Wednesday, 8 August 2012

Gold rush: U.S. quickly grabs 9 medals

Allyson Felix of the United States crosses the finish line ahead of Murielle Ahoure of Cote d'Ivoire and Carmelita Jeter of the United States to win the women's 200-meter final on Wednesday, August 8. Check out Day 11 of competition from Tuesday, August 7. The Games run through Sunday, August 12. See all the action as it unfolds here.
Tiago Splitter of Brazil goes up for a shot against Carlos Delfino of Argentina in the first half of the men's basketball quaterfinal game.
Carla Rebecchi of Argentina stretches out to score during the women's hockey semifinal match against Great Britain.
Aries Merritt of the United States celebrates after winning gold in the men's 110-meter hurdles final.
Kim Ekdahl du Rietz of Sweden goes up to shoot against Denmark during the men's quarterfinal match.

Anna Nazarova of Russia competes in the women's long jump final.

Erika Kasahara of Japan, right, competes against Elizabeth Zamora Gordillo of Guatemala during the women's -49kg taekwondo repechage match.
Yohan Blake of Jamaica leads Bruno De Barros of Brazil and Jared Connaughton of Canada in the men's 200-meter semifinals.
Roman Avramenko of Ukraine competes in the men's javelin throw qualifications.
Dayron Robles of Cuba waits on the track after pulling up injured in the men's 110-meter hurdles final.

Usain Bolt of Jamaica celebrates after the men's 200-meter semifinals.

