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Hulk Hogan sex-tape lawsuit against Gawker due to go to Florida jury

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ST. PETERSBURG, Florida – Celebrity wrestler Hulk Hogan’s privacy invasion suit against the Gawker website over a sex tape of him posted on the website will go to a Florida jury after closing arguments expected on Friday.

Six jurors will weigh a celebrity’s right to privacy in the Internet age against freedom of the press as protected under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

The former professional wrestler testified during a two-week civil trial that he still suffers from the humiliation of the video’s release in 2012 by the New York-based website known for gossip and media reporting.

Hogan, who is suing in state court in St. Petersburg, Florida, near his home, seeks US$100 million (S$135 million) in damages.

The edited one-minute, 41-second video showed the longtime star of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) having sex with the wife of his then-best friend, radio “shock jock” personality Bubba the Love Sponge.

Hogan, 62, whose real name is Terry Bollea, said he did not know he was being recorded when the consensual encounter was recorded about a decade ago in a bedroom inside Bubba’s home.

Gawker said the post reflected the outlet’s mission to cover true and interesting subjects, stressing how Hogan made his sex life a public matter through his many statements about it.

Gawker excerpted a sex tape that it obtained without knowing its exact origin. The editor involved said the post was intended as a commentary on celebrity sex tapes, with the video clip focused on bedside conversation and containing only nine seconds of sexual activity.

Neither side played the published video to the jury. It was entered as court evidence, so jurors may view it during deliberations.

Wearing a signature black bandana during his testimony, Hogan sought to distinguish his real-life persona from the bombastic wrestling character he said he portrayed with”artistic liberty.”

He said his celebrity did not eliminate his right to privacy in a bedroom of a trusted friend’s home.

The trial addressed topics ranging from celebrity nudity to journalism ethics and website analytics.

Gawker said it did not make money directly off the post, which it flagged as unfit for workplace viewing and ran without display advertisements.

Experts for Hogan said the company netted substantial gains from the traffic it generated.

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Religious and community leaders in Tampines take part in crisis preparedness exercise

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March 18, 2016 7:59 PM

SINGAPORE – Religious and community leaders in Tampines took part in a crisis preparedness exercise this evening to test how they would react in the event of a terror attack.



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The Straits Times' News In A Minute: March 18, 2016

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March 18, 2016 7:51 PM

We look at: Singapore stepping up its strategy to counter terrorism, said Minister for Home Affairs and Law K Shanmugam. 



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FAS will not renew Stange's Lions contract

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The Football Association of Singapore (FAS) is likely to have a new president in June and one of his first tasks could be deciding just who will next lead the national team.

The Straits Times understands that the decision about who should succeed Bernd Stange as head coach of the national team will be left to the new man in charge. The new president, who will take over from Zainudin Nordin, will be picked in an open election in June.

Stange’s contract with the FAS ends next month and it is understood that neither side wishes to extend the contract for a third time. After an initial two-year deal, the German’s services were extended, but he was only given short-term deals, first for six months and then a further three months.

The Straits Times reported last October that Stange’s mediocre results with the Lions – he led the defending ASEAN Football Federation Suzuki Cup champions to a group-stage exit in 2014 and struggled to make an impact in the ongoing World Cup qualifiers – meant he was never viewed as a long-term solution to the Lions’ problems.

The parting of ways was confirmed at a meeting between Stange and the FAS senior management late last year, after which a global search began for his replacement.

It is understood that the FAS has a shortlist of more than 10 names, among them coaches who have taken charge of notable club sides and national teams in Europe. Also believed to be on the shortlist are former Lions greats Fandi Ahmad and V. Sundramoorthy.

The list will be whittled down to a handful of names, which will be presented to the new president and his executive committee in June. An appointment is expected to be made in July, ahead of November’s Suzuki Cup.

An FAS spokesman neither confirmed nor denied news of Stange’s impending departure and would only say both parties had discussed the German’s future and that an announcement will be made next month.

Stange will take charge of the Lions for their friendly match against Myanmar next Thursday (March 24) and Singapore’s final World Cup qualifying match against Afghanistan on March 29.


This article was first published on March 18, 2016.
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Saturday, March 19, 2016 – 02:00
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Singaporeans to be trained to deal with terrorist attacks

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Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam introduces a new national movement, called SG Secure, designed to enhance Singapore’s community-level response to terror threats.

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Home Team to roll out new security and community measures to fight terrorism

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March 18, 2016 6:25 PM

SINGAPORE – A new fast response police unit, that is tactically trained, mentally prepared, and equipped to respond to a terrorist attack, is being formed to beefed up Singapore’s security response to the terror threat.



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Singapore unveils counter-terrorism strategy in face of serious threat

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SINGAPORE – With the terrorist threat morphing and at its highest level in recent times, Singapore will enhance its counter-terrorism strategy through added surveillance and new emergency response teams specially equipped with counter-assault skills.
A new…

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Hindu cow activists drink pesticide in India, 1 dies

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RAJKOT – Eight Hindu cow rights activists drank pesticide as part of a protest in India calling for the animals to be given greater protection, with one protester dying of his injuries, police said.

The “gau bhakt”, or cow worshippers, consumed the poison at a rally outside a government office in western Gujarat state Thursday.

They were protesting at what they say is the ongoing slaughter of cows, considered sacred by India’s large Hindu population, despite a widespread ban on killing the animals.

“These men had come with bottles of poisonous substance and consumed a small portion in front of the collectors office”, Manish Nakum, a police inspector investigating the case, told AFP.

