A giant kiln at a cement factory in Japan finally returned to action today and incinerated 10 tons of debris from the March earthquake. Which sounds like a handsome total until you consider that an estimated 25 million tons remain, reports the Wall Street Journal . The nation is now grappling…
Continue reading …James “Whitey” Bulger has confessed, one anonymous official tells the Boston Globe . Authorities found plenty of guns and cash in the Santa Monica apartment where they nabbed Bulger and longtime Girl Friday Catherine Greig, but the two went quietly, the official said, noting that Bulger seemed to be in poor…
Continue reading …There are so many awesome things about the story of Monique Lawless, who gave chase to three beer thieves at a Houston Walmart on Sunday, that it’s difficult to know where to begin. Her name is Lawless , for crying out loud. The first names of the three brothers who allegedly…
Continue reading …Just weeks ago, Elisabetta Canalis firmly stated , “in the future I will be married.” Then she and George Clooney, her boyfriend of two years, promptly broke up . Coincidence? Not according to friends who tell the Daily Mail that the eternal bachelor was afraid his Italian girlfriend was trying to tie…
Continue reading …More than 100 women were sexually assaulted and many more injured in a mass rape in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo two weeks ago, international aid workers said today. The attacks are believed to have been carried out by a group of 200 rebels who had been integrated into the…
Continue reading …Nine years after killing Surrey schoolgirl, former nightclub bouncer and wheel clamper Bellfield finally brought to justice Levi Bellfield, a convicted double killer, has been found guilty of kidnapping and murdering 13-year-old Milly Dowler amid emotional scenes at the Old Bailey. Immediately after the jury returned their unanimous verdict, Milly’s mother Sally broke down and had to be helped from the courtroom by her husband, Bob, as she collapsed in hysterics. Milly’s sister Gemma also became uncontrollably emotional as she left court, shouting “guilty” as medical staff were called. Their screams could be heard for several minutes as observers sat stunned. It had taken nine years for the family to get justice for Milly, with the verdict ending one of the largest police investigations of its kind. It began when she vanished off the streets of Walton-on-Thames in Surrey while walking home from school. Her unclothed remains were found six months later by mushroom pickers at Yateley Heath Woods, near Fleet, Hampshire, 25 miles away. Bellfield, who lived in a rented flat 50 yards from where Milly was last seen, had denied the charges. He showed no emotion as the guilty verdict was read out, and gave a large yawn as he was led from the dock. The jury are still deliberating on a charge of the attempted abduction of another girl, Rachel Cowles, then 11, a day before Milly vanished. Bellfield, a former nightclub doorman and wheel clamper, already has convictions for the murder of Amelie Delagrange, 22, a French student, and gap-year student Marsha McDonnell, 19, and the attempted murder of Kate Sheedy, 18, head girl at a convent school. Those attacks took place in the three years after Milly’s abduction and murder, which became one of Britain’s most notorious unsolved cases. The court had heard that Milly disappeared “in the blink of an eye” while walking home from school on 21 March 2002, shortly after 4pm. CCTV evidence showed she could not have walked past the entrance to the rented flat Bellfield was sharing with his girlfriend and three children. His girlfriend was house-sitting for a friend at the time. Bellfield moved his family out of the flat, in Collingwood Place, Walton, the day after Milly’s disappearance. The red Daewoo Nexia car he was driving has never been found, despite a huge police search of underwater sites and visits to more than 200 scrap merchants. None of Milly’s possessions have ever been found. The jury heard police had knocked 11 times at the door of the flat during house-to-house inquiries, but received no response, and had not checked the identity of the occupants with the landlord. A report by Rachel Cowles’s mother to police about the incident involving her daughter was not followed up at the time, with information only reaching detectives investigating Milly’s murder three years after the schoolgirl’s death. The parents of Delagrange, who was attacked as she walked home at night on Twickenham Green in 2004, were in court for the verdict, as was Sheedy, who suffered horrendous injuries after Bellfield ran her over near her house in Isleworth, west London. Bellfield became a suspect after his arrest following the murder of Delagrange in 2004. Last night, Amelie’s mother, Dominique, questioned Surrey police’s investigation into Milly’s disappearance. “It’s true there is the question that if the same thorough investigation had been carried out in the case of Milly, then Marsha [McDonnell] and Amelie [Delagrange] would still be alive. That question remains,” she told ITN. McDonnell, a gap-year student, was attacked, again with a blunt instrument, near her home in Hampton, south-west London, in February 2003. Bellfield was jailed for life for the attacks on her and Sheedy in February 2008 and was told he would never be released. The four-week trial saw Milly’s father, a 59-year-old former IT recruitment consultant, and mother, a 51-year-old maths teacher at her daughter’s Weybridge school, subjected to tough cross-examination by Bellfield’s defence. Bob Dowler suffered the humiliation of having to admit an interest in bondage sex after evidence that Milly had found a pornographic magazine, and he had to admit he had been considered a suspect. Each of her parents broke down in the witness box as it was suggested Milly may have run away because she was unhappy at home. Last night, Louise Casey, commissioner for victims and witnesses, said: “The experience that the Dowler family have endured through this legal process has been quite appalling.” Milly Dowler Crime London Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Coming soon: More than you ever wanted to know about Hugh Hefner’s almost-wedding. At least, that’s what Hef says. “The marriage special planned for Lifetime TV is now going to have a ‘runaway bride’ theme and will air in July,” he tweeted last night. “Holly and Kendra were here today…
