Re: Idle Chatter

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Tribe Fan in SC/Cali wrote:
Uncle Dennis wrote:Thanks for bringing up memories of Buena Vista, just one of those places. And the Puppet Court is soooo cool, thanks!
Their Irish Coffee is truly amazing.


I'll submit there are few cities better than San Francisco for getting by without a car.......
I'll agree with that, but I am making Charlotte work that way for me.
UD

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Philip Vannatter, detective in O.J. Simpson case, dies at 70
Los Angeles Times

Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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FILE -This file photo taken Sept. 19, 1995, shows Los Angeles Police Department Det. Phillip Vannatter testifying in the O.J. Simpson murder trial. Vannatter, the Los Angeles police detective who served as a lead investigator in the 1994 murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, has died. (AP Photo/L.A. Daily News, John McCoy, Pool, File)

LOS ANGELES - Philip Vannatter, the Los Angeles police detective who led the investigation of the 1994 slayings of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, has died.

Vannatter died of complications from cancer Friday in Santa Clarita, Calif., his wife, Rita, said. He was 70.

"He was a real blue-collar detective," O.J. Simpson prosecutor Christopher Darden said in an emotional interview Sunday. "He did his job the best he could and he was a fine detective, one of the best."

Vannatter was among the first detectives to arrive at former football star Simpson's mansion in June 1994 after the stabbing deaths of Simpson's ex-wife, Nicole, and her friend, Goldman.

In 1977, Vannatter arrested film director Roman Polanski in the lobby of the Beverly Wilshire Hotel on charges of having unlawful sex with a 13-year-old girl.

A grandfather known as "Dutch" among friends and as a "super cop" among colleagues, Vannatter rose to the elite robbery-homicide division of the Los Angeles Police Department early in his 27-year career and earned a reputation for meticulous, tough-minded work.

One colleague told the Los Angeles Times in 1994 that Vannatter was a bear of a man who once kicked a door off its hinges while arresting a robbery suspect. When Vannatter worked as a detective in Los Angeles' Venice section in the 1970s he would have contests with colleagues to see how long they could hold a sledgehammer with one arm outstretched.

But his work was challenged repeatedly during the Simpson trial, and Vannatter often responded testily on the stand when Simpson's attorneys questioned him. In seeking to show that Vannatter illegally entered Simpson's property to collect evidence, the lawyers questioned every detail of his account of events. The detective stood firm, and Municipal Judge Kathleen Kennedy-Powell ruled at a preliminary hearing that the police had acted appropriately.

Simpson's defense team branded Vannatter a "devil of deception" and said he had used a vial of blood from Simpson to plant evidence at the former football star's estate. The detective acknowledged that he had a vial of Simpson's blood in an unsealed envelope in his car during a visit to Simpson's home, but was unapologetic about the matter and said he was simply carrying it to a criminalist.

"We were all supposed to be a group of incompetents, despite hundreds of successful investigations that we had collectively handled," Darden said. "He was really hurt and dejected by allegations that he mishandled the crime scene and mishandled the blood vial, but he was a kind man with a big heart. I never heard him say a cross word about anyone on the defense team."

Vannatter was perhaps more enraged by a member of his own team: Detective Mark Fuhrman, whose racist rants had been recorded in interviews with a screenwriter and who invoked the Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination under questioning by the Simpson legal team about whether he had ever planted evidence. In a book Vannatter wrote with his partner, Tom Lange, the two detectives credited "a brilliantly pragmatic legal-defense team" for using "a handful of police errors and the racist views of one rogue detective" to cause "our 'mountain of evidence' to melt down like a cup of Ben & Jerry's ice cream."

After Simpson's acquittal, Vannatter retired from the LAPD and lived in Vevay, Ind., on a large farm and worked as the chief deputy sheriff in the town of 1,683.

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Speaking of trials, the current Cleveland trial of Jimmy Dimora is begging for a return of Court TV. Not sure if any other former Northeastern Ohio folks are following, but it's a real hoot with stuff that entertainment writers would not make up....


Jimmy Dimora federal racketeering trial: former Cuyahoga commissioner had insatiable sexual desires


Updated: Tuesday, January 24, 2012, 10:17 PM


Peter Krouse, The Plain Dealer


AKRON, Ohio -- Jurors and the rest of Northeast Ohio need wonder no longer what federal prosecutors believe motivated Jimmy Dimora -- an insatiable appetite for sex.

For the first time Tuesday, prosecutors in Dimora's racketeering trial offered accounts of how people trying to curry favor went to great lengths and expense to arrange extra-marital trysts for the then-Cuyahoga County commissioner.

