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FT. HOOD SHOOTINGS

TEXAS-SHOOTINGS

TEXAS-SHOOTINGS

Rampage at U.S. Army post
An Army official tells CNN as many as tweleve people are dead in shootings at Fort Hood in Texas.
Source: CNN.com Live

Officials: 11 killed, plus gunman, in Fort Hood shootings

(CNN) — Eleven people plus a gunman were killed and 31 were wounded after the gunman opened fire at Fort Hood in Texas on Thursday, a Fort Hood spokesman said.

The gunman was a soldier, and two other soldiers have been detained as suspects, said the spokesman, Lt. Gen. Bob Cone.

Cone said more than one shooter may have been involved.

Watch developments live

President Obama called the shootings “tragic” and “a horrific outburst of violence.” He expressed his condolences for the shooting victims.

Officials at Fort Hood, which is the Army’s largest U.S. post, were asking people there to stay away from windows, CNN affiliate KXXV said. The incident took place at the sports dome, now known as the soldier readiness area, the station reported.

* Fort Hood
* Shootings
* U.S. Armed Forces

FBI agents are headed to the scene to assist, said Erik Vasys, spokesman for the FBI office in San Antonio. He had no other details.

On the Fort Hood Web site, the word “closed” is posted with the statement, “Effective immediately, Fort Hood is closed. Organizations/units are instructed to execute a 100 percent accountability of all personnel.”

Fort Hood, with about 40,000 troops, is home to the Army’s 1st Cavalry Division and elements of the 4th Infantry Division, as well as the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment and the 13th Corps Support Command. It is located near Killeen, Texas.

At least 25,000 people are at Fort Hood on any given day, an Army spokesman at the Pentagon said.

Fort Hood is home to the Warrior Combat Stress Reset Program, which is designed to help soldiers overcome combat stress issues.

In June, Fort Hood’s commander, Lt. Gen. Rick Lynch, told CNN that he was trying to ease the kind of stresses soldiers face. He has pushed for soldiers working a day schedule to return home for dinner by 6 p.m., and required his personal authorization for anyone working weekends. At the time, two soldiers stationed there had committed suicide in 2009 — a rate well below those of other posts.

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Jaycee Dugard Face Showed

Pictures of Jaycee Dugard, who suffered an 18-year kidnap ordeal in the US, as she is now have published for the first time.

People has a preview piece on its website promoting Friday’s magazine featuring a full interview with Ms Dugard, now 29.

The photo on the magazine’s cover shows Ms Dugard with brown wavy hair, a departure from the blonde schoolgirl that disappeared in 1991; but the smile is unmistakably hers.

She was 11 when she was abducted from outside her family home in Lake Tahoe, California. Two months ago she reappeared, along with two daughters Angel, 15, and Starlit, 11.

Phillip Garrido and his wife Nancy have pleaded not guilty to kidnapping and rape over Ms Dugard’s abduction.

People said Ms Dugard was “so happy” to be living at a secret location with her mother Terry Probyn, 50, and her two daughters.

She apparently spends her time riding horses, cooking and working on a book.

“They live a surprisingly normal life, considering the circumstances,” Mrs Probyn’s stepmother Joan Curry told People.

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susan boyle wild horses lyrics

susan boylesusan boyle wild horses lyrics

susan boyle wild horses video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yb3XAP0c8WU

Britain’s Got Talent’ sensation Susan Boyle will perform this week for the finale of ‘America’s Got Talent.’ Also on tap for the Scottish singer is her new album, entitled ‘I Dreamed a Dream.’

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DJ AM And Travis Barker Private Plane Crash

DJ AM And Travis Barker Critically Injured In Private Plane Crash In South Carolina

Barker’s assistant, security guard, two others killed in crash.

travis barkerFormer Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker and DJ AM were critically injured in a plane crash Friday night in Columbia, South Carolina. The plane’s four other passengers were killed.

