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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/18/2013 10:47:40 PM

Even in desert retreat, monks feel Egypt's turmoil

Associated Press/Manoocher Deghati - In this Tuesday, April 16, 2013 photo, a monk walks on the grounds of the ancient monastery of St. Anthony, southeast of Cairo, Egypt. In a cave high in the desert mountains of eastern Egypt, the man said to be the father of monasticism took refuge from the temptations of the world some 17 centuries ago. The monks at the St. Anthony’s Monastery bearing his name continue the ascetic tradition. But even they are not untouched by the turbulent times facing Egypt’s Christians, defiantly vowing their community’s voice won’t be silenced amid Islamists’ rising power. (AP Photo/Manoocher Deghati)

ST. ANTHONY'S MONASTERY, Egypt (AP) — In a cave here high in the desert mountains of eastern Egypt, the man said to be the father of monasticism took refuge from the temptations of the world some 17 centuries ago. At the foot of the mountain, the monks at the St. Anthony's Monastery bearing his name continue the ascetic tradition.

But even this remote spot is touched by the turbulent times facing Egypt's Christians, who fear for their future under the rising power of Islamists. Monks normally immersed in spirituality are joining the increasingly assertive tone of many in the minority community, vowing Christian voices won't be silenced.

Their tone reflects the growing activist political role of the Coptic Orthodox Church, which for decades had adopted a quietist policy, avoided rocking the boat and relied on backroom dealings with the country's leadership to try to preserve the community's rights. In doing so, the church is essentially following the lead of many youngChristians who — caught up in the fervor of Egypt's revolution — insist they must stand up for themselves rather than trusting politicians to protect them.

"Anyone who thinks of hurting our church will face divine retribution," Father Yacoub, the monastery's deputy head, told The Associated Press this week. "Our church grows stronger with martyrdom. My faith and confidence tell me that so long as our church is in the hands of God, no one can hurt it."

Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, of the Muslim Brotherhood, has vowed to promote equality between Egypt's Muslim majority and Christian minority. But Christians have been worried by the growing influence in society and government of Muslim conservatives and hard-liners, many of whom espouse rhetoric consigning Christians to second-class status.

A mob attack this month on the Cairo cathedral that serves as the seat of the Coptic pope raised alarm bells among Christians, who make up about 10 percent of the country's 90 million people. There has been a surge in attacks on Christians and churches in the two years since the ouster of autocrat Hosni Mubarak. But for Christians, the cathedral violence laid bare their vulnerability. Morsi quickly condemned the violence, saying attacking the cathedral was like attacking him personally. But the Coptic Pope Tawadros II accused him of failing to protect the cathedral in an unprecedented direct criticism.

One of the world's oldest monasteries, St. Anthony's would seem a world away from such concerns, with its atmosphere of isolation.

Nestled at the foot of an imposing rock mountain in the desert near the Red Sea 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Cairo, its fortress-like walls enclose churches, chapels and chambers for its around 100 monks. The oldest section — a small chapel — is believed to date to the 4th Century. Until several years ago, a spring was the sole source of water for the monks and their date palms and olive trees.

Little disturbs the routine of spiritual contemplation. Before dawn earlier this week, the monastery was still engulfed in darkness, only a sliver of moon in the sky, when the black-clad monks emerged from their cells. They walked up a cobblestone alley to the 15th Century Church of the Apostles to start their day with two hours of hymns and prayers.

With Orthodox Christians deep into Lent — their Easter Sunday is May 5 — that pre-dawn prayer is followed by three more liturgies, two hours each, the last ending at 5 p.m.

But the monks are definitely in touch. Yacoub sports both a Blackberry and an IPhone. He frequently drops mentions of what he reads on social networking sites. He is also willing to cast off some of the caution and diplomacy that the church has been renowned for in dealing with politics.

"If there is someone out there who thinks that persecuting the church or attacking the cathedral will drive us out of Egypt, then they are making a big mistake," said Yacoub, a 51-year-old trained engineer. "They are pestering us so as to drown the Coptic voice that rose during the revolution."

"No one can cover up facts or silence Egyptians any more. That party is over."

For monks to talk like this is a dramatic sign of the sentiment among Christians here. Egypt's estimated 1,200 monks constitute the heart and soul of the Coptic Orthodox Church, one of the world's oldest denominations. Monasticism is believed to have started in Egypt. St. Anthony, born in the mid-3rd Century, is believed to be one of the first, shedding his possessions to live in the desert. His followers gathered to first build the monastery here below his hermit's cave.

