Friday, May 15, 2015

Juventus beat Real Madrid, Evra fought a ballboy and Casillas let it go: the ...



Morata. It had to be him. Football has a novelists soul. Sadistic, but a novelists. Morata, the lad from the academy. The striker who was no use. When he left for Madrid there was no lack of people who imagined whats just happened. We all heard it, in the mouth of another, or in our own heads, though we paid it little attention. More than a prediction it was a premonition, a possibility we expressed to invalidate it, as we do so often, with so little success. As if, how could we meet him in the Champions League? As if, how could Alvarito knock Madrid out... Well it happened. Morata scored in Turin and he did it again in the Bernabu; there was no more important player in the tie, nobody at his level. It obviously hurt him and its easy to guess it still does. On being substituted in the 83rd minute lvaro left the field, clasping his hands together, pleading for divine forgiveness. He shouldnt worry, hes forgiven. If, moreover, he wants to be blessed and repatriated with a presentation in the Bernabu he only needs to bring Barcelona down in Berlin. The president could then say, without being wrong, that Morata was born to play for Madrid.

Source: http://www.theguardian.com/football/2015/may/14/juventus-real-madrid-evra-ballboy-iker-casillas-reaction-champions-league



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Thursday, May 14, 2015

North Korea Nuclear Timeline Fast Facts



Here are some facts and a timeline around North Korea's nuclear capabilities and history.

1985North Korea joins the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

1993International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) charges that North Korea is violating the NPT and demands that inspectors be given access to two nuclear waste storage sites.

North Korea threatens to quit the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty amid suspicions that it is developing nuclear weapons. It ultimately does not quit the program but agrees to inspections in 1994.

1994North Korea and U.S. sign an agreement. North Korea pledges to freeze and eventually dismantle its nuclear weapons program in exchange for international aid to build two power-producing nuclear reactors.

1998August 31 - North Korea fires a multistage rocket that flies over Japan and lands in the Pacific Ocean, proving the North Koreans can strike any part of Japan's territory.

November 17 - The U.S. and North Korea hold the first round of high-level talks in Pyongyang over North Korea's suspected construction of an underground nuclear facility. The United States demands inspections.

1999February 27-March 16 - During a fourth round of talks, North Korea allows U.S. access to the site in exchange for U.S. aid in increasing North Korean potato yields. U.S. inspectors find no evidence of any nuclear activity during a visit to site in May.

September 13 - North Korea agrees to freeze testing of long-range missiles while negotiations with the U.S. continue.

September 17 - President Bill Clinton agrees to ease economic sanctions against North Korea.

December - A U.S.-led international consortium signs a $4.6 billion contract to build two nuclear reactors in North Korea.

2000July - North Korea threatens to restart its nuclear program if the U.S. does not compensate it for the loss of electricity caused by delays in building nuclear power plants.

2001June - North Korea warns it will drop its moratorium against testing missiles if the U.S. does not pursue normalized relations with North Korea. It also says it will restart its nuclear program if there is not more progress on two U.S.-sponsored nuclear power plants being built in North Korea.

2002January 29 - President George W. Bush labels North Korea, Iran and Iraq an "axis of evil" in his State of the Union address. "By seeking weapons of mass destruction, these regimes pose a grave and growing danger," he says.

October 4 - U.S. officials, in closed talks, confront North Korea with evidence that they are operating a nuclear weapons program in violation of the 1994 nuclear agreement. Specifically, the U.S. has proof that they are operating an uranium enrichment facility. North Korea admits that is has been operating the facility in violation of the agreement. The information is NOT made public.

October 16 - The Bush Administration first reveals that North Korea has admitted operating a secret nuclear weapons program in violation of the 1994 agreement. They have NOT, apparently, admitted having any nuclear weapons.

December 22 - North Korea says it has begun removing IAEA monitoring equipment from nuclear facilities.

December 31 - North Korea expels IAEA inspectors.

2003January 10 - North Korea withdraws from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

February 5 - North Korea's official news agency says the nation has reactivated its nuclear power facilities.

February 24 - North Korea test fires a land-to-ship missile into the sea between the Korean Peninsula and Japan.

February 26 - The United States says North Korea has reactivated its five-megawatt nuclear reactor at Yongbyon.

March 10 - North Korea test fires another surface-to-vessel anti-ship missile into the Sea of Japan.

April 23 - Declares it has nuclear weapons.

August 27 - The U.S., North Korea, South Korea, China, Japan and Russia take part in talks about the crisis in North Korea.