They connected with female escort services. They dispatched limos to pick up women from as far away as Toledo. They searched for discreet spots for encounters. They dropped off condominium keys.

And they talked about the women in the bluntest of terms.

"Get the one with the thing in her tongue," Dimora could be heard saying in one secretly recorded phone conversation.

Jurors previously had heard testimony suggesting that Dimora sold his influence to contractors and others for much more mundane loot a refrigerator, a wide-screen television, a gambling junket to Las Vegas, a poolside Tiki bar for his Independence home.

Most of the salacious new testimony came Tuesday morning, with Dimora's wife, Lori, absent from the courtroom and Michael Massie, the FBI's lead investigator in a five-year investigation of corruption in county government, on the stand.
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Former Cuyahoga County Commissioner JImmy Dimora leaves the Federal Courthouse in Akron at the end of another day in his corruption trial Tues., Jan 24, 2012. At far right is his co-defendant Michael Gabor. (Thomas Ondrey/The Plain Dealer)

The men wanted Dimora to increase their boss's pay so that their own salaries, which were higher, wouldn't seem so out of line, Massie testified.

Prosecutors played intercepted phone conversations in which Kelley, Payne and Dimora planned for Dimora to have a Saturday night adventure.

At one point, Kelley asked Dimora if a penthouse at the Embassy Suites hotel at Cleveland's Reserve Square would work. But the commissioner nixed the idea, fearing he might be spotted by someone from television station WOIO Channel 19, which had offices nearby.

The men also considered a condominium at the Stonebridge complex on the West Bank of the Flats.

Kelley repeatedly phoned Dimora about Payne's efforts to get a key, almost to the annoyance of Dimora.

"Don't make yourself crazy, okay, Dimora said. "...If it works, it works."

After securing one of the condos, Payne told Dimora he would drop off the key en route to taking his daughter to a birthday party.

"I appreciate your due diligence on this for me," Dimora said. "You're a good man."

Payne had access to the condo development through architect Robert Corna, he said in the recordings. Corna partnered with The K&D Group and developer Doug Price to design and build the complex, which consists of three buildings near the Superior Viaduct.

K&D's lawyer, Virginia Davidson, said this week that Corna is no longer associated with the development.

At the time, Davidson said, Corna was one of several partners involved in the development. He was in charge of construction management, including on-site operations. K&D, she said, provided property management services, for example, sales, rentals and accounting services. Corna did not respond to a call or email for comment.

Midday update of Jimmy Dimora's trial for Tuesday, Jan. 24 Plain Dealer reporter Peter Krouse updates you on what happened during the morning session of the county corruption trial of former Cuyahoga County Commissioner Jimmy Dimora in Akron.
Dimora and his friends used the condo on other occasions, according to Massie. And again, Dimora raised the subject of sex.

During the planning for a poker game one night, Dimora asked if there was going to be a little "gumar," an Italian slang term for a mistress or girlfriend.

Prosecutors alluded to other connections between Dimora, his friends and women. They played a recording of Kelley, who was with Dimora at the time, calling Payne and looking for the number of a woman named Rebecca.

"I don't know how to get a hold of her," Payne replied.

Massie testified that Rebecca is Rebecca Johnson, a female escort hired by Payne to provide services to Dimora, and that she advertises in Scene magazine and on Eros.com

Other documents presented in court showed how Payne arranged for Johnson and another woman, Allyson Peterson, to be picked up in a limousine and taken different places.

Payne, who was a lawyer, represented "A Touch of Class," a limousine service, and often bartered with his client for transportation services. Travel logs showed Peterson, who sometimes lived in Florida, being picked up at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport.

Another log had a Payne-provided limo picking up a young woman, in Toledo and bringing her to the Cleveland area. Massie identified the woman as escort LaTanya Calhoun, who goes by the name Egypt.

Payne, who eventually pleaded guilty to bribery and other crimes and began cooperating with prosecutors, died of thyroid cancer in 2010. Kelley also has pleaded guilty to corruption-related crimes and is expected to testify against Dimora.

The owner of the limo service, Frank Pistone, was one of the final witnesses Tuesday.

He testified that Kelley had arranged for others -- including Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Bill Mason, former County Recorder Patrick OMalley and former County Auditor Frank Russo -- to receive rides for unspecified purposes. Mason did not return a call Tuesday for comment.

Eventually, according to Pistone, some of the limo drivers objected to taking Payne or Dimora because the men didn't tip or delayed making the payments by weeks or months.

