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More questions are arising about the US raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound as CIA director Leon Panetta indicated that there was a video feed blackout during the critical confrontation with the al-Qaeda leader, reports the Telegraph . Live-feed cameras mounted on the helmets of the US fighters apparently switched off…

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Vincent Tabak

ITN News – Man charged with Jo Yeates murder Vincent Tabak charged with the murder of Joanna Yeates Joanna Yeates Murder Detectives Charge 32-Year-Old Vincent Tabak With Her Murder Dutch engineer accused of murdering architect Joanna Yeates A Dutch engineer accused of murdering landscape architect Joanna Yeates is due to appear at the Old Bailey. Vincent Tabak , Miss Yeates’s next-door. Yeates murder accused in court « Shropshire Star Vincent Tabak , Miss Yeates’s next-door neighbour, will appear via videolink before Mr Justice Field. Miss Yeates, 25, who lived in Clifton, Bristol, disappeared on December 17 after going for Christmas drinks with colleagues. … stevenmorris20 says: Joanna Yeates case: covering hearing of Vincent Tabak at Old Bailey – Dutch man accused of her murder.

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Egypt: Ready for Tourists Again?

US tour operators and Egyptian officials are hoping to convince hesitant international travelers that Egypt is now safe and stable enough to resume large-scale tourism, the AP’s Matt Ford reports. (May 5)

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Ashley Greene Goes Back to the ’80s

Ashley Greene talks about embracing the fashion, music and socializing of the ’80s for her new nostalgia film, ‘Skateland.’ (May 5)

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Sheryl Crow

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Sheryl Crow

OMG! James Durbin’s ‘Closer to the Edge’ brings him closer to the finale!! M4H01601.MP4 American Idol 2011 Top 5 performance Commentary – Now and Then Sheryl Crow | maroc morocco news Grammy awardwinning singer Sheryl Crow talks to Ladies Home Journal about redefining what matters most in her life from her kids Wyatt 4 and Levi 1 … Sheryl Crow Is Spokesperson for CMT One Country [ALCO NEWS & GADGETS] CMT hаѕ enlisted thе hеlр οf Sheryl Crow tο serve аѕ spokesperson fοr CMT’s pro-social initiative, іn conjunction wіth thе 2011 CMT Music Awards. Aѕ раrt οf hеr role, Crow іѕ featured іn a Ladies’ Home Journal take іn tаlе highlighting … Sheryl Crow Next Album 'Old-Fashioned' Sheryl Crow . can be regarded as a mainstream rocker, but his heart and another album belongs to the country. Sheryl Crow grew up in the South of the Missouri River, close to the border of Tennessee and has always loved the music of the … 'Idol' wrap: Now, then and Sheryl Crow [ALCO NEWS & GADGETS] ‘Idol’ wrap: Now, thеn аnd Sheryl Crow . According tο Randy Jackson, three οf thе remaining five American Idol singers — James Durbin, Scotty McCreery аnd Lauren Alaina — аrе “іn іt tο win іt. ” Wednesday, thе Idols picked songs both nеw … Sheryl Crow's new nest: Nashville [ALCO NEWS & GADGETS] MINNEAPOLIS Sheryl Crow now lives іn Nashville. Shе hаѕ lονеd two hit broadcast duets wіth Kid Rock (wіth whοm ѕhе’ll tour thіѕ summer). Shе hаѕ performed οn thе Broadcast Music Association Awards, οn a tribute album tο broadcast legend … SandraFrazier3 says: Tom's of Maine® Launches New Natural Simply White® Toothpaste with Sheryl Crow … http://bit.ly/mJlxG9

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GMC looks at Patel inquest evidence

