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Kerry McCann, 34, from Wrexham, told police: "I was going to stop next week once I had finished college."

Sunday 21 March 2010

Kerry McCann, 34, from Wrexham, told police: "I was going to stop next week once I had finished college." He pleaded guilty at Mold Crown Court to possession cocaine with intent to supply after more than £11,000 of the drug and cash were found at his flat. Recorder Simon Medland gave him "full credit" for his plea and "previous excellent character". He added: "But now you must go to prison. It is yet another example of a person who thinks that he can take class A drugs and manage the habit.
"The fact is, that is impossible." He said that, but for his guilty plea, McCann could have received a five-year sentence. The court, on Friday, heard McCann, who had never been in trouble before, was in the final year of a three-year course at Yale College, Wrexham.Class A drugs kill people and they ruin the lives of others, whether they take them themselves or supply to others Recorder Simon Medland
Elizabeth Bell, prosecuting, told the court police found cocaine with an estimated street value of £6,900 and £4,900 in cash at McCann's flat. They had found 90g (3.17oz) of cocaine in packages ready to be supplied. McCann later told them that he would have kept some of the drugs and sold the rest, she said. Tony Rose, defending, said his client had been working as a surveyor but the ending of a long-term relationship meant that an occasional drugs habit became something more entrenched. That, combined with alcohol abuse, meant that his life spiralled out of control.
He said the defendant had sought help from the NHS drugs advisory service and, with the support of family and friends, had been providing negative test results.
McCann was now drugs free, his life was getting back on track, and he had been planning to work abroad, said Mr Rose. He said his explanation was that he was "using any money he made to fund his own habit and also, ironically, to fund his education". Mr Medland said that it was a "sad case", and "one which, regrettably, the court has to face from time to time." He described McCann as an intelligent and much liked person, with strong support from family and friends, was hard working with potentially a bright future ahead of him, "a future full of golden opportunities".
He said: "Class A drugs kill people and they ruin the lives of others whether they take them themselves or supply to others. "You must now serve a prison sentence but I give you full credit for your plea of guilty and your previous excellent character."

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Chrisdian Johnson, 22, knifed Oluwaseyi "Seyi" Ogunyemi, 16, seven times for straying on to his "turf".

Chrisdian Johnson, 22, knifed Oluwaseyi "Seyi" Ogunyemi, 16, seven times for straying on to his "turf".Sentencing Johnson to a minimum 24 years for murder yesterday, Judge Christopher Moss QC said: "Gang violence will not be tolerated."Johnson, of Vauxhall, South London, was caught after police traced the Staffordshire pitbull cross Tyson from its DNA. Johnson was also jailed for 20 years, to be served at the same time, for trying to murder Hurui Hiyabu, 17, who was stabbed nine times but survived.As Johnson was led down at the Old Bailey, he blustered to family: "Cool man".
Judge Moss also ordered the dog be forfeited and it now faces being put down.

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Ducarme Joseph gangster-businessmen

Ducarme Joseph, with reputed ties to the Bloods, is a 41-year-old "businessman" – owner of a clothing store on St. Jacques St. now riddled with bullet holes.The street gangs are growing up, says Montreal police Inspector Charles Mailloux.
"The phenomenon has been evolving since the 1980s. Young people of 14 and 15 years old are now 40. So they're more structured and associated with organized crime. They still hire people to sell drugs on the street, but they're evolving."
Some fear the level of violence is evolving with them. Investigative journalist Julien Sher says when gangs like the Bloods in Montreal – also known as the Reds – take over from more established biker gangs and Mafia organizations, it can mean more unpredictable violence."We're looking at the next generation of gangsters," Sher said. "It's always dangerous to cry fire, but we have seen in Vancouver and Winnipeg that when less structured gangs get involved, there can be more violence because they can sometimes be more hot-headed and less disciplined. It may be harder for them to control their members."Maria Mourani, a Bloc MP who has written a book on Montreal's street gangs, says right now, all the groups are divided, including the Italian Mafia, and the street gangs that work with them."It's a very volatile environment," she said. But she believes someone will try to unite the "Italian clan" to take back control over territory, the street gangs and the "gangster-businessmen."

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Jorge Enrique Rodriguez Mendieta pleaded guilty in December to an indictment accusing him of importing tons of cocaine into the U.S.A

Jorge Enrique Rodriguez Mendieta pleaded guilty in December to an indictment accusing him of importing tons of cocaine into the U.S.A federal judge in Washington sentenced him on Friday.Rodriguez Mendieta was a commander in the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which prosecutors said controls half the world's cocaine supply.The U.S. has designated it as a narco-terrorist organization.
Rodriguez Mendieta was arrested in 2004 and extradited to the U.S. in 2007.
He was prosecuted in Washington by federal prosecutors from New York City, who have expertise in cases involving FARC.

