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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/18/2013 9:49:49 AM

Texas prosecutor murders: Not linked to white supremacists, after all?

The wife of a disgraced former justice of the peace is charged in killings once suspected to be the handiwork of the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas

Texas authorities arrested the wife of a disgraced former justice of the peace, Eric Williams, on Wednesday, and charged her with the killings of Kaufman County, Texas, prosecutor Mike McLelland, his wife, and one of his top assistants, Mark Hasse. Kim Williams, 46, was charged with capital murder, meaning she could face the death penalty. (According to the Kaufman County Sheriff's office, Kim confessed to the killings to investigators.) Eric Williams, 46, hasn't been charged yet, but he's already in jail, with bond set at $3 million, for allegedly sending an anonymous, threatening e-mail to law enforcement officials.

Initially, investigators worked on the theory that the most likely suspects were members of the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, a white supremacist prison gang. The Kaufman County prosecutors had a hand in a task force that moved against the gang last year, and its members had vowed to retaliate. Recently, however, authorities started focusing on Williams, who was a lawyer and peace officer until last year, when he was convicted of stealing computer equipment in a case handled by McLelland and Hasse.

SEE MORE: Bachmann ethics investigation widens

Williams lost his license to practice law after the conviction, and complained that his dramatic fall left him facing extreme financial hardship. He said his wife was "ill and on disability," and her elderly and ailing parents, who live nearby, were also suffering. Williams insisted that McLelland had prosecuted him to settle a political grudge — and that McLelland used evidence that had been tampered with to convict him. The murder case zeroed in on the couple on Saturday, when investigators searched a storage unit a friend rented on Williams' behalf, and found it filled with guns and a white Ford Crown Victoria similar to a vehicle witnesses spotted fleeing the scene after Hasse's murder in January.

The case sure looks different now. "Initial media speculation and reporting was almost entirely wrong," says William A. Jacobson at Legal Insurrection — much like in the Newtown and Boston Marathon cases. Journalists rushed to cite this as a case of "white supremacists" running amok, and now investigators are saying it's connected to a disgruntled peace officer and his wife, who went over the edge.

SEE MORE: Why do we know so little about what happened in Boston?

Justin Peters at Slate says he can see why authorities focused on a violent gang first. "These shootings were so brazen that it felt like they had to be the handiwork of some sinister gang that had nothing left to lose — like the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas," he says. Assassinating two prosecutors certainly seems like the kind of dark mission that "would have required a lot of work and planning." On second thought, though, it's not clear how, precisely, the gang would have stood to benefit.

Besides, if the gang members were to have gone after the men who tried to put them in jail, there were more obvious targets than Hasse and McLelland. The fact that the idea didn't make much sense wasn't seen as a major strike against the story, given that a lot of things that crazy prison gangs do don't make much sense. Which is true, I guess, but still probably isn't the best starting point when you're trying to solve a couple of murders. [Slate]

SEE MORE: Today in business: 5 things you need to know

View this article on TheWeek.com Get 4 Free Issues of The Week


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/18/2013 9:52:11 AM

Official: Suspect in custody in Boston bombings


BOSTON (AP) — A suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings was taken into custody Wednesday in a breakthrough that came less than 48 hours after the deadly attack, a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation said Wednesday.

The official spoke shortly after several media outlets reported that a suspect had been identified from surveillance video taken at a Lord & Taylor store between the sites of the two bomb blasts, which killed three people and wounded more than 170.

The official was not authorized to divulge details of the investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. The suspect was expected at a Boston courthouse under heavy security, the official said.

A news briefing was scheduled later Wednesday.

Law enforcement agencies had earlier pleaded for the public to come forward with photos, videos or any information that might help them solve the twin bombings. Police also gathered surveillance video from businesses around the finish line.

The bombs were made from ordinary kitchen pressure cookers packed with explosives, nails and ball bearings to inflict maximum carnage, investigators and others close to the case said. But the FBI said nobody had claimed responsibility.

Investigators in white jumpsuits had fanned out across the streets, rooftops and awnings around the blast site in search of clues on Wednesday. They combed through debris amid the toppled orange sports drink dispensers, trash cans and sleeves of plastic cups strewn across the street at the marathon's finish line.

