E.T. and other Atari games rescued from New Mexico landfill to be sold

At this point some 1,377 game cartridges for the Atari 2600 have been rescued from the New Mexico landfill where they were unceremoniously dumped over 30 years ago. Of those, 700 will be appraised, certified and eventually sold, some of which will…

WhatsApp returns for Windows Phone

Earlier this month, WhatsApp was pulled from the Windows Phone app store over “technical issues,” something that has carried on for the past couple weeks. Last week, Microsoft confirmed that … Continue reading

Mac OS X Yosemite and El Cap names tipped

Rumors abound over Apple’s upcoming developers conference: what will be introduced, what changes will take place, and more. Latest among them are hints dropped by Apple’s own WWDC event efforts … Continue reading

Joe Belfiore: WhatsApp’s Return Will Be “Quite Soon”

Joe Belfiore: WhatsApps Return Will Be Quite SoonAs Windows Phone owners are probably aware by now, WhatsApp for Windows Phone has been removed from the app store. Previously it was claimed that this was due to technical reasons and that they were working on fixing it before returning it to the Windows Phone Store. However it has been more than 10 days since then, what gives?

Well in a recent statement by Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore, he offered an update of his own, claiming that Microsoft had been working hard with WhatsApp to resolve the issue, and that the app should be back soon. “Sorry for being quiet about WhatsApp. We’ve worked with them to get a fix built and expect it to be back QUITE SOON.”

This is probably a silver lining as previously Microsoft released a statement saying that they knew it was taking longer than expected, but they wanted to make sure it was a quality release. Unfortunately they did not provide us with a time line, but hopefully if Belfiore’s statement is anything to go by, Windows Phone users won’t have to wait much longer before they will be able to get their hands on the app.

Either way we’ll be keeping our eyes peeled for the app’s return, so do check back with us at a later date for the details.

Joe Belfiore: WhatsApp’s Return Will Be “Quite Soon”

, original content from Ubergizmo, Filed in Cellphones, , , ,

OS X 10.10 Could Be Known As “Yosemite”

OS X 10.10 Could Be Known As YosemiteWWDC 2014 is kicking off next week, and whether you’re a fan or detractor of Apple’s products, well safe to say that both sides are curious to see what Apple could be bringing to the table. Now we know that iOS 8 and OS X 10.10 will most likely be announced, but thanks to a banner spotted by the folks at The Verge, there is a good chance that Apple could be launching OS X 10.10 as Yosemite.

This is according to the banner (pictured above) which shows off scenery that looks like it came from the Yosemite national park in California. This seems to be in line with Apple’s recent naming scheme, starting with OS X 10.9 Mavericks, which is also named after a location in California.

Apple has trademarked several other names in the past, most of which are based around the state of California, such as Mojave and Redwood, just to name a few. Yosemite was one of the names Apple had trademarked for use with OS X, and given the banner pictured above, we guess Apple has decided to go with Yosemite after all.

It is unclear as what sort of features we might be able to expect from OS X 10.10, but many are expecting the OS to undergo a major redesign. This is according to a rumor earlier this year that hinted that a OS X 10.10 could get a flatter look, much like how iOS 7 got a flat look as well. In any case we guess we’ll find out more next week, so check back with us then for the details!

OS X 10.10 Could Be Known As “Yosemite”

, original content from Ubergizmo, Filed in Apple, Computers, Rumors, , , ,

Friday Talking Points — End of Reefer Madness?

It has been a momentous week, with the resignation (read: “firing”) of a cabinet secretary, a presidential speech on America’s foreign and military policy and the announcement of a timetable to bring home the remaining troops in Afghanistan. Plus all the usual Washington squabbling. But one story risks being buried among all this other newsworthy stuff, and that is the vote which happened late last night in the House of Representatives. Because, with a healthy bipartisan majority, they just voted to end the war on medical marijuana forever. If the Senate follows their lead, this could be one of the biggest turning points in ending the federal War On Weed altogether. In other words, it is a momentous event.

