DENVER (AP) – An Iraqi man hailed as a hero for helping U.S. soldiers in Iraq is one of five Iraqis accused of rape-related charges after a woman suffered serious injuries during a sex assault in Colorado Springs.
Jasim Mohammed Hassin Ramadon, 22, was charged with sexual assault and being an accessory after he was arrested Tuesday in connection with the July 22 attack.
Soldiers said they met Ramadon in 2003, when he pleaded with them to arrest him in exchange for key information about local insurgents.
Ramadon was featured in “A Soldier's Promise,” a combat memoir by Army First Sgt. Daniel Hendrex, published in 2009, that detailed his relationship with Ramadon as a teenager who risked his life to provide information to U.S. soldiers deployed in Husaybah, a town in Al Anbar Province of Iraq.
During an interview months ago on KOAA-TV in Colorado Springs (http://goo.gl/rxeTF ), Ramadon said his mother told him to help the Americans. When he tried to return, she told him he had to go back to the soldiers or be killed. His Army protectors said Ramadon ultimately turned over 40 insurgents to the Americans, including his father.
Several soldiers interviewed by KOAA-TV said Ramadon was brought to the United States for his help and he settled in Colorado Springs, where the Army unit was based at Fort Carson.
Ramadon said he got into trouble at school in Colorado Springs after students started calling him a terrorist.
“I didn't know how to react, so I started getting into fights,” he said.
He later married and had a child.
Lt. Howard Black said Wednesday the attack on the woman was “one of the most horrific assaults I have ever seen.” He refused to provide other details.
Court documents said the woman told police she heard a disturbance outside her apartment while getting the mail and intervened. Afterward, she said she was invited to the apartment of one of the men where she was given lemonade and then passed out. Authorities said she suffered serious internal injuries from an attack.
The El Paso District Attorney's Office said charges are pending against others arrested in the case, including Sarmad Fadhi Mohammed, accused of sexual assault and being an accessory, and Mustafa Sataar Al Feraji, Ali Mohammed Hasan Al Juboori, and Yasir Jabbar Jasim, accused of being accessories. They were each being held on $250,000 bond.
Court records indicate Ramadon has a public attorney. it was not known if the other suspects had legal representation.
An Army spokesman said Hendrex now lives in Ft. Meade, Md. He did not return calls seeking comment.
Copyright 2012 the Associated Press. all rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Mitch Winehouse can’t listen to Amy Winehouse’s ‘Back to Black’ album because some of the songs are about his daughter’s ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil, who he blames for leading on a self-destructive path.
22 June 2012 Mitch Winehouse can’t listen to his late daughter Amy Winehouse’s ‘Back to Black’ album.The former taxi driver finds it tough to listen to her most successful record because some of the songs are about her damaging relationship with ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil.Writing in a new memoir, ‘Amy, My Daughter’, Mitch explains how he could never understand why Amy – who had a turbulent two-year marriage to Blake before their 2009 divorce – fell for the former heroin addict.he wrote: “It wasn’t as if he brought much good into her life, or so it seemed to me.”In the book, which is released next Tuesday (26.06.12), Mitch also reveals Amy – who died of alcohol poisoning aged 27 in July 2011 – suffered from stage fright and had considered getting plastic surgery on her nose following the success of her breast enlargement operation.Mitch details her battle with drug and alcohol addiction throughout the tome and at one point he admits he worried “her illness might end up killing” them both.he explains: “Long before Amy was an addict, no one could tell her what to do.”Once she became an addict, her stubbornness just got worse.”There were times when she wanted to be clean, but the times when she didn’t outnumbered them.”Despite revealing he can’t listen to ‘Back to Black’ – which sold more than 20 million copies worldwide – he insists her jazzy first album ‘Frank’ was his favourite record of his daughter’s.
Ashley Judd broke from the selling of maternal wrath and vengeance—the primary plot-drivers of her new prime-time spy caper, Missing—to visit the UN last week and discuss her celebrity recovery and humanitarianism memoir, All that is Bitter and Sweet.
