Tag Archives: Great Britain

Daisy Morris, 9, Discovers New Dinosaur And Has It Named After Her (PHOTOS)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

One little girl’s odd hobby has led to an extraordinary find for British paleontologists.

At the age of 9, Daisy Morris has discovered a new dinosaur species, which scientists have since named after her. The new creature has been dubbed Vectidraco daisymorrisae, the “Dragon from the Isle of Wight.”

Daisy was just 4 when she stumbled upon the fossilized remains of an unknown animal during a family walk on the beach in 2009. The family lives near the coast of England’s Isle of Wight — also known as the “dinosaur capital of Great Britain.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Fossil Footprint Study Casts Doubt On Theory Of Early Humans’ Gait

By The Huffington Post News Editors

By: Tia Ghose, LiveScience Staff Writer
Published: 03/19/2013 08:07 PM EDT on LiveScience

Fossil footprints could provide a skewed view of how ancient animals — including early human ancestors similar to the famous Lucy fossil — walked, new research suggests.

In the past, paleontologists and anthropologists assumed the depth of the footprint correlated with the pressure used to create it. But the analysis, published today (March 19) in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, reveals that the heel tends to create a deeper indentation even when applying the same amount of pressure.

“We shouldn’t necessarily expect the shape of a footprint to directly reflect the way the animal that made it walked,” said study co-author Karl Bates, a biomechanics researcher at the University of Liverpool in the United Kingdom.

As a result, some conclusions about how early human ancestors walked upright may need some rethinking, Bates said. [10 Greatest Mysteries of the First Humans]

Walking pressure

Fossil footprints have the potential to reveal insights into how ancient animals and people moved. For instance, Laetoli, Tanzania, bears the traces of 3.6-million-year-old footprints of the first bipedal walkers, Australopithecus afarensis, the same species as the female skeleton nicknamed Lucy.

But deciphering the ancient marks to recreate human ancestors’ gait is tricky. Historically, scientists assumed the depth of the indentation directly correlated with the pressure placed at that spot. But testing that experimentally was difficult, as the force plates that measure foot-strike pressure are made of materials that don’t deform and leave footprints.

Computer model

To get a more thorough look, Bates and his colleagues created a computer model that simulated the pressure of various sizes of feet as they depressed different types of soils with various strikes.

They then asked 10 people to walk along the beach in Brighton, on the south coast of Great Britain, and measured their footprints. The same people then walked on a force-measuring treadmill, and the researchers correlated the footprint depth with pressure during walking.

Both methods found similar trends: different parts of the foot create different size indentations even when striking the ground with the same amount of pressure.

“The heel is a more effective indenter than the forefoot and the toes,” Bates told LiveScience.

The softer the walking surface, the more exaggerated this effect.

While the researchers focused on human gait, the new analysis should also apply to dinosaur prints and other extinct animal tracks, Bates said.

Ancient walkers

The study is impressive because it cleverly combined sophisticated computer models and experimental approaches, said Kristiaan D’Août, a biomechanics researcher at the University of Antwerp who was not involved in the study.

“They’re two totally different techniques, but they both yielded overall rather similar results,” D’Août told LiveScience.

The findings suggest there’s a much more complicated relationship between foot pressure and footprint depth, which could force scientists to …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

CCE Presents at CAGE Investor Conference, Affirms Full-Year 2013 Guidance

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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CCE Presents at CAGE Investor Conference, Affirms Full-Year 2013 Guidance

ATLANTA–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Coca-Cola Enterprises (NYSE/Euronext Paris: CCE) will discuss its plans and outlook with investors at the Consumer Analyst Group of Europe (CAGE) Conference in London on March 18 at 11:15 a.m. EDT (3:15 p.m. in London). The public can access the presentation through our website, www.cokecce.com.

John F. Brock, chairman and chief executive officer, and Bill Douglas, executive vice president and chief financial officer, will deliver the remarks.

In the presentation, CCE will affirm 2013 full-year guidance, including earnings per diluted share growth of approximately 10 percent and net sales and operating income growth in a mid-single-digit range. This guidance is comparable and currency neutral. At recent rates, currency translation would reduce full-year earnings per share by approximately 1 percent to 2 percent.

