R Dub - Slow Jams

R Dub & "Sunday Night Slow Jams" on Shark Tank

Sunday Night Slow Jams Radio - Episode 507 - Week 4 - 10/11/2013
seen on Season 5, episode 507
Sunday Night Radio Host "R Dub"
on Sunday Night Slow Jams


 Who dat R Dub? If you never heard of R Dub and what His Sunday Night Slow Jams is all about, you will hear real soon on Season 5 episode 507 of the Shark Tank Show. As you probably gathered by the name, R Dub is a Master DJ specializing in Slow Jams on 50 radio stations around the world. Most songs played on the Sunday Night Slow Jams sessions are dedicated  from listener's with a special meaning, and gives R Dub's audience a reason to come back every Sunday night.

R Dub has a rich history in the radio business going back to when he was only 15 years old. This was also the time he decided to host his radio show "Sunday Night Slow Jams" his career and some 19 years later, R Dub is still going stronger than ever.

With the success of the Sunday Night Slow Jams, R Dub set his sights higher establishing his own 24 hour a day radio station specializing in the same type of music. This was first accomplished by starting his own 24 hour a day Internet radio station in 2005, and followed up by a "real" radio station in Los Angeles 92.3 FM picking him up in 2007. The list of radio stations now airing R Dub and the Sunday Night Slow Jams is very impressive and most likely will grow considerably after the Shark Tank air's this episodeRead More Here-->>>

Shark Tank Changes Rules

Shark Tank Show Changes #1 Rule

 
 It's no secret the number one complaint for getting on the Shark Tank is the 2% equity or 5% royalty fee imposed on ALL contestants whether they get a deal with the Sharks or not. For obvious reasons this has prevented some of the bigger more established businesses from even trying to get on the Show. Well thanks in part (from what I hear) from the Sharks themselves, and the success of the Shark Tank as a whole, the producers are getting rid of this required stipulation. All future Shark Tank contestants no longer will be required to give up equity in their companies unless of course they make a deal with the Sharks.

This is Great News for future contestants but what about the 300+ past entrepreneurs that's already appeared on the Shark Tank Show? Obviously when Mark Burnett the Executive Producer for the Shark Tank first conceived the idea for the Show, taking a small percentage of each business, product or idea in exchange for what amounts to priceless publicity, was part of the over-all business plan to make Shark Tank Financially Successful. If you think about it, it's a great long term strategy that I'm sure has been a great investment for all parties involved. Add this to the Shark Tank's Very Successful Rating's on T.V. which draws lots of competition, and you have a Major Hit that's generating piles of cash.Read More Here-->>>

Fairy Tale Wishes - Monster Repellent

Fairy Tale Wishes Monster Repellent on Shark Tank

Therapy Aroma Sprays for Children- Episode 503 - Week 3 - 10/4/2013

Aroma Therapy Sprays for Children episode 503
Fairy Tale Wishes
Therapy Aroma Sprays Seen on Shark Tank Season 5
 O.K, I have to admit, at first thought I wasn't sure what to think about a Monster Repellent for Kids.But the more I learn about this Aroma Therapy Spay for Kids, the more it made perfect sense why the Monster Repellent will certainly help. To this day I still clearly remember being convinced there was a monster under my bed and if I got up, it was going to get me. Would it of helped if my Mom had a bottle of Monster Repellent Spray from Fairy Tale Wishes? I'm not sure because I was completely convinced the boogie monster was under there, but I'm sure I would've felt a lot better knowing I had a repellent just in case. This will definitely be an exciting new episode of the Shark Tank Show seeing if the monster repellent can snag a Shark.

Debbie Glackman the owner of Fairy Tale Wishes took this unique idea for Monster Repellent and expanded the product line to include a Sweet Dreams Spray, Happy Camper Spray, Tooth Fairy Spray and my favorite, the Super Hero Spray.

Read More Here-->>>

Are we there yet?

September is coming to an end...

