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Body parts of missing Brooklyn boy found in refrigerator

Killing of eight-year-old Leiby Kletzky has shocked Orthodox Jewish community in New York An eight-year-old boy who got lost while walking home alone was killed and dismembered by a stranger he had asked for directions. His remains were found stuffed in a rubbish bin and the man’s refrigerator, police said on Wednesday. The gruesome killing of Leiby Kletzky has shocked the Jewish community in Borough Park, Brooklyn, in part because it is one of the safest sections of New York and because the man under arrest is an Orthodox Jew. A day-and-a-half search for the boy ended with the discovery of his severed feet inside a freezer at the home of a man who had been spotted with the child on a surveillance video, police said. The rest of the remains were in bins in another neighbourhood. “It is every parent’s worst nightmare,” said police commissioner Raymond Kelly. The 35-year-old suspect, Levi Aron, had implicated himself in the killing, he said. Police said there was no evidence the boy was sexually assaulted, but they would not otherwise shed any light on a motive except to say Aron told them he “panicked” when he saw photos of the missing boy on fliers distributed in the neighbourhood. Police are looking into whether Aron has a history of mental illness. Aron was arrested on a charge of second-degree murder. The medical examiner’s office said it was still investigating how the boy was killed. Meanwhile, thousands gathered around a Borough synagogue for the boy’s funeral service, with speakers broadcasting over a loudspeaker. They spoke and chanted in Yiddish and Hebrew, stressing the community’s resilience and unity after what one called an unnatural death. Many of the mothers who gathered outside the Kletzky family home on Wednesday said the streets were normally safe enough for a child to walk home alone. Adel Erps, like other neighbours, expressed shock the suspect was Jewish. “It hurts so much more,” she said. Aron’s family was Orthodox but not Hasidic. When detectives arrived at his apartment at about 2.40am local time, they asked him where the boy was, and he nodded toward the kitchen, Kelly said. Detectives saw blood on the freezer door and opened it to discover the feet inside, wrapped in plastic bags. A cutting board and three bloody carving knives were in the refrigerator and a plastic rubbish sack with bloody towels was found nearby. Aron told police where to find the rest of the body. It was in pieces, wrapped in plastic bags, inside a red suitcase that had been placed into a rubbish bin in another part of Brooklyn, Kelly said. Police and volunteers had been looking since late Monday afternoon for Leiby, who disappeared while on his way to meet his mother on a street corner seven blocks from his day camp. It was the first time he was allowed to walk the route alone. His parents had taken him on a practice run on Friday. The break in the case came when investigators watched a grainy video that showed the boy, wearing his backpack, getting into a car with a man outside a dentist’s office. Leiby was last seen wearing dark pants and a short-sleeved shirt and yarmulke. Police said the boy had evidently missed a turn and got lost. Detectives tracked the dentist down to his home in New Jersey, and he remembered someone coming to pay a bill. Police identified Aron using records from the office, and 40 minutes later he was arrested. Kelly said it was “totally random” that Aron grabbed the boy and, aside from a summons for urinating in public, he had no criminal record. He had lived in New York most of his life and worked as a clerk at a hardware supply store around the corner from his home, authorities said. New York United States guardian.co.uk

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Body parts of missing Brooklyn boy found in refrigerator

Killing of eight-year-old Leiby Kletzky has shocked Orthodox Jewish community in New York An eight-year-old boy who got lost while walking home alone was killed and dismembered by a stranger he had asked for directions. His remains were found stuffed in a rubbish bin and the man’s refrigerator, police said on Wednesday. The gruesome killing of Leiby Kletzky has shocked the Jewish community in Borough Park, Brooklyn, in part because it is one of the safest sections of New York and because the man under arrest is an Orthodox Jew. A day-and-a-half search for the boy ended with the discovery of his severed feet inside a freezer at the home of a man who had been spotted with the child on a surveillance video, police said. The rest of the remains were in bins in another neighbourhood. “It is every parent’s worst nightmare,” said police commissioner Raymond Kelly. The 35-year-old suspect, Levi Aron, had implicated himself in the killing, he said. Police said there was no evidence the boy was sexually assaulted, but they would not otherwise shed any light on a motive except to say Aron told them he “panicked” when he saw photos of the missing boy on fliers distributed in the neighbourhood. Police are looking into whether Aron has a history of mental illness. Aron was arrested on a charge of second-degree murder. The medical examiner’s office said it was still investigating how the boy was killed. Meanwhile, thousands gathered around a Borough synagogue for the boy’s funeral service, with speakers broadcasting over a loudspeaker. They spoke and chanted in Yiddish and Hebrew, stressing the community’s resilience and unity after what one called an unnatural death. Many of the mothers who gathered outside the Kletzky family home on Wednesday said the streets were normally safe enough for a child to walk home alone. Adel Erps, like other neighbours, expressed shock the suspect was Jewish. “It hurts so much more,” she said. Aron’s family was Orthodox but not Hasidic. When detectives arrived at his apartment at about 2.40am local time, they asked him where the boy was, and he nodded toward the kitchen, Kelly said. Detectives saw blood on the freezer door and opened it to discover the feet inside, wrapped in plastic bags. A cutting board and three bloody carving knives were in the refrigerator and a plastic rubbish sack with bloody towels was found nearby. Aron told police where to find the rest of the body. It was in pieces, wrapped in plastic bags, inside a red suitcase that had been placed into a rubbish bin in another part of Brooklyn, Kelly said. Police and volunteers had been looking since late Monday afternoon for Leiby, who disappeared while on his way to meet his mother on a street corner seven blocks from his day camp. It was the first time he was allowed to walk the route alone. His parents had taken him on a practice run on Friday. The break in the case came when investigators watched a grainy video that showed the boy, wearing his backpack, getting into a car with a man outside a dentist’s office. Leiby was last seen wearing dark pants and a short-sleeved shirt and yarmulke. Police said the boy had evidently missed a turn and got lost. Detectives tracked the dentist down to his home in New Jersey, and he remembered someone coming to pay a bill. Police identified Aron using records from the office, and 40 minutes later he was arrested. Kelly said it was “totally random” that Aron grabbed the boy and, aside from a summons for urinating in public, he had no criminal record. He had lived in New York most of his life and worked as a clerk at a hardware supply store around the corner from his home, authorities said. New York United States guardian.co.uk