2004February 24-28 - The U.S., North Korea, South Korea, China, Japan and Russia meet in Beijing, China for more talks. The summit closes with no major progress but with an agreement for more talks.

June - The six nations meet again in Beijing for more talks.

August 2004 - North Korea offers to freeze its nuclear program in exchange for aid, easing of sanctions and being removed from the U.S,' list of state sponsors of terrorism. The U.S. wants North Korea to disclose all nuclear activities and allow inspections.

2005February 10 - North Korea drops out of six-party nuclear talks and says it will bolster its nuclear weapons arsenal. North Korea insists on a bilateral non-aggression pact with the U.S. before it will consider dismantling its nuclear program. The U.S. insists Pyongyang must first agree to permanently and verifiably dismantle its nuclear weapons program before it will grant any incentives, including economic assistance and diplomatic recognition.

August 7 - After meeting for 13 straight days, diplomats from the United States, North Korea and four other Asia-region powers decide to take a recess from talks aimed at getting North Korea to dismantle its nuclear program.

September 13 - The six-party talks resume in Beijing.

September 19 - North Korea agrees to give up its entire nuclear program, including weapons, a joint statement from six-party nuclear arms talks in Beijing said. "The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) committed to abandoning all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs and returning at an early date to the treaty on the nonproliferation of nuclear weapons (NPT) and to IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) safeguards," the statement said.- In exchange, the U.S., China, Japan, Russian and South Korea have "stated their willingness" to provide energy assistance to North Korea, as well as promote economic cooperation.- North Korean officials later state that their country would begin dismantling its nuclear program only if the U.S. provides a light-water reactor for civilian power -- a demand that could threaten a day-old agreement among North Korea, its neighbors and the United States. "Without this physical guarantee of the (light-water reactor), our position is not to even dream of us giving up our nuclear deterrence."

2006July 4 - North Korea test-launches a Taepodong-2 missile along with two short-range rockets, but the long-range missile apparently fails.

July 15 - The UN Security Council unanimously passes a resolution demanding that North Korea suspend its missile program. The North Korean ambassador immediately rejects the resolution.

October 9 - North Korea claims to have successfully tested a nuclear weapon. The supposed test is conducted at an underground facility in Hwaderi near Kilju city. Though the nature of the blast as nuclear remains unconfirmed, South Korea's geology research center detects an artificial earthquake in the region of the test, and world leaders condemn North Korea's actions (test conducted at 10:36 a.m. local time or 9:36 p.m. Eastern time on 10/8/2006).

October 14 - The UN Security Council approves a resolution imposing sanctions against North Korea, restricting military and luxury goods trade and requiring an end to nuclear and ballistic missile tests.

October 16 - An analysis of air samples collected on October 11, 2006 detects radioactive debris, confirming North Korea's nuclear test.

2007February 13 - North Korea agrees to close its main nuclear reactor in exchange for an aid package worth $400 million.

March 5-6 - U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill meets with his North Korean counterpart, Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan, to discuss North Korea's nuclear program.

March - During six-party talks, the U.S. agrees to release approximately $25 million of North Korean funds frozen at a Macao bank, a sticking point in the negotiations. The actual release of funds does not occur until June.

June 25 - After spending two days in Pyongyang meeting with North Korea's nuclear negotiator, the U.S. envoy to North Korea, Chris Hill, says that North Korea has reaffirmed its commitment to the nuclear disarmament agreement reached in February. He also says North Korea has invited the IAEA to monitor the shutdown of the Yongbyon nuclear facility, scheduled to occur within a few weeks.

September 2 - U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill announces that after talks in Geneva between U.S. and North Korean officials, North Korea has agreed to fully declare and disable its nuclear programs by the end of 2007.

September 30 - At six-party talks in Beijing, North Korea signs an agreement stating it will begin disabling its nuclear weapons facilities. North Korea also agrees to include a U.S. team of technical experts in the disabling activities.

October 2, 2007 - South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun becomes the first South Korean leader to walk across the Demilitarized Zone separating North and South Korea on his way to a three-day summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il.

October 4, 2007 - North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun sign an eight-point agreement in Pyongyang; among other things, it calls for a smooth implementation of the six-party agreements to shut down of North Korea's nuclear facilities and the replacement of North and South Korea's current armistice agreement with a permanent peace.

