Tag Archives: investigative

Billy Ray Cyrus "Doesn’t Know" if Miley Will Marry Liam Hemsworth

Last week, anonymous sources wondered whether Miley Cyrus would marry Liam Hemsworth . But now a rather important named source has come out and publicly asked the same question. Billy Ray Cyrus Nightline Interview In an interview with Nightline , Billy Ray Cyrus is asked about the romantic future of his daughter. And he doesn’t exactly give Miley and Liam a strong vote of confidence. “They’re young. They’re kids,” the singer says. “The great news is they’re great friends. They’re really really good friends. And if you end up getting married, that’s your business too, you know?” That’s not exactly an answer, Billy Ray. Come on! Will Miley marry Liam?!? “I don’t know,” replied Billy. “I play it by ear, and I know whatever’s meant to be, that’s the way it’s gonna happen.” Rumors of a Cyrus and Hemsworth split have been running rampant for months now, though sources claim the couple remains committed to each other. One half, meanwhile, has something else to worry about right now: A video has hit the Internet of Miley Cyrus smoking pot . Uh-oh!

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Billy Ray Cyrus "Doesn’t Know" if Miley Will Marry Liam Hemsworth

Ship My Pants Ad: Doody Joke Goes Viral!

Is it still? Yes. Is it sophomoric? Absolutely. Is it a smart marketing move? Hey, we’re talking about it, aren’t we? Kmart has hit viral pay dirt with its new “Ship My Pants” ad, a 30-second spot that relies on a turn of phrase to promote a free shipping service, as a family of three gets excited to ship their pants. Get it?!? Never underestimate the power “of a doody joke,” says Mediapost.com advertising columnist Barbara Lippert of the video, which has been viewed over 7.5 million times in YouTube. Join the fun and immature party now by clicking Play: Ship My Pants Ad

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Ship My Pants Ad: Doody Joke Goes Viral!

E.J. Johnson Addresses Sexuality, Support from Father, Internet Hates

It didn’t go exactly as he had planned, but Magic Johnson’s son harbors no ill feelings. In his first interview since TMZ outed him as gay, 20-year old E.J. Johnson said he had always planned on revealing his sexuality. So even if it “came a little sooner than I thought it would, this is still something I knew I would be going through and would have to experience.” EJ Johnson Interview The NYU junior tells Howard Bragman of the YouTube talk show Gwissues that he’s been “very blessed” to receive nothing but support from his family, which includes famous father Magic, mother Cookie and two siblings. Unfortunately, however, he has also been on the receiving end of some “nasty” comments online. “It’s almost like they’re attacking me for being me, and to that, I can only say, ‘Well, I can only be myself, so I don’t really know what you want me to do,'” E.J. says. These haters are not deterring the college student, at least. He hopes to be an influential voice in the media or on television: “I would love to have a talk show someday and just be another voice for [my] generation and, you know, be the voice for young gay people who need someone to be on TV or wherever else to talk to them, and talk about all kinds of issues that all of us face. Not just homosexual issues, but all kinds of issues.” We wish him the best in all future endeavors.

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E.J. Johnson Addresses Sexuality, Support from Father, Internet Hates

Other Wife Found on Facebook: Man Charged With Bigamy After Spouses Both Appear as "Friends"

A Washington man has been charged with bigamy after Facebook revealed he was married to two different women, unbeknownst to either of them. Guess someone needs to up his privacy settings. Alan O’Neill, a 41-year-old state corrections officer, married a woman in 2001, separated from her eight years later, changed his name and remarried. The two wives revealed O’Neill’s deception when – you guessed it – they both noticed the other one as a “friend” on their husband’s Facebook profile. “Wife No. 1 went to wife No. 2’s page and saw a picture of her and her husband with a wedding cake,” Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist said. O’Neill’s first wife then called and confronted the mother of wife No. 2. “An hour later the defendant arrived at [the original wife’s] apartment, and she asked him several times if they were divorced,” court records show. “The defendant at that point said, ‘No, we are still married.'” With his deception revealed, O’Neill allegedly asked his first wife to not alert authorities to the bigamy, which is illegal under federal and state laws. However, she went ahead and reported his duplicity. The accused was previously known as Alan Fulk and currently works as a Pierce County corrections officer, sheriff’s spokesman Ed Troyer said. He was placed on leave from his job after being charged with bigamy, and officials say O’Neill faces up to a year in jail if convicted of that offense.