ABOUT CCE

Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc. (CCE) is the leading Western European marketer, producer, and distributor of non-alcoholic ready-to-drink beverages and one of the world’s largest independent Coca-Cola bottlers. CCE is the sole licensed bottler for products of The Coca-Cola Company in Belgium, continental France, Great Britain, Luxembourg, Monaco, the Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden. We operate with a local focus and have 17 manufacturing sites across Europe, where we manufacture nearly 90 percent of our products in the markets in which they are consumed. Corporate responsibility and sustainability is core to our business, and we have been recognized by leading organizations in North America and Europe for our progress in water use reduction, carbon footprint reduction, and recycling initiatives. For more information about our company, please visit our website at www.cokecce.com and follow us on twitter at @cokecce.


FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

Included in this news release are forward-looking management comments and other statements that reflect management’s current outlook for future periods. As always, these expectations are based on currently available competitive, financial, and economic data along with our current operating plans and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the results contemplated by the forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements in …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

NY terrorism case defendant gets new prosthetics

An Egyptian Islamic preacher with no hands who was extradited from Great Britain to face terrorism charges in a New York court has received new plastic prosthetics to replace the metal hooks he had used previously.

Mustafa Kamel Mustafa received the prosthetics on Friday. He did not wear them to federal court in Manhattan, where he appeared later in the day.

Mustafa is awaiting trial on charges that he conspired with Seattle men to set up a terrorist training camp in Oregon. He also is charged with helping to abduct two American tourists and 14 other people in Yemen in 1998. He has pleaded not guilty.

Defense lawyer Joshua Dratel said Mustafa so far is disappointed with his new prosthetics. He says it is now harder for him to grip pens and other items.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Today in History for 10th March 2013

Historical Events

1801 – First census in Great Britain
1903 – Stanley Cup: Ottawa Silver 7 sweep Montreal AAA in 2 games
1963 – Pete Rose debuts with hits in his 2 1st at bats in spring training
1970 – Barbra Streisand records “The Singer” and “I Can Do It”
1985 – Bonnie Lauer wins Uniden LPGA Golf Invitational
1992 – Sandra Seuser/Katrin Schreiter/Annet Hesselbarth/Grit Breuer walk female indoor world record 4x400m (3:27.22)

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1713 – Christian Friedrich Schale, composer
1918 – Heywood Hale Broun, journalist
1943 – Stephen Montague, composer
1946 – Hiroshi Fushida, Japanese racing driver
1946 – Mike Hollands, Australian animator
1972 – Takashi Fujii, Japanese television performer

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1700 – Diogo Diaz Melgaz, composer, dies at 61
1832 – Muzio Clementi, Italian composer, dies at 79
1900 – Johann Peter Emilius Hartmann, composer, dies at 94
1977 – E Power Biggs, English organist/composer (CBS), dies at 70
1980 – Herman Tarnower, doctor (Scarsdale Diet), killed by Jean Harris
1988 – Andy Gibb, singer, dies of heart infection at 30

More Famous Deaths »

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Less fuss this time over NYC terror trial

The first court appearance for Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law and onetime propagandist unfolded at a Manhattan courthouse Friday without the fuss over security that the Obama administration encountered three years ago over its plan to hold a civilian trial for 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

There were no signs of unusual police activity around the court complex as lawyers for defendant Sulaiman Abu Ghaith entered a “not guilty” plea on his behalf. Public officials who had warned in 2009 that Mohammed’s very presence in New York would put civilians at risk said they didn’t have the same fears this time around.

“Times have changed,” said Michael Balboni, a top domestic security adviser to two New York governors.

Bin Laden is dead. Al-Qaida’s ability to launch a strike in the U.S. is greatly diminished. Other terror trials have proven the city can handle security with minimal cost and disruption. And in any case, Abu Ghaith was known as a “functionary” in the al-Qaida network, rather than a leader, and as such was far less likely to inspire reaction from bin Laden’s followers, said Balboni, New York‘s former deputy secretary of public safety.

“The NYPD is more than capable of locking down Foley Square and making sure they can protect anything going on there,” he said, referring to the part of the city where the trial is taking place.

