The files were discovered on a machine removed from Paula Broadwell’s Charlotte, NC, home as the feds investigated her sordid affair with the military commander whose biography she co-wrote.
Investigators also found documents Broadwell admitted taking from secure government buildings, a source told ABC News, adding the government demanded that they all be returned.
The network said the FBI and military were going through the material this morning and prosecutors were deciding whether to charge her with a crime.
“That’s why they were pulling so much stuff out of [Broadwell’s] place,” a source said, referring to a search carried out Monday night, three days after Petraeus quit as top spy because of their affair.
The discoveries prompted the FBI to step up its probe of Broadwell, who anonymously sent harassing e-mails to Florida mom Jill Kelley — a married “friend” of the four-star general.
Teen mothers have taken to a Facebook page called “I Hate Teen Moms” to fight back against comments they are “sluts” and a “burden on society.”
“I’m not struggling at all because I do my responsibility & I also work hard for it still able to have time for my child more than 8 hours a day. I receive no help at all from anyone,” a woman identifying herself as a 17-year-old teen mother wrote.
The “I Hate Teen Moms” page, which has garnered more than 26,000 “likes,” includes rants and name-calling that the administrator insists are simply “satire and dark humor” that is not violating Facebook’s terms of service or breaking any laws.
“Both landing a job and finding a way to fulfill sexual fantasies can be difficult things to do. Sadly, after writing a bomb threat on the back of his restaurantjob application, a man in Nebraska is no closer to achieving either goal.
Let’s break down where it all went wrong for Jason Dornhoff, 38.
Realizing he did not have a job, Dornhoff decided to apply for a job. So far so good.
Dornhoff drove to Legacy 272, asked for, and received a job application. Perfectly executed.
He filled out the application. Simply da bomb.
Speaking of da bombs, Dornhoff wrote on the back of his application that he had one in his truck.
That would be where it all went wrong.
Here’s what the note Dornhoff handed to his future coworker said:
“I have no money, a huge bomb in my truck, and a syringe of bleach that will kill you instantly. If you be quiet and help me, you won’t die.”
The employee “processed Dornhoff’s application” aka “called the police” a little after 11p.m. (kind of late to be filling out a job application, but no judgments here). Cops found him sitting at the bar when they arrived.
According to court documents, Dornhoff, in a sharing mood, told the police he uses methamphetamines and went to the restaurant hoping to find a way to fulfill his sexual fantasies. “Hoping to find a job” might have been a better thing to say.
Police found neither a huge bomb nor a syringe of bleach that will kill you instantly in Dornhoff’s truck. He is scheduled to appear in court in August.
I remember an instance where The Presiding Deity of a Temple in India,Lord Rama is cited a Litigant In Ayodhya Temple/Babar Masjid Demolition case.
A New Jersey couple is suing their landlord for a refund after they said paranormal activity caused them to flee their rental home.
Michele Callan and her fiance, Josue Chinchilla, moved into the home in Toms River, N.J., with Callan’s two children on March 1 and were immediately spooked.
“Three taps on the TV, taps on the shoulder…” Chinchilla told ABC News.
At first they chalked it up to the adjustment period of moving into a new home.
But things only got spookier, they said.
Doors opened and closed. The family even claimed they recorded strange voices whispering, “Let it burn.”
The new tenants said that between the menacing voices, flickering lights and clothes mysteriously flying from their closets, they couldn’t take it anymore. They fled the three-bedroom home and checked into a hotel, where they said they have been living since March 13.
Callan and Chinchilla filed suit last week in New Jersey Superior Court, seeking the return of their $2,250 security deposit from their landlord, Richard Lopez.
Lopez filed a counter-suit claiming the couple is using alleged paranormal activity as a way to break their lease.
“Frankly, there is something else going on,” David Semanchik, who is Lopez’s lawyer, told the Asbury Park Press. “She is a single mom, she has this fiancé living with her. I think she is in over her head and she can’t afford the rent.”
The couple said that isn’t the case, but ultimately a judge will have the final word on whether the family will be able to escape their alleged nightmare on Lowell Avenue.
The Survey, conducted by ABC News and The Washington Post, throws up Google as the most Popular Tech.Company in comparison Apple,Facebook and Twitter.
While Apple may be reckoned to be in the race, Facebook and Twiiter are no nowher in the picture.
The reason could be that while Google concentrates on Dissemination of Information, Facebook and Twitter caters to the fleeting moods of the peoplefor expressing their thoughts,emotions.
While the former is more referential the later is only a fleeting idea, like Classics against Pulp fiction.
Report:
“In the high-flying world of iconic technology brands, two – Google and Apple – tower at
remarkable levels of public popularity in a new ABC News/Washington Post poll. But add in
strength of sentiment and one of them claims the crown.
An almost unheard-of 82 percent of Americans express a favorable opinion of Google overall,
the national survey finds – and a majority, 53 percent, express a “strongly” favorable opinion of
the world’s leading search engine, itself an unusually high level of positive intensity.
Apple’s no slouch: Seventy-four percent see it favorably. But in addition to trailing Google by a
relatively slim 8 percentage points overall, it lags by a wider 16 points in strong devotees.
Another leading tech brand is popular, albeit less so – 58 percent of Americans in this poll,
produced for ABC by Langer Research Associates, express an overall favorable opinion of Facebook. But a fourth brand does less well: Only a third rate Twitter favorably, while about as
many have a negative view of the creator of 140-character commentary.
Popularity of Tech Companies ABC News/Washington Post Survey
The time is ripe for this sort of assessment, given these companies’ envied positions in the
marketplace. Google has followed up its vast lead in internet search and advertising with online
and mobile technology software, among an array of other initiatives. Just yesterday the company
provided a first look at the Google glasses concept, its “augmented reality” eyewear project.
Apple’s totemic products have made it the most valuable company in the world; it announced a
dividend and stock buyback program last month as its shares soared past $600, with analysts
pegging $1,000 as a possibility. Facebook, the world’s largest social networking site, is set to go
public later this year in what is expected to be the largest internet initial public offering ever.
And Twitter, the youngest of the four, has claimed its position as a combined social networking,
messaging and marketing tool.
In addition to very broad popularity, Google and Apple share vast exposure. Just 10 percent of
Americans haven’t formed a basic opinion of Google (rising to 29 percent of less tech-savvy
seniors), and 14 percent have no opinion of Apple and Facebook alike. Twitter is less well
known, with 31 percent unready to express an opinion of it, jumping to 51 percent of seniors.
GROUPS – Google and Apple are broadly popular across demographic groups, although,
reflecting their emphasis on design and innovation, tend to particularly do well among the young,
highly educated and affluent.
Favorability of both brands peaks among people with household incomes of $100,000 or more;
in this group a near-unanimous 93 and 91 percent express favorable opinions of Google and
Apple, respectively. Among those under age 30, Google maintains 92 percent favorability,
Apple, 81 percent. And both are more popular among college graduates (88 and 84 percent) than
their counterparts (a still-impressive 79 and 70 percent).
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