Saturday, December 3, 2011

2 Men Rape Girl Over N2,000 Debt

Two men, a commercial motorcycle operator and a motor park ticket agent, on Wednesday evening allegedly took turns to rape a 28-year-old petty trader in Awka, after luring her to the bush with a promise to pay her N2, 000 owed her by one of them.
One of the rapists who was later apprehended by passersby however escaped from a moving police patrol van as he was being taken to the police station, after the angry mob had handed him over.
The victim said that she had accosted the motor park ticket agent who was owing her N2,000, but the man pleaded that he had no money with him,  requested her to accompany him on a commercial motorcycle to his friend’s house so he can retrieve his own debt to pay her.
Without suspecting a trap, the lady obliged him as she had closed for the day but he rather took her to a bush near Udoka Estate in Awka, where the two men forcefully undressed her and took turns to assault her before bringing her back to town.
She regained confidence once the motorbike hit town, and started shouting on top of her voice, rocking the bike until she and one of the rapist fell off, while the rider sped on, leaving behind his partner in crime.
The incident, an eye witness told LEADERSHIP, attracted passersby at the popular UNIZIK Junction beside Access Bank, and young men arrested the rapist, when the lady tendered from her hand bag her pant and bra which were torn to shred by the rapists as evidence.
The crowd held the suspect down until the police arrived, but he was said to have escaped from the officers on the way to their station.
At the time of filing this report, LEADERSHIP was unable to ascertain if both rapists had been apprehended as the Anambra State police command’s public relations officer, ASP Emeka Chukwuemeka, could not be reached on his mobile phone for comments.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Drake and Lil Wayne Beef: Drizzy's Leaving Young Money - Weezy's Mad?




After months of speculation, Drake is apparently making his move to leave his label, Young Entertainment. He wants out and he'll probably get out soon. The decision to leave YM can't be an easy one to make. Lil Wayne, who founded Young Money, may not be very happy about Drizzy's choice. Can you blame him? The label's made some serious cash off D's hit albums, most recently the blockbuster Take Care. Weezy's making his feelings known.
According to MediaTakeOut.com, Drake fired his managers and his agents in recent weeks. The ball is rolling, and it does seem more and more likely that Drizzy's looking for a new label. Something's going on! On Thursday, Lil Wayne took to Twitter, sending out a rather cryptic tweet that read, "Sweetheart dont u know that when u lose me, u lose yourself? I'll be loyal before I lie and honored before I'm dishonest."
Some speculate that this tweet was definitely aimed at Drake and his decision to sever ties with Young Money (the loyalty/dishonest part is pretty telling). It could be that Lil Wayne is frustrated and angry about something totally unrelated, but given the Drake drama, possibly not. The timing certainly seems telling.

Fans, what do you think? Is this a Drake and Lil Wayne beef brewing?


NBA player Kris Humphries Fires Back At Tabloid Headline



NBA player Kris Humphries claimed "fraud" as the reason for his separation and annulment to reality starlet Kim Kardashian. While that is plenty interesting, Humphries' response to a gossip report is equally notable.
Star Magazine has blasted a huge headline: "Kim's Bombshell: KRIS IS GAY!" The tabloid claims Humphries wouldn't touch her after the honeymoon and he is now vowing to destroy the Kardashians.
A Humphries representative says the tabloid report is not true. The New York Post ran a statement from the free agent forward's publicist that declares the allegations from Star Magazine's story are "completely false and ridiculous. He is not gay."
Kardashian and Humphries split after just 72 days of wedded bliss. Kris believes he was used as a plot line for the Kardashians' reality show, according to TMZ.
Mets fans will remember former catcher Mike Piazza responding to swirling rumors that he was gay by emphatically stating, "I'm not gay. I'm heterosexual," to reporters on the field before a 2002 game against the Phillies.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

JACKSON DOCTOR CONRAD MURRAY SENTENCED TO FOUR YEARS CONRAD MURRAY, THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA DOCTOR CONVICTED OF THE INVOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER OF POP SUPERSTAR MICHAEL JACKSON, HAS BEEN SENTENCED TO FOUR YEARS IN COUNTY JAIL.


