assault in Glasgow in November 2009. “After very careful and detailed consideration of all the facts and circumstances following an extensive police enquiry, Crown Counsel have decided that there is insufficient evidence to satisfy legal requirements to institute a prosecution. “We have sought to keep the complainer informed throughout the investigation. The Procurator Fiscal has informed her of the decision and has offered her a meeting if she wishes to address any questions she may have.” “The former suspects have been informed that in the circumstances there will be no proceedings,” the spokeswoman added. McGregor had denied the claims as a “vile lie”. “There is not one iota of truth in the allegations,” he said. “I’m devoting myself to clearing my name of these claims.” Rangers Crime guardian.co.uk

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Allan McGregor will not face charges after sexual assault allegations

The Swiss killed Bambi but Spain’s defeat is not the end of the world | Richard Williams

Victory for the artisans over the artists is integral to World Cup 2010 as it was to previous tournaments Who Killed Bambi? was the title of a film about the Sex Pistols that Malcolm McLaren and Russ Meyer, the soft-porn director, never quite got around to making, but it could have been the headline over reports of Spain’s 1-0 defeat by Switzerland on Wednesday afternoon. Spain were supposed to be the darlings of the tournament. They were the ones, we said, who would provide the 2010 World Cup with its finest exposition of the game’s most cherished arts. Their victory would be a triumph for the forces of righteousness, heralding the dawn of football’s new age of enlightenment. It was when Andrés Iniesta, one of Spain’s squadron of much-admired playmakers, left the field after 76 minutes, shaking his head in dismay, that the title of McLaren and Meyer’s movie came to mind. There was pathos, certainly, in the sight of one of the game’s true artists being utterly cancelled out, along with the rest of his team, by a group of men who, by comparison, are no more than willing artisans. But should we really be sad about this, or should we accept that football is about more than just pretty patterns? Spain’s approach is based on that of Barcelona, who arrived at the Emirates Stadium in March and played 20 minutes of the most exalted, expressive football that those of us fortunate enough to be present are ever likely to see. Their movement and their passing ravished the senses, their mutual understanding and their sheer joy in their work communicating itself even to those who feared their side were about to be on the wrong end of an historic pounding. It didn’t work out that way, because Cesc Fábregas – who had something to prove to Barcelona – came on and dragged Arsenal to a memorable 2-2 draw. But would it have been a more satisfying occasion had Barcelona won 5-0, which looked on the cards with a quarter of the match gone? Watching Spain on Wednesday was a lot like watching Arsenal in the later stages of last season: the players could not understand why their virtuous approach was not giving them the critical mass that would tip the balance of the game. They were doing what they had been schooled to do, and it was not enough to overcome an opposing team whose ambitions were not pitched at the same level of creativity. This has happened before at World Cups, even in the finals. Back in 1954 the tournament was supposed to be ready for Hungary – the Magical Magyars of Ferenc Puskas, Sandor Kocsis, Zoltan Czibor, Nandor Hidegkuti and Jozsef Bozsik, who had just beaten England 7-1 in Budapest – to confirm their position as the dominant power in the global game. As they thrashed West Germany 8-3 in their second group match, that outcome seemed a certainty. But Puskas, their figurehead, was injured in that match by a tackle from the defender Werner Liebrich. He did not reappear until the final in Berne, where they met West Germany again and lost 3-2, an equaliser from a half-fit Puskas two minutes from the end being questionably disallowed for offside. That traumatic defeat terminated a four-year, 32-match unbeaten run (Spain went 35 matches without defeat between 2006 and 2009) and heralded the end of Hungary’s golden age. Twenty years later Holland occupied a similar position in the world’s esteem, thanks to the development of Total Football under their coach, Rinus Michels, and the majesty of such players as Johan Cruyff, Johan Neeskens, Ruud Krol, Rob Rensenbrink and Wim van Hanegem. The Clockwork Orange reached the final after beating Argentina 4-0 and Brazil 2-0 in the second group stage before losing in the final to West Germany, the hosts, taking the lead in Munich with a second-minute penalty before succumbing to overconfidence and their opponents’ superior grit. Brazil were the romantic heroes of 1982. A team bursting with such ball-playing aristocrats as Zico, Sócrates, Eder, Paulo Roberto Falcão and Toninho Cerezo breezed through their opening matches in Spain but suffered a rude awakening at the hands of Italy, for whom the combination of a Paolo Rossi hat-trick and the stern defending of Gaetano Scirea and Claudio Gentile was enough to bring down the favourites in the second round. The other purists’ favourites that year were France, then building a superlative midfield around Michael Platini, Alain Giresse and Jean Tigana. In the semi-final in Seville, however, the West German goalkeeper, Toni Schumacher, committed the terrible assault on Patrick Battiston that prefaced the Germans’ victory in a penalty shoot-out after extra time finished at 3-3. Two years later, with Luis Fernandez completing the midfield quartet, France would win the European Championship, but in 1986 they would again suffer defeat to West Germany in the semis. All these results were disappointing to a certain type of football fan. But they were not the end of the world – or only to those who imagine a universe in which every game of football is a replay of Eintracht Frankfurt 3 Real Madrid 7, the nonpareil European Cup final of 1960. That isn’t going to happen – and nor should it, because football without its grinding 0-0 and 1-1 draws, without its unpredictable collisions of mind and muscle, of beauty and bruises, would be like music with nothing below middle C. Spain World Cup 2010 Group H World Cup 2010 Richard Williams guardian.co.uk

