Racing back home after leaving Ecology Auto Parts… well sort-of. I saw a DUI Checkpoint / Speed Trap and slowed down.
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Los Angeles Area Weather Forecast: 1/10
Huge Cockfighting Raid Nets Nearly 50 People, 92 Cocks
VICTORVILLE, Calif. — Nearly 50 people have been arrested and 92 birds seized during a raid on a Southern California desert cockfighting operation. Days before the Sunday morning raid, San Bernardino County officials announced a crackdown on the illegal blood sport and released a video of roosters slashing at each other with steel blades attached to their legs. Property owner Fernando Hernandez and most of the spectators fled when deputies showed up. Forty-seven people were arrested, mostly for being spectators. Six were booked for investigation of animal cruelty. There were about 20 dead roosters. Deputies seized 92 live birds and about $21,000. ___ Read more from the original source: Huge Cockfighting Raid Nets Nearly 50 People, 92 Cocks
‘RHOBH’: Taylor Talks About Her Marriage Ending
With most of the cast enjoying a vacation in Hawaii on ” The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills ” (Mon., 9 p.m. EST On Bravo), Taylor Armstrong was strangely alone during one of the most pivotal moments in her adult life. She’d just realized her marriage to Russell was over, and had left him. So she turned to another friend, Dana Wilkey, to try and get through some of the raw emotions she was dealing with. “I’m either crying or I’m screaming or I’m drinking too much,” Taylor admitted. “I’m just trying to keep a lid on a pot that’s overboiling. I’m just trying to hold it on and I can’t do it anymore.” Dana was supportive, but grateful to finally hear her friend saying what everyone had seen for so long already. “I just have to learn now to be on my own and discover that I’m worth something better than what I’ve had,” Taylor told her. There are only two episodes left in this season, and of course viewers already now the tragic end of the Armstrong’s marital problems. Russell Armstrong committed suicide on August 15, 2011, after filming had wrapped for this season. “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” continues Monday nights at 9 p.m. EST on Bravo. TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser. View original post here: ‘RHOBH’: Taylor Talks About Her Marriage Ending
A Reminder to Be Cautious When Posting Comments Online
Real Simple magazine has dubbed this week Be Nice on the Internet Week . I like it. I’m in. Not that I’m not nice on the Internet. I am. I’m very nice. In fact, I am way nicer on the Internet than I am in real life. Seriously. Ask my kids. Perhaps it is because I have worked in a Web world for the last four years that I am so cognizant of the importance of proper comportment online. Since I spend a great deal of my time watching what others are saying on the Web, I am hyper-aware of my own behavior. At least I hope I am. Real Simple decided to go this route after doing a survey about social media behavior for its annual January “be a better person” issue. The results of the survey are fascinating and the editors wrote that “we’ll explore the psychological impact of Net negativity … Visit realsimple.com/beniceweek for full details and pledge with us to think before you post.” Now, Real Simple is focused on social media, like Facebook, where there is certainly well-documented cases of cyber-bullying that have gone so far as to end in suicide. To me, this idea of “think before you post” needs to be extended to everyone online, as even news sites have morphed into the area of social media with their comment platforms. And sometimes, it can get ugly. When I worked at theday.com as breaking news editor, a large part of my job was moderating comments. And because I had full view of the back of the house, I knew who many of the anonymous commenters really were. And I was occasionally shocked to find that the worst offenders in the comments—those who posted insults, attacks, made fun of others and were generally big jerks—were in their offline life leaders in the community. Anonymity gives many people courage—it’s like having one-too-many drinks at the bar and suddenly thinking you can take on the world. But even some of those who use their real names online go past the line of good manners and good debate. I wonder if it is because they are sitting in front of their computers, which also gives one the feeling that you are not really “talking” to others, you are simply typing. Patch is a news provider, but a major part of its mission and philosophy is to be a community platform—a gathering place where the free exchange of ideas and issues can help people figure out solutions and make changes for the better. A major component of Patch is the community’s ability to contribute through comments, adding photos or videos, posting announcements and events, and writing letters to the editor. I love Patch’s terms of use , which every reader agrees to when registering: Communities thrive when people care about each other, and as such, Patch expects all of its users to be respectful of others. … While we encourage people to be honest and post what’s on their mind, there are some types of Content that we simply can’t allow on Patch. … You might boil it down to three main policies: “Keep it clean,” “Don’t try to trick