“All were rushed to the government hospital where one of them, identified as Gabhru Bharwad, 40, died during treatment in the evening ,” he said.

Nakum said he did not believe the men, who drank a mild pesticide used on cotton plants, intended to commit suicide.

Cow slaughter and the consumption of beef are banned in Gujarat and several other states in officially secular India.

But the activists claim cows are still being killed illegally and want cows to be given the special status of “rashtra mata” (“mother of the nation”).

Four of the protesters, aged in their twenties and thirties, were moved to a private hospital after their condition deteriorated, police said.

Dhaval Pandya, who participated in the protest in Rajkot city but did not drink pesticide, told reporters that cow slaughter was rampant in India.

“So to protect cows, which are holy to us like gods, we need to declare it as the mother of the nation,” he said.

Around 27 members of the same group also tried to block roads in Rajkot, but were detained, police said.

Around 80 percent of India’s 1.2 billion population is Hindu, but it is also home to large numbers of Muslims, Christians and Buddhists.

A spate of attacks on secular intellectuals and Muslims suspected of killing cows have heightened concerns of mounting intolerance under rightwing nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s two-year-old government.

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Friday, March 18, 2016 – 17:54
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Video: Dugongs chained and caged by Indonesian fishermen for tourist dollar

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Photos and a video have emerged showing sea animals chained up inside underwater cages near the remote island of Kokoya, Indonesia.

Divers swimming in the area came across two cages that trapped two dugongs on the seabed.

The divers believe the trapped marine mammals are a mother and her calf, and that they had been caught by local fishermen hoping to profit by allowing tourists to take photos with them, The Sun reported.

One of the divers, Delon Lim, told the news website that the mother and baby were being held in separate cages.

Lim later told animal welfare website The Dodo that while the baby was allowed to swim inside its cage, the mother’s movement was restricted by a huge rope.

The scars on the mother’s tail and the wear and tear on the rope suggest that the animals had been restricted and trapped for several weeks.

“He asked for some money if we wanted to see the dugong or take a picture,” Lim told The Sun, explaining that the animals were being used to attract tourists.

Lim and a fellow diver tried to convince the fishermen to free the dugongs.

He was quoted by The Sun as saying: “When we left the island, the fisherman had agreed to release them. But we were not so convinced he would, so we posted the video on social media.”

The video drew the attention of animal welfare authorities who arrived on the island the following day only to find the dugongs still trapped.

According to The Sun, they were finally set free later that day.

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Friday, March 18, 2016 – 17:22
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Going full throttle

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YOU have to admire the way New Zealand play cricket. You simply have to. A few years ago at the launch of a book written by my wife and I, the erudite Stephen Fleming had said that in New Zealand, cricketers learn to make the most of what they have because there isn’t a lot going around.

The best athletes want to be All Blacks and the total number of players playing serious cricket would be fewer than in a major Indian city.

It probably means they get opportunities faster but it also means they have to try harder. And they have to get smarter. We saw both those qualities on display when they played India on a pitch that could have been custom-made.

And yet, how often have we seen a situation where the home team is expected to waltz home in familiar conditions and is caught on the hop by a team that just does the simple things better!

When I first heard that New Zealand might leave out Trent Boult and Tim Southee, one of the most effective bowling combinations in world cricket, and play three spinners, I thought they were letting the conditions get to them and affect the way they were approaching it.

Three spinners from a New Zealand side that occasionally produced a Dan Vettori was unthinkable.

And yet, in the afterglow of the McCullum approach, New Zealand were ready to take bold decisions.

“This is the only way we can win so we might as well go ahead and do it”, they thought and as it turns out, it worked because the pitch was friendly and the bowlers didn’t try to bowl million-dollar deliveries on it.

I remember Rahul Dravid telling me that a quickish finger spinner bowling left-handed on a turning track was the most difficult to play.

He said that soon after Michael Clarke had taken six in Mumbai in 2004.

The track in Nagpur was nowhere near as diabolical but the nature of the game meant that the batsmen had to be thinking runs rather than survival and that actually made it easier for Mitch Santner.

Having said that, the ball he bowled to Rohit Sharma was a beauty and I wonder if that affected how the rest of the batsmen approached the match.

But this is about New Zealand! While Nathan McCullum has been around for a while and seen different conditions, Santner and Inderbir Sodhi have had to spend a major part of their lives bowling on tracks that weren’t exactly, and how tempting it is to use the phrase, what the doctor ordered for spinners!

Maybe it conditioned them into being disciplined because that was the flavour of their bowling in Nagpur. Sometimes you can see the harvest after a drought and get carried away. They were excellent.

By batting deep, and picking utility all-rounders, New Zealand have allowed themselves to go full throttle up front.

It is an interesting thesis, a bit like how King’s XI played the IPL a couple of years ago. If you have seven aggressive batsmen, you work on the principle that at least two or three will come off and often that gives you the run-rate you need.

It means that sometimes you die by the sword, and that could well happen later in the tournament, but it is an approach that the opponent must fear.

I got the impression too that New Zealand conditioned themselves (and that is how it seemed from 100m away) into thinking that they had nothing to lose. It is an extremely powerful mindset, one that allows fearless decision making but one that is almost impossible to sustain.

Or maybe, New Zealand will tell us that it is the only way to play T20 cricket. Either way, it makes them the team to follow in this tournament.

tabla@sph.com.sg


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Friday, March 18, 2016 – 17:25
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