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Multimillionaire Paul Fridman to stand trial over cocaine-party rape

Thursday, 25 November 2010

Multimillionaire Paul Fridman to stand trial over cocaine-party rape: "Melbourne multimillionaire accused of raping a female acquaintance after snorting cocaine with her has been committed to stand trial.
Property developer Paul Fridman pleaded not guilty to two counts of rape at the Melbourne Magistrates Court, but guilty to one count of possessing cocaine.
It is alleged that Fridman, 34, and the woman had been drinking before going to a party at a house in Prahran where he allegedly forced the woman to perform oral sex on him.
Magistrate Susan Wakeling said while the 'evidence of the complainant is unsatisfactory in a number of respects, the factors which go to credit are an issue for a jury'."

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son of the jailed president of the Chosen Few motorcycle gang was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison today for threatening a government witness.

With about 20 members and supporters of the biker gang watching, Chad Koschuk, 24, of Alden was sentenced by U.S. District Judge William M. Skretny.

The judge referred to Koschuk's conduct as "bad, stupid and ugly," but the sentence was well below the potential prison term that was prescribed by advisory government sentencing guidelines.

After a jury trial in July, Koschuk was convicted of making verbal threats against Jason Macken, an alleged victim of extortion by the Chosen Few, during an encounter outside a convenience store in Alden.

The incident took place in September 2009. According to federal prosecutors and agents, Koschuk criticized Macken for testifying against his father and told him he would some day sexually assault him while pulling on his pony tail.

Koschuk did not stalk Macken, and ran into him "by chance," defense attorney Daniel J. Henry Jr. said. Henry also said Koschuk spoke out of anger and in defense of his father, and noted that his client never physically touched Macken.

Skretny said he understood all that, but added that he cannot "condone" or "minimize" anyone making threats against a witness.

"We're talking about a trash-talking threat [but] you just don't go around doing this to individuals," Skretny told Koschuk. "There needs to be full respect for the law."

The son of the jailed president of the Chosen Few motorcycle gang was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison today for threatening a government witness.

With about 20 members and supporters of the biker gang watching, Chad Koschuk, 24, of Alden was sentenced by U.S. District Judge William M. Skretny.

The judge referred to Koschuk's conduct as "bad, stupid and ugly," but the sentence was well below the potential prison term that was prescribed by advisory government sentencing guidelines.

After a jury trial in July, Koschuk was convicted of making verbal threats against Jason Macken, an alleged victim of extortion by the Chosen Few, during an encounter outside a convenience store in Alden.

The incident took place in September 2009. According to federal prosecutors and agents, Koschuk criticized Macken for testifying against his father and told him he would some day sexually assault him while pulling on his pony tail.

Koschuk did not stalk Macken, and ran into him "by chance," defense attorney Daniel J. Henry Jr. said. Henry also said Koschuk spoke out of anger and in defense of his father, and noted that his client never physically touched Macken.

Skretny said he understood all that, but added that he cannot "condone" or "minimize" anyone making threats against a witness.

"We're talking about a trash-talking threat [but] you just don't go around doing this to individuals," Skretny told Koschuk. "There needs to be full respect for the law."

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Darrin Ebron, Celebrity DJ, Indicted in Cocaine Trafficking Bust - Crimesider - CBS News

Friday, 19 November 2010

Darrin Ebron, Celebrity DJ, Indicted in Cocaine Trafficking Bust - Crimesider - CBS News: "Celebrity disc jockey Darrin Ebron is facing drug trafficking and money laundering charges along with 13 other suspects in an alleged coast-to-coast cocaine ring.
Police say the operation used private jets to smuggle hundreds of kilograms of cocaine via private jets from Southern California to Baltimore. Authorities seized nearly 300 kilograms of cocaine and $1.1 million.
Ebron, who's 43, runs Goodlife American Clothing and was the DJ at Eddie Murphy's 2008 nuptials in Bora Bora. His website say that his clientele included Usher, Christina Aguilera, Justin Timberlake and Kanye West.

Also indicted were Ricky Brascom, 28, and Charles Ransom Jr., 36, both of Los Angeles, and who are co-chief executive officers of Behind da Scenes Entertainment, whose main artist is rapper Paypa."