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Mumbai blasts prompt questions over Indian intelligence yet again

Government tries to fight accusations it is clueless over terrorism after co-ordinated explosions in city leave 18 dead Cities across India are on high alert as the government came under mounting criticism for its repeated failures to detect terrorist attacks, following the blitz on Mumbai in which 18 people were killed. As a steady monsoon drizzle swept Mumbai, the casualty figure from the three bomb explosions on Wednesday was revised downwards by the home minister, P Chidambaram, on a visit to the affected districts. “The discovery of the severed head takes the number of killed to 18 (reduced from the earlier official figure of 21 dead), while the number of injured stands at 131,” Chidambaram said. “It appears that ammonium nitrate was used in the bombs, with a timer mechanism. The three blasts occurred within 10 minutes of each other, which shows it was a co-ordinated terrorist attack.” He added that of the 131 injured, 26 have been discharged from hospital, 82 are in a stable medical condition, while 23 are critical. As yet, no known terrorist organisation – Indian cities have been attacked in recent years by both Muslim and Hindu terrorists – has taken responsibility for the blasts, but security experts believe the prime suspect in the latest outrage is the radical Muslim group, the Indian Mujahideen (IM). But despite the IM remaining active for the last nine years following the Feb 2002 anti-Muslim violence in teh state of Gujarat, both intelligence agencies and local police are struggling to eliminate the threat. Defending the security agencies, Chidambaram told reporters that “if there was no intelligence on a particular incident it doesn’t mean a failure of intelligence.” But he failed to clarify his logic. He also insisted that CCTV cameras have been installed in Mumbai, even though the state home department has still to clear a Jan 2009 city police proposal for a 5,000-camera electronic surveillance network. Only the traffic police have CCTV cameras at road junctions. Maharashtra’s chief minister, Prithviraj Chavan, also maintained that CCTV cameras had “got a lot of useful footage” of the attacks, but explained away the failure to upgrade the system by saying: “Mumbai wants quick progress … but procurement (of equipment) is a difficult process.” Even the ruling Congress party leader, Rahul Gandhi, joined the official chorus and declared that “99% of terror attacks have been stopped” by the authorities. The newspapers however carried long lists of terror strikes in Mumbai and other cities during the last decade, including several that remain unsolved. “It is very difficult to stop every single terror attack,” Gandhi added. “We’ve improved in leaps and bounds, but terrorism is something that is also increasing in leaps and bounds.” Many businesses at the gold, diamond and jewellery centres in Mumbai that were hit by the blasts remained closed on Thursday, but a few traders and workers who were around expressed anger and frustration at the fact that Mumbai had again become a target for terrorists. “Terrorist attacks on Mumbai have become an annual event, the city has become an easy target, as the government cannot do anything,” a businessman in Zaveri Bazaar said on a TV news channel. “So we’ve no choice but to keep working.” Even as politicians resorted to tired clichés about the “resilience of the people of Mumbai”, a young man at the third bomb site in Dadar spoke of the ordinary man’s helplessness. He said: “The relatives of the injured and dead are faced with one kind of tension today, whereas others like me have another kind of tension – the daily tension of filling our stomach. Inflation has gone out of hand, so we’ve to work in order to survive.” But a lot of the anger was directed against the politicians, some of whom made ritual and pointless tours of the bomb sites meant as photo ops. Meanwhile, relatives of the dead stood patiently outside the city coroner’s office in the monsoon rain hoping to collect the bodies of their loved ones. India Global terrorism Maseeh Rahman guardian.co.uk

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Boston industrial estate explosion linked to illegal alcohol

