Sexual assault parolees to wear electronic name tags

Rules are Rules: In case of parole violation, the justice ministry said that serious transgressions could result in a prolongation of the parole period or its cancelation.


After first introducing the idea about a year ago, the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) last week started implementing a measure by which sexual assault parolees are required to wear a radio frequency identification (RFID) device, which will help police track the offenders' movements.


"Among the 520 sexual assault parolees nationwide, seven men were chosen to wear RFIDs because of their high potential for recidivism," Chang Ching-yun, the director of the Department of Corrections at the Ministry of Justice, told a press conference last week.

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'Why atom bomb? End prostitution,' says Iranian Nobel laureate

Iran may be toying with the idea of acquiring a nuclear weapon, but Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi argues that the money needed for making an atom bomb can be better used for a more pressing need - ending prostitution and sexual trafficking of women.


"The cost of making an atom bomb should be set against the cost of rescuing and rehabilitating girls and women trapped in prostitution," said Ebadi, the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize winner, the only Iranian to win the coveted honour, here Saturday.


"Governments complain about not having money or resources to end sexual trafficking of women. But that's only an excuse," Ebadi told rights activists and journalists at the India International Centre here.


The 59-year-old lawyer and human rights activist - an icon for many in Iran - was invited to India by Apne Aap Women Worldwide, an NGO engaged in fighting sexual exploitation of women.

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Swingers swap sex partners in prudish Singapore

Every two months, dozens of couples meet in a pub in Singapore, have drinks, mingle, and then decide whether they want to sleep with one another.


In Sydney or Seattle nobody would bat an eyelid, but the couples are part of a thriving underground swinging scene that is an anomaly for a country where oral sex is illegal and Playboy magazine is banned.


There are more than 10 swingers clubs in Singapore, most of them private, some of them online. With more than 6,000 members, the Web-based United SG Swingers is one of the biggest.


"There are a lot more people that are open to the idea. It's so widespread now," said a 42-year-old Singaporean company executive who only wanted to be identified as Jack.

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Sex secrets of an American Geisha

Did you know that most single women don't know how to continue to attract, satisfy, and keep their men - especially around the holidays when people are busier than ever. But according to Py Kim Conant, the author of the recently released book, 'Sex Secrets of an American Geisha: How to Attract, Satisfy, and Keep Your Man, her "American Geisha" secrets make it easy to do.


Sex Secrets of an American Geisha is based on research with literally hundreds of single and married Asian women and American men pursuing interracial relationships, as well as on her own personal experience finding "and bedding and wedding" her American husband.

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China sentences fake sex pill kingpin

A Chinese man was jailed for eight years for making 60 tonnes of fake sex pills, state media reported on Friday as the country cracks down on pirates who copy nearly every product.


Xi Yongli and his accomplices sold 21.8 million yuan ($2.78 million) of America Number One, Male Exclusive, Great Big Brother -- the popular Chinese name for Viagra -- and other pills and ingredients promising men vibrant sexual lives, a court in central China's Anhui province found, Xinhua news agency said on Friday.


Xi and his gang received sentences spanning from a little over a year to eight years for making and selling medicine without a licence, selling counterfeits, and illegally processing Sildenafil Citrate -- the key ingredient in Viagra, Pfizer Inc.'s top selling male potency pill.

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China sentences fake sex pill kingpin



A Chinese man was jailed for eight years for making 60 tonnes of fake sex pills, state media reported on Friday as the country cracks down on pirates who copy nearly every product.

Xi Yongli and his accomplices sold 21.8 million yuan ($2.78 million) of America Number One, Male Exclusive, Great Big Brother -- the popular Chinese name for Viagra -- and other pills and ingredients promising men vibrant sexual lives, a court in central China's Anhui province found, Xinhua news agency said on Friday.

Xi and his gang received sentences spanning from a little over a year to eight years for making and selling medicine without a licence, selling counterfeits, and illegally processing Sildenafil Citrate -- the key ingredient in Viagra, Pfizer Inc.'s top selling male potency pill.

They were based in Fuyang, a city in Anhui notorious for selling fakes, including baby milk powder without any nutrition that killed at least 13 babies in 2004.

Pfizer won a Chinese patent for its key ingredient from a Beijing court in June, overturning an earlier rejection of its patent application. Other countries have also refused to acknowledge Pfizer's claim.
The United States and European Union both complain that rampant illegal production in China lies behind counterfeit fashion, movies, films, equipment and medicine surging into global markers.

Washington has brandished threats of taking China's counterfeiting to the World Trade Organisation, the Geneva-based global trade umpire. China says it is cracking down.

Earlier this month, EU trade chief Peter Mandelson urged China to stamp out piracy of intellectual property, saying its fakes now include birth-control pills.

On Thursday, China sentenced a man to life imprisonment for pirating over 30 million movie discs.

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Sex secrets of an American Geisha


By Agencies and Staff


American Geisha Secrets to Attract, Satisfy, and Keep Your Man During the Holidays.

