Tuesday, October 2, 2012

"Speed Freak" killer breaks silence on where the bodies are

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Chevelle "Chevy" Wheeler's mother dropped her off at Franklin High School in Stockton, California, the morning of October 7, 1985. "I love you," the 16-year-old said as she left the car. Paula Wheeler never saw her daughter again.

She still recalls in chilling detail the scene 16 years later, when the man convicted of killing her daughter and three others turned to her and her husband in court and highlighted the painful fact that their child's body had never been found.

"My parents will know where I'm at when I'm gone, but you'll never know where Chevy is," she remembers Wesley Shermantine telling them. The condemned killer long refused to offer information about his victims' fate or whereabouts.

But after more than a decade of silence on death row, Shermantine, 46, has begun to speak out about the string of murders - by his count, six dozen - he committed with his childhood friend and partner in crime, Loren Herzog.

Together they were dubbed the "Speed Freak" killers, so named for the methamphetamine-fueled violence investigators said they unleashed in and around California's farm-rich San Joaquin Valley during the 1980s and 1990s.

Authorities have long suspected the pair in as many as 22 deaths in all, mostly of young women and girls who went missing.

If Shermantine's claims prove true, he and Herzog, who committed suicide in January, could end up responsible for 72 killings, ranking them among the most prolific serial murderers in U.S. history.

Shermantine began dribbling out information late last year to a bounty hunter who offered him money in exchange for the location of burial sites.

The killer's crudely drawn maps helped lead authorities in February to skeletal remains of Chevy Wheeler and four others, finally providing a measure of closure to Paula Wheeler and some of the other victims' relatives.

But those discoveries may represent just a fraction of a much larger tally.

In a recent letter to a reporter, Shermantine put the number of victims at "24 X 3," though he has suggested Herzog was mainly responsible. And a telephone hot line investigators set up this year drew reports of about 65 missing persons who callers believed may have fallen prey to Sherman tine and Herzog.

Prosecutor Thomas Testa, who tried both men, said such high numbers strike him as possibly intended for "shock value."

"We never had a number anywhere near 70," he said. But, he added, "I wouldn't discount it entirely ... Maybe there's some fame in a higher number than the next guy."

Meanwhile, efforts to locate and positively identify remains have been painstakingly slow.

A California state legislator and a retired FBI agent assigned to interview Shermantine and assess his credibility say the renewed investigation was badly hindered by ineptitude and by law enforcement agencies working at cross purposes.

A KILLER'S MAPS AND GUIDED TOUR

In a rare step authorized by the state Legislature in hopes of a breakthrough, Shermantine was briefly released under guard from San Quentin State Prison late last month to personally direct FBI agents to sites where he claimed to have disposed of more of his victims.

Law enforcement officials have remained tight-lipped about what, if anything, they discovered during his one-day outing in August, months after excavations of Shermantine's map sites first bore fruit.

In a shallow grave near the former site of Shermantine's family home in San Andreas, 100 miles northeast of San Francisco, cadaver dogs discovered Wheeler's remains and her lavender-colored sweatshirt in February. The remains of Cyndi Vanderheiden, who was 25 when she disappeared in 1998, were unearthed from a ravine a short distance away.

Although prosecutors could not produce either body when they brought Shermantine to trial, a jury convicted him in 2001 of murdering both Vanderheiden and Wheeler, along with two men shot on a pitch-black highway in 1984.

Also in February, investigators recovered three more sets of remains tied to Shermantine from an abandoned well near a former cattle ranch in the San Joaquin County town of Linden. A forensic anthropologist determined the bones belonged to Kimberly Billy, 19, JoAnn Hobson, 16, and an unidentified teenage girl.

Skeletal remains of a fetus were found there as well, along with shoes, coats, a woman's ring, a purse and nearly 1,000 bone fragments.

Neither Shermantine nor Herzog was charged in the murder of Billy, a newlywed who went missing in 1984, or Hobson, a friend of Wheeler who attended the same high school and vanished in 1985, weeks before her classmate. But in another courtroom outburst at the time of his own sentencing, Shermantine told Hobson's mother that Herzog had gone out on a date with her daughter the night she died.

