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Archive for October 31st, 2007

Lawn-watering spat leads to death

posted by admin in cnn, news

SYDNEY, Australia (AP) — A 66-year-old man was bashed to death while watering his lawn in an argument over Sydney’s water restrictions, police and media said Thursday.

A 36-year-old man, whose name has not been released, will appear in a Sydney court Thursday charged with murder following the fatal altercation Wednesday, a police statement said.

The alleged killer approached the older man, whose name has not been made public, as he watered his lawn in southern Sydney with a hose at 5:30 p.m. (0630 GMT) Wednesday and an argument ensued, police said.

Media reported the argument was over Sydney’s water restrictions. The victim reportedly sprayed the younger man with the hose. Police said the younger man responded by punching and pushing the older man to the ground and kicking him.

An off-duty police officer intervened and arrested the younger man, the statement said. The older man was taken by ambulance to the hospital but died soon after, police said.

The victim was complying with Sydney’s water restrictions when he was killed. Watering with hand-held hoses is allowed on Wednesdays and Sundays before 10 a.m. and after 4 p.m.
found here.

CNN Student News: Ten Questions

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(CNN Student News) — November 1, 2007

1. What terrorist attack took place in Madrid, Spain, in March 2004?

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2. According to the segment, what verdict did a Spanish court deliver yesterday to 28 defendants charged in connection with the Madrid attack?

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3. How did different people react to the court’s verdict? According to prosecutor Olga Sanchez, why is this sentence a judicial landmark?

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4. What is your opinion of the verdict?

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5. In your opinion, what role do debates play in determining a political party’s presidential nominee?

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6. What criticisms did some Democratic presidential candidates make about Sen. Hillary Clinton during Tuesday’s Democratic debate? How did Sen. Clinton react to the criticism?

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7. What do you think that political candidates hope to achieve by making negative comments about their opponents? In your opinion, does this approach impact people’s perceptions of candidates? If so, how? If not, why not?

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8. If you had been moderating the recent Democratic debate, what questions would you have asked the candidates? *

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9. According to police, how did a young boy accidentally start the Buckweed wildfire in California? What action do you think that authorities should take next in this case?

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10. How strong was the earthquake that struck the San Francisco Bay area on Tuesday night? Why do you think that people choose to live in the San Francisco area even though it is prone to earthquakes?

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* E-mail to a friend

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Church ordered to pay $10.9 million for funeral protest

posted by admin in cnn, news

(CNN) — A federal jury in Baltimore, Maryland, Wednesday awarded $10.9 million to a father of a Marine whose funeral was picketed by members of a fundamentalist church carrying signs blaming soldiers’ deaths on America’s tolerance of homosexuals.

The family of Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder — who was killed in a vehicle accident in Iraq’s Anbar province in 2006 — sued the Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kansas, and its leaders for defamation, invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Church members showed up at Snyder’s funeral chanting derogatory slogans and holding picket signs with messages including God Hates Fags.

They’ve picketed the funerals of dozens of troops killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, claiming that God is punishing the United States because of its tolerance for homosexuality.

Al Snyder, father of the slain Marine, said he considered filing the lawsuit for a long time before going forward and that he hoped the judgment would make it harder for the church to continue such protests.

It’s hard enough burying a 20-year-old son, much less having to deal with something like this, he said, recalling that some of the other signs at the funeral included Thank God for dead soldiers and Thank God for IEDs. Watch the fallen Marine’s father describe his reaction

As far as their picketing goes, they want to do it in front of a courthouse, they want to do it in a public park, I could care less. But I couldn’t let them get away with doing this to our military, Al Snyder said.

Every day in court I would just think of Matt and have him on my mind and know that he was watching out for me.

Snyder’s attorney told jurors to pick an amount that says don’t do this in Maryland again. Do not bring your circus of hate to Maryland again, according to The Associated Press.

The award includes $2.9 million in compensatory damages and $8 million in punitive damages, a clerk in the judge’s chambers said.

Lawyers for the church members argued Matthew Snyder’s funeral was public and the First Amendment protects all points of view, even offensive ones, the AP reported.

Church founder Fred Phelps said the church would appeal the decision, adding it would take about five minutes to reverse that thing. Watch Phelps laugh at the people trying to silence him

This will elevate me to something important, Phelps told reporters. This was an act of futility.

Later, Phelps said the case was about putting a preacher on trial for what he preaches.

