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Family of 7 Killed in Alabama Plane Crash

A family of seven was killed when their small plane crashed in western Alabama as they were returning from a family reunion. The couple and their five children were flying back to Florida from St. Louis when the crash happened Saturday night. (July 11)

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With the final edition of News Of The World bidding farewell to UK readers, juicy secrets about the company were promised on twitter by an “ex-NOTW writer(s)”. Unfortunately, forces have appeared to silence the ex-journo : The @ExNOTWjourno account, which had been threatening to release damning new information about News International, had all but three tweets deleted just after 10am and all of its 20,000 followers were dropped. Another account, @NOTWjourno, fell silent earlier this morning and more than 50 tweets were deleted, including a message posted late last night which read: “FOLLOW FOR THE INSIDE STORY! -ALL COMES OUT AT 00:00 #NOTW.” The earliest tweets on that Twitter feed now talk about the account being abandoned. The account holder is now systematically blocking new followers. Unless an account is hacked, the only person that can delete Tweets or block followers is the person who holds that Twitter account. Just before the @ExNOTWjourno account went quiet the account holder told Telegraph.co.uk “they are attacking me from all sides”. Hmmm….curious, that. But never fear, Rupert Murdoch has hopped the pond to do damage control. Politicians have been notoriously afraid of the power of the poison pen of Murdoch’s empire, but that may be changing : In the House of Commons, a parade of lawmakers took turns at the microphone to thunder their disapproval of Murdoch, and the way they feel he has debased public life here through media properties that purvey sex scandals and celebrity tittle-tattle, and stoke fear of violent crime. But there were moments of self-criticism as well, from members of Parliament who acknowledged having been too craven to speak out against Murdoch and against abuses at his newspapers. Even David Cameron, the prime minister, now ruefully admits to being hesitant to take Murdoch on. Bryant, the Labor MP, said in a telephone interview that Murdoch had successfully cowed lawmakers to the benefit of his business empire. “He’s used his newspapers to make people frightened of attacking his media interests, and he has favored some people in all sorts of different ways, in particular political parties, and that has kept his financial interests very secure,” Bryant said. “I’m not exempting anybody. I’m not exempting myself, to be honest,” he said. “None of us has shot the legs off from under him.” Murdoch’s latest commercial gambit has been to take control of BSkyB, Britain’s biggest satellite broadcaster, a bid that is now sure to be delayed because of the phone-hacking scandal. The debacle has frightened investors of both BSkyB and News Corp., which lost billions of dollars on the stock market by the end of last week. (In the U.S., News Corp. owns Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post, among other properties.) But as he faces the music in the UK, the question yet to be asked is how do we know these same egregious and irresponsible practices were not being done here in the US? Keep in mind that the Executive Editor of NOTW at the time all this started was Les Hinton. Where is Les Hinton now? He was promoted out of that position and now is the CEO of the Dow Jones with editorial influence on the Wall Street Journal . Under Hinton’s leadership, the initial NOTW investigation was basically whitewashed and swept under the rug, with some of his statements to the investigating subcommittee looking very “misleading”. That alone merits some scrutiny here in the US . After his assurances to the parliamentary committee in 2007, Hinton answered further questions in September 2009. Speaking over a video link from New York, the Murdoch lieutenant again sought to convince the members of parliament that all was now right at the British tabloid newspaper. “There was never any evidence delivered to me that suggested that the conduct of (the single reporter) Clive Goodman spread beyond him … We went, I promise you, to extraordinary lengths within the News of the World,” he said. Though there were times during the hearing when Hinton’s certainty appeared to be cracking — he used the phrases “I do not recall” or “I do not know” or variations on them at least 55 times — his faith in the newspaper’s internal checks seemed resolute. Asked whether he should have pushed his editors on “the extent of the inquiry and more details about what had actually been looked