President Barack Obama branded the attack an act of terrorism. Obama plans to attend an interfaith service Thursday in the victims' honor in Boston.

Scores of victims of the Boston bombing remained in hospitals, many with grievous injuries. Doctors who treated the wounded corroborated reports that the bombs were packed with shrapnel intended to cause mayhem. In addition to the 5-year-old child, a 9-year-old girl and 10-year-old boy were among 17 victims listed in critical condition.

The trauma surgery chief at Boston Medical Center says most of the injuries his hospital treated after the marathon bombings were to the legs.

"We have a lot of lower extremity injuries, so I think the damage was low to the ground and wasn't up," Dr. Peter Burke said. "The patients who do have head injuries were blown into things or were hit by fragments that went up."

Dozens of patients have been released from hospitals around the Boston area.

At Massachusetts General Hospital, all four amputations performed there were above the knee, with no hope of saving more of the legs, said Dr. George Velmahos, chief of trauma surgery.

"It wasn't a hard decision to make," he said Tuesday. "We just completed the ugly job that the bomb did."

The bombs exploded 10 or more seconds apart, tearing off victims' limbs and spattering streets with blood. The blasts near the finish line instantly turned the festive race into a hellish scene of confusion, horror and heroics.

The blasts killed 8-year-old Martin Richard, of Boston, and 29-year-old Krystle Campbell, of Medford. The Shenyang Evening News, a state-run Chinese newspaper, identified the third victim as Lu Lingzi. She was a graduate student at Boston University.

___

Associated Press writers Jay Lindsay, Pat Eaton-Robb, Steve LeBlanc, Bridget Murphy, Rodrique Ngowi and Meghan Barr in Boston; Eileen Sullivan, Julie Pace and Lara Jakes in Washington; Paisley Dodds in London; Lee Keath in Cairo; and Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee contributed to this report along with investigative researcher Randy Herschaft in New York.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/18/2013 9:56:23 AM

Apple's stock price reaches new low: Why are investors so jittery?

The tech giant's Wall Street woes continue

Apple's stock cannot stop tumbling, hitting a new worrisome benchmark this week. The company's share price dipped below $400, its lowest level in 16 months. It also represents a steep drop — 42 percent — from an all-time high of $705.07 in the heady days of September 2012.

The curious part is that Apple's much-anticipated earnings report for the first quarter isn't even out yet. So why are investors so jittery?

SEE MORE: Why the GOP abandoned Mark Sanford

A few ideas are bumping around. First, Cirrus Logic, which manufactures audio chips for iOS devices, announced a revenue forecast with numbers well below Wall Street expectations, fueling concern that Apple's iPhone and iPad sales have dropped.

Cirrus, for its part, says one of its customers — it won’t say which — has moved on to a different audio component, which could mean that Apple is merely dropping Cirrus as a supplier. But as Nigam Arora at Forbes notes, "The stock market so far seems oblivious to this alternate explanation."

SEE MORE: Background checks defeated: A death knell for gun control?

Even if Cirrus' results do reflect a drop in iPhone sales, they "shouldn't create such a hard hit," says Romain Dillet at Tech Crunch. Another factor may be that Apple hasn’t announced a new product since the iPad Mini in October 2012. Product announcements tend to bump stock prices, and such a long gap between surges may have left investors feeling antsy.

Competition could be another factor, with two much-hyped products — the HTC One and Samsung’s Galaxy S4 — hitting stores soon.

SEE MORE: Predicting the next Boston

But beyond these short-term factors, many are tying today's dive to a broader slump in confidence in Apple's prowess. Fears that Apple has run out of creative juice to produce another game-changing device has only deepened, and the pressure on CEO Tim Cook to pull another iPhone or iPad out of his hat is increasing.

"The CEO is not a product visionary," say Jay Yarow and Henry Blodget at Business Insider. "Apple has cash coming out of its ears, but no clue what to do with it."

SEE MORE: Texas prosecutor murders: Not linked to white supremacists, after all?

We'll see what happens when Apple releases its first-quarter report next week. For now, every week brings more evidence that Apple is no longer the golden boy on Wall Street. Indeed, on Wednesday the company lost its title as the world’s most valuable publicly traded company to Exxon Mobil.

