Sunday, September 30, 2012

FOXNews.com: Ryan: Obama's Foreign Policy Record 'Unraveling'

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Ryan: Obama's Foreign Policy Record 'Unraveling'
Oct 1st 2012, 06:39

Republican vice presidential nominee Rep. Paul Ryan on Sunday criticized the Obama administration's response to the deadly attack on the U.S. consulate in Libya, saying it is just part of a larger "unraveling" of its foreign policy.

"Their response was slow. It was confused, it was inconsistent," Ryan said on "Fox News Sunday." "It's part of a bigger picture of the fact that the Obama foreign policy is unraveling literally before our eyes on our TV screens."

Ryan made his remarks just days before Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney is expected to give a major foreign policy speech.

"What Mitt Romney's going to do is lay out a very different vision for foreign policy -- one that is a policy of American strength versus what I would articulate or claim the president's policy is one of weakness," Ryan said.

The Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, killed a U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. The White House initially said the attack was a "spontaneous" response to a anti-Islamic video trailer but has since acknowledged it was a planned terror attack.

The Wisconsin congressman on Sunday also called the recent violence in the Middle East "the ugly fruits of the Obama foreign policy," arguing that 20,000 people have been killed, Iran is closer to a nuclear weapon and Russia is "thwarting us at every stage."

Ryan called Iran "the biggest threat we have today" and said the big issue is Obama's credibility.

"The Ayatollahs in Iran, they have to make a decision to stop pursuing a nuclear weapon and pursue a peaceful resolution," he said. "I would argue that they're not doing that because the president doesn't have credibility."

Ryan also said he and Romney have repeatedly said the U.S. has to stop Iran's nuclear weapons capability and that a Romney-Ryan administration would not put "daylight between our allies, especially Israel."

He also said the president has "moved his rhetoric a bit to look more like ours, and that's good, but the problem is it's built upon a mountain of non-credible actions."

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FOXNews.com: Police: Florida HS TeacherWanted Colleague Dead

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Police: Florida HS TeacherWanted Colleague Dead
Oct 1st 2012, 04:59

A Florida high school teacher was arrested for allegedly plotting to kill a former colleague, My Fox Tampa Bay reports.

James Pepe, 55, a social studies teacher at Bloomington High School, was arrested last week for what police say was a plot to harm Pepe's former colleague, teacher Robert Meredith.

During a recorded conversation played during Pepe's bond hearing Saturday, prosecutors allege Pepe is heard on tape saying of Meredith, "I want him killed; all right."

According to investigators, the suspect believed Meredith had been spreading nasty rumors about him. Investigators say Meredith, who was not in court Saturday, is concerned about his safety. Meredith teaches at another school now, but last year both he and Pepe taught social studies at Bloomington.

Police say Pepe believed Meredith had been spreading nasty rumors about him and wanted revenge, My Fox Tampa Bay reports.

According to the station, a voice on the recording asks: "How do you want Meredith killed?"

Then, a voice detectives say is Pepe, says: "Any way he wants; I don't give a [expletive], OK?"

Pepe was denied a request for bond and remains behind bars.

Click for the full story from MyFoxTampaBay.com

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FOXNews.com: Calif. Bill Gives Juvenile Inmates a Second Chance

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Calif. Bill Gives Juvenile Inmates a Second Chance
Oct 1st 2012, 03:09

SACRAMENTO, Calif. –  Gov. Jerry Brown on Sunday announced signing a bill that could one day bring the release of some criminals who were sentenced as juveniles to life in prison.

There are 309 inmates serving life-without-parole sentences in California for murders committed when they were younger than 18.

Brown signed SB9, by Democratic Sen. Leland Yee of San Francisco. It would let the inmates ask judges to reconsider their sentences after they serve at least 15 years in prison.

Judges could then reduce the no-parole sentence to 25 years-to-life if the inmate shows remorse and is taking steps toward rehabilitation.

