Tuesday, December 11, 2007

BLACK DAY


A federal judge Monday sentenced former media tycoon Conrad Black to 6½ years in prison for his role in defrauding shareholders and skimming cash from his Hollinger International newspaper conglomerate.

Black, 63, was convicted in July of mail fraud and obstruction of justice. He has vowed to appeal his conviction and has 10 days to begin the process.

Black was also ordered to pay a $125,000 fine.




"This sentence will send a message that you do not engage in this type of behavior," said U.S. District Judge Amy St. Eve. "The court's sentence should adequately deter others from engaging in this conduct."

"Mr. Black, you have violated your duty to Hollinger and its shareholders," the judge said. "I frankly cannot understand how someone of your stature can engage in the conduct you did and risk everything."

His associates -- Peter Atkinson of Oakville, Ontario, Jack Boultbee of Victoria, British Columbia, and Mark Kipnis of Northbrook, Illinois -- were also due to be sentenced on Monday. Atkinson, Kipnis and Boultbee were also convicted of mail fraud.

Black left the court without speaking to reporters.




In the early 1990s, Hollinger International controlled 60 percent of Canadian newspapers in addition to hundreds of dailies worldwide, including the Chicago Sun Times, the Montreal Gazette, Britain's Daily Telegraph and the Jerusalem Post.

Black resigned as chairman and chief executive officer of Hollinger in 2004 after an internal investigation into shareholders' complaints that he and other executives were lining their pockets with company funds.

Weeks after his November 2004 resignation, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil fraud lawsuit against Black, as well as Hollinger International's former deputy chairman and chief operating officer, David Radler, and Hollinger International.

A year later, Fitzgerald brought eight criminal fraud charges against Black, and a warrant was issued for his arrest.




Federal prosecutors said Black and the other defendants defrauded shareholders of Hollinger International by collecting "non-compete" payments from the sales of media holdings. In a non-compete, the seller agrees -- in exchange for a payment -- not to compete in the buyer's market.
The prosecution argued that the payments ended up in the pockets of the defendants, as tax-free bonuses, instead of in the company coffers.


During the trial at the U.S. District Court for Northern Illinois, which began in March, U.S. federal prosecutors described the lavish, eccentric lifestyles of Black and his wife, Lady Barbara Amiel, a journalist.

Black renounced his Canadian citizenship in 2001 to become a British citizen and was awarded a place in the British House of Lords. He took the title Lord Black of Crossharbour.



The judge ruled that Black will serve his sentence in a U.S. prison, not a Canadian prison as the defense has requested.

She gave Black 12 weeks to surrender to federal authorities and recommended that he do so at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida as requested by defense attorneys.

A date for the surrender will be set later. If Black fails to do so, Judge St. Eve said, he will forfeit his properties in New York and Florida.

The court ruled in July that Boultbee and Atkinson will be allowed to return to Canada to serve their prison sentences.

Saturday, December 01, 2007

INGRID IS ALIVE


The Colombian government has seized five videotapes from suspected members of a rebel group that show a number of hostages, including Colombian Sen. Ingrid Betancourt and three American contractors, a government statement said Thursday.

The tapes are the only recent evidence that the hostages kidnapped by the Revolutionary Armed Force of Colombia (FARC) may still be alive.

Four of the five videos show recording dates in late October, while the fifth is branded January 1, 2007.

In addition to Betancourt and the contractors, several kidnapped members of Colombia's security forces appear in the tapes.


Earlier this month, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, acting on behalf of the Colombian government, held talks with Colombian Sen. Piedad Cordoba and Luciano Marin Arango, a member of the high command of FARC, in a bid to broker the exchange of as many as 50 kidnapped.

Those civilians include Betancourt, a Colombian-French national who was kidnapped in 2002 while running for president, and the three American contractors who were captured when their plane went down in 2003 during a drug-eradication flight.

The guerrillas have demanded the release of 500 imprisoned FARC rebels in return for their hostages.

