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14 Takeways from today's SEC coaches teleconference

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Here’s a look a what each SEC football coach said during today’s teleconference
„I feel like he didn’t play a perfect game (in last Saturday’s 20-19 win at Notre Dame) , don’t get me wrong. We have some things we can clean up. But the last two days, he’s been more crisp. I almost feel there’s a monkey off his back type deal where he can relax and go play. He’s just got to make good decisions and play within the offense.“

© Source: http://www.nola.com/lsu/index.ssf/2017/09/14_takeways_from_todays_sec_co.html
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8 die at Florida nursing home in Irma’s sweltering aftermath

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Patients at a sweltering Hollywood nursing home died in Hurricane Irma’s aftermath as people confronted new hazards in the storm’s wake, including oppressive heat, brush-clearing accidents and poisonous fumes from generators.
Five patients at a sweltering Hollywood nursing home died in Hurricane Irma’s aftermath as people confronted a multitude of new hazards in the storm’s wake, including oppressive heat, brush-clearing accidents and poisonous fumes from generators.
Alfonso Jose Jr., 2, is floated down his flooded street by his parents as the wade through water to reach an open convenience store in the wake of Hurricane Irma in Bonita Springs, Fla., Tuesday, Sept. 12,2017. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) — Eight patients at a sweltering nursing home died after Hurricane Irma knocked out the air conditioning, raising fears Wednesday about the safety of Florida’s 4 million senior citizens amid power outages that could go on for days.
Hollywood Police Chief Tom Sanchez said investigators believe the deaths at the Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills were heat-related, and added: “The building has been sealed off and we are conducting a criminal investigation.”
Gov. Rick Scott called on Florida emergency workers to immediately check on all nursing homes to make sure patients are safe, and he vowed to punish anyone found culpable in the deaths.
“This situation is unfathomable, ” he said.
The home said in a statement that the hurricane had knocked out a transformer that powered the AC.
Exactly how the deaths happened was under investigation, with Sanchez saying authorities have not ruled anything out, including carbon monoxide poisoning from generators. He also said investigators will look into how many windows were open.
Across the street from the stifling nursing home sat a fully air-conditioned hospital, Memorial Regional.
“It’s a sad state of affairs, ” the police chief said. “We all have elderly people in facilities, and we all know we depend on those people in those facilities to care for a vulnerable elderly population.”
The deaths came as people trying to put their lives back together in hurricane-stricken Florida and beyond confronted a multitude of new hazards in the storm’s aftermath, including tree-clearing accidents and lethal generator fumes.
Not counting the nursing home deaths, at least 17 people in Florida have died under Irma-related circumstances, and six more in South Carolina and Georgia, many of them well after the storm had passed. The death toll across the Caribbean stood at 38.
At least six people died of apparent carbon monoxide poisoning from generators in Florida. A Tampa man died after the chain saw he was using to remove trees recoiled and cut his carotid artery.
In Hollywood, four patients were found dead at the nursing home early Wednesday after emergency workers received a call about a person with a heart attack, and four more died later at the hospital, authorities said.
Altogether, more than 100 patients there were found to be suffering in the heat and were evacuated, many on stretchers or in wheelchairs. Patients were treated for dehydration, breathing difficulties and other heat-related ills, authorities said.
Nursing homes in Florida are required by state and federal law to file an emergency plan that includes evacuation plans for residents. County officials released documents showing that the Hollywood facility was in compliance with that regulation and that it held a hurricane drill with its staff in October.
Calls to the owner and other officials at the Hollywood home were not immediately returned, but the facility’s administrator, Jorge Caballo, said in a statement that it was “cooperating fully with relevant authorities to investigate the circumstances that led to this unfortunate and tragic outcome.”
Through a representative, Carballo told the SunSentinel newspaper that the home has a back-up generator but that it does not power the air conditioning.
