Friday, May 13, 2011

Bilal Says ‘Little One’ is About Autistic Kids Like His Son

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May 10, 2011 at 11:12 am Comments (1)     

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*It’s always touching when celebrities show a different side of themselves and reveal those things, people or issues that are close to their hearts.
Singer Bilal recently shared about raising an autistic son in which he dedicated his recent video, “Little One” to.
His oldest son, Bashir was diagnosed with Autism some over four years ago and with the video he hopes to raise awareness about the illness.
“I just wanted to do a song for the fathers,” Bilal told TheUrbandaily.com. “People always write songs from a mom’s perspective or to their moms. This is something I did for my children.”
Autism is a developmental disorder that typically appears in the first three years of a child’s life. The effects vary and can be from minimal to severe, affecting communication and social behavior.
“My son is high functioning so he deals with a lot of sensory overload and high energy,” says Bilal. “I do a lot of things to calm him down. I changed his diet. He’s on an all-gluten free diet.  I’ve also introduced different exercises and music to help him.  I have him playing the drums so it allows him to get out a lot of his energy. It also teaches him focus and rhythm.”
The singer also participated in the National Mall in D.C. for Autism walk last year and performed his song “Little One” for the audience of family members and supporters.
“It was also cool to talk to other parents and see their methods and what they go through with their child,” he says. “For us to share…it was an inspiring type of thing that was needed for all of us.”
The video for “Little One” follows a family that has recently found out their son is autistic and follows their reaction to it.
“A lot of it is their initial reaction to how it affects a family,” he explains. “I think it starts out as a grieving period but then you start to understand the child and figure out ways to help them and then it’s very rewarding.”
Watch the video:

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Obama way ahead for 2012 election




- Reuters


Washington - President Barack Obama has a wide lead over potential Republican rivals for the presidential election in 2012, but faces serious doubts about his handling of the US economy, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found on Wednesday.
The survey offered a boost for the US president after the killing of al0Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. Now, 45% of Americans believe he will win re-election, a 1O-point rise from a poll taken before November's congressional elections.
The survey is an indication of how difficult it will be for Republicans to dislodge an incumbent president in the November 2012 election.
Ipsos pollster Julia Clark said the Republican results are likely to improve as the field takes shape and Americans begin hearing more about Obama's challengers.
"Most people don't know much about any of these people, and plus there is always an advantage for the incumbent," she said.
The field of possible Republicans challengers to Obama has not generated much enthusiasm so far, with several waiting to announce their candidacy.
Obama, who made history in 2008 by becoming the first African-American to be elected president, leads possible Republican candidates by double digits.
He polls above 50% when compared to his closest rivals, former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, according to the poll.
Jobs the issue
Obama leads Huckabee by 51% to 39%, and Romney by 51% to 38%.
The president's approval rating is at 49%, a 3-point increase over last month, amounting to only a modest bounce after the May 2 bin Laden operation. Other surveys have given him a slightly larger post-bin Laden boost.
Obama got no lift on the economic front, the issue that is most likely to determine whether he wins again in 2012.
Only 34% of Americans approve of his handling of the economy, a finding linked directly to a surge in petrol prices to around $4 a gallon. It was the lowest approval for Obama on the economy in the Ipsos poll since he took office in January 2009.
Although employers have been hiring at a faster rate in recent months, Americans are still grappling with 9% unemployment.
"The economy and jobs are definitely the No 1 issues," said Ipsos pollster Julia Clark.
While the successful bin Laden mission pushed Obama's approval rating on handling terrorism to 59%, "that is probably not enough to swing an election because we know the economy is the most important issue," Clark said.
Wrong track
American attitudes about whether the country is on the right or wrong track have improved. Now, 56% think the country is on the wrong track, a marked improvement from the 69% who thought so last month.
The public also weighed in on the budget battle in Washington, and they showed a centrist attitude.
A majority of those surveyed, 52%, said they believe a combination of tax increases and spending cuts are best to bring down the $1.4 trillion deficit.
Republican lawmakers in Washington prefer budget cuts to rein in the budget, while Democrats would also like to raise taxes on the wealthy. Obama has called for a fair, balanced plan of budget cuts and tax increases on wealthier Americans.
"I think what this poll is telling is that there is a sensible middle when it comes to deficit reduction," Clark said.
The survey was conducted May 5-9. A randomly selected sample of 1 029 adults was interviewed by telephone, both landlines and cell phones. The results are considered accurate to within 3 percentage points. 