Over the centuries, monks offered spiritual guidance to Christians and have been seen as protectors during bouts of persecution through history, starting with the Romans. Egypt's monasteries saw a revival in the 1970s, and since then many have been renovated. Today, tens of thousands of Christians flock to festivals on saint's days at major monasteries like St. Anthony's and Deir el-Muharraq, near the Nile River in southern Egypt. They also often come individually for visits to pray and meditate through the night.

"The monks are the church's first line of defense because our role is to constantly pray to protect the church and comfort the flock," said 65-year-old Father Bakhomious, a monk at St. Anthony's.

He said the attack on the cathedral in Cairo was "painful — a defining moment in the history of Egypt and the church."

"Revolutions have their cons and pros and we as Christians must endure and pray for stability and peace."

Another monk, Father Hedra, says the church can feel the worries among the flock. In a sign of Egypt's overall economic woes, donations of food by the faithful to St. Anthony's to distribute to the poor have gotten smaller, he said.

"People are weighed down by their troubles and they come to us to rest and breathe fresh clean air," he said. "I can also sense the burden on everyone from the attacks on the church. When we have a crisis like that last one, the whole church is praying."

Christians felt empowered by their participation in unusually large numbers in the 18-day revolution that toppled Mubarak's authoritarian regime. Like Muslims, they rose up to create a democratic state that safeguards the dignity and rights of all Egyptians.

The April 7 violence at the cathedral showed Christians' anger and readiness to push back.

The violence followed a funeral service at the cathedral for four Christians killed a day earlier in sectarian violence in a town north of Cairo. During the service, aired live on several TV networks, mourners broke into chants against Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood — an unheard-of show of politics inside a church. "Hold your head high, you are a Copt" and "We will never leave our country," were among the chants.

When several hundred mourners attempted to march outside the cathedral to protest the killings, a Muslim mob set upon them, pelting them with rocks and firebombs, leading to a battle between crowds inside the cathedral and outside.

Morsi ordered a full investigation, reassuring Christians about their safety. However, a senior presidential aide in charge of foreign relations later issued a statement in English saying the violence erupted when Christian protesters vandalized cars — a comment Christians saw as blaming them. Islamist hard-liners delivered sharp public warnings to the church against involving itself in politics.

Tawadros, the pope, was dismissive of Morsi's promises, including his reviving of a commission on equality. "We want action not words and, let me say this, there are many names and committees but there is no action on the ground," he said.

Still, alongside their more assertive tone, the monks preserve their tradition of finding solace in prayer — along with the long-term perspective engrained over the centuries.

"As monks, we will pray until God lifts his anger and help us cope with what we are facing," said a monk at Deir el-Muharraq in southern Egypt, also named Father Bakhomious. "Egypt has seen a lot over the ages and what is happening now is a chaotic phase that will eventually end," he added.

"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 10:52:38 PM

Feds using photo analysis in Boston case



More than sixty victims of Monday's bombings at the Boston Marathon remain hospitalized, including a dozen who are in critical condition. (April 17)
Video: Boston Bomb Victims Face Difficult Recovery

BOSTON (AP) — Using futuristic photo-analysis tools, federal agents on the Boston Marathon case pressed the search Thursday for one or more potential suspects seen on video and considered releasing the images to enlist the public's help in hunting down the bombers.

"We will find you," President Barack Obama warned those behind the attack, bringing words of conviction and comfort in a heavily guarded visit to the shaken city.

The discovery of the surveillance video images raised hopes of a big break in the investigation, even as authorities cautioned a nation hungry for answers not to expect the case to be cracked quickly.

"Not that we are moving to imminent resolution, but we are definitely moving in the right direction," Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick said on his way into a memorial service where Obama and others honored the three dead and more than 180 wounded in Monday's twin blasts.

"There's a lot to follow up on, there was a tremendous amount of response to the FBI's call to the public to supply photographs and videotape that people have, and there is a tremendous amount of analysis that that requires."

At the Cathedral of the Holy Cross, Obama declared to the people of Boston: "Your resolve is the greatest rebuke to whoever committed this heinous act." He spoke in almost mocking terms of those who commit such violence.

