Facebook Tell A Friend Script

I need a Tell A Friend Script for Facebook that will do the following:

1. After a user opts into an email list from a squeeze page they will be taken to another page.
2. On this other page they will be asked to like and post a pre-populated message and url to their Facebook account.
3. Once it has been verified that they liked the page and posted to their facebook account they will be taken to a page where they will receive a gift specified by the person that owns the email list.

It will have a similar feel to this url ( http://www.traffic-zombie.com/ ) Look at the Facebook part of this script.

Please show me similar scripts like this that you have done to be in consideration.

Also let me know if you need more details about this project.

Ten High Quality 500 Word Articles Needed On Bullying

I need 10 high quality articles on the subject of bullying and it’s affects on different demographics. Articles should be 100% original and written in American style English in proper American style grammar.

Articles will need to cover the following topics, one topic per article:

1) Psychological impact of bullying on grade school children
2) Long term impacts of bullying on youngers – how it can affect them in relationships, job, etc.
3) Bullying on facebook – how bullying has spilled over from the playground to facebook
4) Internet bullying – differences/similiarities between bullying in person and bullying on the internet through email, facebook, twitter
5) Bullying in a Technological World – How new technology such as mobile phones, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter has changed the face of bullying
6) Protecting Yourself Against Bullies – Tips to deal with bullies in the workplace
7) Protecting your Children From Bullies – Tips to help children deal with bullies
8) Bullying and self esteem – Information on how bullying can affect self-esteem in youngster and adults
9) Relationship of Bullying and Depression – show link between being bullied and increased vulnerability to depression
10) Inside Look at a Bully – inside look at why a child or adult begins and continues to bully others

Articles should be concise and annotated with any references quoted. Bonus points if you can include any studies supporting conclusions.

All works become property of me once final payment is made and all rights – without exception – are transferred to me upon payment.

Backend Architect/developer

We are looking for a experienced Backend Architect/Developer for custom database development (database design, schema, data normalization, SQL queries, etc.), who is also a PHP wizard with demonstrable experience in common web-based frameworks like CodeIgniter, Zend, Cake, etc.

The entire application has been scoped, designed, mocked-up–and front-end developed (HTML/CSS/JS) leaving you–the backend developer–to focus on the database and front-end integration.

RESPONSIBILITIES
– Build high-performance web application
– Administer database
– Apply logic to front-end code already completed by other engineers

REQUIREMENTS
– Experience building high-performance web applications.
– Must have 4+ years of experience working with PHP5 and common MVC frameworks like CodeIgniter, Zend, Cake, etc.
– Technical experience in relational database technologies; Strong experience in Database Programming
– Experience with multi-tenant architecture and administering servers in a SAAS environment.
– Must have executed on Enterprise/B2B initiatives.
– Must have excellent communication and collaboration skills.
– Computer science degrees preferred but not required – ability trumps all…
– Experience executing 3rd Party / Social Media API’s

We are a live-event production, experiential marketing agency experienced in bringing digital products to market. Our current project was “born of necessity” as a B2B application that leverages our expertise in staffing live-events globally, but with a few twists… making it marketable to a greater audience.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
– Please see the attached SITE MAP for complete project scope
– See short vid of completed/developed fron-end: http://primevalatom.com/vids/mtOvrvw

Interested candidates, please also submit c/o RC:

1.) Two (2) RELEVANT EXAMPLES (Backend/B2B Application Development) Links Only Please.
2.) Recent work history/Resume

Galleon founder Rajaratnam guilty

Mr Rajaratnam was met by photographers and camera crews at courtMore than two dozen people have been charged in the probe, but Rajaratnam is the most prominent
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US hedge fund billionaire Raj Rajaratnam has been found guilty of making tens of millions of dollars from insider trading.

The unanimous verdict brings to an end a nine-week trial which is part of what prosecuters call the largest hedge fund insider trading case in history.

Central to the prosecution’s evidence were tapped phone calls between Rajaratnam and corporate insiders.

Rajaratnam has yet to be sentenced but faces up to 25 years in jail.

Prosecutors asked that he be retained in custody until his sentencing.

He was found guilty on all of the 14 charges he faced, including five counts of conspiracy and nine of securities fraud.

