Woman Allegedly Kills Cat For Lady Gaga Concert Outfit


[The following news story comes from Fox news New York. The original article can be found here]

NewsCore – A 20-year-old Oklahoma woman was receiving treatment in a hospital Thursday after being charged with animal cruelty for allegedly killing the family cat and using the blood for an outfit she planned to wear to a Lady Gaga concert.

A relative of Angelina K. Barnes returned to her home in Oklahoma City and found the woman wearing a long coat, with her face covered in blood — later determined to be cat’s blood — ready to attend the concert, KFOR reported.

The light switches in the house had been covered in duct tape to make them almost impossible to turn on.

It was later determined the cat had been drowned in the bathroom, before being sliced open and its eyes mutilated.

The liver of the animal was found in a makeup case on the bathroom’s vanity.

Police said Barnes was taken to Griffin Memorial Hospital where she was receiving treatment. She did not attend the Lady Gaga concert.

Although Barnes was diagnosed with depression, neighbors said the violence was “completely out of character.”

Lady Gaga famously performed at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards covered in fake blood — and the next year she wore a dress made of meat

Woman Pregnant With 2 Babies Due a Week Apart


Well I have seen it all now. A women has two uteruses and has is pregnant with two baby’s at two different ages. the story was posted at aolnews

(July 17) — A Utah woman is pregnant with two babies, but they’re not twins.

Angie Cromar was born with a rare condition called didelphys, which means she has two uteruses. It didn’t pose a problem for her previous pregnancies, and the 34-year-old has given birth to two healthy children before.

But this time, she’s conceived in both uteruses. During her first ultrasound exam, Cromar and her doctor discovered that she’s carrying two fetuses at different stages of development, one slightly older than the other.

“[He said] I’m five weeks and four days in one, and six weeks and one day in the other,” Cromar told her local TV station, KTLA.

“Angie and I both had the look of surprise,” Dr. Steve Terry, Cromar’s OB/GYN told another Utah TV station, KSL.

The chances of this happening are estimated to be one in five million. “Probably less than 100, so far, worldwide, have been reported,” Terry said. “So she’s a member of a small, elite club.”

Cromar herself is a labor and delivery nurse, and knows the complications her condition can bring: chances of pre-term labor and low birth weight.

“Oh, I’m a little nervous, just because I know what can happen, but I’m really excited,” she told KSL.