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Bradley Speaks to Defendants in Rape Case

 I understand this comes from CBS and let's hope that Ed Bradley can keep this straight. There are still many unanswered questions in this situation.

Bradley Also Speaks To Defendants In Rape Case

Duke Dancers Give Different Accounts

Oct. 12, 2006
(CBS)

The dancing partner of the woman who accuses three Duke Lacrosse players of raping her refutes a key part of her partner’s account of the alleged crime.

Kim Roberts, who danced at the same party where the alleged rape took place, makes the revelation in an interview with 60 Minutes correspondent Ed Bradley this Sunday, Oct. 15, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

Roberts' answer to Bradley’s question directly contradicts a crucial statement the accuser gave to police. Bradley asks whether she, Roberts, who goes by the stage name "Nikki" when she performs, was holding onto the accuser at the beginning of the alleged crime.

Says Bradley, "In the police statement, [accuser] describes the rape in this way: 'Three guys grabbed Nikki,' 'That's you,'" says Bradley, "'Brett, Adam and Matt grabbed me. They separated us at the master bedroom door while we tried to hold on to each other. Bret, Adam and Matt took me into the bathroom.' Were you holding on to each other? Were you pulled apart?"

"Nope," replies Roberts, who says she was hearing this account for the first time.

Roberts also denies the accuser's statement to the police that after the alleged rape, Roberts came into the bathroom and helped one of the rapists dress her.

When pressed by Bradley about whether she saw signs of rape from the accuser, such as complaining about pain or a mention of an assault, Roberts says, "She obviously wasn't hurt...because she was fine."

Bradley's report also contains interviews with the three defendants, Collin Finnerty, Reade Selligmann and David Evans, all of whom proclaim their innocence, and others involved in the case.

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Russia, China cast doubts on quick N.Korea vote

 Everyone repeat after me Russia and China are our friends who want to help stop this crisis, this is how the democrats do it they keep repeating the above line until they've said what is typically a lie long enough they believe it to be the truth.

Russia, China cast doubts on quick N.Korea vote

By Evelyn Leopold and Michelle Nichols

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - China and Russia on Thursday cast doubt on the chances for a quick vote on a U.S.-drafted resolution imposing economic and weapons sanctions on North Korea for its reported nuclear weapons test.

"I think that of course people are talking about a possible vote tomorrow, but I'm not sure," China's U.N. Ambassador Wang Guangya said. "There are many common grounds that members agree. But there are some disagreements."

U.S. Ambassador John Bolton formally introduced the new draft resolution to U.N. Security Council in hopes of securing a vote on Friday but said he was open to further discussion and changes.

But the measure still retained some elements that China has objected to.

Asked about a Friday vote, Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said, "I don't think so" and indicated one should wait for results of the latest flurry of diplomatic activity.

"We think there should be a strong reaction but a cool- headed reaction," Churkin said.

He pointed to diplomatic meetings in Asia and in the United States and Russia. Tang Jiaxuan, a Chinese state councillor and former foreign minister met President George W. Bush and U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice at the White House on Thursday and then was travelling on to Moscow.

China has used forceful language to condemn North Korea since it announced it had conducted a nuclear weapons test on Monday, a change of tack towards Pyongyang. Wang again on Thursday said Pyongyang's action was "irresponsible." Continued...

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10 Football Players Arrested In Gang Rape of 11 Year Old Girl

I saw this on the crawler for MSN when this first happened and funny how it's dropped out of site. I have a few questions as to why the mainstream media didn't find it attractive enough to run as a high profile item.

Was it because these young men weren't known as "affluent"? Could it be that they weren't white? Could it really be that there is unseen pressure not to give a story like this any time because it would show that rape has no color barrier?

California football players arrested in rape of young girl
Once again, some college athletes are being accused of a gang rape, this time in Fresno, California. Their accuser is an eleven-year-old girl.
Police say as many as ten men may be involved, most of them football players at two community colleges. Two men are being held on $100,000 bail. Police Chief Jerry Dyer says other arrests are likely.

