Author: Serkadis

  • Court Denies Innocent Infringement Defense To Teen For Sharing Music

    You may recall a few years back that a teenager, Whitney Harper, who was getting sued by the record labels/RIAA for file sharing, claimed that the amount she should have to pay up should be less than the $750 statutory minimum, because she was an “innocent infringer,” unaware that what she was doing in listening to music was against the law. In fact, she didn’t even realize she was sharing files, but thought she was just listening to music, like radio. Surprisingly, the lower court actually agreed with her and said that $200 per song (for the 37 songs) was an appropriate amount. But, of course, the RIAA appealed, as (despite claims to the contrary in the Tenenbaum and Thomas-Rasset case) they need those huge potential amounts to use as a sledge hammer against file sharers. Unfortunately, an appeals court has overturned the lower court ruling, and said that the statutory minimum of $750 per infringement should apply — saying that the innocent infringement defense isn’t applicable because the CDs the music came on (which she never saw) had proper copyright notices.

    As you may know, copyright law does allow for reduced statutory damages on innocent infringement, “where the infringer sustains the burden of proving . . . that [she] was not aware and had no reason to believe that . . . her acts constituted an infringement of copyright.” Given the details of this case, that seemed to apply — but the appeals court was having none of it. In the decision, it argues that the law says an innocent infringer defense cannot be applied (with one exception irrelevant to this case) if a proper copyright notice “appears on the published . . . phonorecords to which a defendant . . . had access.”

    The court the says that because copyright notices are found regularly on CDs, then Harper effectively “had access” to those recordings, at least enough to know they were covered by copyright. Not surprisingly, I find this argument to be quite troubling. If we assume it is accurate that Harper was using LimeWire as if it were a radio to listen to music, then how would she know that she was violating the copyright on the recordings at all? Would someone listening to the radio know? What about someone listening to Pandora or Spotify. Based on this ruling, anyone can be put at risk of much larger statutory damages for copyright if they simply don’t know if the online streaming service they’re using has properly cleared the copyrights. That does not seem like a conclusion that makes sense, or would have been intended by Congress. Did Congress really intend for each user to do the research before using any online music service to make sure those services had properly cleared the copyrights?

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  • Spoiler Alert: New God of War III clip reveals new bosses, new weapons and tons of gameplay footage

    Can’t get eough of God of War III? Is the demo too short for you? Well check out the latest episode of GameTrailers TV as they showcase some never before seen locations, new bosses, weapons and potential

  • French Court Says IP Address Does Not Identify A User

    Michael Scott points us to the news that a French court has ruled that an IP address is not enough to identify a single individual. Now, obviously, many of us agree with this general point, and we’ve brought that up time and time again in the past when lawsuits insisted that a single IP address was enough to identify a user. And, given that France now has its three strikes law which will be based in large part on entertainment companies indicating a single IP address as evidence of infringement, this might seem like a good ruling. But in this case, there’s another side to it which is important. The reason why the court ruled that an IP address doesn’t identify an individual, is to say that it is not a privacy violation to get someone’s IP address.

    This isn’t a new issue. We discussed a similar case before, and I actually think, on the whole, it’s correct. An IP address shouldn’t be considered private information directly, since it doesn’t identify a individual and you effectively have to give it out just to use the internet. But for people who argue that revealing IP addresses is a violation of confidential information, they might not like this ruling very much. On the whole, though, I think in the long run it’s better to have a world where the courts recognize that an IP address does not identify a user, even if it means that IP addresses aren’t considered private info.

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  • EXCLUSIVE: Interview with American Baptists jailed in Haiti

    PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (WBBM/AP) — WBBM’s Felicia Middlebrooks has gotten an exclusive interview with two Americans being held on kidnapping charges in Haiti.

    She tells us what they had to say today:

    Yesterday, a Haitian judge said American missionaries Laura Silsby and Charisa Coulter will remain in jail over the weekend as he awaits more testimony.

