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| Friday September 19th 2014 |
Scottish referendum: Scotland votes 'No' to independence
With the results in from all 32 council areas, the "No" side won with 2,001,926 votes over 1,617,989 for "Yes".Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond called for unity and urged the unionist parties to deliver on more powers.
Prime Minister David Cameron said he was delighted the UK would remain together and that commitments on extra powers would be honoured "in full".
Mr Cameron said the three main unionist parties at Westminster would now follow through with their pledge of more powers for the Scottish Parliament.
He announced that Lord Smith of Kelvin, who led Glasgow's staging of the Commonwealth Games, would oversee the process to take forward the commitments, with new powers over tax, spending and welfare to be agreed by November, and draft legislation published by January.
Syrian Kurds fleeing Islamic State militants cross to safety in Turkey
ANKARA, Turkey – A Turkish official
says the country has opened its border with Syria to allow up to 4,000
people, mostly Kurds, to cross to safety as they flee militants from the
Islamic State group.
Izzettin Kucuk, the governor of Sanliurfa province, says Turkey decided to permit the Syrians to cross over Friday after reports emerged that militants were closing in on their communities. A day earlier, Turkish authorities refused entry.
The
Islamic State group has taken over more than 20 Kurdish villages since
Wednesday in northeastern Syria as the extremists try to crush one of
the last pockets of resistance against their rule there, the
Kurdish-controlled area known as Kobani.
Turkey is already home to nearly 850,000 registered Syrian refugees.
"If anyone thinks Indian Muslims will dance to their tune, they are delusional. Indian Muslims will live for India. They will die for India," Modi said in an interview with CNN, excerpts of which were aired Friday. The full interview is to be broadcast Sunday.
Most terrorist threats in India have emanated from Pakistan or Kashmir, the disputed Himalayan region claimed by both countries. Al-Qaida's influence there is thought to be minimal.
Many analysts in India dismissed al-Zawahiri's video as a publicity stunt that appeared directed more at his own rivals in the international jihadi movement.
Muslims constitute about 13 percent of India's population of nearly 1.2 billion. The country has largely seen itself as beyond the recruiting territory of international jihadist groups like al-Qaida. Over the last few months, however, the Islamic State group has gained at least a handful of followers in India. Last month, an Indian engineering student who was thought to have joined the group was reported killed.
A pair of Rafale fighter jets accompanied by support planes struck in northern Iraq on Friday morning, and the target was "entirely destroyed," President Francois Hollande said. Four laser-guided bombs struck the Iraqi military installation that had been overrun by the militants, and hit a munitions and fuel depot, a French military official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss operational details.
Iraq's military spokesman said dozens of extremist fighters were killed in four strikes, though the French official said the French armed forces had not completed their damage assessment.
Martina Johnson has not yet responded to accusations of involvement in "mutilation and massing killing".
Taylor has been jailed for war crimes committed in neighbouring Sierra Leone.
A special UN-backed court found him guilty in 2012 of supplying weapons to the Sierra Leonean rebels in exchange for so-called blood diamonds.
He launched a rebellion in Liberia in 1989, becoming president in 1997 - but he was forced into exile by another rebel offensive in 2003.
'Hope for justice' Civitas Maxima, a Geneva-based legal advocacy organisation which helped bring the case against Ms Johnson, said since the end of Liberia's civil war in 2003, no effort has been made by the authorities to investigate and prosecute crimes committed during Liberia's conflict.
This is despite a recommendation in 2009 of the Liberian Truth and Reconciliation Commission to do so.
The group has working with Liberian non-government organisation Global Justice and Research Project (GJRP) to document the alleged crimes.
Izzettin Kucuk, the governor of Sanliurfa province, says Turkey decided to permit the Syrians to cross over Friday after reports emerged that militants were closing in on their communities. A day earlier, Turkish authorities refused entry.
Turkey is already home to nearly 850,000 registered Syrian refugees.
Prime Minister Modi Says Al Qaeda 'Delusional' To Think India's Muslims Will Follow
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has said al-Qaida is "delusional" if it believes it holds any appeal for India's large Muslim population.
