Tuesday, January 24, 2012

MusicShake Brings Its Music Creation Tool For Novices To The Classroom

musicshake-500x466At some point, you may have found yourself bored out of your mind by your current music selection, and resisting the urge to try one of the eleventy million music discovery services out there, you think, "By God, I'm going to do it myself." You rush home, download a music suite, start furiously clicking and recording, only to be sooner or later confronted by the reality that you have no idea what you're doing, and reprimand yourself for turning down those music lessons in fourth grade. The Korea-based, VC-funded MusicShake launched back at TechCrunch40 in 2007 to solve these woes, allowing users to create their own music in a fun an intuitive way.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/N3ent3N-X4g/

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Friday, January 20, 2012

'Women worse at math than men' explanation scientifically incorrect, MU researchers say

'Women worse at math than men' explanation scientifically incorrect, MU researchers say [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 18-Jan-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Steven Adams
AdamsST@missouri.edu
573-882-8353
University of Missouri-Columbia

Popular theory debunked; Researchers say gender stereotype and math skills are unrelated

COLUMBIA, Mo. A University of Missouri researcher and his colleague have conducted a review that casts doubt on the accuracy of a popular theory that attempted to explain why there are more men than women in top levels of mathematic fields. The researchers found that numerous studies claiming that the stereotype, "men are better at math" believed to undermine women's math performance had major methodological flaws, utilized improper statistical techniques, and many studies had no scientific evidence of this stereotype.

This theory, called stereotype threat, was first published in 1999 in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. Essentially, the theory is that due to the stereotype that women are worse than men in math skills, females develop a poor self-image in this area, which leads to mathematics underachievement.

"The stereotype theory really was adopted by psychologists and policy makers around the world as the final word, with the idea that eliminating the stereotype could eliminate the gender gap," said David Geary, Curators Professor of Psychological Sciences in the MU College of Arts and Science. "However, even with many programs established to address the issue, the problem continued. We now believe the wrong problem is being addressed."

In the study, Geary and Giljsbert Stoet, from the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom, examined 20 influential replications of the original stereotype theory study. The researchers found that many subsequent studies had serious scientific flaws, including a lack of a male control group and improperly applied statistical techniques.

"We were surprised the researchers did not subject males to the same experimental manipulations as female participants," Geary said. "It is reasonable to think that men also would not do well if told 'men normally do worse on this test' right before they take the test. When we adjusted the findings based on this and other statistical factors, we found little to no significant stereotype theory effect."

The researchers believe that basing interventions on the stereotype threat is actually doing more harm than good, as vital resources are being dedicated to a problem that does not exist.

"These findings really irritate me, as a psychologist, because this is a science where we are really trying to discover what the issues are," Geary said. "The fact is there are still a disproportionate number of men in top levels of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. We need more women to succeed in these fields for our economy and for our future."

###

The study, "Can stereotype threat explain the sex gap in mathematics performance and achievement?" will be published in the journal Review of General Psychology.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


'Women worse at math than men' explanation scientifically incorrect, MU researchers say [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 18-Jan-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Steven Adams
AdamsST@missouri.edu
573-882-8353
University of Missouri-Columbia

Popular theory debunked; Researchers say gender stereotype and math skills are unrelated

COLUMBIA, Mo. A University of Missouri researcher and his colleague have conducted a review that casts doubt on the accuracy of a popular theory that attempted to explain why there are more men than women in top levels of mathematic fields. The researchers found that numerous studies claiming that the stereotype, "men are better at math" believed to undermine women's math performance had major methodological flaws, utilized improper statistical techniques, and many studies had no scientific evidence of this stereotype.

This theory, called stereotype threat, was first published in 1999 in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. Essentially, the theory is that due to the stereotype that women are worse than men in math skills, females develop a poor self-image in this area, which leads to mathematics underachievement.

"The stereotype theory really was adopted by psychologists and policy makers around the world as the final word, with the idea that eliminating the stereotype could eliminate the gender gap," said David Geary, Curators Professor of Psychological Sciences in the MU College of Arts and Science. "However, even with many programs established to address the issue, the problem continued. We now believe the wrong problem is being addressed."

In the study, Geary and Giljsbert Stoet, from the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom, examined 20 influential replications of the original stereotype theory study. The researchers found that many subsequent studies had serious scientific flaws, including a lack of a male control group and improperly applied statistical techniques.

"We were surprised the researchers did not subject males to the same experimental manipulations as female participants," Geary said. "It is reasonable to think that men also would not do well if told 'men normally do worse on this test' right before they take the test. When we adjusted the findings based on this and other statistical factors, we found little to no significant stereotype theory effect."

The researchers believe that basing interventions on the stereotype threat is actually doing more harm than good, as vital resources are being dedicated to a problem that does not exist.

"These findings really irritate me, as a psychologist, because this is a science where we are really trying to discover what the issues are," Geary said. "The fact is there are still a disproportionate number of men in top levels of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. We need more women to succeed in these fields for our economy and for our future."

###

The study, "Can stereotype threat explain the sex gap in mathematics performance and achievement?" will be published in the journal Review of General Psychology.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/uom-wa011812.php

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Barboza posts ?KO of the Year? finish of Etim at UFC 142

Edson Barboza was cruising towards a solid victory, but that wasn't enough. The Brazilian decided to try a spectacular spinning heel kick (some called it a wheel kick) and Terry Etim's face was the unfortunate recipient.

Etim went down in a heap, his right arm stuck in the air. The Brazilian scored the third-round finish at that 2:02 mark to record his fourth victory in the UFC in the opener of the pay-per-view portion of UFC 142 in Rio de Janeiro.

What a way to kick off the PPV show at HSBC in Barboza's homeland. The fight was actually starting to get a little stale. Barboza used his low kicks to settle into a good scoring groove, but he didn't look like he was going to go for the kill.

The kick was perfectly executed and Etim never saw it coming. UFC analyst Joe Rogan said it was the first spinning heel kick knockout in the history of the UFC.

"When you fight in Brazil, it's unlike fighting in any other place in the world. In a fight, you try things and hope they work. Tonight, it (the kick) worked. It's something I've practiced a lot and I finally was able to land it hard," Barboza said.

