Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Twitter sues U.S. government


Twitter wants to let users know about national security-related data requests.


Twitter wants to let users know about national security-related data requests.






  • Twitter sues Justice Department for restrictions on what it can say about data requests

  • Company says it wants to release more details about scope of U.S. government surveillance




Washington (CNN) -- Twitter is suing the U.S. government in an effort to loosen restrictions on what the social media giant can say publicly about the national security-related requests it receives for user data.


The company filed a lawsuit against the Justice Department on Monday in a federal court in northern California, arguing that its First Amendment rights are being violated by restrictions that forbid the disclosure of how many national security letters and Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act court orders it receives -- even if that number is zero.


Twitter vice president Ben Lee wrote in a blog post that it's suing in an effort to publish the full version of a "transparency report" prepared this year that includes those details.


The San Francisco-based firm was unsatisfied with the Justice Department's move in January to allow technological firms to disclose the number of national security-related requests they receive in broad ranges.


"It's our belief that we are entitled under the First Amendment to respond to our users' concerns and to the statements of U.S. government officials by providing information about the scope of U.S. government surveillance -- including what types of legal process have not been received," Lee wrote. "We should be free to do this in a meaningful way, rather than in broad, inexact ranges."


But a Justice Department spokeswoman pointed to the January move -- which was aimed at mollifying complaints from tech giants like Google and Microsoft -- as evidence that the government is allowing the release of at least some information on its surveillance activities.


"Earlier this year, the government addressed similar concerns raised in a lawsuit brought by several major tech companies," department spokeswoman Emily Pierce said. "There, the parties worked collaboratively to allow tech companies to provide broad information on government requests while also protecting national security."


Critics of the U.S. government's secrecy surrounding its national security surveillance activities lauded Twitter's move.


Jameel Jaffer, the ACLU's deputy legal director, said "challenging this tangled web of secrecy rules and gag orders" was the right move, and he urged other tech firms to follow Twitter's lead.


"If these laws prohibit Twitter from disclosing basic information about government surveillance, then these laws violate the First Amendment," Jaffer said. "The Constitution doesn't permit the government to impose so broad a prohibition on the publication of truthful speech about government conduct."



2 same-sex marriage bans lifted





  • NEW: Court says same-sex marriage bans violate equal protection rights

  • NEW: Plaintiff says she feels like her family can feel "legally secure"

  • NEW: Decision is part of a trend overturning bans, but another circuit may soon uphold them

  • NEW: If circuit courts issue different decisions, the Supreme Court may get back in the mix




Washington (CNN) -- Add Nevada and Idaho to the rapidly growing list of states to have their same-sex marriage bans tossed out in definitive fashion.


A ruling by a federal appeals court Tuesday adds further momentum -- and a degree of inevitably -- to the idea of a civil marriage for gays and lesbians becoming a reality in a majority of U.S. states.


Three judges from the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in California concluded the bans in the two Western states violated the equal protection rights of same-sex couples to legally marry.


"The lessons of our constitutional history are clear: inclusion strengthens, rather than weakens, our most important institutions," said the judges. "When same-sex couples are married, just as when opposite-sex couples are married, they serve as models of loving commitment to all."


The decision comes after the Supreme Court on Monday let stand rulings striking down bans in five states and affecting similar laws in six others.


That means that in coming weeks, 32 states could allow same-sex marriage, an increase of 13 states since the beginning of the month.


Colorado and Utah announced Tuesday they would order county clerks to begin issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.


The decisions affecting Idaho and Nevada become the fourth such federal appeals court action to strike down voter-approved bans.


One of the original Idaho plaintiffs cheered the decision.


"It means so much for the courts to recognize our family and say that we must be treated equally," said Lori Watsen, who wed Sharene Watsen in New York in 2011. Their home state does not recognize their legal union. "Our son will be able to grow up in a world where the state treats his family the same as other families. Today's ruling means that we can finally have the same legal protections as other married couples and the security of knowing that our family is legally secure."


But advocates on both sides of the issue are waiting to see what a federal appeals court in Cincinnati will decide on bans in Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee.


Oral arguments by a judicial panel in August by the 6th Circuit suggested those bans may be upheld, in contrast to a nationwide trend over the past 15 months. A ruling there is expected any day.


A potential "circuit split" may prove the impetus for the U.S. Supreme Court to ultimately decide whether same-sex couples nationwide have a constitutional right to tie the knot.


By refusing to get involved now, the justices this week let stand appeals court rulings that immediately opened up the right to those in Indiana, Oklahoma, Utah, Virginia and Wisconsin.


Because neighboring states are covered by the appeals court's jurisdiction, same-sex marriage could be extended in coming weeks to Kansas, North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia and Wyoming.


The high court's deliberate move to stand off to the side may indicate its natural instincts to go slowly -- to allow hot-button issues like his one to develop on their own, without interference from nine unelected justices.


But the individual members of the bench may have also done some internal head counting and concluded with a shaky 5-4 conservative-liberal divide -- and moderate-conservative Anthony Kennedy the potential swing vote -- the final outcome was too uncertain to put same-sex marriage on the docket now.


The cases in the 9th Circuit Court's decision are Sevcik v. Sandoval (12-17668) in Nevada and Latta v. Otter (14-35420) in Idaho.



Does prisoner have right to beard?





  • Gregory Holt wants to grow beard as part of his religious faith

  • Arkansas officials have denied him the right

  • Justices peppered both sides with questions




(CNN) -- U.S. Supreme Court justices peppered attorneys with questions Tuesday over whether an Arkansas inmate should be allowed to grow a beard as part of his religious faith.


Gregory Holt, also known as Abdul Maalik Muhammad, is a Muslim who filed a handwritten petition with the high court. He cited rights under the federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, or RLUIPA.


