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Stalker Threatened Alec Baldwin With 'Massive Destructive War' If He Refused Marriage

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genevieve sabourin

A French-Canadian actress accused of stalking Alec Baldwin bombarded him with emails telling him that she wanted to become his wife and that if he refused she would start a "massive destructive war."

Genevieve Sabourin, 40, sent Mr Baldwin up to 10 emails a day in which she veered between affectionate and threatening.

In new documents submitted to a Manhattan court on Thursday the 30 Rock star revealed the lengths to which Sabourin allegedly harassed him.

The document, written by Mr Baldwin, says that on March 20 this year he received 10 emails from Sabourin. He says that one email was titled 'Defcon 1' and stated that Sabourin planned to start a "massive destructive war".

Mr Baldwin wrote: "The defendant sent me another email saying…she had saved money and was coming to New York to see me. She also said she would find me no matter what it cost her. She said that I could call the FBI and have her put in jail or I could call and speak to her."

Mr Baldwin said that he received 12 emails from Sabourin between April 2 and April 5. He says one email said that the actress, from Montreal, said she was "excited about creating Genevieve Baldwin".

Sabourin was arrested earlier this year after travelling to Mr Baldwin's Manhattan home just days after turning up at his holiday home in the Hamptons. She had also turned up unannounced at events Mr Baldwin was taking part in, he says.

Mr Baldwin met Sabourin in 2002 on the set of his movie The Adventures of Pluto Nash. He took her to dinner eight years later, he says simply to give her career advice.

However Sabourin's lawyers claim that he later accompanied her back to her hotel. Her lawyer Maurice Sercarz said she was not stalking him. "She wanted to determine, face to face, whether her amorous feelings for Mr. Baldwin were shared by him." he told a previous court hearing.

Sabourin is charged with 23 counts of harassment and one count of stalking. She will appear in court again next month.

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REPORT: Justice Department Officials Broke The Law And Hired Their Kids

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Six of 11 paid internships in one division of the Justice Department  were deliberately filled by family members of DOJ staff in 2010, according to a new report from the department's internal watchdog.

The internships paid salaries of up to $40,000 and often led to full-time work, according to Law Blog.

The report also found eight current or former Justice Department officials manipulated the hiring process so their children or colleagues' children got permanent jobs within the department.

The report, which was first covered by The Wall Street Journal's Law Blog, also found that in at least one case "two senior officials simultaneously attempted to assist each other's relative in securing DOJ employment."

If true, these allegations mean Justice Department officials have broken federal law that prohibits nepotism.

This isn't the first time the department has come under fire for its questionable hiring practices. Back in 2004 and 2008, the DOJ's internal watchdog alleged the department's Justice Management Division hired or promoted family members.

Each time the officials implicated in the probe promised to change, Law Blog reported Thursday.

This time around, Assistant Attorney General for the Administration Lee Lofthus called the report "troubling," since it "identified hiring improprieties for the third time in eight years," according to Law Blog.

DON'T MISS: CRIMINOLOGIST: Don't Blame James Holmes' Parents >

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DEA Executes First Nationwide Crackdown on 'Bath Salts' And 'Spice'

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bath salts

Federal agents seized about 5 million packets of synthetic drugs along more than $36 million in cash while arresting more than 90 people in the first nationwide crackdown of synthetic drugs.

The raids, called Operation Log Jam, involved the DEA and five federal agencies as well a state and local police in more than 100 U.S. cities.

On July 10 President Obama signed a bill that bans the sale, production and possession of 31 compounds commonly found in bath salts and synthetic marijuana after a surge over the last two years in the distribution of drugs made of legal chemicals that mimic cocaine, amphetamines and other illegal stimulants.

Smokable herbal blends marketed as "Spice" or "K2" are labeled "herbal incense” and say “not for human consumption” but contain psychoactive compounds that mimic THC, the active ingredient in marijuana.

The most common types of bath salts, like MDPV and mephedrone, were first developed in pharmaceutical research laboratories but were never approved for medical use. Powerful bath salts can cause a surge in energy, fever and delusions of invincibility.

"We're seeing extreme agitation, hallucinations that are very vivid, paranoia and some really violent behavior, so it's a real crisis for us," Dr. Sullivan Smith of Cookeville Regional Medical Center in Tennessee told the AP. "We sedate the living daylights out of them. And we're talking doses on the order of 10 or 20 times what you would give for a painful procedure."

In 2011 the American Association of Poison Control Centers received more than 6,100 calls about bath salt drugs in 2011 — up from 304 in 2010 — and more than 1,700 calls in the first half of 2012. Sixty percent of the cases involved patients 25 and younger.

The production of a wide spectrum of synthetic drugs makes them very dangerous as it becomes almost impossible to know what people have ingested or how long the effects will last.

