Latest news with #Dr.Feelgood


Perth Now
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Perth Now
Mötley Crüe recruit Dolly Parton for new version of Home Sweet Home
Mötley Crüe have released a new version of Home Sweet Home with Dolly Parton. The rock legends have joined forces with none other than country music icon Dolly on a 40th anniversary version of the power ballad originally released on the 1985 album Theatre of Pain, and again in 1991 for the Decade of Decadence 81-91 compilation album. Another country star, Carrie Underwood, released a cover of Home Sweet Home in 2009. A portion of the proceeds from the single will benefit Covenant House, a non-profit providing safe shelter, meals, hope and more to help youth experiencing homelessness. A new music video will also drop at 5pm BST. The song is part of the From The Beginning singles collection set for release on September 12, 2025, the same day the Crüe will kick off their 10-show residency at Las Vegas' Dolby Live at Park MGM. Mötley Crüe - comprising Vince Neil, Tommy Lee, Nikki Sixx and John 5 - commented: "Home Sweet Home was first released in 1985 as a single from our Theatre Of Pain album. For an icon like Dolly Parton to sing on a song that has not only meant so much to us but to all the fans through the years, is a career high that means a lot to us. We couldn't be happier to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Home Sweet Home in this special way, and we're excited to share this version of the song with all the Dolly and Mötley fans around the world.' On the special cause, they added: 'That we were able to unite with Dolly to raise awareness for homeless youth and the amazing work of Covenant House, which provides them safe housing and care, makes it even more special. We hope you'll enjoy Home Sweet Home featuring Dolly Parton as much as Dolly and we enjoyed creating it.' Dolly added: 'It was an honour and a joy working in the studio on Mötley Crüe's 40th Anniversary re-release of 'Home Sweet Home'. I was so pleased that they would ask me to sing on such a classic.' From The Beginning spans four decades of Crüe anthems, from the global single and MTV video Live Wire, all the way through to 2024's Top 5 Rock smash Dogs Of War. Plus, fan-favourites Kickstart My Heart, Dr. Feelgood, Girls, Girls, Girls, Shout at the Devil, Smokin' In The Boys Room, Wild Side and many more. From The Beginning will be available for streaming in standard audio and Dolby Atmos audio. The physical configurations include the standard CD and 2LP sets. Pre-Save and pre-order via Stream Home Sweet Home with Dolly Parton now on all major streaming platforms. From The Beginning tracklisting: 1. Live Wire 3:14 2. Take Me To The Top 3:43 3. Shout At The Devil 3:16 4. Looks That Kill 4:07 5. Too Young To Fall In Love 3:34 6. Smokin' In The Boys Room 3:27 7. Home Sweet Home 3:59 8. Girls, Girls, Girls 4:30 9. Wild Side 4:41 10. Dr. Feelgood 4:50 11. Without You 4:29 12. Kickstart My Heart 4:48 13. Don't Go Away Mad (Just Go Away) 4:40 14. Same Ol' Situation (S.O.S.) 4:12 15. Primal Scream 4:46 16. Afraid 4:07 * LP ONLY 17. Saints Of Los Angeles 3:40 18. The Dirt (est. 1981) 3:52 19. Dogs Of War 4:04 20. Cancelled 4:47 * LP ONLY 21. Home Sweet Home (featuring Dolly Parton) 3:59 – NEW


Miami Herald
18-02-2025
- Miami Herald
Deficiencies in state search warrant cited by feds in dropping case against Miami doctor
Serious mistakes by the Miami-Dade State Attorney's office led to the dismissal Tuesday of federal narcotics charges against Dr. Jeffrey Kamlet, a Miami addiction doctor accused of sex trafficking a 17-year-old girl found hiding in his closet with another teenager in 2022. In a court filing last week, Kamlet's attorney, Jayne Weintraub, seized on several errors made in drafting the search warrants, among them, an obvious 'cut and paste' job by the investigator for Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle's Human Trafficking Task Force. The dismissal of the federal drug charges is another stunning embarrassment for Rundle, whose office has come under scrutiny after years of sloppy prosecutions that has led to similar dismissals, as well as resignations of top lawyers in her office. The Miami Herald was unsuccessful in obtaining a comment from Rundle or the U.S. Prosecutor's office. Kamlet, 69, a renowned addiction doctor who has treated some of South Florida's most prominent people, had already beaten the state's sex trafficking case, which was brought by Rundle in 2023. Twelve state charges were dropped after the victim was found dead, floating in the Little River Canal just weeks before she was scheduled to testify against Kamlet. The girl's mother, who asked not to be identified because she believes her daughter was murdered, said it's shameful police and prosecutors failed to do their jobs. 