Poland's Bartosz Kurek, left, spikes as Russia's Sergey Grankin, center, and Alexander Volkov attempt to block during the men's quarterfinal volleyball match.
Juliana Silva of Brazil climbs into the crowd as she celebrates winning the women's beach volleyball bronze medal match against China.
Ivan Zaytsev of Uzbekistan competes in the men's javelin throw qualifications.
Argentinian forward Luis Scola, left, tries to score past Brazilian center Nene Hilario during the quarterfinal basketball match.
Senegal's Isabelle Sambou, in red, and Canadian Carol Huynh compete in women's freestyle 48-kilogram wrestling on Day 12 of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
The boats take off for the start of the men's 49er sailing in Weymouth Harbour.
Sweden's Jonas Larholm fights through Danish handball players during the men's quarterfinal match. Sweden beat Denmark 24-22.
Italian water polo player Valentino Gallo faces off with Hungarian Tamas Kasas, left, during the men's quarterfinal match.
A martial arts specialist performs stunts before the night session of taekwondo.
Exhibition riders perform on the BMX track.
French diver Audrey Labeau competes in the women's 10-meter platform preliminary.
Brent Newdick of New Zealand competes in the men's decathlon high jump.
Brazilian beach volleyball player Juliana Silva celebrates during the match against China. Brazil won the bronze medal.
Sweden's right back Kim Andersson, center, vies with Denmark's pivot Michael Knudsen during the men's quarterfinal handball match.
British hurdler Andrew Turner and Nigeria's Selim Nurudeen compete in the men's 110-meter hurdles semifinal.
U.S. hurdler Jason Richardson leads Cuba's Orlando Ortega and Great Britain's Lawrence Clarke in the men's 110-meter hurdles semifinal.
Denmark right back Kasper Sondergaard Sarup, center, shoots during the men's quarterfinal handball match against Sweden at the London Olympics on Wednesday, August 8.
Clarissa Kyoko Mei Ling Chun of the United States, top, faced Iwona Nina Matkowska of Poland in a women's freestyle 48-kilogram match.
Lee Dae-Hoon of South Korea competes against Alexey Denisenko of Russia during the men's 58-kilogram semifinal taekwondo match.
U.S. rider David Herman takes part in the BMX cycling seeding phase runs in Olympic Park.
Fans cheer the individual jumping equestrian event on Wednesday.
Prince Abdullah Al Saud of Saudi Arabia, on Davos, competes in the individual show jumping final.
Maik Baier of Germany powers down the track during the seeding run in the BMX competition.
South Korea's Joo Se-Hyuk returns a ball to China's Zhang Jike during the table tennis men's team final.
Jike Zhang of China, right, competes against Joo Se-Hyuk of South Korea.
Florent PiƩtrus of France goes up for a shot against Marc Gasol of Spain in the first half of their men's basketball quarterfinal game.
A freestyle BMX rider entertains the crowds during a break in the seeding phase runs.
James Clark of Australia looks on from the bench during the men's water polo quarterfinal match against Serbia.
Spain's Blai Mallarach Guell, center, makes a save in the men's water polo quarterfinal match against Montenegro.
Mariana Pajon of Colombia competes in the seeding run at the BMX track.
British Prime Minister David Cameron, left, takes a photo with Olympic volunteer Anita Akuwudike as he meets some of the volunteer work force at the ExCeL center in London.
Russia's Andrei Kirilenko, left, and Paulius Jankunas of Lithuania go up for a rebound during the men's basketball quarterfinal game.
Spain's Albert Rocas Comas shoots during the men's quarterfinal handball match against France.
Blair Tuke, left, and Peter Burling of New Zealand celebrate winning silver in the men's 49er sailing event in Weymouth, England.
New Zealand's Ella Gunson, left, and Kayla Sharland celebrate after Sharland scores their team's first goal during the women's field hockey semifinal match against the Netherlands.
Montenegro's water polo team celebrates its victory over Spain during the men's water polo quarterfinal match.
Brazil's Dante Amaral waits to serve the ball against Argentina during the men's volleyball quarterfinals.
Nikola Janovic, top, of Montenegro and Ivan Perez Vargas of Spain compete in the men's water polo quarterfinal match.
Ireland's Cian O'Connor riding Blue Loyd 12 celebrates winning the bronze in the individual jumping equestrian event.
Jinzi Li, left, of China battles Nadezda Torlopova of Russia during the women's middle 75-kilogram boxing semifinals.
Hungary's Gabor Csaszar scores on a fast break during the men's handball quarterfinal match against Iceland.
Morocco's Halima Hachlaf, left, and Caster Semenya of South Africa compete in round one of the women's 800-meter heats.
Portugal's Fernando Pimenta, left, and Emanuel Silva celebrate winning the silver medal during the men's kayak double 1,000-meter canoe sprint finals in Windsor, England.
Ashton Eaton of the United States competes in the men's decathlon shot put.
The crowd soaks up the atmosphere on Day 12 of the Olympics at Greenwich Park in London.
Nicola Adams of Great Britain gets refreshed during the women's fly (51-kilogram) boxing semifinal fight.
Ukraine's Irini Merleni, left, wrestles with Venezuela's Mayelis Yesenia Caripa Castillo during the women's 48-kilogram freestyle wrestling quarterfinal match.
American Ashton Eaton competes in the men's decathlon long jump qualifications.
Germany's Jan Felix Knobel competes in the men's decathlon's shot put qualifications.
Ireland's Cian O'Connor on Blue Loyd 12 competes during the equestrian individual jumping event.
Japan's Keisuke Ushiro competes in the men's decathlon long jump qualifications.
Marlen Esparza of the United States leaves the ring following her loss to Cancan Ren of China in the women's flyweight boxing semifinals.
Saudi Arabia's Sarah Attar, right, competes in round one of the women's 800-meter heats.
Chanatip Sonkham of Thailand competes against Kristina Kim of Russia during the women's taekwondo under 49-kilogram preliminary match.
Germany's Alexandra Engelhardt, right, competes against Mayelis Yesenia Caripa Castillo of Venezuela in women's freestyle 63-kilogram wrestling.
Eirik Veras Larsen of Norway celebrates the gold during the men's kayak single 1,000-meter canoe sprint finals in Windsor.
New Zealand's Peter Burling, left, and Blair Tuke celebrate winning silver in the men's 49er sailing final in Weymouth, England.
Russian center Timofey Mozgov, left, is challenged by Lithuanian guard Renaldas Seibutis during the men's quarterfinal basketball match.
Daniel Awde of Great Britain competes in the men's decathlon long jump.
Iceland's Sverre Jakobsson, top, vies with Hungary's Szabolcs Zubai during the men's quarterfinal handball match.
Japan's Murakami Ai, left, and Sulette Damons of South Africa vie for the ball during the women's field hockey classification match.
Australia's Craig Mottram leads in round one of the men's 5,000-meter heats at Olympic Stadium.
Palestinian runner Woroud Sawalha gets ready for round one of the women's 800-meter heats.
Peng Tang of Hong Kong competes in the men's team table-tennis bronze medal match.
Germany's Arne Gabius rests after round one of the men's 5,000-meter heats.
Pascal Behrenbruch of Germany competes in the men's decathlon long jump.
Mexico's Jannet Alegria Pena, left, competes against Raya Hatahet of Jordan during the women's taekwondo under 49-kilogram preliminary round.
Lukasz Michalski of Poland competes in the men's pole vault qualifications.
Hungary's Roland Kokeny and Rudolf Dombi celebrate winning gold in the men's kayak double 1,000-meter canoe sprint final in Windsor, England.
Sarah Attar of Saudi Arabia competes in round one of the women's 800-meter heats at Olympic Stadium.
From left, Trey Hardee of the United States, Luiz Alberto de Araujo of Brazil and Ashton Eaton of the United States compete in the men's decathlon 100-meter heats.
Seulki Kang, left, of the Central African Republic competes against Lucija Zaninovic of Croatia during the women's taekwondo under 49-kilogram preliminary round.
Liberia's Jangy Addy competes in the men's decathlon 100-meter heats.
Maksym Mazuryk of Ukraine competes in the men's pole vault qualifications.
Sebastian Brendel of Germany celebrates winning gold during the men's canoe single 1,000-meter sprint finals in Windsor.
Spectators cheer Daniel Awde of Great Britain after the men's decathlon 100-meter heats.
In Boat 5, from left, Hungary's Krisztina Fazekas, Katalin Kovacs and Danuta Kozak celebrate winning the gold medal in the women's kayak four 500-meter sprint final in Windsor.
Athletes compete in round one of the men's 5,000-meter heats at Olympic Stadium.
HIDE CAPTION

Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics
Day 12: The best photos of the Olympics

Monday, 6 August 2012

Gunman was Army vet, police say

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Suspect bought gun recently, says law enforcement official
  • Suspect's former girlfriend interviewed, federal law enforcement official says
  • A former Army buddy says Wade Michael Page, 40, talked back then of "racial holy war"
  • Family of suspect says it is "devastated," in prayer for victims

Oak Creek, Wisconsin (CNN) -- An Army veteran who neighbors say played in a far-right punk band was the lone shooter in the rampage at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin that killed six people and wounded four, according to information Monday from law enforcement authorities.

Wade Michael Page, 40, was shot to death by police responding to the Sunday morning attack in the Milwaukee suburb of Oak Creek, the community's chief of police told reporters.

It was the latest violence against the Sikh community in the United States in apparent misdirected revenge for the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

A long history of bias crimes against Sikhs

Sunday's attack occurred 16 days after a gunman killed 12 people and wounded scores in a Colorado movie theater, reigniting the gun-control debate in the United States.

"These kinds of terrible and tragic events are happening with too much regularity for us not do some soul-searching and examine additional ways that we can prevent" such violence, President Barack Obama told reporters when asked about the Wisconsin shooting at a White House bill-signing ceremony.

However, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg criticized Obama and certain Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney for not advocating tougher laws to prevent dangerous people from obtaining guns.

"The fact that criminals, terrorists and other mentally ill people have access to guns is a national crisis," Bloomberg said during a visit to a Sikh community center in Queens.

