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Iris AO, Inc. News Archive
https://o.twimg.com/2/proxy.jpg?t=HB...5lXKMSZG9FSMvc
-It’s not the first time Violet, now 29, has appalled someone: she was expelled from her girls’ boarding school Tudor Hall at 11. St Trinian’s was calm by comparison. ‘I did once pee out of a window – that was my naughtiest day. And I used to moon a lot during class because that’s the sort of thing I did with my siblings at home,’ she explains. ‘The teachers used to say, “You wouldn’t do this at home, would you?” I would say, “Well, yes, I would actually.”
- Violet Day -- 'fancy-dress-queen'
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2aIsj8lcik
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https://www.facebook.com/oldtoytrains/app_2405167945
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Solfeggio frequencies 147 258 369 nice work, also 417 528 639 741 852 963 these also make a perfect 9X9 magic square!! 1-9 on each line includes horizontal vertical and crosswise. if thats of help or interest to anyone, just noticing the coincidence.
174 285 396
285 396 174
396 174 285
417 528 639
528 639 417 my lil discovery and gift peace
639 417 528
741 852 963
852 963 741
963 741 852
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http://abc7news.com/news/isla-vista-stabbing-victims-were-from-the-bay-area/77427/
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Monday May 26, 2014
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXbH-yzGNfg
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http://www.trialpay.com/checkout/?c=82754a7&tid=9am9gma
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A juvenile and a 21-year-old man have been charged in the shooting death of a pregnant teen on Christmas Day in a southern Chicago suburb, police said Saturday.
Anthony Lee, 16, who is said to be the young teen's boyfriend and the father of the baby, was charged with first-degree murder along with his 21-year-old brother, Diante Lamont Coakley, according to Dolton Police Chief John Franklin.
Both brothers were held without bond Sunday.
Police said they are searching for a third brother and possibly another suspect who they believe drove away with the victim's body and dumped it a few blocks away. Their names have not been released.
The victim, Eva Casara, was found shot between two houses in the 1100 block of East 152nd Street in south suburban Dolton on Christmas Day. She was 26 weeks pregnant.
The little girl, who family members said will be named Lailani Paris Casara, was born weighing 1 pound, 5 ounces. Doctors at Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn were caring for her, but officials said the infant remains in very critical condition Saturday.
Authorities said the shooting was the result of a drug-related robbery that "spiraled out of control."
Prosecutors alleged Lee, Coakley, a third brother and Casara went to the location of 152nd and Dorchester on Christmas with the intention of robbing someone Casara arranged to meet.
Once the individual arrived at the scene, Casara and Coakley got into the back seat of the person's car and had a conversation with the driver, who told Coakley to get out of the car.
Coakley exited the car and walked to the driver's side door, trying to open it when the driver began to drive away. Coakley and one of the other offenders began shooting at the car, striking Casara in the head.
It wasn't until the driver and a passenger heard "gurgling sounds" that they realized Casara was still in the backseat.
The driver pulled the victim out of the car and drove to Hammond, Ind., prosecutors said.
Someone walking to a friend’s house around the 1100 block of 152nd Street found Casara lying in a pool of blood and called 911, according to prosecutors. Casara was pronounced dead at Christ Hospital the next morning.
"Officers discovered that she had one gunshot wound to the head, bleeding profusely from the head, and they immediately called for an ambulance and fire department to give us a hand with that," Franklin said.
Casara was pronounced dead Thursday morning at Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.
"It's hard to call it an accident when you're firing a gun in the direction of people," Franklin said. "Unfortunately, she was just in the wrong place at the wrong time."
Coakley and Lee turned themselves in to the Dolton Police Department, where they admitted to planning the robbery, prosecutors said.
Witnesses identified Coakley as a shooter that night.
"Of course I'm surprise," said Casara's aunt Melody Vardas. "We didn't know the extent of his involvement in the situation. He put her in a situation- him and his brother put her in a bad situation. Why would he do that?"
Vargas said the two had been dating for more than a year and were "in love."
"She was in love with him, she was blushing saying 'this is my boyfriend," Vargas said. "And he also said 'I love her and I'd do anything for her.'"
On Saturday, Casara's family held a vigil for the slain teen.