into,” he replied that he “was happy when I gave evidence to you all two and a half years ago that the answers I gave were sincere and that the efforts made to discover any other wrongdoing had been conscientious and thorough, and I think people worked very hard in very difficult circumstances to both investigate what might have happened and to make sure that it did not happen again.” Those answers could come back to haunt him. And well they should. We’ve seen many irregularities in the way News Corp. does business here in the US, from Roger Ailes using News Corps bodyguards to follow employees of small town publications he personally owned to the stockholder lawsuit over the purchase of Rupert’s daughter Elisabeth’s production company and her elevation to the board . Whose to say that in their over-arching editorial focus on promoting Republican policies and politicians that they haven’t crossed from lack of journalistic integrity straight into criminality ? This is anything but an isolated incident. News of the World spent years invading peoples’ privacy: it was how they did business. The younger Murdoch personally approved an enormous settlement related to phone hacking, and alleged abuses are still being uncovered. The most recent of those include the families of the victims of the terrorist bombings of the London Underground, who have come forward to say their phone messages were hacked too. Despite charges that Brooks knew about the hacking, Murdoch has stated unequivocally that she will remain in leadership. Brooks says it is “inconceivable” that she knew of Milly Dowler’s phone hacking, but it strains credibility that executives could be blind to the fact that the paper was invading people’s privacy for years. At best, it’s an inexcusable lack of oversight; at worst, it’s a conspiracy to spy on private citizens to sell papers. Either way, it requires action and accountability from the top, and Murdoch’s continued support of his long-time lieutenant is one more indication that he puts his personal and political agenda above good business and the common good. Which brings us back to the United States, where Murdoch’s News Corp. owns Fox News , the New York Post and the Wall Street Journal . When asked point-blank this spring whether his company was hacking people’s phone messages here, Murdoch flatly refused to answer. US shareholders are suing News Corp. for nepotism over the purchase of Murdoch’s daughter’s company at a highly inflated price and her subsequent promotion to the News Corp. board. One of the largest News Corp. holdings, Fox News, routinely peddles misinformation about climate change, uses racially charged rhetoric and openly promotes Republican positions and candidates, all while pretending to present “fair and balanced” news. Fox News’s Washington managing editor Bill Sammon was even found pushing his staff to tie President Obama to socialism on air, even as he admitted the claim was “rather far-fetched.” And advertisers wary of sponsoring dubious content have been fleeing Fox News here just as they are fleeing News of the World in Britain due to indecent, if not illegal, activity. UPDATE: It didn’t take long for it to carry over to this side of the Atlantic : Mr Murdoch arrived in London yesterday, wearing a Panama hat and clutching a final copy of the News of the World, in a bid to save his crumbling organisation after the phone-hacking scandal saw the 168-year-old paper axed. But he flew straight into another storm as it was claimed 9/11 victims may have had their mobiles tapped by News of the World reporters. And there was more bad news when it was revealed nine reporters ­allegedly at the centre of the phone scandal and claims of police corruption could face jail, along with three officers. After he spent time at News International’s Wapping HQ in East London, 80-year-old Mr Murdoch held crisis talks with Mrs Brooks, 43 – who denies any knowledge of the Milly phone tapping – at his home in Mayfair. The pair chatted behind closed doors as a former New York cop made the 9/11 hacking claim. He alleged he was contacted by News of the World journalists who said they would pay him to retrieve the private phone records of the dead. Now working as a private ­investigator, the ex-officer claimed reporters wanted the victim’s phone numbers and details of the calls they had made and received in the days leading up to the atrocity. A source said: ‘This investigator is used by a lot of journalists in America and he recently told me that he was asked to hack into the 9/11 victims’ private phone data. He said that the journalists asked him to access records showing the calls that had been made to and from the mobile phones belonging to the victims and their ­relatives.

