Tag Archives: murder

Eminem’s Recovery Vs. Relapse: Experts Weigh In

Em seemed ‘afraid to rap sincerely about what he went through’ on last year’s Relapse, one expert says. By Jayson Rodriguez Eminem in “Not Afraid” music video Photo: Interscope With the release of Recovery earlier this week, Eminem is back in the spotlight after delivering his second album in just more than a year. The projects, Recovery and 2009’s Relapse, bookend the rapper’s return from a five-year, drug-addled hiatus . The two albums, however, couldn’t be more different. Although both chronicle his dependency, each does so in different ways. Relapse was made as Em was flushing the drugs out of his system, while the new offering was made during his focus on sobriety. Also, Relapse ‘s satirical first single, “We Made You,” was rife with stale pop-culture references and no introspection. “My expectations for Relapse were very low, ’cause this is a man coming back, basically, from hell,” Keith Murphy, Vibe senior editor, told MTV News. “If you really wanna go into it, drugs have always been a part of rock-and-roll folklore. It’s always been a part of that from Marvin Gaye to Jimi Hendrix to David Bowie. But those guys kind of seemed to always be able to rebound from their excesses and put out incredible work and work that seemed like their head was on their shoulders. Relapse, you got the sense that he had no business recording that album, and not because it was a bad album — there was some good songs on there — but you could just see that struggle of someone trying to figure it out and someone that was actually afraid to rap sincerely about what he went through.” Dr. Dre helmed the majority of the project, and on standouts like “Beautiful” and “Deja Vu,” Eminem vividly articulates his dark descent. The project, though, was made in the aftermath of Eminem’s divorce, the murder of his close friend Proof and the rapper nearly overdosing. The emotional turmoil Eminem was facing, perhaps, made it difficult for him to focus. In particular, the rapper didn’t appear to pay tribute to Proof on any of the songs. That may be why the rapper himself called his last album “ehh” on Recovery ‘s lead single, “Not Afraid.” Looking for inspiration, Eminem reached out to a slew of new collaborators for Recovery, only using Dr. Dre’s production on a handful of tracks. “He was not as forthcoming with his unhappiness with Relapse at that moment,” Noah Callahan-Bever, Complex editor in chief, said about Eminem, who graced the magazine’s December/January cover . “I think he was still forming his own opinion and sitting with it and dissecting it in hindsight himself. But it was clear he understood that he had more to say and he hadn’t articulated it all. So, for me, my personal expectation was that he would create this thing that would be to Relapse what ‘The Dark Knight’ was to ‘Batman Begins.’ That was the beginning and a loose thought, and then he’s gonna fully polish it. “To me, that’s so indicative of where his head was at that he hadn’t sorted out how he felt about all this stuff that transpired during his downtime,” Callahan-Bever added of the differences between the two sets and the lack of a Proof tribute on the former. The Complex editor even suggested that Recovery rivals the best of Eminem’s work, putting the collection nearly on par with The Eminem Show. Murphy said, lyrically, the new album is what fans were expecting from Relapse, although, musically, the project falls short of the Dre-produced set. Freelance writer and frequent Village Voice contributor Chris Weingarten said the rapper is simply back to doing what he does best: delivering rhymes on a superior technical level. And despite appearances by Pink and Rihanna, Weingarten said the album feels hushed and minimalist. “He’s rapping again,” Weingarten said. “He’s a beast again. It may not be the hottest album. The choruses are still a little corny, but he’s rapping like he was in the ’90s, when he was doing ridiculous punch-line rap on Rawkus [Records] stuff. He’s back to being a crazy wordsmith. He’s being very clear and focused, and it shows.” What album do you like better: Relapse or Recovery ? Let us know in the comments below! It’s Eminem Week at MTV News, so stick with us as we celebrate the release of Recovery and take you inside the making of Em’s latest album. Related Photos The Evolution Of: Eminem Related Artists Eminem

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Eminem’s Recovery Vs. Relapse: Experts Weigh In