Murray was found guilty earlier this month after a six-week trial.  Judge Michael Pastor told the court that while Murray was legally eligible for probation, he did not think his actions showed he was suitable.
He said the evidence in the case showed a "continuous pattern of lies and deceit" by the disgraced physician.  The legal teams will return in January 2012 to discuss the prosecution's request for Murray to pay restitution to Jackson's family.  While the prosecution successfully argued for the maximum term, Murray's lawyers asked that he be kept on probation, saying he is serving "a lifetime sentence of self-punishment".
Defence lawyer Ed Chernoff said he would already be punished for life by being known as "the man who killed Michael Jackson".  In addition, Murray could still lose his licence to practise medicine.  Expressing their sense of loss for their "son, husband, brother and father", the statement said the court should impose a suitable sentence.
"We respectfully request that you impose a sentence that demonstrates that physicians cannot sell their services to the highest bidder and lose sight of their Hippocratic Oath," Panish read.  In a sentencing memorandum delivered to Judge Michael Pastor in advance of Tuesday's hearing, prosecuting lawyer David Walgren said Murray had shown no remorse for Jackson's death.  Defence lawyers argued that Murray had done a huge service to the community throughout his life, including donating supplies to Caribbean doctors and opening a clinic in the poorest area of Houston, Texas.
"I do wonder though to what extent the court considers the entirety of a man's book of life, as opposed to one chapter," Chernoff said, adding that Murray could better serve the community on probation.
Michael Jackson died on June 25, 2009 from an overdose of the powerful anaesthetic propofol.  He had been out of the public eye for several years but was preparing for a series of comeback performances at the O2 arena in London.
The defence argued that Jackson was a drug addict who caused his own death by giving himself an extra dose of propofol while the cardiologist was out of the room at the star's rented mansion in Los Angeles.
However, lawyers for Murray dropped a key argument midway through the trial - that the pop superstar had drunk the propofol.  But they continued to argue that Jackson had somehow dosed himself otherwise.
There is no law against administering propofol, but the prosecution's case rested on the argument that Murray was grossly negligent by doing so outside a hospital setting and without the proper monitoring equipment.
Calling for a four-year prison sentence, Walgren said Conrad Murray had abused the trust placed in him by his patient. "It is the people's position that prison is warranted." (BBC)

