16-year-old boy allegedly killed ex-girlfriend, Rebecca Aylward, 15, in Bridgend woods as ‘sick’ bet to win a free breakfast A pupil murdered a former girlfriend by battering her with a rock after he was promised a free breakfast if he carried out the killing, a jury heard. The alleged killer, aged 16, lured Rebecca Aylward, 15, to woods near Bridgend in south Wales where he attacked her, Swansea crown court heard. The teenage boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, denies murdering Rebecca in October last year and blames his best friend. Greg Taylor QC, prosecuting, said the accused and Rebecca had briefly been in a relationship about a year before the murder and had kept in touch. The defendant used to meet friends at a local cafe for breakfast, the court heard. At one meeting, he openly discussed killing the girl. His friends assumed he was joking but, in a text, he asked one friend: “What would you do if I actually did kill her?” the court heard. The friend replied: “Oh, I would buy you breakfast.” Two days before the killing the defendant contacted his friend to confirm he would attend a breakfast date. He added: “Don’t say anything but you may just owe me a breakfast.” His friend replied: “Sick, sick boy.” After the killing, the teenager is alleged to have asked one friend: “Do you know how hard it is to break someone’s neck?” The jury heard that he told two friends: “She was facing away from me and I thought: ‘This is it, I’m going to go for it.’ I tried to break her neck. She was screaming so I picked up the rock and started to hit her with it. The worst part was feeling and seeing her skull give way.” The “academic” teenage boy and Rebecca had dated for three months and had a sexual relationship, the court heard. Taylor said: “When they split up it was not amicable – all of their friends observed a love-hate relationship between them. They gave different reasons for the break-up. “The boy said Rebecca tried to trick him into getting her pregnant. She told him she was on the pill and he found out that she wasn’t and that she had lied to him. The boy was also telling people that Rebecca was going to go to the police and alleged that he raped her. “Rebecca’s version was that the boy refused to wear condoms and she asked him repeatedly to wear them.” The boy allegedly told a friend: “Wouldn’t it be easier if she wasn’t here? I am going to kill her – it would be real easy.” The jury heard another friend said the defendant claimed he would “kill her, cover it up and not get caught”. He also allegedly claimed he would make “a poison” out of foxgloves and kill her with it. Hours after murdering Rebecca the accused tried to lay a false trail by using Facebook as an alibi, it was claimed. Taylor said: “The boy updated his Facebook saying: ‘I’m just chilling with my two friends”. He used his Facebook to say this was just an ordinary day.” Later he wrote: “I enjoyed a rather good day and a lovely breakfast.” Police were led to Rebecca’s body by a friend of the accused after he had broken down in tears and told his parents, the court heard. Taylor said: “It was the following morning when the boy went into his parents’ bedroom. He told them a girl he knew was going to be missing and he feared she had been hurt or worse. “They could see the state he was in – pale, frightened and obviously upset. “They phoned the police straight away. The boy took police to the forest.” A post mortem examination of Rebecca – who was just 5ft 2ins and weighed six stone – showed she had died of head injuries. The trial continues. Crime Children Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Amid American debate about illegal immigration, Pulitzer Prize winner causes shock with admission he is an undocumented immigrant One of America’s top journalists has admitted he is an undocumented alien. In a startling first person piece in the New York Times , Pulitzer Prize winner Jose Antonio Vargas, who has written for the Washington Post, the New Yorker and the Huffington Post, reveals he is not a legal US resident and was brought into the country with faked papers when he was a child. The news is certain to shock many observers and add more controversy to the debate over illegal immigration. “We’re not always who you think we are. Some pick your strawberries or care for your children. Some are in high school or college. And some, it turns out, write news articles you read,” Vargas writes in an article for the paper’s magazine section. He explains his decision to reveal himself in simple terms: “I’m done running. I’m exhausted. I don’t want that life anymore.” Vargas, who was born in the Philippines, describes how a man who he thought was an uncle brought him to the US in 1993 when he was aged 12 to live with his grandparents in California. He attended high school in America and learned English. He only learned his papers were fake when, aged 16, he tried to get a driver’s permit. It was then that his grandparents revealed the man who brought him to the US had been a smuggler who was paid $4,500 (£2,800) to get him through immigration control with a false passport. Vargas, who is gay, admits his life, that has been highly successful professionally, has been marked by secrecy when it came to his illegal status. “Tough as it was, coming out about being gay seemed less daunting than coming out about my legal status. I kept my other secret mostly hidden,” he writes. But no longer. Vargas has revealed he is one of at least 11 million illegal aliens living in the US and his confession comes as the issue is rarely out of the headlines. Republican Senator John McCain caused controversy earlier