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Andrew Forajter, 26, threw £876 cash out of a window

Friday 19 March 2010

Andrew Forajter, 26, threw £876 cash out of a window, but it was recovered by officers sent to search his house in Repton Road, Middlesbrough, on February 20 last year. Officers found a number of rocks of cocaine in the house, including on the top of a television and in a drawer, all ready wrapped, with a total street value of £650. A quantity of cannabis, worth £35 on the street, was also found. Prosecuting at Teesside Crown Court, Richard Wilson said police also found a list of names, seven mobile phones, a roll of clingfilm and a knife. Forajter, who admitted possession of cocaine and cannabis with intent to supply, said he had been dealing for three months and made £40 a day profit. He said he was in debt to an individual who set him up to deal drugs as a way of repaying the money. The court heard how Forajter, who made full and frank admissions to the police, was in breach of a previous suspended sentence for a different crime. He was now drug free after previously using cannabis. The judge, Recorder Ian Thorp said Forajter was a straight forward street-level dealer, but a "vital cog in a wheel" in the drugs venture. He jailed him for three and-a-half years.

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Joseph Ducarme, 41, survived a brazen midday shooting inside his Old Montreal shop that left two people dead

Joseph Ducarme, 41, survived a brazen midday shooting inside his Old Montreal shop that left two people dead. Ducarme managed to flee the building and, as of Thursday night, was still missing - as were the two gunmen. It is not known whether he was injured in the attack. Ducarme's bodyguard, Peter Christopoulos, and an unidentified man were killed. Two other men were injured. One of them managed to flee the scene and drive himself to the hospital. Ducarme is out on $50,000 bail for a charge of assault and was under orders not to communicate with street gang members. He is reputed to have ties to the Reds, a street gang reportedly trying to mark its territory in the city's lucrative drug trade in bars and restaurants on St. Laurent Blvd.Authorities suspect the Mafia may be behind the attack, and had stated in an earlier search warrant in connection with an investigation that Ducarme "feared retaliation from Italians, Arabs, and motorcycle and street gangs because of his involvement in the drug trade, armed robbery and extortion."Last December Nick Rizzuto Jr., the son of reputed Montreal mob boss Vito Rizzuto, was gunned down in the Notre-Dame-de-Grâce district, and some believe yesterday's attack is in response to the assasination of the mob scion as reported by CBC News:Organized crime experts said the retaliation is likely part of a drawn-out struggle between Montreal's reputed Rizzuto Mafia family and street gangs, and likely linked to the shooting death of Nick Rizzuto Jr. Former crime reporter Michel Auger said Ducarme is a well-known player in Montreal's street gang scene and was once a powerful ally of Vito Rizzuto, but may have had a falling out with the clan. The attack can be seen as an escalation of the underworld conflict between the Mafia and warring factions, Auger said.Since Vito Rizzuto was convicted on a racketeering charge involving the 1981 murder of three Bonanno crime family capos in New York City -- he currently is serving a ten year sentence in a federal prison in Colorado -- and the takedown of several dozen others allegedly tied to the Montreal Mafia pursuant to Operation Coliseum in November 2006, there has been a power vacuum in the city's underworld, and "police have said they are exploring a variety of possible theories about a Mafia turf war" as reported by CBC News: "A power struggle pitting Montreal's mobsters against their counterparts in Toronto is one possible scenario; a battle between Calabrian families and the Rizzutos' Sicilian clan is another."

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Cam Mu appeared at Bristol Crown Court today (Fri), accused of assault by beating.


Cam Mu appeared at Bristol Crown Court today (Fri), also accused of assault by beating.The businessman, who owns Dragon Kiss in Regent Street, Weston, as well as other pubs, restaurants and companies across the South West, denied both charges.
It was the first time that Mu, who previously appeared in front of North Somerset Courthouse, had entered a plea following the alleged incident on November 5. He was released on bail and a trial date was set for June.

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thousands of counterfeit Coach and Gucci shoes, 500 counterfeit Cartier wrist watches and counterfeit Viagra pills.