The jury decision was postponed for several days after one juror fell ill and had to be replaced, forcing the jury to restart their deliberations from the beginning.

Jurors went back to the courtroom repeatedly during their deliberations to listen to sections of the 45 tapes of wire-tapped telephone calls.

Prosecutors argued Rajaratnam made as much as $63.8m (£39m) in illegal profits from 2003 to March 2009 by trading on tips from a network of highly-placed corporate insiders.

The companies traded included Google, Intel and Hilton Hotels, the prosecution said.

In his final closing arguments, Assistant US Attorney Jonathan Streeter said the Rajaratnam defence team wanted the jury to defy logic and common sense and ignore the evidence provided by dozens of recorded phone calls of illegal trading tips.

Prosecutors highlighted conversations they argued showed the win-at-all-cost attitude of Rajaratnam, who wanted to “conquer the market”.

The court heard how investment manager Danielle Chiesi, speaking with Rajaratnam, boasted about one insider tip.

“They’re going to guide down. I just got a call from my guy – I played him like a fine-tuned piano,” she said.

In another call, she said she was “glad that we talk on a secure line”.

In its original charge against Rajaratnam, US financial regulator the Securities and Exchange Commission said he was “not a master of the universe, but rather a master of the rolodex”.

“He cultivated a network of high-ranking corporate executives and insiders, and then tapped into this ring to obtain confidential details about quarterly earnings and takeover activity.”

Defence attorney John Dowd argued the secretly-recorded conversations were between traders discussing widely-known stock information.

He said prosecutors had failed to prove that Rajaratnam had broken any insider-trading laws.

The Sri-Lankan-born billionaire, 53, is the central figure in a sweeping US government probe of insider trading at hedge funds.

More than two dozen people have been criminally or civilly charged in the case. Most of them have pleaded guilty.

In September a former IBM executive, Robert Moffat, was sentenced to six months in jail and a $50,000 fine after pleading guilty to his role in tipping off Galleon with inside information from his former employer.

Moffat had leaked the information to Rajaratnam’s colleague, Chiesi, with whom he was having an affair, and who has also pleaded guilty.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Syria tanks ‘shell’ protest city

Syrian soldier patrols Damascus street - 8 MayThe two main cities, Damascus and Aleppo, have so far been free of major protests

Syrian security forces are continuing their crackdown on anti-government protests across the country, with army tanks shelling the third city of Homs.

Several reports say the residential district of Bab Amro came under attack in the early hours of the morning.

Towns around Deraa in the south have been raided and a western suburb of the capital Damascus has been cut off.

Thousands have reportedly been arrested and hundreds killed in the crackdown.

The Syrian government insists it is pursuing “armed terrorist gangs”.

It says it has seized arms and ammunition as well as 150 motorbikes it says the “terrorists” were using to launch attacks.

Meanwhile, diplomats at the United Nations say international pressure following the crackdown has caused Syria to drop its plans to run for a seat on the UN Human Rights Council.

There has been no official confirmation of the move.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called on Syria to take a softer line.

“I urge again President [Bashar al-]Assad to heed calls for reform and freedom and to desist from excessive force and mass arrest of peaceful demonstrators,” he told journalists.

He said he was disappointed that Syria had not yet allowed an international aid assessment team access to Deraa, where the unrest began in March, despite assurances from Mr Assad.

The BBC’s Jim Muir in Beirut, the capital of neighbouring Lebanon, says that despite the crackdown, solidarity demonstrations are being reported from many parts of the country.

Hands of protest, Syria

It seems that as soon as the flames are stifled in one area, they break out somewhere else, he adds.

One resident in Homs told the BBC the district has been under siege for four days, with no water, electricity or access to medical care.

He said there had been clashes between security forces and residents, who resisted troops with hunting rifles.

It has not been possible to verify the account.

Reports said heavy shelling began in the Bab Amro district at about 0530 (0230 GMT), and that hundreds of troops were moving into the area.

“Homs is shaking with the sound of explosions from tank shelling and heavy machine-guns,” Najati Tayrara, a human rights campaigner in the city, told Reuters news agency.

An eyewitness, who has not been identified for his own safety, told the BBC security in Homs was extremely tight.

