Weird News

Man accused of drunken horse riding in snowstorm

CODY, Wyo. -- A man has been cited for public intoxication while riding a white horse during a snowstorm in the northern Wyoming town of Cody. Police said they cited 28-year-old Benjamin Daniels, of Cody, after they received a call at 4 p.m. Sunday from a motorist who was concerned that a man was creating a road hazard by riding his horse on a street in conditions with poor visibility.

Assistant Police Chief George Menig said officers noticed that Daniels was intoxicated after they stopped him to explain that drivers were having difficulty spotting his slow-moving white horse. Menig said Thursday that Daniels was detained Sunday and released the following day. He will go before a municipal judge later. A friend of Daniels' picked up the horse. There was no telephone listing for Daniels.
 
Man tried to reclaim breast implants from ex

VICTORVILLE, Calif. -- Prosecutors say a spurned lover ambushed his ex-girlfriend and tried to cut out the breast implants he paid for by stabbing her. San Bernardino County prosecutor David Foy says 28-year-old Thomas Lee Rowley attacked his ex in July 2006 outside her mother's home in Hesperia, some 70 miles northeast of Los Angeles in the Mojave Desert.

Rowley is on trial in Superior Court in Victorville for attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon, stalking, burglary, and false imprisonment.The 26-year-old woman survived six stab wounds and the punctured breast implants were repaired. Rowley's former roommate Dennis McGill testified this week that the defendant wanted to reclaim what was rightfully his. Rowley allegedly told McGill, "I'm gonna cut 'em out and get em back."
 
Police: NY boy dressed as girl to cheat on exam

SCHENECTADY, N.Y. -- Dressing as a girl to take a high school Regents exam in place of another student landed a 17-year-old upstate New York boy in some serious detention. Deandre Ellis, 17, of Schenectady was arrested on a felony charge after the incident Tuesday. City school officials said a monitor verifying that each student was taking the proper exam suspected something was amiss when the name on the test and the person taking it didn't match.

District spokeswoman Karen Corona said a closer look revealed the test-taker was a boy masquerading as a girl. Police said Ellis, who was released to probation authorities, was charged with burglary for entering the school to commit a crime. His public defender didn't immediately return a phone call or e-mail seeking comment.
 
NC police say fleeing robber scared woman to death

RALEIGH, N.C. -- Police say Larry Whitfield's entry into a life of crime went wrong quickly, and now he's facing the possibility of life in prison, accused of literally scaring a woman to death. Police say the 20-year-old North Carolina man and an accomplice planned to rob the Fort Financial Credit Union in Gastonia.

As they approached the bank, armed with semiautomatic rifles, the bank's staff locked its security doors. The men fled but crashed their getaway car, and while the accomplice was caught, Whitfield hid inside the home of 79-year-old Mary Parnell. There's no evidence Whitfield ever touched the woman and authorities say he even told the grandmother of five he didn't want to hurt her.

But investigators say Parnell was so terrified she died of a heart attack. Now Whitfield, who had no prior criminal record, is charged with first-degree murder.
 
Justice Department hoaxes employees

SAN DIEGO -- The U.S. Justice Department is acknowledging it perpetrated a hoax on its own employees to see if they were gullible enough to divulge personal information over the Internet.

The department sent a hoax e-mail promising a bailout to employees whose government retirement accounts lost more than 30 percent due to stock market declines. The bogus offer directed employees to a Web site that required that they plug in account information. The hoax was revealed by an administrator Wednesday after triggering a wave of anxiety among department employees. A department spokeswoman says the hoax was part of regular computer testing.
 
What CDL? You don't need no stinkin' license to pull two trailers in Michigan!

Michigan is a state of contradictions. The authorities there are so worried about your focus on the road in front of you that it's illegal to hang anything on your rear-view mirror. Yet if you want to triple tow - that's pulling two trailers at one time, like an RV camper and a boat - you can do it after you pay $10 and take a 15-question test. And you just need to get 12 answers right.

The only caveat worth mentioning is that the total length of the tow vehicle and two trailers can't exceed 65 feet. That's about the length of a semi-trailer combo, the differences being that a semi-trailer has only one articulated point and the folks who drive them need expensive specialized training and commercial driver's licenses.

Incredibly, Michigan is not only not alone with this, it is not the most permissive: Wisconsin and other states allow 65-foot triple-towing combinations, South Dakota allows 75 feet, and Wyoming gives drivers a whopping 85-foot towable length. No wonder Wyoming is the state of The Bucking Horse and Rider...

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Erik, I have officially adopted your wierd news reports for my Radio Show, i showed the program director and He approves, the only thing Is that I am not allowed to use any of the Lewd or sexual ones on my show. I appreciate the frequent updates
 
N.J. disc jockey to part with Jenny's number

WEEHAWKEN, N.J. -- After five years fielding thousands of calls to one of rock 'n' roll's most celebrated phone numbers, disc jockey Spencer Potter is hanging up on Jenny. Her seven digits are familiar to anyone who paid attention to pop music in the early 1980s: 867-5309, immortalized by the band Tommy Tutone.