    Judge Bernard Saint-Vil says he has asked two real estate agents and a pastor from the Dominican Republic to testify in Port-au-Prince about property the missionaries rented to set up an orphanage.

    That is expected Monday. If they do not show, Saint-Vil says he still expects to rule next week.

    He also said Thursday he wants to question a pastor and another man from a border town.

    Silsby and Coulter were among 10 Americans detained in Haiti while trying to take 33 kids to the Dominican Republic after the Jan. 12 earthquake.

    The others have been released and returned home.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Autoblog Weekender: Gumbo Edition

    The Autoblog Weekender – Click above to find out what you missed

    This week’s roundup is like a Jim Jarmusch film or a big pot of gumbo: there’s a little bit of everything in there, and some of it might make you wonder “What happened here?” People who watch UFOs end up catching a Honda CR-Z. The Buick Regal might not come with all-wheel drive but it might come with a nine-speed transmission. And one man buys ten – that’s ten – Aston Martin One-77s. For his family. But as with those Jarmusch films, these things are hard to explain, you just have to experience them yourself. Just one little click to follow the jump will do it…

    Continue reading Autoblog Weekender: Gumbo Edition

    Autoblog Weekender: Gumbo Edition originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 26 Feb 2010 19:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Free dictionaries send District 150 kids on a word quest

    Destinie Stringer proudly held onto her new dictionary, a smile illuminating her small face.

    “It has my name in it,” the third grader said to her friend Catera Anderson, who also held open a brand new dictionary.

    Nearby, Taya Ferguson pointed out the longest word in the dictionary to her friends, Alexis Carter and Jonathon Savka. The mega-syllabic word took up the full last page of the paperback books presented Friday to the youths at Whittier Primary School.

    The books were a gift from the Rotary Club of  Peoria North, which this week provided dictionaries to every third grade student — about 1,100 kids in all — in Peoria School District 150.
     
    “I think it’s really cool. I’ve never had a dictionary, at least not one this big before,” Taya said as she continued to search the book for new and interesting words to impress her classmates.

    This is the second-year the Rotary Club has provided dictionaries to Peoria school children. The books were funded by a combination of contributions by Rotary members and a grant from the Rotary International Foundation.

    “One of Rotary’s major emphasis is literacy. A lot of Rotarys do dictionary giveaways to students,” said Ron Riggins, a member of Rotary Club of Peoria North’s dictionary committee and a past club president. “We truly hope this will help the kids through their school years to improve their spelling, writing and vocabulary.”

    For more complete details, read tomorrow’s Journal Star or check pjstar.com later.
     

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Livingston gets 10-day contract with Wizards

    Peoria High graduate Shaun Livingston has signed a 10-day contract with the Wizards and will be in uniform for Friday night’s game against New York.

    The former fourth overall pick in the 2004 draft played 10 games this season for Oklahoma City, averaging 1.0 points and 2.0 rebounds. Livingston was drafted by the Los Angeles Clippers and has also played for the Miami Heat.

    The 24-year-old swingman’s career has been plagued by injuries. He’s averaged 6.9 points and 4.4 assists in 167 career games.

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • JS Exclusive: Cat no longer doing business with Iran

    Caterpillar Inc. said Friday it will prohibit its overseas subsidiaries from doing business with Iran.

    That decision was lauded by an organization that opposes companies doing business with Iran and had pressured Caterpillar to make the decision.

    New York-based United Against Nuclear Iran posted a billboard in Peoria, located on Northeast Adams Street near the McClugage Bridge, with the headline, “Today’s work; Tomorrow’s nuclear Iran.” It pictures Caterpillar construction equipment beside the image of Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    The statement below the pictures reads, “Stop Cat’s business in Iran.”

    But following Caterpillar’s announcement Friday “prohibiting its non-U.S. subsidiaries from accepting any orders for Caterpillar machines, engines and new parts where the subsidiary knows that the product would be shipped to Iran,” the United group said it plans to take down its billboard.