Lexington County Deputy Coroner Brian Setree confirmed for MTV News on Saturday morning (September 20) that three men and a woman died in the crash. The victims were: Barker’s assistant, Chris “Little Chris” Baker, 29, of Studio City, California (who appeared on MTV’s reality show “Meet the Barkers”); Barker’s security guard, Charles Still, 25, of Los Angeles; the plane’s pilot, Sarah Lemmon, 31, of Anaheim, California; and her co-pilot, James Bland, 52, of Carlsbad, California.

Barker and AM had just performed at a free T-Mobile-sponsored show in the Five Points area, along with Perry Farrell and headliner Gavin DeGraw. Though early reports had suggested that DeGraw may have been on the plane at the time of the crash, DeGraw’s father, Wayne, told MTV News that he’d spoken to his son Saturday morning and that he was fine. Farrell’s manager, Peter Katsis, confirmed that Farrell was not on the plane.

Beth Frits, a spokesperson for the Joseph M. Still Burn Center in Augusta, Georgia, confirmed that AM (born Adam Goldstein) and Barker were transported to a hospital in Columbia following the crash. They were transferred — AM by helicopter and Barker by ambulance — to the Still Center soon after. She told CNN that both men had “extensive burns.”

According to TMZ.com, Barker sustained burns from the waist down, while AM suffered facial burns; UsMagazine.com reported that AM was in a doctor-induced coma and will undergo skin grafts. Both sites cited unnamed sources; MTV News was unable to confirm those reports at press time.

On Saturday afternoon, members of both men’s families were reportedly traveling to Georgia to be with them.

The crash took place just before midnight on Friday and involved a twin-engine private Learjet with six passengers onboard, according to Lynne Douglas, public information officer for the Columbia Metro Airport. While taking off, the plane, which never left the ground, overran the runway, struck an antenna array and several lights, and began sending up sparks. It skidded off the end of the runway, through a perimeter fence separating the airfield from a nearby roadway, and then crossed the roadway, coming to a stop on an embankment. The plane caught fire on impact. Douglas said two passengers — who were later confirmed to be AM and Barker — escaped the aircraft while it was on the ground, while the other two passengers and crew members died in the crash.

The National Transportation Safety Board confirmed these details during a press conference, which was held shortly after 11:30 a.m. Saturday. A 10-member team from the NTSB, along with investigators from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, is on the scene, trying to determine what caused the crash. Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen described the post-crash fire as “significant.”

An eyewitness told NBC news affiliate WIS that he saw a fireball crossing the road near the airport and then realized it was a plane. He saw jet fuel shoot out across the roadway and then saw two men, who were both on fire, patting each other down to extinguish the flames.

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Adam Goldstein injured in fatal Learjet crash

Travis Barker, Adam Goldstein injured in fatal Learjet crash
The plane was taking off in South Carolina with six people aboard. The musicians are in critical condition. Two crew members and two members of Barker’s entourage are killed.

Adam Goldstein

Former Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker and Adam Goldstein, known as celebrity DJ AM, were critically injured in a fiery Learjet crash in South Carolina that killed four Southern Californians, including Barker’s bodyguard and his personal assistant, authorities said.

The pilot, Sarah Lemmon of Anaheim Hills, and copilot, James Bland of Carlsbad, were also killed, according to the Lexington County coroner.

Who is Adam Goldstein.

and http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1622954/

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What is Elimination Communication

What is Elimination Communication?

babyDiaper free baby is happy mama found elimination communicationElimination Communication – it’s quite a mouthful! You can call it ECing for short ;) EC is also called infant potty training, natural infant hygiene, and diaper free. It’s about raising your baby without diapers – or with minimal use of diapers. In March of 2009 I did an “EC Q & A” session with Marija of ECWear.com – you can listen to or download our EC Q & A. Read about my experience using elimination communication with my 3rd baby in Brennan’s EC Journal and see his EC Charts. I’m also posting regular updates on things are going with my diaper free new baby, Galen:

