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Martin Shkreli Resigns From His Horrible Drug Company

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Martin Shkreli Resigns From His Horrible Drug Company

The arc of Martin Shkreli’s great saga has finally cratered: the famewhore CEO and Wu-Tang collector, who was arrested yesterday on various fraud charges, has stepped down from his position atop Turing Pharmaceuticals, the company at which he infamously hiked prices on an AIDS drug by 5,000 percent.

Per the AP, the company’s board has named an interim CEO.

Shkreli founded the company earlier this year after leaving Retrophin, a biopharmecutical firm he created after a career spent working in hedge funds.

Yesterday’s indictment for Shkreli’s arrest accused him of running a long Ponzi scheme across various corporations. He was reportedly aware of federal investigations into his business practices since January.

Shkreli has mostly kept his head below water since the arrest, though he did send out a tweet late last night:

On the bright side, his favorite hoodie is only $15.


Contact the author at jordan@gawker.com.


The Worst Tweets of 2015

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The Worst Tweets of 2015

As selected by the staff of Gawker. These tweets are terrible, man.

The Worst Tweets of 2015

The Worst Tweets of 2015

The Worst Tweets of 2015

Illustration by Jim Cooke

California Prison Is a Racist, Violent Nightmare

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California Prison Is a Racist, Violent Nightmare

The state of California issued a report this week on conditions at High Desert State Prison. It is a nightmare.

The full report, which can be found here, describes a remote, isolated, lawless penal hellscape in which guards abuse some inmates and choose to allow other vulnerable groups of inmates to be abused by their fellow prisoners. This prison, HDSP, has had six different wardens in the past eight years, which should give you a hint as to its level of institutional dysfunction. It has been the subject of media scrutiny for years, which helped lead to this state report.

The report describes a pervasive code of silence among staff members reinforced by strong groups of friends known as “cars”:

On the other hand, some former staff described the negative consequences that could occur if you were not a member of the “car” or if you spoke out or reported misconduct against a member of the “car.” These consequences could include unfavorable job changes, being ostracized and labeled as a “rat,” shunning in the community, retaliatory investigations, verbal badgering and abuse, the threat of not responding to an inmate assault on staff, and even physical assault by a custody supervisor.

Former HDSP inmates testified to extremely widespread racism in day to day life in the prison. Some excerpts included in the report:

.. officers called inmates the N-word or wetbacks. Black inmates wouldn’t get enough time to eat; the officers would ‘kick’ the blacks out of the chow hall first and then the Hispanics. The white inmates didn’t have to leave, they were running the kitchen.

.. never saw such a lack of respect toward black inmates than he experienced at HDSP. Officers called black inmates the N-word and threatened them. This disrespect occurred with free staff as well, including medical staff.

.. there were a lot of disrespectful staff at HDSP. The staff at HDSP were openly racist. The sergeants and lieutenants were worse than the officers. Blacks were treated very differently: they are on lockdowns a lot longer; they go to the hole for the smallest of reasons; and officers messed with their food.

.. officers were racist, called black inmates the N-word, and black inmates were locked down for longer periods of time than other races.

.. the biggest issues are race-related. Once heard an officer call blacks “skid marks.” Regardless of who was involved in an incident, the black population was always held responsible. Since HDSP was run by predominately white staff, the white inmates were favored. White inmates always got the better jobs. Clerical jobs were mainly given to white inmates. Black inmates have to wait at the end of the line during canteen. The canteen manager allows Hispanic and white inmates to run canteen, resulting in the black inmates often not getting a chance to have their canteen orders filled.

Inmates also say that officers at HDSP would point out sex offenders to other inmates so that they would be brutalized. Furthermore, the report says that inmates who were placed in the “Sensitive Needs Yard” (SNY) because they needed protective custody wound up with little protection whatsoever, due to institutional apathy:

The growing numbers of gang dropouts being placed in SNYs has resulted in numerous new gangs forming and warring with rivals on the SNYs. Gang violence has grown so bad that some SNY inmates have asked to return to mainline yards rather than continue to face the gangs on the SNYs. However, once an inmate has been housed on an SNY facility, he then becomes a target or is labeled as soft, making it very difficult to ever transfer out...

Also indicative of the increased violence in SNYs is the proportion of inmate homicides that occur involving victims assigned to SNY housing. In the OIG’s October 2014 SemiAnnual Report, Volume II, it reported on the homicides that took place on sensitive needs yards. Of the 11 inmate-on-inmate homicides reported, 10 occurred on Level IV sensitive needs yards, 8 of which were in-cell homicides. In addition to the 11 homicides, another case reported was an in-cell great bodily injury case that also occurred on an SNY facility, but did not result in death.

We sentence people to prison. The punishment is the loss of their freedom. They are not sentenced to be harassed, discriminated against, targeted with slurs, subjected to gang-like prison guards, and murdered even when they are supposed to be specially protected.

Don’t send people to prison if you can’t protect their human rights.

[The full report. Image via Google]

Chipotle: Our Employees Didn’t Shout “Hands Up Don’t Shoot” at Baltimore Cops

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Chipotle: Our Employees Didn’t Shout “Hands Up Don’t Shoot” at Baltimore Cops

A deleted post to a private Baltimore neighborhood Facebook group details an exchange between two uniformed BPD cops and employees at a Chipotle in which the employees, on seeing the police, raised their hands and yelled “hands up, don’t shoot,” mimicking anti-police brutality protests across the country.

It happened in Brooklyn last year, and now someone appearing to be a Baltimore cop and Chipotle are at odds over whether it happened in that city, too.

The post (via Twitter) reads:

Today two uniformed Baltimore Police officers walked into the Chipotle on Fort Ave for lunch. The employees raised their hands in the air shouting hands up don’t shoot. The Police officers turned around and walked out. They have lost my business.

Chipotle: Our Employees Didn’t Shout “Hands Up Don’t Shoot” at Baltimore Cops

The account appears to belong to Baltimore Police Department detective Thomas DiNunno (pictured above).

But a Chipotle corporate spokesperson told Gawker the exchange didn’t happen. An allegation like that is something we certainly take seriously, so when we were made aware of it, we immediately looked into the situation,” communications director Chris Arnold wrote via email. “We spoke to our managers and crew in the restaurant, and no one reported having witnessed anything like that, and we reviewed security camera footage and saw no evidence of it happening. We have not seen any evidence to substantiate this claim.”

The provenance of the Facebook screenshot is somewhat murky, as the group it was posted to, South Baltimore Community by (SBNA), is private, and the original post seems to have been removed. However, Gawker observed a second screenshot taken today showing a post in the group that reads, “So here’s an update to the Chipotle thread that was removed,” and links to a tweet about the exchange.

Reached via telephone, DiNunno said he did not wish to comment and quickly hung up. BPD public information officer Jeremy Silbert told Gawker that the department has “not been notified by any member of our agency about these allegations,” and directed inquiries to DiNunno.

DiNunno previously made headlines in 2011, when the city of Baltimore paid $100,000 in a lawsuit settlement to a 65-year-old man who alleged that he was beaten by two officers who believed his hand-rolled cigarette was a joint. DiNunno is one of the two officers named in the suit.


Photo via Baltimore Police Department/Facebook

How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

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How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

Of all the real-life characters in Friday Night Lights, Brian Chavez would surely have been voted Least Likely To Be Caught Brawling After Permian High Football Games Into Middle Age.

Late one fall Friday night in 2009, though—more than 20 years after Buzz Bissinger embedded with the Odessa Permian football team for a season—there was Chavez in handcuffs, sitting on a curb under police lights.

The aging schoolboy jock stuck in his hometown is a standard fictional character: Wooderson from Dazed & Confused, for example, or Al Bundy from Married With Children, or that unnamed speedballer from Springsteen’s “Glory Days.” But those guys didn’t have many options other than sticking around. The Chavez Bissinger portrayed in his acclaimed book, which inspired both the film and the cult TV show of the same name, had more options than a tricked-out Escalade.

