Tuesday 1 July 2014

Obama cracks wise about, er, 'crack' in pies

It’s not every day you hear a president joke about crack cocaine — in White House pies, no less.


During a Monday event to celebrate LGBT Pride Month, President Obama praised retiring White House pastry chef Bill Yosses — “the Crustmaster” — for his delicious pies.


“I don’t know what he does — whether he puts crack in them, or …,” Obama said as the crowd chuckled.


First lady Michelle Obama quickly weighed in, saying, “no he doesn’t. … There is no crack in our pies.”


The president went on to note that Yosses’ pies made an appearance at his first physical after moving into the White House.


“My cholesterol shot up,” Obama said. “And the doctor was like, what happened?”


He added: “And I thought, it’s the pie! It’s the pie! So we had to establish like a really firm rule about no pie during the week.”



Obama cracks wise about, er, 'crack' in pies

'Cannibal cop' to be freed, conviction overturned

A judge ordered New York’s notorious “cannibal cop” freed on $100,000 bail Tuesday, a day after tossing out his kidnapping conspiracy conviction.


A jury had convicted Gilberto Valle last year on charges of plotting to kidnap, kill and eat his estranged wife and other women. But Manhattan Federal Judge Paul Gardephe on Monday overturned the conviction on the most serious charge, citing a lack of evidence.


Gardephe let stand Valle’s conviction on illegally using a police database. The maximum sentence for that crime is a year in prison; the conspiracy charge could have meant life in prison.


Valle, 30, has been jailed for more than 18 months. The six-year New York Police Department veteran was fired from the department after his conviction.


Prosecutors had argued Valle looked up potential targets on a restricted law enforcement database. Gardephe was unconvinced.


“It is more likely than not the case that all of Valle’s Internet communications about the kidnapping are fantasy role-play,” Gardephe wrote in a 120-page opinion.


The “decision validates what we have said since the beginning: there was no crime,” defense lawyer Julia Gatto said. “Gil Valle is innocent of any conspiracy. Gil is guilty of nothing more than having unconventional thoughts.”


His estranged wife, Kathleen Mangan-Valle, testified at Valle’s trial in February 2013 that the couple were newlyweds with a young child when she found online chats and other evidence on his computer showing he had discussed killing her and abducting, torturing and eating other women.


“I was going to be tied up by my feet and my throat slit, and they would have fun watching the blood gush out of me because I was young,” Kathleen Mangan-Valle, who was 27 at the time, told a Manhattan jury.


Mangan-Valle also read about plans to put one friend in a suitcase, wheel her out of her building and murder her. Two other women were “going to be raped in front of each other to heighten their fears,” while another was going to be roasted alive over an open fire, she said.


“The suffering was for his enjoyment, and he wanted to make it last as long as possible,” she told the jury.


Gatto had argued that Valle always had been aroused by “unusual things,” including the thought of a woman boiled down on a platter with an apple in her mouth. He found a home at a fetish website with 38,000 registered members, where regulars discuss “suffocating women, cooking and eating them,” she said. But it was all fantasy, his lawyer said.


Contributing: Associated Press



'Cannibal cop' to be freed, conviction overturned

Caffeine overdose ruled cause of prom king's death

A caffeine overdose has been ruled the cause of an Ohio prom king’s sudden death before graduation in May.


The Lorain County Coroner reports Logan Stiner of LaGrange, Ohio, had toxic levels of caffeine in his body, and died from an irregular heartbeat and seizures after ingesting caffeine powder.


Stiner was found by his brother near the white powder on May 27, having taken enough to cause the overdose while at home from school for lunch.


“I never thought it would hurt an 18-year-old child,” resident Lora Balka told WKYC. She says she hopes his death will encourage other youths to consume caffeine in a mindful manner.


While it’s not sold in stores, caffeine powder is available on the Internet and is stronger than traditional forms of the supplement. One teaspoon of the powder contains up to 1,600 milligrams of caffeine — about 70 cans of Red Bull. Comparably, energy drinks contain about 280 milligrams, and a 12-ounce Starbucks coffee contains 260 milligrams.


A warning label on the caffeine powder suggests using a micro-scale to measure a safe amount, and companies claim that it improves focus, increases endurance and elevates mood.



