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Casey Anthony’s Father, George Anthony, Tells Dr. Phil He Blames Her For Caylee’s Death (VIDEO)

Appearing on “Dr. Phil” for the second time in two days, George Anthony said he blamed his daughter, Casey Anthony, for the death of his two-year-old granddaughter, Caylee. “Yeah, I blame my daughter for Caylee not being here today,” George Anthony told Dr. Phil McGraw. “I lost Caylee three years ago and I believe I lost Casey at the same time. I believe that. She is responsible.” Casey Anthony was acquitted of killing Caylee in July. She was convicted on four lesser charges of lying to police and was released days after the trial ended. She is currently in Florida, serving a year of probation stemming from an unrelated 2010 conviction on check fraud charges. George and Cindy Anthony have dramatically different points of view about their daughter’s level of involvement in their Caylee’s death. Cindy Anthony said on the show that she does not know what happened on June 16, 2008 — the day her daughter’s attorneys claim Caylee drowned in the family swimming pool. “I don’t know, but something happened that day that forever changed [Casey's] behavior,” she said. “I buy the part that Caylee drowned but I don’t buy the circumstances surrounding the drowning.” George Anthony had a different point of view. “I believe something else happened to her. … I believe Casey or someone else she was with possibly gave too much to Caylee. She fell asleep and didn’t wake up,” he said. When McGraw asked, “Too much what?” Anthony replied, “Possibly some kind of drug or something like that.” The drugs would have allowed Casey Anthony to “go out and have a good time. To be with friends,” George Anthony said. His wife was visibly surprised by his response. “This is the first time that I’ve heard this out of his mouth,” Cindy Anthony said. She added: “I don’t buy that for a moment. I’m sorry. We disagree about this. … I’m really kind of shocked to hear that today.” George Anthony also said he suspects his daughter was present when Caylee was buried in the woods near their house and said that she “probably had some help.” Despite the difference in opinion, Cindy Anthony said she was not angry with her husband. “If that’s how he feels and he is finally getting that out in the open, then I think that’s a good thing for him because he’s held so much in,” she said. Casey Anthony Trial (ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW) Cindy Anthony had many potential excuses for her daughter’s bizarre behavior, but did say she believed there is “something seriously wrong with … her thought processes.” But, in regard to the verdict that set her daughter free, Cindy Anthony did not mince words. “I believe that justice for Caylee was when her mother walked,” she said. “I believe that with all my heart because I know the love that those two had and I know that Caylee’s soul would never have rested. … I believe it was an accident and until someone can prove differently that is what I believe.”

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DuPont wins $900m Kevlar trade spy case

South Korea’s Kolon found to have stolen trade secrets of fibre in largest ever settlement in intellectual property trial The industrial conglomerate DuPont has won $920m (£583m) in damages after a US jury ruled that a South Korean firm had stolen trade secrets about the high-strength fibres used in its Kevlar body armour. Kolon Industries mounted a “concerted, orchestrated and persistent effort” to steal confidential information, DuPont’s lawyer Thomas Sager said. The Korean firm said it would appeal and was “confident that a fair and favourable decision will be reached on appeal”. The firm is also countersuing DuPont. The jury in Richmond, Virginia, took two days to find in favour of the US firm, which sued Kolon two years ago. DuPont argued that Kolon had conspired with a group of former employees to steal the secrets of its top-selling fibre. Michael Mitchell, a former employee whom the US authorities said gave Kolon proprietary information about Kevlar, is now in prison. The US firm alerted the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) after learning Mitchell, a former DuPont engineer and Kevlar marketing executive, had confidential information on his home computer. The FBI searched his house and found DuPont documents and confidential information belonging to DuPont, federal prosecutors said last year. Mitchell was sentenced to 18 months in prison last March after pleading guilty to theft of trade secrets and obstruction of justice. Kolon recruited other former DuPont workers, from both the US firm and its Japanese subsidiary, as part of a “concerted effort” to obtain information about Kevlar, according to court filings. Kevlar, created by DuPont in 1965 and originally used in racing car tyres, now accounts for $1.4bn of DuPont’s sales and is used in bullet-proof vests, army helmets, snare drums, suspension bridge ropes and fibre-optic cable. “DuPont’s investment in developing this information, amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars over many years, was thereby essentially lost,” the company said in a court filing in October. “Kolon is now able to compete against DuPont in the aramid [the class of synthetic fibres that includes Kevlar] marketing using DuPont’s own information against it.” The “jury decision is an enormous victory for global intellectual property protection”, Sager said. “It also sends a message to potential thieves of intellectual property that DuPont will pursue all legal remedies to protect our significant investment in research and development.” Kolon’s rival product is called Heracron. The Korean firm accuses DuPont of creating unfair competition by requiring customers to buy 80% to 100% of their Kevlar or equivalent fibres from the company. The case is set to go to trial next March. A Kolon spokesman said the verdict was: “The result of a multi-year campaign by DuPont aimed at forcing Kolon out of the aramid fibre market. Kolon had no need for and did not solicit any trade secrets or proprietary information of DuPont, and had no reason to believe that the consultants it engaged were providing such information. Indeed, many of the ‘secrets’ alleged in this case are public knowledge.” Press Millen, an expert on trade secrets cases and attorney at Womble Carlyle, said it was the largest settlement in a trade secrets case he could recall. “In order to get a settlement this large there has to be a real sense of egregiousness and the jury has to buy into that,” he said. He noted similarities to the last big trade secrets lawsuit in which the Barbie toy firm Mattel was ordered to pay $310m to a rival, MGA, in a dispute over the origins of the Bratz doll range. He said the jury’s familiarity with Kevlar may have contributed to their willingness to reach such a large settlement. “Kevlar is also a well-known product, bought in civilian as well as military contexts. It’s a brand name and a lot less abstract than a formula,” he said. The appliance of science Best known for bullet-proof vests and army helmets, and found in a range of sports equipment – such as bicycles, snowboards, rackets and hiking boots – Kevlar has also been to Mars on the Pathfinder spacecraft and used by drug-traffickers for the hulls of submarines. Discovered in 1965 by Stephanie Kwolek, a DuPont scientist, Kevlar is a light and flexible aramid fibre five times stronger than steel. It is also found in military vehicle armour, oil and gas pipes, aeroplane wings and helicopter blades. Oren Gruenbaum DuPont Manufacturing sector Intellectual property United States South Korea Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Louie Gohmert and President Obama plans to get Americans back to work have the same name—the American Jobs Act of 2011—but that’s where the similarities end. Rep. Gohmert, a Republican from Texas, introduced legislation to the House yesterday that would reduce the corporate tax rate from 35% to…