The nursing home was bought at a bankruptcy auction two years ago after its previous owner went to prison for Medicare fraud, according to news reports at the time of the sale.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which regulates nursing homes, gives the Hollywood center a below-average rating, two stars on its five-star scale. But the most recent state inspection reports showed no deficiencies in the area of emergency plans.
Florida, long one of America’s top retirement destinations, has the highest proportion of people 65 and older of any state — 1 in 5 of its 20 million residents. As of 2016, Florida had about 680 nursing homes.
The number of people without electricity in the steamy late-summer heat was down to 6.8 million. Utility officials warned it could take 10 days or more for power to be fully restored. The number of people in shelters fell to under 13,000.
Elsewhere around the state, a Coral Gables apartment building was evacuated after authorities determined a lack of power made it unsafe for elderly tenants.
And at the huge, 15,000-resident Century Village retirement community in Pembroke Pines, more than half the residential buildings had no power Wednesday afternoon. Rescue crews went door to door in the 94-degree heat to check on people and hand out water, ice and meals.
“These people are basically prisoners in their own homes, ” said Pembroke Pines City Manager Charlie Dodge. “That’s why we are camped out there and doing whatever we can to assist them in this process. And we’ re not leaving.”
Florida Sen. Bill Nelson called the six deaths in Hollywood “an inexcusable tragedy” and demanded a federal investigation.
“We need to make sure we’ re doing everything we can to keep our seniors safe during this difficult time, ” he said.
In the battered Florida Keys, meanwhile, county officials pushed back against a preliminary estimate from the Federal Emergency Management Agency that 25 percent of all homes in the Keys were destroyed and nearly all the rest were heavily damaged.
“Things look real damaged from the air, but when you clear the trees and all the debris, it’s not much damage to the houses, ” said Monroe County Commissioner Heather Carruthers.
The Keys felt Irma’s full fury when the hurricane roared in on Sunday with 130 mph (209 kph) winds. But the extent of the damage has been an unanswered question for days because some places have been unreachable.
In Marathon Key, a Publix grocery store opened under police guard on Tuesday, but residents could buy only 20 items each, and no cigarettes or alcohol allowed, said 70-year-old retiree Elaine Yaquinto.
She said she had yet to see any state or federal agencies or utility companies working on the ground yet. Her home had no electricity or running water, apart from a trickle of cold water that was good enough for a shower.
“It made me feel like normal, ” she said.
President Donald Trump plans to visit Naples, on Florida’s hard-it southwestern coast, on Thursday.
At the Hollywood nursing home, Jean Lindor, a kitchen worker, said through a Haitian Creole translator that the air conditioner had not been working since the storm and it had been hot inside.
Paulburn Bogle, a member of the housekeeping staff, said the place had been hot but manageable the past few days. The staff used fans, put cold towels and ice on patients and gave them cold drinks, he said.
Broward County Medical Examiner Dr. Craig Mallak said his office had received the bodies of at least three of the victims — two women age 71 and another who was 78 — for autopsies.
“They were sick already. It’s going to be tough to tell how much was the heat and how much of it was they were sick already, ” Mallak said.
Flora Mitchell arrived at the home trying to learn the fate of her 58-year-old sister, a stroke patient. She said she last heard from her sister two days earlier and learned the air conditioning was not working.
“We need to know what happened to her, ” she said. “They haven’ t told us anything.”
Associated Press writers Jason Dearen on Summerland Key; Brendan Farrington, Gary Fineout and Joe Reedy in Tallahassee; Jay Reeves in Immokalee; Terrance Harris in Orlando; Claire Galofaro in Jacksonville; and Jennifer Kay, Freida Frisaro, Curt Anderson and David Fischer in Miami contributed to this report.
HURRICANE NEWSLETTER — Get the best of the AP’s all-formats reporting on Irma and Harvey in your inbox: http: //apne.ws/ahYQGtb
Copyright © 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

© Source: http://wtop.com/national/2017/09/governor-work-to-do-for-florida-to-recover-after-irma/slide/1/
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Dying to ask rock band Greta Van Fleet a question? Join MLive for a special event