Police investigate reports of illegal vodka distilling after Lincolnshire blast kills five men Police are investigating whether an industrial unit where five men were killed in an explosion in Lincolnshire was being used to brew illegal alcohol. Firefighters found five men at the property after an explosion shortly before 7.30pm on Wednesday in the Broadfield Lane estate in Boston, a sixth man was taken to hospital suffering from severe burns. Local reports suggested the industrial unit was being made to produce alcohol, but police said was only one line of inquiry. Investigators were keeping an “open mind and following up all relevant lines of inquiry”, said a police spokeswoman. “There has been all sorts of rumours along those lines,” she said. “It is far too early for us to speculate.” Inquiries were ongoing and would involved a “full forensic examination of the unit” and finger-tip searches of the cordoned-off unit to establish what was inside, she added. Following the explosion on the industrial estate, including a collection of light industrial outlets including a mechanic’s workshop and a vehicle wrecking yard, firefighters had to cut their way into the small unit after intense heat from the explosion had melted the doors. A car outside the unit was also incinerated. The bodies of the five dead men were discovered inside the industrial unit. The sixth man was taken to Boston Pilgrim hospital with serious injuries, before being transferred to the Queen’s medical centre in Nottingham. Steve Moore, area manager from Lincolnshire fire and rescue service, described the incident as one of the worst he had seen in his 28-year career. “When the first crews attended they were faced with a really serious fire and a casualty who was outside the building suffering from burns,” he said. “Their initial reaction was to treat the casualty. The incoming crew then started to fight the fire.” He added: “It was a really hot, intense fire. As far as the crews I have spoken to, its the single greatest loss of life in fire in their experience.” Ian Nuttall, 42, who lives 200 yards from the scene, said he noticed a commotion and smoke coming from the “lock-up” at about 7.30pm. “There was a rumour going round that it was some Polish nationals who have been brewing their own vodka which is a bit of a problem around here at the moment,” he said. Earlier this year, raids by HM Revenue and Customs, police and Lincolnshire trading standards seized goods including fake vodka from six international stores in the town. HMRC said forensic testing of the counterfeit alcohol, seized in March, showed it contained chemicals unsafe for public consumption. At least one store has lost its alcohol licence, while another has been suspended from selling alcohol. Boston East councillor Mike Gilbert said: “I’m very anxious to find out exactly what’s happened. It’s a lot of people dead and a great tragedy.” Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk

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Burglaries up 14% on last year, annual crime figures show

British Crime Survey reports increase in domestic burglaries in England and Wales There has been a 14% rise in domestic burglaries and a 6% rise in violent crime in the past year, according to the annual crime figures for 2010/11 . However, overall crime levels have remained flat or continued on a downward trend, with police crime figures showing a 4% fall and the more authoritative British Crime Survey indicating a 1% rise in overall crime levels. The Home Office said they indicate the remarkable reduction in the crime rate in England and Wales recorded in recent years is slowing down. But Home Office statisticians said that despite predictions of crime rises linked to the recession and rising unemployment, there was no consistent evidence of “upward pressure” on crimes involving property as a result of the difficult economic conditions. They said, however, that a 4% rise in the theft of unattended mobile phones and purses in the “other theft” category could be an early sign that larger increases were on the way. The official statisticians also said the 14% rise in domestic burglaries reported by the British Crime Survey over 2010/11 was out of line with the trend for the past five years. They said it should be seen in the context of the burglary rate for the previous year, 2009/10, being the lowest for nearly 30 years. Police crime figures reported a 3% fall in burglaries across England and Wales. The rest of the crime figures, published on Thursday, show continuing falls across other crime categories, including a remarkable 9% fall in vandalism as measured by the BCS and a 13% fall in criminal damage and 9% drop in car crime on the police figures. The murder rate in England and Wales rose from 618 to 642 homicides in 2010/11, which included the 12 victims of the Cumbria shootings in June 2010. Sexual offences as recorded by the police rose by 1%. Overall, the BCS estimated there were 9.6m crimes in 2010/11 compared with 9.5m the year before. Police recorded 4.2m offences, a 4% fall compared with 4.3m the previous year and its lowest level since 2002. The police detection rate – meaning that a suspect has been identified and interviewed and there is sufficient evidence to bring a charge – remained at 28%. Crime Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

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Phone hacking scandal – live coverage

