Ryan Reynolds Has A Very Normal Reaction To Fan's Butt Tattoo

If Ryan Reynolds didn’t know who his most devoted fan was before, he sure does now.

On Thursday, the actor happened upon a tweet sent by a die-hard “Deadpool” fan back in March. But it wasn’t any old fanboy tweet.

The tweet included a picture of the name “RYAN REYNOLDS” tattooed on the fan’s bare butt, printed in black and red with Comic Sans font.

That butt belongs to 18-year-old Dustin, who spoke with The Huffington Post on the condition that his last name, unlike his rear end, be censored.

“As some who’s interested in pursuing acting as a career, Ryan Reynolds happens to be quite the inspiration of mine,” Dustin told HuffPost. “I think he’s an incredibly versatile and well-rounded actor and I hope I can get to that point one day as well. Not to mention, he’s just a great dude; he’s selfless, passionate, and hilarious.”

When Reynolds’ saw Dustin’s booty-ful tribute on Thursday, he reacted the way any mature person would ― with horror.

This butt tattoo story began in early March when Dustin first proposed his idea.

Replying to one of Reynolds’ tweets, Dustin wrote, “if you like this i’ll tattoo your name on my butt.”

True to his Wade Wilson character, Reynolds read the tweet and tapped the “like” button.

“I honestly wasn’t too surprised that he liked my original tweet because I’ve noticed that he likes fan’s tweets sometimes,” Dustin told HuffPost.

With the actor’s blessing, Dustin had to reckon with the idea of a brand new tattoo and the people of Twitter didn’t fail him.

“After he liked my tweet people were tweeting me, not believing that I would actually do it,” Dustin said. “So naturally, I had to.”

Dustin even reached out to his followers to choose what type of font should forever mark his body. They chose Comic Sans because “it’s the only way you can truly capture [Ryan Reynolds’] essence.” 

Then Dustin took his request to tattoo artist Chris Bath at Cherry Hill Tattoo in Naples, Florida, and followed through with his pledge.

Dustin’s Twitter picture, appropriately captioned “your wish is my command,” marks the end of this tattoo tale.

And if you’re curious if Dustin regrets his decision to permanently mark his derrière with Ryan Reynolds’ name, rest assured he’s convinced he made the right decision.

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Video Captures Dramatic San Francisco Cliff Rescue

San Francisco rescue workers made a dramatic save from the air of a man clinging to a steep cliff over the sea on Friday.

The man, who officials said was homeless, hiked to a frightening height on a cliff near China Beach in the northern end of the city and apparently became paralyzed with fear. Surfers saw the hiker clinging to the sheer rock face and called 911, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

Fire rescue crews were unable to safely reach him from the ground, so a helicopter team from the California Highway Patrol dropped a rescuer, who strapped him into a harness and they were both airlifted to safety.

The chopper set down on a helipad and the hiker — in sweatpants, a T-shirt, and sneakers — stepped off into a parking lot. He can be seen on the ABC-7 News video gesticulating, perhaps explaining his hiking adventure to the firefighters around him. He suffered only minor bruises and refused medical attention, according to a tweet from the Fire Department. He simply walked away after his hair-raising ordeal. Fire officials didn’t reveal his identity, nor any details about how he found himself clinging to a cliff.

Hikers often get stranded on the steep hills edging the sea in San Francisco and Marin Country. They either become frozen with fear suddenly in the heights, or are forced to scramble up sheer rocks as the Pacific tide comes in, stranding them where it’s impossible to climb out.

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There’s A Jail Snitch Program In Orange County, And Here Are The Inside Memos That Detail It

LOS ANGELES ― The debate about whether the Orange County Sheriff’s Department is operating a jailhouse informant program is over.

According to Superior Court Judge Thomas Goethals, it’s over. According to the 4th District Court of Appeal, which affirmed Goethals’ findings last year, it’s over. Despite years of denials, the Orange County district attorney’s office now says it’s over.

But there’s one agency that’s still in denial: the sheriff’s department. Despite a mountain of evidence to the contrary ― a mountain that got much bigger in court Friday ― it’s not over yet. 

Goethals unsealed a bombshell brief from Assistant Public Defender Scott Sanders that summarizes his review of more than 5,600 internal sheriff’s department documents about the jail informant program. It’s the clearest evidence yet that this Southern California sheriff’s department managed and promoted a robust informant program within county jails and has produced well over a thousand informants over the course of decades.