"Cocaine is cocaine and meth is meth. We know what these things do," Mark Ryan, director of the Louisiana Poison Center, told AP. "But with these new drugs, every time the chemist alters the chemical structure, all bets are off."

The haul included 4.8 million packets of synthetic cannabis and 167,000 packets of bath salts.

SEE ALSO: US Army Private Accused Of Smuggling Seven Pounds Of 'Spice' Into South Korea >

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George Zimmerman's Dad Says His Son Mentored African-American Kids And Isn't A Racist

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robert zimmerman

George Zimmermans' parents have launched their own website to let people know their son is a good man who has been the victim of an "unbelievable, highly orchestrated" chain of events since Trayvon Martin's death.

While he doesn't delve into specifics about his son's second-degree murder case, Robert Zimmerman took to robertandgladys.com to give any interested parties a glimpse into the family that raised the former neighborhood watchman.

News of the website first began making the social media rounds on Thursday.

While the first few years of George Zimmerman's life were financially difficult for the family, the Zimmermans said they still helped out anyone who asked.

"The Zimmerman children were raised knowing that being helpful, good Christians, and good citizens, was their responsibility," Robert Zimmerman wrote. "The word ‘hate’ was never allowed in the Zimmerman household."

Robert Zimmerman goes on to add that his mother-in-law Cristina, who lived with the family while George Zimmerman was growing up, babysat two "young African-American girls."

"These girls, one now a physician and the other a PhD candidate, were very close to all the Zimmerman children," Robert Zimmerman wrote. "To all involved, race was never a thought that came to mind."

Later on, George Zimmerman and his wife, Shellie, mentored two African-American children and did "as much for these children as possible," Robert Zimerman said.

Many critics believe George Zimmerman killed Martin because he was a black man.

In 911 calls from the night Martin died, George Zimmerman can be heard complaining "these assholes always get away," while calling Martin one of "these fucking punks."

Next up for the Zimmermans, George's wife Shellie is scheduled to be arraigned next week on charges she lied to the court about the couple's finances.

DON'T MISS: Cop Told Zimmerman That Trayvon Martin Was A 'Kid With A Future' In Post-Shooting Interview >

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WATCH Two Men Detain An Alleged iPhone Thief After Chasing Him Through Manhattan

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Who says New Yorkers are mean?

Brian Hester and Chase Bunn ran after Noah Udell through downtown Manhattan after Udell allegedly stole a woman's phone while she was standing outside her office.

“She was screaming, ‘Help!’ ” Hester told The New York Post, which first reported the story Friday morning. “They were wrestling. He snatched the phone and pushed her.”

“I just ran,” Hester added. “My coffee went everywhere, and my phone fell out of my pocket.”

The two men eventually caught Udell and wrestled him to the ground. But while Hester was trying to keep a crowd of angry onlookers from attacking Udell, the alleged thief jumped up and tried to run away, the Post reported.

Hester chased him again and caught Udell on Barclay Street near West Broadway.

“I was like, ‘I don’t have all day to be chasing you',’” Hester told the Post. Hester and Bunn then held Udell until police arrive.

Don't worry, Hester's chase wasn't in vain. He told the Post that Starbucks gave him a free refill to compensate for the coffee he spilled while trying to catch Udell.

Now watch a video Hester shot himself while detaining Udell, courtesy of the New York Post.

DON'T MISS: Riders Take Down An Alleged Groper On The L Train In Brooklyn >

 

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A Private Equity CEO Was Shot Dead In His Office

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The CEO of private equity firm was allegedly shot dead by a former business partner who then killed himself, MoneyWeb's Julius Cobbett reports.

The CEO was Julian Williams, 37, the chief executive and co-founder of Basileus Capital.

He was allegedly shot by  Herman Pretorius, a former business partner at hedge fund Abante Statistical Arbitrage.

MoneyWeb points out that the pair had a big dispute earlier this month over the payment of dividends for a company called SA Superalloys. 

Here's Williams' bio from Basileus

Julian Williams graduated with a Masters in Commerce from the University of Cape Town. He successfully completed his board examination and following the completion of his training contract with PriceWaterhouseCoopers Inc, he obtained his CA (SA) professional membership from the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants. 

In Business: 

In 2001 he was responsible for launching Penryth (Proprietary) Limited, a specialist securities lending business in South Africa. This led him to move across and establish an investment Group of companies which comprised: a Financial Services Board registered investment manager; and a private equity company and related companies. 

While running the Group Mr. Williams founded Wesizwe Platinum Limited, a Platinum explorer and mine developer. Mr. Williams engineered the listing of Wesizwe on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange in December 2005. Mr Williams has served on the Wesizwe Platinum Board for 6 years. 

Mr Williams is also the Chairman of Avalloy, South Africa's only superalloy producer. Mr Williams engineered the purchase of the Avalloy plant from African Rainbow Minerals Ltd in 2006 and oversaw Rolls Royce taking a 15% stake in the company along with its acceptance by the market and consequent growth. 

