Alleged kidnapper of mom, 3 girls was no stranger

This undated photo provided by the Mississippi Department of Public Safety shows Adam Mayes. Warrants for kidnapping are being issued for Mayes, who is considered “armed and extremely dangerous,” an official said in a news release Saturday, May 5, 2012. Mayes is wanted in connection with the disappearance of Jo Ann Bain and her three daughters, who were abducted in Tennessee and last seen in Mississippi. (AP Photo/Mississippi Department of Public Safety)

This undated photo provided by the Mississippi Department of Public Safety shows Adam Mayes. Warrants for kidnapping are being issued for Mayes, who is considered “armed and extremely dangerous,” an official said in a news release Saturday, May 5, 2012. Mayes is wanted in connection with the disappearance of Jo Ann Bain and her three daughters, who were abducted in Tennessee and last seen in Mississippi. (AP Photo/Mississippi Department of Public Safety)

This combo image made of undated photos provided by the Mississippi Department of Public Safety shows, clockwise from top left, Jo Ann Bain and her daughters, Adrienne, 14, Kyliyah 8, and Alexandria,12. Bain and her daughters may be in “extreme danger” after they were abducted in Tennessee and last seen in Mississippi, but they could be in another state where their suspected kidnapper has connections, authorities said Saturday, May 5, 2012. The Mississippi Highway Patrol issued an Amber Alert on Saturday morning, and Tennessee authorities also have issued an alert. (AP Photo/Mississippi Department of Public Safety)

Tennessee Bureau of Investigation agents inspect the home and garage of a woman and her three young daughters who authorities say were abducted near Whiteville, Tenn., on Sunday, May 6, 2012. The FBI has said two bodies were found at a home connected to Adam Mayes in Mississippi, but agents have released few other details. (AP Photo/Erik Schelzig)

Tennessee Bureau of Investigation agents inspect the home and garage of a woman and her three young daughters who authorities say were abducted near Whiteville, Tenn., on Sunday, May 6, 2012. The FBI has said two bodies were found at a home connected to Adam Mayes in Mississippi, but agents have released few other details. (AP Photo/Erik Schelzig)

Tennessee Bureau of Investigation agents inspect the home and garage of a woman and her three young daughters who authorities say were abducted near Whiteville, Tenn., on Sunday, May 6, 2012. The FBI has said two bodies were found at a home connected to Adam Mayes in Mississippi, but agents have released few other details. (AP Photo/Erik Schelzig)

(AP) ? A man accused of abducting a mother and her three daughters has been described as being like an uncle to the girls.

Now Adam Mayes, 35, is the subject of an Amber Alert and faces charges in the disappearance of Jo Ann Bain and her daughters 14-year-old Adrienne, 12-year-old Alexandria and 8-year-old Kyliyah.

Meanwhile, FBI spokesman Joel Siskovic said Sunday that authorities were trying to identify two bodies found at a Mississippi home Mayes has been linked to. He would not say if they were children. Authorities have described Mayes as being armed and extremely dangerous.

Jo Ann Bain’s husband Gary and Mayes knew each other, Tennessee authorities said.

Mayes “thought the world of those little girls,” observed Melvin Herron, 42, who lives next door to the Bain family in western Tennessee and recalled seeing the girls playing outside, running and going down water slides.

On Sunday, forensic scientists with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation searched the garage and backyard at the Hardeman County, Tenn., home where Bain, her husband and the three girls live.

Gary Bain declined to comment Sunday to an Associated Press reporter.

“Jo Ann and the kids, everyone loves them. We’re just hoping to hear that they’re safe,” said Linda Kirkland, a family friend and cook at the Country Cafe in Whiteville, Tenn.

Kirkland said Sunday that the woman and her daughters were moving to Arizona because two of the girls had asthma. Other than dealing with a recent death in the family, Bain, who had frequented the restaurant, never indicated anything was wrong.

“She seemed so happy,” Kirkland said.

Jo Ann Bain and her daughters were last seen in their home early April 27, according to Kristin Helm, a spokeswoman for the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.

Mayes and Gary Bain had long been acquainted, having once been married to sisters. Helm said he was viewed as an uncle.

“Mayes is a family friend who was staying there that night to help the family pack and drive a U-Haul to Arizona the next day with Gary because the family was planning on moving there within the month,” Helm said. “Gary was asleep at the home that night and woke to find them gone in the morning and the car gone. Mayes was gone too.”