Goethals blasted Sheriff Sandra Hutchens from the bench for continuing to deny the existence of the jail informant program. “We know what happened. The debate over what has been going on in the jails is over.” 

“The sheriff can say what she wants,” Goethals added. “She can ignore the facts, if she thinks that’s politically beneficial.”

Countless memos on the “cultivation” and “management” of informants.

“The deputies in the jail are not conducting investigations … we don’t have our folks working informants,” Sheriff Hutchens has said in denying the existence of the program.

But, according to an email Sanders obtained, which he says was once posted on the wall of the “Special Handling” department, which had overseen inmates and jail informants, the third item on the list of duties is “Cultivate/manage Confidential Informants.” 

The email was sent to Lt. Lane Lagaret, now the department’s public information officer and formerly a supervisor of sheriff’s deputies in the Special Handling unit. 

Lagaret told The Huffington Post he “won’t be making a statement on the brief” Sanders filed.

Multiple other internal sheriff’s department memos in the cache Sanders reviewed also emphasize the importance of cultivating, encouraging and using informants.

Memo after memo references “CI’s,” or confidential informants. They describe the development of informants, how deputies can work them for information, what can motivate an inmate to turn snitch.

They also discuss the “extreme” reliance on informant information from deputies, classes for deputies to brush up on informant skills and how the Special Handling team at one jail, Theo Lacy, “possesses an excellent expertise in the cultivation and management of informants” ― expertise “recognized by the Orange County District Attorney’s Office as well as numerous law enforcement agencies throughout Southern California.”

Nearly a decade ago, OCSD admitted it had cultivated “hundreds of confidential informants.”

In a 2008 memo from deputies to members of the department’s command staff, they reminded top brass of the enormous value of the Special Handling unit. At the time, the department was apparently discussing replacing deputies with correctional officers in the jails.

“The concept of replacing Deputies with Correctional Officers has serious negative ramifications throughout the entire Corrections system, especially Classification / Special Handling. Every facet of our job, as described above, would be adversely affected,” the memo begins. “It also includes thousands and thousands of interviews with inmates, thousands of hour’s worth of training, attendance at hundreds of intelligence gathering meetings, and cultivation of hundreds of confidential informants.”

A 2007 memo detailing deputy efforts to gather “intel” regarding a possible attack on a deputy in the jail says that there were “in excess of 40 [informants] throughout the facility.” 

The identification of the informant population at this point led Sanders to conclude that it’s likely “well over a thousand jail informants ― not hundreds ― have worked under the supervision of jail staff” over the decades.

Special Handling deputies supervise inmates and informants.

In a 2015 ruling, Goethals called out two Special Handling deputies ― Seth Tunstall and Ben Garcia ― for having “either intentionally lied or willfully withheld information” during their testimony in the case of Scott Dekraai, a man who pleaded guilty to killing his ex-wife and seven other people at a Seal Beach hair salon in 2011. The case, which led to the investigation of the jailhouse informant program, is now one of hundreds in the county tainted by the scandal. 

Tunstall’s and Garcia’s testimony, and that of Deputy William Grover, denied that Special Handling deputies even worked with inmates or informants. But a letter about one informant tank stresses that the unit’s deputies are the primary handlers. The letter also emphasizes the importance of running an informant tank like any other jailhouse tank for it to be effective:

An undated OCSD slideshow that Sanders reviewed clearly outlines the role of Special Handling: The deputies are required to take responsibility for maintaining all jailhouse informants. “Special Handling will maintain all Confidential Informants,” a slide titled “Confidential Informants” states.

The slideshow also emphasizes that Special Handling “prepares and maintains files” on each inmate it manages, including “confidential informants.”

But Special Handling deputies aren’t the only ones cultivating and developing informants in the jail. An internal letter from Special Handling praises the work of deputies in another “module” in cultivating informants:

Other internal documents reviewed by Sanders reveal that one of the main duties of deputies who work with inmates and informants in the jails is to recruit more informants. An internal memo titled “Protective Custody Debrief” includes a script of questions for deputies to use to determine if an inmate will become an informant. Notably, one question is explicitly seeking help with securing convictions, not simply providing intelligence about goings-on within the jail to help deputies with security: 

The term “informants” became “sources of information” in order to mislead, Sanders says.