Record Low Employment Rate for African-American Males

Record Low employment rate



The overall Black employment rate is at its worst in decades.


President Barack Obama’s approval rating received a bump not only after the death of Osama bin Laden but also because 244,000 new jobs were added nationwide. But joy about the latter was not felt as widely in African-American communities—particularly by Black males.

According to the Department of Labor, the percentage of Black adult men with a job fell below 60 percent for the first time. The Labor Department’s April statistical report showed that just 56.9 percent of black males over 20 years of age held jobs, while 68.1 percent of white males were employed.

The overall employment rate for Blacks was also dismal, falling to its lowest point since 1984. In April, only 51.5 percent of African-Americans held jobs, compared with 59.5 percent of whites. The only small, very dim point of light, if one can call it that, was that the Black percentage was lowered somewhat by the inclusion of 16- to 19-year-olds, a group that is traditionally underemployed even in the best of  times.

In April, the unemployment rate for Blacks was 16.1 percent, for Latinos 11.8 percent and for whites 8.0 percent.

The social and political impact of continued high Black unemployment and underemployment can be measured, among other ways, by foreclosures, homelessness and health issues. But the most troublesome lingering problem may be the destruction of the dreams of adults and young people—dreams they will be able to create stable lives and provide economic hope for their children.

(Photo: Shannon Stapleton/Landov)

The impact of minimum wage boosts



San Antonio Express-News


Young, unskilled U.S. workers, especially those without a high school degree, had a tough time during the Great Recession.
Were these workers, age 16 to 24, hurt more by the recession or by the jump in the federal minimum wage that occurred during the middle of the recession, in July 2009?
The answer depends on the ethnicity of workers. Anglos, African Americans and Hispanics all lost jobs and employment opportunities because of the most recent minimum wage boosts. When labor costs go up, employers tend to not hire as many people.
A new national report co-authored by a Trinity University economics professor states that African American male youths were the ones hurt most, by both the wage boosts and the recession.
The study, “Unequal Harm,” conducted for the Washington-based Employment Policies Institute was written by Trinity's David Macpherson and labor economist William Even of Miami University in Ohio.
“Less-educated African Americans are disproportionately harmed by the minimum wage relative to whites and Hispanics,” Macpherson said.
Macpherson and Even looked at 1994-2010 Census Bureau data and found that each 10 percent increase in state or federal minimum wages decreased employment of African American male youths 6.5 percent.
For Anglos, the decrease was 2.5 percent. For Hispanics, it was 1.2 percent.
In the 21 states (Texas is one) where the effect of the 40 percent jump in the federal minimum wage between 2007 and 2010 could best be measured, more young African American males lost jobs due to the minimum wage increase, 18,463, than to the recession, 13,228.
Anglos and Hispanics suffered job losses from both causes, but they did so less from the wage boost than the recession.
In Texas, only 22.66 percent of young African American males who could be working are employed. A higher percentage of Hispanics, 33.82 percent, are working. The percentage for Anglos who are working is 24.31. The disparity is even worse in California, where only 9.16 percent of young black males who could be working have a job.
Why do young African American males suffer the most from the higher minimum wage? They tend to take jobs in restaurants and fast-food shops where costs have risen but prices remained steady. Hispanics more often take jobs in construction.
Construction may be less price-sensitive. Construction labor also is a smaller portion of total production costs, Macpherson said.
The report can be seen as critical of the minimum wage. Employers fought the most recent minimum wage boosts, predicting staff reductions. Employers sponsored the Macpherson-Even study, but Macpherson said his previous studies independent of the Employment Policies Institute found the same results.
More broadly, young, unskilled workers are caught in the globalization of labor. High-skill job wages are rising, but unskilled labor costs less in other countries. That makes unemployment rates for low-skilled workers go up, Macpherson said.
Macpherson said the best solution is to keep students in school longer and provide more skills training. Ending the minimum wage also would help. Macpherson said two f three workers who take minimum-wage jobs obtain better-paying jobs within a year because of the job experience they gain.
He speaks from personal experience. Macpherson, who has taught at Trinity for two years, said he once had a minimum-wage job at a McDonald's. It helped pay his way through Penn State University.
dhendricks@express-news.net