The “Rohrabacher-Farr Amendment” was sponsored by Republican Dana Rohrabacher and Democrat Sam Farr, both from California — the first state in the nation to legalize medical marijuana, almost two decades ago. It uses the traditional congressional “power of the purse” to ban the Justice Department from spending any money on arrests, raids and prosecutions of medical marijuana providers and patients that comply with their states’ medical marijuana laws. That’s the entire Justice Department, including federal attorneys, the Drug Enforcement Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

While the Obama administration began with a promise not to prosecute medical marijuana patients and providers, the reality on the ground has been far different. U.S. Attorneys in some states have used an extremely heavy hand in bringing such prosecutions to court, no matter what the head office was saying (this article, written before the amendment passed, lists a few of these). The head of the D.E.A. has (to put it politely) not exactly jumped on board with laying off medical marijuana providers. Action by Congress, in this case, was necessary to refocus the entire Justice Department away from the drug-warrior mindset when it came to providing medicine to ill patients.

Last night, to the great surprise of even marijuana reform activists, the House voted 219-189 to yank all funding for targeting medical marijuana in states where it is legal (in state law — it still remains illegal under federal law, medicinal or not). A whopping 49 Republicans joined 170 Democrats in voting “yea.” That’s about as bipartisan as it gets, these days. It also raises hopes that its chances in the Senate could be pretty good. House Republicans, by standing behind the idea, have given political cover to Republican senators to vote for the measure, to put this another way. It’s barely even a contentious idea politically any more, as surveys show public support is now at a sky-high 85 percent.

Rohrabacher even invoked a sacred name (for Republicans), showing how to put a conservative spin on the issue: “The heart and soul of the Republican party is that pro-freedom, individual philosophy that Reagan talked about. I think that what we’ve got now and what we have here in the Republican vote last night were people who took a lot of those words and the philosophy of Ronald Reagan to heart.” Those are strong words indeed (again, for Republicans).

If the Senate follows the House’s lead, this will be the beginning of the end of the federal legal battle against medical marijuana — which is now legal at the state level in close to half of the states. Success is by no means guaranteed, however. The amendment has been attached to a budget bill, and there is no guarantee that any budget bills will make it to the president’s desk this year (they may be rolled into some giant omnibus bill, or Congress may punt until after the election or even next year). The Senate may not even take up the amendment at any point. There are all sorts of ways it could be derailed, in fact.

Even if it does survive in a bill Obama can sign, it is still only the first step. The ultimate goal, in this particular case, is “rescheduling” marijuana so we can end the federal legal fiction that it has no accepted medicinal value. Attorney General Eric Holder can do so with his signature, but he has indicated that he’d like Congress to buy into the idea as well. Last night’s vote means that this could indeed happen in the near future. In addition to the other marijuana reforms either Holder or Congress has approved (sentencing reforms, allowing recreational legalization in two states to proceed, hemp production, allowing medical research on marijuana, etc.), we are now standing on the brink of ending the “reefer madness” altogether. No, not the “madness” of the “reefer fiend” so famously propagandized in the movie of the same name, but rather the madness of treating marijuana more harshly than drugs like methamphetamine. It is, indeed, madness to believe that weed is more harmful to society than crystal meth. And that is the madness that could be about to end.

Even if the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment doesn’t survive the budgeting process, the vote itself was a powerful statement: spending money persecuting medical marijuana patients and providers is a gigantic waste and will no longer be allowed. This, from the Republican-led House, no less. The politics of marijuana reform are shifting fast, and politicians from both parties better take note. So while President Obama may have pushed this off the front pages with his foreign policy speech, accepting Shinseki’s resignation or his announcement of the end of the Afghanistan War; we felt the most important story of the week is one that didn’t make many front pages: the beginning of the end of the federal government’s reefer madness.