    “UANI applauds Caterpillar’s decision to prohibit sales of its products in Iran. In response to UANI’s letters of Feb. 4, 11, and 12, Caterpillar Chairman and CEO James Owens acknowledged that Cat had conducted business in Iran,” said spokeswoman Kimmie Lipscomb.

    UANI President, Ambassador Mark Wallace, made this statement: “We applaud Caterpillar’s decision to prohibit its non-U.S. subsidiaries from doing business in Iran. All responsible companies that transact business in Iran through the veil of a foreign subsidiary should take this as a wake up call,” he said.

    Lipscomb said 200 companies around the world were presently doing business in Iran but the media campaign singled out Caterpillar because Lovat, a Canadian-owned Caterpillar subsidiary specializing in tunneling equipment, had done work in Iran. “Iran’s nuclear program is hidden by tunnels,” she added.

    In its statement, Caterpillar called the group’s claims that it did “extensive business in Iran” as inaccurate.

    “Limited, indirect sales through independent dealers and distributors of Caterpillar branded products in Iran amount to less than two-tenths of one percent of Caterpillar’s 2009 worldwide sales and revenues,” the company stated.

    “In no way are these sales material in a quantitative or qualitative sense. As is the case in other markets, some sales of Caterpillar branded products in Iran are conducted by unrelated third parties in the secondary market – with no connection to Caterpillar or any of its foreign subsidiaries or even its independent dealers. And of course, Caterpillar has no legal means to control the secondary market trade of its products,” stated the company.

     

    Steve Tarter can be reached at 686-3260 or [email protected].

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Six hurt in Lake Shore Drive crash

    A three-car crash this afternoon on Lake Shore Drive near Soldier Field sent six people to area hospitals.

    Two adults were transported to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, and two were transported to Stroger Hospital, all in serious condition, Fire Media spokesman Joseph Roccasalva said.

    Two more adults were transported to Mercy Hospital and Medical Center in stable condition, he said.

    The crash happened about 2 p.m. near the intersection of Lake Shore Drive and McFeteridge Drive.

    The cause of the crash was still under investigation this afternoon, Roccasalva said.

    Read the original article from SouthTown Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Dems looking for new lt. gov. candidates

    Illinois Democrats embarrassed by the nomination of Scott Lee Cohen as lieutenant governor are accepting applications to replace the disgraced candidate.

    State Rep. Michael Madigan, the party chairman, said Friday the state central committee wants to hear from people interested in running for the No. 2 post with Gov. Pat Quinn in the fall election.

    People may provide information about their qualifications on the partys Web site, he said.

    State central committee members two from each of the states 19 congressional districts will decide which candidates will address them at a later meeting.

    The committee is scheduled to meet March 15, but a date to name a new nominee hasnt been picked, a spokesman for Madigan said.

    Gov. Pat Quinn said earlier today that voters will be able to learn about the Democrats would-be lieutenant governor candidates online.

    Quinn said people who want to be the nominee for the states No. 2 job should submit their name to the state Democratic Party. The candidates backgrounds would then be outlined on the state partys Web site.

    Cohen left the race after it became widely known he was accused of abusing his ex-wife and arrested for holding a knife to the throat of an ex-girlfriend. Cohen has denied the allegations, and charges stemming from his arrest were dropped when the girlfriend didnt show up in court.

    Read the original article from SouthTown Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Ill. Dems look for new lt. gov. candidate

    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — Illinois Democrats embarrassed by the nomination of Scott Lee Cohen as lieutenant governor are accepting applications to replace the disgraced candidate.

    State party chairman Michael Madigan said Friday the state central committee wants to hear from people interested in running for the No. 2 post with Gov. Pat Quinn in the fall election. People may provide information about their qualifications on the party’s Web site.

    State central committee members – two from each of the state’s 19 congressional districts – will decide which candidates address them at a later meeting.

    Cohen left the race after it became widely known he was accused of abusing his ex-wife and arrested for holding a knife to the throat of an ex-girlfriend. Cohen has denied the allegations, and charges stemming from his arrest were dropped when the girlfriend didn’t show up in court.

    © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Lake Shore Drive crash injures six

    Two adults were transported to Northwestern Memorial Hospital and two were transported to John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County, all in serious condition, Fire Media spokesman Joseph Roccasalva said.

    Two more adults were transported to Mercy Hospital and Medical Center in “stable” condition, he said.

    The crash happened near the intersection of Lake Shore Drive and McFetridge Drive about 2 p.m.

    The cause of the crash was still under investigation Friday afternoon, Roccasalva said.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Swedish Investigator Hired By Warner Bros. During Pirate Bay Investigation Now In Charge Of IT Crime In Sweden

    You may recall, back before The Pirate Bay trial in Sweden, a story came out about how the lead police investigator in the case just happened to take a job at Warner Bros. movie studio while The Pirate Bay investigation was still ongoing. This, obviously lead to quite reasonable questions of conflicts of interest, and even corruption. It’s hard to see how anyone could justify a police investigator agreeing to a job with a party in a lawsuit that he was currently investigating. But, for whatever reason, the police decided to protect one of their own, and saw no reason for an investigation.

    The job at Warner Bros. only lasted (as originally intended) for six months, and then the guy, Jim Keyzer, went back to work for the police. TorrentFreak is reporting that he’s now in charge of the IT crime unit, which has the mandate to investigate file-sharing cases.

    At the very least, this raises extremely serious conflict of interest questions. The guy was involved in an investigation, hired for a “temporary” job by one of the parties in that investigation — and then after the job is over, he goes back to work for the police on other investigations that will almost certainly involve the company he took money from for six months. I can understand people taking jobs back and forth between the public and private sector, but the timing of all this seems very suspect, and it seems like the Swedish police should at least set things up so that the conflict of interest is removed, and someone else is in charge of such investigations for the time being.

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  • Video: Valentino Balboni drives his self-titled Lamborghini

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    Click above to view the video after the jump

    We’ve seen Valentino Balboni drive the tires off his namesake and even managed to spend a few hours with the man while stuck in LA’s notoriously hellish traffic. Now, Danish magazine Bil Magasinet gets some quality time with the famed test driver as he flogs his Lamborghini LP550-2 across the frozen countryside.

    Balboni’s warm, Italian charm stands in stark contrast to the surrounding snow as he offers up several choice quotes about Lamborghinis past and present, his time with the automaker and the development of the LP550-2, among others. Speaking about the lack of all-wheel drive, Balboni says simply, “You need to control the car, the car doesn’t control you.” And with that he pulls off yet another perfect powerslide and goes about his day. It’s like you’re sitting in the passenger seat yourself. Hit the jump to see what we mean.

    Continue reading Video: Valentino Balboni drives his self-titled Lamborghini

    Video: Valentino Balboni drives his self-titled Lamborghini originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 26 Feb 2010 19:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 2.26.10

    Review: Lexus GS450h uses electrons for fun

    Can a Lexus hybrid actually be an entertaining steer? We flog the GS450h for a week and come back with an answer. Yes.

    Geneva Preview: 910-hp Koenigsegg Agera

    Don’t mess with perfection. That’s the mantra of the new Koenigsegg Agera, a 910-hp, 250+ mph supercar that takes all the right bits from the CCX and distills them into a more attractive package.

    Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 2.26.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 26 Feb 2010 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Ron Paul Responds to Ben Bernanke’s “Bizarre” Comments

    Statement of Congressman Ron Paul
    United States House of Representatives
    Statement for the Record
    February 25, 2010

    Madame Speaker, I would like to enter into the record the following letter from Professor Robert D. Auerbach, a professor at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas. This letter provides additional information regarding remarks I made at yesterday’s Financial Services Committee Humphrey-Hawkins hearing, remarks which Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke categorized as “bizarre.”

    I thank Congressman Ron Paul for bringing to the public’s attention the Federal Reserve coverup of the source of the Watergate burglars’ source of funding and the defective audit by the Federal Reserve of the bank that transferred $5.5 billion from the U.S. government to Saddam Hussein in the 1980s. Congressman Paul directed these comments to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke at the House Financial Services Hearing February 24, 2010. I question Chairman Bernanke’s dismissive response.

