Murder rates would be up to five times higher than they are but for medical developments over the past 40 years. According to new research, doctors are saving the lives of thousands of victims of attack who four decades ago would have died and become murder statistics. Although the study is based on US data, the researchers say the principle applies to other countries too: "There is reason to expect a similar trend overall in Britain," said Dr Anthony Harris, the lead author of the study. read more
The state's parole board has released 39 "emerging adult" murder convicts who were originally sentenced to life without parole, but who later became eligible after a court ruling. The Massachusetts Parole Board has issued 51 parole decisions since the Supreme Judicial Court last year ruled that emerging adults who were 18 to 20 at the time of the offense cannot be sentenced to life without parole. read more
Defense attorney Joe Tamburino, who is not affiliated with the case, reviewed the decision and analyzed it for KARE 11 News. He says Judge West ruled that the state's case "relied heavily on circumstantial evidence," and that she believed the state didn't rule out other "reasonable inferences." "That in fact, there could have been other reasonable theories other than guilt in this case. That's what it comes down to," Tamburino said. Despite the ruling, even Judge West wrote that she is "troubled by the manner in which fraud was able to be perpetuated at Promise Health." read more
The Kansas City Chiefs plan to abandon their longtime home in Jackson County and build a new multibillion-dollar complex in Kansas City, Kansas, with the help of a massive public subsidy. read more
His library foundation has told the I.R.S. that by the end of 2027 it expects to bring in just $11.3 million " not nearly enough for a traditional presidential library. read more
REINHASSEXWITHABOT,
Julie K. Brown wrote in her book "Perversion of Justice" that the Miami Herald, Brown's employer, paid to fly Annie Farmer -- a purported Epstein victim -- to Little Rock, AR in July 2019. The itinerary shows a round-trip flight for a passenger departing from Austin, TX (where Annie Farmer resides), connecting at Dallas Fort Worth, and arriving in Little Rock.
Julie K. Brown now says she personally booked this flight. It stands to reason that the DOJ would've subpoenaed American Airlines, and other entities, for travel records pertaining to Annie Farmer, as she'd been identified as a purported victim of Epstein/Maxwell. It further stands to reason that Julie K. Brown's name would appear in these records, as the person who booked the flight on Annie Farmer's behalf.
So... there you go. Detective work complete -- free of charge. I apologize for any inconvenience; I realize it's way more exciting to dramatically proclaim that the DOJ must've been maliciously "monitoring" the intrepid investigative journalist Julie K. Brown.
(What reason would the Feds have to monitor Julie? Would've been redundant; she was already assisting them voluntarily, as a de facto journalistic agent for SDNY prosecutors. Whom she profusely thanks by name in the "Acknowledgements" section of her book.)
x.com
#65 | Posted by A_Friend
What are you talking about?
Oneironskull watched the segment and got all misty-eyed for the good old days...
#67 | Posted by Angrydad
When were the good ole days?
I don't even recall the CCP massacring the anti-african protestors in Tiananmen square. Something Snoofy wouldn't even object too when presented with the truth, do you?
www.hamptonthink.org

no one cares what you think. google it for yourself -------.
#21 | POSTED BY ALEXANDRITE
Nah. You can't defend your statements and sources or be the loser everyone knows you are.