Society's Child
Needham was arrested on a warrant in April because she failed to appear at a preliminary hearing on charges of simple assault, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. Her attorney told the Post-Gazette that the woman was using the bathroom when sheriff's department officers broke down the door, shocked her with a taser and bound her in wrist and arm restraints that were too tight.
The rough treatment and confinement caused Needham's left arm to develop compartment syndrome, a medical condition in which muscle tissue is injured and swells, cutting off circulation to a compartment of the muscle.
Deprived of oxygen and nutrients, the muscle tissue in the blocked compartment dies and becomes necrotic. The damage then spreads to other tissues. Left unchecked, compartment syndrome can cost limbs and lives.

Farmers dig ditches to lead water from a white polluted stream into farm fields, in Dongchuan district of Kunming, Yunnan province.
China's Vice Minister of Land and Resources Wang Shiyuan reportedly told a news conference that current farming on the now-too-contaminated land - roughly the size of Belgium - will be halted and rehabilitated in order to ensure food safety. It was unclear late Monday whether food that had already been grown on that land would be sought out or recalled.
"These areas cannot continue farming," Wang said, noting that the Ministry of Environmental Protection had deemed all of the 8 million acres as having "moderate to severe pollution."
The Chinese government has said that the country needs at least 120 million hectares of arable land to ensure it is able to meet the vastly populated country's food needs. Though China started 2013 with a strong 135 million hectares of arable land, contamination - paired with recent efforts to convert farmland to forests, grasslands and wetlands - has caused the amount of stable cultivated land to drop to 120 million hectares, Wang said. Wang also said the country is committed to spending "tens of billions of yuan" a year for projects aimed at rehabilitating polluted land.

This handout photograph taken and released by The Kaohsiung City Government on September 19, 2013, shows Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman's rubber duck at a harbour in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung
The 18-metre-tall (59-feet) duck on show at Keelung burst around noon and deflated into a floating yellow disc, only 11 days after it went on display.
It was the second time that a giant inflatable duck -- a bath toy replica created by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman -- had burst while on show in Taiwan.
"We want to apologise to the fans of the yellow rubber duck.... the weather is fine today and we haven't found the cause of the problem. We will carefully examine the duck to determine the cause," organiser Huang Jing-tai told reporters.
Organisers had planned to stay open past midnight Tuesday in anticipation of a large new year crowd.
The Central News Agency cited an eyewitness as saying the rubber bird might have fallen victim to eagles which scratched it with their claws.
Three Taiwanese cities exhibited their versions of the yellow duck in 2013. But all were forced temporarily to suspend the exhibit due to bad weather or damage.

A destitute man sleeps on the sidewalk under a holiday window display, in New York.
On a chilly Christmas Eve, it took only a minute for a group of staff and residents at a homeless shelter in Harlem to list what the city's new mayor, Bill de Blasio, needs to do when he takes office on 1 January.
"Reinstate rent-subsidy vouchers, bring back after-school programs to keep the kids away from drugs and violence, supply more affordable housing for low-income families, sort out food stamps," one woman rattled off sternly, as she dashed from the anonymous red-brick building on a quiet residential block to talk to a staff member on a cigarette break. "You want me to go on?"
The woman wasn't a user of the facility, listing demands for herself. She was a security guard, angry at the deterioration in the circumstances of the people she is employed to supervise and protect. Her colleague, shivering in the freezing temperatures, flicked his cigarette butt into the road and pointed to a building across the street - a typical example of low-income housing subsidized by the city but owned and run by a private landlord, he said.
"Housing like that is becoming less affordable. Landlords used to take families that made as little as $17,000 per household but now they demand $30,000 or sometimes $40,000, and who can afford that on minimum wage or disability payments? That keeps people in the shelters."
Comment: Perhaps Bloomberg should spend some time out on the cold streets of New York City living in the same conditions as the homeless do - just to experience, personally, how much 'better off' the poor and homeless are in New York, as opposed to elsewhere.
Don't hold your breath for that to happen.
Acevedo was convicted, in part, on DNA evidence from rape kits that were only tested in the wake of the Ariel Castro case. On May 6, 2013, Amanda Berry, Georgina "Gina" DeJesus, and Michelle Knight were rescued after having been kidnapped, held captive, raped and tortured by Castro for over a decade.
When investigators from the Federal Bureau of Investigations' Violent Crime Task Force first presented Acevedo with evidence that he had chronically abused his three daughters for over thirty years, he denied having done so.
The FBI then confronted him with evidence that he was involved in the 1995 disappearance of Christina Adkins. At first, Acevedo denied any involvement in Adkins's disappearance, but when the FBI offered to remove the death penalty from the table, he confessed.
Irma lives in Massachusetts today, but she was born in 1930 under German fascism. She said her father battled tyranny for years, culminating with his imprisonment under the Nazis and another stint behind bars "under the worst conditions" after communism took over in then-East Germany.
"He had his ideas and he wouldn't bend to them," she told Sexton in a strong German accent, her voice breaking at times. "He did everything he could to prevent them from coming into power."
But the tone of Irma's voice shifted to nearly tearful anguish after Sexton remarked that accounts like hers demonstrate that there is such a thing as tyranny, that there is such a thing as evil, and "people need to understand that."
A priest in Nottingham, Father Jaime, had purchased the painting for $660, and brought it to a filming of Antiques Roadshow to be professionally appraised. Host Fiona Bruce initially thought the painting a fake, but something about it caught her eye.
She had just "spent weeks looking at nothing but Van Dyck paintings" with art expert Philip Mould, and suspected it might be genuine, so she called him in and he believed it was worth investigating.
After months of careful restoration, the pair consulted Van Dyck expert Christopher Brown, who verified it as a genuine Van Dyck worth approximately $661,000.
No injuries have been reported so far. Several area emergency teams are on scene and are setting up an incident command center. A viewer who is about a half mile from the derailment tells Valley News Live she can see large flames.
Several train cars are on fire and huge plumes of black smoke can be seen for miles. Emergency crews are urging people to stay inside and a code red alert has been sent out to residents in a two mile radius of the accident.
Krysta James, who was charged in the incident near Blythewood, has been released on bond.
Investigators say the incident began when the man was trying to leave a home on Twin Pond Road after the argument.
Then, investigators say that is when James attacked him around 8:30 p.m. Wednesday. Deputies say the man was stabbed in the upper body, but his injuries weren't life threatening.
James is charged with criminal domestic violence of a high and aggravated nature. She was released from the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center on a $10,000 bond.

Police say 16-year-old robbery suspect Clifton Chatman was killed during an attempted robbery in the 500 block of Alemany Boulevard near southbound Interstate Highway 280 on Dec. 14, 2013.
Police arrested the teenage suspect Thursday on suspicion of murder and attempted robbery for the Dec. 14 fatal shooting. The teen's name is not being released because he is a juvenile, police said.
The shooting, which killed 16-year-old Clifton Chatman, occurred at about 11 p.m. during an attempted robbery in the 500 block of Alemany Boulevard near southbound Interstate Highway 280, according to police.
The robbery victim told police he was surrounded by a group of males.
One suspect demanded the victim's cellphone and one took out a handgun while others rifled through the victim's belongings, police said.











Comment: Though one can understand this phenomena with mundane scientific explanation, one may also wonder whether universe is telling us some thing. If so, is it 'Party is over' ?