A separate jury found Herzog guilty of three murders, including Vanderheiden's, but his conviction was reduced on appeal to a single count of manslaughter, and he was paroled after 11 years in prison.

Whatever Herzog knew about his victims' whereabouts, he took to his own grave in January, hanging himself just hours after the bounty hunter involved in the investigation informed him that Shermantine was starting to pinpoint grave sites.

'WE'RE TIRED OF WAITING'

Shermantine began mapping locations of remains he claimed were discarded in abandoned wells and mine shafts and buried on remote hillsides and beneath a trailer park after meeting late last year with retired FBI agent Jeffrey Rinek.

By then, a Sacramento-based bounty hunter, Leonard Padilla, had agreed to pay Shermantine up to $33,000 for information leading to remains of his victims.

But Rinek and Assemblywoman Cathleen Galgiani, a Stockton Democrat, have sharply criticized San Joaquin County Sheriff Steve Moore as impeding the effort. They accused Moore of trying to block Shermantine's visit to burial sites, then destroying evidence by allowing his deputies to recklessly dig for graves with a backhoe.

"They give more respect to dinosaurs than they do to these victims," said Rinek, who joined the investigation at the request of the FBI.

Galgiani recently formed a special task force to bring together dozens of law enforcement agencies that believe Shermantine might help them crack cold cases.

"The families of victims have waited and waited, and they wonder why nothing's happening. I know the torture it puts families through," Galgiani said.

The FBI has since taken the lead in the search for bodies, but a bureau spokesman declined to comment on the case.

Moore likewise declined to discuss specifics of the probe, though he confirmed that Shermantine visited San Joaquin County under heavy guard on August 26.

"We are now working with the FBI to further the investigation based on that activity. We stand ready to assist the FBI in making recoveries, which has been our goal all along," he said. "We will do everything we can to bring these victims home."

Sue Kizer is waiting. Her 18-year-old daughter, Gayle Marks, disappeared from Stockton in 1988. Authorities consider Shermantine and Herzog possible suspects.

"I want to get her out of wherever she is, thrown at the bottom of a dusty well or laying in the mud somewhere. I can't bear the thought," Kizer said. "Every family I'm in contact with, they all want the same thing. We want them to get out there and dig up the bodies. And we're tired of waiting."

(This story restores dropped letter in Testa, paragraph 12)

(Editing by Tim Gaynor and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/speed-freak-killer-breaks-silence-where-bodies-154424883.html

khan academy Espn College Football Eddie Murphy died Suzanne Barr Clint Eastwood speech Maria Montessori clint eastwood

Butch Cassidy's gun draws $175,000 in California auction

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A gun the Wild West outlaw Butch Cassidy wielded in the late 19th century and later tried to exchange for amnesty has drawn a $175,000 bid at a California auction house, the owner of the company said on Monday.

The Colt revolver was turned over to a sheriff in Utah in 1899 as part of Cassidy's failed attempt to obtain amnesty from the state's governor, said John Eubanks of California Auctioneers & Appraisers.

"He tried to become a regular citizen by turning over his guns," Eubanks said.

The $175,000 bid for the Colt came over the weekend from a buyer who wants to remain anonymous, Eubanks said.

In a separate auction in New Hampshire Sunday, two pistols found on the bodies of famed Depression-era outlaws Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow sold for a combined $504,000. They were bought by a Texas collector who also wished to remain anonymous.

Cassidy and his partner Harry Longabaugh, who went by the nickname "Sundance Kid," robbed banks and had an outlaw gang called the Wild Bunch.

Their exploits were featured in the 1969 film "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford.

Cassidy has long been thought to have been killed in a shootout in Bolivia, but his fate remains mysterious as members of his family and former associates have said he returned to the United States and lived under a false identity, according to a Web page about the outlaw on a Utah government website.

The sale of Cassidy's gun was part of an auction of Wild West items that California Auctioneers held on Saturday and Sunday in Casitas Springs, 65 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

A beaded jacket that belonged to the American Indian leader Crazy Horse sold for $10,000 in the auction, to a couple from upstate New York, Eubanks said.

