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Posted In: 'True Grit' stars minded manners with teenage actress
'True Grit' stars minded manners with teenage actress < German news | Expatica Germany: "Fourteen-year-old Oscar nominee Hailee Steinfeld kept her 'True Grit' co-stars on a tight leash on set, actor Jeff Bridges
said at the opening of the Berlin film festival Thursday.
Bridges, who is also nominated for his role in the Western by director Joel and Ethan Coen, said he and fellow actors Matt Damon and Josh Brolin had to mind their manners around Steinfeld.
'She kept us all in line,' he told reporters. 'She had a cursing cup and if any of us used the s-word, I think it was five bucks.
'I ran a tab so I still owe her quite a bit of money,' joked Bridges, who picked up his first Academy Award last year for his role in 'Crazy Heart'.
'She made much more money from that jar than she did from the movie,' Brolin quipped."
Posted In: How the Egypt Crisis Has Shut Down Show Business -
How the Egypt Crisis Has Shut Down Show Business - The Hollywood Reporter
: "The political crisis in Egypt has had a devastating impact on the entertainment industry in the country that has been called the 'Hollywood of the Middle East.'
'Everything is shut down; life is at a standstill,' producer Marianne Khoury, who runs MISR International Films (September 11, El Medina) with her brother Gabriel, told The Hollywood Reporter. 'People are glued to their TVs.'
Khoury supports the protesters and, with her company's work shut down, decided recently to help in whatever way she could. She took a carload of blankets to support the anti-Murbarak demonstrators, but her car was attacked by 'thugs paid by the government,' she said.
'It was an extremely traumatic experience,' Khoury added. 'People in the street saw the car full of blankets and guessed who they were for. The whole street attacked us with unbelievable violence and people started banging on the windows.'
She was pulled from her car by her hair before being rescued at the last second. 'Finally,' a shaken Khoury recalled, 'I was taken in a truck to an army checkpoint and sent home.'"
Posted In: The Spanish holiday renaissance is well and truly on
Read more: http://www.benzinga.com/press-releases/11/02/p830184/the-spanish-holiday-renaissance-begins#ixzz1Czo3dPVI
Posted In: and £5m mansion Posted In: Jailed drug baron now faces losing his fortune
Paul Yearsley, 44, lived in a £5m, Georgian-style mansion with swimming pool and cinema, off Chorley New Road in Bolton.
He has been jailed for five years and four months after a trial at Manchester Crown Court – and he now faces losing his home and luxury cars.
A court hearing under the Proceeds of Crime Act is expected to take place this year.
Yearsley organised the hand over of drugs and recruited ‘couriers’ Tony Dixon, 39, and Frederick Hoyle, 61.
Yearsley, who had claimed a disability pension since he was 28, said he funded his lavish lifestyle by selling cars and properties. But he was caught out and arrested after detectives from the Serious and Organised Crime Agency mounted a year-long probe into his dealings.
He was arrested with Dixon and Hoyle at Middlebrook Retail Park in Horwich, Bolton, with 120kg of cannabis resin.
All three men pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply class B drugs. Members of their families wept as they were sent down."
Posted In: Puerto Banus on the Costa Del Sol
They are desperate to quiz him about the deaths of barman Tam Cameron, 49, and hoodlum Billy Bates, 43.
The Sunday Mail today reveals the fugitive's face in a bid to help track him down as sources claim he is living the high-life in a millionaire's playground in Spain.
Sources say Ferguson was smuggled out of the country by a gangland tycoon from Calton, in Glasgow.
He been hiding out in Puerto Banus on the Costa Del Sol where he has stayed one step ahead of Scottish detectives despite a warrant being issues for his arrest.
Meanwhile, the families of the victims in the double murder being probed by detectives hunting Ferguson are sti ll waiting for justice."
Posted In: £5.5m lottery winner flees Spain penniless as bank seizes villa and bar
The generous factory worker immediately shared his fortune with his many relatives, splashing out £370,000 to buy seven houses in the same street in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear so that they could be close together.
Eventually he moved with his family to Benidorm on Spain's Costa Blanca to make a new life."