“Always when we go on the streets, around our jobs and the city centre we find the tanks on the bridges,” he said.

“They divided the city into three or four regions … and inspect everybody who comes in. Nobody can go out.

“We see the tanks with [many] soldiers, fully armed, and we hear the sounds of firing from inside these regions. But we have no ability to go there to see what’s happening or to give food or to give help to the injured people.”

There are reports of theft and looting, and that the main shopping centre in the area has been badly damaged by bombing.

Anti-government protests in Homs, Syria (6 May 2011)Homs reportedly has no water, electricity or medical care

In the town of Jassem, north of Deraa, mass demonstrations continued into the night even as the troops and tanks started to move in.

Jassem and other towns in the area have been surrounded by security forces for several days, declaring their defiance through frequent peaceful protests.

Nearby Deraa has been cut off by troops and tanks for over two weeks, with dozens killed and hundreds arrested.

The government says the situation there is now normal, but it has not allowed UN relief missions in.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says 621 civilians and 120 security personnel have been killed since demonstrations pro-democracy protests began in March. Another Syrian rights group, Sawasiah, says more than 800 civilians have been killed.

Officials dispute the civilian toll and say about 100 soldiers have died.

Foreign journalists have not been allowed to enter Syria, so reports from the country are difficult to verify independently.

CLICKABLE

Qamishli

A mobile phone snapshot, reportedly taken in Qamishli on 29 April, shows protesters carrying banners written in Arabic and Kurdish demanding democracy.

Damascus

Video has been posted online, apparently showing demonstrators in central Damascus, where protests began immediately after Friday prayers had finished.

This footage, which the BBC cannot verify, seems to show demonstrators in Midan, central Damascus, on Friday afternoon. A source in Damascus says he could see a lot of security and police officers in the main areas of Damascus after protests began after Friday prayers finished.

Talbisah

Amateur video has captured the moment what was a peaceful protest in the Syrian city of Talbisah was broken up forcefully by soldiers.

This unverified video seems to show a peaceful protest in Talbisah. Moments into the footage, tanks fire on unarmed civilians. Wyre Davis reports.

Deraa

A soldier walks past men in civilian clothes lying on the ground with their hands tied behind their backs in this still photo taken from an amateur video.

Send your pictures and videos to [email protected] or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Libya rebels ‘take key airport’

Libyan rebels in Misrata, file pic from 9 May, 2011Rebels in the port city of Misrata have been besieged by pro-Gaddafi forces for several weeks

Libyan rebels have captured Misrata airport, driving back troops loyal to Col Muammar Gaddafi, reports say.

Hundreds of rebels were celebrating in the streets after pro-Gaddafi forces fled, leaving behind tanks that were set on fire, witnesses said.

Government forces have been pounding the western city, which remains largely under rebel control, for weeks.

Its port has become a lifeline for supplying civilians and for evacuating wounded people fleeing the fighting.

Meanwhile, explosions were reported in the capital Tripoli on Wednesday, after Nato said its planes had carried out 6,000 missions over Libya since it assumed command of military operations there at the end of March.

The air strikes have helped secure rebels in their strongholds in eastern Libya, but observers say it remains unclear to what extent they have loosened Col Gaddafi’s grip on western Libya.

Witnesses said Misrata airport fell after hours of fighting between rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces overnight.

Analysis

Misrata’s airport has been an important base for Col Gadaffi’s forces and heavy weapons during the long siege of the city and the heavy bombardments that have accompanied it.

During the past few days rebels have been making a big push to break the siege, and heavy fighting has been reported around the airport south of the city. A French reporter at the airport now says it has been captured, along with a number of government tanks, but that couldn’t be confirmed by the rebel’s chief military spokesman – a fact that may underline the poor communications that have plagued Libya’s fragmented revolutionaries.

It is probably too soon to consider whether the airport can be used to bring supplies – civilian or military – into Misrata. Col Gadaffi’s forces have managed, despite intensified Nato air raids, to keep hold of long-range weapons with a range of more than thirty kilometers.

The broader question is whether the rebels can now hold onto both the airport, and a larger swathe of territory recently captured on the western side of the city. The next few days should offer some insights into the resilience of pro-Gadaffi forces in the area, and their determination to recapture the only fully “liberated” chunk of western Libya.