    BERNANKE: “Well, Congressman, these specific allegations you’ve made I think are absolutely bizarre, and I have absolutely no knowledge of anything remotely like what you just described.”

    The evidence Congressman Ron Paul mentioned is well documented in my recent book, Deception and Abuse at the Fed (University of Texas Press: 2008). The head of the Federal Reserve bureaucracy should become familiar with its dismal practices.

    First, consider the Fed’s coverup of the source of the $6300 in hundred dollar bills found on the Watergate burglars when they were arrested at approximately 2:30 A.M. on June 17, 1972 after they had broken into the Watergate offices of the Democratic Party. Five days after the break-in, June 22, 1972, at a board of directors’ meeting of officials at the Philadelphia Fed Bank, it was recorded in the minutes [shown on page 23 of my book] that false or misleading information had been provided to a reporter from the Washington Post about the $6,300. Bob Woodward told me he thought he was the Washington Post reporter who had made the phone inquiry. The reporter “had called to verify a rumor that these bills were stolen from this Bank” according to the Philadelphia Fed minutes. The Philadelphia Fed Bank had informed the Board on June 20 that the notes were “shipped from the Reserve Bank to Girard Trust Company in Philadelphia on April 3, 1972.” The Washington Post was incorrectly informed of “thefts but told they involved old bills that were ready for destruction.”

    The Federal Reserve under the chairmanship of Author Burns not only kept the Fed from getting entangled in the Watergate coverup, which the Fed’s actions had assisted, it allowed false statements about bills the Fed knew were issued by the Philadelphia Fed Bank to stand uncorrected. Blocking information from the Senate and House Banking Committees [letters shown in my book, Chapter 2] and issuing false information during a perilous government crisis imposed huge costs on the public that had insufficient information to hold the Fed officials accountable for what they had withheld from the Congress. Had the deception been discovered the Fed chairmen following Burns may have been forced to rapidly implement some real transparency to restore the Fed’s credibility. That would have reduced or eliminated many of the lies, deceptions, and corrupt practices that are described in my book.

    The second subject brought up by Congressman Ron Paul is the exposure of faulty examinations of the Federal Reserve of a foreign bank in Atlanta, Georgia through which $5.5 billion was sent to Saddam Hussein that a Federal Judge found to be part of United States active support for Iraq in the 1980s.
    On November 9, 1993, several federal marshals brought a prisoner, Christopher Drogoul, into my office at the Rayburn House Office Building of the U.S. House of Representatives. The marshals removed the manacles. Drogoul took off his jump suit and changed into a shirt, tie, and business suit. He immediately looked like the manager of the Atlanta agency with domestic headquarters in New York City of Banca Nazionale. Drogoul had come to testify about a “scheme prosecutors said he masterminded that funneled $5.5 billion in loans to Iraq’s Hussein through BNL’s Atlanta operation. Some of the loans allegedly were used to build up Iraq’s military and nuclear arsenals in the years preceding the first Gulf War.”[1]

    Drogoul’s “‘off book’ BNL-Atlanta funding to Iraq began in 1986 as financing for products under Department of Agriculture programs.”[2] The loans allegedly had been authorized by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Since Drogoul told the committee he was merely a tool in an ambitious scheme by the United States, Italy, Britain and Germany to secretly arm Iraq in their 1980-88 war, the testimony was politically contentious and unproven. He was sentenced in November 1993 to 37 months in prison and he had already served 20 months awaiting his sentencing hearing.