Did you know that most single women don't know how to continue to attract, satisfy, and keep their men - especially around the holidays when people are busier than ever. But according to Py Kim Conant, the author of the recently released book, 'Sex Secrets of an American Geisha: How to Attract, Satisfy, and Keep Your Man, her "American Geisha" secrets make it easy to do.

Sex Secrets of an American Geisha is based on research with literally hundreds of single and married Asian women and American men pursuing interracial relationships, as well as on her own personal experience finding "and bedding and wedding" her American husband.

While investigating the lives of the Japanese Geisha (and Korean Kisaeng), Py Kim found a deep well of untapped wisdom in the Geisha's centuries-old feminine practices that could be applied to 21st century women wishing to learn how to attract, satisfy, and keep a man happy and in love for a lifetime.

While her advice is frequently politically incorrect, it is always practically correct, not to mention refreshing. Her 'bottom line' message of hope: any woman, single or married, and traditionally beautiful or not, can find success in the pursuit of love, marriage, and happiness aided by the practical yet sexy secrets of the Far East.

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Py Kim's work attempt's to provide a timely, fun, entertaining, and controversial show with her as your guest. Here are some possible relationship topics for 'American Geisha Secrets to Attract, Satisfy, and Keep Your Man During the Holidays:'

- Getting married is the best anti-depressant prescription in the New Year

- Sex is the best anti-depressant prescription during the holidays

- American Geisha Secrets to please men with exotic and erotic ways: What I learned when I was 40 pounds overweight, depressed and unhappy, and why I'm married, optimistic, and thin now. And how you can do it too!

- Why American women are losing their men to Asian women: An Asian woman spills the secrets and gives practical advice to help ANY woman catch her man.

- Why women love bad guys - and why they need "Good Men"

- American Geisha's exotic ways to please your man

- Sex will lead to the commitment she wants

- Make your Good Man into your hero

- Make your man feel like your sexual and non-sexual Samurai

- Why women should want to have "MORE" sex with their men

Py Kim Conant, Korean born, she studied Eastern philosophy before coming to Los Angeles to continue her studies. Her writing explores relationships through the lens of her own personal story and the stories of others she interviewed along the journey.

She received her B.A. in psychology from UCLA and went on to receive her M.A. in education from California State University. She has also been published as a contributing writer for the Los Angeles Times and as a featured columnist for Korea Daily. Conant lives in Los Angeles with her husband, Richard.

Py Kim Conant finds that she exists in three distinct cultures living in the US: her original Korean culture, the American culture into which she moved, and the stereotyped "Asian" culture that people apply to her when she meets them.

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Swingers swap sex partners in prudish Singapore



Every two months, dozens of couples meet in a pub in Singapore, have drinks, mingle, and then decide whether they want to sleep with one another.

In Sydney or Seattle nobody would bat an eyelid, but the couples are part of a thriving underground swinging scene that is an anomaly for a country where oral sex is illegal and Playboy magazine is banned.

There are more than 10 swingers clubs in Singapore, most of them private, some of them online. With more than 6,000 members, the Web-based United SG Swingers is one of the biggest.

"There are a lot more people that are open to the idea. It's so widespread now," said a 42-year-old Singaporean company executive who only wanted to be identified as Jack.

"Swinging is all about sex. It's satisfying the urge to have casual sex and doing it with somebody you're comfortable with," said Jack, who has been swinging for 10 years.

For all their enthusiasm, few swingers tell family and friends about their lifestyle, although the practice is not illegal in Singapore.

"In Singapore, most people will perceive us as perverts," said a 39-year-old publisher who has been swinging for five years. "Look at our government policies, they say: 'Let's open up.' But our policies have always remained very conservative."

Wealthy Singapore, which has consistently ranked near the bottom in a global survey of sexually active nations, has been struggling to shake off its reputation for prudishness.

On Friday, it opened Sexpo 2006, the country's second sex exhibition, featuring an array of toys and seminars.

Singapore Swing

At United SG Swingers, people share erotic photographs, exchange personal ads and correspond about the next gathering. It is a close-knit community in which couples recommend good sex partners and criticise those who aren't.

A police spokesman confirmed that swinging is not illegal as long as it is done behind closed doors, is consensual and no money changes hands.

This year, the organisers of United SG Swingers started holding "on premise" parties, where couples can engage in group sex in houses and hotel rooms across Singapore.

At these parties, the bedrooms have a strict clothes-off rule and the "hard swingers" can engage in partner swapping. The "soft swingers" are couples who stand around and watch, or have sex with their own partners in full view of others.

Couples who swing say that seeing their own partners in action keeps their passion burning.

"It's like looking at cake and wanting to eat it," said the main organiser of United SG Swingers, 37-year-old IT specialist Josh, as his 32-year-old wife nodded in agreement.

But some swingers disapprove of these parties, saying they can degenerate into orgies.

"You can't establish pure friendships when there's a large group," said Ishak. "Genuine swingers would want to establish trust -- you can't trust a person just by meeting them one time and then think they can do it with your wife."