Other popular Y! Sports content:
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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/barboza-sets-pace-ko-finish-etim-ufc-142-035657571.html

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U.S. upgrades ties with Myanmar as reforms continue (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The United States said on Friday it would upgrade diplomatic relations with Myanmar after President Barack Obama called the release of 200 political prisoners a "substantial step forward" in the Southeast Asian country's democratic reforms.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Washington was ready to begin the process of exchanging full ambassadors after an absence of two decades, and would consider additional measures if the new civilian-led government's reforms continue.

"Much more remains to be done to meet the aspirations of the Burmese people, but the United States is committed to continuing our engagement," Obama said in a statement.

The U.S. move followed Myanmar's announcement that it was freeing some 200 political prisoners in an amnesty in the latest sign of change in a country that has spent half a century under authoritarian rule.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also welcomed the prisoner release, calling it the most significant to date, and called on the international community to respond "by helping build conditions for sustaining the reform process."

The United States downgraded its diplomatic representation in Myanmar to charge d'affaires following a military coup in 1988 and a violent crackdown on pro-democracy protests in the country, formerly known as Burma.

Clinton, citing progress on a number of fronts, said the next step was to identify a candidate to return to Myanmar as the U.S. ambassador.

"This is a lengthy process, and it will, of course, depend on continuing progress and reform. But an American ambassador will help strengthen our efforts to support the historic and promising steps that are now unfolding," she said.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who was en route to Myanmar for a visit on Friday, issued a statement describing the upgrading of ties as "entirely appropriate."

"While the (Myanmar President) Thein Sein government will need to do more to explain the military relationship with North Korea and hold free and fair elections, it appears entirely appropriate that the United States would consider restoration of more formal ties," said McConnell, who has been a leader in Senate efforts to apply economic sanctions on Myanmar.

SANCTIONS NOT IN PLAY - YET

The sanctions imposed by United States and other western nations have crippled Myanmar's economy, despite its rich resources including natural gas, timber and precious gems, and driven it deeper into the embrace of regional power China.

Clinton said she had instructed her team at the State Department to "to identify further steps that the United States can take in conjunction with our friends and allies to support the reforms underway," but did not suggest any step to remove sanctions was imminent.

Myanmar held elections last March which saw a nominally civilian government - although still heavily weighted toward the military - take over from the ruling junta.

Since then, the government has embarked on a series of reforms that have prompted the United States and other western nations to suggest they may eventually remove sanctions if enough progress is made.

Clinton, who traveled to the isolated Southeast Asian nation in December, said the United States welcomed reforms already under way, which included freeing veteran pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi in November 2010.

"I intend to call President Thein Sein and Aung Sang Suu Kyi this weekend to underscore our commitment to walk together with them on the path of reform," Clinton said.

Clinton said the United States would work with Myanmar to address concerns of ethnic minority groups, ensure that elections scheduled for April 1 are free and fair, and that all remaining political prisoners are also released.

"But this is a momentous day for the diverse people of Burma and we will continue to support them, and their efforts, and to encourage the government to take bold steps that build the kind of free and prosperous nation ... they desire to see," she said.

(Additional reporting By Matt Spetalnick and Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120113/wl_nm/us_myanmar_amnesty_obama

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Banks start playing games with your money (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? A new video game has gotten its hooks into Brian Kealer, a 26-year-old San Francisco software engineer. He's not killing birds or using his vocabulary to impress his friends. No, Kealer is after real prizes, like the iPad2 he just scored. And he's playing with his bank account.

At least once every day, Kealer signs into SaveUp.com, a new financial website, and does some financial activity that wins him credits he can then use to play for big money prizes. To earn those credits, he can pay a credit card bill, deposit money into his savings account, or watch a sponsored video about personal finance.

To be clear, Kealer's not making any real dollar bets; he's just paying his bills. But by participating in SaveUp, he is playing into the financial services industry's latest attempts to attract and keep engaged consumers. Call it, inelegantly, "gamification." It involves the use of game-like attributes and mechanics -- contests, prizes, scorecards, badges, friendly competitions and the like -- to make the boring business of money more appealing to hard-to-snag consumers.

"It's a word that everybody hates, but it is descriptive of what's going on," says Jim Bruene of Netbanker, a banking technology consulting firm.

Financial firms are turning to games to attract a younger demographic that may be impervious to advertising. Online games afford banks a cheaper way to attract customers in an era when interest rates on savings are practically nil, debit card fees are capped and banks have small margins and little leeway to throw rewards at consumers. "It doesn't cost much" for bankers to market this way, he says. And the ability to push games out in smart phone and tablet applications probably contributes to the interest, too.

But financial games may have a more serious social purpose too: Some policymakers believe that bank-run lotteries can encourage lower income people to save more money.

Of course, it's not just banks that are "gamifying." Zynga, the company that creates social-network games like Farmville and Mafia Wars, raised $1 billion in its recent public offering on the expectation that its commercial tie-ins with companies like Pizza Hut and Paramount Pictures would pull real cash from the 200-million monthly active users the company claims. Web network marketing companies like Groupon and FourSquare offer participants badges, crowns and other awards.

$2.8 BILLION OUTLOOK SETS UP HYPE

Gamification is a $100 million market that should grow to $2.8 billion by 2016, according to M2 Research, an Encinitas, California, analysis firm, that is assessing the trend across the board. Another consulting firm, Gartner Inc, says it expects that by 2014 "more than 70 percent of Global 2000 organizations will have at least one gamified application."

But because game attributes are hard to define these numbers can be dicey; it's a little bit difficult to isolate what counts as gamification and where the profits come from. So loud is the buzz that Gartner recently placed gamification on its "hype cycle" -- a list of technology trends -- at a place where it is approaching the "peak of inflated expectations."

Banks have been a little bit slower to come to the game table than other companies, perhaps worried that using frivolous games to market serious financial products would be perceived negatively.

But in 2011, CapitalOne did a promotion inside a couple of Zynga games, and credit card companies have been running sweepstake-like promotions for years. Since the early 2000s, for example, Visa has been running contests in which cardholders would be entered into lotteries every time they used their cards, for prizes like 100 times their purchase amount or a year's worth of bills.

Currently, Chase is gamifying its bank account promotions; in the third quarter of 2011 it ran a $6 million sweepstakes for customers who paid a Chase bill (like a mortgage or credit card) with a Chase checking account.

