Author: Serkadis

  • Video Must See: Post Netbook & Ipad Computing – View of the Future

     

    hattip to Nick Gogerty for this – Nick’s post has 2 other videos and a book reference.

    The singularity and the real future of computing, post netbook – Nick Gogerty – The future isn’t going to be like the past, netbooks are nice and will have a 3 year life of novelty before they become another banal niche in the silecosystem.  Watch this 7 minute video and think about how fast the future is going to be here.  The technology that delivers this is unfolding no matter what happens in the economy.Designing Better Futures

    ted1  <<< Click to watch, or view below

  • Camper Van Beethoven Funds Their SXSW Trip By Letting Fans Sponsor Songs At Their Performance

    American rock band Camper Van Beethoven is traveling to South by SouthWest this year without the support of a record label, so in order to raise funds, they’re selling off the right to choose the songs that go on to their setlist for the 2 shows that they’re going to play. The first 35 fans to pony up $102 get:

    • A Santa Cruz Roller Derby Girl will walk/skate across the stage carrying a placard announcing your sponsorship of the song, within full view of the audience or cameras, to have the moment captured on film or video for all of eternity!
    • You can have up to 4 names or one business on each placard.

    Sounds like an excellent leveraging of a few of the scarcities that we’ve mentioned here before, in this case, attention, exclusivity and patronage. With the “Santa Cruz Roller Derby Girl,” CVB’s personality definitely shines through in this unique offer that should resonate nicely with their fans (in fact, I learned of this promotion via a friend sharing it through Google Buzz). So, once again, it’s great to see yet another label-free band (who once was on Virgin, years ago, actually), explore new and creative ways to give their fans a reason to buy.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Appellate court stops grave removal at St. Johannes Cemetery

    A state appellate court granted a temporary restraining order Thursday evening that will stop further disinterments at St. Johnnanes Cemetery which borders O’Hare Airport.

    The City of Chicago had started removing graves from the historic cemetery this week.

    The graves were being removed to make way for the airport expansion project.

    Relatives of those buried at St. Johannes Cemetery have been part of a long and emotional battle to keep the city from disturbing the gravesites. They say the process will be long and slow and they realize how emotional it will be for relatives of those buried there.

    What had started this week in the shadow of a busy runway at O’Hare comes after a nearly decade long battle in the courts over religious rights and eminent domain – a city that wants to grow its airport versus a church that wants to preserve a resting ground for eternity.

    Earlier this month, the city won title to the cemetery in a condemnation action, and will pay the church $630,000.

    There was another disinterment Thursday at St Johannes Cemetery. It was a solemn occasion for relatives who’ve asked for a measure of privacy in what has been a very public, eight-year long legal fight.

    The cemetery – which sits right off O’Hare runway 10-left 28-right – was started by St. Johannes Church in 1849. It’s unclear exactly how many are buried there. By one estimate it’s around 1,200. They were all to be moved to make way for a new runway that would cut directly through the center of the burial ground. Thursday’s restraining order put a stop to that.

    Earlier this month, the city won its legal fight, took title to the five-acre cemetery, and began the process of contacting next of kin.

    “We know it’s an emotional process and we want to make it as seamless as possible and provide them the necessary support to get them through this process,” said Rosemarie Andolino, Chicago aviation commissioner.

    The disinterments so far – roughly 20, the city says – have been voluntary. Some of the grave sites are being relocated at a nearby cemetery in Elmhurst.

    But others with family at St Johannes remain furious at what they contend is an unnecessary land grab, and a fundamental violation of their religious rights.

    Some were angered by information on the city’s Web site saying that the cemetery office would not permit family members to be present at the grave site of their loved ones, nor could they be present during transfer of remains.

    ABC7 asked about that Thursday, and a spokesperson said it was a mistake. Shortly thereafter, it was removed from the Web site.