• Live coverage throughout the day following Rupert Murdoch’s decision to abandon News Corporation’s bid for BSkyB •  NoW’s Neil Wallis arrested over phone hacking • Murdoch and Brooks must give evidence – Clegg 11.51am: Correction: It was Operation Weeting, the phone hacking investigation, not Operation Elveden, that arrested Neil Wallis, the News of the World’s former executive editor. Apologies. 11.34am: Patrick Wintour , the Guardian’s political editor, writes that cabinet secretary Sir Gus O’Donnell has denied claims he blocked an inquiry into phone hacking sought by the former prime minister Gordon Brown just before the may 2010 general election. O’Donnell has now released his full advice to Brown setting out the options and sent to Brown’s principal private secretary, Jeremy Heywood, on 19 March 2010. In his first major speech in the House of Commons since he resigned as prime minister last year, Brown said on Wednesday, “I deeply regret my inability to do then what I wanted to do and to overturn the advice of all the authorities and set up a judicial inquiry.” O’Donnell said: “I gave advice based on the evidence that was available at the time. It was for the prime minister to decide what to do. I set out options. My advice is clear and was based on the evidence available at the time, and I would have taken the same decision now if I had the same evidence as I had then.” O’Donnell also pointed out to Brown that the inquiry being called so close to a general election in May 2011 there was no possibility that a judicial inquiry could produce a result in time. In his document, marked restricted, O’Donnell set out the necessary steps to be taken before an inquiry was launched and whether in this case such an inquiry would be merited. He wrote “From the limited information available it is doubtful whether this case would merit holding an inquiry under the 2005 act. Any decision to hold such an inquiry could be challenged by judicial review particularly if the inquiry were extended to the media in general and it is not inconceivable that such a challenge might succeed”. He also stressed the immediate proximity to an election would inevitable raise questions over the motivation and urgency of such an inquiry. 11.31am: Breaking: The Guardian understands that Neil Wallis has been arrested by Operation Elveden – the Met police’s investigation into alleged payments by journalists to police – rather than Operation Weeting – the investigation into phone hacking. 11.51am correction: It was Operation Weeting, the phone hacking investigation, not Elveden, that arrested Wallis. Apologies. 11.27am: Lord Prescott, the former deputy prime minister, Brian Paddick, the former senior Met police officer and Lib Dem candidate for mayor of London, and Chris Bryant MP, who are all applying for judicial review of the police over phone hacking, are to be joined by two new claimants, according to Bindmans solicitors. Ben Jackson and “HJK” are members of the public whose voicemails were hacked into on behalf of the News of the World, the law firm says. Neither were told by the police they were victims until the new investigation took charge earlier this year. The family of Milly Dowler and others will also give statements as interested parties in support of the judicial review. The claimants are asking the high court to order that the police failed in their legal duties by not warning people that they were victims, and for failing to conduct a proper investigation, the firm says. 11.16am: My colleagues on the media desk have confirmed that the 60-year-old arrested over phone hacking this morning is ex-News of the World executive editor Neil Wallis. 11.13am: Over on his Politics blog, Andrew Sparrow assesses Nick Clegg’s speech from this morning, which he calls “an exercise in liberal triumphalism”. Andy points out that Clegg’s call for the Press Complaints Commission to be replaced with a system of “independent regulation” dovetails with David Cameron’s preference for “independent regulation” over self-regulation or statutory regulation. The concept is still quite vague, although Clegg said the new press regulator should have the power to fine editors or journalists for breaking the code of conduct. The deputy prime minister also suggested the law be changed so journalists and investigators could be jailed for “blagging” – obtaining personal information by deception. 11.06am: Sky and the BBC are both reporting that the man arrested today is Neil Wallis, former executive editor of the News of the World. More as we get it. 11.00am: The New York Times is claiming that James Murdoch had argued that News Corp should press ahead with the BSkyB deal, but his father overruled him, “consulting him only after the decision was all but final”. The paper also speculates that News Corp might split off all its newspapers into a new company run by new management. This is a move that Rupert Murdoch, 80, is certain to resist fiercely. Though Fox News has of late become the thrust of his political power in the United States, as well as a major source of revenue, his newspapers were the seedlings of his vast media enterprise. His emotional attachment to them runs deep, and they remain influential platforms not just in this country but in Britain. James Murdoch, 38, is said to share none of his father’s romantic notions about newspapers. The NYT also reports on the prospect of News Corp’s facing a US inquiry. Some legal experts cast doubt that the government would pursue a legal case against News Corporation. Ellen S Podgor, a law professor at the Stetson University College of Law and a regular contributor to a blog about the anticorruption act, said that initiating an investigation against the company “would be like entering a minefield”. She said prosecutors would weigh the first amendment [free speech] issues involved and the fact that other statutes covered the conduct in Britain “where they allegedly occurred”. 10.43am: Here’s my colleague Hélène Mulholland’s report on Nick Clegg’s call for Rupert Murdoch and Rebekah Brooks to give evidence to the Commons media committee . She has a good quote from the deputy prime minister: Firstly we need to look at whether they have got the power and the ability to compel them. If someone cannot be compelled I don’t know whether we can frogmarch them to the select committee. But if they have any shred of sense of responsibility or accountability for their position of power then they should come and explain themselves to the select committee. Evan Harris, the former Lib Dem MP, said he expected Brooks to appear before the committee on Tuesday. 10.38am: Here’s my colleague Jason Deans’s piece on the 60-year-old man arrested over phone hacking at the News of the World. Detectives from Operation Weeting, the Metropolitan police investigation into mobile interceptions by News International, are understood to have raided an address in west London. The man was taken for questioning at a local police station on suspicion of conspiring to intercept communications, a Scotland Yard spokesman said. The suspect is the ninth arrest Scotland Yard has made since the fresh investigation into phone hacking was launched in January. A Scotland Yard statement confirmed the arrest was carried out at 6.30am. “The man is currently in custody at a west London police station,” the Met said. “It would be inappropriate to discuss any further details at this time.” 10.27am: Australia’s government may review media laws in the wake of the phone hacking scandal at the News of the World, Julia Gillard said today. The Australian prime minister said: To see some of the things that have been done to intrude on people’s privacy, particularly in moments of grief and stress in the family lives, I’ve truly been disgusted to see it. 10.26am: My colleague Andrew Sparrow has more details of Nick Clegg’s interview on Radio 4 this morning, during which he said Rupert Murdoch, James Murdoch and Rebekah Brooks should give evidence to the Commons culture committee. He said it was not clear whether parliament had the ability to force them to attend. But they should do so voluntarily, he said. Here’s the key quote: If they have any shred of sense of responsibility or accountability for their position of power, then they should come and explain themselves before a select committee. On changes to the Press Complaints Commission, the deputy prime minister called it “far too weak”, and he said that the Lib Dems had never been in thrall to Murdoch. To be far, I’ve been criticised for many things in my time, but the idea that Liberal Democrats have been in the pockets of media moguls … not least because they were perhaps not very interested in having us in their pockets in the first place. We’ve actually been talking about this for years and years and years. Andy also points out that John Whittingdale, the chairman of the Commons culture committee, was on BBC News earlier explaining what the position is in terms of the Murdochs and Brooks being compelled to attend the select committee. The committee has invited the three to attend, and asked them to reply by 9.30am. Andy writes: Whittingdale said it was “not completely” clear what would happen next. If the three do not reply, the committee will issue a formal summons. The hearing will then go ahead next Tuesday and either the three will appear or there will be “three empty chairs”. Whittingdale said he really would hold a hearing with three empty chairs. If the witnesses did not appear, the committee would report that to the Commons as a whole as a contempt of parliament. But at that point it was not clear what would happen, Whittingdale said. The last time this happened was 50 years ago, when John Junor, the Sunday Express editor, was summoned to parliament. Junor obeyed. To find a precedent where someone refused to obey a summons, you have to go back much further. “We are almost into uncharted water,” Whittingdale said. (My understanding is that, in theory, the Commons could order the serjeant-at-arms to go off and arrest the Murdochs or Brooks for a contempt of parliament. That is what used to happen in the 18th century, when the Commons also had the power to jail people for an offence of this kind. But apparently the lawyers accept that it would be impossible for parliament to do this now. For a start, it would never get past the Human Rights Act.) 10.20am: Over at Bloggingheads , Reuters media blogger Felix Salmon describes the hacking scandal as “the UK’s Arab Spring”. Academic Henry Farrell likens it to the child abuse scandal in Catholic church in Ireland. _ 10.15am: The BBC points out that at one point Nick Clegg accidentally called Rupert Murdoch’s company “News Corpse”. 