Prior prisoner-release negotiations between Colombia and FARC have stalled over a rebel demand for creation of a demilitarized zone for the exchange and for released rebel prisoners to return to the guerrilla group.



In the early November meeting, Marin Arango reiterated the guerrillas' demands for a demilitarized zone.

Established in 1964 as the military wing of the Colombian Communist Party, FARC is Colombia's oldest, largest, most capable and best-equipped Marxist rebel group, according to the U.S. Department of State.

The United States, the European Union and Colombia classify FARC as a terrorist group.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

EARTHQUAKE IN PERU

A powerful 7.9 magnitude earthquake has hit the coast of Peru, killing at least 337 people and injuring hundreds more, Peru's civil defence institute says.

All but one of the deaths were in the coastal province of Ica, about 265km (165 miles) south of the capital, Lima.

President Alan Garcia said he was sending three cabinet ministers to the worst affected area.
The earthquake struck at 1841 (2341 GMT) on Wednesday and lasted for several minutes.

The US Geological Survey said the epicentre was beneath the Pacific Ocean, about 145km (90 miles) south-east of Lima. Four strong aftershocks ranging from 5.4 to 5.9 followed, the organisation said.

Rush-hour traffic in Lima came to a halt as buildings shook with the force of the powerful tremors and hundreds of people spilled onto the streets. Low-lying coastal areas in Peru, Chile, Ecuador and Colombia were evacuated after a tsunami alert was issued, but the warning was later withdrawn. Deputy Health Minister Jose Calderon described the situation in the city of Ica, where 650,000 people live, as "dramatic".

The National Institute for Civil Defence said 336 people had been killed in the province and 827 others injured. One person was killed in Lima.


TV reports said 17 people were killed and dozens injured when the Senor de Luren church in Ica collapsed during evening mass.

Callers to Radio Programas del Peru (RPP) said many homes in poor neighbourhoods in Ica and nearby Chincha had collapsed and that several cities had no electricity. The town of Pisco, 60km east of the epicentre, was also badly affected.

Hospitals are reported to be overwhelmed by the number of casualties. A cameraman for the Associated Press said the floors of the hospital in Chincha were covered with dead bodies.
The mayor of Ica, Mariano Nacimiento, said he had asked the government for medicine, blankets, tents and all help that could be given. The weather in the region is very cold at the moment.

Rescuers have struggled to reach Ica, however, as parts of the Pan-American Highway have been blocked by huge cracks in the tarmac and fallen power lines.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

N.Y. TWISTED


The first world is not free of the weather climate change. That's right, Dorothy, you're not in Kansas anymore - you're in Brooklyn! (N.Y., USA)

A tornado hit the Borough of Kings yesterday, leaving a path of shredded rooftops, splintered trees and wrecked cars from Bay Ridge to Sunset Park.

The weather phenomenon more often associated with the Midwest than the Big Apple struck just after 6:30 a.m. amid a furious thunderstorm. For several minutes it swept across the southwestern part of Brooklyn with winds as high as 135 mph, according to the National Weather Service.



The storm uprooted 217 trees - 174 in Brooklyn alone - damaged 40 homes and wrecked as many as 200 cars, officials said.



And it dumped as much as 3½ inches of rain in parts of the city in a matter of hours - crippling the city's transportation system and creating a nightmare for commuters trying to get to work.

Officials recorded one storm-related death - that of a New Jersey woman whose car stalled in high water beneath a Staten Island overpass, was rear-ended and burst into flames.
Police arrested the other driver, Yahov Raihshtein, 58, for operating with a suspended license.

For the most part, however, the first twister in New York City since 1995 - and the first in Brooklyn since 1889 - left little more than torn-up roofs and shattered nerves in its path.



Thursday, August 02, 2007

BRIDGE DOWN IN USA


At least 7 people were killed when an interstate bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota (USA) collapsed in what the governor called a "catastrophe of historic proportions."

