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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Cedric Benson

Wednesday, September 28, 2011
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Cedric Benson and his attorney David Cornwell expressed numerous objections to the running back's three-game suspension in a hearing with NFL official Harold Henderson on Tuesday, a source familiar with the case told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter.

Benson also filed a non-injury grievance challenging the application of the NFL's conduct policy at a time when there was a lockout, no collective bargaining agreement, no union, and Benson was not an employee of any team. Benson was arrested in July and charged with misdemeanor assault after being involved in an altercation with a former roommate in Austin, Texas.

Benson believes that the interpretation and enforceability of the side-letter agreement between the NFL Players Association and the NFL must be resolved either through the non-injury grievance or by the National Labor Relations Board before a decision can be made in the disciplinary appeal. A source confirmed to ESPN senior NFL analyst Chris Mortensen on Sunday that Benson has filed an unfair labor practice charge against the NFLPA with the NLRB regarding the side-letter agreement.

It was unclear whether the league could fine or suspend players who got in trouble during the NFL's 4½-month lockout, when there was no collective bargaining agreement. The NFLPA had decertified as part of the labor dispute.
In the side-letter agreement, the league and the NFLPA eventually agreed that eight players (including Benson) could be disciplined for incidents in the offseason, while 25 others would not be.

"There were some things in the CBA that we were not made aware of, which is really no surprise," Benson told The Associated Press. "That kind of falls on the (players' association). You would think they're here to support you and have your back -- that's what a union does. I guess in my case, it's different."
Benson was arrested during the summer of 2010 over an alleged bar fight in Austin and charged with misdemeanor assault. Benson met with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell after the incident and was not disciplined.
Benson reached a plea agreement to settle both the 2010 and 2011 court cases and served five days in a Texas jail before this season began.

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Andy Rooney

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LAST UPDATE: Wednesday September 28, 2011 10:
LandovFacebook Tweet Andy Rooney, whose wry and acerbic essays about the foibles of everyday life have been a mainstay on 60 Minutes since 1978, will retire from the CBS news-magazine program this Sunday after his 1,097th original essay.

"There's nobody like Andy, and there never will be. He'll hate hearing this, but he's an American original," Jeff Fager, the executive producer of 60 Minutes, told CBS News. "His contributions to 60 Minutes are immeasurable; he's also a great friend. It's harder for him to do it every week, but he will always have the ability to speak his mind on 60 Minutes when the urge hits him."

Rooney, 92, will look back on his career in an interview with Morley Safer during Sunday's program, then announce his retirement in his essay. Thank you Andy for all of the entertainment you have provided me throughout the years. I will miss you and your eyebrows! Enjoy your retirement...

Thank You Andy for all you have done in your career...I have enjoyed your journalistic ability and your sense of humor. Sundays evenings will never be the same.

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Cantaloupe

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WASHINGTON (AP) – Health officials say as many as 16 people have died from possible listeria illnesses traced to Colorado cantaloupes, the deadliest food outbreak in more than a decade.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday that 72 illnesses, including 13 deaths, are linked to the tainted fruit. State and local officials say they are investigating three additional deaths that may be connected.
The death toll released by the CDC

Tuesday — including newly confirmed deaths in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Texas — surpassed the number of deaths linked to an outbreak of salmonella in peanuts almost three years ago. Nine people died in that outbreak.
The CDC said Tuesday that they have confirmed two deaths in Texas and one death each in in Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska. Last week the CDC reported two deaths in Colorado, four deaths in New Mexico, one in Oklahoma and one in Maryland.

New Mexico officials said Tuesday they are investigating a fifth death, while health authorities in Kansas and Wyoming said they too are investigating additional deaths possibly linked to the tainted fruit.

Listeria is more deadly than well-known pathogens like salmonella and E. coli, though those outbreaks generally cause many more illnesses. Twenty-one people died in an outbreak of listeria poisoning in 1998 traced to contaminated hot dogs and possibly deli meats made by Bil Mar Foods, a subsidiary of Sara Lee Corp. Another large listeria outbreak in 1985 killed 52 people and was linked to Mexican-style soft cheese.

Listeria generally only sickens the elderly, pregnant women and others with compromised immune systems. The CDC said the median age of those sickened is 78 and that one in five who contract the disease can die.
Dr. Robert Tauxe of the CDC says the number of illnesses and deaths will probably grow in coming weeks because the symptoms of listeria don't always show up right away. It can take four weeks or more for a person to fall ill after eating food contaminated with listeria.