* Galen’s first 7 weeks * 11 week update * 3 month update * 4 month update * 5 month update * 7 month update * 8 month update

Here’s a video of me and Galen when he was 5 days old (Scott is commentating from behind the camera!): Baby is Aware – and Mama is Aware People the world over have cared for infant elimination without diapers. They even do it without the baby wetting or soiling everything! This natural means of caring for babies also brings baby and caregiver in tune with each other. It’s a powerful way to connect with your baby and it’s simple to get elimination communication started. Babies are very responsive to having “potty help.” They’re aware of elimination, despite what you’ve been told. Babies are adaptive and learn to go where parents and other caregivers teach them – if they haven’t been trained to use diapers! Start at the Beginning (or Later!) You can begin from the moment of birth to observe your baby’s elimination communication. It’s much the same as watching for hunger cues. You can also begin EC with your older baby! In the early days you may rely on timing in relation to feeding. You can give a vocal cue, such as a gentle “ssssss” sound, when you notice your infant eliminating. Babies can learn to use the big potty, a small potty seat, sinks, or small containers designated for their use. They will even come to understand that the supportive position you hold them in is a “potty position!” Elimination Communication is Clean If you choose to EC your baby will use a container – be that a toilet, a child’s potty, or a small bowl. You’ll be able to flush away your baby’s waste without another thought. You won’t need to carry diapers around or worry about finding a clean changing table. You can just EC while you are out. If your baby wears a diaper while you are out you can still offer the potty – or you may come home with dry pants! Your baby stays clean.

He doesn’t have to sit in urine and he doesn’t have to have his own waste smeared all over him. You can wipe your baby with toilet paper, give a quick swipe with a wipe, or do a quick rinse under running water – and that’s it! It’s Comfortable Surely soft cotton diapers are more comfortable than paper and plastic disposables. But no diaper at all is the most comfortable. Your baby is free from wetness and waste and has no uncomfortable bulk between his legs or belly. Some mothers have noticed that their babies spit up less when diaper free and seem more content in general. It’s much more comfortable for a baby to use the bathroom when held in a gentle squatting position than when in a diaper. Imagine trying to go to the bathroom when sitting on the floor, or when lying down! Even nighttime and naptimes can be comfy diaper free experiences with a little planning. It’s Only Natural Elimination communication is a natural and wonderful way to respond to your baby’s elimination needs. It is deeply satisfying and helps build an intense bond with your infant. And remember you can always use diapers as backup. Elimination communication is something all parents should consider.

Read the information I’ve collected and decide if it’s right for you. You can also read the review I wrote on Diaper Free! an excellent gentle baby care manual focused on elimination communication.

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Michael Jackson Homicide Investigation — Michael Jackson Murdered?

micheal-jackson-homicide

The death of Michael Jackson has been classified as a homicide, Los Angeles Police sources spilled to gossip site TMZ overnight.

The LAPD now believe the 50-year-old singer’s death from a suspected cardiac arrest last month may have been due to an overdose of the anaesthesia Propofol — and Michael’s personal physician Dr. Conrad Murray could have been involved.

Law enforcement sources say there is already ‘plenty of powerful evidence’ linking Dr. Murray as the person who administered the drug to Jackson. The evidence includes various items found in Jackson’s house, including the Propofol, an IV stand and oxygen tank, TMZ wrote late Tuesday. ….We’ve learned the LAPD has had ‘multiple conversations’ with the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office, although the case has not been formally presented to the district attorney.

Meanwhile, armed with a court order, investigators stormed the Hollywood office of MJ’s dermatologist on Tuesday.

Video

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Rob Dyrdek

Robert Stanley Dyrdek (born June 28, 1974) is an American professional skateboarder, actor, entrepreneur, producer, and reality TV star.