The accident occurred shortly after 6 p.m. (7 p.m. ET) when dozens of cars were on the bridge.
Witnesses described a "dust cloud" as it collapsed, sending cars and and chunks of concrete plunging into the Mississippi River below.

At least 60 people were taken to local hospitals, according to Minneapolis Fire Chief Jim Clack.

All survivors have been taken off the bridge, said Minneapolis police Chief Tim Dolan during a news conference Wednesday night. Crews have searched 50 cars and will be looking for more possible victims, but the mission has changed from a rescue to a recovery mode.

Recovery operations have ended for the night because conditions became dangerous for workers as darkness set in. "There's too much debris in the river to continue in the river tonight. We will at first light be back in the river working again," Clack said.



Mark Lacroix, who lives on the 20th floor of an apartment building near the bridge, told CNN he saw the last seconds of the collapse.

"I heard this massive rumbling and shaking basically and looked out my window," Lacroix said.

"It just fell right into the river."

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it saw no indications of terrorism in the incident.



Construction took place on the bridge Tuesday night and was to take place again Wednesday night, according to the Minnesota Department of Transportation. The highway would have been restricted to a single lane in both directions from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. both nights.

The bridge was undergoing redecking work, but nothing structural was being done, U.S. Transportation Department spokesman Brian Turmail said.

There were 8 construction workers on the bridge at the time of the collapse, and one of them is unaccounted for, said Mike McGray, president of Progressive Contractors, the company doing the repair work on the bridge.


Gov. Tim Pawlenty said inspections of the 40-year-old bridge in 2005 and 2006 found no structural defects, but a 2001 study conducted by the Minnesota Department of Transportation found "several fatigue problems" in the bridge's approach spans and "poor fatigue details" on the main truss.

The study suggested that the design of bridge's main truss could cause a collapse if one of two support planes were to become cracked, although it allowed that a collapse might not occur in that event. But, the study concluded, "fatigue cracking of the deck truss is not likely" and "replacement of the bridge ... may be deferred."

After the collapse, the nearby University of Minnesota Medical Center received "just a handful" of injuries from the accident, spokesman Ryan Davenport said.

"One of our hospitals has five patients so far, and the other on the other side of the river has none," he said.


Nancy Ebert of Northwestern Hospital said it had received four injured people -- two children and two adults.

Dr. Joseph Clinton, chief of emergency medicine at Hennepin County Medical Center, said the hospital is treating 28 injured people, six of them critically hurt.

He also said the hospital received one patient who was pronounced dead on arrival. "We have one drowning victim here, and I believe there are more drowning victims at the scene," he said.

Witnesses told CNN a school bus filled with children was on the bridge when it collapsed, but they also said the bus did not drop into the water and it appeared that all the children had been evacuated.

Jeff Pearson, regional vice president of First Student, Inc. -- which handles school buses in Minneapolis -- said that about 60 children, plus teachers, chaperones and a driver, were on the bus and that all were accounted for.


Aerial footage showed the middle of the bridge caved in, lying in the Mississippi River, with cars both on top and submerged in the water. The main part of the collapsed span was not submerged, but the span clearly separated from the land-based sections of the highway on both the north and south ends of the bridge.

A witness said it looked like "toy cars" were plunging into the water.

"I heard a terrible noise, and then I looked. It seemed like a piece of the bridge was pancaking and going down," said Janet Stately. "I said, 'Did we really see that? Did we really see that?' and it was unbelievable."

About 100,000 cars a day travel over the bridge, according to the Minnesota Department of Transportation.


Wednesday, August 01, 2007

SPAIN BURNS

Las llamas siguieron ayer devorando Canarias. Ni los bomberos ni las tropas de la Unidad Militar de Emergencia del Ministerio de

Defensa lograron controlar los incendios que ya han arrasado más de 35.000 hectáreas.