    Family members, ABC7 was told, have in fact been allowed to witness the disinterments. The city planned to expedite the grave removal come spring, but locating remains of early settlers – like the church’s first pastor and his large family, all buried in pine boxes – cannot be rushed. “It’s a very sensitive process. It’s a very careful process, but one they are very skilled at so we left it to the professionals to insure we have the best provider of this service here,” said Andolino.

    ABC7 asked how successful the city’s been in locating next of kin to all those buried at St. Johannes. The answer at this point is unclear. The city is paying for all the grave relocations, provided they’re within a 50-mile radius.

    Those most fervently opposed to the city’s action didn’t want to talk on camera Thursday.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Ferrari’s profits fell 28% in 2009, sales down 5%

    Italian supercar maker Ferrari SpA said that its operating profits fell 28 percent in 2009, due to “unfavorable exchange rates” including a weak dollar. Ferrari said sales were down 5 percent, to 6,250 units, while revenue fell 7 percent to $2.4 billion. Operating profit fell from $465 million in 2008 to $334 million.

    Ferrari Chairman Luca di Montezemolo said that the “challenging economic climate” will make 2010 a difficult year “and the first small signs of recovery will not come until next autumn.”

    Click here to price the Ferrari California.

    The brightest spot for Ferrari last year was the new California, bringing in 60 percent of new customers to the brand. The new Ferrari 458 Italia went on sale late last year, thus having a minimal contribution to revenue in 2009.

    Ferrari plans on having 60 retail stores open by the end of 2011.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: Inside Line


  • HTC TouchPro2(GSM) WMPU series ROM

    image

    The WMPowerUser series ROM was released for the TouchPro2 two weeks ago, and like I promised, I will update the ROMz. This post is asking you what you found wrong with your TouchPro2(GSM) ROM, and of course we will include the newest Sense 2.5 with the Ebook readers and more.

     

    Please Comment below and give us your feedback as to what you want us to improve, fix, change in the next update we will release soon. We will also include some new devices when this ROM and others are update.

  • Geneva Preview: Ford announces new turbo’d 203-hp 2.0-liter for Mondeo

    Filed under: , , ,

    Ford C-Max at the 2010 Geneva Motor Show – Click above for high-res image gallery

    One of the more than 100 reveals at next month’s Geneva Motor Show will be the new Ford C-Max and Grand C-Max. Referred to as “Multi-Activity Vehicles” by The Blue Oval, the two C-cars offer a five-seater in the C-Max and a seven-seater in its Grand sibling, that latter also providing twin sliding doors. Ford’s Human Interface System bows as well, with new interactivity and operated through two five-way toggles on the steering wheel.

    Beside those two debutantes will be a Ford Kuga with a new powertrain, getting a more powerful 163-horsepower, 2.0-liter Duratorq TDCi diesel, and an optional Powershift gearbox that emits less CO2. The Mondeo is another recipient of a heart transplant, benefiting from an all-new 203-horsepower, 2.0-liter Ford EcoBoost SCTi gas engine. Follow the jump for all the information from Ford, and get your pre-Geneva high-res peek in the gallery below.

    [Source: Ford]

    Continue reading Geneva Preview: Ford announces new turbo’d 203-hp 2.0-liter for Mondeo

    Geneva Preview: Ford announces new turbo’d 203-hp 2.0-liter for Mondeo originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 18:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Suburban building evacuated after bomb threat

    SKOKIE, Ill. (STMW)  — Illinois State Police are on the scene of a state building in north suburban Skokie for a possible bomb threat.

    The building for the Illinois Department of Health and Human Services, at 8020 St. Louis Ave. in Skokie was evacuated about 10 a.m. for a possible bomb threat, Illinois State Police Trooper James Madden said.

    Emergency crews arrived on the scene at 11 a.m. and Illinois State Police remained on the scene at 2 p.m., Madden said.

    Cook County Sheriff’s police are also responding, Madden said.

    A Cook County Sheriff’s police spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Infomercial king avoids jail, for now

    CHICAGO (STMW)  — Informercial and Internet health “cures” pitchman Kevin Trudeau won’t go to jail, for now.

