Friday, February 9, 2018
Stormi Webster birth certificate revealed: Kylie Jenner's baby details announced as she welcomes first child with boyfriend Travis Scott
Kylie Jenner announced that she had given birth to a baby girl named Stormi on February 4 in an emotional message after months of speculation surrounding her pregnancy.
And little Stormi’s birth certificate has now been released, and confirms the baby has taken Kylie’s boyfriend’s surname, Webster.
The document, obtained by TMZ, also revealed that Kylie’s daughter does not have a middle name, despite speculation that she would be given a unique name.
According to the birth certificate, Stormi - whose name has a special meaning - was born at Cedars Sinai Medical Centre in Los Angeles and was delivered by a different doctor than the Kardashian’s go-to Dr. Paul Crane.
North Korea holds military parade on eve of Pyeongchang Olympics
North Korea held a massive military parade highlighted by intercontinental ballistic missiles in its capital on Thursday, just one day before South Korea hosts the opening ceremony of the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.
Kim Jong-un, dressed in a long black winter coat, was shown walking on a red carpet with his wife at the beginning of the event, which North Korea's state-run television broadcast hours after it was over.
It began with thousands of goose-stepping troops lined up in Kim Il-sung Square to form words and slogans. Later, North Korea displayed its most powerful strategic weapons, including what appeared to be Hwasong-14 and Hwasong-15 ICBMs rolled out on launcher trucks. Analysts believe the missiles, which were successfully tested last year in three launches, could potentially reach deep into the U.S. mainland when perfected.
Woman who won $560m lotto jackpot is suing to try and keep her identity secret
A woman who won $560million on a Powerball ticket is suing for the right to remain anonymous. The newly-minted multimillionaire, who is in New Hampshire, did not realize that signing the winning ticket meant she waived her rights to anonymity.She has since taken legal action against the state’s Lottery Commission, claiming that identifying her could put her at risk of dangers including kidnap. Her lawsuit, which refers to the woman as Jane Doe said: ‘As a lottery jackpot winner, Ms. Doe is now part of a small demographic which has historically been victimized by the unscrupulous with life threatening consequences. The limited public interest in disclosure is far outweighed by Ms. Doe’s interest in remaining anonymous.’
Newlyweds caught up in police chase during wedding day photo shoot
It was supposed to be a romantic setting for their big day, but newly weds Becky and Toby Eyre were in for a surprise when their photoshoot ended up in the middle of a police chase.
The couple were posing for photographs after their nuptials when they were forced to hide behind a tree as police chased a suspected drug deal as they posed for photos.
As they watched on, the suspect ran past them with officers in hot pursuit before diving into the freezing lake behind them at Hinksey Park in Oxford.
As patrols car raced past them, officers shouted "congratulations" out of the window.
The couple were posing for photographs after their nuptials when they were forced to hide behind a tree as police chased a suspected drug deal as they posed for photos.
Thursday, February 8, 2018
Ex-soldier and his mother jailed for 11 years each for murdering gran, 84
A former soldier and his mother have been jailed for life after murdering their 84-year-old mother and grandmother.
Barry Rogers and Penelope John will serve at least 11 years each after force feeding Betty Guy a cocktail of pills and whisky at her home in Pembrokeshire, Wales, in November 2011.
Rogers, 33, then smothered the former nurse using a pillow, a court heard.
The pair, who were found guilty after a trial at Swansea Crown Court, nearly got away with the killing but came under suspicion in 2015 after one of Rogers’ ex-girlfriends reported him to the police.
It emerged that the former technician in the Royal Corps of Signals had told three former partners he had killed his nan by putting a pillow over her face.
Police arrested mother and son in November 2016 and placed a bug in John’s home which recorded them discussing the killing, including Rogers saying to John she had nothing to worry about because ‘it’s me that’s the one that’s done the act’.