£5.5m lottery winner flees Spain penniless as bank seizes villa and barSince the hard-drinking Geordie's's win, which put him at 61 on the Sunday Times rich list, fortune has not been kind to him.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1349792/5-5m-lottery-winner-flees-Spain-penniless-bank-seizes-villa-bar.html#ixzz1Bry864N3
Posted In: George Clooney: 2nd Celeb to Battle Malaria
George Clooney: 2nd Celeb to Battle Malaria -... | Gather: "George Clooney fell ill with Malaria for a second time! Clooney caught Malaria in Sudan and Piers Morgan tweeted about the actor's condition on Twitter. He's not the only celebrity who fell ill with Malaria. Cheryl Cole was also a victim.
This is the second time in less than a year that a celebrity has caught Malaria! Cheryl Cole became ill with Malaria last summer after vacationing with Derek Hough in Africa. Luckily, she survived the illness.
For Clooney, surviving Malaria is an easier task than for most Sudanese. With his celebrity status and top notched handlers, it's given that every situation can be taken care of. There is always a back up plan.
Taking the proper medication and having a team of doctors to observe his condition paid off. George Clooney is back on his feet. So, will these two incidents thwart other celebrities from vacationing and visiting Africa?
It's highly unlikely. With wealth comes a certain level of comfort. Celebrities have a lot of money. Something as trivial as Malaria isn't going to keep their need for adventure at bay!"
Posted In: amenities Posted In: Toll Brothers’ communities designed with luxury finishes
Toll Brothers’ communities designed with luxury finishes, amenities » Naples Daily News: "Within the gates of Toll Brothers’ Estero communities, residents enjoy a lifestyle equal to that in any of Southwest Florida’s luxury communities, with manicured tropical landscaping, a selection of resort-style amenities and numerous activities.
“Toll Brothers not only offers homes designed with luxury features and finishes, but we have also developed communities that provide a lifestyle that is comparable to the area’s most luxurious gated neighborhoods,” said Ken Thirtyacre, division president of Toll Brothers Florida West Division. “The difference is that we have maintained modest homeowner association fees.”
For example, Belle Lago, a single-family community on Estero Parkway with prices starting in the mid-$300,000s, has outstanding amenities that include a grand clubhouse with a multipurpose room, fitness center, aerobics studio, library/craft room, game room, card/TV lounge and locker rooms. Outdoor amenities include four Har-Tru clay tennis courts, a half-court basketball court, and a resort-style swimming pool. Walking trails wind throughout the community, its nature preserves and its five parks."
Posted In: Jamelia wins appeal against driving offence judge accepted she didn’t know she was being prosecuted for speeding because of her jet-set lifestyle.
Speed cameras captured her Audi Quattro being driven at 43mph on a road with a 30mph limit in the city just after midnight on August 15, 2009.
Notice of the speeding offence was then sent to the 30-year-old singer’s Birmingham home but she failed to respond to it and was eventually convicted by magistrates, in her absence, of a charge of failing to give information in relation to the identity of the driver.
Jamelia, whose surname is Davis, of Barnt Green, appeared at Birmingham Crown Court yesterday and appealed against the conviction and sentence."
Posted In: ' a hard-living movie star is suddenly forced to perform another role: full-time father Posted In: n the new drama 'Somewhere
Stephen Dorff stars in new film 'Somewhere' | abc7.com: "In the new drama 'Somewhere,' a hard-living movie star is suddenly forced to perform another role: full-time father.
In 'Somewhere,' Stephen Dorff plays an actor who lives carefree at Hollywood's Chateau Marmont.
But then, this single dad is suddenly forced to care for his 11-year-old daughter, played by Elle Fanning. It's something new for both of them."
Posted In: Top European Beaches
Top European Beaches: "1. Costa Del Sol, Spain
The climate of the Spanish beach, Costa Del Sol makes it one of the most popular beach destinations of Europe. This beach receives little rainfall, and so you can visit it at any time of the year. Different types of entertainment activities including the beach bars have made this beach popular among the youths.
2. Costa Dorada, Spain
The natural beauty with dunes and sand beaches has made Spanish beach, Costa Dorada a popular tourist spot. The shallow water of this area makes it an ideal place for the kids, and you can surely plan a family holiday here. A wide range of accommodation facilities are provided here to make your trip comfortable.
3. Costa Blanca, Spain
If you are looking for a thrilling nightlife, and need a perfect beach destination for partying with friends, Spanish beach, Costa Blanca is for you. It is better to plan a long holiday break when you are coming to Costa Blanca. Apart from the beach activities, you can check Terra Mitica, Entertainment Park in Benidorm.