this week with remarks suggesting the recent devastating wildfires in Arizona had been caused by illegal immigrants. The comments prompted outrage from immigrants rights’ groups and Hispanic activists, although McCain later expressed surprise that his words were deemed controversial. Vargas’ revelations are likely to have a similar polarising effect. On the New York Times website , many comments praise his bravery in speaking out. “I hope you earn the citizenship you deserve. Best of luck. And keep your head up; you have nothing to be ashamed of,” says one commenter from New York. But others are less forgiving and call for Vargas to be sent back to the country of his birth. “It is important that everyone come here the right and legal way so that it is fair to everyone. Mr Vargas should go back to his homeland and apply like everyone else,” writes one reader in Washington DC. The journalist’s future in America is now unclear. He has launched a website, called Define American, that will seek to campaign on the immigration debate and press for the passage of the Dream Act, which aims to grant permanent residency to some illegal alien students who have graduated from US high schools. US immigration United States New York Newspapers Paul Harris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Planned Parenthood’s struggles continues in Indiana … and Wisconsin. In the former state, thousands of low-income patients will officially have to find a way to pay for birth control and medical exams. In the wake of a new law eliminating the organization’s Medicaid funding, Planned Parenthood yesterday began turning away Medicaid…
Continue reading …More bad news out of southern Yemen : At least 40 al-Qaeda militants have escaped from a prison there, according to security officials. As bands of heavily armed militants attacked the Mukalla jail from without, the prisoners attacked their guards within, taking their weapons early today. The escapees include those convicted…
Continue reading …Ed Miliband has commissioned policy reviews in 16 areas, and today we reveal what those areas are – and we’re asking you to help Labour fill in that blank sheet Tom Clark Paddy Allen Paul Owen
Continue reading …Officials have ordered 11,000 Minot, North Dakota, residents to flee their homes by 6pm today, in what will be their second evacuation this month. The Souris River is expected to spill over the city’s protective levees soon, in its worst flood in four decades, the AP reports. Officials say…
Continue reading …Party to draw up policy in key areas in series of bold strokes • Interactive: What do you think should be in Labour’s policy review? Ed Miliband’s famous blank piece of paper, Labour’s policy prospectus, will start to be coloured in this weekend when the party’s policy forum meets on Saturday in the suburbs of Wrexham. The aim will be to start to achieve something no opposition party has managed in the last 30 years — to bounce back to power in just one term. That goal has led Labour’s leaders to decide they need to act with more haste than previously thought. The concept of a leisurely, academic disordered policy review, if ever true, is being disowned. The era of low-risk leadership is about to end with some bolder strokes on policy, personnel and party reform. Lessons are being drawn from a slew of books on the Tories in opposition. Tim Bale’s Conservative Party: Thatcher to Cameron has reminded Labour of how it took the Tories an extraordinary five years from the loss of power under John Major to the basic admission that it was perceived as the selfish, nasty party. Peter Snowden’s Back from the Brink is another guide to how slow parties can be to respond to crises in public perception. By contrast Labour has rushed to admit error. But Labour is also subtly reworking the policy review process. Figures such as the policy review coordinator Liam Byrne would probably admit the hydra-headed reviews, set up November on a largely ad hoc basis, lacked coherence. No fewer than 19 reviews were announced, on what externally looked like a random basis. The advantage was that it gave every shadow cabinet member something to do, such as – in one review – explore the causes of loneliness. But it hardly provided the overarching narrative that Lord Mandelson, a veteran of policy reviews under Neil Kinnock, said the party needed in his Progress speech this week. The foreign policy review conducted by Douglas Alexander seems only to be looking at Brazil, Russia, India and China, an important, but hardly sufficient foreign policy theme. No exploration of Labour’s increasingly questioned pro-Europeanism is being attempted. By contrast, Harriet Harman, the shadow international development secretary, has appointed no fewer than six sub-reviews. Yet there is no discernible review into the economy. Ominously for those who have memories of how Gordon Brown would often disengage from collective policy making, Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, is not conducting any specific review of economic policy. The official explanation is that he is overseeing other economic related reviews. In an attempt to bring some order to the process, the policy reviews have all now been rearranged under one of four sub-heads – rebuilding the economy to help the squeezed middle, keeping the promise for the next generation, renewing responsibility, and our place in the world. Some groups have met six or so times, drawing in as many outside experts as an unfashionable party four years from power can gather. Progress is uneven. The shadow transport secretary Maria Eagle, currently in Amsterdam looking at their tram