BRITISH COURT CONVICTS PAKISTANI PARENTS IN ‘HONOR KILLING’ OF THEIR DAUGHTER

The parents of a 17-year-old girl will spend at least 25 years in a British prison for the death of their daughter after the couple’s conviction Friday for killing her over her desire to live a Westernized lifestyle and become an attorney, a court spokeswoman said Friday.

Chester Crown Court Judge Roderick Evans sentenced Iftikhar and Farzana Ahmed to life in prison. He said the couple, who were originally from Pakistan, must be imprisoned for at least 25 years before being eligible for parole.

The sentence came hours after the court found them guilty of murder in the death of Shafilea Ahmed. The girl’s dismembered body was found on a riverbank in February 2004, months after she disappeared in 2003.

The death was the final act in a long-running effort by the couple to get their daughter to conform to their beliefs, Detective Superintendent Geraint Jones told reporters.

“When this failed, they murdered her, a vile and disgraceful act,” he said.

In sentencing the couple, Evans said they had used “intimidation, bullying and … physical violence” in an effort to force her to adopt ways they viewed as more culturally appropriate.

“Your problem was that, in what you referred to as your ‘community,’ Shafilea’s conduct was bringing shame upon you and your concern about being shamed in your community was greater than your love of your child,” Evans told the couple, according to a transcript provided by court officials. “In order to rid yourselves of that problem, you killed Shafilea by suffocating her in the presence of your other four children.”

Melissa Powner, a friend of the slain girl, told reporters the conviction “brought our friend the justice she deserves.”

“If there is one thing that we pray will come from this, it is that her beautiful face and tragic story will inspire others to seek help and make them realize that this kind of vile treatment, no matter what culture or background they are from, is not acceptable and there is a way out,” Powner said in a statement to reporters.

The conviction and sentencing came just days after the girl’s mother changed her long-standing denials and testified Monday that she had seen her husband attack their daughter on the night Shafilea died. Iftikhar Ahmed has denied killing his daughter.

On Monday, Farzana Ahmed testified that she had tried to intervene to protect the girl, but her husband pushed her away and punched her, according to CNN affiliate ITV. She said she was “extremely scared” when she fled the room and stayed in a bedroom with other children until she heard a car leaving 20 minutes later.

When her husband returned alone, she said, she asked where her daughter was.

“If you care for your dear life and that of your children, don’t ever ask me this question again,” he told her, ITV reported.

Farzana Ahmed testified Monday that only one of their children, Mevish, was present when she saw her husband attacking Shafilea.

Another of the couple’s children, Alesha, testified last month that she saw her parents kill her sister.

Alesha said her parents were angry that Shafilea was wearing a short-sleeved, V-neck top, and no sweater, on the night she was killed.

“Just end it here,” Farzana said to Iftikhar, according to their daughter.

They pushed Shafilea onto a sofa and suffocated the struggling girl, Alesha testified.

Prosecutor Andrew Edis called it “an act of suffocation by both parents acting together.”

Police will review evidence that came out during trial and could decide to seek additional charges, Detective Chief Inspector Chris Ankers said.

“It’s clear that there are a lot of things in play here,” he said.

Prosecutor Helen Morris used the verdict as an opportunity to urge others who may be suffering or fearful of similar violence and abuse to come forward and “put your faith in the criminal justice system.”

So-called honor killings, in which members of a family kill relatives because of behavior that they say shames the family, claim about 5,000 lives a year around the world, according to the United Nations Population Fund.

In England, the Crown Prosecution Service handled 234 crimes involving alleged “honor violence” in 2011. About half resulted in convictions.

JERRY SANDUSKY FOUND GUILTY ON SEX ABUSE CHARGES

Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky will likely spend the rest of his life behind bars after a jury convicted him on 45 of 48 counts related to sexual abuse of boys, ending a painful chapter for victims and the entire university.

But the ordeal is not over, as Sandusky’s defense team announced plans to appeal despite the mountain of convictions against his client.

“If you win on one of the appeal issues, everything probably falls,” attorney Joe Amendola said. “So all we have to do is convince an appellate court that one of the issues that we will raise is worthy of a reversal. … It doesn’t matter, it could be 100 counts, and it would still all come back if an appeal is granted.”

His co-counsel, Karl Rominger, cited questionable court decisions during the trial as grounds for appeal.

“The judge was very fair to us on many levels, but there were a lot of unique legal issues where he made rulings that could be overturned, not because they were, per se, wrong, but because the law in the area was so unclear,” Rominger said.