He was the kid who used football instead of vice versa, acting like being #1 in his class meant as much to him as being #85 in the game program. Chavez was the strongest guy in the school, benching 345, and captain of the schoolboy football team in a region as obsessed with schoolboy football as any. He also got better grades than everybody else, went to Harvard, and gave up the game that made him famous. The book ends with Chavez just starting out in college, but as he made his way in life, he continued to validate Bissinger’s portrayal, graduating with honors and getting a law degree. A 2009 profile in the Odessa American gushed about how Chavez had “managed to juggle the jock and genius role.” Yankees loved him, too: In an extensive New York Times series on the book, writer Rachael Larimore tabbed Chavez as her favorite and most relatable character because he “embodied nuance.”

Chavez’s being the first player with Mexican roots ever named captain of the Permian football team—and Odessa now being a city with a majority-Hispanic population—gave him even more value as a role model.


How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

Odessa, Texas, 2004; photo via AP


But then Chavez was arrested after a violent home invasion on the east side of Odessa. The extensive police reports paint a bloody scene that mixed elements of House Party and Gettysburg. Police reports showed that Chavez spent the hours before his arrest attending a Permian football game at Ratliff Stadium, the local high school football shrine and epicenter of his teenage glories. Chavez’s mug shot, featuring him decked out in jailhouse attire, appeared in the local paper alongside the Permian game stories. Stanley Wilkins, a teammate from the 1988 team whose wildness was noted in Bissinger’s book, was named as a fellow invader.

Chavez was indicted and also sued by the victims, with the local media following every step of his downfall. The Odessa American put Chavez’s criminal case and related civil suits filed against him on a list of the Odessa’s biggest stories of 2009, alongside the reunion of FNL stars on the 20th anniversary of their graduation.

Chavez, who turned 40 years old as his future was being litigated, suddenly went from stereotype buster to lame cliché: The former football star, still going to his old high school’s games and still fucking up.

“This was the kind of thing you expect from high school kids, not full grown adults,” says Wes Mau, the out-of-town prosecutor brought in to throw the book at the local hero after some of Odessa’s top lawmen wouldn’t.

Adolescent or not, these actions had very serious consequences. Several tenants and guests of the home Chavez invaded were injured, and witnesses named him as the leading thrower of haymakers. He avoided jail time by pleading guilty to burglary with intent to commit assault, then settled the lawsuits through payments to the victims; the Texas State Bar Association then invalidated his law license.

“That was the darkest day of all,” Chavez tells me of the license revocation. “I took my license down off the wall and drove it to Austin to turn it in, hand delivered it, frame and all. Man, talk about feeling it.”

As the hits to his reputation just kept coming, the moral of Chavez’s saga seemed to be that you can’t judge the guy on the cover by the book.

Just in time for the 25th anniversary of Bissinger’s tome, though, Chavez is about to get a chance to prove that his heel turn was only temporary. Officials with the State Bar of Texas recently told him that he was fit for reinstatement. As of yesterday, his law license was in the mail from Austin on its way back to Odessa.

I asked Chavez about the imminent end of his court-imposed hiatus from lawyering.

“It’s like I got my arms chopped off,” he said, “and now I’m going to get my arms back. I’ll be able to fight again.”

The same folks who rooted him on as a kid are now cheering for his role modeling career to pick up where it left off. “Brian Chavez will fight and work hard to get back. I know he will,” says LaRue Moore, Chavez’s former English teacher and the academic Norma Rae of Bissinger’s book. “He’ll do whatever it takes.”

Given the way he undid his good name, his former English teacher would probably point out that both of them are using “fight” metaphorically.

“Brian walked in and hit Jaime in the mouth.”

Buzz Bissinger wrote in Friday Night Lights that Chavez told him he knew that he was “an asshole” whenever he was on the football field.

“But,” Bissinger wrote, “he figured it was better to be, as he saw it, an ‘asshole playing football rather than in real life.’”

On Oct. 2, 2009, according to the evidence, Chavez was an asshole in real life. By the end of that Friday night, he was under police lights, handcuffed and sitting on a curb. And the reputation he’d earned over a lifetime—the one trumpeted in movies and books and the New York Times—had taken a beating.

Lots of Chavez’s fellow Odessans took a beating that night, to go by the police reports.

As those accounts have it, Chavez’s troubles began when his girlfriend, Rosemary Soto, called her ex-husband, Jose Luis Jimenez, from Ratliff Stadium, where she and Chavez were watching a Permian football game. The exes began arguing about who would be taking care of their two children that night. Jimenez told police that when he took Soto’s call he was at a party where everybody was listening to the Permian game on the radio. He told police that the call ended when Soto announced she and Chavez were going to show up at the party, and that he heard Chavez in the background yelling that he was planning to “whip his ass.”

The game was enough to put any loyal Panthers fan in a fighting mood. This was the biggest sports night of the year in Odessa, in which Permian played Odessa High, the other secondary school in town. The annual series, which started in 1959, has long been regarded as Texas’s “biggest high school football rivalry” despite traditionally being one of the most lopsided serial matchups. (After getting shutout in the 1964 game by an Odessa Bronchos squad quarterbacked by future country & western cheeseball Larry Gatlin, Permian went 32 years without a loss in the so-called Rumble in Ratliff, and held a 44-6 advantage in wins heading into the 2009 tilt.)

The 2009 season opened with great expectations for Permian. Gary Gaines, the coach during the Friday Night Lights era, had just returned after two decades away. When he left, following the 1989 season, Permian was on top of the schoolboy football world, having won the fifth of its six Texas state football championships that year and being named the #1 squad in the entire country by the National Prep Poll. He used the accolades as a springboard to college coaching, taking a job as an assistant at Texas Tech. He lasted four seasons in Lubbock, then bounced around the state, going from high school to college and back for the next decade and a half. Gaines never achieved the success at any other location or level that he’d had coaching schoolboys in Odessa.


How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

Gary Gaines works out Permian players, 2009; photo via AP


The last Permian state championship came in 1991, and Gaines’s return inspired hopes that the school would end its title drought. The old coach and several of his players from the Friday Night Lights team—Chavez among them—gathered for a preseason ceremony at Ratliff to mark the coach’s comeback and the 20th anniversary of the book’s release. All that optimism had vanished by the end of the Odessa High game, though. A Lubbock pundit once wrote that the heat from the one-sided rivalry came down to kids on the Odessa High squad wanting to “avenge their fathers’ losses to Permian.” Well, lots of avenging took place that night in 2009.

The Bronchos crushed Permian.

“I have never seen Odessa dominate Permian,” the KHKX color commentator said at halftime, with Odessa leading 19-0. The final score was 26-7, the worst Rumble defeat Permian had suffered since 1963. Odessa High’s offensive star was Bradley Marquez, now a rookie receiver with the St. Louis Rams.

“What a difference 20 years makes,” the commentator said after the final gun.

Chavez’s night would get a lot worse than his alma mater’s. The police say that after Soto’s call, Jimenez announced to the party, “Brian and Rosemary are on their way and they want to kick our ass!” Soon enough, they arrived at the house of Jaime Castillo, who hosted the high school football listening party. As a crowd of partygoers and neighbors watched, Soto shouted that Jimenez’s current wife, Pamela Jimenez, was a “fat bitch,” then physically brawled in the street with Diedra Orona, a neighbor of the hosts. Witnesses told police Orona had the upperhand in the scrap before Chavez restrained Soto, got her in his SUV and drove away. Other than some scratches, torn clothes and hurt feelings, nobody got hurt. Jimenez called 911, later telling the cops that he was worried that the incident would somehow be used against him in a custody battle with Soto. Chavez was done playing peacemaker.

Before Odessa’s finest showed up at the Castillos’, Chavez returned—and this time he had reinforcements. According to the police reports, about 15 minutes after their departure, Chavez and Soto came back with two more male passengers in his auto and two other pickup trucks full of uninvited guests, all ready to rumble. Reports say that Chavez and the rest banged on the windows and doors of the house as everybody inside cowered. Then Soto forced her way through the front door and entered, yelling, “Where is that bitch that kicked my ass?” One witness told police that Chavez and “at least 9 or 10 men” ran in behind her; one victim said he counted 12 attackers.

