레이블이 Police인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Police인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2014년 12월 4일 목요일

New York to Retrain Police in Wake of Chokehold Death Case


New York says it is going to retrain its police force in the wake of a grand jury decision to not indict a white police officer in the chokehold death of an unarmed black man.

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the retraining of the city's 20,000-member force Thursday. He said it was essential -- "something fundamental," in his words -- that people of all races be treated equally by police.

One key police official, Benjamin Tucker, said currently there is a "disconnect" between police and the city's 8.4 million residents. He said the three-day retraining sessions would be completed by June.

Hours earlier, U.S. civil rights leaders condemned Wednesday's grand jury decision. The New York case is one of several recent police killings of blacks that have occurred under questionable circumstances in the United States.

National civil rights leaders also pledged to release a longer-term "2015 action plan" that would address excessive force by law enforcement and police accountability one day after the grand jury cleared New York Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo in the death of Eric Garner during an arrest attempt in July.

National Urban League president Marc Morial said Thursday the incident represents the "abject, absolute failure" of the U.S. criminal justice system.

"This is a time in this nation, this is a moment where our consciousness is shocked."

Morial reserved his harshest rebuke for Wednesday's New York grand jury decision, saying it "defied common sense."

Another civil rights activist, Al Sharpton, called for the federal government to correct what he said is a "broken" system of state grand juries unwilling to hold police accountable for their actions and indict them on criminal charges.

Demonstrators vowed to hold new protests in New York on Thursday after the grand jury decided not to charge the police officer.

Protests first erupted there and in several other U.S. cities late Wednesday. Scores of people marched through Times Square hours after the decision was announced, many of them chanting, "No justice, no peace."

A photo of Eric Garner is displayed at a makeshift memorial, where he died during an arrest in July, at the Staten Island borough of New York on Dec. 3, 2014. /Reuters A photo of Eric Garner is displayed at a makeshift memorial, where he died during an arrest in July, at the Staten Island borough of New York on Dec. 3, 2014. /Reuters

◆ Mostly Peaceful Protests

The protests were largely peaceful, but police said they arrested 83 people, mostly for disorderly conduct.

On Thursday, Garner's wife, Esaw Garner, told NBC's "Today" show that she rejected the condolences offered by Pantaleo after he was cleared in her husband’s death.

In an incident captured by a pedestrian on his smartphone video recorder, Eric Garner is heard repeatedly gasping, "I can't breathe, I can't breathe" as he is being restrained by police on a Staten Island sidewalk.

"The time to apologize or have any remorse ... would have been when my husband was screaming he couldn't breathe," Esaw Garner said.

Meanwhile, the officer's lawyer, Stuart London, told WCBS Radio that Pantaleo "was attempting a takedown move that he was taught in the [police] academy" when he tried to put Eric Garner on the ground. "He never meant to apply any force to his neck," London told the radio show.

The city's medical examiner ruled Eric Garner's death a homicide. He said the officers had killed Garner, 43, by compressing his neck and chest, and added that Garner's asthma and obesity also contributed to his death.

The use of chokeholds was banned by the New York Police Department in 1993. But the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, the municipal police union, said the officers involved in the incident had acted within the law.

When the grand jury's decision was revealed, Garner's wife told the "Today" show: “I started crying because it's not fair. It's not fair. What could they not see? How could they possibly not indict?

"I felt hopeless. ... like there was nothing left for me to fight for, but then I got some encouraging phone calls. ... I felt now that we have some type of hope, some type of justice to be done for my husband," Esaw Garner said, referring to a promised federal investigation.

◆ Federal Investigation

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced late Wednesday that he is opening a federal civil rights investigation into Eric Garner’s death, a move that Garner’s family and activists have called for in recent months, but, he acknowledged that, "The time has come do do even more."