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Other Wife Found on Facebook: Man Charged With Bigamy After Spouses Both Appear as "Friends"

Mystery Man on Roof Captivates Twitter, Boston Bombing Conspiracy Theorists

Who is the mystery man on the roof? That’s what Twitter and Boston bombing conspiracy theorists want to know in the wake of yesterday’s explosions. A photo credited to Suffolk University junior Dan Lampariello shows the instant of two Boston Marathon bombings that occurred near the finish line Monday. The photo, and with it Mystery Man on Roof, went viral. Lampariello told ABC News Monday “I was about 200 feet from the finish line … right in front of the Mandarin Hotel. My aunt was running in the marathon.” “We were out there to cheer her on. We thought maybe it was fireworks at first, but when we saw the second explosion we knew something was wrong.” As if the Internet weren’t going berzerk enough over blasts that killed at least three people and injured more than 170 more, many gravely, there’s this. Police say they have no suspects yet, and no individual or group has claimed responsibility for the attack, which only feeds interest in the MMOR. A lack of real leads – the alleged suspect in custody is not believed to have been involved, and his name has not been released – breeds speculation. Here’s what is happening on the investigative front: Last night, agencies raided a unit in a high-rise apartment on Ocean Drive in the seaside Boston suburb of Revere, according to local police officials. Several bags, including what appeared to be a large duffel bag, were removed from the scene. Details are scarce, but the search was related to the case. Boston police also issued a BOLO for a yellow Penske rental van that apparently attempted to access the race course area shortly before the blast. They are also looking for a “black man wearing a black hoodie and a black backpack” who was turned away from a secure area shortly before the bombings. As for Mystery Man on Roof? He could be the perpetrator of this senseless act of terrorism … or just a guy looking for an awesome vantage point for one of the city’s coolest events. Probably the latter … but don’t let logic stop you, Twitter.

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Mystery Man on Roof Captivates Twitter, Boston Bombing Conspiracy Theorists

Epitome Of A Bad Mother: Moscow Mom Kills Her Two Sons By Throwing Them Off A 15th-Story Balcony, Says She Was “Fed Up”

This beyotch HAD to be off them bath salts! Moscow Mother Kills Sons Throwing Them Off Of 15th Floor Balcony A 30-year-old mother in Moscow tossed her two young children off a 15th-floor balcony Sunday because she was reportedly “fed up” with the two boys, according to Russian media. Galina Ryabkova, who is seen on surveillance video shortly after the incident, appeared emotionless after going to look at the remains of her sons, ages 4 and 7, according to RT news. The video – posted by the tabloid LifeNews.ru – begins with one of the children landing just out of frame at the bottom of a short flight of steps outside the building. A man is then seen coming out to discover the gory scene. Ryabkova also comes downstairs, the video shows. Wearing a white t-shirt and jeans, she sits in the lobby as neighbors attempt to keep the bony blonde from walking away. “My wife woke me up and said that there were children falling out,” a neighbor told Life News, according to the RT. “We ran out and saw two children lying on the ground in front of the main door. Just at that time their mother was leaving the building. We asked her if these were her children and she replied, emotionlessly, ‘Yes, I threw them away.’” Threw them away?!?! WTF?!?! Ryabkova and her family lived on the 8th floor of the apartment building, but she took the children up to the 15th before tossing them off, authorities said. The woman initially told authorities her boys were now “angels in heaven,” before refusing to talk, Sergey Markin, the Investigative Committee spokesperson, told RIA Novosti. It is unclear why Ryabkova, who reportedly had tried to commit suicide in the past, killed her two children. Some reports claim she was looking to divorce her husband, while others suggested she had recently discovered he may have been cheating on her. We don’t care if her husband was having “love triangles” with one-legged midgets, there is NO justification for throwing your children off of a balcony. There’s definitely a cozy lil’ seat in Hell for this broad. Image via HOBOCTN Source