Earlier this month, the head of the extremist group, Ayman al-Zawahiri, said in a video that it had created an Indian branch that would bring Islamic rule to the entire subcontinent."If anyone thinks Indian Muslims will dance to their tune, they are delusional. Indian Muslims will live for India. They will die for India," Modi said in an interview with CNN, excerpts of which were aired Friday. The full interview is to be broadcast Sunday.
Most terrorist threats in India have emanated from Pakistan or Kashmir, the disputed Himalayan region claimed by both countries. Al-Qaida's influence there is thought to be minimal.
Many analysts in India dismissed al-Zawahiri's video as a publicity stunt that appeared directed more at his own rivals in the international jihadi movement.
Muslims constitute about 13 percent of India's population of nearly 1.2 billion. The country has largely seen itself as beyond the recruiting territory of international jihadist groups like al-Qaida. Over the last few months, however, the Islamic State group has gained at least a handful of followers in India. Last month, an Indian engineering student who was thought to have joined the group was reported killed.
France Strikes Islamic State Group In Iraq
PARIS (AP) — Joining U.S. forces acting in Iraqi skies, French fighter jets struck Friday against the militant Islamic State group, destroying a logistics depot, Iraqi and French officials said.A pair of Rafale fighter jets accompanied by support planes struck in northern Iraq on Friday morning, and the target was "entirely destroyed," President Francois Hollande said. Four laser-guided bombs struck the Iraqi military installation that had been overrun by the militants, and hit a munitions and fuel depot, a French military official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss operational details.
Iraq's military spokesman said dozens of extremist fighters were killed in four strikes, though the French official said the French armed forces had not completed their damage assessment.
Liberian female rebel Martina Johnson held for war crimes
Rights groups have
welcomed the arrest in Belgium of a female commander of Charles Taylor's
rebel group for war crimes allegedly committed during Liberia's civil
war.
The arrest follows a complaint filed on behalf of three victims of an offensive in 1992 known as Operation Octopus.Martina Johnson has not yet responded to accusations of involvement in "mutilation and massing killing".
Taylor has been jailed for war crimes committed in neighbouring Sierra Leone.
A special UN-backed court found him guilty in 2012 of supplying weapons to the Sierra Leonean rebels in exchange for so-called blood diamonds.
He launched a rebellion in Liberia in 1989, becoming president in 1997 - but he was forced into exile by another rebel offensive in 2003.
'Hope for justice' Civitas Maxima, a Geneva-based legal advocacy organisation which helped bring the case against Ms Johnson, said since the end of Liberia's civil war in 2003, no effort has been made by the authorities to investigate and prosecute crimes committed during Liberia's conflict.
This is despite a recommendation in 2009 of the Liberian Truth and Reconciliation Commission to do so.
The group has working with Liberian non-government organisation Global Justice and Research Project (GJRP) to document the alleged crimes.
Germany charges 2 women, man with supporting Islamic State extremist group
BERLIN – German federal prosecutors say they've charged a man and two women with supporting the Islamic State extremist group.
Prosecutors said in a statement Friday the main suspect, 25-year-old Karolina R., a German and Polish citizen, is married to an Islamic State member. Using a middleman, she's accused of providing the group with 1,100 euros ($1,400) worth of cameras and accessories to produce propaganda videos in October.
Prosecutors say shortly afterward she personally traveled to Syria and delivered three more cameras and 5,000 euros in cash.
After her return in December, she's accused of sending a further 6,000 euros, some raised with help from the other two people charged, Germans Ahmed-Sadiq M., and Jennifer Vincenza M., both 22.
No last names were released in line with German privacy laws.
Prosecutors said in a statement Friday the main suspect, 25-year-old Karolina R., a German and Polish citizen, is married to an Islamic State member. Using a middleman, she's accused of providing the group with 1,100 euros ($1,400) worth of cameras and accessories to produce propaganda videos in October.
After her return in December, she's accused of sending a further 6,000 euros, some raised with help from the other two people charged, Germans Ahmed-Sadiq M., and Jennifer Vincenza M., both 22.
No last names were released in line with German privacy laws.
Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania form joint military brigade for cooperation, peacekeeping
WARSAW, Poland – Poland, Ukraine
and Lithuania are forming a joint military unit that will be
headquartered in Poland and will work to strengthen their military
cooperation and will participate in peacekeeping missions.
Defense ministers from the three countries are to sign the act forming the brigade of several thousand soldiers on Friday.
The
Polish Defense Ministry said the work on forming the unit began in
2007. It is to be headquartered in the eastern Polish city of Lublin.
The ministry said the unit will operate under the auspices of the United Nations, NATO or the European Union.
However, the ministry did not provide any more details or say whether the armed conflict in Ukraine would affect its work.
The attack, a serious escalation by the rebels known as the Hawthis, prompted President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi to hold emergency talks with top Cabinet aides.
The officials also said heavy fighting raged Thursday between the rebels and Sunni militias in Shamlan, a suburb also northwest of Sanaa that is home to the Iman Islamic university, an institution long viewed as a primary breeding ground for militias.
The officials say the fighting in Shamlan has forced thousands to flee their homes, but they had no word on casualties.
The Hawthis have recently routed their Islamist rivals in a series of battles that expanded their control of northern Yemen.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Yemen, one of the Arab world's poorest nations, is facing multiple challenges. In addition to the Hawthi rebels, an al-Qaida branch in the south poses a constant threat as it tries to impose control over cities and towns. There is also a growing separatist movement in the south, a region that once constituted an independent state before it merged with northern Yemen.
GlaxoSmithKline
has been found guilty of bribery by a Chinese court and has agreed to
pay a fine of 3bn yuan (£297m) to the government in Beijing.
At the same time, the former head of its China division, Mark Reilly, and other GSK executives are facing two- to four-year jail terms, according to the state news agency, Xinhua. Reilly was accused of running a "massive bribery network".
The bribery case involved allegations that GSK sales executives paid up to 3bn yuan to doctors to encourage them to use its drugs. Other revelations included news that a sex tape of Reilly and his girlfriend was emailed to 13 company executives last year, including the chief executive, Sir Andrew Witty.
The company said the illegal actions of its subsidiary, GSK China Investment Co, were "a clear breach of GSK's governance and compliance procedures; and are wholly contrary to the values and standards expected from GSK employees". It has published an apology to the Chinese government and its people on its website.
According to its latest results, the scandal knocked four percentage points off GSK's sales growth in emerging markets. The company's staff have also been accused of bribing doctors in Poland, Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon.
A team of 30,000 people is going house-to-house to find those infected and distribute soap.
But critics say the lockdown will damage public trust in doctors.
Meanwhile in neighbouring Guinea, the bodies of eight missing health workers and journalists involved in the Ebola campaign have been found.
A government spokesman said some of the bodies had been recovered from a septic tank in the village of Wome. The team had been attacked by villagers on Tuesday.
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Citing President Obama’s calls for an expanded bombing campaign against the terror group — whose videotaped beheadings of three western hostages drew international revulsion — longtime foes of what’s known as sequestration say now is no time to slash military funding.
Rather, they argue, the Islamic State, or ISIS, is just the latest
threat that underscores the need to undo the $487 billion in automatic
Defense spending cuts required under the 2011 Budget Control Act.
“Even before these things erupted, it was not adequate,” Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., said of Pentagon funding at a Senate Armed Services Hearing earlier this week. “As we all know, risk increases when adequacy is not met.”
The Oklahoma Republican was pressing Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey on whether the Defense Department has enough money to carry out Obama’s goal of destroying ISIS. While the Obama administration has requested an additional $500 million to pay for arming and training Syrian rebels, more than a month of airstrikes against the terror group have already cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
Clinton, fresh off her campaign-style weekend visit to Iowa and her summer-long book tour, used Thursday's panel at the Center for American Progress to focus on issues that could form part of her domestic agenda should she run for president in 2016.
Clinton noted that women hold two-thirds of the minimum wage jobs across the country and three-quarters of the jobs that depend primarily on tips — meaning that many of them are working full time but hovering at or below the poverty line.
“We talk about a glass ceiling,” said Clinton, who ended her 2008 campaign by proclaiming that she and her supporters had put 18 million cracks in it. “The floor is collapsing.