Holder was speaking in Cleveland, Ohio, where the Justice Department just concluded an investigation into nearly 600 use-of force incidents by that city's police department.? The conclusion, he said, was that the police there engage "in a pattern or practice of using excessive force" as a result of "systemic deficiencies, including insufficient accountability, inadequate training and equipment, ineffective policies, and inadequate engagement with the community."

Cleveland police recently gunned down a 12-year-old black boy waving what turned out to be a toy pistol in a public park

The New York Police Department also is doing an internal probe that could lead to administrative charges against Pantaleo, who remains on desk duty, according to The Associated Press.

In order to find Pantaleo criminally negligent, the grand jury would have had to determine he knew there was a "substantial risk" that Garner would have died. Pataleo's lawyer and union officials argued that the grand jury got it right, saying he used an authorized takedown move -- not a banned chokehold -- and that Garner's poor health was the main cause of his death.

Staten Island District Attorney Daniel Donovan said the grand jury found “no reasonable cause” to bring charges. The grand jury could have considered a range of charges, from murder to a lesser offense such as reckless endangerment.

"I am actually astonished based on the evidence of the videotape, and the medical examiner, that this grand jury at this time wouldn't indict for anything," a lawyer for the Garner family, Jonathan Moore, told the AP.

The decision not to indict Pantaleo comes less than two weeks after a grand jury in Ferguson, Missouri, declined to indict a white officer who fatally shot an unarmed black teenager during a street confrontation. In another controversial case, a 12-year-old black boy was shot dead by police in Cleveland, Ohio, while the youth was handling a toy pistol at a playground.

◆ 'An American Problem'

President Barack Obama reacted swiftly to the grand jury decision, saying it underscores the frustrations many African-Americans feel "that law enforcement is not working with them and dealing with them in a fair way."

"And in some cases those may be misperceptions but in some cases that's a reality," Obama said, "and it is incumbent on all of us as Americans, regardless of race, region, faith, that we recognize this is an American problem and not just a black problem or a brown problem or a Native American problem; this is an American problem.

"When anybody in this country is not being treated equally under the law, that's a problem. And it's my job as president to help solve it," he said.

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio called this a "deeply emotional day" for the Garner family and all New Yorkers, acknowledging that many people do not agree with the grand jury's decision.

Protests occurred across the nation after the grand jury's decision was announced Wednesday. Demonstrators in Oakland, California, blocked major streets as they marched in solidarity with New York demonstrators. Demonstrations were also held in other cities including Seattle and Atlanta.


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2014년 12월 2일 화요일

Hong Kong Protest Leaders Will Surrender to Police


The three founders of Hong Kong's Occupy movement are moving ahead with plans to surrender to police and are urging their fellow protesters to retreat for their own safety.

At a news conference Tuesday, Benny Tai, Chan Kin-man, and Chu Yiu-ming announced they will turn themselves into the Central Police Station on Wednesday.

Benny Tai said it is unclear whether police will detain or release him and his Occupy co-founders, but he said they are ready to accept the consequences no matter the outcome.

He also urged the hundreds of protesters who remain camped on Hong Kong's streets to pull back and prepare for a long-term fight aimed at securing democratic reforms.

"The government that uses police batons to maintain its authority is a government that is beyond reason. For the sake of the Occupy safety, for the sake of our original intention of love and peace, as we prepare to surrender, we three urge the students to retreat, to put down deep roots in the community and transform the movement," he said.

On its Twitter page, the Occupy movement said the surrender "is not an act of cowardice" or admission of failure, but a denunciation of what it called a "heartless government."

Occupy Central civil disobedience founder Benny Tai (center), a law professor at the University of Hong Kong, along with co-founders Chan Kin-man (left), a professor of sociology at Chinese University and Reverend Chu Yiu-ming, join hands during a news conference. /Reuters Occupy Central civil disobedience founder Benny Tai (center), a law professor at the University of Hong Kong, along with co-founders Chan Kin-man (left), a professor of sociology at Chinese University and Reverend Chu Yiu-ming, join hands during a news conference. /Reuters

The protests, which began in late September, are calling for authorities to hold fully democratic elections in the semiautonomous Chinese territory in 2017.