The invaders spent several minutes beating the homeowners and their friends. Pamela Jimenez told police that when she looked for her husband, Soto’s ex, amid the melee she saw “two or three men” on top of him, pounding his head not only with fists but also with a “thing with little tea candles” that one of the attackers had grabbed from the living room. Castillo and Jason Orona, Diedra Orona’s husband, also took bad bashings.

“Brian walked in and hit Jaime in the mouth,” Tammie Castillo, Jaime’s wife, told police. Jaime Castillo, the report said, told police that Chavez and others were “punching him on his head until he passed out,” and that “when he regained consciousness his house was destroyed.”

Diedra Orona told police she saw her husband being beaten by the late arrivals as he was “trapped between the cushions on the couch and his face was covered in blood.” She said she dragged him into the kitchen unconscious and bleeding. Jason Orona could only identify Chavez among the assailants, saying he’d “seen him on TV.”


How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

A detail from a 2010 indictment.


Neighbors, several of whom had called 911, told cops that after a few minutes of hearing the donnybrook going on inside the Castillos’ home, they saw lots of men run out the front door, jump into two trucks and speed away. Chavez and two other male attackers waited outside after the beatings, the victims said, while Soto continued cursing at them. Those four were the only invaders still on the premises when a fleet of squad cars and ambulances pulled up.

Police interviewed neighbors while several of the victims went to a local hospital. Officers reported blood in the living room and on all four arrestees.

The juvenile nature of Chavez’s actions became even more apparent when police figured out that one of the guys he brought along for the fight was Stanley Wilkins, a teammate on the 1988 Permian squad. Wilkins didn’t play a major part in Friday Night Lights, but his cameo appearances in the book do something to explain why Chavez would want him as a tag-team partner.

“Wilkins weighs 136 pounds,” Bissinger wrote, “and of all the kamikazes who dominate Permian and are eagerly willing to sacrifice their bodies for the great cause of football, he is the most fearless, or foolhardy.”

The other guy nabbed by the police at the scene was Brian’s younger brother, Jacob Chavez. The brothers, along with Soto and Wilkins, were booked on felony burglary charges; police never did learn who the people that neighbors saw scurrying into trucks and scooting away.

Residents in the region got to see Chavez on TV and newspapers as a result of the arrest. The local NBC affiliate, KWES-9, ran a story with the tease, “An Odessa neighborhood still reeling after a weekend ruckus lands some prominent residents behind bars.” The piece focused on “former Permian football star and Odessa lawyer Brian Chavez.”

Back in high school, after Permian lost, 22-21, to Midland Lee, a rival school from the neighboring and richer city, Chavez came home to find “For Sale” signs had been put in his front lawn by upset Mojo fans.

That was the last time Chavez’s renown worked against him in Odessa. Until this.

“It was like putting a cave man in the modern world.”

“I assure you when I left here I wasn’t planning to come back,” Chavez now says. “Nobody ever plans to come back to Odessa.”

So what brought him back?

“Harvard played a part,” he says. “Being away made me appreciate being home.”

Friday Night Lights makes a great case that he won the war just by leaving town in the first place. Getting out of Odessa, especially for academic purposes, was a near-foreign concept to the typical Permian kid. Bissinger portrayed Bridgitte Vandeventer, a cheerleader, as the most popular girl at Permian. She told Bissinger that the highlight of her life was being crowned homecoming queen. She didn’t bother taking SATs, and had no academic goal beyond maybe getting into the local junior college. And from everything the writer saw, Vandeventer was “clearly a role model” to her peers.

As the parent of a Permian student says about the school in Friday Night Lights, “It’s not popular to be bright.”

Yet Chavez was both. In an interview after the movie version of Bissinger’s book was released, Ken Brodnax, the longtime lead columnist for the Odessa American, said Chavez let everybody know from an early age that he wanted to go to an Ivy League school. That’s not a goal a lot of Permian kids make happen: Chavez was told that at the time he attended, he was only the second student from Odessa to ever study at Harvard.

Bissinger all but accused Permian coaches of hindering Chavez’s attempt to get into Harvard. Nobody from the football staff at Permian, he wrote, contacted the college’s coaches on their player’s behalf, a standard role for high school coaches. And after a Harvard coach requested game film of Chavez, Permian coaches shipped a tape of the only game from his senior season that Chavez didn’t play in.

Not everybody in the book roadblocked the brainy and brawny student. Bissinger wrote that Chavez got support academically from LaRue Moore, an English teacher who encouraged him to chase his dream of getting to Harvard.

Moore understood that writers “did not pack the stands with 20,000 people on a Friday night” or foment civic pride, and knew that, “No one dreamed of being able to write a superb critical analysis of Joyce’s ‘Finnegans Wake’ from the age of four on” as much as they did playing under the Ratliff lights. She was well aware of the wage discrepancy between teachers and coaches, but didn’t mind that the community valued the game more than her discipline. Moore, who had a masters degree and had already been teaching for 20 years by 1988, was making $32,000 a year then. Bissinger said Moore spent “hundreds of dollars out of her own pocket” to buy books for students; Gary Gaines, in his first run as Permian’s head football coach, was getting $48,000, and was promised “a new Taurus sedan” every year.


How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

Odessa, Texas, 2006; photo via AP


Moore, now retired from teaching but still living in Odessa, wasn’t in it for the money. She recalls that Chavez made her love her job.

“When he decided he wanted to go to Harvard, he was going to do anything it took,” she says. “He was a wonderful student.”

The way Chavez now tells it, most of the happiness he got out of Harvard came from just getting there. His admission was only time he felt accepted.

“You could have done a dang anthropology dissertation on me moving over there from Odessa,” he says. “It was like putting a cave man in the modern world. I felt just so different from the people I went to school with at Harvard.”

He says Harvard forced him to be aware of his race “for the first time since third grade.” He was born to Mexican-American parents in El Paso, an overwhelmingly Mexican border town where his ethnicity was never an issue. But that changed when his family moved to Odessa so his father, Tony Chavez—a former police officer who’d just finished law school—could accept a job as a prosecutor in the Ector County District Attorney’s office. He would soon open his own law practice in town. The racial divide between white and in the region in the late-1970s was still as wide as portrayed in Giant, James Dean’s 1956 West Texas epic. In Odessa, though, both of Chavez’s parents had good jobs, so they got to live, he says, on “the white side of town.” It took a while to get his overwhelmingly Caucasian classmates to accept him.

“Not to brag, but in El Paso I was the most popular kid in third grade,” he says. “Then we move to Odessa and for the first time I experienced meanness and ugliness toward me. I didn’t get it at the time, but now I see it was racism. But everybody I had to fight later became my friend, and I only won them over by being better than them at sports and smarter than them, and because my parents had as much money as theirs. I gave them nothing to fit me into that box they had for all Mexicans. So slowly but surely I became ingrained in their culture, accepted in that culture.”

From the start, he embraced the locals’ high school football fervor. He remembers being afraid to ask his new classmates what it meant that “MOJO” and “Permian” were stenciled on all their t-shirts. “I waited a month,” he says, “And they said, ‘That’s the high school football team!’ In El Paso, it was the Dallas Cowboys. In Odessa, it was the high school team. You wanted that. I wanted to play, too. And from then on the boulder kept rolling.”

His gridiron prowess played a huge role in the Permian community’s embrace of him. It was something he couldn’t take with him to college.

“I was voted captain of the football team, got voted prom king, dated the cheerleader, was named salutatorian,” he says. “I mean, like in El Paso, my ‘Mexicanness’ wasn’t a thing. Then I get to Harvard, the most liberal place on earth, and it was—boom! Back to the bottom rung! So I had to start back up trying to win them over, like I did in third grade. Only I didn’t do that.”