The new players are a little bit different. SaveUp, a San Francisco startup, isn't a bank; it's an intermediary that hopes to attract banks as marketing clients, but consumers can play regardless of what bank they use. Behind the games, SaveUp is an aggregator that claims to use the same technology as Mint.com to bring in user accounts from hundreds of financial institutions.

Another new intermediary firm, Bobber Interactive, has created "GoalCard" - a Facebook-linked debit card that lets users play games with friends to win rewards points that they can trade for cash prizes. Some of the games are financial literacy quizzes, and players who do well enough on them can graduate to a level that allows them to play "Credits and Debits," a game that is bejeweled with dollar signs and piggy banks, instead of emeralds and diamonds.

All of the financial games get really serious when they have a higher policy purpose. A paper published a year ago by the National Bureau of Economic Research suggested that savings accounts with a lottery component could encourage low-income families to save more money. These prize-linked accounts, which offer savers a chance to win a specified (and potentially large) amount of money, are already offered in various countries, including many in Latin America and Europe. In Great Britain, the government issues Premium Bonds that pay off in lottery chances instead of interest.

"This is a well-tested product. (and its ). appeal is fairly widespread," the study's authors, led by Melissa Schettini Kearney of the University of Maryland, concluded.

Prize-linked savings accounts were piloted in the U.S., starting in 2009, by a group of Michigan credit unions, and now some in Nebraska have launched a new "Save to Win" program at the beginning of this year. Depositors who put at least $25 in a share certificate at a participating credit union will be entered into a drawing. Every $25 (up to $250 a month) is another entry. Monthly prizes range from $125 to $1,000; there will be one $25,000 grand prize at the end of the year.

In the last two years, six states (Rhode Island, Nebraska, Washington, Maryland, Maine and North Carolina) have changed their state laws to allow savings promotional raffles.

"No one can deny that people love lotteries," Peter Orszag, President Obama's first budget director, wrote in a Financial Times op ed last year. "Let's give savings accounts linked to lotteries a chance. It's a gamble but it could well pay off handsomely."

BIG PRIZES

SaveUp, the site that Kealer frequents, isn't messing around. Its top prize is a $2-million annuity; it also has airline tickets, cars, scholarships and a $5,000 Apple gift card in the mix. Many of its prizes are furnished through sponsorships; and they are all bonded and insured, according to CEO Priya Haji, who founded the start-up with Sammy Shreibati, an engineer who has worked on education products.

To win awards, customers sign up for the site, and link it to their bank and credit card accounts. Every time they save $10, they are entered with a chance to win. They get three chances to play every time they watch a sponsored educational videos. Titles include "Harnessing the Power of Mutual Funds," for example.

Haji sees gamification as a way to engage financial customers who might not be tempted by net worth reports, even if they are in colorful pie chart form. She says her site capitalizes on the top three trends in the banking sector: (1) consumers being more concerned about reducing debt; (2) the industry moving beyond conventional financial management to behavioral approaches of modifying financial behavior, and (3) social networking.

Progress mechanics, like a thermometer that shows you how much you've saved for a goal; socializing mechanics (how much you spend at Starbucks compared to your friends, or even compared to other people at your salary level); leaderboards and badges "are all elements of games that make you feel like you are achieving something," says Gabriel Zichermann, a gaming expert and editor at Gamification.co.

But not everyone is a believer. "If that works to get some people to have good behavior, I'm all for that," said Mark Schwanhausser, a senior analyst with Javelin Strategy & Research, a Pleasanton, California, consulting company that monitors financial services trends. "But it's like mixing a game into something that is pretty darn serious, and I don't think it's going to be a widespread winner with banks."

Gartner analyst Stessa Cohen doesn't think banks can afford to ignore this trend. Basic bank services are becoming commoditized, and intermediaries like SaveUp and Bobber could easily induce gamers to switch financial services companies. That's because consumers banking through intermediary firms could easily switch banks if another deal came along. "That's a big problem for banks," she said. "They may think 'we don't have to pay attention to that,' but then all of the sudden, 10 percent of their customers are just using them as a storage facility."

And it's not clear that the financial gamesmanship will win over those coveted Gen Y customers, either, despite the blatant pitch. "GoalCard is integrated completely into the Facebook ecosystem, which our Gen Y user Nathan uses as his primary filter for relevance and validation around all aspects of his life," Bobber Interactive's CEO Eric Eastman says of the model Gen Y customer he uses in his presentations.

That sounds like a challenge to a pretty cynical generation. "They don't believe anything a brand says," says Zichermann. "'Oh, really? That's the fastest car? And the tastiest burger?'"

It's a short step from that attitude to the one expressed by one 20-something who Reuters recently introduced to SaveUp for this story: "I don't want my personal finance tied up with marketing ploys," he said.

Said another: "That sounds like a site that is probably just selling your info, which is scary." SaveUp claims bank-level security and "does not sell any information to third parties," according to Shreibati, the company's chief technology officer.

But a free iPad is a free iPad. Kealer, a Gen Y-er who says his job involves discovering new mobile apps, has cast his cynicism aside after winning the coveted tablet and a $100 Macy's gift card.

"This is a good time to play because fewer people are participating," he says.

He makes a good point. As more players join the games, and the financial games themselves proliferate, it may get harder for consumers to win at these contests. Just choosing which games to play may start to feel a lot less like play and more like work.