"That long incubation period is a real problem," Tauxe said. "People who ate a contaminated food two weeks ago or even a week ago could still be falling sick weeks later."

CDC reported the 72 illnesses and deaths in 18 states. Cases of listeria were reported in California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. The most illnesses were reported in Colorado, which has seen 15 sickened. Fourteen illnesses were reported in Texas, 10 in New Mexico and eight in Oklahoma.

The outbreak has been traced to Jensen Farms in Holly, Colo., which recalled the tainted cantaloupes earlier this month. The Food and Drug Administration said state health officials had found listeria in cantaloupes taken from grocery stores in the state and from a victim's home that were grown at Jensen Farms. Matching strains of the disease were found on equipment and cantaloupe samples at Jensen Farms' packing facility in Granada, Colo.

FDA, which investigates the cause of foodborne outbreaks, has not released any additional details on how the contamination may have happened. The agency says its investigation is ongoing.

The Rocky Ford-brand cantaloupes from Jensen Farms were shipped from July 29 through Sept. 10 to Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming.

The recalled cantaloupe may be labeled "Colorado Grown," "Distributed by Frontera Produce," "Jensenfarms.com" or "Sweet Rocky Fords." Not all of the recalled cantaloupes are labeled with a sticker, the FDA said.
Unlike many pathogens, listeria bacteria can grow at room temperatures and even refrigerator temperatures. The FDA and CDC recommend anyone who may have one of the contaminated cantaloupes throw it out immediately and clean and sanitize any surfaces it may have touched.

About 800 cases of listeria are found in the United States each year, according to CDC, and there usually are three or four outbreaks. Most of these are traced to deli meat and soft cheeses, where listeria is most common.
Produce has rarely been the culprit, but federal investigators say they have seen more produce-related listeria illnesses in the past two years. It was found in sprouts in 2009 and celery in 2010.

While most healthy adults can consume listeria with no ill effects, it can kill the elderly and those with compromised immune systems. It is also dangerous to pregnant women because it easily passes through to the fetus. Dr. Tauxe of the CDC said the type of listeria linked to the cantaloupes is not one that is commonly associated with pregnancy-associated illnesses, however. State and federal health authorities have not definitively linked any miscarriages, stillbirths or infant illnesses to the current outbreak.

Symptoms of listeria include fever and muscle aches, often with other gastrointestinal symptoms. Victims often become incapacitated and unable to speak.

Debbie Frederick said her mother knew something was wrong when her father, 87-year-old William Thomas Beach, collapsed at his home in Mustang, Okla. and couldn't get up. He died a few days later, on Sept. 1. The family later learned his death was linked to eating the cantaloupe and sued Jensen Farms.
"First you just kind of go into shock," said Frederick. "Then it settles in that he would still be alive if this hadn't happened. It's a life, for what?"

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Mega Millions

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Living Vent Volunteer Locally More features » Obituaries Funeral Directors Obituary Archives Obituary Help Atlanta Obituary News Homes Jobs Cars Classifieds Metro Atlanta / State News 10:37 a.m.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011 Text size:
The jackpot for Friday night's Mega Millions lottery reached an estimated $113 million after no tickets matched the winning numbers drawn Tuesday night.
The six winning numbers were 2, 20, 28, 36, 45 and a Mega Ball of 37. Nine tickets matched the first five numbers but not the Mega Ball. Those tickets are worth $250,000 apiece. They were sold in California, Illinois, New York, Ohio and Texas.

Can you see the change? What's altered in the two photos? See how you score when you play the Find 5 Challenge! Rockin' women's wear? Kanye West is among the latest male musicians to step out in women's clothing. Check out his lady shirt.Luckovich on GOP debatesEditorial cartoonist Mike Luckovich gives his take on local news, politics, sports and celebrities. Pam gets sexy in MexicoPam Anderson showed off her sexy moves on a Mexican reality series. See scenes from the show.An oasis in East CobbTeacher David Dewar spent three years building a lush outdoor classroom at East Cobb Middle School. She lost 113 poundsGeri Parrish reached a turning point when she realized her weight was keeping her from completing her goals.

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Amy Smart

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The Shameless actress, 35, and the Carter Can host, 34, married in Traverse City, Michigan with 215 guests in attendance. "He's from there and my parents live there, so it's been my second home since I was very young," Smart explained of the Midwestern locale.