Police say the girl, a runaway from a group home, went to an apartment complex Saturday night to visit a friend. She says she was then sexually assaulted multiple times by several men.

The girl ran from the apartment and asked a couple on the street to call police.

An attorney says seven Fresno City College football players who were in the apartment complex at the time spoke with police yesterday.

 

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Defense in Duke Rape Case Seek Notes

 

Alot of fluff for the media yet no day in court for the accused.

Defense in Duke Rape Case Seek Notes

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -- Defense attorneys in the Duke University lacrosse rape case said the prosecutor's office has failed to hand over details of any statements from the accuser or handwritten notes from investigators.

Attorneys for player David Evans said the information was not included in 615 pages of evidence District Attorney Mike Nifong turned over to them last month, according to a letter sent to the prosecutor on Wednesday.

This spring, Evans, 23, and fellow players Reade Seligmann, 20, and Collin Finnerty, 20, were indicted on charges of rape, kidnapping and sexual offense.

A student at nearby North Carolina Central University told police she was raped in a bathroom by three men at a March 13 off-campus lacrosse team party. Defense attorneys have strongly proclaimed the players' innocence.

Defense attorneys Joseph Cheshire and Brad Bannon said they believe Nifong talked with the accuser based on a court motion in which the prosecutor states the woman told him she had not taken Ecstasy on the night of the party.

Nifong's assistant said the prosecutor was out of town and had not read the letter.

© 2006 The Associated Press.

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Democrat fundraiser for Gov. Democrat fundraiser for Rod Blagojevich Charged

 

Here I thought the culture of corruption existed only in the GOP........

Blagojevich Adviser Indicted on Charges


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Scary Movie Producer Censored by YouTube

I'm sure this will shock everyone that when one of Hollywood's film makers pooks some serious fun at the Clintons You Tube tried to block access to his work.
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Just Say No to Alec Baldwin

 Too bad more people won't take the lead of the NYPD when Alec Baldwin attempted to cross the policeline near the fatal small plane crash of NY Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle.
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Dixie Chicks Opinion Poll

 

If you ever wondered what a majority of other people thought of the Dixie Chicks the survey says .

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Democrat Operative Shopped Foley E-Mails

Between the democrats & the mainstream media they want me to believe they have the page's safety in their best interests? This is the same subject matter that is being used in by the democrat running against Deb Pryce in Ohio as she had personal knowledge of what was happening?

This only goes to show these are the same democrats that turned their backs on the activities of Barney Frank. I'll start calling for Republican's resignations right after Barney Frank does the duck walk out of the local District Attorney's office.

All the Democrats want to do is raise our taxes, support the gay indoctrination of our kids and model our country after the failed Soviet Union. Shame on George Soros, Hilliary Clinton, Howard Dean, John Kerry and the rest of the "demorats" for this scam.


"Democrat Operative" Shopped Foley E-Mails

Reporter says magazine killed story in May 2 newspapers had info from source 1 year ago

Posted: October 10, 2006
5:00 p.m. Eastern
© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

A Democratic operative shopped around the story of disgraced former congressman Mark Foley's inappropriate behavior with male pages more than one year ago, according to Harper's magazine.

In a story posted today on the weekly's website, reporter Ken Silverstein says that in May he received copies of the now-infamous e-mail exchanges between Foley and a 16-year-old page.

Silverstein said that one year ago his unnamed source provided the same material to the St. Petersburg Times and, he "presumes," the Miami Herald, which both decided against publishing the stories. The two papers already have acknowledged receiving copies of the e-mails – the Times said it didn't run the story because the e-mails contained "nothing overtly sexual," and the boy and his family wouldn't speak on the record.

The Harper's reporter wrote a story after receiving the e-mails in May, but the magazine did not publish it, he said, "because we didn't have absolute proof that Foley was, as one editor put it, 'anything but creepy.'"