Melissa Huckaby biography

Biography for Melissa Huckaby # Age: 28 years old in 2009CBS News: Arrest in Murder of 8-Year-Old Calif… # Sunday school teacher in Tracy, California # Granddaughter of pastor Lane Lawless at the Clover Road Baptist ChurchCBS News: Arrest in Murder of 8-Year-Old Calif… # Huckaby lived in the same mobile home park where the Cantu family livedCBS News: Arrest in Murder of 8-Year-Old Calif… # Sandra Cantu disappeared on March 27, 2009CBS News: Arrest in Murder of 8-Year-Old Calif… # Hucka

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Melissa Huckaby biography

Police release transcripts in Joran van der Sloot murder case

Lima, Peru (CNN) — Joran van der Sloot said he elbowed murder victim Stephany Flores Ramirez in the face before strangling her and then suffocating her with his own shirt, according to transcripts of his confession released by Peruvian authorities. The transcripts give shocking details of the murder van der Sloot is accused of and also gives the public its first glimpse of why van der Sloot says the alleged murder took place. “There was blood everywhere,” van der Sloot said in the transcripts. “What am I going to do now. I had blood on my shirt. there was also blood on the bed, so, I took my shirt and put it on her face, pressing hard, until I killed Stephany.” Peruvian authorities charged van der Sloot with murder last week in the death of Flores, a 21-year-old student. Van der Sloot, a 22-year-old Dutch citizen, has also been considered the main suspect in the well-publicized 2005 disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway in Aruba. In the transcript, van der Sloot said that after Flores read the e-mail she punched him in the face. “At that moment impulsively, with my right elbow I hit her in the face exactly on top of the nose,” van der Sloot said. “I think she started to faint. It affected me so that I grabbed her from the neck and strangled her for a minute.” Van der Sloot said he had a quick thought that he might try to hide the body but instead fled. He was arrested in Chile on June 3 and was returned the next day to Peru. Along with killing Flores, who had a broken neck, he took money and bank cards from her wallet, police said. Van der Sloot told police in Chile a different story of how Flores died when he was arrested there, according to transcripts. He blamed the death on robbers who had waited for him at his hotel in Peru. “There was a man coming from the access door with a knife in his hand,” van der Sloot said. “The man with the knife hit her in the face making her bleed through the nose.” But Peru authorities said they had overwhelming evidence pointing to van der Sloot and when he was transferred to Peru, van der Sloot confessed to the crime, police said. Van der Sloot said he was in Peru for a poker tournament and had met Flores while he was gambling. Police have said they think van der Sloot allegedly killed Flores to steal money she won from gambling. Van der Sloot offered a different motive. “After I responded with hitting her, I feared that she would go to the police and they would detain me for what was an impulsive act,” van der Sloot said. “I think I wanted to kill her because I wasn't thinking.” Van der Sloot's lawyer, Maximo Alonso Altez Navarro, has said he plans to ask the judge in the case to strike down van der Sloot's confession because he was not properly represented when he was interrogated. Peruvian police have defended the interrogation and said van der Sloot's confession was acquired legally. added by: TimALoftis