A 34-year-old Australian who attends swinging parties told Reuters that Singapore's scene is just evolving.

"It's very innocuous here, it's not like other countries," he said. "Compared to Australia and Europe, it's more discreet and less lively. Singaporeans are pretty reserved in a lot of ways."

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'Why atom bomb? End prostitution,' says Iranian Nobel laureate


Iran may be toying with the idea of acquiring a nuclear weapon, but Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi argues that the money needed for making an atom bomb can be better used for a more pressing need - ending prostitution and sexual trafficking of women.

"The cost of making an atom bomb should be set against the cost of rescuing and rehabilitating girls and women trapped in prostitution," said Ebadi, the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize winner, the only Iranian to win the coveted honour, here Saturday.

"Governments complain about not having money or resources to end sexual trafficking of women. But that's only an excuse," Ebadi told rights activists and journalists at the India International Centre here.

The 59-year-old lawyer and human rights activist - an icon for many in Iran - was invited to India by Apne Aap Women Worldwide, an NGO engaged in fighting sexual exploitation of women.

Ebadi also launched "The Place Where I Live is Called a Red Light Area" - a book that chronicles the anguish and sadness of teenagers living in Kalighat and Sonagachi - the areas infamous for prostitution in Kolkata.

The book contains first person accounts of teenagers living in a place scorned by civilised society and evokes their raw feelings of rejection and daily humiliation through simple but haunting sketches.

"In your country, the military budget is more than the combined budget on health and education," Ebadi said while pointing to the flourishing of prostitution in different parts of India despite a legal bar on it.

Iranian women were trafficked to different countries and some of them ended up in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

Ebadi also said that despite being illegal in Iran, prostitution not only thrived but women were also trafficked into that country from Pakistan, Afghanistan and other Caucasian countries.

"The victory of feminist movements in every country will open the door for more democracy. A sacred battle is being fought in Iran for equal rights of men and women," she added.

Ebadi outlined some steps for the rehabilitation of sex workers by teaching them alternative skills and opening of more vocational courses by the government.

"Violence against women knows no geographical boundaries, caste or class. Taking measures to stop violence against women is central to the 11th five year plan," said Syeda Hameed, women rights activist and a member of the Planning Commission.

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Famous female golfer in nude-photo scandal?

Geoff Botting

"Don't miss it!," screamed the ad for the Nov. 7/14 edition of Flash magazine. "Full nude photo of a beautiful and famous athlete!"

While many readers are busy trolling the internet for nude pictures of female golfer Michelle Wie all readers needed to do was buy a copy of a weekly magazine in Japan, slice open the edges of the sealed pages, and viola -- a photo of the mystery sportswoman - rumored to be a female golfer - in the flesh, albeit with her face blurred.

The woman was indeed completely naked, facing the camera while flashing the peace sign with both hands. According to Flash, as well as Asahi Geino, which also ran the photo, it had been circulated by a former boyfriend and taken in the bathroom of a love hotel.

So, during the following several days, readers were left to wonder -- who was this obviously young and very fit woman. Figure skater Miki Ando sprang to many people's minds. Or maybe skier Aiko Uemura?

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Shukan Gendai steps in to reveal the answer: golfer Ai Miyazato. The magazine knows this because it had obtained the original photo, in which the face is plain to see. Ranking sixth in the world, 21-year-old Miyazato is undoubtedly one of Japan's most famous sports celebrities.

But is the photo genuine?

Most of the experts Shukan Gendai speaks with say no, no doubt to the disappointment of Miyazato's many male fans.

Takafumi Suzuki, a professional photo analyst, concludes that the manipulation in the image goes well beyond some blurring of the face. The image appears to be a composite, with the head stuck on the body of another shapely young woman.

"In the photo, the tiles in the background are in focus, while the body is a bit blurry. So then why is the face in focus?" he says.

Other inconsistences include the way light is reflected in the bathroom mirror, Suzuki points out.

As to why someone would create and then give such a photo to the media, the answer likely involves a very serious grudge against the famous golfer.

But, believe it or not, that news wouldn't come as a surprise to anyone familiar with Japan's professional women's golf scene, according to the magazine. Ai, it turns out, is deeply resented by many of her colleagues.

"There's a lot of behind-the-scenes bullying going on, and it's particularly bad toward Ai," says an anonymous source, described as someone who takes part in the pro golf tour in Japan. "People do all sorts of things to her, such as breaking her umbrella or hiding her clothes right before the tournaments get under way."

Who might be the bullies? Namely other female golfers on the tour who are considerably older than Ai and not nearly as popular, the source speculates.

"For players in their 30s, even if they win a championship they'll see Ai grabbing the headlines in the sports papers the next day. . . . The photo seems to be just another part of this bullying."

Clearly, behind the naked truth of Flash's controversial photo lie some nasty truths in the world of Japanese professional sports.

