Posts Tagged ‘sentence’

Sentence warning to drug dealers

Saturday, April 28th, 2012

Police say long jail sentences for a gang who tried to smuggle cannabis into the south Wales valleys sends a strong message to criminals.

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Sentence warning to drug dealers

VIDEO: Jail for Lennon bomb plot men

Friday, April 27th, 2012

Two men who sent suspect packages to Celtic manager Neil Lennon and two other prominent followers of the club are sentenced.

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VIDEO: Jail for Lennon bomb plot men

Egypt comedian’s sentence upheld

Tuesday, April 24th, 2012

A court in Egypt upholds a three-month prison sentence handed to leading comic actor Adel Imam, convicted of insulting Islam in his films and plays.

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Egypt comedian’s sentence upheld

North Carolina Law Used to Set Aside a Death Sentence

Friday, April 20th, 2012

A North Carolina judge concluded that racial bias played a significant factor when Marcus Reymond Robinson was sentenced to death 18 years ago, the first such decision under the Racial Justice Act.

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North Carolina Law Used to Set Aside a Death Sentence

VIDEO: Would-be bomber has sentence cut

Monday, April 16th, 2012

A British would-be suicide bomber jailed for plotting to blow up an aircraft has his sentence cut after assisting prosecutors in the US.

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VIDEO: Would-be bomber has sentence cut

‘Black widow’ gets death in Japan

Friday, April 13th, 2012

A Japanese woman who murdered her three former lovers in 2009 is sentenced to death.

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‘Black widow’ gets death in Japan

VIDEO: CCTV shows girlfriend’s car revenge

Thursday, April 12th, 2012

A mother-of-two has been given a nine month suspended sentence after smashing her ex-boyfriend’s car into the bowling alley where he worked.

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VIDEO: CCTV shows girlfriend’s car revenge

Russia furious over Bout sentence

Friday, April 6th, 2012

Moscow condemns the US jail sentence for arms dealer Viktor Bout as “political” and says his case will be a priority in relations with Washington.

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Russia furious over Bout sentence

Arms dealer Viktor Bout sentenced

Friday, April 6th, 2012

Arms dealer Viktor Bout, dubbed the “merchant of death”, is sentenced to 25 years in jail by a New York federal judge.

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Arms dealer Viktor Bout sentenced

VIDEO: Arms dealer Viktor Bout sentenced

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

Arms dealer Viktor Bout, dubbed the “merchant of death”, has been sentenced to 25 years in jail by a US judge.

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VIDEO: Arms dealer Viktor Bout sentenced

Ex-New Orleans Officers Sentenced in Post-Katrina Shootings

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

The former New Orleans police officers were sentenced to prison terms ranging from 38 to 65 years for their roles in the deadly shootings of unarmed residents and for a cover-up afterward.

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Ex-New Orleans Officers Sentenced in Post-Katrina Shootings