10.14am: That’s it from Clegg. Coming up today: • It is expected that Rebekah Brooks may be called to give evidence to the Commons media committee. • The advice given by cabinet secretary Gus O’Donnell to former prime minister Gordon Brown suggesting Brown should not hold a judicial inquiry into phone hacking may be published today. • The Metropolitan police authority is meeting at 2.30pm and may make an emergency motion about hacking. • We will also be watching the US for any moves by the attorney general, Eric Holder, or other US politicians or bodies, against Murdoch’s companies. 10.09am: Is Vince Cable owed an apology now for being punished for saying he had “declared war on Murdoch”, when he had the responsibility for deciding whether News Corp should take over BSkyB? Clegg does not give a clear answer. “Do I think that Vince’s misgivings about the proposed deal have been vindicated?” he muses, without answering. “Was it a deal serious enough to elicit serious scrutiny? You bet.” 10.05am: Should parliament take on new powers to compel people to attend select committee hearings? “Let’s see what happens,” Clegg says. “We don’t know if the individuals who have been asked to attend will refuse or not” – a reference to Rupert and James Murdoch and Rebekah Brooks. When you give people power and they think they can act without being held to account that will always go wrong, Clegg says. They should make themselves available for questioning, he says. He says he has an enormous amount of sympathy for Gordon and Sarah Brown about the publication of details about his son’s illness. But on his speech yesterday “I sensed a whiff of rewriting history … Are we really supposed to believe that for 13 years he was hamstrung by dastardly officials? … There were many other things that he wanted to do over those years that he just “bulldozed through”. Not on phone hacking or regulation of the media, Clegg says. To Brooks and Murdoch he says: “Do the decent thing … When you’re in that position of power, you are also accountable … Make yourself available.” 10.03am: The Lib Dems have been the most outspoken on this issue, he says. At every single turn we were blocked, “by the bigger vested interests in politics … who didn’t want to open that Pandora’s box.” This is now an opportunity, he says, to do things better in the future. 10.02am: Is News Corp fit and proper to own its existing 39% stake in BSkyB? “Fit and proper” is not a clearly defined concept in law, he says, and we need “greater clarity” on that. It has been developed in other domains, such as financial services. 10.00am: What was Clegg’s wanring to David Cameron about hiring and Andy Coulson? He won’t be drawn on specifics. But he says he had “serious misgivings” about “allegations of hacking and so forth … Of course we discussed this”. But he and Cameron don’t vet each other’s advisers. “It was his decision and his decision alone, for which he takes responsibility.” 9.57am: Questions from the media. Is he saying the public should stop buying and watching News Corp products? Clegg says the public has realised the media was invading their privacy. They are disgusted and feel revulsion, he says. They are looking at what they are reading with a cynicism that was not there before, and that is healthy, he says. Do the Tories agree with his proposals today? He says what he has said on the Press Complaints Commission and plurality and transparency is “not that radical” and “long overdue”. 9.56am: The hacking scandals will no doubt continue but we must stay focused on the endgame: getting the ball rolling while the demand for change is still strong to rebuild confidence in our media institutions and make sure this never happens again, Clegg says. 9.53am: On to the police. The Met has a big job winning back public confidence, Clegg says. If information was obtained in the public interest there may be a case for a custodial sentence, Clegg suggests. 3. Plurality . A corporate monopoly threatens democracy almost as much as a state monopoly does. Traditional media still matters, he says – it’s still responsible for the majority of original journalism. The plurality test – why doesn’t it cover companies that expand their market share naturally through market growth? We should also look at the way competition law operates, Clegg says. 9.48am: 2. Accountability . This has improved in other areas of the economy: financial services and the police are now far more accountable. But the media has not kept up. It has “institutionalised immunity” from the basic standards of the rest of the country, Clegg claims. Corporate governance for the media needs to be examined. Something must be wrong when misconduct and lawbreaking can be endemic in an organisation while senior staff do nothing, he says. He thinks we need to address a lack of clarity over what it means to be “fit and proper” to own media companies. The PCC has failed, he says. It is only a limited complaints body. If a member of the public is shocked by the treatment of Kate Middleton (above), they can’t complain. Only Kate can complain. Clegg thinks that’s crazy. We need an independent body, he says, with proper sanctions including financial penalties. Scrutiny needs to extend to dealings between press, politicians and police. Civil servants and advisers will have to record their meetings with media figures. 9.44am: His three principles for reform of the media: 1. Press freedom . “The lifeblood of liberal democracy.” He says the last week has been a triumph for proper investigative reporting. Journalists will never be shrinking violets and papers will never be owned by angels, he says. He does not want to live in a society where politicians feel comfortable with the press. 9.44am: Nick Clegg is giving a speech in central London now on phone hacking. He says all parties now have a rare opportunity to work together to reform the media. 9.39am: Breaking: A 60-year-old man was arrested in London this morning by detectives investigating phone hacking at the News of the World. More as we get it. 9.24am: Hello, and welcome to today’s live coverage of the continued crisis in Rupert Murdoch’s media empire, the day after Murdoch abandoned News Corporation’s bid for 100% of BSkyB. To recap the main developments from this morning and yesterday : • Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, has said that Rupert Murdoch should appear before the Commons culture, media and sport committee to answer questions about the phone hacking scandal that led to the closure of the News of the World. Clegg said today that Murdoch had “big questions” to answer after the scandal forced him to drop his bid for full control of BSkyB yesterday. The committee has asked Murdoch to appear next week with his son James and Rebekah Brooks, the chief executive of News International, Murdoch’s British newspaper arm. Clegg said the three should appear “if they have any shred of sense of responsibility or accountability for their position of power”. • Rupert Murdoch abandoned his bid to buy the whole of BSkyB yesterday. News Corporation announced that it was withdrawing its bid only a few hours before the start of a Commons debate that saw all three major parties supporting a motion saying that the bid would not be “in the public interest”. • David Cameron launched a wide-ranging inquiry into media standards. It will be headed by Lord Justice Leveson and it will take place in two parts. The first part will cover the “culture, practices and ethics of the press” generally and Cameron wants it to report within a year. It will have the power to summon witnesses, and Cameron said that he expected politicians and newspaper proprietors to be called to give evidence, saying: “If you own the media in this country, you should be able to be called under oath.” This has been interpreted as a call for Murdoch to appear. • MPs passed a motion opposing Murdoch’s bid for BSkyB. During the parliamentary debate Gordon Brown accused the civil service of blocking his attempts to hold an inquiry into phone hacking before the election. He asked Sir Gus O’Donnell, the cabinet secretary, to look into setting up an inquiry but was advised not to set one up. • Ed Miliband accused Cameron of making a “catastrophic error of judgment” when he gave Andy Coulson a post in Downing Street. At PMQs, Miliband accused Cameron of ignoring warnings his staff had received from the Guardian about Coulson. • Senior US politicians called for the Justice Department, the FBI and Congressional hearings to investigate allegations that the News of the World hacked phones and bribed police officers. Amid signs that the scandal is becoming a major issue in the US , the families of victims of the 9/11 terror attacks also backed demands for an investigation following claims that the phones of those killed had been targeted by the UK tabloid. A number of key members of the family that controlled the Wall Street Journal said they would not have agreed to sell the newspaper to Murdoch is they had been aware of News International’s conduct over phone hacking at the time. Phone hacking United States Rupert Murdoch Newspapers News of the World BSkyB BSkyB Paul Owen guardian.co.uk