Audio helped sway judge to give Jackson doc jail


The voice of Michael Jackson helped put the man who killed him behind bars.
It wasn’t the familiar voice of hits such as “Billie Jean” and “Thriller,” but the slow, slurring recording of the singer that was found on his physician’s cell phone that helped convince a judge to sentence the doctor to jail for four years.
The four-minute recording was one of the blockbuster revelations of Dr. Conrad Murray’s involuntary manslaughter trial, a previously unknown piece of evidence that revealed an impaired Jackson describing his ambitions and aspirations as his personal physician listened.
It was also one of the trial’s most haunting moments, and stuck in the mind of Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor as he considered in recent days how to sentence Murray for causing Jackson’s unexpected death in June 2009. It wasn’t the only thing the judge considered — he unwaveringly assailed the cardiologist’s decisions and ethics for nearly 30 minutes on Tuesday — but helped convince Pastor to give Murray the maximum sentence.
Jurors unanimously convicted Murray on Nov. 7, but it was up to Pastor on Tuesday to sentence the doctor and explain his punishment.
“Of everything I heard and saw during the course of the trial, one aspect of the evidence stands out the most, and that is the surreptitious recording of Michael Jackson by his trusted doctor,” Pastor said.
Murray’s attorneys never explained in court why the recording was made, and prosecutors said they do not know what substances Jackson was under the influence of when the audio was recorded six weeks before his death. Murray had been giving the singer nightly doses of the anesthetic propofol to help him sleep.
The doctor’s time in a Los Angeles jail will be automatically reduced to less than two years due to laws imposed due to California’s prison overcrowding and budget woes.
Murray, 58, will have plenty of time if he wants to consider Pastor’s harsh rebuke of him. The Houston-based cardiologist will be confined to a one-man cell and kept away from other prisoners.
With Jackson’s family and Murray’s mother and girlfriend looking on, the judge called the doctor’s actions a “disgrace to the medical profession,” and said he displayed a “failure of character” and had showed a complete lack of remorse for his significant role in causing Jackson’s death.
“It should be made very clear that experimental medicine is not going to be tolerated, and Mr. Jackson was an experiment,” Pastor said. “The fact that he participated in it does not excuse or lessen the blame of Dr. Murray, who simply could have walked away and said no as countless others did.
“But Dr. Murray was intrigued with the prospect of this money-for-medicine madness,” the judge said.
Defense attorney J. Michael Flanagan said after the sentencing hearing that Murray made the recording accidentally while playing with a new application on his iPhone. He deleted it, but a computer investigator recovered it from the doctor’s phone after Jackson’s death.
Pastor said he believed the recording was made with more sinister intent.
“That tape recording was Dr. Murray’s insurance policy,” the judge said. “It was designed to record his patient surreptitiously; at that patient’s most vulnerable point.”
“I can’t help but wonder if there had been some conflict between Michael Jackson and Dr. Murray at a later point in time in their relationship, what value would be placed on that tape recording, if the choice were to release that tape recording to a media organization to be used against Michael Jackson,” Pastor said.
Pastor said Murray was motivated by a desire for “money, fame and prestige” and cared more about himself than Jackson.
After sentencing, Murray mouthed the words “I love you” to his mother and girlfriend in the courtroom. Murray’s mother, Milta Rush, sat alone on a bench in the courthouse hallway.
“My son is not what they charged him to be,” she said quietly. “He was a gentle child from the time he was small.”
Of her son’s future, she said, “God is in charge.”
Jackson’s family said in a statement read in court that they were not seeking revenge but a stiff sentence for Murray that would serve as a warning to opportunistic doctors.
“We’re going to be a family. We’re going to move forward. We’re going to tour, play the music and miss him,” brother Jermaine Jackson said.
Defense attorney Ed Chernoff implored Pastor to look at Murray’s life and give him credit for a career of good works. “I do wonder whether the court considers the book of a man’s life, not just one chapter,” Chernoff said.
The judge responded: “I accept Mr. Chernoff’s invitation to read the whole book of Dr. Murray’s life. But I also read the book of Michael Jackson’s life, including the sad final chapter of Dr. Murray’s treatment of Michael Jackson.”
A probation report released after sentencing said Murray was listed as suicidal and mentally disturbed in jail records before his sentencing. However, Murray’s spokesman Mark Fierro said a defense attorney visited the cardiologist in jail last week and found him upbeat.
“That time is behind him,” Fierro said.
What lies ahead for Murray is more flogging, with medical authorities in California, Nevada and Texas looking to strip his medical license and Jackson’s father, Joseph, suing the physician for wrongful death.
Chernoff, who had advocated Murray receive probation instead of jail, said his client will forever live with the stigma of having caused Jackson’s death.
“Dr. Murray — whether he is a barista for the rest of his life, whether he is a greeter at Walmart, he’s still gonna be the man that killed Michael Jackson,” he said.
– Associated Press

Kanye gets 7 noms; Adele, Mars, Foos get 6 each

Adele scored six Grammy nominations on Wednesday, including for record, song and album of the year, but the owner of the 2011's best-selling album with "21" wasn't the night's top nominee — and that wasn't the evening's only surprise.

