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The 20 Most Amazing Mug Shots Of Famous Athletes

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We're obsessed with athletes.

Their skills, athletic prowess, and larger-than-life personalities often fascinate even the least athletic American.

But those crazy personalities can often get athletes in trouble.

We've compiled some of the craziest athlete mugshots, including Mike Tyson's infamous tongue shot.

Perhaps the most recent high-profile athlete arrest, NFL star Chad Johnson was booked in August 2012 for allegedly head-butting his wife Evelyn Lozada.

Source: The Smoking Gun



Olympic figure skater Tanya Harding was arrested in 2000 after she allegedly threw a hubcap at an ex-boyfriend.

Source: The Smoking Gun



Baseball all-star Josh Hamilton was arrested in May 2005 after he allegedly punched in the windshield of a friend's truck and tore off the truck's rearview mirror.

Source: The Smoking Gun



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Former Suspect In Etan Patz Case To Be Freed After 25 Years

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The man long suspected of killing 6-year-old Etan Patz in 1979 is about to be a free man.

Pennsylvania inmate Jose Ramos, the man Stanley Patz has long believed killed his son, is set to be freed Nov. 7 after serving 25 years on child molestation charges, The Associated Press reported.

A civil court once declared Ramos responsible for Patz's death but the Manhattan District Attorney has since said there isn't enough evidence against him to file criminal charges.

Suspicion shifted from Ramos to a former bodega clerk when the clerk, Pedro Hernandez, confessed in May to strangling the boy as he walked to school in 1979, wrapping the body in a bag, and putting it in a box.

However, cops could still have the wrong man.

Hernandez's confession is more than a little questionable given the fact he confessed 30 years ago but police dismissed him as a lunatic and police haven't been able to find any significant evidence linking Hernandez to the crime.

Cops searched Hernandez's New Jersey home in August, looking for a picture of Patz the suspect reportedly kept hidden among personal papers. They never found the picture.

Hernandez is expected in court again Nov. 15, a little more than a week after Ramos' release.

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A Penthouse With An Eerie Past Was One Of Manhattan's Biggest Sales This Week

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965 fifth ave penthouse

The penthouse inside 965 Fifth Avenue sold for $17.9 million, making it the most expensive sale of the week, according to The New York Times.

The penthouse has an eerie past. 

The apartment, No. 18-19A, sold with its adjoining 1-bedroom pad, is where celebrity real estate broker Linda S. Stein was beaten to death in 2007 by her former assistant. Stein's clientele included Billy Joel, Michael Douglas, and Sting, among others. 

The assistant received a prison sentence of 25 years to life. 

The penthouse was purchased from Stein's estate for $1 million. The duplex penthouse has four bedrooms, four bathrooms, and a wine cellar. 

DON'T MISS: Take A Tour Of The New Most Expensive Zip Code In America

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Prepare For A Wave Of Looting After Hurricane Sandy

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Hurricane Sandy - Ocean City

It's all anecdotal at this point, but if police reports following hurricanes Katrina and Irene are any indication, the East Coast is in for a crime wave, post-Sandy.

No reports of looting or Hurricane Sandy-related crimes have been reported yet but that doesn't mean we won't see some soon.

Following Hurricane Katrina, the most devastating hurricane in modern memory, New Orleans was besieged with reports of looting, rape, and murder, causing delayed troop deployments, delayed medical evacuations, and police department mutiny, The New York Times reported in 2005.

From the Times:

"Beyond doubt, the sense of menace had been ignited by genuine disorder and violence. Looting varied from basic thievery to foraging for the necessities of life. Police officers said that at least one person fired for nights on end at a police station on the edge of the French Quarter. The manager of a hotel on Bourbon Street said he saw people running through the streets with guns.

At least one person was killed by a gunshot at the convention center, and a second at the Superdome. A police officer was shot in the Algiers neighborhood, across the river from downtown, during a confrontation with a looter."

Same can be said for Hurricane Irene, albeit on a less dramatic scale.