(Reporting By Linda Stern)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/videogames/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120113/wr_nm/us_usa_gamification

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

New SF sheriff charged with domestic violence

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, right, and his wife Eliana Lopez walk away after speaking to reporters at City Hall in San Francisco, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012. A prosecutor says he has charged San Francisco's newly sworn-in sheriff with misdemeanors, including domestic violence, related to a New Year's Eve incident with his wife. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, right, and his wife Eliana Lopez walk away after speaking to reporters at City Hall in San Francisco, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012. A prosecutor says he has charged San Francisco's newly sworn-in sheriff with misdemeanors, including domestic violence, related to a New Year's Eve incident with his wife. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon fields questions from reporters Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012, in San Francisco. San Francisco prosecutors say they hope to decide by the end of the week whether to file any charges in the domestic?violence investigation of newly elected Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi. District Attorney George Gascon said Wednesday that "hopefully" a decision in the case could be reached as early as Friday. According to a police affidavit, a neighbor reported that Mirkarimi grabbed and bruised wife Eliana Lopez's right arm during a heated argument at their home on New Year's Eve. Mirkarimi has denied the allegations. Lopez, a former Venezuelan telenovela star, has said she has no complaint against her husband and that the incident was taken out of context. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi walks to his car after leaving his home in San Francisco, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012. Members of a group seeking to eliminate domestic violence are calling for Mirkarimi to step down. During a gathering outside City Hall Thursday, members of the San Francisco Domestic Violence Consortium, urged Mirkarimi to resign. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, left, is followed by reporters after leaving his home in San Francisco, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012. Members of a group seeking to eliminate domestic violence are calling for Mirkarimi to step down. During a gathering outside City Hall Thursday, members of the San Francisco Domestic Violence Consortium, urged Mirkarimi to resign. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi walks to his car after leaving his home in San Francisco, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012. Members of a group seeking to eliminate domestic violence are calling for Mirkarimi to step down. During a gathering outside City Hall Thursday, members of the San Francisco Domestic Violence Consortium, urged Mirkarimi to resign. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

(AP) ? Prosecutors on Friday charged San Francisco's newly sworn-in sheriff with three misdemeanors, including domestic violence, related to a New Year's Eve incident with his wife.

Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi faces one count each of domestic violence battery, child endangerment and dissuading a witness, San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon said.

"While I do not relish having to bring charges against a San Francisco elected official, I have taken an oath to uphold the laws of the state of California, and as the chief law enforcement official for the city and county of San Francisco, it is my solemn duty to bring criminal charges when the evidence supports such action," Gascon said.

"Whether this was the elected sheriff or any other San Francisco resident, this type of behavior is inexcusable, criminal and will be prosecuted," the district attorney said.

Gascon said the basis for the child endangerment charge was that the couple's son saw the alleged incident occur. Gascon declined to explain the allegation that Mirkarimi influenced a witness.

Mirkarimi was booked at San Francisco County Jail, said San Francisco police Sgt. Michael Andraychak. He was released on $35,000 bail.

Gascon said prosecutors have also requested an emergency protective order prohibiting Mirkarimi from having contact with his wife and son. He is also ordered to stay away from his home while police investigate other possible domestic violence incidents involving Mirkarimi and Lopez, Gascon said.

Mirkarimi could be arraigned as early as Tuesday, Gascon said.

The sheriff, 50, vowed to remain in office while he fights the charges. He spoke to a gaggle of reporters camped outside his office Friday afternoon and denied the allegations.

"The charges are very unfounded," he said calmly. "We will fight the charges."

He also said he wouldn't resign from office and planned to turn himself in for fingerprinting and mugshots later Friday.

"We are cooperating," he said.

His wife spoke briefly, and much more emotionally.

"This is unbelievable," she said. "I don't have any complaint against my husband. This is unbelievable."

A neighbor reported that Mirkarimi grabbed and bruised Eliana Lopez's arm during a heated argument at their home, according to a police affidavit.

The injury was shown on a video recorded by the neighbor, and a text message conversation between Lopez and the neighbor included details of the incident, according to the affidavit requesting a search warrant to obtain the video camera and phone.

Lopez, a former Venezuelan telenovela star, defended her husband in a written statement, saying the episode was "completely taken out of context."

The couple was married after having their first child in 2009.

Controversy swirled around the investigation from the start.

Days after the alleged dispute, Mirkarimi was sworn in as San Francisco sheriff, but a judge had declined to perform the ceremony to avoid a potential conflict if Mirkarimi were charged.

Mirkarimi appeared at the ceremony with his wife and son. Asked about the incident, he called it a "private matter, a family matter."

But the case prompted newspaper commentary and protests by anti-domestic violence groups. A coalition of them on Thursday urged Mirkarimi to take a leave from his post until the case is resolved.

San Francisco's sheriff does not have broad law enforcement powers as sheriffs do in other jurisdictions. The position mostly entails overseeing an organization of more than 800 sworn officers and a civilian staff of about 100.

The department runs San Francisco's jails with an average daily inmate population of 2,200, provides City Hall and courtroom security, carries out court-ordered evictions and warrants, and aids San Francisco police in enforcement actions.

Mirkarimi was elected sheriff in November after serving seven years as one of the city's more liberal supervisors. He's been an advocate for legalization of medical marijuana, was a co-founder of the California Green Party before becoming a Democrat in 2010, and led the nation's first successful attempt to ban plastic bags from supermarket chains.

If convicted of the misdemeanor charges, Mirkarimi would have to give up his department-issued firearm and possibly be subjected to searches as conditions of probation.

He also would be required to attend domestic violence classes, pay a $400 fine and could be put on probation for up to three years or sent to jail for up to a year

That would make him the only elected sheriff in the state forbidden from carrying a gun, said Merced County Sheriff Mark Pazin, president of the California State Sheriff's Association.

Under state law, Mirkarimi could only be automatically removed from office if convicted of a felony.

Mayor Ed Lee has the authority to charge Mirkarimi with official misconduct and suspend him from office, according to John St. Croix, executive director of the city's Ethics Commission.

Lee issued a statement Friday evening terming the charges "extremely serious and troubling," but did not indicate what actions, if any, he would take.

"As mayor, I must now review the facts and options available to me under the city charter, but I must also ensure that we do not take steps that undermine the integrity of the criminal justice proceedings," the statement said.

After possible hearings, the commission could make a recommendation to the Board of Supervisors about whether to reinstate him or permanently remove him from office.

___

Associated Press writers Beth Duff-Brown and Paul Elias contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-01-13-SF%20Sheriff-Domestic%20Violence/id-847f6450ed7541bb917f5ea26d258837

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Marine: Sgt. called for bloodshed in Haditha (AP)

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. ? A Camp Pendleton Marine testified Wednesday that his commanding officer called for violent retaliation before his squad killed 24 Iraqis, including women and children, in 2005.

According to U-T San Diego ( http://bit.ly/zztsBi), Sgt. Sanick Dela Cruz said that Sgt. Frank Wuterich told his squad how they should react if they were attacked again.

"If we ever get hit again, we should kill everyone in that vicinity," Wuterich allegedly told his men, according to Dela Cruz' testimony.