 

If you left pieces still undone, go ahead and finish them. If you are in FB, post them in the group or public page HERE

Visit the huge Linky list in the top Menu of this blog to have your daily fix of art, enjoy a new blog, leave them a comment and make a new friend in a far away place.  We have people from Australia, Argentina,  Belgium, Canada, England, Finland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, many places in the US ... Where else? Did I miss your country, let me know.

Hugs! See you next February! ♥ 
Meanwhile if you like challenges and paper, visit Manon's blog:



Salt n Pepper's here

Mr & Mrs SaltPepper

AG rejects Sheriff's refusal of info on jail death

Custodial death report to be released


Bulletin:A spokesman at the Sheriff's Office said at 10 a.m. on Monday, September 30, they have no record of a public information act request. “I can't find find the request,” she said, after going through several files.

You can file an information request. We will have ten days to seek an AG's opinion,” said Kelly Olson, who was taking over for the day for Sharon Wilson, whom, she said, is the custodian of record for the Bosque County Sheriff's Office.

Meridian, TX – A blanket denial of information regarding a matter under investigation by law enforcement is not legal, according to an Attorney General's Opinion released late last week.


County Attorney Natalie Koehler sought the advice of the Texas Association of Counties, who referred her to a Tyler attorney named Robert S. Davis.

Mr. Davis requested an opinion from the AG's office, a near-standard practice by Texas public officials who do not wish to release information. They say – routinely - that they have 10 days to respond.


Mr. Conyer began by informing the attorney retained by Bosque County that “...you acknowledge, the sheriff's office did not comply with its ten-business-day deadline under Texas Government Code Section 552.301(b) of the Government Code,” and that “the sheriff's office did not comply with its fifteen-business-day deadline under Section 552.301(e)...”

He added, “When a governmental body fails to comply with the procedural requirements of (the law), the information at issue is presumed public and must be released unless there is a compelling reason to withhold it.” He listed numerous cases as an authority.


The sheriff's office refused to release certain information regarding Ms. Troyn's demise because officials believe it describes her medical condition, which, they held, is a subject of federally protected privacy. Mr. Conyer disagreed, saying that only applies as to that privileged information which consists of “an individual's protected health information...(which) includes any information that reflects that an individual received health care from the covered entity.” She received no health care while in custodial detention.

You do not inform us the sheriff's office is a covered entity...”

Information at issue “includes a custodial death report” that is required to be sent to the Texas Commission on Jail Standards. A standard form of the Office of the Attorney General, it is a 4-page questionnaire consisting of extremely detailed inquiries, such as the date and time of arrest; the date and time the person was placed in custody or incarceration; the date and time of death; where the event that caused the death occurred; the manner of death; what type of treatment the deceased had received; if there were injuries, how the the deceased received them – from officers, other inmates, people with whom they had a dispute; had the deceased been receiving treatment for the medical condition after admission to the jail's jurisdiction; did the deceased at any time threaten the officers, fight or attempt to flee from custody; what type of custody/facility was the offender in/at prior to the time of death; the specific type of custody/facility; and an additional, optional space in which to attach remarks.


Although the matter is under investigation by both the department and by Texas Ranger Jim Hatfield, the law “does not except from disclosure 'basic information about an arrested person, an arrest, or a crime...'” He added that the law refers to “the basic front-page offense and arrest information held to be public in Houston Chronicle Publishing Co. v. City of Houston, 531 S.W. 2d 186-88.

An experienced criminal investigator named R.S. Gates, who retains his Texas Peace Officer's Certification, helped prepare the Public Information Request. At the time, he said he thought public officials' withholding the information could be prosecuted as a crime, under the provisions of the statute.

He is now convinced the opinion he formed at the time is correct.

I want it all,” he said. “I submitted a written request for it almost four months ago. I plan to continue my request for the information that the statute says I can have. The statute says that this information will be made promptly, and they dragged this out for almost four months.

It's not that the public is entitled to the information. The point is, the information belongs to the public. They (public officials) are merely the custodians. The only burden I have is, I have to want it. It already belongs to me.”