Yee said his bill recognizes that young people's brains and impulse control grow as they age. His bill was opposed by the state's major law enforcement and victims' organizations.

"I am proud that today California said we believe all kids, even those we had given up on in the past, are deserving of a second chance," Yee said in a statement.

California is one of 39 states that allow judges to sentence minors to die in prison. More than 2,570 people convicted as juveniles are serving life sentences without the possibility of parole in the U.S., according to the Youth Justice Coalition, an Inglewood-based group concerned with the treatment of juvenile offenders.

The U.S. Supreme Court recently struck down mandatory life without parole sentences for juveniles as unconstitutional "cruel and unusual" punishment. But the ruling didn't affect California's law because it already gives judges the discretion to impose a sentence of 25 years-to-life.

Opponents say the bill is unfair to victims' families. Allowing the possibility of parole would force the survivors to relive their experience as they fight against parole.

"Before, we had life without possibility of parole -- without," said Maggie Elvey of Sacramento, who helped organize opposition to the bill. "It's so sad that they're taking the justice away."

She said survivors like herself were told that their loved one's murderers would never be released from prison.

"It's not fair to go retroactive back to all those killers," she said.

Yee struggled for a year to get the bill through the Legislature over opposition from organizations representing police chiefs, sheriffs, prosecutors, victims and many rank-and-file law enforcement officers. He had support from some individual law enforcement officials, notably San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon, Police Chief Greg Suhr and interim Sheriff Vicki Hennessy.

It was his third attempt in five years. He succeeded in getting it through the Legislature this year, with no Republican votes, only after amending the bill to exclude young offenders who tortured their victims or killed a law enforcement officer or firefighter.

The exemptions are not enough to satisfy survivors such as Elvey.

"Victims hate that, when they say that one person's loved one is more important than another," Elvey said.

Her husband, Ross, was murdered by two teens during the robbery of his gun shop in Vista, Calif.

"They held Ross down on the floor and just kept beating and beating him," she said.

He was in a coma for 41 days before he died on June 7, 1993.

"They're all violent, brutal murders," she said. "That's why they got this sentence."

However, University of Southern California law professor Heidi Rummel, director of the university's Post-Conviction Justice Project, said children are different from adults and deserve to be treated differently under the criminal justice system.

"Their brains are still developing. They are impulsive, vulnerable to peer pressure and often victims of their life circumstances. But most importantly, they have a much greater capacity to grow and change," she said in a statement. She will supervise law students who will represent 12 juvenile offenders seeking resentencing under the bill.

California has more than 10 percent of the nation's juvenile life-without-parole cases, said Elizabeth Calvin, an advocate with Human Rights Watch, which supported the bill along with the American Civil Liberties Union. She said the law should serve as a model for other states.

The bill had the support of numerous mental health and medical associations, along with defense attorneys and church groups. The groups note that some offenders were sentenced to life without parole as accomplices to murder, despite not being the actual killer.

One of them is Christian Bracamontes, who was 16 in 1998 when he and another youth tried to rob another teenager of his marijuana. Bracamontes' friend fatally shot 15-year-old Thomas Williams in Fontana.

Bracamontes turned down a plea deal and was convicted of murder during a robbery with the special circumstance of knowing that a gun would be used. Bracamontes consistently claimed he never expected his friend to fire the weapon or kill Williams.

"A lot of kids don't understand aiding-and-abetting," prosecutor John Davis told The Press-Enterprise newspaper of Riverside when Bracamontes was sentenced in 2000.

Bracamontes is now 31 and serving his life term in California State Prison, Los Angeles County in Lancaster. The shooter, Jose Morales, who was two years older, negotiated a plea deal that eventually could result in his release.

Arturo Macedo, Bracamontes' father, said through an interpreter that for years he has lived without hope of his son being paroled, "and now there is some light."

His son has served 14 years in prison, has a clean record behind bars, and is likely to petition for resentencing, Macedo said.

"He was just there," Macedo said. "He did not kill anybody, he was just there when it happened."