Other pieces of memorabilia from the Wild West have fetched even higher prices. Last year, the only authenticated photograph of gunslinger Billy the Kid was auctioned off to the billionaire William Koch for $2.3 million.

(Reporting By Alex Dobuzinskis; editing by Greg McCune and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/butch-cassidys-gun-draws-175-000-california-auction-214017296.html

vince carter sweet potato casserole safeway standing rib roast its a wonderful life its a wonderful life rex ryan

Readout of the Secretary-General?s meeting with H.E. Mr. J?nos ?der, President of Hungary, on the margins of the 67th United Nations General Assembly

For information only - not an official document

UNIS/INF/460
28 September 2012

NEW YORK, 27 September (UN Information Service) - The Secretary-General met with H.E. Mr. J?nos ?der, President of Hungary.

They discussed the sustainable development agenda, including Hungary's critical leadership on water and sanitation issues, and emerging consensus on the post-2015 UN Development Agenda.

The Secretary-General and the President also noted the importance of 2013 as the international year of water cooperation as well as Hungary's initiative to host a conference on water resource management in the coming year.

* *** *

Source: http://www.unis.unvienna.org/unis/en/pressrels/2012/unisinf460.html

masters leaderboard frozen four joe avezzano kanye west theraflu joey votto the masters live mega millions winner

Monday, October 1, 2012

Rookie Quarter Backs in the NFL (2012 what they are showing us)

Rookie Quarter Backs In The NFL (2012 What They Are Showing Us)

American Football

Week 3 Update
Luck had his most impressive showing so far despite his defeat to the Jags. RG3 had to chase the game after it had a hard time in the first half he still looks like the franchise future. Tannehill still looked limited to me he could punish the Jets once they lost Revis he looks average. Wilson may have threw the very debatable winning hail mary, but he still looks limited he moves well but his passing looks suspect their is a strong case of Flynn getting a game. Weeden continued to have issues failing to complete a large number of passes.

Previous The season enters week 3 and their has been a record for the NFL with rookie quarter backs starting from week 1 in the league this season 5 in all, in week one they went 1-4.

Andrew Luck
The stanford product is having a though introduction to the NFL been part of the rebuilding project currently in progress at the Colts who aim to rebuild their franchise about the most talked about player over the last 2 years in the college football, ultra reliable with pretty an all round game with little or no downside to him he is rightfully talked up as the next peyton manning, i personally think he can be better he is alot more mobile than he is given credit for making him elusive in the pocket.
Luck recovered from a week 1 defeat to settle at 1-1 with the win over vikings to ensure a better rookie start than the man he replaced. This has left him with 3 TD's, 3 Int, 533yds. He will want keep up his yardage but cut out his intercepts he has shown calm thou coming back from a intercept to lead a drive down field he has such pose. Week 3 should give an excellent test when he faces the Jaguars who are a real mixed bag.

Here are some of the excellent plays he made during his time at Stanford

Robert Griffen III
RG3 raised the Baylor programme last year with a great final year and it earned him the Heisman trophy too. He is a really mobile quarterback more elegant and quick than Newton but with a bigger more accurate arm from the off. He works hard and the redskins have made a huge effort to ease him in adjusting their play book for alot of plays he worked out during his time at Baylor.

He won a good game week 1 the only rookie quarterback to do so, but in week 2 he came up against a hungry Rams side in a game that either side could have taken, he has proven the most effective of the rookies from the 2 games so far (3TDs. 1Int, 526yds). He faces a test against the Bengals at home in week 3 a game they will want bounce back and win, RG3 will want record as good if not better numbers against an average Bengals defense.

Action from his debut NFL game:

Ryan Tannehill
A product of texas A&M he looked an excellent college quarter back but had a bit to prover that he would deliver in the pro ranks. Despite this a good camp gave him the starting spot over Henne. At 6foot 4 he is a big guy but he sees alot of his passes over the line getting tipped despite his size this is due to his low throwing action which worries some experts. He lost in week 1 but faced one of the moss impressive teams in the league, he looked much improved in the win over oakland, althou a home crowd will have helped him greatly.