people,” and “Treat others as you’d like to be treated.” Easy, right? Not as easy as it sounds, based on some of the experiences we’ve had. But the in-the-now aspect of news coverage on Patch, and online in general, is what draws me to this latest incarnation of journalism—the fact that we are no longer all sitting alone in our kitchens, reading the news and talking to our pets about how we feel about what’s happening. Instead, we are reading the news and are able to state our opinions and add our two cents immediately—and share it with the world. And the world can answer back. Fabulous. I always think about posting online this way: Would I say it in front of my mother? Would I say it in front of my kids? Would I want someone to say it to my face exactly like this? Will I be sorry later? Be nice on the Internet—be nice in life. Words to live by. Elissa Bass is a regional editor for Patch.com in Connecticut. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . See the article here: A Reminder to Be Cautious When Posting Comments Online
Trio Of Robbers In Jail After Returning For Security Camera Footage
SANTA CLARITA, Calif. — Investigators say three young robbers are in jail after returning to a Southern California crime scene to retrieve liquor store surveillance camera video. Los Angeles sheriff’s Lt. Tom Bryski says the trio stole beer from Dooley’s Liquor Store in the Newhall area of Santa Clarita on Sunday night and fled. They returned to the store about 85 minutes later to get the surveillance video. The lieutenant tells City News Service that there was a scuffle and one of the robbers pulled a knife and slashed the store clerk’s arm. Deputies arrested 19-year-old Oscar Jimenez, 18-year-old Eduardo Salgado and a 17-year-old youth. They have been booked for investigation of theft, intimidating a witness and assault with a deadly weapon. Here is the original post: Trio Of Robbers In Jail After Returning For Security Camera Footage
Serial Killer Sought In Deaths Of 3 Homeless Men
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Police and advocates on Thursday warned homeless people in Orange County not to sleep alone on the streets because a serial killer has already killed three homeless men. The Orange County Rescue Mission is handing out flashlights and whistles to the homeless, in an effort to help them protect themselves, said Jim Palmer, the group’s president. Palmer’s group is encouraging area homeless to sleep in groups, or better yet, come inside to a shelter. “Our goal is to get them into those beds and fill those beds,” he said. Darryl Bossier, 49, said he sleeps outside the Orange County administration building in downtown Santa Ana – one of a dozen transients who use the benches that zigzag across the courtyard as a place to rest each night. “I’m a watchdog. I don’t want them to get anybody,” Bossier said of the killer, adding he sleeps only about four hours a night. “Who wants to wake up next to somebody dead?” He said he learned of the killings three days ago but would not go to a shelter because he had his cellphone stolen from his bag the last time he slept there. “You take a deep breath, but what are you going to do? Watch out for the people who are there.” Authorities have asked for the public’s help in finding the killer, as a special task force searches for the suspect with officers from Placentia, Anaheim and Brea, the Orange County Sheriff’s Department and the FBI. An image of a suspect from a video surveillance camera in the area where the first victim was killed shows what appears to be a thin man dressed in a dark hoodie or sweater who appears to be lying in wait for his victim. The body of the first victim, 53-year-old James McGillivray, was found Dec. 21 near a Placentia shopping mall. The second victim, 42-year-old Lloyd Middaugh, was found on a riverbed trail in Anaheim a week later. The third victim, 57-year-old Paulus Cornelius Smit, was discovered with fatal stab wounds outside a Yorba Linda library, where a photo of him stood at a small candlelit memorial this week. Two of the killings took place at night and one in the late afternoon. No motive has been disclosed, and investigators have found no connection among the victims beyond their homelessness. Read more: Serial Killer Sought In Deaths Of 3 Homeless Men
Joe Francis: Girl Fighter Extraordinaire
Normally we would fear being sued by the lawyer-wielding stud behind the Girls Gone Wild video juggernaut for calling him “girl fighter extraordinaire.” But in this case there doesn’t seem to be any question about it. See the article here: Joe Francis: Girl Fighter Extraordinaire
Men Caught on Tape Assaulting Circle K Clerk
The Garden Grove Police Department are searching for two suspects caught on surveillance video Dec. 28 attacking a Circle K Market clerk who asked whether one of the men, who sought to purchase beer, was… Link: Men Caught on Tape Assaulting Circle K Clerk
The Boyz II Men Video Retrospective You’ve Always Wanted
In honor of Boyz II Men getting the 2,456th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame today, we offer a video retrospective of some of the hits of the top-selling R&B group of all time (that’s over 60 million albums, wowzers!). Turn the lights down low, because the slow jams are about to roll hard. more › Read this article: The Boyz II Men Video Retrospective You’ve Always Wanted