Florida Warden Fired Over Prisoner's 2012 Scalding Death

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A warden and two of his assistants were fired because the investigation of an inmate who died in a scalding shower was taking too long, prison officials said Thursday.

Florida Department of Corrections Secretary Mike Crews visited Dade Correctional Institution last week as part of an investigation into the death of Darren Rainey, a mentally ill prisoner who was punished in 2012 with a shower so hot that his skin separated from his body. “I have not been satisfied with the information flow from Dade C.I., and we need leaders there who will act with urgency to protect the safety of the inmates and staff, and hold individuals accountable when needed,” Crews said in a news release.

The secretary said he was further upset after learning that he wasn’t told that a Dade prisoner had died shortly before his visit. The death was apparently from natural causes.

Crews said he was working with the Miami-Dade Police Department to complete a full investigation of Rainey’s death.

“This investigation has taken too long, and it is time to get the facts so we can take any additional action that may be necessary,” Crews said.

The American Civil Liberties Union, Amnesty International and other human rights groups recently called for a federal investigation.

The former warden, Jerry Cummings, had been on administrative leave since Crews visited the facility last week. His termination was announced Thursday, along with his replacement, Les Odom.

Cummings’ phone number was not listed. His assistant warden and another prison leader were also replaced.

These Folks Have Mastered The Art Of The Photo Booth

Photo booths at weddings are practically a given these days, but that doesn’t make them any less awesome. With wedding guests now getting so many opportunities to practice their photo booth skills, how can you set yourself apart from the pack?

Watch and learn from 10 masters of the craft below:

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Zach Braff Says His Parents Divorce Caused 'Life-Long Pain'

Zach Braff is an accomplished actor, writer and director, but despite his professional success, when asked about a pivotal moment that changed his life forever his answer was far from Hollywood.

In fact, the A-lister says it was his parents’ divorce.

During a Reddit: Ask Me Anything session on Thursday, a fan asked the following question:

“In Garden State, your character says: ‘It’s really amazing how much of my life has been determined by a quarter-inch piece of plastic.’ What has been the quarter-inch piece of plastic in your life?”

(For reference, the “quarter-inch piece of plastic” refers to a broken dishwasher latch in the film. Braff’s character confesses that he pushed his mother one time when he was a kid, and because of the broken latch, she tripped over the open dishwasher door and was paralyzed. The act haunted him and changed his life forever.)

Responding about a pivotal moment in his own life, Braff said, “My parents divorce at a young age. I was shocked by it and it truly caused life-long pain that I’ll always deal with.”

Braff’s parents divorced around the time he was in junior high school. In March 2014, he wrote a powerful essay for the New York Times in which he described that era of his life and how it pushed him into acting.

“I was a melancholic child. Worried, anxious. I never felt as if I belonged anywhere, as if I were a foreign exchange student living among the other kids, who seemed predestined to love sports. Add to that alienation the fact that my parents were going through a divorce, and I was truly treading water. But in that junior high school auditorium, I felt like I’d discovered a secret I didn’t even know was being whispered. There was a place where I might belong: It was the Theater, and I was sold.”

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Former Republican Rep Says She Never Endorsed Sam Brownback's Dem Opponent

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A former Republican congresswoman from Kansas says she never endorsed Democratic challenger Paul Davis in the gubernatorial race against incumbent Sam Brownback, despite being included on a list of GOP backers.

The Kansas City Star reports (http://bit.ly/1qLEquQ ) that Jan Meyers said she would never publicly endorse a Democratic challenger over a sitting Republican governor.

Davis announced earlier this week that more than 100 former and current GOP officials had endorsed him through a new group called Republicans for Kansas Values. Meyers’ name was one of the most prominent on the list.

Meyers said she joined the group because she’s a GOP moderate, but she said she didn’t endorse Davis. She said there must have been some miscommunication.

Meyers represented the Kansas City-area 3rd District from 1985 to 1997.

___

Information from: The Kansas City Star, http://www.kcstar.com

Malaysia Plane Crash Victims Included WHO Staffers

Several of the passengers aboard the Malaysian Airlines flight that crashed in eastern Ukraine on Thursday were World Health Organization staffers heading to a conference on AIDS research in Australia, the Guardian reported.

Glenn Thomas, a spokesperson for WHO’s Global TB Program, was among the victims, according to a fellow staffer. Global TB Program Coordinator Haileyesus Getahun shared the news via Twitter.

WHO’s Dr. Rachel Baggaley told Vox, “I’m just devastated. He’s a very close colleague whom I work with on a daily basis. He just had his birthday, he was going to plan all sorts of celebrations.”

The International AIDS Conference is taking place in Melbourne this weekend. The International AIDS Society, which organized the event, released a statement following the tragic news:

The International AIDS Society (IAS) today expresses its sincere sadness at receiving news that a number of colleagues and friends en route to attend the 20th International AIDS Conference taking place in Melbourne, Australia, were on board the Malaysian Airlines MH17 flight that has crashed over Ukraine earlier today.