View this article on TheWeek.com Get 4 Free Issues of The Week


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/18/2013 10:03:28 AM

War medicine now is helping Boston bomb victims

Associated Press/MetroWest Daily News, Ken McGagh, File - FILE - In this April 15, 2013 photo, an injured person is helped on the sidewalk near the Boston Marathon finish line following an explosion in Boston. The bombs that made Boston look like a combat zone have also brought battlefield medicine to their civilian victims. A decade of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has sharpened skills and scalpels, leading to dramatic advances that are now being used to treat the 13 amputees and nearly a dozen other patients still fighting to keep damaged limbs. (AP Photo/MetroWest Daily News, Ken McGagh, File) MANDATORY CREDIT

FILE - In this Monday, May 28, 2012 file photo, U.S. Army Capt. Dan Berschinski, foreground, uses prosthetic legs to stand on the field before a baseball game between the St. Louis Cardinals and Atlanta Braves in Atlanta. Berschinski lost both legs to an IED blast while serving in Afghanistan in 2009. Nearly 2,000 American troops have lost a leg, arm, foot or hand in Iraq or Afghanistan, and their sacrifices have led to advances in the immediate and long-term care of survivors, as well in the quality of prosthetics that are now so good that surgeons often chose them over trying to save a badly mangled leg. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
FILE - In this Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012 file photo, U.S. Marine Cpl. Daniel Riley, 21, navigates the steps outside his apartment on his prosthetic legs in San Diego, Calif. Riley lost both legs to an IED in Afhganistan. Learning to walk on his prosthetic legs was "like kicking a soccer ball in a swimming pool." Nearly 2,000 American troops have lost a leg, arm, foot or hand in Iraq or Afghanistan, and their sacrifices have led to advances in the immediate and long-term care of survivors, as well in the quality of prosthetics that are now so good that surgeons often chose them over trying to save a badly mangled leg. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi)

The bombs that made Boston look like a combat zone have also brought battlefield medicine to their civilian victims. A decade of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has sharpened skills and scalpels, leading to dramatic advances that are now being used to treat the 13 amputees and nearly a dozen other patients still fighting to keep damaged limbs after Monday's attack.

"The only field or occupation that benefits from war is medicine," said Dr. David Cifu, rehabilitation medicine chief at the Veterans Health Administration.

Nearly 2,000 U.S. troops have lost a leg, arm, foot or hand in Iraq or Afghanistan, and their sacrifices have led to advances in the immediate and long-term care of survivors, as well as in the quality of prosthetics that are now so good that surgeons often choose them over trying to save a badly mangled leg.

Tourniquets, shunned during the Vietnam War, made a comeback in Iraq as medical personnel learned to use them properly and studies proved that they saved lives. In Boston, as on the battlefield, they did just that by preventing people from bleeding to death.

Military doctors passed on to their civilian counterparts a surgical strategy of a minimal initial operation to stabilize the patient, followed by more definitive ones days later, an approach that offered the best chance to preserve tissue from large and complex leg wounds.

At the same time, wartime demand for prosthetics has led to new innovations such as sophisticated computerized knees that work better than a badly damaged leg ever would again.

"This is a clear case where all of the expertise that was gained by prosthetic manufacturers was gained from the wars. It's astonishing how well they function and the things people can do with these prostheses," said Dr. Michael Yaffe, a trauma surgeon at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

The hospital has performed amputations on three blast victims so far. A few other patients there may yet need them. Yaffe is a lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserves, and many other doctors treating Boston blast victims also have had military training.

The military partnered with the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons to train doctors throughout the United States on advances learned from the wars, said Dr. Kevin Kirk, an Army lieutenant colonel who is chief orthopedic surgeon at San Antonio Military Medical Center.

Help, too, has come from Israel, which for decades has dealt with the aftermath of Palestinian bombs, like the ones in Boston, often laden with nails, ball bearings and other metals.

"Unfortunately, we have great expertise," said Dr. Pinchas Halpern, director of emergency medicine at Tel Aviv's Sourasky Medical Center.

Halpern, who gave lectures in 2005 at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Massachusetts General about responding to attacks, has been in email contact with doctors in Boston this week.

Among the topics he covered in his lectures were how to coordinate ambulances to distribute the wounded to area hospitals according to their type of injury, performing more CT scans than usual to locate deep shrapnel wounds and ways to identify and classify wounds.