Bernard Zapor, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives special agent in the investigation, said Monday that the 9 mm semiautomatic handgun with multiple ammunition magazines used by the attacker had been legally purchased.

Page bought the gun on July 28 at the Shooters Shop in West Allis, Wisconsin, and picked it up two days later, according to a law enforcement official. The suspect bought ammunition there and used the shop's range at some point, said the official.

The gunman shot people inside and outside the Sikh house of worship, including a police officer, Oak Creek Police Chief John Edwards said. Another police officer with a rifle then shot the gunman, who died at the scene.

Read Obama's statement on the Wisconsin shooting

While authorities said Page was the only gunman, they also had been looking for another man spotted at the crime scene Sunday who left before anyone could identify him. On Monday, the FBI's Paul Bresson said the man being sought had been "located, interviewed and cleared."

According to Edwards and the FBI, authorities have received tips that Page might have links to the white supremacist movement, but nothing had been confirmed.

Two neighbors of Page identified him in photos that showed him playing in the far-right punk band "End Apathy," and the nephew of the slain president of the Sikh temple said the attacker had a 9/11 tattoo on his arm.

Teresa Carlson, the FBI special agent in charge of the investigation of Sunday's shooting, said no motive for the attack has been established. The FBI was looking into whether it was domestic terrorism, which is the use of violence for political or social gain, Carlson said.

"We are looking at ties to white supremacist groups," Carlson told a news conference, adding there was no active investigation of Page prior to Sunday's attack.

According to a man who described himself as an old Army buddy of Page's, the attacker talked about "racial holy war" when they served together in the 1990s. Christopher Robillard of Oregon, who said he lost contact with Page more than a decade ago, added that when Page would rant, "it would be about mostly any non-white person."

"He didn't seem like the type of person to go out and hurt people," Robillard said. "He would talk about it all the time, but it was more like he was waiting for the ... revolution to start."

Page, born on Veterans Day in 1971, joined the Army in 1992 and left the service in 1998, according to Army spokesman George Wright. His service was marked by "patterns of misconduct," though he received an honorable discharge, according to a Pentagon official.

The suspect did have a criminal record, Edwards said. A background check showed Page had separate convictions for DUI in Colorado in 1999 and for criminal mischief in Texas in 1994.

A federal law enforcement official told CNN that investigators interviewed a former girlfriend of Page. The woman said the pair had recently broken up, and she told investigators she had no indication Page planned such an attack. She provided the names of friends and associates of Page, the official said.

Page's family said it was "devastated by the horrific events," according to the Journal Sentinel newspaper.

"While there can be no words of comfort that will make sense of what happened that day, please be aware that our thoughts and prayers go out to all the victims and their families," the family said in a text message, according to the newspaper.

"We share in their grief for all who lost their lives that day and for those survivors, we hope for a speedy recovery. We have been cooperating and will continue to cooperate with the investigation in any way we can. Please respect our privacy as we try to deal with the tragic loss of life and family."

Obama noted Monday that the motive for attack had yet to be determined, but if it turns out to be based on the ethnicity of the worshipers, "I think the American people immediately recoil from those kinds of attitudes."

Because of their customary beards and turbans, Sikh men are often confused with Muslims, and they have been the targets of hate crimes since 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.

The six victims of Sunday's attack were identified by police as five men -- Sita Singh, 41; Ranjit Singh, 49; Satwant Singh Kaleka, 65; Prakash Singh, 39, and Suveg Singh, 84 -- and one woman, 41-year-old Paramjit Kaur.

Photos: Shooting at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin

Two other Sikh victims remained hospitalized in critical condition, while a third was treated and released, Edwards said.

Vigils were scheduled Monday night in the Milwaukee metropolitan area.

Lt. Brian Murphy

The wounded police officer, identified as 51-year-old Lt. Brian Murphy, also was in critical condition, the police chief said. Edwards told CNN's "Erin Burnett OutFront" that Murphy had a "promising," but long, recovery ahead.