How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

Brian Chavez, second from left, at the 2004 premier of Friday Night Lights; photo via Getty


The fight for acceptance was a lot different this time around. Everybody at Harvard was at the top of their class academically. “And my parents weren’t as rich as these people’s parents,” he says, laughing. “I mean, now I was in school with Roosevelts and Rockefellers.”

Perhaps most profoundly, he no longer had football on his side at Harvard. Chavez went out for the junior varsity team—freshmen weren’t allowed to play varsity—but quit days after his first practice, later telling folks that he’d realized the Ivy League version of college football wouldn’t match up to his Texas high school football career as far as talent level, crowd sizes, and overall intensity.

He always felt alienated. Harvard allows third-year students to leave Cambridge to study topics not offered by the school—the cliched “junior year abroad.” Chavez says he felt like a foreigner his freshman and sophomore years, however, so he spent his sabbatical back in Texas, enrolling in the Mexican-American Studies program at the University of Texas at Austin. He ignored the football games at UT, instead adopting a very Ivy League pastime.

“I played rugby,” he says. “I loved it.”

He went back to Harvard for his senior year, did an honors thesis to meet cum laude criteria, and then accepted a scholarship offer from Texas Tech’s law school in Lubbock, 140 miles to the north of Odessa. He founded the Mexican-American Law Students Association at Tech, then got further in touch with his heritage by spending a year in Mexico after graduation. And all of this set him on a path quite different from the one a reader of Friday Night Lights might have imagined for him.

“I could have tried Wall Street, or a big New York or Houston law firm,” he says, “But our firm basically had cornered the market for Hispanics in Odessa and Midland, and that’s about 240,000 people, because there’s so few Mexican lawyers besides us. So I could make as much money as anybody I went to school with and not have to work like a New York lawyer, and be close to my family. And I’d been away, so I knew what that was like. Maybe being at Harvard and so far away, being so isolated, made me appreciate it or long for it. I just decided from a quality of life standpoint, this was an easy decision.”

After Mexico, he went home.

“I was the big fish.”

The civil suits came first and fast. Less than three weeks after his home invasion arrest, the Castillos, joined by the Oronases, sued Chavez. In their complaint, according to a report in the Odessa American, they claimed that he and his posse “struck Plaintiffs with their fists, kicked them with their feet, struck them with fixtures and statues from within Plaintiffs’ home, and held Plaintiffs down with their bodies.”

“Several Plaintiffs were assaulted until unconscious,” the suit said.

Jaime Castillo told the court that because of threats made against them by Odessans loyal to Chavez, his children were “afraid to be in their own home.”

In preliminary hearings, Daniel Bates, hired by Chavez to defend him in the civil case, told the court that the brouhaha was an example of “mutual combat,” sticking to the story Chavez had told police shortly after the incident—that all the fighting was among consenting adults. But the sides started settlement talks immediately and, because of Chavez’s local fame, the negotiations were far more public than in a typical personal injury case. The Odessa American gave readers extensive coverage of the brawl and related legal cases, which went on for months, and routinely cited Chavez’s back story (i.e., “a former Permian football star [who] was featured in the book Friday Night Lights’”).

In March 2010, Chavez paid a reported $360,000 to those given the beatdown to settle the cases. In return for the cash, the victims signed so-called “affidavits of nonprosecution,” which essentially tell prosecutors that signees won’t cooperate with a criminal case. So after the settlement, Chavez thought he would have no further trouble.

He was wrong.


How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

Director Peter Berg and Permian alums James “Boobie” Miles and Brian Chavez under the lights, 2004; photo via AP


Chavez had friends in high places all over Odessa, including in the local court system. Perhaps if the whole town hadn’t been paying attention, those connections would have helped. Folks were watching, however, and so the case couldn’t just disappear. First, Judge John Smith recused himself, citing his relationship with Chavez. Then District Attorney Bobby Bland begged out of prosecuting the case, also citing a friendship with the accused.

The replacement judge brought in Wesley Mau, an Austin-based prosecutor from the state attorney general’s office. Mau says his only previous trip to Odessa had come a year earlier, when he was tasked by the state to prosecute a murder case that dated back to 1994. The jury accepted Mau’s recommendation to give the death penalty.

“I knew from experience that after a settlement with [affidavits of nondisclosure], the criminal case gets dropped,” says Chavez. “That’s how it is. But when I heard the state was taking over the case, I knew I was in trouble. They don’t mess around.”

Reached at his office, Samuel Sanchez, the Fort Worth attorney who represented plaintiffs in the civil suits against Chavez, declined to answer questions about the case “because of confidentiality agreements.”

Mau ignored the agreements signed by the alleged victims and brought the case to a grand jury.

“I understood there was a settlement,” he says. “But that doesn’t have anything to do with me.”

The victims cooperated with Mau, and the prosecutor now says he thinks he eventually got a straight story from Chavez about what took place after the game.

“He had lied to the police, but not to me,” says Mau.

Chavez had told police that the brawl started outside the house; Mau didn’t buy it. And whether the brawling was consensual became inconsequential, the way Mau saw things, once Chavez entered the Castillos’ home without permission. In the eyes of the law, when Chavez and his posse went through the front door, they crossed a legal line. The grand jury indicted him for burglary of a habitation with intent to commit assault, a felony. He faced a punishment of 20 years in jail and a $10,000 fine.

Mau says that he took into account that Chavez had never been arrested before. He offered him a deal with no jail time, but the maximum fine, 340 hours of community service, and five years of supervised probation. Mau also told Chavez that if he took the deal, the state would not pursue various other charges that had been hanging over his head since the ruckus, such as witness tampering and making a false report to a police officer. And while Mau still believes witness and victim testimony that Chavez had lots of help pounding partygoers—“It was eight or nine guys,” Mau tells me—he only prosecuted Chavez and the three others arrested with him on the night of the brawl (Wilkins, Soto, and Jacob Chavez). All defendants were offered similar deals.

On Dec. 16, 2010, Chavez copped the plea. The others followed suit.

“I was the big fish,” he says. “I was the guy they wanted to get. I had too much to risk, and I didn’t want to put my friends at risk either.”

As the settlement was filed with the court, his attorney, Mike McLeaish, told the media that Chavez was sorry and that his client had suffered enough.

“Until this indictment, no person that I know of had led a better life than Brian Chavez,” McLeaish said. “He was well-known and well-liked at Permian and at Harvard University and Tech Law School. He is a nice guy.”

The message didn’t take. The Texas bar’s disciplinary board took up the Chavez case and determined that his offense met the legal definition of both an “intentional crime” and a “serious crime,” which rendered him eligible for permanent disbarment. As it was, the board moved to suspend his license for the length of his probation—until, that is, Dec. 15, 2015. In its ruling, the bar association ruled that if for any reason his probation was revoked, then “Brian Jose Chavez should be disbarred.”

Chavez still has hard feelings for the plaintiffs, who, he says, took his money and “went back on their word.” But he thinks it was right to take Mau’s deal. If he went to trial and got convicted, he says, he thinks it likely that he would have been permanently disbarred. And he knows that he wasn’t all that innocent.

“I think it all got exaggerated, to tell you the truth,” he says. “But, basically, we whupped ’em, and got punished for whupping ’em.”

“Nothing is like high school football, especially at Permian.”

As it worked out, the kid who came off in the book as the most eager and prepared to get out of town is the only one who ended up there. Not one of the other five Permian players that Buzz Bissinger used as main characters still lives in Odessa.

Even the Permian kid that the book painted as most inert, Bridgitte Vandeventer, got away and stayed away. According to a story in the Odessa American about the Class of ‘89, Vandeventer married a South African, and, when he got homesick, moved with him to Johannesburg. He bought her a ranch to show his appreciation for leaving West Texas, and then discovered diamonds on the property. Vandeventer, the class’s homecoming queen and cheerleader, told her old hometown newspaper that she “accidentally” ended up a diamond mine owner.