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Date of Birth : 1 January 1983 (28 years old) Place of Birth : Pasadena, California, USA Alison Brie is an American actress mostly known for performing guest spots for Comedy Central and Disney’s “Hannah Montana”. Alison Brie was born in Hollywood and grew up Los Angeles. She has been interested in acting at an early age and she began her career performing in community theater shows at the Jewish Community Center in Los Feliz. Her very first role was “Toto” in the Wizard of Oz. Alison Brie Photo’s :

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Date of Birth : 27 November 1985 (25 years old) Place of Birth : Toronto, Canada Alison Pill is an actress born in Canada. She was so keen to be in the movie “Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen” that after her fist audition was turned down she took pictures of herself as the character and sent them to the producers to convince them how right she was for the part! She is a big Coldplay fan and often camps out for tickets. Alison Pill Photo’s :

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The Open 2011 round one – live! | Scott Murray

• Click refresh to update or tick the auto-update button • Don’t bother emailing in, my account is jiggered • Marvel at Paul Lawrie’s hole-by-hole guide to Sandwich • Click here for the official Open leaderboard • And here for more news, analysis and video highlights 10.45am: Donald makes his first mistake of the day, pushing his tee shot at 6, but though his ball teases with a greenside bunker, it stays out and gives him a very good chance of getting up and down. 10.40am: Another par for McIlroy on 6, a par for Donald on the tricky 5th. There’s not much in the way of movement going on; today will be all about not falling out of contention, rather than making the running. The weather’s set to improve tomorrow, only to get worse again at the weekend. Oh, hold on, Miguel Angel Jimenez has just carded his second birdie of the day, this one on 9, to join Calcavecchia in second place. 10.35am: A birdie from Thomas Bjorn on 12, to give him the sole leadership. Calcavecchia is the only man still at-2. The course isn’t giving away much today. The weather’s expected to ease off a bit in the afternoon, which will be music to the ears of Lee Westwood (2.10pm), Graeme McDowell and Bubba Watson (1.43pm), Martin Kaymer, Louis Oosthuizen and Phil Mickelson (2.21pm) and perhaps even SANDY LYLE (12.26pm). 10.30am: Ishikawa is having something of a nightmare so far. He’s +2 through 4, and has just sliced a long iron into pure rubbish on the next hole. On 5, McIlroy requires a ten-footer to save his par. He’s escaped bogeys on the last two holes now. 10.20am: Donald had more than 12 feet to go, to be fair, and so his birdie putt didn’t drop. That’s a par, though; he’s -1 through 4. Garcia can’t save his, sending a hot first putt a good eight feet past the hole, then failing to save his par. And so it begins. He hit a wonderful tee shot, only to overcook his wedge approach, and bugger it up from there on in. How many majors would this guy have if he could putt? He’d have challenged McIlroy for the US Open last month, for a start. 10.15am: Donald has started very nicely indeed; another lovely iron, to 12 feet or so, into 4. Garcia looks to have followed him, but his ball bites at the front of the green and stays put. He’ll have two putts for par, but there’s some distance to travel. Neither McIlroy nor Els can find the green on 5. 10.10am: Trying to keep the ball on the 5th fairway is like attempting to land a block of ice halfway up a wall made of salt. Els and McIlroy see their drives take idiotic kicks into the right-hand rough after landing their balls pretty much in the middle of the fairway. Donald makes his birdie putt on 4; Sergio has to settle for par. As for Britain’s Martin Laird – you’ll see why in a second – he’s just double bogeyed 9 to fall off the top of the leaderboard in spectacular style. 10.07am: Par for McIlroy on 4; he’s +2 through the hole. He dealt with a tricky situation very calmly there. Maybe that’ll give him some positive momentum. 10.05am: Ha! John Daly’s out on the course, in a ludicrous luminous orange hat, compensating for the fact that his egregious breeks are currently covered by some sober-coloured waterproofs. He rakes in a Fowleresque right-to-left breaker from off the back of the green, to open with a birdie. John Daly! 10am: McIlroy drives his ball into deep rough down the left at 4. But from a terrible position, and with a crosswind making a nuisance of itself, he knocks perhaps the shot of the day so far to 12 feet. He’s left with a fairly straight putt up the green, though it’s by no means a nailed-on birdie. Even so, to get out of trouble from there was very decent work. Here’s the leaderboard on the hour: -2 Calcavecchia (13) Storm (13) Bjorn (9) Laird (8) -1 Jacobson (10) Dyson (9) Moore (9) Jimenez (7) Goosen (2) Hansen (2) 9.57am: On 3, great tee shots from Garcia, to 20 feet, and in particular Donald, who knocks his 5-iron pin high, leaving him a ten-foot birdie chance. Todd Hamilton’s dropped another shot; he’s now +5. Your rescue club isn’t going to get you out of this one, Todd, is it. 9.55am: Scottish golf is in a bit of a state at the moment, even if Paul Lawrie remains the last home winner of this championship. But here’s Martin Laird, the only Scot on the US tour, who follows up a birdie on the par-five 7th with a majestic approach to 8; he knocks in a three-foot birdie putt to join the leaders on -2. 9.50am: From the back of 3, McIlroy leaves himself a good 12 feet short of the hole. He can’t make the par putt; he’s +2. This is a rocky start from the US Open champion. Speaking of hopeless starts, here’s 2004 champion Todd Hamilton. Remember him? Of course you don’t. He’s +4 after 10, having gone out in 39 strokes. Meanwhile Bjorn’s Sandwich nightmares begin again: the leader misses a two-foot tiddler on 9 to drop back to -2. 