Woman accused of robbery arrested

A 27-year-old Kerrville woman wanted for robbery and abandoning two children at the Kerrville Walmart was arrested Thursday afternoon after a tip to police led them to the woman.,money clips

Amanda Christine Switzer was arrested without incident and taken to the Kerr County jail around noon Thursday.

Switzer reportedly tried to steal $111.82 worth of merchandise from Walmart on Sunday before being stopped outside the store by security.

When confronted,rings, Switzer reportedly offered to pay for the merchandise before becoming aggressive and striking the security guard in the face and chest. She then fled the scene,earrings, leaving two children she had been baby-sitting,Charm bracelet, ages 8 and 9,bracelets, standing with the security guard.

The children’s mother came to the store 15 minutes later to pick up her children. She reportedly told police she received a call from Switzer telling her to pick up her kids.

Switzer was charged with robbery and two counts of endangering/abandoning children, all felonies. The shoplifting charge was upgraded to robbery because she assaulted an employee.

According to jail records, this was Switzer’s 15th arrest since 2003. Many of the charges were misdemeanor crimes such as possession of marijuana, public intoxication and parole violations.

No bond had been set as of Thursday afternoon.

Women prisoners spend time with their children at

"I did not sleep all night after learning from my grandmother that I was going to visit my mother at prison the next day.",bracelets

This is how 12-year-old Hanan described her feelings when she was told she was going to see her mother during a special iftar at the Jweideh Women’s Correctional and Rehabilitation Centre (JWCRC) on Wednesday.

"I miss my mother and wish that I could visit her more often," said Hanan, as she played on a swing with her sister in a special playground prepared by the JWCRC to host the inmates’ children at a Ramadan iftar.

The State Security Court convicted Hanan’s mother, Noor,cuff Links, of smuggling hashish into the country from Syria almost three months ago and she was sentenced to seven-and-a-half-years in prison.

"I was framed by my friends who used my car without my knowledge to smuggle hashish. I hope the Cassation Court will declare me innocent," the 40-year-old told The Jordan Times.

Nonetheless, she said, Wednesday was a very special day for her.

"I did not expect to have iftar with my two daughters and spend some time talking with them and watching them play on the swings’ in front of my eyes," the mother of four said.

The JWCRC organised the special iftar for half a dozen inmates,money clips, either convicted or awaiting trial, and their children.

The prison administration also distributed gifts to the inmates’ children and organised a comedy play in the dining hall shortly after iftar that was watched by over 200 cheering prisoners.

JWCRC Director Lt. Colonel Hana Afghani said the Ramadan iftar idea aimed at reuniting detained or imprisoned mothers with their children.

"This was a gesture by the prison administration to show the inmates that we really care for their well-being and that of their children," said Afghani, who has headed the JCWRC for the past 11 years.

"This activity is one of many that will help inmates’ rehabilitation and their future integration into their communities,Atlas charm bracelet," she told The Jordan Times.

The centre currently houses 262 women, but the full capacity of the premises is 450.

Fifty-year-old Shrouq expressed her gratitude for the prison administration in allowing her to see her 10-year-old son face-to-face and have an iftar meal with him.

"I could not hold back my tears when my son walked through the prison gates and ran towards me screaming ‘mom’ mom I miss you’," the mother of eight said.

Shrouq has been in prison for 10 months while on trial for murdering her neighbour, a charge she strongly denied.

Shrouq’s son Nidal said he was very happy to see his mother,tiffany, especially since he is used to seeing her only "from behind glass during the prison’s short visiting hours".

"I wish that the prison administration would organise more visits like this one so that I can see my mother in person and hug her," said Nidal.

Woman accused in Bi-Mart pharmacy robberies

After a Vancouver pain clinic lost the ability to prescribe painkillers, Larae Corzine a year ago said her family was in dire straits.

Her husband, Steve, was a longtime patient at the Payette Clinic,tiffany, which forfeited its rights to prescribe opioids last year after federal agents linked the clinic to the overdose death of an Oregon teen.

Corzine told a newspaper reporter in April 2009 that other doctors in town wouldn’t see her husband, who she said suffers from reflex sympathetic dystrophy, because they were afraid he was addicted to Oxycontin. She said her husband was in pain, was not an addict, and needed help.