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IRA Supporter, Rep. Peter King testifies In UK Parliament on Muslim Extremism

Click here to view this media Rep. Peter King, one of the biggest national security blowhards in Congress, who was widely criticized for holding controversial anti-Muslim hearings, knows a thing or two about supporting terrorists. Yes, he was a huge booster for the IRA. Long before he became an outspoken voice in Congress about the threat from terrorism, he was a fervent supporter of a terrorist group, the Irish Republican Army . “We must pledge ourselves to support those brave men and women who this very moment are carrying forth the struggle against British imperialism in the streets of Belfast and Derry,” Mr. King told a pro-I.R.A. rally on Long Island, where he was serving as Nassau County comptroller, in 1982. Three years later he declared, “If civilians are killed in an attack on a military installation, it is certainly regrettable, but I will not morally blame the I.R.A. for it.” So it was a bit surprising that the British asked him to testify in front of their Parliament: British Parliament will hold a hearing on the “ roots of violent radicalisation ” in the Muslim community in that country. The first witness before the committee will be Rep. Peter King (R-NY). King will reportedly be the first member of Congress to ever address a committee of Parliament. While there is nothing wrong with hosting a hearing examining violent radicalization among British Muslims — just as the British government is probing radicalization among the far-right in Britain — it is a serious error in judgment to invite King. The congressman has been both a vocal supporter of anti-British terrorism in the past and conducted one-sided terror hearings in the U.S. more intended to paint all Muslims with a broad brush than delve into the roots of radicalization. Peter King was questioned by Labour MP David Winnick about his past support and love for the IRA and was characterized as a terror apologist . He responded by saying he was just trying to put the IRA in its proper context. Huh? That’s what he said and that’s not what he’s been saying in the U.S. Justin Elliott has more: It was the longtime Labour MP David Winnick , who was first elected to the House of Commons in 1966, who confronted King. “There’s been some surprise in the United States but also in Britain that you have a job looking into and investigating into terrorism,” said Winnick. King, the MP added, “seems to be an apologist for terrorism.” Winnick cited a King quote from 1982: We must pledge ourselves to support those brave men and women who this very moment are carrying forth the struggle against British imperialism in the streets of Belfast and Derry. And another from 1985: If civilians are killed in an attack on a military installation, it is certainly regrettable, but I will not morally blame the I.R.A. for it. “Do you stand by that?” Winnick asked King. “I stand by it in the context of when it was said,” King responded, without hesitation. He later added that those quotes were designed to “put [the conflict] in a perspective” for an American audience that was too often exposed to anti-I.R.A. points of view. He then offered this lengthy defense of the role he played during the conflict in Ireland. Conspicuously missing from it is any denunciation of, or expression of regret for, I.R.A. terrorism. I stand by it in the context of when it was said. … I can cite you Tony Blair, as recently as March of this year, put out a long statement defending my record both in the 1980s and throughout the Irish peace process. I was just out in the hallway and Baroness Kennedy came up to me to thank me for the work I did in the Irish peace process. Paul Murphy came by last evening. What I was saying — and I stand by it — is that the situation in northern Ireland — there were loyalist paramilitaries and obviously Republican paramilitaries — and I believe that, I had gotten to know Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness. And I was very confident that if the Republican movement could get to the table, you would see a peace process. And I believe the United States had a very significant role to play as an honest mediator, as an honest broker. And I worked very closely with Bill Clinton, I was very much involved in the Good Friday agreements , I was very involved in getting Gerry Adams’ visa, but also involved in getting loyalists into the United States. I felt that when it was on the table, that Adams and McGuinness would be able to, if you will, control the republican movement. And it’s worked. Tony Blair said I made invaluable contribution to peace, Bill Clinton has cited me in his memoirs as a person who was very much involved. It was never my position as an Irish-American, whether or not Ireland was united, to me there were injustices in the north. There were good people on both sides. I spent a lot of time meeting with the loyalist community, the unionist community, at the same time, and I came away from that convinced that there was a role for the U.S. to play. What I was saying with those quotes, I was also trying to put in perspective. All of the quotes were anti-I.R.A. in the United States, no mention [ever] made of the UVF or the UDA or the Red Hand Commandos or whatever. I was trying to put it in a perspective to show that there were people — that this is not just the terrorist mayhem it was made out to be — that there were significant leaders on the Republican side. It’s also worth noting here that this year King defended his support for the I.R.A. to the New York Times by claiming that the group had “never attacked the United States. And my loyalty is to the United States.” He did not repeat that explanation to the parliamentary committee. Winnick followed up on the exchange by asking about British use of torture against the I.R.A. being used as a recruiting tool, and whether there is a parallel to post-9/11 U.S. torture policies. King said he did not believe there was. He was also called out about our use of torture and waterboarding under Bush which I will have up at another time.