It describes a youth marred by rape and abuse, an adulthood plagued by thoughts of suicide, paralyzing depression and pervasive hopelessness. And the path of healing that led her to work on behalf of such sufferers of the Global South as Congolese rape victims, Cambodian orphans and Bangladeshi sex slaves.
“I believe the patriarchy is not men,” Ms. Judd told her eager audience. “Patriarchy is a system in which both men and women participate.”
The crowd of more than a hundred might have populated the pages of a wildly dishonest social studies text: Women from distant lands with heads wrapped in exotic textiles, a girl with Down syndrome upon whom you couldn’t help wrongly projecting massive innocence, a sexually harmless priest and a Jewish grandmother with the accent of a lost neighborhood. a majority were women, with just enough nonthreatening men for each nonthreatening man to feel himself not threatened.
They came for the slow-dripping sweet stuff of first World stardom meeting Third World woe. They listened like unwitting adherents of a new religion as Ms. Judd discussed helping women heal from sexual violence and shame.
“It’s a very dynamic form of psychotherapy in which the individual is able to safely recreate a moment of violence and trauma and fight back and move that experience out of the body,” she explained. “Out of the neuroanatomical pathways of the brain and reclaim their personal power.”
But as Ashley Judd the humanitarian shared sexual catharsis at the UN, Ashley Judd the Clinton-era screen siren was suffering deeply online.
“What’s up with Ashley Judd’s Face?” tweeted Trevor O’Sullivan, referencing an appearance made by the actress and her cockapoo, Buttermilk, on Canadian television earlier in the week.
Viewers had noted a pneumatic plumpness about her cheeks—an aesthetic known to amateur online celebrity plastic surgery conjecturers as “pillowyness.”
“Like Lindsay Lohan,” said Us Weekly, “the star might be using injectable fillers in an attempt to look as youthful as possible for her big career comeback.”
“Ashley Judd’s new face makes me so sad,” tweeted Marisa Roffman.
Does a beautiful middle aged woman’s decision to inject herself full of chemicals to appear younger on television count as female empowerment, or submission to mass misogyny? Would a public denial of such self-maiming be further empowering, or another bow to the violent patriarchy that, we’d all just learned, is not about just men but men and women? sometimes it’s hard to not to cry.
But at the UN Ms. Judd was not a faltering screen goddess. She was, rather, a living celebrity saint, Ashley of Malibu, who had touched the flesh of even greater members of the canon; Ms. Judd’s interviewer now asked about her mentors, yes, Bono and Desmond Tutu.
“I’ve learned a lot from Father Tutu,” she said. “He has taught me it’s O.K. to be sloppily imperfect in this world. He’ll use scripture with me when I’m, you know, in Bukavu with a fistula repair surgery amongst a woman who’s on her third or fourth attempt and the surgeons are washing up with bar soap from the river water that’s pulled from pails and the electricity keeps going off. I mean, you know, that in itself is a beautiful scene.”
The tale of an unknown woman’s protracted agony passed as a visualization across the conference room, horror converted to texture by Ms. Judd’s anesthetizing Merchant-Ivory finish. People let out very faint sighs, imagining themselves on this very river in darkest Congo, fighting greatest evil with pure sentiment.
“Jesus and God are willfully self-constrained,” informed Ms. Judd, sharing former Archbishop Tutu’s circularity of divine indifference. “Powerfully powerless.”
And heads bobbed in deep appreciation of the existential souvenir.
Meanwhile Ms. Judd’s publicist, Cara Tripicchio, was moving against the fast-spreading facial-filler meme with her own counter-meme—that of a noble woman’s struggle against a viral sinus infection and face-swelling steroids.
“Ashley has been battling an ongoing, serious sinus infection and flu,” Ms. Tripicchio told E! News. “Ashley is a natural beauty enjoying her 40s gracefully.”
