Difference between revisions of "User:RahalMccall69"

From eplmediawiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(She was held in a cage for 2 months! Unlikely hero who led her to freedom has a harrowing story to tell)
(Republicans, Michaud staff spar over accuracy of two campaign ads)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
@@@  
 
@@@  
INDIANA (WITI/CNN) She was missing for two months聽 聽held captive, living in a cage in a mobile home in Indiana. An unlikely hero is speaking out, after his brave actions helped to lead the woman to freedom.
+
The Michaud campaign defended the ad and reiterated calls for TV stations to pull an ad from the Republican Governors Association, which claims Michaud supports giving welfare to illegal immigrants. The Democrat s campaign called that claim false, and questioned the sources purporting to back it up.
Joelle Lockwood
+
Joelle Lockwood was reported missing on July 9th.
+
The back-and-forth highlights the role of television advertising 鈥?<a href=http://www.symbiose.ca/images/christianlouboutin.gwij.php>Christian Louboutin Outlet</a>  both positive and negative 鈥?in Maine s tight gubernatorial race pitting Republican Gov. Paul LePage against the six-term congressman and independent candidate Eliot Cutler.
FOX6 s sister station, FOX59 in Indianapolis reports Lockwood left a friend s apartment that night. She had reportedly been drinking, and was described as heavily intoxicated.
+
  Campaigns still overwhelmingly drop their money into TV, said Mark Brewer, an associate professor of political science at the University of Maine. That tells you that TV is still a dominant player in influencing voter choice and moving public opinion.  
FOX59 reports while walking on the street, a friend saw Lockwood and offered her a ride. They apparently used narcotics at a residence, and then Lockwood s friend dropped her off at another location to see some other friends.
+
Michaud s ad features the headline House Passes Michaud Amendment Requiring 100% Made-in-USA Uniforms under a State News Services banner styled to resemble the front page of a newspaper. However, that organization, which is actually called States News Service, appears to be an online aggregation of news releases issued by members of Congress.
She left that house, and wasn t heard from again until Saturday, September 6th when police received a call from her parents, saying she was alive.
+
   
