Friday, November 8, 2013

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Oklahoma police arrest prison escapee after 33 years on the run

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Oklahoma police arrest prison escapee after 33 years on the run
Nov 9th 2013, 00:35

OKLAHOMA CITY Fri Nov 8, 2013 7:35pm EST

OKLAHOMA CITY (Reuters) - Oklahoma City police have arrested a man who escaped from a Maryland prison more than 30 years ago after he contacted them to say he was tired of paying off a business partner who threatened to expose him as a fugitive.

Anthony Rackley, 62, escaped from a Maryland prison in 1980 after being convicted of robbery. He later took on an alias and earned a living raising funds for the Lions Club community service organization.

"He called initially to report an extortion," Master Sargent Gary Knight of the Oklahoma City Police Department told Reuters on Friday.

"He called back and said he needed to talk to us about a situation. He said 'I'm a prison escapee from Maryland.' He was very forthright and forthcoming."

Going by the assumed name Jack Watson, Rackley told police his fundraising partner knew he was a fugitive and was demanding a large chunk of the money they raised for the charity to keep quiet.

When the man asked for additional money earlier this week, Rackley said he had had enough.

"He was willing to go back to jail to stop it," Knight said.

Authorities in Maryland are seeking Rackley's extradition, Oklahoma City police said. Oklahoma City police were investigating the business partner.

(Reporting by Heide Brandes; Editing by Jon Herskovitz and Ken Wills)

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Thursday, November 7, 2013

Reuters: Oddly Enough: New Hampshire man takes vanity plate debate to states top court

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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New Hampshire man takes vanity plate debate to states top court
Nov 7th 2013, 22:28

By Richard Valdmanis

BOSTON | Thu Nov 7, 2013 5:28pm EST

BOSTON (Reuters) - A New Hampshire man who last year changed his name to "human" has gone to the state's top court to defend his right to a vanity plate that insults police: COPSLIE.

The man formerly known as David Montenegro argued in state Supreme Court on Thursday that denying him the plate is a violation of his right to free speech.

The man, an unemployed accountant, made his request for the COPSLIE vanity plate in 2010, but was instead given one bearing his alternative choice of GR8GOVT.

"The Division of Motor Vehicles has a regulation which prohibits vanity license plates containing messages which the DMV believes a reasonable person would find offensive to good taste. That regulation does not meet constitutional standards," human told a local CBS affiliate after the hearing.

New Hampshire Associate Attorney General Richard Head, who argued on behalf of the DMV at the hearing, said the agency was within its authority to deny the vanity plate request.

"The primary purpose of a plate is to identify motor vehicles, not to engage in public debate," he said in a phone interview.

"A statement against an individual would be defamatory. In this case the plate would have insulted an entire class of workers," he said.

The New Hampshire Civil Liberties Union has sided with human. It called the DMV's standard on vanity plates "unconstitutionally vague, overbroad, and viewpoint discriminatory," according to court filings.

The court is expected to rule on the case by early next year.

(Editing by Scott Malone and Leslie Adler)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: U.S. VP Biden congratulates wrong man in Boston mayor's race

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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U.S. VP Biden congratulates wrong man in Boston mayor's race
Nov 7th 2013, 15:19

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden gestures after a meeting with Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto at Los Pinos Presidential Residence in Mexico City September 20, 2013. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden gestures after a meeting with Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto at Los Pinos Presidential Residence in Mexico City September 20, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Edgard Garrido

BOSTON | Thu Nov 7, 2013 10:19am EST

BOSTON (Reuters) - As he watched the returns in Boston's most competitive mayoral race in two decades on Tuesday night, Marty Walsh's cell phone rang.

"A 202 number popped up, and I picked it up. It was Vice President (Joe) Biden. He went right into it, 'Congratulations, Marty, you son of a gun. You did it!'" Walsh recalled on Thursday. "I said, 'Mr. Vice President, you have the wrong Marty Walsh.'"

Biden had intended to call labor activist and state Senator Marty Walsh, who had just been elected mayor of Boston. Instead he was on the line with the Marty Walsh, president of Gateway Public Solutions, a public affairs consulting firm in Boston.

"He laughed, and he was great about it," said non-Mayor-elect Walsh, who worked in the administration of Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick and before that for Senator Edward M. Kennedy.

He has been getting calls for the other Marty Walsh for more than a decade, he said, and considers him a friend.

He was so used to the drill that he gave Biden the correct phone number, and the vice president signed off by saying, "Congratulations on not being the mayor," according to Walsh.

This year the longest-serving mayor in the city's history, Thomas Menino, decided not to seek reelection after 20 years in office. Incumbent mayors in Boston are rarely defeated.

Boston's political scene is crowded with Democrats of Irish descent, illustrated by the fact that the losing candidate in Tuesday's race, City Councilor John Connolly, also fit that description.