In the e-mails – which were not sexually explicit but, nevertheless, troubled the teens' parents – Foley requested a photograph and asked what the 16-year-old wanted for his birthday. Later, Foley's salacious instant-message exchanges with another teen prompted his resignation.

Silverstein said, "At the time I was disappointed that the story was killed – but I must confess that I was also a bit relieved because there had been the possibility, however unlikely, that I would wrongly accuse Foley of improper conduct."

Silverstein said he also was provided with several e-mails the page sent to the office of Rep. Rodney Alexander, R-La., who had sponsored the teen when he worked on Capitol Hill.

The Harper's reporter contends the Democratic operative was "genuinely disgusted" by Foley's behavior and had no partisan intent, because the e-mails might originally have come from Republicans, and the operative was not working "in concert" with the Democratic Party.

If this was all a plot to hurt the GOP's chances in the midterm elections, why did the original source for the story begin approaching media outlets a full year ago? If either of the Florida papers had gone to press with the story last year, or if Harper's had published this spring, as the source hoped, the Foley scandal would have died down long ago. A stronger case could be made that the media, including Harper's, dropped the ball and inadvertently protected Foley and covered up evidence of the congressman's misconduct.

The e-mails got into the hands of the George Soros-sponsored Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington July 21. The group says it turned them over to the FBI, which later concluded the messages "did not rise to the level of criminal activity." Two months later, Sept. 24, an anonymous blog, StopSex Predators.com, published the e-mails. ABC News, which had received the messages in August but put them aside to cover other stories, published them on its website Sept. 28. The next day the network received copies of sexually explicit instant messages between Foley and a teenage boy from 2003, leading to the congressman's resignation.

As WND reported, a radical homosexual activist has claimed some of the credit for revealing Foley's behavior and has warned there is more to come, stating on his website earlier this year he would "out" a "gay" Republican senator during the run-up to the mid-term elections.

"Ladies and Gentlemen ... if they want a cultural war, I'll give them a f------ cultural war. Fasten your seatbelts, it's gonna be a bumpy 2006," wrote Mike Rogers on his weblog in January.

Rogers held on to damaging information about Foley, having indicated the story would break just prior to the Nov. 7 congressional elections.

Rogers helped develop a "target list" of 20 lawmakers and Capitol Hill staffers he believed were hiding their sexual orientation while promoting an "anti-gay" political agenda. The list included Foley and Democratic Sen. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland

Rogers claimed that before the Foley story broke, he shared information about the congressman with Bill Burton, the director of communications for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. WND spoke with a Burton assistant, but the director did not respond to a request for comment.

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Japan Announces New Sanctions against N. Korea

 

Japan announces new sanctions against

N. Korea

Oct 11, 8:55 AM (ET)
By Chisa Fujioka

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan announced on Wednesday it would impose new sanctions on North Korea over this week's reported underground nuclear blast, while the reclusive communist state held out the threat of more tests.

The North's KCNA news agency, renowned for blustering anti-U.S. rhetoric, said pressure from Washington to rein in its nuclear program would be tantamount to a declaration of war.

Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki said new sanctions, adding to measures imposed after Pyongyang test-fired missiles in July, included barring all North Korean ships from Japanese ports and banning imports from the country. The decision, agreed by the National Security Council, would be formally approved by cabinet on Friday.

Tokyo has also been pressing for U.N. sanctions against Pyongyang, and the Security Council is likely to make a decision by Friday. A broad consensus appears to be building but some reservations have been expressed by China and Russia, North Korea's largest trading partners.

In the North Korean capital, the country's No. 2 leader said whether Pyongyang conducted more tests depended on Washington.

"The issue of future nuclear tests is linked to U.S. policy toward our country," Kyodo news agency quoted Kim Yong-nam as saying in a meeting with a Kyodo delegation.

"If the United States continues to take a hostile attitude and apply pressure on us in various forms, we will have no choice but to take physical steps to deal with that," he added.

Pyongyang's KCNA news agency was characteristically dramatic in its portrayal of the situation.

