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news aggregatorCook 'embarrassed Man City fans'Former Manchester City chief executive Garry Cook says he "embarrassed the fans" with mistakes he made at the club.
VIDEO: How to grow your own clothesFashion designer Suzanne Lee has developed a novel approach to fashion design: She grows her own materials.
Panetta visits Afghanistan as violence spikesKABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta arrived in Afghanistan on Thursday to take stock of progress in the war and discuss plans for the troop drawdown, even as violence spiked in the south....
Officers 'saved landmark church'A passing police patrol prevented the landmark Bangor Parish Church from being destroyed in a fire, a senior detective has said.
Central Asia group admits Afghanistan as observerBEIJING (AP) -- China, Russia and four Central Asian states granted Afghanistan observer status in their regional grouping on Thursday, moving to boost their influence with the impoverished, war-torn nation ahead of the withdrawal of most foreign combat troops by the end of 2014....
Fear for missing 10-year-old girlA search is underway for a schoolgirl who disappeared after leaving her Belfast home at tea-time on Wednesday.
Both sides emotional after verdictNatasha Trethewey named 19th US poet laureateWASHINGTON (AP) -- A Pulitzer Prize winner is the nation's first poet laureate to hail from the South since the initial one - Robert Penn Warren - was named by the Library of Congress in 1986....
Pay row Metro strike under wayMetro staff across Tyne and Wear stage a 24-hour strike in a dispute over pay.
Seventeen hurt in Xinjiang blastChinese state media say 17 people, including 12 children, have been injured in an explosion at a religious school in the restive Xinjiang province.
Official: Dock found in Ore. is debris from JapanA nearly 70-foot-long dock that floated ashore on an Oregon beach was torn loose from a fishing port in northern Japan by last year's tsunami and drifted across thousands of miles of Pacific Ocean, a Japanese Consulate official said Wednesday....
Push to quash tobacco tax could echo beyond CalifLOS ANGELES (AP) -- Big Tobacco's success in branding a proposed California cigarette tax as a government boondoggle sent a message that could echo in other states as votes trended toward the opposition....
The rise and rise of new BollywoodA new crop of films is changing popular cinema
CA10: Off-duty officer from another city working bar security was not government actor for Fourth AmendmentA police officer from another city working plain clothes at a bar with a t-shirt with “Security” on the back who found a gun was not a state actor at the time of employment. The record was clear he was serving the interests of the bar and not the police, and he called the police to “sort it out” after the encounter. United States v. Cintron, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 11308 (10th Cir. June 5, 2012): The OK Corral Club, not the Boley Police Department, hired and paid Mr. Reed for his security guard work at the club. Not all security team members were off-duty police officers. As for the members of OK Corral's security staff who were off-duty police officers, the OK Corral Club hired them and did not rely on official assistance from the police department. See Traver v. Meshriy, 627 F.2d 934, 938 (9th Cir. 1980) (holding that off-duty police officer working as security teller at a bank was a state actor when that position was part of a "secondary hiring" program and the security teller's "primary duty was to the [police] department, not to the bank"). Mr. Reed was not wearing his police uniform, did not have his badge, and never identified himself as a police officer. See Lusby v. T.G. & Y. Stores, Inc., 749 F.2d 1423, 1429-30 (10th Cir. 1984) (holding that off-duty police officer working as a store security guard was acting under color of state law when he flashed his badge, identified himself as a police officer, and arrested the alleged shoplifter on the spot), vacated on other grounds,City of Lawton, Okla. v. Lusby, 474 U.S. 805 (1985). At the suppression hearing, Mr. Reed explained that he was working to further the interests of the OK Corral Club, not those of the police department. ... "Well, yeah, but I don't [enforce the laws] there. I just ... protect and keep the staff and the property safe over there. It's not a matter of me really enforcing the laws over there. We just look out for the safety over there." Id. at 34-35. He also explained that had he been acting as a police officer, he would have acted differently and would have "put [Mr. Cintron] on the ground." Id. at 32. Finally, Mr. Reed did not formally arrest Mr. Citron. ... Under the facts, it probably wouldn't make any difference, either. Tsunami dock washes up in OregonA huge concrete dock torn from a Japanese port by last year's tsunami washes up some 8,000 km (5,000 miles) away in the US state of Oregon.
S.D.Ohio: Where car was validly impounded, difficulty in recovering it isn't a Fourth Amendment claimPlaintiff’s car was validly towed to impound because she was hospitalized after an accident. She had difficulty in regaining her vehicle, and she sued for $500B. “Plaintiff's claims do not appear to challenge the actual seizure of her vehicle, but instead focus on her inability to regain possession of her vehicle. Plaintiff's interest in regaining her vehicle, however, is outside the scope of the Fourth Amendment. See Fox v. Van Oosterum, 176 F.3d 342, 351 (6th Cir. 1999) (‘[T]he Fourth Amendment protects an individual’s interest in retaining possession of property but not the interest in regaining possession of property.’).” Mathis v. Dep't of Pub. Safety, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76780 (S.D. Ohio June 4, 2012). Defendant was possibly speeding and hastily exited from a freeway, but the officer didn’t stop the defendant. He followed him home. Defendant got out of his van and went onto his porch and the officer followed. The attempted stop on defendant’s porch was without reasonable suspicion of any wrongdoing other than the alleged traffic offense, and that wasn’t good enough. Defendant testified that he did not know there was a police officer in the car because it was unmarked. “Sgt. Norman followed and grabbed Defendant by the back of his coat. Defendant pulled away and continued behind the house. At this point, uniformed officers appeared on the property, and they tasered, handcuffed and arrested Defendant.” The search that relieving him of his gun was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment. United States v. Walker, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76781 (S.D. Ohio June 4, 2012).* D.Md.: “[T]he age of the information supporting a warrant is increasingly irrelevant when the object searched is stored on a computer.”14 month old information in a child pornography case is not stale. More importantly, it seems that computer forensics makes staleness almost irrelevant: “the age of the information supporting a warrant is increasingly irrelevant when the object searched is stored on a computer.” United States v. Johnson, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77808 (D. Md. June 5, 2012) Additionally, the ability of forensic examiners to recover files from a computer—even those deleted by a user—impacts a court's staleness analysis. Since evidence on a computer is recoverable months or years after it has been downloaded, deleted, or viewed; the age of the information supporting a warrant is increasingly irrelevant when the object searched is stored on a computer. See, e.g., Gourde, 440 F.3d at 1071 ("Having paid for multi-month access to a child pornography site, Gourde was also stuck with the near certainty that his computer would contain evidence of a crime had he received or downloaded images in violation of § 2252. Thanks to the long memory of computers, any evidence of a crime was almost certainly still on his computer, even if he had tried to delete the images. FBI computer experts, cited in the affidavit, stated that 'even if ... graphic image files [] have been deleted ... these files can easily be restored.' In other words, his computer would contain at least the digital footprint of the images."); United States v. Toups, No. 2:06-cr-112-MEF, 2007 WL 433562, at *4 (M.D. Ala. February 6, 2007) ("Further bolstering the conclusion that the staleness calculation is unique when it comes to cases of Internet child pornography is the images and videos stored on a computer are not easily eliminated from a computer's hard drive. The mere deletion of a particular file does not necessarily mean that the file cannot later be retrieved."). Note: The court also notes that no case it could find had ever found staleness in a CP case. Water meter call over shortagesWater meters that charge for using extra supplies on cars and gardens are needed to avoid shortages, experts say.
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