Wednesday, February 7, 2018
New Music - Marry You - @kefchild
As we enter into the month of love is only right we drop one for our beautiful women. Here's "MARRY YOU" by KEFCHILD. a soft vibe. Downland share n enjoy. God bless. #painkilla#luz#marryyou
Kefchild – Marry You (Prod. Professor) [Music]:https://www.mp3bullet.ng/
Shocking : Morgue worker sacked for having sex with corpse of murdered Big Brother star
A morgue worker has been sacked after it was discovered that he had performed necrophilia on the corpse of a murdered reality TV star. Oksana Aplekaeva was murdered in 2008 and her killer has never been found, but police in Russia received new information.
They exhumed her body and carried out new and more detailed forensic tests on her body.
Those tests revealed that she had been sexually violated after her death and DNA led investigators to point the finger at a morgue technician identified only as Alexander, 37. Speaking after he was sacked, he said: ‘I could not argue against science. I have not been able to find a job for three months.’
How One Girl’s Heroic Escape Saved Her Chained And Starving Siblings From Their Parents
Ask just about anyone who has a tight-knit family and they’ll tell you it’s the absolute best. While some people yearn for their independence the moment they turn 18, some people simply can’t imagine life without their family members. From the outside, the Turpins of southern California felt the same way.
David and Louise had 13 sons and daughters in all. The family took regular vacations to Disneyland and Las Vegas, and they seemed relatively normal. Sure, they had their eccentric moments, but neighbors claimed they were happy… or so they thought. Then, early one morning, the nasty truth about the family was revealed—and the news shook the entire country.
In the southern California town of Perris, about 70 miles southeast of Los Angeles, David and Louise Turpin appeared, from the perspectives of neighbors, friends, and family, to be raising the perfect—if not eccentric—family. Soon, everyone learned how wrong they’d been.
Brazil police arrest sect members for enslavement
Brazilian police have arrested 13 members of a religious sect on suspicion of enslavement, human trafficking and money laundering.
Sect leaders are accused of seizing the possessions of followers and making them work unpaid.
Police raided several businesses as part of an investigation into the sect, known as The Evangelical Community of Jesus, the Truth that Marks.
The church is estimated to have 6.000 followers.
Man arrested in connection to murder of teen he met on the internet
Investigators have made an arrest in the homicide of Diamond Bradley, the 16-year-old found dead of multiple stab wounds in a ditch in rural Putnam County on Jan. 27.
Putnam County Sheriff Kevin Doyle said Richard Henderson, 26, of Standard, Illinois, was arrested on Monday, Feb. 5 after voluntarily giving a statement to investigators. According to Doyle, Henderson and Bradley "met through the internet" and agreed to meet the morning she was reported missing.
"Based on information we have at this point, Henderson picked Diamond up near her residence and drove directly to Putnam County, to 850 North road," he said. "A physical altercation occurred, resulting in Henderson killing Diamond."
At this point, Henderson is being charged with concealing a homicidal death, but additional charges are expected soon, Doyle said.
Doyle said Bradley's cell phone records and video surveillance obtained during the investigation corroborated that sequence of events, leading to Henderson's arrest.
Henderson is being held in the LaSalle County Jail. No bond has been set. He will be arraigned in Putnam County Court when a circuit judge is made available, Doyle said.
Maldives' Supreme Court handed a victory to the nation's embattled president after he orchestrated the arrests of 2 justices
The Supreme Court in the Maldives has reversed a controversial ruling which dismissed terrorism charges against opposition leaders.
The initial ruling was ignored by the country's president who instead declared a state of emergency and arrested two Supreme Court justices.
The declaration also limited the court's powers, but this restriction was lifted shortly before the ruling was reversed.
The Supreme Court in the Maldives has overturned a ruling that kick-started the nation's political turmoil this week.
Last Thursday the court dismissed charges of terrorism against nine opposition leaders, and reinstated 12 legislators who lost their seats when they moved to the opposition in 2017.