Authorities have declared the protests to be illegal and have tried several times to clear parts of the camps, resulting in violent clashes.

It is unclear whether the protesters will agree to back down. Several student leaders have said they will not surrender, insisting instead on further escalation.

One student leader hopes a hunger strike will convince authorities to consider reforms. Joshua Wong began his indefinite hunger strike late Monday, along with two other members of his group, known as Scholarism.

Twelve hours into the fast, the 18-year-old Wong told reporters his demand is to hold fresh talks, with no preconditions, on restarting Hong Kong's political reform process.

He also said he wants his action to help bring attention to the so-called Occupy Central movement, which has lost momentum in recent weeks.

"We admit that it's difficult in the future to have an escalated action, so besides suffering from batons and tear gas, we would like to use our body to get public attention on the issue. We are not sure if the hunger strike can put pressure on the government, but we hope that when the public finds out about the student hunger strike, they will ask themselves what they can do next," said Wong.

The hunger strike is being held in the Admiralty district, where clashes erupted Sunday after protesters broke through police lines in an attempt to surround government headquarters.

Police pushed back with pepper spray and batons, but the protesters eventually succeeded in temporarily forcing government offices and parliament to close. Several protesters were injured and at least 18 were arrested.

Hong Kong's High Court has approved an injunction to clear part of the Admiralty site, though it is unclear if and when authorities will enforce that ruling.


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2014년 12월 1일 월요일

Ferguson Police Officer Wilson Not to Receive Severance Pay


The white police officer who fatally shot an unarmed black teenager in the central U.S. state of Missouri after a street confrontation, sparking protests, has resigned and will receive no severance compensation.

A lawyer for Officer Darren Wilson said Saturday his resignation from the Ferguson Police Department is effective immediately. Wilson had been on administrative leave since he shot and killed 18-year-old Michael Brown in August in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson.

Ferguson Mayor James Knowles said in a press conference Sunday that neither he nor the chief of police asked Wilson to resign, adding that he will not be receiving any severance pay.

Knowles said city authorities are working hard to assemble resources to fix the damage from protests and looting following a grand jury's decision Monday not to indict Wilson for killing Brown.

Knowles added that officials are looking at ways to address the grievances of the Ferguson community and will increase efforts to recruit more African Americans to the police force.

Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson says he will not be stepping down.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch newspaper posted Wilson's resignation letter. Wilson wrote he had been told his continued employment on the police force may put his fellow officers and Ferguson residents at risk. He added he hopes his resignation will allow the community to heal.

Meanwhile, protests continued Saturday against the grand jury decision. "I mean, at this point, everybody's going to be upset anyway. Everyone's going to feel the way they feel. I'm upset. I have a 16-year-old son. It could have been him. I feel that he was absolutely in the wrong," said a Ferguson resident.

A group of demonstrators set out from Ferguson Saturday on a seven-day, 193-kilometer march to the Missouri state capital, Jefferson City.

The so-called "Journey for Justice" is organized by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

The NAACP says the march's purpose "is to call for new leadership of the Ferguson Police Department" and "new reforms of police practice and culture" across the country. It says rallies and teach-ins will be held along the route each night of the march.

In the Washington, D.C., area Saturday, hundreds of people angry over the decision in Ferguson marched on a local shopping mall, after rallying in the historic Georgetown neighborhood.

"Every 28 hours a black person is killed in America. They are basically telling us that black lives do not matter. It's the system, it's the American system," said a protester. "Basically, if you're white, you're white. And if you're black, you must have done something, and that's the problem. That's what we are fighting to change."

Saturday's protests follow demonstrations coinciding with Black Friday - the traditional kickoff to the holiday shopping season.