“These women don’t even have a secure floor under them.”
The authorities have identified the gunman as Don Charles Spirit, 51.
Schultz said a colleague responded to reports of a shooting on Thursday afternoon and on arrival made contact with Spirit before he killed himself.
"I haven't seen anything like this at all," said Schultz.
"This county, this community is going to be devastated from this. It is a small county, we are all family here.
"We're asking for prayers for this community and the families involved."
After Spirit took his own life, police found the other seven bodies in the house, although there were other people there who were still alive.
Spirit, who was known to police previously, was the only suspect, said Schultz.
According to the Florida Department of Corrections, the grandfather was once behind bars for a gun charge, and was released in February 2006.
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Defense ministers from the three countries are to sign the act forming the brigade of several thousand soldiers on Friday.
The ministry said the unit will operate under the auspices of the United Nations, NATO or the European Union.
However, the ministry did not provide any more details or say whether the armed conflict in Ukraine would affect its work.
Yemen Rocked By Heavy Fighting
Yemen's state television said on Thursday that its headquarters in a northwestern suburb of the capital Sanaa has come under attack by Shiite rebels.The attack, a serious escalation by the rebels known as the Hawthis, prompted President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi to hold emergency talks with top Cabinet aides.
The officials also said heavy fighting raged Thursday between the rebels and Sunni militias in Shamlan, a suburb also northwest of Sanaa that is home to the Iman Islamic university, an institution long viewed as a primary breeding ground for militias.
The officials say the fighting in Shamlan has forced thousands to flee their homes, but they had no word on casualties.
The Hawthis have recently routed their Islamist rivals in a series of battles that expanded their control of northern Yemen.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Yemen, one of the Arab world's poorest nations, is facing multiple challenges. In addition to the Hawthi rebels, an al-Qaida branch in the south poses a constant threat as it tries to impose control over cities and towns. There is also a growing separatist movement in the south, a region that once constituted an independent state before it merged with northern Yemen.
GlaxoSmithKline to pay £297m fine over China bribery network
Mark
Reilly and executives face up to four years in jail over claims that
sales team bribed doctors to prescribe company medicine
At the same time, the former head of its China division, Mark Reilly, and other GSK executives are facing two- to four-year jail terms, according to the state news agency, Xinhua. Reilly was accused of running a "massive bribery network".
The bribery case involved allegations that GSK sales executives paid up to 3bn yuan to doctors to encourage them to use its drugs. Other revelations included news that a sex tape of Reilly and his girlfriend was emailed to 13 company executives last year, including the chief executive, Sir Andrew Witty.
The company said the illegal actions of its subsidiary, GSK China Investment Co, were "a clear breach of GSK's governance and compliance procedures; and are wholly contrary to the values and standards expected from GSK employees". It has published an apology to the Chinese government and its people on its website.
According to its latest results, the scandal knocked four percentage points off GSK's sales growth in emerging markets. The company's staff have also been accused of bribing doctors in Poland, Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon.
Ebola crisis: Sierra Leone begins three-day lockdown
A three-day curfew has
begun in Sierra Leone to enable health workers to find and isolate cases
of Ebola, in order to halt the spread of the disease.
Many people have been reluctant to seek medical treatment for
Ebola, fearing that diagnosis might mean death as there is no proven
cure.A team of 30,000 people is going house-to-house to find those infected and distribute soap.
But critics say the lockdown will damage public trust in doctors.
Meanwhile in neighbouring Guinea, the bodies of eight missing health workers and journalists involved in the Ebola campaign have been found.
A government spokesman said some of the bodies had been recovered from a septic tank in the village of Wome. The team had been attacked by villagers on Tuesday.
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Lawmakers renew call to roll back military cuts amid ISIS, Ebola fights
Defense hawks on both sides of the aisle are pointing to the new war against the Islamic State to revive efforts to roll back across-the-board Pentagon budget cuts.Citing President Obama’s calls for an expanded bombing campaign against the terror group — whose videotaped beheadings of three western hostages drew international revulsion — longtime foes of what’s known as sequestration say now is no time to slash military funding.