4. Costa Del Garraf, Spain
It is rightly said that Spanish beaches attract everyone. Costa Del Garraf beach in Spain is not only the ideal holiday destination for straight couples, but also it is one of the best places for the gays. The beach located in Sitges is known to attract thousands of gay couples every year."
Posted In: Banco de Portugal's Financial Stability Report Posted In: is disturbingly similar to the structural flaws in Ireland's banks
and will need to raise significant amounts of new capital to "resist additional adverse shocks".
The analysis of the weakness of Portugal's banks, contained in the, which took Ireland to the brink of bankruptcy.
There is however one important difference, which some will argue makes Portugal's financial predicament more perilous: Portugal's banks have not only been borrowing colossal sums from the ECB, they have also been lending billions of euros to the Portuguese government, so that it can finance the significant gap between what it spends and its dwindling tax revenues.
This is how the central bank put it: "the expansion of Portuguese banks' balance sheets in the first half of the year essentially reflected the financing of general government".
Posted In: a sparkling boat parade Posted In: and a New Year's Eve celebration. Posted In: December in the Florida Keys brings many highly anticipated holiday events Posted In: including the 47th Annual Sailfish Tournament
To celebrate these unique Keys events, KeysCaribbean Luxury Resort Villas & Marinas is showcasing a December Special Savings Offer that provides a lower nightly rate for each additional day booked; guests can receive a generous up to 50 percent off rates or free night stays at all KeysCaribbean luxury resorts all fall season; and a 100 percent cancellation guarantee.
Read more: http://www.benzinga.com/press-releases/10/11/p652851/keyscaribbean-luxury-resorts-offers-up-to-50-discount-free-night-stay-p#ixzz16nEDKR00
Posted In: Bayerische Motoren Werke AG’s dominant shareholder Posted In: The Quandt family Posted In: vowed to carry on its commitment to the carmaker as Volkswagen AG’s Audi challenges BMW’s lead in luxury vehicles.
The Quandt family, Bayerische Motoren Werke AG’s dominant shareholder, vowed to carry on its commitment to the carmaker as Volkswagen AG’s Audi challenges BMW’s lead in luxury vehicles.
“We as a family are looking forward” to shaping the future with BMW, Stefan Quandt said at a Munich event today to mark the 50th anniversary of the shareholders’ vote approving the German family’s rescue of the luxury-car maker. “Lead, don’t follow - that’s the entrepreneurial calling of BMW.”
Investor Herbert Quandt fended off a takeover attempt five decades ago by Stuttgart, Germany-based Daimler AG, then called Daimler-Benz, by bankrolling development of the 1500-model midsize sedan. His family still owns 46 percent of BMW, and Stefan Quandt and Susanne Klatten, two of his children, sit on the supervisory board.
BMW surpassed Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz division as the world’s largest luxury-car maker five years ago and aims to almost double annual sales by 2020 to 2 million vehicles. That may not be enough to fend off Audi, which aims to leapfrog BMW and Daimler to become the largest maker of luxury cars by 2015.
Posted In: 35 Posted In: narrowly avoided jail after admitting leading a lavish life with gun-running ex-partner Paul Wilson. Posted In: Nicola Whittaker
Nicola Whittaker, 35, narrowly avoided jail after admitting leading a lavish life with gun-running ex-partner Paul Wilson.
But prosecutors believe she benefited from Wilson’s ill gotten gains to the tune of £426,030 – cash they claim was splashed on a posh house, jewellery and a boob job.
They want the money back from the mum-of-one who contested their Proceeds of Crime Act application at Liverpool crown court on Wednesday.
Most of the cash is tied up in the couple’s £250,000 home in Liverpool Road, Ainsdale – now worth up to £1m.
Prosecutors also want £82,000 spent on jewellery and £5,000 they claimed Whittaker spent on cosmetic surgery.
Whittaker, of Coronation Drive, Crosby, denied the jewels were ever hers and said her dad, Ronald Whittaker, paid for her surgery after she split from Wilson in 2006.
She said although Wilson initially bought her a boob job, she needed a second operation in 2008 because he hit her and split her implant.
Whittaker previously admitted money laundering and eight counts of concealing criminal property.
Her 12-month sentence was suspended for two years after Judge James Roberts accepted she had endured “extreme violence”.
She was given 300 hours unpaid work after the judge accepted she tried – but failed – to leave Wilson several times.
Prosecutors said the £30,000 deposit on the couple’s home and the £1,400 monthly mortgage payments from her bank account came from Wilson.