Kanye West came away with a leading seven nominations, including a bid for song of the year for his all-star song "All of the Lights." However, the album from which it came — "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy," heralded by many critics as the best album of 2010 — was shut out of the best album category, and all of his other nominations were relegated to the rap fields.

Other notable omissions in the top categories included country phenomenon Taylor Swift and veteran crooner Tony Bennett.

Bruno Mars and the Foo Fighters tied Adele with six nominations each, including in the album of the year category. Critical-darling folky act Bon Iver scored four nominations, with two in the prestigious record and song of the year categories; and dubstep star Skrillex may have been the night's biggest surprise, getting five nominations, including a bid for best new artist.

The nominations were announced after the Recording Academy's fourth annual live concert special, which aired on CBS from the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles. The hour-long event featured key nominees like Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Nicki Minaj and the Band Perry.

Even though Adele didn't get the lion's share of nominations, she got them where it counted: Her "21," the mournful post-breakup album that produced smash hits like the torch ballad "Someone Like You" — was nominated for album of the year. The searing groove "Rolling in the Deep," which spent seven weeks at No. 1 this past summer, got nominations for both record and song of the year. Only Mars got nominations in all three categories as well.

Other nominees in the record of the year category included Bon Iver's ballad "Holocene"; Mars' ballad "Grenade"; Mumford & Sons' "The Cave"; and Katy Perry's inspirational anthem "Firework." For song of the year, which honors the writers of the tune, contenders included "The Cave," ''Grenade, "Holocene" and Lady Gaga's "You and I."

The best album category was as noteworthy for who was excluded as it was for who was nominated. Lady Gaga garnered her third straight nod in the category for "Born This Way," while veteran rockers the Foo Fighters were nominated for "Wasting Light," along with Mars' debut album, "Doo-Wops & Hooligans," and Rihanna's steamy dance album "Loud."

Shut out were perceived favorites like 85-year-old Bennett, who became the oldest person to score a No. 1 debut when his "Duets II" album was released earlier this year, and the megawatt collaboration of Jay-Z and West with the heavily hyped "Watch The Throne."

The biggest snub may have been to Swift, who won in the category in 2010 and was considered by some critics to be a favorite for "Speak Now," which has sold 3.7 million copies. She did get three nominations, however, including for best country album.

Unlike the past two years, which saw Swift and fellow country act Lady Antebellum soar in the general categories, the only country act that got a mainstream nomination was the country sibling act The Band Perry. Best known for their poignant ballad "If I Die Young," they got a nomination for best new artist. Their competition also includes Bon Iver, Jay-Z rap protégé J. Cole, Skrillex and rapper-singer Nicki Minaj, who scored four nominations in total.

The 54th Grammys will be held Feb. 12 in Los Angeles. The ceremony will mark the first since the academy shaved its categories from 109 to 78 this year, amid some protest. Some of the more niched categories, like best Zydeco or Cajun music album, were eliminated.

In addition, men and women now compete together in vocal categories for pop, R&B and country, instead of having separate categories for each sex. This year, the category is best pop solo performance and Bruno Mars is the only man nominated for "Grenade." His competition includes Adele for "Someone Like You," Lady Gaga for "You and I," Pink for "(Expletive) Perfect" and Perry for "Firework."

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Lil' Dex Shuts Down The Place @Entertainment Industry Nite Concert. Lil' Dex on stage


If you think you have seen an entertainer take a crown so fast, then you need to look again because it happened even faster yesterday night @Entertainment Industry Night concert which was held in Mia Suites and Hotels, Kaduna. The show stopper of the night was no other person but our very own budding female rap icon Lil' Dex. The upcoming hiphop diva proved to everyone that truely, what a man can do, a woman can do better.

Lil' Dex took the stage at exactly 11:30pm to perform her newest hit single "Drunk Flow", a song that expresses her rap prowess a result of a super charged chemical imbalance which causes her to crush the music industry competition. With a back up help by another singer by the name of R3AliTy, she commanded the crowd who were at her mercy to do what so ever she wishes with them. After her electric performance, she was specially invited back on stage by record label CEO Don G (rumors currently have it that she might be getting signed to Don G Entertainment).