 

Most Impressive Democrat of the Week

President Obama was certainly in the news this week, as just mentioned. He announced the Afghanistan drawdown schedule, he gave a major foreign and military policy speech, he finally fired (oh, excuse me, “accepted the resignation of”) Veterans Administration head Eric Shinseki, he held a conference on concussions in sports and he teased the media with an upcoming announcement on new Environmental Protection Agency rules on pollution and greenhouse gases. All in all, a pretty productive week, politically. But this week he only earned an Honorable Mention for all his fervent activity.

Because the Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week this week was none other than Representative Sam Farr. Farr represents a coastal district in Central California which includes the seaside town of Santa Cruz. So it’s not like he’s going to suffer politically for championing the end to federal persecution of medical marijuana. I’d have to check a map, but I believe that the pivotal Supreme Court case Gonzales v. Raich (originally Ashcroft v. Raich) began with a raid of a medical marijuana cooperative in Farr’s district (or, perhaps, “just north of his district”). But Farr hasn’t been as prominent in the marijuana reform movement as other Democrats (such as Jared Polis of Colorado, to name just one), at least not up until now.

But by cosponsoring Rohrabacher’s amendment, Farr took the lead in this instance. Dan Riffle of the Marijuana Policy Project praised Farr’s efforts, after the vote:

Representative Farr gave an impassioned floor speech, and lobbied his colleagues on the House floor leading up to the vote. His staff was also incredibly helpful in narrowing down the list of members I needed to target.

If the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment becomes law, this will be a stunning achievement. It will be pivotal in redirecting the federal government’s entire drug policy, in fact. For leading the effort on the Democratic side, for rounding up 170 Democratic votes, for working across the aisle on an important issue (and by doing so, proving that it should now be seen as a non-partisan issue), for doing what his constituents want him to do in Washington and for possibly ending the federal reefer madness altogether, Sam Farr is this week’s Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week.

Well done, Sam! Well done indeed.

[Congratulate Representative Sam Farr on his House contact page, to let him know you appreciate his efforts.]

 

Most Disappointing Democrat of the Week

This one’s pretty obvious.

Eric Shinseki has served his country in many ways. He left part of his foot on the battlefield in Vietnam wearing the uniform of the United States. He was the highest-ranking Japanese-American ever in the military. He told the truth when asked about how many troops he thought would be necessary in Iraq (much to the dismay of Donald Rumsfeld). And he took on a tough job in the Obama cabinet.

But, while he did make a lot of improvements at the Veterans Administration, he fell far short on one major area. The institutional problems at the Veterans Administration go back decades (if not centuries) — America just doesn’t have all that great a record when it comes to taking care of veterans (with the exception of World War II vets, perhaps). But that doesn’t excuse Shinseki. He was at the helm for five years, and in all that time didn’t realize that the data on wait times was being gamed far and wide by lower-level administrators in local hospitals. This is an enormous failing, whether you hold Shinseki personally responsible or not.

When the interim report was released this Wednesday, it was clear that Shinseki had to go. Over 100 members of Congress — including many Democrats — called on him to step down. The media was more split, although I have to admit that I joined in the chorus calling for Shinseki to go after the report was released. Many veterans groups stood behind Shinseki all week, but in the end it wasn’t enough.

Some might argue that Shinseki’s not exactly a Democratic politician, but in our eyes serving in the cabinet of a Democratic president is close enough. Which is why we’re awarding him the Most Disappointing Democrat Of The Week on his way out the door.

[Eric Shinseki is now a private citizen, and our policy is not to provide contact information for people out of the world of politics.]

 

Friday Talking Points

Volume 306 (5/30/14)

We’ve got quite the mixed bunch this week, since we spent most of the rest of the column on a single subject. Oh, and for every blogger out there (which definitely includes me) who has ever made a mistake or typo they later had to go back and sheepishly correct, here’s the cover of the venerable New York Times from earlier this week. Note that sub-heading on the Obama speech story: “Tells West Point Cadets That Critics Misread His Cautious Reponse to World Crises.” Reponse? Heh. Even the high and mighty slip up, on occasion!