Read more: http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/article/The-impact-of-minimum-wage-boosts-1374186.php#ixzz1M5J6kYtC

Thursday, May 12, 2011

48 Women Raped Every Hour In Congo, Study Finds - Congo has been called the worst place on earth to be a woman




NPR

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DAKAR, Senegal May 11, 2011, 10:09 pm ET
The African nation of Congo has been called the worst place on earth to be a woman. A new study released Wednesday shows that it's even worse than previously thought: 1,152 women are raped every day, a rate equal to 48 per hour.
That rate is 26 times more than the previous estimate of 16,000 rapes reported in one year by the United Nations.
Michelle Hindin, an associate professor at Johns Hopkins' Bloomberg School of Public Health who specializes in gender-based violence, said the rate could be even higher. The source of the data, she noted, is a survey that was conducted through face-to-face interviews, and people are not always forthcoming about the violence they have suffered when talking to strangers.
"The numbers are astounding," she said.
Congo, a nation of 70 million people that is equal in size to Western Europe, has been plagued by decades of war. Its vast forests are rife with militias that have systematically used rape to destroy communities.
The analysis, which will be published in the American Journal of Public Health in June, shows that more than 400,000 women had been raped in Congo during a 12-month period between 2006 and 2007.
On average 29 Congolese women out of every 1,000 had been raped nationwide. That means that even in the parts of Congo that are not affected by the war, a woman is 58 times more likely to be raped than a woman in the United States, where the annual rate is 0.5 per 1,000 women.
Previous estimates of the number of rapes were derived from police and health center reports in the nation's troubled east where the conflict is concentrated. The authors of the study used figures from a government health survey and pooled data from across the country.
The highest frequency of rape was found in North Kivu, the province most affected by the conflict, where 67 women per 1,000 had been raped at least once.
"The message is important and clear: Rape in (Congo) has metastasized amid a climate of impunity, and has emerged as one of the great human crises of our time," said Michael VanRooyen, the director of the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative.
Margot Wallstrom, the U.N. special representative for sexual violence in conflict, welcomed the study.
"Conflict-related sexual violence is one of the major obstacles to peace in the DRC," she said in statement, using the initials for Congo. "Unchecked it could disrupt the entire social fabric of the country."
Wallstrom said the figures in the study are higher than the U.N.'s because it covers all sexual violence — including domestic and intimate partner violence — not just from military actors.
U.N. figures tend to be conservative because they must be verified by the organization itself, she said.
Wallstrom said she consistently stresses that "the number of reported violations are just the tip of the iceberg of actual incidents."
——
Associated Press Writers Saleh Mwanamilongo in Kinshasa, Congo, Edith Lederer in New York and Mike Stobbe in Atlanta contributed to this report.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Short, Bleak Life of Marchella Pierce, Emaciated 4-Year-Old

Marchella Pierce of Brooklyn died last year. Her mother, in white shirt, and grandmother, left, have been indicted.
Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
Marchella Pierce of Brooklyn died last year. Her mother, in white shirt, and grandmother, left, have been indicted.

