Christmas in the clink? Most arrested man goes before judge to hear if he'll celebrate the holidays in jailHenry Earl, 64, has been arrested over 1,500 timesHis most recent arrest last month landed him back in Kentucky jail for ThanksgivingHe is scheduled to appear in a Fayette County court for a probation revocation hearing today
Earl's first arrest came in 1970 for carrying a concealed weapon but most of his arrests are due to public intoxicationBy Ashley Collman and Helen Pow Published: 09:50 EDT, 5 December 2013 | Updated: 09:54 EDT, 5 December 2013 e-mail View comments
(CelebrityAccess) A story about a bit of a spat between Jake Owen and five-time major golf tournament winner Phil Mickelson has been making the rounds because, well, it’s a good story.
Owen, a one handicapper who is a close friend with and has played alongside golfer Jordan Spieth at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am for the last four years, also happened to be at Spieth’s wedding this past November, and so was Mickelson.
Decker family, party of 6! Jessie James Decker and her husband, former NFL wide receiver Eric Decker, welcomed their fourth child, a baby boy, last Friday (Feb. 9).
The singer shared the news on social media, sharing two snapshots of her new baby's first days. One photo is a family shot, while the second is a closeup of the sweet new addition.
"Our beautiful boy is here," Decker wrote in the caption of her post.
Minor spoilers ahead. In Episode 8 of Netflix’s newest season of The Crown, we watch the queen make a potentially disastrous misstep: She expresses an opinion. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher has managed to ruffle Her Majesty's typically immobile feathers, in large part due to the PM’s unwillingness to support sanctions in apartheid-rattled South Africa. In addition, Thatcher’s no fan of the Commonwealth, the group of countries—most all of them former British territories—devoted to advancing democracy and human rights.
Landmarks in lawStudying lawA 1783 case exposed how the law facilitated the slave trade – and increased momentum for the abolitionist movement
In August 1781, a British slave ship, the Zong, left Ghana with 442 slaves aboard – twice the number it was designed to carry – bound for Jamaica. The ship’s owners claimed that due to navigational errors, it took longer than anticipated to reach Jamaica, and as water was running low, the crew threw more than 130 live slaves overboard.