"It's a healing process," said her mother Estrellita Casara. "This is helpful. I needed this because I can't sleep."
Note: This report was originally published on Dec. 28, 2013.
Source: http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/Juvenile-Charged-Another-in-Custody-in-Pregnant-Dolton-Teens-Shooting-237853211.html#ixzz32sYTtqxR
Follow us: @nbcchicago on Twitter | nbcchicago on Facebook
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btls7X4yrOs
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Microsoft TerraServer
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http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1026380-REG/jbl_lsr310s_powered_subwoofer.html/prm/alsVwDtl
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The grieving family of Eva Casara asked Dolton’s police chief Sunday when he would find the third man wanted in the pregnant Chicago teen’s murder.
A little more than 24 hours later, officers led a young man in a dark hoodie and jeans into the back of the Dolton Police Department with his hands cuffed behind his back.
That man was Darius D. Marshall, 19, according to Chicago defense attorney Stuart Goldberg. He said Marshall, his client, surrendered to police Monday as a suspect in 17-year-old Casara’s death.
Prosecutors say Casara took a bullet to the back of her head Christmas Day during a botched robbery attempt in Dolton in which she participated.
Before she died, doctors delivered her infant daughter, Lailani Paris Casara, who is still in the hospital struggling to stay alive.
Marshall had not been charged as of Monday afternoon, prosecutors said. Police would only say they’re questioning a third suspect.
But Goldberg said Marshall is the brother of Anthony Lee, 16, and Diante Coakley, 21, who have already been charged with first-degree murder in Casara’s death.
He said Marshall turned himself in Monday at the George N. Leighton Criminal Court Building in connection with Casara’s death and will plead not guilty if charged.
“I feel that, eventually, he would have been caught,” Goldberg said, “under potentially compromising . . . circumstances, and I wanted him to be turned in under a controlled environment.”
Goldberg said Marshall began calling him Saturday, around midnight, the day his brothers were charged. He said Marshall was in an “undisclosed location” unknown even to Marshall’s family.
Estrellita Casara, Eva Casara’s mother, said the news that Marshall had turned himself in made her “so happy.” And while she said her granddaughter, Lailani, continued to fight for her life Monday afternoon, the battle was going well.
“She’s having a good day,” Estrellita Casara said. “Every day counts.”
Estrellita Casara also said she wants police to continue hunting for suspects so the truth can come out about her daughter’s death.
Sunday, Cook County prosecutors told a judge Casara plotted with Lee, Coakley and an unnamed brother to rob someone in Dolton on Christmas Day.
They said she set out with the brothers when they left their grandmother’s house to commit the robbery at 152nd and Dorchester, where Casara made arrangements to meet their intended victim.
Once there, prosecutors said Casara got into a car with the intended robbery victim, his passenger, and Coakley. But the robbery victim eventually told Coakley to get out, and he did.
As Coakley tried to open the driver’s side door, prosecutors said, the intended robbery victim drove off. Prosecutors said Coakley began shooting at the car even though Casara was in the back seat.
They said one other person fired shots, but it wasn’t clear who the second triggerman was. It’s believed Coakley fired the fatal shot.
The robbery victim only realized Casara was still in the car when he and his passenger heard gurgling sounds from the back seat. They dumped her at 1104 E. 152nd Street, prosecutors said, and drove to Hammond, Ind. Lee, Coakley and their brother, meanwhile, went back to their grandmother’s house and then to Gary, Ind., when they couldn’t find Casara.
A passerby discovered the pregnant teen in a pool of blood about 7:45 p.m. and called 911. She was ultimately taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn and was pronounced dead shortly before 11 a.m. Thursday.
Cook County Judge James Brown ordered Lee and Coakley held without bail.
Email: [email protected]
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The grieving family of Eva Casara asked Dolton?s police chief Sunday when he would find the third man wanted in the pregnant Chicago teen?s murder.
A little more than 24 hours later, officers led a young man in a dark hoodie and jeans into the back of the Dolton Police Department with his hands cuffed behind his back.
That man was Darius D. Marshall, 19, according to Chicago defense attorney Stuart Goldberg. He said Marshall, his client, surrendered to police Monday as a suspect in 17-year-old Casara?s death.