He wants to grow the beard as part of his religious faith and his attorneys claim he had offered to keep it to a "half-inch" as part of what Holt called a "compromise."


In their response, Arkansas corrections officials cited security concerns in their refusal to accommodate.


According to the state of Arkansas, current policy allows only a "neatly trimmed mustache" and inmate beards could pose a security risk to guards and the public: Prisoners who escape could shave their facial hair, altering their appearance. And weapons and other contraband could be hidden in heavy beards or inside their cheeks, covered by facial hair.


Justice Samuel Alito was skeptical: "As far as searching a beard is concerned: Why can't the prison just give the inmate a comb and say comb your beard? And if there's anything in there -- if there's a SIM card in there or a revolver or anything else you think can be hidden in a half-inch beard, a tiny revolver -- it'll fall out."


Chief Justice John Roberts addressed the issue of how to define "neatly trimmed."


"One of the difficult issues in a case like this is where to draw the line," Roberts said, addressing Holt's lawyer.


"And you just say: 'Well, we want to draw the line at a half-inch because that lets us win.' And the next day someone's going to be here with 1 inch. And then 2 inches.


Administrative Directive 98-04.D of the Arkansas Department of Correction permits beards only for those "with a diagnosed dermatological problem."


But in his self-initiated plea to the justices, Holt complained that he and fellow Muslims were forced "to either obey their religious beliefs and face disciplinary action on the one hand, or violate those beliefs in order to acquiesce" to the facial hair policy.


Read Holt's original handwritten petition to the Supreme Court (PDF)


He cited the Hadith -- literary traditions and sayings of the Prophet Mohammed -- which says, "Allah's Messenger said, 'Cut the mustaches short and leave the beard (as it is).' " Holt said he offered to keep his beard to a half-inch as a "compromise," but that was rejected.


Forty states and the federal correctional system allow beards of varying lengths, say his attorneys.


Holt is housed at the Varner Supermax, a 468-bed, ultra-maximum security section of the correctional facility in Grady, Arkansas, near Pine Bluff.


Officials point to Inmate 129-616's self-admission as a "Yemen-trained Muslim fundamentalist" with a violent criminal past. He had been indicted by a federal grand jury for threatening to harm then-President George W. Bush's two daughters.


A few years later, he was convicted in state court and sentenced to life in prison for breaking into the home of his ex-girlfriend and severely wounding her, slitting her throat and stabbing her in the chest.


Law enforcement officials say he threatened to wage "jihad" against anyone who helped convict him, both at trial and later behind bars.


But Holt's lawyers say his criminal history is not at issue, but rather the state's continued restrictive policies.


"What they really seek is absolute deference to anything they say just because they say it," attorney Douglas Laycock told the justices at the start of the one-hour argument. "There may be deference to prison officials, but there must be concrete limits to that deference."


Justice Antonin Scalia questioned Holt's claim of a compromise in growing a trimmed beard. "Let's assume in the religion that requires polygamy -- could I say to the prison: 'I won't have three wives, just let me have two wives.' I mean, you're still violating his religion, it seems to me, if he allows his beard to be clipped to one-half inch, isn't he?"


When Laycock said the inmate should not be punished for being "reasonable" in his request, Scalia shot back, "Religious beliefs aren't reasonable."


State leaders had a simple message for the courts: Allow us room to decide which restrictions work best within each institution's unique circumstances.


David Curran, representing the state attorney general's office, said "common sense" was applied in a reasonable way when the no-beards policy was enacted. But that brought tough questions from the bench.


"You have no comparable rule about hair on one's head, where it seems more could be hidden than in the beard," said Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, "where you hide something in a beard and it might drop out."


And Justice Stephen Breyer: "There's no example, not a single example in any state, that allows beard policies where somebody did hide something in his beard," a point the state conceded.


Arkansas also argued growing facial hair could make it hard to identify inmates -- either behind bars or if they escape.


Alito again: "Why is that so? Are you saying that somebody with or without a half-inch beard -- that's a bigger difference than somebody who has longish hair, versus the same person with a shaved head?"


The Obama administration is backing Holt. Some legal analysts say the justices have traditionally been deferential to the security judgments of prison officers.


The beard case is one of three high-profile disputes over religion that will be heard by the justices in coming weeks. One involves the ability of Americans born in the holy city of Jerusalem to list "Israel" or "Palestine" as their country of birth on U.S. passports.


Another is a workplace discrimination claim filed by a female Muslim woman from Tulsa who wears a hijab. She sued the clothing chain after a job was offered then rescinded -- she claims because of her headscarf.


And the court will hear arguments over whether local governments can impose stricter regulations on temporary church signs than on other noncommercial displays, such as lost-dog posters and political campaign banners, typically displayed along streets in the weeks before an election.


Holt is being defended in court by the Beckett Fund for Religious Liberty, the same nonprofit group that backed two Christian families in a separate high court challenge earlier this year.


At issue there was whether a federal law permitted closely held family-owned corporations the discretion to deny contraception coverage in employer-funded insurance plans.


The conservative court dealt a setback to the White House and Obamacare supporters in the so-called Hobby Lobby dispute, saying those with "sincerely held" religious beliefs had a limited right to operate in harmony with biblical principles while competing in a secular marketplace.


The Beckett Fund noted that groups like the American Civil Liberties Union and the Anti-Defamation League, along with Catholic bishops, are now backing Holt.


The current Arkansas dispute is Holt v. Hobbs (13-6827).



Which TV shows should be revived?






