By Rand Paul
Obama acts as though we no longer have a Constitution
For years, the affable, white-haired Max Clifford has been the "go to" guy for British celebrities seeking help with public relations fiascos. Now it is Clifford who may need help: He was arrested Thursday as part of a wide-ranging U.K. inquiry into sex abuse.
Jimmy Savile was one of Britain's biggest stars _ and, allegedly, one of its worst sexual predators. Now the nation is asking whether there was a link between one and the other.
Brace yourself, Harry.
Brace yourself, Harry.

A judge on Friday banned a 30-year-old woman from going near Simon Cowell after she admitted smashing a window of the entertainment mogul's house with a brick.

He gets colonic irrigations, Botox injections and vitamin drips, and insists on black toilet paper in his home.

Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel just got a prime-time gig: host of the Emmy Awards.
A woman accused of breaking into Simon Cowell's house wielding a broken brick and then hiding in the entertainment mogul's wardrobe appeared in a London court Monday.
She squared off against former Beatle Paul McCartney in divorce court; on Thursday, Heather Mills took on Piers Morgan at Britain's media ethics inquiry.
CNN star interviewer Piers Morgan faces questions Tuesday about his time at the top of Britain's tabloid industry _ widely anticipated testimony that may dredge up allegations his British newspaper career was colored by wrongdoing.
As Britain's most powerful Sunday newspaper crashes and burns, newsrooms across London are feeling the heat.
The dress is packed away, the partying guests have left Buckingham Palace and Prince William returns to military duty next week instead of taking a honeymoon with Kate Middleton.

Naomi Campbell's swagger is what powers her runway strut, and it's unlikely another few uncomfortable days of attention over her testimony in the Charles Taylor war-crimes trial will change that.

Naomi Campbell's swagger is what powers her runway strut, and it's unlikely another few uncomfortable days of attention over her testimony in the Charles Taylor war-crimes trial will change that.
`Max, I'm worried that I'm going to be implicated.'
"Anyone who really knew me all those years ago and those who have known me since will have no doubt that I would never act in the way I have today been accused," he said, adding that the allegations were "very distressing" to him and his family.