FOX59 reports two people have been arrested in the case. They face preliminary charges of rape, kidnapping, criminal confinement and conspiracy to commit rape. They are 37-year-old Ricky Roy House Jr. and 44-year-old Kendra Tooley.
+
During a media conference Monday at Republican headquarters in Augusta, Bennett didn t dispute facts stated in the ad, but said Michaud was essentially padding his resume by citing his own release as a source.
Ricky Roy House Jr. and Kendra Tooley
+
  It s a simple rule my son in his junior year of high school understands: You cannot cite yourself as a source, Bennett said. Yet after 34 years in politics, Mr. Michaud broke that rule.
Lockwood says House and Tooley offered her a ride on July 9th. She went with them to their mobile home, spending some time there before deciding to leave.
+
Bennett said it wasn t the first time that Michaud s ads have faced criticism.
FOX59 reports court documents say House 鈥減laced chloroform over her mouth and nose, causing her to lose consciousness.鈥?
+
Last summer, Michaud had to revise an ad that claimed Maine had lost jobs, when in fact it had added jobs. The ad was based on information from the Pew Charitable Trusts Stateline news service, whose data was later corrected by the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Over the course of the next 59 days, FOX59 reports she was bound to a bed and only allowed to go out on three occasions. She was forced to wear a red dog collar with a rope or leash attached <a href=http://www.aec-ist.com/css/Gucci-Sale-Online-Watch-Strap-New-Shoes-Sweatpants.html>Gucci Sweatpants</a>  to it. She was repeatedly sexually abused, court documents revealed. She was beaten on multiple occasions and wasn鈥檛 allowed to contact anyone. She was watched all of the time and forced to stay in a wooden cage built by House.
+
In 2012, Michaud exaggerated upgrades that Republican Kevin Raye, the former state Senate president, made to a small kitchen area of his office by using an unrelated stock photo of a large, shiny kitchen with an island.
It was September 4th when Ronald Higgs went to visit Tooley his ex-wife.
+
Michaud campaign spokeswoman Lizzy Reinholt said the claims in Michaud s recent ad are accurate. The campaign used the image of a fictitious newspaper banner because the headline was the simplest and most straightforward, she said.
Ronald Higgs
+
Reinholt criticized a TV ad by the Republican Governors Association that claims Michaud supports giving welfare to illegal immigrants. A letter was sent last Wednesday to TV stations, asking them to pull the ad, she said.
  She slid over on the couch beside me and said I ve got a girl back here in a cage. I said you got a girl back here in a cage? What are you talking about?' Higgs said.
+
In the letter, Philip Saucier, an attorney for the Michaud campaign at the Portland law firm Bernstein Shur, said the ad made three false claims: Michaud did not say he supports welfare for illegal immigrants in the article cited by the ad; the cost estimate of $1 million does not stand up to scrutiny, <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/gucciusaonlineoutlet.php> cheap gucci</a>  because it includes costs for asylum- and refugee-seekers who are here legally; and a claim that Maine would be more attractive to illegal immigrants isn t sourced.
The girl in the cage was Joelle Lockwood.
+
Steve Carter, <a href=http://www.museosangennaro.com/Public/wdluk.php>Christian Louboutin Shoes Sale</a>  station manager of WCSH in Portland, said the Federal Communications Commission prohibits stations from censoring political ads that are paid for and authorized by candidates. Those rules don t apply to ads purchased by outside groups, but Carter said the station has reviewed the complaint about the RGA ad and will not take it down.
Higgs says the cage was about two-and-a-half feet tall, stuffed in a room, hidden from plain view.
+
Station managers at WGME in Portland and WMTW in Auburn did not respond to requests for comment.
  No food, no water, nowhere to use the bathroom, Higgs said.
+
James Melcher, a political science professor at the University of Maine in Farmington, doesn t believe the ad criticized by the Republican Party should be pulled, because many ads use fake mastheads. He said Republicans could be making a tactical decision to criticize Michaud, since the RGA ad has come under fire by Michaud s campaign and a recent Portland Press Herald editorial.
Higgs says when he first saw Lockwood, she was only wearing a T-shirt and a dog collar with a rope tied to it apparently being treated as a slave.
+
  This could be an attempt to deflect attention from that, trying to make people say Look, the Michaud campaign is just as misleading, Melcher said. But I really don t think this critique will stick.
  This just isn t adding up. When she cooked all of our meals she said can I have something to eat? They said if there s something left, you can have something to eat,' Higgs said.
+
Brewer, however, believes that if the Republican criticism is true, the Michaud campaign ought to edit the ad.
Higgs returned to the trailer the following night September 5th. That s when he says Lockwood made her plea for freedom.
+
  I think it makes perfectly good sense for the Republicans to do this, given that it s not the first time Michaud kind of stepped in this stuff, Brewer said.
She says please don t leave here without me. I said what s the matter? She says I ve been here for over 60 days and they put me in that cage,' Higgs said.
+
It was then that Higgs says he realized Lockwood s fate was in his hands.
+
I didn t really know what I could do because I m nowhere near the man I used to be, but I m not leaving this house without her. I don t care what I have to do. She s coming home, Higgs said.
+
Higgs says he initially tried to buy Lockwood s freedom, but he couldn t make a deal. He realized force was the only way <a href=http://www.aec-ist.com/css/Gucci-Belts-Online-Winter-Boots-China-Womens-Loafers.html>Gucci China</a>  and it was at that point that he found out the allegedly sinister reason for Lockwood s capture.
+
But the whole time during it all they was talking about a baby. She s not leaving here until she has the baby. I m not selling her. You re not taking her. You re not doing nothing. She told me Ricky was raping her, making her have oral sex. Kendra can t have more children and Ricky doesn t have any children of his home. I hate to say this to the public or even her even hearing it, but I think they were just going to have a baby and we would never see her again, Higgs said.
+
Higgs says he tried to take Lockwood out of the trailer, but was stopped <a href=http://www.aec-ist.com/css/Cheap-Gucci-Handbags-Envy-Me-Sneakers-Cheap-Large-Tote.html>Gucci Envy Me</a>  by House and his shotgun.
+
He stuck that shotgun right here under my chin with his finger on the trigger. He said I m going to kill you. And you ll probably bleep this out, but I said if you re going to (expletive) kill me you better do it now or I m going to take this (expletive) away from you an beat you to death with it,' Higgs said.
+
Higgs says House lowered his gun and a fight ensued. Higgs says he was able to head-butt House, and fend him off. But Lockwood wasn t faring as well.
+
Joelle was sitting in the floor crying, naked, with Kendra beating on her. Just beat her down to the ground, took her clothes off of her, Higgs said.
+
Higgs says while House retreated to another room in the trailer, he saw his opportunity to escape with Lockwood. Higgs says he convinced Tooley that if she let Lockwood leave, he wouldn t go to the police.
+
  I actually think they believed I wasn t going to do anything about it, Higgs said.
+
Higgs says he left with Lockwood taking her to his house. The first thing Lockwood asked for was a shower. After she was cleaned up, she was reunited with her family outside Higgs home.
+
I m 61 years old and I don t even cry at funerals, but I busted out crying like a baby, Higgs said.
+
As for the accused, Higgs has a recommendation for a fitting punishment.
+
  I told the police last night I hope you all have some real small cells. That s where they need to spend the rest of their lives, in a real small cell,' Higgs said.
+
for more on this story via FOX59.
+