Sin control y alentados por el viento, los fuegos se extendieron todavía más y obligaron a 14.000 personas a abandonar sus hogares. En Gran Canaria, 20.000 hectáreas de pinares han quedado convertidos en cenizas. La ministra de Medio Ambiente, Cristina Narbona, calificó de «suma alarma» la situación en Tenerife, donde se han perdido más de 15.000 hectáreas.

Mientras, el presidente del PP, Mariano Rajoy, atacó la «ineficacia» de un Gobierno que, en su opinión, es incapaz de «dar respuestas a los problemas», e insistió en pedir la creación de un Centro Nacional de Gestión de Crisis que haga frente a desastres como el de Canarias. Durante un acto público que tuvo lugar durante una visita al municipio malagueño de Mijas, Rajoy se mostró convencido de que «son demasiados los problemas a los que el Ejecutivo es incapaz de dar respuesta».«Se lo hemos advertido con los incendios», manifestó el máximo dirigente de los populares. «Hubo unos fuegos descomunales en Andalucía, en Galicia y en Guadalajara, y ahora los hay en Canarias y también en Andalucía».

Así, recordó que han trasladado al Ejecutivo «hasta la saciedad y en infinidad de ocasiones» la necesidad de la creación de un centro que se encargue de este tipo de emergencias a nivel nacional, ya que «un ayuntamiento o una comunidad no puede tener los medios para prevenir y atender las catástrofes que se pueden producir».«Queremos gobiernos que estén a la altura de las circunstancias», insistió Rajoy.


Desde que se originó el incendio de Gran Canaria, el pasado viernes, ya han sido evacuadas cerca de 14.000 personas. De ellas, 2.000 fueron desalojadas el lunes y la situación de alarma provocó ayer que otros 3.200 vecinos tuvieran que salir de sus casas de forma urgente.
No ha habido víctimas mortales pero, según el presidente del Gobierno insular, Paulino Rivero, se ha producido una auténtica «catástrofe natural».

En este sentido, la Fundación Canaria para la Reforestación Foresta estimó que el fuego ha destruido más de un tercio de la superficie forestal de Gran Canaria y ha puesto en riesgo la supervivencia de una treintena de especies de fauna y flora endémicas, informa Efe.

Entre ellas destacan los pinares naturales mejor conservados de la isla, que forman parte de la reserva natural integral de Inagua y del pinar de Ojeda, seriamente afectados. O los bosques de Icod y los municipios limítrofes, en Tenerife, que constituyen, por extensión, la mayor masa forestal de Canarias.

El fuego también quemó el 65% del parque zoológico y botánico Palmitos Park, en Gran Canaria, y afectó al 60% de las especies. Muchas de las aves tuvieron que ser soltadas.

Asimismo, dos soldados de la Unidad Militar de Emergencia (UME) resultaron heridos leves al volcar el vehículo autobomba con el que participaban en la extinción, aunque fueron dados de alta horas después y se reincorporaron al trabajo. Unos 300 militares de esta unidad especial trabajan repartidos a partes iguales en las dos islas.

La Consejería de Sanidad tuvo que reforzar la atención sanitaria en varios municipios. No fue en vano, porque 26 personas -además de los dos soldados- fueron asistidas en Gran Canaria y en Tenerife por heridas de diversa consideración relacionadas con los incendios. En general, fueron quemaduras leves, ampollas y cuadros de ansiedad, hipertensión y problemas respiratorios, aunque uno de los atendidos sufrió quemaduras de segundo grado.

Las infraestructuras también se vieron afectadas y casi una decena de carreteras fueron cerradas al tráfico en las cumbres de las dos islas.

El foco más intenso en Gran Canaria se encontraba en el municipio de San Bartolomé de Tirajana, mientras la situación mejoraba en Tejeda, Mogán y La Aldea de San Nicolás. La preocupación se centró en la zona alta del municipio de Santa Lucía, que estaba en alerta preventiva ante la posibilidad de que las condiciones meteorológicas dirigieran el fuego hacia el casco histórico.