Looting of evacuated homes was so widespread TruTV compiled all the security images into one crime-filled slideshow.

In New York City alone, about 30 arrests were reported for crimes that happened as the hurricane pummeled the city, The New York Times reported last year.

From the Times:

"Shortly before midnight, a Staten Island man choked his girlfriend, and was later arrested. A half-hour later in Brooklyn, a woman’s boyfriend punched her in the head. The hours passed with more punches and kicks, and shortly before 5 a.m., with sunrise soon to come, a Queens man beat a woman and shoved her down stairs before taking her cellphone so she could not call the police."

Doesn't bode too well for Hurricane Sandy.

Check Out Pictures Of The 'Biggest Storm Ever' Hits The East Coast >

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The Supreme Court Justices Refuse To Run From Sandy

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Wall Street might have caved to Hurricane Sandy's safety threats but our country's highest judges will do no such thing.

In a move of either admirable dedication to the law or sheer stubbornness, the Supreme Court is still in session today, The Wall Street Journal's Law Blog reported.

The court is slated to add new cases to its docket as well as hear arguments.

However, the lower courts, including the federal courthouse just blocks away from SCOTUS, are closed.

DON'T MISS: Prepare For A Wave Of Looting After Hurricane Sandy >

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Save Yourself Future Legal Drama And Protect Your Identity From Sandy

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hurricane sandy

For anyone in Sandy's wrathful path, IDentity Theft has put together a pretty helpful tip sheet on how to keep your most important property and documents safe:

  • Make sure you have both paper and digital copies of all your important documents. All of your financial information, birth certificates, IDs, and passports should be placed in a waterproof bag that is then stored inside a safe.

  • If you have to evacuate, make sure you take that bag of documents with you. The ability to prove who you are and show proof of your financials could be invaluable.

  • Store irreplaceable documents like wills, estate and trust records, and power of attorney letters in an online vault. Cheap, remote electronic data storage will save you quite a bit of grief if your home floods.

  • Last but not least, keep a detailed record of all your big-ticket electronics that will have to be left behind if you evacuate. For insurance purposes, record the model and serial numbers for items like TVs, audio equipment, or other expensive possessions.

Check out the American Red Cross and FEMA for tips on how to keep your family, your pets, and yourself safe during Sandy.

DON'T MISS: Prepare For A Wave Of Looting After Hurricane Sandy >

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China Sentences Man To Year In Jail For Ringing Exam Bell 5 Minutes Early

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A man in the central Chinese province of Hunan was sentenced to a year in prison for improperly administering the nation's ultra-competitive national college entrance exam, according to multiple reports.

Xiao Yulong, now a former employee of the high school in which the exam was administered, rang the bell and ended the exam four minutes and 48 seconds early, which disrupted the test for approximately 1,000 students, according to the Xinhua news agency.

A written statement issued by the county people's court on October 26 said that Xiao, 54, "was careless in his work and mistakenly rang the bell too early, resulting in adverse social impact."

He was officially sentenced to one year in jail with a one-year reprieve for negligence. However, the one-year reprieve means he will likely serve "either very little or no time inside," Reuters reports.

Thousands of students and parents had gathered in protest against the teacher's actions at the local ministry of education and the school prior to Xiao's sentencing.

ALSO: You Don't Realize How Bad Pollution In China Is Until You Compare It To The US >

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The 15 US Cities With The Most Murders Last Year

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Every year the FBI compiles a massive amount of data for crime in America — including the cities with the most murders.

The Uniform Crime Report tracks everything from most murders and most forcible rapes to art thefts.