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Epitome Of A Bad Mother: Moscow Mom Kills Her Two Sons By Throwing Them Off A 15th-Story Balcony, Says She Was “Fed Up”

Epitome Of A Bad Mother: Moscow Mom Kills Her Two Sons By Throwing Them Off A 15th-Story Balcony, Says She Was “Fed Up”

This beyotch HAD to be off them bath salts! Moscow Mother Kills Sons Throwing Them Off Of 15th Floor Balcony A 30-year-old mother in Moscow tossed her two young children off a 15th-floor balcony Sunday because she was reportedly “fed up” with the two boys, according to Russian media. Galina Ryabkova, who is seen on surveillance video shortly after the incident, appeared emotionless after going to look at the remains of her sons, ages 4 and 7, according to RT news. The video – posted by the tabloid LifeNews.ru – begins with one of the children landing just out of frame at the bottom of a short flight of steps outside the building. A man is then seen coming out to discover the gory scene. Ryabkova also comes downstairs, the video shows. Wearing a white t-shirt and jeans, she sits in the lobby as neighbors attempt to keep the bony blonde from walking away. “My wife woke me up and said that there were children falling out,” a neighbor told Life News, according to the RT. “We ran out and saw two children lying on the ground in front of the main door. Just at that time their mother was leaving the building. We asked her if these were her children and she replied, emotionlessly, ‘Yes, I threw them away.’” Threw them away?!?! WTF?!?! Ryabkova and her family lived on the 8th floor of the apartment building, but she took the children up to the 15th before tossing them off, authorities said. The woman initially told authorities her boys were now “angels in heaven,” before refusing to talk, Sergey Markin, the Investigative Committee spokesperson, told RIA Novosti. It is unclear why Ryabkova, who reportedly had tried to commit suicide in the past, killed her two children. Some reports claim she was looking to divorce her husband, while others suggested she had recently discovered he may have been cheating on her. We don’t care if her husband was having “love triangles” with one-legged midgets, there is NO justification for throwing your children off of a balcony. There’s definitely a cozy lil’ seat in Hell for this broad. Image via HOBOCTN Source

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Epitome Of A Bad Mother: Moscow Mom Kills Her Two Sons By Throwing Them Off A 15th-Story Balcony, Says She Was “Fed Up”