New York Times
By N. R. KLEINFIELD and MOSI SECRET
Published: May 09, 2011
She died in September by the ugliest means, weighing an unthinkable 18 pounds, half what a 4-year-old ought to. She withered in poverty in a home in Brooklyn where the authorities said she had been drugged and often bound to a toddler bed by her mother, having realized a bare thimble's worth of living.
The horrid nature of Marchella Pierce's death produced four arrests. This week, Charles J. Hynes, the Brooklyn district attorney, is convening a grand jury to explore what he called "evidence of alleged systemic failures" in New York City's child welfare agency, which had monitored the girl's family.
An examination of Marchella's bleak, fleeting life, drawn from interviews with relatives, neighbors and law enforcement authorities, as well as from legal documents, shows that almost nothing went right for her. She entered the world prematurely with underdeveloped lungs. When she was not in a hospital, she was being raised in the uproar of a helter-skelter, combative family struggling with drugs. And when she came under the watch of the city's Administration for Children's Services, an agency remade a number of times after child deaths, her well-being fell to caseworkers who, prosecutors say, essentially ignored the family.
Marchella's household was brought to the agency's attention in late 2009, yet for several months after that it appears no one there knew that the girl, hospitalized for most of her life, even existed. After she was taken home from a nursing home, she was supposed to be looked after by not one but two sets of caseworkers, one set from the city and one from a private agency under contract to the city.
Although Children's Services ended that contract last year, records make clear that it had known for years that the private agency had troubles, including making insufficient visits to families.
Marchella's mother, Carlotta Brett-Pierce, 31, is charged with murder, and her grandmother, Loretta Brett, 56, with manslaughter. Both are in jail awaiting trial. Damon Adams, 37, a Children's Services caseworker, and his supervisor, Chereece Bell, 34, are charged with criminally negligent homicide; it is thought to be the first time that city child welfare workers have been incriminated in a death. Prosecutors said that Mr. Adams had not made required visits to the family and lied about it, and that Ms. Bell had failed to supervise him. Both have left the agency.
All four have said they are innocent. None would comment for this article.
Other relatives of Marchella are dismayed about what happened to her. "It's wrong," the child's great-aunt, Levonnia Parnell, said. "That's not a child that asked to be here. No child deserves what she got. She got a nightmare."
The Marcy Houses public housing project in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, is where Marchella's parents grew up and where their futures seemed to freeze.
Her great-grandmother Leola Brown lived in a jampacked apartment with her daughters, Loretta and Martha, and eventually Martha's two children and Loretta's daughter, Carlotta. Martha, a nurse, died young of cancer. Husbands and fathers were absent.
Loretta Brett and Carlotta, both wafer-thin, were known as truculent people with fiery tempers. Neighbors said they regularly smoked marijuana and crack. The police arrested Carlotta twice for criminal possession of marijuana and once for assault.
"Carlotta was a troublemaker," a neighbor, Evelyn Rizzo, said of Marchella's mother. "You'd look at her and that was enough to make trouble." She said Ms. Brett-Pierce once threw a padlock at her, hitting her in the face. Another neighbor said in a police report that Ms. Brett had punched her while Ms. Brett-Pierce smashed her with a bat.
"They were just evil," said Elizabeth Soto, who also lived in the building. Ms. Brett cut her in the head with a razor blade, she said. When Ms. Soto was pregnant, she said, Ms. Brett-Pierce threatened "to give me an abortion."
The police were called several times, and Ms. Soto said she got an order of protection against the two women.
Ms. Brett-Pierce listed herself on her MySpace page as a model and an entrepreneur, but relatives said she never worked. Years ago, she began dating Tyrone Pierce, who lived in a companion building. In 1996, at 16, he was arrested twice on drug charges.
Antagonized neighbors finally began a petition to have the Bretts kicked out. And the Bretts had another problem: The lease was in Leola Brown's name, and she died in 2001.
Court papers say Ms. Brett and Ms. Brett-Pierce forged Leola's name on documents after she was dead, to try to claim the apartment. In 2005, the New York City Housing Authority evicted them. They moved nearby, and then to a third-floor apartment on Madison Street, also in Bedford-Stuyvesant.
Mr. Pierce, meanwhile, pleaded guilty to robbery in 1998 after being accused of a string of thefts as well as drug possession. In June 2004, he was released from prison on parole, which he violated several months later by going to South Carolina for his mother's funeral without permission. Returned to prison, he was in a cell when his son was born. He got out in September 2005. Soon, Ms. Brett-Pierce was again pregnant, with twins.
The Longest Odds