Rapid Ramen Cooker

Rapid Roman Cooker on Shark Tank

 Top Ramen Bowl - Episode 503 - Week 3 - 10/24/2013
Shark Tank Season 5, episode 503
Christopher Johnson
Inventor of "Rapid Ramen"
 Having College Student's on the Shark Tank with new products, inventions or businesses is nothing new. But having a College Student that invented a new product specifically for students is. Christopher Johnson is the inventor and soon-to-be Shark Tank Star who came up with a better way to cook the #1 meal found in most dorm rooms which is Top Ramen. While studying at the University of California Davis, Johnson realized he could cook Top Ramen in half the time using a microwave by simply changing the way the bowl was shaped. With a little experimenting and a lot of hard work that followed, the Rapid Romen Cooker was born.
 

Ramen Noodles on Shark Tank
101 Creative Ways To
Cook Top Ramen
While doing a little research on the Rapid Ramen, I must say I've never thought about what goes into making a perfect Top Ramen Meal. But Christopher Johnson sure has and seems to of perfected exactly what it takes to make Top Ramen in half the time and only using half the water recommended on the directions.
Read More Here-->>>

Freeloader Child Carrier

My Freeloader Child Carrier on Shark Tank

Piggy Back Carrier For Kids - Season 5 - Episode 5 - Week 3

Erick Jansen and Nathan Jones Inventors of Freeloader
Freeloader Child Carrier
Seen on Shark Tank Season 5
  If you're kids are getting a little big for the traditional child carrier's on the market, but you still love asking long hikes out in the woods, along the beach or sightseeing while on vacation, then My Freeloader Child Carrier may be just the solution you're looking for. Coming from someone that's always taken extremely long walks when something is on my mind, and raising two Boys on my own since they were very young, the My Freeloader Child Carrier could have come in handy multiple times.

We had our routine down pact; the kids would walk on their own until the first one started getting tired. It was more of a game so neither wanted to give in first, and as a result sometimes we'd end up several  miles away somewhere up in the Mountains usually resulting in a tie. This is where the piggy back rides start on our way back from whatever trail we were on at the time. It was a nice break for them as we made our way back to the vehicle, but not so much for Dear Ole Dad that never got a break most of the way. Who would've thought combining a traditional child carrier with a bicycle type seat would be the answer as the perfect way to give kids a piggy back ride?Read More Here-->>>

Kook n Kap

The Kookn Kap on Shark Tank Show

Cooking Cap - Episode 503 - Week 3
Shark Tank Season 5, episode 503
Kookn Kap Girls Coming To
The Shark Tank Show
 With a slogan like "Hair smells like crap? Get a Kap", you can be sure the Sharks will have their hands full with the Kook n Kap Gals. Juli Deveau and Ozma Khan are coming into the Shark Tank with a stylish cooking cap thousands of Shark Tank Fans are going to love. This Chef's Hat not only keeps hair from getting into your food while cooking, it also keeps the smell the food from getting into your hair.

As far as the look and style of the Kookn Kap goes, it's a little different from the traditional Cooking Hat, but I like it. I think it looks good on the Ladies, but not so much on the guys in their commercial. Juli and Ozma posted a picture on FaceBook of Kevin O'Leary wearing a Kookn Kap and he doesn't seem to mind, but something tells me the target market definitely favors the ladies.Read More Here-->>>

Just shut it, man

close me!

News tongue in cheek as house passes O-care defund

Washington – The House of Representatives passed a bill that is emblematic of the legislative gridlock prompted by Obamacare.

The law would delay implementation of the controversial health care program for one year, while at the same time paying the troops and paving the way to raise the nation's debt ceiling.

Senate Democrat Majority Leader Harry Reid said that nevertheless, the law is DOA in the upper chamber, and the President said it faces automatic veto the minute it hits his desk.

In repealing a medical device tax, AP writers noted, the government will forego $29 billion in new revenue over the coming decade.

“By repealing the medical device tax, the GOP measure also would raise deficits — an irony for a party that won the House majority in 2010 by pledging to get the nation's finances under control.”

