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A Georgia woman is reaping the benefits of a shop’s error. Kathy Scruggs asked for a Mega Millions ticket, and the clerk handed her one for Powerball; she decided to keep it anyway. Good choice: Turned out it was the winning $25 million ticket, and now the unemployed 44-year-old can…

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Amanda Knox arrives in Seattle after Meredith Kercher murder acquittal

American freed by Italian court gives brief but emotional press statement in Seattle thanking ‘everyone who believed in me’ Amanda Knox has arrived home in Seattle saying she is “overwhelmed” to be back in the US following her acquittal of the murder of Meredith Kercher. Visibly emotional and shaking, Knox, who spent four years in an Italian prison, spoke briefly to supporters at a news conference after alighting at Seattle-Tacoma international airport shortly after 5pm local time. “I’m really overwhelmed right now,” she said. “I was looking down from the airplane and it seemed like everything wasn’t real.” Knox, 24, and ex-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, 27, were cleared on appeal on Monday of the 2007 killing of Meredith Kercher in Perugia, Italy. Knox sobbed and held her mother’s hand as her lawyer Theodore Simon said her acquittal “unmistakably announced to the world” that she was not responsible for the killing. After her parents offered their thanks to Knox’s lawyers and supporters, Knox spoke briefly, saying: “They’re reminding me to speak in English, because I’m having problems with that.” “Thank you to everyone who’s believed in me, who’s defended me, who’s supported my family. “My family’s the most important thing to me so I just want to go and be with them, so thank you for being there for me.” Knox’s father, Curt, later spoke to reporters outside his house, where there was a small welcome home party but no sign of his daughter. He said Amanda “needed her space” and had not agreed to any media deals. “She has been in a concrete bunker for four years.” Curt Knox said Amanda would like to return to the University of Washington at some point to finish her degree, but for now “the focus simply is Amanda’s wellbeing and getting her reassociated with just being a regular person again”. He said he was concerned about what four years in prison may have done to his daughter. “What’s the trauma … and when will it show up, if it even shows up?” he said. “She’s a very strong girl but it’s been a tough time for her.” Theodore Simon described the Knox family’s situation as a “gruelling, four-year nightmarish marathon that no child or parent should have to endure”. “Meredith was Amanda’s friend. Amanda and the family want you to remember Meredith and keep the Kercher family in your prayers,” he said. On Tuesday the family of Meredith Kercher said that they were back to “square one.” Monday’s decision “obviously raises further questions”, her brother Lyle Kercher said. “If those two are not the guilty parties, then who are the guilty people?” Rudy Guede’s conviction for the murder of Meredith Kercher is the only one that still stands. His sentence was cut to 16 years in his final appeal. His lawyer has said he will seek a retrial. The prosecutor, Giuliano Mignini, has expressed disbelief at the appeal verdicts of Knox and Sollecito and said he will appeal to Italy’s highest criminal court after receiving the reasoning behind the acquittals, due within 90 days. “Let’s wait and we will see who was right. The first court or the appeal court,” Mignini said. “This trial was done under unacceptable media pressure.” Anne Bremner, a Seattle defence lawyer and spokesman for Friends of Amanda Knox, said Amanda was looking forward to having a backyard barbecue, being outside on the grass, playing football and seeing old friends. Amanda Knox Meredith Kercher United States Italy Lee Glendinning guardian.co.uk

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Amanda Knox arrives in Seattle after Meredith Kercher murder acquittal