But even at the UN there was an undeniable pillowyness, a frozenness about the eyes.
“I did a grief group recently,” said Ms. Judd. “It’s not easy but it is so worth it. just an average year of living, the little hurts that accrue, the losses that we sustain, the jabs that we take. And I ended up doing some of my mother’s grief from when she was an unwed teenage girl and her baby brother was dying of cancer and it’s—”
The girl with Down syndrome (so innocent it hurt) was grinning at a joke she’d told herself while playing with her necklace as, in the front row, an elderly woman exercised her right to impromptu napping. We moved into Q&a, where Ms. Judd was asked if all this very selfless and beautiful and taxing humanitarian work had left her in any way scarred.
“It’s a big scar,” she admitted. “And the challenge and the gift is to let it heal enough so that I can function well but not to let it heal all the way, lest I forget.”
“Well, thank you, Ashley,” said the UN interviewer, “At 8 p.m. Eastern time on ABC Missing will be on the air, Ashley’s new series where she plays a powerful former CIA operative-turned-florist brought back in the game.”
And the grandmothers and the sexually harmless priest and the nonthreatening men and the women with heads wrapped in exotic textiles—but not the girl with Down syndrome—they all smiled like, “Boy, that’s quite an idea for a show.”
TINA Fey has been called the funniest woman in the US. until I read Bossypants, her disappointingly negligible new book, I'd probably have agreed.
Fey’s 30 Rock is the sharpest sitcom on television, full of quotable lines. Bossypants, alas, is not. This memoir is too rambling and loosely written to make you laugh, and it’s hard not to suspect Fey composed it with less care than she lavishes on her show. in an age when TV writing strives for permanence, books such as this are ever more disposable.
But let’s begin with Fey’s strengths. There may be no better practitioner of the one-liner in the US today. here she is on how it felt to grow up in the 1970s: "It was always ‘Day 27′ of something in Beirut." And here’s what she said, during an impersonation of Sarah Palin, on the topic of gay marriage: "I believe marriage is meant to be a sacred institution between two unwilling teenagers." (At the time, Palin’s pregnant daughter had just celebrated a lightning engagement to her luckless inseminator.)
That’s how Fey sounds at her best: compact, venomous, bang on target. But you can’t construct a 270-page book entirely out of one-liners. across the long haul, Fey turns out, inevitably, to be a less scintillating performer. mostly this book is a mildly jocular autobiography, sprinkled with some purely comic chapters that never really take fire.
She declines to tell the "whole story" behind her famous scar, saying only what she’s said in interviews: at the age of five, she was slashed across the face by a stranger. There’s some interesting stuff about the nuts and bolts of TV writing. There’s an excellent chapter about a calamitous luxury cruise.
All this is readable, occasionally moving, and better than average for a book of this kind. But that’s the problem: this is just a celebrity memoir, when Fey seemed more than qualified to deliver the book of a real writer.
30 Rock is refreshing because it offers a wide-angled perspective on US cultural insanity. One assumed this book would be like that too: cool, sceptical, above the fray. instead Fey embraces the trivial celebrity-culture priorities her show lampoons.
She has no quarrel, for example, with the Oprah-esque assumption that the self, especially the outer surface of it, is an endlessly discussable topic. She tries to be ironical about getting manicures and posing for glamour shots, but she doesn’t find these things quite absurd enough to stop doing them. She seeks credit, and perhaps even deserves it, for having "thus far refused to get any Botox or plastic surgery". But a culture in which that qualifies as a radical act, akin to refusing treatment for an arrow in the neck, should get a far more comprehensive satirical spray than Fey gives it here. 30 Rock would give it one. But Bossypants fatally personalises the big social questions. Defending her private "choices", Fey sounds too touchy to be funny.
