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	<title>case &#8211; Cincy Link</title>
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		<title>Georgia jury awards $1.7 billion in Ford pickup truck crash case</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2023/07/05/georgia-jury-awards-1-7-billion-in-ford-pickup-truck-crash-case/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[cincylink]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jul 2023 04:10:56 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[A Georgia jury sided against Ford in a wrongful death case and awarded $1.7 billion to the children of a couple killed in a pickup truck crash in 2014. The Associated Press reported that in April 2014, Melvin and Voncile Hill were killed when they were involved in a rollover crash in their 2002 Ford &#8230;]]></description>
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<p>A Georgia jury sided against Ford in a wrongful death case and awarded $1.7 billion to the children of a couple killed in a pickup truck crash in 2014.</p>
<p>The Associated Press reported that in April 2014, Melvin and Voncile Hill were killed when they were involved in a rollover crash in their 2002 Ford F-250.</p>
<p>The roof collapsed after the rollover, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.</p>
<p>The couple's children, Kim and Adam Hill, filed the lawsuit against the automaker for what their attorneys called dangerously weak roofs, the news outlets reported.</p>
<p>During the trial, the Associated Press reported that the Hills' lawyers presented evidence of nearly 80 similar rollover wrecks that involved someone was injured or killed after the truck roofs collapsed.</p>
<p>A spokesperson for the automaker told The Associated Press they plan to appeal the verdict.</p>
<p>“While our sympathies go out to the Hill family, we do not believe the verdict is supported by the evidence, and we plan to appeal,” the automaker said in a statement Sunday to The Associated Press.</p>
<p>The verdict is believed to be the biggest in state history, the newspaper reported.</p>
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		<title>1988 murder of Pennsylvania woman finally solved thanks to genealogy testing</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2023/07/05/1988-murder-of-pennsylvania-woman-finally-solved-thanks-to-genealogy-testing/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[cincylink]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jul 2023 04:10:37 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://cincylink.com/?p=169936</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The 1988 murder of a Pennsylvania woman has finally been solved thanks to DNA evidence collected from a letter sent to a local newspaper a decade ago and from the victim's clothing. On Thursday, the Pennsylvania State Police and Berks County District Attorney John Adams held a press conference about the unsolved murder of 26-year-old &#8230;]]></description>
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<p>The 1988 murder of a Pennsylvania woman has finally been solved thanks to DNA evidence collected from a letter sent to a local newspaper a decade ago and from the victim's clothing.</p>
<p>On Thursday, the Pennsylvania State Police and Berks County District Attorney John Adams held a press conference about the unsolved murder of 26-year-old Anna Kane, NBC News reported.</p>
<p>They identified her killer as Scott Grim, the news outlet reported.</p>
<p>According to Pennsylvania Crime Stoppers, Kane's body was found on Oct. 23, 1988, near Ontelaunee Trail Road in Perry Township.</p>
<p>She had been beaten and strangled to death, the media release said.</p>
<p>Law enforcement said they collected DNA evidence off the clothing of the mother of three, the Reading Eagle newspaper reported.</p>
<p>The news outlets reported police tested the DNA, but no match was found at the time.</p>
<p>After running a front page article in 1990 about the unsolved murder, the newspaper received a letter from a "concerned citizen" with “numerous intimate details” about the homicide, law enforcement told NBC News.</p>
<p>The news outlet reported that DNA collected from the envelope was later tested and found to match the DNA collected from Kane's clothing.</p>
<p>NBC News reported that sometime this year, Parabon NanoLabs in Virginia conducted genetic genealogy testing and found that the DNA profile likely matched Grim. </p>
<p>According to NBC, Grim wouldn't be brought up on charges since he died of natural causes in 2018. He was 58.</p>
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		<title>How the Supreme Court could reshape the internet as you know it</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2023/06/02/how-the-supreme-court-could-reshape-the-internet-as-you-know-it/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[cincylink]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Jun 2023 18:39:48 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://cincylink.com/?p=189894</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Justice Samuel Alito of the U.S. Supreme Court asked this week what may be, to millions of average internet users, the most relatable question to come out of a pair of high-stakes oral arguments about the future of social media."Would Google collapse, and the internet be destroyed," Alito asked a Google attorney on Tuesday, "if &#8230;]]></description>