Prosecutors say Casara took a bullet to the back of her head Christmas Day during a botched robbery attempt in Dolton in which she participated.
Before she died, doctors delivered her infant daughter, Lailani Paris Casara, who is still in the hospital struggling to stay alive.
Marshall had not been charged as of Monday afternoon, prosecutors said. Police would only say they?re questioning a third suspect.
But Goldberg said Marshall is the brother of Anthony Lee, 16, and Diante Coakley, 21, who have already been charged with first-degree murder in Casara?s death.
He said Marshall turned himself in Monday at the George N. Leighton Criminal Court Building in connection with Casara?s death and will plead not guilty if charged.
?I feel that, eventually, he would have been caught,? Goldberg said, ?under potentially compromising . . . circumstances, and I wanted him to be turned in under a controlled environment.?
Goldberg said Marshall began calling him Saturday, around midnight, the day his brothers were charged. He said Marshall was in an ?undisclosed location? unknown even to Marshall?s family.
Estrellita Casara, Eva Casara?s mother, said the news that Marshall had turned himself in made her ?so happy.? And while she said her granddaughter, Lailani, continued to fight for her life Monday afternoon, the battle was going well.
?She?s having a good day,? Estrellita Casara said. ?Every day counts.?
Estrellita Casara also said she wants police to continue hunting for suspects so the truth can come out about her daughter?s death.
Sunday, Cook County prosecutors told a judge Casara plotted with Lee, Coakley and an unnamed brother to rob someone in Dolton on Christmas Day.
They said she set out with the brothers when they left their grandmother?s house to commit the robbery at 152nd and Dorchester, where Casara made arrangements to meet their intended victim.
Once there, prosecutors said Casara got into a car with the intended robbery victim, his passenger, and Coakley. But the robbery victim eventually told Coakley to get out, and he did.
As Coakley tried to open the driver?s side door, prosecutors said, the intended robbery victim drove off. Prosecutors said Coakley began shooting at the car even though Casara was in the back seat.
They said one other person fired shots, but it wasn?t clear who the second triggerman was. It?s believed Coakley fired the fatal shot.
The robbery victim only realized Casara was still in the car when he and his passenger heard gurgling sounds from the back seat. They dumped her at 1104 E. 152nd Street, prosecutors said, and drove to Hammond, Ind. Lee, Coakley and their brother, meanwhile, went back to their grandmother?s house and then to Gary, Ind., when they couldn?t find Casara.
A passerby discovered the pregnant teen in a pool of blood about 7:45 p.m. and called 911. She was ultimately taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn and was pronounced dead shortly before 11 a.m. Thursday.
Cook County Judge James Brown ordered Lee and Coakley held without bail.
Email: [email protected]
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http://www.11alive.com/story/news/local/2014/05/26/brian-portwine-va/9614875/
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http://www.wsoctv.com/news/news/national/rock-hill-rescue-squad-member-accused-using-emerge/nf7P3/?icmp=cmgcontent_internallink_relatedcontent_2014_ partners3
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The James Farm
The log cabin portion of the James home is over 160 years old. It was purchased in 1845 by the Rev. Robert Sallee James and his wife, Zerelda. Jesse James was born here on September 5, 1847, and was buried here April 6, 1882. The Victorian cottage that is the front portion of the house was built in 1893. The house has been a tourist attraction since 1882, and is visited by thousands of persons annually.
After the death of Zerelda Samuel in 1911, Frank James inherited the farm and lived here with his wife Anna and son, Robert. Frank died here in 1915, his widow in 1944. "Bob" James ran the Farm, and built a small golf course on it. After his death it came into the hands of the sons of Mary Barr, Jesse?s daughter. The Barrs sold it with all the original furnishings to Clay County in 1978 to be operated as an historic site.
The log cabin was restored in 1978-79 and the cottage portion in 1984.
The Farm is operated by the Division of Historic Sites of the Clay County Department of Parks, Recreation and Historic Sites.
Jesse Woodson James
Jesse James is one of the best known of all Americans. His name is recognized by more people throughout the world than that of any other historic American. He has become the "American Robin Hood" in song, literature and folklore. Nearly forty motion pictures, scores of plays and television programs, hundreds of books, and thousands of articles have appeared about him. There are more historic sites that have been preserved and opened to the public that relate to Jesse James than for any other American except George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, and of the thousands of people who visit his birthplace many come from other nations.