Wuterich, who faces nine counts of voluntary manslaughter, is the last defendant in the biggest and lengthiest criminal case against U.S. troops to arise from the Iraq War. The attack is considered among the war's defining moments, further tainting America's reputation when it was already at a low point over the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.

Wuterich's comment allegedly came in the wake of the death of a Marine in Camp Pendleton's 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment.

The killings in Haditha on Nov. 19, 2005, came after the squad was attacked by a roadside bomb while running a supply convoy.

Dela Cruz and Wuterich, 31, were among the first to jump out of their trucks that day.

He said he saw Wuterich had taken a knee and was pointing his gun at a group of Iraqi men standing in front of a white car nearby.

Dela Cruz testified that he assumed his squad leader had seen something threatening and was shooting, so he also opened fire.

Dela Cruz also performed a "dead check" by spraying bullets at the bodies from a close range.

No weapons were found on the Iraqi men, and none was linked to the insurgency.

Dela Cruz also testified that he regrets urinating on the skull of one of the dead Iraqis, saying he was taken over by grief for his dead comrade.

"The emotion took over, sir. We had just had one Marine (who) died," said Dela Cruz.

Six squad members have had charges dropped or dismissed, and one was acquitted.

Wuterich's charges were reduced to voluntary manslaughter in nine of the 24 deaths and other crimes. Wuterich also has been charged with aggravated assault, reckless endangerment, dereliction of duty and obstruction of justice.

His lawyer, Neal Puckett, has said Wuterich is confident the all-military jury will acquit him.

___

Information from: U-T San Diego, http://www.utsandiego.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120112/ap_on_re_us/us_marines_haditha

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Friday, January 13, 2012

Microsoft eclipses Yahoo in US search for 1st time

(AP) ? Microsoft Corp. has finally reached a long-sought and expensive goal ? its Bing search engine now ranks second behind Google in the Internet's most lucrative market.

Bing and Microsoft's other websites fielded 2.75 billion search requests in the U.S. during December, catapulting in front of Yahoo Inc. for the first time in the jockeying for runner up to Google Inc., according to statistics released Wednesday by comScore Inc.

Bing's December volume translated into a 15.1 percent share of the U.S. search traffic, comScore said. Yahoo processed 2.65 billion search requests, representing 14.5 percent of the U.S. market.

Google remained Internet's go-to place for information, with 12 billion U.S. requests in December. That works out to a 65.9 percent market share.

Other research firms track the Internet search market. But comScore's numbers matter the most to industry analysts and the companies trying to attract queries so they can make more money from the ads that appear alongside the results. Google's dominance of online search is the main reason it has established itself as the Internet's most profitable company.

Analysts have expected Microsoft and Yahoo to flip-flop their positions in Internet search since they announced a partnership in July 2009. The 10-year agreement has enabled Yahoo to save money by relying on Microsoft to provide the bulk of its search technology.

Microsoft wanted the deal so it would have billions more search requests to analyze each year, giving it a better chance to learn about people's tendencies and preferences.

Pursuing Google has come at a huge cost for Microsoft, which still makes most of its money from the Windows operating software and other software it sells for personal computers. Microsoft's online division, which is anchored by Bing, has suffered operating losses of about $7 billion since June 2008.

Even though it leans heavily on Microsoft's technology, Yahoo hasn't totally abandoned search. It still offers some unique features within its results in hopes of persuading more people to search on its website instead of going directly to Bing. The main reason: Yahoo still gets 88 percent of the ad revenue from searches conducted on its website and receives nothing from queries entered on Bing.

The efforts haven't been enough to prevent a steady slide in searches at Yahoo. The company's share of the U.S. search market stood at about 19 percent when it joined forces with Microsoft, according to comScore. Meanwhile, Microsoft's market share has climbed from roughly 9 percent.

Yahoo's eroding search share is one of the reasons that its revenue has been falling during the past three years, causing a downturn in its stock price, too. The company just hired Scott Thompson to become the fourth CEO in the past five years to attempt a turnaround at Yahoo.

"Scott Thompson has his work cut out for him," Citigroup analyst Mark Mahaney wrote in a research note breaking down comScore's latest search statistics.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-01-11-Internet%20Search%20Share/id-a62d51cf275c4ca98e02bf2faf36bf24

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Stocks set for a mixed open

By msnbc.com news services

U.S. stocks are set for a mixed open Monday.

Worries over Europe?s banks and caution ahead of Italian and Spanish debt sales this week left riskier assets vulnerable to further losses.

Attention is focused on a meeting between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy later today, which is likely to keep pressure on the euro although market expectations of any new announcements are low.

?We would be surprised if we saw concrete proof of fundamental progress towards a solution today (at the Merkel/Sarkozy meeting),? Investec chief economist Philip Shawsaid.

In positive economic news, German exports jumped in November, data showed on Monday, suggesting fourth quarter gross domestic product for Europe's bulwark economy may be stronger than expected, though its industrial output that month was subdued.

This follows Friday's jobs data in the U.S., which saw the jobless rate down to its lowest level in almost three years.

Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/09/10069605-stocks-set-for-a-mixed-open

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

LG AirPlay-enabled speaker dock eyes (and ears)-on

LG wasn't very forthcoming with details when it announced its new AirPlay speaker dock back in November, so here at CES 2012 we decided we'd stop by LG's booth to dig deeper and see it for ourselves. It looks like a foot square black Rubik's cube, with glossy and matte exterior squares alternating around the outside, along with two mesh speaker grilles on the front corners. Up top is a dock that fits any iDevice and the power button, while a Smart Square screen resides on the front that'll have touch controls when the dock ships in Q2 or Q3 of this year. A 3.5mm input jack and a USB port are on the back, and we're pretty sure that the dongle plugged there is where the AirPlay chip currently resides, though it'll be baked in before it gets to market. It was hard to evaluate the thing's sound on the show floor, but with an 8-inch subwoofer inside, the low end came through loud and clear and overall it sounded good. Unfortunately, we can't tell you how much it'll cost when it becomes available, but we can give you the gallery of pics below. Enjoy.