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<p>
					Justice Samuel Alito of the U.S. Supreme Court asked this week what may be, to millions of average internet users, the most relatable question to come out of a pair of high-stakes oral arguments about the future of social media."Would Google collapse, and the internet be destroyed," Alito asked a Google attorney on Tuesday, "if YouTube and therefore Google were potentially liable" for the content its users posted?Alito's question aimed to cut through the jargon and theatrics of a nearly three-hour debate over whether YouTube can be sued for algorithmically recommending videos created by the terrorist group ISIS.His question sought to explore what might really happen in a world where the Court rolls back a 27-year-old liability shield, allowing tech platforms to be sued over how they host and display videos, forum posts, and other user-generated content. The Google case, as well as a related case argued the next day involving Twitter, are viewed as pivotal because the outcome could have ramifications for websites large and small — and, as Justice Brett Kavanaugh observed, "the digital economy, with all sorts of effects on workers and consumers, retirement plans and what have you."The litigation could have vast implications for everything from online restaurant reviews to likes and retweets to the coding of new applications.Though the justices this week seemed broadly hesitant to overturn or significantly narrow those legal protections, the possibility remains that the Court may limit immunity for websites in ways that could reshape what users see in their apps and browsers — or, in Google's words, "upend the internet."Nearly 30 years of protectionsPassed in 1996, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act sought to foster the growth of the early internet. Faced with a technological revolution it wanted to nurture, Congress created a special form of legal immunity for websites so they could develop uninhibited by lawsuits that might suffocate the ecosystem before it had a chance to flourish. In the time since, companies ranging from AOL to Twitter have invoked Section 230 to nip user-content lawsuits in the bud, arguing, usually successfully, that they are not responsible for the content their users create.For decades, courts have interpreted Section 230 to give broad protections to websites. The legislation's original authors have repeatedly said their intent was to give websites the benefit of the doubt and to encourage innovation in content moderation.But as large online platforms have become more central to the country's political and economic affairs, policymakers have come to doubt whether that shield is still worth keeping intact, at least in its current form. Democrats say the law has given websites a free pass to overlook hate speech and misinformation; Republicans say it lets them suppress right-wing viewpoints. The Supreme Court isn't the only one reviewing Section 230; Congress and the White House have also proposed changes to the law, though legislation to update Section 230 has consistently stalled.Understanding how the internet may work differently without Section 230 — or if the law is significantly narrowed — starts with one, simple concept: Shrinking the liability shield means exposing websites and internet users to more lawsuits.A lack of oversight or a legal cudgel? Virtually all of the potential consequences for the internet, both good and bad, flow from that single idea. How many suits should websites and their users have to face?For skeptics of the tech industry, and critics of social media platforms, more lawsuits would imply more opportunities to hold tech companies accountable. As in the Google and Twitter cases, websites might see more allegations that they aided and abetted terrorism because they hosted terrorist content. But it wouldn't end there, according to Chief Justice John Roberts."I suspect there would be many, many times more defamation suits, discrimination suits... infliction of emotional distress, antitrust actions," Roberts said Tuesday, ticking off a list of possible claims that might be brought.Roberts' remark underscores the enormous role Section 230 has played in deflecting litigation from the tech industry — or, as its opponents might say, shielding it from proper oversight. Allowing the courts to scrutinize the tech industry more would bring it in line with other industries, some have argued."The massive social media industry has grown up largely shielded from the courts and the normal development of a body of law. It is highly irregular for a global industry that wields staggering influence to be protected from judicial inquiry," wrote the Anti-Defamation League in a Supreme Court brief.For a moment, Justice Elena Kagan