General Medical Council looks into findings which were criticised by other pathologists at Ian Tomlinson inquest The General Medical Council is investigating the suspended pathologist Dr Freddy Patel for the way he conducted a postmortem examination on Ian Tomlinson. Patel carried out the first autopsy on the body, suggesting that the newspaper seller had died of a heart attack during the G20 demonstrations in London on 1 April 2009. His findings were criticised by three other pathologists who subsequently conducted examinations of Tomlinson and concluded that the 47-year-old father of nine had died from internal bleeding. An inquest jury returned a verdict of unlawful killing on Tuesday after seeing a video showing a police officer pushing Tomlinson who fell forward on to the pavement in the City of London. It is understood that the GMC has begun its inquiries into Patel’s performance during his controversial autopsy. The disciplinary panel has also been approached by other families who are pressing for inquiries into Patel’s role as a pathologist in other deaths. The families of those affected have begun banding together to raise concerns about the way postmortems have been conducted. Among those who have been in correspondence with the GMC are the relatives of Richard Chang, who died in 2004 after a fall inside the atrium of a London finance office. Patel conducted the postmortem examination. The courtroom-style hearings at the GMC’s high-rise offices on London’s Euston Road must, by now, be a painfully familiar ritual to Patel: the 63-year-old pathologist has been disciplined three times in the past decade and is serving his second term of suspension from the profession. At the end of the last examination, counsel for the GMC urged that he be struck off the medical register. Patel has had a chequered career. In 2002, he was found to have breached patient confidentiality by telling journalists that Roger Sylvester, a 30-year-old who died after being restrained by police, had been taking drugs. The GMC issued him with a reprimand. Last summer, Patel appeared before a fitness-to-practice panel to face charges that four of his postmortems were “not of a standard expected of a Home Office-registered forensic pathologist” and that one case “was liable to bring the profession into disrepute”. One of his postmortems was on a five-year-old girl who had been admitted to hospital after her parents claimed she had suffered a serious fall. Patel failed to spot signs of abuse and was suspended from practice for three months. The publicity generated by the Tomlinson case has stirred up several allegations against Patel. Between December last year and March this year, Patel was called by the GMC to answer fresh allegations of incompetence and dishonesty. He was found to have falsified his CV and to have conducted a botched autopsy on the body of 31-year-old sex worker Sally White, who was the first victim of the “Camden Ripper” Anthony Hardy. Patel suggested she had died from a heart attack during consensual sex despite evidence of blood-stained clothing and bedding. His findings discouraged police from launching a murder investigation. Hardy went on to murder two more women. In March, the GMC suspended Patel for a further four months. On Patel’s status, a spokeswoman said: “The GMC argued very strongly for erasure [striking off the register] but we have independent panels and they went with suspension. It’s frustrating for the GMC.” The GMC says it cannot confirm whether it is investigating the Chang family’s complaint. Chang, 48, was found dead on 13 July 2004 on the ground floor of Abbey National’s office. He was a risk analyst and had been working on corporate governance. He had fallen from a fifth-floor internal balcony shortly after being interviewed by a private investigation company about accusations of sending malicious, anonymous documents to the Financial Services Authority. The inquest returned a verdict of suicide. His family has never accepted the official version of events and has challenged the thoroughness of the postmortem conducted by Patel, questioning whether he examined certain marks on the body. Lawyers for Patel were passed the complaints from the Chang family but did not respond. Dr Freddy Patel Ian Tomlinson Owen Bowcott Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk

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Last WWI Combat Veteran Dies at 110

The last known World War I combat veteran has died in Australia aged 110. Claude Stanley Choules lived life defying his age, with mixed views of his long military service. (May 5)

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Osama Bin Laden Was Unarmed During Navy SEAL Raid, Says White House