Government hacker betrays Wikileaks video source

Pictured: Hacker Adrian Lamo (Credit: Matthew Griffiths) http://news.cnet.com/8301-27080_3-20007024-245.html?tag=TOCmoreStories.0 A well-known hacker says he tipped authorities off to a man who confided in him about leaking a video of a U.S. military helicopter gunning down journalists and civilians in Iraq in 2007. Other information allegedly being leaked could compromise U.S. foreign policy and lead to deaths, the hacker said. “I turned him in to protect lives and to protect information that's essential for the U.S. to be able to effectively carry out foreign policy abroad,” Adrian Lamo, once busted for breaking into computer networks of high-profile companies, told CNET in a phone interview on Monday. “He was not at all being mindful about what he was leaking. He was basically acting as a vacuum cleaner.” U.S. Army intelligence analyst Bradley Manning was arrested nearly two weeks ago from a military base near Baghdad after Lamo shared e-mails and instant-message conversations he had had with Manning. Manning, 22, of Potomac, Md., deployed with the 2nd Brigade 10th Mountain Division in Baghdad, was placed in pretrial confinement for allegedly releasing classified information. He is currently confined in Kuwait, the Pentagon said in a statement Monday. In addition to the airstrike shooting video, Manning told Lamo he had leaked video footage showing a 2009 air strike in Afghanistan that killed nearly 200 civilians, including many children; a classified Army document assessing Wikileaks as a security threat; and 260,000 classified U.S. diplomatic cables showing what Manning said were “almost criminal political back dealings,” according to Wired. “If it was just the video, I would have left the issue alone, and frankly, he would have had my kudos–and he still does,” Lamo said. “But it wasn't just the video. It was a lot of information that was unrelated to our activities in Iraq and Afghanistan or the war on terror at all, including information about some of our major trading partners.” Asked to elaborate, Lamo said he couldn't say more, except that the sensitive information had to do with code words and that it was “top-secret sensitive, compartmentalized information.” The Iraq helicopter video, released on Wikileaks in April under the title “Collateral Murder,” generated an outpouring of antimilitary sentiment because the shootings appeared to be unjustified and because of the apparent lack of compassion displayed by the unidentified soldiers involved. The video showed the Apache helicopter shooting at a group of people on the street and a van that pulled up to rescue the injured, wounding several children and killing two Reuters journalists and other unarmed Iraqi civilians. “Look at those dead bastards,” one pilot is heard saying. “Nice,” someone else replies. Laughter is heard, as a tank on the ground appears to drive over a dead body. A perfect storm Lamo, previously dubbed the “homeless hacker,” knows what it's like to be on the wrong side of the law. Sleeping in bus terminals and abandoned buildings, Lamo would use public Internet connections to break into corporate networks and Web sites. He answered customer support e-mails at Excite@Home, told WorldCom how to fix its security to prevent intrusions like his, modified news articles on Yahoo, and used Lexis-Nexis to search for owners of undercover police cars. While some companies thanked Lamo for pointing out their lax security, others complained, and an arrest warrant was issued in 2003. Lamo spent a few days in hiding before turning himself in and pleading guilty to unauthorized network access at The New York Times, Lexis-Nexis, and Microsoft. He was sentenced to six months of home arrest and 24 months probation, and ordered to pay about $60,000 in fines. After that, he studied journalism and has been working as a threat analyst. “I've been 22. I've been in shackles and led by guards before a judge to determine my fate. I've been where he is,” Lamo said of Manning. “I know it can be terrifying, and I wish to God it hadn't been me that had to do it.” Lamo said he thinks Manning contacted him after reading a Wired article last month about Lamo being diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, after a stint in the hospital for depression. “He was lonely and wanted somebody to reach out to,” Lamo said. “It's the most painful part of it–the fact that he had such a simple and pure intent, and it had to be me.” It's unclear exactly what Manning's motivation was in the alleged whistle-blowing, but a glimpse can be seen in one of his messages to Lamo: “If you had unprecedented access to classified networks 14 hours a day, 7 days a week, for 8-plus months, what would you do?” Even though Manning was required to use secured laptops to access the classified networks the information was on–SIPRNET, the Secret Internet Protocol Router Network, used by the Defense Department and the State Department to transfer classified data, and the Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System–and they were not connected to the Internet, it was still relatively easy for him to smuggle the information out, he told Lamo. For example, Manning would bring a rewritable CD to work labeled as music, erase the music, and store classified data on it by compressing it and splitting it into smaller files. I “listened and lip-synced to Lady Gaga's 'Telephone' while exfiltrating possibly the largest data spillage in American history,” he told Lamo. “Weak servers, weak logging, weak physical security, weak counterintelligence, inattentive signal analysis…a perfect storm.” Like many others, Lamo applauded the release of the 2007 video showing the helicopter attack in Iraq. But releasing all the diplomatic cables was going too far, he said. “My plan initially was not to see him arrested. I and the FBI wanted to continue feeding him disinformation,” Lamo said. However, the criminal investigation unit of the Army had other plans, he said. A compassionate man, Lamo sounds burdened by the weight of his actions. He's been called a “snitch” and received lots of hate mail for turning in someone whom many people, including Wikileaks founder Julian Assange–call a hero. Lamo has even received death threats. He knew he would feel the heat but felt that the only honorable thing to do was to go public with the story, because Manning “has a right to know who flipped him.” “I agonized over this. I regret the whole situation,” Lamo said. “I wish he had never told me anything beyond the gun camera footage, but ultimately, I didn't get Bradley Manning arrested. Bradley Manning got Bradley Manning arrested.” added by: Elevator