seemed to agree on Tuesday."Every other industry has to internalize the costs of its conduct," she said. "Why is it that the tech industry gets a pass? A little bit unclear."Threats to comment sections, Craigslist, even WikipediaExactly how the internet may change if the Supreme Court rules against the tech industry depends heavily on the specifics of that hypothetical ruling, and how expansive or narrowly tailored it is.But in general, exposing online platforms to greater liability creates incentives for those sites to avoid being sued, which is how you would get potentially dramatic changes to the basic look and feel of the internet, according to the tech industry, digital rights groups and legal scholars of Section 230.Websites would face a terrible choice in that scenario, they have argued. One option would be to preemptively remove any and all content that anyone, anywhere could even remotely allege is objectionable, no matter how minor — reducing the range of allowed speech on social media.Another option would be to stop moderating content altogether, to avoid claims that a site knew or should have known that a piece of objectionable material was on its platform. Not moderating, and thus not knowing about libelous content, was enough to insulate the online portal CompuServe from liability in an important 1991 case that helped give rise to Section 230.The sheer volume of lawsuits could crush website owners or internet users that can't afford to fight court battles on multiple fronts, leading to the kind of business ripple effects Kavanaugh raised. That could include personal blogs with comment sections, or e-commerce sites that host product reviews. And the surviving websites would alter their behavior to avoid suffering the same fate.Without a specific scenario to consider, it's hard to grasp how all this would play out in practice. Helpfully, multiple online platforms have described to the Court ways in which they might change their operations.Wikipedia has not explicitly said it could go under. But in a Supreme Court brief, it said it owes its existence to Section 230 and could be forced to compromise on its non-profit educational mission if it became liable for the writings of its millions of volunteer editors.If websites became liable for their automated recommendations, it could affect newsfeed-style content ranking, automated friend and post suggestions, search auto-complete and other methods by which websites display information to users, other companies have said.In that interpretation of the law, Craigslist said in a Supreme Court brief it could be forced to stop letting users browse by geographic region or by categories such as "bikes," "boats" or "books," instead having to provide an "undifferentiated morass of information."If Yelp could be sued by anyone who felt a user restaurant review was misleading, it argued, it would be incentivized to stop presenting the most helpful recommendations and could even be helpless in the face of platform manipulation; business owners acting in bad faith could flood the site with fraudulent reviews in an effort to boost themselves, but at the cost of Yelp's utility to users.And Microsoft has said that if Section 230 no longer protects algorithms, it would jeopardize its ability to suggest new job openings to users of LinkedIn, or to connect software developers to interesting and useful software projects on the online code repository GitHub.Even a 'like' could trigger a lawsuit Liability could also extend to individual internet users. A Supreme Court ruling restricting immunity for recommendations could mean any decision to like, upvote, retweet or share content could be identified as a "recommendation" and trigger a viable lawsuit, Reddit and a number of volunteer Reddit moderators wrote in a brief.That potential nightmare scenario was affirmed in Tuesday's oral argument, when Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked Eric Schnapper, an attorney going up against Google, to explore the implications of his legal theory. Schnapper represented the family of Nohemi Gonzalez, an American student killed in a 2015 ISIS attack in Paris; the Gonzalez family has alleged that Google should be held liable under a U.S. antiterrorism law for its YouTube recommendations of ISIS content."If you go on Twitter, and you're using Twitter, and you retweet, or you 'like' or you say 'check this out,'" Barrett said, "on your theory, I'm not protected by Section 230.""That's content you've created," Schnapper agreed.The sweeping, seemingly unbounded theory of liability advanced by Schnapper seemed to make many justices, particularly the Court's conservatives, nervous.Both liberals and conservatives on the Court struggled to identify a limiting principle that could allow the Court to ratchet back the scope of Section 230 without also raising legal risks for innocuous internet use.Kagan told Schnapper that even if she didn't necessarily buy his opponent Google's "'sky is falling' stuff... boy, there is a lot of uncertainty about going the way you would have us go, in part, just because of the difficulty of drawing lines in this area."