Terror, tragedy for tight-knit Sikh community

One of the dead, Prakash Singh, was a priest who recently immigrated to the United States with his wife and two young children, said Justice Singh Khalsa, a temple member since the 1990s.

Relatives of Kaleka, the president of the temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, said that he was killed fighting the attacker.

"From what we understand, he basically fought to the very end and suffered gunshot wounds while trying to take down the gunman," said Kanwardeep Singh Kaleka, his nephew.

Kaleka said those inside the gurdwara, or Sikh house of worship, described the attacker as a bald white man, dressed in a white T-shirt and black pants and with the 9/11 tattoo on one arm -- which "implies to me that there's some level of hate crime there."

Belief Blog: Who are Sikhs?

While officials try to piece together what prompted the man to go on his shooting spree, America's Sikh community struggled to come to grips with the brutal attack.

A Sikh human rights group said it would give a $10,000 reward to Murphy, the police officer wounded in the attack.

"Our government must take urgent steps to educate the country about the Sikh population and help put an end to these horrific and deadly acts of violence," said a statement by the group, Sikhs for Justice.

Kaleka was horrified to have such violence occur at his place of worship, especially so soon after the 12 killings at a screening of the Batman movie "The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, Colorado.

"You're talking about Aurora one minute, and the next minute it's you and your family," Kaleka said.

Meanwhile in India, the birthplace of Sikhism, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said he was "shocked and saddened" by the shooting.

"That this senseless act of violence should be targeted at a place of religious worship is particularly painful," Singh, himself a Sikh, said.

The country's main Sikh political party, the Shiromani Akali Dal, held a demonstration in New Delhi's embassy district Monday to protest.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke by phone with India's foreign minister, and U.S. Ambassador Nancy Powell met with Sikh community leaders in New Delhi and visited the largest Sikh temple in the city, said State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell.

Sunday's attack occurred about 10:30 a.m., when temple members were reading scriptures and cooking food in preparation for the main Sunday service and community lunch. The temple has more than 350 members.

According to witnesses, the gunman started shooting in the parking lot, killing at least one person. He then entered the temple and continued firing, they said. Police spent Sunday night searching the shooter's home in nearby Cudahy, a short distance from the temple.

Political leaders at the national, state and local level offered condolences for the killings and declared solidarity with the Sikh community.

Obama ordered U.S flags flown at half-staff through Friday "as a mark of respect for the victims of the senseless acts of violence."

In a statement Sunday, Obama said the United States had been "enriched" by Sikhs, and that his administration "will provide whatever support is necessary to the officials who are responding to this tragic shooting and moving forward with an investigation."

Romney, meanwhile, called the slayings "a senseless act of violence and a tragedy that should never befall any house of worship."

Romney: A 'senseless act of violence'

The United States is home to about 700,000 Sikhs, nearly all of Indian origin, according to the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund. The men are easily identifiable by their beards and turbans, a tradition that's lasted for 500 years.

The first person murdered in retaliation for the 9/11 attacks was a Sikh -- Balbir Singh Sodhi, a gas station owner in Mesa, Arizona. He was shot five times by aircraft mechanic Frank Roque on September 15, 2001. Roque is serving a life sentence.

In the intervening years, the Sikh Coalition, a New York-based advocacy group, reported more than 700 attacks or bias-related incidents.

Obama: Shooting a 'tragedy'

Six people were killed in a shooting rampage. Share your thoughts and remembrances.

CNN's Tom Cohen, Brian Todd, Harmeet Shah Singh, Poppy Harlow, Ed Payne, Ted Rowlands, Marlena Baldacci, Matt Smith, Steve Almasy, Greg Botelho, Phil Gast, Shawn Nottingham, Carol Cratty, Susan Candiotti and Deborah Feyerick contributed to this report.

Original - http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_topstories/~3/zs6l1OtoFWQ/index.html