"We finish the race, and we do that because of who we are," the president said to applause. "And that's what the perpetrators of such senseless violence — these small, stunted individuals who would destroy instead of build and think somehow that makes them important — that's what they don't understand."

In Washington, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said surveillance video points to more than one person the FBI wants to find and interview. In remarks to the House Homeland Security Committee, she gave no details on what the video shows. She did not describe them as suspects.

A day earlier, City Council President Stephen Murphy said he was told by police that investigators are looking for a man seen in a department store surveillance video dropping off a bag and then walking away at the site of the explosions that tore off limbs and hurled nails and other shrapnel.

Seven victims remained in critical condition. Killed were 8-year-old Martin Richard of Boston, 29-year-old restaurant manager Krystle Campbell of Medford, Mass., and Lu Lingzi, a 23-year-old Boston University graduate student from China.

Video and photos recovered in the investigation will be examined and enhanced by an FBI unit called the Operational Technologies Division, said Joe DiZinno, former director of the FBI lab in Quantico, Va.

Investigators will examine video frame by frame — a laborious process, though one aided by far more sophisticated facial recognition technology than is commercially available, forensic specialists said.

"When you have something that is this high-profile, they are going to use every available resource that they have," said former Miami federal prosecutor Melissa Damian Visconti.

The investigation will probably collect about a million hours of videotape from fixed security cameras and cellphones and cameras used by spectators, said Gene Grindstaff, a scientist at Intergraph Corp., a Huntsville, Ala., company that makes video analysis software used by the FBI and other law enforcement agencies.

But after years of investigating terrorist incidents and other crimes, the FBI is practiced at cataloging, categorizing and analyzing such evidence and will winnow it down dramatically, he said.

"Back in the days of 20 years ago, you were lucky if you had video and it was probably of poor quality and it took a tremendous amount of enhancement. Today you have a completely different issue," Grindstaff said.

Investigators can set the video analysis software so that it automatically searches for certain types of objects or people matching a height and weight description. The software can also see patterns that analysts might not notice, such as a certain car that turns up in different places, Grindstaff said.

DiZinno, who ran the FBI lab from 2007 to 2010, said any retrieved bomb components such as the pressure cookers, shrapnel and pieces of timers or wire will be closely examined for fingerprints, DNA, hairs and fibers.

The bomb components would be traced by figuring out the item's maker, where each piece is typically purchased and whether the device resembles any bombs the FBI has seen in past attacks. The FBI lab keeps a detailed file on past bombings, including many overseas attacks.

"Let's say there was a timer," DiZinno said. "Was there a serial number? Who was the manufacturer? That can provide leads for investigators."

One pressure cooker maker, the Fagor Group in Spain, said that it has been contacted by U.S. investigators and that company officials are extending full cooperation. The company sells 250,000 pressure cookers a year in the U.S. and 1 million worldwide.

___

Associated Press writers Jay Lindsay, Pat Eaton-Robb, Steve LeBlanc, Bridget Murphy, Meghan Barr, Jeff Donn and Julie Pace in Boston; Eileen Sullivan and Lara Jakes in Washington; Curt Anderson in Miami; and Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

"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 10:54:29 PM

Mich. grandmother gets 22 years in teen's killing



Associated Press/Paul Sancya, FILE - FILE- In a March 13, 2013 file photo, Sandra Layne testifies in the Oakland County Circuit Courtroom of Judge Denise Langford Morris in Pontiac, Mich. The 75-year-old, convicted of murder in the fatal shooting of her teen grandson was sentenced to at least 22 years in prison Thursday, April 18, 2013, despite her desperate plea to a judge to spare her from dying behind bars. Layne got a minimum sentence of 20 years for second-degree murder, along with a mandatory two-year sentence for using a gun to kill 17-year-old Jonathan Hoffman. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, FILE)

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — A 75-year-old Detroit-area woman who killed her grandson expressed remorse Thursday but repeatedly accused his parents of dumping a troubled boy at her doorstep during a desperate, emotional plea to avoid a prison sentence that likely means death behind bars.

The judge wasn't swayed, sending Sandra Layne away for at least 22 years and capping a wrenching case that revealed family strife, adolescent rebellion and fatal consequences.

Joanthan Hoffman was shot six times, including twice in the back, last spring in Oakland County's West Bloomfield Township. Layne, a former teacher and real estate agent, said she shot him out of fear during a physical altercation, but a jury in March rejected her claim of self-defense.