'From the day they found her in his apartment, everything was swept under the rug,' she said. The case was part of a recent Miami Herald investigation, 'Dr. Feelgood,' which detailed the numerous errors by both Miami Beach police and Rundle's office. The story also revealed that Kamlet was able to expunge three prior criminal arrests, including one for cocaine possession while he was a licensed doctor who treated patients with addiction problems. Kamlet told the Herald that he met the two girls on the dating app Tinder. He contends that they told him they were 18. He and his lawyer have characterized the two girls, one 17, the other 16, as drug addicts and prostitutes who entrapped him. Kamlet denied that he had sex with or gave the girls drugs. The 17-year-old alleged that Kamlet had given her pure Colombian cocaine, then showed her his collection of high-powered weapons and dozens of bottles of pills he kept in his safe. He then handcuffed her to his bed and had sex with her. In another incident, he made her watch a porn video, told her he could get her into pornography and later, in a text message, told her that he would take care of her if they had chemistry and she stopped using drugs. She was admitted to a drug treatment facility in late 2022. When she returned home, she told her mother she intended to testify against him in his upcoming trial and her mother begged her not to. 'I said to her, 'don't do it,' don't say anything to them, our lives are in jeopardy here by talking to the police about someone like him…I told her that people with money and power don't get in trouble.' Three months later, she was dead. The medical examiner ruled her death as 'undetermined.' Miami-Dade police are investigating, but there's no evidence the probe is active. After her death, the FBI stepped in, filing federal drug charges against Kamlet, based on the cache of pills and other forms of powdered and liquid drugs found in his apartment -- pursuant to the state's search warrant. At least one of the drugs found in a safe in his condo was banned in the U.S. At the same time, federal prosecutors seized Kamlet's computers, telling a judge that they were investigating him on child pornography charges. Ultimately, prosecutors couldn't overcome the deficiencies in the search warrant and never filed additional charges. 'We were able to show the government that Dr. Kamlet possessed the controlled substances for legitimate medical purposes in the course of his practice,' said his lawyer, Weintraub, on Tuesday. The court filings however, tell a different story. Weintraub focused on the holes in the search warrant as well as the credibility of the victim. Probably the most damning revelation she found was that the investigator failed to remove references in the search warrant that had nothing to do with Kamlet's case. Frank Casanovas, who has since resigned from Rundle's office, apparently cut and pasted the language from another sex trafficking warrant into Kamlet's search warrant, but didn't delete references to the agencies involved in the other case. Aventura police, for example, was highlighted in the language, but Kamlet's case wasn't handled by Aventura police. 'Notably, because it was cut and pasted, there was no mention of the Miami Beach police who were essential to serve and execute the warrant at the defendant's address,' Weintraub wrote in her filing. Federal prosecutors conceded there were 'numerous shortcomings' in the search warrant, calling it an example of poor 'draftsmanship.' But prosecutors nevertheless argued that Casanovas was operating in good faith and any errors were nothing more than an oversight. Kamlet's arrest warrant was signed by the chief of Rundle's Human Trafficking unit, assistant state attorney Brenda Mezick. It's not clear whether Mezick signed off on the search warrants. It's not the first mistake by Rundle's sex trafficking unit, which handled another recent probe involving allegations that a Key Biscayne gymnastics coach had inappropriately touched one of his students. The unit, which reviewed the allegations, declined to investigate. Had they looked deeper, they would have found that two other students, ages 4 and 7, also filed similar complaints to police. Of the 638,872 criminal charges in the past 10 years in Miami-Dade County, the overwhelming majority — 71% — were dropped, abandoned or otherwise not prosecuted, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. Statewide, that figure was 39%. Staff writer Jay Weaver contributed to this story.