Later this week we'll be bringing you a list of most violent cities per capita, but for now, here are the 15 cities in the United States that reported the most murders and non-negligent homicides in 2011:

  1. New York — 515
  2. Chicago — 431
  3. Detroit — 344
  4. Philadelphia — 324
  5. Los Angeles — 297
  6. New Orleans — 200
  7. Houston — 198
  8. Baltimore — 196
  9. Dallas — 133
  10. Memphis — 117
  11. Phoenix — 116
  12. St. Louis — 113
  13. Washington D.C. — 108
  14. Kansas City, Mo. — 108
  15. Oakland, Calif. — 104

DON'T MISS: The 50 Most Dangerous Cities In The World >

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Man Lives Everyone's Fantasy And Successfully Sues Telemarketers For Wasting His Time

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A British man lived out every phone-owner's dream and successfully sued telemarketers for wasting his time.

In fact, Richard Herman made the companies pay an invoice of £10 for every minute wasted. (Plus court fees).

Even though Herman was listed with the Telephone Preference Services, which is like the Do Not Call list in the U.S., he was getting call after call from telemarketers offering him accident compensation and payment protection insurance reimbursements. He hadn't had an accident or a PPI.

Herman told the Daily Mail that he was particularly perturbed when telemarketers disturbed his mid-afternoon snack: "Once I was out in the garden eating and picking raspberries and had the telephone with me in case the children called. I was sat in the sun enjoying myself but one of these blasted companies called me – it was infuriating."

Even more infuriating was the fact that even after waiting on hold to get transferred from an overseas call center to an office in the U.K., Herman's pleas to be taken off their lists went unanswered. 

"I said to them, you need to stop calling me and, I said, if you keep calling me, I'll charge you £10 a minute for my time to be talking to you," Herman told the BBC. And that's what he did.

A Northampton court heard Herman's claims of harassment — along with his recordings of the calls — and awarded him the payment of £195 plus £25 court fees from the telemarketers.

This isn't the first time someone successfully sued telemarketers. In 2007, André-Tascha Lammé was awarded $6,000 from mortgage brokers who avoided his request to be on a do not call list.

See Herman's claim below:

richard herman telemarketer sue legal document

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Court Rules George Zimmerman's Attorney Can Keep Trying The Case In The Media

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George Zimmerman

A Florida judge won't be muzzling George Zimmerman's attorneys just yet.

Last week prosecutor Bernie de la Rionda and Zimmerman's attorney Mark O'Mara faced off over O'Mara's right to discuss evidence in the case and his opinion about his client's guilt with news organizations and on social media.

De la Rionda argued O'Mara's constant public profile weakened the state's case and has tainted the potential jury pool.

However, O'Mara argued he was fighting an uphill battle when he took the case since so many people already hated his client and he has a right to defend his client in all ways possible.

And it seems the court agrees.

Circuit Judge Debra Nelson issued a ruling Monday afternoon denying the state's request for a gag order.

In her ruling, Nelson stated she found no "overriding pattern of prejudicial commentary that will overcome reasonable efforts to select a fair and impartial jury."

DON'T MISS: George Zimmerman Is Suing NBC For Making Him Look Like A Racist >

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Building Facade Collapses In Manhattan At 8th And 14th Street

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A four-story building facade has collapsed at 8th Ave and 14th Street in Manhattan.

No one was injured, though there were people inside when the facade fell, NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly said on CNN.

The building at 92 8th Ave in Chelsea included multiple high-end apartments, which rented for $4,395/month according to Huff Po's Meg Robertson. A restaurant called Muscle Maker Grill was on the ground floor.

Similar collapses have been reported in Brooklyn and Queens, plus there's the hanging crane in Midtown

UPDATE: Here's video from NYMag:

 

Here's a photo from Gilad Lotan on twitter:

collapsed

Here's a photo from Meg Robertson, who tweets: "No one injured amazingly."

collapsed

Many fire trucks and police cars have been spotted outside. Here another picture from Gilad Lotan:

collapsed building

Here's what the building looked like before:

collapsed building

Get the latest hurricane news >

See pictures of hurricane damage >

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Five Sandy-Related Deaths Have Now Been Reported In New York

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Five deaths have been reported in New York State, including one in the city, q13fox.com reported.

Both Gov. Andrew Cuomo's office and CNN confirmed the five Hurricane Sandy-related deaths.