At this incredibly sad and sensitive time the IAS stands with our international family and sends condolences to the loved ones of those who have been lost to this tragedy.

Former President Bill Clinton is listed as one of the featured speakers for the conference.

Devastating Photos Emerge Of Malaysia Plane Crash Passengers' Families

Hit with the news that a Malaysia Airlines plane traveling from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur went down in Ukraine, relatives of the passengers gathered at the airports in Kuala Lumpur and Schiphol Airport near Amsterdam seeking answers.

With no expected survivors from the crash, the images show the relatives’ heartbreak.

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Relatives of people onboard Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 from Amsterdam react outside the family holding area at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang on July 18, 2014. (MANAN VATSYAYANA/AFP/Getty Images)

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Akmar Binti Mohd Noor, 67, whose sister was onboard Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 from Amsterdam cries outside the family holding area at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang on July 18, 2014. (MANAN VATSYAYANA/AFP/Getty Images)

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A woman reacts to news regarding a Malaysia Airlines plane that crashed in eastern Ukraine at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang, Malaysia, Friday, July 18, 2014. (AP Photo/Joshua Paul)

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A woman reacts to news regarding a Malaysia Airlines plane that crashed in eastern Ukraine at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang, Malaysia, Friday, July 18, 2014. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)

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A family member cries as she receives the news of the ill fated flight MH17 on the phone on July 18, 2014 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (Photo by Rahman Roslan/Getty Images)

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A relative of passengers on flight MH17 cries as he waits in a bus to receive more information, at Schiphol airport in Amsterdam, Thursday, July 17, 2014. (AP Photo/Phil Nijhuis)

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A couple walks to the location where more information will be given regarding the Malaysia Airlines plane traveling from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur that crashed near the town of Shaktarsk, in rebel-held east Ukraine, at Schiphol Airport near Amsterdam, the Netherlands on July 17, 2014. (JEROEN JUMELET/AFP/Getty Images)

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A family member cries as she receives the news of the ill fated flight MH17 on the phone on July 18, 2014 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (Photo by Rahman Roslan/Getty Images)

298 people were on board, and all are believed to be dead.

What's Up With Young People and Virginity? Not What You Think

Here’s a shocker: Virginity is cooler than it used to be among teens and young adults. At least that’s what entertainment giant MTV, creator of Teen Mom and 16 and Pregnant, is hoping as it aired this week the first of a series called Virgin Territory featuring 15 young women and men in their late teens and early 20s who haven’t had sex.

Some of those 15 want to lose their virginity soon. Others are waiting until they’re married or feel they’re emotionally and psychologically ready. Dominique, a lively young woman dressed in a skin-tight white dress and on her way to a club, wants a sign of commitment. In the first episode, she says, “Literally, all of my friends are not virgins.” But for her, “no ringo, no dingo.”

Those of us who came of age in the late 1960s and 70s talked a lot about having sex, just as these women do. HIV and AIDS were not something we worried about. We could go to Planned Parenthood and get the pill. Sex, freely expressed and endorsed by popular culture, symbolized power, especially for women. “Girl,” Neil Diamond sang, “you’re a woman now.”

When younger sisters and brothers came along, they upped the percentages of those having sex and talking about the sex they had. If they were lucky or, depending on one’s point of view,unlucky enough to be a virgin, they didn’t tell anyone except maybe their best friend. That reticence about revealing one’s virginity is disappearing.

Don’t get me wrong, a lot of high school students and young adults are having sex. They first have sex at 17, on average, according to federal government statistics. By age 22, 5 of 6 women and 4 of 5 men have had sex. Yet these young millennials also accept or even endorse virginity more than most people would think.

A survey commissioned by The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, in collaboration with MTV, found that 69 percent of young adults (ages 18-24) say it is acceptable for someone their age to be a virgin. Nearly half (46 percent) say they “feel respect” for those their age who have not had sex and 34 percent say when they hear that someone they know is a virgin, they “don’t give it a second thought.”

What’s more surprising in the survey of 18- to 24-year-old adults conducted by GfK Custom Research, is that virgins are not ashamed to admit they’re virgins. A majority say they haven’t ever lied about their status and that their friends know they haven’t had sex. It seems unlikely that the proportion of virgins is going to increase, but apparently it’s no longer something young people feel they have to hide. In fact, those polled said they wished popular media would feature more virgins.

Of course, many older adults won’t believe that. When it comes to what older generations think of as outlandish behaviors on part of the young, they tend to think the worst. The hit song “What’s the Matter With Kids Today?” from the musical Bye Bye Birdie is as current a complaint now as it was when the musical opened on Broadway in 1960.

If you don’t believe me, scan the negative or disbelieving comments that will follow this column – or any other column that says positive things about the younger generation. (Among the kinder comments on a FoxNews.com review of Virgin Territory, for example, was this one: “How do we know they are really virgins? This is not cool.”)