Conflicting reports on Obamacare, shutdown fight

Washington – The national media is sending mixed signals about Congressional actions leading to a dramatic showdown on Tuesday, October 1, over funding the government and implementing Obamacare.

Meanwhile, the Treasury Department announced that if no rise in the national debt ceiling is authorized, the government will run out of cash on Oct. 17.

According to the Associated Press, House Republicans will on Tuesday unveil a new bill for preventing a government shutdown that would also delay implementing the rest of President Barack Obama's health care law for one year.

Republican Rep. Devin Nunes of California said the new bill also would repeal a new tax on medical devices in the Affordable Care Act. Republicans will try to pass a bill that would get paychecks to members of the military on time if a shutdown occurs, said Rep. Nunes.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is on record saying the Senate will not pass any bill keeping the government open past Monday that would alter the health care law.

The “New York Times” quoted Sen. Reid, saying the two votes signal “the first step toward wresting control from the extremists. This is it. Time is gone. Here’s a president who less than a year ago won election by five million votes. Obamacare has been the law for four years. Why don’t they get a life and talk about something else?”

According to the “Times,” The Senate stopgap spending legislation to keep the federal government open without The Affordable Patient Protection Act of 2010 sounds like a done deal. Times writers said Speaker John A. Boehner is now under pressure to find “a way out of an impasse that had the government on a steady course to a shutdown at midnight Monday.”

Senators voted 54-44 to cut off debate on House legislation that would fund the government only if the new health law is eliminated, terming that “a bipartisan rebuke to Republican hard-liners.”

“The 79-to-19 vote included the top Republican leadership and easily exceeded the 60-vote threshold to break a filibuster. It was followed by a 54-44 vote to take out the health law provision before passage.

(^o^)

la casa delle sorprese

Shark Tank Episode 505

Shark Tank Season 5 - Episode 505 (Week 2)


episode 505, week 2 w Lori Greiner
Lori Greiner Blowing Into The
Breathometer Breathalyzer App
 The Sharks are wasting no time showing their willingness to offer the big bucks if your business model has what it takes. Already in the second week of the Shark Tank Show, the Sharks will make their first $1 million dollar offer on tonight's episode.

 A lot of the episodes seem to have a theme with at least a few contestants, but in episode 505 the four businesses couldn't be farther apart. Starting with the newest specialty food product the Mango Mango Preserver's, to the Man Medal's Business which should be entertaining to say the least. Then we have an entrepreneur that's made a very impressive line of dog clothes and an App that transforms into a breathalyzer. Who gets the million dollar offer in tonight's episode? There are a few telling signs in the previews, but we'll all have to wait and see if they actually do get a deal with any of the Sharks.

 Mango Mango Preserves


 I have a feeling the three Mango Mango Ladies are going to be a Big Hit in tonight's episode. With several very successful specialty food products already seen on the Shark Tank, this one has all the ingredients to follow in their footsteps. I just hope they have enough Mango's to fulfill all the orders they will be getting after the Shark Tank Effect comes knocking on their door.

Man Medals

Read More Here-->>>

Judges call high noon show down over jail costs


Waco – There's a new Sheriff in town, and the DA isn't making deals.

People accused of serious crimes get no plea bargain offers other than what the statute calls for if convicted by a jury trial.
The Jack Harwell Detention Center, Waco's private jail

Assault? 15 years. Burglary? Same same.

The DA is on record. “You pull a gun on somebody, I guarantee you. We're gonna dance,” he told a Republican Club meeting.

What happens? The accused are less than eager to plead out.

People who can't make bail sit in stir for the obligatory 90 days, and then their court-appointed attorney gets them released on their personal recognizance on a motion for a writ of habeas corpus.

McLennan County found itself in the unenviable position of ranking just slightly behind Rwanda (492) in its rate of incarceration of prisoners per 100,000 population - 480. Even worse, it's just slightly ahead of the Russian Federation, which sees fit to lock up 479 per 100,000 on any given day. That compares with some big, bad towns like Houston's Harris County at 218, Ft. Worth's Tarrant County at 179. True, Waco is behind the south Texas counties of Kenedy at 2,324 and McMullen County at 1,803, which outstrips its population of 851 by a huge percentage. Immigration woes near the Rio Grande can be pesky. No doubt.