The consultant Marty Walsh said he was not sure that having a name doppelganger in City Hall would make his life any easier.

"I don't think it's going to help my parking situation at all," he joked.

(Reporting by Scott Malone; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Douglas Royalty)

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Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Home where Oswald slept night before Kennedy assassination now museum

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Home where Oswald slept night before Kennedy assassination now museum
Nov 7th 2013, 03:12

By Marice Richter

DALLAS | Wed Nov 6, 2013 10:12pm EST

DALLAS (Reuters) - The suburban Dallas home where Lee Harvey Oswald spent the night before he assassinated U.S. President John F. Kennedy opened as a museum on Wednesday ahead of the 50th anniversary of the shooting later in November.

Oswald stored the rifle he used to kill Kennedy in the garage at the modest tract house owned by Michael and Ruth Paine in a middle-class neighborhood of Irving, Texas.

Its notoriety has continued to draw curiosity seekers ever since, so the city of Irving bought the house in 2009 and restored it to its 1963 appearance, down to the single-pane windows typical of that era.

"We're trying to tell the human side of this story," said Kevin Kendro, Irving's archives coordinator. "The story of the assassination is filled with huge characters but here were two housewives doing ordinary things and taking care of their children but got caught up in it."

Oswald's wife, Marina, had met Ruth Paine at a party for Russian immigrants earlier in 1963 and the two became good friends. Marina lived with Paine while Oswald looked for work in New Orleans. Marina joined Oswald that summer in New Orleans, but they moved back to Texas when he lost his job.

Ruth Paine offered Marina a place to stay while awaiting the birth of her second child. Meanwhile, Oswald moved into a rooming house along a bus route to his job at the Texas Book Depository in downtown Dallas.

Oswald typically spent weekends with Marina at the Paine house. But he arrived unexpected on Thursday, November 21, the evening before the assassination.

Ruth Paine, 81, who moved from the home in 1966 and now lives in California, said nothing seemed out of the ordinary that evening or the next morning.

"Lee went to work and we watched the news about the president's visit in Fort Worth," Paine told Reuters. "I went to the dentist with the kids and watched the coverage of the motorcade afterwards."

Paine and Marina learned of the assassination from television news coverage.

"We had no clue that Lee was involved until the police showed up that afternoon," she said.

Paine also said she didn't know that Oswald's rifle was in the garage until she translated the officer's question for Marina, who pointed to a blanket where he concealed it. The gun was missing, she said.

The museum interprets the discovery and other details of the women's lives through re-enactments projected on glass screens.

"They really did an excellent job," Paine said. "At first, I couldn't understand why anyone cared about all this but now I'm convinced they do."

(Reporting by Marice Richter; Editing by David Bailey and Lisa Shumaker)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: New Mexico man sues over repeated anal probes by police

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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New Mexico man sues over repeated anal probes by police
Nov 7th 2013, 03:28

By Zelie Pollon

SANTA FE, New Mexico | Wed Nov 6, 2013 10:28pm EST

SANTA FE, New Mexico (Reuters) - A New Mexico man has filed a lawsuit claiming police subjected him to repeated anal probes and enemas after a routine traffic stop because they suspected he was hiding drugs.

David Eckert, 54, claims violations of his civil rights in the lawsuit, which was filed in U.S. District Court in New Mexico in August but not make public until this week, his lawyers said on Wednesday.

"This suit is about stopping officers and doctors from subjecting people in their custody and control to unlawful sadistic medical procedures that violate the most intimate parts of the human body," attorney Shannon Kennedy said.

The legal action stems from Eckert's treatment by police after he was pulled over in January for failing to come to a complete stop while exiting a Wal-Mart parking lot in Deming, New Mexico.

Officers suspected that he was hiding drugs in his anus, based on the way he was standing and the fact that a police dog alerted to his driver's seat, and obtained a search warrant "to include but not limited to (plaintiff's) anal cavity," according to the lawsuit.

After a medical facility in Deming refused to carry out the procedures, Eckert was taken to Gila Regional Medical Center in nearby Silver City, the lawsuit says, where he was forced to undergo eight searches - including digital penetration of his anus, three enemas, two X-rays and a colonoscopy.

Ultimately, no drugs were found, according to the complaint, which says that the Gila Regional Medical Center billed Eckert for the services it performed.

Named in the lawsuit are the city of Deming, its police department, officers involved in the incident and the Gila Regional Medical Center.

Representatives for the Deming Police Department and the Gila Regional Medical Center could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.

Deming Police Chief Brandon Gigante told local KOB-TV, "We follow the law in every aspect and we follow policies and protocols that we have in place."

