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TOPEKA,
kubki stanley Kan. - Can there be no trust between a kidnapper and his hostages A man who held a Kansas couple hostage in their home while fleeing from authorities is suing them, claiming they broke an oral contract made when he promised them money in exchange for hiding him from police. The couple has asked a judge to dismiss the suit.Jesse Dimmick of suburban Denver is serving an 11-year sentence after bursting into Jared and Lindsay Rowley s Topeka-area home in September 2009. He was wanted for questioning in the beating death of a Colorado man and a chase had begun in in Geary County.The Topeka Capital-Journal reported that Dimmick filed a breach of contract suit in Shawnee County District Court, in response to a suit the Rowleys filed in September seeking $75,000 from him for intruding in their home and causing emotional stress.Dimmick contends he told the couple he was being chased by someone, most likely the police, who wanted to kill him. I, the defendant, asked the Rowleys to hide me because I feared for my life. I offered the Rowleys an unspecified amount of money which they agreed upon, therefore forging a legally binding oral contract, Dimmick said in his hand-written court documents. He wants $235,000, in part to pay for the hospital bills that resulted from him being shot by police when they arrested him.Neighbors have said the coup
stanley usa le fed Dimmick snacks and watched movies with him
stanley cup until he fell asleep and they were able to escape their home unharmed.Dimmick w Sgio UK Intelligence Has Endorsed Cyber Security Courses For Wannabe Spies
The State Department has blocked the release of declassified documents about the CIA role in the 1953 coup that overthrew Iran democratically elected prime minister, due to the ongoing negotiations with Tehran over its nuclear program. But some historians think this is a dumb decision, that could actually backfire. The documents at the source of the controversy appear in a volume of The Foreign Relations of the United States FRUS . Compiled by State Department historians, the FRUS series is an invaluable resource, containing declassified documents that include diplomatic cables, candid internal memos and minutes of meetings between the president and his closest advisors. The volume on Iran had been slated for publication last summer, but was delayed in September and again this week. In 1953, the UK and the U.S. decided to remove Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh from power, after he nationalized the country oil industry, which, until that time, had been owned and operated by the British. After the coup, the Shah was i
stanley vaso nstalled as Iran absolute monarch until he was overthrown during the 1979 revolution. The decision to delay the
stanley flask release of documents from this period is perplexing, since the details of U.S. involvement are pretty much an open secret. And, State Department historians redact any information that is regarded as especially sensitive. Steven Aftergood, who publishes the well-regarded Secrecy News blog, broke this story,
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