New York City had a solid track record for handling major terrorism trials until the effort to bring Mohammed to justice collapsed amid opposition to his presence on U.S. soil. The thrust of that debate was over whether al-Qaida figures were more properly tried in a military court, but security challenges also loomed as a factor.

At the time, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said he planned to spend $200 million a year on extra security for the trial, which Obama ultimately moved to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly drew up a plan that would have created a “frozen zone” in vital business districts, involving thousands of extra officers and checkpoints for inspecting vehicles.

Since then, prosecutions of less infamous terror figures have quietly resumed in New York.

Three Queens men were prosecuted for plotting to bomb New York City’s subway system. An Egyptian preacher extradited from Great Britain is awaiting trial on charges that he conspired to set up a terrorist training camp and helped abduct American tourists …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Motorsports: Rod Millen to face Monster Tajima in Electric Division of Pikes Peak Hill Climb

By Michael Harley

Toyota TMG EV P002 on Pikes Peak

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The 91st running of the Pike’s Peak International Hill Climb is scheduled to begin on June 30. Like last year’s event, the 12.42 mile course – fully paved these days – starts at 9,390 feet elevation and doesn’t stop climbing until it reaches an impressive 14,110 feet (the air is so thin up there that the FAA requires pilots to use oxygen at that altitude).

There will be an assortment of internal combustion machines racing to the summit, entries from France, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Sweden, Brazil, Canada, Great Britain, Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland and Belgium, but all eyes will be on the electric showdown between Rod Millen and Nobuhiro “Monster” Tajima, from Japan. 61-year-old Millen is a familiar name to Toyota racing fans, and he will be driving the Toyota TMG EV P002 (it won the Electric title last year), while Tajima will be again piloting the Monster Sport E-Runner (which was forced out of the field last year after a fire broke out).

Other entrants include Rhys Millen driving a 2013 Hyundai PM58OT and Paul Dallenbach, who will be driving Millen’s Hyundai Genesis Coupe (it set the all-time speed mark last year).

Tickets and camping permits may be purchased online at the PPIHC official site, and the official press release announcing Millen’s run is available below.

Continue reading Rod Millen to face Monster Tajima in Electric Division of Pikes Peak Hill Climb

Rod Millen to face Monster Tajima in Electric Division of Pikes Peak Hill Climb originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 11 Feb 2013 18:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Kindle Fire Dominates US Android Market but Seemingly Non-existent Outside the US

By Chuck Jones, Contributor Localytics, which has its software installed on over 500 million devices, analyzed the Android tablet market that used apps with Localytics analytics integrated and determined the following. The US accounted for 59% of Android tablets The US and Great Britain (5%) account for almost two-thirds of Android tablets
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

The Unintended Consequences of The Greatest Economic Experiment

By Robert Lenzner, Forbes Staff As you must realize the central banks of “advanced market economies,” the U.S., Great Britain, Western Europe and Japan, for starters, have for the past 5 years consistently lowered interest rates to zero and swollen their balance sheets quite enormously– a coordinated and unprecedented policy on which the stability of the global economy rests. The intended consequence of this deliberation was to stimulate asset prices, household wealth and consumer activity such as to restore a semblance of economic growth. And indeed this desirable short term effect has performed well as stock prices and residential home prices rebounded. Lurking in the background, suggests economist William White is the “undesirable longer run effects” like “negative feedback mechanisms” that will weaken growth, threaten the health of financial institutions and “encourage imprudent behavior on the part of governments.” One of the unintended consequences is the “shadow banking system,” which has the inherent quality of being non transparent, of being opaque. of in effect being hidden from view from regulators, from the media, and from most of the financial system. As a recent report by the Financial Stability Board had it “shadow banking” is in effect a long chain “of interactions involving collateral, rehypothecation, large offsetting position in CDS(credit default swaps) and other derivatives, exposure to counterparty risk became almost impossible to estimate.” Get that? “exposure to counterparty risk became almost impossible to estimate.” No wonder the Financial Stability Board believes “the opacity of the system proved a substantial impediment to supervisory oversight.” So, the danger is no supervision available when excessive risk is being taken– and excessive risk may be taken as what’s actually happening behind the scenes is not transparent. Non transparent means we are living in the dark. Another unintended consequence of easing and zero interest rates is the huge pension deficits in the U.K. where the Pension Protection Fund is only 70% funded– and part of the overall underfundedness of over $1 trillion. Actuarilly speaking pension funds are short the income stream required maintain stability of retirement income. Zero cost of money has a price that makes the promise of a fixed income in retirement an impossibility.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Obama Redefines America’s Founding Principles