Smart and Oosterhouse met by chance at a green-charity event in November 2010. An insider told Us: "He's an eco-carpenter; Amy drives a hybrid and is the greenest girl I know. They are perfect for each other." The source added: "Here are two wholesome, kind, sweet Midwestern types. Neither has sold out and gone Hollywood."

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Antonio Gates

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Antonio Gates was born June 18, 1980 in Detroit Michigan. Ever since Gates was a young child it was obvious that he was going to be a great athlete in one sport or another. Standing at 6 foot 4 inches and weighing 260 pounds, he has all of the physical skills that a top notch NFL tight end could need. When you add this to the mental aspect of his game, it is no wonder why many people consider him to be the best tight end in the game.

Gates is a bit different than the rest of the players that you see in the NFL. Before his rookie season in the league, he had not played in an organized football game since high school. Gates decided that he wanted to go to Michigan State University to play both basketball and football, but when he was told by then Coach Nick Saban that he could only play football he decided to transfer. Subsequently, this led him to Eastern Michigan University then two junior colleges until he finally settled down at Kent State University in Ohio.

After his college basketball career was over, NBA scouts felt that at 6'4" he was not big enough to make it in the league. In turn, he began to focus his energy on getting ready for the NFL. Nearly 20 teams attended his workout, and the San Diego Chargers were so impressed that they signed him to a contract.

After a slow rookie season in 2004, Gates quickly became an offensive threat. Throughout the next three seasons combined he caught 241 passes for 2,989 yards and 32 touchdowns. This was good enough to land him in the Pro Bowl each of these three years, and also establish himself as a top offensive threat. For a guy that did not play college football, Gates is doing just fine in the NFL.

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Carl Sagan

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The late astronomer Carl Sagan. (EDUARDO CASTANEDA - AP) With two other planet-finder missions on hold, the Kepler spacecraft may be the only one left that could find another Earth out there and answer that most fundamental human question: Are we alone?

While Madrigal points out tha $20 million is the “cost of fighting a few hours of the war in Afghanistan,” these are belt-tightening times, and influential supporters such as astronomer Carl Sagan, who died in 1996, are no longer around.

(Sagan, the American astronomer, author, TV host and pioneer of exobiology and the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence, would likely roll over in his grave if he thought the government would stop funding the search for other planets.)
The Kepler spacecraft has so far discovered hundreds of planetary candidates by watching 145,000 stars for variations in their brightness, which can help flag the presence of an extrasolar planet.

On Tuesday, BBC reported that two new exoplanets were spotted by amateur stargazers who analyzed images generated by Kepler last year.
“It will be one of those small bureaucratic losses that hardly anyone notices,” Madrigal writes. “But it will be yet another sign of the fraying of our democracy that we can't fund (cheap) research into the most fundamental questions of human existence.”

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Cornel West

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Dr. Cornel West has become the third celebrity in the past 24 hours to visit the Occupy Wall Street protests in Zuccotti Park. Michael Moore and Susan Sarandon both paid their respects to the demonstrators earlier today and last night.

West, a professor at Princeton, recently said on MSNBC, "The top 10 percent got 100 percent of income growth. That's pathological. You can't sustain a democracy when you have that kind of wealth inequality."

There is talk that the Occupy Wall Street protestors will attend tonight's Community Board 1 meeting to coordinate their activity with the wishes of its members, but that could not immediately be confirmed with the organizers.
Meanwhile, more than 700 United and Continental pilots are protesting the bungled merger of their companies near Zuccotti Park on Wall Street. IBT reports, "the pilots believe that the company needs to focus on contract negotiations instead of changing the logo on the cocktail napkins." They marched in silence in their uniforms, in contrast with the Wall Street Occupiers because, as one pilot said, they "were professionals and very disciplined."

Postal workers also took to Lower Manhattan to protest the massive cuts and closings that the USPS is bracing for. A from the livestream, it appear that members of Occupy Wall Street joined the postal workers, but the protests were largely self-segregated.

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Chris Christie

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In a speech at the Reagan library in California on Tuesday night, the New Jersey governor laid out a broad vision for the country and positioned himself as nothing short of the anti-Obama.