OK, sorry, that was juvenile. Ahem. Getting back to the subject at hand… well, we seem to have quite a few subjects at hand this week. A lot happened in the political world, including a whole lot of stories we didn’t even have room for, so it’s kind of a hit-or-miss week for the talking points.

 

1
   End the madness

To make this point, all you need to do is compare marijuana (listed under Schedule I — the most dangerous drugs around) with all the drugs which are considered less harmful (those on Schedule II). It’s a pretty easy point to make.

“I fully support the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment, which will zero out the budget for the Justice Department to go after medical marijuana users and providers in states which have legalized marijuana for medical purposes. We need to end the ‘reefer madness’ in the federal government. Because it is indeed madness to put sick people and their medical providers in jail for five or ten years when their own state allows such medical treatment. With medical marijuana legal in over 20 states, it is madness for the federal government to list marijuana as having, and I quote from the Schedule I definition: ‘no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States.’ The federal war on medical marijuana is nothing but sheer madness, folks. Listing marijuana as more dangerous than cocaine? Madness! Listing it as more dangerous than crystal meth? Madness! Listing it as more dangerous than opium, Dexedrine, PCP and barbiturates? Utter and complete madness, nothing less. Which is why I strongly support Rohrabacher-Farr, and hope it passes the Senate and arrives on President Obama’s desk. Because we simply must stop this reefer madness in the federal government, once and for all.”

 

2
   Maybe next year, huh?

This one is almost too funny for words.

“I see that even though Republicans have now had three or four years to come up with their own bill to replace Obamacare, the House is punting on the issue once again. The House leadership just announced that they will be postponing a floor vote on the non-existent Obamacare Republican replacement plan. It seems that, and I quote from the Washington Post article announcing this decision, ‘the delay will give them more time to work on the bill and weigh the consequences of putting a detailed policy before the voters in the fall.’ That’s really amusing, isn’t it? They don’t want the voters to know what they’re planning. They’re afraid it will not be as popular as Obamacare, to put it another way. They need more time — that’s the really funny part! They’ve had years and years now, and they are still no closer to replacing Obamacare with some pie-in-the-sky pure conservative answer because such an answer does not exist. Voters, please take note.”

 

3
   Championing incestuous fathers’ parental rights

I wrote recently about how Democrats should frame this issue, in the strongest terms possible. Representative Alan Grayson this week tried to get a change to an anti-abortion provision in an appropriations bill. Republicans kept the exceptions for rape and the life of the mother intact, but somehow dropped the exception for incest. While Grayson’s bill failed, he did a good job of expressing his outrage. From his floor speech:

Laws have consequences. The scenario we’re describing here is one where a female prisoner is the victim of incest. If this law passes as currently written, that female prisoner will be forced to carry to term the child of an incestuous relationship. I regard this as absolutely indefensible.

 

4
   Tax cuts pay for themselves?

The hypocrisy is obvious on this one.

“Whenever Democrats try to get federal money for a deserving cause — like relief funds for natural disasters, for instance — Republicans say ‘it’s got to be paid for elsewhere.’ Whenever any Democratic budget proposal is made, Republicans respond by saying the money has to be cut from other programs. But this budget-cutting purity gets thrown right out the window when Republicans push for more tax breaks. The House Ways and Means Committee just pushed $304 billion in tax breaks (over ten years), after voting for $310 billion in other loopholes last month. They didn’t pay for a dime of it. They just tacked the entire thing onto the budget deficit. Once again, Republicans show that they only posture about being fiscally responsible — when the subject is relief money for hurricane victims, say — but they could not care less about busting the budget when it comes to tax breaks for their donors. The hypocrisy is astounding. Where are all those Tea Partiers, hollering to the skies about balanced budgets, one wonders.”

 

5
   Latino vote landslide?

House Republicans seem absolutely determined to drive the Democratic share of the Latino vote to new heights, it seems.

