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Watch live streaming video from democracynow at livestream.com UPDATE: Officer MacPhail’s mother told CNN that SCOTUS says she will have a decision by 8:30 pm. Lawyers for Troy Davis report that a seven-day reprieve was granted while the Supreme Court examines the petition for a stay of execution. He can, however, still be executed during that time if the Georgia authorities so choose: ATLANTA — Troy Davis, the condemned inmate who convinced hundreds of thousands of people but not the justice system of his innocence, filed an eleventh-hour plea Wednesday asking the United States Supreme Court to stop Georgia authorities from executing him for the murder of an off-duty police officer, The Associated Press reported. His execution had been set to begin at 7 p.m., but as the hour arrived, Georgia prison officials were still waiting for the high court’s decision. The appeal to the Supreme Court was one of several last-ditch efforts by Mr. Davis on Wednesday. Earlier in the day, an official of the N.A.A.C.P. said that the vote by the Georgia parole board to deny clemency to Mr. Davis was so close that he hoped there might still be a chance to save him from execution. Edward O. DuBose, president of the Georgia chapter, said the organization had “very reliable information from the board members directly that the board was split 3 to 2 on whether to grant clemency.” “The fact that that kind of division was in the room is even more of a sign that there is a strong possibility to save Troy’s life,” he said. The N.A.A.C.P said it had been in contact with the Department of Justice on Wednesday, in the hope that the federal government would intervene on the basis of civil rights violations, meaning irregularities in the original investigation and at the trial. I was a little shocked to see the riot police surrounding the prison tonight, ready to move against anti-death penalty protesters. We really are seeing the increased militarization of the police.

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Family of Slain Journalist Requests Asylum in Australia Because ‘Americans Shoot Us’

enlarge Credit: ABC News The family of a well-known and respected Afghan journalist, killed in an attack near the main Australian base in Afghanistan, has rejected compensation from the U.S. military and is seeking asylum in Australia . Omed Khpulwak, who worked for an Afghan news service as well as freelancing for other media outlets, including the BBC and Australia’s ABC News, was shot dead by U.S. troops in July. He was mistaken for a suicide bomber during an insurgent attack in Tarin Kowt, the capital of Oruzgan Province. His brother, Ahmad Jawid Khpulwak, told ABC News, “I want from Australian Government to please give us, to our family, the safety because Americans shoot us.” Omaid Khpulwak’s relatives are demanding a further investigation into his death. The U.S. soldier responsible for his death is not facing any disciplinary action in connection with the incident, according to International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Jimmie Cummings. The attack in the southern Afghanistan town left 19 people dead after two Taliban suicide bombers struck the offices of state broadcaster Radio Television Afghanistan in Tarin Kot. U.S. forces were clearing the building after the attack when a soldier saw Khpulwak near a broken wall and others believed they heard him fire a shot. Another soldier approached him and saw him “with something clinched in one of his fists and reaching for something on his person with his other hand,” according to the ISAF’s report. “The soldier assessed the actions as those of a suicide bomber who was taking steps to detonate an IED (bomb). He shot the individual with his M-4 (assault rifle)… After a thorough investigation, it was determined the reporter was killed in a case of mistaken identity,” ISAF said in a statement. ISAF later discovered that Khpulwak was at the RTA compound to file a story when the attack took place. He was unarmed and the shot which soldiers heard was probably fired by one of their own side. Australian troops were called in to help evacuate casualties after the attack. ABC Afghanistan correspondent Sally Sara says the journalist’s killing sent shockwaves through the Afghan media, his killing triggering concern from human rights and press freedom groups in Afghanistan. “The loss of Ahmed Omid is a tragedy for his family and friends as well as his colleagues at the BBC,” said Peter Horrocks, director of BBC global news. “Ahmed Omid’s death further highlights the great dangers facing journalists who put their lives on the line to provide vital news from around the world.” Representatives of the Taliban have also expressed their condolences and regret over his killing. “We have to leave Tarin Kowt but we don’t know where we will go,” Ahmad Jawid Khpulwak said. “We have had warnings from both sides – from the Taliban and Americans. When we started our investigation as to who killed my brother, we had a warning from an American to stop our investigation and stop talking to the media.” He said the Taliban had also demanded the family hand over any money they received in compensation for Omed’s death. The claims have been denied by the International Security Assistance Force, which said it had been working closely and openly with the Khpalwak family since the “unfortunate incident.” “No one from the family has contacted U.S. officials, military officials or ISAF with any of these concerns,” Lieutenant Colonel Jimmie Cummings said yesterday. “As far as any claims of harassment by U.S. officials or U.S. military, that is totally untrue. “We do not go around threatening people we have been helping.”