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‘The Adventures of Tintin’ International Trailer

Here’s the first full-length trailer for The Adventures of Tintin, which Steven Spielberg directed as a mo-cap animated adaptation of one of Herge’s classic Tintin tomes. This is our first good look at the action and adventure promised by the title and poster, and our best look yet at the animation, produced by Peter Jackson and enabled by WETA. Jamie Bell plays Tintin, who finds a replica of the ship… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 11/07/2011 15:02 Number of articles : 3

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Syria, Egypt and Middle East unrest – live updates

• Assad supporters storm French and US embassies in Syria • Egypt’s interim government fails to quell public anger • US envoy tells Yemen’s President Saleh to stand down 3.24pm: Pro-regime supporters smashed windows at the US Embassy, scrawled graffiti on the walls and raised a Syrian flag , witnesses told AP reports. French Embassy security guards fired in the air to hold back supporters of Assad’s regime who were also protesting the French ambassador’s visit to Hama. One witness said three protesters were injured when guards beat them with clubs. The witness asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the situation. There was no immediate word on casualties at the American Embassy demonstration. Hiam al-Hassan, a witness, said about 300 people had gathered outside the French Embassy while hundreds others were at the American diplomatic compound. “Syrians demonstrated peacefully in front of the French embassy but they were faced with bullets,” said al-Hassan. The US state department is to have stern words with Syrian diplomats, according to Reuters: “We are calling in the Syrian charge (d’affaires) to complain,” said a US official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “We feel they failed (in their responsibility to protect U.S. diplomats). We are going to condemn their slow response.” 3.05pm: The break-ins at the US and French embassies in the Syrian capital Damascus now appear to be over. Reuters reports: Unidentified people tried to break into France’s embassy in Syria on Monday but failed, the French Foreign Ministry said. The incident “is now finished,” spokesman Bernard Valero said in response to a query. He could not immediately give more details. This photograph of the incident at the US embassy (left) appears on a pro-Assad Facebook group. 2.51pm: More on the embassy raids from Reuters: French embassy guards in Damascus fired live ammunition to disperse loyalists to President Bashar al-Assad who tried to break into the compound on Monday and are still surrounding it, diplomats in the Syrian capital said. A similar crowd broke into the U.S. embassy but later left, they added. A US embassy official said the response of the Syrian authorities was “slow and insufficient”. 2.33pm: There is a photograph of pro-regime supporters scaling the US embassy fence in Damascus on the the Arabic website, Day Press News (via @LeShaque ). And over at the French embassy there’s been clashes between the security guards and pro-regime supporters, Reuters reports. President Assad loyalists try to break into French embassy compound in Damascus, confrontation erupts with embassy guards – Diplomats. The French ambassador to Syria accompanied Ford on his “solidarity” trip to Hama. The BBC claims security guards fired into the air at the French embassy . 2.19pm: Reuters news flash: President Bashar al-Assad loyalists break into U.S. embassy compound in Damascus-Diplomats in Syrian capital Yesterday, the US ambassador Robert Ford accused the Syrian authorities of failing to prevent a demonstration outside the embassy at the weekend. How ironic that the Syrian Government lets an anti-U.S. demonstration proceed freely while their security thugs beat down olive branch-carrying peaceful protesters elsewhere. Ford’s visit to Hama appears to be backfiring. On Friday an official said he left the demonstration “so as not to be a distraction during the weekly demonstrations” . But his motorcade was mobbed by protesters before he had a chance to leave. 1.46pm: Egypt’s interim government is struggling to contain anger at the slow pace of change, as protests continue in Cairo, Suez, and Alexandria and activists call for a million-person march tomorrow, writes Egyptian journalist Sara Elkamel. Headlines in the Egyptian press portray the public’s dissatisfaction with prime minister Essam Sharaf’s recent concessions. Sharaf has promised a cabinet re-shuffle in response to massive protests last Friday. But activists have rejected the offer as a feeble gesture that does not match their demands. Thousands of protesters continue to hold sit-ins, determined to see immediate reforms. According to the daily newspaper al-Ahram, Tahrir sqaure, more protests are expected tomorrow. The demands of groups leading the protests include the public trail of ousted president Mubarak and his family, along with the remnants of his party, and the police involved in the killing of protesters during the uprising. They also want the repeal of anti-strike and anti-demonstration laws, as well as a new state budget that does more to help the poor. Thousands of protesters have remained in Tahrir Square for a fourth consecutive day. And despite army efforts to disperse protests in Suez, demonstrators gathered near the Suez canal, calling for freedom and dignity