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The Swiss killed Bambi but Spain’s defeat is not the end of the world | Richard Williams

The Sea Turtles’ Breeding Tradition is Threatened – Delicate Turtles Dying Amid the BP Oil Spill

http://www.latimes.com/media/alternatethumbnails/blurb/2010-06/34574476-12213022… Sea turtles' breeding tradition threatened By Kim Murphy On an Alabama beach, the reptiles return to their birthplace to deposit their eggs. But this year, hundreds have been found dead or stranded. Photos (click on link) By Kim Murphy, Los Angeles Times June 12, 2010 | 8:18 p.m. Reporting from Gulf Shores, Ala — Each summer, a ritual millions of years old unfolds on this beach, next to the high-rise condos and beach chairs, the T-shirt shops and the Hooters across the road. A 300-pound loggerhead turtle drags herself out of the water for the first time since her birth, probably on the same beach, 18 years ago. Under the moonlight, she kicks a 2-foot-deep hole into the sand, drops in a gleaming heap of eggs, covers it and then lumbers back out to sea. Two months later, 100 or more tiny turtles will scratch their way up through the sand, glimpse the shine of the moon and stars on the water that serves as some kind of celestial GPS, and head for the sea. Fishermen's nets, children with sand shovels, confusing waterfront lights and pollution have plundered the sea turtles, leaving all five species that inhabit the Gulf of Mexico endangered or threatened. Now they face what may be the most serious threat of all: millions of gallons of spilled oil, much of it in the waters they must navigate to reach their Alabama nesting beaches. More than 350 turtles have been found dead or foundering along the Gulf Coast since the April 20 well blowout, a number wildlife biologists find alarming. At least 62 turtles have been found covered in oil. Rescuers in Gulfport, Miss., on Thursday were called to collect 20 turtle carcasses, the highest daily number they have ever recorded. Researchers say there is no way of knowing how many more turtles have perished at sea. “Before, we didn't deal much with dead turtles. The calls we'd get were few and far between,” said Tim Hoffland, director of animal care at the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Gulfport. “But since this oil spill, it's just gone berserk,” Hoffland said. “I'm getting calls from my people saying they can't even walk a quarter-mile on the beach without running into dead turtles. It's crazy.” The turtle deaths pose a complex forensics mystery for scientists, many of whom say they are not ready to blame it all on the oil spill. Many of the stranded turtles, for example — five times the number seen in recent years — have been caught by fishing hooks. Toxicology tests will try to determine whether a toxic algae bloom may have killed some of the animals. Many researchers say the spill could have unleashed a tangled web of threats that is killing the turtles even without swathing them in oil. Some suspect shrimping boats — unleashed recently for what many fishermen feared could be their last chance to harvest before oil kills off or contaminates their catch — may have harmed the turtles in their eagerness. It's possiblethey dispensed with the required openings in their nets and inadvertently trapped turtles, leaving them unable to surface for air and causing them to drown. Oil or dispersants may have poisoned the turtles or the fish and crabs they rely on for food; the turtles then may have been driven toward fishing bait along the piers, resulting in the large number of hookings. In a little more than half of the roughly 70 necropsies performed so far, there has been evidence of either acute toxicosis — of unexplained origins — or drowning, said Michael Ziccardi, director of the Oiled Wildlife Care Network at UC Davis, who has been working in the field to help diagnose the deaths. “What we're doing is a CSI for sea turtles. We're taking all of that information and pursuing the clues to try to see why these animals are dying,” he said. So important are their findings — illegal fishing, for example, could carry criminal penalties — that the turtle carcasses are being marked with evidence tags and kept under lock and key in a refrigerated trucking container at the Gulfport marine mammal facility until they can be picked up by government scientists. Though turtle strandings around the world are relatively common, the number on the Gulf Coast has averaged only 47 a year over the last five