"If the U.S. increases pressure upon the DPRK (North Korea), persistently doing harm to it, it will continue to take physical countermeasures, considering it as a declaration of a war," it quoted a Foreign Ministry spokesman as saying. But it added that North Korea was ready for both dialogue and confrontation.

Ignoring U.N. warnings, North Korea announced on Monday that it had conducted its first-ever nuclear test. It said a U.S. "threat of nuclear war and sanctions" forced its hand.

There were fears, later discounted, that Pyongyang might conduct another test on Wednesday. NHK started the day saying that Tokyo was checking reports of a second blast in North Korea, but the reports were never substantiated.

"ACCEPT IT WAS A TEST"

Experts have been unable so far to confirm that the earth tremor detected on Monday was indeed a nuclear test. U.S. envoy to Japan Thomas Schieffer said they might never be able to do so.

"Because the yield was so small, we may not be able to make a real determination at all," Schieffer told Japanese executives.

In September, Japan approved new financial sanctions effectively freezing remittances and the transfer of funds from Japan by groups suspected of having links to Pyongyang programs for developing missiles and weapons of mass destruction.

But economists said the effect on North Korea of banning trade would be more symbolic than real unless Pyongyang's key trading partners such as China and Russia joined in.

China and Russia, which both border North Korea, met other veto-holding members of the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday to discuss a range of sanctions proposed by the United States and Japan to pressure Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear program.

"I think that there has to be some punitive actions," said Beijing's U.N. ambassador, Wang Guangya. "We need to have a firm, constructive, appropriate but prudent response to North Korea's nuclear threat."

Russia called Monday's reported test a "colossal blow" to the non-proliferation regime but, like China, insisted an eventual U.N. resolution not leave the way open for the use of force.

The United States, France and Britain, the three other permanent Council members, agreed that tough measures were needed fast. Diplomats hoped a resolution could be adopted by Friday on an array of weapons-related and financial sanctions.

Human Rights Watch urged that emergency food aid to the impoverished North be continued, however, saying millions of ordinary citizens could be at risk of hunger and starvation.

South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun, whose country is technically still at war with the North, said strong pressure as well as dialogue might be needed to sway Pyongyang.

(Additional reporting by Lindsay Beck in Beijing, Jon Herskovitz in Seoul, Linda Sieg and Isabel Reynolds in Tokyo, and Canberra bureau)

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North Korea Threatens War Against U.S.

 North Korea Threatens War Against U.S.

Oct 11, 9:21 AM (ET)
By HANS GREIMEL

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - North Korea stoked regional tensions Wednesday, threatening more nuclear tests and saying additional sanctions imposed on it would be considered an act of war, as nervous neighbors raced to bolster defenses and punish Pyongyang.

South Korea said it was making sure its troops were prepared for atomic warfare, and Japan imposed new economic sanctions to hit the economic lifeline of the communist nation's 1 million-member military, the world's fifth-largest.

North Korea, in its first formal statement since Monday's claimed atomic bomb test, hailed the blast as a success and said attempts by the outside world to penalize North Korea with sanctions would be considered an act of war.

Further pressure will be countered with physical retaliation, the North's Foreign Ministry warned in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

"If the U.S. keeps pestering us and increases pressure, we will regard it as a declaration of war and will take a series of physical corresponding measures," the statement, said without specifying what those measures could be.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the United States would not attack North Korea, rejecting a suggestion that Pyongyang may feel it needs nuclear weapons to stave off an Iraq-style U.S. invasion.

Rice told CNN that President Bush has told the North Koreans that "there is no intention to invade or attack them. So they have that guarantee. ... I don't know what more they want."

But she also said that the decision by Pyongyang to go ahead with its nuclear program means it likely will see "international condemnation and international sanctions unlike anything that they have faced before."

North Korea's No. 2 leader Kim Yong Nam threatened in an interview with a Japanese news agency that there would also be more nuclear tests if Washington continued what he called its "hostile attitude."

