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Pro wrestler Chris Benoit strangled his wife, suffocated his 7-year-old son and placed a Bible next to their bodies before hanging himself with the pulley of a weightlifting machine, authorities said Tuesday.Investigators found prescription anabolic steroids in the house and want to know whether the muscle man was unhinged by the drugs, which can cause paranoia, depression and explosive outbursts known as roid rage. Benoit s employer, the WWE, instituted a new and supposedly tougher drug policy just last year after the death of another wrestler was linked to steroid use, reports CBS News national correspondent Byron Pitts. Authorities offered no motive for the killings, which were spread out over a weekend, and would not discuss Benoit s motive or state of mind. No suicide note was found. I m baffled ab
stanley thermos out why anybody would kill a 7-year-old, District Attorney Scott Ballard said. I don t think we ll ever be able wrap our head around tha
stanley mug t. Benoit, a Montreal native whose nickname was The Canadian Crippler, was known for his wholesome family man image. His w
vaso stanley ife, Nancy, was a wrestling stage manager who worked under the name Woman. They met and fell in love when their wrestling story lines intertwined.When he won the world heavyweight championship, Benoit pronounced ben-WAH hoisted the belt over his head and invited his wife and child into the ring to celebrate.Nevertheless, Nancy Benoit filed for a divorce in 2003, saying the couple s three-year marriage was ir Ndwy Report: ICE did not report allegations of sexual assaults in immigration detention centers
First came Edward Snowden, and now this: a Utah state panel has ordered the release of documents regarding water usage at a newly opened NSA data center in the city of Bluffdale. The decision is the latest i
vaso stanley nstallment in an ongoing controversy that began last November, when the Salt Lake Tribune revealed that Bluffdale had agreed to sell water to the NSA at a rate below the city guidelines so that it could secure a bid to become the site for the $1.5 billion facility鈥攁nd all the infrastructure upgrades that would come with it. It been estimated that the Utah Data Center, at peak operation, uses more than 1 million gallons of water per day to cool its computer systems and high-capacity-data-storage equipment. Typically, large consumers of water in Bluffdale pay $3.25 per 1,000 gallons for water in excess of 100,000 gallons a month. But the city told the NSA that it would be charged $2.
stanley quencher 05 per 1,000 gallons, no matter how much water it used. The Salt Lake Tribune, seeking to find out precisely how much water the NSA uses, filed a request for Bluffdale to release the data, under Utah open-records law. In a 5-0 vote, the State Records Committee upheld the request. As the Salt Lake Tribune reports: Bluffdale City Attorney Vaughn Pickell argued on behalf of military lawyers that water data 822
stanley flask 0;could be used to extrapolate the electrical power usage, and thus the computing power, of the Utah Data Center. By releasing the data, Pickell said, city