Curses, foiled again
Minutes after receiving a report that a convenience store had been robbed, police in Suffolk, Va., found suspect Sean Almond, 43, behind the store, having interrupted his getaway to urinate. He had the stolen cash on him. (The Virginian-Pilot) When Clair Arthur Smith, 42, received a $10 check from Florida Gulf Bank after closing his account, he altered it to read $269,951, then tried to deposit it to another account using a Bank of America ATM. Lee County sheriff’s investigators promptly arrested Smith, who confessed. (Fort Myers News-Press)
Nuclear power vs. oil
Russia’s leading newspaper, Komsomoloskaya Pravda, suggested the best way to handle the Gulf of Mexico oil geyser is to nuke it. It reported the Soviet-era government relied on controlled, underground nuclear blasts to move rock to plug oil leaks. Besides using “this method five times to deal with petrocalamities,” the paper said officials tried subterranean nuclear blasts as often as 169 times “to accomplish fairly mundane tasks, like creating underground storage spaces for gas or building canals.” Only one detonation failed to accomplish its purpose. (The Raw Story)
Who’s expletived now?
When Michael Powell told Home Depot he’d invented a device to keep store employees from slicing off their fingers while cutting wood for customers, instead of paying him $7,000 apiece for his Safe Hands attachment, company executives dispatched workers to copy the safety guards that Powell had allowed Home Depot to test at eight stores. Advised that Powell might have a claim against Home Depot for stealing his invention, one executive declared, “(Expletive) Michael Powell. Let him sue us.”
Powell did sue. A Florida jury awarded him $15 million. On top of that, U.S. District Judge Daniel Hurley called Home Depot callous and arrogant for its treatment of Powell and awarded him an additional $3 million in punitive damages, $1 million a year interest on the judgment until it’s satisfied and $2.8 million for legal fees, making the total judgment against Home Depot around $25 million. (The Palm Beach Post)
Held to a lower standard
While under investigation for lying about educational claims on her official filing papers, Mayor Patti Galle of West Linn, Ore., bought an associate’s degree online and backdated it to support claims that she was “degreed in English” when she ran for office in 2008. State Justice Department officials said that Galle’s diploma from Redding University was dated 1973, but the school is a “diploma mill” that wasn’t established until 2003. Galle earlier said the FBI probably lost her real college records at San Jose City College while investigating her for being a member of the Animal Liberation Front. (The Oregonian)
Compiled from the nation’s press by Roland Sweet. Authentication on demand.