Posted In: 482 by Stafford Crown Court. Posted In: Alan Wilson (pictured) was handed a confiscation order of £919

Stafford company director Alan Wilson (pictured) was handed a confiscation order of £919,482 by Stafford Crown Court. The 57-year-old, from Chapel-en-le Frith, in Derbyshire, was jailed for 44 months in January after admitting theft, false accounting and fraud offences.The director of a company which designed and rented portable refrigerated units, his fraud centred on falsifying rental agreement documents, misappropriation of company funds and disposal of equipment.Wilson’s criminality funded a luxury lifestyle in the UK and Spain which included the purchase of a villa in Marbella, currently on the market at 850,000 Euros, a 47ft yacht with a list price of £490,000, a luxury home in Derbyshire and Mercedes cars.
The court directed that £764,012 of the order should be used to pay creditors of the failed company to compensate the victims of the fraud.Detective Sergeant Nick Jones, who works in the force’s economic crime unit, said: “Over the last three years the force has obtained 281 confiscation orders with a total value of £9.8 million.
We’ve also obtained cash forfeiture orders amounting to £1.3 million.
“These significant figures reflect that we are taking every opportunity to hit criminals in the pocket. Wherever possible, assets that are recovered are used to ensure crime victims are compensated.“We continue to work with the Crown Prosecution Service and the courts to make sure offenders are stripped of their assets. This includes monitoring ‘old’ cases to identify if further assets are available for confiscation.” District Crown prosecutor Mark Forster, said: “Our continuing success in the field of asset recovery is testament to the dedication and hard work put in by both police officers and Crown Prosecution Service lawyers alike.“Those engaged in crime should be aware that, working in close partnership with the police and courts, the specialist prosecutors within Staffordshire Crown Prosecution Service will be proactive in employing the powers contained in the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 to ensure criminals do not benefit financially from any illegal activity.
“Monies and property acquired by those engaged in crime will be taken back and used to compensate the victims.
“Those convicted can expect to face more than the prospect of simply being punished for the offence itself. “
Posted In: 60 Posted In: is hiding out on the Costa del Sol Posted In: James Walter Tomkins

Candy Dawson believes James Walter Tomkins, 60, is hiding out on the Costa del Sol after he allegedly slayed her son Rocky Dawson, 24, for no apparent reason in 2006.
Police have named Tomkins – also known as Jimbles – as one of the UK’s ‘Most Wanted’ criminals.But despite Crimestoppers insisting he has links to both Marbella and Fuengirola, as well as Benidorm, he has not yet been caught.Desperate mother Candy Dawson, from Essex, told of her determination to catch Tomkins.
“I have contacted you because I am desperate,” she said in an emotional interview.
“I cannot put my son to rest and I’m willing to do anything to catch this monster.
“As a mother I cannot let this person get away with what they have done to my family and his two children.”
Her son was shot in the back a number of times, in what police believe was a case of mistaken identity.Horrifically, his children watched as he was gunned down outside his mother’s house in Hornchurch, Essex.His mother explained: “My son had been visiting me and was putting his little boy, Rocky, into the back seat of his car when he was shot in the back.
“He came back into the house and said: ‘Mum I’ve been shot’, before collapsing.
“He died minutes later in my arms.”
A swift police investigation eventually led police to arrest of Christopher Pearman, 56, who was convicted of his murder in 2007.
However, his accomplice has never been found and police want to quiz Tomkins.
International director of the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA), David Armond, said many criminals like Tomkins could be hiding in ex-pat communities.
He said: “Attention is the key to making sure they can’t escape justice to live a life in the sun.”
Tomkins has two scars one close to his left eye on his brow and another on the right side of his neck.Described as tall, medium to stocky build and sometimes wearing a close cut beard.
A 23,000 euro reward is available for any information regarding Tomkins whereabouts.
The fresh appeal follows Crimestoppers’ success in catching half of the criminals from their most recent appeal for criminals in Spain.Of the list issued six months ago, half of the ten most wanted have already been caught.The most recent capture was Jody Flynn, caught entering the UK from Spain.
Others, such as Stephen Henry Pitman, are also believed to be living on the Costa del Sol.Operation Captura has made 31 arrests since it began its series of ‘Most Wanted’ appeals in 2006.