Chavez sort of struck gold after losing his lawyer’s license. He founded a trucking company and bought up Odessa real estate to take advantage of the biggest oil boom to hit West Texas since the 1980s, then invested in a restaurant and a ballroom. He also got engaged to Soto.

“I look at it as kind of a blessing in disguise,” he says of the break from lawyering, “I’d put all my eggs in the lawyer basket. It was good to diversify.”

The state bar told him that he was eligible to practice law as of this week. On Thursday, the clerk’s office of the Texas Supreme Court mailed out his bar card and law license—frame and all, just like he delivered it. To prepare for this day and those yet to come, Chavez ordered a passel of suits from the Men’s Wearhouse in Midland. “It’s been a while since I had to wear one,” he says.

He still pays attention to Permian football, like everybody else in Odessa. He followed the squad with more emotion this season than he had since he played. His nephew, Anthony Chavez, was a senior defensive back and special teamer for Mojo. Brian Chavez coached Anthony on youth leagues all the way up to high school. “He wore my jersey number all the way growing up,” says the proud uncle.


How The Hero Of Friday Night Lights Won And Lost His Good Name

An extra walks in front of a stand full of dummies as Friday Night Lights is filmed, 2004; photo via AP


Permian was supposed to contend for a state title this fall, which marked the 25th anniversary of Friday Night Lights. The squad had 19 seniors starting. Mojo was undefeated through nine games, including a 57-7 spanking of the Odessa Bronchos in the Rumble in Ratliff. But Permian’s season ended in the second round of the divisional playoffs, with an upset to Amarillo Tascosa, which heading into the contest had lost 16 games in a row to Permian, a streak that dates back to the 1960s.

Chavez didn’t get in any trouble after that loss. “I was just a big cheerleader,” he says.

The Odessa American wrote up the season-ending game like an obituary, and accompanied the story with a photo of Permian players holding hands and crying, much like the scene Bissinger captured after an upset loss during Chavez’s senior year.

“We can never go back to high school football,” safety Jax Welch, who will graduate this year, told the newspaper after the Amarillo Tascosa defeat. “Nothing is like high school football, especially at Permian.”

A lot of things about Bissinger’s book still hold, and among them is this: football remains the king in Odessa. The income gap between those teaching literary classics in a classroom and those putting kids through the Oklahoma Drill on a practice field has only widened in the years since Friday Night Lights was published. Current head coach Blake Feldt, brought in after Gaines left under pressure, was lured to Permian by a base salary of $110,399, plus a $7,200 car allowance. (The Permian coach always gets perks from the booster club, too.) Feldt had been a football coach for 13 years; a teacher with that same amount of experience at the time got $49,734, with no transportation subsidy, and, alas, no booster bonuses.

In 2013, the school board approved installation of a $2 million, 50 foot-by-26-foot video scoreboard for Ratliff Stadium.

No matter what the rest of the world thinks about misplaced priorities or lack of perspective, Chavez, at 45, still believes in the Permian way. It turns out the guy so admired a quarter century ago for not putting all his eggs in football’s basket sees nothing tragic in those who do.

“What made the Permian program, what’s so great about it, is that in Odessa, as a third grader you idolized the Permian middle linebacker or safety or receiver. That’s who you wanted to be,” he says. “And that’s a goal you can actually attain! How great is that? A goal you have in life is actually attainable! All you have to do is you just keep playing with your buddies and your friends and you actually attain your goals! In Odessa, you can do that! But, you grow up somewhere else, wanting to be Troy Aikman? You’re never going to be Troy Aikman.”

There are signs that Chavez has had an influence on those who followed in his cleat-steps—and not just because latter-day Permian players are no doubt aware of Friday Night Lights. (The locals have been complaining about their portrayal since the book was hot off the presses.) In 2013, Permian’s captain, Jorrion Wilson, who ran for 2,700 yards and scored 38 touchdowns as a junior and senior, graduated at the top of his class, and with all the college options Chavez had 25 years ago.

He turned down lots of football scholarships to accept admission to Harvard.

Chavez, the last Permian player to make it to Cambridge, won’t take any credit for Odessa’s latest export. But he will admit having a hand in his nephew’s decision-making about life after Mojo. Anthony Chavez is deciding on a college. He’s told his uncle that he plans to stay in Texas, and that he’s done with football.

“He thinks,” says Chavez, “he’s going to play rugby.”


Know something we should know? You can reach the reporter at dave.mckenna@deadspin.com. Illustration by Jim Cooke.

Bernie Sanders Accuses DNC of Sandbagging Him to Help Hillary's Campaign

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Bernie Sanders Accuses DNC of Sandbagging Him to Help Hillary's Campaign

Bernie Sanders’ campaign, reeling from allegations that it improperly accessed confidential Clinton voter data, has accused the Democratic National Committee of sandbagging him in an effort to help Hillary win the election.

The controversy is centered around the DNC’s voter database, which the DNC says was improperly accessed by at least four Sanders staffers. The Committee rents its extensive database to candidates and allows campaigns to update the lists with proprietary data for their own personal use.

http://gawker.com/report-bernie-...

At issue are confidential Clinton voter models, which were allegedly seen by Josh Uretsky, who has since been fired. According to the AP, a vendor used a software patch Wednesday that rendered the database’s firewalls ineffective, allowing candidates to access one another’s data.

Uretsky claims he was just trying to point the security flaw out to the DNC and didn’t realize he had violated any rules.

“We wanted to document and understand the scope of the problem so we could report it accurately,” he told MSNBC. “We didn’t actually use it for anything valuable and we didn’t take custodianship of it.”

However, sources who spoke with The New York Times claimed that Sanders’ team did in fact save several files. From the Times:

According to people briefed on the matter, four different user names associated with the Sanders campaign conducted 25 separate searches of the Clinton data. A summary of audit trails of the logs show that people with the Sanders campaign searched and saved multiple files, according to two people briefed on the matter.

In the meantime, the DNC has barred Sanders’ campaign from the database, effectively kneecapping him right before the Iowa caucus. Calling the database “the lifeblood of any campaign,” Sanders’ campaign manager, Jeff Weaver is now accusing the Committee of sabotaging the campaign to help Hillary win.

“By their action, the leadership of the Democratic National Committee is now actively attempting to undermine our campaign. This is unacceptable. Individual leaders of the DNC can support Hillary Clinton in any way they want, but they are not going to sabotage our campaign - one of the strongest grassroots campaigns in modern history,” Weaver said in a statement Friday.

He also tells the AP, “Clearly, in this case, they are trying to help the Clinton campaign.”

The DNC has not yet responded to his accusations.


Image via AP. Contact the author at gabrielle@gawker.com.

Look at Martin Shkreli's Big Pants

The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

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The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Gawker Media readers have purchased more than 10 million products through links on our sites. Here are the 15 most popular from this year.

Let us know what you treated yourself to in the comments.

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/the-10-most-po...

http://deals.kinja.com/the-14-most-po...

http://gizmodo.com/the-13-most-po...

Ranking based on purchases on Amazon through links on Gawker properties. “Purchased by readers” may not be accurate and reflects all-time purchases. Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale.


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Amazon Prime

The best deal in tech got multiple unprecedented discounts this year, and we need a guide just to keep track of the ever-expanding benefits.

http://www.amazon.com/Amazon-Prime-O...

http://deals.kinja.com/amazon-prime-w...

Purchased by readers number not accurate.


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Kmashi External Batteries

While they lack the build quality and features of more expensive options, you won’t find better price-per-mAh USB battery pack deals than these Kmashis.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://www.amazon.com/KMASHI-15000mA...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-km...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Magnetic Smartphone Vent Mounts

Minimal, cheap, effective, and everything is better with magnets.

http://www.amazon.com/Mpow-Magnetic-...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-mp...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-io...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Velcro Cable Ties

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

3. Million. Cable Ties.

http://deals.kinja.com/bestsellers-ve...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Sub-$20 Bluetooth Headphones

The ecosystem of sub-$20 bluetooth headphones ranks in the top five of all-time popularity. These are this year’s most popular variants of the latest models.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-mp...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Amazon Fire

The best deal of Black Friday and the ultimate stocking stuffer.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-am...

http://gizmodo.com/amazons-50-fir...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Amazon Premium Headphones

http://www.amazon.com/Amazon-KA416Y-...