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Go to MLive’s Facebook Live at 5: 30 p.m. Sept. 14,2017 as John Gonzalez interviews members of Frankenmuth rock band Greta Van Fleet.
GRAND RAPIDS, MI — Have you wondered what life is like for a bunch of kids from Frankenmuth who all of sudden find themselves being called rock music’s „next biggest thing“?
We will find out on Thursday (Sept. 14,2017) when we sit down with 21-year-old twin brothers Josh and Jake Kiszka, their 18-year-old brother Sam Kiszka and their friend Danny Wagner, who is also 18.
It’s a band with an unconventional name, but it’s their classic rock sounds that are turning the music world upside down.
The group’s first single, „Highway Tune, “ is the No. 1 song in the country on Active Rock radio, and the band’s dates are selling out coast to coast.
Tickets for Thursday’s show at The Stache (inside The Intersection) sold out weeks ago.
Last week they opened up for Bob Seger, which they called an „absolute honor.“ The band has a string of European dates and major festivals, too, in the near future.
Has it all sunk in yet?
„Really, it’s not. It just moves so quickly, “ Sam said in an interview before the Saginaw show with Bob Seger.
The band’s four-song EP, „Black Smoke Rising, “ debuted Aug. 17 at No. 1 on the American and Canadian iTunes Rock Charts.
If you want to ask the guys some questions, MLive will be broadcasting a Facebook Live event at 5: 30 p.m. (EST) Thursday, Sept. 14 from The Stache in Grand Rapids.
Go to Facebook.com/MLive to join us.
We will be interviewing the guys and taking your questions.
Feel free to post your questions in the comments section of this story or email me before 4 p.m. on Thursday: gonzo@mlive.com.
I’ll do my best ask as many of your questions as possible.
Oh, and don’t forget to follow me on Twitter for some backstage fun.
The band is at @GretaVanFleet
One of the hottest tickets in rock is for a Michigan band
Is America’s next greatest rock band from Michigan?

© Source: http://www.mlive.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2017/09/dying_to_ask_rock_band_greta_v.html
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Wyclef Jean on DACA: “If I was born now, ” he says, “I wouldn’ t be here”

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The artist performs for „Salon Stage“ and speaks about the plight of immigrants today, as one of them himself
“The policies which affect immigrants are dear to my heart, because I’ m one of them, ” Wyclef Jean, singer, producer and musician, told Salon’s Amanda Marcotte on “Salon Stage.” Jean’s new album “Carnival III: The Fall and Rise of a Refugee” will release September 15, and for Wyclef Jean fans, the theme and plight of refugees in his music is nothing new. It’s been 20 years since Jean’s solo debut album “The Carnival, ” but as an immigrant himself from Haiti, the sounds and experiences from his homeland, as well as the journey to the U. S., continue to inform his music today. Jean may “be the uncle in the studio now, ” as he puts it, but the experiences of young immigrants and their livelihoods feels deeply personal, because it could have been him.

© Source: http://www.salon.com/2017/09/13/wyclef-jean-on-daca-if-i-was-born-now-he-says-i-wouldnt-be-here/
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After Her Life-Saving Heart Transplant, Rockland County Woman Recruits 10K Organ Donors