Continue reading …Nirvana’s Nevermind turns 20 this September (yep, it has been 20 years and yes, you are old). So Universal thought it only right to celebrate the multi-platinum album by issuing a remastered version of it—as part of a massive set that includes four CDs and one DVD. The set,…
Continue reading …Jose Antonio Vargas’ “coming out” as an illegal immigrant generated quite a bit of buzz—so why wasn’t his story published in the Washington Post , where he worked for years? Vargas originally brought his 4,000-word account to the Post , and until last week, that’s where it was scheduled to…
Continue reading …Home Retail Group said to be in talks to buy parts of Habitat in a possible £20m deal In the 1960s, Sir Terence Conran started a style revolution with the Habitat chain that helped the nation to shake off postwar austerity. It went on to define “the designer decade” of the 1980s, spawned countless imitators on the high street and became a victim of its own success. The chain could now face an ignominious fate, as part of the group which owns Argos, which has pioneered a different kind of design movement selling sofas for under £200 and £30 wardrobes. Home Retail Group was today said to be in talks to buy parts of Habitat in a deal that could be worth up to £20m. Home Retail declined to comment but is reported to be interested in acquiring some of Habitat’s stores and the rights to use the brand in Britain and an announcement could come as soon as tomorrow morning. Home Retail also owns Homebase and analysts suggested the Habitat brand could be used on products across its stores. “I don’t think this is a marriage made in heaven,” said one analyst. “It’s like jumping into a swimming pool with a lump of concrete tied round your neck. Habitat has never made any money and Home Retail has got enough problems of its own. “In the early days Habitat was interesting, innovative and quite successful but only people with extremely long memories can remember its best days.” Habitat has struggled financially for many years. Although the shops were a breath of fresh air when they arrived on the high street, its clever designs were soon mimicked by cheaper rivals and by the late 80s it was in financial difficulties. Even ownership by Sweden’s wealthy Kamprad family, whose patriarch Ingvar founded Ikea, could not restore its fortunes. Despite owning Habitat for nearly 20 years, they failed to come up with a successful formula and eventually paid restructuring firm Hilco a multimillion pound dowry to take the loss-making business off their hands in December 2009. Indeed while Habitat struggled Ikea marched on to become the UK’s biggest furniture retailer with sales of more than £1bn. Last year profits at Argos fell sharply as moribund consumer confidence put a dampener on sales of homeware and electricals and the group’s chief executive Terry Duddy recently warned that sales of electricals – particularly televisions and video games – had tumbled 20% during the spring. According to analysts at Verdict, the high street downturn has cost the furniture market nearly £2bn in lost sales. Neil Saunders says that back in 2008 it was worth £12.5bn but had withered to £10.7bn by last year; it has stabilised but is still predicted to shrink this year. Despite its woes, Home Retail has a substantial cash pile and is looking for new avenues of growth, having embarked on a number of new initiatives including selling books and children’s clothes. Last week it launched Argos TV, its own home shopping channel. Argos has substantial market share in areas such as furniture, toys and homeware. It already owns household brands including Schreiber, Hygena, Alba and Bush and Chad Valley which it bought following the collapse of Woolworths. In sales terms Habitat is a minnow. While Home Retail turned over more than £4bn last year, at last count Habitat was making a loss of £18.7m on sales of £74.3m in the year to March 2009. Habitat’s performance is thought to have improved on Hilco’s watch as it extricated itself from expensive stores and introduced new products and it is said to have approached private equity firms about a deal. It is unclear how many of its 29 stores Home Retail would be interested in taking on but it is thought to face competition from the French furniture group Conforama reported to be interested in buying the international parts of the chain. Conran has had no involvement with Habitat for many years. Having expanded his business empire to include restaurants and hotels, the 79-year-old’s most recent design brief is a homeware collection for Marks & Spencer which he says is a “serious design project”. “It gives us the chance to produce a truly democratic and British collection, something that I have been aiming to achieve all my working life,” said Conran of the tie-up announced in March. “This is our chance at last.” Retail industry Zoe Wood guardian.co.uk
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