Mr. Williams is a co-founder of the Basileus Group of companies with James Ngculu. The Basileus Group specialises in Private Equity transactions and corporate advisory work.

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Colorado Shooting Suspect Isn't The First To Reveal Grisly Plans Of An Attack

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dylan klebold and james holmes

If accused Colorado shooter James Holmes actually sent a notebook showing stick figures shooting each other to a university psychiatrist, then he's just the latest accused mass murderer to document plans of an attack.

Police believe Holmes, the 24-year-old accused of opening fire on a theater full of mostly young people, sent a notebook "full of details about how he was going to kill people" to a University of Colorado psychiatrist.

But this isn't exactly an original move, according to a story ABC News published Thursday.

"These attackers may be trying to be understood," Marisa Randazzo, an expert on threat assessment and targeted violence told ABC News. "Because at the time they carry out the attack they don't feel understood. This may be part of what is driving this personal desperation — the feeling that they have no options left."

Those attackers include Columbine High School shooters Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold who left a trove of diaries and videos, as well as diagrams of the school, before killing 13 students.

Seung-Hui Cho, the student believed to have killed himself and 23 fellow students at Virginia Tech in 2007, left video clips of his ranting against unnamed enemies just before the attack.

"You had 100 billion chances and ways to avoid today," he said in the video, according to ABC News. "But you decided to spill my blood. You forced me into a corner and gave me only one option. The decision was yours. Now you have blood on your hands that will never wash off."

DON'T MISS: This Graphic Shows The Shocking Amount Of Equipment Carried By The Denver Shooter >

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Massachusetts' Top Court Says A Civil Union Is Equivalent To Marriage

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Obama Hands Gay marriage Newsweek

Massachusetts' highest court unanimously decided to recognize a civil union issued by another state as equal to marriage so as not to violate Massachusetts' polygamy laws.

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court's ruling comes after Richard Elia claimed his marriage to Todd Elia-Warnken should be void because Elia-Warnken had an undissolved civil union in Vermont, The Wall Street Journal's Law Blog reported Thursday.

"If we do not recognize [Mr. Elia-Warnken's] civil union, he would have two legal spouses, each of whom could expect virtually the same obligations from him, such as spousal or child support, inheritance, and healthcare coverage," Chief Justice Roderick Ireland wrote in his opinion, according to the Law Blog.

The decision comes on the heels of a Boston federal appeals court ruling that declared the core of the Defense of Marriage Act is unconstitutional.

DON'T MISS: REPORT: Justice Department Officials Broke The Law And Hired Their Kids >

 

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REPORT: James Holmes' PhD Program Was Intensely Isolating And Grueling

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James Holmes dropped out of one of the nation's most prestigious neuroscience PhD programs just weeks before his alleged shooting rampage in an Aurora, Colo.

That program, at the University of Colorado – Denver, is so high-pressured that some PhD students drag cots into the lab so they can check data throughout the night, according to a Friday article in the LA Times.

While officials at the University of Colorado – Denver declined to discuss Holmes specifically, they gave the LA Times new details on the environment he worked in until just a few weeks before the "Dark Knight Rises" tragedy.

The work of a PhD neuroscience student can be "isolating drudgery" with students spending hours by themselves in tiny rooms with rats and mice as their only friends, according to the Times, which also interviewed officials from similar doctoral programs.

"There's a lot of time when you're just alone, [and] it's very easy to get lost in those periods of isolation," said Shawn E. Nielsen, a doctoral student at a similar program at UC-Irvine.

Holmes graduated at the top of his class from the University of California – Riverside in 2010, but was apparently slipping behind in graduate school. He reportedly failed an important exam before buying one of the guns he allegedly used to shoot dozens of people last Friday.

Barry Shur, dean of the University of Colorado-Denver's graduate school, hinted to the LA Times that the program is not for everybody.

"It requires someone with enormous perseverance and an underlying passion for the science to get them through it: 'I have to do this experiment again, and again, and again to find out if it's right or wrong,'" Shur said. "A lot of people get worn down."

DON'T MISS: The Names And Faces Of People Who Died In The Batman Massacre >

 

 

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Lawyer's Ex-Mistress Gets 20 Years In Bizarre Murder-For-Hire Case

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Michelle Gaiser

The ex-mistress of a high-profile Houston lawyer pled guilty Friday to hiring hit men to make three botched attempts to kill his wife in exchange for a 20-year prison sentence.

Michelle Gaiser, 39, insisted her former lover Jeffrey Stern plotted with her to kill his wife Yvonne, but prosecutors dropped the case against him earlier this week, ABC News reported Friday.

Yvonne Stern became the target of seemingly random gunfire in 2010, when men twice fired into the house she shared with Jeffrey.