November 14-16, 2007 - North Korean Prime Minister Kim Yong Il and South Korean Prime Minister Han Duck-soo meet in Seoul, South Korea. At the end of the summit, they announce a number of economic projects including cross-border cargo train services, road repairs, and construction of a new industrial complex near Haeju, North Korea.

December 31 - North Korea misses a deadline to declare all its nuclear programs.

2008January 4 - The North Korean Foreign Ministry states, via broadcast message, that North Korea had already provided enough explanation to meet the 12/31/2007 deadline, and that it had provided that information in a report presented to the U.S. in November. Members of the six party talks dispute this claim.

February 21 - After meeting with North Korean Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan, South Korean envoy Chun Yung Woo states that North Korea still plans to meet the obligations it agreed to during six-party talks in 2007.

May 8 - An official with the U.S. State Department announces that North Korea has handed over thousands of documents pertaining to its nuclear activities, especially related to its production of plutonium, to visiting U.S. official Sohn Kim. Another official puts the number of documents at 18,000 to 19,000.

June 27 - North Korea destroys a water cooling tower at the Yongbyon facility, where officials now acknowledge they extracted plutonium to build nuclear weapons. The massive implosion is intended to be a powerful public symbol of a move to end nuclear activities by the communist nation.

September 24 - At the request of North Korea, the IAEA removes surveillance equipment and seals from the Yongbyon nuclear facility.

October 11 - U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack announces that North Korea has been removed from the U.S. list of states that sponsor terrorism.

October 10-17 - In response to the U.S. move, North Korea replaces the seals and surveillance equipment at its Yongbyon nuclear facility.

December 8-11 - Another round of six-party talks is held in Beijing, China. The talks break down over North Korea's refusal to allow international inspectors unfettered access to suspected nuclear sites.

2009January - U.S. scholar Selig Harrison meets with senior officials in North Korea. After the meeting he reports that the officials have claimed that North Korea has weaponized most of its plutonium stockpile. The amount of weaponized plutonium is allegedly enough for four to five nuclear bombs.

April 25 - North Korea announces it has begun reprocessing spent fuel rods.

May 25 - North Korea announces it has conducted its second nuclear test shortly after the U.S. Geological Survey reports a magnitude 4.7 seismic disturbance at the site of North Korea's first nuclear test. The White House is reporting that North Korea also test-fired a short range missile.

June 12 - The UN Security Council approves Resolution 1874, condemning North Korea's May 25th nuclear test. The UN also imposes new sanctions, banning the sale of most arms to or from North Korea.

November 3 - North Korea's state-run news agency reports that the reprocessing of 8,000 spent nuclear fuel rods has been completed. The reprocessing garnered enough weapons-grade plutonium for one to two nuclear bombs.

2010November 20 - According to a report by Stanford University professor Siegfried Hecker, North Korea has a new nuclear enrichment facility composed of 2,000 centrifuges. Hecker was given unprecedented access to North Korea's facility and documents.

2011October 24-25 - U.S. officials, led by U.S. Ambassador Stephen Bosworth, meet with a North Korean delegation, led by First Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye-gwan, in Geneva, Switzerland, in an effort to restart the six-party nuclear arms talks that broke down in 2008.

December 15 - U.S. and North Korean officials meet in Beijing to discuss possible food assistance to North Korea in exchange for the suspension of North Korea's uranium enrichment program.

2012January 11 - North Korea indicates that it is open to further discussions with the U.S. over suspending its uranium enrichment program in exchange for food aid, an agreement that seemed close to realization before Kim Jong Il's death on December 17, 2011.

February 29 - The U.S. State Department announces that North Korea has agreed to a moratorium on long-range missile launches and nuclear activity at Yongbyon, the nation's major nuclear facility.

April 10 - Ryu Kun Chol, the deputy director of the Space Development Department of the Korea Space Technology Committee, outlines the country's plans to complete and launch a rocket within the next seven days. Japan, South Korea and the U.S. believe the launch to be a cover-up for testing a long-range ballistic missile.

April 13 - North Korea's long-range rocket launch is a failure. Shortly after launch, it breaks apart and falls into the sea.

May 24 - A spokesperson for South Korea's Defense Ministry says that based on analysis of commercial satellite images at North Korea's nuclear test site, North Korea appears ready to carry out a nuclear test at any time.

December 12 - North Korea successfully launches an Unha-3 long-range rocket from the Sohae Space Center in Cholsan County and puts a "working satellite" into orbit, days after Pyongyang suggested the launch could be delayed.

