Tag Archives: death

Liam Neeson and Frya St. Johnston dating

Liam Neeson, 56, is seeing Freya St. Johnston, a U.K.-based public relations executive who, like the actor, is the parent of two children. The pair was spotted holding hands in London on Sept. 3. A year and a half after the death of wife Natasha Richardson, Liam Neeson is cautiously entering the dating pool. “She#39;s a wonderful person and a fantastic mother,” Johnston#39;s ex, Matt Winton, a marketing exec for the U.K.-based street wear brand Boxfresh, tells us. “She takes life seriously in

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Liam Neeson and Frya St. Johnston dating

Tea Party, Oil Companies Take Aim at State Climate Laws

Photo via Fulton County Republicans Who would have thought that two years after the definitive election of a president who counted addressing climate change and instituting a forward-looking energy policy among his top priorities, the state of climate politics would be more miserable than ever. The failure to pass clean energy and climate legislation, with the prospects of doing so anytime in the near future looking bleak, would be bad enough. But it only gets worse — emboldened by the death of the Senate bill and riding on a wave of anti-regulatory, anti-government sentiment,… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Tea Party, Oil Companies Take Aim at State Climate Laws

Shoya Tomizawa death

Japanese rider Shoya Tomizawa is pictured in the pits during the Moto2 practice session of the Catalunya GP on July 2 in Montmelo, near Barcelona. Tomizawa died from injuries sustained in a crash on Sunday in the San Marino Moto2 Grand Prix. Japanese media, racing figures and fans on Monday mourned the death of teenage motorcycle racer Shoya Tomizawa at a Moto2 race at Italy#39;s San Marino Grand Prix. “No way, the 19-year-old hopeful…” said a Tokyo Chunichi Sports daily headline after Tomiz

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Shoya Tomizawa death

British Spy and Top Code Breaker Found Dead in MI6 London Safe House

Gareth Williams, a Welshman from Anglesey was one of Britain's top Code Breakers worked the ” GCHQ listening center” in the West Country. He had been living in an apartment probably owned by MI5 which is nearby. The Pimlico area of London is near to the MI6 HQ and there are many “safe houses” for use. Williams was a single man was discovered in a large sports bag in his bath. A laptop he used is missing. Williams was also a regular visitor to the NSA “Puzzle Palace” another listening and spy center. The CIA are so concerned about his death they are holding their own investigation. Williams was single but porn, bondage mags and women's clothes his size were also found at the “safe house” apartment. MI6 and other spy agencies are refusing to let the police interview any of his fellow workers, stating they are suddenly out of the country. This story has all the hallmarks of a Hollywood Spy Thriller…………… from the Daily Mail The CIA was called in to help investigate the murder of an MI6 spy last night as it emerged he was sent on frequent secret missions to the United States. American intelligence officers are poring over every detail of Gareth Williams's work and personal life to see if the circumstances of his death endangered U.S. national security. The Daily Mail can reveal that the 31-year-old codebreaker flew to the National Security Agency, the Pentagon's listening post and the largest intelligence agency in the world, up to four times a year. He returned from his last trip to America only a few weeks before he was found dead. Questions also remain over why his body lay undiscovered for up to a fortnight at his

Former White House Correspondents President Denounces ‘Travesty’ of Fox News Getting Front Row Seat

For some in the White House Press Corps, literally thanking God for the existence of a terrorist organization is less controversial than being owned by a company that gives more money to one political party than the other. That, at least, is the standard former WHCA president Edwin Chen has set forth. In an interview with the far-left blog Media Matters, Chen dubbed “a travesty” the WHCA’s decision to award a front-row seat in the briefing room to Fox News. His objection? “The vacancy was created because of an ideological conflict,” and would be filled by “another cloud of ideological conflict.” The first ideological conflict to which Chen referred was Helen Thomas’s retirement, forced by a video showing her making anti-Semitic comments. The second: the political contributions of Fox’s parent company, News Corp. The years of offensive, derogatory, and (to say the least) controversial comments from Thomas – such as “thank God for Hezbollah” and “why does [George W. Bush] want to drop bombs on innocent Iraqis?” – are apparently, in Chen’s mind, not indicative of “ideological conflict” as he uses the phrase in this context. Thomas’s presence in the front row was never an issue of concern for Chen until her final outburst as a White House reporter. In fact, Chen defended Thomas’s record of journalistic fairness even after she retired. “She was a bipartisan inflictor of pain,” he told NPR . But Chen lamented to Media Matters that Thomas retired in the midst of “this conflict over politics and a question of fairness,” and that Fox “drags in all of this controversy” because of its parent company’s political donations. But if the issue is controversy – if Chen believes that White House reporters should not drag controversy into the briefing room – why is this only becoming an issue now? Why is controversy surrounding Fox News any more of a disqualifying factor than controversy surrounding Helen Thomas? Of course Chen and others will note that Thomas is an opinion columnist, not a “straight news” reporter. To which any sensible observer will reply that no one is citing Fox’s coverage of the White House as cause for concern. The controversy has to do not with Fox’s news operation, but rather with its parent company’s political activities. If Fox’s discontents in the WHCA were able to claim that Fox’s news operation is too opinionated, or that its parent company’s political activities are directly affecting its work in the White House press pool, they would do so. Another former WHCA president, former Knight Ridder reporter Ron Hutcheson, takes a similar angle, raising the issue of whether Fox can report fairly without actually citing any of Fox’s reporting. Hutcheson told Media Matters that “a big political contribution by any news organization raises some questions. Clearly the management of Fox has political views.” Since Hutcheson and Chen are so concerned about “political views” staining the WHCA’s reputation for fairness, why are they more concerned with hypothetical bias from reporters who have not themselves demonstrated political favoritism than they are with Helen Thomas, a White House reporter who was open about her political favoritism? Thomas proudly proclaimed her political views on more than one occasion. “I’m a liberal, I was born a liberal, and I will be a liberal ’til the day I die,” she told the Philadelphia Inquirer. “I’d say I’m about as far left as you can go,” she told the Fox Business Network’s Stuart Varney. If the issue is journalistic fairness – whether White House correspondents can give those they are covering a fair shake – you would think that the litany of outrageous statements from Thomas, coupled with her self-proclaimed uber-leftism, would set off more alarms than the fact that the Fox correspondent’s news organization’s parent company gave more to one political party than the other. The real “travesty” is the double standard at play. A couple concluding notes on Chen: the Washington Examiner’s Julie Mason told Media Matters that the WHCA’s decision on the vacant seat came down to one between Fox and Bloomberg, Chen’s former employer. In other words, he’s not exactly a neutral arbiter of this dispute. Chen’s current employer is the Natural Resources Defense Council. If his double standard on controversial White House correspondents did not tip you off to his personal political views, that fact should.