The first death was reported around 7:50 p.m. when @911BUFF tweeted a man had been struck by a tree.

@CNBC tweeted the unnamed man was 30 years old and had been "found dead apparently trapped underneath a tree inside his home."

The man lived at 166th Street in East Flushing Queens, The New York Times reported.

Unfortunately he isn't the only Hurricane Sandy death.

One person died from a storm-related crash in Maryland around 6:50 p.m., according to ABC News.

Another person has died after a tree fell in Mansfield, Conn., NBC Connecticut reported Monday night.

A firefighter in Easton, Conn., was also injured by a falling tree, according to NBC Connecticut.

Before Sandy landed in the U.S., the storm killed up to 65 people in the Caribbean, 51 of whom were in Haiti, ABC News reported.

British banker Timothy Fraser-Smith, 66, was one of those deaths, The Telegraph reported Saturday.

Fraser-Smith headed up Deltec Bank & Trust.

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Manhattan Immigration Lawyer Nearly Loses An Arm Trying To Get Into Her Apartment

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When a reportedly drunk corporate immigration lawyer couldn't get into her Manhattan apartment after a night of revelry she came up with what turned out to be a horrific plan for reentry.

Maggie Baumer decided to slide down the trash chute to get the basement and then go through the lower level to get to the garden and open a window to her apartment from there, the New York Post reported Sunday, citing an unnamed "source in the building."

But her plan began to fail when her arm got caught in the compactor, which crushed the limb so badly it was "barely hanging" from her body when authorities arrived, a fire department source told the Post.

Baumer, a 2011 graduate the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and lawyer at Goldstein & Lee, was taken to Bellevue Hospital where she had emergency surgery, according to Above The Law.

DON'T MISS: Donald Trump's Ex-Lawyer Is Suing His Trust-Fund Baby For Questioning His Generosity >

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Corporate Lawyer Tied Down Flying Objects Outside His House While Closing A Huge Merger

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A lawyer for Reed Smith didn't let a little hurricane stop him from closing a $255 million deal for an important client, the AM Law Daily reports.

David Grimes was finishing up pharmaceutical company Patheon Inc.'s purchase of Banner Pharmacaps when his Westport, Conn. neighborhood was being evacuated.

So, the Reed Smith partner alternated between getting his home ready for Sandy and finishing up the important deal remotely, according to the AM Law Daily.

"You multitask," he said.

At Proskauer Rose, most laywers continued to work from home, but clients kept calling to ask if their lawyers would still be able to meet with them on Tuesday, a secretary there told AM Law Daily.

The answer was "probably not."

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The Supreme Court Is Set To Rule On What You Can Sell On eBay

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* Domestic resale of products made elsewhere at issue

* Court deadlocked in similar case two years earlier

WASHINGTON, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Several justices on the U.S. Supreme Court voiced concern on Monday about letting U.S. copyright holders block the resale inside the country of products they make elsewhere, in one of the court's biggest copyright cases in years.

The case, likely to result in a close decision, could profoundly affect the roughly $63 billion gray market, in which third parties import brand-name goods protected by trademark or copyright into the United States.

It also gives the court a chance to delineate copyright protections at the very time that products and information from international sources become much more freely available, whether in physical form or downloaded or otherwise available online. A ruling is expected by June.

At the center of the case is Supap Kirtsaeng, a Thai national who arrived in the United States to study math at Cornell University and the University of Southern California.

He subsidized his education by reselling textbooks through eBay Inc's website that family and friends had bought in Thailand and shipped to him.

Eight of the textbooks came from an Asian unit of John Wiley & Sons Inc, prompting the publisher to sue Kirtsaeng for copyright infringement.

A jury ordered Kirtsaeng to pay $600,000 in damages. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York upheld that award in August 2011, saying foreign-made copies can never be resold in the United States without permission of copyright owners.

But Kirtsaeng contended that his actions were protected under the "first-sale" doctrine, a provision of federal copyright law that lets owners of "lawfully made" copies sell or dispose of them without copyright owners' permission.