system, pretty well knows her policy destination — free travel for young people, reintegrate the mainline rail system, prioritise buses over trains and devolve power to regional transport authorities. Other policy groups seem not have gone beyond clearing the undergrowth. Byrne argues the starting point is understanding why the public rejected Labour. In a speech yesterday he said: “If we want to win back the people’s trust to lead again, we have to understand how the public see us and why. Therein starts the business of renewal. This is perhaps the first great lesson from oppositions which stay in opposition for a long time. Oppositions that stay in opposition are the parties that fail to confront and take on the weaknesses the public see in them.” While this was true of the Tories after 1997, Labour after 1979 was not much better. “It was an incredible eight years before [Neil] Kinnock embarked on a major exercise of his own – talking to the public about the way they saw things. This is not a mistake we are going to repeat,” Byrne says. The aim this weekend is to provide some signposts leading to something more specific at autumn party conference, including something close to definitive on a replacement to tuition fees. On the squeezed middle, Miliband believes the centre-ground of politics has shifted from public service reform to a rebalanced economy, an issue belatedly addressed by Mandelson and now being taken up by the shadow business secretary John Denham. Critical to this squeeze is not just better balanced growth, but also lack of childcare and social care, constraining the amount of time the middle class, especially the second earner, can work. Miliband’s second chosen theme is the promise of Britain, the contract that the next generation should fare as well as the current generation. Social housing is now seen by Labour as the biggest barrier to young people getting on. This allows him to offer optimism, the ingredient he is convinced can win him the election – one the Tories, with the emphasis on the deficit, cannot offer. Byrne argues the Conservatives returned to power after only a term in opposition precisely because Margaret Thatcher engaged in an argument about what her party was for. Miliband has to be equally clear about the future. The review’s final leg will be responsibility, in the benefit queue and the boardroom. The party is going to try to renew social insurance, and to try to leapfrog the Tories on welfare. None of this answers the pressing question of the deficit, Labour’s dire polling on economic competence or Miliband’s own personal ratings. Last week Balls alarmed some by coming close to admitting he has bet the whole farm on his judgment that Osborne’s cuts will seriously kill growth. It may take two years for him to know if he or Osborne is right. In the meantime, to rebuild trust, Balls will look at new credible fiscal rules so an authoritative independent body can warn if Labour was about to head off on an unsustainable spending splurge. There is also dark talk of a mechanism to address waste in public spending. A party elder may be asked to set up an inquiry into the issue. Miliband is attempting something rare – shifting the centre of British politics to the left from the position of opposition, rather than from government. By next year he may remember what the Australian prime minister John Howard once said to William Hague: “You know, William, there’s only one thing harder than the first year in opposition … It’s the second.” • Interactive: What do you think should be in Labour’s policy review? Labour Ed Miliband Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Google set a staggering record in May, according to new comScore data: It reeled in more than 1 billion unique visitors, marking the first time an Internet company can claim that honor, reports the Wall Street Journal . The figure represents an 8.4% rise over the past year, and it’s…
Continue reading …Senior Tory MPs in dialogue with MEPs who are seeking to prevent a toughening of Europe’s climate targets • The bloody fight for the green soul of the Conservative party David Cameron has promised to intervene in the intensifying row over rebel Tory MEPs who are trying to prevent a toughening of Europe’s climate targets. At prime minister’s questions, he told MPs that Downing Street enforcers would be talking to the MEPs who are threatening to revolt in a Brussels vote to raise the EU carbon cutting target from 20% to 30% of emissions by 2020. The rebellion threatens to dent the green credentials of the prime minister and the coalition. Senior Tory ministers told the Guardian they were “in dialogue” with their colleagues in the European parliament. The energy minister, Charles Hendry, said: “It is clearly
Continue reading …Senior Tory MPs in dialogue with MEPs who are seeking to prevent a toughening of Europe’s climate targets • The bloody fight for the green soul of the Conservative party David Cameron has promised to intervene in the intensifying row over rebel Tory MEPs who are trying to prevent a toughening of Europe’s climate targets. At prime minister’s questions, he told MPs that Downing Street enforcers would be talking to the MEPs who are threatening to revolt in a Brussels vote to raise the EU carbon cutting target from 20% to 30% of emissions by 2020. The rebellion threatens to dent the green credentials of the prime minister and the coalition. Senior Tory ministers told the Guardian they were “in dialogue” with their colleagues in the European parliament. The energy minister, Charles Hendry, said: “It is clearly
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