    An appeals court granted Trudeau’s emergency appeal Thursday and said it will hear it next week.

    Trudeau appealed after a federal judge in Chicago ordered him to surrender this afternoon to serve a 30-day jail sentence for criminal contempt of court for urging supporters to flood the judge with e-mails.

    Trudeau filed his appearl Wednesday night after U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman sentenced him to 30 days in prison after previously finding Trudeau in direct criminal contempt of court.

    That finding came after Trudeau supporters deluged the judge with 300 e-mails, locking up Gettleman’s e-mail system and shutting down his BlackBerry for part of the day last week.

    “This was an attempt by Mr. Trudeau to harass, intimidate and influence the court,” Gettleman said.

    He said Trudeau posted the judge’s e-mail address online and asked listeners of his radio show and those who visit his Web site to e-mail Gettleman. Gettleman said Trudeau falsely told listeners the judge wanted to burn all of his books and fine him tens of millions of dollars.

    Gettleman is presiding over a civil case filed by the Federal Trade Commission involving deceptive ads for a Trudeau weight-loss book.

    Trudeau’s lawyers argued in their appeal that the jail sentence went too far. “Mr Trudeau still must suffer the ‘dark stain’ of a criminal conviction for what at worst was a foolish mistake,” the lawyers told the higher court.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Former House speaker keeps publicly funded office

    YORKVILLE, Ill. (AP) – Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert has spent about $1 million in taxpayer money to keep an office and staff in the Chicago suburb of Yorkville, paying three former staffers salaries of more than $100,000 a year to work there.

    Hastert retired from Congress in 2007.

    The Chicago Tribune reported Thursday that the 68-year-old lobbyist and business consultant’s office is funded through a federal law that allows former House speakers to have an office for up to five years to deal with issues pertaining to their time as speaker.

    The news Web site Politico first reported on the use of taxpayer money for Hastert’s office, according to the Tribune.

    Hastert spokesman Brad Hahn said the former speaker keeps his business endeavors separate from the office, which is next to the Kendall County Courthouse. Hahn said spending is well below the annual allowance for the office.

    Staffers at the Yorkville office sort through documents and mementos from Hastert’s time in the U.S. House, Hahn said, and they take requests for Hastert to give free speeches. Hahn said the office works with nonprofit groups as well as the J. Dennis Hastert Center for Economics, Government and Public Policy at Wheaton College.

    A spokesman for Waubonsee Community College in Sugar Grove said the school has held classes at the office.

    Hastert’s eight years as speaker made him the longest-serving Republican to hold the job. Hahn said he did not know how long the office would remain open.

    According to a review of the office’s spending by the Tribune, an administrative assistant is paid $138,551 a year, and two secretaries earn $116,365 and $101,000 a year.

    The $6,300 in monthly rent for the office is paid to a company partially owned by three sons of a Hastert business partner, the newspaper reported, and an $860-a-month vehicle lease is paid to a dealership owned by a Hastert campaign donor. Hahn said the vehicle lease won’t be renewed when it ends in March.

    Taxpayer money also pays for computers, phones, utilities and travel, among other expenses.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • CTA talks with Rev. Jackson

    CHICAGO (WBBM)  — Spokespersons for the CTA, its operating unions and the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition say Friday’s meeting between CTA Chairman Terry Peterson and the Rev. Jesse Jackson won’t be a negotiating session — just a chance for CTA to explain its side of the issues to Rev. Jackson.

    Spokespersons for Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) Locals 241 and 308 said they will not be a part of the meeting.

    Rev. Jackson has issued statements sympathetic to the unions’ position, and has accused CTA of implementing service cuts Feb. 7 that unfairly penalized far south side residents.

    CTA has denied the accusation.

    Union representatives are expected to be part of a rally and meeting Saturday at Rainbow/PUSH headquarters, 950 E. 50th St.

    The CTA and its unions now expect to meet Friday to discuss possible concessions that would allow service to be restored and laid-off employees recalled.