Caffeine overdose ruled cause of prom king's death

As House committee staffs shrink, press offices expand

WASHINGTON — Members of Congress are putting your money where their mouths are.


Since Republicans took control of the U.S. House in January 2011, Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, has led a cost-cutting effort that has trimmed staff for House committees by nearly 20%, saving taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. But the number of committee staff responsible for press and communications work has increased by nearly 15% over the same period, according to House spending records.


In the first three months of 2010, with Democrats still in control of the chamber, the primary committees of the House reported employing 1,570 staff members, 74 of whom had “press” or “communications” or related terms in their job titles. Over the same period this year, the same committees reported 1,277 total employees, a 19% cut, 85 of whom had communications-related job titles.


Boehner spokesman Michael Steel said the numbers are “completely unsurprising. We promised responsible oversight of the Obama administration, and effective oversight requires communicating with the American people.”


But the numbers raise concerns that Congress is replacing investigative and legislative work with political messaging.


Drew Hammill, spokesman for Minority Leader (and former speaker) Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said, “while the urgent needs of the American people are ignored by House Republicans, it isn’t surprising that their Republican Committee chairmen are hiring more communications staff to spin their record of obstruction, dysfunction and distraction.”


Rep Elijah Cummings, D-Md., the top Democrat on the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said it is Republicans on his committee who have driven the change. “Our committee — and all committees — should use taxpayer dollars to help better the everyday lives of our constituents, not inflate their press operations to basically run political campaigns out of government buildings.”


The Oversight Committee has gone from a total staff of 118 with eight communications people in 2010 to 108 staff and 10 communications people. The trend is more dramatic over a longer period of time. In 1997, when the oversight committee headed by Chairman Dan Burton, R-Ind., was aggressively investigating President Clinton, the committee listed a staff of 121 with only two employees with communications in their job title.


As the majority party in the House, Republicans get a bigger staff on each committee, and GOP staff grew after the House switched from Democratic to Republican control. For instance, the House Financial Services Committee had four press people in 2010, two Republican and two Democratic. For the first quarter of 2014 there were six, and GOP spokesman David Popp said four of those are Republicans. But the House records do not detail which party the staff members work for.


Becca Watkins, spokeswoman for Oversight Committee Republicans, said the change is driven by changing technology, and it affects both parties. “Just as the Internet changed the landscape for newspapers, it changed it for Congress as well. On a bipartisan basis, fewer staff hours are used on mail and managing paper-based archives. More goes toward digital efforts — good communication will always be integral to good oversight.”


Brad Fitch, president and CEO of the Congressional Management Foundation that helps lawmakers manage their offices, said “Internet and e-mail have increased the number of conversations that citizens are having with members of Congress . . . (which) generally leads to more positive communications because (lawmakers are) providing more information.”


But Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on Government Oversight, which trains congressional staff on how to investigate government programs, said “communicating with the public — that’s incredibly important, but technology has made that easier to do. You don’t need to increase your staff significantly and disproportionately.”


Brian said her concern is that Congress is replacing subject-matter expertise with communications expertise, which makes it harder to generate significant and meaningful legislation. “It’s more important to know what you are doing than it is to talk about it,” she said.


Watkins said this is not happening. “There are still plenty of lawyers and investigators,” she said. “Technology advances that have allowed for overall staff reductions haven’t meant a drop-off in reforms, investigations and hearings.”


Former congressman Tom Davis, who chaired the Oversight Committee 10 years ago, said “Obviously the legislative output hasn’t gone up. … A lot of it is just messaging at this point. Getting the message out.” But, he adds, lawmakers also have to keep up with their constituents’ engagement in new media platforms. “If they weren’t out there responding to people, people would fault them. So you’re damned if you add more staff, damned if you don’t.”


Stephen Farnsworth, a political scientist at the University of Mary Washington who specializes in political communication, said the numbers are not a surprise. The White House always gets more media attention for its views than Congress does, he said, which is a particular problem for Republicans who control only the House and not the Senate. “It is surprising to me that Congress hasn’t been more aggressive earlier in trying to reduce the disparity between the attention that the White House and Congress gets,” Farnsworth said.


“Since the legislative branch is mired in single-digit approval ratings, the members figure they need to invest more in getting their message out.”



As House committee staffs shrink, press offices expand