“House Republicans refuse to even hold a vote on the Senate immigration reform bill, because they are terrified that it will pass. The Republicans cannot agree on putting their own immigration reform bill together, either. The window is fast closing politically for action on immigration reform this year, except when they rush through a vote on bills like the one Steve King just got passed, which focus 100 percent on the enforcement side of things. At the same time, they block votes against allowing citizenship for immigrants who serve America in the armed forces. It’s almost as if the Republican Party is trying to see how high the Latino vote percentage can go against them. Not unlike their non-existent Obamacare replacement plan, the non-existent House Republican immigration reform bill means Democrats are going to get an even-bigger landslide among Latino voters for the foreseeable future. Anyone want to bet how high it’ll be in the 2016 presidential election? Maybe 80 percent this time? Or 85 percent? How many states will that guarantee go to the Democrats in the Electoral College, do you think?”

 

6
   Whoops.

The Washington football team (we prefer to now call them the “Washington Racial Slurs”) decided that social media was the way to go in their fight with the likes of Harry Reid. Whoops.

“The football team in our nation’s capital refuses to change their team name, even though it is quite obviously racially offensive. Harry Reid and 49 other Democratic senators wrote the team a letter urging them to change the name. The team responded on Twitter, in the hopes that legions of fans would inundate Harry Reid’s Twitter feed. Instead, what they got was legions of people informing them that their team name is no longer acceptable. I encourage the entire Twitterverse to join in this pile-on, using either @Redskins or the hashtag #RedskinsPride, so they’ll notice.”

 

7
   Have a drink before you vote!

This one is rather amusing, especially for those Americans who have never experienced what “dry counties” and alcohol “blue laws” are like in some places.

“I see that South Carolina is about to lift their ban on alcohol sales on election day. By doing so, they’ll join the rest of the country where it is legal to toss down a few stiff ones before exercising their citizen’s franchise. Prohibition is over, and the days of getting lots of voters drunk in ballot-stuffing schemes are long gone. So voters in South Carolina will soon be able to use alcohol on election day as they see fit — whether that means getting tipsy enough to bring yourself to vote for one guy over another, or whether it means popping open some bubbly to celebrate when your candidate wins. As W. C. Fields famously once said: ‘Everybody’s got to believe in something. I believe I’ll have another drink.’ A fitting toast for election day in South Carolina!”

 

Chris Weigant blogs at:
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NYC Mallard Rescue Yields a Box of Quakers

As the bridge keeper in Monty Python and the Holy Grail contemplated the air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow, he probably would have had a hard time imagining a heavily laden female mallard duck gliding onto a NYC penthouse terrace and proceeding to hatch 16 babies. But that is precisely what happened to actor, Tina Chen. “Four years ago a mother duck landed on our terrace to have her babies. She, and now her daughter, have returned each year,” explained Tina with a maternal sparkle in her eye. Stymied at first about what to do, she called Michelle Gewirtz, a volunteer wildlife rehabilitator with the Wild Bird Fund to ask for help. They advised her on the proper nutrition, how to keep them protected, and when the time came, helped relocate them to Central Park. Relocation to safer ground is helpful before they begin their flying lessons, as many jump off the roof tops and plummet to the ground.

“My husband and I went to Central Park to see if we could find the ducks after they had been released,” recalled Tina. “I saw six teenage ducks swimming along, then suddenly they started power-swimming in my direction. They hopped onto land and ran to my feet. They had obviously imprinted on me.”

Hundreds of Mallard babies are born in inconvenient and dangerous places around NY City each Spring. The Wild Bird Fund fields emergency calls concerning all kinds of stranded or injured birds. On any given day you can drop by their office to see a variety of birds, such as pigeons, ducks, songbirds, owls, pheasants or even a swan, in different stages of recovery. An informal network of volunteers also helps foster some of the convalescing fowl at their homes until they are strong enough to be released back into the wild. Contact the Wildbirdfund.org if you would like to foster or help relocate rescued birds.