All it was, was a protestation by the government of the United States against the word of God. They don’t want me preaching that God is punishing the country by killing their servicemen. Watch Phelps say freedom of speech is under fire

The church had made a new sign to carry after the jury’s decision, said his daughter, Margie Phelps.

Our message is ‘Thank God for 10.9 [million dollars],’ she said.

By that mechanism [the award], the entire world will look over and see that America is doomed and that in doomed America there is no such thing as religious liberty.

The judgment would not change the message the group was carrying, said another of Phelps’ daughters, church attorney Shirley Phelps-Roper.

It’s going nowhere, she said of the jury’s decision. This is a nothing. God is not going to stop killing your soldiers. He’s not going to stop pouring his wrath out on this nation. America is doomed.

Church members were persecuted for their teachings and the court mocked and scoffed at our religious beliefs, she said.

Phelps-Roper added that protests were planned later this week in Boston and Acton, Massachusetts, and in Norton, Kansas.

The group plans to protest a Veterans Day rally in Washington, she said.

Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church — which has no connections with any mainstream Baptist organizations — are longtime anti-gay protesters.

Before launching their protests at the funerals of American troops killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, they routinely picketed the funerals of gay people and those who died of AIDS.

Phelps and his followers also picketed the February 2006 funeral of Coretta Scott King, widow of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., because of her support for gay rights.

Several states have implemented laws about funeral protests and Congress has passed a law barring protests at federal cemeteries.
found here.

Home saved from fire — against owner’s will

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RANCHO SANTA FE, California (AP) — Dr. Jorge Llorente became irritated recently when the fire department kept rejecting his plans to landscape his hacienda-style home with jacarandas and avocado trees.

But he is grateful now.

Those restrictions may well have saved his multimillion-dollar home when a wildfire passed through last week.

Now that we have a chance to see how it works we are tickled pink, the retired surgeon said. I’m a convert. I’m a true believer.

Rancho Santa Fe has lots of converts after braving last week’s Southern California’s wildfires, the first major test of the stringent construction and landscaping standards adopted by the community in 1997. The San Diego suburb lost 53 houses, but none of them were in the five subdivisions that embraced restrictions designed to be so tough that people can stay in their homes if they cannot evacuate.

As Southern California begins to rebuild from the blazes that killed at least seven people and destroyed more than 2,000 homes, homeowners and government officials are looking at places as far away as Australia and as nearby as Stevenson Ranch in Santa Clarita, north of Los Angeles, that have adopted super-strict standards that require such precautions as nonflammable roofs, indoor sprinklers and regular watering of shrubs.

Rancho Santa Fe practices a strategy known as shelter-in-place, designed to insulate homes from flames if people cannot evacuate.

The fire department in Rancho Santa Fe, whose past residents include Bing Crosby and Howard Hughes, scrutinizes plans for every tree and bush and sends inspectors with measuring tapes to make sure its orders are obeyed.

Trees and bushes must be a certain distance from the house and cannot exceed a certain height. Roofs must be nonflammable; shrubs near the house must always be watered. Indoor sprinklers are a must.

Columns must be masonry, stucco or precast concrete; windows must be dual-paned or tempered glass; wood fences cannot touch the home.

Rancho Santa Fe has done some really, really pivotal work, said Ron Coleman, former California state fire marshal and vice president of Emergency Services Consulting Inc. in Elk Grove, California. It’s a success story.

Cliff Hunter, Rancho Santa Fe’s fire marshal, believes the standards saved homes.

I just go by the results, he said as he drove through the wide streets of The Crosby subdivision, where hillside flames stopped just short of homes.

Fire experts caution that no home is fireproof; they prefer the term ignition-resistant. Advocates say such precautions give firefighters time to save more vulnerable homes in fast-moving fires.

But some critics say the shelter-in-place strategy may lull homeowners into a false sense of security, leading them to stay put when they should flee. And some say it only encourages construction in tinderbox areas in California and elsewhere across the West.

Nearly 1 million homes in 11 Western states border undeveloped wildlands, and builders are increasingly breaking ground on the edge of wooded areas, according to a study last month by Headwaters Economics, a consulting firm in Bozeman, Montana.

Despite the destruction in Southern California — and widespread acknowledgment that fire will strike again — there is little doubt homeowners will be allowed to rebuild on the same lots. San Diego County has already issued its first building permit for a home destroyed in last week’s fires.

But government officials and fire experts say the blazes may lead to stricter standards.