In May 2010 a man wearing silver aviator glasses finally shot her through the abdomen, wounding her but leaving her alive, according to a lengthy Texas Monthly report on the case back in February.

Gaiser claims Jeffrey was assisting her the entire time, even saying to her, "What an amateur job, they missed the bitch again," according to the Texas Monthly report.

But Yvonne doesn't believe her husband was involved. In a truly weird twist in the case, Yvonne who previously filed for divorce, has since reconciled with her lawyer husband.

“Today, because of all we’ve been through, our marriage is stronger than it’s ever been,” Yvonne Stern told the Texas Monthly. “It’s full of love, it’s full of honesty, and it’s full of forgiveness. I made a decision to forgive my husband for his affair, and how dare anyone criticize me for that. How dare anyone criticize me for wanting to keep our family together.”

DON'T MISS: REPORT: James Holmes' PhD Program Was Intensely Isolating And Grueling >

 

 

 

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A Former Chick-Fil-A Employee Is Suing The Chain For Gender Discrimination

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Brenda Honeycutt, a former Chick-fil-A employee, is suing the chicken chain for wrongful termination based on gender discrimination, according to a lawsuit obtained by GLAAD.

The lawsuit — which you can read in full here — alleges that despite Honeycutt's "satisfactory-to-above satisfactory" performance, she was fired so that she could be a stay-at-home mom.

During Honeycutt's time working for the chain, her boss Jeff Howard suggested "that as a mother she should stay home with her children," the complaint alleges.

Not only that, but the lawsuit accuses the chain of widespread discrimination against female employees, and of replacing them with male employees after firing them. The incidents in question all happened at Chick-fil-A locations in Northern Georgia.

This comes in the middle of a controversy centered around Chick-fil-A president and COO Dan Cathy's anti-gay marriage statements.

Honeycutt is asking the court to order the chicken chain to give her full front pay, full back pay, benefits, and compensation for "the humiliation, emotional distress, and other damages," caused by her termination.

And now for the man who started it all: Meet S. Truett Cathy, the 91-year-old billionaire behind Chick-Fil-A >

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'Dark Knight' Shooting Suspect Saw Psychiatrist Specializing In Schizophrenia Before Massacre

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James Holmes

The university psychiatrist who reportedly received a notebook from the Colorado shooting suspect detailing his future crimes was also treating him in the weeks before the massacre.

James Holmes, 24, was seeing Lynne Fenton, a University of Colorado — Denver psychiatrist who specializes in schizophrenia, according to court records which were released Friday and were reported on by The Washington Post.

Holmes allegedly sent a notebook to Fenton depicting stick figures with guns shooting at other stick figures. Fenton heads up student mental health services at the university.

Holmes' public defenders are asking the court to find out who leaked news of the notebook to the media, claiming whoever did so violated Holmes' privacy and constitutional rights, according to the Post.

Holmes was a PhD student in the university's neuroscience program, which has been described as intensely isolating and grueling.

In addition to her work with the counseling facility, Fenton has written a number of medical papers and is spearheading research into schizophrenia, according to the Post.

She did not return the Post's requests for comment.

DON'T MISS: This Graphic Shows The Shocking Amount Of Equipment Carried By The Denver Shooter >

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Christie's Must Reimburse Russian Oligarch $2.7 Million Over 'Fake' Painting

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viktor vekselberg

Viktor Vekselberg, one of the world’s richest men, paid £1.7 million for Odalisque, a nude said to be the work of Russian artist Boris Kustodiev.

The price was 10 times the pre-sale estimate and represented the “pure absurdity” of the art market, the court heard.

Soon after the purchase in 2005, experts working for Mr Vekselberg’s arts fund, Aurora, began to cast doubt on the picture’s authenticity. They claimed that Kustodiev’s signature, dated 1919, was done in an aluminium-based pigment not available until after the artist’s death in 1927.

Mr Vekselberg sued Christie’s and today the judge ruled that he was entitled to recover the £1.7 million he paid for the painting. Christie’s must also pay around £1 million in costs.

Following a 20-day hearing, Mr Justice Newey dismissed allegations that Christie’s was negligent or that it misrepresented the painting.

However, he ruled: “I do not think certainty on the point is possible but my task is to determine authenticity on the balance of probabilities and the likelihood, in my view, is that Odalisque is the work of someone other than Kustodiev.

“It follows that Aurora is entitled to cancel its purchase and to recover the money paid for it.”

Christie’s said they were “surprised and disappointed” by the ruling.

A spokesman said: “We welcome the judge’s findings that Christie’s was not negligent. We are surprised and disappointed by his view of the painting’s attribution. We maintain our belief in the attribution to Kustodiev and are considering our options.”

Lawyers for Christie’s argued during the case that Odalisque had a “reliable provenance”, pointing out that the painting featured a distinctive chair known to have been owned by the painter. They also claimed that the pigment used in the signature was available in 1919, albeit not in common usage until the 1930s.