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New York Times White House reporter Jackie Calmes and Binyamin Appelbaum reported Wednesday on Obama’s latest big-spending “stimulus” proposal, “ Bigger Economic Role for Washington ,” enthused that the chance of some of it coming law “could have a substantial effect on economic growth and unemployment….could add 100,000 to 150,000 jobs a month over the next year, according to estimates from several of the country’s best-known forecasting firms.” Calmes had consistently hyped the administration’s stream of vague, liberal spend-now-pay-later economic “plans,”only to see the proposals die in Congress. This front-page headline from her July 20 story captures her typical cheerleading tone: “ Bipartisan Plan For Budget Deal Buoys President – House Republicans Face Intensifying Pressure to Avoid Isolation .” (It has not aged well.)

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Michaele Salahi Kidnapped

UPDATE REAL HOUSEWIVES TAREQ SALAHI MICHAELE SALAHI KIDNAPPED BY JOURNEY NEAL SCHON Anita_Conner2 says: ‘Real Housewife’ Michaele Salahi Kidnapped a Week Before ‘Comeback’ Party: Another Hoax? http://t.co/ZHkaigvo

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A happy ending in Detroit: 101-year-old Texana Hollis is getting her house back. HUD foreclosed on the home Monday and evicted the bewildered woman , who was unaware that her son had failed to pay property taxes to keep a reverse mortgage afloat. After the story made national headlines, HUD officials…

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Taxi driver found dead at his mother’s house in Preston, Lancashire, along with baby son who later died in hospital A father is thought to have killed his six-month-old son before hanging himself. Paul McBride, 39, was found dead at his mother’s house in Preston, Lancashire, on Wednesday. His son, who has not been named, was found in a “very poorly” condition and taken to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Officers and family had been looking for the taxi driver after concerns were raised about his welfare. His sister found his body after arriving at the house in the suburb of Ribbleton, shortly after 6pm. Their mother, Denise Betts, is thought to be on holiday in France. Lancashire Police have launched a murder investigation but are not looking for anybody else in connection with the incident. A post-mortem examination will take place on Thursday to establish how the child died. A police spokeswoman said detectives from the force’s Major Investigation Team were leading the inquiry. “Officers were called to an incident at an address in the Ribbleton area of Preston at around 6.15pm,” she said. “On arrival, a man was found dead and a six-month-old boy was in a very poorly condition. He was taken to the Royal Preston Hospital where he sadly died.” Detective Superintendent Neil Esseen, who is leading the investigation, said it was an “incredibly tragic” case. “It is being treated as a murder inquiry, although we are not looking for anybody else in connection with this incident, he said. “We are still in the very early stages of this investigation, but we are conducting a number of inquiries in order to establish the exact circumstances surrounding the deaths.” A neighbour said: “It’s shocking, a terrible thing. I knew Paul. He was a happy, jolly type. He was always jokey and loved football. “He had moved away, so we didn’t see much of him any more. His mother is on holiday so I don’t even know why he was at the house.” Crime guardian.co.uk

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Paul Ryan: America’s Conversation Starter

Congressman Paul Ryan, Chair of the House Budget Committee, has become the GOP’s go-to guy for everything economical, and there are two reasons why: first, he is courageous enough to jump into the water and get the pool party started. As with his Path to Prosperity, his budget, and his plan for Medicare, Mr. Ryan Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Big Government Discovery Date : 14/09/2011 15:02 Number of articles : 3

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The House’s crop of enraged Tea Party freshmen hasn’t exactly been the independent firebrands they were advertised as, at least as far as their actual voting record is concerned. In more than 100 key House votes, Republican freshmen bucked their party at a rate of about 12.5%, almost identical…

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