The new document trove, along with OCSD policy manuals Sanders had obtained, reveal that the sheriff’s department changed official vernacular to try to “create cover for false testimony [by their deputies] about the use of informants,” Sanders argues.

Sanders says deputies were ordered to stop calling informants “informants” and instead call them “sources of information.” Sanders argues the agency later changed its policy manuals to suggest that “informants” and “sources of information” were two different categories of inmates.

The switch, Sanders says, allowed deputies to escape perjury by denying a jailhouse informant program existed during the Dekraai hearings because technically informants were no longer called “informants.”

“Gents, I need to ask a favor,” Deputy Grover begins his email. “As some of you may know OC has been in the media recently for its Inmate Informants. OCJ no longer labels these inmates “Informants” we now call them ‘Sources of Information.’”

The D.A. delayed the release of more deputy logs in order to ensure a death sentence, Sanders contends.

In June, after years of denials, the Orange County district attorney’s office acknowledged that an informant program does indeed exist and that sheriff’s deputies actively “recruited and utilized” informants and rewarded them for information.

The admission followed the discovery of a 1,000-page Special Handling log that shed new light on the scope of the informant program inside county jails.  

But a series of emails discovered in the new document cache indicates that the D.A.’s office took possession of still more deputies’ logs from another jail, the Theo Lacy Facility, in June 2016, but decided to delay their release to the court until December 2016. Theo Lacy, the county’s largest jail, is where Sanders’ client Dekraai continues to be housed.

Sanders argues that a deeply troubling but “likely” explanation for the delay was related to the timing of the sentencing in a double-murder case ― that of Daniel Wozniak, whom Sanders also represents. According to Sanders, the existence of these logs would have impeached testimony in hearings held earlier in the Wozniak case, which was also linked to a jail informant.

By withholding the log until after Wozniak’s case ended in September 2016, it helped to “ensure that a death sentence … would be imposed” without the issue emerging or the case being delayed, Sanders says. Assistant District Attorney Dan Wagner, who was the lead prosecutor in the Dekraai hearings and whose emails are referenced in the brief, is the head of the D.A.’s office homicide unit and was the prosecutor during a portion of the Wozniak case.

The emails refer to a set of “additional logs” as a “TL Log” (TL likely stands for Theo Lacy). Wagner says in an August 2016 email exchange that he’s going to compile the logs into a “single document” and submit them to the court for an “upcoming” review in the Dekraai case. If Wagner had disclosed the “additional logs” as he indicated in his emails, Sanders says, he would have had the logs and the impeachment evidence well before Wozniak was sentenced to death. Wozniak, a former actor, is in San Quentin State Prison.

With new hearings coming, the death penalty may be removed from the Scott Dekraai mass murder case.

Despite the misconduct that has tainted the Dekraai case, and allegations of more, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra announced last month that his office would continue to pursue the death penalty against Dekraai. The state attorney general’s office inherited the prosecution when the entire Orange County district attorney’s office was ejected from the case in 2015 over misconduct stemming from its failure to turn over evidence on the jail informant system.

But in court Friday, Judge Goethals said he was considering employing what he called the “nuclear option”: the removal of the death penalty from Dekraai’s sentencing hearings. Goethals said that this option was once “completely unthinkable,” but because of the “extensive” allegations of misconduct, it has entered into the realm of possibility.

If Goethals were to dismiss the death penalty, he would instead sentence Dekraai to life in prison without the possibility of parole, he said in court. 

Upcoming evidentiary hearings, he hopes, will better inform his decision on the matter. Goethals said he wants to get to the bottom of what appear to be “ongoing significant failures of compliance” with “legitimate orders made by this court over the last four years.”

The new evidentiary hearings are set to begin in May.

The Justice Department announced in December that it was investigating allegations that the informant program used by the sheriff’s and district attorney’s offices had violated defendants’ rights. 

Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas has maintained that no one in his office intentionally behaved inappropriately in relation to the jailhouse informant program. The sheriff’s department echoes those arguments and adds that it has taken steps to create more robust ways of documenting and managing inmates.