5@5 – Non-cookbooks for food enthusiasts

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

5@5 is a daily, food-related list from chefs, writers, political pundits, musicians, actors, and all manner of opinionated people from around the globe. Has a non-cookbook ever sent you scrambling kitchen-ward? For legendary and James Beard award-winning chef Norman Van Aken , literature often beelines straight from his brain to his stomach. He says of the delicious bond: “The strands of fate and history pull us in circles we may never fully comprehend, but they are there. And why I’m a chef is moved, most surely by all of the ‘levers’ moved by the pencils, pens and typewriters of these artists and many more.” Five Non-Cookbooks that Influenced My Cooking: Norman Van Aken 1. “ Why We Eat What We Eat ,” Raymond Sokolov “On September 26, 1991, I bought this little book and it changed the way I was looking at my food in major ways. It made me appreciate how greatly the ramifications of history change our way of eating and how my location in America (for me, South Florida in particular) was shaped by what writer Ray Sokolov was referring to as 'The Columbian Exchange.' The phrase was not his, but his way of making it so darn fascinating sure was. I might have snapped up the book on the strength of M.F.K. Fisher’s prominent endorsement on the back cover alone. She is one of my favorites of all time. The book remains extremely relevant. Here’s an example. The Spanish had also opened up a regular trade with China from their base in the Philippines. Food and food ideas flowed freely between Seville and Asia on the same ships that carried goods from China and the Americas to Europe, and on the return trip brought European necessities for the colonists. The so-called Manila galleons took five months to make the passage across the Pacific to Acapulco. Their cargoes were transported overland to Veracruz on Mexico’s Gulf coast, reloaded on shipboard, and sent on to the mother country. 2. “Oliver Twist,” Charles Dickens “Charles Dickens's classic story of duality and life’s twists (the title character is named as such) struck a major chord with me growing up. I can still remember the first time I held the book and turned the first page. It was as if I turned a door on its hinges. I felt outside the world at times (though what child doesn’t?), but when you are going through it, a book like this comes along and just saves you. You realize that you can identify with others who, though from distant places, are very much like you in the dizzying, twisting, road of life. When young Oliver loses a contest and must represent the other hungry inmates of the workhouse they live in and asks on behalf of all: 'Please, sir, I want some more.' He is another human suddenly, and defenselessly, caught up in the cross-hairs of social injustice in the hope for a better world for many, including his very young self. Reading that book again at age 20, I had no idea that becoming a cook would let me have access not only to food but a place where I could find a community and kindred spirits. And while that may not be everything it certainly is a lot.” 3. “ Culture and Cuisine ,” Jean-François Revel “I purchased this book at a shop on Fleming Street in Key West in mid-February of 1988. I was part owner of my first restaurant. It was called MIRA. I was also in the middle of a huge amount of culinary self-analysis as to what I was going to do with cuisine. I’d cooked my way around French, Italian, various regional American cuisines like many of my generation. After reading this book, I sat down and over the course of about two weeks wrote a paper I titled 'Fusion.' I wrote the paper only for my own personal understanding; I had no intention of publishing it. Iin the Fall of '88, I was asked to join other chefs on stage in Santa Fe for a symposium on American Cuisine to describe why we cooked the way each of us did. The other chefs that day on stage with me were Tom Douglas, Lydia Shire, Emeril Lagasse and Charlie Trotter. My definition of fusion refers to fusion between haute cuisine – or aristocratic-styled 'restaurant' cuisine – with the more down-to-earth, rustic home cooking. Later, by others, it also came to mean the 'fusion' between various cultures and countries. Fusion cuisine can and does take place in almost every continent. Jean-François Revel states: 'There is gastronomy when there is a permanent quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns and when there is a public both competent enough and rich enough to arbitrate this quarrel.' I think that fusion is the mother of all of the different types of hyphenated cuisines. Like me, other chefs across the globe are finding that there is a combined power in what I named 'fusion cooking.' In my cooking, I create an interplay, a fusion, between regionalism and technical know-how. My cooking is the result of coupling our native regional foodstuffs like conch, black beans, plantains, mangoes, coconuts, grouper, key limes, snapper, shrimp and the folk cooking methods intrinsic their preparation, with my self-taught classical techniques. 'New World Cuisine' is the term I came up with to describe the fusion occurring in Florida and the immediately surrounding areas.” 4. “ In the Night Kitchen ”, Maurice Sendak “Maurice Sendak wrote and illustrated this controversial book about a young boy’s nighttime ‘voyages’ in 1970. Our son, Justin, was born in 1980 and by 1986, I’d probably read it to him 100 times. I’ve no doubt that we both were captivated by the wondrously surreal dreamscape that Sendak conjured up. As the young boy, Mickey fell out of his clothes and into cake batter where he was met with a city made out of a baker’s stock and trade tools. Mickey proclaims, 'I’m not the milk and the milk’s not me!' That made us both wonder what existential intent that meant – and I still don’t know. The story confounds, captivates and liberates – which essentially all art (and the art of cuisine) seeks to do. This year Justin and I wrote our first cookbook together. The bond was forged in mythical storytelling as well as in blood.” 5. “On the Road,” Jack Kerouac 'On the Road' starts with this classic first sentence, 'I first met Neal not long after my father died.' And that is when I first 'met' the work of Kerouac, just after my father died. So many characterize Kerouac as a ‘free spirit,’ when in fact, he was almost never free from the hurt of his brother Gerard’s early death when Jack was 4 or 5 years of age. Jack is a seeker and my friends and I were as well. We too hitchhiked around America with rucksacks slung to our hungry frames. Kerouac’s book 'Desolation Angels' might be my favorite of his, but it was 'On the Road' that got me started. I didn’t know until much later that he wrote the famous 120-foot scroll version in an apartment on West 20th Street in New York. I wonder how close it was to my own family’s home in two preceding generations. My maternal grandfather lived at 252 W. 20th when he was a boy. My great-grandfather lived at 312, and my grandmother and grandfather lived at 400 when my mother was born.” Do you feast on non-cookbooks as well? Share your favorite titles in the comments. Is there someone you'd like to see in the hot seat? Let us know in the comments below and if we agree, we'll do our best to chase 'em down.

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5@5 – Non-cookbooks for food enthusiasts

Ex-NOLA cops get prison time in Danziger Bridge shootings

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

A federal judge has sentenced five former New Orleans police officers to prison terms ranging from six to 65 years for the shootings of unarmed civilians in the chaotic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

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Ex-NOLA cops get prison time in Danziger Bridge shootings

Katrina police shooters jailed

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

Five former policemen convicted of shooting six people, two fatally, at Danziger Bridge in New Orleans less than a week after Hurricane Katrina, have been sentenced to jail.

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Katrina police shooters jailed

Man sentenced for Spiers killing

Friday, March 30th, 2012

A Coleraine man already on parole for grevious bodily harm through dangerous driving is sentenced to four years and ten months for the unlawful killing of Trevor Spiers in December 2009.

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Man sentenced for Spiers killing