Prosecutors said there were no signs of Layne being injured by Hoffman. A recording of a 911 call shows him being shot again while pleading for help — a critical piece of evidence that jurors played over and over during deliberations. Judge Denise Langford Morris zeroed in on it, too, wondering why Layne simply didn't call police if she felt helpless.

"Grandmothers are supposed to protect. ... Why did you keep shooting and how could you keep shooting?" Morris asked. "You didn't have to keep shooting. Those were hollow-pointed bullets designed for a devastating impact."

Layne sobbed heavily during a long, rambling address to the judge, her belly chains and handcuffs sagging over orange jail clothes on her slight frame.

"I'm sorry for what I did. I apologize to everyone I've hurt, everyone. ... Sorry is too small a word," she said, pleading with Morris to not allow her to die in prison.

She will get credit for 11 months served in jail. Any release from prison after serving the minimum sentence would be determined by the Michigan parole board.

Hoffman was living with his grandmother during his last year of high school while his parents lived in Arizona where a daughter was being treated for a brain tumor. He had a history of drug use and had tested positive for synthetic marijuana on the day of the shooting. Layne claimed he feared flunking probation and demanded money and a car to leave the area.

Prosecutors, however, said Hoffman was wearing just shorts and socks when he was killed and had made plans to see a friend that night, not flee.

Prosecutor Paul Walton, noting the minutes that went by before Layne shot the boy again, said he had never handled a homicide "this cold, this long and this calculating."

Hoffman's father did not attend the hearing because he was in Arizona with his 16-year-old daughter, Jessica, who is recovering from a tumor. Michael Hoffman said the girl "has a hole in her heart to match the hole in her head" since her brother's death.

In a letter read by the prosecutor, the father said Layne "put on her war paint and came in gunning for my boy." He accused Layne of killing his son because he was ready to move on after high school and she would no longer be able to control him.

Layne's daughter, Jennifer Hoffman, urged the judge to show no mercy.

"She showed no mercy when she planned, stalked and murdered my son in his bedroom. Sandra Layne is pure evil and if given the opportunity would surely kill again," Jennifer Hoffman said.

Layne blamed the parents for not taking Jonathan back to Arizona and said her grandson's drug use made him unmanageable for an elderly woman. She accused Michael Hoffman of giving up on the boy and said she pleaded with the pair to return to Michigan when drugs landed him in the hospital.

"If I could go back, I never would have bought that gun," Layne told the judge. "I would have said to his parents it's their responsibility, help him, take him."

Outside court, Jennifer Hoffman said her mother was lying about any indifference by parents. She said she visited Michigan once a month.

"She's a complete narcissist. ... I wish I had seen how evil she was. I wouldn't have left my son with her," Jennifer Hoffman told reporters.

Layne's husband, Fred, and son, Scott Silvers, declined to comment on the sentence. The judge said Hoffman probably belonged in a rehab center or another place outside his grandmother's supervision but instead "is in his grave at 17."

"Make no mistake," Morris said, "Jonathan is the victim here."

___

Follow Ed White at twitter.com/edwhiteap


"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 10:55:56 PM

Arias defense tries to discredit state witness

Associated Press/The Arizona Republic, David Wallace, Pool - Defendant Jodi Arias looks at the jury as they enter the courtroom during her trial at Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix on Wednesday, April 17, 2013. Arias is on trial for the killing of her boyfriend, Travis Alexander in 2008. Arias claims self-defense but faces a potential death sentence if convicted of first-degree murder. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, David Wallace, Pool)

PHOENIX (AP) — Jodi Arias' defense attorney on Thursday attacked the credibility and findings of a prosecution witness who said the defendant wasn't a battered woman and doesn't suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.

Clinical psychologist Janeen DeMarte is testifying as a prosecution rebuttal witness after the defense rested its case earlier this week. Throughout about 2 1/2 months of defense witness testimony,Arias' attorneys worked to portray her as a domestic violence victim who killed her one-time boyfriend in self-defense.

DeMarte was called by the prosecution to discredit defense experts who diagnosed Arias with PTSD, amnesia and battered woman's syndrome. DeMarte has since explained that Arias suffers from none of the conditions, but instead had borderline personality disorder.