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Barack Obama Unveils the “Buffett Rule”: It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand that the U.S. needs money, but conservatives think Barack Obama is waging class warfare by taxing the rich. The Word – Death and Taxes: If Americans don’t find someone to pay the government’s tab soon, Congress may get desperate enough to do the unthinkable. Which is of course, raising taxes on the poor because heaven forbid we can’t ask those “job creators” to pay any more.

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Iran Hikers Release: Jailed Americans Shane Bauer, Josh Fattal Freed From Prison

MUSCAT, Oman — After more than two years in Iranian custody, two Americans convicted as spies took their first steps toward home Wednesday as they bounded down from a private jet and into the arms of family for a joyful reunion in the Gulf state of Oman. The families called this “the best day of our lives,” and President Barack Obama said their release – under a $1 million bail-for-freedom deal – “wonderful news.” The release capped complicated diplomatic maneuvers over a week of confusing signals by Iran’s leadership on the fate of Josh Fattal and Shane Bauer. Although the fate of the two gripped America, it was on the periphery of the larger showdowns between Washington and Tehran that include Iran’s nuclear program and its ambitions to widen military and political influence in the Middle East and beyond. But – for a moment at least – U.S. officials may be adding words of thanks in addition to their calls for alarm over Iran. For Tehran, it was a chance to court some goodwill after sending a message of defiance with hard-line justice in the July 2009 arrests of the Americans along the Iran-Iraq border. The Americans always maintained they were innocent hikers. “Today can only be described as the best day of our lives,” said a statement from their families. “We have waited for nearly 26 months for this moment and the joy and relief we feel at Shane and Josh’s long-awaited freedom knows no bounds.” “We now all want nothing more than to wrap Shane and Josh in our arms, catch up on two lost years and make a new beginning, for them and for all of us,” the statement added. Obama called it “wonderful, wonderful news about the hikers, we are thrilled … It’s a wonderful day for them and for us.” U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the hikers’ release, saying he “appreciates the decision to respond to international appeals on humanitarian grounds,” said spokesman Martin Nesirky. “He commends all parties who helped to secure their release.” The release came on the eve of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s previously scheduled address Thursday to the U.N. General Assembly’s annual ministerial meeting. The families waited on the tarmac at a royal airfield near the main international airport in Oman’s capital, Muscat. Also returning to Oman was Sarah Shourd, who was arrested with Bauer and Fattal but freed a year ago. She received a marriage proposal from Bauer while in prison. At about 20 minutes before midnight, Fattal and Bauer – wearing jeans and casual shirts – raced down the steps from the blue-and-white plane. They made no statements to reporters before walking into the airport terminal building, which was guarded by security officials. The men appeared thin, but in good health. “We’re so happy we are free,” Fattal told reporters in Oman. The two men made brief statements before leaving the airport with their families. “Two years in prison is too long,” Bauer said, and hoped their release from prison will also bring “freedom for political prisoners in America and Iran.” In many ways, the release was a mirror image of the scene last year when Shourd was freed on $500,000 bail. That deal, too, was mediated by Oman, an Arabian peninsula sultanate with close ties to both Tehran and Washington. A statement from Oman said it hoped the release would lead to better ties between Iran and the U.S. The gray metal gates of Tehran’s Evin prison finally opened for Shourd – as it did for her companions on Wednesday – as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was preparing for the spotlight in New York at the U.N.’s annual gathering of world leaders last year. He is scheduled to address the world body again Thursday. Just a month ago, Bauer and Fattal – both 29 – were appealing their eight-year prison terms for espionage and illegal entry into Iran. They denied the charges and said they were merely hikers in Iraq’s relatively peaceful Kurdistan region who wandered close to Iran’s border. The first hint of change came last week when Ahmadinejad said they could be released within days. But then came the voice of the hard-line ruling clerics, who have waged a stinging campaign against the president and his allies in recent months