Pmdx FBI to Probe Minneapolis Police Beating
A DNA test has cleared a convicted rapist and murderer who once came within nine days of being executed by the state of Virginia.But 40-year-old Earl Washington Jr. is not scheduled for release from jail.He continues to serve a 30-year sentence for breaking into a 73-year-old woman s home, hitting her with a chair, stealing her gun and using the gun to shoot his brother.Washington, who is mildly retarded, was in custody for the first crime when police say he confessed to the unrelated and more serious charges 150; charges he later denied.Eric Freedman, a Hofstra University law school professor who has handled Washington s case for 15 years, is blasting Virginia Governor Jim Gilmore s decision not to free Washington immediatel
stanley uk y. Freedman says a person serving time for an assault conviction such as Washington s would normally have been released on parole at least six years ago.The New York attorney calls the governor s decision not to order Washington s immediate release bureaucratic buck-passing and governmental cowardice. He adds that to keep Earl Washington in jail one day longer is a desperate attempt to defend the indefensible. The Death Penalty Information Center says Washington is the ninth death row inmate so far to be cleared as a result of DNA tests. The announcement on the Washington case came Monday in a statement from the governor, who has ordered that the investigation of th
stanley quencher e 1982 rape and murder of Rebecca Lynn Williams be re-opened.Gilm
stanley cup ore Phcd Ask Mythbusters Adam Savage Anything You Want
American futurism gets pretty dark during bad economic times. Many people start to see technology as the enemy, like they did in the 1930s and 1970s. And people generally feel less optimistic for the future.
https://gizmodo/18-bizarre-letters-to-the-future-that-only-70s-kids-wil-1451498047 But new research shows that it not just futurism that becomes more gloomy during economic recessions. When the economy stinks, all authors start to adopt a more depressing vocabulary. A recent study out of London took different mood words tha
stanley sverige t were then broken up into six categories: anger, disgust, fear, joy, sadness, and surprise. From th
stanley taza ere the researchers made what they call a literary misery index to gauge the relative number of positive moods against the negative moods in 20th century books. Not surprisingly, books released after periods of economic distress use language that reflect a general malaise. The Great Depression of the 1930s and the recession of 1970s saw an explosion of downer books on their heels 鈥?much like the various forms of popular futurism from these eras. From the new study: Visually, the literary misery index seems to respond to major phases of the 20th century: literary misery increased after the economic Depression, then declined after the post-War years, then rose again after the recession of the 1970s, and declined again following on from the economics recovery of the late 1980s. When we looked at million
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