years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The significant increase this year raises an uncertainty: How much of the bigger reported number is due to the larger number of people on the beach looking for troubled animals? Here on the white beaches of Alabama, there are typically far fewer sea turtle nests than the tens of thousands in Florida. The loggerheads that make their way here are so threatened by the bustling resort development that volunteers with a group called Share the Beach patrol the 47 miles of sand at dawn each morning. They look for new nests and fence them off with posts, tape and warning signs — an effort that has won ready cooperation from residents and tourists. Mike Reynolds, a real estate agent and auctioneer from Gulf Shores who heads the group, said he fears there are already signs that fewer turtles have made their way toward shore through the oil and tar balls. “By this time of year, we should have 11 nests. We have six,” he said one morning last week as he motored in a dune buggy down the beach, looking for the long, sliding track known as a “crawl” that shows a female turtle has made her way onto the beach to deposit her eggs. Reynolds said the volunteers began their work eight years ago to counteract the devastating effect of development on the newly hatched sea turtles, which were increasingly turning toward the urban lights on shore rather than the safe glint of starlight on the sea. “Back in the late '90s, we lost tens of thousands of turtles,” Reynolds said. “They'd start going to the light; they'd end up getting dehydrated in the dunes, foxes would eat them, coyotes would eat them, and you'd drive down the road and you'd find squished baby sea turtles.” Since then, local officials have passed an ordinance minimizing lights on the beach during hatching season. Just before the babies emerge, volunteers dig a deep trench from the nest directly to the sea. But in what is normally a busy nesting season, sticky globs of oil have marred the beach. Sargassum seaweed, a favorite habitat for young turtles, has washed up soaked with oil. The last nest laid on the beach, on June 3, came exactly one day before the first waves of oil showed up in Gulf Shores. Are the turtles merely slow this year, Reynolds wonders? Or unable to make it through the oil? Or dead? The volunteers — a postal carrier, an office manager, a teacher, a retired transportation specialist — are motivated by a growing fear, and a lingering sense of obligation: Whatever primordial impulse drives these slow, heavy turtles toward their shores must be honored. “These turtles circumvent the globe, and no matter where they go, 18 or 20 years after they were born, they're driven to come back to this beach to nest. It doesn't matter if it's oiled, or if it's got too much light on it, or too many people or too much trash,” Reynolds said. “So we can have our houses here, have our condos, get our suntans, as long as we remember this is an important habitat for an ancient creature that doesn't have a choice.” added by: EthicalVegan

Maria Asis del Alamo picture

Today, the criminal case against Maria Asis del Alamo was dismissed after Gary explained the misunderstanding. Last month, Maria Asis del Alamo,Gar Dourdan’s girlfriend, was arrested for alleged domestic violence after police noticed the former CSI actor covered in scratches. Gary claims a neighbor confused their orgasmic screams for violence. The scratches on his neck were from Maria being too enthusiastic. However, before prosecutors could move further, they told Gary, “Pics or GTFO!” No, ac

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Maria Asis del Alamo picture

The Guy from CSI with Some Hot Ass in a Bikini of the Day

If you are on TV on any level….like if you are insignificant, or your role is insignificant, or even if the show sucks and no one watches it, so long as you are on TV, even if it’s a local TV commercial, or even the local news for a few minutes….you will always be able to score seriously hot pussy…not necessarily celebrity pussy, cuz there is some kind of hierarchy, but real life pussy that is usually better looking than celebrity pussy. It’s like being on camera is all it fucking takes to make a pussy wet and jump on your dick and never leave you and here is the black guy from CSI with his girlfriend and her ridiculous body….who isn’t leaving him anytime soon, cuz he gives her the good life…and she give him the good ass to fuck…it all works out in the end. Pics via Bauer