The district attorneys' association notes that virtually all the inmates sentenced to life in prison as juveniles in California were 16 or 17 at the time of the offense and were convicted of first-degree murder with one or more special circumstances. That could have brought them the death penalty had they been older.

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FOXNews.com: Veterans Choose Politics For Their 'Second Service'

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Veterans Choose Politics For Their 'Second Service'
Oct 1st 2012, 02:03

RALEIGH, N.C. –  The link between U.S. military service and running for office is as old as the republic itself. It started with George Washington, who famously wrote that, "When we assumed the Soldier, we did not lay aside the Citizen."

During the long wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, hundreds of thousands of veterans have come home and laid aside their uniforms. But not all have opted to simply blend back into civilian life.

Many have chosen to run for public office.

Several dozen veterans -- some of them from earlier wars -- are vying for U.S. House and Senate seats this year. And many others are seeking state and local offices across the country. Men and women, Republicans and Democrats, they range from well-known hopefuls such as congressional candidate Tammy Duckworth in Illinois, who became a double amputee when her National Guard helicopter was shot down in Iraq, to Arizona state House contender Mark Cardenas, a 25-year-old Iraq vet who remains a National Guardsman.

They are people like former Marine tank commander Nick Popaditch, who lost his right eye during the April 2004 Battle of Fallujah in Iraq, and who is now the Republican nominee in California's 53rd Congressional District.

"I was looking at my government and I wasn't happy with it," says the ex-gunnery sergeant, who cuts a striking figure on the campaign trail with his shaved head and black eye patch. "So rather than complain, I decided to run myself. I thought I could do a better job, and I still feel that way."

After back-to-back wars, there are more recent combat veterans in the United States today than at any time since Vietnam.

But the number of former military members in public office has been declining for years. In 1969, nearly 90 percent of all U.S. House and Senate seats were held by people who'd served in uniform. Today, says the Congressional Research Service, it's about 20 percent. And for the first time in decades, none of the major party candidates for president and vice president has been in the military.

Seth Lynn thinks that's one of the problems with our political system these days, and he's working to change that.

Lynn, a Naval Academy graduate who spent six years in the Marines, helped found Veterans Campaign to train former service members interested in running for office.

He notes that as the number of veterans on Capitol Hill has dropped, there has been "an almost parallel decrease in America's confidence in Congress."

"I'm not saying that the two are necessarily a causal relationship," says Lynn. "But I do think that there is that ability to put your country before yourself, but also to work together across party lines, that Americans want more that just isn't happening in Washington."

There is a natural ebb and flow to this nexus between military and public service.

When World War II ended, 16 million men and women had served in uniform around the globe, and as a result postwar politicians were often veterans. The pool of veterans grew smaller in following years, especially since the end of the military draft in 1973.

The all-volunteer military engenders a sense of duty and "selflessness" that Lynn and others feel has been sorely lacking in the political arena. He sees this quality as a motivation for veteran-candidates today.

Even though he lost a Sept. 6 Democratic primary for a Massachusetts state Senate seat, Joe Kearns Goodwin says he's more convinced than ever "that a life of service is a very worthy one."

Goodwin was a new Harvard graduate when, following the Sept. 11 attacks, he announced he was enlisting in the Army.

His parents "thought I was totally insane" then and were surprised again when he declared he was running for office. But they shouldn't have been, given the family's proximity to politics. His mother is Doris Kearns Goodwin, the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, and his father, Richard Goodwin, was an adviser and speechwriter for Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson.

"I was weaned on stories of the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, the Great Society, the New Frontier," says the 34-year-old Goodwin. His father worked on these issues, he noted, "all of which represented the ability of government to do good, when it's done well."

Goodwin served combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, and rose to the rank of captain. "Before we went on patrol, nobody asked, `Are you a Democrat or a Republican?"' he says. "No one asked if you were from a blue state or a red state, a progressive or a conservative. We were just, `What do we need to do to get the job done?"'