Protesters in the St. Louis area, Chicago, New York and other U.S. cities called for a shopping boycott as a show of solidarity. Three St. Louis-area malls were reportedly shut down briefly as a result of the demonstrations.

Police say 16 people were arrested in Ferguson overnight.

Brown's killing has inflamed racial tensions in the country and re-ignited concerns about police brutality, especially against the nation's black population.


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2014년 11월 26일 수요일

Hong Kong Police Arrest Protest Leaders, Clear Streets


Hong Kong authorities cleared a main protest camp Wednesday and arrested two leaders of the Occupy Central movement, which is calling for greater democracy in the semiautonomous Chinese territory.

Police hauled away several protesters, including student leaders Lester Shum and Joshua Wong, during the several-hour operation to clear barricades from a road in the Mong Kok district.

Scuffles broke out when some protesters tried to prevent workers from tearing down the barricades on a major thoroughfare.

Avery Ng Man-yuen, vice chairman of League of Social Democrats (LSD), tells VOA he and other protesters believe the police violated the court injunction during the enforcement process.

"They did not follow the procedure, but using the injunction as an excuse to clear the site," he said. "I have repeatedly asked the police to explain some questions, such as, is the bailiff there when they were enforcing injunction? He replied he didn't know. The injunction mentioned clearing obstacles, does that include protesters? He didn't reply."

The workers, who wore red baseball caps and "I Love Hong Kong" T-shirts, were backed by thousands of police. After the barricades and tents were removed, the highway reopened to traffic.

The workers and police initially faced resistance from demonstrators, who chanted for "full democracy" in the city. Police dragged away and arrested many protesters who refused to move.

One demonstrator, who identified himself as Roland, said he didn't know who the workers were. "Probably they are hired by the authorities to clear these [protest sites]. ... But I would like to insist that the Occupied zone is the expression of people’s voice. The government shouldn't do this."

Police officers remove tents set up by protesters as they clear an occupied area of the Mong Kok district of Hong Kong on Nov. 26, 2014. /AP Police officers remove tents set up by protesters as they clear an occupied area of the Mong Kok district of Hong Kong on Nov. 26, 2014. /AP

Demonstrations have blocked some Hong Kong's streets since the pro-democracy protests began in late September.

In October, Mong Kok was the site of violent clashes between protesters and thugs who attacked them. Police later said the attackers were members of local criminal gangs.

Pa Sah, who has joined in the daily demonstrations, alleged there has been "brutality and damage to the protesters."

"There have been a lot of cases where the police have attacked and injured protesters," the demonstrator said. "The police brutality is very apparent."

It was the third time authorities have cleared protest sites since Hong Kong's High Court approved the actions earlier this month. On Tuesday, police said they arrested 116 people during an operation to clear another part of Mong Kok.

Protesters remain camped out at two other sites near government headquarters in the Admiralty neighborhood and in the popular shopping district of Causeway Bay.

Public opinion in Hong Kong has been divided over the protests. Many residents say the demonstrations, which have blocked traffic and damaged sales at nearby shops and stores, have taken an economic toll on the city. Protest leadership has become increasingly split between moderate and more extreme activists who demand radical action.

While the protesters may be divided, the government's position is clear, Pa Sha said.

"I think the government is trying to arrest the leaders to try to deal with the movement once and for all, trying to show a very hard-line stance against the movement."

The demonstrators have been calling for fully democratic elections in 2017. They took to the streets after China ruled in August that all candidates for Hong Kong's chief executive must first be approved by a committee that is stacked with pro-Beijing loyalists.


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2013년 6월 23일 일요일

TV chef Nigella Lawson's husband cautioned by police for assault


By Belinda Goldsmith

LONDON (Reuters) - Art collector Charles Saatchi has been cautioned by police for assaulting his wife, the celebrity chef Nigella Lawson, after being photographed grabbing her by the throat in an incident that has fueled a debate in Britain about domestic violence.