His stats so far this season (1TD, 3INT, 419yds) improved greatly from the improved running game in week 2 were he was without an intercept and passed for his first td, he looked much better suited to balancing the pass with the rush. The improvement was great in week 2, but in week he faces Revis and the jets who will test him thru air so the rush may be leaned on again.

His week 1 showing v texans

Brandon Weeden
The Browns are also a team looking to build and try form some sort of play off team, they dropped previous draft pick McCoy and have now put their faith in Weeden to improve the teams fortunes. Weeden has what can only be called a rotten opening game, in fact the worst for a rookie qb on debut in history. The Oklahoma State product managed just 12 completed passes and 118yds and was picked off 4 times a rotten night for the newbie.

He recovered in week 2 and current rate of improvement will have him with hall of game numbers by the end of the season (2TD,4INT, 440yds) They did go 0-2 but they kept the bengals close and their defence is doing good work if Weeden can help the offense put points on board.

Some of the play that urged the Browns to select Weeden:

Russell Wilson
The Seahawks signed up Matt Flynn off his two games filling in for Rodgers, they paid him the money but after training camp, it was decided that Wilson the rookie was the preferred option to lead the side on the opening day of the season. Another mobile quarterback with a great arm who had a chance to enter MLB but opted to go the way of the NFL.

Week 1 was mixed, he had a chance to win them the game but while he did some things right his execution when given so many chances at the death let him down when the team needed him most. Week 2 saw improved numbers as they got out early against the cowboys (2TDs, 1INT, 304yds) his numbers are nothing much and the man hes keeping out of the side is probably the best of the back ups for these rookies. Everything improved in week 2, they host the Packers in week 3 who are weak against the pass, a game of 200yds or less might push flynn into the team.

The reason he was picked excellent pre season form:

Any questions or thoughts leave a message or get in touch on twitter: @gghofman


Source: http://www.olbg.com/blogs/post.php?id=403807

texas longhorns francesca woodman kennedy center honors danny gokey sonny rollins sweet caroline lottery winning numbers

Petersburg mayor faces local architect in Ward 4 election

PETERSBURG - Petersburg Mayor Brian Moore is facing a challenger - local architect Terry Ammons - in the contest for the 4th Ward City Council seat.

Terry Ammons

The 48-year-old Ammons says that it has been interesting to try and tell people quickly why he is qualified for council, feeling that it's something he's been working toward for quite some time "in terms of the nature of my work and the community service that's part of a lot of the work."

"I have a lot of experience working in the public sphere," Ammons added. "My work has really let me develop a lot of skills that I think are really relevant to what I could apply to serving the ward as a councilman."

Ammons said that he mulled over whether he would run in the current election and decided about a day or so before the June filing deadline that he would run. "I actually thought the deadline was in July and then I found out it was in June," Ammons said.

He said that he believes in the public process and that he also feels that citizens have been left out of the process.

"I can't do anymore as a business owner," Ammons said, adding that he's tried to effect positive change in the city and that he felt there was more he could do. "I knew this might be a step I would take on at a some point in time."

Ammons says he felt he's been in the city long enough and has built two businesses and renovated several buildings, something he describes as a record to show for what he has done here.

The candidate said that he has a list of priorities for the city if he wins, including economic development, youth and education, arts and culture and responsible government among other issues. "I think there's a lot of low-hanging fruit out there," Ammons said. "Our City Council has to make education a priority and I don't think that's just the school system."

The candidate also says that he feels the city hasn't been effectively utilizing its history. In his campaign materials, he says he wants to establish a partnership with the National Park Service to establish a visitor contact station at South Side Depot and that he wants a civil rights museum in the former Trailways bus station at the intersection of East Washington and North Adams streets. The city recently announced a grant from the Virginia Department of Transportation and The Civil War Trust which will be used to establish a Visitor Contact Station at South Side Depot. Additionally, a private nonprofit group has been working with the city on establishing a civil rights museum in the former Trailways station.