ROB DYRDEK

Career

Television

Dyrdek first starred in a MTV reality series, entitled Rob & Big (aired November 2006 to April 2008), with his best friend and bodyguard Christopher “Big Black” Boykin as well has his cousin, Chris “Drama” Pfaff. After three seasons Boykin left the reality show. In February 2009 Rob Dyrdek’s Fantasy Factory, featuring Dyrdek, Pfaff, and his Dyrdek Enterprise staff, was first aired. The “Fantasy Factory” is a converted warehouse where Dyrdek runs his many entrepreneurial ventures. It also features a large indoor skate plaza, Rob’s personal office with “bat cave” parking garage, a foam pit, and numerous basketball hoops in various places around the inside of the factory. He also built a “hands of God” music studio for his cousin Drama inside the factory. During the course of the first season, he also opened his first SafeSpot SkateSpot with the sponsorship of Carl’s Jr. During the grand-opening Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa rode with Dyrdek on the world’s largest skateboard. Dyrdek was also featured in the video games, Skate and Skate 2, along with Boykin. During the days of Rob&Big, they featured an episode of Rob and Big actually going to the EA building to shoot for the game. In Skate 2, you are able to purchase an early version of the Fantasy Factory as an add-on and you’re able to skate within the premises.

World Records
Rob Dyrdek riding the World’s Largest Skateboard

Dyrdek set 21 separate Guinness World Records for skateboarding as part of his former show Rob & Big. Boykin also set two eating records for the show; most bananas eaten and most powdered donuts eaten in a set period of time.[5] Since Dyrdek set those 21 world records, several have since been broken. In Fantasy Factory, Dyrdek also set the record for the largest skateboard after he found the current record holders undeserving of the record.[6] Although, according to the GBWR website it is listed as the Longest Skateboard in the world.

Sponsors and Brands

Dyrdek is sponsored by DC Shoes, Alien Workshop, Spy+ Optics, and Monster Energy drinks. Dyrdek owns Reflex Bearings and Silver Trucks, he also is co-owner of the brand Rogue Status with Travis Barker. [7]

Wild Grinders, a fictional cartoon skate crew, are Dyrdek’s first venture into toys based on him and his group of childhood skateboarding friends. The line consists of six characters. Dyrdek also pioneered the iSX, Instant Scoring Experience, which he hopes will revolutionize the way skate competitions are held. He also has a sunglass eyewear company, Battle Eyewear, as well as being the founder of the Street League skateboarding league. Dyrdek also has his own signature TAG Body Spray scent called “Make Moves.” A fraction of the profit will go to his charity organization, “Safe Spot Skate Spot.”[8]

Personal life

His parents are Patty and Gene Dyrdek. He has one sister, named Denise and his cousins Chris “Drama” Pfaff and Drama’s older brother Scott “Big Cat” Pfaff, who are featured in Rob and Big and Rob Dyrdek’s Fantasy Factory.[9] He also has two bulldogs named Meaty and Beefy.[7]

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Philip Schuth

philip schuth

Stories

Philip Schuth: The man behind French Island’s ‘Freezer Mom’ case speaks out
By MATT JAMES/ La Crosse Tribune

He didn’t cry for days.

His mother’s body was still warm when he found it the morning of Aug. 15, 2000.

He panicked. His mind raced. “Oh no, I’ve lost her. Everybody’s coming to get me. What am I going to do? What am I going to do?”

Days later, he was at a table when he finally started blubbering and couldn’t stop. He bawled and bawled until one day he was at a window, sobbing so loudly a man in the driveway next door heard him.

So he went to the basement.

Weeks passed, then months. The hair on top of his head fell out in clumps. He lived on Spam, tuna sandwiches, Little Debbie snack cakes and cold beans he stockpiled on rare trips to the grocery store.

His box-shaped house with the flat roof had been falling apart for years. Water seeped through the roof, trickled down the walls and shorted out the wiring. The electricity went out room by room, until all he had was the basement and three outlets on the second floor.

The water heater quit. So did the furnace. After the water was shut off, he dragged 20-gallon plastic drums into the yard to catch rainwater. He kept six in the living room and two in his bedroom. In the winter, he shoveled snow into them, melted it with a space heater.