In California, Popaditch is making his second run for Congress -- but were it not for a rocket-propelled grenade, he'd most likely still be wearing a uniform.

The son of a Korean War veteran, Popaditch turned down a college scholarship to join the Marines. In the first Gulf War, he commanded a tank during the invasion of Iraq. He left the Marines after six years, but re-enlisted in 1995 and went through training as a drill instructor. After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Popaditch asked to be reassigned to tanks.

He took part in the second Iraq invasion in 2003. On April 7, 2004, his tank was struck by an RPG, shrapnel carving a path through his sinuses and destroying his right eye. His actions earned him a Silver Star and a Purple Heart but cost him his career.

Like former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole and other wounded vets before him, Popaditch used the GI Bill to go back to school. Last year, he graduated magna cum laude from San Diego State University with a degree in teaching.

Misgivings about the country's direction troubled Popaditch while an undergraduate, prompting his unsuccessful 2010 congressional race. He has put his studies toward a master's on hold this year to run again.

"I think things are slipping," he says. "And they will continue to slip if we don't get involved."

Tom Cotton, the Republican nominee in Arkansas' 4th Congressional District race, compared his decision to run with his decision to join the Army in 2005.

"At that time, it was an attack from a foreign enemy, and we were in an active war. And now we're in a debt crisis that threatens our future prosperity and, therefore, ultimately freedom," says Cotton, 35, who declined a commission as a legal officer to go into the infantry.

Cotton served tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, then left a position as a management consultant to run for office. He says the skills he developed in the military have served him well in the business world, as well as on the campaign trail.

"The constant ability to prioritize and reprioritize tasks, to work with imperfect information, to handle ambiguity, to build coalitions to reach a common goal," says Cotton, who defeated a fellow veteran in his primary race. "Being part of a team and helping lead a team by purpose and motivation and direction so it can accomplish more than the individual could accomplish on his or her own."

For many veteran-candidates, their military service is front and center -- but that carries risks.

Running against Cotton for the open 4th District seat is longtime Arkansas state Sen. Gene Jeffress, a retired school teacher.

"I appreciate ALL of our veterans, and I respect them," says Jeffress. "But I think it's been overdone. If he (Cotton) hadn't have had that, I don't know what else he would have had to run on."

In Illinois, Duckworth's opponent, Republican incumbent Rep. Joe Walsh, said her service -- which cost her both legs and partial use of one arm -- demands respect. "However," he added, "unlike most veterans I have had the honor to meet since my election to Congress, who rarely, if ever, talk about their service or the combat they've seen, that is darn near all of what Tammy Duckworth talks about."

Lynn says the "single biggest pitfall" veteran candidates face is overestimating the power of the war-service narrative. The "Candidate's Field Manual" developed for Veterans Campaign hammers that point home.

John F. Kennedy's World War II heroics after the sinking of PT 109 might have helped him in the close 1960 presidential race against Richard Nixon, but George McGovern's bombing runs over Europe in same war didn't lift him over Nixon in 1972, the manual notes. By the same token, allegations of draft dodging and preferential treatment during the Vietnam War didn't stop Bill Clinton and George W. Bush from becoming two-term presidents.

Vietnam veteran John Kerry's failed 2004 presidential campaign introduced a new verb to the political lexicon: to be "swiftboated," a reference to the members of his river boat crew who came out to question his war record.

"A DD-214 (military discharge form) is not an ironclad guarantee to winning office," the manual says -- but it adds that military credentials, "wielded with care," can help.

"All things being equal," says Lynn, "being a veteran of the Iraq or Afghanistan wars today is a greater benefit to a politician than being a veteran of Vietnam 40 years ago."

Mark Cardenas, who recently won his Arizona state House Democratic primary and is unopposed in the general election, was reluctant to play off his veteran status.

The son of Mexican immigrants, he didn't see many options when he graduated from high school. But he knew that if he joined the Army, "I'd have the GI Bill. ... It's something that I had to do to get ahead in life."

