Society's Child
Robert Watson, 54, of Des Moines, brought his gravy-soaked laptop into a local Best Buy back in August and asked workers to transfer his files onto his new device, according to police.
That's when employees with the store's "Geek Squad" said they found several inappropriate images of underage girls, police said.
"During this file transfer process employees at Best Buy 'Geek Squad' observed multiple images they believed contained child pornography," police said in a complaint. "Once this transfer was complete both computers were collected by Des Moines police as evidence."
The controversy comes after a working group determined the mural, made up of several panels, "traumatizes students and community members." But advocates for keeping the 83-year-old mural say that removing it ignores the intent of the artist and represents an attempt to erase history.
In 1936, Victor Arnautoff painted the 13 panels that make up the "Life of Washington" mural at the San Francisco Unified School District campus. Arnautoff was a prominent Russian-American painter who created the murals as part of a Works Progress Administration project undertaken during the New Deal.
Comprised of five independent experts, the UN rights group said that Assange's 50-week internment at the high-security Belmarsh prison made it seem "as if he were convicted for a serious criminal offense."
Claiming that Assange had received a "disproportionate sentence," the UN experts argued in a statement that his punishment "appears to contravene principles of necessity and proportionality." The statement also described the skipping bail charge as a relatively "minor violation."
The same panel issued an opinion in 2015 that Assange was being arbitrarily detained, after the WikiLeaks figurehead was forced to seek political asylum at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, in order to avoid extradition to Sweden to face allegations of sexual assault.
After thousands of protesters took to the streets of Paris to mark International Workers' Day on Wednesday, Castaner took to Twitter to condemn what he said was an attack on the city's Pitié-Salpêtrière hospital.
The protesters, he said "assaulted nursing staff," and "wounded a policeman mobilized to protect it."
Health Minister Agnes Buzyn described the alleged break-in as "unspeakable," while Prime Minister Edouard Philippe condemned it as "totally irresponsible."

This picture taken on May 23, 2010 shows a Nepalese sherpa collecting garbage, left by climbers, at an altitude of 8,000 metres during the Everest clean-up expedition at Mount Everest.
A clean-up team in Nepal recently picked up more than three tons of garbage from the area around the world's highest peak, and they plan to grab a total of 11 tons in a 45 day cleaning initiative that started April 14, local media reported.
"Our goal is to extract as much waste as possible from Everest so as to restore glory to the mountain. Everest is not just the crown of the world, but our pride," Dandu Raj Ghimire, Nepal's tourism director, told reporters earlier this week in Kathmandu, according to the Hindu.
Hrafnsson sought to collect Assange's belongings which were left behind in the embassy after he was arrested on April 11. However, the Icelandic investigative journalist failed to even enter the premises of the diplomatic mission, as, according to him, the Ecuadorian diplomats simply refused to open the door and let him in.
"I sent them an email and told them I would be there at 3 o'clock with a full mandate from Julian Assange, his family and friends and that I am the editor-in-chief of the WikiLeaks. They did not open the door. It is disgraceful," Hrafnsson told a crowd of around 50 Assange supporters that had gathered in front of the embassy following the publisher's extradition hearing.
A crowd which staged an improvised rally in front of the mission chanted: "respect the law", "free Assange" and "open the door." Some of the demonstrators were also holding placards that read: "Free Assange" and "Free Speech."
The norms of academia-which have been built up and preserved by institutions such as Cambridge for centuries-demand that academics engage with each other in a scholarly manner. That is, if one academic has a problem with the methods or conclusions of another's research, he or she should address those concerns within journals, according to established procedures, which other scholars can then read and respond to, including the academic whose research is being challenged.
Today, due to the hyper-specialisation of academic fields, most academics will not be able to judge the quality of scholarship that is published in journals outside their field. That's why when research is peer-reviewed it is done by experts in the specific field in which the research was carried out, not by a random selection of university professors. Just as a professor of English will not be able to judge a study conducted within chemical engineering, a chemical engineer will not be able to assess a scholarly essay on Shakespeare's sonnets.
It was the latest blow to the leadership of a city that's seen two mayors resign in scandal in less than a decade and a third one decline to seek another term after a riot over police misconduct and a soaring murder rate.
Pugh, a Democrat, submitted a letter of resignation with Thursday's date filled in by hand. Her resignation is effective immediately, her attorney Steven Silverman said at a 96-second news conference at his offices in downtown Baltimore.
Pugh did not attend, Silverman took no questions and there was no indication when she would emerge from the seclusion she's imposed on herself since her last news conference March 28.
It's those kinds of greetings that has made companies think twice about physical contact in the workplace. So where does that leave handshakes?
A survey by TotalJobs found that three out of four people want all physical contact banned at work. The idea is to remove confusion over what kind of touch is appropriate.
Some companies are now considering whether they should prohibit handshakes.
"I think that's going a little too far. I've never had a problem with it," one woman said.
"I think it's a show of mutual respect," said one man.
"This chaos reflects a real danger to our society and to our time because Julian Assange is very symbolic for freedom of speech and freedom of press," the iconic artist and activist told Ruptly video news agency as he joined dozens of protesters, who gathered near the Brandenburg Gate - one of the best-known landmarks of the German capital - to support Assange, who is now fighting against his extradition to the US.
"We are all Julian Assange," read a large banner that the demonstrators unfurled. Ai warned that if the extradition case moves forward, it would "pose a danger to all journalists and all individuals, who are defending the very essential rights" of the freedom of speech and the freedom of press.














Comment: More on Dr Carl's research: