Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 2008-12-10 17:27
Story here. Excerpt:
'A mother will appear before magistrates in Manchester this morning charged with murdering both of her children.
Jael Mullings was arrested after the bodies of two-year-old Romario Mullings-Sewell and his brother Delayno, aged three months, were found at their home in Kilmington Drive, Cheetham Hill, on November 12.
Both had been stabbed to death with a single wound to their chests, according to the post-mortem examinations.
Police and paramedics discovered the bodies at 5.45pm, a few hours after a GP called reporting concern for the children’s welfare.
...
Officers had called at the house where the boys’ bodies were found just hours before the brothers were killed.
The boys were described as “gorgeous” and “beautiful” by their family. Their mother was sectioned under the Mental Health Act following their deaths.'
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2008-12-10 17:17
Article here. Well I suppose it keeps you from seeing the inside of a "family court" but it's sad commentary on the state of affairs between the sexes. We will soon see a male version I am sure. For all the money the inventor spent on creating this android, as imperfect as it is at mimicking an actual human, the truth is that the technology is available today and the only thing lacking is major funding and the input of more engineers who are as brainy (or nearly so) as the inventor. The selling price of the "Programmable Perfect Mate 3000" could be as high as $30,000 and there would be no shortage of takers. Heck, they could sell them for $100k and still make a mint. Cylons indeed! Excerpt:
'Inventor Le Trung, 33, created Aiko, said to be “in her 20s” with a stunning 32, 23, 33 figure, shiny hair and delicate features.
She even remembers his favourite drink and does simple cleaning and household tasks.
"Fem-bot" Aiko, who has cost £14,000 to build so far, is a whizz at maths and even does Le’s accounts.
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Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 2008-12-10 12:33
Story here. Excerpt:
A 'perfect' mother massacred her five children by calling them one by one into her bedroom and slitting their throats, a Belgian court has been told.
Genevieve Lhermitte, 42, said she felt desperate and trapped alone at home with the children - four girls and a boy aged between 14 and three - while her husband Bouchaib Moqadem was away visiting his parents in Morocco.
On the day of the killings last year, which left Belgium in shock, she stole two knives from a supermarket and cooked a farewell lunch for the family before locking the front door and starting the massacre, the court in Nivelles, near Brussels, was told.
...
She later told police she felt "desperate and trapped" at having to be at home with the children while her husband was away, the court heard.'
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2008-12-10 08:04
Article here. Excerpt:
'From its beginnings three decades ago, the domestic violence industry has been plagued by a cabal of pinkshirts who will do almost anything to advance their agenda.
Erin Pizzey, founder of the first domestic violence shelter in England, let the cat out of the bag when she revealed many of the women in her shelter were as abusive as the men they had left. In retaliation, feminists issued death threats and eventually forced her to flee the country.
In the United States, Dr. Suzanne Steinmetz' research on the Battered Husband Syndrome triggered a whispering campaign designed to torpedo her impending promotion, as well as a bomb threat at her daughter's wedding.
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2008-12-10 03:56
Article here. Excerpt:
'One lesson came from an emailer in California who was an economics student at a state university in the early 1990s. "This is like déjà vu," he wrote. He told me that as part of his studies he researched the economics literature on the male/female "wage gap" and arrived at basically the same conclusions that Professor Block did in his Loyola College lecture: Once one accounts for the effects of marriage and numerous other economic factors, there is little evidence that sex discrimination is a very important determinant of the "wage gap."
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2008-12-10 00:05
Article here. Excerpt:
'9 December 2008 - As the world grapples with a global recession and financial markets remain volatile, many people are reminding themselves that money can't buy happiness. Men however, beg to differ.
Results of a global happiness survey from The Nielsen Company reveal that men are happier with money, while women are happier with friendships and relationships with their children, co-workers and bosses.
"Because they are happier with non-economic factors, women's happiness is more recession-proof, which might explain why women around the world are happier in general than men are," said Susanna Baggaley, Executive Director, The Nielsen Company, New Zealand.'
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2008-12-10 00:02
Article here. Excerpt:
'As speculation heats up over another Kennedy in the Senate, New Yorkers - and especially women - need to seriously consider what exactly is behind the nudge-that's-become-a-shove for a woman to fill Hillary Clinton's seat.
...
This is the kind of emotion-laced rhetoric that reduces the importance of public service to a petty, quid pro quo board game of interchangeable pieces, and sets gender debates back 50 years to a time when it was argued only a man could lead a country, a boardroom or a military division - only now the argument is reversed.
Since when are men incapable of or disqualified from advocating for women's rights? Barack Obama supporters, in fact, told us incessantly during his campaign that he and Joe Biden would be two stalwart male champions of women's issues. In particular, the giddy cheerleading on behalf of Kennedy, a well-respected national figure who has no experience in elected office, only worsens the sexism and elevation of symbolism over substance.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-12-09 23:56
Article here. Excerpt:
'There is a newly built women’s prison in Massachusetts where 40 percent of the women have mental health issues and 85 percent have substance abuse issues. In the wake of severe budget cuts, instead of providing social services like drug treatment programs, mental health programs, jobs, childcare, etc., the state is throwing women in jail.
The Women’s Fightback Network in Boston is demanding that the governor declare an economic state of emergency. WFN brings to the forefront how women have been disproportionately victimized by foreclosures, evictions, job loss and budget cuts. Anita Hill wrote an article last year stating that women were particular targets of subprime predatory lenders, especially elderly women and Black and Latina women. One loan officer talked about how she would add many additional costs to the mortgage loan if the client “appeared uneducated, inarticulate, was a minority or was particularly young or old.”
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-12-09 23:54
Story here. Excerpt:
'Katie Gutierrez-Perez, 40, ran over Finlay Woods in her two ton Toyota Hilux as his mother Tina Woods pushed him along the pavement near a primary school in Chingford, Essex, in September.
Finlay was dragged under the wheels while his mother was smashed against a pillar and left with a head wound. The toddler was taken to nearby Whipps Cross Hospital but died.
Appearing at Snaresbrook Crown Court in London on Wednesday via video-link, Gutierrez-Perez sobbed as she admitted causing death by dangerous driving and driving without insurance.
Sue Rodham, defending, said: "There was quite clearly a failed suicide attempt and a history of depression."
Gutierrez-Perez owned a struggling café which had been closed by bailiffs days before the crash.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-12-09 23:50
Story here. Excerpt:
'Proposed tough changes to family law in Ontario — from beefed-up requirements for those seeking custody of children to easier to obtain restraining orders and new rules on how to divvy up pension assets — were announced this morning by the provincial attorney general.
...
The Star reported on Saturday that Bentley would introduce legislation that toughens how custody is awarded. The proposed changes include detailed, sworn child care plans from those seeking custody for both parents and non-parents; for non-family members seeking custody, they must submit to police checks and submit a letter from Children's Aid outlining concerns, if any, the society may have about that person's ability to parent.
...
The changes were welcomed by many groups and advocates for women's rights.
"We can no longer ignore the fact that the safety of women and children in this province must be paramount," said Zahra Dhanani, legal director for the Metropolitan Action Committee on Violence Against Women and Children.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-12-09 23:47
Article here. Excerpt:
'The number of women in prison is growing rapidly. In NSW, it has almost doubled in the past 10 years, and Aboriginal women are over-represented. Life in jail is difficult for anyone but for women there are particular challenges.
Most of the women in custody are mothers. But studies show their community support networks while in prison are weaker than those of men, as male partners are less likely to hang around and keep the household running.
Without partners, their children live with family or in foster care. Regaining custody can be hard, as women need stable housing to get their children back but struggle to get public housing if their children aren't living with them.
...
Ms Armstrong agrees. She credits her success at turning her life around since 2003 to a mentor provided by the prisoner advocacy group Justice Action. She is now one of the driving forces behind the Women In Prison Advocacy Network.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-12-09 23:15
Article here. Excerpt:
'Men tend to perform better than women at tasks that require rotating an object mentally, studies have indicated. Now, developmental psychologists at Pitzer College and UCLA have discovered that this type of spatial skill is present in infancy and can be found in boys as young as 5 months old.
While women tend to be stronger verbally than men, many studies have shown that adult men have an advantage in the ability to imagine complex objects visually and to mentally rotate them. Does this advantage go back to infancy?
"We found the answer is yes," said Scott P. Johnson, a UCLA professor of psychology and an expert in infant perception, brain development, cognition and learning. "Infants as young as 5 months can perform the skill, but only boys — at least in our study."
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2008-12-09 16:21
Around the country, groups are working to stop false allegations of domestic violence. Now the mainstream media are beginning to highlight the devastating impact of such claims.
Recently WCVB-TV, the ABC affiliate in Boston, Mass. ran a newscast highlighting two men whose girlfriends obtained domestic violence restraining orders. The orders had been issued without any evidence of abuse.
When it came time for the final hearing, the women didn't bother to show up and the orders expired. But the men's names were permanently entered into the state Domestic Violence Registry.
As a result, one man had his employment application denied. He commented, "I was guilty from the moment this person walked in and filed that order."
The segment also quotes a representative of the Massachusetts domestic violence coalition who notes restraining orders can be "misused," and admits, "I think it's a problem."
The 4-minute, must-see segment can be viewed here.
To RADAR's knowledge, this is the best-ever TV coverage of the problem of false allegations.
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Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 2008-12-09 06:14
Story here. Excerpt:
'"STEVE" has been barred from seeing his daughter for seven years.
He has never harmed his only child or her mother. He has never threatened them and a court has accepted he is of good character.
But last week, after a tortuous 10-year journey through four courts, more than 20 hearings, 12 psychologists and six lawyers, he was told he could not see his daughter until she came of age.
Steve, whose real name cannot be revealed for legal reasons, has gone through more than 20 intrusive psychological examinations, while daughter "Molly" has endured seven.
He says he has spent more than $100,000 in 10 years.
His wife twice raised sexual-abuse allegations, proven false after months of investigation.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-12-09 03:03
Story here. Excerpt:
'RIVERSIDE, Calif. (CNS) -- A mother of four who fatally shot her husband in what she has repeatedly described as an accident was sentenced Friday to 40 years to life in prison.
Sonja Regina Hadnot, 39, was convicted in June of second-degree murder and a sentence-enhancing allegation of using a firearm in a crime resulting in great bodily injury or death for the June 28, 2000, death of her husband, David.
Judge J. Richard Couzens sentenced her to 15 years to life for the murder charge and 25 years to life for the gun allegation, according to Hadnot's attorney, Danny Davis.'
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