Sunday, June 26, 2011

UFC on Versus 4 Preview: Charlie Brenneman vs. Rick Story

Charlie “The Spaniard” Brenneman has taken Nate Marquardt’s place on literally one day’s notice to fight rising contender Rick Story. Brenneman enters with a 2-1 UFC record, 13-2 overall. Thus far in his UFC career, Brenneman has won decisions against Jason High and Amilcar Alves, while he was stopped by Johny Hendricks by TKO. I happen to think that Hendricks is one of the most underrated fighters in the division, so I’m not going to hold that one against Brenneman, but neither of his UFC victories really blow me away.
Now, I have to point out that it’s not like Brenneman was just sitting on the sidelines this whole time. In fact, Brenneman had been slated to fight T.J. Grant at this event until just Wednesday. So Brenneman should be in shape and ready to go; this isn’t a Mike Massenzio situation. The big question is: even at his best, can Brenneman beat Rick Story?
It certainly doesn’t look good. Brenneman has a wrestling background, but probably isn’t as good a wrestler as Story. Brenneman is 13-2 compared to Story’s 13-3, but Story has been fighting much tougher competition. I need to have a reason to favor Brenneman in this fight, and I’m just having difficulty finding one. For all of Brenneman’s wins, Story has a much better win.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Gay Rights Group Speaks Out Against Chris Brown

This is now getting overblown. The Human Rights Campaign is speaking out against Chris Brown for his gay comments, telling TMZ his comments were “just plain unacceptable.”

Brown accused several photogs of tipping off parking enforcement to his illegally parked car -- saying, "Y'all n**gas is weak. Did you all call them to try and film me? Y'ALL N**GAS IS GAY!"

A spokesperson tells the website, “Invoking words meant to demean gay Americans is just plain unacceptable. Chris Brown should know better.”

The rep adds, “He irresponsibly neglected to recognize the impact of his words and the unacceptable message that it sends to couple the word gay with negative actions.”

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Man charged in riot incident a hero, says grateful friend

VANCOUVER — One of the first men charged in the Stanley Cup riot should be hailed as a hero instead of having to defend himself in court, says a friend who was stabbed during the melee.

Sunny Jaura, who was knifed in the back in the 700-block of Hornby, said his friend Joshua Evans disarmed the man who was attacking Jaura and two others in their group.

Yet Evans is now charged with possession of a dangerous weapon after police arrived at the scene and saw him with the knife.

Jaura said it is upsetting to see that Evans, an engineering student in Calgary, is now being named as a criminal along with the man alleged to have attacked them.

Vancouver police named the 27-year-old student Monday, along with Edgar Ricardo Garcia, the 20-year-old Burnaby man charged with aggravated assault in the stabbing of Jaura and his friends.

Jaura said the three victims and Evans had been together throughout the afternoon and were trying to get away from the chaos when a stranger began stabbing them.

"Josh was there and he knew that the best thing to do was to get ahold of the guy and give him to the police. By doing that, he put his own life on the line. When he subdued the man, he had to take the knife out of his hand. You can's just subdue someone and leave the knife," Jaura said.

"Unfortunately the police only saw the end of that. They had their guns drawn. When you look at the evidence, we were friends and all together and Josh didn't do anything to us. It is just wrong."

He said he hopes the matter can be straightened out quickly.

"It is common sense. I was lying on the ground. The other two people are our friends and they were lying on the ground. Josh is our friend. Put two and two together and save the taxpayer some money here and do the right thing," Jaura said.

Evans is due to make his first court appearance Wednesday in Vancouver.

Already, 40 friends and relatives have written letters on his behalf, lawyer Matthew Nathanson said Tuesday.

"The police are under enormous pressure to bring people who have committed criminal acts that have enraged the community to justice swiftly. But unfortunately, sometimes in that haste innocent people get caught up in the torrent," Nathanson said.

"He is not only innocent; he was somebody who was acting in the best interest of the community. They should be pinning a medal on his chest."

And, Nathanson said, with the backlog in B.C. courts, if the charge goes forward it could be more than a year before Evans is able to clear his name.

Nathanson said Evans was strip-searched and held for 24 hours, then charged, before witness statements were taken.

"I am going to be speaking with the Crown because I want to give the Crown the full picture of what happened here, and I am hopeful that once they have the right picture, the Crown will do the right thing," Nathanson said.

Jennifer Lopez's Nipple Slip -- Guten Tag, Germany!