The painting was first sold by Christie’s in 1989 for £19,000, but by the time of the 2005 auction its pre-sale estimate had risen to £180,000-£220,000.

The final sale price of £1.7 million - for what one expert viewed as a “bread and butter picture” by the artist - came at the height of the economic boom. Natalia Kournikova, a Russian art collector who bid unsuccessfully for the painting, said the price was “pure absurdity”.

Christie's claimed that the work was probably "painted to sell quickly" because the artist, then a wheelchair-bound invalid, was desperate for money and struggling to feed his family in post-revolutionary St Petersburg.

James Aldridge, for Christie's, said: "It is not suggested that the painting is a masterpiece, but not every Kustodiev is a masterpiece."

Mr Vekselberg, 56, an oil tycoon, is listed by Forbes magazine as the world’s 64th richest man with a fortune of more than £7 billion.

DON'T MISS: Russian Oligarch Roman Abramovich Has Some Awesome Toys >

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Police: Maryland Man Calling Himself 'A Joker' Threatened To Shoot Up Workplace After Getting Fired

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Maryland Guns ShooterPolice in Maryland have arrested suspect who referred to himself as "a joker" and threatened to shoot up his workplace, investigators said Friday.

An official with knowledge of the investigation told The Associated Press that Neil Prescott of Crofton, Md., phoned in the threat to software and mailroom supplier Pitney Bowes near Washington, D.C.

Investigators say a search of Prescott's home turned up more than 20 guns, including assault rifles and handguns, and more than 400 rounds of ammunition.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is unfolding.

Though the suspect referred to himself as "a joker" when he called in the threat, the official said there is no other known connection to a deadly shooting last week at a Colorado movie theater during the latest Batman movie.

Investigators believe Prescott, who was arrested Thursday night, had lost his job with the company and was disgruntled. They say he called in the threat earlier this week.

Pitney Bowes Inc. spokeswoman Carol Wallace said in an emailed statement that Prescott was an employee of a subcontractor to the company and had not been on any Pitney Bowes property in more than four months.

Prescott was being held Friday at Anne Arundel Medical Center in Annapolis, where he was undergoing a psychological evaluation. Crofton is located between D.C. and Annapolis, Md.

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Big-Time Patent Lawyer Stars In Adidas Commercial With An NFL Quarterback

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A patent lawyer for corporate law firm Steptoe & Johnson has taken on a totally new role.

Tremayne Norris, who represents big-time clients including Motorola, stars alongside NFL star Robert Griffin III in an Adidas commercial, The Washington Post's Capital Business Blog reported Thursday.

In the commercial, images of Griffin III follow Norris before the two finally play each other in a big game, with the NFL player jumping over the lawyer and scoring a touchdown.

"I don't mind being the guy that gets hurdled over right before he gets to the endzone," Norris, a fifth-year associate at the firm, told the Post. "This is RGIII's commercial, I'm just there. Being the guy that's supposed to be opposite him on the defensive side of course I'm going to get showed up."

Here's the commercial:

DON'T MISS: WATCH Two Men Detain An Alleged iPhone Thief After Chasing Him Through Manhattan >

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Yes, The 'Happy Birthday To You' Song Is Copyrighted—And Its Owners Will Earn Royalties Until 2030

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“Happy Birthday to You” has been used in hundreds of movies, countless advertisements, an estimated 1,500,000+ singing telegrams, and been the basis for pieces by classical composers like Igor Stravinsky and Aaron Copland.

It’s arguably the most recognized song in the English-speaking world, and it’s making some lucky people a whole lot of money.

But who?

The birthday staple originated as another song, “Good Morning to All,” written and composed by sisters Patty and Mildred Hill in 1893.

Patty was an early childhood educator who worked as a kindergarten teacher and principal in Kentucky. Her older sister, Mildred, was an accomplished pianist, organist, and composer. She also studied ethnomusicology before there was even a name for it, and is thought to have written (under a pseudonym) a pioneering journal article about African-American music that shockingly, but presciently, claimed that the melodies and themes of “Negro Music” would eventually give rise to distinctively American forms of music.

Patty often complained that the songs available for her students to sing in class were either too musically difficult for children or too mismatched in their musical style, lyrical content, and emotional tone. So, in 1889, she and Mildred started to collaborate on a number of songs for children, specifically ones tailored to the limited musical abilities of Patty’s young students.

One of their first efforts, “Good Morning to All” (GMTA), was, like the song it would morph into, deceptively simple. Crafting a melody that’s easy enough to be sung and remembered by kindergarteners is no small feat. At the same time, it’s still musically interesting within those constraints. The melody plays, repeats a step higher, repeats another step higher and then comes back down, in a frequently used theme that Leonard Bernstein compared to a three-stage rocket. It’s got symmetry, it’s got repetition, and it’s got just enough variation to keep you on your toes. The same qualities that made, as Mildred might have predicted, the 12-bar blues form such a bedrock idea in American music.