Some shows never got much of a chance -- and should get another go-round. One that maintains a fervent fan base is <strong>"Firefly,"</strong> the Joss Whedon-created sci-fi western that starred Nathan Fillion. It aired for just one season. Yeah, there was a movie -- 2005's "Serenity" -- but come on, wouldn't a limited-run series be better?Some shows never got much of a chance -- and should get another go-round. One that maintains a fervent fan base is "Firefly," the Joss Whedon-created sci-fi western that starred Nathan Fillion. It aired for just one season. Yeah, there was a movie -- 2005's "Serenity" -- but come on, wouldn't a limited-run series be better?

<strong>"Freaks and Geeks,"</strong> about a group of misfit students, also lasted just one season (1999-2000). The show was full of talent -- creator Paul Feig, producer Judd Apatow, stars Linda Cardellini, James Franco and Jason Segel -- and rich in character, so it might be worth a short run to see what's happened to the gang at McKinley High. (No, "Undeclared" doesn't count.)"Freaks and Geeks," about a group of misfit students, also lasted just one season (1999-2000). The show was full of talent -- creator Paul Feig, producer Judd Apatow, stars Linda Cardellini, James Franco and Jason Segel -- and rich in character, so it might be worth a short run to see what's happened to the gang at McKinley High. (No, "Undeclared" doesn't count.)

Leslie Nielsen played Detective Frank Drebin in<strong> "Police Squad!"</strong> ("In color!" the credits announced), which lasted just six episodes in 1982. The show was from the Zucker/Abrahams/Zucker team that made "Airplane!' and had a similar anything-goes attitude about comedy -- one that rubbed off on "The Simpsons" and "30 Rock." The show spawned three theatrical films, but there was something about a half-hour comedy that brought out the wackiest chaos.Leslie Nielsen played Detective Frank Drebin in "Police Squad!" ("In color!" the credits announced), which lasted just six episodes in 1982. The show was from the Zucker/Abrahams/Zucker team that made "Airplane!' and had a similar anything-goes attitude about comedy -- one that rubbed off on "The Simpsons" and "30 Rock." The show spawned three theatrical films, but there was something about a half-hour comedy that brought out the wackiest chaos.

Damian Lewis (center), now of "Homeland" fame, starred in<strong> "Life,"</strong> an NBC series about a wrongly convicted detective that ran for two seasons in 2007-09. With its layered characters and interesting themes, the show could be refreshed for a new run.Damian Lewis (center), now of "Homeland" fame, starred in "Life," an NBC series about a wrongly convicted detective that ran for two seasons in 2007-09. With its layered characters and interesting themes, the show could be refreshed for a new run.

<strong>"Jack and Bobby,"</strong> which aired for one season in 2004, had a great cast -- Christine Lahti, John Slattery, a young Jessica Pare -- and a curious concept: It was the story of two teenage brothers, one of whom becomes president. The final episode revealed some details of the future, but so much was left hanging."Jack and Bobby," which aired for one season in 2004, had a great cast -- Christine Lahti, John Slattery, a young Jessica Pare -- and a curious concept: It was the story of two teenage brothers, one of whom becomes president. The final episode revealed some details of the future, but so much was left hanging.

Yeah, <strong>"Deadwood"</strong> had a good (expletive deleted) run, but it still just ended. The 2004-06 HBO series about the West in the 1870s, with John Hawkes (right) and Timothy Olyphant, had one foot in fact and another in fiction, and for many fans there was more story to tell. Yeah, "Deadwood" had a good (expletive deleted) run, but it still just ended. The 2004-06 HBO series about the West in the 1870s, with John Hawkes (right) and Timothy Olyphant, had one foot in fact and another in fiction, and for many fans there was more story to tell.

Though never a huge hit,<strong> "Picket Fences" </strong>(1992-96) was popular with critics and award-givers: it was twice named best drama series at the Emmys. But Tom Skerritt (center) and the rest of the residents of Rome, Wisconsin, could use another run.Though never a huge hit, "Picket Fences" (1992-96) was popular with critics and award-givers: it was twice named best drama series at the Emmys. But Tom Skerritt (center) and the rest of the residents of Rome, Wisconsin, could use another run.

Given its prominence in reruns once upon a time, it's surprising that <strong>"Rat Patrol"</strong> (with Christopher George) ran for just two seasons in the 1960s. The original show was about a World War II military unit in North Africa; you could easily update it with troops in the Middle East.Given its prominence in reruns once upon a time, it's surprising that "Rat Patrol" (with Christopher George) ran for just two seasons in the 1960s. The original show was about a World War II military unit in North Africa; you could easily update it with troops in the Middle East.

Bryan Fuller, who now produces "Hannibal," has had a number of series that never got the audience they deserved. One of them was <strong>"</strong><strong>Pushing Daisies</strong><strong>,"</strong> which ran for two seasons in the late '00s. Lee Pace (right) starred in a strange mix of mystery, magic and pie. Bryan Fuller, who now produces "Hannibal," has had a number of series that never got the audience they deserved. One of them was "Pushing Daisies," which ran for two seasons in the late '00s. Lee Pace (right) starred in a strange mix of mystery, magic and pie.

Another Fuller show was<strong> "Wonderfalls,"</strong> which had one season on Fox in 2004. The show starred Caroline Dhavernas as a Niagara Falls gift-shop worker who talks to the shop's figurines. Dhavernas is now in "Hannibal."Another Fuller show was "Wonderfalls," which had one season on Fox in 2004. The show starred Caroline Dhavernas as a Niagara Falls gift-shop worker who talks to the shop's figurines. Dhavernas is now in "Hannibal."