All eyes are on Jeniffer Lopez. When initially watching the video nothing will come up suspected. But pay careful attention at the end of the video. The clothing malfunction takes place when the singer is gonna sit down on the couch while the show host Thomas Johannes Gottschalk struggles to keep her dress low. Even so it might not be very clear but however when performing an image processing (“Wetten, Dass…?” – Wanna bet that…?) things look absolutely different. Probably Jeniffer Lopez fans (and not only) would not mind at all. watch video

*Jennifer's people tell us they've seen the unblurred photo and insist Lopez is wearing "clothing tape." 

Barrack Obama - The Pacifier

President Barack Obama may not be able to solve all the world's problems -- but last week at the White House, dude proved he can definitely calm a crying baby ... even when Michelle can't.  watch video

Identified Vancouver Riot Criminal List

Thanks to the thousands of images captured and social media, the participants in the Vancouver riots have forever branded themselves. A "digital" tattoo that can never be expunged. And whether one agrees with it or not, the call to put names to the images will happen and will result in a legacy they will not be able to shake.

Most if not all employers now "Google" candidates' names for any position. So anyone identified with this event in a negative fashion must set their expectations from life very low. So whether they face the legal system or not, Social Media will exact a penalty that will cost them more than hard time will or would.

And I believe this will in fact be a bigger deterrent for participating in this type of event that the legal system presents.



Male
Brock Anton
Zac Chan
Robert Snelgrove
Jason Li
Taylor Shale
Jordy Dean
Pharaoh Saleh
Alex Nikolic
Roneil Kumar
Connor Epp
Blair Reid
Dustin Anderson
Yousef Ahmad
Darren Watroba
Brandon Drader
Tony Smith
Connor Mcilvenna
Billy Chickite
Travis Baker
Jesse Rene Attig
Kyle Taylor
Nick Archibald
Tim Kwong
Mathew Eakin
Luke Basso
Payam Barani
Sukhjeewan Grewal
Dan Ray
Steve Constancia
Jordan Reid
Luc Le’Guerrier
Jagminder Singh Shergil
Chris Taylor
Kurt Sikora
Danny Martins
Daniel Crossley
Dustin Tran
Matthew Machado
Nik Malenović
Dave Laliberte
Brad Harwood
Brawnson Pyne
Bryan Jensen
Stefano Bordon
Ryan Jacob
Brendan Banah
Jassi Badesha
Clark Dennison
Josh Speight
Ryan Yer
Alex Prochazka
Nick Auger-langejan
Chris Devine
Nick Archibald
Dustin Tran
Edward Stewart
Stryder Watson
Zarif Mahmood
Derrick Hardware
Yousef Ahmad
Mike Leary
Morag Desormeaux
Brandon Drazdoff
Richard Phillips
Brett Sedola
John Mitchell
Nick James
MJ Calinisan
Charlie Shin
Jassi Badesha
Mitch Anderson
Jeremy Desjardin
Andrew Phaneuf
Rily Memphis O’Neill
Jonathon Mason
T. Paterson
Jason NoGood Nazaroff
Brad Harwood
Steve Boss
Brandon Florencio
Faizan Riyadh
Tanner Jacobsen
Elijah Lindsay
Soheil Motevalli
Kevin Hoang
Vincent Wong
Chris Taylor
Andy Taylor
Jeff Zwicker
Jake Brownell
Westonn Orr
Tyrell Williams
Nik Malenovic
Matthew Machado
Daniel Crossley
Brenden Banah
Jeff Plummer
April Starii Perry
Steve Boss
Dhanda
Tyler Romas
John Clarke
Josh Maher
Matthew Machado
Stormy Gray
Lloyd Humchitt
Kurtis Blackson
Jasper Gill
David Pham
Dmitriy Lashkov
Andrew White
Cole McNeilly
Aland James
Riley Langford
Rickie See
Sam Romaya
Jordan Krause
Monty Sky-Diamonds Benton
Joey Leduc
Rodney Bishop
Wyatt Kyle Costain
Kiela Hunter
Anthony Kelly
Mandeep Dhaliwal
Josh Taylor
Mathew Eakin
Kelly Johnson
Thad McMichael
Jay Green
Myles Lohman
Adam Davis
Sterling McDougall
Colt McKenzie
Drew Guthrath
Troy Stewart
Eloitte Adam
Dave Laliberte
Stefano Bordon
Sean Hutichinson
Trevor Mista Hindz
Aaron Amos
Bryan Jensen
Rocky Robson
Archivest Camera Boss Don
Scott Webster
Johnathan Edware Knott
Shervin Miraeidi
Brawson Pyne
Landan Thatcher
Adam Grandmaison
Leonard Martin
Brendan Ndjiva

Female
Alicia Price
Camille Cacnio
Christine Millard
Dominique Larocque
Sarah McCluster
Jayy Greene
Sienna Laurent
Julie Bosma
Coral Speers
Shea MacDonald
Tara Rudski-Bonnetplume
Megan Young
list by: http://facebookjustice.wordpress.com/identified-list/

Vancouver police chief fires back over Stanley Cup riot criticism

Vancouver Police Chief Jim Chu issued a strongly-worded denunciation Tuesday of criticism around his handling of last week's Stanley Cup Riot.