“Even before these things erupted, it was not adequate,” Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., said of Pentagon funding at a Senate Armed Services Hearing earlier this week. “As we all know, risk increases when adequacy is not met.”
The Oklahoma Republican was pressing Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey on whether the Defense Department has enough money to carry out Obama’s goal of destroying ISIS. While the Obama administration has requested an additional $500 million to pay for arming and training Syrian rebels, more than a month of airstrikes against the terror group have already cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
Hillary Clinton touts family issues and hints at 2016 domestic agenda
Hillary Rodham Clinton joined some of the most powerful women in Congress on Thursday to push for advances on affordable child care, paid family leave and raising the minimum wage that could create greater economic progress for women.Clinton, fresh off her campaign-style weekend visit to Iowa and her summer-long book tour, used Thursday's panel at the Center for American Progress to focus on issues that could form part of her domestic agenda should she run for president in 2016.
Clinton noted that women hold two-thirds of the minimum wage jobs across the country and three-quarters of the jobs that depend primarily on tips — meaning that many of them are working full time but hovering at or below the poverty line.
“We talk about a glass ceiling,” said Clinton, who ended her 2008 campaign by proclaiming that she and her supporters had put 18 million cracks in it. “The floor is collapsing.
“These women don’t even have a secure floor under them.”
California judge rules against privacy advocate and protects police secrecy
Man loses bid to access to police license plate records in case with repercussions on surveillance and government databases
A California judge’s initial ruling against a tech entrepreneur, who seeks access to records kept secret in government databases detailing the comings and goings of millions of cars in the San Diego area, via license plate scans, was the second legal setback within a month for privacy advocates.
The tentative decision issued Thursday upheld the right of authorities to block the public from viewing information collected on their vehicles, by way of vast networks that rely on cameras mounted on stoplights and police cars.
The rapidly expanding systems and their growing databases have been the subject of a larger debate pitting privacy rights against public safety concerns in a new frontier over high-tech surveillance. A Los Angeles judge ruled in August that city police and sheriff’s departments don’t have to disclose records from the 3m plates they scan each week.
Michael Robertson, best known for creating the music website MP3.com, stepped into the discussion with a personal lawsuit, asking for access to only his information. He will still get to present his case Friday, despite the initial ruling from San Diego Superior Court Judge Katherine Bacal that went against him.
The ACLU of southern California and the Electronic Frontier Foundation had been seeking a week’s worth of data from databases that hold hundreds of millions of scans.
The court's decision leaves independent Greg Orman, who has been rising in the polls, as the only major opponent currently in the running to take on the 78-year-old incumbent.
The court agreed with Democrat Chad Taylor, saying his formal letter
of withdrawal to the secretary of state's office was sufficient to get
his name off the ballot.
The court also said it did not "need to act" regarding Secretary of State Kris Kobach's "allegation" that the Democratic party must name a new candidate for the race. Kobach said earlier Thursday that the Democratic Party is legally obligated to pick a new nominee and set a Sept. 26 deadline.
The Roberts campaign has repeatedly accused Democrats of playing dirty politics after national Democrats such as Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill reportedly nudged Taylor out of the race earlier this month to make way for Orman.
Kane and other keen observers, were right. The Dems got their judges, but furious Republicans retaliated by blocking or delaying action on non-judicial nominees, reducing a steady confirmation flow down to a trickle.
This week, after an intense lobbying campaign waged by many nominees’ backers, a total of two dozen nominees likely will be confirmed. Eight were confirmed on Tuesday and seven on Wednesday. Thursday night the Senate is expected to confirm nine more before it heads out of town until after the elections.
More than a hundred other nominees will have to hope they’re part of a tiny group that could get through during the lame-duck session in November — or maybe next year, when the GOP likely will control the Senate, and they’ll only be in those jobs less than two years.
(On the other hand, Obama’s judges will be wearing those robes for decades.)
Here are the lucky nine scheduled to be confirmed Thursday night:
On the ambassadorial front, there are four “political” (or non-career foreign service) nominees teed up for confirmation: Mark Lippert, chief of staff to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, for South Korea, St. Louis attorney Kevin O’Malley for Ireland, Adam Scheinman, now a senior adviser for nuclear nonproliferation at the State Department, to be special rep to the president for nuclear nonproliferation.