Revision as of 23:01, 1 October 2014

@@@ The Michaud campaign defended the ad and reiterated calls for TV stations to pull an ad from the Republican Governors Association, which claims Michaud supports giving welfare to illegal immigrants. The Democrat s campaign called that claim false, and questioned the sources purporting to back it up.

The back-and-forth highlights the role of television advertising 鈥?<a href=http://www.symbiose.ca/images/christianlouboutin.gwij.php>Christian Louboutin Outlet</a> both positive and negative 鈥?in Maine s tight gubernatorial race pitting Republican Gov. Paul LePage against the six-term congressman and independent candidate Eliot Cutler.

Campaigns still overwhelmingly drop their money into TV, said Mark Brewer, an associate professor of political science at the University of Maine. That tells you that TV is still a dominant player in influencing voter choice and moving public opinion. 

Michaud s ad features the headline House Passes Michaud Amendment Requiring 100% Made-in-USA Uniforms under a State News Services banner styled to resemble the front page of a newspaper. However, that organization, which is actually called States News Service, appears to be an online aggregation of news releases issued by members of Congress.

During a media conference Monday at Republican headquarters in Augusta, Bennett didn t dispute facts stated in the ad, but said Michaud was essentially padding his resume by citing his own release as a source.

It s a simple rule my son in his junior year of high school understands: You cannot cite yourself as a source, Bennett said. Yet after 34 years in politics, Mr. Michaud broke that rule. 

Bennett said it wasn t the first time that Michaud s ads have faced criticism. Last summer, Michaud had to revise an ad that claimed Maine had lost jobs, when in fact it had added jobs. The ad was based on information from the Pew Charitable Trusts Stateline news service, whose data was later corrected by the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. In 2012, Michaud exaggerated upgrades that Republican Kevin Raye, the former state Senate president, made to a small kitchen area of his office by using an unrelated stock photo of a large, shiny kitchen with an island. Michaud campaign spokeswoman Lizzy Reinholt said the claims in Michaud s recent ad are accurate. The campaign used the image of a fictitious newspaper banner because the headline was the simplest and most straightforward, she said. Reinholt criticized a TV ad by the Republican Governors Association that claims Michaud supports giving welfare to illegal immigrants. A letter was sent last Wednesday to TV stations, asking them to pull the ad, she said. In the letter, Philip Saucier, an attorney for the Michaud campaign at the Portland law firm Bernstein Shur, said the ad made three false claims: Michaud did not say he supports welfare for illegal immigrants in the article cited by the ad; the cost estimate of $1 million does not stand up to scrutiny, <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/gucciusaonlineoutlet.php> cheap gucci</a> because it includes costs for asylum- and refugee-seekers who are here legally; and a claim that Maine would be more attractive to illegal immigrants isn t sourced. Steve Carter, <a href=http://www.museosangennaro.com/Public/wdluk.php>Christian Louboutin Shoes Sale</a> station manager of WCSH in Portland, said the Federal Communications Commission prohibits stations from censoring political ads that are paid for and authorized by candidates. Those rules don t apply to ads purchased by outside groups, but Carter said the station has reviewed the complaint about the RGA ad and will not take it down. Station managers at WGME in Portland and WMTW in Auburn did not respond to requests for comment. James Melcher, a political science professor at the University of Maine in Farmington, doesn t believe the ad criticized by the Republican Party should be pulled, because many ads use fake mastheads. He said Republicans could be making a tactical decision to criticize Michaud, since the RGA ad has come under fire by Michaud s campaign and a recent Portland Press Herald editorial.

This could be an attempt to deflect attention from that, trying to make people say Look, the Michaud campaign is just as misleading, Melcher said. But I really don t think this critique will stick. 

Brewer, however, believes that if the Republican criticism is true, the Michaud campaign ought to edit the ad.

I think it makes perfectly good sense for the Republicans to do this, given that it s not the first time Michaud kind of stepped in this stuff, Brewer said.
Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
extras
Toolbox