Patty’s students instantly took to the song and sang it every morning. In 1893, the Hill sisters published it, and the rest of their songs, in the book Song Stories for the Kindergarten.

It’s not clear how the lyrics changed from “good morning” to “happy birthday.” Supposedly, the children in Patty’s school so enjoyed the song that they began singing it spontaneously and changing the lyrics to suit their needs, and a birthday version naturally followed. While the rest of the Hills’ songs slid into obscurity, GMTA gained widespread popularity with the alternate birthday lyrics. The new version was published in songbooks, played on the radio, featured in the new “talkie” movies, and even used in Western Union’s first singing telegram (sent from a fan to Rudy Vallee).

That Sounds Familiar

In almost every one of these instances, the use of the music was uncredited and uncompensated. This went on for decades, with the Hill sisters none the wiser, until another of their sisters, Jessica, recognized the GMTA melody in a 1934 production of Irving Berlin’s As Thousands Cheer. Patty and Jessica (Mildred had since passed away) filed a lawsuit alleging infringement of GMTA, but the case was eventually dismissed.

That same year, Jessica and Patty granted permission to the Clayton F. Summy Co., a Chicago-based music publisher, to use the GMTA melody. Summy printed sheet music and songbooks containing four instrumental versions of the melody and two versions of the GMTA melody combined with the “happy birthday” lyrics, titled “Happy Birthday to You” (HBTY). The company also filed for copyright on these six arrangements, all ascribing the songs as works for hire by composers employed by the company. In the following decades, the credits to HBTY became fairly confused, with the authors listed variously as Hill and Wilson, Hill and Dahnert, “traditional” and Hill and Hill.

In 1988, the Summy Company—which had since merged and become Summy-Birchard, and then became a division of Birchtree, Ltd.—was bought, along with its 50,000 songs, by Warner/Chappell Music, Inc. for a reported $25 million. Since then, the ownership of HBTY has changed pretty regularly because of corporate dealmaking, mergers, and sales. Not long after it acquired HBTY, Warner Communications merged with Time, Inc. to create Time Warner, the world’s largest media and entertainment conglomerate. A little over a decade later, Time Warner was itself purchased by America Online, creating AOL Time Warner.

After a significant loss was declared on the corporation’s income statement amid the dot-com bubble burst, AOL was removed from the corporation’s title and eventually spun off as an independent company, with Time Warner keeping the music publishing and recording operations. These were eventually sold to a group of investors who reformed the Warner Music Group as a company separate from Time Warner, which was sold just last year to Access Industries Inc.

Birthday Money

Despite it being a relatively small drop in a stream of revenue coming in from thousands of properties, all of HBTY’s various owners have kept a tight grip on the song, insisting that any use of the melody and/or lyrics in public or for profit must result in a royalty check for them. From the song’s use in film, television, radio, or in a public performance (ever wonder why most restaurants have their own birthday songs instead of the real deal?), its owners have pulled in a decent amount of cash. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, the song generated $15,000 to $20,000 per year. Through the 1960s, it made closer to $50,000 annually, and over $75,000 during the 1970s. By the 1990s, the song was generating well over $1 million per year. In the last few years, WMG has pulled in over $2 million a year in royalties. It will continue to do so until the year 2030.

The original copyright was supposed to have expired long ago, but copyright extension legislation passed in the 1970s and the 1990s extended the copyright by almost a century, giving the song a whopping 137 years of protection after the melody was first written.

Who Gets the Money?

Neither Patty nor Mildred ever married or had children, so they established the Hill Foundation to receive income from royalties for the song. Under Time Warner ownership, two thirds of the revenue went to the company and the remaining third went to the foundation, which then passed it to the Hill sisters’ nephew, Archibald Hill. Archibald was a linguistics professor who reportedly used some of the money to subsidize the Linguistic Society of America in its leaner years. When he died in 1992, control of the foundation was given to the nonprofit Association for Childhood Education International, which spent years fighting in court to get its share of the royalties.

In the last few years, some legal minds—most famously Robert Brauneis, a Professor of Law and Co-Director of the Intellectual Property Law Program at George Washington University – have questioned the validity of the HBTY copyright and pointed out several issues with it in law journals, among them:

  • The Hill sisters’ melody, which is a work subject to its own copyright, bears a strong resemblance to several works that came before it, including some traditional folk songs.
  • The words “Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear (celebrant name), happy birthday to you” is another work subject to its own copyright, and its author is unknown. In her testimony in the suit against the Broadway show, Patty never claimed that she or her sister wrote the “happy birthday” lyrics or combined them with the tune of GMTA.
  • The combination of the music and lyrics as HBTY is a derivative work and, again, subject to its own copyright. Brauneis argues that anyone claiming rights to the song can only make that claim if they can trace the work back to the author. No one can trace the song back any further than the Hills, who admittedly didn’t write the “Happy Birthday” lyrics, and who might have even copped the melody from another song.