He offered no concrete words about reports that he is rethinking his decision not to run for president, but did nothing to quiet that speculation, either, telling a woman who offered an impassioned plea for him to run that he was “touched.”
“That reason has to reside inside me,” he said. “My answer to you is just this: I take it in and I’m listening to every word of it, and I feel it.”

Asked by a previous questioner whether he would re-consider running, he urged the man to view web videos of his repeated denials. Before the man could follow up, he shut him down by essentially threatening him with a rhetorical joust.
The only other time Christie alluded to the presidential race was when he took a pretty direct shot at Texas Gov. Rick Perry, criticizing Perry’s contention that anyone who opposes in-state tuition for the children of illegal immigrants is “heartless.”

Aside from that, Christie used his platform to criticize the president as weak, ineffective and sacrificing his core principles in the name of political expediency, Christie contrasted all of that with his own record as governor of New Jersey.
“In New Jersey over the last 20 months, you have actually seen divided government that is working,” Christie said. “Being a mayor, being a governor, being a president means leading by taking risk on the most important issues of the day. It has happened in Trenton.”

The speech amounted to a campaign-style speech that sounded suspiciously like that of a candidate trying to make an election a choice between him and his opponent.

In fact, Christie not only compared himself to Obama; he actually said his governance in New Jersey has served as a model for what other states have done. More than selling a set of values, Christie was selling himself.
After talking about his own achievements in balancing a budget with a Democratic legislature and making the tough decisions, Christie then turned to the president, who has to contend with a Republican-controlled House in Washington.

“We watch a president who once talked about the courage of his convictions, but still has yet (to find) the courage to lead,” Christie said, adding: “And still we continue to wait and hope that our president will finally stop being a bystander in the Oval Office.”

Perhaps better than any presidential candidate has, Christie used the forum Tuesday night to launch a broadside against Obama, shunning the usual attacks on the president’s health care bill and the size of government for a more personal attack.

Hs strongest moment was when he quoted Obama’s speech to the 2004 Democratic National Convention, when the then-Senate candidate talked about the country not being divided between black and white or liberal and conservative, but being one United States of America.
“Seven years later, President Obama prepares to divide our nation to achieve re-election,” Christie said. “This is not a leadership style, this is a re-election strategy.”

In the end, Christie was either setting himself up as a potential candidate in 2012 or making himself into a very important surrogate and somebody we will be talking about as a future presidential candidate in the years to come.
Bachmann camp calls Iowa must-win: Days after her former campaign manager said so, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) is acknowledging that she must win Iowa to stay in the presidential race.

In a four-minute strategy video, Bachmann’s new campaign manager, Keith Nahigian, says “she has to win Iowa and move on from there.”
None of this is a surprise, but ex-campaign manager Ed Rollins phrased the same sentiment a bit less kindly on MSNBC last week, saying his old boss did not have the resources to compete past the first state right now.

Utah lawmakers pick preferred map: We’ve got an idea about what the new congressional map in Utah will look like, and it looks like Republicans won’t create Democratic district in the Salt Lake City area.

The map selected by the state legislature’s redistricting committee would put all of the state capital in one district, but would combine it with all of western and southern Utah and put other more Democratic areas into other districts.
It would also give Rep. Jim Matheson (D-Utah) a very different district from the one he has now. While he would get more of Salt Lake City, he would have to woo lots more new voters in western Utah. His current district starts in Salt Lake City and stretches east before roping in southern Utah.

The question going into redistricting was whether the GOP would give Matheson a safe district. He has turned aside every effort to defeat him in a very conservative district, and some suggested giving him a tough shake make lure him into a statewide run, where polling shows him competitive.
“Based on the map I have seen, a race by me for Governor or for the Senate is still on the table,” Matheson said in a statement to Roll Call.

Meanwhile, the National Republican Congressional Committee has added a candidate for the state’s new 4th district, state Rep. Carl Wimmer, to its Young Guns program for promising candidates. Wimmer was added along with Beth Anne Rankin, who is running a repeat bid for retiring Rep. Mike Ross’s (D-Ark.) seat.

Perry’s lieutenant governor, who is the frontrunner in the Texas GOP Senate primary, disagrees with Perry on in-state tuition for the children of illegal immigrants. All the latest on the presidential primary calendar, from the New York Times’ Jeff Zeleny. Meanwhile, the AP says a new rule could draw out the nominating contest.