Nothing strange about any of this, since the U.S. has an incarceration rate of 716, head and shoulders over Cuba at 510; and Texas locks up 632 per 100,000, in fourth place behind Louisiana at 865 and Mississippi and Alabama at 690 and 650, respectively.

Texas penitentiaries are hard time joints; the temperatures during summer months hover between 100 and 130 degrees, both night and day. Many defendants don't mind doing as much of their time as possible in an air conditioned county lockup near family, friends, and their lawyers.

It's also no surprise that all this is expensive.

As it turns out, the ministerial duty of holding inmates is a constitutional obligation of the Sheriff, acting in concert with what has been aptly described as the world's most benign form of anarchy, a well-tuned Texas Courthouse in the full-blown throes of the status quo. That is Latin for what a Texas Ranger once testified is “the mess we done got ourselves in now.”

When weekends come, the DWI crowd shows up to serve their time behind bars on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights, and the resulting overflow goes next door to a privately operated, publicly financed lockup at the rate of $45.50 per day. In a recent year, that expense exceeded its budgeted allocation of $1 million by 300 percent. This year, it's a line item of $5.4 million, following a recent budget transfer of more than $800,000 in “contingency” funds.

When the Commissioners Court raised the tax rate by 5 cents in an attempt to keep up with the unsustainable financial equation, members of the Tea Party showed up for the second year in a row to say that elected officials had better start finding some solutions - if they like their jobs.

There is a pressure point, a place where there is a remedy to be found, and it's in the chambers of the county's seven judges.

They held two meetings on Wednesday, September 25. The first, at 8 a.m., was to consider budgeting more money to ankle bracelet monitoring for the non-violent offender serving time for minor drug cases and DWI. At $7 a day for the indigent and $8.50 a day for those who have jobs, 88 percent of 239 offenders successfully complied with the terms and conditions of probation. That includes wearing a monitor that can detect the use of drugs and alcohol.

According to an official of the company that furnishes and monitors the bracelets, this practice saved taxpayers an estimated $600,000 during fiscal year 2013.

The judges didn't stop there. They scheduled a high noon meeting to consider a brand new way of disposing of serious cases in a more timely, less expensive way.

Matt Johnson of the 54th District Court acted on a tip from two fellow district judges, Gary Coley, who hears chiefly juvenile cases, and Vicki Menard, who sits on civil matters, and consulted a Midland County judge.

In that west Texas regional banking and finance capital, a twin city to the petroleum production hub of Odessa, the judges acted on the same need and found a successful reduction in jail expenses.

It seems that in the Permian Basin, the Sixth Amendment guarantee of a speedy prosecution applies to the People of the State of Texas, as much as to the accused.

According to Judge Johnson, about 90 accused offenders have languished behind county bars for more than a year. For the record, even more have stalled for many months while on bail. In Midland, local judges found a solution by creating a special docket, one that dictates a final call for balky defendants – no matter what.

In a letter, he told his four fellow District Judges and two County Court-at-Law judges, “Before the date of trial the State and Defense would be given notice of the cases to be placed on this special docket. The cases would be set for a Final Docket Call in which a plea offer, if any, would be placed on the record and if no agreement was reached the case was set for a firm trial date.”

His former law partner, District Attorney Abel Reyna, campaigned on the notion that he would take the fight against crime to the courts, that the main problem would be “finding a court to try the cases.”

No problem, according to Judge Johnson.

On trial days, the 19th (criminal) Court and the 54th(criminal) Court, in full cooperation and with the approval of each judge, could send a felony case to a participating district court and/or County Court-at-Law. That would potentially give us 6 or 7 courts available for trial on selected weeks.”

What about defense attorneys who don't want to go along to get along?

There's a rumor going around. The judges are in charge of who gets appointed to defend which case, and attorneys are bound by ethics laws to act in the best interest of their clients.