Dr. Paul Biddinger of Mass General's emergency department said the hospital took much of Halpern's advice.

"We improved our plans for triage, site security, reassessment and inter-specialty coordination" following Halpern's visit, Biddinger said.

Blast victims can be challenging to treat because they typically have multiple complex physical injuries that may include loss of limbs, fractures, brain damage, and vision and hearing impairment, said Dr. Paul Pasquina, chairman of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the Uniformed Services University and Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

"It's very important that during their acute medical and surgical care that rehabilitation is applied early on, to get them up as soon as possible" to reduce risks from being immobile, including blood clots, deconditioned muscles and other problems that will make recovery more difficult," he said.

A multidisciplinary approach that involves everyone from plastic and orthopedic surgeons to therapists is important, said Dr. James Ficke, chairman of the department of orthopedics and rehabilitation at San Antonio Military Medical Center. He also advises the U.S. Army Surgeon General on orthopedics.

"As a doctor, one of the lessons I learned most dramatically is, I don't have any preconceptions of what they can or can't do as a patient. There was a patient who lost his leg completely and had no hip joint and recently did a marathon in Austin in 4:33."

John Fergason, chief prosthetist at Center for the Intrepid, an outpatient rehab center that is part of Brooke Army Medical Center, said advances include computerized knees that allow amputees with above-the-knee amputations to walk down steep ramps, to walk up steps and go from a walk to a run.

After every war, "you see a tremendous spike in prosthetic innovation," largely because of increased research money, said Hugh Herr, a prosthetic expert at MIT and a double-amputee himself. Federal funds let his MIT lab do basic research on a bionic foot-ankle-calf system, and he founded a company that has commercialized that device.

If Boston victims are generally healthy and motivated, and their legs are amputated below the knees, or perhaps even above the knees, "it's possible they could run the marathon a year from now," he said. "It would take a lot of effort, but it's indeed possible with today's technology."

One amputee's story is encouraging.

Dan Berschinski, 28, used to run marathons but now works with the Amputee Coalition, an advocacy and support organization based in suburban Washington, D.C. He was an infantry officer in Afghanistan when he stepped on an IED in August 2009. The blast blew off his entire right leg and most of his left leg. After treatment in the field and in Germany, he was sent to Walter Reed.

His biggest initial challenge was intense pain, treated with narcotic painkillers, and phantom leg and foot pain. Doctors used to consider phantom pain a psychological problem but now consider it real, physical pain. Treatment includes nerve blockers.

Recovery and rehab took about three years, including 10 months of daily physical therapy to strengthen his arms and core — muscle power he'd need to learn to walk on prosthetics.

The bionic legs he uses cost $60,000 apiece, are hydraulically operated and equipped with microchips and a gyroscope that sense when to relax and stiffen to help him walk. Walter Reed was involved in developing the legs, said Zach Harvey, former prosthetics chief at Walter Reed.

Berschinski used to run marathons but now competes in triathlons — swimming, biking with his arms and racing in a wheelchair.

"I'm very happy with my progress," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Malcolm Ritter in New York, Lindsey Tanner and Sharon Cohen in Chicago, and Daniel Estrin in Jerusalem contributed to this report.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/18/2013 10:08:52 AM

Options narrow for Venezuelan opposition

Associated Press/Fernando Llano - Opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles talks to journalists in Caracas, Venezuela, Monday, April 15, 2013. Venezuela's government-friendly electoral council indicated Monday it would quickly certify the presidential victory of Hugo Chavez' hand-picked successor Nicolas Maduro, apparently ignoring opposition demands for a recount in Sunday's tight race. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

'Chavista' demonstrators, supporters of President-elect Nicolas Maduro, march in front of the National Electoral Council (CNE) in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, April 17, 2013. Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles has presented a series of allegations of vote fraud and other irregularities to back up his demand for a vote-by-vote recount for the presidential election. Maduro, the hand-picked successor of the late Hugo Chavez, was declared the winner by 262,000 votes out of 14.9 million cast, and Capriles contends the purported abuses add up to more than Maduro's winning margin. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela's opposition watched its options dwindle Wednesday after the head of the Supreme Courtsaid there could be no recount of the razor-thin presidential election victory by Hugo Chavez's heir, leaving many governmentfoes feeling the only chance at power is to wait for the ruling socialists to stumble.

