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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Cheat Sheet - Rubio Steps Up on Immigration

Today: Missing Girls Found After Ten Years , Drug-Resistant Gonorrhea, the 'Sex Superbug,' Is Not Worse Than AIDS , North Korea Removes Missiles
Cheat Sheet: Morning

May 07, 2013
LITTLE TO GAIN

This is a remarkable moment, writes The Daily Beast's Stuart Stevens, as a rising star exposes himself to real political damage on an issue that offers almost no foreseeable political gain with the party's base.

INCREDIBLE

This should give hope to desperate families everywhere. Cleveland police say they've found three missing women who disappeared as teens from the same neigborhood around the turn of the century. Michelle Knight, now 32, disappeared in 2002; Amanda Berry, 27, was last seen in 2003; Gina DeJesus, 23, went missing in 2004. The women were found in a house along with several children after Berry made a frantic 911 call, saying she had been kidnapped, "missing for 10 years," and knew she had been "in the news." The three women have since checked into a local hospital and three brothers have been arrested. Neighbors said the house was always dark, with boarded-up windows, and that a man always entered through the back door. 

CALM DOWN

Drug-resistant gonorrhea, the so-called sex superbug found in Hawaii, is no killer on par with AIDS, as some reports suggest. It's hardly even a killer. The Daily Beast's Dr. Kent Sepkowitz on our addiction to superbug stories.

EASING UP

So here's some good news. North Korea removed two missiles from a launch site on the coast, an indication that there is no longer an immediate threat of a launch, a U.S. official said Monday. Pentagon spokesman George Little called the movement a "provocation pause," and said it was "obviously beneficial" to normalizing relations on the Korean peninsula. South Korean president Park Geun-hye will be holding talks with U.S. President Obama on Tuesday, and Park will address U.S. Congress on Wednesday. But the move comes just a few days after North Korea sentenced a U.S. citizen to 15 years in a hard labor camp for murky charges.

THREATS

The Pentagon is through being polite about China's hacking problem. In its annual report to Congress on Monday, the Pentagon directly accused China's military of cyberattacks against U.S. defense contractors and government employees—and these attacks could potentially weaken the U.S. during a crisis. The report conceded that China is most likely trying to steal industrial technology, but the country is still gaining insight into the inner workings of the U.S. military. Despite the dire warnings in the report, there are no potential solutions listed—and there are no indications that the U.S. is developing similar cyberspying technology, although billions are spent each year on cyberdefense and the creation of cyberweapons.


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Swears weight loss is for family's sake, not potential presidential bid.
GONE GUILTY
'Girls Gone Wild' Creator Convicted
Of false imprisonment and assault.
FROM THE BLOCK
Shots Fired Near Lopez Interview
After filming music video in Fort Lauderdale.
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Kidnapped Girl: 'I'm Here. I'm Free Now.'

In an emotional 911 call made shortly after she escaped 10 years of captivity, Amanda Berry pleads with the Cleveland operator to send police to come to her aid. The resulting rescue mission ended in Berry and two other girls, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight, all of whom had disappeared around a decade ago, being hospitalized and a man named Ariel Castro taken into police custody.



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