				</p>
<div>
<p>Justice Samuel Alito of the U.S. Supreme Court asked this week what may be, to millions of average internet users, the most relatable question to come out of a pair of high-stakes oral arguments about the future of social media.</p>
<p>"Would Google collapse, and the internet be destroyed," Alito asked a Google attorney on Tuesday, "if YouTube and therefore Google were potentially liable" for the content its users posted?</p>
<p><!-- article/blocks/side-floater --></p>
<p><!-- article/blocks/side-floater --></p>
<p>Alito's question aimed to cut through the jargon and theatrics of a nearly three-hour debate over whether YouTube can be sued for algorithmically recommending videos created by the terrorist group ISIS.</p>
<p>His question sought to explore what might really happen in a world where the Court rolls back a 27-year-old liability shield, allowing tech platforms to be sued over how they host and display videos, forum posts, and other user-generated content. The Google case, as well as a related case argued the next day involving Twitter, are viewed as pivotal because the outcome could have ramifications for websites large and small — and, as Justice Brett Kavanaugh observed, "the digital economy, with all sorts of effects on workers and consumers, retirement plans and what have you."</p>
<p>The litigation could have vast implications for everything from online restaurant reviews to likes and retweets to the coding of new applications.</p>
<p>Though the justices this week seemed broadly hesitant to overturn or significantly narrow those legal protections, the possibility remains that the Court may limit immunity for websites in ways that could reshape what users see in their apps and browsers — or, in Google's words, "upend the internet."</p>
<h2 class="body-h2">Nearly 30 years of protections</h2>
<p>Passed in 1996, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act sought to foster the growth of the early internet. Faced with a technological revolution it wanted to nurture, Congress created a special form of legal immunity for websites so they could develop uninhibited by lawsuits that might suffocate the ecosystem before it had a chance to flourish. In the time since, companies ranging from AOL to Twitter have invoked Section 230 to nip user-content lawsuits in the bud, arguing, usually successfully, that they are not responsible for the content their users create.</p>
<p>For decades, courts have interpreted Section 230 to give broad protections to websites. The legislation's original authors have repeatedly said their intent was to give websites the benefit of the doubt and to encourage innovation in content moderation.</p>
<p>But as large online platforms have become more central to the country's political and economic affairs, policymakers have come to doubt whether that shield is still worth keeping intact, at least in its current form. Democrats say the law has given websites a free pass to overlook hate speech and misinformation; Republicans say it lets them suppress right-wing viewpoints. The Supreme Court isn't the only one reviewing Section 230; Congress and the White House have also proposed changes to the law, though legislation to update Section 230 has consistently stalled.</p>
<p>Understanding how the internet may work differently without Section 230 — or if the law is significantly narrowed — starts with one, simple concept: Shrinking the liability shield means exposing websites and internet users to more lawsuits.</p>
<h2 class="body-h2">A lack of oversight or a legal cudgel? </h2>
<p>Virtually all of the potential consequences for the internet, both good and bad, flow from that single idea. How many suits should websites and their users have to face?</p>
<p>For skeptics of the tech industry, and critics of social media platforms, more lawsuits would imply more opportunities to hold tech companies accountable. As in the Google and Twitter cases, websites might see more allegations that they aided and abetted terrorism because they hosted terrorist content. But it wouldn't end there, according to Chief Justice John Roberts.</p>