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Roxanne Watson often carries a picture of the young man who saved her life when he died in a motorcycle accident seven years ago.
RAMAPO, N.Y. (CBSNewYork) – Ever since her life-saving heart transplant, a Rockland County woman has been paying it forward.
As CBS2’s Cindy Hsu reported, Roxanne Watson often carries a picture of the young man who saved her life when he died in a motorcycle accident seven years ago. He served in the Coast Guard and had registered as an organ donor in several states.
“He was an organ donor. He was signed up in New York, New Jersey and in the Coast Guard, and he was a fireman and an EMT. So he was a lifesaver, ” Watson told Hsu.
She had waited two years for a heart transplant before 23-year-old Michael Bovill gave her his heart. She has since become very close with Bovill’s family, and just a few weeks ago, his father listened to his heart beating in her chest.
“I was dying. So, even when I was in the hospital, I said if I lived, I would do this work, ” Watson said.
That work is getting people to register to donate their organs. Wednesday at Rockland Community College, student Priya Greg became the 10,000th organ donor signed up by Watson.
“Even though I feel like sometimes I can’ t do much, I know that at least my organs will be able to help someone else, ” Greg said.
It’s fitting that Watson chose the college for the milestone, since she’s recruited 4,000 organ donors from the school.
Each donor can save multiple people with their organs. Bovill saved five.
“If I can save a life, then I’ ve done my part, ” said another student.
There are more than 120,000 Americans on the waiting list for an organ and nearly 10,000 in New York alone. According to Long Live New York, a New Yorker dies after 18 hours waiting for a life-saving transplant, and it only takes minutes to register.
Now that Watson has signed up 10,000 organ donors, her next goal is 15,000.

© Source: http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2017/09/13/woman-recruits-10k-organ-donors/
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‘American Assassin’ Cast: Who Is Taylor Kitsch Playing?

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American Assassin is the new fall thriller set to open in theaters, September 15. The film stars Teen Wolf actor Dylan O’ Brien as CIA recruit, Mitch Rapp, and Michael Keaton as his handler, …
American Assassin is the new fall thriller set to open in theaters, September 15. The film stars Teen Wolf actor Dylan O’ Brien as CIA recruit, Mitch Rapp, and Michael Keaton as his handler, Stan Hurley. So who is Taylor Kitsch playing?
The full-length trailer reveals key details about Kitsch’s role in the movie. Before getting into the details of what it reveals, let’s address what American Assassin is about. The film is an adaptation of late writer Vince Flynn’s spy novel of the same name. The story follows Mitch Rapp (O’ Brien) , whose life is forever altered when his girlfriend is murdered in a terrorist attack.
Out to avenge her, Rapp is eventually recruited by CIA deputy director Irene Kennedy (Sanaa Lathan) to become an operative. He is then mentored by one of the CIA’s best, Stan Hurley (Michael Keaton) .
When Rapp and Hurley go on their latest mission, they are met by an unlikely adversary. That enemy turns out to be a former ally, who Keaton’s character refers to in the trailer as “Ghost.”
Portraying Ghost is actor Taylor Kitsch. The previous trailer for American Assassin had mainly focused on O’ Brien’s Rapp with a brief glimpse of Kitsch’s character, which did not give away a great deal about Ghost or his agenda.
Thanks to the second trailer you can watch on IMDB, potential movie-goers can see that Ghost is out for his own revenge, against Hurley. In the trailer, there is a brief shot of Ghost revealing his back, which appears to be severely ravaged by the scars of a brutal beating. Ghost then says that Hurley “should have come” for him.
CBS Film’s website includes the official synopsis for the movie, which better explains the end game of Kitsch ‘s “mysterious operative.” You can read it in its entirety below.
“American Assassin follows the rise of Mitch Rapp (Dylan O’ Brien) , a CIA black ops recruit under the instruction of Cold War veteran Stan Hurley (Michael Keaton) . The pair is then enlisted by CIA Deputy Director Irene Kennedy (Sanaa Lathan) to investigate a wave of apparently random attacks on both military and civilian targets.” “Together the three discover a pattern in the violence leading them to a joint mission with a lethal Turkish agent (Shiva Negar) to stop a mysterious operative (Taylor Kitsch) intent on starting a World War.”
American Assassin marks a major return to the silver screen for the Friday Night Lights alum. It is Kitsch’s first role in a live-action feature film, since 2013’s Lone Survivor.
Kitsch’s last role in a TV series was in the highly-publicized second season of HBO’s True Detective, which ran during the summer of 2015. His breakout role came on the fan favorite NBC series Friday Night Lights as Tim Riggins. That series premiered in 2006 and concluded in 2011.
American Assassin is not the only movie Kitsch is starring in that is set for a 2017 release. The Canadian actor will next star in Only the Brave, which is scheduled to be released on October 20. That drama is based on a real-life tragedy that befell a group of firefighters known as the Granite Mountain Hotshots during a blaze in Arizona, circa 2013. You can watch the trailer for it on YouTube here.
Kitsch will be taking on a completely different role from Only the Brave in American Assassin, as the latter film’s central antagonist. Will Mitch Rapp succeed in taking down Ghost? Find out when American Assassin hits theaters on September 15.