Kim, second to North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, told Kyodo News agency that further nuclear testing would hinge on U.S. policy toward his communist government.

"The issue of future nuclear tests is linked to U.S. policy toward our country," Kim Yong Nam was quoted as saying when asked whether Pyongyang will conduct more tests.

Along the razor-wired no-man's-land separating the divided Koreas, communist troops were more boldly trying to provoke their southern counterparts: spitting across the demarcation line, making throat-slashing hand gestures, flashing their middle finger and trying to talk to the troops, said U.S. Army Maj. Jose DeVarona of Fayetteville, N.C., adding that the overall situation was calm.

On the streets of North Korea's capital, it seemed like business as usual. Video by AP Television News showed people milling about Kim II Sung square in Pyongyang and rehearsing a performance for the 80th anniversary of the "Down with Imperialism Union."

South Korean Defense Minister Yoon Kwang-ung said that Seoul could enlarge its conventional arsenal to deal with a potentially nuclear-armed North Korea.

Scientists and other governments have said Monday's underground test has yet to be confirmed, with some experts saying the blast was significantly smaller than even the first nuclear bombs dropped on Japan during World War II.

North Korea appeared to respond to that Wednesday, saying in its statement that it "successfully conducted an underground nuclear test under secure conditions."

In rare direct criticism of the communist regime from Seoul, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun said the security threat cited by North Korea "either does not exist in reality, or is very exaggerated," according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency.

He spoke even as South Korea's military was checking its readiness for nuclear attack, Yonhap said. The Joint Chiefs of Staff recommended improving the military's defenses, possibly with state-of-the-art weapons to destroy nuclear missiles, the report said.

The top U.S. general in South Korea said that American forces are fully capable of deterring an attack despite the North's still-unconfirmed nuclear test.

"Be assured that the alliance has the forces necessary to deter aggression, and should deterrence fail, decisively defeat any North Korean attack against" South Korea, U.S. Army Gen. B.B. Bell said in a statement to troops. "U.S. forces have been well- trained to confront nuclear, biological and chemical threats."

About 29,500 U.S. soldiers are deployed in the South, a remnant of the 1950-53 Korean War that ended in a cease-fire, not a formal peace treaty.

Bell said seismic waves detected after the claimed test were still being analyzed and it had not been yet determined if the test was successful.

Japan took steps to punish North Korea for the test, prohibiting its ships from entering Japanese ports and imposing a total ban on imports from the impoverished nation. North Korean nationals are also prohibited from entering Japan, with limited exceptions, the Cabinet Office said in a statement released after an emergency security meeting late Wednesday.

A total ban on imports and ships could be disastrous for North Korea, whose produce like clams and mushroom earns precious foreign currency on the Japanese market. Ferries also serve as a major conduit of communication between the two countries, which have no diplomatic relations.

Tokyo has already halted food aid and imposed limited financial sanctions against North Korea after it test-fired seven missiles into waters between Japan and the Korean peninsula in July, including one capable of reaching the United States.

A report that North Korea may have conducted a second test rattled nerves Wednesday before the Japanese government said there was no indication of a blast.

Japanese public broadcaster NHK reported around 8:30 a.m. that unidentified government sources were saying "tremors" had been detected in North Korea. South Korean and U.S. seismic monitoring stations said they hadn't detected any indications of a second test, findings backed by White House spokesman Blair Jones.

With the United Nations debating how to respond to North Korea, China agreed to punishment but not the severe sanctions backed by the U.S.

Beijing is seen as having the greatest outside leverage on North Korea as a traditional ally and top provider of badly needed economic and energy aid.

The United States asked the U.N. Security Council to impose a partial trade embargo including strict limits on Korea's weapons exports and freezing of related financial assets.

All imports would be inspected too, to filter materials that could be made into nuclear, chemical or biological weapons.

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North Korea threatens US with Nuke Missle

 This is the same country that Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, Madline Albright and a few other so-called high level democrat diplomats played "let's make a deal" with this country. To imagine they were allegedly "duped"?