    Peterson said Wednesday that he made it clear to Rev. Jackson, when setting up the meeting, that what CTA’s operating unions have offered in the way of concessions won’t work.

    “We actually have gone through it point by point,” Peterson said. “It would actually cost the agency $78 million on top of the $95 million deficit that we have.”

    The executive board of ATU Division 241, which represents bus drivers and maintenance personnel, was meeting Thursday to discuss whether it would agree to accept a six-month delay in the 2011 pay raise, due under terms of a five-year contract, and whether it would agree to extend the contract, with a pay freeze, through 2013.

    Peterson indicated in a letter to the unions Wednesday that he would be pleased to defer next year’s pay increase until July, and would like to extend the existing contract to freeze pay in 2012 and 2013, as proposed by the union. But he said he needs $95 million in savings in 2010, and said a pay freeze two years out won’t solve the CTA’s immediate crisis.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • TouchPro(GSM) WMPU Series ROM

    image

    The HTC Touchpro(GSM) ROM was released a while ago, and it seems that it was very successful. The ROM users reported back and gave it the fastest and most stable ROM they have ever flashed. This question then seems kind of pointless but we want to know how you like the ROM and what you would like to see in the next coming update? We would like to know the bugs, improvements, tweaks you want us to fix and add to the next version.

    If you are currently running this on your device, please comment below and tell us what you think.

  • MAURITIUS-POLITICS: Plea for More Female Candidates

    By Nasseem Ackbarally* PORT-LOUIS , Feb 18 (IPS) Sandhya Boygah considers herself a victim of male-dominated politics. In 2007, she was asked by her party, the ruling Labour Party, to step aside and allow a man to stand for the elected post she sought.

    After long days of intense canvassing; of lobby ministers and even the Prime Minister; and neglecting her family and children, Boygah thought she would be nominated for the post of chairperson of the Pamplemousses/Rivière du Rempart District Council, in northern Mauritius.

    "Unfortunately, when the time came the party preferred a man. I was really hurt," she recalled.

    She added that she will insist her party nominate her as a candidate for the July elections. (In Mauritius a candidate must be nominated by the leader of their political party before they can stand for elected office. The alternative is to run as an independent candidate.)

    It has been three years since Boygah was asked to step aside because of her gender and, while progress has been made towards achieving increased female representation in politics, it remains far too slow for some.

    Rights organisations say too few women are being nominated by leaders of political parties as candidates in local, regional and national elections. Of the members of parliament (MPs), only 17 percent (12 out of the 70 members) are women, in municipalities only 11.2 percent of politicians are women. And in the district councils the number is lower, with only 5.2 percent female representation. Though this is an increase from 2005 where only 5.4 percent of MPs were women.

    There have been increasing calls to improve female representation in parliament ahead of July’s national assembly elections – where members are elected to parliament by voting in multi-member constituencies.

    Mauritius currently lags behind the 30 female representation in parliament by 2010 it agreed to when it signed the 2005 Southern African Development Community (SADC) Declaration on Gender and Development. The agreement, however, is not binding.

    A local non-governmental organisation, Women In Networking (WIN), is circulating a petition calling for increased female representation in parliament. They hope to obtain 50,000 signatures by the end of March when the petition will be handed over to political leaders.

    "We want things to change for the upcoming election due later this year," said Paula Atchia, a member of WIN affiliate, Women in Politics (WIP). WIP has asked all political parties to nominate at least one female candidate for every three candidates in each of the 20 constituencies of the island.

    Paul Berenger, head of the opposition Mouvement Militant Mauricien (MMM), may have promised to nominate a woman as speaker of parliament if his party comes to power in the next election, but WIP is sceptical. "This is not our goal. We want one in three candidates. Let us do it now," Atchia said.

    Other rights activists have called for a compulsory quota system to be introduced. "Without a quota, we’ll not get enough women as candidates," said Professor Ameenah Gurib-Fakim, Vice-Chancellor at the University of Mauritius.