Federal prosecutors in Maryland announced the indictments Friday of nine people on charges of smuggling 120,000 pairs of counterfeit Nike shoes and half a million counterfeit Coach handbags through the Port of Baltimore.According to the 72-count federal indictment, undercover officers from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement infiltrated the massive operation in 2008, delivering a shipment of 10,000 Nike shoes to Brooklyn, N.Y. The arrests came this week.The products were mostly made in Malaysia and China. Three U.S. citizens are charged with smuggling, trafficking counterfeit goods and money laundering. Four Chinese citizens and two Malaysians also are charged.The crimes occurred in Maryland, New York, North Carolina and elsewhere, authorities said.The merchandise also included thousands of counterfeit Coach and Gucci shoes, 500 counterfeit Cartier wrist watches and counterfeit Viagra pills.Merchandise was delivered to sites in New York and New Jersey with payments and smuggling fees paid in cash. Money was wired to accounts in Asia, and the ring was designed to avoid payment of import duties, authorities said.
The investigation also led to the arrests Thursday of six men in London, in what authorities called one of the biggest counterfeit goods seizures in the United Kingdom's history.Authorities confiscated counterfeit Nike, Ugg, Adidas, Versace, Ralph Lauren and other brand-name merchandise.

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German police officer was critically wounded this week after a Hells Angels member shot him during a house search in Germany


German police officer was critically wounded this week after a Hells Angels member shot him during a house search in Germany. The incident happened during a raid related to prostitution in Anhausen, as part of the German police's offensive to put an end to illegal activities of motorcycle gangs like Hells Angels and Bandidos, The Press Association reported. According to prosecutors, the killer fired without warning through the closed door of his apartment, killing the 42-year-old officer. Despite wearing a bullet-proof vest, the officer got hit and died of internal bleeding. German officials say the gunman, who was also wanted for robbery charges, was arrested.The Hells Angels gang, set up in 1948 in the Fontana/San Bernardino area, is responsible in the US for transportation and distribution of cocaine, hashish, heroin, LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide), ecstasy, PCP (phencyclidine) and diverted pharmaceuticals. They also have been charged with assault, extortion, homicide, money laundering and motorcycle theft.In Germany, concerns are growing that these types of illegal activities are escalating into something far more dangerous. According to German authorities, last year, an increase in joint activities between Hells Angels and neo-Nazi organizations have been reported in Berlin, Brandenburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Saxony, Baden-Württemberg and Hanover.

The US estimates Hells Angels consists of in between 2,000 and 2,500 members, divided in over 230 chapters in the US and in 26 foreign countries. Around 40 of those chapters can be found in Germany.

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Before Bernard Madoff jumped to the top of America's most-hated fraudster list, Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling shared the spot.

Sunday 7 March 2010

Before Bernard Madoff jumped to the top of America's most-hated fraudster list, Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling shared the spot. The two were accused of lying about Enron's financial health while growing rich from inflated high share prices. Of all the frauds in the early aughts, none galled as much as the one that broke the world's largest energy trader.
While lesser crooks were hauled into courthouses and tossed in jail, impatience grew for the hides of Lay and Skilling. A special government task force spent years building a case, winning an indictment and maneuvering through pretrial skirmishes.
Finally, in 2006, after 16 weeks of trial and five days of deliberation, a federal jury in Houston declared them guilty of multiple counts of fraud.
Now there is a chance all of that will come to naught.
Lay died in 2006 before sentencing and appeal, so a judge nullified his conviction as the law required. However reviled, he died an innocent man in the eyes of the law.
Now Skilling just might come out from under his conviction by less dramatic means.
As his appeal awaits a decision from the Supreme Court, look for a partial reversal at least. Several justices have expressed distaste for one of the laws that prosecutors used in
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this indictment, as in other white-collar cases.
The vague "honest services" fraud statute could well doom those counts that are based on it. If the court alters or strikes down the law, it could reverse anywhere from one to 14 of the 19 counts of Skilling's conviction.
But there are five counts, for insider trading and lying to auditors, that have nothing to do with honest services fraud. Those counts would keep Skilling in prison for years to come. He would stay put unless the court decides the entire trial was too unfair to trust any part of the guilty verdict.
This week, several justices gave him reason to hope for an all-out reversal, on every single count.
Skilling was handed that possibility because of his trial judge's devotion to efficiency. U.S. District Judge Simeon Lake III in Houston was more focused on keeping his own tight schedule for jury selection than he was on weeding out biased jurors.
The first problem was that Lake let the trial take place in Houston, the one city in the world where anti-Enron passions ran hottest, deepest and broadest. Even if jurors entered the courtroom with no such feelings themselves, would they have the backbone to declare these men not guilty when everyone around them wants their hides?
Lake blew off defense evidence of widespread bias without so much as a hearing.
That might have been OK had he then thoroughly questioned potential jurors and sent home those too biased to be fair, or those with a conflict of interest.
He didn't.
One potential juror said she had lost $50,000 to $60,000 in the Enron debacle, yet Lake declined to excuse her for cause.
"How can we be satisfied that there was a fair and impartial jury picked when the judge doesn't follow up on a witness who says, 'I'm a victim of this fraud?'" asked Justice Sonia Sotomayor.
True, that juror was dismissed on a discretionary strike by the defense, as were others who expressed bias. But the number of those so-called peremptory challenges is limited.
Lake's refusal to excuse some seemingly biased jurors for cause forced the defense to use strikes they might have otherwise saved for jurors who provoked subtler concerns for them. Limited in number, peremptory challenges are designed for that.
During Supreme Court arguments, Justice Stephen Breyer said he counted at least three and as many as six potential jurors who Lake refused to dismiss in spite of clear indications of bias.
"I am worried about a fair trial," Breyer said. "I am genuinely worried."
Whether the court will decide for Skilling based on that concern is another question. Breyer also fretted about how far the Supreme Court should go in micromanaging jury selection and telling an experienced, respected judge such as Lake how to do his job.
And yet, part of Lake's solid reputation stems from his ability to keep trials running smoothly and quickly without bullying lawyers. Great. But surely fairness should come first.
A 14-page pretrial questionnaire culled the most deeply prejudiced of the potential jurors. Of those who were left, Lake spent a mere five hours questioning 48 of them to see whether any expressions of bias in their written answers made them unable to fairly judge the evidence.
Five hours was nothing, considering a widespread sense in Houston that the once-beloved Lay had betrayed the city's trust, a belief that Lay and Skilling should be made to pay for their crimes and the pervasive publicity about Enron's collapse and the trial itself.
It took five days to sort through Martha Stewart's jury pool in New York.
But Lake had promised to conclude jury selection in a day, and this he did.
If Skilling wins on that claim, his conviction on all 19 counts would be thrown out. The government would have to decide whether to seek re-indictment, which would be far more difficult now than it was before, when the evidence was less than a decade old.
And this time Lay wouldn't be there as his co-defendant to give the allegations more heft.
The whole previous effort would have been wasted.
How is that for efficiency?