LG AirPlay-enabled speaker dock eyes (and ears)-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jan 2012 21:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://twitter.com/famitsu/statuses/156179653931962368

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

A Call for a Radical New Communications Policy - RegBlog

When Randolph J May.jpg Congress passed the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the most significant change to the Communications Act since its adoption in 1934, it was thought by many that the enactment of the new statute meant there would be a meaningful deregulatory shift in communications policymaking in light of the developing marketplace competition. ?But, unfortunately, there has been no such paradigm shift ? which means there is still much work to do to reform our nation's communications laws and policies.?

For most of the twentieth century, the "public interest" model of regulation, which grew out of Progressive-era thinking, dominated communications policymaking. ?Under this model, much of the Federal Communications Commission's regulatory activity was carried out under the Communications Act's many statutory provisions that simply delegate authority to the agency to act in the "public interest." ?The public interest standard, of course, is inherently indeterminate. ?Indeed, it is often said, with a large measure of truth, that the public interest means whatever three of the five FCC commissioners happen to say it means on any given day. ?Such an indeterminate standard provides no meaningful check on excessive or unnecessary regulation.

?

When Congress enacted the Telecommunications Act of 1996, more than a decade after the 1984 breakup of the monopolistic Bell System following Judge Harold Greene's historic 1982 divestiture decree, competition already was emerging, however slowly, in most segments of the communications and information services marketplace. ?To a large extent, the steady development of competition in the post-Ma Bell and post-1996 Act environment was attributable to technological advances, especially the transition from analog to digital communications networks and equipment, and from narrowband to broadband services. ?Thus, as early as December 2000, then-FCC Commissioner Michael Powell, quite accurately, referred to this transition as the "Great Digital Broadband Migration."

?

As Cell Phone Tower.jpg the new century began, the quickening digital migration, coupled with certain regulatory changes attributable to the 1996 Telecom Act, made it easier for traditional telephone companies, cable and satellite operators, and wireless firms to compete with each other in the provision of voice, video, and data services. ?For example, employing new broadband networks, traditional "telephone" companies began offering multichannel video services, and "cable television" operators began offering voice services. ?Both telephone companies and cable operators, along with "cell phone" providers, offered data services over increasingly higher-speed broadband networks. ?And, before too many years, wireless subscribers began to view videos on what are now called "smart" phones. ?In the digital world, "convergence," long a futuristic mantra, became a reality as broadband competitors offered bundled packages of various digitally-delivered services. ?And, the further reality ? a very important one ? is that, as each year passed, the power of competition was steadily supplanting monopolistic power in most communications and information services markets.

?

There was some reason to hope that, after adoption of the 1996 Telecom Act, the FCC would exercise its delegated authority in a way that recognized that marketplace competition lessens the need for regulation, especially the type of "command-and-control" regulation traditionally favored by the agency. ?After all, Congress emphasized in the 1996 Act's preamble that the statute was intended "to promote competition and reduce regulation." ?The principal legislative report accompanying the new law declared the congressional intent "to provide for a pro-competitive, deregulatory national policy framework."

?

There may have been reason for hope, but, alas, the hopes have been dashed. ?The FCC has been too slow to eliminate, or even reduce, outdated legacy regulation developed during the monopolistic Ma-Bell analog era. ?The Commission has even extended public utility-style regulations to digital broadband service providers through the adoption of so-called net neutrality mandates.

?

?

Thus, by virtue of the competition standard, the FCC would be required, much more than it is today, to engage in meaningful economic analysis that focuses on market structure. ?It would be required to determine whether individual service providers subject to complaints possess market power that should be constrained by some form of regulation. ?Further, unlike the way the agency mostly operates today, it generally would be required to favor narrowly-tailored ex post remedial orders over broad ex ante proscriptions developed in rulemakings. ?This competition-based, market-oriented model would force the FCC to focus on overall consumer welfare, not on outdated distinctions grounded in particular technology platforms or functional characteristics that just happen to favor one competitor over another without good reason. ?The Commission no longer would be able to invoke the elastic public interest standard to devise new regulations that have little or nothing to do with existing marketplace realities.

?

In addition to Congress making these changes in the FCC?s role, the Supreme Court should accord the electronic media essentially the same First Amendment protection accorded to the print media, such as newspapers and magazines. Whatever the rationales that in the past were used to justify differential content restrictions on the electronic media, in the face of proliferating competitive alternatives attributable to profound marketplace and technological changes, it is time for the Court to establish a new First Amendment jurisprudence befitting the media abundance of the twenty-first century?s digital age.

?

Only with radical changes in communications law and policy will the United States be able to realize the full benefits that enhanced competition in telecommunications can bring to our nation?s consumers, while, at the same time, affording all media companies, regardless of the technological platform they employ, the same First Amendment rights long enjoyed by the print media.

?

?

Source: http://www.law.upenn.edu/blogs/regblog/2012/01/a-call-for-a-radical-new-communications-policy.html

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Military budget slashed, White House delirium.

IAVA Logo

SMITH Magazine is honored to team up with Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) to hear stories about coming home from war?in exactly six words. IAVA is the country's first and largest nonprofit, nonpartisan organization for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and has more than 200,000 veteran members and civilian supporters nationwide. IAVA addresses the critical issues facing new veterans and their families, including challenges related to education, employment and healthcare.

Visit IAVA, join its Facebook page, and follow IAVA on Twitter.

Source: http://www.smithmag.net/iava/story.php?did=295462

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Monday, January 9, 2012

The week at the White House: jobs, campaign cash and some hoops (Washington Bureau)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/184438704?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Gunmen kill eight in Nigerian church

11:10 AEDT Sat Jan 7 2012

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Gunmen killed eight people when they opened fire on worshippers at a church in the capital city of the Nigerian state of Adamawa on Friday.

"Bodies were brought in from the church attack, we have between eight and 10 bodies," a hospital source said.

The killings took place on Friday night at a church in downtown Yola, where up to 17 were killed in an attack, earlier in the day, on Christians at a house as they mourned the death of a friend shot dead the night before.

"There was an attack at the Christian Apostolic church this evening. Some gunmen went into the church and opened fire on worshippers killing some people and wounding several others," said a journalist who lives in Yola and asked not to be named.

The hospital source could not give the numbers of wounded "because nurses and doctors are treating the victims."