    But this may not happen for a while. While a conservative culture has been partially blamed for lack of female representation in politics, the country’s constitution is also hindering transformation.

    Mauritius remains one of two countries that have not signed the binding SADC Protocol on Gender and Development – which commits countries to work towards the goal of having 50 percent women in political and decision-making positions by 2015 – because it contradicts the country’s constitution. A quota system will contradict the clause in the constitution that promotes equality, experts say.

    Nita Kumaree Deerpalsing, an MP from the ruling Labour Party, explained that the concept of gender equality in the constitution means one gender cannot be privileged over another.

    "Mauritius subscribes to gender equality and this has been noted in the passing of the Equal Opportunity Act. But some of the clauses of the SADC protocol deal with quotas and when you deal with the Equal Opportunity Act and a society that believes in equality, the quotas then just go against what the nation believes and stands for," Deerpalsing said.

    She said Mauritius is a sovereign country with its own laws and government had to be careful how it interprets international codes, such as the SADC protocol. She said any international agreement signed by Mauritius had to comply with the country’s laws.

    "The problem is legal so it has to be dealt with legally and they have to find gaps to try and solve the issue. The process has already started but will take time to identify the gaps because the constitution is good as a whole," Deerpalsing said.

    Loga Virahsawmy, the director of Gender Links (Mauritius and Francophone Office) agreed, adding that the constitution needed to be preserved.

    "We have a very good constitution and we cannot amend it because of one article, so we just have to look for ways around the problem," Virahsawmy said.

    Deerpalsing said that until this was finalised, political parties had to commit to nominating more women to run for political office.

    "The main political parties have to align more women on their lists – that way the number of female MPs can increase. Women across the country have become conscious of the fact that there is low female representation and they are starting to get involved in politics," she said.

    Virahsawmy said women in Mauritius wanted to venture into politics and have shown interest through their different political parties. "They are beginning to head committees and (are) taking up more leadership roles," Virahsawmy said.

    Rishy Kumar Choony, former chairman of the Moka-Flacq District Council (East), agrees that women have an important role to play in politics.

    Choony nominated two women to his 12-member council after he realised they were able to successfully tackle the social problems that affected his village.

    He added that many men still believed a woman’s place was at home: "Religion and culture have not been very helpful either in taking the women out of their home." He is presently training his 16-year-old daughter in political skills so that she can take his place one day.

    Dany Marie, member of Rezistans ek Alternativ, a small political movement, said there still remained certain factors that discouraged women to become involved in politics. One of these, she said, is the fact that most women work in sectors where being active in politics is against employment regulations.

    She added that women also worked in areas, like the manufacturing industry and call centres, where the hours are so long and irregular that they had little time for pursuits apart from work and their family responsibilities.

    Boygah has called on Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam, who heads the Labour Party, to offer 50 percent of the party’s election tickets to women in the next election.

    "Is he ready to play such a game?" asked Boygah.

    *Additional reporting by Marshall Patsanza

  • Joe Weisenthal Explains The China Bubble On Russia Today

    Last night our own Joe Weisenthal went on Russia Today to explain the China bubble.

    If you want to catch up fast on some of the issues, watch this video, because unlike on your typical cable news gabfest, the segment doesn’t wrap up in 90 seconds. The host Alyona Minkovski actually hosts a discussion, which is very refreshing.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Changing Your Diet To A Low Carb Vegetarian Diet

    More and more people are beginning to make lifestyle choices to benefit their health and are following a vegetarian diet. There are substantial positive health impacts that getting rid of meat from your diet can bring. Luckily these days there are more vegetarian options being served up in restaurants and more vegetarian products being produced and sold at supermarkets.

    vegetarian diet 272x300 Changing Your Diet To A Low Carb Vegetarian Diet

    The chief benefit that you will enjoy if you are following a vegetarian diet is a better health outcome. Vegetarians are estimated to consume about 25 percent less saturated fat in their diet. This means they rarely have problems with obesity or type II adult onset diabetes.

