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Sotomayor Statement: Full Text From Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing

Sonia Sotomayor spoke at her confirmation hearing for the first time on Monday afternoon, sketching out her judicial philosophy.

“My personal and professional experiences help me listen and understand, with the law always commanding the resul…

Man jailed for spiked omelette killing

Stephen Singer committed murder to ‘find solution to love triangle’

A school caretaker was jailed for life today for killing his lover after lacing her omelette with sleeping pills.

Stephen Singer then battered Dina Sharpe’s head and trapped her in her burning bedroom, where she died.

He was ordered to serve a minimum of 23 years in prison after the judge at the Old Bailey said he had committed the murder to find a “chilling” solution to a complex love triangle.

Singer, 37, was also jailed concurrently for 20 years for the attempted murder of a toddler in the flat, in Southwark, south London, and for six years for arson.

The judge praised neighbours who tried to save Sharpe, 39, a school cleaner, after she called for help from a window of the fourth-floor flat.

After breaking down her door, they rescued a 17-month-old boy from the flames.

The court was told that Singer had been having a three-year relationship with Sharpe while living with another woman.

Things came to a head last summer when the woman found out about his affair and threw him out of their home.

At the same time, Sharpe found out that Singer was trying to get back with his long-term partner.

On Sunday 2 August, Singer bought sleeping tablets and lighter fuel before going to Sharpe’s home.

After he calmly left and rode off on his motorcycle, Sharpe’s cries were heard and she was seen calling for help from a window.

Judge Stephen Kramer said Singer had argued with Sharpe and punched her three times in the face and head, causing the brain damage from which she died.

He had planned the murder, grinding up sleeping pills earlier in the evening and trying to sedate Sharpe by adding them to an omelette he had cooked for her, and to her wine.

Singer had set fire to the flat to cover up his “calculating and callous” crime.

The judge told him: “You are a controlling person who was prepared chillingly to use aggression and deceit to take control of a complex triangle of your own making.”

Andrew Munday QC, prosecuting, said the little boy, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, survived but had 75% burns and was still undergoing extensive plastic surgery.

He said Sharpe died from brain damage due to injuries to her head and face, not from the fire.

After her death, her blood was found to contain sleeping pills. Items from the flat were re-examined and the same drug was found in wine and in half an omelette.

“Not only did he spike the omelette, but also the wine,” said Munday.

“He made an omelette but left his half. There was a plan by this defendant to cause her a fatal overdose or at least to incapacitate her.”

Sharpe’s cousin, Deborah Judge, told the court: “To us, Dina died a hero. We will never understand why Stephen Singer didn’t just walk away.”

Outside court, Detective Chief Inspector Carl Mehta said: “This is an absolutely horrific case and the level of callousness and brutality used by Singer to plan and execute the murder is just unimaginable.”

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Emma Coleman Jordan: Have TV Talkers been Fair to Judge Sotomayor?

We have all read and heard the repetitive discussion of the “wise Latina” quote. But what many have not paid attention to is the unfair…

MySpace ‘suicide bully cleared’

A US judge has acquitted a Missouri woman over her role in a computer hoax directed at a 13-year-old neighbour who later killed herself.

District Judge George Wu stressed the ruling in the case of Lori Drew was tentative until issued in writing.

Drew, 50, was convicted last year after allegedly creating a fake MySpace page to find out what Megan Meier was saying about her daughter.

After the fake boy "dumped" Ms Meier online, she committed suicide.

Drew was found guilty in November of illegally accessing computers.

‘Public symbol’

But the judge said on Thursday that if she had been convicted for breaking the social networking site’s terms of service, "you could prosecute pretty much anyone who violated terms of service".

Lori Drew leaves an LA Court 18 May

Posing as "Josh Evans", Drew started an online relationship with her teenage neighbour, before apparently staging a falling-out and sending a message that "the world would be better off without" her.

She hanged herself a short time later in October 2006.

During court proceedings, Drew’s lawyer argued that "the government’s case is all about making Lori Drew a public symbol of cyber-bullying".

"The government has created a fiction that Lori Drew somehow caused [Megan's] death, and it wants a long prison sentence to make its fiction seem real."

But federal prosecutor Tom O’Brien said he stood by his decision to prosecute.

"I’m proud of this case," he said. "This is a case that called out for someone to do something. It was a risk. But this office will always take risks on behalf of children.</p


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