Bruce Beresford-Redman Visits Caged Animals

Filed under: Bruce Beresford-Redman , Monica Burgos Beresford-Redman Wanted in Mexico for the murder of his wife, Bruce Beresford-Redman decided to forget his troubles and treat his kids and his mother to a day at the Los Angeles Zoo. Read more

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Bruce Beresford-Redman Visits Caged Animals

Felicia Lee and Brian Lee Randone picture

Brian Lee Randone was charged last week with beating and suffocating Felicia Lee at their Monrovia home. He faces 25 years to life in prison if convicted. Felicia Lee (born October 22, 1977, died September 11, 2009) also known as Felicia Tang, was an ad-ult actress who was killed Sept. 11, 2009. Police charged Felicia Lee#39;s boyfriend, Brian Lee Randone, with her murder. A self-proclaimed preacher who was on the “America#39;s S-exiest Bachelor” pageant will be arraigned next week for alleged

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Felicia Lee and Brian Lee Randone picture

Murder Suspect’s Dad Opens Probate Case

Filed under: Bruce Beresford-Redman , Monica Burgos Beresford-Redman , Celebrity Justice David Beresford-Redman has filed legal papers to validate the will of his murdered daughter-in-law

Jesus Take The Wheel: Suspect In Natalee Holloway Case Wanted For Murder Of Peruvian Girl!

Joran van der Sloot, the Dutch national who was repeatedly detained in connection with the Natalee Holloway case, has now been named the prime suspect in the murder of a Peruvian girl. Details on the flipside Just three days after the fifth anniversary of Holloway’s disappearance, the body of 21-year-old Stephany Flores Ramirez was discovered early this morning in a Lima Peru hotel room, on the avenue Miraflores district, Peruvian newspaper El Comercio reports. According to police reports, the girl was brutally stabbed and was found wrapped in a blanket in a pool of blood. According to the Peruvian newspaper, the hotel room where Ramirez’s body was found was registered under van der Sloot’s name. Hotel employees also told police that they saw him with the girl over the weekend. According to Peruvian police, she was last seen with van der Sloot, who has not been located. Ramirez was the daughter of racecar driver and well-known businessman Ricardo Flores. Joran van der Sloot was the man person of interest in the disappearance of 18-year-old Alabama high school student Natalee Holloway when she went missing during a senior class trip to Aruba in May 2005. Holloway was last seen leaving a bar with van der Sloot, who was 17 at the time. He was detained in the case several times but Aruban authorities said they don’t have enough evidence to charge him. In this country we say innocent until proven guilty, but this guy is clearly more than just a proverbial ‘lady killer’. We hope when they find him this time there is enough evidence to bury him under the jail AND compel his cellmates to deprive him of his nutsack! Source

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Jesus Take The Wheel: Suspect In Natalee Holloway Case Wanted For Murder Of Peruvian Girl!