The original copyright on the song might never been renewed. Under the laws of the time, the song should have entered the public domain had it not been renewed at the end of the original term of copyright. Brauneis has only been able to find renewals filed for particular arrangements of the song, and doubts that they suffice to preserve copyright on the song itself.

There’s a strong case that HBTY shouldn’t be protected by copyright any longer, and T.G.I. Friday’s waitresses should be able sing it to patrons if they want. Who would be silly/brave enough to test this in court, though? The opposition would almost certainly have more lawyers and deeper pockets, but Brauneis points out that these weaknesses in the registration and renewal of HBTY have probably kept the song’s owners from being too lawsuit-happy with infringers.

“Any suit that [the owner] filed would be susceptible to a very early motion to dismiss based on the lack of any registration for the song,” Brauneis writes. “That motion could be decided without much discovery; if it were decided adversely to Summy-Birchard, the song would be in the public domain due to the defective renewal, and the entire stream of income from the song would dry up—a very big risk to take just to enforce against one infringer.”

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6 Warning Signs That Might Have Foreshadowed The 'Dark Knight' Massacre

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Aurora Colorado Shooting Victims

By now, the entire world is learning the most minute details of the life of the man who allegedly killed 12 people during a shooting rampage at an Aurora, Colo. movie theater.

The media is rife with speculation that James Holmes' family and acquaintances should have seen signs of impending violence.

"But being able to recognize concerning, troubling behavior does not mean you can prevent a mass homicide," FBI agent Mary Ellen O'Toole told the Associated Press. "There are many people at a university level who act quirky and strange and don't go out and commit mass murder."

So, the question remains, what — if anything — could have been done?

Note: We are not saying any one person was responsible for the shooting or could have stopped it. We are just presenting possible warning signs.

A Colorado gun range owner knew something was off about Holmes a few weeks before the shooting.

When Holmes tried to join the Lead Valley Range, something about his outgoing voicemail message set owner Glenn Rotkovich on edge.

Rotkovich called Holmes' message "bizarre — guttural, freakish at best," and warned his staff not to accept Holmes into the gun club.

"I flagged him to people and said, if he shows up, I don't trust him," Rotkovich told the Associated Press, adding that Holmes spoke "in a strange, low-pitched voice with heavy breathing," on his outgoing voicemail message.



Holmes' Match.com profile asked a pretty eerie question.

In his profile on the dating website, Holmes describes himself as an agnostic man who "definitely" wants kids.

"Will you visit me in prison?" Holmes wrote on his page, according to the AP. "I spend a lot of time thinking about the future, mind = blown."

Things got really creepy though when a woman discovered just hours after the shooting the dating service matched her to Holmes.

“It’s pretty scary getting matched to a mass murderer,” the woman, identified as Diana, told TMZ.

 


His father was a top-tier scientist and perhaps Holmes just couldn't live up his example.

Robert Holmes is a senior scientist in the San Diego office of FICO who boasts a "glittering academic career," that includes degrees from Stanford, UCLA, and Berkeley, according to U-T San Diego.

But, after a 2006 summer internship at the prestigious Salk Institute for Biological Studies, it seems Holmes wasn't destined to follow in his father's footsteps.

Salk neurobiology lab supervisor John Jacobson called Holmes "very undistinguished," after spending the summer working with the then-19-year-old, the Christian Science Monitor reported.



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London Banker Was On Welfare While Earning £500-A-Day

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London Gherkin Buillding City Of London Bank London

A banking troubleshooter has been prosecuted for fraudulently receiving benefits while being paid £500 a day in the City.

Adam Lancelot, 35, spent his earnings on a Mercedes convertible, a kitchen refurbishment, foreign holidays and restaurant meals.

But between spells working for major financial institutions such as Barclays Wealth he was also claiming council tax benefit.

However he also fraudulently received hundreds of pounds over a period when he had failed to tell the council that he was in employment.

Lancelot, of Edenbridge, Kent, admitted four charges in relation to the benefit fraud at Sevenoaks Magistrates’ Court earlier this week.

The court heard that he was a “troubleshooter” for banks, but that he had been unable to find work since August last year.

His solicitor Brian Ferris said he had “put his head in the sand” about the benefits he was receiving and that although he earned “a lot of money while working” he had endured long periods of unemployment due to the financial crisis.

Mr Ferris said: “He stuck his head in the sand and thought he could sort it out later – but it caught up with him. The banking industry has taken a huge knock and job losses have been in the tens of thousands.”