Ground Zero Imam’s Group Trained NY Times Mosque Reporter

A New York Times reporter, who co-authored two fawning articles on the Ground Zero mosque in 2009 and 2010, previously attended a media training program run by the mosque’s organizer, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, according to the group’s website. The journalist, Sharaf Mowjood, participated in an April, 2009 media training program led by Rauf’s American Society for Muslim Advancement (ASMA), reported the Investigative Project on Terrorism on Sept. 20. Rauf founded ASMA in 1997, and currently serves as the group’s CEO. Mowjood’s first article on the controversial Ground Zero mosque – a glowing, 1,200-word piece titled ” Muslim Prayers and Renewal Near Ground Zero ” – was co-authored with Ralph Blumenthal in December, 2009. All eight of the sources cited in the piece said they approved of the Ground Zero project or lauded its leader Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf. Mowjood was also a contributing reporter to a flattering front-page profile on Rauf that ran in the Times on Aug. 22. ASMA, which ran the “Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow” media training session that Mowjood attended, pointed to the reporter’s work as evidence that its training program was effective. “Media trainings showed immediate results,” claimed a 2009 report on the ASMA website, noting that “Sharaf Mawjood [sic], a journalism student at Columbia University and trained at the [Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow] conference, wrote a compelling story about the Muslim community’s plan to establish a center near Ground Zero. The story was published on the front page of the New York Times with Sharaf as co-author.” According to the ASMA website, the conference “focused specifically on the media. It offered participants a diverse range of intensive media trainings, imparting the [Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow] in attendance with concrete tools to become effective media spokespeople.” The website said that the conference was held in partnership with the Cordoba Initiative, the organization behind the Ground Zero mosque – which is another group led by Rauf. The Times’ Metro editor Joe Sexton denied that Mowjood was trained by ASMA, telling the IPT that the reporter “attended a lecture sponsored by ASMA in 2008. He was not a presenter or participant. He signed the sign-in sheet.” But the IPT noted that a photo from the event, which shows Mowjood seated at a conference table littered with papers while watching another participant speak, “indicates the session was more than a lecture.” In addition to his ties with ASMA, Times’ reporter Mowjood also held a government lobbying position at the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) up until at least March of 2008. CAIR, which calls itself a “grassroots civil rights and advocacy group,” has come under fire in the past for its alleged ties to international terrorist organizations. Excerpts from Mowjood’s work could possibly pass as press releases for groups like CAIR or ASMA. His Times articles were extremely favorable toward Rauf and the Ground Zero mosque. “Those who have worked with [the imam] say if anyone could pull off what many regard to be a delicate project, it would be Imam Feisal [Rauf], whom they described as having built a career preaching tolerance and interfaith understanding,” read Mowjood’s enthusiastically pro-Rauf article written in December, 2009. Mowjood’s story made no mention of legitimate criticisms of the planned mosque. Instead, opponents of the prayer center were sources of potential anti-Muslim violence. “[T]here is anxiety among those involved or familiar with the project that it could very well become a target for anti-Muslim attacks,” wrote Mowjood and his co-author Ralph Blumenthal. “Joan Brown Campbell …who is a supporter of Imam Feisal, acknowledged the possibility of a backlash from those opposed to a Muslim presence at ground zero.” Mowjood was also a contributing reporter to an Aug. 22 Times article on Rauf, in which the imam is described as the leader of “a truly American brand of Islam [that] could modernize and moderate the faith worldwide.” The 1,900-word article quotes no critics of the mosque, featuring mainly friends of Rauf who say things like “[he] is an excellent schmoozer” and “[to] stereotype him as an extremist is just nuts.” Mowjood’s background as a CAIR lobbyist, as well as his attendance at an ASMA media training event, may conflict with the Times’ ethical standards. The paper’s code of ethics says that reporters “should be vigilant in avoiding any activity that might pose an actual or apparent conflict of interest and thus threaten the newspaper’s ethical standing.”

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Ground Zero Imam’s Group Trained NY Times Mosque Reporter

Spiritually Bankrupt: Catholic Church hiding assets from Abuse Victims

This is written with a sense of sadness and some mixed feelings. While not a member of the Roman Catholic Church, I have great respect for the church and its followers. The church has done and continues to do much good in the world. I've seen it among the poor, the downtrodden, and the ill all around the globe. But with a team of other investigative reporters, we uncovered some things that should be brought to light and pondered. Earlier this month, Pope Benedict XVI issued the first apology to priest abuse victims from St. Peter's Square – a gesture intended to show that church leadership is finally ready to confront this growing scandal. But in reporting a recent story, we found that behind the scenes – and in court – the church has taken a much less contrite and more confrontational position. Our investigation found that in various dioceses across the United States, church leaders were going great lengths to avoid making amends with the same victims of abuse they claimed to be trying to make peace with. Facing waves of lawsuits by now-adult victims, we found the church has reacted more like a big business than a sacred institution: Wealthy dioceses have claimed to be broke and taken the drastic act of filing for bankruptcy. Only when forced to open their ledgers in bankruptcy proceedings does it become clear that several of these dioceses were actually flush with assets – cash, real estate, parishes – that it could have made available to victims seeking restitution. Take the Diocese of San Diego: In 2007, just before several abuse cases were scheduled to begin, it filed for bankruptcy. It sought this protection despite owning hundreds of millions of dollars worth of real estate – everything from commercial buildings, to open land, to parking lots. Only after it became clear that the bankruptcy judge was ready to dismiss the diocese's bankruptcy filing did the church seek to settle with victims. At the end of the bankruptcy proceedings, the judge, a Catholic, scolded the church for being “disingenuous.” Story Continues – with DAN RATHER video report http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-rather/spiritually-bankrupt_b_629424.html added by: Stoneyroad