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Sexual assault parolees to wear electronic name tags


Rich Chang


Rules are Rules: In case of parole violation, the justice ministry said that serious transgressions could result in a prolongation of the parole period or its cancelation.

After first introducing the idea about a year ago, the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) last week started implementing a measure by which sexual assault parolees are required to wear a radio frequency identification (RFID) device, which will help police track the offenders' movements.

"Among the 520 sexual assault parolees nationwide, seven men were chosen to wear RFIDs because of their high potential for recidivism," Chang Ching-yun, the director of the Department of Corrections at the Ministry of Justice, told a press conference last week.

After evaluating all 520 parolees, seven were considered to have a higher likelihood of committing sexual crimes again, Chang said.

According to the regulation, the seven will not be required to wear the device for longer than six months, he added.

Chang said the ministry had procured a total of 150 RFIDs.

Such devices look akin to a wristwatch and cannot be removed by the parolee.

He said the ministry had asked the seven to remain in their homes from 8pm to 7am.

If the eventuality that they would leave their home, a computer located in the ministry would receive a signal and the ministry would immediately inform the police and officers at the Sexual Assault Prevention Center to look for the violators.

The ministry has imposed "curfews" on the offenders because records have shown that sexual assaults often occur late at night, Chang said.

In case of parole violation, the ministry said that serious trans-gressions could result in a prolongation of the parole period or its cancellation.

Chang said the measure offered better chances for the rehabilitation of individuals charged with sexual assault.

Deputy Minister of Justice Lee Chin-yung said the ministry was considering releasing a high-profile prisoner on parole on the condition that he wore a RFID.

Lee was referring to a prisoner, surnamed Yang, who was convicted of sexually assaulting 30 women.

Police called him the "Hwakang Wolf" because most of his victims were college students at the Chinese Culture University on Yangmingshan, in the Hwakang area near Yangmingshan National Park. A female professor was also a victim.

In July 2001 Yang took the joint university entrance exam in jail and was admitted to the Department of Sociology of National Taiwan University (NTU).

He then applied for parole so that he could attend the university but his request was rejected several times by the MOJ.

Lee said Yang has indicated he was willing to wear the device.

Law experts have said that RFID monitor devices could also be worn by suspects of serious corruption and economic crimes, as they often tend to disappear.

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Former spy's wife positive for radiation

An Italian security expert who met with former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko the day he fell fatally ill has also tested positive for the same radioactive substance found in his body, British authorities said Friday.



Litvinenko's wife tested positive as well, a friend said.


Also Friday, a hotel in Sussex, southeastern England, was evacuated as police and health workers carried out tests for polonium-210, police said. The hotel, set in 186 acres of countryside, was being examined by specialists as part of the inquiry into Litvinenko's death.


The Italian expert, Mario Scaramella, met with Litvinenko at a sushi bar in London on Nov. 1 — the day the former intelligence agent first reported the symptoms that ultimately led to his death.

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Why Chavez Is a Shoo-in: It's the Economy, Stupid

Never mind his anti-American theatrics. The Venezuelan president carries the support of the majority because they believe he's eased their poverty.


Listening to his campaign speeches, you might think Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was running against George Bush — whom he has been known to call "the devil" — rather than Manuel Rosales in Sunday's presidential election. The Venezuelan leader is convinced that Washington is behind Rosales's effort to unseat him, and told an enormous campaign rally on Sunday that his real opponent was the "imperialist government of the United States." But the president's supporters say his hostility to the Bush administration is not the main reason Chavez holds a commanding 20-point lead over Rosales according to most polls. Instead, his support is based on the myriad development programs he has set up to provide cheaper food, free education and free health care for the poor.

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Why Chavez Is a Shoo-in: It's the Economy, Stupid

JENS ERIK GOULD

Never mind his anti-American theatrics. The Venezuelan president carries the support of the majority because they believe he's eased their poverty.

Listening to his campaign speeches, you might think Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was running against George Bush — whom he has been known to call "the devil" — rather than Manuel Rosales in Sunday's presidential election. The Venezuelan leader is convinced that Washington is behind Rosales's effort to unseat him, and told an enormous campaign rally on Sunday that his real opponent was the "imperialist government of the United States." But the president's supporters say his hostility to the Bush administration is not the main reason Chavez holds a commanding 20-point lead over Rosales according to most polls. Instead, his support is based on the myriad development programs he has set up to provide cheaper food, free education and free health care for the poor.

"Foreign policy has an effect, but obviously a leader grows stronger through the solution of internal problems," said deputy William Querales, who is on the National Assembly's foreign policy committee. "President Chavez has confronted the problem of poverty and the serious social problems in our country." The opposition counters by pointing to studies showing that Chavez has failed to put a major dent in poverty and that crime has actually increased. But many in the dilapidated barrios on the outskirts of Caracas say they are better off since Chavez was elected in 1998. And since the majority of Venezuelan voters are from the lowest income brackets, that perception is what will count most on Sunday.