Gary Bain woke up after the kids typically went to school so he didn’t expect to see them, Helm said. But then he tried calling his wife on her cell phone during the day and couldn’t reach her.

When the girls didn’t get off the school bus, he reported them missing to the sheriff’s office that evening.

Helm said Gary Bain’s adult daughter and his granddaughter had also spent the night at the family’s home, but that the grown daughter didn’t see Jo Ann or the girls the next morning. And the car was missing.

On April 30, the vehicle was found abandoned in Hardeman County, which is about 70 miles east of Memphis. Jo Ann Bain and her daughters had left most of their personal belongings at the house, Helm said.

On Friday, the TBI reported that the girls were with Mayes in Mississippi, but there was no evidence that a crime had been committed.

Mayes was last seen Tuesday in Guntown, Miss., about 80 miles southeast of the Bains’ Tennessee home.

Siskovic said authorities talked to Mayes early on in the investigation, but that he fled when they tried to contact him again. Authorities said Mayes did not appear to have a criminal record.

Police had been trying to determine whether Jo Ann Bain went with Mayes willingly.

By Friday, Mayes had a warrant on file in Hardeman County for false report stemming from information he gave investigators about the case.

Siskovic said Saturday that the bodies were found late Friday or early Saturday in a Mississippi home. He wasn’t sure if the home belonged to Mayes or an acquaintance.

The Mississippi Highway Patrol issued an Amber Alert on Saturday morning for the girls, and Tennessee authorities have also issued an alert.

The Mississippi Department of Public Safety said Saturday it believed “the children may be in extreme danger,” and that warrants for kidnapping had been issued for Mayes.

The FBI and U.S. Marshals Service also announced a reward of up to $50,000 for information that leads to the location of the missing victims and the arrest of Mayes.

Authorities had said over the weekend that Mayes could be in Mississippi but that he has ties to Arizona, Texas, North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida.

Authorities described Adrienne as having brown hair and eyes. She’s 5 feet 4 inches tall and 129 pounds. Alexandria has brown hair and hazel eyes and is 5 feet tall and 105 pounds. Kyliyah has blonde hair and brown eyes and is 4 feet tall and 57 pounds.

Mayes has brown hair and blue eyes and is 6 feet 3 inches tall and weighs 175 pounds.

However, authorities said Mayes may have cut his hair, as well as cut and dyed the girls’ hair to disguise their identities.

Back in the Bains’ neighborhood, neighbor Herron said he hoped the bodies found in Mississippi were not the girls or their mother.

“I’m praying to God it’s not those little girls,” he said.

___

Associated Press writer Holbrook Mohr in Jackson, Miss., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

los angeles desserts Discount Motorcycle Luggage Planters for Sale upholstery and furniture cleaning Colorado Springs

RSS Feed Search Engine – Real-Time Search Powered by FeedRank

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

car locksmith michigan primary results how to network market online laundromat for sale

Twitter makes its mobile site more feature phone friendly

Image

When you look at the latest, greatest devices from Apple, Samsung, Motorola and the like all day, it can be easy to forget that not everyone out there is sporting a smartphone. But feature phone users have thoughts and feelings that need to be tweeted at all times, too. It’s a good thing then, that Twitter’s seen fit to update its mobile site to help offer a more uniform experience to users with old browsers, low bandwidth and handsets that don’t quite fit under the “smart-” moniker. The new mobile site, available at mobile.twitter.com, rolls out today.

Twitter makes its mobile site more feature phone friendly originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 May 2012 17:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTwitter  | Email this | Comments

fence contractor Los Angeles steel band Hoa Management Houston luton car rental

Dish profit down 34 pct, but adds subscribers

(AP) ? Satellite TV provider Dish Network Corp. said Monday that it added subscribers in the first quarter, but net income dropped 34 percent and revenue growth fell short of Wall Street expectations.

Shares fell $1.25, or 4 percent, to $30.07 in morning trading.

The company’s profit dropped largely because the year-ago period got a boost from Dish settling a patent lawsuit with TiVo Inc.

Dish Network, based in Englewood, Colo., is trying to expand beyond TV into Internet access, video and other services, both for homes and on mobile devices. Last year, it bought Blockbuster out of bankruptcy.

The company said it added 104,000 net subscribers, ending the January-March quarter with about 14.1 million subscribers. A year ago, it added 58,000 subscribers.

Net income in the January-March quarter was $360.3 million, down from $549.4 million a year ago. On a per-share basis, earnings fell to 80 cents from $1.22, but that beat the 71 cents that analysts polled by FactSet had been expecting.