Sin embargo, el presidente del Cabildo insular, José Miguel Pérez, anunció anoche la detención del avance de media decena de focos, dio el incendio por estabilizado y vaticinó que la situación iba a mejorar.

En Tenerife, el fuego se mantenía vivo en Los Realejos, Icod de Los Vinos, Santiago del Teide y Guía de Isora. Un nuevo conato se declaró por la noche en Tacoronte, al norte de la isla. El perímetro afectado era de 72 kilómetros. Un total de 8.500 vecinos fueron desalojados por la voracidad del fuego, que hizo que se perdieran las comunicaciones y la conexión de telefonía móvil en la zona de Bolicos.

Por su parte, el consejero de Presidencia del Gobierno de Canarias, José Miguel Ruano, afirmó anoche que «existe la sospecha de que el incendio de Tenerife también pueda ser un fuego provocado», informa EfeDe la gravedad de los incendios habló Narbona, desplazada a Gran Canaria en un viaje de urgencia. La ministra anunció el envío de más medios aéreos y humanos de su Departamento, que se sumarán a los 400 efectivos, tres helicópteros, un avión y 13 vehículos que el Gobierno estatal ha movilizado ya.

La buena noticia fue que el incendio de La Gomera, que obligó a desalojar a 100 personas y quemó unas 60 hectáreas, ya está controlado.

Sin embargo, el fuego también dio problemas en la Península, sobre todo en Aldeadávila de la Ribera (Salamanca), en donde el alcalde advirtió a los vecinos de una posible evacuación por un incendio que anoche estaba a dos km. del casco urbano.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

BERGMAN DIES


Swedish director Ingmar Bergman, an iconoclastic filmmaker widely regarded as one of the great masters of modern cinema, died Monday, the president of his foundation said. He was 89.

"It's an unbelievable loss for Sweden, but even more so internationally," Astrid Soderbergh Widding, president of The Ingmar Bergman Foundation, which administers the directors' archives, told The Associated Press.

Bergman died at his home in Faro, Sweden, Swedish news agency TT said, citing his daughter Eva Bergman. A cause of death was not immediately available.

Through more than 50 films, Bergman's vision encompassed all the extremes of his beloved Sweden: the claustrophobic gloom of unending winter nights, the gentle merriment of glowing summer evenings and the bleak magnificence of the island where he spent his last years.

He was "probably the greatest film artist, all things considered, since the invention of the motion picture camera," Woody Allen said in a 70th birthday tribute in 1988.

"He was one of the world's biggest personalities. There were (Japanese film director Akira) Kurosawa, (Italy's Federico) Fellini and then Bergman. Now he is also gone," Danish director Bille August told The Associated Press. "It is a great loss. I am in shock," August said.

Bergman first gained international attention with 1955's "Smiles of a Summer Night," a romantic comedy that inspired the Stephen Sondheim musical "A Little Night Music."

"The Seventh Seal," released in 1957, riveted critics and audiences. An allegorical tale of the medieval Black Plague years, it contains one of cinema's most famous scenes -- a knight playing chess with the shrouded figure of Death.

The film distilled the essence of Bergman's work -- high seriousness, flashes of unexpected humor and striking images.


In a 2004 interview with Swedish broadcaster SVT, the reclusive filmmaker acknowledged that he was reluctant to view his work. "I don't watch my own films very often. I become so jittery and ready to cry ... and miserable. I think it's awful," Bergman said.

Though best known internationally for his films, Bergman also was a prominent stage director. He worked at several playhouses in Sweden from the mid-1940s, including the Royal Dramatic Theater in Stockholm, which he headed from 1963 to 1966. He staged many plays by the Swedish author August Strindberg, whom he cited as an inspiration.

The influence of Strindberg's grueling and precise psychological dissections could be seen in the production that brought Bergman an even-wider audience: 1973's "Scenes From a Marriage." It is an intense detailing of the disintegration of a marriage.