Often, he pictured himself dead, lying on an autopsy table.

“I just wanted to be alone,” he says.

And in his loneliest moments, Philip Schuth would disappear into his basement and stare at that freezer.

Investigators say Schuth put his dead mother, 86-year-old Edith Margorie Schuth, in that freezer the day she died. An autopsy would show her kidneys and heart gave out. They say he filled it with ice, which during the next 4½ years hardened into a solid block.

They say he confessed, that he did it because he thought he would be blamed for her death. They say he had no job and needed her Social Security checks to keep the house.

Against his lawyer’s advice, Schuth has given more than three hours of telephone interviews to the Tribune during the past two weeks. He wants to set the record straight, he says, about his life, his family, the case and some of the events on Friday, April 22, the day he could hide no more.

Two boys were in Schuth’s backyard that afternoon at 1330 Bainbridge St. in Campbell, Wis., a town of 4,400 wedged between the Mississippi and Black rivers. The boys were tearing apart his steps, Schuth says. Police say he came out and smacked 10-year-old Josh Russell on the side of the head.

Randy Russell Jr. and his wife, Melissa, went to confront Schuth, who was in the backyard. And then, according to police, the man who had spent most of his life trying not to draw attention to himself pulled a handgun from his pocket and started pulling the trigger.

Just like her only son, Margie Schuth never made friends easily. She never became a U.S. citizen, never trusted Americans, never got a driver’s license, never really let go of her native England.

She didn’t love her husband, James Schuth, who Philip says was sexually abusive and had a violent temper.

Where would she go? She had no family in America and none in England that wanted her. She had no experience to get a job.

Her husband told her she had no right to own property as a foreigner, and if she divorced him, she would be out on the streets with only her “little bastard.”

Philip graduated from Logan High School in 1971 and from the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse 3½ years later, but never moved out of the house. He refused to leave his mother behind, to abandon her as he felt he’d done his grandmother in England, the one who had gone crazy after they left, who begged for change on street corners and didn’t even recognize Margie or Philip when they went back to visit. She had died, among strangers, in a dump of a nursing home.

When a black spot formed on her face, she was scared chemotherapy would turn her into a walking skeleton, like Hubert H. Humphrey and John Wayne had looked in the end. She pulled her hair over the spot, so doctors wouldn’t notice.

She had high blood pressure and would collapse on her bed. The room would spin like she’d had too much to drink.

That’s what their deaths would be like, she told her son, with the world spinning, surrounded by strangers who didn’t care if you lived or died, as had happened with her mother. She told him there was no afterlife, there couldn’t possibly be enough room in heaven for everyone.

After she died, images would come to Philip. He saw his own corpse on an autopsy slab, ready to be cut open. He pictured Jim Schuth’s penis. He envisioned his grandmother, raving in a nursing home.

He heard his mother’s voice, describing death.

He lived in fear. More than once, he says, his house was broken into, that kids would throw snowballs and shoot BB-guns at him as he walked.

In 1985, Schuth says, two men came onto his property and wrestled him to the ground, one saying, “Do you know how easy it is to break a neck?” They kicked him in the face, breaking two of his front teeth and parts of two more, and then ran off when his dog bit one of them. He didn’t report the attack, and never got his teeth fixed.

Television was his only distraction. “My 70 friends,” he called his 70 channels. It was the shows with heroic female leads that he loved the most, “La Femme Nikita,” “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and, especially, “Alias.”

He subscribed to the “Alias” magazine, along with “Fangoria,” a horror magazine he was embarrassed about getting, so he subscribed under the name “Gail Schuth,” which he borrowed after watching a special about Olympic sprinter Gail Devers. If it was late, he would call and complain his “daughter’s” magazine hadn’t arrived.

He fell in love with “Alias” actor Jennifer Garner. He imagines an alternate universe where he isn’t an “ugly old man” and he and Garner are married.

He says police accused him of stalking Garner, but he swears he’s never tried to contact her.