But supporters urged him to make more of his veteran status, he says, telling him, "That's your credibility right there."

The youngest candidate in his district, he says his Iraq tour came in handy when questions arose about his youth or his experience.

"Well, for one thing, I'm the only person (in the race) that's ever had an AK-47 shot at them in anger," says Cardenas, whose stint in the National Guard won't end until nearly two weeks after the Nov. 6 election.

Cardenas was among the first graduates from one of Lynn's boot camps in 2009. The program has since blossomed into the George Washington University Center for Second Service, of which Lynn is now director.

Lynn says nearly 60 veterans have won their primaries for the U.S. House and Senate. Not all are recent veterans.

Another of Lynn's alumni is Blair Milo. At 29, she has been an anti-submarine warfare officer and lived aboard Iraqi oil platforms in the North Arabian Gulf; at the Pentagon, she worked on the program to develop the Navy's latest stealth destroyer. She's still a lieutenant in the Navy Reserves.

In 2010, the ROTC graduate from Purdue University was home in La Porte, Ind., on "terminal leave" and trying to figure out what to do with the rest of her life. The local newspaper was full of stories about the city's fiscal crisis.

Milo wrote a series of guest columns, offering solutions. Before she knew it, she'd been recruited to run for mayor. Challenging the two-term Democratic incumbent, she won.

The city of 22,000 continues to borrow money to meet its obligations, but Milo says things are improving. She's focusing her efforts on economic development and has even invited residents to join her for a weekly 5k run. About 250 people now participate in Fitness Friday.

"I like my job -- MOST days," Milo says.

It's important, Lynn says, for vet-candidates to make it clear that they won't be fixated simply on military issues.

After more than two decades in the Army, those issues are certainly close to Steve Wilkins' heart. But the retired lieutenant colonel says that's not why he's seeking to unseat Rep. Renee Ellmers, a tea party favorite, in North Carolina's 2nd Congressional District.

Wilkins, who served as Gen. David Petraeus' logistics chief during the 2003 invasion of Iraq, says there's a tendency to see military people as all moving in "lockstep." In his 22 years of service, he found that there was room for disagreement and discussion.

But at the end of the day, the Democratic nominee says, "there has to be some kind of compromise."

"I've been distressed at looking at the political environment right now, how divisive it is and how our political leaders, particularly in the Congress, just don't seem to be getting anything done," Wilkins says. "There's more of a focus on waiting each other out to see who can have a stronger upper hand before doing anything.

"And I just don't think that's in the spirit of our democracy," he says. "Things have got to get done to advance the football down the field."

In that respect, Wilkins says, government could stand a little more military discipline.

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FOXNews.com: DeMint Backs 'No Pension Bailout'

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DeMint Backs 'No Pension Bailout'
Oct 1st 2012, 01:04

Illinois Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn is getting hit with a nationwide backlash over his suggestion that the federal government bail out the state employees' pension program.

Critics have in the past several days pounced on the suggestion, made last year when Quinn, in announcing the state's fiscal 2012, said part of Illinois' long-term effort to reduce the estimate $167 billion in under-funded liabilities would be to seek "a federal guarantee of the debt."

Among those leading the charge is Republican Sen. Jim DeMint. The South Carolina senator has joined the Illinois Policy Institute's national "No Pension Bailout" campaign -- an effort to stop Congress from attempting to rescue failing state and municipal pension plans.

"Our greatest concern is states will assume they can run their pension systems into bankruptcy and then turn to the federal government for bailout," DeMint said Thursday.

He also suggested the problem is the result of state legislators trying for decades to win over voters through pension promises based "on accounting methods that would put any business in jail."

The conservative policy group estimates the total amount of under-funded pension liabilities in states is at least $2.5 trillion, with Illinois leading the nation.

The basic plan floated by Quinn would be for the federal government to rescue the pension program through buying the state's bonds, which critics say are too financially risky to attract investors.  