Back in the 70s, Woody Allen published three volumes of comic pieces that were ultimately collected as his Complete Prose. to measure Fey’s book against Allen’s is to realise how drastically the American mind has shrivelled in the intervening years. Allen’s range of interests was ridiculously wider. Dostoevsky, Kafka, Plato, van Gogh, Yeats, Gertrude Stein: many an Allen joke depended on your having at least a rough idea who such people were. when Fey drops a name from ancient history, it invariably turns out to be someone from a horrible TV show. Larry Wilcox? Jon from CHiPs. Robert Wuhl? the guy from Arli$$. It’s moderately funny, once or twice, when a woman as smart as Fey conjures the name of some long-forgotten TV hack, or drops some gangsta catchphrase. But when she confines herself to the same tiny spectrum of trash-culture references for the course of a whole book, you struggle for air.
When Fey does risk a lone literary allusion — her cruise-ship chapter is titled "my Honeymoon, or a Supposedly Fun thing I’ll never Do Again Either" — she adds a clanging footnote that epitomises the book’s weaknesses: "if you get this reference to David Foster Wallace’s 1997 collection of essays, consider yourself a member of the cultural elite. why do you hate your country and flag so much?!" Fey’s deft touch deserts her here, as it does in so many parts of the book: she lets anger propel her beyond irony into sarcasm. But we should probably cut her some slack on this one. America’s idiots want her down there in the trenches of the culture wars. the temptation to take the odd brutal crack at them must be awfully hard to resist.
Fey got a $US6 million advance for this book. No doubt she felt obliged to deliver the kind of book that would earn the money back. But it isn’t much fun watching an intelligent writer pretend to be less smart than she really is. Writing for TV, Fey has never seemed to doubt what her audience wants: it wants her to write at her best. She doesn’t seem to think readers of this book will want the same thing. Reading Bossypants, you get a feeling you never get while watching 30 Rock: the feeling you’re being written down to.
<a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/arts/when-trash-culture-is-so-trivial-it-isnt-funny/story-e6frg8nf-1226057408592tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/arts/when-trash-culture-is-so-trivial-it-isnt-funny/story-e6frg8nf-1226057408592Fri, 20 May 2011 14:09:55 GMT 00:00″>When trash culture is so trivial it isn't funny
Jesse James just can’t stop the verbal diarrhea from pouring from his mouth. while the rest of the world hears the crap hitting the floor, he hears cash dropping.
James made a stop on Nightline to pimp his memoir ‘Dances With Whores: The Vanilla Gorilla Story.’ while there he cried about the fact that Sandra Bullock doesn’t let him within breathing distance of her or Louis.
“I’ve never seen Louis since everything happened, so a year. Sunny has only seen Sandra couple of times, but there has been no contact at all for several months.
I could only cry so much about [Louis] until I have to suck it up and keep a stiff upper lip and realize, Hey, [there are] three kids that I do have. I need to take care of them and not worry about the one that I don’t, you know, and I think that’s the lesson.”
He also whined about spending the last 5-6 years of his life worrying about Sandra and her preference that he keep his peen out of whatever strange he stumbled upon.
“I can’t worry about her anymore. I think I’ve spent the last 5 or 6 years worrying only about her and what she thinks and what I should do. you know like controlling all my movements. I think it’s time to start worrying about Jesse and making sure Jesse is happy.”
Isn’t that what landed him in the divorced boat? I digress. James continues in the interview about his “new life” and not needing “millions of dollars and licensing deals.” Regardless, that hasn’t stopped him from talking the subject of Sandra Bullock to death while trying to sell a book.
As if that wasn’t enough, Jesse James went on Howard Stern to talk about how Kat Von D is “100%” better in bed than Sandra.
I guess you really can’t expect class from someone who is less respectable than a Jabberwoky who forgets her son’s birthday, gives her grandchildren IOU’s for their birthday, suggests said grandchildren should have been given up for adoption only to turn around and have some drunk hose beast attempt to take the aforementioned grandkids so she can have a picture to show her friends so she doesn’t look like an C.U.N.Tuesday when they ask about her family.
Ok, I admit it…Jesse James looks like a gem comparatively. Touche Jesse James. Touche.