<strong>"Party Down"</strong> had a terrific cast, including Ken Marino (left), Adam Scott (right), Jane Lynch and Lizzy Caplan. But the comedy about struggling actors doing catering lasted just two seasons on Starz. Rumor has it a film is in the works."Party Down" had a terrific cast, including Ken Marino (left), Adam Scott (right), Jane Lynch and Lizzy Caplan. But the comedy about struggling actors doing catering lasted just two seasons on Starz. Rumor has it a film is in the works.









  • "Twin Peaks" returning in 2016, latest show to be rebooted

  • Bringing back old shows combines nostalgia, need for content

  • A number of old shows could use revivals




(CNN) -- If you haven't heard, "Twin Peaks" is coming back.


On Monday, Showtime announced that the early-'90s David Lynch series would return for a limited run in 2016.


'Twin Peaks' returns -- on Showtime


A new "Twin Peaks" could be intriguing, since the show was so labyrinthine to start with. Indeed, the Internet erupted with enthusiasm at the news. Other ideas, such as the possibility of a "Say Anything" TV series, haven't been so well received.


Nowadays, there's no reason that a show has to die completely. Thanks to the endless appetite for content and nostalgia, old noble failures can be repurposed, rethought and recast to make shiny NEW failu -- uh, hopefuls. (Besides, as the saying goes, there's nothing new under the sun.)


What could these shows be? A long time ago -- back in the '90s and '00s -- there was a program on the now-defunct network Trio called "Brilliant But Cancelled," which was a way to showcase a number of notable network programs that died before their time.


It was a chance to look anew at shows such as Larry Gelbart's "United States," the prescient "Profit" and the bizarre "Lookwell," starring Adam West and created by Conan O'Brien and Robert Smigel. (Trio, which had an interesting mix of old talk shows, British reruns and a smattering of new programming, also died before its time, with its plug pulled in 2005.)


We've come up with our own list of TV series that we wouldn't mind seeing get a second shot. With the right brain trust, some of these programs can be better than they were.


The best example is probably "Battlestar Galactica," which in its original incarnation was an old-fashioned space opera. When it was brought back in 2004, it became a trenchant commentary on terrorism, religion and its impact on society.


What other shows could be rebooted? Check out the gallery for a few suggestions -- and join the comments to add some of your own.



No indictments for cops who hurt baby





  • U.S. attorney: Feds to review case after grand jury failed to return indictment on officer

  • SWAT team entered home after informant bought methamphetamine, sheriff said

  • During raid, officer inadvertently threw flash-bang grenade into baby's playpen, police said

  • Had officers known child was inside, they would've "done things different," sheriff said




(CNN) -- A federal prosecutor will review the case of a Georgia SWAT team that threw a flash-bang grenade into a playpen, according to a Tuesday statement.


The news comes a day after a state grand jury declined to return an indictment.


The incident, which severely injured a 1-year-old child, occurred in May when the Habersham County Special Response Team conducted a drug raid in Cornelia. The grand jury began hearing the case late last month.


"Federal authorities have been participating in the investigation of this terrible incident, and now that a state grand jury has declined to return an indictment, we will review the matter for possible federal charges," said U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia Sally Quillian Yates.


The police officers involved were called baby killers and received threats following the incident, Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell said at the time.




Wanis Thonetheva is being held without bond.

Wanis Thonetheva is being held without bond.



The SWAT team, made up of six or seven officers from the sheriff's department and the Cornelia Police Department, entered the Cornelia residence of Wanis Thonetheva on the morning of May 28.


A confidential informant hours earlier had purchased methamphetamine at the house, the sheriff said.


Because Thonetheva had a previous weapons charge, officers were issued a "no-knock warrant" for the residence, Terrell said.


When the SWAT team hit the home's front door with a battering ram, it resisted as if something was up against it, the sheriff said, so one of the officers threw the flash-bang grenade inside the residence.


Once inside the house, the SWAT team realized it was a portable playpen blocking the door, and the flash-bang grenade had landed inside where a 19-month-old was sleeping, the sheriff said.


A medic on the scene rushed the baby outside to administer first aid, and a nearby ambulance transported the baby to a hospital.


The child's mother, Alecia Phonesavanh, told CNN affiliate WSB the family was sleeping at her sister-in-law's house when police arrived, and the grenade seared a hole through the portable playpen after exploding on the child's pillow.


"He's in the burn unit. We go up to see him and his whole face is ripped open. He has a big cut on his chest," Phonesavanh told the station at the time.


Thonetheva, 30, was not at the home at the time of the raid, but the toddler's mother and father and their other three children were inside. Thonetheva's mother was also at the house, Terrell said.


Thonetheva was arrested at another Cornelia residence, along with three other people, shortly after the raid, Terrell said. He was charged with distribution of methamphetamine.


Thonetheva was not charged with any weapons crime, and as for drugs, Terrell said officers found only residue in the home.


In hindsight, Terrell said at the time, officers would've conducted the raid differently had they known there was a child inside the home, but there was no sign of children during the alleged drug purchase that prompted the raid.


"We might have gone in through a side door," he said. "We would not have used a flash bang."


CNN's MaryLynn Ryan, Devon M. Sayers and Martin Savidge contributed to this report.



Drug cops 'raid' okra crop





  • Cartersville, Georgia, man says police "strapped to the gills" came to his house last week

  • A helicopter belonging to a drug task force mistook his okra plants for cannabis, police say

  • Police: Okra plants, cannabis plants have "quite a number of characteristics" in common

  • Jokes aside, man worries: "The more I thought about it, what could have happened?"




(CNN) -- The grower was alarmed when the police helicopter swooped low over his property.


Soon, Bartow County, Georgia, deputies -- "strapped to the gills" and with a drug dog in tow -- converged on his doorstep.


They had the grower dead to rights.


Except the plant that the chopper cops had spotted from the air was ... okra.


Dwayne Perry of Cartersville told CNN affiliate WSB that he is none too happy about last week's "raid" conducted by the governor's drug suppression task force.





Mexico's President on drug legalization







Do not use this in your gumbo.

Do not use this in your gumbo.



"Here I am, at home and retired and you know I do the right thing," Perry told the station. "Then they come to my house strapped with weapons for no reason. It ain't right."


He received many calls about all of the police officers at his home, Perry said, and he worries that his reputation in the community may suffer.


The helicopter was combing the area in search of cannabis plants when it came across the five-leaflet okra plant, the station reported. Marijuana plants can have anywhere between one and 13 leaflets per leaf, depending on maturity and health, but they generally have seven or nine.


"It did have quite a number of characteristics that were similar to a cannabis plant," Georgia State Patrol Capt. Kermit Stokes told WSB.


Upon realizing that it had dispatched officers to confiscate a popular gumbo ingredient, the Georgia State Patrol, which operates the task force, issued an apology, both to Perry and publicly.


"If we disturbed them in any manner, that's not our intent. Our intent is to go out and do our job and do it to the best of our ability," Stokes told WSB.


It seems like a humorous mistake, only because no one was hurt, but there have been numerous instances in which innocent citizens have been injured or worse when police acted on bogus information.


That potentiality didn't escape Perry.


"The more I thought about it, what could have happened? Anything could have happened," he told WSB.



LED light earns Nobel Prize





  • NEW: Scientist Shuji Nakamura says winning the Nobel Prize is "unbelievable"

  • Committee: Trio's work is in keeping with the spirit of Alfred Nobel

  • They invented the blue light-emitting diode

  • Coupled with the red and green, it creates white LED lights




(CNN) -- Two scientists in Japan and one at the University of California at Santa Barbara were awarded this year's Nobel Prize in physics for helping create the LED light, a transformational and ubiquitous source that now lights up everything from our living rooms to our flashlights to our smart phones.


The awarding committee said the trio's work is in keeping with the spirit of Alfred Nobel, the founder of the prize, because LED lights save on energy, last long and are environmentally-friendly because they don't contain mercury.


They "hold great promise for increasing the quality of life for over 1.5 billion people around the world who lack access to electricity grids," the awarding committee said.


Specifically, Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano and Shuji Nakamura were honored for inventing the blue light emitting diode.


Red and green diodes had been around for years. But when the three created the blue diodes in the early 1990s, only then could the white lamps that glow from every corner of our world be created.


For 30 years, scientists had tried to create the blue diode.


"They triggered a fundamental transformation of lighting technology," the committee said. "They succeeded where everyone else failed."


LED lights last longer and are more efficient than regular light bulbs and fluorescent lamps.


Medicine Nobel Prize goes for work on cells that form brain's GPS system


Not prepared for it


Nakamura, a scientist at the University of California, Santa Barbara, said by phone that receiving the news that he had won the Nobel prize was "unbelievable."


Akasaki and Amano are affiliated with Nagoya University in Japan.


Amano was on a flight when the committee tried to call him so was not able to hear the news in advance of the news conference, the committee said.


Staffan Normark, permanent secretary of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, said that Nakamura and Akasaki had been thrilled to learn they were prize winners.


"I think they were not prepared for it. They had not been waiting up all day and all night for this call," he said.


The three winners will share the 8 million Swedish kronor ($1.2 million) attached to the prize.


Last year's physics prize went jointly to Francois Englert of Belgium and Peter Higgs of the United Kingdom for the theory of how particles acquire mass. Their theoretical brilliance was borne out when researchers confirmed the existence in 2012 of the Higgs boson, or "God particle."


The Nobel prizes in chemistry, literature and economic sciences will be announced later this week, as will the Nobel Peace Prize.



911 calls released in mayor's death





  • On September 30, mayor of California town near Los Angeles was killed at home

  • On a 911 call, son says his mom was defending him when she fired gun

  • "It wasn't my mom's fault," the frantic caller says

  • An investigation is ongoing and no one has been charged in the shooting




(CNN) -- The distraught caller to 911 sobs as the police dispatcher repeatedly asks him the nature of the emergency.


Finally the caller realizes someone is on the other end of the phone.


"My parents got in an argument and there were shots fired," he cries.


The man who was fatally shot was Daniel Crespo, the mayor of Bell Gardens, California, and the shooter was his wife, Levette Crespo, who shot her husband multiple times in the torso, according to police.


On Tuesday, the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department released two 911 calls from the September 30 shooting, one from the couple's son and the other from a neighbor.


"It wasn't my mom's fault. She was defending herself," Daniel Crespo Jr. says on the tape in the frantic aftermath of the shooting.


After the Bell Gardens 911 operator confirms that the mother, 43, has shot her 45-year-old husband, Daniel Crespo Jr. says: "He hurt me. He hurt me. He's on the floor dying, OK? He hurt me."


CNN affiliate KTLA reported -- citing investigators -- that the son, who is 19, tried to break up a fight between his parents.


Levette Crespo has not been charged and a police investigation continues, KTLA reported.


Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Daniel Crespo moved to Bell Gardens in 1987. He worked as a probation officer, a job he held even after becoming mayor of the city of 42,000, about 10 miles southeast of Los Angeles in 2001.



U.S. Vice President apologizes





  • NEW: Vice President Joe Biden apologizes to the UAE

  • He had said at Harvard that allies inadvertently strengthened ISIS

  • Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan demanded an apology from Biden

  • Biden said Erdogan told him that Turkey had let too many foreign fighters through the border




(CNN) -- U.S. Vice President Joe Biden has apologized to the United Arab Emirates and Turkey for comments he made last week that Middle Eastern allies are partly to blame for the strengthening of ISIS.


The latest apology came in phone call from Biden to the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, representatives from both countries said Sunday. The vice president issued an apology to Turkey earlier during the weekend.





Biden regrets saying allies helped ISIS




Will Turkey face ISIS on the ground?




Cam catches ISIS shelling Syrian city

The problem appears to have originated during an appearance last week at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University when Biden spoke about Turkey, the UAE, other Middle Eastern allies, and the threat posed by the so-called Islamic State terror group, also known as ISIS or ISIL.





An American fighting ISIS on the ground?

Biden told attendees that the militant Islamist group had been inadvertently strengthened by actions allies took to help opposition groups fighting against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.





Turkey authorizes strikes on ISIS

"They poured hundreds of millions of dollars and thousands of tons of weapons into anyone who would fight against Assad. Except that the people who were being supplied were al-Nusra and al-Qaeda and the extremist elements of jihadis coming from other parts of the world," Biden told students.


"We could not convince our colleagues to stop supplying them," he said.


On Turkey's alleged role, Biden said, "President (Recep Tayyip) Erdogan told me, he's an old friend, said, 'You were right. We let too many people (including foreign fighters) through.' Now they are trying to seal their border," he said, according to transcripts.


Biden gets colorful on being a VP


Denial and consternation


Erdogan vehemently denied ever saying such a thing.


Biden extended a mea culpa on Saturday to the Turkish President.


The apology came hours after Erdogan expressed his anger over the comments to reporters in Istanbul, saying, "Biden has to apologize for his statements."


Otherwise, he said, Biden will become "history to me," according to published reports by the semi-official Anadolu news agency.


The United Arab Emirates' foreign ministry hit Biden with a sharply formulated statement Saturday, expressing its "astonishment" at the vice president's remarks.


They were "far from the truth, especially with relation to the UAE's role in confronting extremism and terrorism and its clear and advanced position in recognizing the dangers, including the danger of financing terrorism and terrorist groups," said Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Dr. Anwar Mohammed Gargash.


The apologies


The UAE on Sunday said that Biden apologized to the Crown Prince during their phone call "for any implications in his recent statements" that the Middle Eastern nation has backed the growth of terror groups.


A statement from Biden's office avoided the word "apology," but said he "clarified that his recent remarks regarding the early stages of the conflict in Syria were not meant to imply that the UAE had facilitated or supported ISIL, Al Qaeda, or other extremist groups in Syria."


Biden thanked the UAE for its role in fighting ISIS and terrorism in the region, according to accounts from both nations.


He made similar overtures to Turkey.


"The Vice President apologized for any implication that Turkey or other Allies and partners in the region had intentionally supplied or facilitated the growth of ISIL or other violent extremists in Syria," Biden spokeswoman Kendra Barkoff said.


"The Vice President made clear that the United States greatly values the commitments and sacrifices made by our Allies and partners from around the world to combat the scourge of ISIL, including Turkey."


During their telephone conversation, Biden and Erdogan reaffirmed the two countries' commitment to fight the terror group, Barkoff said.


Erdogan's office and the Turkish Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a CNN request for comment regarding Biden's apology.


The issue has arisen at a sensitive time, with Turkey's government authorizing the use of military force against terrorist organizations, including ISIS, as the militant group's fighters laid siege to towns just south of the Turkish border.


The government also agreed to allow foreign troops to launch operations against ISIS from Turkey.


Until now, Turkey has offered only tacit support to the coalition.


While Biden is known for making blunt statements that sometimes embarrass the administration, Turkey is particularly sensitive to allegations of allowing terrorists to cross its border into Syria.


Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has accused Turkey of looking the other way and, in some cases, providing support to rebels embroiled in the country's civil war.


Turkey, in turn, has accused Syria of fomenting the unrest that has led to ISIS taking hold in the region.


CNN's Talia Kayali and Tom Dunlavey contributed to this report.



Morrissey hints at cancer scare






Fans of singer Morrissey knew the star had been ill after he canceled some U.S. tour stops in June, but it appears the performer has been battling cancer. "They have scraped cancerous tissues four times already, but whatever," Morrissey <a href='http://ift.tt/1twG8A2' target='_blank'>said in an interview with Spanish language outlet El Mundo</a>. "I am aware that in some of my recent photos I look somewhat unhealthy, but that's what illness can do. I'm not going to worry about that." These stars have also faced their own cancer battle: Fans of singer Morrissey knew the star had been ill after he canceled some U.S. tour stops in June, but it appears the performer has been battling cancer. "They have scraped cancerous tissues four times already, but whatever," Morrissey said in an interview with Spanish language outlet El Mundo. "I am aware that in some of my recent photos I look somewhat unhealthy, but that's what illness can do. I'm not going to worry about that." These stars have also faced their own cancer battle:

Diem Brown, one of the stars of MTV's "The Challenge," was diagnosed with cancer for the third time in August. Last week doctors discovered a tumor blocking her kidneys, <a href='http://ift.tt/1rE14Z4' target='_blank'>People.com reported</a>, slowing her recovery. However, she's stayed upbeat in the face of her struggle. Diem Brown, one of the stars of MTV's "The Challenge," was diagnosed with cancer for the third time in August. Last week doctors discovered a tumor blocking her kidneys, People.com reported, slowing her recovery. However, she's stayed upbeat in the face of her struggle.

When former "Good Morning America" host Joan Lunden learned she was facing an "aggressive" form of breast cancer, she was determined to face her health battle head on. Knowing she would need chemotherapy, Lunden decided to remove her familiar blond hair before her locks could be affected by the treatment. "You know it's going to happen one of these days and you are wondering how or when," <a href='http://ift.tt/1qtPomD' target='_blank'>Lunden explained to People magazine</a>, which she posed for without her wig in September. "So I just owned it."When former "Good Morning America" host Joan Lunden learned she was facing an "aggressive" form of breast cancer, she was determined to face her health battle head on. Knowing she would need chemotherapy, Lunden decided to remove her familiar blond hair before her locks could be affected by the treatment. "You know it's going to happen one of these days and you are wondering how or when," Lunden explained to People magazine, which she posed for without her wig in September. "So I just owned it."

Hugh Jackman<a href='http://ift.tt/1kTV0Ev' target='_blank'> took to Instagram</a> on May 8 to share a photo of his nose, which was bandaged because of treatment he had on basal cell carcinoma.Hugh Jackman took to Instagram on May 8 to share a photo of his nose, which was bandaged because of treatment he had on basal cell carcinoma.

Former "Dancing With the Stars" co-host Samantha Harris has breast cancer and will undergo a double mastectomy, <a href='http://ift.tt/1kqCnO2' target='_blank'>according to People</a>. Harris says she detected a lump during a self-exam and then followed up with a specialist after receiving a clean mammogram, the magazine reported. Former "Dancing With the Stars" co-host Samantha Harris has breast cancer and will undergo a double mastectomy, according to People. Harris says she detected a lump during a self-exam and then followed up with a specialist after receiving a clean mammogram, the magazine reported.

Actress Brittany Daniel of "Sweet Valley High" and "The Game" has been quietly dealing with stage IV non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Daniel recalls in an issue of <a href='http://ift.tt/1hCMkSw' target='_blank'>People magazine</a> that her 2011 diagnosis "happened so suddenly," but she's been able to face it with the support of her family. Actress Brittany Daniel of "Sweet Valley High" and "The Game" has been quietly dealing with stage IV non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Daniel recalls in an issue of People magazine that her 2011 diagnosis "happened so suddenly," but she's been able to face it with the support of her family.

Famed journalist Tom Brokaw <a href='http://ift.tt/1iZLdO1'>revealed in February that he's been diagnosed with multiple myeloma</a>, a cancer which affects blood cells in the bone marrow. Famed journalist Tom Brokaw revealed in February that he's been diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a cancer which affects blood cells in the bone marrow.

Getting a mammogram live on "Good Morning America" for cancer awareness month revealed to ABC's Amy Robach that she had breast cancer in November.Getting a mammogram live on "Good Morning America" for cancer awareness month revealed to ABC's Amy Robach that she had breast cancer in November.

Radio personality Robin Quivers quietly battled cancer for months, but she had happy news to share with "Howard Stern" listeners in September 2013. On the show, Quivers revealed that her doctors now believe she's cancer-free after receiving treatment, including chemotherapy. Radio personality Robin Quivers quietly battled cancer for months, but she had happy news to share with "Howard Stern" listeners in September 2013. On the show, Quivers revealed that her doctors now believe she's cancer-free after receiving treatment, including chemotherapy.

Singer Melissa Etheridge became <a href='http://ift.tt/1sHUZte'>an advocate for the use of medical marijuana</a> after her 2004 breast cancer diagnosis. Singer Melissa Etheridge became an advocate for the use of medical marijuana after her 2004 breast cancer diagnosis.

Sharon Jones held off plans to tour and release a new album with the Dap-Kings <a href='http://ift.tt/1sHV0gP' target='_blank'>after being diagnosed</a> with stage 1 bile duct cancer in 2013.Sharon Jones held off plans to tour and release a new album with the Dap-Kings after being diagnosed with stage 1 bile duct cancer in 2013.

Michael Douglas offered <a href='http://ift.tt/1sHV0gT'>some interesting insight</a> as to how he may have developed the throat cancer that he was diagnosed with in August 2010. Douglas later told the "Today" show that his tumor was gone. Michael Douglas offered some interesting insight as to how he may have developed the throat cancer that he was diagnosed with in August 2010. Douglas later told the "Today" show that his tumor was gone.

Buffalo Bills Hall of Fame quarterback Jim Kelly has been <a href='http://ift.tt/1qyBiXg' target='_blank'>diagnosed with cancer of the upper jaw bone</a>. "Doctors have told me that the prognosis for my recovery is very good," <a href='http://ift.tt/19BYAjT' target='_blank'>Kelly said in a statement from his former club</a>. Indeed, in August, <a href='http://ift.tt/1mwfFpv' target='_blank'>Kelly was told</a> that he was cancer-free.Buffalo Bills Hall of Fame quarterback Jim Kelly has been diagnosed with cancer of the upper jaw bone. "Doctors have told me that the prognosis for my recovery is very good," Kelly said in a statement from his former club. Indeed, in August, Kelly was told that he was cancer-free.

Actress Christina Applegate had a bilateral mastectomy in 2008. <a href='http://ift.tt/18Lg3Gb' target='_blank'>Doctors had diagnosed her</a> with cancer in her left breast and offered her the options of either radiation treatment and testing for the rest of her life or removal of both breasts.Actress Christina Applegate had a bilateral mastectomy in 2008. Doctors had diagnosed her with cancer in her left breast and offered her the options of either radiation treatment and testing for the rest of her life or removal of both breasts.

In 2006, singer Sheryl Crow underwent minimally invasive surgery for breast cancer. In 2012, she <a href='http://ift.tt/1qyBiXn' target='_blank'>revealed she had a noncancerous brain tumor.</a>In 2006, singer Sheryl Crow underwent minimally invasive surgery for breast cancer. In 2012, she revealed she had a noncancerous brain tumor.