They asked him if he was trying to impress Garner.

“Somehow,” he says, “I don’t think Jennifer Garner would be impressed by any of the alleged incident on French Island.”

Five bullets flew towards the Russells as they ran to a neighbor’s house and Schuth went back into his house.

Police tried to talk Schuth out of his house for 14 hours. That’s when they say he told them his mother’s body was in a chest freezer in the basement.

At 7:25 a.m., he finally came out. They found homemade explosives and an illegal sawed-off shotgun in the home, as well as a body in the freezer.

During interrogations, he says, investigators accused him of wanting to kill everyone on French Island, of being the rumored serial killer who drowns young men, and of murdering Tong Thao, the 37-year-old man whose body was found in a French Island park in March 2003.

He denied it all, and isn’t sure if they believed the accusations, or whether they were just interrogation tactics.

The lead investigator in the case, Sgt. Kurt Papenfuss of the La Crosse County Sheriff’s Department, says they did ask him about the French Island murder but doesn’t remember any questions about the drownings.

“He was hard to keep quiet,” Papenfuss says. “He was kind of hard to keep focused, but if you live alone as many years as he did, it’s nice to have anyone to vent to. Even a cop can listen.”

Philip Schuth has been in jail for three months on a $100,000 cash bond he can’t pay. He had $10,000 in cash at his house and $25,000 in an account, funded by his mother’s Social Security checks, but his assets have been frozen.

He lives in the downstairs portion of the jail, where they keep high-profile inmates, or those who are physically or mentally disabled, or the ones who get into fights in the general population upstairs.

The number of inmates downstairs has been low recently, a sign, the other inmates tell Schuth, his “evil vibrations” are driving everyone away.

The inmates have nicknames for him. “Sub-Zero.” “Freezer Boy.” “Frosty” is their favorite.

An inmate was arrested, Schuth heard, while wearing one of the “What’s in Your Freezer?” T-shirts that have popped up in the La Crosse area, and the shirt was confiscated at the jail. The jail administrator, Doris Daggett, says that could be true; inmates aren’t allowed to have T-shirts with writing of any kind.

The shirts are a play on the “What’s in Your Wallet?” Capital One bank commercials, and read, “French Island, WI.” on the back. After the shirts came out, a businessman began selling car magnets, one with the same logo, and two others that have a picture of an arm hanging out of a freezer that read, “My Mom is Cooler than Yours!” and “My Old Lady is Cooler than Yours!”

“What really upset me about those magnets was the picture of an arm sticking out of the wretched deep freeze,” Schuth says. “I didn’t care for that. It implied, in my mind at least, it was a horror movie and she was put in there alive.”

Tom Locante, a public defender assigned to Schuth’s case, had no comment for this story, and has repeatedly asked Schuth not to talk to the media.

A local TV reporter came to see him not long after the arrest, Schuth says, claiming to be an old girlfriend, but then pulled out a notebook as soon as they were face to face and started asking questions.

The reporter says that’s not true, that she just signed in and was allowed to see Schuth, and when she identified herself, he asked if she would like to take notes, and proceeded to talk for most of the next 20 minutes.

Locante was livid with the sheriff’s department that she’d been allowed in the jail.

Don’t talk to the media, Locante tells him.

“I’ll take it under advisement,” Schuth says.

“I figure I might as well get my story out,” Schuth says.

During interviews with the Tribune, Schuth did not admit to any of the charges: attempted first-degree homicide, two counts of first-degree recklessly endangering safety, hiding a corpse, possession of a short-barreled shotgun and three counts of possession of explosive devices.

He referred to them as the “alleged incidents,” as much to mock the American legal system as to avoid the subject. He was a National Honor Society member at Logan, then graduated from UW-L with honors. One college classmate remembers Schuth read his entire textbook the first week of class, and Schuth admits he did that in history classes because he was so worried about pop quizzes.

