Sunday, April 14, 2013

Vi Ripken Kidnapping Tip Leads To Dead End; Police Still Do Not Know Who Kidnapped Cal Ripken Jr.'s Mother, Or Why

Detectives in Aberdeen received a tip they hoped would be their big break: A prisoner seeking leniency said he knew the man who abducted the mother of Orioles legend Cal Ripken Jr.

But nearly nine months after the bizarre kidnapping, no suspect has been identified and police still don't know of a motive in the case, in which Violet R. Ripken was taken from her home by an unknown assailant and safely returned nearly 24 hours later.

Michael Wayne Molitor claimed last year to know what happened and gave police a name; in return, police helped persuade a judge to grant him bail after a string of drug offenses. But after several weeks of detective work to follow up on that tip, detectives came to a dead end and now say Molitor wasted their time.

Molitor, a 41-year-old Port Deposit man, is back in prison on a probation violation. And the investigation into the Ripken kidnapping continues.

Police say they are actively searching for answers in Ripken's kidnapping from her modest white vinyl-sided home on a quiet Aberdeen street where she raised her children with her late husband, longtime Orioles coach and manager Cal Ripken Sr. The tips continue to come in, but not as frequently, and the Molitor case underscores the difficulty in sifting through the information.

Dave Henninger, a Bel Air-based criminal lawyer who represented Molitor, said his client was just passing along information he had heard. And it's possible the lead may still prove valuable, he said.

"You don't want a case to turn cold," he said. "When it goes cold, it's not on anybody's mind, leads dry up and it's harder to solve."

Detectives have released few details on the abduction.

The suspect, a medium-build white man seen in surveillance video from an Anne Arundel County Walmart, forced Ripken at gunpoint into her 1998 Lincoln Town Car after hiding in her garage, according to authorities. He tied her up, drove her around Central Maryland and dropped her off, unharmed, less than half a mile from her home.

The Ripken family declined Friday through a spokesman to comment on the case.

"At this time, the case is still active," said Aberdeen police Detective John Divel.

Divel, the lead detective on the case, said officers did chase down the Molitor tip. They looked through phone records, caught up with the alleged suspect in Pennsylvania and researched his record. The man Molitor claimed was the kidnapper was an old accomplice with whom Molitor had had a falling out, Divel said.

"We take every tip that comes in seriously, and we work it to the fullest," Divel said.

But when the information didn't prove helpful, Divel testified against Molitor during his probation violation hearing last week, when he was sentenced to nearly seven years in prison for failing a drug test and failing to report to his probation officer.

The detective warned would-be tipsters: "If it turns out to be bogus, you're going to get prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law."

Henninger said he has no reason to believe Molitor "simply fabricated" the allegation. He said that Molitor was beaten up by people who may have been associated with the alleged suspect for telling police what he'd heard.

"When Mr. Molitor passed it along, he thought it was true," Henninger said. "He passed along what he had heard, which is sometimes very good information on the street, and sometimes it's not very good information."

Doug Colbert, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Law, said the Ripken case has left the community uneasy, especially because there has been no resolution. The case has proved equally frustrating for police, he said, because they must rely on citizen informants while also being wary of their motivation and veracity.

"In the law, any type of a citizen's tip must be examined to see if the information is reliable and if the informant is credible," Colbert said.

"Many citizens will cooperate and provide information because that's part of being an involved citizen," he added, "but when someone is asking for law enforcement's help on their own criminal cases, that's immediately reason to give the highest scrutiny."

Given the amount of time that has passed since Ripken was kidnapped, the family and police should consider increasing the $2,000 reward that's been offered, Colbert said.

"A reward can generate leads, particularly in a troubled economy," Colbert said. "If you want to generate more citizens' involvement, often money becomes the incentive, but great care has to be exercised. Credibility is key."

Divel testified at Molitor's probation violation hearing April 3 in Harford County Circuit Court before Judge Angela M. Eaves, who sentenced Molitor to nearly seven years in prison.