One community that might be expected to ask how much Chavez had done for them would be the residents of Tacagua, a dilapidated neighborhood clinging to a mountainside near Caracas, where many homes are made of scraps of tin pieced together. Here, gang violence and drugs are part of everyday life, and the government has been slow to provide new housing for families whose homes are in danger of collapsing in mudslides. Even so, posters and graffiti praising Chavez's "Bolivarian Revolution," named after South American independence leader Simon Bolivar, permeate the neighborhood.

Yris Machado, 41, a widow, could only feed her four children one meal a day until a Chavez-backed program began supplying her with food staples. Now, she and her children eat three times a day. She is also beginning to benefit from a government program called "Mothers of the Barrio," which gives stipends to poor mothers with handicapped children. She will use the extra funds to help pay for anti-convulsive drugs and a new mattress for her daughter, who has Down syndrome. "Thanks to my president, now I can say that I'm going to buy a new mattress for my daughter and I'm going to give her a better way of living," Machado said.

Across town in the low-income area of El Valle, Gladys Garcia is thrilled with the Chavez government for a different reason. After noticing unusual lesions on her skin — and being denied treatment by a private hospital because she couldn't pay — Garcia is now getting attention at a free government-sponsored health care clinic. The program — called Barrio Adentro, Spanish for "inside the neighborhood" — brings tens of thousands of Cuban doctors to work in Venezuela in exchange for sending Venezuelan oil to Cuba under preferential terms. Since 2003, thousands of red-brick clinics have sprung up across the country, giving the poor 24-hour-a-day treatment closer to home.

It is voters like Garcia and Machado that the Rosales campaign is failing to win over. His main proposal is a debit card, called "Mi Negra," that would tap oil revenues to give anywhere from $300 to $1,000 a month in cash to Venezuelans in need. Chavez supporters dismiss the card, whose name refers to a term of endearment and to the color of oil, as an idea crafted to capture votes that won't assist them in the way that Chavez's programs do.

"That deceitful offer of money without working — that Negra card — it's shameless populism that can't be compared to the benefits we're currently receiving," said Jesus Sanchez, 62, who is an industrial mechanic. With the help of the government, Sanchez has started a small business and now has a contract to install public lighting at a Chavez-backed cooperative in western Caracas. "I feel like I have a second life," he said.

Of course, not everyone in the lower classes supports Chavez. One woman from the poor and dangerous Caracas neighborhood of Petare, who asked to remain anonymous, said Chavez's programs were just a way of buying votes. "Chavez has bought all the people in the barrios," she said. She also told her son to vote for the president, wary that opposing Chavez could bar him from access to government jobs and programs. Her fears are not unfounded — countless people who signed in favor of holding a referendum to oust Chavez in 2004 say they're blacklisted and can't get a government job.

Despite government assurances that elections will be clean, the opposition is still suspicious of electoral manipulation. Echoing U.S. claims that Chavez is turning authoritarian, his domestic opponents argue that a president who has eliminated most checks and balances to his power might not tolerate an unfavorable election result. The electoral council is tilted towards Chavez allies, while the government has pressured state employees to support the president and has used state television to promote him. But the only director on the council sympathetic to the opposition assures that voting will be secret and that any fraud can easily be detected. If irregularities do occur, observers from the Organization of American States, the European Union and the Carter Center will be watching.

Meanwhile, Chavez continues to campaign as much as against Washington as against Rosales. Banners around Caracas exhort voters to "Vote against the devil, vote against the empire." For his part, Rosales says he wants to restore respectful relations with the U.S., since it is the biggest customer of Venezuela's oil industry. Posters calling on Venezuelans to reject the U.S. government adorn the walls of a local meeting space set up near Tagagua for participants in the "Mothers of the Barrio" program. But Yamileth Zambrano, who helps manage that space, doesn't mention foreign policy when asked why she likes the president. Instead, she praises the revolution for funneling oil revenues to the people, which she says previous governments didn't do.

"Now oil is for all Venezuelans," she says. And that belief, widespread as it is in the barrios, ought to ensure Chavez a comfortable victory on Sunday.

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Carmel bank robbed

Hamilton County sheriff's deputies are looking for a bold bank robber who seemed unconcerned by witnesses and security cameras. The gunman threatened Charter Bank workers then made off with the cash. The search shut down busy streets and even a Starbucks on Michigan Road near 106th Street in Carmel.


Just before 6 p.m. Thursday the robber came in from the pouring rain and immediately caught the eye of bank employees.


Capt Kevin Jowitt, of the Hamilton County Sheriffs Department, explains why. "He was wearing a yellow rain slicker. It was an unusual eye catching garment."

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Sentencing Today For Man Convicted Of Killing Behrman

The parents of slain Indiana University student Jill Behrman hoped to take the witness stand on Friday and speak directly to the 31-year-old handyman convicted of killing her more than six years ago.A Morgan County jury needed only about 50 minutes to find John Myers II guilty after a 10-day trial in October, giving an answer to a mystery that had lingered since the 19-year-old Behrman disappeared in May 2000 while on a bicycle ride near Bloomington.