Brains, Guns, and Preventable Murder

The Isla Vista mass murder was a preventable tragedy. It was the destruction of innocent life without need or reason. It is proof, as if more proof were needed, that we are past the time to break the nexus between guns, murder, and mental illness. And we should do that by enacting rigorous new gun-control legislation that takes account of an individual’s fitness to own lethal weapons in light of what we are learning about the human brain.

Our knowledge of the human brain is increasing exponentially. Consider just a few recent advances: The Human Connectome Project is in the process of mapping the brain. And the maps the Project is producing are not the rough, schematic sketches of just a few years ago but a detailed guide to “every twist and turn of the 86 billion neurons in the human brain.” The mapping, it is suggested, will be helpful in diagnosing not only brain trauma, such as concussions or strokes, but a wide variety of psychiatric conditions “such as post-traumatic stress disorder, autism, and dementia.”

Scientists are not yet able to read people’s minds. Such a task involves multiple levels of consciousness and would be difficult to accomplish. On the other hand, neuroscientists have demonstrated the capacity to access the visual contents of dreams. And neurologists are also exploring ways in which deep brain stimulation can be used to relieve if not eliminate entirely the symptoms of major depressive disorder, Parkinson’s disease, and even Alzheimer’s.

Can We Predict Crime Using Brain Scans?” So asked the headline of an article in Psychology Today, dated April 17, 2013. A neuroscientist from the University of New Mexico conducted brain scans of 96 convicted felons about to be released from prison. The scans focused on identifying neurological signatures of the convicts’ impulsiveness, since it is known that poor impulse control lies at the root of many types of crime. The scans revealed that telltale markers in the anterior cingulate cortex correlated with poor impulse control and high recidivism rates. Indeed, “the level of brain activation predicted how long it would take before the person committed the [next] crime.”

Brain science, in other words, has advanced to the point where we can see into the brain, alleviate the symptoms of mental illness, and even make credible predictions about future misconduct.

Now, what do we know about Elliot Rodger? We know that he displayed psychological difficulties from an early time in his life. He was in therapy, it seems from the age of 8 or 9. He found it difficult to interact with other people and displayed aloofness.

These difficulties only intensified as Elliot entered adolescence. He informed all who would listen to him of his perceived problems in attracting women. Elliot, however, was not experiencing normal teenaged social anxiety but was instead slipping free of the bonds of reality. His problem was not awkwardness or clumsy interpersonal skills. It was a thought disorder that led to grandiose views of what he was entitled to and a deep sense of grievance that he was somehow being deprived of his birthright.

Much has been said about the Isla Vista massacre as a crime of privilege. And I think that there is much truth in these observations. Elliot Rodger absorbed misogynistic and racist attitudes from the ambient culture, and he expressed these repugnant thoughts in Web postings and videos. He enjoyed all the privileges of wealth. On the night of the murders, he was driving a BMW that was a gift from his father. It seems that he saw women as the one material possession he could not have, and he felt deprived. The imaginings of his mind, in other words, were fueled by an unrestrained sense of entitlement.

His parents and therapists came to understand the dark and dangerous turns he was making in the way he viewed the world. He posted threatening videos. His parents contacted the police, requesting that they intervene. The police arrived at young Elliot’s door, asked a few polite and deferential questions, and closed the investigation.

The police, it seems, never bothered to inquire about whether Elliot had any weapons. Elliot, however, acknowledged in his own writings that had the police sought weapons, it would have been all over for him. The larger question thus presents itself: How in the world did such a disturbed young man come to own an arsenal of deadly weapons?

Elliot, indeed, had equipped himself with the best weapons money could buy — handguns retailing in excess of $1,000 a piece. And this gets us to the question of guns. Elliot had never crossed the threshold that would have prevented him from buying or owning guns. Had he made a credible “threat of violence against specific, identifiable victims to a psychiatrist, the psychiatrist would have been required to report it to law enforcement, and Rodger could have been banned from owning guns for five years.” Elliot, however, had merely made non-specific threats. This was not enough to take his guns away.