The bodies of pro-government forces could be seen lying in the street as the rebels celebrated their victory, correspondents said. A dozen rebels were said to have been wounded in the fighting.

As well as burning government tanks, the rebels said they had captured 40 Grad rockets from the regime troops, AFP news agency reported.

Libya’s third-largest city, Misrata is the only significant western rebel holdout, and is strategically important because of its deep-sea port.

Though the rebels are said to be better organised than those in eastern Libya, and have, for example, set up a network of makeshift arms factories, their campaign is still an improvised affair.

Government forces have sown anti-shipping mines off the harbour, used Russian-made Grad rockets to scatter anti-vehicle mines in the port, and set fuel storage tanks ablaze with missile strikes, according to rebels and human rights groups.

Pro-Gaddafi troops in civilian areas are also using Spanish-made cluster bombs, Human Rights Watch and other agencies say.

Libya’s government says militants inspired by al-Qaeda are fighting with rebel forces in Misrata.

It says it is trying to protect civilians from rebels, and that doctors in the city were “trying to give a bad image of Misrata” to encourage more direct Nato intervention.

Following a wave of revolutions across the region, Libya’s uprising was sparked by February’s arrest of a human rights campaigner in the eastern city of Benghazi that rapidly spread to other cities.

Authorities used aircraft to attack protesters, prompting the resignation of many Libyan diplomats as rebel forces called on Col Gaddafi to relinquish his five-decade rule and open Libya up to a more democratic rule.

The EU has frozen the assets of Col Gaddafi and members of his family, and banned the supply of arms, ammunition and any equipment that could be used for “internal repression”.

The European bloc plans to open an office in Benghazi to improve the flow of aid for the authorities there, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton has said.

The office will help support civil society and the interim Transitional National Council, she said.

Addressing Euro MPs in a debate on EU foreign policy, Baroness Ashton stressed the need for the EU to help the anti-Gaddafi rebels develop education, healthcare and border security.

Some party leaders in the parliament urged the EU to make a bigger commitment to support the pro-democracy movements in North Africa and the Middle East, with France and Italy recognising the TNC as the legitimate representative of the Libyan people.

map

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pupil headlock teacher suspended

A Wrexham teacher slapped a pupil and put him in a headlock, a professional conduct committee has been told.

Mark Salisbury, a senior teacher at an education centre for excluded children, was dismissed at a disciplinary hearing in July 2009 for gross misconduct.

The General Teaching Council committee found the facts in the case and suspended him from the teaching profession for a period of one year.

Mr Salisbury was not at the hearing in Ewloe, Flintshire, on Wednesday.

It heard from two of his former colleagues at Dodds Lane Student Centre, Gwersyllt, at the time of the incident in 2008.

Karen Rathbone, a classroom assistant at the time, described how she had been sitting at a desk with a 14-year-old pupil, known throughout the hearing as Pupil A, when Mr Salisbury approached and reproached him for a previous incident involving other students.

She said he slapped the boy at least twice on the side of the head and then placed him in a headlock and poked him with a crutch that he was using at the time.

Mrs Rathbone said that the pupil was angry and upset and hit Mr Salisbury back.

Support worker John Stewart told the panel he heard raised voices and came out of his classroom to see Mr Salisbury with his arm around pupil A’s neck.

Both staff members filled in incident report forms and Mr Salisbury was suspended two days later, the panel heard.

In a statement he made during the investigation, he described the exchange with pupil A is being “entirely friendly”.

But he was dismissed at a disciplinary hearing in July 2009 for gross misconduct, withdrawing an appeal a few months later due to health reasons, the panel was told.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Disability cuts ‘to hit 80,000’

Parking space for disabled personPeople claiming middle and lower rates of benefits face losing out, the charity says
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Up to 80,000 disabled people in Wales could be hit by benefits cuts, a charity has claimed.

Cardiff Vales and Valleys Institute of Blind People (CVV) said people claiming middle and lower rates of Disability Living Allowance (DLA) were at risk.

The group took part in a protest march in London by about 40 UK disability groups.

Ministers say the welfare system is failing people and that reforms will see benefits go to those who need them.