© Source: https://www.inquisitr.com/4496184/american-assassin-cast-who-is-taylor-kitsch-playing/
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США перекинули в Польщу тисячу одиниць техніки

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Це лише перша частина озброєнь в рамках операції Atlantic Resolve.
Це лише перша частина озброєнь в рамках операції Atlantic Resolve.
У польський порт Гданськ прибула тисяча одиниць американської військової техніки Другої протитанкової бригадної бойової групи. Як повідомляє Польське радіо, в порту розвантажуються танки Abrams, бойові машини Bradley, гаубиці Paladin та інше бойове спорядження. Зазначається, що це лише перша частина техніки, яка прибула до Польщі в рамках операції Atlantic Resolve (Атлантична рішучість – ред.) . За словами головнокомандувача видами Збройних сил Польщі генерала Ярослава Мікі, техніка буде використовуватися під час навчань. „Це військове спорядження, яке ми сьогодні тут бачимо, буде розміщено в західній частині Польщі. Я маю на увазі, перш за все, такі місцевості: Болеславец, Жагань, Торунь, Сьвентошув, Ськвежіна. Ці машини будуть використовуватися в різних вишколах і маневрах. Це бригадна бойова група“, – сказав генерал. Ярослав Мікі наголосив на масштабі майбутніх маневрів Dragon-17: „Це 17 тисяч солдатів з 11 держав. Думаю, що ці дані досить красномовні, якщо говорити про активність країн-членів НАТО, а також використання потенціалу американської сторони“. Очікується, що вже 15 вересня на місце постійної дислокації відправиться перший потяг з американською технікою. Як повідомляв Кореспондент.net, розміщення сил НАТО в Східній Європі – частина програми Північноатлантичного альянсу, спрямованої на стримування можливої агресії з боку Росії. Раніше США почали перекидання бронетехніки з Польщі в Естонію, Латвію і Литву.

© Source: http://ua.korrespondent.net/world/3886088-ssha-perekynuly-v-polschu-tysiachu-odynyts-tekhniky
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Gary Wadler, Antidoping Pioneer, Had a Gift for Straight Talk