Yahoo
11-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
What to know about Scottsdale Airport, scene of deadly plane crash that killed 1
The city-owned Scottsdale Airport, where planes have been flying since 1942, was the scene of a deadly crash between a Learjet 35A owned by Mötley Crüe frontman Vince Neil and a parked Gulfstream 200 jet. Neil was not on board when its landing gear apparently failed Monday and collided with the other aircraft on the runway, according to a written statement released to media from Worrick Robinson, an attorney in Nashville, where Neil is based. Mötley Crüe is a long-running heavy metal rock band known for songs such as "Shout at the Devil," "Girls, Girls, Girls" and "Dr. Feelgood." Four people were on the Learjet and one person was on the Gulfstream 200, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. Scottsdale Airport, near Scottsdale and Thunderbird roads, is an open-to-the-public general aviation reliever that accommodates smaller, privately owned airplanes than the bigger commercial facilities in Arizona such as Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport. Here's what else to know about Scottsdale Airport. Who is Vince Neil? Motley Crue rockstar owns plane involved in Scottsdale Airport crash Scottsdale Airport's precursor, the old Thunderbird Field II, debuted on June 22, 1942, a little more than six months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The airfield is described on the airport's website as "a basic training facility for World War II Army Air Corps pilots" that "graduated more than 5,500 students." Thunderbird Field I was another training facility in Glendale. Scottsdale in the 1960s became interested in opening a satellite municipal airport. In April 1964, then-Mayor John Woudenberg released a feasibility study that pointed to the former Thunderbird Field site, shuttered since October 1944, as the frontrunner location. Sky Harbor already was getting overwhelmed by air traffic, The Arizona Republic reported at the time. The Arizona Conference of Seventh-day Adventists since 1953 had owned the Thunderbird Field property and had been using it for dormitories. The conference asked Scottsdale to rezone 218 acres around the airfield for industrial use. The rezoning request was controversial, but the city Planning and Zoning Commission went ahead and endorsed it. Scottsdale in 1966 acquired the airfield site, according to the city's online history of the airport. The new Thunderbird Field, now an auxiliary airport owned and operated by Scottsdale, in 1967 opened for air traffic with a 4,800-foot runway. Scottsdale Airport, and the surrounding 2,600-acre Scottsdale Airpark commercial zone, over the years has become central to the city's business growth and has proven itself an essential economic asset. Scottsdale's airport website boasts that Scottsdale Airpark has become the Phoenix metro area's "third-largest employment center" with more than 25 national or regional corporations, more than 2,500 small to medium-sized companies and 48,000 workers. As Scottsdale's residential development grew northward, complaints about noise at Scottsdale Airport became a chronic headache for city officials. Scottsdale in 1999 set up a Noise Abatement Program and includes a page about noise on its airport website. It tracks noise complaints from inside what it calls the "Scottsdale Airport Influence Area" between 40th Street, Jomax Road, 112th Street and Mockingbird Lane. The airport operates 24/7 but aviators are encouraged "to fly before 10 p.m. and after 6 a.m.," the city says. The Monday afternoon collision between Neil's Learjet 35A and the Gulfstream 200 jet was the first fatal accident at Scottsdale Airport since six people died on April 9, 2018, after a Piper PA-24 Comanche crashed shortly after takeoff onto the TPC Scottsdale golf course. A 28-year-old student pilot on the doomed flight, James Pedroza, had cocaine and MDMA in his system at the time of the accident. Dan Nowicki is The Arizona Republic's national politics editor. Follow him on X at @dannowicki. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Scottsdale Airport: What to know about site of deadly plane crash