2013January 24 - North Korea's National Defense Commission says it will continue nuclear testing and long-range rocket launches, all of which are a part of an "upcoming all-out action" aimed at the United States, "the sworn enemy of the Korean people." Two days prior to this statement, the United Nations Security Council condemned a recent rocket launch by North Korea and expanded sanctions.

February 12 - Conducts its third underground nuclear test. This is the first nuclear test carried out under leader Kim Jong Un.

2014February 27 - According to South Korean Defense Ministry, North Korea launches four scud missiles into the sea off its eastern coast. The scud missiles were fired in the direction of Russia and fell into the sea.

March 3 - According to South Korean Defense Ministry, North Korea fires two short-range missiles off its eastern coast. This is the second launch in less than a week.

Oct. 2 - A senior North Korean envoy says the country is ready to resume the six-party talks regarding its nuclear program. However, referring to joint exercises by South Korea and the United States, So Se Pyong, North Korea's ambassador to the UN, said the DPRK "have to be alert also, we have to be prepared to make counter measures against military exercise which are against us."

2015May 6, 2015 - Park Yong Chol, deputy director of the DPRK Institute for Research into National Reunification, tells CNN in an exclusive interview that his country has the missile capability to strike mainland United States and would do so if the U.S. "forced their hand."

May 9, 2015 - The North Korean state news agency reports that the country has carried out a successful underwater test of a ballistic missile by launching it from a submarine.

Source: http://www.wptz.com/national/north-korea-nuclear-timeline-fast-facts/33027956



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North Korea's Economy Shows Signs of Improving



SEOUL

Although the reported purge of North Koreas defense chief and other high ranking officials may point to instability within the Kim Jong Un regime, the countrys economy has shown signs of improving. Under Kim Jong Un, the country has seen lower numbers of defectors trying to escape to the more prosperous South.

In the wake of the reported execution of North Koreas Armed Forces Minister Hyon Yong Chol and three other high-ranking officials, there have been no outward signs of instability in the Kim Jong Un regime.

South Koreas Defense Ministry says there has been no change in military readiness posture on either side of the border. North Korea did begin live-fire drills at sea near the border, but they conducted similar drills last year.

The countrys economy has also been improving, despite tough international sanctions imposed on Pyongyang for a variety of provocative actions, most importantly its continued development of nuclear weapons.

In 2014, the Hyundai Economic Research Institute in Seoul forecast that North Koreas economy would grow by seven percent a year for 10 years. This may be overly optimistic but the country has experienced positive growth for the past three years.

And according to South Koreas Unification Ministry the number of North Korean refugees entering South Korea dropped by more than 50 percent in 2009 to about 1,300 in 2014.

Part of the reason for this decline is that Pyongyang, during the tenure of Kim Jong Un, has increased the number of border guards and instituted harsher punishments for Koreans caught attempting to illegally cross the border. And because it is more difficult and dangerous to escape, it is also more expensive. It can cost thousands of dollars to pay smugglers and bribe border guards, to illegally cross over the border into China.

But Andrei Lankov, a professor of North Korea history at Kookmin University in Seoul, also credits the young supreme leader for taking a more practical approach to managing the economy to give more workers a financial incentive to operate within the system.

A case in point, he said, is the increase of legal migrant labor programs that send low wage North Korean workers to China, Russia and the Middle East. By allowing these laborers to work overseas, with the caveat that their families would be held accountable if they do not return, Professor Lankov said Kim Jong Un is giving workers a viable alternative to defecting.

He understands that he cannot completely stop North Koreans especially from the border regions from running to China where their income is so much higher. So what he did he tried to introduce some control by essentially accepting this, said Lankov.

Human rights groups, like the Seoul-based Database Center for North Korean Human Rights, describe the controls imposed by Pyongyang as inhumane treatment. These migrant workers often toil long hours under harsh conditions and have no legal rights or recourse. Their passports are confiscated and they are allowed to keep only a portion of the wages they earn.

Still, these are sought after jobs in North Korea, where workers in many state run operations do not get paid at all. And legal migrant laborers dont put their families back home at risk of imprisonment, as do defectors who try to escape the repressive state.

Since the famine that struck North Korea in the late 1990s, when about one million people died of starvation, Pyongyang has slowly instituted some market-based reforms to the state run communist system to allow farmers to keep a portion of what they earn. Under Kim Jong Un some state owned enterprises have been given the latitude to operate essentially as private businesses.

Professor Lankov said the economic system now is a ruthless type of capitalism, rife with exploitation, but it is working.