<p>"I suspect there would be many, many times more defamation suits, discrimination suits... infliction of emotional distress, antitrust actions," Roberts said Tuesday, ticking off a list of possible claims that might be brought.</p>
<p>Roberts' remark underscores the enormous role Section 230 has played in deflecting litigation from the tech industry — or, as its opponents might say, shielding it from proper oversight. Allowing the courts to scrutinize the tech industry more would bring it in line with other industries, some have argued.</p>
<p>"The massive social media industry has grown up largely shielded from the courts and the normal development of a body of law. It is highly irregular for a global industry that wields staggering influence to be protected from judicial inquiry," wrote the Anti-Defamation League in a <a href="https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/21/21-1333/249416/20221207165116723_21-1333acAnti-DefamationLeague.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Supreme Court brief</a>.</p>
<p>For a moment, Justice Elena Kagan seemed to agree on Tuesday.</p>
<p>"Every other industry has to internalize the costs of its conduct," she said. "Why is it that the tech industry gets a pass? A little bit unclear."</p>
<h2 class="body-h2">Threats to comment sections, Craigslist, even Wikipedia</h2>
<h2 class="body-h2"/>
<p>Exactly how the internet may change if the Supreme Court rules against the tech industry depends heavily on the specifics of that hypothetical ruling, and how expansive or narrowly tailored it is.</p>
<p>But in general, exposing online platforms to greater liability creates incentives for those sites to avoid being sued, which is how you would get potentially dramatic changes to the basic look and feel of the internet, according to the tech industry, digital rights groups and legal scholars of Section 230.</p>
<p>Websites would face a terrible choice in that scenario, they have argued. One option would be to preemptively remove any and all content that anyone, anywhere could even remotely allege is objectionable, no matter how minor — reducing the range of allowed speech on social media.</p>
<p>Another option would be to stop moderating content altogether, to avoid claims that a site knew or should have known that a piece of objectionable material was on its platform. Not moderating, and thus not knowing about libelous content, was enough to insulate the online portal <a href="https://www.eff.org/issues/cda230/legislative-history" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">CompuServe</a> from liability in an important 1991 case that helped give rise to Section 230.</p>
<p>The sheer volume of lawsuits could crush website owners or internet users that can't afford to fight court battles on multiple fronts, leading to the kind of business ripple effects Kavanaugh raised. That could include personal blogs with comment sections, or e-commerce sites that host product reviews. And the surviving websites would alter their behavior to avoid suffering the same fate.</p>
<p>Without a specific scenario to consider, it's hard to grasp how all this would play out in practice. Helpfully, multiple online platforms have described to the Court ways in which they might change their operations.</p>
<p>Wikipedia has not explicitly said it could go under. But <a href="https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/21/21-1333/252719/20230119161248736_21-1333bsacWikimediaFoundation.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">in a Supreme Court brief</a>, it said it owes its existence to Section 230 and could be forced to compromise on its non-profit educational mission if it became liable for the writings of its millions of volunteer editors.</p>
<p>If websites became liable for their automated recommendations, it could affect newsfeed-style content ranking, automated friend and post suggestions, search auto-complete and other methods by which websites display information to users, other companies have said.</p>
<p>In that interpretation of the law, <a href="https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/21/21-1333/252677/20230119145528517_21-1333_CRAIGSLIST%20INC.%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Craigslist</a> said in a Supreme Court brief it could be forced to stop letting users browse by geographic region or by categories such as "bikes," "boats" or "books," instead having to provide an "undifferentiated morass of information."</p>