Photographs of Saatchi, 70, a former advertising tycoon, grasping a tearful Lawson around the neck while the couple were having dinner outside a London restaurant about a week ago were published in a tabloid newspaper on Sunday.

On Monday he downplayed the images, saying it was just a "playful tiff" and he was holding her neck to make his point, sparking fury from women's rights group. He said the couple made up although Lawson had moved out while "the dust settled".

A spokesman for London's Metropolitan Police said on Tuesday that they were aware of the photographs that appeared in the Sunday People on June 16 and had carried out an investigation.

"Yesterday afternoon, Monday June 17, a 70-year-old man voluntarily attended a central London police station and accepted a caution for assault," the spokesman said. "That would normally be the end of the matter."

Under English law, a caution can be given to an adult who admits a minor offence and this is not a criminal conviction but can be used as evidence of bad character in court for another crime. The suspect can be arrested or charged if they do not agree to be cautioned.

Lawson, 53, dubbed the domestic goddess after the title of one of her cook books and known for her flirtatious kitchen manner, has made no public comment on the incident that happened outside a seafood restaurant in upmarket Mayfair on June 9.

Her publicist said she would not be commenting on Tuesday.

"TREATED TOO LENIENTLY"

Lawson, daughter of former Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) Nigel Lawson, married Saatchi in 2003 after her first husband, journalist John Diamond, died of throat cancer. She has two teenage children, Cosima and Bruno, from her first marriage.

Saatchi's comments on Monday downplaying the incident unleashed a storm of comments on Twitter and in the print media, describing his defence of his behavior as "bizarre" while others criticized the lack of action taken against him.

Saatchi told London's Evening Standard, for which he writes a column, that he recognized the impact of the pictures but said they conveyed the wrong impression.

"There was no grip. It was a playful tiff. The pictures are horrific but give a far more drastic and violent impression of what took place," said Saatchi, who ran the world's largest advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi with his brother in the 1980s.

"Nigella's tears were because we both hate arguing, not because she had been hurt."

Saatchi, who opened the Saatchi Gallery in London in 1985, said he had made up with Lawson, his third wife, by the time they had reached home but acknowledged she had moved out, saying that was due to the paparazzi outside their house.

Polly Neate of the charity Women's Aid said perpetrators of domestic violence would often try to excuse or minimize their behavior and the caution given to Saatchi showed that these cases were often not dealt with severely enough.

"Often, women living with abuse at home do not speak out because they are worried they won't be believed or feel ashamed that their partner has been violent towards them," Neate said in a statement.

"We must take every case of domestic violence seriously, and ensure that the abusers receive appropriate sentences."

(Additional reporting by Michael Holden, Editing by Gareth Jones)


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2013년 6월 21일 금요일

TV chef Nigella Lawson's husband cautioned by police for assault


By Belinda Goldsmith

LONDON (Reuters) - Art collector Charles Saatchi has been cautioned by police for assaulting his wife, the celebrity chef Nigella Lawson, after being photographed grabbing her by the throat in an incident that has fueled a debate in Britain about domestic violence.

Photographs of Saatchi, 70, a former advertising tycoon, grasping a tearful Lawson around the neck while the couple were having dinner outside a London restaurant about a week ago were published in a tabloid newspaper on Sunday.

On Monday he downplayed the images, saying it was just a "playful tiff" and he was holding her neck to make his point, sparking fury from women's rights group. He said the couple made up although Lawson had moved out while "the dust settled".

A spokesman for London's Metropolitan Police said on Tuesday that they were aware of the photographs that appeared in the Sunday People on June 16 and had carried out an investigation.

"Yesterday afternoon, Monday June 17, a 70-year-old man voluntarily attended a central London police station and accepted a caution for assault," the spokesman said. "That would normally be the end of the matter."

Under English law, a caution can be given to an adult who admits a minor offence and this is not a criminal conviction but can be used as evidence of bad character in court for another crime. The suspect can be arrested or charged if they do not agree to be cautioned.