And he singled out Robert Whitelaw, who worked on the report into the 1994 Stanley Cup Riot. Chu said he has misrepresented his involvement in the inquiry 17 years ago.

In a letter to officers and staff that he encouraged them to circulate, Chu said Whitelaw falsely claimed he was the author of the report into the 1994 riot. In fact, he said, Whitelaw's suggestions in a preliminary report were discarded as impractical, and the inquiry hired new investigators who provided different recommendations.

"I confirmed yesterday that Mr. Whitelaw did not write the 1994 report, and that he has misrepresented to the news media his involvement with the BC Police Commission. This was confirmed yesterday when I talked to the former Chair of the BC Police Commission, Mr. David Edgar. I also have talked to others who were involved in writing the final report," Chu said in his letter.

In an email to The Vancouver Sun, Edgar said Whitelaw is "grossly exaggerating" his involvement in the 1994 investigation.

"He had no qualifications or experience in policing, security or crowd management and was not hired to be involved in the investigative or recommendation side of the inquiry. He was a "wordsmith" only," Edgar wrote.

"For him to suggest or to allow the idea that he was the author or had any substantive role in its contents is quite simply a fabrication. Nor was he an investigator, let alone a "head investigator", as one broadcaster suggested. He was, rather, an embarrassment to the Commission on this project."

But Whitelaw, contacted Tuesday at his home in Ottawa, said he was surprised at the allegations. He read a letter of recommendation Edgar sent to Whitelaw's employer in the provincial Comptroller's Office at in November, 1994, that said his efforts had been included in the final report.

"As a result of this work the final report was able to reflect accurately the essential facts and draw from the lessons that the report sets out," Whitelaw read from the letter.

In his letter to his officers, Chu said Whitelaw's involvement in the 1994 investigation was largely discarded.

"I was given a copy of an early report that I was told Whitelaw did help write. It was immediately discarded by the BC Police Commission in 1994. I was also told that because of the inadequacy of Mr. Whitelaw's work, new investigators were brought in and a completely new report was written without any use of this first inadequate report.

"Many of Mr. Whitelaw's recommendations in his discarded report were rejected as unrealistic, and recommended a police reaction disproportionate to the offence being committed."

But Whitelaw said no one ever raised any concerns about his work and he can't confirm that his findings were discarded. He said he didn't claim he was the author of the report or the chair of the inquiry.

"I was providing information and I know there were a number of writers. It was not my report, it was the Police

Commission's report," Whitelaw said.

Edgar said in his email to The Sun that Whitelaw's work was never used in the final draft.

"When it came time for him to submit his draft (which was late), it was, to be polite, below standard and unacceptable. The work of drafting the report was taken away from him and assigned to a senior researcher on the Commission staff, Jill McIntyre," Edgar wrote.

"It was Mrs. McIntyre who wrote the report. Nothing written by Whitelaw is in that report."

Chu said Whitelaw also tried to offer his services to the VPD on June 1 and went to The Vancouver Sun after his help was rejected. He said Whitelaw also appeared to misrepresent his involvement with other police forces.

"Mr. Whitelaw has definitely raised his personal profile and received a lot of attention at our expense. I found out yesterday that Mr. Whitelaw did offer his services to the VPD as a consultant on June 1st but we did not accept his offer. Shortly after, he appears to have contacted the Vancouver Sun with his opinions and an article warning of a riot appeared on June 4th. One recent article I read has him assisting the Montreal and Calgary Police with their playoff runs. I talked to the Chiefs in both Calgary and Montreal. Both of these agencies have never had any relationship with Mr. Whitelaw nor have these police agencies heard of him," Chu said in his letter to staff.

Whitelaw said he did contact the VPD to offer his services since Vancouver was once again in the Stanley Cup playoffs and he felt they could benefit from the findings of the 1994 report. He said he never claimed to work with the Calgary and Montreal police departments, but rather gave interviews to the media there.

Chu's strong attack on Whitelaw comes as pressure intensifies on the police department and the city to explain how they could not have predicted or prevented the riot from happening. Chu continues to refuse to say how many police officers he had on the streets Wednesday, saying it remains an operational piece of information. However, the Vancouver Police Union said the number was between 500-700 out of a total police force of 1,300.

On Monday the province and the city announced the terms of reference for an independent inquiry into the riot, but stopped well short of calling for a full public Commission of Inquiry.
By Jeff Lee, Vancouver Sun June 21, 2011 11:59 AM