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His approachability was one of his biggest assets, and a big reason he served as an unofficial translator on the topic of performance-enhancing drugs.
While on a trip to Stockholm nearly a decade ago, Gary Wadler and his wife, Nancy, visited the palace, where they were offered a chance to pose for a photograph with Queen Silvia of Sweden. Just before the camera clicked, Wadler threw his arm around the queen and flashed a big smile, just as he might have posed with an old friend.
The room fell silent. Soon the Wadlers could hear murmurs.
“ ‘Oh, my God, he’s touching the queen! He’s touching the queen!’ ” Nancy Wadler recalled people whispering. “Whoops. I guess you weren’ t supposed to touch the queen.”
But that snapshot was consummate Wadler, the antidoping pioneer who died Tuesday at age 78. The son of a Brooklyn window-trimmer, Wadler was friendly, not formal. Studied, but never staid.
He grew up to be a doctor and a professor of medicine at New York University, and approachability was always one of his biggest assets. It’s part of the reason he served for decades as an unofficial translator of the subject of performance-enhancing drugs.
When reporters called Wadler for his guidance while covering one drug scandal or another — and I can’ t count the number of times I called — he didn’ t overwhelm them with scientific or medical jargon. In the same manner in which he might deal with a patient in his internist’s practice on Long Island, Wadler was always patient, always helpful, always eager to dumb down highly technical terms without making the questioner feel dumb.
Wadler didn’ t mind the tutorials. In fact, he thought they were vital. He often talked to me about how important it was that the public understand that steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs could be dangerous — to elite athletes, for sure, but to young ones, too. Wadler feared ignorance more than the drugs themselves, just as he worried that “steroid fatigue” would keep people from caring.
Long before the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative steroids scandal, and way before Lance Armstrong came clean, Wadler was telling Americans that doping in sports was a scourge. Wadler knew so much about antidoping science and the culture of doping in sports that he wrote a seminal book, “Drugs and the Athlete, ” which was published in 1989, years before the subject of steroids became a standard feature of the sports pages.
“I grew up believing that our sports heroes were genuine, that they were great athletes because they had special skills and trained harder, ” he told Newsday in 2003 .
But he also understood how much times had changed.
When Taylor Hooton, a teenage Texas pitcher, committed suicide in 2003 after stopping his steroid use, Hooton’s father, Don, reached out to Wadler for answers to his many questions.
“Over many calls and many hours, he educated me and pointed me to reading material, helping me understand what anabolic steroids are and what they do to the mind and body, ” Don Hooton said Wednesday. “Some of these experts start off with going into all the technical stuff with doping, and they can lose you really quick. But Gary put things in a way that I could understand, and was so compassionate.”
Wadler later encouraged Hooton to start a foundation to fight steroid use among young people, and went on to serve as its chairman.
But he also testified to Congress during the 2005 baseball steroid hearings. He criticized the WWE for not doing enough to combat drug use in professional wrestling, and he questioned the N. F. L.’s drug-testing program because he found it odd that more players were not testing positive in a sport in which athletes could surely benefit from banned drugs.
More times than I can count, Wadler called the N. F. L.’s rules “blatantly ridiculous” when we spoke about them.
“It took guts to stand up to so many people and so many leagues like he did, ” Nancy Wadler said. “But I like the truth. Gary liked the truth.”
That truth went both ways. When the former N. F. L. lineman Lyle Alzado was dying of brain cancer in 1991, he blamed his many years of steroid and human growth hormone use. Some were happy to let this idea circulate widely, perhaps to scare younger athletes away from steroid use. But Wadler said, no, there wasn’ t actually a scientific connection between steroids and cancer. Wadler didn’ t ring alarm bells just to ring them.
It didn’ t take long for his reputation to spread internationally. He was a founding member of the World Anti-Doping Agency when it was formed in 2000, and at one point he led the committee that determined what substances would be on the agency’s banned list.
“I didn’ t know much about him when he appeared at WADA, but I soon realized that this is a man who knows what he is talking about, ” said Arne Ljungqvist, a former chairman of the International Olympic Committee’s medical commission, who met Wadler soon after WADA was formed.
Ljungqvist said WADA’s prohibited-substance committee initially was filled with researchers like him and experts in subjects like pharmacology, hematology and chemistry, a group that he said was heavy on credentials and missing a common touch. Wadler, he found, provided a refreshing perspective.
“As a medical doctor, he filled a gap which made the commission complete, ” Ljungqvist said. “He had knowledge that some didn’ t. I looked upon him as one of my best friends.”
Ljungqvist liked Wadler because he had a lot of common sense, and because he wasn’ t the type of man who would promote himself. Wadler was just so very likable, said Ljungqvist, who was the person who arranged Wadler’s meeting with Queen Silvia.
A day after Wadler died, Nancy Wadler told me that Queen Silvia story. In a conversation that lasted most of the morning, she laughed a lot. And she cried some, too.
She said she had been going through their belongings lately, and among them she had found a gigantic teddy bear candle he had given her when they began dating in the early 1970s. They were married for 45 years, and often discussed why their relationship lasted that long.
“It’s really a mirror of honesty, having principles you live by, integrity and giving back to the world, ” Nancy Wadler said. “You could say that also was his philosophy about his doping work.”

© Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/13/sports/olympics/gary-wadler-wada-doping.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
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Judge revokes Martin Shkreli's $5M bond

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A federal judge revoked the $5 million bond of Martin Shkreli after the former pharmaceutical executive posted a bounty for strands Hillary Clinton’s hair.
Sept. 13 (UPI) — A federal judge on Wednesday revoked the $5 million bond of Martin Shkreli after the former pharmaceutical executive posted a bounty for Hillary Clinton’s hair in what he described as a joke.
U. S. District Judge Kiyo Matsumoto in Brooklyn, N.Y., said Shkreli posed a danger to the community after he offered $5,000 on Facebook for a strand of the former secretary of state’s hair. Prosecutors also said comments about journalist Lauren Duca were threatening.
His remarks sparked the interest of the Secret Service.
Shkreli and his lawyers, though, said his comments were a joke and that he doesn’t deserve to be jailed.
„I wanted to personally apologize to this court and my lawyers for the aggravation that my recent postings have caused, “ Shkreli said in a letter Tuesday. „I understand now that some may have read my comments about Mrs. Clinton as threatening, when that was never my intention when making those comments.“
„I used poor judgment but never intended to cause alarm or promote any act of violence whatsoever, “ he added.
A jury convicted Shkreli in early August on three counts related to securities fraud for a Ponzi scheme he ran between 2009 and 2014 in which he bilked investors out of a total of $11 million.
Prosecutors said Shkreli illegally took stock from his biotechnology firm, Retrophin Inc., and used it to pay off debts from a failed hedge fund — which is illegal. The Retrophin board of directors later sued Shkreli and he was ousted from the company for which he served as CEO.
His sentencing hearing for the conviction has yet to be scheduled.

© Source: https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2017/09/13/Judge-revokes-Martin-Shkrelis-5M-bond/9451505340683/
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Wesley Stromberg Drops Gorgeous Live Studio Version Of ‘If Only’ — Watch – Hollywood Life

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Wesley Stromberg’s live studio video for ‘If Only’ has arrived! Watch it here.
Wesley Stromberg, 23, has collaborated with Alek Fin for their upcoming debut EP Sýna, and from the sound of the first single “If Only, ” it’s going to be gold! Above, HollywoodLife.com is exclusively premiering the live, in-studio version of the track. “I wish it could be only you and me/Forever we’ d run away, ” Wesley croons on the song, “Layin’ on a beach loving so easy/In your perfect hide away.” How good is that? We’ re obsessed, to say the least!
Wesley stopped by HollywoodLife.com to fill us in on what he’s been up to after Emblem 3, and how he’s growing as a solo artist. “This last year, I’ ve been working with Alek, and he’s an awesome producer. He has really brought a great side out of me that I have never had before — this more sensitive, intricate, intellectual side, ” Wesley revealed. “Before I was in your face, always jumping around. I love that, and it’s super fun, and I definitely want to get back to that too, but it’s been nice getting to find another side of me and bring that out.”
He also added that in the spring, he’ ll have a tour coming, and he’ ll be dropping the rest of his EP by the end of 2017. As for what the rest of his new music will be like, expect to hear some personal stories from Wesley. “Every single song on this EP is a moment in time of something that’s happened, questions that I had and needed answered, things I needed to figure out for myself, and through writing and getting them out there, I kind of answered that, ” he told us. “It’s all really personal stuff — all little pieces of me. You’ ll get it once you hear them, but a lot of it is along the lines of ‘If Only.’”
Stay tuned for more of our exclusive interview, and click through our entire photo shoot with Wesley! HollywoodLifers, what do you think of the live, in-studio version of “If Only?” Tell us if you love it!

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