"The pain is 10 times worse than it’s ever been," Corzine told The Columbian last year. "He’s vomiting and shaking. I’m surprised he hasn’t gone into seizures."

Now, the distressed wife is behind bars and charged with three Vancouver pharmacy robberies and an attempted robbery on a fourth occasion. The alleged drug of choice: Oxycontin.

The 39-year-old Vancouver woman was arraigned Thursday on the most recently filed charge of first-degree attempted robbery relating to a June 18 holdup attempt at the Vancouver Clinic pharmacy, 501 S.E. 172nd Ave.

Corzine also is charged with three counts of first-degree robbery relating to the April 20,bangles, June 14 and June 18 holdups of the Bi-Mart pharmacy, 11912 N.E. Fourth Plain Blvd.

She is being held in the Clark County Jail in lieu of $300,000 bail.

Trial has been set for Oct. 18.

Corzine was first arrested after the June 18 Bi-Mart robbery when a suspect sped away from police in a green Ford Taurus and crashed into an SUV at Northeast 63rd Street and 58th Avenue. In the collision, both cars were knocked off the road and the Taurus caught fire, deputies said.

After taken to Southwest Washington Medical Center and later jailed, investigators allegedly linked Corzine to the other robberies through surveillance video and witness identifications,money clips, according to court documents.

In each robbery, the bandit had a black gun tucked in her front waistband and made threatening requests for Oxycontin. In the Vancouver Clinic Pharmacy holdup, the robber said, "Give me Oxycontin 80 (mg) — I have a gun,earrings," according to court documents. She then counted down from 10.

Two pharmacy clerks escaped into an office, called 911 and the robber fled.

Corzine’s case isn’t the first evidence of fallout from the Payette Clinic. Of the 800 former patients,bracelets, the Drug Enforcement Administration estimated that half were physically dependent on narcotics. The clinic remains open under a new name, Walnut Grove Medical and Mental Health Clinic.

In September 2009, another former Payette patient, Harold Andres Jr., was sentenced to four years and seven months in prison after pleading guilty to three Safeway pharmacy robberies earlier that year for oxycodone.

Laura McVicker: 360-735-4516 or laura.mcvicker@columbian.com.

Women’s Bureau program helps boys learn respect

The Women’s Bureau has a new program aimed at student-athletes that’s designed to help young men learn to treat women with respect.

The program, called Coaching Boys into Men, CBIM,key rings, is designed to help prevent violence by teens and young adults toward themselves and others, especially the girls and women in their lives. The program has been around since 2001 and started in North Carolina.

Unlike past programs, CBIM targets coaches and their athletes. Coaches need only spend five minutes a week, for a total of seven weeks, giving a prewritten message to their athletes.

The message for each lesson is broken into points on flip cards in an easy-to-use notebook. Each lesson is one page.

Coaches and players both sign a pledge saying they will show respect toward women, not violence.

Lessons include personal responsibility, insulting language, bragging about a sexual relationship and how disrespectful that is to your partner, disrespect to women and girls,money clips, responsibility with physical strength, when aggression crosses the line, no excuse for disrespectful behavior, and helping your teammates.

According to the program’s website, since CBIM’s start, thousands of coaches have signed up in support.

The program runs in collaboration with the National High School Athletic Coaches Association. CBIM sees it as important to target athletes because so many of their peers look up to them; if they set a good example,tiffany, others should follow.

Principal Matt Stinson and his football coach at Lane Middle School have come on board, but other schools have been slow to join in.

"I contacted high schools in Fort Wayne last year and got little response, so this year I am trying middle schools," said Candice Hall,pendants, Women’s Bureau prevention and outreach specialist.

Hall believes by having coaches deliver the message, young athletes will be more open to the ideas.

The program’s curriculum suggests a game night where student-athletes ask fans to pledge themselves to following the program guidelines.

"CBIM literally recommends only five to 10 minutes a week; the coaches don’t have to do anything but read these cards," Hall said. "If people would take a few minutes to let me show them this, they would see that it won’t take much time."

Hall thinks a younger group will be more receptive to the message. She is working with IPFW in hopes of getting student-athletes involved so they can act as role models and come to schools to spread the message.

"Kids really look up to college athletes," she said.

The curriculum materials are free for the program. The only expense the Women’s Bureau incurs are the hours that Hall has devoted to get CBIM to take off. That cost is covered by a grant to the Women’s Bureau.

"I am really excited to have Lane Middle School doing (this),rings, and we will continue to do this throughout the year," Hall said.

Rock Hudson — Dark and Handsome Stranger

Maddeningly reductive docu.

Documentary

Germany

A Florianfilm, Arte GEIE production,Charm pendant, in collaboration with YLE Teema. (International sales: SND Films, Amsterdam.) Produced by Rieke Brendel, Anna Steuber, Heike Lettau, Cecile Thomas. Executive producer, Marianne Schaefer. Directed, written by Andrew Davies, Andre Schaefer.

(English, French dialogue)

About the only department in which "Dark and Handsome Stranger" works is as a reminder of the shameful brouhaha surrounding Hudson’s AIDS diagnosis. The pic boils the star down to the stereotype of the closeted actor whose fame intimidated sexual partners, and whose death in 1985 put a face to a demonized disease. Of the various interviewees, Belgian publicist Yanou Collart is best at evoking the AIDS panic of the early 1980s: She had to charter a 747 for $250,000,watches, because no commercial airline would take the dying Hudson from Paris to L.A.Poor Rock Hudson: Can his life really be summed up with the line "Rock loved my chocolate mousse"? Apparently, helmers Andrew Davies and Andre Schaefer think so,money clips, since that’s how they end their maddeningly reductive docu, "Rock Hudson — Dark and Handsome Stranger." Utilizing trailer excerpts rather than film clips (presumably, the rights were too pricey),cuff Links, this unsatisfying look at the late star is stuffed with inconsequential sex gossip and starved for real meat, relying on tired presumptions about life in the Hollywood closet. Still, the docu will likely kick around the gay fest circuit.

Poor Rock Hudson: Can his life really be summed up with the line "Rock loved my chocolate mousse"? Apparently, helmers Andrew Davies and Andre Schaefer think so, since that’s how they end their maddeningly reductive docu, "Rock Hudson — Dark and Handsome Stranger." Utilizing trailer excerpts rather than film clips (presumably, the rights were too pricey), this unsatisfying look at the late star is stuffed with inconsequential sex gossip and starved for real meat, relying on tired presumptions about life in the Hollywood closet. Still, the docu will likely kick around the gay fest circuit.

Camera (color/B&W, DigiBeta), Tom Kaiser, Jens Schade; editor, Martin Schomers; music, Ritchie Staringer; sound, Ralf Weber, Chris Glade. Reviewed at Berlin Film Festival (Panorama), Feb. 19, 2010. Running time: 96 MIN.

Treasury Announces End of Global Engagement Tour o

News from America.com and the Washington File,tiffany

U.S. Department of the Treasury,pendants, Press Release, Washington, DC, August 20, 2010

Treasury Concludes Three Weeks of Global Engagement with Governments, Private Sector on Iran

Levey, Cohen, Glaser Wrap Up Eight Country Tour; Urge Robust Worldwide Implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1929, Outline Financial Provisions of New U.S. Legislation on Iran

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of the Treasury today announced the conclusion of three weeks of face-to-face global engagement on Iran with governments and the private sectors in Bahrain, Brazil, Ecuador, Japan, Lebanon,money clips, South Korea, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) led by Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, Stuart Levey; Assistant Secretary for Terrorist Financing, David Cohen; and Deputy Assistant Secretary for Terrorist Financing and Financial Crimes, Daniel Glaser. Treasury’s leading officials on U.S. sanctions crisscrossed the globe this month, meeting with senior government officials to urge U.S. partners and allies to take bold steps to ensure rigorous, comprehensive implementation of UN Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1929 to bolster the impact of the Resolution and additional measures imposed by the United States, European Union and others in recent weeks. Treasury also briefed government officials and banking sector leaders on the financial provisions of the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability and Divestment Act (CISADA) and the new Iranian Financial Sanctions Regulations (IFSR) issued this month by Treasury.

Focusing on key financial and commercial centers across the globe, Levey,Charm pendant, Cohen and Glaser traveled to Asia, Latin America and the Middle East to strengthen sanctions efforts and underscore the importance of strong implementation of UNSCR 1929. They were joined by State Department and White House officials to implement the President’s direction to apply targeted financial pressure to deny Iran’s access to the international financial system and further sharpen the choice for Iran. In meetings with senior government officials, bank regulators and banking sector leaders, Treasury officials highlighted the impact that the latest round of sanctions have already begun to have on Iran’s economy – including the Government of Iran’s inability to attract foreign investment, develop its oil and gas fields, acquire financial services and maintain financial relationships with the international community — and making the case for concerted action to persuade the Government of Iran to change its behavior.

"As international pressure mounts and its economic isolation increases, Iran will attempt to seek out new channels to access the international financial system for illicit purposes," said Levey. "It is incumbent upon governments to put into place the appropriate mechanisms to protect against this threat. The U.S. will continue its outreach to governments and the private sector around the world to prevent Iran from exploiting new banks and unwitting partners in furthering its nuclear and missile programs."

During their travels, Treasury officials briefed regulators and members of the banking sector on the financial provisions of CISADA and outlined the potential for foreign financial institutions continuing to do business with individuals or entities designated by the United States to lose access the U.S. financial system. At roundtable discussions with banking associations, Treasury continued its dialogue with the private sector on the need for enhanced vigilance with respect to Iran’s continued efforts to engage in a range of deceptive measures to conduct illicit transactions and evade sanctions. U.S. officials also highlighted the need for intense scrutiny from both regulators and financial institutions of all transactions involving Iran to combat attempts by Iran to establish new and expand existing financial relationships as sanctions tighten.

Conviction upheld for Linda man who beat up girlfr

A state appellate court has upheld the seven-year prison sentence of a Linda man who severely beat his live-in girlfriend about a year after killing her cat and stringing up its organs.

In the month prior to the December 2008 beating, Robert MIchael Gray, then 21, told the girlfriend,money clips, identified in a court document as K.P., that, "I won’t put you 6 (feet) under I will go 7 feet under for possible room for me," according to a letter written to a Yuba County judge by K.P.’s mother.

Gray appealed his conviction because the letter was forged by the mother on behalf of K.P. But 3rd District Court of Appeal justices said Gray and his attorney failed to object in Yuba County Superior Court, and that the mother’s account of the threat could still be considered in sentencing.

Gray also told K.P., "If I can’t have you, no one will," according to the letter.

K.P. asked the Yuba County judge to disregard the mother’s letter. In her own letter, she asked that Gray get "some jail time" and "more than just drug treatments."

K.P. suffered four broken orbital bones around her left eye and was expected to undergo surgery at a cost of $75,000. She subsequently moved from the area out of fear, according to the 24-page appellate court document issued last week.

"She feared for her own safety and her fear was reasonable under the circumstances since approximately one year prior (Gray) killed the victim’s cat by throwing it at the ground like a basketball and then stomping on it, dissecting it and stringing up its organs," Justice Cole Blease wrote.

At sentencing in February 2009, a Sutter County Probation Department report indicated Gray had no significant criminal record as an adult. But,Beads necklace, as a juvenile, Gray once threatened his stepfather with a knife.

"Attached to the probation report were letters from (Gray’s) father,Bead bracelet, mother,Atlas charm bracelet, stepfather, stepmother and godfather, each of which spoke to some degree to defendant’s problems with anger and substance abuse," Blease wrote.

"There is nothing in the record to suggest that the (Yuba County court) ignored any of the evidence before it, nor is there evidence that the court’s minimal reliance on the forged statement was improper," Blease wrote.

CONTACT Rob Young at 749-4710 or at ryoung@appealdemocrat.com.

Grant pays for retreat at discount

A $12,458 "team-building" retreat for Lucy C. Laney Comprehensive High School staff at the Ritz-Carlton at Lake Oconee on Thursday and today is drawing sharp criticism from Richmond County school board members.

Patsy Scott summed up her reaction with one word: "Mercy."

The two-day, one-night visit is tied to a more than $1 million federal school improvement grant the school received last month through an Obama administration initiative.