Potter and his roommates requested the number on a lark for their home phone in northern New Jersey. They got it, along with about 30 to 40 calls a day. The 28-year-old Potter says he's selling his business, A Blast Entertainment, and moving to New York. The business and the phone number are for sale on eBay, where the high bid was about $1,000 by Sunday morning.
 
Police arrest man driving boom lift at 3 a.m.

MOUNTLAKE TERRACE, Wash. -- Police knew something wasn't quite right after they spotted a man driving a piece of construction lift equipment down a street at 3 a.m. on Thursday. The man, who appparently had been drinking, was in the lift bucket of the Genie Boom with an unopened six-pack of beer and a bag of beef jerky when police pulled the vehicle over. He was clocked at 2 mph.

At first the 29-year old man told police he was just going to the store. But when they asked him why he was in the bucket on the lift, he said he was delievering the $20,000 piece of construction equipment on a dare from a stranger he met on Craigslist, according to a police report.

The Everett Herald reported the lift apparently had been taken from a construction site. The man was jailed for investigation of theft.
 
Police: Sister beats up bride at wedding reception

HEBRON, Ind. -- A woman who wasn't invited to her sister's wedding reception showed up anyway and attacked the bride, pulling out clumps of her hair, police said. Annmarie Bricker, 23, of Valparaiso, was arrested on a misdemeanor charge of battery. Jeremy Glotzbach told police he was hosting a reception for newlyweds Nicholas Landry and Lori Kappes at his home on Jan. 23 when Bricker, Kappes' sister, attacked Kappes on the front porch. Bricker pulled out clumps of Kappes' hair, struck her head and took the bride to the ground during a struggle, according to the Porter County Sheriff's Department.

Bricker told police she went to the house because she "just wanted to talk" to her sister and parents about family problems. She said she never touched her sister, but five witnesses contradicted her, authorities said. Kappes did not need medical treatment. Bricker later resigned from her job as a Porter County 911 dispatcher, officials said.
 
Gluttony and strippers reign at Philly Wing Bowl

PHILADELPHIA -- In a gut-busting display of championship eating, a man nicknamed Super Squibb has won Philadelphia's Wing Bowl by downing 203 chicken wings in about 20 minutes. For his efforts, 23-year-old John Squibb of Berlin, N.J., gets a car, a $7,500 diamond ring and a crown of miniature chickens. And maybe a case of indigestion.

Thousands attend the early morning gorge-fest held every year on the Friday before the Super Bowl. The contest is sponsored by sports-talk station WIP-AM. It also features scantily clad "Wingettes" and a cast of sickened contestants. Professional eaters were not allowed in this year's Wing Bowl, but organizers say they'll be back next year. Richard "Not Rich" Razzi came in second by eating 180 wings
 
Its a catastrophe for the apostrophe in Britain

LONDON -- On the streets of Birmingham, the queen's English is now the queens English. England's second-largest city has decided to drop apostrophes from all its street signs, saying they're confusing and old-fashioned. But some purists are downright possessive about the punctuation mark.

It seems that Birmingham officials have been taking a hammer to grammar for years, quietly dropping apostrophes from street signs since the 1950s. Through the decades, residents have frequently launched spirited campaigns to restore the missing punctuation to signs denoting such places as "St. Pauls Square" or "Acocks Green."

This week, the council made it official, saying it was banning the punctuation mark from signs in a bid to end the dispute once and for all. Councilor Martin Mullaney, who heads the city's transport scrutiny committee, said he decided to act after yet another interminable debate into whether "Kings Heath," a Birmingham suburb, should be rewritten with an apostrophe.

"I had to make a final decision on this," he said Friday. "We keep debating apostrophes in meetings and we have other things to do." Mullaney hopes to stop public campaigns to restore the apostrophe that would tell passers-by that "Kings Heath" was once owned by the monarchy.

"Apostrophes denote possessions that are no longer accurate, and are not needed," he said. "More importantly, they confuse people. If I want to go to a restaurant, I don't want to have an A-level (high school diploma) in English to find it." But grammarians say apostrophes enrich the English language.

"They are such sweet-looking things that play a crucial role in the English language," said Marie Clair of the Plain English Society, which campaigns for the use of simple English. "It's always worth taking the effort to understand them, instead of ignoring them." Mullaney claimed apostrophes confuse GPS units, including those used by emergency services. But Jenny Hodge, a spokeswoman for satellite navigation equipment manufacturer TomTom, said most users of their systems navigate through Britain's sometime confusing streets by entering a postal code rather than a street address.

She said that if someone preferred to use a street name - with or without an apostrophe - punctuation wouldn't be an issue. By the time the first few letters of the street were entered, a list of matching choices would pop up and the user would choose the destination. A test by The Associated Press backed this up. In a search for London street St. Mary's Road, the name popped up before the apostrophe had to be entered.