American freed by Italian court gives brief but emotional press statement in Seattle thanking ‘everyone who believed in me’ Amanda Knox has arrived home in Seattle saying she is “overwhelmed” to be back in the US following her acquittal of the murder of Meredith Kercher. Visibly emotional and shaking, Knox, who spent four years in an Italian prison, spoke briefly to supporters at a news conference after alighting at Seattle-Tacoma international airport shortly after 5pm local time. “I’m really overwhelmed right now,” she said. “I was looking down from the airplane and it seemed like everything wasn’t real.” Knox, 24, and ex-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, 27, were cleared on appeal on Monday of the 2007 killing of Meredith Kercher in Perugia, Italy. Knox sobbed and held her mother’s hand as her lawyer Theodore Simon said her acquittal “unmistakably announced to the world” that she was not responsible for the killing. After her parents offered their thanks to Knox’s lawyers and supporters, Knox spoke briefly, saying: “They’re reminding me to speak in English, because I’m having problems with that.” “Thank you to everyone who’s believed in me, who’s defended me, who’s supported my family. “My family’s the most important thing to me so I just want to go and be with them, so thank you for being there for me.” Knox’s father, Curt, later spoke to reporters outside his house, where there was a small welcome home party but no sign of his daughter. He said Amanda “needed her space” and had not agreed to any media deals. “She has been in a concrete bunker for four years.” Curt Knox said Amanda would like to return to the University of Washington at some point to finish her degree, but for now “the focus simply is Amanda’s wellbeing and getting her reassociated with just being a regular person again”. He said he was concerned about what four years in prison may have done to his daughter. “What’s the trauma … and when will it show up, if it even shows up?” he said. “She’s a very strong girl but it’s been a tough time for her.” Theodore Simon described the Knox family’s situation as a “gruelling, four-year nightmarish marathon that no child or parent should have to endure”. “Meredith was Amanda’s friend. Amanda and the family want you to remember Meredith and keep the Kercher family in your prayers,” he said. On Tuesday the family of Meredith Kercher said that they were back to “square one.” Monday’s decision “obviously raises further questions”, her brother Lyle Kercher said. “If those two are not the guilty parties, then who are the guilty people?” Rudy Guede’s conviction for the murder of Meredith Kercher is the only one that still stands. His sentence was cut to 16 years in his final appeal. His lawyer has said he will seek a retrial. The prosecutor, Giuliano Mignini, has expressed disbelief at the appeal verdicts of Knox and Sollecito and said he will appeal to Italy’s highest criminal court after receiving the reasoning behind the acquittals, due within 90 days. “Let’s wait and we will see who was right. The first court or the appeal court,” Mignini said. “This trial was done under unacceptable media pressure.” Anne Bremner, a Seattle defence lawyer and spokesman for Friends of Amanda Knox, said Amanda was looking forward to having a backyard barbecue, being outside on the grass, playing football and seeing old friends. Amanda Knox Meredith Kercher United States Italy Lee Glendinning guardian.co.uk

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No 15-year itch for this couple: Two Tennessee lovebirds have renewed their wedding vows a 99th time, setting a world record once again, the Huffington Post reports. Lauren and David Blair fell in love when they met in 1982. They were married—for the first time—in California in 1984….

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The House passed a spending bill today to fund the government for six weeks, delaying a series of battles over spending and policy that include everything from labor law and environmental regulations to abortion and the Pentagon budget. The 352-66 vote sent the measure to President Obama in time to…

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Russia and China veto UN resolution against Syrian regime

