Showing posts with label state. Show all posts
Showing posts with label state. Show all posts

Thursday, June 28, 2012

NY state cites club that was site of celeb brawl

NEW YORK (AP) — New York state officials say a nightclub that was the site of a bottle-hurling brawl following a dispute between the entourages of singers Drake and Chris Brown could lose its liquor license.

The New York Post reports (http://nyp.st/MqgGIo ) the State Liquor Authority filed 14 charges on Friday against New York City's W.i.P. nightclub.

The agency says the Manhattan club has been cited for numerous fights, excessive noise and using unlicensed or unprofessional guards, including one accused of selling marijuana to an undercover investigator.

Liquor Authority spokesman William Crowley says the club is in danger of having its license yanked.

Club representatives were unavailable for comment.

The club earned notoriety earlier this month, when Brown and Drake were involved in a fight that featured patrons hurling bottles of liquor.


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Thursday, June 14, 2012

Girl jabbed in foot by syringe at Washington state hotel

SEATTLE (Reuters) - A 9-year-old girl will need to undergo periodic testing for exposure to HIV and hepatitis after being accidentally jabbed in the foot with a used hypodermic needle left in her bed in a Washington state hotel room, her mother said on Thursday.

Police in Aberdeen, a city about 100 miles southwest of Seattle, said they are treating the incident at the Guest House Inn and Suite in that town as a medical case, not a criminal investigation, because it would be impossible to determine to whom the disposable syringe belonged.

Angie Smith of Edgewood, Washington, said her daughter, Emily Johnson, was pierced in her right heel by the needle, which was attached to a disposable syringe stained with dried blood, on June 1 while the family was visiting Aberdeen for a girls' softball tournament.

Her daughter described the needle prick as feeling like a bee sting, Smith said.

The syringe was lodged between the mattress and mattress pad on the girl's bunk bed in the hotel room. A plastic baggie and a second syringe were found nearby, Smith said.

Emily's family said they took her to a hospital that night and also called police.

"The police were in and out pretty quickly," Smith said. "They just weren't that concerned."

Smith said her family had consulted an attorney about the incident, she said.

Aberdeen police spokesman Captain John Green said his agency did not test the syringes, and that the hospital where the girl was taken disposed of them. He also said he could not confirm that the minute quantity of liquid in the syringe was blood.

"There's no crime to investigate," Green said. "Syringes aren't illegal and the hotel had no idea how long the syringes had been there. ... They could be from diabetics, they could be from drug users. We have no idea."

The girl has since undergone blood tests for the AIDS virus and hepatitis, and the results were negative. However, doctors have advised the family that she should continue to be screened for blood-borne infections on a periodic basis, her mother said.

An official from the hospital where the girl was taken could not be reached for comment.

Angel Housden, the manager at the Guest House Inn and Suite, said she had apologized to the family, but she found it strange when the family declined an offer to change the two rooms they had booked for two nights.

Smith said the room where the needle was found was cleaned at the family's request and they did not change rooms, although they continued to avoid the bunk beds where the syringe had turned up.

The hotel initially offered to waive a single room charge for the first night's stay but rescinded the offer after the family insisted on getting both rooms free for both nights.

"They ended up staying both nights and wanted both rooms comped," she said. "When they realized they didn't get their stay free and they also wanted the adjacent room free as well, they did get very angry and start verbally attacking my front desk."

(Writing by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Bill Trott)


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Tuesday, May 15, 2012

German state election deals blow to Angela Merkel's party - Los Angeles Times

Roettgen The Christian Democrats’ candidate for governor, Norbert Roettgen, enters the state parliament in Duesseldorf, Germany. After the election, he announced that he would resign as the local party chief. (Boris Roessler, European Pressphoto Agency / May 14, 2012)

DUESSELDORF, Germany — Voters in Germany's most populous state dealt a decisive blow to Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union on Sunday, preliminary results show, a potentially ominous preview of things to come for the chancellor in next year's federal elections.

Merkel's party mustered about 26% of the vote in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, a drop from 35% in 2010 and 45% in 2005, the year she took office, the results show. The opposition Social Democrats and Greens, at about 39% and more than 11%, respectively, secured the majority of seats they needed to form a governing coalition.

The upstart Pirate Party, a group primarily devoted to Internet freedom, rode its recent surge in popularity to a nearly 8% vote share and won entry into its fourth consecutive state parliament. Merkel's national coalition partner, the Free Democrats, managed a better-than-expected 8%, above the 5% threshold needed for representation, while the far-left Left Party was kicked out of the statehouse with less than 3% of the vote. Other parties with low shares accounted for the remaining votes.

Election results in North Rhine-Westphalia have been harbingers of change in the past. It was a loss in this state in 2005 that brought down the chancellorship of Merkel's predecessor, Social Democrat Gerhard Schroeder. Now, the state that allowed Merkel to assume power in the first place could undermine her quest for a third term.

The disappointing result for the conservative parties in North Rhine-Westphalia follows a similarly poor showing a week ago in the state of Schleswig-Holstein, where the governing Christian Democrat-Free Democrat coalition was ousted.

But the North Rhine-Westphalia election is particularly significant, both because of the state's importance in Germany — over a fifth of the country's population resides here — and because the campaign was largely framed as a referendum on Merkel's austerity policies.

The Christian Democrats' candidate for governor, Norbert Roettgen, who serves as Merkel's environment minister and is often mentioned as a potential successor to the chancellor, announced late Sunday that he would resign as the local party chief.

On the campaign trail, Roettgen hammered at the need for budgetary restraint and criticized what he labeled the free-spending ways of the current governor, Social Democrat Hannelore Kraft, whose deficit-raising budget proposal brought down her minority government and forced Sunday's election.

Merkel's opponents, however, tried to ride the wave of anti-austerity sentiment sweeping across Europe. In recent weeks, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, both close allies of Merkel, have been pushed from power, and parties supporting austerity policies lost ground in Greek elections.

"Whoever's campaign Merkel supports loses: Jost de Jager, Sarkozy, and now Roettgen is facing the same fate," Green Party parliamentary Chairman Juergen Trittin said recently. De Jager was the losing candidate in the Schleswig-Holstein election.

Merkel has so far stuck to her message of the need for austerity cuts to relieve Europe's debt crisis. But she has become increasingly isolated.

Polling had shown the Social Democrats to be the overwhelming favorite to capture the most votes in Sunday's race in North Rhine-Westphalia. But the Christian Democrats were hoping to deny the Social Democrats and Greens a majority and thereby force a so-called grand coalition between Christian and Social Democrats.

A grand coalition on the national level is a realistic possibility after next year's federal elections. The Christian Democrats remain the most popular party nationwide, but the Free Democrats have suffered such a collapse that a continuation of the current governing coalition is unlikely. And by attracting a sizable portion of the youth vote, the Pirate Party could prevent the Social Democrats and Greens from forming a national majority.

Wiener is a special correspondent.


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