On Thursday night, gunmen stormed a church in the northeastern city of Gombe and opened fire as worshippers were praying, killing six people, including the pastor's wife.

The attacks come as a three-day ultimatum issued by a purported spokesman for an Islamist group Boko Haram, for Christians to leave the north.

Source: http://news.ninemsn.com.au/world/8399628/gunmen-kill-eight-in-nigerian-church

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

Phlib Frames ?Liberate? Your Photos

The Phlib is kind of an exoskeleton for your photos. Only instead of the exoskeletons found in insects, crustaceans and aliens, this one is almost invisible in use. And equally unlike the scaffold of the natural (and extraterrestrial) world, when naked the Phlib looks like the postcard stands in seaside gift shops.
The display rack sticks [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/_BURvQu_gCA/

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Video: Who is Rick Santorum?

Dogs really do know what you're thinking

Scientists have finally proven what every dog owner knows ? our canine friends read our facial expressions like dedicated detectives. Dogs don?t just depend on verbal commands, they look deeply into our eyes and try to guess what we?re up to, according to a new study.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45891639#45891639

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Summary Box: Asian countries want Iranian oil (AP)

SKIP THE SANCTIONS: China, the biggest buyer of Iran's oil, has publicly rejected U.S. sanctions aimed at Tehran's energy industry while American allies Japan and South Korea are scrambling to find a compromise to keep critical supplies flowing.

SLIPPERY SLOPE: Sanctions approved by President Barack Obama on Saturday have led to a clash of interests between Washington and key commercial and strategic partners over efforts to stop Iran's nuclear program.

LET'S TALK: China's foreign ministry called for negotiations On Iran. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is due to visit Beijing and Tokyo next week for talks that officials say will include the sanctions.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120106/ap_on_bi_ge/as_asia_iran_oil_summary_box

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Holloway suspect begins Peru murder trial Friday

FILE - In this June 4, 2010 file photo, Dutch citizen Joran van der Sloot is escorted by police outside a police station near the border with Chile in Tacna, Peru. Joran van der Sloot goes on trial in the murder of a young Peruvian woman on Friday Jan. 6, 2011, nearly seven years after he became the prime suspect in the unsolved disappearance of an American teenager on holiday in Aruba. Van der Sloot, 24, is charged with killing 21-year-old Stephany Flores in his Lima hotel room on May 30, 2010, after the two left a casino together in the day's wee hours. (AP Photo/Karel Navarro, File)

FILE - In this June 4, 2010 file photo, Dutch citizen Joran van der Sloot is escorted by police outside a police station near the border with Chile in Tacna, Peru. Joran van der Sloot goes on trial in the murder of a young Peruvian woman on Friday Jan. 6, 2011, nearly seven years after he became the prime suspect in the unsolved disappearance of an American teenager on holiday in Aruba. Van der Sloot, 24, is charged with killing 21-year-old Stephany Flores in his Lima hotel room on May 30, 2010, after the two left a casino together in the day's wee hours. (AP Photo/Karel Navarro, File)

(AP) ? Joran van der Sloot goes on trial in the murder of a young Peruvian woman Friday, nearly seven years after he became the prime suspect in the unsolved disappearance of an American teenager on holiday in Aruba.

Van der Sloot, 24, is charged with killing 21-year-old Stephany Flores in his Lima hotel room on May 30, 2010, after the two left a casino together in the day's wee hours.

The slaying happened five years to the day after the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, a 19-year-old from Alabama who was celebrating her high school graduation on the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba and was seen leaving a nightclub with Van der Sloot. Her body has never been found.

Authorities say Van der Sloot confessed to killing Flores, claiming he became enraged after she discovered his connection to Holloway.

His attorney says the confession should be voided because the defense lawyer present when he made it was state-appointed and no official translator was present.

Police and Flores' family dispute Van der Sloot's version of her death that the defendant was hard up for cash and knew the Peruvian business student had been winning at the casino.

Prosecutors are seeking a 30-year prison sentence for Van der Sloot on murder and theft charges in a trial that will be held at Lima's Lurigancho prison. He is accused of murdering Flores with "ferocity and great cruelty," and prosecutors say he also stole 600 soles, about $220, from the victim.

The handsome, garrulous Dutchman, a staple of true-crime TV shows for years after Holloway's disappearance, has in several interviews described himself as a pathological liar. He's been in custody after his arrest in neighboring Chile just days after Flores' death.

Van der Sloot shares a cell with a Mexican and a Chinese inmate at the maximum security Miguel Castro Castro prison, separated from convicted prisoners, said his lawyer, Jose Luis Jimenez.

He said Van der Sloot spends his days making crafts and reading self-help books.

"His mood is super good," Jimenez said during a telephone interview Wednesday.

The defendant has granted several jailhouse interviews to media and was confronted there in September 2010 by Holloway's mother, Beth Holloway Twitty, when she accompanied a Dutch television crew. Her lawyer, John Kelly, said at the time that she was determined to get answers about her daughter.

The Associated Press reached Twitty by telephone on Thursday and she had said she no comment on the trial or whether she feels any closer to knowing her daughter's fate.

Van der Sloot has told several people he was involved in Holloway's disappearance, only to later deny it.

U.S. law enforcement officials say he extorted $25,000 from Twitty after offering to lead Kelly to Holloway's body in Aruba, using the money to fly to Lima on May 14, 2010, just days after meeting with Kelly.

The defense will argue that Van der Sloot killed Flores in a state of emotional distress.

"We will challenge the aggravating factors (charged by the prosecution) and seek to reduce the charge from first-degree murder to simple homicide," Jimenez said. That charge carries a prison sentence of from eight to 20 years.

He said his client, whose prominent lawyer father died of a heart attack on an Aruba tennis court in February 2010, was in a fragile state from years of being under suspicion for Holloway's presumed death and other legal problems stemming from that case.

"The killing was impromptu. There was no planning to carry it out," Jimenez said.

Lawyers for Flores' family, who are allowed to participate in the trial under Peruvian law, will try to show that Van der Sloot killed the woman to steal money she won at the casino.

If the court finds that to be true, a conviction could result in Van der Sloot being sentenced to life in prison.

"This guy wanted to take the money of the girl because he, in communications he had with his friends in Holland through Facebook and email, stated that he had no money, that he had no money or food, that his stay in Peru was hard and he told them: 'I am on the verge of prostitution,'" family lawyer Edward Alvarez said in an interview.