On July 19, Schuth was declared competent to stand trial, on the recommendation of Kenneth Smail, a psychologist with the Wisconsin Forensic Unit, who Schuth says seemed bored during his evaluation and repeatedly sighed, “Where are you going with this story?”

Schuth agreed with his assessment at the competency hearing, telling La Crosse County Circuit Judge Ramona Gonzalez, “I do not feel I am daft.”

At his preliminary hearing Wednesday, prosecutors showed they have enough evidence to go to trial, which is scheduled to start Oct. 24. Randy Russell Jr. also testified about his three bullet wounds. Before the hearing, even Schuth had said, “If (district attorney) Scott Horne hasn’t come up with enough evidence by now, he never will get that judgeship he’s been pining for.”

Russell was treated and released the evening of the shooting, having been hit twice in the arm and grazed in the face, but Schuth says Russell’s version of the shooting isn’t true.

The day after the shooting, Russell told a reporter he had asked Schuth, “Sir, did you hit my son?”

“I don’t understand how anybody could believe a modern man in a stressful situation would use such language,” Schuth says. “It’s not Victorian times.”

The D.A. told reporters at the competency hearing he had made a plea offer, but Schuth hasn’t been told the details and probably isn’t interested.

“I talked to my lawyer and encouraged him to fight it out, unless it’s a very excellent plea bargain,” says Schuth, who pleaded not guilty to all charges Wednesday and faces 143 years if convicted of everything.

“I’m not interested in going away for 190 years instead of 200 years.”

Philip Schuth is a contradiction — articulate, educated, well-read, funny at times, yet his life has been defined by isolation, a struggle to connect with other people.

“If you’ve talked to him, I think you understand,” says Brent Larson.

Larson was a 25-year-old teacher at Lincoln Junior High when UW-L assigned Schuth to be his student-teacher in the spring of 1974. Of the more than 50 student teachers he’s had through the years, Schuth is the only one Larson didn’t recommend for teaching.

“He’s not a very warm person,” Larson says. “I don’t know how to put it. He’s very intelligent, but he didn’t react well with kids. Kids did not respond to him in any way.”

Schuth was assigned to work in Murphy Library for the rest of his final semester. He was given a bachelor of science degree, rather than education.

Schuth’s version is he approached Larson, saying he wasn’t cut out to be a teacher, but the result was the same.

“Once (education majors) get to that point, they’re really screwed,” Larson says. “What are you going to do now?”

Schuth worked as a security guard at Menard’s, where he was required to carry a revolver. He worked at his parents’ upholstery shop, but he was never any good at it because he has little feeling in the tips of his fingers. He cleaned businesses at night.

He cleared tables and washed dishes at several North Side restaurants. A former co-worker at Embers says he didn’t hear Schuth say one word for an entire year.

In 1979, he wrote a novel he called “Chrisagone,” about a hero who fights creatures and sorcerers. He paid an artist $50 to paint a map of Chrisagone’s world, like the “Lord of the Rings” books.

He published a science fiction and fantasy magazine he called “Bloodrake” that had a circulation of a few hundred.

He wrote short stories, many of them horror, some with characters he wasn’t proud of. One, he remembers, wanted to “skullseal” a human. Chop off his ears, cut out his eyes and tongue and remove his fingers so he couldn’t even read braille. A man trapped inside his own skull, with only his own thoughts.

“I was definitely daft,” he says, “when I came up with these ideas.”

Margie walked her son to fourth grade after they first came to French Island. She walked with him the next year, too, and the next and the next, until he was a high schooler with an English accent, getting walked to school by his mother.

She doted on him constantly, bought him french fries every day after school, made him his favorite foods when they got home.

Classmates of Schuth say she acted child-like and would steal things from the 5 and Dime.

Their cat, Tiger, was sitting in the window one day, watching two cats fight outside, when Margie tried to move Tiger and it attacked her, Philip says. It gashed her arm and bit her chest, and blood smeared against the wall.

If he had reported her death, he figured, police would have seen the scars and her blood on the wall and read his stories and come to only one conclusion: He was “looney” and probably killed her.