Joran van der Sloot father picture

Joran van der Sloot, right, sits in a car with his father, Paulus Van Der Sloot, after Joran was released from custody near Oranjestad, Aruba, in this Dec. 7, 2007, file photo. Joran Van der Sloot, the Dutch national who was arrested twice and later released in the disappearance of U.S. teen Natalee Holloway, has been named the prime suspect in the murder of a Peruvian woman, according to local reports. Stephany Flores Ramirez, 21, the daughter of racecar driver and businessman Ricardo Flores,

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Joran van der Sloot father picture

From Snow to Sweat Lodges: Making "Rape on the Reservation"

Joanne Shen co-produced “Rape on the Reservation,” premiering as part of Vanguard's fourth season on Wednesday, June 2, at 10/9c. A few weeks before Christmas last year, my co-producer John Henion and I flew to South Dakota to begin researching the story that would become “Rape on the Reservation.” We landed in Rapid City and drove three hours east to two of the poorest reservations in America, Pine Ridge and Rosebud reservations, home to members of the Lakota (Sioux) nation. The point of the trip was to make contacts and figure out if it was even feasible to do a television documentary about the sexual assault on Indian reservations. We had been repeatedly warned over the phone that outsiders were regarded with suspicion and it would it would be especially difficult to get people talking about such a sensitive subject like rape. First impression: in the dead of winter, rural South Dakota has got to be one of the coldest places in America. The poverty makes it feel all the more bleak. The impoverished conditions that many people on the reservation live under are among the worst I’ve ever seen in the U.S. A trailer home will be packed with more than a dozen adults and children living under one roof. Sub- zero temperatures are exacerbated by the fact that some residences still lack electricity or indoor plumbing. I remember going with the Pine Ridge police department on a ride-along. We entered the home of an elderly man when neighbors complained that his young nieces had been partying on the premises (alcohol is illegal on Pine Ridge, a so-called “dry” reservation”). I noticed that all four gas burners on his stove were on full-blast, which I thought was odd and dangerous, considering there were 2 or 3 toddlers running around the premises. I pointed this out to the man because I thought he might have left the stove on accidentally. He ignored me. Later, I learned that this was one of the many creative ways people on “the rez” kept their houses warm. Like any shoot, this one had its own logistical challenges. When we go to foreign countries, we know we have to play by someone else’s rule—and visiting an Indian reservation is no different. Reservations are legally recognized sovereign nations within the geographical boundaries of the U. S. and the rhythm of life is definitely different. They call it “Indian time,” and it means that schedules are fluid. Television producers live and die by adhering to strict schedules so that they can pack as much filming in a day as possible. But, as with almost every Vanguard shoot I’ve ever been on—efficient Japan being a notable exception—being super-flexible to work with your subject’s schedule has usually paid off with getting great access in the end. Before you do, you’re likely to spend some time that feels wasted, like standing outside for half an hour in bracing 20-below weather waiting for a source to show up at a traditional Lakota funeral, as we did. Or braving the other temperature extreme—an Indian sweat lodge—in the hopes of convincing a medicine man to let us film a traditional healing ceremony. It was no easy feat, considering I was 23 weeks pregnant at the time. In the end, I literally couldn’t take the heat and left my co-producer to sweat it out (pardon the puns) with our subjects. Ultimately, we met amazing individuals who were brave enough to share their stories with us. In spite of the dark subject matter, I was frequently struck by the resilience of the people we met along the way. I remember interviewing one of our subjects about the murder of her daughter. She’d be in tears one moment and then, in the very next moment, be able to laugh genuinely at some silly joke I’d crack out of sheer nervousness. Later on, Tillie Black Bear, the head of White Buffalo Calf Woman Society, an important women’s organization on Rosebud Reservation, told me that this was characteristic of the Lakota—to be able to switch quickly from deep sorrow to moments of joy and laughter—and it was probably one way they have been able to survive psychologically, in the face of their traumatic history. And that’s the way I remember my time there: hearing countless heartbreaking stories from some of the toughest people I’ve ever met. Watch the trailer for “Rape on the Reservation” after the jump, and tune in on Wednesday, June 2 at 10/9c to watch on Current TV. added by: joanneshen