Those following the developments in Friday evening’s UCSB shootings are aware of the suspected perpetrator Elliot Rodger‘s frightening YouTube manifesto, describing his bitterness towards women and the men who are able to find a mate.
As it turns out, he had also written a 141-page manifesto that lays out his grievances in painstaking detail, describing stories from his childhood onward that seemed to have laid the foundation for his anger towards women, “alpha males,” and society in general.
Titled “My Twisted World,” the lengthy document describes his plans for a “Day of Retribution,” on which: “All of those beautiful girls I’ve desired so much in my life, but can never have because they despise and loathe me, I will destroy.” …
Rodger described being bullied in high school:
“Some boys randomly pushed me against the lockers as they walked past me in the hall. One boy who was tall and had blonde hair called me a “loser”, right in front of his girlfriends. Yes, he had girls with him. Pretty girls. And they didn’t seem to mind that he was such an evil bastard. In fact, I bet they liked him for it. This is how girls are, and I was starting to realize it.
And, perhaps most alarming of all, he wrote of his desire to become powerful enough to punish everyone around him for having sex:
I began to have fantasies of becoming very powerful and stopping everyone from having sex. I wanted to take their sex away from them, just like they took it away from me. I saw sex as an evil and barbaric act, all because I was unable to have it. This was the major turning point. My anger made me stronger inside. This was when I formed my ideas that sex should be outlawed. It is the only way to make the world a fair and just place. If I can’t have it, I will destroy it. That’s the conclusion I came to, right then and there.
Read the full document below. WARNING: Strong language throughout:
“The underlying facts here do not seem to be in dispute, at least by these parties. It appears, and certainly is alleged, that Plaintiff Eunice Huthart has suffered a grotesque invasion of her privacy,” said Judge Michael Fitzgerald this week, granting the dismissal motion by the media giant in the first and only American-based suit in the wide-reaching scandal.
“Nonetheless … the Court concludes that Huthart must obtain her relief from the courts of England and Wales,” he added in the order (read it here) filed Wednesday. Despite attempts by Huthart in March to keep the case in the U.S. with an argument that a move to the British courts would be the “litigation equivalent of purgatory,” this latest order is almost verbatim what the judge said in his tentative ruling in February.
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In her initial complaint filed on June 13, 2013, the England-born Huthart — whose most recent gig was as a stunt coordinator on Disney’s upcoming Maleficent starring Jolie — claimed her cell phone was hacked in 2004 while staying in the U.S. and working with Jolie on Mr. And Mrs. Smith. Her fears turned out to be correct when Huthart’s name and phone number later turned up in the notes of Glenn Mulcaire, the jailed P.I. who worked for the now-shuttered Rupert Murdoch tabloid News Of The World. That hacking seems to be connected to a number of stories about the early days of Jolie’s relationship with her Smithco-star Brad Pitt.
In what ultimately has proved to be a successful argument with Fitzgerald, News Corp and News International’s lawyers filed a motion in September to throw out the case or have it moved to Britain. They argued that the case should be tossed from the U.S. courts because Huthart’s cell was a UK phone with a UK company and Mulcaire’s alleged actions against her originated in the UK. “Huthart argues that California also has an interest in this litigation because her voicemail messages were hacked not only when she was in England, but also when she was in Los Angeles,” noted Fitzgerald. “Even assuming that Huthart’s messages were stored temporarily in the United States and transmitted using United States-based networks, this activity does not create a sufficiently strong interest to outweigh the private interest factors and England’s strong interest in this action. That’s music to News Corp’s ears because the company also wanted Huthart’s case moved to a Brit jurisdiction because “a trial on these matters in the United States would be complex, expensive, and burdensome for a Court with one of the most congested dockets in the United States.”
News Corp and the other defendants were represented in court by Louis Karasik of LA firm Alston & Bird LLP along with Joseph Terry and Jonathan Pitt of D.C. firm Williams & Connolly LLP. Craig Stein of LA’s The Stein Law Firm as well Steven Hyman, Paul Levinson, and Bruce Langer of McLaughlin & Stern, LLP and Norman Siegel and Sara Lee Evans of Siegel Teitelbaum & Evans LLP repped Huthart.
http://www.deadline.com/2014/05/angelina-jolie-stunt-double-phone-hacking-lawsuit-dismissed-news-corp/