Does he consider himself looney?

“I’d say I’m not exactly in the 90 percent average people,” he says. “Not too many people would be willing to live in a house under the conditions I allegedly was living under, and would be constantly afraid that somebody was going to inflict physical injury upon them. I’d say that’s strange, it’s not clinically insane.”

Schuth’s parents met in England during World War II. Jim was in the U.S. Army. Margie was well into her 30s, so scared of ending up alone she lied to Jim about her age.

They were married in 1945 and moved to French Island, where Jim’s parents, Tony and Anna, owned Schuth Upholstery at 1330 Bainbridge St., and lived in the house next door. Jim and Margie moved into the second floor above the shop, the same building where 50 years later Philip was still living and where they would find his mother’s body.

Margie left Jim not long after they came to French Island and moved back to England. She dated an English railworker named Ronald Bellamy and became pregnant with Philip.

Bellamy, he says, was killed in a train accident before the birth.

By 1961, Philip was nearly 9 and Margie’s mother, Mary Philips, who they were living with, was becoming elderly. Margie didn’t want to end up alone raising a son, so she agreed to come back to the U.S. if Jim agreed to sign paperwork that stated he was Philip’s biological father.

Philip says he didn’t know about Ronald Bellamy until after Jim died, when he found a letter his mother had written. His mother told him the story and they never spoke of it again.

All those times Jim had called Philip his “little bastard,” he had meant it.

Philip claims that within two weeks of their coming to French Island, Jim began abusing him. He says he would bounce Philip on his knee to become aroused and then have sex with Margie.

Jim slapped him and his mother around, he says, and tied Philip up at least once. Another time, he says, Jim shoved a pencil in Philip’s anus.

Philip says on several occasions he loaded a .22 rifle and waited for Jim to walk through the door. He chickened out every time.

“(Margie) just thought he was a slob,” Philip says. “She didn’t think he would do things to me.”

As he became older and heavier, Philip says, Jim’s behavior became more and more disgusting. He cut the tops off milk jugs and urinated in them while sitting in his chair. When the floor was covered in full jugs, he would have Philip dump them in the yard.

After Jim’s teeth rotted to the gumline, he would pop the sores in his mouth with his fingers and rub the pus on his shirt.

Near the end of his life, doctors amputated Jim’s infected lower leg. In the final year, Jim sat in his chair, naked, a towel draped over his lap, flies laying eggs on his stump.

He died Sept. 24, 1994, and Philip doesn’t know where he is buried.

Gene Goyette lived in Philip’s grandparents’ house for years after they died, renting it from Jim and then Margie. He has been Schuth’s only friend for the last 20 years. He visits Philip twice a week at the jail and puts money in his “canteen fund” so Philip can buy a daily newspaper.

He never saw Jim’s violent temper or abusiveness.

“Of course I didn’t live there, so I don’t know,” he says.

Schuth lied about his mother to Goyette, too, telling him she was too sick to say hi, or was upstairs watching “Jag.” She had a crush on the lead actor, David James Elliott, Philip told him.

“If he’d have told me (she was dead),” Goyette says, “I’d have gotten her out of there.”

Schuth would like to put a headstone on his mother’s grave with the inscription, “Delenda est tyrannis,” a Latin phrase meaning, “Tyrants must be destroyed.”

The inmates tell him he should sell the freezer, that he could get a lot of money for it, and he’s asked Goyette to try to sell it online so he can pay for his mother’s inscription.

He wants his own gravestone to one day read, “Sic transit amore.”

Thus passes away all love.

He won’t plead insanity, he says.

“I told (my lawyer), ‘I’m not Charles Manson,’ I’m not going to carve a swastika in my forehead or prance around the courtroom to entertain the guests or spectators or whatever you want to call them.

“I don’t feel like acting like a madman. It’s not really my style.”

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Barrack Obama’s Ramadan Message Video

Barrack Obama’s Ramadan Message Video

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