CVV, which was formerly the Cardiff Institute for the Blind, claimed that people currently receiving DLA middle rate care could have their payment reduced from the current £55 a week to £20 a week.

People on the lower rate risk losing their entitlement, the charity said.

Head of development Carol Adams the charity wanted to see the UK government review its benefits reforms urgently.

She said: “We are deeply concerned about the impact that planned cuts could have to benefits.

“I’m really worried that if there are cuts I won’t be able to do everything that I am able to do at the moment, and will lose my independence”

Danny Eggar Disability Living Allowance claimant

“They could be under threat of a significant reduction or removal of their DLA benefits altogether.

These vital benefits help disabled people to live independent lives.

“They will be amongst the people hardest hit by the government’s cuts, losing out in multiple areas including benefit reforms and service cutbacks.”

Organisers of the demonstration in London called it the Hardest Hit Protest and said they wanted to send a message to ministers to scrap cuts.

One of those who took part, Danny Eggar, 23, from Cardiff, who claims DLA, said: “I’m joining the march as I’m afraid that many of my friends will be affected.

“I use my DLA for transport, taxis to the doctors, shopping and on software for my computer which is expensive.

“I’m really worried that if there are cuts I won’t be able to do everything that I am able to do at the moment, and will lose my independence.”

Charities and organisations taking part in the event included Scope, Leonard Cheshire Disability, Mencap, and Sense.

A spokesman for the Department for Work and Pensions said: “Our commitment to help support disabled people live independent lives runs at the heart of our welfare reforms and severely disabled people who need support will always get it.

“The system we have at the moment is not fit for purpose and is failing disabled people.

“We are reforming welfare to make sure that the billions we spend on benefits goes to those who need it and that for the first time disabled people get proper help and support to live independent lives and work in the mainstream jobs that they want.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

SNP backbencher wins Holyrood job

Tricia MarwickSNP MSP Tricia Marwick was elected as the Scottish Parliament’s presiding officer

SNP backbencher Tricia Marwick has been elected as the new presiding officer of the Scottish Parliament, in the wake of her party’s election win.

The Mid Fife and Glenrothes MSP won the five-year job in a ballot of Holyrood’s 129 members.

Ms Marwick pledged to do her “very, very best” in the role.

Out-going presiding officer Alex Fergusson said the election of a member of the likely party of government to the post presented “fresh challenges”.

Labour criticised the appointment, saying it gave “cause for concern”.

Ms Marwick, 57, saw off a challenge from party colleague Christine Grahame and former Labour minister Hugh Henry.

The elections were held as Holyrood sat for the first time since the SNP’s landslide win at the polls, last week.

Tricia Marwick – background

Tricia Marwick was born on 5 November, 1953, in the Fife town of Glenrothes.

The miner’s daughter worked as a public affairs officer for housing charity Shelter Scotland until her election, in 1999, as a list MSP for Mid-Scotland and Fife.

She contested the Central Fife seat in subsequent elections, taking the constituency on the night of the SNP’s historic win in 2007.

Ms Marwick, who has previously served as SNP business manager, won the new seat of Mid Fife and Glenrothes in the 2011 Holyrood election.

In the second parliament, she brought forward a backbench bill to introduce the single transferable vote method of Proportional Representation voting for local council elections.

The move was rejected, but in reality was designed to flush out the Lib Dems, in coalition with Labour at the time, who favoured the move.

Ms Marwick was also convener of the Scottish Parliament’s standards committee, but stood down in 2003, amid the fallout of a row involving former SNP MSP Dorothy-Grace Elder, who had made a complaint against her.

She has an interest in animal welfare.

Timeline: Post-election steps Who are the MSPs?

The party will form Scotland’s first majority administration, four years after it went into minority government following its victory in the 2007 election.

Paying tribute to her predecessor as presiding officer, Ms Marwick – who will resign from the SNP to take up the politically neutral post – told MSPs: “Alex was a class act and a difficult one to follow. I will do my very, very, best.”

In an emotional acceptance speech, she added: “As presiding officer, I will be fair to all members. I will always act in the interests of the Scots parliament.”

In his final speech as presiding officer, Mr Fergusson, who has returned to parliament as a Tory MSP, Mr Fergusson said each Scottish election had delivered a first for Holyrood – a coalition government in 1999, a “rainbow parliament” of seven parties in 2003, minority government in 2007 and, now, a likely majority administration.