A California judge’s initial ruling against a tech entrepreneur, who seeks access to records kept secret in government databases detailing the comings and goings of millions of cars in the San Diego area, via license plate scans, was the second legal setback within a month for privacy advocates.
The tentative decision issued Thursday upheld the right of authorities to block the public from viewing information collected on their vehicles, by way of vast networks that rely on cameras mounted on stoplights and police cars.
The rapidly expanding systems and their growing databases have been the subject of a larger debate pitting privacy rights against public safety concerns in a new frontier over high-tech surveillance. A Los Angeles judge ruled in August that city police and sheriff’s departments don’t have to disclose records from the 3m plates they scan each week.
Michael Robertson, best known for creating the music website MP3.com, stepped into the discussion with a personal lawsuit, asking for access to only his information. He will still get to present his case Friday, despite the initial ruling from San Diego Superior Court Judge Katherine Bacal that went against him.
The ACLU of southern California and the Electronic Frontier Foundation had been seeking a week’s worth of data from databases that hold hundreds of millions of scans.
Kansas must remove Dem candidate from Senate ballot, state court rules
The Kansas Supreme Court ruled unanimously Thursday that the state must remove the name of the Democratic candidate running against Republican Sen. Pat Roberts from the November ballot, adding another twist to a now-hotly contested race.The court's decision leaves independent Greg Orman, who has been rising in the polls, as the only major opponent currently in the running to take on the 78-year-old incumbent.
The court also said it did not "need to act" regarding Secretary of State Kris Kobach's "allegation" that the Democratic party must name a new candidate for the race. Kobach said earlier Thursday that the Democratic Party is legally obligated to pick a new nominee and set a Sept. 26 deadline.
The Roberts campaign has repeatedly accused Democrats of playing dirty politics after national Democrats such as Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill reportedly nudged Taylor out of the race earlier this month to make way for Orman.
Many Obama nominees will be left on the floor Thursday night when the Senate slithers out of town
Back when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) unleashed the nuclear option in November 2013, our colleague Paul Kane noted that the Democrats might rue the day, predicting they would get their heretofore blocked judicial nominees confirmed — but precious few others.Kane and other keen observers, were right. The Dems got their judges, but furious Republicans retaliated by blocking or delaying action on non-judicial nominees, reducing a steady confirmation flow down to a trickle.
This week, after an intense lobbying campaign waged by many nominees’ backers, a total of two dozen nominees likely will be confirmed. Eight were confirmed on Tuesday and seven on Wednesday. Thursday night the Senate is expected to confirm nine more before it heads out of town until after the elections.
More than a hundred other nominees will have to hope they’re part of a tiny group that could get through during the lame-duck session in November — or maybe next year, when the GOP likely will control the Senate, and they’ll only be in those jobs less than two years.
(On the other hand, Obama’s judges will be wearing those robes for decades.)
Here are the lucky nine scheduled to be confirmed Thursday night:
On the ambassadorial front, there are four “political” (or non-career foreign service) nominees teed up for confirmation: Mark Lippert, chief of staff to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, for South Korea, St. Louis attorney Kevin O’Malley for Ireland, Adam Scheinman, now a senior adviser for nuclear nonproliferation at the State Department, to be special rep to the president for nuclear nonproliferation.
Florida man kills his daughter and her six children
A grandfather shot dead his daughter and her six
children before taking his own life at a home in Bell, Florida, police
have said.
The children range in age from three months to 10 years old, said Gilchrist County Sheriff Robert Schultz.The authorities have identified the gunman as Don Charles Spirit, 51.
Schultz said a colleague responded to reports of a shooting on Thursday afternoon and on arrival made contact with Spirit before he killed himself.
"This county, this community is going to be devastated from this. It is a small county, we are all family here.
"We're asking for prayers for this community and the families involved."
After Spirit took his own life, police found the other seven bodies in the house, although there were other people there who were still alive.
Spirit, who was known to police previously, was the only suspect, said Schultz.
According to the Florida Department of Corrections, the grandfather was once behind bars for a gun charge, and was released in February 2006.
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