It's a small, administrative matter for the Presiding Regional Judge to order judges of County Courts-at-Law or District Judges who typically hear civil cases to sit on criminal cases that have been placed on a special docket by order of the District Judges, according to Judge Johnson's reasoning.

The jury is still out.

The taxpayers and County Commissioners await the results of Judge Johnson's high noon meeting with his fellow jurists.

One may view a video of Tea Party reactions to the historic tax hike required to balance the books as a result of jail overcrowding by clicking here:

"Stay on the road. Keep clear of the moors..."

Shocked post

Just call me barnaby. Geddit?

Very Old Red Barn Smiling for Over a Century

Clinton, Obama sell Obamacare, blame Supreme Court

"The devil you know is always better than the devil you don't know." - Barack Hussein Obama

New York – A female AP news writer described the scene in a darkened hotel ballroom as a spectacle of two presidents wearing dark power suits, relaxed and nearly reclining on comfy overstuffed chairs as they explained the Affordable Patient Protection Health Care Act of 2010 – Obamacare – to an adoring crowd at an opulent fundraiser.


President Bill Clinton and President Barack Obama tossed away America's very real repulsion with a mandatory system of health care protection enforced by government bureaucrats as if it's a flute of fine champagne - offered in a toast, at a happy wedding reception.

They called it misdirected sentiment, aimed at the President, when it's really the Supreme Court that is to blame.

While freshman U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) read Dr. Seuss's “Green Eggs and Ham” to his little girls over C-Span as he filibustered a bill that if stymied would enable Republicans to hold the government's debt ceiling hostage to a defunding of the controversial law that becomes partly operative on Oct. 1, Clinton pointed out the part of the Supreme Court's decision on Obamacare that holds states cannot be forced to take Medicaid money to finance the expansion of health care coverage.

That's going to lead to a cruel result, and there's nothing the President can do, and it's not his fault,” he said. “That's what the Supreme Court said.” So, blame it on the Governors, the Attorneys General, and the state legislators for taking advantage of a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that enabled the bureaucracy of an unsustainably debt-riddled corporation, the United States of America, to force its citizens to buy health insurance – whether they want it, or not.

It's kind of like the Irishman who, when kicked by the jackass, said, “Consider the source.”

Such a deal.

Those individuals who refuse to enroll will be subject to punitive IRS tax levies, a procedure the Court ruled is constitutional because it's one of the House of Representatives' enumerated powers, that of levying taxes.

Part of the Clinton Global Initiative, the plan to palliate what a sizable majority of the nation sees as an abominable choice is in full swing. President Obama left the gala and appeared at a fundraiser held at the Waldorf-Astoria. Guests there paid a minimum of $5,000 a plate and a maximum of $32,400 to thump on the tubs for an idea that died an ignominious death 20 years ago during the Clinton Administration, was revived in 2010, and has caused the House of Representatives to vote its demise a phenomenal number of times - way past 30 times, but who's counting - to defund its implementation.

Despite their popularity, those bills have gone nowhere in the U.S. Senate. In fact, the issue has gridlocked the fiscal policies of the world's largest corporation, the U.S.A. The nation has operated without a budget since 2009, flying by the seat of its pants while the bankers who control the Federal Reserve Banks devalue the currency and increase the debt load to staggering heights.

Meanwhile, the world's more stable economies pour their cash into the deepest, most liquid pool on the planet, the Treasury bond market.

With a slipping credit rating, the yield is bound to go up. Cui bono?

One is reminded of the dilemma of confidence in the nation of Chile, right before they found President Salvador Allende sprawled across his desk, dead of a gunshot wound that left the back of his skull missing, the muzzle of a custom-engraved AK-47 assault rifle bearing Fidel Castro's signature thrust through his broken teeth. Jet fighters bombed and strafed the executive mansion for hours during his last day of life. Foreign policy experts often point to that as a textbook case of a hostile takeover. 

Here's a clue. The sitting President and Attorney General were ex-law partners - rainmakers - in Wall Street's largest, most successful bond firm.

It's all a function of "clearing up misconceptions," the President said. “Normally this would be pretty straightforward. But let's face it. It's been a little political, this whole Obamacare thing.”