Some justices were receptive to an argument by Kirtsaeng's lawyer E. Joshua Rosenkranz said that could have a profound negative impact on the U.S. economy, and cost many jobs.

"The moment that a manufacturer learns that this court says you get what we've called the Holy Grail of manufacturing, endless eternal downstream control over sales and rentals, you can ruin secondary markets," he said. "That will be yet another reason for manufacturers silently to decide that they're sending their manufacturing overseas."

WILEY LAWYER IS QUESTIONED

Wiley's lawyer Theodore Olson came under sharper questioning as he argued that the ban on resales should extend to products made outside the United States.

Justice Stephen Breyer suggested that used Toyotas could be covered by a ban, given that they may include copyrighted components made abroad, such as sound systems and GPS devices.

"When people buy them in America, they think they're going to be able to resell them," he told Olson. "Under (Wiley's) reading, the millions of Americans who buy Toyotas could not resell them without getting the permission of the copyright holder of every item in that car which is copyrighted."

But Olson said the 2nd Circuit got it right. "For 30 years, the statute has been interpreted the way that we are suggesting that it should be," he said.

The court tried to address the same issue two years ago but deadlocked 4-4, in a case involving Costco Wholesale Corp's resale of imported watches made by a unit of Swiss-based Swatch Group SA.

Justice Elena Kagan sat out that case but took part in Monday's arguments, and also questioned Olson's position.

"As far as I can see, there's really nothing to support your argument that that language (in the law) was intended to address this gray market problem," she said.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, often the swing vote on a closely divided court, also expressed concern. "If we write an opinion with the rule that you propose, we should, as a matter of common sense, ask about the consequences, he told Olson.

The United States supported Wiley's position, rejecting Kirtsaeng's contention that a decision in the publisher's favor would encourage copyright owners to exercise "eternal" control over how its copies are resold.

Costco and eBay sided with Kirtsaeng, as did a group of major bookstores including Powell's Books in Portland, Oregon; Strand Book Store in New York; and Harvard Book Store in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

"There are enough copyright owners out there - and enough crazy copyright lawsuits - that it is not always reasonable to rely on forbearance by copyright plaintiffs," the bookstores' lawyers said in a brief. "No one should be put to the choice of violating the law and hoping they don't get caught."

The case is Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons Inc, U.S. Supreme Court, No. 11-697.

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GIGANTIC FIRE DESTROYS 80 HOMES IN QUEENS [PHOTOS]

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At least one firefighter and two civilians have been injured in a gigantic fire in the Breezy Point neighborhood of Queens.

Officials are estimating anywhere from 80 to 100 houses have also been destroyed by the blaze, according to The Associated Press.

The injuries are only minor and reports speculate the inferno was caused by a gas line, according to The Guardian Express Newspaper.

Breezy Point is a low-lying neighborhood at the end of the Rockaway peninsula.

Population of the area is about 12,000.

The was under control at 11 a.m. Tuesday, according to Mayor Michael Boomerg — 12 hours after it was first reported.

The fire was so thick you couldn't see through it. It was wall-to-wall flames. breezy point fire

These pictures from the AP show just how catastrophic this fire was:

breezy point fire

The fire began around 11 p.m. and quickly became "an out-of-control six-alarm blaze," the New York Daily Newsreported at the time. 

According to NBC 4, 200 firefighters remained on the scene as late as 6 a.m. battling the fire which started at 11 PM ET. The scene was located in a flooded Zone A area, according to NBC 4.

breezy point fire

The blaze is reportedly contained now according to the AP but crews are still battling pockets of fire.

breezy point fire

Eileen Blair and Keith Klein look on at the damage caused by the inferno. breezy point fire

Here's video:

Watch YouTube user medicvideo's video of the 6-alarm blaze:

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Hurricane Sandy Death Toll Climbs To 38

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As the worst of superstorm Sandy passes, we're beginning to get a tally on deaths.

Currently, 38 fatalities have been reported, according to The Associated Press.