as part of power struggle. The clerics made it clear: Only they have the authority to set the timing and ground rules to release the men. After several days of halting progress, their defense attorney secured the necessary judicial approval for the bail on Wednesday. “I have finished the job that I had to do as their lawyer,” said their defense attorney Masoud Shafiei. He obtained signatures of two judges on a bail-for-freedom deal. A $1 million bail – $500,000 for each one – was posted. Hours later, the men were in a convoy with Swiss and Omani diplomats headed to Tehran’s aging Mehrabad airport – whose designers in the 1950s included the late American architect William Pereira. One of the last Tehran landmarks on the convoy’s route was the massive Azadi Square, which is used for military parades but also was a temporary hub for protesters after Ahmadinejad’s disputed re-election in 2009. Oman – ruled by a lute-playing sultan – has acted as mediator in the releases and the apparent transfer point for the bail money because of U.S. economic sanctions on Iran. Oman also plays a strategic role in the region by sharing control with Iran of the Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Gulf, which is the route for 40 percent of the world’s oil tanker traffic. Switzerland represents U.S. diplomatic interests in Iran because the U.S. broke off diplomatic relations with Tehran shortly after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Iraq also sent envoys to neighboring Iran during the negotiations over the release. In one possible parting shot by Iran, the release came just minutes before Obama addressed the U.N. General Assembly. There was no direct evidence that Iran timed the American’s freedom to overshadow Obama’s speech, but Iran has conducted international political stagecraft in the past. Most famously, Iran waited until just moments after Ronald Reagan’s presidential inauguration in January 1981 to free 52 American hostages held for 444 days at the former U.S. Embassy after it was stormed by militants backing Iran’s Islamic Revolution. The timing was seen as a way to embarrass ex-President Jimmy Carter for his backing of Iran’s former monarch. Though the release eases one point of tension between Iran and the U.S., major conflicts still persist. Washington and European allies worry Iran is using its civilian nuclear program as cover to develop atomic weapons and have urged for even stronger sanctions to pressure Tehran. Iran denies any efforts to make nuclear weapons. Iran, in turn, is deeply concerned about the U.S. military on its borders in Iraq and Afghanistan, and sharply denounces U.S. influence in the Middle East. The London-based rights group Amnesty International called the release of the Americans a “long overdue step.” “Iranian authorities have finally seen sense” and have agreed to release Bauer and Fattal, said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Amnesty International Deputy Director for Middle East and North Africa. The last previous direct contact family members had with Bauer and Fattal was in May 2010, when their mothers were permitted a short visit in Tehran. Iranian officials also used the reunion for high-profile propaganda: Using extensive clips on its international English-language TV and its web site. In recent days, Iran has used the men’s pending release to draw attention to Iranians in U.S. prisons and difficulties faced by their families such as securing visas for visits. Since her release last year, Shourd has lived in Oakland, California. Bauer, a freelance journalist, grew up in Onamia, Minnesota. and Fattal, an environmental activist, is from suburban Philadelphia. Shourd and Bauer had been living together in Damascus, Syria, where Bauer was working as a freelance journalist and Shourd as an English teacher. Fattal, an environmental activist, went to visit them in July 2009 shortly before their trip to northern Iraq. Their case of the three Americans closely parallels that of freelance journalist Roxana Saberi, an Iranian-American who convicted of spying before being released in May 2009. Saberi was sentenced to eight years in prison, but an appeals court reduced that to a two-year suspended sentence and let her return to the U.S. In May 2009, a French academic, Clotilde Reiss, also was freed after her 10-year sentence on espionage-related charges was commuted. Last year, Iran freed an Iranian-American businessman, Reza Taghavi, who was held for 29 months for alleged links to a bombing in the southern city of Shiraz, which killed 14 people. Taghavi denied any role in the attack. ____ Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writers Barbara Surk contributed to this report from Dubai and Anita Snow from the United Nations.

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Casey Anthony’s Parents Divided On Seeing Daughter Again

