Saturday, January 9, 2016

Lawyer Faces National Scrutiny While Defending Bill Cosby

Lawyer Faces National Scrutiny While Defending Bill Cosby

Lawyer Monique Pressley accompanied Bill Cosby and lawyer Brian McMonagle at a criminal court appearance in Elkins Park, Pa., last month.
Lawyer Monique Pressley accompanied Bill Cosby and lawyer Brian McMonagle at a criminal court appearance in Elkins Park, Pa., last month.
Matt Rourke/AP
A good attorney in a high-profile case needs to know how to change public opinion. Bill Cosby's attorney Monique Pressley is trying to do just that. Under the glare of public scrutiny, she has been vehemently defending the beleaguered comedian, projecting poise under pressure.
To watch Pressley on TV, you'd never know this is her first time defending a celebrity this big against charges of this magnitude. In broadcast and cable TV interviews, she is unflappable. Talking about Cosby's defamation lawsuit against former model Beverly Johnson, she told MSNBC, "What we're doing now, in a court of law, is requiring people like Miss Johnson to actually prove what they've said. And I would assert to you today, as we did in the complaint, it cannot be done."
When attorney Gloria Allred — who is representing several alleged Cosby victims — challenged Pressley to a debate on MSNBC, Pressley's response was almost scolding. "We as attorneys do what attorneys do. We're not in high school. We don't debate. We're not politicians running for office," she told MSNBC host Thomas Roberts.
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Not long after she was hired by Cosby, Pressley talked to Tom Joyner on his top-rated morning radio show. After she explained the ins and outs of the various complaints, allegations and legal charges, Joyner told her, "You know, Monique Pressley, I never heard of you before this, but just listening to you just now, I think Bill Cosby has chosen a very good attorney because you broke that down."
Pressley is media savvy, according to Lolita Buckner Inniss, a former prosecutor and professor at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law at Cleveland State University. "Monique Pressley does a masterful job of turning the conversation to the message that she and the Cosby defense team want to deliver," says Buckner Inniss.
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'You Better Memorize Everything, Because She Already Has'
Pressley is from Galveston, Texas. In high school, she won honors on the debate team. She received her law degree from Howard University in 1997.
Later, as an adjunct faculty member at Howard, Pressley helped make history. In 2005, she coached a team of Howard law students for a mock trial competition. The team won, beating 18 law schools, including the reigning champions from Harvard. The win was a first for a historically black law school.
Atlanta attorney Chris Stewart was a member of the team. "She was tough," he laughs, remembering Pressley's coaching technique. "Who you are seeing on television is exactly who she is. She will talk to you the way she talks in those interviews: Firm. She's not going to play around. She's not going to let somebody misquote her or misquote her client. And you better memorize everything, because she already has," says Stewart.
Pressley was a public defender and an assistant attorney general for the District of Columbia.
Religion's Role In Her Law Practice
Today Pressley runs her own firm. Her personal website says she's also an ordained minister. In 2013, she founded Monique Pressley Ministries. On her radio show,Breathe Through It, her guests have included the prominent religious figure Bishop T.D. Jakes and attorney Benjamin Crump, who represented the families of Trayvon Martin, who was killed in Florida, and Michael Brown, who was fatally shot by a police officer in Ferguson, Mo.
TV legal analyst Roland Martin, who has known Pressley for 30 years, says Pressley's faith is deeply important to her. "She comes from a strong faith background. Her godfather was a prominent Catholic priest. So it plays a tremendous role," says Martin.
Strategy In The Cosby Case
Pressley is a regular guest on Martin's weekly legal segment on the Tom Joyner Morning Show. As Pressley tells it, one of Cosby's "loyal supporters" heard her talking about his case on the radio show and suggested he hire her. Martin says, for Pressley, "there is no comfort zone" in this kind of high-stakes, emotionally charged case being played out in the public arena. "In some ways, Monique is on a lonely journey," says Martin.
The decision to hire her is also strategic, says Buckner Inniss.
"Her gender and her race matter, because Bill Cosby is being charged with sexual assault of several women. A large number of those women are white women. I think there's a certain extent to which the idea of racial solidarity plays in here," says Buckner Inniss. "The idea that if an intelligent, well-spoken black woman stands with Bill Cosby on this, then perhaps some of those people who accuse Bill Cosby are lying."
Buckner Inniss urges people watching the Cosby coverage to be skeptical.
She says there will be "an epic demonstration of theatrics and legal performances" from both sides.
Pressley declined to be interviewed for this profile.
This week, Pressley and Cosby had some good news: The Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office declined to file criminal charges against him, though he still faces a criminal charge in Pennsylvania and multiple civil suits.