Like I said, everything is better with magnets.

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-am...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Antec Bias Lights

Bias lighting is a great, and in the case of the Antec Bias Light, very cheap way to reduce the eyestrain that can come with looking at a screen in a dark room, while also improving your perception of on-screen blacks and grey.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-an...

http://lifehacker.com/why-bias-light...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Aukey Lightning Cables

Clearly, one cannot have enough lightning cables.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-au...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Aukey 4.8A Dual USB Car Charger

You buy a lot of car chargers, but this Aukey model that sits flush in your cigarette lighter while still delivering 4.8A was this year’s most popular.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-au...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Anker PowerCore External Batteries

Anker makes the best external batteries money can buy, and their PowerCore series is keeping thousands of your phones, cameras, and even MacBooks topped off.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://deals.kinja.com/bestsellers-an...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Panasonic Vortex Nose Hair Trimmer

The Panasonic ER-GN30-K Vortex Nose and Ear Hair Trimmer is an effective and cost-effective way to get rid of nose hair and more.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-pa...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

iOttie Easy One Touch 2

The iOttie One Touch won its Kinja Co-Op, and many a spot on your dashboards.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-io...

http://co-op.kinja.com/the-best-smart...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Rubbermaid 42-Piece Set

Let’s see so that’s... ~375,000 pieces of Rubbermaid.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Brother HL-L2300D Resolution Monochrome Laser Printer

Wrapping up our list is a printer you won’t hate, and a whole bunch of you liked enough to buy.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-br...


Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.

Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker.


500 Days of Kristin, Day 328: Kristin's 4th Favorite Organic Beauty Brand

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500 Days of Kristin, Day 328: Kristin's 4th Favorite Organic Beauty Brand

Favorite organic beauty brands? Kristin Cavallari has five of them. The author of the forthcoming dystopian teen romance novel Balancing in Heels catalogued them all in a recent post on her app titled, “My Favorite Organic Beauty Brands.”

We discussed Kristin’s fifth-favorite organic beauty brand, Dr. Hauschka Skin Care, earlier this week. (Per Kristin, “This line of makeup also advocates long term skin health—making sure not to forget about the biology of the skin!”)

Her fourth-favorite brand is Tata Harper.

Kristin writes of the company: “Based in Vermont, this company is yet another that is truthful in their dedication to the environment by producing all of their beautiful products in small batches in their laboratory.”

Kristin remains steadfast in her dedication to saying nothing at all.


This has been 500 Days of Kristin.

[Photo via Getty]

Review-Journal Reporters Were Forced to Investigate Judge Overseeing Lawsuit Against Their New Owner Sheldon Adelson

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Review-Journal Reporters Were Forced to Investigate Judge Overseeing Lawsuit Against Their New Owner Sheldon Adelson

Are you ready for a completely foreseeable twist in the increasingly bizarre story of billionaire and GOP bankroller Sheldon Adelson’s secret acquisition of Nevada’s largest paper, the Las Vegas Review-Journal?

http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas...

Today the paper reported that, as the sale’s terms were being finalized, the paper’s corporate managers (in what seems to have been a bid to win Adelson’s favor) forced three reporters to monitor the courtroom behavior of a particular Clark County judge who happened to be overseeing a lawsuit involving the paper’s future owner:

Just over a month before Sheldon Adelson’s family was revealed as the new owner of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, three reporters at the newspaper received an unusual assignment passed down from the newspaper’s corporate management: Drop everything and spend two weeks monitoring all activity of three Clark County judges. The reason for the assignment and its unprecedented nature was never explained. One of the three judges observed was District Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez, whose current caseload includes Jacobs v. Sands, a long-running wrongful termination lawsuit filed against Adelson and his company, Las Vegas Sands Corp., by Steven Jacobs, who ran Sands’ operations in Macau.

The confounding assignment was not exactly a polite request or helpful suggestion. The paper quotes a memo sent to staff by deputy editor James G. Wright, who wrote: “We’ve simply been told we must do it, and it must start on Tuesday.” And the lawsuit was no minor matter, either. As reporters James DeHaven, Jennifer Robison and Eric Hartley note:

The case has attracted global media attention because of Jacobs’ contention in court filings that he was fired for trying to break the company’s links to Chinese organized crime triads, and allegations that Adelson turned a blind eye to prostitution and other illegal activities in his resorts there.

The Review-Journal’s entire story of this unusual reporting errand—which involves, among things, a mysterious reporter named “Edward Clarkin” who does not appear to actually exist—is well worth reading in full. For one, it helps answer the question (perhaps definitively) of whether Adelson expects the paper to advance, or at least align with, his own business interests. Two, it demonstrates the resolve of an editorial staff who won’t be easily cowed by their wealthy new owner. Let’s hope it lasts.

http://gawker.com/report-las-veg...

Photo credit: Getty Images

Get the Look: Martin Shkreli

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Get the Look: Martin Shkreli

On Thursday, a couple hours after pharma-villain Martin Shkreli was arrested on suspicion of securities fraud, I looked up in the mirror and saw his face. Well, it wasn’t actually his face. It was my face, but for a heartbeat, I looked a lot like him, leading to this very important Q:

The answer, I think, is no. (I suffer from a very specific kind of face blindness where I sort of think I look like everyone. Like once on the subway, I startled for a second thinking I had been used in a subway ad when in fact I was looking at a photo of an Asian model. IDK.) But could I look like Martin Shkreli if I really wanted to? The answer, of course, is YES. And you can, too!

To look like Martin Shkreli, all you need is a gray hoodie, a lack of conscience, and an exaggerated pug frown. Don’t go buy a gray hoodie, though—just borrow one from your coworker J.K. Trotter. Having Hitler bangs—in this instance and ONLY this instance—is a plus.

Get the Look: Martin Shkreli

Do I look like Martin Shkreli?

Maybe a little?

Why does this matter to me?

The best way to really give off the Martin Shkreli vibe is to A.) jack up the prices of in-demand, lifesaving medications and B.) inappropriately flirt with some teens. I do not have the power for A. and I am uncomfortable with B., so instead I just sent some creepy direct messages to Nicholas Stango, one of the youngest staffers at Gawker Media.

Get the Look: Martin Shkreli

Do I look like Martin Shkreli?


Contact the author at madeleine@jezebel.com.

Images via Getty.

Bernie Sanders Is Now Officially Suing the DNC

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Bernie Sanders Is Now Officially Suing the DNC

After accusing the Democratic National Committee of attempting to sandbag his campaign with accusations of illicitly accessing Clinton Data, Bernie Sanders has announced that his campaign is officially suing the DNC.

http://gawker.com/report-bernie-...

As Sanders’ campaign manager, Jeff Weaver, explained at a press conference late Friday afternoon:

We are announcing today that if the DNC continues to hold our data hostage, and continues to try to attack the heart and soul of our campaign, we will be in federal court this afternoon seeking an immediate injunction.

The leadership of the Democratic National Committee is now actively attempting to undermine our campaign. This is unacceptable. Individual leaders of the DNC can support Hillary Clinton in any way they want, but they are not going to sabotage our campaign — one of the strongest grassroots campaigns in modern history.

Weaver also noted that while four members of Sanders’ staff accessed the information in some capacity, only one had taken actions that resulted in a fireable offense.

By refusing the Sanders camp access to the database, the DNC is essentially holding the entire Democratic voter base hostage. Or, as explained in the campaign’s lawsuit, “The loss of DNC support could significantly disadvantage, if not cripple, a Democratic candidate’s campaign for public office,.” Sanders’ campaign insists that, while its staffers actions were inappropriate (one of whom has since been fired over the incident), it’s the vendor of the DNC’s database technology, NGP VAN, that’s truly at fault.