Marchella weighed 1 pound 4 ounces when she was born, prematurely, on April 3, 2006. A relative recalls thinking she was about the size of a one-liter Pepsi bottle. A twin sister, born first, died. Her name was Miracle.
Marchella had a fluty whisper of a voice. Too fragile for the outside world, she lived amid a swirl of doctors and nurses, shuffled among at least six health care facilities. To help her breathe, she had a tracheal tube, which required regular cleaning.
In mid-2009, in final preparation for family life, she entered the Northwoods Rehabilitation and Extended Care Facility at Hilltop, near Schenectady, N.Y., about 170 miles from Brooklyn. For years, the State Health Department had faulted it for myriad violations, including neglect and medication errors. In 2007, regulators put Northwoods on a federal watch list of homes with persistent serious problems. It was in bankruptcy until a new owner bought it last summer.
Marchella's parents visited her and told relatives they got training at Northwoods to care for her. Ms. Brett-Pierce would take a cab, for $130 each way. "She took cabs everywhere," Shaquanna Parnell, her sister-in-law, said. "That was her."
By then, the parents had separated. Ms. Brett-Pierce was also pregnant with her third child.
The household was anything but peaceful. "They fought a lot," Ms. Parnell, a school crossing guard, said. Ms. Brett-Pierce, furious that Mr. Pierce did not help financially, would refuse to let him see his son, Ms. Parnell said.
"She would call me and leave messages on my machine, 'I'm going to hurt him,' " Ms. Parnell said, adding, "Carlotta talked a lot of mouth."
On Feb. 9, 2009, Mr. Pierce called the police, saying his wife would not let him get his clothes. When they arrived he was gone. That October, the authorities said, she called the police about him, saying he had slapped her. The police said she had a cut inside her lip. He was gone when they arrived. They returned several times but did not find him.
Mr. Pierce, 31, would not comment for this article. After Marchella's death, he said he knew nothing of her being abused.
In November 2009, the family came to the attention of the child protection agency. Ms. Brett-Pierce gave birth to another son and tested positive for drugs. The case was assigned to the Child Development Support Corporation; since 1987, it had had a contract to furnish preventive services to at-risk Brooklyn families. Ms. Brett-Pierce was enrolled in drug treatment but was far from compliant. And according to Children's Services, the private agency never made anything near the specified number of visits to the home.
On Dec. 7, the police stopped by Madison Street again, following up on the October assault complaint. Ms. Brett-Pierce would not let them in, but they found Mr. Pierce outside and arrested him. It is unclear what happened to the case, but he served no jail time.
Police protocol is to notify the Statewide Central Register of Child Abuse and Maltreatment when domestic abuse occurs and children are in the home. The police did not do so, because, they said, they were unaware there were children in the home.
Two months later, on Feb. 9, 2010, after 10 months at Northwoods, Marchella was discharged. It is not clear if the nursing home knew that the parents were feuding and that the mother was a drug user being monitored by Children's Services. Both Children's Services and the private agency said they doubted they knew then that Marchella even existed; she was still in the nursing home when the complaint about her mother's drug use came in, and it is not known whether caseworkers had compiled a full family history.
And so a girl weighing a slight 26 pounds entered the chaotic world of her mother to begin the final sequence in a life that had had no good ones.
Missed Opportunity
The Madison Street apartment was cramped. One bedroom was used for storage. Ms. Brett-Pierce shared another with her two sons. Marchella slept with her grandmother in the third. Ms. Brett-Pierce's cousins took the living room.
Things quickly fell apart. A month after Marchella came home, Ms. Brett-Pierce took her to the hospital because the breathing tube had malfunctioned. Doctors found the mother oddly insouciant, and she refused to be taught how to tend the tube. A call was made to the child abuse registry.
Children's Services sent an investigator to the home, about the only action it found appropriate in a blistering post-mortem investigation of its actions in the case. The mother was reported to be hostile and in need of evaluation.
The agency assigned the family to one of its own caseworkers, Mr. Adams, who had joined it in 2006. He was a graduate of Tufts University, where he studied psychology and childhood development and was a star athlete. For the next three months, both he and the Child Development Support Corporation were supposed to be looking out for Marchella.
In 2005, the city had put the support corporation on a watch list for poor performance, and the next year the city gave it a "needs improvement" rating. In March 2008, an audit by the city comptroller found it made insufficient visits to families and did not test parents in substance abuse treatment.
The corporation's contract expired at the end of 2008. Despite the negative audit, Children's Services renewed the contract to June 30, 2010.