One could argue easily that American youth today are not only smarter about sex (in particular, contraception) than earlier generations, but also bolder, kinder, more altruistic and less likely to use illegal substances. Is that the kind of material that will make TV ratings soar? Maybe not. But kudos to MTV for daring to do what few commercial studios do, and that is fill out the portrait of what’s up with kids today.

Questions Surround NBC's Removal Of Ayman Mohyeldin From Gaza

NEW YORK — When Israel invaded Gaza in early 2009, Ayman Mohyeldin was one of the only journalists present to bear witness. He covered Israeli air strikes on Gaza in late 2012, and on Wednesday he movingly reported on an attack that killed four Palestinian children playing on a beach.

But Mohyeldin, one of the most experienced reporters when it comes to Gaza, was not there Thursday as Israel launched a ground invasion aimed at rooting out Hamas. He didn’t report on the conflict from another city in the region, such as Jerusalem or Cairo. And Moyheldin didn’t surface on social media, where he’s built a large following and regularly provides on-the-ground tweets, photos and videos.

NBC News’ decision to pull Mohyeldin from Gaza has angered and baffled fellow journalists, inside and outside the network, as well as fans of his reporting worldwide. The network declined to comment on why he is no longer reporting from Gaza.

The Intercept’s Glenn Greenwald reported Thursday that NBC executives said privately that the move was motivated by “security concerns” as Israel prepared a ground invasion. A source, who is not authorized to speak publicly about the situation, confirmed to The Huffington Post that executives stressed security as the reason behind the decision. But just as Moyheldin was pulled out, NBC sent Richard Engel, the network’s chief foreign correspondent, into Gaza.

Foreign correspondents often get reassigned as news warrants, but there’s arguably no better place to currently position Mohyeldin, a fluent Arabic speaker with extensive contacts on the ground. Mohyeldin won praise this week for his on-air reporting from Gaza, and is respected by his colleagues.

Andrea Mitchell, NBC’s chief foreign affairs correspondent and the host of a noon MSNBC show, told HuffPost that Mohyeldin “did great work on my program covering Gaza and is a valued colleague.”

Moyheldin’s reporting has earned him respect far from 30 Rock, with his social media coverage of the tragic beach attack going viral. Mohyeldin tweeted Wednesday about having just played soccer with the children killed on the beach near several hotels where foreign journalists are staying. He covered their parents’ heartbreaking reaction on both Facebook and Instragram. Mohyeldin also worked on a TV package that was broadcast later on “NBC Nightly News.”

Yet it was Engel who reported on the Gaza attack from his location in Tel Aviv, Israel. It’s not unusual for several journalists’ work to be fed into one report that a top correspondent, like Engel, presents on air. And Engel is a highly respected foreign correspondent who has reported for over a decade from the Middle East.

However, some were surprised that while Moyheldin’s reporting was used on air, he didn’t appear in the broadcast to offer his first-person perspective. A few hours later, TVNewser reported that some NBC News colleagues were “angered” by the decision to not include Moyheldin.

There’s been speculation that Mohyeldin could have rankled NBC News executives with a since-removed tweet and Facebook post describing the State Department as having said it considered Hamas ultimately responsible for the Israeli strike on the beach because it did not agree to a ceasefire.

But the source with knowledge of the network’s decision told HuffPost that the deleted tweet and Facebook post were not given internally as reasons behind Mohyeldin’s removal.

Some conservative outlets have suggested in the past that Mohyeldin favored Palestine’s side in the conflict. But there’s no evidence at this time that such a criticism, or any outside pressure, was behind NBC’s decision.

Mohyeldin, an Egyptian-American journalist, started at NBC News in Washington in 2001 and later worked for Fox News and CNN. He joined Al Jazeera English and became a TV news star covering the 2011 Arab Spring upheaval. That April, he was named one of Time’s 100 most influential people, and a few months later he was poached by NBC News.

The network’s president at the time described Mohyeldin as “an extremely passionate and hardworking journalist” with extensive experience “covering major conflicts” who would be an “excellent addition to our team of correspondents.”

Mohyeldin recently reported amid crossfire in East Jerusalem, and has covered other airstrikes in Gaza. But as NBC News correspondents covered a major conflict Thursday, stationed in Gaza and Israel, Moyheldin was nowhere to be found.

What's hiding behind these giant holes on the Moon?

What's hiding behind these giant holes on the Moon?

You’ve probably seen the mysterious giant hole that was discovered in Siberia, which appears to lead into a large cave. It’s not the only hole like that on Earth. Or the Moon: NASA found these formations there too, which are perfect for future human outposts. Or current alien/Nazi UFO bases.

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These lunar shoes make you feel like you're walking on the moon

These lunar shoes make you feel like you're walking on the moon

To celebrate the 45th anniversary of Neil Armstrong walking on the moon, Nike has made a pair of shoes that’ll make you feel like every step you take is on the moon. Because of the all over lunar print, the silhouette of the shoe completely disappears and makes it look like the shoe is made from moon rock.

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