And, as it just so happens NGP VAN’s CEO, Stu Trevelyan, was also a former White House staffer under Bill Clinton. Hillary Clinton’s Press Secretary has since tweeted the following in response to Sanders’ fight against the DNC’s actions:

NGP VAN released a statement, noting:

First, no NGP data was impacted by this situation, nor any Action ID or FastAction data. No client websites or web site data were impacted, either. For VAN clients, no myMembers, myWorkers, or myCampaigns data was impacted. The one area that was impacted was voter file data. We are confident at this point that no campaigns have access to or have retained any voter file data of any other clients; with one possible exception, one of the presidential campaigns. NGP VAN is providing a thorough report to the DNC on what happened and conducting a review to ensure the integrity of the system.

The vender then later clarified that same statement, as there had been some confusion about what was actually accessed and by whom:

First, a one page-style report containing summary data on a list was saved out of VoteBuilder by one Sanders user. This is what some people have referred to as the “export” from VoteBuilder. As noted below, users were unable to export lists of people.

Second, there has been independent confirmation that NGP VAN has not received previous notice of a data breach regarding NGP VAN. Josh Uretsky, the former National Data Director for the Sanders campaign confirmed on MSNBC (at 5:47), and also on CNN, regarding the previous incident: “it wasn’t actually within the VAN VoteBuilder system, it was another system.”

Hillary Clinton’s campaign did not immediately respond to request for comment. You can read the lawsuit in full below.

[h/t Politico]


Contact the author at ashley@gawker.com. Image via Getty.

Listen to the Governor of New Mexico Defend Her Hotel Pizza Party To Cops

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Listen to the Governor of New Mexico Defend Her Hotel Pizza Party To Cops

If you really are only as old as you feel, then audio released today by Santa Fe police regarding a little hotel pizza party that got out of hand indicates that New Mexico governor Susana Martinez is... maybe 17 years old.

The tapes (via the NM Political Report) capture calls placed to 911 about a loud party early Sunday morning at the Eldorado Hotel & Spa in the state’s capital. In one call, a front desk clerk asks a dispatcher to send officers to the hotel to remove the noisemakers from the premises. The other two calls feature Martinez, who identifies herself as the state’s governor, interrogating various officers, dispatchers and hotel employees about why police had been sent to respond to the noise complaints.

According to one dispatcher, the hotel had requested officers after being told that people in Martinez’s room were throwing bottles off of a balcony. The problem as far as Martinez saw it was that her party was merely “eating pizza,” a story she repeats with increasingly fanciful diction across the tapes. Here’s a representative part of one exchange, which comes about a minute into the third call:

Martinez: You just sent police over to shut down a room?

Dispatcher: To go speak to individuals about a party

Martinez: Okay. So we’re just sitting in there, I’m the governor of the state of New Mexico, and we’re in there with my sister who’s disabled along with six other people who are having pizza.

A few minutes later, Gonzalez seems to not-so-slyly admit that... something had happened on the balcony of her room:

Martinez: We’re all in a room, eating pizza.

Dispatcher: Okay, well that wasn’t what was reported to us.

Martinez: What was reported to you?

Dispatcher: That there was a party and people where throwing bottles off the balcony.

Martinez: I’m sorry there’s no one on the balcony and there’s no one throwing bottles off the balcony, and if there were it was about six hours ago.

In one of the other conversations, Martinez says she had only gotten to the room two hours prior, which wouldn’t explain her specificity regarding when something might or might not have happened on the balcony. Per the Santa Fe New Mexican, Martinez was celebrating her annual staff holiday party at the hotel the night of the incident, which probably explains why she sounds kind of drunk.

But if you can explain why everyone in these calls sound like someone in a Portlandia sketch goofing on Canadians then you know more about New Mexico than I do.

[image via AP]


Contact the author at jordan@gawker.com.

Al Jazeera Censors Its Own Anti-Saudi Arabia Article for International Readers

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Al Jazeera Censors Its Own Anti-Saudi Arabia Article for International Readers

When readers in the U.S. click on this hyperlink, they’ll be taken to an Al Jazeera America op-ed criticizing Saudi Arabia for an uptick in executions of prisoners for apparently political reasons. When international readers click it, they’ll get a 404 error. According to Al Jazeera itself, this discrepancy is by design.

The Intercept reports that Al Jazeera, a media network funded by the Qatari government, appears to be blocking its own readers from reading the article, which was penned by Georgetown Law professor Arjun Sethi. An Al Jazeera representative told Okaz, a Saudi paper, that the network would remove the piece to avoid offending the Saudi government, a Qatari ally, and apologized for its publication in the first place.

The decision to self-censor is certainly bizarre, but it isn’t totally without precedent at Al Jazeera: The Intercept notes several previous instances, including one that resulted in several staffers resigning in protest, of coverage that was apparently influenced by the politics of emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, the monarch who rules Qatar.

And although its representatives had already admitted to the foreign press that it was pulling the article, Al Jazeera was oddly reluctant to admit to the breach of journalistic ethics to the Intercept’s reporter. When asked about the apparent takedown, the network wrote in a statement, “After hearing from users from different locations across the world that several of our web pages were unavailable, we have begun investigating what the source of the problem may be and we hope to have it resolved shortly.”


Image via Wikipedia

Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

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Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

A cheap 4K monitor, smartphone camera lenses, and Bushnell binoculars highlight today’s best deals. Here are the best of today’s deals. Get every great deal every day on Kinja Deals, follow us on Facebook and Twitter to never miss a deal, join us on Kinja Gear to read about great products, and on Kinja Co-Op to help us find the best. Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

Ready to step up to 4K? If you don’t mind a refurb, this 28” Samsung monitor is just $340 today on Woot. [Refurb Samsung 28” 4K Monitor, $340]

http://computers.woot.com/offers/samsung...


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

We’ve posted deals on these smartphone lens kits enough that you probably already own a set, but if you need an easy stocking stuffer idea, this checks all the boxes: It only costs $10, it has nearly universal appeal, and relatively few people already own something like it. [Mpow 3 in 1 Fisheye, $10 with code RF6YDGK5]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00QXT58JA


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

One can never own too many Lightning cables. [Mpow Apple MFI Certified 8-Pin Lightning Cable, $5 with code 9TA5NA3H]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00WWA1L9K


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

Whether you’re watching some birds or tracking planets, Amazon has some nice deals available today on binoculars and telescopes.

Bushnell Binocular Bundle: Trophy XLT Roof Prism Binoculars, 10x42mm ($88) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B017IUQPW6/...

Celestron 31035 AstroMaster 76 EQ Reflector Telescope ($90) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/Celestron-3103...

Celestron 71340 Outland X 8x25 Binocular ($28) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/Celestron-7134...


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

It’s not really sandal season, but hey, a deal’s a deal. [40% off Teva Sandals, today only]


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

This seemingly-basic remote might not look like much at first blush, but it can actually control eight of your favorite home theater devices, and even turn your smartphone into a universal remote as well.

You’re probably used to seeing Logitech Harmony remotes with screens built-in, but it turns out that you already carry a much better screen in your pocket. So in addition to controlling your TV, cable box, game console, stereo, and more from the remote itself, the Logitech Harmony Smart Control can now do the same from your iPhone or Android from anywhere in the house. That’s especially handy when your favorite show is about to start and you can’t find the remote anywhere. Today’s $70 deal is the best we’ve ever seen, but I’d expect it to sell out quickly. [Logitech Harmony Smart Control with Smartphone App and Simple Remote, $70]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BQ5RYI4?...


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

You might not want to wear it all the time, but the Microsoft Band 2 is one of the best fitness trackers you can buy, and Amazon is already offering a $50 discount for the holidays. [Microsoft Band 2, $200]

http://gizmodo.com/microsoft-band...


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

Got your eyes on Apple’s jaw-dropping new MacBook? Best Buy is both offering a whopping $300 discount on the base 256GB/8GB model right now, plus an extra $50 off if you have a .edu email address. [Apple MacBook, $1000]

http://gizmodo.com/new-macbook-re...