He said “substantial constitutional questions” surrounded the prosecution’s ability to use an accuser’s claims based on hearsay alone. “All the convictions could come back on that ruling alone,” Rominger said.

The attorney said Saturday that Sandusky has been placed on what is commonly known as suicide watch for his own safety. He is being held in protective custody, in an area separate from other inmates, as he awaits sentencing.

JOHN EDWARDS ACQUITTED OF FRAUD: FALL FROM GRACE COMPLETE

We all knew that John Edwards was not going to go to jail for his involvement in campaign finance fraud, but for a man who nearly entered the white house as the President of the United States, he has truly fallen.

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CNN) — The acquittal and mistrial in John Edwards’ campaign finance fraud trial completes a fall from grace that transformed the man who might have been president into one of the most vilified and lampooned political figures in the country.

The boyish-looking, smooth-talking lawyer and self-described “son of a millworker” was once known for rallying supporters with a populist mantra describing two Americas — the haves and have-nots.

Now he is best known for fathering a child in an extramarital affair while his wife Elizabeth battled incurable cancer and, according to prosecutors, scheming to use wealthy donors’ money to help him cover up his affair and hide his mistress from the public.

It was all so different five years ago, when Edwards could be heard preaching his populist prose to Iowa voters who eagerly packed into lumber barns, Veterans of Foreign Wars halls and restaurants across the state.

He had every reason to believe he could be president. He felt the country would let Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, both senators at the time with presidential ambitions of their own, destroy each other with negative campaigning.

And if the country wasn’t ready to elect a black man or a woman president, he would rise as the more experienced and safe nominee.

To many voters, Edwards was a fitting candidate to live in the White House and serve as president.

Instead, Edwards appeared in front of TV cameras Thursday and took responsibility for “my sins” after his federal corruption case ended in an acquittal and mistrial.

Prosecutors had accused Edwards of using almost $1 million in illegal campaign contributions to keep his pregnant mistress under wraps. But after more than 50 hours of deliberations, jurors cleared him of one of six counts and deadlocked on the rest.

Edwards, who turns 59 on June 10, argued that while his actions were wrong, they were not illegal.

Emerging from the courthouse with his parents and daughter at his side, he said that while he never believed he committed a crime, “I did an awful, awful lot that was wrong, and there is no one else responsible for my sins.”

Now a widower, he is the sole caregiver to his two youngest children by his late wife — Emma Claire, 13, and Jack, 11. The couple also raised two older children. Their son, Wade, died at age 16 in a 1996 road accident.

Daughter Cate Edwards Upham attended every day of her father’s four-week trial, sitting behind Edwards and next to her grandparents.

Edwards also provides financial support for his daughter with Rielle Hunter, his mistress from the campaign trail during his unsuccessful bid for the Democratic presidential nomination in the 2008 election.

A product of a working class family from South Carolina, Edwards got a law degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1977. He became a successful trial lawyer representing claimants against large corporations and insurance companies.

He won his first, and only major, political race in 1998, unseating a Republican incumbent to become a U.S. senator from North Carolina.

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As a senator, Edwards reportedly made it onto a list of potential running mates for Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election. He didn’t make the ticket that time.

But before his first term ended, he was running for president and ended up as Sen. John Kerry’s running mate in 2004. Kerry lost to incumbent President George W. Bush.

Once running mates, Kerry and Edwards quickly severed their friendship after what was a disappointing election for Edwards. He quickly set his sights on Iowa, gearing up for another presidential bid in 2008.

Edwards met Hunter in early 2006 at a bar at the Regency Hotel in New York City. Hunter approached Edwards, not believing it was him. Later that evening, Edwards and Hunter met again, privately.

The man who constantly spoke about two Americas began living two lives.

The 40-something Hunter told Edwards that she could help his campaign. Edwards hired her to produce a few videos that would present the politician in a more relaxed manner. The videos were called “webisodes” and were posted to Edwards’ campaign site.

However, instead of showing Edwards in a new light, the flirtatious on-camera banter only highlighted just how close Edwards and Hunter had become.

Staffers began to suspect that Hunter had become more than a videographer to Edwards. That thought was fueled by Edwards’ directive that Hunter be allowed to travel with him whenever either of them insisted.

Josh Brumberger was Edwards’ chief of staff during the time Hunter traveled with the campaign. On several occasions, he talked to Edwards about Hunter’s involvement with the campaign.

One heated altercation ended with Edwards firing Brumberger, and by the fall of 2006, several longtime senior aides left the campaign amid Edwards’ refusal to end his relationship with Hunter, as detailed in “Game Change,” the book about the 2008 election.