Her mother, Marilyn Behrman, said Thursday that she and her husband, Eric, want Myers to receive the maximum prison term of 65 years during Friday's sentencing hearing."I think I can do that, look at him and tell him what he has done to us, how this has affected each of us and our family and our friends and our town......

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Carmel bank robbed


Rich Van Wyk

Eyewitness News

Carmel - Hamilton County sheriff's deputies are looking for a bold bank robber who seemed unconcerned by witnesses and security cameras. The gunman threatened Charter Bank workers then made off with the cash. The search shut down busy streets and even a Starbucks on Michigan Road near 106th Street in Carmel.

Just before 6 p.m. Thursday the robber came in from the pouring rain and immediately caught the eye of bank employees.

Capt Kevin Jowitt, of the Hamilton County Sheriffs Department, explains why. "He was wearing a yellow rain slicker. It was an unusual eye catching garment."

He was also wearing a black ski mask.

There were no customers in the Charter Bank branch, but several in the adjoining Starbucks. Capt. Jowitt says he moved quickly toward a teller. He says the robber showed a handgun, "a silver revolver and demanded money." The teller complied.

The robber quickly made for the door and vanished. Bank workers say he's white, 5'8" in height and weighs around 250 pounds. "They described him as not muscular, kind of fat," according to Captain Jowitt.

In addition to being heavy, the robber was in his late thirties to early forties. Police say that's older than a typical hold up man. He is also described as confident, robbing a bank on a busy street, in front of numerous witnesses and security cameras.

But Capt. Jowitt is concerned. "Anybody who walks into a bank with a gun is a dangerous guy."

The same bank was held up in February. Detectives are still looking for that robber too.

Police say they hope to release the security camera video on Friday in hopes that someone will recognize the heavy armed holdup man in the yellow slicker.


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Sentencing Today For Man Convicted Of Killing Behrman

The parents of slain Indiana University student Jill Behrman hoped to take the witness stand on Friday and speak directly to the 31-year-old handyman convicted of killing her more than six years ago.A Morgan County jury needed only about 50 minutes to find John Myers II guilty after a 10-day trial in October, giving an answer to a mystery that had lingered since the 19-year-old Behrman disappeared in May 2000 while on a bicycle ride near Bloomington.

Her mother, Marilyn Behrman, said Thursday that she and her husband, Eric, want Myers to receive the maximum prison term of 65 years during Friday's sentencing hearing."I think I can do that, look at him and tell him what he has done to us, how this has affected each of us and our family and our friends and our town. This is not the way our life was supposed to be," she said. "But I don't anticipate a reaction one way or the other. He always has the same expression."The jury reached its quick verdict even though prosecutors presented no physical evidence or eyewitnesses linking Myers to Behrman, whose remains were found in a remote Morgan County field three years after she vanished.The conduct of jurors while they were sequestered for about two weeks was expected to be raised during Friday's hearing. Court documents released this week showed that the judge questioned jury members about their actions at their hotel - with men racing each other wearing high heels, food fights and games of football and Frisbee.Morgan Superior Court Judge Christopher Burnham denied defense attorney Patrick Baker's motion for a mistrial based on the behavior.Baker, however, said this week that he would have "plenty to say" during the sentencing hearing about the jury's behavior and expected to raise questions about the activities in an appeal of the verdict.The murder conviction against Myers, of Ellettsville, carries a standard prison sentence of 55 years, but the judge could add up to 10 years based on Myers' previous convictions on battery and receiving stolen property charges and other factors.During the long investigation of Behrman's disappearance, authorities named other possible suspects and drained a creek several miles from where her remains were found in their search for clues. A grand jury heard testimony from 90 witnesses before deciding in April to indict Myers, the son of a former Monroe County Jail commander.Marilyn Behrman said she worried throughout the trial that Myers might go free."That was really scary to me," she said. "I already have a sense of relief because I know he will now have consequences for what he did. My relief comes from knowing he is not out there. He cannot hurt anyone else."

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Why Tom Vilsack is Starting So Early

Winning the 2008 Democratic Nomination will require taking down a giant, but the Iowa governor is eager to take the challenge.


If you're thinking about winning the Democratic presidential nomination and you're not already on a first (Hillary) or last name (Obama) basis with millions of Americans, it won't be easy. You have to find a compelling personal story or policy idea to distinguish yourself from at least a half dozen other similar politicians. Then, you need to sell that story convincingly to the news media, to experienced political talent you want on your staff and most importantly, to the deep-pocketed money men or the emerging Netroots who can help you raise upwards of $20 million to run a competitive race. Worse yet, you have to try to do this while all of those groups are to one degree or another sitting on their hands, eagerly anticipating a candidacy from Hillary or Obama. Then, as Howard Dean learned in 2004, you have to turn all that money, buzz and potential into an actual win in Iowa-or at least a close second.