Molitor tested positive for a cocktail of illegal drugs on July 20, 2011, failed to report to any subsequent meetings with his probation officer and didn't show for court appearances, prosecutors said in court records.

The case stemmed from his conviction of cocaine possession and giving a false name to police in July 2010. He served about a year in prison and had been given probation in lieu of the remainder of his eight-year sentence.

Police first learned of Molitor's claim in August, about a month after the abduction. Divel said in exchange for the information, police petitioned the Harford County state's attorney's office to seek bail for Molitor, who was back in jail on the probation violation charge. Divel said Molitor requested bail, which was granted, so he had time to get "get his affairs in order."

By early October, Divel said, the police had ruled out as a suspect the man Molitor claimed was Ripken's kidnapper. "Through interviews and other investigation, we exonerated" the man, Divel said. "We completely ruled him out."

Divel then contacted Harford County prosecutors, and Divel was called to testify. The judge ultimately revoked Molitor's probation.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/14/vi-ripken-kidnapping-_n_3074819.html

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Obama budget 'compromise?' No way, says the GOP (+video)

In the Republican radio address Saturday,?Rep. Jackie Walorski (R) of Indiana called President Obama's proposed budget for 2014 'a blank check for more spending and more debt.'

By Brad Knickerbocker,?Staff writer / April 13, 2013

House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., holds a copy of President Obama's 2014 budget proposal as he questions Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius Friday.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP

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The budget President Obama delivered to Congress this week was presented as a compromise package, a path to some sort of ?grand bargain? involving taxes and spending.

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?I don't believe that all these ideas are optimal,? the president acknowledged. ?But I'm willing to accept them as part of a compromise if and only if they contain protections for the most vulnerable Americans.?

Indeed, his budget did draw immediate sniping from Obama?s liberal base as well as from Republican lawmakers. A particular affront to the left is the tweaking envisioned for Medicare, revealed Friday in congressional testimony by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

The Obama budget also would change the way inflation is figured for Social Security recipients, and it raises taxes on higher-income households.

But ?compromise?? No way, the GOP charged in its Saturday radio/Internet address.

Speaking on behalf of her party, freshman Rep. Jackie Walorski (R) of Indiana called it ?a blank check for more spending and more debt.?
?
??Even when the president?s budget offers signs of common ground ? like modest entitlement reforms ? he says he won?t follow through unless he can impose more tax increases,? Rep. Walorski said. ?Worst of all, the White House says the president?s budget never balances ? ever, failing to meet the most basic principle of budgeting for every family and small business.?

?The president?s budget isn?t a compromise; it?s a blank check for more spending and more debt,? she said. ?If that were the answer, millions of Americans wouldn?t be leaving the workforce and asking ?where are the jobs???

Walorski, who?s a member of the House Budget Committee, hammered Obama?s plan for its alleged tax impact: more than $1 trillion in new taxes, in addition to $1 trillion in new taxes from ObamaCare and more than $600 billion in tax hikes the president secured in January.

And she touted the House budget plan, including the claim that it would produce a balanced budget in ten years.

?First, our balanced budget seizes opportunities to support our nation of builders and get Americans back to work, through popular energy projects like the Keystone XL pipeline,? she said. ?Second, our balanced budget repeals ObamaCare so we can address the problems it is causing ? like making it harder to hire and driving up health care costs ? and work towards patient-centered reforms.?Finally, our balanced budget lays the groundwork for a fairer, simpler tax code.?Closing loopholes and lowering tax rates for everyone would mean more jobs and higher wages.?

In releasing his budget, Obama claimed that he?d ?already met Republicans more than halfway.?

?So in the coming days and weeks, I hope that Republicans will come forward and demonstrate that they?re really as serious about the deficits and debt as they claim to be,? he said.

To which Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell sniffed that Obama?s budget amounted to a ?left-wing wish list.?? House Speaker John Boehner warns that Obama?s entitlement adjustments are being ?held hostage? to more taxes.