On December 28, 2006, Edwards launched his presidential campaign in New Orleans against the backdrop of a city trying to rebuild and revive itself. He vowed to strengthen the middle class, progressively end poverty and tackle the longstanding Democratic health care platform.

But just as the campaign got off the ground, it hit turbulence. In March 2007, Elizabeth Edwards announced she had breast cancer for the second time, and it was incurable.

Still, they decided to continue with the campaign. And in the weeks after the devastating discovery, internal campaign polling showed Edwards surging ahead of rivals Clinton and Obama in Iowa.

Meanwhile, Hunter had become pregnant. And to complicate things, Edwards was swimming in a pool of bad press — he had received $400 haircuts and had made a six-figure salary working for a hedge fund that was linked to subprime lending and foreclosed homes.

Enter Rachel “Bunny” Mellon. The wealthy banking heiress and widow who was once a close friend of Jacqueline Kennedy had been a supporter of Edwards since the 2004 election.

After already contributing to Edwards the maximum allowed by law, Mellon provided additional money. According to court documents, between June 2007 and January 2008, Mellon allegedly wrote personal checks payable to a friend, hiding that she was giving money to Edwards.

The checks were made out to the wife of Edwards aide Andrew Young, in her maiden name, and were deposited into accounts controlled by her and Young. As Edwards and Young planned, Young allegedly used the money to provide Hunter with rent, furniture, care, living expenses, medical visits and prenatal care.

In total, the now 101-year-old Mellon gave Edwards seven checks ranging from $10,000 to $200,000.

On October 10, 2007, the National Enquirer ran its first story saying Edwards was having an affair.

The next day while campaigning in Summerton, South Carolina, Edwards denied the report, calling it “tabloid trash.”

With tabloid reporters and photographers chasing Hunter and publishing photos of her pregnant, a second wealthy donor came forward. Fred Baron, a wealthy Texas lawyer who is now deceased, was the national finance chair of the campaign.

Court documents show that from December 2007 to January 2008, Baron allegedly wrote nine checks ranging from $9,000 to $58,000. The money was used for Young to hide a pregnant Hunter from the media, as he falsely claimed paternity for her child. Baron’s money was used to charter a private jet for trips to Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Aspen, Colorado; San Diego and Santa Barbara, California.

Things weren’t faring better for Edwards on the campaign trail. He placed second in the Iowa caucuses, and following disappointing losses in New Hampshire and South Carolina, he ended his campaign for president on January 30, 2008.

Amid rumors in Democratic circles that he was secretly trying to broker a deal for vice president or attorney general in a Clinton or Obama administration, reporters remained persistent and continued to ask Edwards if he was having an affair.

In February 2008, Hunter’s and Edwards’ child was born.

Six months later, after repeated denials, Edwards admitted he had an affair with Hunter in an August 8 interview with ABC. When asked in the interview if he was the father of Hunter’s child, he responded, “That is absolutely not true.”

While his name was not on the birth certificate, Edwards would eventually claim paternity and apologize for denying the baby was his child.

In February 2009, the U.S. Department of Justice acknowledged they had opened an investigation on Edwards regarding campaign finances.

By this point, his more than 30-year marriage was falling apart. John and Elizabeth separated and lived apart until Elizabeth Edwards succumbed to breast cancer weeks before Christmas in 2010, with Edwards and their oldest daughter, Cate, at her bedside.

For Edwards, life got worse. After testimony from a cast of former staffers, including Hunter and Young — the latter having published a scandalous tell-all book — a grand jury indicted Edwards on June 3, 2011.

Edwards refused a plea bargain that would have given him a few months in prison but would have allowed him to keep his law license.

SHOULD RUTGERS STUDENT DHARUN RAVI GO TO JAIL FOR FILMING HIS ROOMMATE IN GAY SEX

Rutgers University student, Dharun Ravi, set up illegal spy cams and video taped his male room mate engaging in sex with another man. His roommate killed himself when he found out that he had been watched by several people, while he was involved in gay sex. I can’t even belive that I’m calling it gay sex. Sex is sex!!

By the way,  if found guilty, Dharun could face up to 10 years in jail for the crime. I’m a big believer in if you the crime, you do the time. His roommate would still be alive if it were not for Ravi. Sentencing for Ravi, will take place later on today.

Ravi has not helped himself by not acknowledging that he did anything wrong. Bullying is wrong and should not be condoned. Do you think that Dharun Ravi should go to jail?

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