They are rewarded for the hard labor and they are punished for inefficiency. Because it is a very brutal type of capitalism there, really brutal. No social security. Nothing. If you dont make money, you just starve to death, he said.

Professor Lankov said North Koreas apparent improved economic performance does not necessarily equate to increased stability within the Kim Jong Un regime. But he says it is important to note the country is not on the verge of starvation or economic collapse.

VOA Seoul Producer Youmi Kim contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.voanews.com/content/north-korea-economy-shows-signs-of-improving/2767071.html



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Harriet Tubman On the $20 Bill Is Chump Change



North Wind Picture Archives/AP American abolitionist Harriet Tubman (1820 - 1913) escaped slavery and went on to lead the Underground Railroad.

Sierra Mannie is a writer based in Mississippi.

When I read that an appeal for Harriet Tubmans image to grace the front of the U.S. $20 bill would soon land on the Secretary of the Treasurys desk, I was, to say the least, underwhelmed.

Earlier this year the group Women on 20s launched a poll asking who people would rather see on a $20 bill instead of seventh president Andrew Jackson. Harriet Tubman won. As a black woman and a feminist (and as someone who once played Harriet Tubman in her second-grade class play), I am painfully aware of the major impact that representation or a lack thereof has on the reflection of societal progress of underprivileged groups. Recalling the social media whirlpool of anguish after Michelle Obamas jubilant, self-affirming speech of black womanhood at BETs Black Girls Rock event last month cries of reverse racism and even a #metoo hashtag that proclaimed #whitegirlsrock its obvious that America is past-due for getting over its centuries of misogynoir.

But Harriet Tubman on a $20 bill is chump change.

Its not that I dont want to see her on my money, but there is a bitter irony to putting a black woman on a $20 bill when America makes it nearly impossible for black women to see Andrew Jacksons face there in the first place.

Black women from slaves to First Ladies have served and suffered for as long as we have existed in this country, in every imaginable way. But despite the centuries of black female triumph as we toil through merely living in this unfriendly nation, built on our backs, the rest of the world gets to pick and choose whether or not were worthy of acknowledgement. We are either muted, the unseen, or blaring, painful to the senses. And the strident force in blocking us out is pervasive. Black men killed by the police get widespread media attention, for better or worse; we cannot say the same of the very many women brutalized or killed by law enforcement, or of the black trans women murdered at alarming rates. The leech of poverty, existing at the crossroads of capitalism and racism, disproportionately affects women of all races, but especially black people.

All of these small calamities are residual evils of the institution of slavery that Harriet Tubman risked her life, for decades, to try to dismantle. Black women need representation, but Harriet Tubman on a twenty feels like commiseration, a pat-on-the-back apology for being black and thats if she makes it there. If she does, it would always be a reminder (whenever $20 graces my presence, at least) that I deserve so much more justice.

Sierra Mannie is a writer based in Mississippi.

Read next: Dear White Gays: Stop Stealing Black Female Culture.

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TIME Ideas hosts the world's leading voices, providing commentary and expertise on the most compelling events in news, society, and culture. We welcome outside contributions. To submit a piece, email ideas@time.com.

Source: http://time.com/3857367/harriet-tubman-20-bill-slavery/



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Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Juventus vs Barcelona: Only 40000 of 70500 in stadium will be supporters ...



But the average supporter of Juventus or Barcelona is highly unlikely to get a chance to watch the game in the flesh, after Uefa only allocated 20,000 seats to each side in the 70,500 Olympiastadion in Berlin.

With a further 6,000 going on general sale, that leaves a whopping 24,500 seats that have been set aside for sponsors, corporate partners and Uefa members.

With tickets no longer on sale officially, supporters will now have to shell out huge amounts if they want to attend the game.

There are plenty of tickets still available on ticket exchange websites, but a search by The Independent revealed the cheapest tickets being sold on ticket exchange websites are now costing more than 1,500 each for single Category 4 seats, with Category 1 tickets going for around 3,000.

If you don't want to go alone, a premium is being put on multiple tickets - we found a pair of Category 1 seats at the half-way line for 12,000 each.

Hospitality packages, originally priced from 2,450 (1,768) are now fetching between 5,000 and 20,000 each.

If you had been quick and bought your tickets when they went on sale back in March, the face value was between 70 (50) for Category 4 and 390 (280) for Category 1.

Barcelona have averaged more than 70,000 people at their games at the Nou Camp this season, a stadium which holds almost 99,000.