I'm having a difficult time believing that story, what about you?

North Korea threatens US with Nuke Missle

Official says Pyongyang will fire weapon
Unless Washington acts to resolve standoff

Posted: October 10, 2006
6:00 p.m. Eastern


Communist North Korea has threatened to fire a nuclear-tipped missile unless the U.S. takes action to resolve its standoff with Pyongyang, according to the South Korean news agency Yonhap.

The unnamed North Korean official who issued the threat said the intent is to bring Washington to the negotiating table.

"We hope the situation will be resolved before an unfortunate incident of us firing a nuclear missile comes," the official said yesterday. "That depends on how the U.S. will act."

The South Korean agency previously reported the North Korean official said that Pyongyang was willing to return to the negotiating table and quit its nuclear program if the U.S. takes "corresponding measures."

"The nuclear test is an expression of our intention to face the United States across the negotiating table," official said. "What we want is security of the (North), including guaranteeing our system."

The official told Yonhop any move by the U.N. Security Council to sanction North Korea is futile.

"We have lost enough. Sanctions can never be a solution," the official said. "We still have a willingness to give up nuclear weapons and return to six-party talks as well. It's possible whenever the U.S. takes corresponding measures."

While the official did not specify the measures, North Korean has been demanding Washington lift financial restrictions for Pyongyang's alleged counterfeiting and money laundering.

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'Foley Problem' surfaces for Ohio Democrats

 What do you imagine could have caused this problem? Is the liberal double standard coming home to roost on their doorstep?

'Foley problem' surfaces for Ohio Democrats

Scandal puts spotlight on gubernatorial candidate's vote on pedophilia

Posted: October 11, 2006
1:00 a.m. Eastern

In the wake of the Mark Foley scandal, questions are circulating below the radar screen in Ohio about the past record of Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland on pedophilia.

Strickland is the Democratic gubernatorial candidate in Ohio running against Republican Secretary of State Ken Blackwell.

The issue surfaced Dec. 15, 2005, when the left-leaning Athens News reported on an anonymous letter-writing campaign to Democratic voters citing Strickland's vote as "present" and not in support of the 1999 House Concurrent Resolution 107 that condemned an American Psychological Association study supporting "nonnegative sexual interactions between adults and adolescents."

The APA study claimed scientific evidence established that sex between adults and underage minors might be positive for children.

HCR 107 passed with a strong bipartisan coalition of 355 congressmen voting "yea" and only 13 congressmen, including Strickland, voting "present."

Strickland's refusal to vote "yea" has been interpreted as implicit support for pedophilia, as he was given a chance to join an overwhelming congressional bipartisan majority voting to condemn the APA study.

In the Democratic primary, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Brian Flannery openly challenged Strickland on his HCR 107 vote. Flannery still has posted on his gubernatorial website Strickland's July 27, 1999, speech on the House floor explaining his refusal to condemn the APA pedophilia study.

Mr. STRICKLAND. Mr. Speaker, it troubles me that sometimes in this Chamber we stand and say things that we ought not to say. We criticize people that we have no right to criticize.

We recently voted to condemn a scientific study and an organization, an organization that has done as much as any organization in this country to fight child abuse.

WND Managing Editor David Kupelian in his best-selling book "The Marketing of Evil" has noted a tendency since sex researcher Alfred C. Kinsey published his sexual behavior books in the late 1940s and early 1950s to use flawed social science research to endorse sexual practices traditionally considered deviant.

Bloggers in Ohio argue that the behavior of the Democratic Party in Washington expressing outrage over Foley's e-mails demands "a full vetting" of the seven-year old controversy over Strickland's refusal to take a strong stand against the APA study arguing that pedophilia can be beneficial to children.

The argument is that Democrats are pursuing a double standard, condemning Republicans on sexual misconduct issues while giving Democratic candidates a pass.