"Our history is the thing that crosses cultural lines," Ammons said. "We need to create a new narrative for this city."

As part of that new narrative, Ammons said he would push a "market-to-market" project that he says would eliminate a "competing situation" between "uptown and downtown." The project would connect the market square area in Old Towne and the Halifax Triangle. "We need to say these are our two market squares," Ammons said. He added that the history of the markets is not one of segregation only, but that people shopped at both markets.

One of the challenges that Ammons sees is a culture of distrust of organizations and government by residents of the city. "The city should really be deciding what the city leadership can do," Ammons said. "I don't think it's the council's job to make school policy, but you can say that education is one of the city's biggest problems," and direct resources to the issue.

Brian Moore

Moore, 49, has been a telecommunications consultant and contractor for the past 27 years.

"The hard work and effort I've put in the last eight plus years," Moore said, is one of his qualifications for being re-elected. "I've got the experience and knowledge to move projects forward. That's evident. Look around in the city and see what's going on."

That has been work not only on the project side, Moore says, but in working with city administration to hire more professional leadership on the city's staff. "We've seen a lot better customer service and people are more responsive."

Moore said that the city has also begun to take a different approach to projects, particularly with the new city manager in place by looking forward "we're looking three, five, 10 years down the road."

One example of that is a hotel-conference center plan, which the city has been working closely on with Virginia State University. Moore said it should be coming online in the next two to three years. "We're working to build the economic base to support the programs," Moore said. Moore said the hotel and conference center should be ready approximately six months before the VSU events center on campus. "The goal is to put the city in a position to use the revenue from the project to go into debt service. We've already got folks interested in the project. We've been getting multiple calls. We're building a lot of energy. We're building a lot of success as we move forward."

Moore said that the success of the project along with other projects in the downtown and Ward 4 affects all of the city.

Moore said that as more businesses and projects come to the city, it can benefit all residents. "Once we get the revenue coming in, people always want the real estate tax done, but first you have to build the value of the land book," Moore said. He said that many people make comparisons between the city's real estate taxes and neighbors, including Chesterfield. "That's not a fair comparison, because you have to look at the land book value."

The mayor said that over the past four years he's seen not only a change inside the city, but the perception of the city by outsiders.

"When we go places now. People take Petersburg seriously," Moore said. "It's a great city. I love this city. It's a great place to be."

Some of the growth over the past four years includes market driven, market rate loft style apartments, including the Perry Street Lofts, Courthouse View and the Oddfellows Building. Additionally, he said that the city was able to sell the landfill - which had been owned by the city and would have been closed, costing taxpayers millions of dollars. Instead, the City Council sold the landfill to Container First Services. The business now pays the city $1 per ton of trash per day up to $1,000 a day for $365,000 a year in revenue.

Moore said that he's running for re-election because he wants to continue the hard work that he's already put in and see several projects finished to completion - including work to establish a visitor contact station at South Side Station and an effort to transform the former Trailways bus station into a civil rights museum - and to continue to work with the current City Council.

He added that the work isn't done yet, and the city must continue to develop its economic development engine. "We have to look at new ways of collaborative efforts and regionalism," Moore said.

- F.M. Wiggins may be reached at 804-732-3456, ext. 3254 or fwiggins@progress-index.com. Terry Ammons

Age: 48

Education: degree in architecture Virginia Tech

Career: architect, owner, Studio Ammons

Civic Involvement: Wilcox Watershed Conservancy; Virginia LISC; Downtown Petersburg Inc.; Cockade City Initiative; Petersburg Downtown Harbor Initiative; Leadership Southside Program; Preservation Alliance of Virginia; Battersea Technical Advisory Board; Historic Petersburg Foundation; Petersburg Film Task Force and Advisory Board; past member Petersburg Architectural Review Board, chairman five years; American Association for State and Local History; King and Queen Historical Society; Preservation Virginia; Virginia Association of Museums; American Association of Museums; Southeast Association of Museums; Virginia Historical Society; Virginia Downtown Development Association; National Trust for Historic Preservation; Bath County Historical Society; Historic Fairfax City Inc.