Bergman showed his lighter side in the following year's "The Magic Flute". It is a fairly straight production of the Mozart opera, enlivened by touches such as repeatedly showing the face of a young girl watching the opera and comically clumsy props and costumes.

Bergman remained active later in life with stage productions and occasional TV shows. He said he still felt a need to direct, although he had no plans to make another feature film.





The son of a Lutheran clergyman and a housewife, Ernst Ingmar Bergman was born in Uppsala on July 14, 1918, and grew up with a brother and sister in a household of severe discipline that he described in painful detail in the autobiography "The Magic Lantern."

Ingmar was consumed with jealousy, and he managed to acquire the object of his desire by trading it for a hundred tin soldiers.

The apparatus was a spot of joy in an often-cruel young life. Bergman recounted the horror of being locked in a closet and the humiliation of being made to wear a skirt as punishment for wetting his pants.

He broke with his parents at 19 and remained aloof from them, but later in life sought to understand them. The story of their lives was told in the television film "Sunday's Child," directed by his own son Daniel.

The director said he had coped with the authoritarian environment of his childhood by living in a world of fantasies.

Bergman waged a fight against real-life tormentors: Sweden's powerful tax authorities. In 1976, during a rehearsal at the Royal Dramatic Theater, police came to take Bergman away for interrogation about tax evasion. The director, who had left all finances to be handled by a lawyer, was questioned for hours while his home was searched. When released, he was forbidden to leave the country.

The case caused an enormous uproar in the media and Bergman had a mental breakdown that sent him to hospital for over a month. He later was absolved of all accusations and in the end only had to pay some extra taxes.

In his autobiography he admitted to guilt in only one aspect: "I signed papers that I didn't read, even less understood."

The experience made him go into voluntary exile in Germany, to the embarrassment of the Swedish authorities. After 9 years, he returned to Stockholm, there Bergman broke into the world of drama, starting with a menial job at the Royal Opera House after dropping out of college. He was hired by the script department of Swedish Film Industry, the country's main production company, as an assistant script writer in 1942.

In 1944, his first original screenplay was filmed by Alf Sjoeberg, the dominant Swedish film director of the time. "Torment" won several awards including the Grand Prize of the 1946 Cannes Film Festival, and soon Bergman was directing an average of two films a year as well as working with stage production.

After the acclaimed "The Seventh Seal," he quickly came up with another success in "Wild Strawberries," in which an elderly professor's car trip to pick up an award is interspersed with dreams.

Other noted films include "Persona," about an actress and her nurse whose identities seem to merge, and "The Autumn Sonata," about a concert pianist and her two daughters, one severely handicapped and the other burdened by her child's drowning.

Friday, July 27, 2007

THE SIMPSONS ON SCREEN

A toon triumph!. The 20th Century Fox says The Simpsons Movie shred the competition for No. 1 with a $71.8 million North American weekend, more than double what the studio hoped. After a stunning $30 million on Friday from 3,922 North American theaters, Homer and the family fell 23% Saturday to take in $23.1 million. The studio projects an $18.7 million Sunday (-17%).

Overseas, The Simpsons Movie is also No. 1 with an average 55% market share. The toon grossed a phenomenal $96 million in 71 day and date markets, despite debuting in only 8 of the top 15 markets: UK, Germany, France, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, Australia and Argentina. Opening day records included: biggest industry opening day ever in Australia, Argentina, Columbia and Chile; and biggest animated opening day ever in Australia, Belgium, Finland, Germany, New Zealand, Peru, Sweden, Uruguay, Venezuela.


According to Fox, it opened bigger than any Pixar film and than any non-sequel animated film ever. It's also the biggest opening for a non-CGI animated film including sequels. The Simpsons Movie's $30 million Friday was a shock because it was more than Transformers made on its opening day and best single day this summer, and good enough for The Simpsons to slot into the Hollywood's Top 17 opening days of all time (right behind the $30.1 mil of Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones).