Arias faces a potential death sentence if convicted of first-degree murder in Travis Alexander's June 2008 killing at his suburban Phoenix home. Authorities said she planned the attack in a jealous rage. Arias initially denied involvement then blamed it on masked intruders. Two years after her arrest, she said it was self-defense.

Alexander suffered nearly 30 knife wounds, was shot in the head and had his throat slit. Arias' palm print was found in blood at the scene, along with nude photos of her and the victim from the day of the killing.

Arias said she recalls Alexander attacking her in a fury. She said she ran into his closet to retrieve a gun he kept on a shelf and fired in self-defense but has no memory of stabbing him.

She acknowledged trying to clean the scene, dumping the gun in the desert and working on an alibi, even attending a memorial service for Alexander and sending his family flowers before her arrest. Arias said she was too scared to tell the truth then but insists she isn't lying now.

The case at this point has devolved into dueling expert witnesses, with the defense side explaining away Arias' lies after the killing, and the prosecution working to portray Arias showed premeditation and organization, not the actions of someone fighting for her life.

Defense attorney Jennifer Willmott is questioning DeMarte's conclusions about Arias after spending part of the previous day picking apart the witness's credentials and education.

Among the points Willmott addressed Thursday was DeMarte's contention that it was odd, given Arias' gaps in memory from the day of the killing, that the moment she realized she had blood on her hands after driving far away from the scene, she believed she had killed Alexander.

DeMarte called that an "illogical" response.

"Given all the things that she does remember up to that point, it's not a huge leap ... to assume that something bad happened when she sees blood on her hands?" Willmott asked.

"As I stated before, that is a huge leap," DeMarte replied.

Prosecutor Juan Martinez plans to call several more rebuttal witnesses before closing arguments. Deliberations are likely still several weeks away.

___

Brian Skoloff can be followed at https://twitter.com/bskoloff


"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 11:00:53 PM

Starving sea lion pups fill Calif. rescue centers



Associated Press/Pacific Marine Mammal Center - FILE - This undated image provided by the Pacific Marine Mammal Center shows rescued sea lion pups in Laguna Beach, Calif. Federal officials say starving sea lion pups are washing up on Southern California beaches at a rate more than five times higher than the historical average, and scientists are still scrambling to figure out why according to officials, Wednesday, April 17, 2013.(AP Photo/Pacific Marine Mammal Center)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Starving sea lion pups are washing up on Southern California beaches at a rate more than five times higher than usual, and scientists are scrambling to figure out why.

Since the beginning of the year, 1,293 emaciated sea lions found stranded on beaches from San Diego to Santa Barbara have been treated at seven facilities in the state, Sarah Wilkin of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Wednesday during a conference call with reporters.

The number is a record for strandings of live California sea lions along the Southern California coast from Jan. 1-April 30 since 1982, when formal record-keeping began. The low was 25 sea lions in 2000. The previous high was 659 in 1998, when the Pacific experienced a strong ocean-altering El Nino.

Last month, the agency declared an "unusual mortality event" that allowed more scientists to help search for the cause.

A leading hypothesis is lack of available food. Researchers were also doing tests to see if pollution, disease outbreak or algae bloom are to blame.

Currently there is no El Nino, the ocean-warming phenomenon that makes it harder for female sea lions to find food and often leaves them unable to provide milk to their pups, according to NOAA. Pups are born in May and June and depend on their mothers' milk through the following April or May. NOAA said pups don't usually leave their mothers as early as they did this year.

Most of the pups being treated weighed between 20 and 30 pounds when they were found, with some as small as 18 pounds. The animals should weigh about 65 pounds by now, she said.

As many as 25 percent of the seals have died after being brought in for treatment.

The surviving seals are slowly brought up to a normal body weight and monitored to make sure they can find prey on their own and compete with other animals in tanks.

The goal is to get them healthy enough to be released back into the wild. Such releases are happening daily at some facilities, Wilkins said.

At least two released seals outfitted with monitoring tags have been tracked diving and foraging normally in their regular habitat.

Three animals that were released washed up on beaches again and have since been deemed non-releasable. Officials are trying to find homes for them at aquariums or zoos.

Anyone who sees a sea lion that has been swept ashore — dead or alive — is asked to call the nearest marine mammal center. Authorities say people should not touch the animal or let a pet near it, because sea lions can bite.


It's been a busy few days for SeaWorld and local lifeguards, who've been going up and down our coast rescuing sea lions stranded on shore

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

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