Alvarez predicted Van der Sloot would plead guilty Friday in an effort to get a reduced sentence.

Jimenez, the defense attorney, ruled out that possibility.

He said that would require his client to make a confession that accepted all the charges alleged by the prosecution.

The lawyer didn't dispute that Van der Sloot confessed to the killing, but he said the Dutchman's rudimentary Spanish didn't allow him to respond properly during his interrogation.

Van der Sloot met Flores, the daughter of a circus promoter and former race car driver, at the Atlantic Casino in Lima.

Video from casino cameras show the two playing at the same table, then leaving together.

In his confession, Van der Sloot said they planned to play Internet poker at the down-market TAC Hotel where he was staying.

He said in his confession that while they were playing, his computer received an instant message on his links to the Holloway case. He said Flores then struck him, and he became enraged and strangled her.

Hotel video shows Van der Sloot entering the hotel with Flores then leaving alone a few hours later. Her body was found in the hotel room three days later.

Two days later, the Dutchman was arrested in Chile.

That same day, he was charged in Alabama with trying to extort the Holloway family in return for disclosing the location of Natalee Holloway's body.

___

Associated Press writers Franklin Briceno, Frank Bajak and Martin Villena contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-01-05-LT-Peru-Van-der-Sloot/id-b4bc1606f5cf47f9bc69772de0960f4f

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Conn. man gets 70 years for kidnapping ex-wife (AP)

HARTFORD, Conn. ? A prominent former advertising executive declared that he has hired an "assassin" to kill his ex-wife just before being sentenced Wednesday to 70 years in prison for holding her hostage for more than 13 hours and burning down the Connecticut home they once shared.

Richard Shenkman, 62, was sentenced in Hartford Superior Court, where a jury convicted him in October of 10 charges including kidnapping, arson, assault and threatening. He faced a potential of nearly 80 years in prison.

Shenkman and his ex-wife, Nancy Tyler, were in the middle of divorce-related court hearings when he abducted her from her office's parking garage in downtown Hartford on July 7, 2009, and forced her at gunpoint to drive about nine miles to the home in South Windsor.

Authorities said Shenkman and Tyler were due in court for a divorce-related hearing later that morning, and he was supposed to turn over the house to her or face jail time for contempt of court.

Tyler testified that Shenkman threatened to kill her, fired a gun near her head and threatened to blow up the house. She escaped unharmed during a standoff with police, and he was arrested after running out of the burning house.

During Wednesday's sentencing hearing, Shenkman told Judge Julia Dewey that he has hired an experienced killer to murder Tyler. The judge had rejected a motion by Shenkman's attorney to delay sentencing for further psychological evaluation of his client.

"When Nancy Tyler's lifeless body is lying in the morgue ... I will have made my point," Shenkman said. "There is nothing this system can do to prevent Nancy Tyler's murder."

Shenkman is the brother of Mark Shenkman, founder and president of one of the nation's largest money management firms, Shenkman Capital Management. Richard Shenkman's former advertising firm, Primedia, produced the "Gayle King Show" in 1997, starring Oprah Winfrey's best friend.

Shenkman wore an orange prison jumpsuit and his hands and legs were shackled. Dewey rejected his request to have the handcuffs taken off for the hearing. He had also grown a full gray beard since he was convicted, and his shoulder-length hair that was in a ponytail during the trial was untied.

Defense attorney Hugh Keefe said Shenkman's remarks show his client is mentally ill.

"I've never seen a defendant say things like that at sentencing," Keefe said. "He demonstrated he was off the reservation big time."

Keefe called the prison term "ridiculously stiff" and said he will appeal the convictions.

Tyler had urged the judge to impose the maximum prison sentence, saying Shenkman has terrorized her, her family and her friends for years. She begged the judge to "give us some peace."

"Mr. Shenkman's campaign of destruction has been devastating," Tyler said. She said after the hearing that she wasn't worried about the murder threats.

"I am very relieved and planning to go back to my life with my family and friends in safety," she said.

Prosecutor Vicki Melchiorre told the judge that Shenkman "will never stop trying to destroy" Tyler, and she asked for the maximum sentence.

"He got exactly what he deserved," Melchiorre said later. "I think he was pathetic. I think this was his last opportunity to terrorize her and he took it."

Dewey called Shenkman a narcissistic and self-centered man who would do anything to get his way.

"You are never going to be rehabilitated," the judge said before announcing the sentence, which also included an order for Shenkman to pay $100,000 restitution to Tyler.

Shenkman had mounted an insanity defense, but Tyler testified that her ex-husband often acted "crazy" to get his way.

Tyler testified at the trial about her harrowing ordeal, saying Shenkman handcuffed himself to her, fired a handgun twice near her head, prepared a noose for her and claimed to have rigged the house with explosives as swarms of police surrounded the home. Tyler had called a friend on her cellphone in concern over seeing Shenkman's minivan near her office and urged her to call police just before she was kidnapped.

Tyler said Shenkman handcuffed her to an eyebolt in a basement wall at one point, and that she managed to unscrew the bolt and run outside when Shenkman went upstairs to check on police activity.

Shenkman talked on the phone to dispatchers and police officers several times during the ordeal. The jury listened to the recorded conversations, in which Shenkman sometimes sounded frantic, screamed, used profanity and several times counted down the seconds to his threatened killing of Tyler.

Tyler described how Shenkman became increasingly enraged at police during the ordeal for not meeting his demands, which included having a priest administer Tyler last rites and having authorities fax over a marriage license so he and Tyler could get remarried.

Police testified that the nearly 15-hour standoff ended when Shenkman came out of the burning home, which was uninsured at the time, and pointed a handgun at his own head. Minutes later, officers shot Shenkman with rubber bullets and used a stun gun on him twice before subduing him and taking him into custody.

Shenkman and Tyler married in 1993, and she filed for divorce in 2006. A judge approved the divorce in 2008, but court proceedings continued as Shenkman appealed.

He also is charged with burning down his and Tyler's beachfront home in East Lyme in 2007 just before he was to hand it over to Tyler as part of their divorce. He awaits trial on those charges.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120105/ap_on_re_us/us_divorce_hostage

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