9.45am: McIlroy’s tee shot into the par-three 3rd lands reasonably close to the pin but takes a hard bounce and springs off the back of the green. He’ll do well to save par. Fowler and Els aren’t too close either. Donald looks in the mood, though; despite pushing his tee shot into heavy rough down 2, he’s found the middle of the green, getting a surprising amount of spin from that filth. 9.40am: Fowler has to knock in a testing ten-foot par putt on 2. He’s due a proper tilt at a major championship. Being paired with McIlroy, very much his contemporary, will concentrate the mind. Rory and Ernie pop in for pars too. Calcavecchia has responded to his bogey on 11 with a birdie at 12; he’s back on -2. On the BBC – and I’m very happy to say I only caught the second half of this snippet of commentary – Peter Alliss has just mentioned “a Colonel in the clubhouse bashing one off”. There are generational issues at play here, I am sure of it. I have to convince myself that’s the case. 9.35am: Garcia makes par on 1. Donald gets up and down from the back without much fuss; he’ll be in the mood after a superlative show at Castle Stuart in the Scottish Open. Ishikawa bogeys, though, after making a pig’s lug of his pitch from the right of the green, the ball barely getting up onto the putting surface. These greens are lightening fast, incidentally. Graeme Storm has drained one from off the front of the 12th; he’s -2. 9.32am: Bjorn is doing his level best to chase those demons away: he birdies 8 for sole ownership of the lead. On 1, Garcia chips marvellously from off the back of the green to a couple of feet. A sure knock-in par for anyone else; anything between par and quadruple bogey for Sergio and his Special Putter. 9.30am: The breeze is picking up. Garcia’s approach to the 1st is down in Fowler Country. As is Donald’s. Ishikawa attempts to bounce in a Scottish wedge, but his ball takes a huge kick to the right and rolls off the green. They’ll all have tests to save par. On 7, Alvaro Quiros joins Bjorn on -2, reaching the front of the par-five hole in two, then rolling in a huge right-to-left breaker that takes an age to drop, but eventually sneaks in. His playing partner Ryan Moore picks up his second birdie of the day to join him. Calcavecchia isn’t leading any more, however, having dropped a shot at 11. 9.25am: Back up on the tee, Luke Donald and Ryo Ishikawa clack booming tee shots down the middle. And here comes Sergio! What special nonsense awaits today from our slapstick hero? He starts as he probably won’t go on, creaming a perfect 3-wood straight down the fairway. Meanwhile on the green, McIlroy prods an uncertain par putt at the hole, the ball staying high on the left. He opens with a bogey five, which wasn’t in the script. But then the young man from Holywood rarely bothers to follow scripts. 9.20am: What a birdie putt on the 1st from Fowler, who rakes in a 20-yard monster from just off the back of the green! What a start to his tournament. McIlroy’s ball was just in front of Fowler’s, but he doesn’t learn much from the schooling, setting his putt out to the left, where it stays. He’ll have a tester coming back. 9.15am: Fowler and McIlroy both find the middle of the green at the 1st, but they’re not getting much in the way of spin from their positions in the rough, and their balls bounce through the green and fall off the back. They’ll both do well to get up and down from there. Els, from the middle of the fairway, can get a bit of bite with his approach and gives himself a birdie chance from 15 feet or so. On 7, Bjorn sends his third to eight feet, and rolls the birdie putt in; he’s got a share of the early lead with Mark Calcavecchia at -2. Memories of 2003 for Bjorn? If so, they’ll pretty much all be bad ones. 9.10am: “On the tee from Northern Ireland, Rory McIlroy.” A huge cheer, pretty much as you’d expect. His first shot in competitive golf since rolling the ball into the cup on the 18th at Congressional, a 3-wood, is clapped down the track, only taking a kick right off the undulating fairway and into the semi-rough. He’ll be fine from there. His playing partner Els – who towers over him as they walk down the hole chatting warmly – is straight down the middle. Rickie Fowler completes the group, and he’s hit a screamer that’s just leaked a bit left. Conditions today: Blustery, but not preposterously so. Unlike 2003, the rough is said to be perfectly playable. Sandwich should offer the field quite a test, but nothing beyond reason. So, some of the notable early tee off times. Paul Casey and Ben Curtis have just gone out. Luke Donald, Ryo Ishikawa and Sergio Garcia are off at 9.20am. John Daly will begin his charge to -6 by the turn, before finishing the day +8, at 9.53am. And, of course, Ernie Els and Rickie Fowler are just about to tee off, along with a certain young lad from Holywood. The Open: It is on! The last time the Open was held here, Thomas Bjorn should have won. Should have, but didn’t. He held a three-shot lead on the 15th tee; four holes later, all hope was gone, the centrepiece of his meltdown a thundering nervous breakdown in a bunker at 16. Curtis was the champion, having only dropped 978 strokes over the last nine holes. What a hero. Anyway, Bjorn has started well this year; a late qualifier, he’s birdied the 2nd and after six holes is -1, a shot behind the early leader, the 1989 champ Mark Calcavecchia. So, then, a very early leaderboard at 9am: -2 Mark Calcavecchia (9) -1 Thomas Bjorn (6) Simon Dyson (6) Ryan Moore (5) Hiroyuki Fujita (3) Welcome to the Guardian’s coverage of the 140th Open Championship, from Royal St George’s, Sandwich, Kent. Arguably the four greatest days in the entire sporting year lay ahead of us. Which will only be spoilt at the very end when a US journeyman comes ambling out of the pack at the very last minute and makes off with the spoils. You know how this works. I’ve still not quite recovered from 2009 yet, when Stewart Cink ruined everyone’s dreams, and by definition, their lives. Welcome to the Guardian’s coverage of the 140th Open Championship, from Royal St George’s, Sandwich, Kent, where some of the greats of the game have lifted the Auld Claret Jug. Harry Vardon. Walter Hagen. Bobby Locke. Sandy Lyle. Greg Norman. Bill, er, Rogers. Ben Cu… let’s start again. The Open 2011 The Open Golf Scott Murray guardian.co.uk