    Since vegetarians consume less animal fats, they also tend to avoid many problems such as high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol, angina, heart attacks and strokes. Lower cholesterol levels keep the blood circulating through the body more easily and it does not place undue pressure on the heart.

    There is also irrefutable proof that eating vegetarian can prevent certain types of cancer from occurring in the body. Countless studies have shown time and time again that high consumption of fruits and vegetables and lower intake of meat can reduce cancer risk by around 50 percent. The antioxidant properties of some vegetables and especially cruciferous vegetables can protect the body from cancer causing agents.

    People who have digestion problems should seriously consider changing to a vegetarian diet. Heavy and dense meat products take a long time for the body to digest, this can lead to a sluggish digestion system that is unable to fully eliminate waste. After a while, the inability to get rid of waste effectively can lead to stomach, colon or intestinal cancer. Vegetarians eat foods that are much more easily digested and therefore can avoid many digestive problems.

    Eating meat can not only cause health problems for you, but it can also be detrimental to the environment. Beef and other meat production have a serious impact on the environment. For example, much of the Amazon Jungle is being cut down and destroyed to make space for cattle farms and stations. If you cut out meat, then you are reducing the total global demand for meat. Your contribution may not seem like much, but if many of us make a change we can make a real impact in a positive way.

    Research done into the environmental impact of meat production indicates that it is one of the most damaging industries. It is responsible for a lot of habitat loss, water and air pollution and the extinction of different species. Among meat production, beef and pork are considered to have the worst environmental impact. This is a very important reason to significantly reduce your meat consumption and move towards becoming a vegetarian.

    By deciding to follow a vegetarian diet meal plan you can increase your life expectancy, as well as improve your quality of life as you age. You will enjoy significant health benefits from refraining from eating meat that will protect you from several dangerous and debilitating diseases and illnesses. A change to a vegetarian weight loss diets will also help to protect the environment from the effects of meat production.

    Changing Your Diet To A Low Carb Vegetarian Diet is a post from the Vegetarian Vitamins Guide blog where you can find suggestions and advice from vegetarians and vegans on vegetarian diets, supplements, vitamins and overall nutrition.

    Related Vegetarian Vitamins Posts:

    1. A Guide in Becoming a Vegetarian Becoming a vegetarian is an ideal for many people that…
    2. Why Are So Few Christians Vegetarians? I recently asked in another question whether Christians cared less…
    3. The Proper Plannings For A Vegetarian Diet Special care must be taken when planning a vegetarian…
    4. Facts About Being a Vegetarian A vegetarian is defined as one who does not…
    5. Healthy Vegetarian Nutritional Diet Our health needs proper nourishment and nutritional diet with…
  • Afghan road mixes beauty, madness and death

    Filed under:

    Have you been considering driving from Kabul to Jalalabad in Afghanistan lately? We have some advice for you: Don’t do it. Not because you’re going to get captured and beheaded by Al Queda or suicide bombed by the Taliban (but hey, both of those things could happen), but rather we advise specifically against the driving part. Yeah, us, Autoblog – we’re telling you not to drive. Why? The road, you see, is much too dangerous.

    The curving, climbing, dropping, tiny guard-railed, high-altitude road was built by the West Germans in the 1960s and then promptly blown apart by the Soviets in the 1980s. The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in the 1990s didn’t exactly fill the pot holes (they are rumored to be elephant size or larger), and while the U.S. incursion might be there to win the hearts and minds of the Afghan people, we’re A) dropping a lot of bombs that tend to blow things up B) not focused on tarmac. Even if the road were Autobahn-smooth it’s barely two-lanes wide and heavily trafficked by over-loaded semi-trucks.