This is an outrageous state of affairs. We must get serious about guns. Guns are not playthings. They are not ornaments. They are lethal weapons. The whole point and purpose of a firearm is to put holes in objects — including living human beings.

We need to shift the presumption about gun ownership in this country away from a rights-based perspective. Gun ownership must be premised on responsibility. And we can draw on brain science as a means of determining fitness to own a gun. Can someone control his or her impulses? Do they have violent tendencies? If they do, they should not own a gun.

Sorry, gun ownership should not be the universal right and privilege of every so-called red-blooded American. The presumption should always favor public safety, and that means keeping guns out of the hands of people who may abuse them. With rational gun control laws tied to what science can tell us about human behavior, we might hope to put a limit to the senseless, needless tragedy of gun violence.

Sandy Hook Shooting Denier Charged With Allegedly Stealing Memorial Signs

McLEAN, Va. (AP) — A Virginia man who believes the Sandy Hook school shootings were a hoax has been charged in the theft of two memorial signs in New Jersey and Connecticut dedicated to victims of those shootings, police said Friday.

Andrew Truelove, 28, who was renting a room in Herndon, has been charged in Fairfax County with possession of stolen property, Herndon Police said. Police say the blue and purple vinyl signs, one depicting a peace sign, were stolen from playgrounds in Mystic, Connecticut, and Mantoloking, New Jersey. They were dedicated to Grace McDonnell and Chase Kowalski, two of the 20 first-graders killed in the 2012 massacre.

At a press conference, Herndon Police Chief Maggie DeBoard said Truelove does not believe the Sandy Hook shootings actually occurred.

“It’s hard to explain the ‘why’ because from our perspective it doesn’t appear rational,” DeBoard said.

After the Mystic sign was stolen, a man called the McDonnell family to taunt them, claiming responsibility for the theft and claiming the shootings were a hoax.

Well-wishers in Connecticut responded to the theft by putting up dozens of handmade signs, many with depictions of hearts and peace signs.

DeBoard said Truelove has a history of criminal behavior involving kids and that he is banned from school property in Fairfax County. Court records show a variety of charges against him in recent years, including trespassing, disorderly conduct and destruction of property.

A lawyer who is representing him in an ongoing, unrelated case, Suzanne Hruby, said Friday night that she is unfamiliar with the new charges and declined to comment.

Truelove was being held in the Fairfax County jail. DeBoard said grand larceny charges are pending against him in Connecticut and New Jersey.

Herndon Police said they acted on a tip they received from police in Stonington, Connecticut earlier in the week.

___

Associated Press writer Ben Nuckols contributed to this report from Washington.

'Arsenio Hall Show' Canceled After 1 Season

LOS ANGELES (AP) — “The Arsenio Hall Show” has been canceled because of low ratings, ending Hall’s late-night comeback bid after a single season.

Hall’s bid to recreate the success he enjoyed 20 years ago failed to find a big enough audience in the ever-crowded TV market. CBS Television Production had previously announced Hall’s syndicated show would be back for a second season, but faced the prospect of stations moving it to lesser time slots as ratings fell.

In a statement, Hall said he knew launching the show would be a challenge.

“I’m gratified for the year we’ve had and proud of the show we created,” the actor and comedian added.

The show is in reruns and won’t resume production, a show spokesman said. The last original episode aired May 21.

When Hall began his original series in 1989, he was seen as the cool alternative to Johnny Carson and “The Tonight Show” on NBC. Guests including sax playing-presidential candidate Bill Clinton helped push Hall into the spotlight.

By 1994, with increased competition from new “Tonight” host Jay Leno and CBS’ David Letterman, Hall’s ratings had slipped and the show ended.

When Hall returned last year, he was fighting for attention with even more programs, including ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel and the Comedy Central lineup.

The cancellation of Hall’s show returns the late-night talk show scene to almost uniformly white male hosts, with a few exceptions such as Tavis Smiley on PBS.