Revenue rose 11 percent to $3.58 billion from $3.22 billion. Still, that was slightly below analysts’ expectations of $3.62 billion.

Associated Press

depression cures jailbreak iphone 4g Real Time Graphics lawn care lawrencville

Posted in discriminating. Tags: . No Comments »

Austerity now dirty word in Europe, but what next?

People sit down to admire the view on Eiffel tower Paris Monday May 7, 2012, one day after the second round of the Presidential elections. France handed the presidency Sunday to leftist Francois Hollande, a champion of government stimulus programs who says the state should protect the downtrodden, a victory that could deal a death blow to the drive for austerity that has been the hallmark of Europe in recent years. (AP Photo/Laurent Cipriani)

People sit down to admire the view on Eiffel tower Paris Monday May 7, 2012, one day after the second round of the Presidential elections. France handed the presidency Sunday to leftist Francois Hollande, a champion of government stimulus programs who says the state should protect the downtrodden, a victory that could deal a death blow to the drive for austerity that has been the hallmark of Europe in recent years. (AP Photo/Laurent Cipriani)

Paris buildings reflect in a shop window displaying the cover of a magazine with a picture of President-elect Francois Hollande in Paris Monday May 7, 2012. France handed the presidency Sunday to leftist Hollande, a champion of government stimulus programs who says the state should protect the downtrodden, a victory that could deal a death blow to the drive for austerity that has been the hallmark of Europe in recent years. (AP Photo/Laurent Cipriani)

Greek presidential guards perform ceremonial duties at the monument of the unknown soldier in front of the Greek Parliament in Athens, Monday, May 7, 2012. Bailout-reliant Greece faces weeks of financial turmoil after voters angry at crippling income cuts punished mainstream politicians, let a far-right extremist group into Parliament and gave no party enough votes to govern alone. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

(AP) ? The day after Francois Hollande rode to power in France on a slogan of “change now,” the conversation in Europe was already different Monday: Austerity had become a dirty word.

What replaces it, though, was anything but clear.

The newly powerful in France and Greece want to roll back the spending cuts and tax increases that have defined Europe’s response to its 3-year-old debt crisis. But campaign rhetoric is likely to prove more extreme than any real-world reversal of the budget tightening.

World financial markets took Europe’s latest round of political upheaval in stride, convulsing early and then recovering. The continent’s uncertain future ? including the possibility of Greece leaving the euro ? was causing anxiety but not panic about the threat to the global economy.

But there is hardly unity in Europe.

Sunday night, Socialist president-elect Hollande celebrated his victory over Nicolas Sarkozy by vowing, “Austerity can no longer be inevitable!”

On Monday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel gently pushed back.

She rejected Hollande’s call to renegotiate a treaty signed last month on tougher action to control government deficits. “We in Germany, and I personally,” she said, “believe the fiscal pact is not up for negotiation.”

Still, she stressed the importance of French-German cooperation ? and her willingness to meet soon with Hollande.

Economists said that while the anti-austerity winds are bound to stir up short-term political instability, especially in Greece, they could eventually bring some financial calm.

“This is going to force some rethinking” all across Europe about how to manage the debt crisis, said Laura Gonzalez, a finance professor at Fordham University in New York. “That is good for everybody.”

Greece remains the focus of Europe’s financial and political unease. Political parties that made gains by rejecting belt-tightening still have to assemble a majority coalition in Parliament before they can begin governing. The conservatives got the first try Monday but failed ? leaving a new left-wing, party to take its turn. If no party can assemble a coalition, the country will need to hold new elections, probably in June.

The main stock index in Greece plunged almost 7 percent. France’s CAC-40 ended 1.7 percent higher.

The Dow Jones industrial average in the United States fell as much as 68 points early Monday but recouped its losses and ended the day down 30 at 13,008.

The biggest fear was that Greece’s new leadership would renege on commitments made to secure the country’s massive rescue loans ? or even leave the euro. Merkel pressed Greek leaders on Monday to stay the course. “Of course, the most important thing is that the programs we agreed with Greece are continued,” she said.

Greece wasn’t the only problem. The 17 countries that use the euro ? and nine other European countries ? agreed in March to the fiscal compact that seeks to make countries balance their budgets. But bailout fears have intensified in recent months as Spain, Italy and other governments face rising borrowing costs on bond markets, a sign that investors are nervous about the size of their debts relative to their economic output. Austerity was intended to address these jitters by reducing their government’s borrowing needs, but there has been a negative side effect: As economic output shrinks, the debt burden actually looks worse.