    There’s also the fact that most Afghanies don’t have anything even resembling a driver’s license and are probably driving Ladas. Says local fish monger Mohammed Nabi, “I sit right here and watch people crash all day long. The course of history has proved that the Afghan people are bullies. This is why we cannot drive safely.” Then there’s our favorite part:

    The only note of caution is provided by children, who live in the impoverished villages nearby. Often as young as 4 or 5, they stand bedraggled at the bends, using flattened green Sprite bottles as flags, waving the drivers through when the way is clear.

    Safety first!

    [Source: New York Times | Image: RuckSackKruemel – Licensed Under CC2.0]

    Afghan road mixes beauty, madness and death originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Four arraigned in Waukegan shooting

    Four Waukegan men charged in connection with the robbery and shooting of another man pleaded not guilty to a number of charges Thursday in Lake County circuit court.

    A prosecutor said it is possible that murder charges will be filed against one or more of the suspects as the victim of the crime, Andres Marin, 42, died Tuesday night of what is believed to be complications from his wound.

    Assistant State’s Attorney Ari Fisz said Michael J. Cook, 19, is accused of firing a sawed-off .22-caliber rifle into Marin’s abdomen during the Jan. 22 robbery.

    Cook is charged with attempted murder, armed violence, armed robbery and aggravated battery with a firearm.

    Ja’Frai Bradshaw, 19, and Christopher Davis and Darrius Gunn, both 18, are charged with armed violence, armed robbery and aggravated battery with a firearm.

    Police said the four men saw Marin sitting in his car in the 2000 block of Western Avenue just after 11:30 p.m. and decided to rob him.

    After they took Marin’s cell phone, Cook shot him once and they fled from the scene, police said.

    Witnesses identified Gunn as one of the group seen running from the area and all suspects were arrested within 10 hours of the shooting.

    Fisz said he will determine if other charges will be filed in the case after reviewing the autopsy report and other evidence.

    Cook is being held on $2 million bond, Gunn and Bradshaw on $1.5 million bonds, and Davis on a $750,000 bond.

    All four face prison sentences of between 15 and 30 years if convicted of the charges they are facing now and are due in court again March 11.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Prison inmate charged in 2004 Carpentersville gang slaying

    A former Carpentersville man locked up in state prison for his part in a 2005 shooting is facing new murder charges alleging he gunned down a rival gang member nearly six years ago in the victim’s home.

    Jesus Lechuga, 26, was indicted this week by a Kane County grand jury on two counts of first-degree murder stemming from the March 1, 2004, slaying of Jose Covarrubias in the 900 block of Chippewa Circle in Carpentersville.

    The 23-year-old construction worker was shot in the head just after midnight that morning when he answered a knock on his bedroom window, authorities said.

    Carpentersville police Cmdr. Tim Bosshart did not have information regarding a motive for the shooting, but said Lechuga and Covarrubias were members of opposing gangs.

    Lechuga, he said, was a suspect from the start. But because there were no eyewitnesses to the shooting, it took investigators significant time to locate witnesses who could link him to the murder and determine if they were reliable.

    “Typically when you’re dealing with these kinds of people, there can be credibility questions, so we wanted to get them before a grand jury and get (their testimony) locked in,” Bosshart said.

    Investigators, Bosshart added, knew they could methodically build their case against Lechuga because he has been incarcerated on other charges since shortly after the murder.

    Illinois Department of Corrections records show Lechuga was sentenced in June 2004 to seven years in prison for separate burglary and weapons offenses. He was charged with unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon just 12 days after the slaying when police found him with a loaded shotgun.

    A Boone County judge later sentenced him to another 18 years behind bars for an aggravated battery with a firearm conviction stemming from a 2005 shooting.

    Lechuga currently is serving his time at the maximum security Menard Correctional Center. Bosshart said the Kane County State’s Attorney’s office will take steps to bring him back to the county to face the new charges.

    Covarrubias’ family has stayed in touch with the case’s lead investigator in the nearly six years since the shooting and were relieved to learn of the charges, Bosshart said.

    “The parents have been cooperative from the beginning,” he said. “We’re really happy to get this cleared for their sake.”

