Pfc. Bradley Manning, who disclosed a large number of government documents to Wikileaks, has been acquitted of the charge of aiding the enemy but convicted of over 20 other charges, including espionage. The judge, Col. Denise Lind, reached the verdicts after a trial that lasted about 8 weeks, which took place at Fort Meade. Although acquitted of the most serious charge, Manning still faces a maximum possible sentence of 136 years.
Read more at the Washington Post, the Chicago Tribune, NBC News, Reason(dot)com and WJLA.
In other news:
The Chattanooga Times Free Press tells President Obama, quite literally, where to put his new jobs plan. (via The Examiner)
From CBS News, unemployment is up in 90% of American cities.
From The Daily Beast, the U.S. cities that offer the best combination of economy and culture are "mostly southern and modest sized".
From US News, Congressman John Conyers (D-MI) has invoked the death of Trayvon Martin in sponsoring his End Racial Profiling Act. (via Weazel Zippers)
From the Associated Press, an appeals court has ruled against New York City's prohibition on large sodas.
From The Daily Galaxy, for the first time, x-ray observations have detected an extrasolar planet passing in front of its parent star. (Is The Daily Galaxy anything like the Daily Planet?)
Global Research answers the question, "How rich is Congress?"
From CNN, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) calls Governor Chris Christie the "king of bacon".
From USA Today, a girl in Arkansas, after swimming in a lake in Little Rock, has been infected with a brain-eating amoeba.
From NBC News, an outbreak of food poisoning in Iowa and Nebraska has been traced to a prepackaged salad mix.
And from CNS News, Saddam Hussein's "ceremonial sword" has been returned to Iraq.
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