Archive for the ‘Virus Killer’ Category

Fugitive McAfee blogs on the run

19 November 2012 Last updated at 07:46 ET

The founder of anti-virus software maker McAfee has gone on the run in Belize following a police investigation into the murder of his neighbour.

Protesting his innocence, Mr McAfee said via his blog that he had gone into hiding following police "harassment".

Belize police said Mr McAfee was a "person of interest" in the murder of Florida businessman Gregory Faull.

The authorities said they wanted to talk to him to help investigate the circumstances surrounding the death.

Mr Faull was found dead of a single gunshot to the head on 11 November. His Belize home sits next to the compound Mr McAfee maintains, on a tropical island. Mr Faull is known to have had a long-running row with Mr McAfee about the multi-millionaire fugitive's dogs.

On his blog, Mr McAfee said he was writing to publicise the treatment he had received at the hands of the police in Belize. Mr McAfee said he had nothing to do with the death of Mr Faull. Belize police said he should come forward to help them track down the killer.

Mr McAfee said he was hiding so he could keep an eye on his home and what the police did to investigate Mr Faull's death.

To go unnoticed, Mr McAfee revealed that he had changed his appearance by dying his hair and beard, stuck chewed bubble gum to his upper gums to fatten his face and stained his teeth.

He said he took these steps so he could stay close to his Belize home and conduct his own investigation into Mr Faull's death, adding that he had little faith that the island's police would find the murderer.

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Fugitive McAfee blogs on the run

John McAfee's Ex Says He Lives 'In Constant Fear,' And For Good Reason

By Radar Staff

An ex-girlfriend of suspected killer John McAfee -- the anti-virus software guru who started McAfee Associates in 1989 -- says the 67-year-old is justified in his paranoia that authorities in Belize are out to get him.

"He's in constant fear, paranoid," the woman -- only identified as "Francesca" -- told CNN. "I would say it's because of what he has been through."

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As we previously reported, Belize officials seek to speak with the eccentric McAfee about the shooting death of his neighbor, and fellow American, Gregory Faull.McAfee has evaded officials, claiming he and those close to him have been wrongly targeted since the incident.

"He thinks people are always after him, which they really are right now," Francesca said, adding she speaks to McAfee "not often, once a day, or hardly ever" since his issues with police emerged.

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"It will never be ended until John is dead," Francesca said. "That's what I believe, until [police] kill him."

Francescasaid she's unsure of where his physical location is at this time.

Watch the video on RadarOnline.com

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John McAfee's Ex Says He Lives 'In Constant Fear,' And For Good Reason

Blogging on the run: John McAfee swears to keep site alive if captured

Anti-virus pioneer and now murder suspect John McAfee has vowed to keep his blog alive if hes captured by Belizian authorities.

McAfee is the lead suspect in the murder of his neighbour Gregory Faull. The American retiree was found floating in his pool with a gun shot wound to the back of his head.

The software billionaire has since been on the run, claiming to have hidden in sand with a box over his head while police searched his property on the island of Ambergris Caye off the coast of Belize. At the time he said there was absolutely no chance he would leave Belize.

In a blog post which went live today, acknowledges the possibility that authorities might catch up with him. He reassures his readers however that the blog will continue indefinitely in such an event:

If I am captured, this blog will continue. I have pre-written enough material to keep this blog alive for at least a year. In addition, the administrator, Chad, will continue to monitor comments. He will administer the reward and post any information received. In truth my continued involvement from this point is irrelevant.

In the event that I am captured, please continue to support this cause. It is a just cause and it needs International attention.

In an earlier post, which also went up today, he details the lengths hes gone to in order to remain hidden from authorities, having been on the run for about a week:

The first day I colored my full beard and my hair light grey- almost white. I darkened the skin of my face, neck and hands carefully with shoe polish and put on an LA Saints baseball cap with the brim facing backwards and tufts of the front of my hair sticking out unkempt through the band. I stuffed my cheeks with chewed bubble gum stuck to the outside of my upper and lower molars making my face appear much fatter. I darkened and browned my front teeth. I stuffed a shaved down tampon deep into my right nostril and died the tip dark brown giving my nose an awkward, lopsided, disgusting appearance. I put on a pair of ragged brown pants with holes patched and darned. I wore an old, ragged long sleeve shirt. I donned an old Guatemalan style sarape and toted a bag containing a variety of Guatemalan woven goods. I adjusted my posture so that I appeared a good six inches shorter than my actual height and slowly walked up and down the beach with a pronounced limp, pushing an old single speed bicycle and peddling my wares to tourists and reporters using a broken English with a heavy Spanish accent. On my second day, while peddling small wooden carvings, I nearly sold a dolphin carving to an Associated Press reporter standing at the edge of my dock. He was pulled away from my enticement by an urgent phone call.McAfee is convinced that police are more concerned with finding him than Faulls killer. Hes also announced that hes put up a US$25 000 reward for the capture of Faulls killer.

According to The Next Web, McAfee has been in trouble before. He was the subject of a wrongful death suit and also misled a journalist writing a feature for FastCompany.