He was born here in the cabin on September 5, 1847. There was an older brother Alexander Franklin (Frank) and a sister, Susan. His parents were, for the raw frontier, upper middle class. The father, Reverend Robert S. James, was an eloquent Baptist minister, who had two college degrees and a sizable library. He founded or reorganized three churches near here, all of which are still active; and was member of the first Board of Trustees of William Jewell College, in nearby Liberty, Missouri.
Jesse?s mother, Zerelda Cole, was like her husband, a Kentuckian. She was a tall, demanding woman, who saw many tragedies during her long life (1823-1911). In 1850, when the children were very young, Rev. James "got the call" and went to California to preach to the miners during the Gold Rush. He died of a fever shortly after arriving there. The young widow subsequently married Dr. Reuben Samuel. It was a marriage that lasted for over fifty years and produced four children. Her home was ravaged during the Civil War and her husband hanged several times by Union soldiers to extract information concerning Frank, who had joined Confederate guerrillas. Though Dr. Samuel survived, he received permanent damage to his vocal chords and brain. She was arrested and jailed as a spy and she and the family were banished from Missouri.
Jesse was wounded three times during the war, the latter while surrendering, and suffered for more than three years.
Later, her sons became the nation?s most wanted outlaws and her home was visited a number of times by law enforcement groups. On the night of January 25, 1875, a bomb thrown into the house by detectives, exploded, killing her eight-year-old son, Archie Samuel, and mangling her right arm so badly that part of it was amputated. Jesse was murdered by Robert Ford in 1882; and Frank, who surrendered to the Governor of Missouri, was subsequently acquitted of crimes by juries in Missouri and Alabama. Susan died in childbirth a few years later and Dr. Samuel, whose mind slowly deteriorated, died in an insane asylum. Zerelda?s strong heart stopped beating on a train, when she was returning from a visit to Frank?s ranch in Oklahoma in 1911.
After Jesse was killed in 1882, Zerelda had him buried in her yard so she could watch over the grave. The home became a tourist attraction. It still is. She met visitors and would take them on a tour explaining the sweet, the sad, and the violent things that had happened to her and her family. Devoted to Jesse?s memory, she never admitted he had done anything wrong, but had been forced into his actions by people and circumstances. Whenever Frank was here, she would enlist him to help her.
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Christopher Cantwell
The reason he was suspended from school was because he'd been caught with a backpack filled with stolen jewelry. One story the national media ignored was a police whistleblower who came out and said that in order to artificially reduce the crime rate among black teens (the police were under fire for racism) the police were sending them to their schools for punishment rather than charging them with crimes. The stolen jewelry sat in the evidence room for months even though the police knew who it belonged to because telling the owner about it would have forced them to prosecute.
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Bar Refaeli Covered Topless in Elle Spain June 2014
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http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/29/te...ectronics.html
http://freedomfromgovernment.us/how-...case/#more-734
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/29/us...ix-center.html
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Yea, read this...after. Spending the night in the hospital with my dying mother and then driving home all night for 10 hrs straight i stopped at the vet at 8 am to check on my 18 yr old cat, to find out they had put it to sleep without telling me..while sitting in my car outside the vet finally breaking down and crying a cop comes to my door, opens it, ask me if everything is alright (duh..I m crying) he asks for my i.d...I say"my license is in my wallet, turn my head to get it in the seat next to me, and he yanks me out of the car so fast from behind that i come off the ground..he throws me up against the car and handcuffs me...in disbelief I ask what is going on and he says he is arresting me for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest....my other cop friends said officer Quillin , in city of Huntsville, AL was just an "old smart ass" cop, that couldnt get off street duty....next time i lock my door and keep my seat belt on..Magistrate threw it out and said "if she was a lawyer she would have a good time with this"..but then I was told I would still have to pay court cost for it to be dropped....$200......what a crock system we live in...yea right, protect and serve, not hardly...
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"It's hard to understand why Apple would have to spend $3 billion on a nascent streaming service and a line of bass-heavy headphones," frank Gillett says.