With that kind rhetoric, any budget ?compromise? could be a long way off.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/MOHqVK5P8Ag/Obama-budget-compromise-No-way-says-the-GOP-video

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Minneapolis trades council makes early mayoral endorsement (Star Tribune)

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Ex-AP writer McArthur, who covered Vietnam, dies

This April 28, 1972 file photo shows once-and-future bureau chiefs at The Associated Press' Saigon bureau, from left, George Esper (1973-75), Malcolm Browne (1961-64), George McArthur (1968-69), Edwin Q. White (1965-67), and Richard Pyle (1970-73). McArthur, a former AP foreign correspondent who reported all over the world and spent years in Saigon covering the Vietnam war, has died. He was 88. His wife, Eva Kim McArthur said he died Friday night, April 12, 2013 in a hospice in Fairfax County, Va., of complications from a stroke. (AP Photo)

This April 28, 1972 file photo shows once-and-future bureau chiefs at The Associated Press' Saigon bureau, from left, George Esper (1973-75), Malcolm Browne (1961-64), George McArthur (1968-69), Edwin Q. White (1965-67), and Richard Pyle (1970-73). McArthur, a former AP foreign correspondent who reported all over the world and spent years in Saigon covering the Vietnam war, has died. He was 88. His wife, Eva Kim McArthur said he died Friday night, April 12, 2013 in a hospice in Fairfax County, Va., of complications from a stroke. (AP Photo)

FILE - This 1963 file photo shows George McArthur, Chief of Bureau in Cairo for The Associated Press. McArthur, a former AP foreign correspondent who reported all over the world and spent years in Saigon covering the Vietnam war, has died. He was 88. His wife, Eva Kim McArthur said he died Friday night, April 12, 2013 in a hospice in Fairfax County, Va., of complications from a stroke. (AP Photo)

FILE - In this April 11, 1969 file photo made by George McArthur, a South Vietnamese militiaman, wearing a handkerchief to ward off the odors, probes the rubble to free a body from the ruins of the Tay Ninh Provincial military headquarters area after an area of about nine city blocks was leveled when Viet Cong rockets blew up a 200-ton ammunition dump. McArthur, a former AP foreign correspondent who reported all over the world and spent years in Saigon covering the Vietnam war, has died. He was 88. His wife, Eva Kim McArthur said he died Friday night, April 12, 2013 in a hospice in Fairfax County, Va., of complications from a stroke. (AP Photo/George McArthur)

FILE - In this circa 1968-69 file photo, AP Saigon staffers, correspondent Peter Arnett, left; photo chief Horst Faas, second left; Chief of Bureau George McArthur, second right; and Edwin Q. White, right, pose for a photo with Jean Ottavi, owner of the Royal Hotel in Saigon. McArthur, a former AP foreign correspondent who reported all over the world and spent years in Saigon covering the Vietnam war, has died. He was 88. His wife, Eva Kim McArthur said he died Friday night, April 12, 2013 in a hospice in Fairfax County, Va., of complications from a stroke. (AP Photo)

Born in the Deep South and caught up in the romance of journalism at an early age, George McArthur was not one to let social taboos or politics interfere with a good story.

As a campus reporter for the local newspaper, covering civil rights and racial tensions at the University of Georgia, he was called a "communist" by the state's segregationist governor, Herman Talmadge. McArthur replied, with typical sarcasm, that he felt honored.

Later, while reporting for The Associated Press from Seoul during the Korean War, and from the Arab world and Indochina, McArthur cultivated Soviet and other communist-state reporters as friends, and the trust paid off with exclusive bits of inside information from the ongoing peace talks at Panmunjom.

In one case, McArthur recalled recently, his source made the deal in exchange for a box of condoms from the PX.