By Richard Larsen

Obama Forward SC 690x1024 Obama Redefines Americas Founding Principles

Historically, Presidential Inaugural Addresses have sought to inspire and unite the nation and provide directional leadership for the next presidential term. Perhaps to some, Monday’s speech did that. But to adherents of American exceptionalism, it was disconcerting. The president’s speech was laced with references to our founding principles; but their meanings were twisted, misrepresented, and stripped of their historical and definitional significance.

God was mentioned seven times in the address, which may exceed the number of times the Almighty has been invoked by Obama over the past four years, which made their invocation seem superficial. The Constitution was mentioned once, at the very beginning, citing his second term as evidence of its “enduring strength” (in spite of the fact that he has stretched and distorted that document’s limitations on the executive branch beyond recognition of the founding fathers so dramatically during his first term.)

Even the Declaration of Independence was cited along with those eternal classical-liberal ideals of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness that led to the severance of our relationship with Great Britain and the perceived tyranny of King George. It was no surprise that he was reticent regarding the breadth and scope of our current federal government, which arguably wields immensely more tyranny over the American people than the British crown held over colonial America.

Even free market economics were mentioned, although it was in the context that the omnipotent and omniscient federal government must constrain and control it.

Clearly, through artistry and manipulation, precept-by-precept, the principles upon which the American republic was established were being redefined. Those tenets, which are distinctly and singularly American, which once were the pillars that the nation stood upon, were going through a historical revision right before our eyes. They were being reframed, redefined, and reshaped to fit a new progressive lexicon of American patriotic buzzwords that vitiate their original meanings.

The Constitution seems to have relevance since it returned him to power for another four years. But in terms of governance, it seems that to him, it has lost its applicability to 21st century American politics since he can issue Executive and Administrative Orders that circumvent the very document he moments earlier swore he would uphold and defend.

God has no relevance in the godless, morally relativistic, and warped values of the ideology that seeks to make omnipotent government the central component in every American life, replacing an omnipotent deity. As the president’s campaign website so proudly portrays with its “Life of Julia”, the government is to be there at every turn and juncture in the life of the average American: governing, regulating, “helping,” and “supporting.”

And perhaps most invidious of all, Obama presented a perverted sense of “liberty.” No spurious redefinition of liberty could be more antithetical to the founder’s intent than “being true to our founding documents … does not mean we all define liberty in exactly the same way.”

In any language and any culture, liberty is synonymous with freedom. Not just a freedom “to,” as in “to do something,” but also a freedom “from,” as in freedom from control, repression, and tyranny. Each time liberty or freedom were mentioned, the words rang increasingly hollow and meaningless. For freedom to, and freedom from, have an inverse relationship to government growth, government power, and government control, which have dramatically increased over the past four years.

With each incremental Executive Order or legislative Act that broadens and expands central governmental authority, and with every dollar taken out of the pockets of Americans to fund the insatiable spending appetite of government, individual liberty and freedom are disproportionately diminished. As government grows, individual liberty decreases. No wonder, then, that he would frame the concept of individual freedom in the context of “collective action.” The progressive statist agenda is always based on collectivism, not individuality.

It’s difficult to separate the causation, or at least correlation, of the massive expansion of governmental power, and the alarming growth of government debt of the past four years, from the perceived elusiveness of the American Dream. Four years ago, over 52% of Americans still believed the “American Dream” was attainable. That has now dropped to less than 40%, according to pollsters at Zogby.

And regrettably, the perception seems accurate. Between legislative Act, presidential declarations, and bureaucratic regulatory expansion, Investor’s Business Daily now calculates that the government has direct or indirect control of more than 60% of the entire U.S. economy. Energy production, oil production and distribution, banking and finance, manufacturing, logging, mining, health care, insurance, automobile manufacturing, and more are all now controlled by the central government. A strict political classification of such an economy is clearly fascistic, where government controls, not necessarily owns, the means of production. Individual and collective freedoms are sacrificed when government wields so much power over the entire economy.

Clearly typifying the moral relativism of our dysfunctional culture, the phrase “We cannot mistake absolutism for principle” perverts the very meaning of principle. After all, a principle is  “a fundamental truth or proposition that serves as the foundation for a system of belief or behavior or for a chain of reasoning.” As such, a principle is definitionally absolute. When they are no longer absolute, they are no longer principles; they’re simply good ideas. Such facile application of relativism to fundamental tenets like individual freedom and liberty diminishes the principled foundation of our republic.

The implications for the next four years are indeed ominous if this Inaugural Address represents the ideologically tortured state of our founding principles. With fundamental precepts marginalized through redefinition, token relevance accorded the Constitution, and free markets only viable with governmental control of the means of production, we are well on our way to the president’s desired “fundamental transformation of America.”

AP award winning columnist Richard Larsen is President of Larsen Financial, a brokerage and financial planning firm in Pocatello, Idaho, and is a graduate of Idaho State University with a BA in Political Science and History and former member of the Idaho State Journal Editorial Board.  He can be reached at rlarsenen@cableone.net.

Photo credit: Dave Merrick

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

The Mining Giants of the Globe Should Be Using Their Cash to Pay Dividends

By Robert Lenzner, Forbes Staff Mining giants like Rio Tinto, Freeport-McMoran and Glecore figured the roaring Chinese demand for raw materials would bail them out of any mega- takeover that meant borrowing a bundle of debt to diversify into aluminum or gold or copper was the path to growth, higher profits and ecstatic shareholders. Now comes Rio Tinto of Australia and Great Britain to take a $14 billion write-down on its unwise purchase of Alcan, or Freeport-McMoran borrowing billions to increase its ownership of some partially-owned energy properties. Guess their boards weren’t familiar with the telecom craze of the late 1990s when the most ridiculous prices were paid for expansion moves just as the value of broadband was in a deep correction. There’s nothing like excess leverage threatening the survival of grandiose empire builders. So much for the cycle free mining industry group, betting that the price of copper, iron ore, coal, aluminum– you name the metal– would rise and rise and rise without tumbling. Then, there’s the economic climate for mining giants which are beset by tax grabs from governments like Australia or Peru, by the very real difficulty of finding immense and cheap new natural resources. And by the way the costs of drilling and digging deep under the earth’s crust costs a great deal more than the mining companies projected. It would appear managements have not been reporting their real bubble in the costs of producing the earth’s riches when they’ve got the environment protectors trying to restrict their activities– while the local governments in Australia and South America want to grab as huge tax royalties as possible. What’s become obvious is that mining executives don’t have the same savoir-faire or clever lobbyists to get their special benefits like the oil giants have been mostly able to do. So, the miners can’t solve the ceiling in terms of growth, the volatility in natural resource prices, and would be doing their all-suffering shareholders a favor by marshaling their free cash flow towards increasing dividends or buying back shares– rather than going all-in on buying Alcan or a Canadian resource giant that requires massive capital expenditures for years to exploit a find. And the process of developing a find could take 20 years during which time monetary resources are stretched pretty thin. There’s romance there in finding something precious, but not if its going to soak up profits or threaten credit downgrades and potential insolvency.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Panetta: US helping French forces with intel

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Monday that the U.S. is already providing intelligence-gathering assistance to the French in their assault on Islamist extremists in Mali, and that officials would not rule out having American aircraft land in the North African nation as part of future efforts to lend airlift and logistical support.

Speaking to reporters traveling with him to Europe, Panetta said that while al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, also known as AQIM, and other affiliate groups in Mali may not pose an immediate threat to the United States, “ultimately that remains their objective.”

For that reason, he said, “we have to take steps now so that AQIM does not get that kind of traction.”

The United States has “a responsibility to go after al-Qaida wherever they are,” including Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and North Africa, Panetta said. “We have a responsibility to make sure that al-Qaida doesn’t establish a base of operations in northern Africa.”