<p>If Yelp could be sued by anyone who felt a user restaurant review was misleading, it argued, it would be incentivized to stop presenting the most helpful recommendations and could even be helpless in the face of platform manipulation; business owners acting in bad faith could flood the site with fraudulent reviews in an effort to boost themselves, but at the cost of Yelp's utility to users.</p>
<p>And <a href="https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/21/21-1333/252578/20230119093338723_Microsoft%20Section%20230%20Brief.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Microsoft</a> has said that if Section 230 no longer protects algorithms, it would jeopardize its ability to suggest new job openings to users of LinkedIn, or to connect software developers to interesting and useful software projects on the online code repository GitHub.</p>
<h2 class="body-h2">Even a 'like' could trigger a lawsuit </h2>
<p>Liability could also extend to individual internet users. A Supreme Court ruling restricting immunity for recommendations could mean any decision to like, upvote, retweet or share content could be identified as a "recommendation" and trigger a viable lawsuit, Reddit and a number of volunteer Reddit moderators <a href="https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/21/21-1333/252674/20230119145120402_Gonzalez%20-%20Reddit%20bottomside%20amicus%20brief.pdf" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">wrote in a brief</a>.</p>
<p>That potential nightmare scenario was affirmed in Tuesday's oral argument, when Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked Eric Schnapper, an attorney going up against Google, to explore the implications of his legal theory. Schnapper represented the family of Nohemi Gonzalez, an American student killed in a 2015 ISIS attack in Paris; the Gonzalez family has alleged that Google should be held liable under a U.S. antiterrorism law for its YouTube recommendations of ISIS content.</p>
<p>"If you go on Twitter, and you're using Twitter, and you retweet, or you 'like' or you say 'check this out,'" Barrett said, "on your theory, I'm not protected by Section 230."</p>
<p>"That's content you've created," Schnapper agreed.</p>
<p>The sweeping, seemingly unbounded theory of liability advanced by Schnapper seemed to make many justices, particularly the Court's conservatives, nervous.</p>
<p>Both liberals and conservatives on the Court struggled to identify a limiting principle that could allow the Court to ratchet back the scope of Section 230 without also raising legal risks for innocuous internet use.</p>
<p>Kagan told Schnapper that even if she didn't necessarily buy his opponent Google's "'sky is falling' stuff... boy, there is a lot of uncertainty about going the way you would have us go, in part, just because of the difficulty of drawing lines in this area."</p>
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		<title>Jury convicts Alex Murdaugh on 2021 murders of his wife, son</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2023/06/02/jury-convicts-alex-murdaugh-on-2021-murders-of-his-wife-son/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Jun 2023 15:09:37 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[THE DAY LATER IN THE YEAR. HAPPENING RIGHT NOW, THE JURY IN THE TRIAL OF ALEC MURDOCH IS DETERMINING WHETHER OR NOT THE DISGRACED LOW COUNTRY ATTORNEY KILLED HIS WIFE AND SON. THE JURY BEGAN DELIBERATIONS SHORTLY BEFORE 4:00 THIS AFTERNOON. IT COMES AFTER SIX WEEKS OF TESTIMONY AND WHAT SOME ARE CALLING SOUTH CAROLINA’S &#8230;]]></description>