Quinn said after announcing the budget that seeking the federal guarantee was only a precaution, then later called the related wording a "drafting error," according the non-partisan Citizens Against Government Waste, which nevertheless gave the governor its September 2012 "Porker of the Month" award.

The governor's office could not be reached for comment this weekend.

The Wall Street Journal's editorial writers recently said: "Sooner or later, we knew it would come down to this since the Democrats who are running Illinois into the ground can't bring themselves to oppose union demands."

In addition, an editorial Tuesday in the Chicago Tribune argued that saving Illinois will "start a stampede of demands for equal treatment from other financially troubled states" with public pension debts ranging from $1 trillion to $25 trillion.

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FOXNews.com: Order Overturns School's Bible Verse Ban at Games

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Order Overturns School's Bible Verse Ban at Games
Sep 30th 2012, 22:04

Cheerleaders in a Texas town will be allowed to include Bible and religious messages on signs at sporting events after receiving a temporary restraining order against a high school's ban.

The Kountze Independent School District banned the messages this month after the Freedom From Religion Foundation accused it of violating the Constitution.

"I called our legal counsel and they recommended to me that we instruct all administrators in the district that religious signs or messages would no longer be permitted at school district events and that student groups and their sponsors were to be notified of the prohibition effective immediately," Superintendent Kevin Weldon told Fox News.

But the Liberty Institute, an advocacy organization fighting the ban, won a restraining order from a Texas district court that puts the school's decision on hold until an Oct. 4 hearing.

The high school football team runs through the giant banners before each game.

"Our boys always pray on the field before the game," Stacy Trotter, a parent, told Fox News. "They got the idea to give inspiration to the football team (with the Bible verse banners)."

Mike Johnson, a senior counsel a the Liberty Institute, says Texas state law and the Constitution supports the cheerleaders and their message.

"The Supreme Court said more than 40 years ago and many courts have repeated it ever since, that students and teachers do not shed their constitutional rights to free speech when they walk through the schoolhouse gates," he told Fox News.

Dan Barker, a member of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, disagreed.

"There's a difference between free speech and government speech," he said. "When those cheerleaders are wearing the uniform, when they're at an official public high school event, they are not speaking for themselves -- they are representing the school, which has a diversity of viewpoints."

"School as a form of government must be neutral and include all viewpoints and not offend any viewpoints at that school," he added.

Fox News' Todd Starnes contributed to this report.

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FOXNews.com: Police: Lindsay Lohan Attacked at NYC Hotel

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Police: Lindsay Lohan Attacked at NYC Hotel
Sep 30th 2012, 20:20

Actress Lindsay Lohan was allegedly assaulted by a man she met at a nightclub in Manhattan after she confronted him about pictures he was taking on his cellphone, sources told the New York Post.

Lohan met the suspect, 25-year-old Christian Labella, at 1 Oak in Chelsea early Sunday morning before returning to the W Hotel.

Police sources told the New York Post that Labella was taking cellphone pictures of Lohan partying. Labella and Lohan got into a tussle in the room, other sources said, before going out into the hallway of the hotel, where he allegedly tried to choke her.

A fire alarm was pulled during the incident, but the hotel told visitors there was no need to evacuate.

After police arrived at the hotel, Lohan was questioned while cops remained outside her room for six hours, according to a Fox News Channel producer who was at the hotel.

"They thought I took pictures but I didn't," Labella was heard telling police in the lobby, where he was caught.

The NYPD told Fox News that the victim of the alleged attack was a white, 26-year-old female, but would not confirm it was Lohan.

Labella has been charged with two counts of misdemeanor assault and two counts of harassment.

"Lindsay was assaulted early this morning in a New York hotel. While she did sustain some injuries, she was not hospitalized," Steve Honig, Lohan's publicist, said in a statement. "The assailant was arrested and is currently in police custody. Lindsay has spoken with police and is fully cooperating with the investigation."

TMZ reports that Labella is no stranger to rubbing arms with celebrities.

