Tuesday, 29 January 2013

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Wednesday, 9 January 2013

Oregon Teen Arrested After Posting 'Drivin Drunk' Facebook Status


The Oregon teen who was arrested after he posted a 'Drivin drunk' status update on his Facebook page New Year's Day says it was all a misunderstanding.
Jacob Cox-Brown, 18, of Astoria, Ore., about 100 miles west of Portland, was with friends when, police say, he posted the status update on his Facebook page: "Drivin drunk… classsic ;) but to whoever's vehicle i hit i am sorry. :P"
In an interview with ABC affiliate KATU-TV in Portland, Cox-Brown says the post was meant as a joke. But his friends who spotted the update didn't see the humor behind it. Instead, one friend sent a private message to an Astoria police officer's personal Facebook account while another friend called police Sgt. Brian Aydt.
"When you post 'Drivin drunk… classsic ;) but to whoever's vehicle i hit i am sorry. :P' on Facebook, you have to figure that it is not going to stay private long," Brad Johnston, Astoria deputy chief of police, said in a news release.

Oregon Teen Arrested After Posting 'Drivin Drunk' Facebook Status


The Oregon teen who was arrested after he posted a 'Drivin drunk' status update on his Facebook page New Year's Day says it was all a misunderstanding.
Jacob Cox-Brown, 18, of Astoria, Ore., about 100 miles west of Portland, was with friends when, police say, he posted the status update on his Facebook page: "Drivin drunk… classsic ;) but to whoever's vehicle i hit i am sorry. :P"
In an interview with ABC affiliate KATU-TV in Portland, Cox-Brown says the post was meant as a joke. But his friends who spotted the update didn't see the humor behind it. Instead, one friend sent a private message to an Astoria police officer's personal Facebook account while another friend called police Sgt. Brian Aydt.
"When you post 'Drivin drunk… classsic ;) but to whoever's vehicle i hit i am sorry. :P' on Facebook, you have to figure that it is not going to stay private long," Brad Johnston, Astoria deputy chief of police, said in a news release.

Diana Photo Mystery Man Revealed


The mystery of the young man sitting beside the late Diana Spencer in a photo apparently prohibited from being published has been solved.
The photo of Lady Diana before she married into the royal family will be up for auction later this month. Besides the identity of the mystery man, the words, "not to be published," written on the image in grease pencil, intrigued the photo's owner, Eric Caren of Caren Archive.
Caren had bought images from the former British newspaper, the Daily Mirror.
The man in the photo is Adam Russell, a student at Oxford University at the time and the great-grandson of former Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin. He is currently a deer farmer in Dorset, England.
Reached on the phone in western England, Russell confirmed with ABC News he was the man in the photo, but refused to say any more.

Watch this story on "Good Morning America" Saturday
In Photos: Rare Diana Photo and Other Expensive Items
Asked whether he had any additional photos of

FDA Moves on New Food Safety Rules


The FDA proposed new rules today that would require US food distributors to implement additional measures to combat food-borne illness. The guidelines are aimed at improving food handling in both the agriculture and manufacturing sectors after a series of recent disease outbreaks in peanuts, cantaloupe, cheese, and leafy green vegetables that killed scores of Americans.
Food safety organizations welcomed the new rules after a long delay.
"Under the old rules, we've been reacting to food contaminations after they happened," Ami Gadhia of Consumers Union said in a statement. "The goal here is to prevent deadly outbreaks before people get hurt. We're anxious to dive deep into these proposed rules so we can review and comment on the details."
One rule would require growers, manufacturers and distributors to develop formal plans for preventing contamination, including techniques for cleaning equipment and keeping animals out of crops. Mandatory contingency plans for outbreaks

Thieves Smash Wall, Miss Jewelry Store, Rob KFC


In a jewelry heist gone incredibly wrong, just after 8 a.m. on New Year's Eve, two thieves planned to rob Wrights Jewelers in Beaudesert, Australia, about 45 miles south of Brisbane. But instead they knocked through the wrong wall and found themselves inside a Kentucky Fried Chicken outlet next door.
Police say the suspects, Dwayne Doolan and Peter Welsh, were prepared to raid a store full of precious stones and gems. Instead, they found themselves surrounded by trays of the Colonel's Original Recipe and Extra Crispy chicken as well as stares from surprised workers after smashing through the wrong block wall in a restroom.
But they quickly regrouped and robbed the fast food joint instead, police said.
The Queensland Police Service released a statement saying, "The men threatened staff with a metal bar and made demands for cash. Two female employees complied and handed over a sum of cash to the men."
After robbing the fast food chain, the

Vanilla the Cat Reunited With Owners After 9 Long, Lost Years


They say cats have nine lives, and for one Siamese cat yesterday in San Francisco, after nine long, lost years, he was finally reunited with the people he shared his first life with.
Vanilla the cat went missing from his owner, Dara Gerson, nine years ago in Sausalito, Calif., and was presumed to be lost forever. Despite Gerson's and her daughters' efforts to find him, posting signs around the neighborhood and searching for days, the cat was nowhere to be found.
"We lived in Sausalito and my older daughter was holding the cat, and somebody had a dog that scared the cat and the cat ran out of her arms," Gerson told ABCNews.com. "We put up posters and asked everyone in the neighborhood and never found him. But we never gave up hope. I'm a pretty intuitive person and assumed he was still alive."
Vanilla was indeed alive, and had somehow over the years made his way across the Golden Gate Bridge to a home in Noe Valley, about six hours away from Gerson and her family.