    U.S. District Judge Ernest Tidwell found that the United States had actively supported Iraq in the 1980s by providing it with government-guaranteed loans even though it wasn’t creditworthy. The judge said such policies “clearly facilitated criminal conduct.”[3]

    Gonzalez was drawn to Drogoul’s answer about the Fed examiner who had visited his Atlanta operation. Gonzalez said that:

    “At the November 9, 1993 Banking Committee hearing I asked Christopher Drogoul, the convicted official of the Banca Nazionale Del Lavoro agency branch in Atlanta, Georgia, how the Federal Reserve Bank examiners could miss billions of dollars of illegal loans, most of which ended up in the hands of Hussein.

    Mr. Drogoul stated:

    “The task of the Fed [bank examiner] was simply to confirm that the State of Georgia audit revealed no major problems. And thus, their audit of BNL usually consisted of a one or two-day review of the state of Georgia’s preliminary results, followed by a cup of espresso in the manager’s office.”

    Gonzalez was appalled at the of lack of effective examination of a little storefront bank and also appalled by the gifts exchanged by officers of the New York Federal Reserve and the regulated banks in New York City where the main U.S. office of BNL was located. A description of what followed is in my book.

    The Fed voted in 1995 to destroy the source transcripts of its policy making committee that had been sent to National Archives and Records Administration. Chairman Alan Greenspan had the committee vote on this destruction, telling the members: “I am not going to record these votes because we do not have to. There is no legal requirement.” (p. 104 in my book.) Greenspan thus removed any fingerprints on this act of record destruction. Donald Kohn, who is now Vice Chairman of the Board of Governors at the Federal Reserve, answered some questions I had sent to Chairman Greenspan about this destruction. Kohn replied in a letter on November 1, 2001 to me at the University of Texas that they had destroyed the source records for 1994, 1995 and 1996, they did not believe it to be illegal and there was no plan to end this practice. That is one reason why the Federal Reserve audit supported by Congressman Ron Paul is needed. The Fed must stop destroying its records.

    [1] Marcy Gordon, “Banker Imprisoned in BNL Case Tells Story to House Committee,” The Associated Press, November 9, 1993.

    [2] U.S. Newswire: “Former Executive of Atlanta Agency of Italian-Owned Bank Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy”, from U.S. Department of Justice, Public Affairs, June 2, 1992.

    [3] Peter Mantius, “Drogoul given 37 months Judge in BNL case also blasts actions of U.S. prosecutors,” The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, December 10, 1993, Section A, p. 12.

    Robert Auerbach is Professor of Public Affairs at the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs, The University of Texas at Austin. He was an economist with the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee during the tenure of four Federal Reserve Chairmen: Arthur Burns, William Miller, Paul Volcker, and Alan Greenspan. Auerbach also served as an economist in the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Domestic Monetary Affairs during the first year of the Ronald Reagan administration and as a financial economist with the U.S. Federal Reserve System. Auerbach has been a professor of economics at the American University in Washington, D.C. (1976-83), and a professor of economics and finance at the University of California-Riverside (1983-93). He has written numerous articles, and two textbooks in banking and financial markets. He received two Masters degrees in economics, one from the University of Chicago and one from Roosevelt University, where he studied under Abba Lerner, and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Chicago, where he studied under Milton Friedman.

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  • Convicted ex-cop fails drug test, charged with violating probation VIDEO

    CHICAGO (STMW) — Former Chicago cop Anthony Abbate — convicted of beating a female bartender half his size in a drunken attack that went viral last year — has been charged with violating probation for testing positive for opiates.

    Abbate, 41, appeared in court Friday before Judge Arthur Hill, who set bond at $40,000 for failing a drug test, a provision of his probation, Cook County State’s Attorney’s office spokesman Andy Conklin said. He will next appear in court on March 12.

    Abbate tested positive for opiates in January, in violation of probation, which was issued following his conviction for felony aggravated battery last June for beating Karolina Obrycka on Feb. 19, 2007 in a Northwest Side bar. A videotape of the beating, widely circulated on the Internet, showed the 250-pound Abbate pummeling the petite bartender in a drunken attack.

    In addition to two years probation, Abbate was ordered to perform 130 hours of community service  at a homeless shelter and attend anger management classes. He was also ordered to serve a strict 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew during the probation period and undergo drug and alcohol evaluations.