There is no national body responsible for regulating place names in Britain. Its main mapping agency, Ordnance Survey, which provides data for emergency services, takes its information from local governments and each one is free to decide how it uses punctuation. "If councils decide to add or drop an apostrophe to a place name, we just update our data," said Ordnance Survey spokesman Paul Beauchamp. "We've never heard of any confusion arising from their existence."

To sticklers, a missing or misplaced apostrophe can be a major offense. British grammarians have railed for decades against storekeepers' signs advertising the sale of "apple's and pear's," or pubs offering "chip's and pea's." In her best-selling book "Eats, Shoots and Leaves," Lynne Truss recorded her fury at the title of the Hugh Grant-Sandra Bullock comedy "Two Weeks Notice," insisting it should be "Two Weeks' Notice."

"Those spineless types who talk about abolishing the apostrophe are missing the point, and the pun is very much intended," she wrote.
 
Ohio man sentenced for disciplining children with electronic dog collar

XENIA, Ohio -- A western Ohio man has been sentenced to 16 years in prison for disciplining his children with a dog collar, the kind that gives a mild shock. Thirty-nine-year-old David Liskany, of Jamestown, had pleaded guilty to charges of felonious assault and attempted felonious assault.
 
Man jailed for hiring hitman to kill wife's horses

GREENSBURG, Pa. -- A western Pennsylvania man will spend up to one year in jail for trying to hire a hitman to kill his estranged wife's two horses. Thirty-five-year-old Joseph Mendicino of Scottsdale is already in jail for violating a protection-from-abuse order. On Friday, Mendicino pleaded guilty to charges he took out a contract on his estranged wife's horses and tried to run her off the road.

Police say Mendicino tried to arrange the hit on the horses from the Westmoreland County Prison. Mendicino initially talked to another inmate about hurting his wife's new boyfriend and her horses. The inmate informed county police who set up a sting operation and had a detective pose as a horse hitman during a phone call with Mendicino
 
Virtual heroics: Gamers can try NYC river landing

NEW YORK -- You can be the virtual Hero of the Hudson. An online video game inspired by the heroics of Flight 1549's crew offers players the chance to try landing a plane in the Hudson River. The instructions for the game tell you to use the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard to keep the plane level with the water as it plunges from an altitude of 1,500 feet.

It begins with the warning, "The fate of passengers is in your hands!" If you get it wrong, the jet crashes and sinks into the river with an ominous gurgling sound. The pilot of the US Airways flight was forced to ditch the plane in the river after a collision with a flock of birds knocked out both engines. All 155 aboard survived the Jan. 15 splash-landing.
 
Ark. Highway Police seize 890 pounds of marijuana

HOPE, Ark. -- An 18-wheeler heading from Texas to Canada was carrying some extra freight that turned up in a safety inspection at an Interstate 30 weigh station, Arkansas Highway Police said Monday -- 890 pounds of marijuana.
A news release from the agency said the truck driver, Laroi Jeff Sutherland of Toledo, Ohio, was arrested on a charge of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver.

According to the release, several bundles of marijuana were found as officers conducted an inspection at the Hope Highway Police Station in Hempstead County on Thursday. The truck was apparently traveling from Donna, Texas, to Ruthven, Ontario, Canada, the release said.
 
Staten Island Chuck bites NY Mayor Bloomberg

PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. -- A Pennsylvania groundhog says there will be six more weeks of winter. A New York groundhog had an even nastier message. Staten Island Chuck bit Mayor Michael Bloomberg on the hand during his annual forecasting ceremony today. A Bloomberg spokesman says the animal "nicked" the mayor's hand, drawing blood, but that there's no risk of rabies. Chuck was born and raised in captivity, and has had no interaction with other animals.

Earlier, in Punxsutawney, Pa., the groundhog known as Phil emerged just after dawn in front of an estimated 13,000 witnesses. Organizers reported that the world's most famous groundhog saw his shadow, which traditionally means winter will last for six more weeks. That wasn't enough to dampen the exuberant mood of the crowd, many dressed in Pittsburgh Steelers colors to celebrate the team's Super Bowl victory.
 
Soldier lands safely on 1st skydive with dying instructor

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Daniel Pharr calls it a "once-in-a-lifetime" event that he hopes he never has to top. The 25-year-old soldier made his first skydive on Saturday, strapped to an instructor. After free falling for a minute, the instructor pulled the chute and Pharr says "it got super quiet." Instructor George Steele told him, "Welcome to my world." And those were the last words he spoke. Pharr says he tried to ask a question, but got no response.

He says he realized something was wrong with Steele. So, it was up to Pharr to guide them to a landing. Pharr credits his military training with teaching him not to panic, and as the pair drifted toward a house and some trees, he managed to steer the chute toward a field instead. On the ground, Pharr started CPR on Steele, but it was too late. A county coroner says initial indications are that Steele died of a heart attack. Pharr says his family doesn't want him jumping again
 
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