The HRC 107 controversy resurfacing in the last month of the Ohio gubernatorial campaign also has brought back another controversy over sexual misconduct that first was launched by Flannery, Strickland's Democratic challenger.

On March 17, during the primary campaign, Lynn Hulsey reported in the Dayton Daily News that Flannery had accused Strickland of hiring from 1997 to 1999 a male congressional and campaign staffer who had been convicted of exposing himself to children. As Hulsey wrote:

According to Athens police, the man's case stems from 1994, when he was arrested for public indecency after several children reported he'd exposed himself. Police records show he was found guilty, although the exact charge is unclear.

Flannery also accused Strickland of taking the man with him to Italy after his 1998 congressional campaign. Again, Hulsey wrote:

Strickland said campaign workers planned to treat themselves to the trip if Strickland won, but as it turned out only Strickland and the man were able to go.

Hulsey reported Strickland had learned of the sexual misconduct charge against his employee late in the 1998 campaign through an anonymous letter, but he discounted the letter since it was sent anonymously. Hulsey quoted Strickland as saying "perhaps" he should have pursued the matter more aggressively, but at the time he took no action. The man left Strickland's office of his own accord in 1999, after the reported trip to Italy with Strickland.

After the Foley scandal, these resurfacing charges against Strickland are creating a firestorm among Ohio's political blogs.

Among Strickland's endorsers is the choice of Ohio's openly pro-homosexuality PAC, the Equality Ohio Campaign Fund, or EOCF. In endorsing Strickland, EOCF emphasized his service as a minister, a psychologist and a professor, commenting:

Representative Strickland has long been an ally of and advocate for LGBT (Lesbian-Gay-Bi-sexual-Transvestite) people. He maintained a 100% rating with the Human Rights Campaign's Congressional Scorecard while in Congress. He voted against the Federal Marriage Amendment (FMA).

The EOCF noted Ted Strickland is married to Frances Strickland who lives in Simpsonville, Ky. The EOCF closed its endorsement by commenting that Frances "is an educational psychologist and author of a widely-used screening test for kindergarten-age children."


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Muder In Moscow Update #2

Activists, Reporters Imperiled in Russia

By MARIA DANILOVA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MOSCOW -- Internet postings are calling on Russian nationalists to kill government critics - death lists that underscore the dangers journalists and rights activists face in Russia.

Svetlana Gannushkina, a refugee rights activist, tops a list of 89 people published by a radical nationalist group, the Russian Will, which has urged "patriots" to take up arms and execute her and other friends of "alien" peoples.

"Since there is nothing I can do in this situation, I try not think about it," the soft-spoken, 64-year-old Gannushkina said.

Slain investigative reporter Anna Politkovskaya was on such a list, for her reporting on Chechnya and criticism of the Kremlin. Her slaying Saturday has cast a chill over human rights activists and journalists who criticize government policies and increasingly fear for their safety in a repressive climate.

Since President Vladimir Putin came to power nearly seven years ago, he has moved to silence critics, squeezing the opposition and tightening the screws on media critical of the Kremlin. He came under strong Western condemnation for a new law that severely limits the activities of non-governmental organizations.

Prosecutors have linked Politkovskaya's slaying to her award-winning reports, fearlessly uncovering human rights abuses by government troops in war-ravaged Chechnya. She had been listed as one of 63 "non-friends of Russia" by the nationalist group National Sovereign Party of Russia.

Chechen Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov, whose forces were accused of torture, abductions and murder by Politkovskaya, denied any role in her murder Wednesday.

Some colleagues have suggested Politkovskaya could have died at the hands of Russian nationalists at a time when xenophobia is growing and hate crimes take place almost daily. Rights activists complain the government is doing little to combat the alarming trend.

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"I am horrified at what happened with Anya," said Gannushkina, using Politkovskaya's nickname. "Of course, I understand that considering what happened, we are all under the same threat."

Gannushkina said she first learned in August of the Web site calling for her to be killed as an "advocate of alien migrants." Other alleged enemies included journalist and commentator Yevgeniya Albats and veteran rights activist Sergei Kovalyov.

The site, http://www.russianwill.org, could not be accessed Wednesday. Gannushkina said it was shut down this week.

However, information on the targeted activists and journalists, including their phone numbers and addresses, has spread to numerous other nationalist sites and blogs and Gannushkina has received phone threats.

Gannushkina said she asked prosecutors to investigate the group's activities in August, but prosecutors have failed to launch a probe. A spokesman for the Moscow Prosecutor's Office declined comment.

Last year, Oksana Chelysheva, an activist and journalist with the Russian-Chechen Friendship Society, which advocates for Chechen rights, discovered leaflets stuffed in mailboxes in her apartment building proclaiming her "a wh*re for the Chechens," giving her full name and address and accusing her of supporting terrorists.

Chelysheva has kept up her work despite the threats. Her boss, Stanislav Dmitriyevsky, was convicted in February of inciting ethnic hatred and handed a two-year suspended sentence - a verdict he condemned as part of a state assault on non-governmental organizations. This week, prosecutors asked a court to shut down the group.

Aaron Rhodes, executive director of the Vienna-based International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights, condemned the intimidation campaign against Gannushkina and her colleagues. He urged authorities to use the recently passed law on extremism to crack down on radical groups instead of targeting groups promoting ethnic tolerance.

"The climate is starting to resemble a fascist society where there is freedom to make money by friends of the rulers but critics and independent thinking are persecuted," Rhodes said.

Oleg Panfilov, director of the Moscow-based Center for Journalism in Extreme Situations, said Russian journalists, along with rights activists, face many threats.

"When a journalist is threatened, he is threatened either with courts or with death - either we will kill you or we will throw you in prison," Panfilov said.

He declined to estimate how many journalists have been threatened, saying most threats are delivered by phone or in person, making them hard to document. But he said more than 40 journalists have been attacked in connection with their work this year alone.

Russia has become one of the deadliest countries for journalists. Forty-three journalists were killed between 1993 and 2005, many in Chechnya, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists.

Gannushkina said she would continue her advocacy work despite the intimidation, rejecting her colleagues' advice to hire a bodyguard, because she did not want to put anyone in danger.

"If I intend to live here, I intend to live and not hide in a burrow," she said.

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Abortion Opponents Energized In Key U.S. State

If you would like one more reason to be sure to vote on November 7th, 2006 this is an important issue that will more than likely be up coming.

It's time this issue is returned to the individual states instead of it having been hijacked and dcided by a supreme court of liberals.

Abortion opponents energized in key U.S. state

Wed Oct 11, 2006 9:10am ET168

By Carey Gillam

SIOUX FALLS, South Dakota (Reuters) - Kim Shemon crooks an elbow around her four-month-old daughter and keeps a wary eye on her four-year-old son as she puts a donation on the table and picks up a "Vote Yes for Life" sign for her yard.

The busy mother is part of a surge of support for South Dakota's new ban on abortion, rallying to defend the law in a referendum on November 7.

"I'm just very passionate about the right to life" Shemon said. "I've adopted both my kids. I'm thankful their birth mom chose life."

Widely seen as the most restrictive abortion law in the United States, the South Dakota law has shaken abortion rights groups and emboldened their opponents, making this wind-blown farm state ground zero in the U.S. war over abortion.

Signed by Gov. Mike Rounds on March 6, the law bans abortions at all stages of pregnancy, including cases of rape and incest, and offers no exception if a mother is in poor health.

A range of national abortion rights organizations helped conduct a successful petition over the summer to force a referendum on the law onto the ballot of U.S. midterm elections.

But opponents of abortion still see sparsely populated South Dakota as their best route to overthrowing Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion 33 years ago.

"We're really working and we're focusing," said Leslee Unruh, who is leading the campaign to uphold South Dakota's ban. "We're going to have a big party on November 7. Victory is soon." Continued...

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