Family: One son, age 20.

Brian Moore

Age: 49

Education: Bachelors degree Hampden Sydney College, Project Management Certificate from University of Richmond.

Career: 27 years as a telecommunications consultant.

Civic Involvement: Amtrak National Mayor's Advisory Council; member United States Conference of Mayors; member Public Education Task Force United States Conference of Mayors; chairman of policy committee Tri-Cities Area Metropolitan Planning Organization; chairman Petersburg Interpersonal Violence Advisory Council; chairman of general laws sub-committee, Virginia Municipal League; commissioner, Crater Planning District Commission; member, executive committee Joint Land Use Study Taskforce, Tri-Cities Area Metropolitan Planning Organization; subcommittee member, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Commission, Commonwealth of Virginia; member board of directors, Virginians for High Speed Rail; member Virginia Municipal League; member, National League of Cities; member Virginia Gateway Region, Global Growth, Global Future Initiative; member, board of directors, Crater Development Company; member, board of directors, Tri-Cities Area Metropolitan Planning Organization; member, International City/County Management Association; alternate member, Metropolitan Richmond Air Quality Committee, Virginia Department of Environmental Quality; chairman, Petersburg Democratic Committee; member, 4th Congressional District Central Committee, Democratic Party of Virginia; member, resolutions committee, Democratic Party of Virginia; member, Sons of the American Legion, Post #2; Chairman Emeritus, Petersburg Public Library Foundation, Inc.; past advisor, Army Community Heritage Partnership; past member, physical and visual linkages committee, Army Community Heritage Partnership; past member, board of directors, Junior Achievement of Central Virginia; past president McKesson Farms Neighborhood Association; past member, Building Industry Consulting Services International; past member Society of Logistic Engineers; past member, board of directors McKesson Farms Neighborhood Association; former vice-president Walnut Hill Parent Teachers Association; former co-chair, principal's advisory council, Vernon Johns Middle School.

Family: Three daughters - Alicia, 20; Gina, 18; Dawn, 16.

Source: http://progress-index.com/news/petersburg-mayor-faces-local-architect-in-ward-4-election-1.1381009?localLinksEnabled=false

manson bubba watson recent earthquakes fbi most wanted list stuttering james van der beek dyngus day

Supreme Court rejects appeal on airport scanners

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Supreme Court on Monday refused to consider a Michigan blogger's challenge of the use of full-body scanners and thorough pat-downs at airport checkpoints.

Without comment, the court declined to take up Jonathan Corbett's complaint that the Transportation Security Administration's use of the screening techniques violated passengers' protection against illegal searches under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

The TSA, in October 2010, directed the use of the scanners, sometimes known as advanced imaging technology, which some critics fear could emit too much radiation.

In addition, the TSA authorized enhanced pat-downs, which could include the touching of genitals, buttocks and breasts, for passengers unwilling to go through the scanners. Passengers who rejected both procedures would not be allowed to fly.

Corbett, who maintains the "TSA Out of Our Pants!" blog, complained that the TSA lacked unilateral authority to adopt the procedures.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta had rejected Corbett's case, saying a lower court correctly concluded that it did not have jurisdiction to review a TSA order.

On his blog, Corbett wrote that he plans to continue pursuing his case, using procedures allowed by the 11th Circuit. "The good news is that the fight is not over," he wrote.

The case is Corbett v. U.S., U.S. Supreme Court, No. 11-1413.

(Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, M.D. Golan and Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/supreme-court-rejects-appeal-airport-scanners-135043877.html

human nature arkansas football howard johnson blackhawks levon helm firelight world peace elbow

George Michael Axes Tour Over Anxiety Issues

George Michael Axes Tour Over Anxiety Issues

George Michael has canceled his Australian tour after announcing he was suffering from “major anxiety” as he continues to recover from a his almost fatal [...]

George Michael Axes Tour Over Anxiety Issues Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2012/10/george-michael-axes-tour-over-anxiety-issues/

king arthur there will be blood there will be blood nigel barker 420 secret service fenway park