The event was organized by XtraTime TV in collaboration with Mia Suites to show case budding talents in the northern region of Nigeria. Ace comedian Bishop Talk was the master of ceremony of the night. Other musical performances came from big artists like Kenas, Emmyli OmoKogi. Mr. Ruff, SkinnyBoi, Arab, Wutah Nelson, EFX and others.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Drake Disappointed Justin Bieber Didn't Curse In 'Trust Issues' Remix



September 2nd, 2011 10:28am EDT favoriteAdd to My News
Drake is disappointed Justin Bieber made his remix of the rapper's song "Trust Issues" child-friendly because he was convinced the teen superstar would show his "transformation" into a young man by keeping all the curse words in.
The "Baby" hitmaker showed his admiration for Drake's work by releasing an unofficial cover of the track earlier this week.
But Bieber made sure his verse on the tune was suitable for his young fanbase by changing Drake's references to his lovers as "b**ches" to the more respectful "women." He also altered Drake's line, "F**k it, I'm on one", to "You know I'm on one."
But the pop star's move to censor the lyrics has left Drake a little downbeat.
He tells MTV News, "I wish he would've left all the cuss words in it. I feel like that would've been so G (gangsta), if he would've done all the swearing. I was excited when I heard he remixed it, because there was like a gang of swearing in that song. I was like, 'Oh, we're about to hear the transformation of Bieber.'"
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Saturday, October 22, 2011