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Blogging on the run: John McAfee swears to keep site alive if captured

‘Quarantine’ by John Smolens is half plague narrative, half historical romance

Disease, it seems, is the disaster du jour. Whether its the vampiric virus in Justin Cronins The Twelve, the SARS-like epidemic in Lauren Groffs Arcadia or the killer flu that wipes out 99 percent of the worlds population in Peter Hellers The Dog Stars, contemporary culture seems addicted to fantasies about its own vulnerability to contagion.

Unlike most recent entrants into this crowded field, John Smolenss Quarantine doesnt feature an imaginary disease or a contemporary setting. Instead, it uses one of the many outbreaks of yellow fever that afflicted American cities in the late 18th and early 19th centuries as the springboard for a novel that is half plague narrative, half historical romance.

(Pegasus) - Quarantine by John Smolens

The story opens in June 1796 with the arrival of the trading ship Miranda, in Newburyport, Mass., from the Caribbean. On board are molasses and lumber, as well as horses for the ships dissolute owner, local grandee Enoch Sumner. But with them comes a fever that has already claimed the lives of the captain and many of the crew.

Summoned to inspect the ship, the surgeon Giles Wiggins, Enochs half brother and a veteran of the War of Independence, elects to quarantine it. Enoch, whose excesses have brought him to the brink of ruin, does not take that decision lightly. Yet when those on shore begin to die as well, Giles elects to pursue more drastic measures, quarantining the port and establishing a pesthouse on the outskirts of town.

Theres a lovely spaciousness to these early sections, especially the opening chapter, in which Giles and various others make their way out to the dying ship anchored in the port. One of the problems in any historical novel is striking an effective balance between information and imagination. At first blush, Quarantine looks like the kind of novel likely to err on the side of information, but it only occasionally feels overburdened with explanation or detail, usually in the form of overly expository dialogue. (Much of the wealth of this town was earned from privateering during the war activities we now treat with all due patriotic respect.)

Indeed, if anything, Quarantine feels a little underdone historically. It gives too little sense of the foreignness of the past or of the gulf between the minds of its characters and our own. Even the debates about the fevers causes between Giles, who correctly intuits a connection to mosquitoes, and his more conservative colleagues, who believe it to be a result of volcanic effusions or divine will, are oddly muted, capturing little of the intellectual ferment that gripped medical science in the late 18th century.

That problem is also evident in the chapters dealing with the spread of the fever. Theres something peculiarly unsettling about plague narratives, not least because they lay bare deep anxieties about our mortality and our capacity to control natural forces. But as works such as Camus La Peste make clear, the true power of the plague narrative lies in the capacity of disease to strip away the artifice of society and reveal the true face beneath.

Quarantine is not blind to this power. As the disease spreads, the divisions beneath the surface of Newburyport begin to emerge. Some are religious, reflecting the tension between those who regard the disease as the wages of sin and those who see it in more scientific terms. Others divisions are economic and social, driven not just by the tension between rich and poor and black and white, but by the lingering effects of the War of Independence. Still other divisions are more basic, reflecting the struggle between those, like Giles, who feel an obligation to their fellow human beings and those who see an opportunity to profit from the misfortune of others.

Yet despite their power, these questions are quickly pushed aside in favor of a series of increasingly implausible plots involving the machinations of the Sumner household, a mysterious French beauty and a cache of stolen medicine, plots that culminate in a chase on the high seas, cannon fire and, finally, the tragic death of one of the characters.

Originally posted here:
‘Quarantine’ by John Smolens is half plague narrative, half historical romance

DNR: Lakeshore area herds not affected as much as inland areas by virus

Thousands of Michigan hunters are donning orange, hefting guns and hitting the woods as firearm deer hunting season starts today.

But another killer has been ahead of them. Epizootic hemorrhagic disease, or EHD, has a record number of outbreaks among the state's deer herd, according to the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

Brent Rudolph, the deer and elk program leader at the Michigan DNR, said that before 2012, the record number of counties reporting EHD outbreaks was six.

"This year, we're at 30," he said.

Officials from the DNR have placed stricter limits on the number of antlerless deer permits given to hunters and are asking hunters to report deer that may have died from EHD, or that have hooves identifying them as having survived the disease in the past.

The local deer herd are veterans of a virus that has been in southwest Michigan for three years now. As a result they haven't been as hard-hit by the virus this year as other inland areas, said Steve Chadwick, wildlife regional supervisor in the DNR's Plainwell office.

"Along the lakeshore, expectations are similar to what they have been," Chadwick said. "Because the lakeshore counties had the disease in the past, it's possible that they had built up an immunity to the virus."

Chadwick is asking hunters to report harvested deer that have abnormal hooves a sign of the disease, which interrupts the hooves' growth.

The disease also attacks small blood vessels in the deer and causes extensive internal bleeding. It's caused by a virus is transmitted by a type of biting fly called a midge. The disease isn't a threat to humans.

Rudolph said the disease isn't new and usually crops up on years when wild winters allow the midge flies to thrive. A number of other factors this year, including the drought, made it an especially good year for the bugs.

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DNR: Lakeshore area herds not affected as much as inland areas by virus