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The Guy from CSI with Some Hot Ass in a Bikini of the Day

Watch CSI: Miami Season 8 Episode 24 – They All Fall Down

Watch CSI Miami S8E24: They All Fall Down This seaon finale of the 8th season of CSI: Miami puts the CSI team battling an intelligent serial killer who have been continually taunting them with encrypted clues and with that, the team has now added time pressure with the thought of trying to decrypt the hint in their hopes of putting a stop to the quickly rising death toll. The new episode of CSI: Miami is the TV show’s 24th episode of the 8th season that aired last 05/24/2010 Monday 10:00 PM on CBS. Watch CSI Miami 8×24 Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:

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Watch CSI: Miami Season 8 Episode 24 – They All Fall Down

Mischa Barton is Scary as Fuck of the Day

Mischa Barton is a fucking wreck. Maybe this is the aftermath of being the second line pussy on some teen TV show that made getting more work impossible after the series fell apart. But I like to think it has to do with being eaten up by the media, leading to her drinking and popping pills to feel good about herself, eventually giving up on showering and caring about herself, leaving her a fat sloppy mess I’m just wating to see overdose, cuz it’s time for another Hollywood suicide…..and looking at her freaky fucking face in a wedding dress is scarier than her breakout role as the dead girl under the bed in the Sixth Sense you all wanted to fuck cuz she was at her hottest, perverts….I feel like we don’t need to do the Deathwatch anymore, she’s already dead on the inside, sure her heart is pumping but there’s no fucking soul behind these glassed over eyes, like a brain dead vegetable in the hospital and I say it is time to pull the fucking plug…..but on the positive side, she’s got pretty rockin’ tits in this wedding dress she’s modeling, reminding me that now is a good time to move in on her because she’s desperate, cuz she’s probably better to fuck than the old ladies I tried to recruit at the old folks home into putting me into her will, and I can only hope there’s at least one opportunist working his way into securing this Mischa Barton as his prime zombie bride, cuz girls who drug up themselves to make bad decisions are better than girls you have to drug to make bad decsions, because you can’t get arrested for the shit….. Pics via PacificCoastNews

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Mischa Barton is Scary as Fuck of the Day

The Jonas Brothers’ ‘It’s On’ Video Gives Sneak Peek Of ‘Camp Rock 2’

JoBros’ new video was made just after they wrapped the Disney movie. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by James Lacsina Kevin and Joe Jonas Photo: MTV News Fans will get a glimpse into the world of “Camp Rock 2” on Friday night (May 14), when the Jonas Brothers release their new music video for the track, “It’s On,” off the TV-movie’s soundtrack. Shot just as the guys wrapped up work on “CR2,” which will premiere September 3 on Disney, the guys say that the video perfectly encapsulates the vibe of the sequel. “We shot [the video] back in September, October, and it was a great experience,” Joe Jonas told MTV News at the Young Hollywood Awards on Thursday night. “We were able to get back with the cast, and the video was really fun. Joe added that the video, which was directed by Brandon Dickerson, will give fans a taste of what they will see in the flick. “It has a lot of pieces to the puzzle to what people will see when the movie does come out,” he said. “I think it’s also a little something of what people are going to see when we go out on tour.” “The video is a really cool concept,” Kevin Jonas continued. “It takes on the aspect of the music and just the intensity, the high energy of what the song is. … What’s cool is just the passion of all the people who are singing.” Nick explained that it was a bit of a high-intensity shoot since they filmed “It’s On” at night. “It was good. It was a long night. We shot it overnight, ’cause we wrapped the movie with night shoots so from basically 10 [at night] to 10 in the morning every day [we shot the movie],” he said. “And after the movie wrapped, we shot the video, so we had to stay on that schedule. We stayed up all night and then [had] a flight on the next day. It was [an experience] we’ll never forget.” What’s your favorite Jonas Brothers video? Share your thoughts in the comments. Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: The Jonas Brothers Related Artists Jonas Brothers

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The Jonas Brothers’ ‘It’s On’ Video Gives Sneak Peek Of ‘Camp Rock 2’