WASHINGTON — Osama bin Laden was unarmed when Navy SEALs burst into his room and shot him to death, the White House said Tuesday, a change in the official account that raised questions about whether the U.S. ever planned to capture the terrorist leader alive. The Obama administration was still debating whether to release gruesome images of bin Laden’s corpse, balancing efforts to demonstrate to the world that he was dead against the risk that the images could provoke further anti-U.S. sentiment. But CIA Director Leon Panetta said a photograph would be released. “I don’t think there was any question that ultimately a photograph would be presented to the public,” Panetta said in an interview with “NBC Nightly News.” Asked again later by The Associated Press, he said, “I think it will.” Asked about the final confrontation with bin Laden, Panetta said: “I don’t think he had a lot of time to say anything.” The CIA chief told PBS NewsHour, “It was a firefight going up that compound. … I think it – this was all split-second action on the part of the SEALs.” Panetta said that bin Laden made “some threatening moves that were made that clearly represented a clear threat to our guys. And that’s the reason they fired.” The SEALs were back in the U.S. at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington for debriefing on the raid, lawmakers said after meeting with Panetta. The question of how to present bin Laden’s death to the world is a difficult balancing act for the White House. President Barack Obama told Americans that justice had been done, but the White House also declared that bin Laden’s body was treated respectfully and sent to rest in a somber ceremony at sea. Panetta underscored on Tuesday that Obama had given permission to kill the terror leader: “The authority here was to kill bin Laden,” he said. “And obviously, under the rules of engagement, if he had in fact thrown up his hands, surrendered and didn’t appear to be representing any kind of threat, then they were to capture him. But they had full authority to kill him.” For the long-term legacy of the most successful counterterrorism operation in U.S. history, the fact that bin Laden was unarmed is unlikely to matter much to the Americans he declared war against. President George W. Bush famously said he wanted bin Laden “dead or alive,” and the CIA’s top counterterrorism official once promised to bring bin Laden’s head back on a stake. Yet just 24 hours before the White House acknowledged that bin Laden had been unarmed, Obama’s chief counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, said: “If we had the opportunity to take bin Laden alive, if he didn’t present any threat, the individuals involved were able and prepared to do that.” Will it matter around the world? Some may try to make much of it in Pakistan and elsewhere. “This country has gone through a lot of trauma in terms of violence, and whether or not he was armed is not going to make a difference to people who were happy to see the back of him,” said Mosharraf Zaidi, a political analyst and columnist in Pakistan. “The majority have a mistrust of America and this will reinforce their mistrust of America.” Others may not even believe it. “I think he was definitely armed and he was firing on U.S. commandos,” said Hamid Mir, an anchor for Geo Television. “Osama told me many times that he will not surrender; he claimed that he will fight and I think he was fighting.” In Washington, the issue will become part of the political debate over Obama’s terror policies. His national security team had offered differing accounts of what would happen if the U.S. ever had a chance to kill or capture bin Laden. And Republicans have criticized the president for shutting down the CIA’s controversial network of overseas prisons and trying to close Guantanamo Bay, moves they say have left the U.S. with few options for interrogating terrorists. On Monday, the White House said bin Laden was involved in a firefight, which is why the SEALs killed rather than captured him. On Tuesday, however, White House press secretary Jay Carney said bin Laden did not fire on the SEALs. He said bin Laden resisted but offered no specifics. Bin Laden’s wife rushed the SEALs when they stormed the room, Carney said, and was shot in the calf “Bin Laden was then shot and killed,” Carney said. “He was not armed.” That was one of many official details that have changed in the two days since bin Laden was killed. A White House transcript misidentified which of bin Laden’s sons was killed – it was Khalid, not Hamza. Officials incorrectly said bin Laden’s wife died in gunfire while serving as his human shield. That was actually bin Laden’s aide’s wife, and she was just caught in cross fire, the White House said Tuesday. Carney attributed those discrepancies to the fog of war, saying the information was coming in bit by bit and was still being reviewed. “We provided a great deal of information with great haste in order to inform you, and through you the American public, about the operation and how it transpired and the events that took place there in Pakistan,” Carney told reporters Tuesday. “And obviously some of the information came in piece by piece and is being reviewed and updated and elaborated on.” Five people were killed in the raid, officials said: Bin Laden; his son; his most trusted courier, Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti, and al-Kuwaiti’s wife and brother. After killing the world’s most wanted terrorist, the SEAL team in just minutes quickly swept bin Laden’s compound for useful intelligence, making off with a cache of computer equipment and documents. The CIA was hurriedly setting up a task force to review the material from the highest level of al-Qaida’s leadership. The documents provide a rare opportunity for U.S. intelligence. When a mid-level terrorist is captured, his bosses know exactly what information might be compromised and can change plans. When the boss is taken, everything might be compromised but nobody knows for sure. Al-Kuwaiti inadvertently led intelligence officials to bin Laden when he used a telephone last year to talk with someone the U.S. had wiretapped. The CIA then tracked al-Kuwaiti back to the walled compound in a town near Islamabad. The home was bigger than those nearby, and there were no phone lines or Internet cables running to it. But other than that, it didn’t stand out in the neighborhood, where residents tend to be very religious and jealous of their privacy. The walls are mold-stained, there are trees in the garden and the windows are hidden. Once, when a woman involved in a polio vaccine drive turned up at the driveway, the men at the gate took the vaccine, apparently to administer to the 23 children at the compound, and told her to go away. The Pakistani government has denied suggestions that its security forces knew anything about bin Laden’s hideout or failed to spot suspicious signs. But in the closed-door briefing for lawmakers Tuesday, Panetta said, “Pakistan was involved or incompetent,” a U.S. official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the private briefing. Pakistan formally criticized the raid Tuesday, calling it an “unauthorized unilateral action.” While the statement suggested further strain in U.S. relations with an important but at times unreliable counterterrorism ally, Pakistan is unlikely to have much world support for criticizing the successful mission. Though Monday’s pre-dawn raid on that compound was a major counterterrorism victory, there had been no guarantee of success. Government analysts suspected bin Laden was living there but could never prove it. Satellite surveillance provided the military with images to plan its strike but never captured a picture of bin Laden on the property. With no assurance that bin Laden would be there, sending troops into Pakistan was a risky call. The SEALs could storm a compound and find no terrorists at all, leaving Pakistan furious about a U.S. military incursion. Or the Pakistani military, not realizing what was going on, could send its own air force to attack the SEAL team. “What if you go down and you’re in a firefight and the Pakistanis show up and start firing?” Panetta said in an interview with Time. “How do you fight your way out?” With officials at the CIA and the White House watching on television monitors, tensions increased when one of the two Black Hawk helicopters lowered into the compound and, beneath a moonless sky, fell heavily to the ground. Officials believe that was due to higher-than-expected air temperature that interfered with the chopper’s ability to hover – an aeronautical condition known as “hot and high.” Photos released by the White House show the president and national security team watching tensely as events unfolded. The CIA director said neither he nor Obama saw bin Laden shot. The SEALs all got out of the downed helicopter and proceeded into the compound. As they swept through the property, they handcuffed those they encountered with plastic zip ties and pressed on in pursuit of their target, code-named Geronimo. Many SEAL team members carry helmet-mounted cameras, but the video beamed back to Washington did not show the fateful showdown with bin Laden, officials said. That word came from the SEALs on the ground: “Geronimo EKIA” – enemy killed in action. The CIA’s makeshift command center erupted in applause as the SEALs helicoptered to safety. Now, the agency’s attention turns to finding the intelligence in the computer files, flash drives, DVDs and documents hauled out of the compound. All of that is in Washington and the analysis has begun. The SEALs also confiscated phone numbers from bin Laden’s body, and those might provide new leads for investigators. If the intelligence provides the kind of insight about al-Qaida operations that officials hope, the U.S. could deliver follow-up strikes against al-Qaida’s remaining leaders. ___ Array ___ Associated Press writers Kimberly Dozier, Donna Cassata, Alan Fram, , Darlene Superville, Ben Feller, Erica Werner, Pauline Jelinek, Robert Burns and Matthew Lee in Washington, Chris Brummitt in Islamabad and Nahal Toosi and Zarar Khan in Abbottabad contributed to this report.