New York reported the most deaths at 17 while Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Connecticut reported 5, 4, and 3 respectively.

Maryland and Virginia each reported two while West Virginia and North Carolina each reported one. One death was also reported off the coast of North Carolina.

Here's a breakdown of some of the fatalities:

  • In New York City alone, 10 people died as a result of the storm. Of the deceased both the city and New York State are man who died when a tree fell on him, a woman who was electrocuted when stepped into a puddle, a teenage girl on Staten Island, and others, according to the New York Post

  • Pennsylvania TV station WJACTV tweeted this morning that three deaths were reported in the eastern part of the state. 

  • In New Jersey, a man and a woman died when a tree fell on their pickup truck and a 77-year-old man was also killed when a tree hit his home, The Associated Press reported. 

  • A woman died in West Virginia in a car accident caused by Sandy, according to CNN.

  • One person died in Maryland and North Carolina and two have died in Connecticut as well, according to USA Today.
  • Hurricane Sandy also sunk the HMS Bounty. Fourteen members of the 16-member crew were found alive. A female crew member was found dead and one is still missing.

We'll update you as we learn more. Recovery efforts are in effect up and down the East Coast.

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Scalia Gave Wyoming Law Students His 'Single Best Piece Of Advice'

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Antonin Scalia

Justice Antonin Scalia isn't shy about sharing his uncensored opinions, even if they're incredibly controversial. After all, he has a lifetime appointment.

His speech at the University of Wyoming's law school last week was no exception, the Casper Star-Tribune reports.

A law student asked him for the "single best piece of advice" he has for law students, and he told her they should skip the "frill courses."

"Take the bread and butter courses. Do not take 'law and women,' do not take 'law and poverty,' do not take 'law and anything,'" Scalia said, explaining that many professors simply "teach their hobbies."

Scalia isn't the only justice to offer up advice to aspiring lawyers.

John Roberts recently implied that people shouldn't go to law school simply because they're "not good at math and can't think of anything else to do."

SEE ALSO: Corporate Lawyer Tied Down Flying Objects Outside His House While Closing A Merger >

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Philly Man Rescued From Collapsed Building And Promptly Arrested

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Hurricane Sandy Morning After Upper West Side Manhattan

A Philadelphia man was pulled out of a building demolished by Hurricane Sandy and immediately arrested because authorities thought he was only there to loot, the Daily Mail reports.

The three-storey building was abandoned and was nothing but rubble when authorities heard someone crawling around inside.

Police helped the unnamed man to safety. Then they began to suspect he was only there for nefarious purposes, according to the Daily Mail.

Police have become more concerned about looting after natural disasters, especially after New Orleans was reportedly overwhelmed by widespread lawlessness after Hurricane Katrina.

SEE ALSO: Corporate Lawyer Tied Down Flying Objects Outside His House While Finalizing Merger >

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The Supreme Court Is Going To Decide Whether To Hear Gay Marriage In A Secret Meeting AFTER The Election

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The Supreme Court said Monday it would meet privately on Nov. 20 to decide whether to hear major cases involving gay marriage.

That news came after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg revealed last month the high court would almost certainly take up same-sex marriage this term.

The cases that could come before the court include challenges to the federal Defense of Marriage Act -- which defines marriage as between a man and a woman -- and a separate case involving gay marriage in California.

Slate's Emily Bazelon suggests gay marriage is just one of the politicized cases the Supreme Court is trying to avoid jumping into right before the election.

Also on Monday, the court put off hearing a challenge to Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, Bazelon pointed out. That law requires states with histories of bias against voters to clear changes to election laws with federal officials.

"It's entirely likely that the justices will hear a challenge to the Voting Rights Act before April is out, along with one to the Defense of Marriage Act," Bazelon writes. "But putting off the decisions to hear these cases so far has helped to keep the court clear of the campaigns' line of fire."

Head on over to Slate to read Bazelon's entire analysis >

SEE ALSO: Scalia Gave Wyoming Law Students His 'Single Best Piece Of Advice' >

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