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As Iraq Bleeds, the U.S. Policy Cupboard Remains Bare

Despite the hype, the Baker group's recommendations may be too little and too late to turn Iraq around.


Like the wild, but vain, windmilling of arms by traffic cops hoping to prevent an imminent accident, the signs emanating from Baghdad — as well as Amman and Washington — suggest that as bad as things are in Iraq, they are only going to get worse. Events over the last couple of days have made the following grimly clear: President Bush can't rely on Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to stop the sectarian warfare, according to Bush's own national security adviser. Al-Maliki is beholden to arch-sectarian Moqtada al-Sadr, who this week showed his clout by ordering his minions out of the fragile coalition government. And if the climax of this cliffhanger was supposed to be former Secretary of State James Baker leading the cavalry to the rescue, the reports of his group's conclusions are not exactly reassuring. There is a sense of profound foreboding in Washington that events in Iraq have spiraled downward beyond anyone's control, and that all the Bush administration can now do is contain the resulting damage.

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Why Tom Vilsack is Starting So Early




Winning the 2008 Democratic Nomination will require taking down a giant, but the Iowa governor is eager to take the challenge.

If you're thinking about winning the Democratic presidential nomination and you're not already on a first (Hillary) or last name (Obama) basis with millions of Americans, it won't be easy. You have to find a compelling personal story or policy idea to distinguish yourself from at least a half dozen other similar politicians. Then, you need to sell that story convincingly to the news media, to experienced political talent you want on your staff and most importantly, to the deep-pocketed money men or the emerging Netroots who can help you raise upwards of $20 million to run a competitive race. Worse yet, you have to try to do this while all of those groups are to one degree or another sitting on their hands, eagerly anticipating a candidacy from Hillary or Obama. Then, as Howard Dean learned in 2004, you have to turn all that money, buzz and potential into an actual win in Iowa-or at least a close second.

So Tom Vilsack is smart to get started early. The outgoing Iowa Governor declared he was running for president only two days after the mid-term elections and this week kicks off a five-day announcement tour through all the states that have early primaries — Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada, along with his native Pennsylvania. In announcing his candidacy, Vilsack acknowledged the long odds, telling a crowd in Mount Pleasant Iowa, that "I have always been an underdog and a long shot." He cast himself as a candidate with "the courage to create change", a phrase he invoked repeatedly in calling for an improved health care system, the end of bickering in Washington, an energy policy less dependent on foreign oil and pushing Iraqis to take control of their own security. "He may not be as well-known, he may not be as well-funded, so it's important for him to get out as early as possible," said Gordon Fischer, the former head of the Iowa Democratic Party and a Vilsack backer.

For all the obstacles he faces, Vilsack has several strengths as a candidate. Orphaned at birth in Pittsburgh and adopted and raised by an alcoholic mother, he offers just the kind of unique personal narrative that could help him connect with voters. He's been a popular governor, coming back from a 20-point deficit to win an upset victory in the gubernatorial race in 1998 — in the process becoming the first Democrat in 30 years to take the statehouse. He captured 53% of the vote in 2002 only two years before John Kerry narrowly lost the state to President Bush. He's had some major successes, particularly in increasing the number of children in the state who have health insurance.

Being from Iowa would seem an obvious advantage too, but so far, it doesn't look that way. A June Des Moines Register poll put him only in fourth place in Iowa among Democratic primary voters, lagging behind Clinton, John Kerry and John Edwards. While much of the state's Democratic establishment is backing Vilsack, many elected officials and key activists in the state are considering or have already signed on with other candidates. It's a sharp contrast to 1992, when Iowa Senator Tom Harkin ran for president, and the other contenders essentially conceded the state to him. Edwards has been in Iowa so much he's essentially the second presidential candidate who lives in the state. On the day Vilsack announced, Edwards was in Des Moines to sign copies of his new book. Senators Evan Bayh, Chris Dodd and Joe Biden, all considering presidential runs, have already been in the state, as has Obama. And that's just his challenge in Iowa. As the Washington Post reported this week, Vilsack isn't even guaranteed the support from people who have been close advisers in his earlier runs for office. One former top adviser, Chicago-based strategist David Axelrod, is likely to join Obama's team if he runs.

Vilsack will run as centrist with a record of success in a red state, the exact same message that Bayh has — except the Indiana Senator and former governor can also point to his years in the Senate for the foreign policy experience that Vilsack lacks. And in terms of offering a different vision for the country, it will be difficult for Vilsack or any of the candidates to stand out, because all of them largely agree on the issues. In 1991-1992, Bill Clinton could run as a different, new kind of Democrat because many in the party didn't back him on such policies as reforming welfare and supporting a free trade agreement with Mexico. Three years ago, Howard Dean fundamentally disagreed with much of the Democratic field on the Iraq war. Vilsack says he would like to see troops out of harm's way In Iraq and Iraqis take more responsibility for their own country, a position shared by nearly everyone in America except John McCain and a few others who want to send in more troops. While Vilsack has been a leader in the centrist Democratic Leadership Council, the middle class tax cuts and push toward a balanced budget that the DLC pushes have become so mainstream and embraced by so many Democrats that those ideas were part of the six-part "New Direction" that congressional Democrats will act on when they take control in January.