According to Children's Services, the private agency recommended in May that the Pierce case be closed, saying the home was stable and the children were safe. Yet there was only one visit in which Marchella was reported seen. Moreover, the drug treatment program had told the private agency that Ms. Brett-Pierce continued to abuse drugs and had threatened an employee.
When Ms. Brett-Pierce tested positive again for marijuana, Children's Services decided to keep the case open.
Marcia Rowe-Riddick, the executive director of the support corporation, said it felt its work was improving. But in April 2010, when the city announced new contracts, it was not allowed to bid because of "performance issues."
Ms. Rowe-Riddick said that Children's Services had the records from the Brett-Pierce case and that she did not know whether her agency had done anything wrong. Those assigned to the case, she said, are gone, laid off after the city contract ended.
John B. Mattingly, the Children's Services commissioner, declined to be interviewed for this article, saying it was inappropriate with the pending grand jury inquiry.
In the Madison Street home, drugs remained common. In June, Loretta Brett was arrested for possession of marijuana; she had four prior arrests, including ones for robbery and assault.
By July 1, Mr. Adams was the only caseworker for Marchella's family. Colleagues said that he was diligent and that caseworkers juggled impossible workloads. They said they were forced to assign their own priorities and decide which households to visit and which to skip. "You ask yourself, if I don't do a visit, will this child die?" said Kelly Mares, a city caseworker supportive of Mr. Adams and his supervisor, Ms. Bell. "That's horrible. But that's what we have to do. The truth is any child can die if you don't make a visit."
The arrests have made things worse, she said. "I don't know how to do this job," she said. "We're terrified."
Children's Services, in its own investigation, said it was "questionable" that Mr. Adams had ever seen the family. After the child's death, the agency said, Mr. Adams documented visits he supposedly had made, and Ms. Bell documented meetings she said she had had with Mr. Adams. Ms. Bell had been with the agency 12 years, a married mother of two young children who was working on a double graduate degree.
Her lawyer said Ms. Bell had wanted Mr. Adams transferred because his work was substandard. Mr. Adams, his lawyer said, knew of no transfer plans.
Relatives of Marchella said the girl had spent much of the time with her grandmother, Ms. Brett. As for Ms. Brett-Pierce, "she would shop, shop, shop," Shaquanna Parnell said.
Marchella kept losing weight. "She was thin but she didn't seem like a difficult child," said Keyba Wright, a sister of Mr. Pierce. She had trouble with solids, and Ms. Brett-Pierce sometimes fed her liquid nutrition products.
Levonnia Parnell, the great-aunt, invited Ms. Brett-Pierce and her children to a party in Harlem last July for her own son's high school graduation. It was the last time she saw Marchella. She wrapped the child in her arms. She said Marchella's bones were visible through her flesh. She recalled, "People said, What happened to her?"
Twine on the Bedposts
Carlotta Brett-Pierce called 911 a little after 7 a.m. last Sept. 2 to say her daughter was unresponsive, her hands cold.
When an ambulance arrived, Marchella was dead. The police found marijuana and crack in the apartment, and signs of a horrifying existence.
Twine was knotted to the child's bedposts. Ligature marks scarred her ankles. The authorities said Loretta Brett, the grandmother, told them Marchella had been tied up for part of each day for months, though Ms. Brett's lawyer denied she had said this. The girl had multiple bruises suggesting beatings, which prosecutors say both mother and grandmother inflicted. Blood speckled the wall and a video case the police fished out of the trash.
Prosecutors said Ms. Brett-Pierce had starved Marchella, force-fed her antihistamines and beaten her with the video case and a belt. Ms. Brett-Pierce told an officer she had tied Marchella to the bed because she was "wild" and would wake up at night to get food.
The coroner ruled the death a homicide and ascribed it to child abuse syndrome involving drug poisoning, blunt impact injuries and malnutrition.
Marchella's brothers, who were in good health, were taken by the authorities. Before her arrest, Ms. Brett, the grandmother, tried to gain custody, but she tested positive for marijuana.
Mr. Pierce is not working. Relatives say he never did. Since leaving prison in 2005, he has had 10 more arrests, including one in February for driving without a license and one in March for marijuana possession. He lives in Brooklyn with a girlfriend, a home health care aide who has several children.
Despite his instability and persistent arrests, he hopes to get custody of Marchella's brothers, now 6 and 1. They are with a foster family. He sees them one hour a week. At a recent hearing, his lawyer told the judge that Mr. Pierce wanted more time with them. A representative for the boys said that the older son had been asked and did not want to see his father longer - that an hour a week was enough.
Alain Delaquérière contributed research.