As he spoke those words, Sen. Cruz read the names of dozens of multinational, Fortune 500 corporations that have cut their employees' work schedules to a week of less than 30 hours in order to exempt their payroll from its clutches. Cruz is the son of a Cuban who in 1959 fled what President Kennedy called “that imprisoned island” – fled for his life and those of his family.

This is the health care plan – the law of the land – the one you had to pass “to find out what's in it,” said then Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco).

This is a big part of what's in it.

Like Ragu, it's in there.

Woody the alien

Woody

Man who shot daughter in the back during alleged property invasion to go on trial for murder Dec. 3 in shotgun killing


Hillsboro – The world will hear the story of how Edwin Odell Collins put his teenaged kids in the family mini-van and fled their rural home near Whitney in terror.

Somehow, according to the story he told investigators in July of 2012, his 15-year-old daughter lost her life after she screamed, and he impulsively fired his shotgun in the dark – at something he could not really describe, and never saw clearly.

This much is clear; during the long night on which a pretty young woman lost her life, the Collins family was fleeing some nameless, unspeakable terror brought on by what the father, Edwin Odell Collins, 41, described in a 911 call as multiple vehicles driving around the rural property, and a group of flashlight-bearing individuals he feared were searching for he and his children.

To this day, he has not said why. 
Edwin Odell Collins

He has said only that he heard a loud bang, and surmised that someone was shooting at he and his children. His daughter screamed, and he shot his gun in defense of their lives.

His plea to the Court is he is not guilty of murdering his daughter.

When the sun rose on July 24, the father and his two sons walked into the Hill County Sheriff's Office. His 17-year-old son then helped authorities find the lifeless body of Judith Collins, the fatal gunshot wound that felled her located in her back, where she lay in a copse of tangled brush that follows the fenceline near the family business.

During the night he never called 911 to report the shooting. Mr. Collins placed a call on a cell phone to the Bosque County Sheriff's Office, telling the dispatcher there of the property invasion in progress. The man lost contact with Collins when he tried to patch the call through to the proper agency, the Hill County dispatcher's office.

He failed to mention to his father when he visited the store that the girl lay dead in the brush. He asked only if any officers had stopped by to investigate.
Judith Collins

Collins' Hitchin' Post is a beer and gasoline emporium, a pit stop for bottled propane, milk, bread and cigarettes located at the busy corner of FM 933 and FM 1713, just north of Whitney. The Collins home is in a complex of houses and barns at the rear of the farm, a few hundred yards distant, just down a meandering caliche road. To the south, there is a brushy area surrounding another house and the fence separating the property from a neighbor's.


The Collins family fled after approaching the rear door of the beer store; when they heard the loud bang, they abandoned their vehicle nearby and ran for cover in the trees.

The horrific tale would be almost unbelievable – except for one factor.

Many other people in this state, residents of rural areas peripheral to the vital access corridor between Laredo to the south and the teeming triangular-shaped megalopolis of smaller communities that lies between Dallas/Ft. Worth, Austin-San Antonio, and the coastal petrochemical complex of metropolitan Houston, have told a similar story.

Suddenly, their rural property is filled with vehicles chasing across the prairie, the night working alive with people carrying flashlights, running around, scouring the ground in the dark.

In at least one other case, a lawman fled when residents of a rural home chased him away from their property, his life's blood gushing from a gunshot wound to his back. 


It's hardly an unfamiliar story.

Others will only talk in guarded fashion about their experiences, too afraid to give a cogent and complete account of what has happened as they rested during a long night in rural homes near arteries of traffic leading from Mexico to the vital markets of the midwest, the northeastern Boston-Washington corridor, and the west coast beyond the Rockies and the deserts.

Only a fool fails to prepare.

Hill County's District Attorney, Mark Pratt, took his time about seeking the indictment grand jurors returned August 23. He had a previous autopsy finding of death by gunshot wound. He was seeking a finding based on certain evidence lawmen long sought that the wound was, in the expert opinion of a specialist, intentionally inflicted.