The Richmond County school board agreed earlier this year to apply for the grant, but several board members said Thursday they weren’t aware a portion of the grant was being used by Laney for the Ritz retreat.

"If I had known this, I wouldn’t have approved the grant," said school board Vice President Alex Howard upon first hearing from The Augusta Chronicle about the trip.

Calling it a "poor choice," Howard said that even if the school got a good rate the Ritz trip sends the wrong message in a time of budget cuts.

He said he understands the need for a retreat, but it could have been held locally to save money.

"There’s no excuse for this," he said.

The retreat involves 85 Laney faculty and staff. The site — where country music star Carrie Underwood recently got married — was named among the World’s 500 Best Hotels in Travel + Leisure Magazine in 2008, according to the hotel’s Web site.

School system spokesman Louis Svehla was quick to note that the school got a reduced group rate and its retreat cost fell well below a budgeted amount of $35,000 that the grant had allowed.

"The grant proposal budgeted up to $35,000 for this retreat,Charm pendant, which was approved by the state," Svehla wrote in an e-mail. "In negotiation with several sites, the Ritz-Carlton at Lake Oconee in Greensboro, Georgia, offered the best hotel rates, acceptable food service costs and room meeting rates."

Board member Jimmy Atkins, who also hadn’t heard of the trip, noted that for the past several years the school board has held its retreats at its own central office.

"I’m very disappointed to hear that they would take off and go somewhere that extravagant to hold a retreat," he said.

Scott said the money should’ve been spent in Richmond County.

"If this is true, especially when we’re asking everybody to cut back, to me it’s just very, very unfortunate,money clips," she said.

Svehla said the normal room rate for this time of year at the Ritz-Carlton is $244 per person. "However, for this training session the discounted room rate will be $70 per person or $140 for a room for two people (double occupancy)," he said. "The hotel is waiving all meeting room rentals."

The retreat comes as part of a turnaround reform model Laney is having to undertake this coming school year in accepting the federal school improvement funds. The turnaround model requires the school to replace half its staff and have them reassigned to other schools. Several of those positions have been accounted for through attrition and some teachers being reassigned from an eighth-grade academy that Laney won’t have this school year.

"Now that the selection of staff is nearing completion, the staff will be required to attend the retreat," Svehla said. "At this retreat, there will be an agenda and various activities designed to enable the newly selected and returning faculty and staff members to become fully oriented with the vision and mission of the school relative to the implementation of the Turnaround Model of the School Improvement Grant at Lucy C. Laney High School."

The retreat cost, Svehla said, includes lodging, several meals and meeting rooms for the 85 faculty and staff,bangles, equaling a per-person cost of $147.

"Accordingly, while the name of the hotel carries a perception that there may be some added expense, in reality, the rates are very reasonable and discounted after thorough negotiations," he said.

Two other Richmond County schools also received more than $1 million each from the school improvement grant, but Svehla said those schools — Glenn Hills and Josey high schools — are staying locally for their retreats. Svehla said the decision about where to hold retreats was up to each school’s principal.

Glenn Hills Principal Wayne Frazier said he chose to keep his school’s retreat at his school because he’d rather use the grant money in the classroom and in professional development of teachers.

"My leadership style does not lend itself to that type of retreat, with the present economy crisis," Frazier said.

Frazier did confirm,Charm bracelet, though, that in June there was a school-system initiative where some leaders from his school and several others in Richmond County in Needs Improvement status attended training at Calloway Gardens. He said he thinks it was tied to the reform plan as well.

As for the Ritz trip, Svehla said Laney’s situation is unique because it’s the only school having half of its staff reassigned and the only one going through America’s Choice and college board training for the first time.

"It’s a way to get away with each other and really form a team," he said of the need for Laney’s retreat.

Columbia County school officials said they can’t recall ever sending a group to a Ritz-Carlton for training or a retreat, and lately have been trying to keep retreats and training local unless it’s only offered at an out-of-county location.

Richmond County board member Jack Padgett said of the Ritz retreat: "There’s a lot of other places you can have them," noting that although it seems the school got a decent per-room rate it probably shouldn’t have booked "the fanciest name in town."

"I just think the image is not good when we’re having furloughs," he said.

Board member Helen Minchew said that when broken down to individual workers the cost doesn’t seem exorbitant, but "it just would have been prudent to have stayed here."

Department of Cardiovascular Medicine

New research, ‘Pulse pressure and coronary atherosclerosis in asymptomatic type 2 diabetes mellitus: a 64 channel cardiac computed tomography analysis,’ is the subject of a report (see also <http://www.newsrx.com/library/topics/Type-2-Diabetes.html> Type 2 Diabetes). "Identification of high risk sub-groups for early initiation of preventive medical therapy requires widespread population screening using simple,earrings, inexpensive tests. High pulse pressure has been shown to predict adverse coronary events," investigators in Haifa, Israel report.

"We examined if this correlation was related to a greater coronary plaque burden in patients with high pulse pressure using 64 channel coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. The study included 427 consecutive asymptomatic diabetic patients with no history of coronary disease, (age 55-74 years, 58% women), undergoing CCTA as part of a prospective outcomes study. Coronary atheroma was present in 76.6% of patients, multivessel coronary atheroma in 55.1% and luminal stenosis (>or=50% of diameter) in 22.9%. Pulse pressure (adjusted for age,key rings, gender, mean blood pressure and heart rate) correlated with number of coronary arteries with atheroma (p=0.005) and with multivessel coronary atheroma (odds ratio 1.24 95%CI 1.06-1.43 for each 10 mm Hg pulse pressure, p=0.009). The correlation was independent of Framingham and United Kingdom Prospective Diabetic Study risk scores (p=0.027 and p=0.036 respectively). Adjusted pulse pressure also correlated with quartiles of coronary artery calcium score (p=0.009),Charm bracelet," wrote D.A. Halon and colleagues, Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center, Department of Cardiovascular Medicine.

The researchers concluded: "Elevated pulse pressure was a useful independent marker of presence and extent of pre-clinical coronary artery disease in an asymptomatic diabetic population."

Halon and colleagues published their study in International Journal of Cardiology (Pulse pressure and coronary atherosclerosis in asymptomatic type 2 diabetes mellitus: a 64 channel cardiac computed tomography analysis. International Journal of Cardiology, 2010;143(1):63-71).

For additional information, contact D.A. Halon, Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center, Dept. of Cardiovascular Medicine, Haifa, Israel.

Keywords: City:Haifa, Country:Israel, Arterial Occlusive Diseases, Arteriosclerosis, Atherosclerosis,money clips, Cardiology, Cardiovascular Diseases, Endocrine System Diseases, Endocrinology, Glucose Metabolism Disorders, Metabolic Diseases, Non insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, Vascular Diseases.

Edgewood 4th in Lady Mustang Invitational

Host Edgewood finished fourth in the nine-team field of the Lady Mustang Invitational Thursday at Cascades.,necklaces

Owen Valley was sixth, while Linton did not have enough players to post a team score.

The Mustangs were led by Carlie Greven’s 96 and Sam Faletic’s 101 in their second match of the year. Coach Gary Lawson says it’s just a matter of bringing those scores down as the season progresses.

"They did OK today," he said. "Between now and the end of the season, we’re looking to drop 10 shots a girl. That’s our job at this point."

LADY MUSTANG INVITATIONAL

At Cascades

Washington 338 — Owen Valley 438

Whiteland 348 — Mitchell 439

Mooresville 378 — Monrovia ns

Edgewood 415 — Linton ns

Northview 429 |

Individual leaders: 1. Morgan Knieper, Mon, 79; 2. Larren McDonald,money clips, Was,tiffany, and Sara Craven, Whi, 80; 4. Blythe Woldridge, Was, 81; 5. Malina Padgett, Was, 86; 6. Alexa West, Whi, 87; 7. Allison McQueen, MoR, 89; 8. Michelle Morgan, Whi, and Ashley McQueen, Mor, 90. Edgewood: Carlie Greven 96, Sam Faletic 101, Olivia Lunn 108, Abby Abel 110. Owen Valley: Kennedy Williams 102, Jacy Schrougham 104, Michaela Morgan 112,rings, Whitley Marsh 120. Linton: Katie Wells 117, Ashley Tibbett 118, Darcy Andis 144.