The entertainment news site says Labella's Facebook page has photos of him with stars like Kim Kardashian and her mother, Kris Jenner.

Lohan was previously arrested in New York City on Sept. 20 after she allegedly grazed or barely missed a man walking in front of her car while pulling into the Dream Hotel, according to surveillance footage from the NYPD. She is due in court on Oct. 23.

Click for more from the New York Post.

Fox News' Donald Fair contributed to this report.

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FOXNews.com: Critics Slam 'Bizarre' Attack Response

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Critics Slam 'Bizarre' Attack Response
Sep 30th 2012, 17:53

Sen. Bob Corker has joined fellow congressional Republicans in calling for more and complete answers about the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Libya -- where four Americans were killed – calling the administration's response so far "bizarre."

Corker, R-Tenn., sent a letter this weekend to National Intelligence Director James R. Clapper Jr., who last week took responsibility for the administration originally calling the Sept. 11 strike in Benghazi, Libya, a "spontaneous" response to an anti-Islamic movie trailer and not a pre-planned or terrorist attack.  

"It seems that with each passing day, the situation surrounding the administration's response to the terrorist attack on the U.S. Consulate in Libya becomes more bizarre. The United States Congress and the American people are still waiting to get straight answers," Corker wrote in the letter dated Sept. 29.

Clapper on Friday called the strike a "deliberate and carefully planned terrorist attack."

The administration's responses on Sept. 16 came from U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice, whom the administration has repeatedly said gave answers based on the best information available.

Still, Rep. Peter King, the New York Republican who heads the House Homeland Security Committee, on Friday called for Rice to resign over her "misleading" statements.

Corker also joins in the growing concern about whether the consulate, as well as U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and the three other Americans killed, had adequate security and why FBI investigators have yet to reach the crime scene.

"Yet just 18 days ago the administration apparently judged that it was appropriate for our consulate to be lightly guarded and it was safe for our ambassador to come through the city with a small security detail," Corker wrote. "What has changed in Libya in such a short time that even FBI agents, our most elite investigative personnel, cannot safely enter the city? What has led to such a precipitous decline?"

Republican Sens. John McCain (Ariz.), Lindsey Graham  (S.C.), Kelly Ayotte (N.H.), and Ron Johnson (Wis.), also sent letters last week demanding more detailed answers, including one to Rice seeking clarification on her statements.

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FOXNews.com: NY Man Sought in Murder Threatened to Kill in '85

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NY Man Sought in Murder Threatened to Kill in '85
Sep 30th 2012, 17:53

A New York man wanted in the murder of his daughter-in-law threatened to kill a state Department of Environmental Conservation officer in 1985.

Eugene Palmer was arrested and charged with second-degree aggravated harassment after he made repeated "life threatening" calls to Kenneth Didion's home over a period of months, according to The Journal News, citing a report at the time by the Rockland Journal.

The arrest of Palmer in that case ended a DEC investigation into numerous phone calls threatening Didion's life and home that the officer had received since December 1984, the paper reported.

Palmer, working as a truck driver at the time, pleaded guilty in April 1986 and the next month was sentenced to one year probation and fined $750. He also was ordered to avoid any contact with Didion for a year.

No motive for the threats was ever established.

"He's a woodsman and he has plenty of guns."

- John Pannirello

Palmer, 73, is the subject of a police manhunt after he allegedly shot his daughter-in-law early last Monday.

Palmer, who lives in Haverstraw, N.Y., admitted to relatives that he killed Tammy Palmer, 39, after shooting her at about 7:40 a.m. Monday, minutes after the woman put her two children on a school bus, according to Tammy Palmer's father, John Pannirello.

"He admitted it, he admitted it to his sister," Pannirello told FoxNews.com. "He said, 'I just shot Tammy.'"

Palmer reportedly then told his sister, Elaine Babcock, who could not be reached for comment, to "give [him] an hour to get away" before calling police to report the crime. Babcock told The Journal News she then called 911 and went to Palmer's home, where police investigators had already found her body.