As Europe’s economy got weaker, the public and politicians grew weary of the budget-cutting required to make the fiscal compact work. Across Europe, austerity meant layoffs and pay cuts for state workers, scaled-back expenditures on welfare and social programs, and higher taxes and fees to boost government revenue.

Hollande says he intends to renegotiate the fiscal treaty so that it places an emphasis on growth and not just deficit reduction. He says governments should actually increase spending now, while economies are so weak.

Merkel and the European Central Bank have instead stressed deeper, long term fixes such as reducing red tape for small businesses, making it easier for workers to find jobs across the eurozone and breaking down barriers that countries have created to protect their own industries. Those changes involve challenging unions and other powerful constituencies ? and they can take years to have an effect.

The anti-austerity sentiment appears to be picking up strength.

In Italy on Monday, several candidates in local elections who oppose the deficit-cutting promoted by Premier Mario Monti had a strong showing. And the head of the International Monetary Fund ? one of the institutions that designed the Greek bailout and the austerity measures that go with it ? warned that Europe has to be careful about pushing austerity too far. Christine Lagarde said European countries should reduce their budget deficits gradually to avoid further damage to their economies.

Eight of the 17 eurozone nations are already in recession and unemployment across the bloc rose to 10.9 percent in March ? its highest ever.

The European commission called upon Greece to make “full and timely” implementation of its budget cuts. Those include ?11.5 billion in new cutbacks that must be found in June to make sure Greece keeps getting money under the terms of its second, ?130 billion bailout.

Economist Christoph Weil at Commerzbank said that if aid is cut off, Greece would be unable to pay its debts by autumn, leading to a second default following a writedown of ?107 billion in March.

“There is certainly room for negotiations that could save face for both sides,” Weil said. But “patience is wearing thin” with Greece and “I would not count on this happening.”

The U.S. and European financial systems are so intertwined that a loss of confidence in Europe could cloud the U.S. economy.

But there were few expectations that the votes in France and Greece would have much immediate effect in the U.S.

Still, they make it more likely that Greece will have to abandon the euro, roiling world markets, said Jacob Kirkegaard, research fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Sarkozy and Merkel were the architects of the European austerity plan ? so close they were known as “Merkozy.” The big question now is if there will be a “Merkollande” in Europe’s future.

Hollande’s plans to jump-start the French economy by investing in infrastructure and buoying small businesses will determine how bumpy the road ahead is.

He has promised to keep the deficit in check by raising taxes on the wealthy and closing some corporate loopholes ? but some investors say that will kill the very growth he hopes to foster.

If he does start wildly increasing spending, France will no doubt see its borrowing costs rise ? which could make his policies untenable and prompt a shift back to austerity. It was those rising borrowing costs that eventually forced fellow eurozone nations Greece, Ireland and Portugal to seek bailouts.

Some are hoping that Hollande will turn out to be more pragmatic.

“Adieu, election campaign. Bonjour, reality,” read an editorial in Germany’s daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung.

___

McHugh contributed from Frankfurt. Juergen Baetz in Berlin, Nicholas Paphitis in Athens and Paul Wiseman in Washington also contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Oklahoma Lake Property toric lenses Generic Levitra Mattress reviews

Posted in discriminating. Tags: . No Comments »

The Weekly Winston (Powerlineblog)

Posted in discriminating. Tags: . No Comments »

RSS Feed Search Engine – Real-Time Search Powered by FeedRank

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

burn victims support groups divers watches alcohol yeast Discount Pet Doors

Posted in discriminating. Tags: . No Comments »

Samsung and AT&T announce Focus 2: LTE Windows Phone on May 20th for $50

Samsung and AT&T announce Focus 2: LTE Windows Phone on May 20th for $50

The Nokia Lumia 900 may be the current leader when it comes to a quality Windows Phone handset on a budget, but Samsung is under-cutting the competition with the newly announced Focus 2. Succeeding the Focus and Focus S, this new handset offers LTE and comes in any color you like (so long as it’s white) for the low-low price of $49.99 on-contract. It has a 4-inch Super AMOLED (non-Plus) display up front and a five megapixel sensor in the back, capable of recording 720p video, paired with a VGA camera facing forward. No details on processor or memory at this point, but for that price we wouldn’t expect to be too overwhelmed. Intrigued? You can sate that curiosity when it hits AT&T stores on May 20th.