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											THE DAY LATER IN THE YEAR. HAPPENING RIGHT NOW, THE JURY IN THE TRIAL OF ALEC MURDOCH IS DETERMINING WHETHER OR NOT THE DISGRACED LOW COUNTRY ATTORNEY KILLED HIS WIFE AND SON. THE JURY BEGAN DELIBERATIONS SHORTLY BEFORE 4:00 THIS AFTERNOON. IT COMES AFTER SIX WEEKS OF TESTIMONY AND WHAT SOME ARE CALLING SOUTH CAROLINA’S TRIAL OF THE CENTURY. OUR TAGGART HOUCK HAVE BEEN FOLLOWING THE TRIAL SINCE THE BEGINNING AND HE JOINS US LIVE OUTSIDE THE COURTHOUSE IN CARLTON COUNTY WITH WHAT WE’RE LEARNING. DAGEN. YEAH, WELL, THOSE DELIBERATIONS COULD LAST UNTIL 10:00 TONIGHT. MEDIA IS ADVISED TO STAY CLOSE BY. THERE’S A PRETTY LARGE PRESENCE HERE OUTSIDE THE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, BUT THIS IS ALL PART OF A BUSY DAY THAT ACTUALLY BEGAN WITH A CHANGE IN THE JURY. WE’RE GOING TO REPLACE THURSDAY BEGAN WITH THE REPLACEMENT OF A JUROR AFTER SHE ALLEGEDLY DISCUSSED THE CASE WITH TWO PEOPLE OUTSIDE THE TRIAL. AND WE DO APPRECIATE YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE IN CLOSING ARGUMENTS, THE DEFENSE CRITICIZED SLEDS INVESTIGATION AND SAID MURDOCK’S DRUG INDUCED PARANOIA WAS THE REASON HE LIED ABOUT BEING AT THE SCENE. MINUTES BEFORE THE MURDERS. HE LOT COMES. THAT’S WHAT ADDICTS DO. ADDICTS LIE. HE LIED BECAUSE HE HAD A CLOSET FULL OF SKELETONS THAT HE DIDN’T WANT ANY MORE ANYMORE. SCRUTINY ON HIM, BUT ADDED THAT DOESN’T MAKE HIM A KILLER. ON BEHALF OF ALEX, WE HAVE A BUSTER. HALF OF MAGGIE. YOU KNOW, HALF OF MY FRIEND PAUL. I RESPECTFULLY REQUEST YOU DO NOT COMPOUND A FAMILY TRAGEDY WITH ANOTHER. THANK YOU. IN REPLY, THE STATE CALLED THIS A COMMON SENSE CASE. HOW CAN YOU BELIEVE THEM WHEN THE ULTIMATE ISSUE WHEN THEY SAID THEY DIDN’T? WHEN THE ONLY THING THEY CORROBORATED FOR YOU THROUGHOUT THE INVESTIGATION, THROUGHOUT THIS TRIAL AND THROUGHOUT MR. WARD’S CROSS-EXAMINATION THAT HE’S A LIAR. AND THAT’S ALL YOU CAN JUDGE. PEOPLE ON. AND WHY WOULD HE LIE ABOUT WHERE HE WAS IF HE WERE INNOCENT? I THINK HE LOVED MAN. I THINK HE LOVED PAUL. BUT, YOU KNOW WHO HE LOVED MORE THAN THAT. YOU KNOW, HE LOVED MORE MEN. AND HE WAS GOING TO MAKE SURE THAT THAT LIFE WANTED TO MAKE SURE THAT LIFE. HE LOVED ALEX AND HE EXERCISED THIS GREATEST POWER OF CHOICE TO MAKE SURE THAT 15. SO IF ALL OF YOU WILL NOW GO TO THE JURY ROOM AROUND 350, THE JURY BEGAN DELIBERATIONS. AND WHILE IT’S NOT REALLY CLEAR WHEN A VERDICT COULD BE REACHED, IT HAS BECOMING CLEAR THAT THIS WILL NOT RUN INTO THE WEEKEND. THE JURY, BY THE WAY, IS NOT SEQUESTERED IN CUMBERLAND COUNTY, TAGGAR
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<p>
					Disgraced South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh was convicted of murder Thursday in the shooting deaths of his wife and son in a case that chronicled the unraveling of a powerful Southern family with tales of privilege, greed and addiction.The jury deliberated for less than three hours before finding Murdaugh guilty of two counts of murder at the end of a six-week trial that pulled back the curtain on the once-prominent lawyer’s fall from grace.Murdaugh, 54, faces 30 years to life in prison without parole. His sentencing has been scheduled for Friday morning.Through more than 75 witnesses and nearly 800 pieces of evidence, jurors heard about betrayed friends and clients, Murdaugh’s failed attempt to stage his own death in an insurance fraud scheme, a fatal boat crash in which his son was implicated, the housekeeper who died in a fall in the Murdaugh home, the grisly scene of the killings and Bubba, the chicken-snatching dog.In the end, Murdaugh’s fate appeared sealed by cellphone video taken by his son, who he called “Little Detective” for his knack for finding bottles of painkillers in his father’s belongings after the lawyer had sworn off the pills. Testimony culminated in Murdaugh’s appearance on the witness stand, when he admitted stealing millions from clients and lying to investigators about being at the dog kennels where the shootings took place but steadfastly maintained his innocence in the deaths of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh.“I did not kill Maggie, and I did not kill Paul. I would never hurt Maggie, and I would never hurt Paul — ever — under any circumstances,” Murdaugh said.Murdaugh’s 52-year-old wife was shot four or five times with a rifle and their 22-year-old son was shot twice with a shotgun at the kennels near at their rural Colleton County home on June 7, 2021.Prosecutors didn’t have the weapons used to kill the Murdaughs or other direct evidence like confessions or blood spatter. But they had a mountain of circumstantial evidence, led by a video locked on Paul Murdaugh’s cellphone for more than a year — video shot minutes before the killings that witnesses testified captured the voices of all three Murdaughs.Alex Murdaugh, 54, had told police repeatedly after the killings that he was not at the kennels and was instead napping before he went to visit his ailing mother that night. Murdaugh called 911 and said he discovered the bodies when he returned home.But in his testimony, Murdaugh admitted joining Maggie and Paul at the kennels, where he said he took a chicken away from a rowdy yellow Labrador named Bubba — whose name Murdaugh can be heard saying on the video — before heading back to the house shortly ahead of the fatal shootings.Murdaugh lied about being at the kennels for 20 months before taking the stand on the 23rd day of his trial. He blamed his decadeslong addiction to opioids for making him paranoid, creating a distrust of police. He said that once he went down that path, he felt trapped in the lie.“Oh, what a tangled web we weave. Once I told a lie — I told my family — I had to keep lying,” he testified.Prosecutor Creighton Waters grilled Murdaugh about what he repeatedly called the lawyer’s “new story” of what happened at the kennels, walking him moment by moment through the timeline and assailing his “fuzzy” memory of certain details, like his last words to his wife and son.A state agent also testified that markings on spent cartridges found around Maggie Murdaugh’s body matched markings on fired cartridges at a shooting range elsewhere on the property, though the defense said that kind of matching is an inexact science.Murdaugh comes from a family that dominated the local legal scene for decades. His father, grandfather and great-grandfather were the area’s elected prosecutors for more than 80 years and his family law firm grew to dozens of lawyers by suing railroads, corporations and other big businesses.The now-disbarred attorney admitted stealing millions of dollars from the family firm and clients, saying he needed the money to fund his drug habit. Before he was charged with murder, Murdaugh was in jail awaiting trial on about 100 other charges ranging from insurance fraud to tax evasion.Prosecutors told jurors that Murdaugh was afraid all of his misdeeds were about to be discovered, so he killed his wife and son to gain sympathy to buy time to cover his tracks.Murdaugh’s lawyers will almost certainly appeal the conviction based on the judge allowing evidence of the financial crimes, which they contend were unrelated to the killings and were used by prosecutors to smear Murdaugh’s reputation.
				</p>
<div class="article-content--body-text">
<p>Disgraced South Carolina lawyer Alex Murdaugh was convicted of murder Thursday in the shooting deaths of his wife and son in a case that chronicled the unraveling of a powerful Southern family with tales of privilege, greed and addiction.</p>
<p>The jury deliberated for less than three hours before finding Murdaugh guilty of two counts of murder at the end of a six-week trial.</p>
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<p>Murdaugh, 54, faces 30 years to life in prison without parole when he is sentenced, which in South Carolina is typically right after the verdict but can be delayed if a judge chooses.</p>
<p><strong><em>This is a developing story. Check back for updates.</em></strong></p>
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		<title>Samsung Galaxy Buds+ hands-on first impressions</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2020/02/11/samsung-galaxy-buds-hands-on-first-impressions/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Feb 2020 19:00:10 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[The newest Samsung earbuds don't do noise cancelling and don't do fitness tracking, either. Subscribe to CNET: CNET playlists: Download the new CNET app: Like us on Facebook: Follow us on Twitter: Follow us on Instagram: source]]></description>
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<br />The newest Samsung earbuds don't do noise cancelling and don't do fitness tracking, either.</p>
<p>Subscribe to CNET:<br />
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