Posted In: one British woman had to run down the street to the nearest translation service because she had no idea who to call. Posted In: When her husband died
Fortunately, for those Britons in Spain whose command of the language appears to stretch no further than hola or gracias and who are lost in Spanish bureaucracy, help is at hand: Spanish civil servants are to work at the British consulates in Malaga and Alicante to help expatriates to integrate with their neighbours.In a deal between Britain and Spain, the staff will offer advice on dealing with health services, registering with the local authorities and property problems.More than one million Britons are thought to live in Spain for at least part of the year. However, many of the thousands who headed there to retire in the sun never registered with local authorities or health services, preferring to pay taxes in Britain or rely on benefits paid back home.Because the pound has fallen against the euro and with Spain in a recession, many have found that the dream has soured. With a sparse command of Spanish and faced with trying to fathom their way through a labyrinthine bureaucracy, a rising number are struggling to cope. Expatriate aid agencies report that some have become dependent on handouts.Others bought holiday homes, putting their trust in estate agents or lawyers simply because they spoke some English. Only later did they discover that the dream homes were illegal and faced demolition.
Mary McKechnie, of the British Association of Marbella, said: “I lose patience with some people who can’t say more than gracias [thank you] and por favor [please] and don’t know how to do anything.”Karen O’Reilly, of Loughborough University, author of The British on the Costa del Sol, said: “The main point is that integration is linked to social exclusion. People who are not integrated can end up socially excluded.“I do not mean they have to learn the language and/or have Spanish friends, but they do need to understand the rules and regulations and be legal residents in order to claim rights and to have responsibilities.”
In an interview with The Times, Chris Bryant, the Europe Minister who visited Spain last weekend to meet British expatriates, said: “I would appeal to British people living in Spain to register with the authorities and with the health services.”
Posted In: 200 kilos of pure cocaine Posted In: Spanish authorities in the port at Valencia have seized 1
Spanish authorities in the port at Valencia have seized 1,200 kilos of pure cocaine, hidden in the false floor of a container on a freighter whose last port of call was Dominican Republic, consigned to a company in Madrid.Sources close to the ongoing investigation said two people were arrested, one in Valencia and another in Barcelona, who apparently awaited the drug.They said the container with the drug, which had been placed aboard the Cyprus-registry ship "Nordsea," had arrived in Valencia on February 23, from the Dominican Republic.
A previous discovery of a cocaine shipment in containers sent trough’s Valencia’s port prompted a probe of boats which had weighed anchor in Dominican Republic
Posted In: Donald Southall ran the UK side of a smuggling network which brought in cigarettes from Eastern Europe Posted In: evading at least £1.7 million of tax.
Homes in Spain, a yacht, red E-type Jaguar and a classic Norton motorbike were all bought by Donald Southall from Sedgley who was making a mint out of his part in an international tobacco smuggling plot.He ran the UK side of a smuggling network which brought in cigarettes from Eastern Europe, evading at least £1.7 million of tax.
Customs officials believe that although they seized 11 million cigarettes, many more cigarettes would have gone into the UK black market.Gang member Robert Horton, aged 43, of Church Road, Norton Canes, controlled the European end of the operation from his base in Hungary, Northampton Crown Court heard yesterday.He would meet potential suppliers and arrange for the bulk transportation of the smuggled cigarettes by the lorry load. Southall, of Gospel End Road, Sedgley, operated the UK side of the criminal network and oversaw the arrival and distribution of the cigarettes.Horton’s partner Julie Henworth, aged 42, was said to be “at the heart” of the organised crime gang. She was said to have acted as an administrator and travel agent” by arranging and paying for flights for numerous covert meetings between Horton and Southall in Europe and beyond.Sentencing the defendants, Judge Ian Alexander said: “This was a highly professional operation. You (Southall and Horton) joined together for the mutual benefits you derived from tobacco smuggling.” Southall and Horton were sentenced to four years and eight months in prison after pleading guilty to charges of tobacco smuggling.
Henworth, of Church Road, Norton Canes, was jailed for two years after pleading guilty to charges of money laundering.Southall and Henworth were arrested in March 2007 following a series of dawn raids across the Midlands after a two-year operation.Cash, computers and paperwork including bank account details were seized from their home addresses. Horton was arrested in May 2008 when he surrendered to UK authorities.Adrian Farley, Assistant Director of Criminal Investigation for Customs, said today: “This was a large-scale international tobacco smuggling plot which took our investigations all over Europe.“With the support of law enforcement colleagues in Hungary, Portugal, Spain, Slovakia, Austria and France, we have broken up this gang and are now working to take away the proceeds of their crime.” The gang operated between 2005 and 2006.