Lawson, 53, dubbed the domestic goddess after the title of one of her cook books and known for her flirtatious kitchen manner, has made no public comment on the incident that happened outside a seafood restaurant in upmarket Mayfair on June 9.

Her publicist said she would not be commenting on Tuesday.

"TREATED TOO LENIENTLY"

Lawson, daughter of former Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) Nigel Lawson, married Saatchi in 2003 after her first husband, journalist John Diamond, died of throat cancer. She has two teenage children, Cosima and Bruno, from her first marriage.

Saatchi's comments on Monday downplaying the incident unleashed a storm of comments on Twitter and in the print media, describing his defence of his behavior as "bizarre" while others criticized the lack of action taken against him.

Saatchi told London's Evening Standard, for which he writes a column, that he recognized the impact of the pictures but said they conveyed the wrong impression.

"There was no grip. It was a playful tiff. The pictures are horrific but give a far more drastic and violent impression of what took place," said Saatchi, who ran the world's largest advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi with his brother in the 1980s.

"Nigella's tears were because we both hate arguing, not because she had been hurt."

Saatchi, who opened the Saatchi Gallery in London in 1985, said he had made up with Lawson, his third wife, by the time they had reached home but acknowledged she had moved out, saying that was due to the paparazzi outside their house.

Polly Neate of the charity Women's Aid said perpetrators of domestic violence would often try to excuse or minimize their behavior and the caution given to Saatchi showed that these cases were often not dealt with severely enough.

"Often, women living with abuse at home do not speak out because they are worried they won't be believed or feel ashamed that their partner has been violent towards them," Neate said in a statement.

"We must take every case of domestic violence seriously, and ensure that the abusers receive appropriate sentences."

(Additional reporting by Michael Holden, Editing by Gareth Jones)


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2013년 6월 13일 목요일

'Fashion Police' Will Celebrate Joan Rivers' Birthday In Style


NEW YORK -- "I'm having a great time," Joan Rivers crows before offering a brisk self-appraisal: "Everything is working, my mind is fine.

"The only time I play the age card is on planes when I'm trying to put a bag above the seat: `I am 80 years old! Would someone PLEASE help me?!'"

Actually, she only turned 80 on Saturday, a milestone that has prompted the E! network to stage a Joan Rivers "takeover": Its regular one-hour edition of "Fashion Police" (airing Friday at 10 p.m. EDT) will be a black-tie birthday salute, preceded nightly through Thursday by special half-hours (at 10:30 p.m. EDT) featuring guest appearances by celebrities and even victims of past fashion slams.

This means frequent-flier Rivers would soon be back on a plane for Los Angeles to tape this five-day marathon while she marvels at the success of "Fashion Police," which, since premiering three years ago, has only tightened its grip in the culture as a wicked hybrid of style and snark.

Rivers is well-served by her co-hosts Giuliana Rancic, Kelly Osbourne and George Kotsiopoulos, all of whom can deliver shrewd analysis as well as piercing gibes at red-carpet infractions.

But "Fashion Police" is perfectly tailored to the comedic skills of Rivers as demonstrated by her 46-years-and-counting in show biz.

Hear her hail Uma Thurman, sheathed in Versace at the Cannes Film Festival: "This gown is so feminine, so silver ? it's the Anderson Cooper of dresses!"

Hear her skewer a baggy, dizzyingly hued Alexander McQueen jumpsuit worn by actress Marion Cotillard at a Crash Magazine party: "The pattern looks like Precious sat on somebody's butterfly collection."

Sure, it's "Police" brutality, but Rivers and her "Joan Rangers" are never less than arresting.

At first, Rivers resisted the urge to do the show.

"I remember, I was in Vegas on a treadmill ? cause you STILL try! ? saying to my agent and (daughter) Melissa, `cause Melissa's exec-producing, `You're crazy! I'm not gonna do this! I'm not gonna commute!'"