KISS band member Peter Criss <a href='http://ift.tt/1sHUZJU'>sat down with CNN's Elizabeth Cohen</a> in 2009, a year after his battle with breast cancer. The musician said he wanted to increase awareness of the fact that men can also get the disease.KISS band member Peter Criss sat down with CNN's Elizabeth Cohen in 2009, a year after his battle with breast cancer. The musician said he wanted to increase awareness of the fact that men can also get the disease.

Cynthia Nixon not only <a href='http://ift.tt/1qyBlSM' target='_blank'>joined the cast of Showtime's "The Big C,"</a> about a woman battling the disease, and portrayed a woman with cancer in the Broadway play "Wit" -- Nixon was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2006.Cynthia Nixon not only joined the cast of Showtime's "The Big C," about a woman battling the disease, and portrayed a woman with cancer in the Broadway play "Wit" -- Nixon was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2006.

Zoraida Sambolin was diagnosed with breast cancer in April 2013, and she chose to have a double mastectomy. <a href='http://ift.tt/1sHV2Ft' target='_blank'>Sambolin said</a> that Angelina Jolie's New York Times opinion piece about undergoing the procedure gave her courage to share her story. Zoraida Sambolin was diagnosed with breast cancer in April 2013, and she chose to have a double mastectomy. Sambolin said that Angelina Jolie's New York Times opinion piece about undergoing the procedure gave her courage to share her story.

"Good Morning America" co-host Robin Roberts had been cancer-free for five years in 2012 after beating breast cancer when she revealed she had <a href='http://ift.tt/1qyBkhX'>been diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome, </a>also called MDS."Good Morning America" co-host Robin Roberts had been cancer-free for five years in 2012 after beating breast cancer when she revealed she had been diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome, also called MDS.

"Three's Company" star Suzanne Somers <a href='http://ift.tt/1sHV0NU' target='_blank'>spoke with CNN's Piers Morgan in 2012</a> about her stem cell surgery and her bout with breast cancer. She was diagnosed in 2001, which is when she began researching alternative methods to reconstructive surgery."Three's Company" star Suzanne Somers spoke with CNN's Piers Morgan in 2012 about her stem cell surgery and her bout with breast cancer. She was diagnosed in 2001, which is when she began researching alternative methods to reconstructive surgery.

Olivia Newton-John was diagnosed in 1992, and the singer has become an advocate for breast self-examination.Olivia Newton-John was diagnosed in 1992, and the singer has become an advocate for breast self-examination.

E! co-host Giuliana Rancic<a href='http://ift.tt/1sHV2VT' target='_blank'> underwent a double mastectomy in 2011</a> after a breast cancer diagnosis. E! co-host Giuliana Rancic underwent a double mastectomy in 2011 after a breast cancer diagnosis.

Actress Kathy Bates <a href='http://ift.tt/1sHV2VX' target='_blank'>didn't share news of her battle until 2012</a>, eight years after she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer.Actress Kathy Bates didn't share news of her battle until 2012, eight years after she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer.

Australian singer Kylie Minogue was only 36 when she was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2005.Australian singer Kylie Minogue was only 36 when she was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2005.








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  • Morrissey: "If I die, then I die"

  • Singer says doctors have scraped cancerous tissues from him

  • He's had many health issues recently




(RollingStone.com) -- It's been a rough year for Morrissey, as the laconic singer has endured everything from tour-canceling illnesses to possibly being dropped from his new label to bizarre allegations of a murder-for-hire plot.


However, in a new interview with El Mundo, the former Smiths singer reveals he's dealing with some health issues that make all those other troubles seem insignificant. According to Morrissey, he's had a cancer scare, although in talking about the disease, the singer doesn't seem that scared at all.


Morrissey talks about his health, sex appeal


"They have scraped cancerous tissues four times already, but whatever," Morrissey told the Spanish-language El Mundo (via a translation by the Guardian). "If I die, then I die. And if I don't, then I don't. Right now I feel good. I am aware that in some of my recent photos I look somewhat unhealthy, but that's what illness can do. I'm not going to worry about that. I'll rest when I'm dead."


Over the past few years, Morrissey has canceled tour dates for reasons like food poisoning, bleeding ulcers, pneumonia and a sickness he blamed on his opening act, but this is the first time the usually candid rocker has uttered the C-word aloud. In early 2013, Morrissey spent some time in a Michigan hospital after suffering from "a concussion, a bleeding ulcer and Barrett's esophagus."


Morrissey denies former bodyguard's allegations


After canceling six U.S. shows following his hospital stay, the singer penned a grim letter to fans where he discussed his own mortality.


"The reports of my death have been greatly understated," Morrissey wrote. "The positive from all of this is that there are now no known ailments left for me to try."


The singer also joked about an upcoming Las Vegas concert, writing, "If there's an audience of any kind in attendance, I just might die with a smile on my face, after all. If I am not there, I shall probably never again be anywhere. Equally, I am determined to play Flint [Michigan] if it kills me (which, on the face of it, it almost has)." He concluded the letter by signing off, "pause at my headstone, MORRISSEY."


Morrissey partners spar over cancellation


In a recent interview where Morrissey talked about his many health issues, he proclaimed that, "The worst was in June in Boston, when I was hospitalized with acute fever. I was delirious for six hours, talking absolute nonsense and unable to stop. I've never been so frightened in my life. Then, of course, you get these bitchy comments for having to cancel shows.... I've been to so many hospitals lately that there's hardly any point in my leaving."


At press time, Morrissey hasn't updated his fan sites about the cancer reports. Whatever the diagnosis, Morrissey is back out on the road, and NME reports that the singer's backing band is proudly donning shirts that say "F*** Harvest" as a nod to his record label after the label released Moz's new LP "World Peace Is None of Your Business."


See the original story at RollingStone.com


Copyright © 2011 Rolling Stone.