Continue reading Samsung and AT&T announce Focus 2: LTE Windows Phone on May 20th for $50

Samsung and AT&T announce Focus 2: LTE Windows Phone on May 20th for $50 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 May 2012 09:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAT&T  | Email this | Comments


angel investors mayawhite.com window displays quantumlinx seo

Posted in discriminating. Tags: . No Comments »

This motor home is yours … for $3 million

Photo courtesy Marchi Mobile

The $3 million eleMMent Palazzo is a rolling mansion that allows the owner to skip the sacrifices of a 5-star hotel.

By Paul A. Eisenstein, The Detroit Bureau

There?s nothing worse than having to rough it on the road. But with the new eleMMent Palazzo, the days of suffering at a 5-star hotel are a thing of the past.

The $3 million mansion on wheels guarantees that the road-weary 1-percenter can live in the accustomed lifestyle, even when they?re hours away from home or don?t have a place to fly in the private jet.

Better yet, the Palazzo, produced by Vienna?s Marchi Mobile, is nearly as environmentally friendly as some of the latest battery-electric vehicles, the 20-ton, 40-foot rolling palace delivering a full 13 mpg out of its 510-horsepower turbo diesel.? That?s better than the Bentley Mulsanne or Rolls-Royce Phantom II an owner now can comfortably leave behind in the 10-car garage at home.?

Relief at the Pump: Oil Prices Slip Below $100?

Credit the eleMMent Palazzo?s aerodynamics and lightweighting.? There?s a wind-cheating front spoiler, the maker notes, along with a carbon fiber rear diffuser.

EleMMent ?offers reduced fuel consumption of up to 20% by its trendsetting aerodynamics, thus creating economic and ecologic harmony,? says its Austrian manufacturer.

With a top speed of 93 mph, it?s very possible the enthusiast owner just might prefer to handle the driving chores, but for those who prefer to have Jeeves behind the wheel ? with the proper coach license, of course ? there?s a separate bunk bed for the staff up front.? No uncomfortable mingling with the celebrities.?

Ford Sells Off Key Parts Plant?

One thing?s clear, you won?t confuse the Palazzo for the typical, low-rent mobile home converted from a conventional bus.? One of its most distinctive visual features is the three-circle windshield, the central glass looking a lot like a designer monacle, cleared of rain or sand ? since Arab oil sheiks are expected to make up many of the customers ? but a unique triple wiper system that spins like a windshield.

Photo courtesy Marchi Mobile

There is plenty of space for a family gathering.

Of course, all that shouldn?t matter to the jet-setting, er, road-going traveler who?d buy one of these customized behemoths.? For them, it?s all about having the comforts of home ? or mansion, if you prefer.

The interior of the eleMMent measures a comfy 430 square feet.? But you can expand that by 80% with the push-button pop out that ensures you?ve got enough space for the entire investment club.? And if it?s a dance party, another feature is a pop-up roof terrace adding yet 250 square feet more space.? It features an awning, of course, as well as that essential heated floor.?

Top Ten Vehicles for Teens?

The living quarters are divided into a lounge area and a large master bedroom.? To get rid of that road grime, there?s a large shower with a rainfall showerhead.

?Relax with your friends by having a chilled drink from one of the bars on your fully automatic liftable flybridge lounge or on the welcoming couch area inside,? explains Marchi Mobile.

And in case those friends you meet later traveling on the yacht don?t quite believe how nice life can be on the road, the company notes that ?Remote video access allows you to show your friends the exterior and interior and also permits to pre-set the lighting and temperature for your return to the vehicle.?

So, while life sometimes requires sacrifice as you race from one family mansion to the other, it?s good to know that you?re never again going to have to settle for a Four Seasons or Ritz-Carlton.?

funny videos chain link fence Orlando at home security cameras designer wallets in new jersey

Posted in discriminating. Tags: . No Comments »

iMore Picks of the Week for May 5, 2012

Every week the editors at iMore carefully select some of our favorite, most useful, most extraordinary apps, accessories, gadgets, and websites. This week’s selections includes a way to monitor your electricity usage, an app that helps you learn some awesome blues licks on the guitar, a godsend for regular air travelers, an app and service for listening to your favorite music, and a beautiful way to read articles on the web. To see what we picked, and to tell us your pick, follow on after the break!



motivational speakers welders direct bluffton south carolina homes for sale image is everything

Posted in discriminating. Tags: . No Comments »