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Federal 'Witch Hunt' Against Trump Critic On Twitter Sparks Investigation

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The Office of the Inspector General of the Department of Homeland Security has launched an internal investigation into federal efforts to “unmask” the owner of a Twitter account critical of immigration policies.

Inspector General John Roth informed Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) in a letter Friday that his office is conducting a probe to determine whether behavior by federal officials concerning the Twitter account was “improper in any way” or if there was an “abuse of authority.” 

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which is overseen by the Department of Homeland Security, last month served Twitter with a summons demanding the identity of the operator of the account for “Alt Immigration” – @ALT_uscis (U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is part of CPB). The account is one of dozens that sprang up after Donald Trump’s inauguration purporting to be the rebellious voice of truth from within various federal agencies or from agency supporters.

Twitter in turn sued CBP and DHS to block the action, and the demand was dropped. 

Wyden, who called the action against Twitter a “witch hunt,” complained in a letter to the CBP commissioner that he was concerned the summons represented a “disturbing threat to free speech and whistleblower protections” — and he called for an investigation.

Roth, who received a copy of Wyden’s letter, wrote to the senator that DHS had determined, at CBP’s request, that no classified information was released via the @ALT_uscis Twitter account. Roth said his own office was unaware of the effort to unmask the identity of the Twitter account holder until officials read about it in the media.

“We strive to ensure that our work does not have a chilling effect on individuals’ free speech rights,” wrote Roth, who emphasized that his office “is not … and will not investigate, any alleged misconduct on the part of the @ALT_uscis account owner relating to his or her use of the Twitter account.”

His office is, however, investigating whether CBP’s conduct concerning the Twitter account was “improper in any way, including whether CBP abused its authority in issuing the …. summons to Twitter.” Roth added that his office is “also reviewing potential broader misuse of summons authority.”

Wyden could not immediately be reached for comment.

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Surgeon General Dismissed By Trump Administration

The White House on Friday dismissed U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, a holdover from the Obama administration. 

“Today, Dr. Murthy, the leader of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, was asked to resign from his duties as Surgeon General after assisting in a smooth transition into the new Trump Administration,” the Department of Health and Human Services said in a statement, according to USA Today.

Murthy announced his farewell on Twitter: 

“Dr. Murthy has been relieved of his duties as Surgeon General and will continue to serve as a member of the Commissioned Corps,” the statement read.

Rear Admiral Sylvia Trent-Adams, who previously served as deputy surgeon general, has become acting surgeon general. She becomes one of the first nurses to serve in this position, according to The New York Times.

Trent-Adams’ photo has already appeared on the official surgeon general website, Twitter and Facebook

Murthy, who was confirmed on Dec. 14, 2014, was a vice admiral in the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps. He was the 19th surgeon general of the United States. 

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Pinterest fixes its broken visual search tool for Chrome

Pinterest thought it launched something cool when it added visual search to its Chrome browser in March. It was supposed to be able to pinpoint specific items in an image, say a pair of sunglasses somebody’s wearing in a photo, and find pins with sim…

Verizon Samsung Galaxy S8 Won’t Get The Full Bixby Experience

Leading up to the release of the Samsung Galaxy S8, Samsung announced that the handset will not be launching with Bixby Voice. While they did not dive into details, some reports suggested that the feature was not working as well as Samsung had hoped which is why they’ll be launching it at a later date instead.

Unfortunately for those who are buying their Galaxy S8 handsets through Verizon, you guys will actually end up with a slightly more crippled version of Bixby. Verizon has confirmed to CNET that one of Bixby’s features, shopping on Amazon via Bixby Vision, will not be available at launch. For those unfamiliar, one of Bixby Vision’s features includes the ability to recognize bar codes and products which you can then purchase on Amazon.

However it seems that Verizon has decided to turn off the feature. In a statement by a Verizon spokesperson, “Bixby Vision works on all versions of the Galaxy S8, but the Amazon shopping function isn’t operational yet. We are working with Amazon to provide that experience, but in the meantime you can use the existing Amazon app on your Samsung Galaxy S8 for the same photo and shopping experience.”

We’re honestly not sure what’s the hold up since it clearly does not appear to be a technical problem, but either way Verizon users will just have to wait for it. In the meantime we have also learnt that Bixby Voice could be arriving in the Spring.

