Saturday, July 20, 2013

Governor: California falling short of inmate release quota

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) ? Gov. Jerry Brown's administration says in a court filing that the state is falling far short of meeting a demand from federal judges to find thousands of inmates who could be released from prison early without endangering the public.

The judges are requiring the state to free nearly 10,000 inmates by the end of the year to ease prison crowding as the best way to improve treatment for sick and mentally ill inmates. If other methods fail, they ordered the state to reach that level by releasing offenders who are deemed unlikely to commit new crimes.

However, the state said late Thursday that it has identified only about 1,200 inmates who could be safely released.

Last week, Brown asked the U.S. Supreme Court to delay the inmate releases while it considers an appeal by the state. Inmates' attorneys filed a 73-page challenge Friday asking the high court to reject that request.

The justices should refuse to reconsider the decision they made in 2011, when they upheld the authority of the lower court to order that inmates be released to improve prison conditions, the attorneys said. Moreover, the attorneys said inmates can be released without harming public safety.

"Prisoners are continuing to die and be seriously injured because of the unconstitutional conduct of the state," said Don Specter, director of the nonprofit Prison Law Office that is suing to force the state to reduce prison crowding.

The lower court has threatened to cite the Democratic governor for contempt if he does not reduce the prison population to about 110,000 inmates by Dec. 31.

Last month, the lower court directed the state to take steps, including expanding good-time credits leading to early release, sending more inmates to firefighting camps, paroling sick and elderly felons, leasing cells at county jails and slowing the return of thousands of inmates now housed in private prisons in other states. The state said in its filing that it is working on all those steps.

But the panel of three federal judges projected that all those measures would still fall nearly 4,200 inmates short of reaching the population cap. They directed the state to release the remainder from what it dubbed the Low-Risk List if other options fail.

However, the administration said it so far can identify only 1,205 lower risk inmates from among the 133,000 inmates who remain in the state's 33 adult prisons, four private prisons and assorted fire camps and community correctional centers.

The state already has reduced the prison population by more than 46,000 inmates since 2006, primarily through a 2-year-old state law that is sentencing lower-level criminals to county jails instead of state prisons. As a result, the administration said in its latest court filing that most of the "low risk" inmates already are gone.

There are 9,077 inmates now serving time for nonviolent, non-serious, and non-sexual offenses, down from 32,397 in June 2007, the state said. However, just 1,205 have a low risk of committing new crimes, do not belong to prison gangs, have not committed felonies in prison within the past 10 years, and have less than a year to serve on their sentences. The count would rise to 1,777 if inmates with more than a year to serve also are released.

The state said it is now working to evaluate higher-risk inmates with violent histories to add to the list. However, corrections spokesman Jeffrey Callison said in an email that the state is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to block the releases "because they would unnecessarily jeopardize public safety, and are not needed given the quality medical and mental health care that inmates already receive."

The department routinely paroles about 3,000 inmates every month, said Specter, the lawyer representing inmates' welfare.

"No one is complaining about that," he said. Releasing an additional 9,000 inmates over six months "is not going to cause any significant difference at all."

Source: http://www.bakersfieldnow.com/news/local/Governor-California-falling-short-of-inmate-release-quota-216218811.html

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Former judge admits flaws in secret court

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A former federal judge who served on a secret court overseeing the National Security Agency's secret surveillance programs said Tuesday that the panel is independent but its oversight is flawed because of the lack of legal adversaries inside the system able to confront the government's actions.

"Anyone who has been a judge will tell you a judge needs to hear both sides of a case," said James Robertson, a former federal district judge based in Washington who served on the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for 3 years between 2002 and 2005. Robertson spoke during a Tuesday hearing of a federal oversight board directed by President Barack Obama to scrutinize government spying.

Robertson questioned whether the secret FISA court should provide legal approval for the surveillance programs, saying the court "has turned into something like an administrative agency."

Much of the NSA's surveillance is overseen by the FISA court, which meets in secret and renders rulings that are classified. Some of these rulings also likely been disclosed by Edward Snowden, the NSA systems analyst who leaked significant information about the spying program.

After Snowden began exposing the NSA's operations in June, Obama instructed the U.S. Privacy and Civil Liberties Board to lead a "national conversation" about the secret programs. The board, which took testimony Tuesday on the secret surveillance programs, has been given several secret briefings by national security officials and plans a comprehensive inquiry and a public report on the matter.

The board's chairman, David Medine, had told The Associated Press in advance of Tuesday's hearing that "our primary focus will be on the programs themselves. Based on what we've learned so far, further questions are warranted."

Robertson, who said he asked to join the FISA court "to see what it was up to," had previously played a central role in national security law. Robertson was the judge who ruled against the Bush administration in the landmark Hamdan vs. Rumsfeld case, which granted inmates at the U.S. naval prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the right to challenge their detentions. That ruling was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2006.

Robertson quit the FISA court in 2005, days after the New York Times revealed widespread NSA warrantless wiretapping under President George W. Bush's administration. Robertson had previously refused to explain his decision. But during a break in the hearing Tuesday he confirmed to the AP that he had "resigned in protest because the Bush administration was bypassing the court on warrantless wiretaps."

Robertson said that FISA court judges have been scrupulous in pushing back at times against the government, repeatedly sending back flawed warrants. But he warned that Congress' 2008 reform of the FISA system expanded the government's authority by forcing the court to approve entire surveillance systems, not just surveillance warrants, as it previously handled. Robertson said the system needed the presence of a legal adversary to act as a check on the government's programs.

"This process needs an adversary," Robertson said, suggesting that the oversight board itself might play that role in the secret legal setting.

The board heard Tuesday from civil liberties activists and former Bush administration lawyers in its first public event since the spying operations were revealed in news reports.

American Civil Liberties Union Deputy Legal Director Jameel Jaffer warned the oversight board that the government's massive sweeps of cellphone and telephone call logs and other data on phone and Internet communications erode privacy protections guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution. The amendment protects against unreasonable search and seizure.

Snowden's disclosures revealed that the NSA collects phone "metadata" ? records that omitted only the actual contents of conversations ? from millions of Americans. A separate NSA surveillance program aimed solely at foreign terrorist suspects also sweeps up metadata about the Internet communications from smaller numbers of Americans, federal officials have acknowledged. Obama urged Americans not to worry about the secret programs because the contents of their communications are rarely targeted.

The president and the director of national intelligence "have been at pains to emphasize that the government is collecting metadata, not content," Jaffer said in advance remarks obtained by the AP. "But the suggestion that metadata is somehow beyond the reach of the Constitution is wrong. For Fourth Amendment purposes, the crucial question is not whether the government is collecting content or metadata but whether it is invading the reasonable expectation of privacy. Here, it clearly is."

Jaffer has urged stricter limits on government surveillance as well as new oversight mechanisms.

One of the oversight board's members, James Dempsey, is a top official with the Center for Democracy and Technology, a civil liberties advocacy group. Dempsey urged both civil liberties activist and former Bush lawyers to be more specific on ways that the current legal oversight system could be improved. He also said he was troubled by the government's assurances of "minimization" ? the vast and growing storage of metadata from millions of Americans without scanning the material.

"I would like to see more engagement on the question of minimization," Dempsey said.

Steven Bradbury, a former top Bush administration lawyer who played a central role in national security decisions, said that the massive trawling of phone metadata was critical to "connect the dots" to terrorist operations inside the U.S. Bradbury said the metadata did not compromise the content of Americans' private communications and was carefully segregated from data targeted by counter-terror investigations. Federal officials have said there were less than 300 queries of the vast inventory of stored metadata in 2012.

Bradbury questioned whether Robertson's call for a legal adversary inside the FISA court process could work because of strict limits on those with access to information about the top secret surveillance programs.

"In this context, you're talking about access to the most sensitive national security information," Bradbury said. Any adversary, he added, would "have to be an officer of the U.S. government and fully participate in the process."

Bradbury, who headed the Office of Legal Counsel at the Justice Department, wrote several legal memos backing the CIA's limited use of harsh interrogation techniques on terrorist suspects, including simulated drowning. But he also signed other memos that placed legal brakes on some of the Bush administration's expanded national security authority.

Two of the oversight board's members also worked as Bush administration lawyers. Elisebeth Collins Cook is a former Justice Department lawyer who drafted revised guidelines in 2008 that expanded the FBI's ability to conduct domestic intelligence investigations. The guidelines gave FBI agents involved in national security probes new authority to conduct physical surveillance without a court order and to interview people without identifying themselves as federal agents.

Oversight board member Rachel Brand is another former Bush Justice lawyer who urged Congress to give the FBI expanded authority to use what are called national security letters and administrative subpoenas to obtain information in terrorism investigations. The use of such tools is limited but can allow federal investigators to demand data without direct judicial approval.

The oversight board is appointed by the president but reports to Congress. David Cole, a professor of constitutional and national security law at Georgetown University, said the board faces high expectations.

"Their very existence may make government officials more careful about their surveillance programs because they will know that a board empowered and obligated to report on privacy and civil liberties abuses exists," Cole said.

___

--Associated Press Writer Matt Apuzzo contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/former-judge-admits-flaws-secret-court-145541583.html

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Appellate brief seeks reversal for Jackson doctor

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? A lawyer for Michael Jackson's doctor told an appellate court on Wednesday that Jackson's contract with AEG Live LLC should have been admitted as evidence in Dr. Conrad Murray's manslaughter trial.

In the last of a series of appellate briefs submitted to the California Second District Court of Appeal , attorney Valerie Wass said jurors did not consider the pressures placed on Jackson by the concert promoter before his death because they didn't see the contract.

The lawyer suggested that Jackson might have self-administered the drugs propofol and lorazepam because of his concern over fulfilling the terms of his contract for 50 performances of the show, "This Is It."

"Admission of the contract or evidence of its terms was necessary to show what was at stake for Jackson if he could not meet his contractual obligations, which was pertinent to establish his state of mind which may have explained his conduct on the day he died, and supported the defense theory of the case," the 24-page brief states.

The defense suggested that Jackson was so concerned about being unable to sleep that he gave himself the drug that caused his death.

However, witnesses at Murray's trial testified it was the doctor who administered the overdose of the anesthetic propofol to the sleep deprived Jackson.

An autopsy found the star died of acute propofol intoxication.

In another filing, Wass reiterated her claim that Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor erred in refusing to sequester the jury.

"The unprecedented fame of Jackson combined with the pervasiveness of media coverage of the case rendered It Impossible for appellant to receive a fair trial with a nonsequestered jury," the filing said.

Wass also faulted the judge for allowing TV cameras at the trial.

Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and is serving a four-year sentence. Wass said he is due for release on Oct. 27.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/appellate-brief-seeks-reversal-jackson-doctor-193836146.html

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The Roku 3 Is Your Deal Of The Day

The Roku 3 Is Your Deal Of The Day

The Roku 3 is unquestionably the king of the streaming boxes. It's also new, and doesn't go on sale that often. Grab it today for $89 bucks- the lowest price we've seen on it and even more on an easy impulse buy than its MSRP. [Amazon]

Of particular note today is a Newegg promo that takes $15 off $50 or more on anything you buy. This could applied to prepaid cards for services like Playstation Network, or really anything you can think of:

? Get $15 off $50+ at Newegg by checking out using Google Wallet on the Newegg Android app or m.newegg.com and using code WALLET


Top Deals

? Generic Lightning-to-30 pin Adapter ($2) | Amazon via Ben's Bargains

? Logitech Desktop MK120 Mouse and keyboard Combo ($15) | Amazon | Near lowest price ever

? Toshiba 32GB Class 10 SD Card ($20) | Amazon via TechDealDigger

? HTC One LTE [Sprint] ($50) | Amazon via Ben's Bargains

? Roku 3 Streaming Player ($89) | Amazon | Lowest price ever

? Get $15 off $50+ at Newegg by checking out using Google Wallet on the Newegg Android app or m.newegg.com and using code WALLET


Storage

? Toshiba 32GB Class 10 SD Card ($20) | Amazon via TechDealDigger


Audio

? JBL Duet II Speaker System ($50) | World Wide Stereo via Ben's Bargains | Use code BENSDUET

? Refurb Samsung AudioBar w/ Wireless Sub ($150) | Groupon via 9to5Toys | Normally $350


Video

? Roku 3 Streaming Player ($89) | Amazon | Lowest price ever

? 42-Inch LG Smart LED HDTV ($570) | Amazon via Deals Kinja | Lowest price ever

? Samsung UN50F6300 - 50 inch 1080p 120Hz Smart WiFi ($599) | BuyDig | Price shown in cart

? 2013 LG HDTV's w/ Built-in Google TV | TigerDirect via TechBargains

  • 42" for $719.99 w/ Code: BMM95458
  • 47" for $829.99 w/ Code: HLT95455
  • 50" for $999.99 w/ Code: NHB95452
  • 55" for $1159.99 w/ Code: "LUX95449"
  • 60" for $1599.99 w/ Code: "QNR95446"

Input

? Logitech Desktop MK120 Mouse and keyboard Combo ($15) | Amazon | Near lowest price ever


Computers

? Toshiba Laptop With Radeon Graphics and HDMI ($330) | Best Buy via Deals Kinja | Lowest price ever


PC Parts

? AsRock Z87 ATX Haswell Motherboard ($100) | Newegg via TechBargains | Normally $115 | This is currently the cheapest Haswell Mobo on Newegg.

? OCZ Fatal1ty 750W Modular Gaming 80PLUS Bronze Power Supply ($80) | Amazon | Lowest price ever, must choose Amazon as seller on right

? MI-008 Tower Black P4 Chassis with 250W Itx PSU ($40) | Amazon


Tablets and Phones

? Generic Lightning-to-30 pin Adapter ($2) | Amazon via Ben's Bargains

? HTC One LTE [Sprint] ($50) | Amazon via Ben's Bargains


Gaming

To get all the gaming deals all the time, check out the Kotaku Moneysaver. I would know.

? PC 48 Digital Download Sega Genesis Games ($5) | Amazon via Deals Kinja | Lowest price ever

? PC Pre-order Titanfall [Origin] ($48) | Gamefly via Daily Game Deals | Use code GFDJUL20

? PS3/360 Pre-order Grand Theft Auto V Special Edition ($80) | Amazon | It's not clear how limited the run of the special edition will be, you may want to lock yours up.

? Lancaster Multi Language Board Game ($45) | Amazon | Lowest price ever


Media

? FREE 10-Day Trial of MLB.TV | via Fatwallet | Fatwallet's source | Vote here to get trial
? The Dark Knight Rises [Blu-ray/DVD/UltraViolet] ($11) | Amazon

Photography

? 16 Megapixel Canon Powershot A2300 ($59) | Amazon via Deals Kinja | Lowest price ever, today only


Mac

? FREE sBlaster - Record audio from any OSX application | 9to5Toys

? Growl ($1) | Mac App Store via Lifehacker


iOS


Android

? FREE Power Lines Match5 | Amazon


Clothing

? New Balance 890 Men's Runners ($40) | Joe's New Balance via Deals Kinja | $60 and up elsewhere


Life

? Dyson DC40 Upright Vacuum Cleaner ($274) | Lowes via Deals Kinja | Use promo code 470000000027891

? Craftsman 53 pc. Mechanics Tool Set ($25) | Sears Outlet via Deals Kinja | 50% off

? Kenmore 3.3 cu. ft. Compact Refrigerator ($100) | Kmart | Save $60, today only

? Coleman 50-Quart Cooler ($33) | Amazon | Lowest price ever
? Fred and Friends Whisked Off Rocket Whisk ($8) | Amazon | Lowest price ever
? 26" Mongoose Ledge 2.1 Men's Mountain Bike ($120) | Walmart | Save $15

Hobomodo

Several free apps and trials in the other categories.


Gizmodo Wants You!

Gizmodo is looking for someone passionate and knowledgeable about both deals and tech to take over Gizmodo, and who better to do it than a long-time reader?


Keep up with Shane Roberts on Kinja and Twitter. Check out Dealzmodo for more great tech deals, and Deals.Kinja.com for even more discounts.

Join us every weekday at 3pm ET for Dealzmodo, brought to you by the Commerce Team. We're here to bring Gizmodo readers the best tech deals available, and to be clear, we also make money if you buy. We want your feedback.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/the-roku-3-is-your-deal-of-the-day-732594253

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Luke Donald is the trump card for Tom Lewis as he looks to rebuild his career - World of Golf

By Derek Lawrenson

|

Tom Lewis looks like a young Luke Donald, employs Luke?s brother Christian as his caddie and has now turned to the former world No 1 for advice on rebuilding his career.

It was sad to see the 22-year-old Englishman looking so stressed out.

How do you follow leading after the first round of the 2011 Open at Royal St George?s as a fresh-faced amateur and then winning only your third event as a pro three months later with a wonderful final-round 65? Lewis fell into a classic trap.

On the way back: Tom Lewis has enlisted the help of the Donald brothers as he bids to find form

On the way back: Tom Lewis has enlisted the help of the Donald brothers as he bids to find form

Fine teacher: Luke Donald has given Lewis advice on his short game

Fine teacher: Luke Donald has given Lewis advice on his short game

? ?

More from Derek Lawrenson...


?Like so many young players, I was just trying too hard,? he said.

?I changed a few things, thought I?d be playing better a lot quicker than it turned out and then I lost confidence.?

Enter the Donald brothers. First Christian, who took over caddying duties in January.

He knew who Lewis should seek out with regard to some short-game weaknesses and so it was that Tom flew to Florida to spend time with the man who might be the best in the world in that department.

?It was very good of Luke and we?ve played a few practice rounds since, which really helped,? said Lewis.

Luke?s verdict? ?The talent was clearly there but he wasn?t taking advantage on or around the greens and then he?d lose momentum if he hit a few loose ones because his short game wasn?t sharp enough,? he said.

?We looked at the fundamentals and addressed those. It was also important he stopped being so hard on himself.??

They are lessons on life and golf that the personable Lewis has absorbed and you can?t help but notice the difference.

On the bag: Christian Donald, seen here with former employer Martin Kaymer in 2011, is Lewis' caddie

On the bag: Christian Donald, seen here with former employer Martin Kaymer in 2011, is Lewis' caddie

Fine start: Lewis won his first professional event at the Portugal Masters Golf tournament in 2011 but has struggled since

Fine start: Lewis won his first professional event at the Portugal Masters Golf tournament in 2011 but has struggled since

?It was about a month ago that I really took on board what Luke was saying about chilling out, that it wasn?t life and death,? he said. ?And I can see small signs my game is turning around.

?It will be unfortunate if I don?t make it to The Open (he has to win the Scottish Open this week to qualify).

'Muirfield is one of my favourite courses but there will be opportunities in the future.

?I also have a fight on to keep my card but even if you don?t see me for 12 months I will be back and good things will happen if I stay patient.?

Timing now crucial for Scottish Open

Has the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open lost its identity, as Graeme McDowell claims?

Or was Paul Lawrie right to lambast his Ryder Cup colleague and jump to the defence of his national Open, which takes place in its pre-Open slot at Castle Stuart this week?

You can see why Lawrie would take offence.

On paper, the comment looks damning. But, sitting in the room when he aired his views, it was clear G-Mac meant it as constructive criticism.

Scottish Open debate: Graeme McDowell, left, and Paul Lawrie disagree on the tournament's standing

His point was: the event has slipped from its previous position of high-standing, how do we make it great again?

Only three of Europe?s 12 Ryder Cup heroes will be in attendance and thank goodness Open champion Ernie Els firmed up his commitment last week, otherwise the only ?glamour? player would be the loyal American, Phil Mickelson.

It?s hard to see how the event can regain its lustre if it stays in this slot, for the event is principally a victim of the fact big names would rather conserve energy by not playing the week before The Open.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

?To qualify to play at Augusta and everywhere else is just amazing. Your year can change in one day.?

That will be the little-known Swede Jonas Blixt, whose victory in the Greenbrier Classic on Sunday not only got him into the Masters next year but The Open next week.

?


MOST WATCHED SPORT VIDEOS

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dailymail/sport/~3/d1jHeztALBc/Luke-Donald-trump-card-Tom-Lewis-looks-rebuild-career--World-Golf.html

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'Bless my Hotshot crew': Survivor speaks at vigil

PRESCOTT VALLEY, Ariz. (AP) ? On a day filled with speeches from dignitaries including the vice president, the words of the lone survivor of a fire crew overrun by flames resonated deepest in an arena packed with firefighters from around the nation.

A stone-faced Brendan McDonough filed onto the stage at the end of the service and offered what's called "The Hot Shot's Prayer," calmly reciting the words: "For if this day on the line I should answer death's call, Lord, bless my Hotshot crew, my family, one and all."

He concluded by telling the crowd: "Thank you, and I miss my brothers."

McDonough spoke at a memorial for the 19 members of the Prescott-based Granite Mountain Hotshots who died June 30 when a wind-fueled, out-of-control fire overran them as they tried to protect a former gold-mining town from the inferno.

Vice President Joe Biden called them "men of uncommon valor" while thanking God that one member of the crew survived unhurt.

"There's an old saying: All men are created equal, and then a few became firefighters," Biden said. "Thank God for you all. Thank God for your willingness to take the risks you do."

The event was marked by an outpouring of support from firefighters from across the country, who traveled to the Prescott area to honor their fallen brethren.

They talked about how firefighters are accustomed to answering the call of duty when the alarm sounds and sends them into harm's way, whether it's a fire in a forest, house or apartment. And they noted that the same can be said when a fellow firefighter dies.

"When you hear of a death, especially a group of firefighters, and there's 19 that we're here to mourn, there's no question that at the drop of a hat you do what you can to go and support the fire service and their families," said Capt. Steve Brown of the Rancho Cucamonga, who brought 17 others in his department of 85 uniformed firefighters from California.

The memorial in Prescott Valley began with a choir singing "On Eagle's Wings" as Biden sang along from the sidelines. Homeland Security Secretary and former Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano looked on, as did Sen. John McCain and his wife, Cindy, and other members of the state's congressional delegation.

Biden talked about the 1972 death of his wife and young daughter in a traffic crash, and how firefighters freed his sons from the mangled wreckage.

"I don't have the privilege of knowing any of these heroes personally, but I know them. I know them because they saved the lives of my two sons," Biden said. He also said firefighters rushed him to a hospital after he suffered an aneurysm in 1998, and he credited firefighters with saving his wife Jill after lightning once struck their home.

Gov. Jan Brewer praised people around the country for responding as she hoped they would ? with candlelight vigils, financial contributions, prayers, and flowers and notes placed at makeshift memorials.

"Of course our hearts are filled with profound sadness today, but they're also filled with great pride," she said. "How wonderful is it to know that Arizona was home to 19 men like those we honor today."

Outside the minor league hockey arena, each of the 19 firefighters was represented by a U.S. flag and a purple ribbon with his name. A bronze statue of a wildland firefighter with an ax in hand, stood in front as if guarding the building.

Inside, each firefighter's name scrolled across an electronic board on two sides of the arena. Lined up in front of the stage were 19 sets of firefighting gear, complete with commemorative Pulaski tools similar to the ones the elite crew uses to dig lines around fires.

Prescott Fire Chief Dan Fraijo gave the tools to the firefighters' families, along with flags that had been flown in their honor.

Alumni of the Granite Mountain Hotshots sat in the front rows, with about 1,000 members of the fallen firefighters' families surrounding them in seats on the floor of the arena. Those who first responded to the Yarnell Hill Fire sat in the rows behind them.

Darrell Willis, a Prescott Fire Department division chief, said he traveled with the crew a couple of years ago when they fought a fire in Colorado. On the way back, the unit stopped in Glenwood Springs and then climbed Storm King Mountain, where 14 firefighters died in 1994.

"We spent the entire sunny summer afternoon evaluating, studying, talking about what happened there 19 years ago," Willis said. "They were truly committed to never letting something like this ever happen again. They were committed to returning to you after every assignment. But there was another plan."

The highly specialized crew was part of a small community of Hotshots nationwide. There are only about 110 of the 20-person teams, mostly stationed west of the Mississippi River.

McDonough was assigned to give a "heads-up on the hillside" for the team on that fateful afternoon, said Prescott Fire Department spokesman Wade Ward. McDonough notified the crew of the rapidly changing weather that sent winds swirling erratically and caused the fire to cut off his team's escape route, then swiftly left his post for safety.

Ward has said it's just been too tough on McDonough, but that "he did exactly what he was supposed to."

Tuesday's memorial was the last of a handful of vigils for the men before the first of 19 funerals begin later in the week.

Ron Merrell, pastor of Heights Church, asked for comfort in an opening prayer, saying the past week has felt like "hell on Earth," leaving the families and firefighting community broken, confused, hurt and numb. He held up the firefighters as heroes who gave the ultimate sacrifice not only in death but in life.

Two tolls of a bell rang out as each firefighter's name was called, and a member of his family stood up in the audience.

An honor guard that included alumni of the Granite Mountain Hotshots carried the flags and Pulaski tools through the aisles, turning to face the family members who accepted the items on behalf of the firefighters.

Some of the family members then hugged others next to them, as the men's pictures flashed on screens overhead and the choir began singing "You Raise Me Up."

Other photos showed the men playing with their children, riding bikes, carrying crew members on their backs, hanging out at camp and in close encounters with fire.

Biden offered the families some solace as he wrapped up his remarks.

"As unbelievable as it is to even fathom ... the day will come when the memory of your husband, your son, or your dad or your brother will bring a smile to your lips before it brings a tear to your eye," he said. "My prayer for all of you is that that day will come sooner than later, but I promise you as unbelievable as it is, it will come."

Biden met privately with family members after the memorial.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bless-hotshot-crew-survivor-speaks-vigil-214920039.html

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Top Summer Hikes For Car-Free New Yorkers

Top Summer Hikes For Car-Free New Yorkers
Get New York Newsletters:

DNAinfo.com:

NEW YORK CITY ? Many New Yorkers are happy to live without cars in a city with extensive public transportation, but that lack of wheels can make it hard to hit the great outdoors.

Luckily, with a bit of planning, it's easy to get to some of the area's top hiking paths. Many trains and buses from Penn Station and Grand Central Terminal drop you just steps from the trailhead, and the New York-New Jersey Trail Conference has a fantastic set of maps.

Read the whole story at DNAinfo.com

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    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/08/top-summer-hikes-for-carf_n_3561882.html

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    Monday, July 8, 2013

    Sony Vaio VPCSE2NFX/B Smart Network Software 3.12.0.08100 for Windows 8 64-bit

    This utility installs the originally shipped version of the VAIO Smart Network software.

    Important Notes
    - During the installation of this file, be sure that you are logged in as the Administrator or as a user with Administrative rights.
    - To ensure that no other program interferes with the installation, save all work and close all other programs. The Taskbar should be clear of applications before proceeding.
    - It is highly recommended that you print out these instructions for use as a reference during the installation process.

    It is highly recommended to always use the most recent driver version available.

    Do not forget to check with our site as often as possible in order to stay updated on the latest drivers, software and games.

    Try to set a system restore point before installing a device driver. This will help if you installed a wrong driver. Problems can arise when your hardware device is too old or not supported any longer.

    Source: http://drivers.softpedia.com/get/Other-DRIVERS-TOOLS/Sony/Sony-Vaio-VPCSE2NFX-B-Smart-Network-Software-312008100-for-Windows-8-64-bit.shtml

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    Sunday, July 7, 2013

    Survey Seeks to Establish Sexual Trauma Scale Unique to Military

    By Stephen Spotswood

    Deleene Menefee, PhD.

    HOUSTON - In recent years, DoD officials have admitted publicly that military sexual trauma (MST) is a serious problem among the services, one that?s more widespread than previously recognized.

    VA, meanwhile, has made efforts to screen for MST, especially among female servicemembers, and to create safer environments in their facilities for veterans to talk about their experiences and to receive treatment.

    Deciding what that treatment should be and how best to judge its effectiveness, however, is hampered by a lack of understanding of the causes and physical, psychological and social aftermath of MST.

    It?s generally understood that MST can be more difficult to treat than civilian incidents of sexual trauma because symptoms of other illnesses, including PTSD, often are present. But it is not always appreciated how different MST can be from its civilian counterpart or how far the damage from such an incident can spread.

    VA researchers in Houston are taking the first steps to answer those questions and provide for VA physicians everywhere an evidence-proven scale of MST - one they can use to help judge severity and, subsequently, treatment progress.

    Pattern in MST Patients

    It did not take long for Deleene Menefee, PhD, to realize that MST is substantially different from sexual trauma that occurs in the civilian sector.

    A psychologist with extensive experience in treating sexual trauma victims, Menefee was hired by VA in 2008 to open the Women?s Inpatient Specialty Environment of Recovery Program (WISER) at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center (MEDVAMC) in Houston. The goal of the 10-bed unit is to provide a space for women who are not successfully progressing in an outpatient setting to focus on trauma-specific therapy.

    Over time, Menefee and her colleagues began to notice some very obvious patterns.

    ?Women would say the same things repeatedly, like, ?I feel like I have a sign on my forehead that says ?Rape me,??? Menefee explained. ?They continually talked about how, after the assault happened, they would change the way they dressed. They talked about the consequences that happened to them when reporting it or the guilt they felt for not reporting it.?

    Menefee started collecting notes ? clinical observations that she collected in a folder. The patterns were so apparent that new trainees, with no knowledge of Menace?s collection of notes, would mention them to her.

    The WISER program includes a research protocol requiring self-evaluation, so Menefee began searching for a survey she could use to help her understand the range of MST among her patients. She wanted to know whether there are indicators of when it?s more severe, such as whether it?s different for patients when the incident involved a higher ranking officer or when it occurred in the barracks vs. out of town.

    ?I wanted anything that could clinically inform me about my women with MST,? Menefee said. ?We came up with a big goose egg. There was nothing.?

    While there were surveys about rape and sexual trauma, child sexual trauma and male-on-male sexual trauma, little was found on MST.

    ?I was really interested in what was unique with veterans ? men and women ? with military sexual trauma,? Menefee said.

    So she and her colleagues at WISER decided to create a survey of their own ? a proof-of-concept study that will collect a host of data from veterans and, if successful, provide a framework for better understanding MST.

    Unique Sexual Trauma

    Sexual trauma in a military setting involves an array of unique factors. Anyone who has spent time talking with veterans with MST for any length of time will recognize that, Menefee explained.

    The survey Menefee and her team are creating recognizes that. It asks questions not only about where and when but also military-specific questions, such as about rank and power dynamic.

    ?So much of rape is about power, domination and humiliation. The first two are used openly in military training. There?s a big power differential and a very strict hierarchy,? Menefee said. ?

    This can create an environment that makes it much easier for the perpetrator and much more confusing and traumatic for the victim. The perpetrator is more often than not either a colleague or a superior. And if the incident goes unreported ? or even sometimes when it does ? the victim will need to stand at attention in front of or beside the perpetrator the next morning.

    The survey also asks about the period of time in which the incidents occurred. Menefee has had patients whose commanders had forced them to have sex for the entire duration of their deployment.

    ?Most [civilian] sexual trauma victims other than children or spouses can get away from their perpetrators,? Menefee explained. ?If you?re raped by your commander or fellow soldier, you have to go out on drills with them the next morning.?? ?

    There are questions detailing the immediate consequences of the incident ? an area where there are significant gaps in the literature.

    ?We don?t know what happens to them immediately,? Menefee said. ?Do they seek medical help? Is a rape kit performed? Are the police involved? Do they report for duty with vaginal tearing the next morning??

    Perhaps the most striking question ? the one that most clearly highlights just how different MST can be from civilian sexual trauma ? is the one asking whether a service weapon was involved in the assault.

    Menefee noted that personal service weapons were used to force victims to submit to rape in at least 20 of the cases she has seen in the last three and-a-half years.

    Part of the survey will deal with whether the incident was reported and, if not, then why.

    ?Most say they don?t report because they?ll be seen as weak or nothing will happen or they?ll be ostracized by their peers,? Menefee said. ?Sometimes they don?t because the perpetrator told them they would kill them.?

    In an environment where the perpetrator is often armed, the victims have reason to believe the threat.

    Questions also exist about the many possible after-effects.

    ?There are extensive long-term consequences,? Menefee said. ?They frequently have body image issues, physical health [problems]. They?re unable to sustain marriages.??

    Source: http://www.usmedicine.com/womenshealth/survey-seeks-to-establish-sexual-trauma-scale-unique-to-military.html

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    TSA Agent Caught in Apple iPad Sting

    In the latest apparent case of hundreds of thefts by TSA officers of passenger belongings, an Appl e iPad left behind at a security checkpoint in the Orlando airport was tracked 30 miles to the home of the TSA officer last seen handling it. The iPad was one of 10 purposely left behind at checkpoints at airports with a history of theft by government screeners, as part of an ABC News investigation. The TSA officer, Andy Ramirez, was no longer with the agency as of Wednesday afternoon.

    Source: http://feeds.drudge.com/~r/retort/~3/w5qxuY2FDME/tsa-agent-caught-apple-ipad-sting

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    Friday, July 5, 2013

    Pets and Fireworks Do Not Mix - WABI TV5

    Leave the pets home if fireworks are part of your fourth of July plans.

    Fireworks can be frightening, even painful to dogs, who have a much better sense of hearing than humans do.

    July 5th is traditionally one of the busier days at shelters across america because many dogs will run away to escape the noise of fireworks.

    Pet experts say the best thing to do during fireworks is to leave your dog at home with the TV or radio on to drown out the explosions.

    Of course, if you are lighting your own fireworks make sure that all people and pets are not near them when they go off.

    Print this Story

    Source: http://www.wabi.tv/news/41449/pets-and-fireworks-do-not-mix

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    Wrap up warm to avoid heart attacks in winter

    When it's cold we turn up the central heating. Our bodies do the same ? burning brown fat to produce extra heat and keep us warm. But this internal heating system may have a dangerous side effect. A study of brown fat in mice has found that exposure to cold leads to a thickening of artery walls, increasing the risk of heart disease.

    "Brown fat has always been considered to be good fat," says Yihai Cao at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden. Since it turns the energy obtained from food into heat, brown fat is thought to be one of the keys to weight loss. Cao and colleagues wanted to investigate its role in atherosclerosis ? the build-up of fatty deposits in blood vessels.

    First, the team created genetically modified mice that were especially prone to atherosclerosis. At eight weeks old, they split the mice into two groups. Some mice were kept for a further eight weeks at 30&nbsp:?C ? a temperature that mice find comfortable ? while the rest were kept at 4&nbsp:?C.

    In cold conditions, white fat is converted into brown fat, which then breaks down and in the process produces heat.

    Bad cholesterol

    When they studied the breakdown of brown fat in both groups of mice, the team found that it releases fatty acids and glycerol that stimulate the liver to make low-density lipoprotein (LDL) ? or "bad" cholesterol ? which can clog up arteries.

    Mice exposed to the cold converted more white fat to brown and the production of LDL was accelerated, leading to a greater build-up of fatty deposits. The mice kept in the cold also had deposits in their blood vessels that were more likely to break off and cause blockages ? a major cause of heart attack and stroke.

    To test whether the effect was specifically linked to heat generation, the team next created atherosclerosis-prone mice that were unable to use their brown fat to produce heat. These mice were completely protected from the increased production of LDL and consequent arterial problems.

    Finally, the team recruited 14 people with high levels of LDL in their blood and exposed them to a temperature of 16&nbsp:?C for 4 hours over two days. They found that the participants had significantly more LDL in their blood after the trial than before.

    "These findings suggest an important potential explanation for links between cold temperatures and heart attack risk," says Krishnan Bhaskaran at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. In 2010, Bhaskaran and his colleagues investigated the link between cold weather and heart attacks over four years across England and Wales. They estimated that there were about 200 more heart attacks for each 1-degree drop in temperature (BMJ, DOI: 10.1136/bmj.c3823).

    Stay indoors

    "We cannot control the weather but we can control our response to it," says Bhaskaran. He suggests that wrapping up warm and limiting the amount of time spent outdoors might reduce the risk of heart attack. "This might be particularly important for older people and those with prior heart problems who appear to be particularly vulnerable to cold effects."

    Andrew Whittle at the University of Cambridge is excited by the results. "It conclusively shows that by modifying brown fat you can have profound changes on how cholesterol is taken up by the bloodstream," he says.

    But he notes that mice kept in the cold will eat twice as much food, which might also contribute to the extra fatty deposits.

    Until recently we did not know adult humans had brown fat at all, he says, and we are still learning what it does. "Every human has found out they have an organ that five years ago they didn't know they had." It might be worth keeping warm just in case, says Cao.

    Journal reference: Cell Metabolism, DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2013.06.003

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    Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/2e42d331/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cdn238240Ewrap0Eup0Ewarm0Eto0Eavoid0Eheart0Eattacks0Ein0Ewinter0Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

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