Mr Lancelot claimed that he told the benefit team at Sevenoaks District Council that he was in work at the relevant times, but the council said it had “no record” of it.

Mr Ferris said: “He admitted he only telephoned the council but says he wasn’t asked to tell them in writing.”

Mr Lancelot pleaded guilty to four charges of failing to tell the council of his employment between April 26 and May 31 last year, and again between June 6 and August 7.

The court heard Lancelot had repaid much of the money but would need to pay the rest from the benefits he is now legitimately receiving, at £10 a fortnight.

He was sentenced to 300 hours' community work and ordered to pay £500 towards prosecution costs.

On his LinkedIn page online, Mr Lancelot said that he had worked for institutions including Barclays Wealth, as a credit operations manager, and Bank of America Merrill Lynch, as an operational risk manager.

A spokesman for Barclays Wealth said he had been temporarily employed through a recruitment agency last year.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch did not return messages left with its corporate communications office.

Mr Lancelot disputed the amount of benefit claims involved in the court case, reportedly £2,000, saying it was just over £332, and said he had paid it back within a week.

He said he had called Sevenoaks District Council four times to stop his benefit but they had not done so. He said he had been advised to plead guilty by his solicitor but now wishes he had not done so.

Mr Lancelot said his earnings of between £400 and £600 per day were higher than the average salary but not high in comparison to City pay packets.

Asked how he had spent the money he said: “Nice restaurants, going on holidays, it all adds up. If you earn it, you might as well spend it.” He also said he had the kitchen of his home refurbished. He said he received council tax benefit of £67 a week.

Mr Lancelot, who lives in a £200,000 house he says he inherited, said that since being unemployed he had been doing voluntary work for charities.

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I Tried To Stop A Guy From Stealing My Date's iPad And I Ended Up With A Broken Jaw

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siri poison oak ad iphone

A distressing and painful tale from the Wall Street Journal's Rolfe Winkler...

He and his date were riding a New York subway in Brooklyn. Just before the doors closed at a stop, some guy grabbed his date's iPad and took off out of the car.

Winkler chased the guy--only to get clobbered by an assistant on the platform. He ended up with a broken jaw.

Thus starts Winkler's story about the rise in "iCrime"--muggers stealing iPhones, iPads, and other "smart" devices and then selling them in secondary markets.

The cops call it "Apple picking." The devices are so valuable and easy to fence these days that the industry is booming.  There were 26,000 "incidents" of this in New York in the first 10 months of last year, the vast majority of which involved smartphones.

A "secondhand" iPhone can apparently fetch $400 once it has been wiped clean.  Many of them are shipped overseas, where new iPhones can cost $1,000.

Earlier this year, a man in the Bronx was shot dead for his iPhone. A guy in Denver had part of his finger ripped off when thieves ripped an Apple Store bag out of his hands. Rolfe Winkler had to drink through a straw for a month.

The way to prevent this is to make the stolen devices worthless (or close), so carriers are discussing the idea of giving each device a unique ID that can only be used by the owner. To prevent stolen devices from being used on WiFi, meanwhile, it might be possible to allow users (or the manufacturers) to remotely bork the devices if they are stolen--sort of like cancelling a stolen credit card.

(This solution reminds me of the solution to the wave of car-radio theft that hit cities in the 1980s. Walking around the streets of New York in those days, you'd see car windows smashed all over the place. One of the first solutions was allowing owners to remove their stereo systems when they left the cars--sliding them out like a book. The more successful and convenient solution, if memory serves, was electronically encoding the devices so they wouldn't function if they were removed from the car.)

In any event, our sympathies to Rolfe Winkler for his broken jaw.  And don't get engrossed in your device on the street or subway, especially when the doors are about to close...

Read Rolfe Winkler's story here >

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Chinese Citizens Stormed Government Offices Near Shanghai And Forced The Mayor To Strip

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The big Chinese news today is out of Qidong, a city of over a million inhabitants one hour north of Shanghai, which has seen widespread protests against an industrial waste pipeline.

Protests in China aren't rare, but the scale and violence of this protest make it remarkable. Reuters reports that 1,000 protestors marched on government offices, eventually storming and vandalizing them, as well as turning over at least five cars and one minibus.

The video below gives a good idea of the scale of protest.

WATCH:

According to reports on Weibo, protestors found condoms and expensive liquor in the offices. Pictures posted to Weibo appear to show the local Qidong mayor Sun Jianhua stripped of his shirt. He was reportedly made to wear an opposition t-shirt.

Qidong Mayor China

While officially the government has backed down in its plans for the pipeline, the repercussions against the protestors may be tough. There are reports that the internet has been taken down in Qidong, and that hospitals are full of people who have been badly beaten by the police, with reports of some deaths.

Images posted to Weibo appear to show a full on battle between a huge amount of police and a huge amount of protesters.

Qidong Battle

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