Air Passenger Caught ‘Stealing Thousands Of Euros From Fellow Traveler Mid-Flight’

Air Passenger Caught ‘Stealing Thousands Of Euros From Fellow Traveler Mid-Flight’

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A man who allegedly stole thousands of Euros from a fellow air passenger mid-flight has been arrested.
At first he denied it but was later left red-faced when another traveller produced what appears to be video evidence of the theft.
Ma Qiguan, 45, is a native of central China’s Henan Province, and was on his way to Thai capital Bangkok.
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The incident took place on a Turkish Airlines flight earlier this week.

The offender reportedly took down a Danish passenger’s luggage from the overhead compartment of flight TK064, before rummaging through it and taking the equivalent of £3,700.

The footage was recorded on a mobile phone and shown to authorities when the plane landed in Bangkok.
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Ma was detained by police at Suvarnabhumi Airport, where he was said to be carrying a return ticket to Istanbul for the next day.

It is not known how Ma knew the Danish passenger was carrying such large amounts of cash or if Ma will be deported to China for punishment.

Mavericks surf leads to costly wipeout

Mavericks surf leads to costly wipeout

 
Updated 6:31 pm, Friday, January 8, 2016
The surf at Mavericks was at its most treacherous on Thursday, one of the biggest days of recent years. Conditions were far from ideal, and there was no talk of holding the annual big-wave contest at Half Moon Bay’s fabled spot. One particular episode, however, got everyone’s attention.
The biggest waves were steaming in at some 50 feet on the face. It was a clear, relatively windless day, but the ocean was so chopped up from recent storms, very few surfers were out - and even fewer were willing to meet the challenge.
WATCH FRAME BY FRAME:
One of them was Garrett McNamara, who is not on the 24-man list of Mavericks contest invitees but has been a storied figure in big-wave surfing for years. On a day when most of the really giant waves went unridden - just too dangerous - McNamara stroked into one of the biggest waves ever paddle-surfed (as opposed to tow-surfing, with a jet-ski assist).
He did not get far. About halfway down the drop, McNamara went down, hard, and as San Francisco surfer Grant Washburn described it, “He skipped like a stone and flew into the air,” at one point getting so dramatically airborne, it resembled a man being catapulted off a trampoline. Then, to make matters worse, McNamara was crushed underneath the wave’s massive lip.
“Shocking,” said Washburn. “Maybe one of the worst wipeouts ever filmed.”
Badly shaken, McNamara wound up in the hospital for surgery on his arm and shoulder. “It happened early,” Washburn said. “The crowd was understandably cautious the rest of the day.”
According to reliable forecasts, Mavericks isn’t likely to be contest-worthy for at least another week, due to poor conditions and undersized swells. The contest window runs through the end of March.
Bruce Jenkins is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. E-mail:bjenkins@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @bruce_jenkins1

Gloria Steinem: ‘Black women invented the feminist movement’

Gloria Steinem: ‘Black women invented the feminist movement’




Gloria Steinem, a feminist icon, is speaking out against the classification of feminism as a “white middle-class” movement.

During an interview for Bust, Steinem made a stand for intersectionality, attributing her own feminist education to black women.

“Nothing in this country is not affected by racism and sexism and class, it’s not as if one can be exempt from those influences,” Steinem said.

“But in my experience, the women’s movement was less subject to them than any other large group that I’ve been part of. We all have different experiences and this probably wasn’t true from everyone, but I learned feminism disproportionately from black women.”

In an interview with Black Enterprise, published last year, Steinem stated for the record that she feels as though black women “invented the feminist movement.”

http://thegrio.com/2016/01/06/gloria-steinem-black-women-invented-the-feminist-movement/

Strange space balls crash in rural Vietnam

Strange space balls crash in rural Vietnam

 
Published 2:04 pm, Friday, January 8, 2016
Vietnam defense officials reportedly are investigating three mysterious metal spheres that apparently dropped out of the sky and crashed in a rural area of the country's north last weekend.
Local residents reported hearing "what sounded like thunder, despite no signs of rain," before venturing outside and finding the orbs. They range from 15 to 40 inches in diameter.
One landed near a stream in Tuyen Quang province, another in the garden of a home in neighboring Yen Bai province. A third — the smallest, only 9 ounces — hit the roof of a house. Fortunately no one was injured.
The defense ministry believes the spheres are compressed-air tanks that ended up as space debris, but whether they originated from a missile or some other aircraft is not known, Thanh Nien News reported.
Nguyen Khoa Son of Vietnam's State Space Science and Technology Program told Vietnam Net: "This may be the result of a failed launch of satellite."
Now that they have landed, the balls pose no danger — they contain no explosives. Russian writing on the surface of the orbs suggests the balls were manufactured for Moscow's air force or space program, although they could have been sold to another country.