and the public trail of Mubarak. Meanwhile, in Alexandria a rally blocked the Corniche Road . A tweet from activist R.Saro sums up the mood: “#Egypt is not back to Square one– Its back to #tahrir” . Elkamel is working for the Guardian this week. 1.26pm: Syrian activists claim that while the “dialogue” meeting has been taking place in Damascus, the security forces killed two people in a raid on the country’s third city of Homs. Activists have circulated video of the funeral of Afnan Khalid, who it said was killed in the city on Sunday. At least two people were killed and 20 wounded in the attacks in Homs , activists told AP. In Homs, an activist in the city told The Associated Press clashes occurred after security forces killed on Sunday the son of an anti-regime tribal leader. The unrest lasted until 5 am 9 (local time). Street lights were turned off then troops started entering neighborhoods, shooting with heavy machine guns atop Russian-made armoured personnel carriers, said the activist, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of government reprisals. Activists have also uploaded video of a Red Crescent ambulance riddled with bullet holes . They claim the vehicle was shot at in Homs. The Red Crescent has yet to respond to the footage. Sara Elkamel, provides this translation of the commentary on the video. “These are Bashar al-Assad’s reforms…Even the Red Cross ambulances could not escape them…do you see the bullets on the ambulances? Here are Bashar al-Assad’s reforms…” _ 12.06pm: US envoy John Brennan has now travelled to Yemen to continue to push for a transfer of power, AP reports. Yesterday Brennan was in the Saudi capital Riyadh for talks with President Saleh who continues to refuse to stand down, despite months of protests against his regime. Today Brennan is meeting Yemen’s caretaker president Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi in Sana’a to try to revive a Gulf Co-operation Council broker deal that involves Saleh’s resignation. 12.00pm: Diplomatic relations between France and Syria are tense after a troubled weekend, writes Angelique Chrisafis in Paris. The French foreign office summoned Syria’s ambassador to France on Sunday night to express its outrage over violent protests outside the French embassy in Damascus over the weekend. Demonstrators at the embassy and the French consulate in Aleppo had burned French flags, lobbed stones into the compound and destroyed cars in what France called “unspeakable acts” while the Syrian authorities stood by. The violence came after the French ambassador to Damascus, Eric Chevallier, and his US counterpart, Robert Ford, visited the northern city of Hama in a show of solidarity for protesters on Friday. The Syrian government objected to the ambassadors’ visits, calling them “blatant” interference in Syrian internal affairs. 11.13am: Yemen state TV has carried footage of President Saleh meeting US envoy John Brennan in Saudi Arabia. In the clip Saleh’s hands are covered in surgical gloves , and he still appeared to be ailing from the attack on his compound last month. _ The White House said Brennan urged Saleh to sign a Gulf Co-operation Council deal that would see him stand down in return for immunity from prosecution. Yemeni activist NoonArabia makes the obvious sick joke : With these hands #Saleh is unlikely to sign a #GCC initiative plan. Sorry #US #KSA he’ll just have to leave #Yemen asap! twitpic.com/5ob4pz The Yemen state news agency, Saba, indicated that Saleh again refused to agree to the GCC deal. It said Saleh pointed out that the “peaceful transfer of power in Yemen must be within the framework of democracy and the constitution” . 10.43am: UAE journalist and blogger Sultan al-Qassemi is hopeful of change from the new generation of Saudi leaders, but he says change needs to be gradual. When we mentioned on the blog on Friday that Qassemi would be coming to the Guardian offices, below the line littleriver asked us to challenge him on his assertion that Saudi Arabia is on the “cusp of major change “. I put that and some of littleriver’s other points to Qassemi in an Audioboo interview on Friday . He said: “Before 2020 you will see a shift to the third generation of Saudi leadership. Many of them have studied abroad … the current generation has not gone to university [or] interacted with the outside world.” He said Saudis educated aboard, won’t take to the streets, but will slowly take over the running of the country. “They will slowly recruit people who are like minded and that’s how I see change happening,” he said. Qassemi added that change in Saudi Arabia needed to be slow and manageable. He is more forthright about continuing protests in Egypt, which he describes as “a good sign”. “The [Egyptian] army should be kept on track. The army should not forget that it is the people who will rule Egypt and not them.” _ 10.13am: The Syrian state news agency, Sana, has acknowledged criticism of the regime at the “dialogue” meeting with some opposition figures. In an interesting write-up of the opening day of the talks, it rattles through a number of serious challenges to the government made at the talks. But it does not go into details and has few direct quotes. Here is a flavour of the tone of the report: Participants called for ending the ‘police state’ and working for a democratic civil state which enjoys party and political multilateralism and media freedoms … They urged for an immediate halt to violence and random arrests, lifting the ‘blockade’ on cities and setting up civil committees to organize visits to these cities and review the demands of their residents. 