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Friday, October 25, 2013

Cheat Sheet - New Revelations in JonBenet's Unsolved Death

Today: How Ted Cruz Can Win in 2016 , Danvers Reopens After Teacher Murder , Europe Demands No-Spying Deal
Cheat Sheet: Morning

October 25, 2013
COLD CASE

No one was ever charged in her death. Now, 17 years later, newly released documents show the grand jury recommended John and Patsy Ramsey be indicted with child abuse resulting in death. Carol McKinley reports.

YES HE CAN

Forget what you think you know about the next presidential election. David Frum details how the junior senator from Texas can take the White House.

AFTERMATH

Students returned to Danvers High School in Massachusetts after a math teacher was killed by a 14-year-old student Tuesday. Meanwhile, new details about the chilling murder continue to emerge: Phillip Chism allegedly followed the popular teacher Colleen Ritzer, 24, to the bathroom and killed her with a box cutter, dumped her body in a recycling bin, and dragged her into the woods, where he left the body uncovered. Witnesses said that after changing clothes, Chism went to Wendy's and then a movie before police found him walking along the road in complete darkness. He was known as reserved and well-behaved, and the school is still in shock after the killing.

PRIVACY, PLEASE

Get your eyes out of our call logs, Obama. At the start of the two-day European Council summit on Thursday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel says the United States must agree to a "no-spying" deal with Germany and France before the year's end. The demands come after revelations that the National Security Agency tapped into Merkel's private phone and accessed tens of thousands of French phone records. The U.S. already has a post-WWII no-spying deal with the UK, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. The deal had previously been brought up between Merkel and President Obama earlier this summer, but nothing was decided.

CRACKDOWN

They kill far more people than drugs like cocaine, heroin, or meth, but they're way easier to get. Now, in a major policy shift, the FDA is recommending tighter restrictions on prescription painkillers that are widely abused, mostly thanks to the loose rules around prescribing them. The painkillers at issue combine hydrocodone with a popular over-the-counter medication like aspirin or acetaminophen, and are given for pain from basic injuries and medical procedures. The new regulations would decrease the number of refills allowed before the patient has to visit the doctor—reducing the current supply a patient can get on one prescription by half. They could go into effect as early as next year.


POUR IT UP
Lhota PAC Can Take Unlimited Cash
In NYC mayoral race.
CHA-CHING!
Twitter Releases IPO Price Range
$17 to $20 a share.
STOP THE SPYING
Firefox Launches Web Privacy Tool
Will visualize parties accessing your data.
SHE'S OUT
Deadline's Finke Building New Site
To 'report the real truth about Hollywood.'
THE END
Orlando Bloom, Miranda Kerr Split
After three years of marriage.

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