Mr Fergusson, said: “The parliament itself seems to have taken this road of firsts to heart, electing a female member as presiding officer for the first time.

“Furthermore, it has also elected a member from the likely party of government for the first time and that in itself will present fresh challenges.”

Mr Fergusson went on to say he could testify to Ms Marwick’s “ability to put the interests of this parliament before the interests of any party within it.”

In his pitch for presiding officer, Mr Henry, a former education and deputy justice minister, said he would not stand in the way of an independence referendum, which the SNP is staging in the second half of the parliamentary term.

Mr Henry was nominated for presiding officer by out-going Labour leader Iain Gray, and seconded by the Tories’ Annabel Goldie.

His position came amid speculation that Nationalists would wield their majority to elect one of their own MSPs, because of fears that an opposition member could rule the referendum beyond the parliament’s powers.

Labour business manager Paul Martin, said: “The appointment of the new presiding officer was a big challenge for the new majority government, and it has not got off to a good start.

“Labour wants to engage positively with it, but this appointment does not send out the right signal and is a cause for concern.”

The election for first minister – with SNP leader Alex Salmond the only realistic candidate – is taking place at a later date.

Mr Gray and Miss Goldie have both announced they are standing down from their leadership roles in the autumn, while Tavish Scott earlier quit as Lib Dem leader with immediate effect.

MSPs have also been asked to elect two of their fellow members to serve in the post of deputy presiding officer, in the new parliament.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Friend ‘last to see Milly alive’

Milly DowlerMilly Dowler disappeared as she walked home from a railway station after school in March 2002

A friend of schoolgirl Milly Dowler was the last person to see her alive before she was abducted from the street and murdered, a court heard today.

The 13-year-old disappeared nine years ago while walking home from school in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey. Her remains were found six months later.

Levi Bellfield, 42, formerly of West Drayton, west London, denies murdering and kidnapping the teenager.

The Old Bailey heard a schoolfriend of her sister Gemma saw her walking home.

Katherine Laynes, who was 15 at the time, made eye contact with Milly moments before she vanished.

“So [Katherine] looked out for her on the same side she had seen her walking, but she wasn’t there”

Prosecuter Brian Altman QC

Brian Altman QC, prosecuting, said Milly had gone to a cafe at Walton-on-Thames railway station after leaving Heathside School in Weybridge on 21 March 2002.

Katherine was sitting at a bus stop in Station Avenue when she saw Milly walking alone, wearing her school uniform and carrying her rucksack.

Mr Altman said: “She was alone at the bus stop. She thought she was at the stop for about 10 minutes when she saw Milly Dowler walking along on the opposite side of the road.

“According to Katherine, they made eye contact.”

Mr Altman said Milly walked to Katherine’s left, crossing the entrance to the station car park.

Levi BellfieldBellfield is also accused of trying to abduct an 11-year-old girl the day before Milly disappeared

But she lost sight of her when the advertising board side of the bus shelter obscured her vision.

Katherine’s bus arrived at the stop within a couple of minutes of Milly disappearing from her view, Mr Altman said.

“The older girl boarded her bus and was the only passenger on board.

“As the bus moved off, she expected to see Milly again in Station Avenue, continuing her walk.

“So she looked out for her on the same side she had seen her walking, but she wasn’t there.”

The Old Bailey has heard Bellfield, a former wheelclamper, had rented a flat “literally just yards away from the spot where Milly was last seen alive”.

CCTV showed a red car Bellfield was using at the time leaving the area within 22 minutes of Milly’s abduction, prosecutors said.

Bellfield denies Milly’s kidnap and murder.

He also denies the attempted kidnap of 11-year-old Rachel Cowles in Shepperton, Surrey, the day before Milly disappeared.

Bellfield was convicted at the Old Bailey in 2008 of attacks on women in west London over a period of just over two years.

He killed Marsha McDonnell, 19, in February 2003 and Amelie Delagrange, 22, in August 2004, by striking them on the head with a blunt instrument.

In May 2004, he attempted to murder Kate Sheedy, 18, by deliberately running her over in a car.

The trial continues.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.