9.31am: Welcome to Middle East Live. There’s lots to catch up on after another busy weekend in the region. Syria remains the key place to watch as opposition activists boycott a second day of “dialogue” with the ruling Ba’ath party amid a continuing crackdown. Meanwhile, in Egypt more protests are planned as the interim government fails to quell growing frustration at the pace of change and lack of accountability for members of the old regime and its security forces. And on a trip to Saudi Arabia, the US envoy John Brennan has told Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh to stand down. Here’s a run down in more detail. Syria • Activist and opposition leaders in Syria are boycotting a second day of a “national dialogue” conference on reform with the ruling Ba’ath party. • The Local Co-ordination Committees of Syria, which says it has a list of the names of 1,963 people killed in the uprising so far, repeated its opposition to the talks, claiming the exercise was “nothing but a cover-up for violence committed against Syrian citizens”. • Opposition figures who have attended the talks have been allowed to make sweeping criticisms of the regime on state TV , the LA Times reports. It quotes comments made by Tayyeb Tizini, a professor of philosophy at Damascus University, who told a news conference: We should dismantle the security state that dominates the whole society. Now we are suffering the consequences of the police state. The police state will destroy every aspect of society as it keeps tabs on every Syrian citizen. And conference participant and parliament member Mohammed Habash said: A part of what is going on is a result of foreign intervention, but 80% of it is a result of internal congestion that comes as a result of oppression and the practices of the security apparatus. • A campaign has been set up to free the Syrian blogger and activist Anas Maarawi, who was arrested earlier this month in Damascus . • Human Rights Watch has gathered more evidence that the army has ordered to shoot protesters and shoot soldiers who refuse to do so , from those who defected from the military. One soldier, who defected after being deployed to Deraa, said: We received orders to kill protesters. Some military refused the orders and were shot with a handgun. Two were killed in front of me. Defectors also said they were banned from watching television in private to avoid any of them watching TV channels that aired anti-government information. • There are conflicting reports about whether an activist in central Damascus was killed after being shot in Friday’s protests. The Guardian quotes activists saying that 25-year-old Mohamed Dakdak died after being shot in the head , making him the first casualty of the uprising in the centre of the capital. But Syrian dissident Ammar Abdulhamid reported that an Ahmad Dakdak is still alive but in critical condition after twice undergoing surgery . • The US ambassador to Syria Robert Ford has condemned a pro-regime protests outside the US embassy after his visit to Friday protests in Hama provoked anger from the regime . Writing on the Damascus’s embassy Facebook page , Ford said: On July 9 a “mnhebak” group threw rocks at our embassy, causing some damage. They resorted to violence, unlike the people in Hama, who have stayed peaceful. Go look at the Ba’ath or police headquarters in Hama – no damage that I saw … And how ironic that the Syrian government lets an anti-US demonstration proceed freely while their security thugs beat down olive branch-carrying peaceful protesters elsewhere. The people in Hama have been demonstrating peacefully for weeks … And I saw no signs of armed gangs anywhere – not at any of the civilian street barricades we passed. Egypt •  Activists in Egypt have vowed to continued protests about the slow pace of change and lack of accountability for police violence. Egypt’s interim leader, Essam Sharaf, promised to to meet demands of the protesters who came out in force on Friday. But his speech failed to convince, as demonstrations broke out in Cairo yesterday and more demonstrations are planned for tomorrow. • The Egyptian army clashed with protesters in Suez on Sunday, the Washington Post reports. • The latest Arabist podcast discusses the increasingly fractured Egyptian opposition and shouting matches between Islamist and secularists in Tahrir Square on Friday. Yemen US counter terrorism chief John Brennan has urged Yemen’s President Saleh to step down and not return to Sana’a , the New York Times reports. In a written statement on Sunday, the White House said Brennan “called on President Saleh to fulfil expeditiously his pledge to sign” an agreement brokered by the Gulf Co-operation Council, which would lead to a transition ending his 33 years in office and grant the president immunity. Libya France has urged Libyan rebels to enter negotiations with Gaddafi’s regime , in a sign of Nato’s growing impatience with the conflict. Reuters quoted the French defence minister, Gerard Longuet, as saying: We have asked them to speak to each other. The position of the TNC (rebel Transitional National Council) is very far from other positions. Now, there will be a need to sit around a table. Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Syria Bashar Al-Assad Egypt Yemen Libya Nato Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk

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Ncaa Football 12

NCAA Football 12 Launch Day Update Detailed (VIDEO) NCAA Football 12 Impressions – HIGHLIGHT July 10, 2011 NCAA Football 12 Ultimate Conference July 10, 2011 (VIDEO) hottrendtoday says: curb your enthusiasm season 8, monterey bay aquarium, alcatraz, ncaa football 12 , shirley templ http://howcompare.com/node/644

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VIDEO- Tim Pawlenty: Michele Bachmann’s “record of accomplishment in Congress is non-existent.”

You know what else is non-existent? Michele Bachmann’s value system, judgment, and sense of decency. I reluctantly owe Timmy a nod for saving me the trouble of slamming her not-record. H/t to Think Progress for providing the video: Pawlenty’s critique … Continue reading → Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Political Carnival Discovery Date : 10/07/2011 21:11 Number of articles : 2

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First Person: Minn. Shutdown Idles Workers

Two state employees in Minnesota talk about how a budget showdown has left them without work after the state shut down. (July 11)

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First Person: Minn. Shutdown Idles Workers

Two state employees in Minnesota talk about how a budget showdown has left them without work after the state shut down. (July 11)

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ShowBiz Minute: Beckham, Royals, Box Office

David and Victoria Beckham welcome a baby girl; Prince William and Kate depart US after charming Hollywood; ‘Transformers’ stay in shape with $47M weekend. (July 11)

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Jaycee Dugard Describes 18 Years Of Captivity In First Interview

SAN FRANCISCO — Jaycee Dugard, the California woman kidnapped in 1991 and held captive for nearly two decades, talked through tears about both the pain and determination she felt as she gave birth to her captor’s child in his backyard while she was still just a girl herself. Dugard was clear and composed throughout the interview with ABC News’ Diane Sawyer on her show “Primetime” that aired Sunday night, but grew emotional when she talked about seeing the first of two girls fathered by Phillip Garrido. When Sawyer asked how old she was at the time of the birth in the San Francisco Bay Area city of Antioch she said “14″ with a small, incredulous laugh and a shake of her head. “It was very painful,” said Dugard, now 31, as tears welled in her eyes. “She was beautiful. I felt like I wasn’t alone anymore.” She said she didn’t know how she could protect the child, but said “I knew I could never let anything happen to her.” Dugard appeared younger than her 31 years as she talked to Sawyer on a couch and on a porch at her California home. The blond hair she had in now-familiar photographs from her childhood is now reddish-brown, and she wore a red sweater and a necklace with a pinecone charm on it, representing the last thing she touched before her 18-year captivity. The interview came on the eve of Dugard’s memoir about her time in captivity, “A Stolen Life,” which will be released this week. Dugard told Sawyer there was “a switch” she had to shut off to emotionally survive her rape and imprisonment. She described walking to the school bus stop on the day of a fifth-grade field trip and being zapped with a stun gun on a South Lake Tahoe street at age 11. She said she heard Garrido laughing and telling his wife Nancy Garrido “I can’t believe we got away with it,” calling the moment “the most horrible moment in your life, times 10.” “I lost control of my bladder,” Dugard told Sawyer in one of many moments in the interview where she appeared astounded she was talking about herself. “I wasn’t even embarrassed. There was no time to be embarrassed.” Dugard said she tried to hold in her tears because of her cuffed hands. “I tried not to cry because I couldn’t wipe them away,” she said, “and then they get itchy.” She recalled the soundproof door of the backyard studio that Garrido shut and locked each time he left her. “I can still hear it, consciously, when I’m awake,” Dugard said. “Some sounds and smells just don’t leave you.” Phillip Garrido, 60. a serial sex offender, was given the maximum possible sentence of 431 years to life in prison last month after pleading guilty to kidnapping and 13 sexual assault charges, including rape and committing lewd acts captured on video. His plea was part of a deal with prosecutors that saw Nancy Garrido, 55, sentenced to 36 years to life after pleading guilty to kidnapping and rape.

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