But the well reviewed pic managed an outstanding per screen average of 7,649 Friday and ended the weekend with a high $18,320 3-day per screen average. Fox says the pic cost only $75 million (without marketing) because so much animation work was done in South Korea.

There's ecology, obesity, the hollowness of American leadership, the rapacity of big corporations and the complacency and ignorance of the American public.

The tension between Flanders' genuine Christianity, complete with charity, generosity and fellow feeling, and Homer's id-centered selfishness has never been exploited for more cutting effect.Humiliated by his dad once too often, Bart turns to Ned to discover the pleasures of a pat on the back or a cup of hot cocoa.

Without an ounce of cant or moralizing, The Simpsons Movie teaches him (and us) that no man is an island, even if he's as big as one.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

LOHAN DEEP FALL

In the pre-dawn hours of July 24, 2007, the Santa Monica police received a 911 call from a car being driven by Michelle Peck - whose daughter, Tracie Rice had left her employment as Lohan's personal assistant several hours previously. Peck reported that she was being chased by a white GMC and feared for her safety.The police later found Peck and Lohan having a "heated debate" in the parking lot of the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. Lohan refused to take a breathalyzer test, but agreed to other field sobriety tests.

After failing these tests, she was taken to a police station where her blood alcohol level was tested at between 0.12 and 0.13 percent - above the California legal limit of 0.08 percent. While conducting a search, the police found a small amount of cocaine in her pocket. Lohan was booked on felony charges of possession of cocaine and transportation of a narcotic - in addition to charges of driving under the influence and driving with a suspended license. A few hours after Lohan's release on $25,000 bail.



Her attorney said Lohan is getting "medical care." Lohan completed a stint in rehab earlier this month and previously had checked into a recovery clinic in January. She still faces DUI allegations connected to a Memorial Day weekend hit-and-run crash in Beverly Hills.

Since Lindsay transitioned to outpatient care, she has been monitored on a SCRAM bracelet and tested daily in order to support her sobriety. Unfortunately, late yesterday Lindsay had relapsed. The bracelet has now been removed. She is safe, out of custody and presently receiving medical care.

The actress was cooperative during the arrest.

Michael Lohan, the actress' estranged father, said he was worried about his daughter's behavior. He suggested that he and his wife, Dina, who are separated, should rally to help their daughter. "When we were a family, did you see any of this going on? It wasn't until we were torn apart, at the pinnacle of Lindsay's career no less, when people came into the picture, did everything fall apart," Michael Lohan told Access Hollywood.

Michael Lohan was released from prison in March after serving nearly two years for attempted assault and driving while intoxicated.

Upon her recent release from the Promises treatment center in Malibu, Lohan had agreed to wear a alcohol-detecting anklet. Lohan's recent stint at Promises was her second round of treatment in less than a year. In January, she checked into the Wonderland Center in Laurel Canyon after reportedly passing out in a hotel hallway after a party thrown for the Golden Globe Awards.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

DON`T BET AGAINST THE JUDGE


a report of an investigation by the FBI into allegations of an NBA referee betting on games to control the point spread emerged by columnist Murray Weiss of the New York Post. It was later revealed that Donaghy, who has a gambling problem, placed tens of thousands of dollars in bets on games during the 2005-06 NBA season and 2006-07 NBA season and had been approached by lower level mob associates to work on a gambling scheme. Mike Missanelli of the Stephen A. Smith Show suggested that Donaghy had gotten himself into debt and tried to make it up by betting on games.



The report sent shock waves through the NBA. While the league devotes significant resources to monitoring officials' performance, it only found out about the affair when the FBI stumbled upon Donaghy in the midst of a broader organized crime investigation.

NBA Commissioner David Stern said in a statement, "We would like to assure our fans that no amount of effort, time or personnel is being spared to assist in this investigation, to bring to justice an individual who has betrayed the most sacred trust in professional sports, and to take the necessary steps to protect against this ever happening again."









A shame.