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Former White House Correspondents President Denounces ‘Travesty’ of Fox News Getting Front Row Seat

Brad Pitt: Let’s Execute Some BP Executives

On July 27th and 28th, the  New York Times  published the  following headline:  “The oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico appears to be dissolving far more rapidly than anyone expected.” In the story that followed the headline, readers were informed: “The immense patches of surface oil that [once] covered thousands of square miles of the gulf after the…oil rig explosion are largely gone.” Ironically, the man who predicted this would be case was the much-maligned Tony Hayward, former Chief Executive of British Petroleum (BP). While being grilled on Capital Hill about the oil spill earlier this year, Hayward described it as a ” relatively tiny ” one in comparison to the “very big ocean” in which it had occurred.  Although the backlash Hayward faced by Democrats was nasty, Rush Limbaugh concurred with the BP boss, and stories like the one I cited from the  New York Times  seem to demonstrate that Hayward and Limbaugh were both correct. Yet, not only does BP continue to be the target of heavy criticism by Democrats and environmental groups, it has even found itself in the crosshairs of Brad Pitt, who recently “said he would  consider the death penalty  for those to blame for the Gulf oil spill crisis.” According to the UK’s  Daily Mail , Pitt’s exact words were: “I was never for the death penalty before – I am willing to look at it again.” With all respect to Pitt, a seemingly reasonable guy who has made some great movies, it may be a bit over the top to support (or even consider supporting) the death penalty for a human being simply because that person was involved in an environmental disaster. How out of whack has our world become when someone of Pitt’s stature can spend his whole life opposing the death penalty for men who commit crimes like rape and murder, then suddenly find a way to condone that punishment for men who accidentally spill oil in the waters of the Gulf? Talk about turning teleology on its head. Making matters worse, Pitt said these things almost a month after the  New York Times  and other media outlets informed readers that the spill will not be as bad as first thought. And while Pitt is talking up the death penalty,  Jeffrey Short , a former government scientist who now works with Oceana, is telling reporters that “40 percent of the oil in the gulf might have simply evaporated once it reached the surface” while another “unknown percentage of the oil would have been eaten by bacteria.”  (This doesn’t even take into account the percentage of oil that was dissolved by the dispersants BP put into the Gulf.) Simply put, the extent of the disaster predicted by many talking heads has been greatly reduced, if not done away, in many parts of the Gulf. And while this isn’t to condone any degree of environmental recklessness, it is to say that we shouldn’t be talking about “the death penalty” for men who may (or may not) have played a part in an oil spill that is “dissolving far more rapidly than anyone expected.” Crossposted at Big Hollywood

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Brad Pitt: Let’s Execute Some BP Executives

Martin Short’s wife dies

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Martin Short’s wife dies

Man tells police he had sex with female corpse but claims he didn’t kill her

August 13, 2010 – Police arrested 26-year-old Bernard Keith Howell, III of Tenino Sunday night after he was caught carrying the corpse of a woman in his pick-up truck. Howell has since admitted to having sex with the corpse. The body of Vanda Boone was wrapped in plastic and a sleeping bag in the back passenger seat. Thurston County Coroner Gary Warnock said Boone died after her throat was slashed. Also contributing to her death were blunt force injuries to her head and neck, and asphyxia due to strangulation and suffocation. In his truck, Howell had plastic bags, zip ties, bungee-type elastic cords, and a 10-pound-weight. Howell claims he did not kill Boone and, according to court documents, denied having any involvement in her death. Later, after he was arrested, he did tell police that he had sex with her dead body. http://www.examiner.com/headlines-in-seattle/man-tells-police-he-had-sex-with-fe… added by: unimatrix0

Mechele Linehan Biography

Biography for Mechele Linehan Born October 12, 1972 (1972-10-12) New Orleans, Louisiana Charge(s) First degree murder Penalty 99 years in prison Status Released on $250,000 bond – Brian Watt Spouse Colin Linehan Children 1 daughter Mechele Linehan (b. 12 October 1972 in New Orleans, Louisiana) was, for a time, an American convicted murderer. She is currently free after successfully appealing her conviction. She was serving a 99 year prison sentence for her role in the death of her former

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Mechele Linehan Biography

EXCLUSIVE: Jason Alexander on the Death of George Steinbrenner

For many people (namely, non-sports fans who loved Seinfeld ), George Steinbrenner will always be inextricably tied to George Costanza , a zeitgeist-y association that kept him inside the relevant gates of pop culture long after he stopped firing Billy Martin. Sports dignitaries may have plenty to say about the man fondly known as Mr. Steinbrenner, but to us, it seems fitting to get a final word on his death from none other than the man who played Costanza himself, Jason Alexander:

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EXCLUSIVE: Jason Alexander on the Death of George Steinbrenner