Prosecutors presented a September 2003 invoice for limo service arranged by Payne that took Dimora, two escorts and others to an Indians game at Jacobs Field. On the front of the invoice, the driver had written in large block letters: NO TIP FROM KEVIN.


Reporters James McCarty, Rachel Dissell and Stan Donaldson contributed to this story.

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I'm not sure what photo service my wife is using for all the prints and posters we get these days, but this current one is the least flexible I have encountered to this point in time.

I tried (Heinz) 57 workarounds and managed to get this one to carry, but now have to figure out which desktop or iPhone attempt worked.

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Uncle Dennis wrote:
Tribe Fan in SC/Cali wrote:
Uncle Dennis wrote:Thanks for bringing up memories of Buena Vista, just one of those places. And the Puppet Court is soooo cool, thanks!
Their Irish Coffee is truly amazing.


I'll submit there are few cities better than San Francisco for getting by without a car.......
I'll agree with that, but I am making Charlotte work that way for me.
Yep, I read the story and remember your passion for making it work.

Kudos.

I like your plan. You just have to be more resourceful and creative in pursuing your worthwhile mission than folks in San Francisco on a similar plan might have to be.

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Jan 27, 12:09 AM EST

Robert Hegyes, played Epstein on 'Kotter,' dies


METUCHEN, N.J. (AP) -- Robert Hegyes, the actor best known for playing Jewish Puerto Rican student Juan Epstein on the 1970s TV show "Welcome Back Kotter" has died. He was 60.

The Flynn & Son Funeral Home in Fords, N.J., said it was informed of Hegyes' death Thursday by the actor's family.

A spokesman at JFK Medical Center in Edison, N.J., told the Star-Ledger newspaper that Hegyes, of Metuchen, arrived at the hospital Thursday morning in full cardiac arrest and died.

Hegyes was appearing on Broadway in 1975 when he auditioned for "Kotter," a TV series about a teacher who returns to the inner-city New York school of his youth to teach a group of irreverent remedial students nicknamed the "Sweathogs." They included the character Vinnie Barbarino, played by John Travolta.

The show's theme song, performed by John Sebastian, became a pop hit.

Hegyes also appeared on many other TV series, including "Cagney & Lacey."

He was born in Perth Amboy and grew up in Metuchen, the eldest child of a Hungarian father and Italian mother.

He attended Rowan University, formerly Glassboro State College, in southern New Jersey, before heading to New York City after graduation. He returned to Rowan on several occasions to teach master classes in acting, a university spokesman said Thursday.

"He was a good friend to the university," spokesman Joe Cardona said.

Hegyes continued to act after "Kotter" and was a regular on "Cagney & Lacey." He also guest-starred in shows including "Diagnosis Murder" and "The Drew Carey Show."

On his website, Hegyes wrote that he was inspired by Chico Marx, whom he had played in a touring production of a show about the Marx Bros. He also recalled how his mother encouraged him to get involved in theater as a teen.
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Re: Idle Chatter

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loufla wrote:TFISC- Good looking family!

Is that Clos du Val you are slurping?

Good eye, Loufla!

My wife picked it out because they had some kind of two for one tasting coupon online. When we taste in The Livermore Valley it is normally free, or at least free if one buys a bottle or two after tasting.

My wife was the planner of this trip and had located some obscure grocery market in Napa that she said was well rated for their deli sandwiches. My daughter and I, and to a lesser extent my daughter's boyfriend chided her a bit as we waited in line for a full half hour as five or six ladies worked slowly to make each sandwich.

When we made it to the winery and had the fresh made on fresh baked bread sandwiches we were unanimous in, "OMG! This could be the best freakin' sandwich I have ever had in my life!" Of course, THAT was after the initial tasting as we chose a couple of bottles to have outside with our vineyard picnic lunch.

It was a rare slow day in Napa and we ended up having essentially private tastings.

After Clos du Val, where I bought enough to essentially get our tasting for free, we continued on to Silverado.

I think I shared pics of my daughter and her boyfriend here.....from there.

We spied a theatre promo poster of Ratatouille on the hallway in, featuring the rat with an oversized wine glass. I inquired with our pourer as to whether the framed posted could be purchased.

We were informed "no, because it is one of the owner's favorites."

My wife asked, "who is the owner?"

"Diane Miller, and her husband Ron."

I was like "Oh, OK."

But my wife, a Walt Disney fanatic (in the truest meaning) said, "OMG, do you mean Diane Marie Disney Miller??"

"The daughter of Walt Disney??"

"Yes," was the reply.

And yes, I now have half a case of Silverado wines (remaining) in our bar area.