Miroslav Klose’s red card crucial as Serbia fail to hand it to Germany | David Hytner

Alberto Undiano’s decision to send off Germany’s Miroslav Klose against Serbia was harsh. Anyone for netball? Miroslav Klose is the man who saves his best for the world stage. Impotent for Bayern Munich over the course of this past season, the striker flicked the switch in Germany’s opening group game against Australia, scoring his 11th goal at World Cup finals to close in on the Brazilian Ronaldo’s record of 15. Onwards and upwards, everyone predicted, with Germany widely fancied. Yet he and his team were stopped brutally in their tracks here. Klose’s red card was one of those moments that had eyes widening and mouths opening all around the stadium. Already on a booking for a trip on Branislav Ivanovic, as the Serb had burst out of defence, Klose’s challenge on Dejan Stankovic was nothing more than a nibble at ankles. Yes, it was a foul, but a second yellow card? Stanovic was not about to spark a Serbian attack and there was certainly nothing nasty in Klose’s intent. But you knew that the referee Alberto Undiano was going to do it by the way that he rushed in. • Follow the Guardian’s World Cup team on Twitter • Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game • Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player • The latest team-by-team news, features and more The Spaniard had possibly made a rod for his own back by dishing out five yellow cards in the first 32 minutes but his application of the strictest letter of the law drew gasps. The Germany players, it ought to be said, were commendably restrained in their protests. What will they make of the decision at the referees’ headquarters in Pretoria? Each of the four-strong teams of officials from the various nations are based there and, after every performance, there is an extensive debrief involving them all. Could it be that the furore over Cristiano Ronaldo’s call for greater protection had an influence? The consensus here was that if Klose’s second card were merited, football would be entering the realms of non-contact sports. Anyone for netball? The World Cup had so far been notable for an absence of controversy. Undiano appeared keen to compensate and, as he continued to keep the whistle to his lips in the second half, so the blood pressure of the Germany manager, Jogi Löw, rose. At full time, Löw marched straight off down the tunnel, gesturing angrily. The dismissal shaped the game, although it should not detract from an encouraging performance from Serbia, whose football was compact, committed and laced with no little enterprise. Their three starting midfielders held a narrow line, with the captain, Stankovic, in the middle, ever available for the short ball out of defence. On the flanks, Milos Krasic and the new Liverpool signing Milan Jovanovic impressed, Krasic particularly so. The CSKA Moscow winger is a summer transfer target for Juventus and he would have added to his value. His crosses and trickery were a delight. Serbia sometimes offer the impression that their finger is never far from the self-destruct button. The vital penalty that Zdravko Kuzmanovic conceded for handball in their opening game defeat against Ghana was utterly needless and Nemanja Vidic, inexplicably, aped his team-mate to concede another one. Mercifully for Serbia, Vladimir Stojkovic saved Lukas Podolski’s 60th minute kick. Germany showed great character with 10 men and Löw the boldness to chase the game with attacking substitutions. But his players, as they diced with conceding a second on the counter, could not fashion the equaliser. Löw was keen not to turn his team’s final group game, against Ghana on Wednesday, into a drama. Thanks in part to Undiano, he has been denied his wish. Germany Serbia World Cup 2010 Group D World Cup 2010 David Hytner guardian.co.uk

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Miroslav Klose’s red card crucial as Serbia fail to hand it to Germany | David Hytner