Jurors will assemble on December 3 to answer that question, once and for all.

Mr. Collins, a truck driver, remains free on $500,000 bond, charged with the shotgun murder of his daughter, who was shot in the back when she screamed in the night, fleeing some threat she perhaps never really saw and her family cannot fully describe. 

Retired man walks away unhurt after crashing plane


Laguna Park - A retired man walked away unhurt from an awkward landing at a private airstrip at 1:30 p.m. Sunday, September 22, just yards from Lake Whitney Dam.


Eyewitnesses said Steve Howard, 450 Bosque County Road 1812, appeared to have stalled his 1946 Taylorcraft, a single-engine plane, at an altitude of about 50 feet.

"It just fell out of the air, and then it bounced on the left landing gear and spun around," said a neighbor, who requested anonymity because of an on-going dispute over ownership of the landing strip. "We and everyone else in Laguna Park are in danger that he may crash into a house."

The person who witnessed the crash said the same aircraft crash-landed in a similar fashion only a few weeks ago.

The plane skidded to a stop in trees beside the runway, avoiding a collision with a propane tank by only a few feet.

The only real damage done was to the antique two-place airplane, which snapped the left landing gear and sheared off the left wing upon impact.

The landing strip is collectively owned by some 20 property owners whose lots surround the grass runway. Property owners settled the ownership dispute out of court a few years ago, said neighbors. 

Breathometer Breathalyzer App

Breathometer on Shark Tank

Breathalyzer App - Season 5 - Episode 505 - Week 2
 
Season 5, episode 505, week 2, 9/27/2013
Smartphone Breathalyzer App
Seen on Shark Tank Season 5
 It's really amazing how far the App Business has come in just that last few years. But making a functional working Breathalyzer App still seems like science fiction, right? I mean how can you make an App that reads your Blood Alcohol Content with stunning accuracy?

To take this smart phone app a step further, the Breathometer not only is a reliable breathalyzer, it's also a "smart" breathalyzer that can track your progress and let you know when it's safe to drive. With a retail price of only $49, this small little Breathometer can potentially save you thousands of dollars from getting a DUI, or a great deal more if you were also involved in an accident.

 Earlier this year on March 13, 2013, Charles Michael Yim decided to raise the needed capital for developing the Breathometer Breathalyzer App using Indiegogo as the preferred Crowd Funding Platform. Yim set a reasonable goal at $25k which was easily achieved way a head f schedule By the time the crowdfunding campaign was over, the Breathometer raised $138,000.00 from over 3800 contributors.

Charles Michael Yim is no stranger developing new technology or taking a startup company from an idea, to being acquired by a large conglomerate which the Sharks are going to love. Yim was the founder and CEO of Chatterfly which was started back in 2010 and successfully raised $1 million seed money in February 2011. Later that year in December 2011, Chatterfly was acquired by Plum District (a Kleiner Perkins Co.) who was only interested in the technology to further grow their version of the Daily Deals Business.Read More Here-->>>

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Kane & Couture Dog Accessories

Kane and Couture on Shark Tank Season 5

High Fashion Dog Accessories - Episode 505 - Week 2 - 9-27-2013

If you're a Dog Lover that loves dressing up your pets in style, then you're going to love what Kane and Couture has to offer. Pet apparel and fashion expert Amber Lee Kane is coming to the Shark Tank Friday Night with a very impressive line of high quality dog accessories. Some of the products include dog collars, leashes, harnesses, dresses, shirts and hoodie's all designed to make an instant fashion statement for you and your best furry friend.

I still remember the first time I seen a dog wearing a sweater my Grandma knitted for her poodle. I thought why on earth are you dressing up your dog that matched a dress she was wearing?  Her response was "because she looks so cute" and besides, "there's 2 feet of snow outside and it helps keep her dog warm in the winter". That was a good enough answer, but seeing a dog wearing a sweater for the first time, I still thought my grandma may of fell off her rocker. Little did I know that High Quality Dog Clothes and Accessories would grow into a multi-million dollar market.


Read More Here-->>>