He declined to go into detail about the U.S. aid, but he spoke with Gen. Carter Ham, head of U.S. Africa Command, during the flight to get an update on the situation.

A senior U.S. official acknowledged that the intelligence support had started, but said talks were continuing to determine exactly what other aid will be provided. It was not clear how long it would be before those decisions are made. The official was not authorized to speak publicly about the issue so requested anonymity.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said U.S. officials were consulting with their French counterparts on a number of requests for support.

“We share the French goal of denying terrorists safe haven,” she told reporters in Washington.

International efforts would have to focus on strengthening Mali‘s military, which suffered another setback Monday, Nuland said. After cutting off a key road, al-Qaida-linked extremists moved closer to Mali‘s capital by overrunning the garrison town of Diabaly in the center of the country. They are now only 250 miles from the capital, Bamako, in the far south.

“Even as the Malian military works with France … to try to root out these havens where the rebels have taken root, they’re still going to have to be strong enough to hold that territory once they reclaim it,” Nuland said.

Panetta’s comments came as the French continued bombing raids across Mali‘s north in an effort to root out fighters who seized control of a large chunk of the region about nine months ago. The U.S. and six other countries are providing assistance, with the Pentagon assisting in transportation and intelligence gathering, including one drone.

French fighter jets bombed the airport, training camps, warehouses and other facilities used by the al-Qaida linked rebels, and at least 400 French troops have been deployed to the country as part of the broad-based, coordinated attacks.

French President Francois Hollande authorized the military assault as it became clear that the rebels could break Mali‘s military defenses in Mopti, the first town on the government-controlled side, located in the center of this African country.

The French have suggested that the rebels are better armed than initially expected, having obtained caches of weapons stolen from the abandoned arsenal of Moammar Gadhafi, the former Libyan leader who was killed in the wake of the rebel uprising in his country. The Islamists also have gained control of weapons left by Mali‘s army when it abandoned the north when the rebels began advancing last spring.

Panetta is embarking on what is expected to be his final overseas trip as defense chief, with stops in Portugal, Spain, Italy and Great Britain. He has plans to step down once the Senate has confirmed his successor. President Barack Obama has nominated former Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska.

He was en route Monday to Portugal, where he is expected to talk to defense officials about the U.S. plans to reduce its presence at the Lajes military base in the Azores islands. The cutbacks would remove more than 400 military personnel and as many as 500 family members from the base in 2014. It is expected that the Air Force service members that remain would serve yearlong tours and would not be accompanied by their families.

___

Associated Press writer Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Lawyers: NYC conditions harsh for terrorism client

Lawyers for an Egyptian Islamic preacher extradited from Great Britain in a terrorism case say the U.S. government has imposed harsh pre-trial restrictions.

The lawyers say special administrative measures were imposed about a week ago on Mustafa Kamel Mustafa (muh-STAH‘-fuh kah-MEHL‘ muh-STAH‘-fuh). They say that severely limits his communications and what he can read at a federal lockup in Manhattan.

Attorney Lindsay Lewis says the restrictions are more difficult for a defendant who has trouble getting around because he has no hands.

Mustafa has pleaded not guilty to conspiring with Seattle men to set up a terrorist training camp in Oregon. He’s also accused of helping abduct two American tourists and 14 other people in Yemen in 1998.

Prosecutors did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

European courts spare accused pedophile, hacker from American justice

By Perry Chiaramonte

Shawn Sullivan is a fugitive and accused pedophile, and to some, he’s also a poster child for a European judicial system that often would rather let criminals roam their streets freely than see them subjected to American justice.

Nearly 20 years ago, Sullivan, who is now 43, fled to Ireland after being charged with raping a 14-year-old girl and molesting two boys in Minnesota. Sullivan, who had dual citizenship, was accused of assaulting two girls in Ireland in 1997, but fled to London, where police finally caught up with him in June 2010. Although he did time in Wandsworth Prison for his crimes in the United Kingdom, when U.S. authorities sought to have him brought to justice on American soil, a British judge refused.

The reason: The U.S. policy of committing repeat child molesters to civil confinement — where they are kept off the streets even after completing prison terms — was deemed too barbaric.