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Kevin Dunion has been asked by the family of Moira Anderson, a schoolgirl who disappeared almost 50 years ago, to review a decision

Monday 1 March 2010

Kevin Dunion has been asked by the family of Moira Anderson, a schoolgirl who disappeared almost 50 years ago, to review a decision by Strathclyde police not to release the document that may identify her abductors.
The 11-year-old was last seen boarding a bus in Coatbridge, Lanarkshire, in 1957 during a heavy snowstorm. She was on her way to the shops to buy a box of chocolates for her mother’s birthday.
The dossier, written by James Gallogley, a convicted paedophile who died in Peterhead prison in 1999, is said to implicate senior public figures in the abuse of children in Strathclyde during the 1950s and 1960s. It is also believed to list vehicles and safe houses used in Glasgow, Monklands and Paisley where children were hidden before being taken to sex parties.
Strathclyde’s chief constable has refused to release the document, saying its publication could destroy any chance of solving the case.
However, relatives argue it could help to identify those responsible for Anderson’s abduction and recover her remains.
Her sister Janet, 63, who lives in Australia, has appealed to the information commissioner to order its release. A decision is expected in the next few weeks.
Her call is backed by Sandra Brown, the founder of the Moira Anderson Foundation, who believes her late father, Alex Gartshore, was responsible for the crime.
In an interview with The Sunday Times this weekend, Brown said her father, a former bus driver and convicted sex offender from Coatbridge, was part of a paedophile ring whose members she will recognise when she sees Gallogley’s dossier.
She said that Gartshore and Gallogley, who were friends, lived close to Fred West, the notorious serial killer, in Coatbridge during the early 1960s. Both Gartshore and West moved out of the area in late 1965.
However, Gartshore, who was on bail accused of sexually assaulting a teenage girl at the time of Anderson’s disappearance, denied any involvement in the crime. He died earlier this month at the age of 85.
According to Brown, who has spoken to former police officers involved in the investigation, Gallogley’s dossier describes how “wee Moira” was subdued with chloroform, abused by Gartshore and “one other” and placed in the boot of Gartshore’s bus.
It claims her body was dumped in the Tarry Burn in Coatbridge, an area that has never been thoroughly searched.
The dossier was handed to police by a former cell mate four years after Gallogley’s death. It prompted a review of Anderson’s disappearance but failed to throw up any meaningful leads.
“Pressure needs to be brought to bear on Strathclyde police,” said Brown. “Who is being protected and why is there a problem with transparency? I understand Gallogley’s dossier reveals names in his confession. It indicates Moira was not the sole victim of this ring and gives details of parties where children were abused.
“Those named could help lead us to Moira’s remains. There’s unwillingness by officers to share information.”
However, Strathclyde police said inquiries were ongoing.
“We regularly review any investigations and the disappearance of Moira Anderson is no exception,” said a spokesman. “Any new evidence and information will be the subject of further investigation in an effort to resolve her disappearance, ” said a spokesman.
//

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