For nearly three decades, McArthur was the quintessential foreign correspondent as he reported from the boulevards of Paris to the sands of the Middle East and jungles of Vietnam, for the AP and later the Los Angeles Times. He died Friday night at age 88 in a hospice in Fairfax County, Va., of complications from a stroke 17 days earlier, his wife, Eva Kim McArthur, said.

When Australian journalist Wilfred Burchett, an avowed communist, hosted American anti-war advocate Tom Hayden at his home in Cambodia, his friend McArthur was the only western reporter invited to their news conference.

"As I left," McArthur recalled years later, other reporters were standing outside, asking: "'What did he say? What did he say?' I went past them and headed for the phone."

Born July 15, 1924, in Valdosta, Ga., George A. McArthur III said he was first inspired to become a foreign correspondent at age 9, when he read a book by Richard Harding Davis, a famous globe-trotting reporter in the early 20th century.

At age 20 in October 1944, McArthur served aboard the Navy hospital ship USS Bountiful, witnessing from a distance the World War II Battle of Leyte Gulf in the Philippines.

While the Japanese military was notorious during World War II for mistreatment of enemy prisoners and otherwise ignoring the rules of war, he said the mercy ship ? operating alone, and painted white with large red crosses illuminated at night to mark its noncombat status ? was never attacked or threatened by the Imperial Navy.

"In our case, the Japanese respected the laws of war and left us alone," he said.

After the war, McArthur attended the University of Georgia while working for a local newspaper. He was hired by the AP in Atlanta in 1949 to cover sports and write radio news copy ? a typical start for a wire service career path that could lead anywhere.

In his case, that was Korea. In 1951, McArthur was one of several youthful AP staffers who volunteered to replace the aging ex-World War II retreads first dispatched to Seoul after communist North Korea's invasion of South Korea in July, 1950.

It was a new experience for McArthur and his colleagues, who were dubbed the "boy correspondents." But he recalled the remark of a veteran United Press reporter, Bob Vermillion, that "if you can't cover war, you can't cover anything."

Rewarded after Korea with a choice of AP assignments, McArthur opted for Paris, where he spent six years, then moved to Cairo as AP's bureau chief, living in a houseboat on the Nile. In 1963, he moved from there to Manila, Philippines, again as bureau chief.

McArthur polished an elegant writing style in those years that he said was patterned after that of his boyhood hero Davis, and lived the life of a foreign correspondent and bon vivant, a heady, Hemingway-esque mix of glamor, drama and danger.

Sent to cover a Paris news conference by visiting U.S. Vice President Lyndon Johnson, McArthur took along a comely French girlfriend named Domino. "LBJ immediately spotted her, pumped her hand and rattled on for about 60 seconds before realizing she didn't speak a word of English," McArthur recalled in a 2005 interview. "Afterward, Domino asked, 'Who was that man?'"

He later survived a tense moment in Sudan when a street demonstration flared out of control. McArthur said he fled to the U.S. embassy, scrambling under the front security gate seconds before it slammed down.

In 1964, McArthur began making reporting trips from Manila to Vietnam and a year later joined the AP Saigon staff full-time. He was named bureau chief in 1968, and in late 1969 he left the AP to join the Los Angeles Times, continuing to cover the Vietnam war.

He also met, and later married, Eva Kim, a diplomatic secretary to U.S. ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and his successor, Graham Martin.

When Saigon fell to invading North Vietnamese troops on April 30, 1975, Martin and key aides were on one of the last Marine helicopters to leave the U.S. embassy roof. Martin carried the embassy's folded flag; McArthur, accompanying his wife Eva, carried the ambassador's tiny terrier, Nit Noy, on his lap, having saved it from being left behind.

In later years, McArthur and his wife lived in Washington and northern Virginia.

Edith Lederer, who is now AP's chief United Nations correspondent, first met McArthur in Vietnam. "George's courage, keen eye and story-telling skills gave readers around the world a front-row seat on major events of the 20th century," she said.

"He was a role model for many who followed, including me."