Juventus average around 40,000 at their home matches but are easily the most well-supported and successful club in Italy.

More follows

Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/european/juventus-vs-barcelona-only-40000-of-70500-in-stadium-will-be-supporters-and-tickets-are-now-selling-for-up-to-12000-each-10247691.html



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The Witcher 3 on Xbox One Features Dynamic Scaling to 1080p



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From 900p to 1080p, in parts. By Nathan Lawrence

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt will dynamically upscale from 900p to 1080p in certain sections.

Developer CD Projekt RED has made the announcement via official statement and Xbox One gameplay video (below).

The video youre now watching is grabbed directly from an Xbox One console. Weve been working to give gamers an even better experience on Xbox One and, on day1, well bring you [Xbox One owners] dynamic scaling from 900p to 1080p," read a statement from the developer.

Were not much more than a week before launch, but were still fighting for every line of codewe want gamers to get the best possible experience we can deliver.

This news comes in the wake of the unlikelihood of a fidelity bump to coincide with the launch of DirectX 12.

Nathan Lawrence is a freelance writer from Sydney who feels a 200-hour cold coming on. Track him down onTwitter.

Source: http://www.ign.com/articles/2015/05/12/the-witcher-3-on-xbox-one-features-dynamic-scaling-to-1080p



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Isla Vista shooting: 2 suspects in custody



ISLA VISTA, Calif. (KABC) --

Two suspects were arrested in connection to a shooting near the UC Santa Barbara campus in Isla Vista, where two students suffered gunshot wounds.

The shooting occurred outside of a home in the 6500 block of Sabado Tarde Road, according to the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department. The UC Santa Barbara dorms are just a block away, and the main campus is about a five-minute walk from the scene.

Investigators said two individuals, identified as 22-year-old James Joshua Taylor from Lompoc and 19-year-old Jose Guadalupe Gutierrez from Goleta, entered the home shortly after 7 p.m. Monday. Authorities said the two UCSB male students who live in the home knew Gutierrez, but Gutierrez and Taylor are not students at UCSB.

While Taylor and Gutierrez were inside the home, an altercation occurred, and the two UCSB students suffered gunshot wounds. Deputies said one was shot once in the abdomen and the other received a through-and-through wound in the chest. Both students were transported to Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, where they were treated for their wounds. Both are expected to survive.

After the altercation, Taylor was held down by other residents in the home until law enforcement arrived on scene. Taylor was transported to Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital to be treated for head wounds he sustained in the altercation. He is also expected to survive.

Gutierrez fled the scene in what was described as a white four-door sedan.

A short time later, a Hispanic male arrived at Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital with injuries he said he sustained from a car accident on the UCSB campus. Deputies later learned that this individual was the suspect they were looking for and that his injuries were from the altercation, not a car crash.

Both suspects were arrested. Due to their injuries, they were kept in the hospital until they can be released and booked into the Santa Barbara County Jail.

A motive for the shooting remains under investigation. Detectives are looking into the possibility that drugs may have been involved.

Such incidents are not necessarily rare, according to the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department.

"We find that Isla Vista attracts outsiders who come in, some of them, with criminal intent," said Kelly Hoover with the sheriff's department.

The big law enforcement response following the shooting put UCSB and the surrounding dorms on lockdown for about two hours.

"We walked down there and we saw two guys that were just laying on the steps, like walking up to their apartment. They looked like they had been shot. We saw like b****y clothing, but it didn't look super serious because when we saw them get into the ambulance, they looked pretty stable," said witness Collin Mack.

Taylor was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, robbery, discharge of a firearm in the commission of a felony causing great bodily injury and participation in a criminal street gang.

Gutierrez was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, robbery, possession of a stolen firearm, participating in a criminal street gang and discharge of a firearm in the commission of a felony causing great bodily injury.

The shooting comes nearly a year after 22-year-old Eliot Rodger went on a shooting spree in the college beach town. Rodger killed six people and injured 13 others before committing suicide.

"That was so much for this community to go through. Emotions are running high out here, just coming up on that anniversary," Hoover said. "So for this to happen right now, even though it's completely unrelated, just to have injured students in Isla Vista, it's just very, very, very hard to deal with."

If you have any additional information regarding this incident, you're urged to contact the sheriff's anonymous tip-line at (805) 681-4171.

(Copyright 2015 KABC-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

Source: http://abc7.com/news/isla-vista-shooting-2-suspects-in-custody/716151/



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