But don't count out Vilsack just yet. The last two Democratic presidents, Clinton and Jimmy Carter, both started as relatively unknown governors who initially polled in the single digits too, and recent history has shown that Senators have a hard time portraying themselves as outsiders capable of bringing change to Washington. Neither Obama nor Clinton has declared they are running and if only one of them does, there's a lot of room for another major challenger to emerge. Aides to other Democratic candidates are already starting to quietly knock the big two, saying Hillary can't win the general election and Obama is too green to be elected president. Tom Vilsack won't come out and say anything that blunt, but he is likely to talk about his own history of success in a swing state. By next June, when Democratic donors start cutting their checks, we'll have a pretty good idea if he can repeat any of that history on a much bigger stage.

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As Iraq Bleeds, the U.S. Policy Cupboard Remains Bare




Despite the hype, the Baker group's recommendations may be too little and too late to turn Iraq around.

Like the wild, but vain, windmilling of arms by traffic cops hoping to prevent an imminent accident, the signs emanating from Baghdad — as well as Amman and Washington — suggest that as bad as things are in Iraq, they are only going to get worse. Events over the last couple of days have made the following grimly clear: President Bush can't rely on Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to stop the sectarian warfare, according to Bush's own national security adviser. Al-Maliki is beholden to arch-sectarian Moqtada al-Sadr, who this week showed his clout by ordering his minions out of the fragile coalition government. And if the climax of this cliffhanger was supposed to be former Secretary of State James Baker leading the cavalry to the rescue, the reports of his group's conclusions are not exactly reassuring. There is a sense of profound foreboding in Washington that events in Iraq have spiraled downward beyond anyone's control, and that all the Bush administration can now do is contain the resulting damage.

The Baker report, the fruit of a 10-member bipartisan panel created by Congress, sought — but failed to find — any silver bullet to reverse the slide in Iraq. Like many such efforts that subcontract the thinking that Americans expect to be done by their president and lawmakers, the panel appears set to recommend goals without specifying the tools to achieve them. It will declare that the U.S. military presence in Iraq not be open-ended while simultaneously refusing to set a timetable for its withdrawal. At the same time it will call — as has incoming defense chief Robert Gates — for the Bush administration to talk to Iran and Syria over Iraq's future, something Bush has been loathe to do.

Bush and his military leaders have made it clear they want U.S. forces to remain in Iraq for the foreseeable future without a significant hike in troop levels. That, defense officials say, is unlikely to change the dynamic on the ground and — absent some political push that achieves a semblance of peace — is only likely to continue the grim parade of the flag-draped coffins of U.S. troops into Dover Air Force Base.

There is a growing sense in the capital that the Baker panel may be reporting too late to do any good. Indeed, hindsight suggests that "Too Little, Too Late" might be a more appropriate title for what the Pentagon christened Operation Iraqi Freedom. Lacking sufficient troops and armor to calm Iraq following the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003, U.S. troops were unable to suppress the insurgency that has percolated for three years. Now, with the addition of Shi'ite and Sunni militias fighting for control of Baghdad, the U.S. military doesn't have the firepower, or, it seems, the stomach to launch a battle for control of the Iraqi capital. Given the current situation on the ground, and absent an Iraqi initiative to turn matters around, it's likely that U.S. forces will continue to bleed and die until Bush tosses in the towel — or the new Democrat-controlled Congress forces him to do so.

As the situation on the ground in Iraq grows uglier, Washington increasingly seems willing to blame the downturn on Maliki's lack of clout and the poor performance of the Iraqi military. This strikes Anthony Cordesman, an expert on the war with the Center for Security and Strategic Studies, as a bit dubious. He said, Wednesday, "The idea that when you send the bull in to liberate a china shop, [and then] you blame the china shop for breaking the china is, shall we say, somewhat ingenuous, and probably misleading." But it may reflect a growing desire among many in Washington to wash their hands of a problem that, for the foreseeable future, may have no solution.

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Spreading the Wealth in India

That was the topic of a posh tea at the Prime Minister's house recently, as business leaders struggle with making sure that India's boom benefits more than just the urban professionals.


It's not every day you get invited to the Prime Minister of India's house for tea. As part of the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting, which opened in India a few days ago, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh asked a hundred or so delegates to tea on the lawn of his residence Sunday evening. Guests were bused to the PM's New Delhi house and escorted along a path beneath trees that teamed with chirping Indian Mynah birds and the occasional peacock to a meeting room where the softly spoken Singh gave a short formal address. India's economy has experienced 8% annual growth for the past few years but it was vital to make that growth "inclusive," said Singh, an economist who began liberalizing India's moribund economy in the early 1990s. "Unless growth is inclusive, unless we create a lot more jobs in the process, unless we include the backward communities" then growth will be pointless.

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