In a 2005 interview, McArthur said his career had been more rewarding than he could have imagined as a small-town boy in south Georgia.

Going on home leave from Paris, he crossed the Atlantic on the ocean liner United States, and was invited to dine at the captain's table.

"Nobody from Valdosta, Ga., dresses for dinner or eats at the captain's table," he said in the interview.

___

Pyle, a former Saigon bureau chief for The Associated Press, reported from New York.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-13-Obit-George%20McArthur/id-1f988773c72d4ce7b4a0283483d605db

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

Mercedes' Hamilton takes pole for F1 Chinese GP

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain waves to the crowd after winning the qualifying session for the Chinese Formula One Grand Prix in Shanghai, China, Saturday, April 13, 2013. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain waves to the crowd after winning the qualifying session for the Chinese Formula One Grand Prix in Shanghai, China, Saturday, April 13, 2013. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton, centre, of Britain waves to the crowd after winning the qualifying session for the Chinese Formula One Grand Prix in Shanghai, China, Saturday, April 13, 2013. Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen, right, of Finland finished second and Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain third. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)

(AP) ? Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton took the pole position for Formula One's Chinese Grand Prix.

Hamilton's best time Saturday at the Shanghai International Circuit was 1 minute, 34.484 seconds, qualifying a quarter of a second ahead of Lotus' Kimi Raikkonen. Ferrari's Fernando Alonso will start third in Sunday's race.

"It's an incredible feeling, so happy to have our first pole for some time," Hamilton said. "I'm just ecstatic really, the lap was great."

"I can't answer (critics) with one result but bit by bit, as we progress and improve, they will have to stand corrected. I am so grateful because it could have gone the other way. It was such a big choice for me and a big step for me but I made the right call."

A cat-and-mouse qualifying session allowed all drivers to restrict their time on the track to preserve their tires for the race, with all of the top 10 having only one flying lap in the final stage of qualifying.

McLaren's Jenson Button and Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel both elected to do their flying lap on the harder of the two tire compounds, sacrificing grid position so they can have a longer stint at the beginning of the race. Button qualified eighth and Vettel ninth.

Of the top three, Hamilton is likely going to have to pit first, as the Mercedes has quickly degraded the soft tires throughout the weekend and his times are likely to start dropping after as few as two or three laps.

He is putting faith in his team's decision to start on the soft tires and not follow the example of championship leader Vettel in settling for a lower grid spot but a longer first stint on Sunday.

"I have really good strategists and I just trust them and their decisions and stand by it," Hamilton said. "No matter what strategy you are on everyone will struggle on the option tire, whether it's high or low fuel."

Red Bull's Mark Webber had a fuel pressure failure in the second sector of qualifying, putting him 14th. He will start from the back of the grid, however, if there is not enough fuel in the car to provide a sample to stewards.

"We'll have to see what the rules are," Webber said upon his return to the garage. "Double-whammy, maybe."

Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg, last year's winner, qualified in fourth, ahead of Ferrari's Felipe Massa, Lotus' Romain Grosjean and Daniel Ricciardo of Toro Rosso. Sauber's Nico Hulkenberg was 10th.

Raikkonen came up just short of his first pole in five years, set when he was with Ferrari.

"Second is not too bad. It's the best I've achieved with the team. I would rather be in first place but we don't have the speed," Raikkonen said.

The Finn won the season-opening race in Australia by having one less pit-stop than his rivals. If he can nurse his tires again Sunday, he will be hard to beat.

"It's a big question mark because we were pretty happy (Friday), but the car is not the same as then," Raikkonen said. "Hopefully it will turn out to be good tomorrow, but it will be pretty close and whoever gets it exactly right will make a difference.

Alonso edged Massa by about a tenth of a second to avoid qualifying behind a teammate for a fifth straight race, which has never happened in his career.