    A federal civil suit was filed by Obrycka, a manager and another employee of the bar in April 2007. A status hearing for that suit, which seeks at least $1 million, is scheduled for March 3 in U.S. District Court.

    Abbate was fired by the Chicago Police Dept. in December 2009 due to department rules regarding felons on the force.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Cops bust alleged drug dealer in Aurora

    Kane County Sheriff’s police found more than 500 grams of suspected cannabis and 150 pills of a pain killer with nearly the same potency as morphine in an Aurora residence Thursday night, police said Friday.

    The sheriff’s Special Operations Unit made the discovery while executing a search warrant at 803 Kensington Place. In addition to the drugs, police found $7,500 in cash.

    Police arrested the homeowner, Robert A. Hammond, 68, and charged him with unlawful possession of a controlled substance with the intent to deliver, unlawful possession of a controlled substance, unlawful possession of cannabis with the intent to deliver, unlawful possession of cannabis and unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia.

    Hammond was being held at the Kane County jail on $350,000 bond. He is expected to appear in court again on Saturday.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Accused North Aurora child abuser innocent

    The attorney for a North Aurora man accused of burning an 18-month-old boy with a “caustic liquid” called the incident an “unfortunate accident” Friday, but said his client is not guilty of a crime.

    Jason Barnes, 36, of the 700 block of Lloyd Lane, is charged with heinous battery and aggravated domestic battery in the Aug. 15, 2009, incident, which resulted in third-degree burns to the child’s lower half and his toes being amputated.

    Barnes’ attorney, Frank Giampoli, did not discuss the case in detail but said his client never intended to harm the child. “We believe it was a very unfortunate accident,” he said. “There was no culpability on Jason’s behalf, and we intend to show that in court.”

    Barnes, who is related to the child, was indicted by a Kane County grand jury Dec. 1 on charges he poured a “caustic liquid” on the boy while standing near a sink. The boy’s mother had filed an order of protection against Barnes in 2008, but he was granted visitation rights last May.

    In court Friday, Barnes’ attorney told Judge Timothy Q. Sheldon he is investigating whether he can continue to represent Barnes due to a potential conflict of interest.

    Giampoli said his wife was a trauma coordinator at the hospital where the boy was treated for burns, and he spoke briefly to a doctor who treated the boy during a Christmas party last year, though the case itself never came up in conversations among them.

    “I don’t know of anything that would present a conflict,” Giampoli said, noting his wife as trauma coordinator “would not be involved in the actual treatment of a patient.”

    The defense also is attempting to introduce a witness statement given by the boy’s minor sister.

    If convicted of the most serious offense, Barnes could be sentenced to six to 45 years in prison, or up to 60 years if he is eligible for an extended sentence. He was on probation for aggravated driving under the influence at the time of his arrest last year and has prior arrests for disorderly conduct and resisting police, according to court records.

    Barnes is free on $500,000 bond and scheduled to return to court March 25.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Spy Shots: 2012 Hyundai Accent

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    2012 Hyundai Accent – Click above for high-res image gallery

    With all the new product coming out of Hyundai, the Azera and Accent are beginning to stand out like the proverbial sore thumbs. To rectify the latter, Hyundai has begun testing the next Accent in the Great White North.

    Since the upcoming Veloster will fill the hatch-sized space in Hyundai’s line-up, there’s a good chance that the next Accent will only be available in sedan form when it hits the market in the next two years. In four-door form, the Accent employs the now-standard sweeping roofline of its bigger Sonata sibling, and underneath the camouflage we expect a similar fascia and liberal application of chrome.

    Early indications suggest that the i20‘s platform will be used to underpin the new Accent, with power supplied Hyundai’s next generation 1.6-liter inline four, capable of producing around 140 horsepower. If all goes according to plan, we suspect the all-new Accent will make an appearance later this year or early next, with sales beginning in the middle of 2011.

    Spy Shots: 2012 Hyundai Accent originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 26 Feb 2010 18:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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