In a court hearing on Saturday, ODB, who also goes by the nom de
guerre Big Baby Jesus, maintained his innocence, saying he was
holding a cell phone and not a gun. Peter Frankel, ODB's lawyer,
says the other passenger in the car, Frederick Cuffie, corroborated
the report, and that they are now awaiting results of a paraffin
test which should reveal whether ODB actually fired a weapon at the
police (various reports claim that a gun was never found).
"[ODB] is sticking by what he's said all along: that he didn't have
a gun and he didn't fire a gun," says Frankel. "The only way [the
police will] get a positive result is if [ODB] fired a weapon.
Based on what he said, it's not going to happen." As of Tuesday
morning, ODB was still being held at Riker's Island Correctional
Facility in New York waiting for friends and family to come up with
$150,000 bail. Frankel was confident his client would be out of
jail on Tuesday. ODB is expected to return to court on Thursday. If
found guilty on the first-degree murder charge, he faces a maximum
sentence of life in prison . . .
During Monday night's episode of Ally McBeal, the waifish
lawyer represented a woman whose husband claimed that their
nine-year marriage was bogus. Funny how life imitates art. Now
Mick Jagger is claiming his eight-year wedlock
with Jerry Hall was also a sham. Tuesday morning
(Jan. 19) reports revealed that the Rolling Stone says the Buddhist
ceremony in which he and Hall were married on the Indonesian island
of Bali in 1990 didn't constitute legal nuptials.
A statement released by Jagger's spokespeople said the marriage
wasn't legal because Hall hadn't converted to Hinduism and the
couple lacked the appropriate legal forms to make the marriage
binding by the Indonesian government. The BBC reports, however,
that "local laws are very flexible for couples wanting to marry.
You don't need to be a Hindu to marry under Hindu law ... Couples
do not need documentary proof to prove they have been married" . .
.
Prolific British avant-rock composer Bryn Jones,
who recorded under the moniker Muslimgauze, died
this weekend in a Manchester hospital after contracting what
doctors described as "a rare blood fungus that ravaged his immune
system." He was thirty-five years old. As Muslimgauze, Jones -- who
kept a very low public profile -- recorded more than ninety
full-length albums over the course of the past fifteen years. His
compositions were often minimal, usually percussion-based and
peppered with elements of Middle Eastern culture.
Jones said that he was inspired to undertake the Muslimgauze
project after Israel's invasion of Lebanon in 1983: Subsequent
albums like Hebron Massacre, Abu Nidal and
Vote Hezbollah also painstakingly explored troubles in
that region. Despite the contentious tone of his rhetoric -- in
interviews and album packaging, Jones openly advocated the
terrorist tactics of what he viewed as "oppressed peoples" trying
to "throw off the shackles of their enslavers" -- Muslimgauze's
music was usually pacific and ethereal. The last full-length album
that he completed, Hussein Mahmood Jeeb Tehar Gass, will
be released in America early next month by Soleilmoon Records . .
.
The RSN Staff
(January 19, 1999)
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