Aaron Blake covers national politics at the Washington Post, where he writes regularly for the Fix, the Post’s top political blog. A Minnesota native and summa cum laude graduate of the University of Minnesota, Aaron has also written about politics for the Minneapolis Star-Tribune and The Hill newspaper. Aaron and his wife, Danielle, live in Annandale, Va.

Rachel Weiner came to the Washington Post in 2010 as a web editor. After running PostPolitics for a year, she moved to The Fix, where she is a deputy blogger.

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Zach Braff

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Former "Scrubs" star Zach Braff , who plays Frank (the assistant to Oz) in the Disney film "Oz: The Great and Powerful" that's now shooting in Pontiac, was spotted grabbing a latte at Starbucks in downtown Royal Oak Tuesday morning. The barista told sources that Braff is a regular. A customer reported the actor showed up in a Cadillac CTS with manufacturer's plates and a driver. "Oz" is slated for release in 2013.

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Christmas Island

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The crew of an asylum seeker boat telephoned West Australian police to alert them to the vessel's imminent arrival at Christmas Island.

Home Affairs Minister Brendan O'Connor said the patrol boat HMAS Albany, operating under the control of Border Protection Command, intercepted the vessel on Wednesday morning.

The caller said the boat was five nautical miles northeast of Christmas Island and did not claim the vessel was in distress, official sources told AAP.
It is the fourth boat to be intercepted since the High Court on August 21 quashed the federal government's Malaysia people-swap deal.

It's understood it is not the first time a boat crewman has alerted WA police of its impending arrival, and in the past telephone calls have been put through to a range of agencies including customs, the immigration department and the Australian Maritime Safety Authority.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard is continuing talks with independents MPs to get amendments to migration laws through parliament to put the Malaysian deal on solid legal ground.

Opposition immigration spokesman Scott Morrison said the government should accept the coalition's migration law amendment - which would ensure offshore processing was only done in UN refugee convention signatory countries - and look for an alternative solution to Malaysia.

Labor has rejected Nauru as an option, citing immigration department advice that people-smugglers saw it as an easy entry-way to Australia.
"Our amendments provide greater protection for those who would be processed offshore and equally provide protection against challenges in the courts," Mr Morrison told reporters in Sydney on Wednesday.

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Kevin Federline

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Last updated at 11:11 AM on 28th September 2011Comments (57) Add to My Stories Share This may be the fifth time around for Kevin Federline but the former dancer had the new father glow this weekend as he and girlfriend Victoria Prince stepped out for the first time with their newborn daughter Jordan Kay. The doting parents beamed from ear to ear as they strolled around the idyllic beach side town of Santa Barbara, California with their new addition who was dressed in an adorable pink ensemble.

Kevin was equally as dressed down in his uniform khaki shorts and striped shirt with a white tank top underneath. Happy family: The new parents strolled along the beach path with as their daughter slept in a stroller Just like dad: Baby Jordan displayed a full head of dark hair while her parents had dressed her in an adorable pink ensemble for her first public outing The couple strolled out from their hotel and down to the beach boardwalk where they cuddled together as a family with their baby girl and watched the sun setting.The romantic pair also shared kisses and couldn't take their eyes off each other or the baby.

Earlier in the day the new parents enjoyed lunch on their hotel balcony with Kevin taking the parenting reins while Victoria ate her food.

The then headed into town and browsed a baby boutique for new garb for Jordan. Kevin took the opportunity to show off by pretending to play a tiny pink toy piano while Victoria looked on laughing.

The pro-volleyball player, who appears to have bounced straight back to her pre-baby body, appeared to be a complete natural as a mother, comfortably cradling her daughter as they looked at a bunch of pink clothing.

Stay-at-home dad Federline, 33, has been with Victoria, 28, for two years. This is their first child together.He has also fathered two children with Britney - Sean Preston, aged five, and four-year-old Jayden, who Federline earlier said were 'super excited' about becoming big brothers.Federline has another two children with his ex-girlfriend Shar Jackson, Kori, aged nine, and seven-year-old son Kaleb.

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Elisabetta Canalis

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She and professional partner Val Chmerkovskiy earned 21 points out of 30 for their quickstep routine -- a six point improvement over their debut dance. But fans failed to keep the couple in the competition.
"For me, it was a gift every day staying here. It was a great adventure," Canalis said after learning her fate. "I want to thank everybody because they made me come here. Thanks to the public and to everybody who voted for us. Now I am really nervous, but thank you anyway. It was a great experience."

Canalis earned mixed reviews for her routine Monday. Head judge Len Goodman said the dance was "not great but it was better than last week," while fellow judge Carrie Ann Inaba told the couple, "You nailed it."

Judges' scores are combined with viewer votes to determine which celebrity is ousted each week. Basketball star Ron Artest, now known as Metta World Peace, was bounced from the ballroom last week.

Perhaps the most relieved to be returning was Chaz Bono, who came into Tuesday's episode with the lowest score. He said Tuesday that he was "completely nervous" about the results and hoped he had performed well enough to continue in the competition.

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Conrad Murray

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Conrad Murray in Los Angeles Superior Court during his manslaughter trial,

Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2011(Credit: CBS) (CBS/AP) LOS ANGELES - A lawyer for Dr. Conrad Murray, who is charged in the death of Michael Jackson, says the pop superstar caused his own death.

Defense attorney Ed Chernoff told jurors in his opening argument Tuesday that Jackson, of his own accord, swallowed several lorazepam pills on the morning of his death and that was enough to put people to sleep.

Chernoff told jurors it was not their job to determine whether Murray was a good doctor. He said Murray and Jackson were actually friends and Murray was trying to wean Jackson off of propofol. Jackson, however, took a lethal dose before he died, the lawyer said.

The defense's remarks came after more than an hour of opening arguments by prosecutors who laid out their case against the Houston-based cardiologist with a multimedia presentation which featured an audio recording Murray made of Jackson under the influence of propofol, and an image of the pop star's pale body lying on a gurney after he died from an overdose on the drug on June 25, 2009.

Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter and he and his attorneys have denied he gave Jackson anything that should have killed the pop superstar.

A number of Jackson's family members were in the courthouse for opening arguments, including his father Joseph, mother Katherine, sisters LaToya and Janet, and brothers Jermaine, Randy, and Tito.

Murray arrived holding hands with his mother. If convicted, he faces up to four years in prison and the loss of his medical license.

Another drug abuser dies and everyone is in all this shock? Jackson is just on the list along with Belushi, Elvis, Anna Nichole, Heath Ledger, etc. He abused drugs for years and weighed 110 at his death. He had only known Dr Murray a month.
Years ago he stumbled into court in his pajamas supported by two grown men so he would walk and years ago it was reported he was even getting prescriptions in his kids names. Even his brother and sister stated on Larry King he was an addict.

I do not know trial you are watching. Listen to facts straight from Dr. Murray's mouth. He admitted giving all those different strong drugs that led to Michael's death. Dr. Murray disobeyed all the Medical Standard Proper Care.Definitely GROSSLY NEGLIGENT!! DEFINITELY GUILTY!!!!

He has no other excuse. This is a man originally wanted 5 million dollars a year to care for MJ since would have to leave his four clinics and 'beloved patients. He left them for a bit less money and never looked back. He was unqualified to care for Jackson who was an admitted addict.

Everyone knows that Michael Loved everything, and would be unhappy to see this good man blamed for something that he had no control over. The hate, finger pointing and blaming will not bring Michael back. What we need is understanding and love, and forgiveness. no wonder the public doesn't have a clue about Jackson, this kind of biased reporting is the reason. terrible article. i watched the trial, this doesn't begin to represent what went on in court today.

Dr. Murray was a greedy b**stard who knew better not to give a surgical anesthesia to his patient but did it anyway because he wanted to get paid $150,000 a month to support his questionable lifestyle. Murray has 7 kids by six different women. He was in debt up to his neck, his home was being foreclosed on, etc. He needed money and didn't care what he did to make money.
I have to look at the actions of the doctor. He gave enough of the pills to Jackson for Jackson to take ON HIS OWN. He was the supplier. He knew Jackson had them. He knew Jackson had issues with sleeping and could take the pills that were prescribed (and probably often did).

And with all of that previous knowledge and knowledge o previous actions, he STILL administered a powerful aesthetic by IV that he was NOT qualified to administer. Yeah, I'm going to go with gross negligent homicide on this one. Thank you, Defense Attorney. You have proven the Prosecutor's case.

He wanted is own doctor for his fix . we lost so many stars music movies etc to drugs . Money power and more money he gets his way . Do not get me wrong he was a great performer . But hearing all today i think he was a junkie to pills . The shame about it the people and his family had to see it .

Dr. Murray was nothing more than MJ's last DRUG DEALER. MJ was obviously into these drug use behaviors LONG before Dr. Murray came into MJ's life.
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Craigslist Killer

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VOLUSIA, Fla. -- Ronald Kroll said he's watched "The Craigslist Killer" movie but never thought something like that could happen to him.

The 37-year-old New Smyrna Beach man said he found himself fighting for survival moments after he met a man who claimed interest in buying a boat Kroll had advertised on Craigslist, a popular classifieds website.

Kroll met the man, who was later identified by authorities as Merritt Island resident Darin Leutbecker, about noon Wednesday near the Intracoastal Waterway in New Smyrna Beach to test out a 2005 Savage Creek Classic boat. The two ventured south into the channel with Kroll at the controls.

Minutes later, Kroll said he offered the wheel to Leutbecker, who took the boat into shallow water. However, when they were out of sight from other boaters, Kroll said that's when he got suspicious.

Kroll said the suspect told him to stand facing away at the front of the boat to see if it would rock. But Kroll knew better and tried taking the boat back to shore.
Seconds later, he said he thought he saw the suspect had dropped the gun and Kroll pulled out a pocketknife to defend himself. But the suspect drew the gun out of the water and shot at Kroll as he dove for cover.

Kroll swam to land while the suspect drove away with the boat, which was later found abandoned, Volusia County Sheriff's Office spokesman Brandon Haught said.

Volusia sheriff's investigators then notified the Brevard County Sheriff's Office to be on the lookout for anyone showing up at a hospital there with the suspect's description and injury. About 7:30 p.m. Wednesday a Brevard sergeant notified Volusia investigators that a man matching the description, including a neck injury, was at Canaveral Hospital.

Leutbecker was charged with robbery with a firearm, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, use of a firearm during the commission of a felony, grand theft and battery. He was taken to the Volusia County Branch Jail and was being held Thursday on $10,000 bail.

Kroll, who has sold several items on Craigslist in the past, said he will be more careful next time. By Thursday, he had taken his phone number off the online listing.

"It's left me scratching my head," he said. "You only hear about these things happening to other people. You never think it's going to be happening to you."

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Listeria

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Related Topics: cantaloupe, food-borne illness, jensen farms, Listeria, outbreak, Policy & Industry, recall, rocky ford, Safety Health officials say as many as 16 people have died from possible listeria illnesses traced to Colorado cantaloupes, the deadliest food outbreak in more than a decade.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said Tuesday that 72 illnesses, including 13 deaths, are linked to the tainted fruit. State and local officials say they are investigating three additional deaths that may be connected.
The death toll released by the CDC Tuesday — including newly confirmed deaths in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Texas — surpassed the number of deaths linked to an outbreak of salmonella in peanuts almost three years ago. Nine people died in that outbreak.

The CDC said Tuesday that they have confirmed two deaths in Texas and one death each in in Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska. Last week the CDC reported two deaths in Colorado, four deaths in New Mexico, one in Oklahoma and one in Maryland.

New Mexico officials said Tuesday they are investigating a fifth death, while health authorities in Kansas and Wyoming said they too are investigating additional deaths possibly linked to the tainted fruit.

Listeria is more deadly than well-known pathogens like salmonella and E. coli, though those outbreaks generally cause many more illnesses. Twenty-one people died in an outbreak of listeria poisoning in 1998 traced to contaminated hot dogs and possibly deli meats made by Bil Mar Foods, a subsidiary of Sara Lee Corp. Another large listeria outbreak in 1985 killed 52 people and was linked to Mexican-style soft cheese.

Listeria generally only sickens the elderly, pregnant women and others with compromised immune systems. The CDC said the median age of those sickened is 78 and that one in five who contract the disease can die.
Dr. Robert Tauxe of the CDC says the number of illnesses and deaths will probably grow in coming weeks because the symptoms of listeria don't always show up right away. It can take four weeks or more for a person to fall ill after eating food contaminated with listeria.
"That long incubation period is a real problem," Tauxe said. "People who ate a contaminated food two weeks ago or even a week ago could still be falling sick weeks later."
FDA needs to shut down Walmart. They have had a seroius listeria problem for years. They should not be allowed to sell food at least.
how do we get tested for listeria? how is it formed? my 4 yr old loves cantoloupe and we just got done eating some last week. just found out this morning on the news about this. :
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