Steve Wynn: Casino mogul quits his company amid harassment claims
US casino mogul Steve Wynn has stepped down as chairman and CEO of his Wynn Resorts company amid sexual misconduct allegations.
A Wall Street Journal report alleged that the 76-year-old billionaire harassed massage therapists and forced one staff member to have sex with him.
Mr Wynn denied any misconduct and called the story "preposterous".
Last month Mr Wynn also resigned as finance chair of the Republican National Committee (RNC).
"In the last couple of weeks, I have found myself the focus of an avalanche of negative publicity," Mr Wynn said in a statement on Tuesday.
"As I have reflected upon the environment this has created, one in which a rush to judgment takes precedence over everything else, including the facts, I have reached the conclusion I cannot continue to be effective in my current roles," he said.
Wynn Resorts owns and operates several casino complexes including Wynn Macau, Wynn and Encore Las Vegas, and Wynn Palace Cotai.
Wynn Macau's shares were suspended from trading in Hong Kong following the firm's announcement on Tuesday.
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
Fraud trial of three ex-Tesco bosses abandoned after one defendant suffers heart attack
The jury in the trial of three former Tesco bosses accused of fraud and false accounting has been discharged after one of the defendants suffered a heart attack.
Jurors returned on Monday after a two-week adjournment to learn Judge Deborah Taylor was halting the trial because Carl Rogberg, who was Tesco's UK finance director, was in hospital after a heart attack.
A decision on a possible re-trial will be made on March 2.
Rogberg, 51, was on trial with Christopher Bush, 52, former managing director of Tesco UK, and John Scouler, 49, the former UK food commercial director. All denied any wrongdoing.
The judge at Southwark Crown Court told the jury: "Thank you once again for your patience.
US pop star Lady Gaga Cancelled World tour Shows Due to "Severe Pain."
The Grammy award-winning singer in a statement posted on Twitter, told fans she was "devastated" that she has to cancel her remaining ten shows from her world tour. The decision taken was "beyond her control."
According to her:
"I need to put myself and my well-being first,"
Beloved Frasier star John Mahoney dies age 77 in a Chicago hospice facility
The British-born actor John Mahoney, best known for his role as Martin Crane in the US sitcom Frasier, has died aged 77, his manager says.
Mahoney died on Sunday while in hospice care in Chicago, TMZ reports.
Mahoney played the unpretentious, blunt father of Frasier and Niles Crane in the hit comedy, who were portrayed by Kelsey Grammer and David Hyde Pierce.
Frasier ran for 11 seasons from 1993-2004 and Mahoney won a SAG award in 2000 in for the role.
Mahoney was also nominated for two Emmys and two Golden Globes.
Born in Blackpool, he moved to the US as a young man and started out in theatre, winning a Tony award in 1986, before turning to television.
The British-born actor starred as Martin Crane alongside his on-screen sons Kelsey Grammer, who played the titular Frasier, and David Hyde Pierce, who played Niles, in the sitcom for a whopping 11 seasons, from 1993 to 2004.
In 2000, he was awarded a SAG Award for his work on the show, and was also nominated for two Emmy Awards and two Golden Globes.
Besides starring in the hugely popular sitcom, John also had a lucrative film career, with roles in productions including The American President, Say Anything… and Eight Men Out.
Most recently, John had a recurring role in TV Land’s Hot In Cleveland, where he appeared as Roy in six episodes between 2011 and 2014.
His last TV appearance was in Foyle’s War in 2015, where he played Andrew Del Mar.
Aside from his careers in film and television, John was also active in theatre, and won a Tony in 1986.
John was intensely private about his personal life, but is thought to have never married, despite previously claiming to have been in several relationships.
However it is for Martin Crane, the grumpy ex-cop father of Frasier and Niles Crane that John Mahoney is best known.
Starring in Frasier alongside Kelsey Grammer and David Hydge Pierce for 11-years, the show was originally a spin-off from the mega-hit Cheers.
However, Frasier became one of the most successful follow-on shows in history securing 37-Primetime Emmy Awards - which in 2004 was a record for any television show.