Her mind was changed.

"We do the jokes, and we tell the truth, too," Rivers sums up proudly. "E! told me, `Whatever you want to say, you say.' We're having so much fun! And our lawyers are so dear."

Interviewed last week, she presides from an ottoman in the den of her vast Upper East Side Manhattan digs, a spread whose unabashed spectacle she dubs "Louis XIV meets Fred (Astaire) and Ginger (Rogers)."

It's 9 a.m. and Rivers, having apologized for being "only half-dressed," has presented herself in stocking feet and a chic, floor-length black-velvet caftan (part of her Joan Rivers Collection, she notes; she also has a jewelry collection).

She says her interest in fashion reaches back to her girlhood, when, still in school in New York, she had a job as a fashion coordinator at a department store chain, then another job where she assisted with the creation of Lord & Taylor's legendary Fifth Avenue window displays every Thursday night.

"If I hadn't gotten into show business," says Rivers, "I would have gone into fashion."

Not that any celeb should get her knickers in a twist over fashion feedback from any loose-lipped comedian ? or so says Rivers, anyway.

"When you're making $20 million a picture and the dress is free, do you REALLY care if Joan Rivers says you shouldn't wear a peplum?" she chuckles. "I don't think Julia Roberts sits up at night thinking, `She said WHAT?!'"

To say what she has to say about couture catastrophes, Rivers is happy to hop a plane for the year-round weekly tapings of "Fashion Police" ? just one piece of her on-the-go schedule that has seen no letup for decades and has its roots in her show-biz obsession as a child growing up in Brooklyn: She wanted to be an actress.

Only by chance did her definitive role become playing a comedian. Comedy was a way to pay the bills while she auditioned for dramatic parts.

"Somebody said, `You can make six dollars standing up in a club,'" she explains, "and I said, `Here I go!' It was better than typing all day."

In the early 1960s, comedy was a male-dominated game where the only women comics she could look to were Totie Fields and Phyllis Diller. But after several years of struggle, she landed a spot on "The Tonight Show" where host Johnny Carson gave her his blessing, saying she was destined to be a star.

A half-century later, Rivers' drive is undiminished. She never settles down.

The previous weekend she played three nights at Las Vegas' Venetian Resort.

She had then planned to go on to California. But she raced back East on a sad mission after getting a call. Barbara Waxler, her ailing older sister in Ardmore, Pa., had taken a turn for the worse. Flying into Philadelphia, Rivers reached her in her final hours.

"Aunt Joan is the head of the family now," says Rivers. "Look out! We're having pink flowers at the funeral!"

Rivers is no stranger to loss, including the suicide of her husband-producer-manager, Edgar Rosenberg, in 1987. Nor has her career, despite its towering heights, been immune to cruel setbacks, including her late-night talk show that launched the Fox network in 1986 but lasted less than a year.

"You never relax and say, `Well, here I am!'" declares Rivers. "You always think, `Is this gonna be OK?' I have never, in 46 years, taken anything for granted."

Except maybe the jokes she creates, tests and continuously fine-tunes. The jokes never stop. They can't.

"The trouble with me is, I make jokes too often," she says. "I'm making jokes at my sister's shivah. I was making jokes yesterday at the funeral home. That's how I get through life. Life is SO difficult ? everybody's been through something! But you laugh at it, it becomes smaller."

Even the terror of aging ? Rivers has always mocked it, not only with her self-directed jokes but also with her never-secret rounds of plastic surgery.

"But I have never wanted to be a day less than I am," she insists. "People say, `I wish I were 30 again.' Nahhh! I'm very happy HERE. It's great. It gets better and better. And then, of course, we die," she quips, chuckles and looks unconcerned.

How long does she plan to keep working?

"Forever," says Rivers. This time, she's not joking.

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EDITOR'S NOTE ? Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier

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