So THAT's how Michelle gets those arms! First Lady's one-armed push-up with Dominique Dawes and Michelle Kwan on White House lawn


A fit role model: The First Lady led activities for over 80 students and parents on the South Lawn of the White House on Monday as part of an event to promote physical fitness among military families

A fit role model: The First Lady leads activities for more than 80 students and parents on the South Lawn of the White House as part of an event to promote physical fitness among military families

MailOnline - news, sport, celebrity, science and health stories


She's become a role model for children and adults keen to get fit - and Michelle Obama isn't keeping the secret behind her notoriously toned arms secret. 
The First Lady, who is campaigning against childhood obesity with her Let's Move initiative, exercised on the South Lawn of the White House today.
Joined by star athletes including gymnast Dominique Dawes, ice-skater Michelle Kwan, tennis player Billie Jean King and basketball's Grant Hill, Mrs Obama led activities to promote physical fitness among military families. 


Speaking to a crowd of 80 children and their parents before the activities began, Mrs Obama announced three new physical fitness opportunities for military families.
She said the American Council on Exercise would provide a minimum of one million hours of free personal training. 
 
She also said the International Health, Racquet and Sports Club Association would offer free memberships to immediate family members of actively deployed reservists.
She said: 'This isn't about physical prowess. It's about movement. And we have to go from sitting to standing to walking to moving.'
Let's move! Mrs Obama performed a dance routine with students as a fun way to get fit
Let's move! Mrs Obama performs a dance routine with students as a fun way to get fit
The President's Council on Fitness, Sports and Nutrition will also hold a series of events with military families, she said.
Council co-chairs Ms Dawes, Ms Kwan, Mr Hill, and basketball star Chris Paul then joined Mrs Obama to lead demonstrations on the South Lawn.
The First Lady performed a dance routine, led stretching exercises and ran through a three-part obstacle course with the students and their parents.
Leading the charge: Mrs Obama led stretching, balancing and strengthening techniques with the help of her trainer (right)
Leading the charge: Mrs Obama leads stretching, balancing and strengthening techniques with the help of her trainer (right)
Star support: Olympic ice-skater Michelle Kwan (far left) was among athletes joined Mrs Obama during the activities
Star support: Olympic ice-skater Michelle Kwan (far left) was among athletes joined Mrs Obama during the activities
Star support: Olympic ice-skater Michelle Kwan (far left) was among athletes joined Mrs Obama during the activities
Mrs Obama also pushed parents to play a supporting role in their children's lives in effort to fight the obesity epidemic in the U.S., showing, as she said, 'it doesn't take money' to be active. 
Instead, Mrs Obama suggested taking family walks after dinner or dancing in the living room.
Mrs Obama has made it her mission as First Lady to fight childhood obesity. 
She launched her Let's Move initiative to promote healthy eating and exercise last year.
Famously fit: The First Lady juggles two gallons of water while running through a three-part obstacle course and participates in a ball toss on the South Lawn (left)
Famously fit: The First Lady juggles two gallons of water while running through a three-part obstacle course and participates in a ball toss on the South Lawn (left)
Famously fit: The First Lady juggles two gallons of water while running through a three-part obstacle course and participates in a ball toss on the South Lawn (left)
The campaign picked up steam thanks to star support from star Beyonce, who recently released a viral video segment dancing with school kids to her hit song Move Your Body.
Both women have made appearances at schools across the U.S. in a bid to get children more excited about being active.
Last Tuesday, Mrs Obama got her dancing shoes on at the Alice Deal Middle School in Washington, DC, to promote the initiative, looking fit as she danced a routine to the Beyonce song alongside students.
With one-third of the nation’s children estimated to be overweight, Mrs Obama’s goal is to help solve the problem in a generation.