Palmer, a seasoned outdoorsman, is now being sought by police and may be hiding out in the woods near Willow Grove Road or in Harriman State Park, a vast wooded area, police and relatives told FoxNews.com.

"They think he's up in Harriman, they're all out looking for him," Pannirello said. "But he's a woodsman and he has plenty of guns."

Police discovered Palmer's green 1995 Dodge Ram pickup truck on Tuesday afternoon during a search of Harriman State Park. The vehicle was found on a trail about a half-mile from his home, the Times Herald-Record reported. Bloodhounds on loan by Westchester County police then picked up a scent and traveled up steep ridges before growing too tired.

Haverstraw Police Chief Charles Miller told the newspaper that authorities were waiting for a search warrant before entering the vehicle, the newspaper reports.

Babcock, meanwhile, has said her brother, who left money to pay property taxes before fleeing, was caught in the middle of domestic problems between Tammy Palmer and his son, John, who had been estranged after 17 years of marriage.

Police are maintaining a road patrol around the border of Harriman State Park in hopes that Palmer will surrender.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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FOXNews.com: City Urged to Stand Firm Against Anti-Prayer Campaign

FOXNews.com
FOX News Channel - We Report. You Decide. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
City Urged to Stand Firm Against Anti-Prayer Campaign
Sep 30th 2012, 17:53

After one Colorado city council canceled opening prayers at public meetings under pressure from a Wisconsin-based atheist group, at least one other community is being urged to draw a line in the sand.

The Pueblo City Council dropped opening prayers after the city received a letter from the Freedom of Religion Foundation in Madison, Wis., arguing it is unconstitutional to coerce people at a government meeting to participate in what is typically a Christian prayer. That prompted a bitter outcry in Colorado Springs, 45 miles to the north. In a forceful editorial in the Colorado Springs Gazette, columnist Wayne Laugesen urged that community to stand up to the atheist group and blasted Pueblo for caving in.

"As its name implies, this confused organization believes we have government-protected freedom from religion in addition to our freedom to pick and choose religious beliefs or to ignore and avoid them all," conservative columnist Wayne Laugesen wrote in an editorial posted Thursday on the Colorado Springs Gazette website. 

"While we have a right to shun religion, we do not have a right to government protection from the sights and sounds of religion in public — even on government property," Laugesen wrote. 

"As such, one might expect Pueblo politicians to ignore the foundation's threat," he said. "Instead, they fell over without putting up a fight. We expect a more vigorous defense of our most basic freedoms — religious liberty and free speech."

So far Colorado Springs plans to keep the opening invocation at public meetings and not cancel prayers under pressure from the foundation

According to the Pueblo Chieftain newspaper, Pueblo has tried to include prayers from every faith, but council members now say a moment of silence will serve the same purpose.

"Regarding the moment of silence, I actually find it to be more fair because it gives people who want to pray the option to do so but those who don't want to, no longer have to," resident George Starkgraf told local news station KKTV.

"While we have a right to shun religion, we do not have a right to government protection from the sights and sounds of religion in public — even on government property."

- Wayne Laugesen, Colorado Springs Gazette

But some in Pueblo agree with Laugesen and say the long-standing practice should remain.

"I'm really sad that they made that decision, because for those of us who believe in God and the power of prayer...I think prayer is very important," another local resident, Mary Beth Netherton, told the station.

KKTV reports that someone in Pueblo complained to the Wisconsin-based group, which then issued a letter to the city council, asking them to remove the prayer. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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FOXNews.com: Inside Attack Puts US Deaths at 2,000

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Inside Attack Puts US Deaths at 2,000
Sep 30th 2012, 15:59

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Magnitude 7.4 Earthquake Hits Southwestern Colombia

  • Eugene Palmer, wanted in the killing of Tammy Palmer, above, reportedly threatened to kill DEC officer in 1985

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