Playing an ex-Seattle cop forced by injury to gate-crash his son's luxury lifestyle the clash of salt-of-the-earth police officer and cultured psychiatrist provided crux of the witty comedy the show became known for.
Mahoney received two supporting actor Emmy nominations for his work on the show but sadly failed to win.
"I'm very proud to have 'Frasier' as my television legacy," Mahoney told the Associated Press in 2014. "I've done a lot of good television myself. But still I think nothing can quite compare to 'Frasier.'"
Born in 1940 the seventh of eight children, Mahoney was born in Blackpool in England after his family left their family home in Manchester to avoid Germany bombing during the Second World War.
Indeed, his early life in Manchester allowed him to school fellow Brit Jane Leeves in getting the city accent right for her Frasier character, Daphne Moon, a kooky physical therapist from Lancashire.
Mahoney moved to the United States as a teenager with his sister Vera and he studied at Quincy University in Illinois and joined the US Army, which helped him become a citizen in 1959.
He worked through the 1960s and 1970s as a former Midwestern medical-magazine editor and he quit his job there in his his late 30s to take up his passion of acting.
He joined the famed Steppenwolf Theater revue of Chicago soon after and then moved to New York to further his burgeoning career.
Mahoney quickly became noted for an off-Broadway production of Orphans and he received a Theater World Award for that performance.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-5355555/Frasier-star-John-Mahoney-dies-77-Chicago-hospice.html#ixzz56Hsfciz4
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Teen, 17, found dead in bed 24 hours after being sent home by doctor who said he had bad constipation
A teenage boy died just 24 hours after being sent home from hospital with laxatives to treat constipation.
Jack Dunn, 17, was fit and healthy, but had gone to see his GP with severe stomach pains and was told to go to A&E for suspected appendicitis.
But, despite being in excruciating pain, doctors suspected he was suffering constipation after a scan and sent him home.
The tragic youngster was later found dead in bed by his dad the next day.
The teenager died from a deadly condition called ketoacidosis – a condition which causes a build up of acidity in the blood.
Three police officers reportedly shot in Colorado Springs
Three police officers have been shot in Colorado Springs, local media are reporting.
Local television station KKTV 11 News, an affiliate of CBS, also reported that suspects have been shot.
El Paso County sherriff's office confirmed that they were en route to the scene.
Maldives: Supreme Court judges arrested amid political crisis
Maldives police have arrested the country's chief justice of the Supreme Court hours after the government declared a state of emergency.
The crisis began when President Abdulla Yameen refused to comply with a court order to release political prisoners.
Chief Justice Abdulla Saeed and another judge, Ali Hameed, were arrested in the early hours of Tuesday morning "for an investigation", police said.
Monday, February 5, 2018
Samsung heir freed from S Korea jail
Samsung heir Lee Jae-yong has been freed from jail after a South Korean court suspended his five year jail term for bribing the country's ex-president.
An appeals court upheld parts of the conviction, but used its discretion to release the executive.
South Korea's supreme court is expected to appeal against the decision.
The case gripped the public amid growing anger against the country's biggest companies, known as chaebols, and their influence on wider society.
chemicals found in plastic and linked to breast and prostate cancer are found in 86% of teenagers' bodies
Almost 90 per cent of teenagers have gender-bending chemicals from plastic in their bodies, according to a study.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is found in plastic containers and water bottles, on the inside of food cans and in till receipts.
The chemical, used since the 1960s to make certain types of plastic, mimics the female sex hormone oestrogen, and has been linked to low sperm counts and infertility in men, as well as breast and prostate cancer.
A study by the University of Exeter, whose researchers tested urine samples from 94 teenagers, found 86 per cent had traces of BPA in their body.
Experts fear it is all but impossible to avoid the chemical, given the widespread use of plastic packaging for food.