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

This was $5 cheaper on Black Friday, but if you find yourself in need of a lot of extra file storage, it’s tough to beat 5TB for $115. [Seagate Backup Plus 5TB Desktop External Hard Drive, $115]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


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Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker


Florida Professor Hired To Teach Conspiracy Theories Fired For Being Sandy Hook 'Truther'

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Florida Professor Hired To Teach Conspiracy Theories Fired For Being Sandy Hook 'Truther'

A professor who has been teaching conspiracy theories for 13 years and spreading false theories about the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting is finally facing termination at Florida Atlantic University.

According to The New York Times, James Treacy, a professor in the school of communication and media studies who teaches a course on conspiracies, has been accused of harassment by the parents of a 6-year-old boy who was killed in the shooting.

A statement released by the university said that action was taken “in light of “numerous requests from media outlets and the public”:

Today, James Tracy, an associate professor in the School of Communication and Multimedia Studies, was served a Notice of Proposed Discipline — Termination by the Vice Provost for Academic Affairs at Florida Atlantic University.

Treacy has ten days to respond to the university’s request.

The termination comes after the boy’s parents, Lenny and Veronique Pozner, published an op-ed in The Sun Sentinel, the local newspaper of Broward County, Florida. In the article, the couple said that Treacy led a group of people in “a wave of harassment, intimidation and criminal activity against our family and others” in an effort to promote a conspiracy theory about the shooting.

“They seek us out and accuse us of being government agents who are faking our grief and lying about our loss.”

It should come as no surprise, however, that Treacy is a Sandy Hook “truther”—the course he teaches at the university is called “Culture of Conspiracy,” and presents conspiracy theories about major attacks and assassinations in U.S. history, including the September 11, 2001 attacks.

In a Facebook post titled “No One Died at Sandy Hook” on the group Sandy Hook Hoax, Treacy allegedly wrote of the attacks that killed 20 children and six adults:

Don’t take my word for it. Just do a search on the title for a free copy of the book. The Pozners, alas, are as phony as the drill itself, and profiting handsomely from the fake death of their son.

Treacy insists that the shooting, along with others, are staged in an attempt to promote more secure gun control measures.

And if that isn’t bad enough and you haven’t had your fill of hate-reading Treacy’s theories, take a look at his explanation—one that has been widely, irrevocably, and forcefully debunked—of why the Sandy Hook shootings didn’t happen.


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

Mongolia Is Getting Its Stolen Tyrannosaurus Skull Back

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Mongolia Is Getting Its Stolen Tyrannosaurus Skull Back

It’s always a good day when you get your stolen, $230,000 Tyrannosaurus skull back.

That was Mongolia’s lucky break this week, after US attorney Preet Bharara filed a civil forfeiture complaint regarding a certain Tyrannosaurus bataar skull that entered the United States unlawfully in 2006 and was sold for $230,000 (plus a buyer’s premium of $46,000) at a California auction house in 2007.

A rare cousin of T. rex, T. bataar flourished in the modern-day Mongolia’s Gobi Desert in the late Cretaceous some 70 million years ago. As a Mongolian native, the animals’ mortal remains are considered “cultural artifacts” and belong to the Mongolian government by law. But in 2006, some wise guy decided to pull a fast one and list a T. bataar skull on a customs form as “fossil stone pieces.” It worked, and the fossil stones were soon sold for an impressive price tag to an anonymous buyer.

Homeland Security Investigations examined the skull in September 2015, and confirmed that it “rightfully belongs to the government of Mongolia and had been illegally imported into the United States.” It’s but one of many, many ancient reptilians the US has had to relinquish to Mongolian authorities over the past few years, including, according to The Guardian, three full T. Bataar skeletons, six Oviraptors, a Protoceratops, and numerous prehistoric lizards and turtles.

Perhaps the lesson here is that we ought to start including paleontology 101 as a pre-requisite to working at US customs. Seriously—nobody should be looking at those beastly jaws and and thinking “oh yea, fossil rocks.”

Update: As an astute commenter pointed out, it appears that the skull in question was purchased by one Nicolas Cage. Could this be the National Treasure he’s been seeking all these years?

[The Guardian]


Top: A Tyrannosaurus bataar skeleton on display in a museum in Prague. Image via Wikimedia

Jeb Bush, Spiraling Out of Control, Calls Donald Trump a 'Jerk'

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Jeb Bush, Spiraling Out of Control, Calls Donald Trump a 'Jerk'

Jeb! Bush, lover of all things tech and all things cool, really does not love jerks. In fact, he hates them so much that, as of this writing, he has officially begun the War on Jerks™.

First target: Donald Trump, the jerk to end all jerks. According to CNN, Bush used the expletive to describe Trump at a town hall in New Hampshire on Saturday.

“Just one other thing — I gotta get this off my chest — Donald Trump is a jerk.”

The inflammatory rhetoric didn’t stop there. Bush, whom no one really likes right now, spent his Friday night tweeting angrily at Trump, trading barbs about Putin’s endorsement of the Republican presidential frontrunner, and continuing his War on Jerks:

Meanwhile, the jerk himself is trying out out-jerk the hater of jerks. On Friday night, Trump tweeted back at Bush, saying that Jeb! had “embarrassed himself & his family with his incompetent campaign for President.”

The battle ended without bloodshed, but all agreed that it was truly the biggest jerk-off the world had ever seen.

[Image via Getty]


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

Guess How Many Testicles Hitler Had

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Guess How Many Testicles Hitler Had

If you had to guess how many testicles Adolf Hitler had, how many testicles would you guess? Would you guess two testicles? Perhaps more? If so, you’d be wrong. Because according to a recently discovered doctor’s note, Adolf Hitler had a total testicle count of one. One testicle.

Which is fine! You are your own special butterfly and however many testicles you have is the right number of testicles for you. It just so happens, however, that for genocidal populist dictator Adolf Hitler, that number of testicles was one. Records taken from a medical exam following Hitler’s arrest in 1923 note that he had “right-side cryptorchidism.” In other words, his (mostly theoretical) second testicle had just never decided to descend.

There had long been rumors of Hitler’s single slapper status; British children even had a schoolyard song making light of Hitler’s “one ball.” But these new records from a German historian finally prove it.

And other than his “stunted” right testicle, Hitler—or as he preferred to be called, ‘The Adolf’—had good bill of health, with the medical officer at Landsberg prison describing him as “otherwise healthy and strong.” Not at all unlike a certain modern day would-be presidential prodigy of his who was recently described as having extraordinary “strength and stamina.” Funny coincidences!

Anyway, just think how different history would have been if that other testicle had only descended.

[h/t The Guardian]


Contact the author at ashley@gawker.com. Image via Getty.

High School Students Want To Return Martin Shkreli's Dirty Money Donation

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High School Students Want To Return Martin Shkreli's Dirty Money Donation

“Martin Shkreli, from the Class of 2001, donates $1,000,000 to HCHS!” read an alumni association website for Hunter College High School a year ago.

Now, after the pharma villain’s arrest on charges of securities fraud, students are calling for the school to return the gift, according to The New York Times. Students say that Shkreli, who dropped out of the high school to attend another alternative school when his grades plummeted, donated to the school as a way to show how successful he’d become (mainly by jacking up prices for life-saving medications).

“I thought it was weird since he hadn’t graduated,” one classmate said. “It seemed almost like a ‘take that’ move.”

Another great detail from the Times piece is that after leaving for another high school, Shkreli “would come back to Hunter frequently in a suit and in a briefcase, hanging out in the hallways and sort of showing off.”

Hunter has yet to respond, and in all likelihood, won’t be giving back the $1 million that the drug-racketeering child-man so generously bequeathed. But at least unsatisfied students have this livestream of Shkreli creeping on a teenage girl to comfort them.

[Image via Getty]


Contact the author at melissa.cronin@gawker.com.

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