Gaddafi killed in hometown, Libya eyes future




By Rania El Gamal and Tim Gaynor
SIRTE, Libya | Thu Oct 20, 2011 7:15pm EDT
(Reuters) - Muammar Gaddafi was killed after being captured by the Libyan fighters he once scorned as "rats," cornered and shot in the head after they overrun his last bastion of resistance in his hometown of Sirte.
His body, bloodied, half naked, Gaddafi's trademark long curls hanging limp around a rarely seen bald spot, was delivered, a prize of war, to Misrata, the city west of Sirte whose siege and months of suffering at the hands of Gaddafi's artillery and sniper made it a symbol of the rebel cause.
A quick and secret burial was due later on Friday.
"It's time to start a new Libya, a united Libya," Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril declared. "One people, one future."
A formal announcement of Libya's liberation, which will set the clock ticking on a timeline to elections, would be made on Saturday, Libyan officials said.
Two months after Western-backed rebels ended 42 years of eccentric one-man rule by capturing the capital Tripoli, his death ended a nervous hiatus for the new interim government.
U.S. President Barack Obama, in a veiled dig at the Syrian and other leaders resisting the democrats of the Arab Spring, declared "the rule of an iron fist inevitably comes to an end."
But Gaddafi's death is a setback to campaigners seeking the full truth about the 1988 bombing over Lockerbie in Scotland of Pan Am flight 103 which claimed 270 lives, mainly Americans, and for which one of Gaddafi's agents was convicted.
Jim Swire, the father of one of the Lockerbie victims, said: "There is much still to be resolved and we may now have lost an opportunity for getting nearer the truth."
"That's for Lockerbie," said the front-page headline in The Sun, Britain's best selling daily newspaper.
Confusion over Gaddafi's death was a reminder of the challenge for Libyans to now summon order out of the armed chaos that is the legacy of eight months of grinding conflict.
The killing or capture of senior aides, including possibly two sons, as an armored convoy braved NATO air strikes in a desperate bid to break out of Sirte, may ease fears of diehards regrouping elsewhere - though cellphone video, apparently of Gaddafi alive and being beaten, may inflame his sympathizers.
As news of Gaddafi's demise spread, people poured into the streets in jubilation. Joyous fighters fired their weapons in the air, shouting "Allahu Akbar."
Others wrote graffiti on the parapets of the highway outside Sirte. One said simply: "Gaddafi was captured here."
Jibril, reading what he said was a post-mortem report, said Gaddafi was hauled unresisting from a "sewage pipe." He was then shot in the arm and put in a truck which was "caught in crossfire" as it ferried the 69-year-old to hospital.
"He was hit by a bullet in the head," Jibril said, adding it was unclear which side had fired the fatal shot.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who spearheaded a Franco-British move in NATO to back the revolt against Gaddafi hailed a turn of events that few had expected so soon, since there had been little evidence that Gaddafi himself was in Sirte.
But he also alluded to fears that, without the glue of hatred for Gaddafi, the new Libya could descend, like Saddam Hussein's Iraq, into bloody factionalism: "The liberation of Sirte must signal ... the start of a process ... to establish a democratic system in which all groups in the country have their place and where fundamental freedoms are guaranteed," he said.
NATO, keen to portray the victory as that of the Libyans themselves, said it would wind down its military mission.
"KEEP HIM ALIVE"
The circumstances of the death of Gaddafi, who had vowed to go down fighting, remained obscure. Jerky video showed a man with Gaddafi's distinctive long, curly hair, bloodied and staggering under blows from armed men, apparently NTC fighters.
The brief footage showed him being hauled by his hair from the hood of a truck. To the shouts of someone saying "Keep him alive," he disappears from view and gunshots are heard.
"While he was being taken away, they beat him and then they killed him," a senior source in the NTC told Reuters before Jibril spoke of crossfire. "He might have been resisting."
Officials said Gaddafi's son Mo'tassim, also seen bleeding but alive in a video, had also died. Another son, heir-apparent Saif al-Islam, was variously reported to be surrounded, captured or killed as conflicting accounts of the day's events crackled around networks of NTC fighters rejoicing in Sirte.
In Benghazi, where in February Gaddafi disdainfully said he would hunt down the "rats" who had emulated their Tunisian and Egyptian neighbors by rising up against an unloved autocrat, thousands took to the streets, loosing off weapons and dancing under the old tricolor flag revived by Gaddafi's opponents.
Mansour el Ferjani, 49, a Benghazi bank clerk and father of five posed his 9-year-old son for a photograph holding a Kalashnikov rifle: "Don't think I will give this gun to my son," he said. "Now that the war is over we must give up our weapons and the children must go to school.
Accounts were hazy of his final hours, as befitted a man who retained an aura of mystery in the desert down the decades as he first tormented "colonial" Western powers by sponsoring militant bomb-makers from the IRA to the PLO and then embraced the likes of Tony Blair and Silvio Berlusconi in return for investment in Libya's extensive oil and gas fields.
There was no shortage of fighters willing to claim they saw Gaddafi, who long vowed to die in battle, cringing below ground, like Saddam eight years ago, and pleading for his life.
One description, pieced together from various sources, suggests Gaddafi tried to break out of his final redoubt at dawn in a convoy of vehicles after weeks of dogged resistance.
However, he was stopped by a French air strike and captured, possibly some hours later, after gun battles with NTC fighters who found him hiding in a drainage culvert.
NATO said its warplanes fired on a convoy near Sirte about 8:30 a.m. (2:30 a.m. ET), striking two military vehicles in the group, but could not confirm that Gaddafi had been a passenger. France later said its jets had halted the convoy.
(Additional reporting by Taha Zargoun in Sirte, Barry Malone, Yasmine Saleh and Jessica Donati in Tripoli, Brian Rohan in Benghazi, Jon Hemming in Tunis, Edmund Blair and Yasmine Saleh in Cairo, Samia Nakhoul in Amman, Christian Lowe in Algiers, Tim Castle, Peter Apps and William Maclean in London, David Brunnstrom in Brussels, Alister Bull, Jeff Mason and Laura MacInnis in Washington and Vicky Buffery in Paris; Writing by Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Giles Elgood)