“Minnesota’s law is said to be more Draconian than many others,” Lord Justice Moses of England’s High Court of Justice said in his ruling in June of last year. “…it is clear to me that were an order of civil commitment to be made, it would be a flagrant denial of this appellant’s rights.”

Jeffrey Cramer, a former federal prosecutor who is now managing director of Kroll Advisory Solutions, told FoxNews.com European courts are increasingly shielding criminals from U.S. penalties they consider too harsh.

“The European courts are starting to view U.S. courts as being so Draconian that it violates human rights,” said Cramer. “They’ve always felt this way pertaining to death penalty cases, but now we are seeing it more in fraud and sexual abuse cases.”

Sullivan’s case is one of several instances in which European — particularly British — courts have substituted their idea of justice for America’s, in what some see as a blatant disregard for the spirit, if not the letter, of extradition agreements.

— In November, Moses denied extradition for former Iranian Ambassador Nosratollah Tajik, who was arrested in London in a 2006 international sting operation conducted by U.S. Department of Homeland Security agents. After six years of delays, Moses discharged Tajik, who was trying to smuggle night vision goggles to Iran, saying extraditing him to the U.S. could hurt relations between the UK and Iran and endanger embassy staff in Tehran.

— A month earlier, Great Britain‘s high court also blocked extradition of alleged hacker Gary McKinnon to the U.S., where he is accused of hacking into NASA and Pentagon computers. The ruling citedMcKinnon’s battles with Asperger’s Syndrome and depression in determining that imprisonment in the U.S., where he faced up to 70 years in prison, could constitute a violation of his human rights. He is now free.

— In perhaps the most high-profile case of a European court denying U.S. access to a fugitive whose crimes were committed on American soil, filmmaker Roman Polanski avoided extradition from France on charges he raped a 13-year-old girl more than three decades ago. Swiss authorities finally nabbed him in 2010 at the request of U.S. prosecutors, but when it came time to send him to the U.S. to face justice, a judge there overruled it, citing a technicality.

Under the rule of non-inquiry, nations that have extradition agreements typically are not supposed to second-guess one another on procedures and due process, Bruce Zagari, an attorney with Washington-based firm Berliner Corcoran & Rowe, who specializes in international white collar crime, including extradition issues, told FoxNews.com. Zagari believes the policy of civil confinement and the U.S. policy toward detainees at Guantanamo Bay may have prompted European judges to no longer feel compelled to abide by the rule.

That means Shawn Sullivan, who has been accused of molesting children on two continents and married a British Ministry of Justice worker while in prison, can now roam free — as long as he stays out of the U.S.

“The British court has nevertheless denied the U.S. extradition request because of its concern that, if returned, Sullivan would not receive fair treatment because the Minnesota civil commitment program for sex offenders could deprive him of his freedom and fundamental rights if the UK was to extradite him,” Zagari said.

Cramer said Sullivan should be brought to justice in the U.S.

“I think any rational person would say that he [Sullivan] should come back,” said Cramer. “After all, he absconded.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Facts Anti-Gun Advocates Don’t Want You To Know

By Breaking News

guns SC Facts Anti Gun Advocates Don’t Want You to Know

After last summer’s shooting in Aurora, Colorado and last month’s shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, anti-gun advocates want you to believe that America is a nation infected with violent crimes and murders. They want you to believe that we are one, if not the, most violent nation in the world and that we have to rid the nation of guns to solve the problem.

But what are the real facts?

Amidst the Noise released a video on You Tube that provides some very stunning facts about violent crimes in the US and Great Britain that anti-gun advocates don’t want you to know this.

For instance, according to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports: Crime in the United States Table 1, violent crimes in the US have dropped by nearly 50% in the last twenty years. In 1992, there were 757.7 violent crimes per 100,000 people. In 2011, there were only 386.3 violent crimes per 100,000 people. That’s a reduction of 49%.

In the same Table 1, we also see that there were 9.3 homicides per 100,000 people in 1992 and that number dropped to 4.7 homicides per 100,000 in 2011. That’s a reduction of 49.4% in the homicide rate in the past twenty years.

Read More at godfatherpolitics.com . By Giacomo.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism