[10362] in linux-announce channel archive
Notification: Tax Defense
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tax Debt Pro)
Fri Apr 4 08:05:08 2014
Date: Fri, 4 Apr 2014 05:04:17 -0700
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Tax Debt Pro" <TaxDebtPro@kohenspmfuld.us>
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We can help you with IRS Tax Debt
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FoxNews.com reporter Jana Winter, right, and her attorneys won a victory
when the New York Court of Appeals threw out a subpoena requiring
her to go to Colorado and reveal sources for an exclusive story
or face jail..AP Photo/Ed AndrieskiCENTENNIAL, Colo. Lawyers for the man
accused of killing 12 people at a Colorado movie theater said Friday
they will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to require a Fox News
reporter to reveal the confidential sources she used in a story about
defendant James Holmes.The defense wants reporter Jana Winter to identify
the law enforcement officials who told her that Holmes sent a notebook
containing violent images to his psychiatrist before the 2012 attack.Holmes'
lawyers say whoever spoke to Winter violated a gag order and should
be punished. They also say that officers might have lied when they
denied under oath being Winter's sources, undermining their credibility
as potential trial witnesses.New York state's top court ruled in December
that Winter did not have to testify in Colorado because she is
protected by her home state's shield law, which says reporters do not
have to identify confidential sources.A Colorado court issued a subpoena
for Winter's testimony, but because she is based in New York, that
state's courts would have to enforce it.Winter has said she would not
identify the sources, even though the Colorado court could sentence her
to jail for contempt of court for refusing.Winter's attorney, Dori
August 22, 2013: Former New England Patriot football player Aaron Hernandez,
listens to proceedings in a court in Attleboro, Mass. Hernandez was indicted
on first-degree murder and weapons charges in the death of a friend
whose bullet-riddled body was found in an industrial park about a mile
from the ex-player's home. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)Former New England Patriot
Aaron Hernandez used "coded messages" to communicate about his murder case
in jailhouse phone calls, Massachusetts prosecutors said in a request for
access to recordings of his calls.In the calls, Hernandez discussed the
murder of Odin Lloyd, including his "belief about his criminal liability"
and the "extent of his control over persons charged as accessories," according
to the request filed Thursday in Fall River Superior Court.The ex-player
also talked about other matters related to his co-defendants' "whereabouts
and likely criminal liability," the motion says.Hernandez, 24, has pleaded
not guilty in the killing of Lloyd, a 27-year-old Boston man who
played semi-professional football and was dating the sister of Hernandez's
fiancee.Two associates said to be with Hernandez and Lloyd on the night
of the killing Ernest Wallace and Carlos Ortiz have pleaded
not guilty to charges of accessory after the fact.Defense attorneys didn't
immediately respond to messages seeking comment.Inmates are notified that
their calls, except those with their lawyer, are recorded and the conte
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> six-year sentences for the defendants. The verdict was
set for March 7.The cases -- including the death this month in
Syria of a 30-year-old man from Toulouse -- has raised alarm bells
in French households. Two mothers, in Nice and Avignon in southern France,
whose children went missing have voiced fears they have taken off for
Syria.The father of the 15-year-old charged on Friday told a Toulouse newspaper
this month that his son left the house the morning of Jan.
6 presumably to catch his bus for school, then called home late
that evening to say "don't worry." He had used his father's bank
card to buy two tickets to Turkey, for himself and his friend.The
father made two trips to the border area, and brought him home
last Monday, a day after his friend returned.Christian Etelin, one of the
lawyers for the 15-year-old, said the boy had crossed from Turkey to
Syria on what was supposed to be a humanitarian mission, but "was
placed in a camp of terrorists." He then left, the lawyer said.The
two teenagers were charged with criminal association in connection with
a terrorist organization. If the charge is finalized after a full investigation,
they would face up to 10 years in prison.The risk of a
conviction, said Chouet, the former intelligence chief, "is to turn them
into martyrs.""I would not be very comfortable in the judge's seat," he
said.
An emaciated man whose boat washed up on the shores of the
Pacifics Marshall Islands is reportedly telling a harrowing tale of being
adrift for 16 months, surviving on fish, birds, and turtle blood.The manwho
only speaks Spanishsays he drifted more than 8,000 miles in his 24-foot
fiberglass boat, after leaving Mexico for El Salvador in September 2012,
the AFP reports. He had been traveling with a companion who he
says died at sea several months ago.Two locals discovered the man Thursday
when his boat with propeller-less engines floated onto the reef at Ebon
Atoll. He has long hair and a beard, and was wearing only
ragged underwear, the report said."His condition isn't good, but he's getting
better," Ola Fjeldstad, a Norwegian anthropology student told AFP by phone.
Fjeldstad is part of a group doing research on Ebon-- the southernmost
outpost of the Marshall Islands-- who was helping the man.Its been difficult
to get more details on the mans story because of a language
barrier, but he told the researchers his name is Jose Ivan. He
did say that he survived by eating birds and fish he caught
with his bare hands, and drinking turtle blood when there was no
rain.No fishing gear was found on the boat and Ivan suggested he
caught turtles and birds with his bare hands. There was a turtle
on the vessel when it landed at Ebon."The boat is really scratched
up and looks like it has been in the water for a
long time," Fjeldstad said.The locals wh
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