(Reporting by Zelie Pollon; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Lisa Shumaker)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Grab the vacuum: Ladybugs overwhelm parts of U.S. Southeast

Reuters: Oddly Enough
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
Grab the vacuum: Ladybugs overwhelm parts of U.S. Southeast
Nov 6th 2013, 23:16

Lady beetles are congregating in a corner of a ceiling in this photo courtesy of University of Tennessee released to Reuters on November 6, 2013. REUTERS/David Cook/University of Tennessee/Handout

Lady beetles are congregating in a corner of a ceiling in this photo courtesy of University of Tennessee released to Reuters on November 6, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/David Cook/University of Tennessee/Handout

By Colleen Jenkins

WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina | Wed Nov 6, 2013 6:16pm EST

WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina (Reuters) - Millions of ladybugs are invading homes and businesses in parts of the U.S. eastern seaboard and Gulf Coast this fall, causing headaches for residents who are fighting the invasion with vacuum cleaners that suck up the insects.

While harmless to humans, masses of the multi-colored invaders are a nuisance as they slip indoors through cracks around doors and windows. Plus they can stain curtains, upholstery and walls if squashed.

A spike in the ladybug population is typical this time of year as they fly out of the farm fields where they help control other insects and seek a warm place to spend the winter.

A mild winter followed by a rainy spring in the east and south created the perfect environment for the species, known as the multicolored Asian lady beetle, to flourish in larger-than-usual numbers in some areas, said David Cook, an entomologist for the University of Tennessee and an extension agent in Nashville.

"It was a perfect insect storm," he said. "They're cute, but no one wants a lot of cute."

The swarms have been particularly bad in the South. In Alabama, Walter Harris said he found a couple hundred of the critters swarming the front door of his house last week, and he knew better than to squash them.

"If you do that, they'll stain real bad," said Harris, coordinator for the county extension office in Huntsville. "The only thing you can do is vacuum them up."

The ladybugs, which have black spots and wing covers that vary in color from red-orange to yellow or tan, gravitate to heated homes and light-colored walls, Cook said.

While they are not harmful, he said people looking to avoid the nuisance should check the weather stripping and insulation of their homes, particularly if they live near wooded areas.

Cook called the beetles a "major problem" in Tennessee, but an insect expert in North Carolina said big swarms of ladybugs in that state were not widespread so far this year.

"We've had a few areas with high populations, but you could go even a mile or two away and not see them," said Michael Waldvogel, an extension entomology specialist at North Carolina State University. "So much depends on surroundings and where the ladybugs were finding prey."

The invasion should be repelled in a few weeks by the onset of cooler weather and a few freezes. Typical patterns in the ladybugs' food supply, mainly aphids, also mean the population will be much smaller next year, Cook said.

"But I'm afraid for a few weeks, it's going to be annoying for some people," he said.

(Editing by Daniel Trotta and Bob Burgdorfer)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Wal-Mart website glitch gave shoppers super bargains, temporarily

Reuters: Oddly Enough
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
Wal-Mart website glitch gave shoppers super bargains, temporarily
Nov 7th 2013, 00:43

A new Wal-Mart store shows off the company's new logo in Loveland, Colorado July 21, 2009. REUTERS/Rick Wilking

A new Wal-Mart store shows off the company's new logo in Loveland, Colorado July 21, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Rick Wilking

Wed Nov 6, 2013 7:43pm EST

(Reuters) - Shoppers looking for a bargain got some big ones, if only temporarily, at Walmart.com Wednesday morning.

A technical glitch on the Wal-Mart Stores Inc U.S. website offered some items at a fraction of their actual retail price.

Treadmills, which normally cost hundreds of dollars, were priced at $33.16. LCD computer monitors were offered for $9.

Ravi Jariwala, a spokesman for Walmart.com, said in the late afternoon that the problem had been fixed and that the mistakenly priced orders would not be honored.

"Given the wide discrepancy in pricing, we are notifying customers who ordered these items that their orders have been canceled and that they'll be refunded in full," Jariwala said in an e-mail. Walmart.com will also offer those shoppers a $10 gift card.

The company did not say how many orders were placed at the low prices. Most of the affected products were electronics, said Jariwala, adding that the website was not available at times on Wednesday while repairs were made.

The glitch comes at the start of what analysts say will be a particularly competitive holiday season.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc kicked off its online holiday-season deals on November 1, a month earlier than usual. The earlier deals and bigger incentives come after data firm ShopperTrak forecast the slowest holiday sales growth since 2009.

"This is particularly disappointing since Wal-Mart has been investing aggressively in e-commerce in the last two years," said Brian Sozzi, CEO & Chief Equities Strategist at Belus Capital Advisors.

(Reporting by Jilian Mincer. Additional reporting by Phil Wahba; Editing by John Wallace and Ken Wills)

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