ORLANDO, Fla. — Casey Anthony’s father said that he doesn’t believe it’s possible to reconnect with his acquitted daughter and that she should be held responsible for his 2-year-old granddaughter’s death. George Anthony told “Dr. Phil” host Phil McGraw in an interview that aired on Monday that after being accused by his daughter’s lawyers during her murder trial of molesting her, he doesn’t think a relationship is in the offing. He also said that he feels he was “played” by his daughter’s lawyers over the past three years of the case. “I do love my daughter, I don’t like what she’s done to this family,” George Anthony said. Cindy Anthony, however, said she hopes the relationship between mother and daughter can be mended and that she feels her daughter should have been acquitted. She also told McGraw that her daughter’s lead defense attorney, Jose Baez, invited her to his office for a private meeting shortly before the trial began because “he said that Casey wanted me to know how Caylee died.” The girl was the focus of a wide-ranging search after her disappearance in June 2008. Casey Anthony told police that a fictitious babysitter had kidnapped the child. The 25-year-old told the same story to her family until the child’s skeletal remains were found in the woods in December 2008 not far from the Anthony family home. During the trial over the summer, her attorneys told jurors the child accidentally drowned in the family pool. “When he (Baez) told me she had drowned in the pool and that Casey panicked … I was hysterically crying and couldn’t believe our daughter had put us through this and ruined her life,” Cindy Anthony said. George Anthony, who wasn’t invited to that meeting, said he thinks it was all an effort to manipulate Cindy emotionally and set him up the scapegoat for Casey’s erratic behavior during her disappearance. “I didn’t believe anything,” he said. “I didn’t believe anything that the defense told me. I felt I had been played.” The Anthonys spoke with McGraw for a lengthy, taped interview that aired in three parts over the past two weeks. Cindy Anthony said she never believed the molestation allegations against her husband, but wanted her daughter to be acquitted. “I think (the jury) based (the verdict) on the lack of evidence the state presented,” Cindy Anthony said. “… If I had been on that jury, I would have done the same thing.” A message left by The Associated Press with Baez was not immediately returned. Casey Anthony was found not guilty of murder in July, but convicted of four charges of lying to police. She is somewhere in Florida serving a year of probation on a separate check fraud conviction. Authorities are keeping her whereabouts confidential for her safety. Anthony’s acquittal caused a national uproar, with people protesting their displeasure with the verdict both publicly and through social media. One of the defense’s arguments was that some of Casey’s erratic behavior could be explained because she was molested by her father, which George Anthony again denied. “They had to put on a defense and they did that,” he said. Cindy Anthony said the last contact she had with Casey was via Baez. He said she wanted to pass along “That she loves us and that when the time is right she’ll talk to all of us.” She said she thinks her daughter likely has remorse about the allegations she made against her father. “I think she regrets it, but I don’t think Jose regrets it,” Cindy Anthony said. “…But it’s something Casey will have to live with for the rest of her life.”

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Samsung SHV-E120L comes out of the development dark, is the Xtina to LG’s Britney

Brothers from another mobile mother, or just a case of copycat syndrome? We’ll let you be the judge, but from the looks of this latest leak, Samsung’s SHV-E120L could be sharing some of the LG LU6200′s special spec sauce . Outed over on Cetizen and iNews24, the full breakdown of the device’s innards point to a dual-core 1.5GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 4.7-inch 1280 x 720 HD display, 2 megapixel front-facing / 8 megapixel rear camera, 1GB RAM, 16GB of onboard storage, WiFi, Bluetooth and NFC. We’ve seen conflicting reports as to the exact version of Gingerbread that’ll ship on the phone, with Android 2.3.5 in the running. As for the handset’s radios, its purported MDM9600 Gobi chipset indicates tri-mode LTE, HSPA and CDMA compatibility. Sammy’s super-sized smartphone could hit South Korea later this month, or in early October — if the passable English in that Google translation can be believed. Samsung SHV-E120L comes out of the development dark, is the Xtina to LG’s Britney originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Sep 2011 20:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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The latest political firestorm comes courtesy of the top four Republicans in Congress (Mitch McConnell, John Boehner, Jon Kyl, and Eric Cantor), who wrote a letter to Ben Bernanke urging restraint on the economy. “We have serious concerns that further intervention by the Federal Reserve could exacerbate current problems,” they…

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A Royal Education: Kate Middleton Goes to Princess School

Think of it as Kate’s 101 on all things British. The Daily Telegraph is reporting that Kate Middleton (ahem, Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge), is getting some private briefings on Britain’s august national institutions to prepare her for a lifetime of shaking hands royal duties. It’s been remarkably quiet for Middleton in recent weeks, since she

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Dana Milbank is a job creator. Oh sure, “I have never knowingly created a job,” he writes in the Washington Post . “But I am a job creator in the sense that Republicans mean when they say ‘don’t tax our job creators more.’” Republicans like to say that “small businesses…

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A detail shot from Burberry’s Spring/Summer 2012 runway show on Monday.

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