Anger from Europe and US as two security council powers insist implied threat of sanctions will not bring peace Russia and China have vetoed a European-backed UN security council resolution that threatened sanctions against the Syrian regime if it did not immediately halt its military crackdown against civilians. It would have been the first legally binding resolution adopted by the security council since President Bashar Assad’s military began using tanks and soldiers against protesters in mid-March. The UN estimates there have been more than 2,700 deaths. The European sponsors of the resolution had tried to avoid a veto by watering down the language on sanctions three times, to the point where the word “sanctions” was taken out. The eventual vote was 9-2 with four abstentions: India, South Africa, Brazil and Lebanon. It is the first double veto by Russia and China since July 2008 when they rejected proposed sanctions against Zimbabwe. In January 2007 they both vetoed a resolution against the Burmese regime. Russia’s UN ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, told the council after the vote that his country did not support the Assad regime or the violence but opposed the resolution because it was “based on a philosophy of confrontation”, contained “an ultimatum of sanctions” and was against a peaceful settlement. He complained that the resolution did not call for the Syrian opposition to disassociate itself from “extremists” and enter into dialogue. China’s ambassador, Li Bandong, said his country was concerned about the violence and wanted reforms but opposed the resolution because “sanctions, or threat of sanctions, do not help the situation in Syria but rather complicates the situation”. France’s UN ambassador, Gerard Araud, called the veto “a rejection of the extraordinary movement in support of freedom and democracy that is the Arab spring” and commended “all of those who fight against the bloodthirsty crackdown in Syria”. Britain’s UN ambassador, Mark Lyall Grant, said the veto “will be a great disappointment to the people of Syria and the wider region that some members of this council could not show their support for their struggle for basic human rights”. “By blocking this resolution the onus is now on those countries to step up their efforts and persuade the Syrian government to end the violence and pursue genuine reform,” he said. The US ambassador, Susan Rice, said: “The courageous people of Syria can now clearly see who on this council supports their yearning for liberty and human rights – and who does not.” “Those who oppose this resolution and give cover to a brutal regime will have to answer to the Syrian people – and, indeed, to people across the region who are pursuing the same universal aspirations. The crisis in Syria will stay before the security council and we will not rest until this council rises to meet its responsibilities.” Rice accused Russia and China of wanting to sell arms to the Syrian regime rather than stand with the Syrian people – an accusation vehemently denied by Russia. From the outset of the Syrian uprising the council has been split. Western members, backed by some African and Latin American nations, demanded an end to violence, and when it was not heeded they pushed for security council action, including the threat of sanctions. On the other side Russia and China along with Brazil, India and South Africa pressed for more time for the Assad government to implement reforms and for political dialogue with the opposition. It took four months of arguments between supporters and opponents of Assad’s regime for the security council to issue a presidential statement in August condemning the escalating violence. Britain, France, Germany and Portugal, backed by the US, then pressed for a council resolution calling for an immediate arms embargo and other sanctions. But Russia, China, India, South Africa and Brazil have argued the UN resolution authorising the use of force to protect civilians in Libya was misused by Nato to justify months of air strikes against Muammar Gaddafi’s regime. They expressed fear a new resolution might be used as a pretext for armed intervention in Syria. The final watered-down called for Syria to end all violence, respect rights and freedoms and let in the media and human rights investigators – or, after 30 days, the security council would “consider its options, including measures under article 41 of the charter of the United Nations”. Article 41 authorises the council to impose non-military measures such as economic and diplomatic sanctions. The defeated draft strongly condemned “the continued grave and systematic human rights violations and the use of force against civilians by the Syrian authorities” and called on all states “to exercise vigilance and restraint” in supplying weapons to Syria. Syria’s UN ambassador, Bashar Ja’afari, the last speaker after the vote, criticised “the prejudice in certain western capitals against our country” and insisted a comprehensive package of pro-democracy reforms was being implemented by the government. Without naming the US, Ja’afari said it had used its security council veto 50 times since 1945 to protect Israel and deny the Palestinians their rights. Therefore, he said, it could be considered a party to “genocide, as this language is tantamount to turning a blind eye and supporting the Israeli massacres in occupied Arab lands.” As he spoke, US diplomats led by Rice walked out of the council chamber. Syria Middle East United Nations Europe US foreign policy China Russia guardian.co.uk

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Russia’s former—and likely next —president wants to join former Soviet countries in a “Eurasian Union.” The entity would be rooted in Russia’s Customs Union with Belarus and Kazakhstan, to allow labor, capital, and trade to flow freely among the countries beginning next year, Reuters notes. But “we are not…

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Warren Buffett sounds pretty content to be at the center of the nation’s tax debate: He said today that he’d be happy to release his tax returns as critics have demanded—provided fellow billionaire Rupert Murdoch did the same, reports Reuters . Why Murdoch? His News Corp owns the Wall Street…

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Officials are looking for the person who shot a whale that beached itself and died on the Jersey shore after a month of painful swimming. The attack could result in big fines and a year in jail. “This poor animal literally starved to death,” says a wildlife agency rep. “It…

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Who do you find sexier: Playboy bunnies or Brian Williams? If you went with the former you’re out of luck, because NBC’s 10pm EDT Monday time slot is about to be filled by the latter. The Playboy Club has officially become the first cancellation of the fall season. A slim…

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