"The car has been competitive from Friday and this morning we made changes and the car responded well," Alonso said. "We have a good setup for the race, which is the most important thing. Tomorrow, if everything goes well, we should fight for the podium with both cars."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-04-13-CAR-F1-Chinese-GP/id-5c708ea152d64e9ba7b1dc1e0391617e

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Friday, April 12, 2013

Huawei G510 heads to Vodafone UK, puts Jelly Bean on a budget

Huawei G510 heads to Vodafone UK, puts Jelly Bean on a budget

Huawei's G510 isn't what you'd call a screamer. In fact, the handset's more of what the Chinese market refers to as a "1,000 yuan" phone, or as we so benignly call it: a budget device. Formerly available in Asia-only, the G510's now making the trek to the UK on Vodafone for £130 outright or £13 monthly. Despite its lower-end leanings, the Android Jelly Bean device packs a reasonably large 4.5-inch WVGA display, dual-core Cortex-A9 clocked at 1.2GHz, 5-megapixel rear camera, NFC and a 1,750mAh battery. It's also the first of Huawei's UK releases to ship with its custom skin, the Emotion UI. It's a questionable bragging right, we admit. But we'll let it slide for now.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/11/huawei-g510-heads-to-vodafone-uk-puts-jelly-bean-on-a-budget/

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Bialik happy with 'nonsexual' 'Big Bang' romance

CBS

Sheldon tries to nurse a sick Amy back to health on "The Big Bang Theory."

By Drusilla Moorhouse, TODAY contributor

Are Sheldon Cooper and Amy Farrah Fowler ever going to get past second base on "The Big Bang Theory"? Not if Mayim Bialik, who plays the nerdy neurobiologist on the CBS hit, has any say.

"I kind of like us the way we are," she told TODAY.com.

"Sheldon made a comment that he could picture the two of them having coitus (and) honestly, I was surprised that the producers were ready to have his character say that," shared the former "Blossom" star.

"I think it's really sweet that we depict an as-yet nonsexual romantic intimate relationship that is very sweet. But anything can happen on our show."

That includes some kinky spanking, the unforgettable moment that fans can enjoy (or cringe about) again on Thursday's rebroadcast of "The Fish Guts Displacement."

Originally, viewers weren't intended to actually see Sheldon deliver the corporal punishment to his "very bad girl" girlfriend.

"The naughty was (originally) supposed to be off-camera," Jim Parsons revealed at PaleyFest last month, adding: "It was one of the hardest things I've ever had to do -- because I found it tremendously amusing."

But Bialik paid the price for the her co-star's repeated attempts "to get the sound we wanted": "There was some redness," she admitted.

"One thing I like about Amy is that she's very honest almost to a fault" -- except when she's tricking Sheldon, Bialik told us. "She's not afraid to bend the rules in terms of what's expected of her, or what people think she should act like, dress like, be like (or) have a relationship like."

Unfortunately, Bialik didn't share any screen time with legendary comedian Bob Newhart, who is guesting on the show May 2.

"I'm not in (the) episode sadly, so I did not get to meet him," said the chagrined actress. "It's really a bummer. I've been a huge 'Newhart' fan and spent many -- I don't know if they were lonely teenage years, but many appropriate teenage years watching ''Newhart' late at night."

When we asked Bialik what other series she'd like to guest on herself, she confessed, "I don't watch television. I've heard of shows. I was a huge fan of 'Northern Exposure' 20 years ago. I actually was seated next to (its star) Rob Morrow at this Alzheimer's benefit the other night and I was geeking out in my head the whole time. I've heard that 'Downton Abbey' is a good show and I sometimes look good in period pieces, so that might be fun."

(Maybe Lady Edith can interview famous scientist Marie Curie for her newspaper column?)

As to where "Big Bang" is headed, Bialik is completely in the dark.

"We know nothing" about the upcoming sixth-season finale, she told us. "(The writers) sort of go where their passion takes them!"

Do you hope Amy and Sheldon find passion on "Big Bang"? Tell us on our Facebook page!

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