Opposition activists and independent observers called the judge's declaration blatant and legally unfounded favoritism from a purportedly independent body that is packed with confederates of President-elect Nicolas Maduro, Chavez's hand-picked successor.

The recount issue isn't before the court, but its president, Luisa Morales, appeared on television at midday to declare that the opposition call for an examination of each and every paper vote receipt had "angered many Venezuelans."

It was an unsubtle reminder that virtually every lever of power in Venezuela sits in the hands of a ruling party unafraid to use almost all means at its disposal to marginalize its opponents.

"In Venezuela the system is absolutely automatic, in such a way that manual recounts don't exist," Morales said.

Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles later told a TV interviewer that Morales should be disqualified from legal decision on petition that his campaign filed Wednesday for a recount.

A day earlier, Capriles canceled a march in the capital planned for Wednesday, saying the government planned to react with violence. That decision came after Maduro urged his own supporters to take to the streets Wednesday.

Maduro hectored the opposition during a 45-minute live appearance on state television Wednesday, calling his opponents "fascists" plotting to overthrow the government.

"Superman could not win an election here," Diego Arria, a former U.N. ambassador and conservative member of the opposition coalition, said resignedly.

"We're left with the option of calling the United Nations, the Organization of American States and the Inter-American Human Rights Commission, but that won't have any impact here," Arria told The Associated Press. "If the population stands down, we lose."

The National Electoral Council on Monday ratified Maduro as the winner of the previous day's vote with 50.8 percent to Capriles' 49 percent.

The United States, meanwhile, appeared to soften its insistence on a recount as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry left open the possibility of recognizing Maduro as president even the votes aren't reviewed.

The Obama administration has stood almost alone, along with Paraguay and Panama, in insisting on a recount as other governments congratulated Maduro, who is scheduled to be formally sworn in Friday.

Maduro's government said 15 countries had confirmed they were sending high-level delegations, among them Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Iran, China, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Haiti, Uruguay and Argentina.

Kerry said there was no plan to send a U.S. diplomat but when asked about whether the U.S. would recognize Maduro as legitimate, he said, "I can't give you a yes-or-no answer on that."

"If there are huge irregularities, we're going to have serious questions about the viability of that government. But that evaluation has to be made, and I haven't made it yet," Kerry told the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Maduro boomed angrily in a later TV appearance.

"Take your eyes off Venezuela, John Kerry! Get out of here! Enough interventionism!"

Capriles has presented a series of allegations of vote fraud and other irregularities that he contends easily add up to more than Maduro's 262,000-vote winning margin out of about 14.9 million votes cast. In addition, the electoral council says about 100,000 votes from abroad had not been counted by Wednesday, and Capriles got about 90 percent of such overseas ballots in the October presidential election won by Chavez.

The list of alleged problems includes:

— Government backers forced pro-Capriles observers out of 283 polling places at which 722,983 votes were cast, and the lack of witnesses raises the possibility of fraud, including double voting.

— Menacing bands of government supporters turned pro-Capriles voters away from the polls.

— There were 3,535 damaged voting machines, representing 189,982 votes.

— Voting rolls included 600,000 dead people.

Morales, the Supreme Court chief, said Venezuela's voting system is so automated that a manual count doesn't exist. Technically, however, a recount is possible as paper receipts are issued for every vote cast and can be checked against tallies done by each voting machine, voter registries and centralized records.

The non-partisan Academy of Political and Social Sciences at the Central University of Venezuela said paper ballots are explicitly described in Venezuela's election law as a tool for investigating vote irregularities. "Recounting votes, along with protests and peaceful demonstrations, is one of the legitimate means of democratic co-existence," it said.

Maduro and his ruling circle have accused Capriles of inciting postelection violence by "neo-Nazi gangs" that the government said claimed eight lives and injured 61.

___

Associated Press writers E. Eduardo Castillo, Frank Bajak, Fabiola Sanchez and Michael Weissenstein contributed to this report.

___

Vivian Sequera on Twitter: http://twitter.com/VivianSequera

Christopher Toothaker on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ctoothaker

___

NOTE: So what about the seven dead reported in Venezuela? (see next post)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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