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Appeals court stays infomercial pitchman’s jailing

    An appeals court has issued a last-minute order staying an author and infomercial pitchman’s 30-day jail sentence for unleashing a flood of e-mails that locked up a federal judge’s computer and his BlackBerry.

    Author Kevin Trudeau says he learned of the stay 25 minutes before the hearing at which he had been expecting to be jailed.

    U.S. District Judge Robert W. Gettleman, who is presiding over a legal battle between the Federal Trade Commission and Trudeau, last week found the infomercial king in criminal contempt after he urged his supporters to deluge Gettleman with e-mails decrying the federal case. He ordered the 30-day sentence.

    The appeals judges did not say why they ordered the stay.

    Gettleman also cut a $50,000 fine against Trudeau to $5,000.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Professor says carp-related lock closure costs exaggerated

    TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — Government officials and Illinois businesses are overstating the economic pain that would result from closing Chicago-area shipping locks to block the Asian carp’s path to the Great Lakes, two transportation specialists said Thursday.

    Costs of transporting and handling cargo on Chicago waterways would rise by about $70 million a year if two locks were shut as Michigan and neighboring states want, said Wayne State University business professor John Taylor and James Roach, a transportation consultant.

    That’s a tiny fraction of the city’s $521 billion economy and much less damage than the $7 billion fishing industry could suffer from a carp invasion, Taylor and Roach said in a telephone conference. They were hired by the Michigan attorney general’s office to conduct the study and said they’d been paid less than $50,000.

    They acknowledged closure would have “negative impacts” on Chicago barge and tour boat operators but said freight could be transferred to rail cars, trucks or pipelines without substantial new costs or traffic jams.

    “The claims that even a temporary closure will devastate the local economy and Illinois’ role in the regional, national and global economy cannot reasonably be supported,” Roach said.

    Taylor and Roach are serving as expert witnesses in Michigan’s lawsuit asking the U.S. Supreme Court to order closure of the locks and eventual separation of the Great Lakes and Mississippi River basins.

    Their analysis shows likely harm to Chicago is “dramatically less” than its business and political leaders claim, said John Selleck, spokesman for Mike Cox, Michigan’s attorney general.

    “The losses would be much higher than that,” responded Lynn Muench, vice president of the American Waterway Operators, a trade group representing barge and tug companies.

    Her organization has not calculated cost estimates but the Illinois Chamber of Commerce is conducting a study, said Jim Farrell, director of its infrastructure council.

    More than $16 billion worth of goods are transported on Illinois rivers annually, Farrell said in a Supreme Court affidavit. State officials said shipping cargo through just one lock — the O’Brien — costs $190 million a year less than transporting it on land.

    “The economic harm that will result from the closure of the O’Brien and the Chicago locks is real and significant,” Farrell said.

    Taylor and Roach said shutting the locks wouldn’t halt shipping on the 70-mile-long network of canals and rivers. Instead, freight could be unloaded below the locks and hauled a short distance in trucks, rail cars or pipelines. That would create more jobs than the barge industry would lose, they said.

    About 7 million tons of cargo a year would be affected — less than 1 percent of freight traffic in the Chicago area, the study said, adding that affected barge traffic would be the equivalent of two loaded railroad trains.

    Farrell said the report failed to consider higher costs and unemployment resulting from freight traffic disruption, while understating the locks’ importance to shipping. During the year beginning June 2008, more than 3,800 loaded barges passed through the O’Brien lock, the equivalent of 306,000 truckloads, he said.

    During two recent public meetings, dozens of tour boat company workers said closing the locks would put them out of business.

    The debate has overshadowed a wide-ranging battle plan announced by the Obama administration this month. It includes more than two dozen actions, including use of nets and poisons to nab Asian carp that may have slipped beyond an electric barrier 25 miles south of Lake Michigan.

    Illinois authorities began netting and electrofishing operations Wednesday and continued Thursday but had yet to catch any of the despised fish, despite DNA test results suggesting their presence in the waterway.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services