San Diego County, which was hardest hit, will revisit building codes and may add restrictions, said Supervisor Dianne Jacob. In March, the county Department of Planning and Land Use expanded the shelter-in-place concept as an option for new subdivisions in areas where the topography prevents the building of a second escape road.

It is difficult to say how much a shelter-in-place design adds to the cost of a home. Roofing and sprinkler systems can easily run tens of thousands of dollars, said Dan Bailey of the International Code Council, which advises governments on building restrictions. Other measures, such as trimming trees, cost little.

Rancho Sante Fe is a community of about 10,000 people with giant homes on large lots, where golfing and horseback riding are popular pastimes. The median household income in the 92067 ZIP code tops $200,000.

Residents in the five protected subdivisions get a fire department brochure that tells them that they can survive a fire without evacuating and that they should keep a three-day food supply. Those who live outside the area get a brochure titled Getting Out Alive.

Llorente, who moved to his 21/2-acre lot last year from San Diego, thought Rancho Santa Fe’s restrictions were overkill until he and his wife were ordered to evacuate their home. They fled the nearby flames October 22 with their two cats and a computer. That night and the next day, they were convinced they lost their home.

The couple drove north to the first hotel they could find — out of range of San Diego television stations — and waited for morsels of news. A friend said a fruit stand burned near the gated entrance to their subdivision, where homes sell for $2 million to $12 million.

The flames came within about 200 feet of the house, wilting rose petals next to one wall and dumping ash on the pool and hot tub. But the house itself was unscathed.

We were very, very lucky, he said Monday on the patio on his hillside lot, which is filled with peppermint willows and olive and citrus trees, with views to the Pacific Ocean on clear days.

His neighbor, 47-year-old investor Don Ceglar, also felt the rules went too far when he moved from Connecticut in 2003. The fire department refused to let him in until he removed two 8-foot cypress plants near the front door.

Ceglar ignored three reverse 911 evacuation calls the morning of October 22, thinking it made more sense to stay put than to drive narrow, winding roads surrounded by fire.

He said the community’s fire-protection standards passed last week’s test with flying colors.

The fire surrounded our community like a doughnut, he said. It’s remarkable. It literally looks like someone took a torch and went to the edge of these properties, and the fires just stopped.
found here.

Church ordered to pay $10.9 million for funeral protest

posted by admin in cnn, news

BALTIMORE, Maryland (AP) — A grieving father won a nearly $11 million verdict Wednesday against a fundamentalist Kansas church that pickets military funerals in the belief that the war in Iraq is a punishment for the nation’s tolerance of homosexuality.

Albert Snyder of York, Pennsylvania., sued the Westboro Baptist Church for unspecified damages after members demonstrated at the March 2006 funeral of his son, Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder, who was killed in Iraq.

The jury first awarded $2.9 million in compensatory damages. It returned later in the afternoon with its decision to award $6 million in punitive damages for invasion of privacy and $2 million for causing emotional distress.

U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett noted the size of the award for compensating damages far exceeds the net worth of the defendants, according to financial statements filed with the court.

Church members routinely picket funerals of military personnel killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, carrying signs such as Thank God for dead soldiers and God hates fags.

A number of states have passed laws regarding funeral protests, and Congress has passed a law prohibiting such protests at federal cemeteries.

But the Maryland lawsuit is believed to be the first filed by the family of a fallen serviceman.

The church and three of its leaders — the Rev. Fred Phelps and his two daughters, Shirley Phelps-Roper and Rebecca Phelps-Davis, 46 — were found liable for invasion of privacy and intent to inflict emotional distress.

Snyder claimed the protests intruded upon what should have been a private ceremony and sullied his memory of the event.

The church members testified they are following their religious beliefs by spreading the message that the deaths of soldiers are due to the nation’s tolerance of homosexuality.

Their attorneys argued in closing statements Tuesday that the burial was a public event and that even abhorrent points of view are protected by the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of speech and religion.

The judge said the church’s financial statements, sealed earlier, could be released to the plaintiffs.

Earlier, church members staged a demonstration outside the federal courthouse.

Church founder Fred Phelps held a sign reading God is your enemy, while Shirley Phelps-Roper stood on an American flag and carried a sign that read God hates fag enablers.

Members of the group sang God Hates America to the tune of God Bless America.

Snyder sobbed when he heard the verdict, while members of the church greeted the news with tightlipped smiles.
found here.

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