The study’s co-author Professor Lorna Harries, from the university’s medical school, said: ‘Most people are exposed to BPA on a daily basis. In this study, our student researchers have discovered that at the present time, given current labelling laws, it is difficult to avoid exposure by altering our diet. In an ideal world, we would have a choice over what we put into our bodies. At the present time, since it is difficult to identify which foods and packaging contain BPA, it is not possible to make that choice.’
The European Chemicals Agency last year reclassified BPA as a substance of ‘very high concern’ because of its ‘probable serious effects’ on human health.
Philadelphia Eagles beat the New England Patriots to win Super Bowl LII
The Philadelphia Eagles eventually triumphed 41-33 in a thrilling Super Bowl LII on Sunday , earning their first ever victory in NFL's premier game.
The Eagles won a thrilling contest which featured more yards being gained than in any other Super Bowl in history, with the underdogs capturing Philadelphia's first major honour in any sport since the Philadelphia Phillies won baseball's World Series in 2008.
Tom Brady's Patriots were unable to win back-to-back Super Bowls, but they contributed to what was an incredible contest that enthralled fans all over the world.
The match went all the way to the death, when a long pass from Brady almost opened up the defiant Eagles, but they held on.
Is it that bad to smoke pot in front of your kids?
Did you read the title of this article and have a strong yes or no gut reaction? You might be surprised to find out that opinions from parents and medical experts alike on whether it’s OK to smoke pot in front of your kids actually vary quite a bit.
“Whether it’s alcohol or cannabis,” says Jane West, a Denver-based mom and cannabis activist, “it’s all about having honest conversations with your kids, modeling good behavior and helping them develop the self-confidence and common sense to make responsible decisions.”
We live in an ever-changing landscape when it comes to weed. Over the past decade and a half, we’ve seen a steady rise in marijuana use in America, and at the same time, we’ve seen a steady decline in the perceived risks.
We’re also learning more about the therapeutic value and effectiveness of marijuana for the treatment of chronic pain, insomnia, nausea, anxiety and more.
Meet 17-year-old Ahed Tamimi, the new face of Palestinian resistance
To Palestinians and their supporters, hers is the face of a hero, a new symbol of resistance. But many Israelis call 17-year-old Ahed Tamimi "Shirley Temper" after viewing videos showing the girl angrily lashing out at Israeli soldiers.
The long-running Israeli-Palestinian conflict has always been about competing narratives, and in this age of social media and viral videos, Ahed's defiance has made her into something of a star in the Arab world and beyond.
The blond-haired, blue-eyed Palestinian girl spent her 17th birthday inside an Israeli military prison last week, where she, along with her mother, await trial on Feb. 13, charged with a dozen offences, including incitement and assault against a soldier.
Sunday, February 4, 2018
Quentin Tarantino and muse Uma Thurman's secret feud after she felt he tried to kill her during Kill Bill stunt
Actress Uma Thurman has revealed a secret feud with director Quentin Tarantino after he allegedly made her do a dangerous stunt on Kill Bill.
The mum-of-three opened up about her row with directing legend Quentin at the end of filming Kill Bill back in 2003. Filming had taken nine months and the crew only had four days left to shoot the famous scene where she’s driving the blue convertible to kill Bill.
Uma told the New York Times she didn't want to drive the car as it had been deemed unsafe by others on set - but said Quentin, who described her as his muse, forced her.
Nobel laureate and political prisoner, Liu Xiaobo dies in Chinese custody
China is facing a ton of international criticism for its treatment of Nobel laureate and democracy campaigner Liu Xiaobo, who died at the age of 61 on Thursday February 1.
Liu, who championed non-violent resistance as a way of overcoming “forceful tyranny”, had been serving an 11-year jail sentence for demanding an end to one-party rule when he was diagnosed with late-stage liver cancer in May.
He died of multiple organ failure while under guard at a hospital in north-east China, making him the first Nobel peace prize winner to die in custody since German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky, the 1935 recipient, who died under surveillance after years confined to Nazi concentration camps.
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