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Kickass Celebrity of the Day: Beyoncé recreates her…

Kickass Celebrity of the Day: Beyoncé recreates her anti-childhood-obesity campaign video “ Move Your Body ” IRL with kids from P.S. 161 Pedro Albizu Campos middle school in Harlem, who clearly had no idea she was stopping by (skip to 1:34). [ vulture .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 04/05/2011 17:19 Number of articles : 5

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G-Form Extreme Sleeve gives new reasons to throw a MacBook out a window (video)

Extreme products make people do extreme things — take, for example, all of those phones we’ve dumped in glasses of water and various things we’ve run over with cars . When it comes to demonstrating ruggedness, G-Form is no slouch. After dropping a bowling ball on its iPad case (iPad inside, naturally), the company hit YouTube again to toss a MacBook encased in a new Extreme Sleeve from a 20 foot balcony — a fall it survived unscathed. These heavy-duty cases are made up of PORON XRD, a flexible material that absorbs 90 percent of impact energy, which the company also uses it to make things like skateboarding knee pads and biking accessories. The laptop case starts shipping on May 31st for $69.95, so heads up when walking under windows this summer. Extreme press release and video of gadget abuse after the break. Continue reading G-Form Extreme Sleeve gives new reasons to throw a MacBook out a window (video) G-Form Extreme Sleeve gives new reasons to throw a MacBook out a window (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 May 2011 07:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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