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Betting shakeup will target offshore bookmakers

Offshore betting operations would have to be licensed under government plans to help fund horse-racing industry The government is to launch a crackdown on offshore betting which will mean bookmakers operating in Britain, including those based abroad, must be licensed by the Gambling Commission . The heritage minister, John Penrose, said: “We are intending to move as fast as we can towards a system which will fix the problem of offshore betting. “We plan to move to a system which will switch away from the current organisation which has driven many bookmakers offshore.” Speaking to MPs on Wednesday night, he said the revamped industry would be based on the point of consumption rather than production. “It means anybody based anywhere in the world who wants to sell gambling services to any consumer based in the UK will, in future, have to have a Gambling Commission licence.” The Conservative MP Matthew Hancock had earlier called for bookmakers taking bets in Britain to be run from Britain so they funded horse racing through the betting levy, rather than being able to avoid it by being based offshore. “We need a level playing field by ensuring all gambling in the UK pays UK tax and UK levy.” He warned that racing prize money was falling fast and jobs that relied on the “sport of kings” were at risk. Opening the debate, Hancock said funding for horse racing had been in crisis for the past few years. “The problem is in part because those who make a profit from the sport through the gambling on it have gone offshore to escape contributing to the sport on which they rely.” He hoped to put the sport which “gives so much excitement to so many people on an even keel so its funding is fair and secure for years to come”. Penrose agreed reform was needed. “The levy as it currently stands is broken,” he said. “It does not work and people on all sides – whether in the gambling industry or in racing – are pretty united in their criticism of it.” Penrose said the government’s plans would be set out in a written ministerial statement on Thursday. Horse racing Sport betting guardian.co.uk

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