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Galaxy S8’s Iris Scanner To Be Used For Financial Transactions

One of the features of the Samsung Galaxy S8 that was brought over from the Galaxy Note 7 is the iris scanner, which apparently is said to be more secure than other biometric forms of security such as fingerprints. This is also why it doesn’t surprise us that the feature could be used to facilitate financial transactions in the future.

In a report from The Korea Herald, it seems that Samsung is looking into using the iris scanner on the Galaxy S8 to help make financial transactions, presumably through payment systems such as Samsung Pay. The feature is expected to be enabled in South Korea and in parts of North America, although there is no mention of when that will be happening.

As the report points out, iris scanning was part of the Note 7 and financial institutions in Korea actually allowed users to log into their accounts using the feature, but this will be the first time that transactions can be made and verified using the iris scanning technology on the phone. Assuming that this is successful, we wouldn’t be surprised if in the future more phones were to include the feature.

As it stands Apple is also rumored to be looking into alternate means of security beyond the fingerprint, such as a laser scanner that can be used to scan the faces of the user to authenticate them.

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Dell Unveils New HDR10 Monitor For Creative Professionals

If you use your computer for work and your work involves being creative, such as editing photos, videos, graphic design, and so on, then you might be interested to learn that Dell has recently announced a new monitor which they claim is aimed at users who are considered to be creative professionals.

This comes in the form of the Dell UltraSharp 27 4K HDR Monitor (UP2718Q) which as the name suggests, is a 27-inch monitor with a 4K resolution. It is also Dell’s first HDR10 display with UHD Alliance Premium Certification, which should result in a display that offers up better contrast, brightness, and overall vibrancy.

According to Dell, “With a peak brightness of 1,000 nits, the UP2718Q produces the deepest blacks and brightest whites and the REC2020 color coverage makes it an ideal choice for video editors working on color-critical post production.” However it will also play nicely with gamers who use consoles like the Xbox One S and PS4, both of which supports the new standard.

Unfortunately the new display does not come cheap as it is priced at a whopping $2,000. If you want something that’s a little more friendly on your bank balance, then there is Dell’s “regular” 27-inch 4K display which retails for $550.

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Neil deGrasse Tyson Cites Celebrity Flat-Earthers To Make A Point About Politics

Famed astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson knows the Earth is, in fact, round. Tyson also knows some people who share his level of celebrity don’t agree with him on that.

After vainly explaining to these celebs time and time again that the Earth is round, Tyson is trying a different approach. This time, he’s showing how science deniers can be detrimental in government.

In a series of tweets on Friday, Tyson highlighted a larger problem that high-profile flat-Earthers (and other types of science deniers) create: They are bad influences on their fans and supporters. 

Tyson began by explaining that flat-Earthers who live in the U.S. are allowed to say whatever they want, truth or not. Constitutional rights don’t make beliefs true, however. 

Tyson then turned his attention to the concept of what it means to be a pop star and, consequently, a role model.

“If kids who are fans of pop-stars think Earth is flat because they do, then it exposes a flaw in the concept of Role Models,” the astrophysicist tweeted.

Unlike his past Earth-is-round Twitter rants, Tyson’s recent tweets didn’t appear to be in response to a freshly outed denialist celebrity. However, his comments do reflect another type of denialism that exists in a very influential place in America: the White House.

Scott Pruitt, chief of the Environmental Protection Agency, doesn’t believe humans are the primary cause of climate change ― a view that contradicts an estimated 97 percent of climate scientists. President Donald Trump has called climate change a hoax and has proposed deep cuts to NASA’s budget for climate-change research in favor of space exploration.

Perhaps, in honor of upcoming Earth Day and the coinciding March for Science protests, Tyson was pointing to flat-Earthers to make a case against policymakers who are also science deniers, and argue for science to have a larger role in government.

In fact, Tyson’s flat-Earther tweets were posted after he published an essay titled, “Science in America,” arguing for just that.

“Scientific truths emerge by consensus — not of opinion, but of observations and measurements — rendering the research that falls outside of consensus the shakiest possible grounds on which to base policy,” Tyson wrote in his essay.

“Politics is not a foundation on which you base your science,” he added. “Science is a foundation on which you base your politics, lest you undermine a functioning, informed democracy.”

A Tyson tweet drove the point home: 

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