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Montreal police bust cocaine ring

Montreal police bust cocaine ring: "Montreal police were in the midst of a large-scale drug bust early Thursday morning in the city's northern sector.
According to Montreal police Constable Anie Lemieux, officers executed 11 search warrants and made several arrests before 7:30 a.m.
Two businesses along Beaubien and Everett Sts., along with several houses, were reportedly searched.
The drug trafficking ring that was targeted specialized mainly in cocaine, Lemieux added.
More arrests are expected as the investigation continues."

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Bruno Mars court date postponed in Vegas - San Jose Mercury News

Lawyer: Bruno Mars court date postponed in Vegas - San Jose Mercury News: "Singer-songwriter Bruno Mars has had his Las Vegas court appearance for a cocaine charge postponed.
Attorney David Chesnoff told The Associated Press the 25-year-old 'Just the Way You Are' singer did not have to appear in person Thursday in a Las Vegas courtroom.
Mars is due back in court Dec. 14.
Mars' real name is Peter Hernandez. He's accused of having 2.6 grams of cocaine when he was arrested after a Sept. 19 performance at a Las Vegas nightclub.
He could face up to four years in prison if convicted on the possession of a controlled substance charge."

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Traveling Vice Lords target of drug probe netting nearly 100 arrests - Chicago Crime | Examiner.com

Thursday, 18 November 2010

Traveling Vice Lords target of drug probe netting nearly 100 arrests - Chicago Crime | Examiner.com: "Nearly 100 alleged members of the Traveling Vice Lords street gang members are being paraded before judges this afternoon following a two year investigation into drug dealing on the West Side.
The TVLs were rounded up this morning as part of 'Operation Blue Knight', a combined investigation by Chicago police and the FBI. It targeted drug sales in the area of Kedzie and Ohio in the North Lawndale Community.
Police say the Traveling Vice Lords ran a 24-7 crack cocaine and heroin retail sales business that brought in between $3000 and $6000 a day.
It was drive-up or hand-to-hand delivery and authorities say when there was a particularly potent brand of heroin called 'Blue Magic', buyers would come from as far away as Elgin and Iowa to make purchases.
Investigators used video recordings, wiretaps, and controlled purchases by undercover officers and confidential sources to build the case against the Traveling Vice Lords."

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Inmate on death row for teen's death loses appeal » Evansville Courier & Press

Inmate on death row for teen's death loses appeal » Evansville Courier & Press: "Spencer County court has rejected death row inmate Roy Lee Ward's latest appeal.
Ward, who was convicted of slaying Stacy Payne in 2001, saw his post-conviction relief petition denied in Spencer Circuit Court by Special Judge Robert Pigman of Vanderburgh County.
Pigman rejected each claim Ward's defense team raised.

Roy Lee WardWard was convicted of raping and murdering Payne, a 15-year-old Heritage Hills High School student, on July 11, 2001, in her Spencer County home."

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Brizzi: Man may face death penalty in slayings | IndyStar.com | The Indianapolis Star

Brizzi: Man may face death penalty in slayings | IndyStar.com | The Indianapolis Star: "Prosecutor Carl Brizzi says he's considering seeking the death penalty against a Lawrence man accused of killing his ex-girlfriend and then setting her and their infant daughter on fire.
Joshwa Carlisle, 22, has been charged with two counts of murder and one count of arson in the Sept. 19 blaze that killed Tracie Shannon and her 9-month-old daughter Juliana in a Lawrence apartment.Brizzi said multiple factors, including the baby's age and the fact that there were multiple killings, could be reason to seek the death penalty or a life sentence without parole.Brizzi said he would discuss the case with prosecutor-elect Terry Curry, who takes office Jan. 1.Carlisle was in Marion Superior Court on Wednesday for a initial hearing. He is being held without bond in Marion County Jail."

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Officer recommends Hasan face death-penalty trial in Fort Hood massacre | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News | Texas Regional News

Officer recommends Hasan face death-penalty trial in Fort Hood massacre | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News | Texas Regional News: "U.S. Army Maj. Nidal Hasan should face a capital-murder court-martial for last year's slaughter at Fort Hood, the officer presiding over his pretrial hearing has recommended.
Col. James L. Pohl found probable cause to justify 13 charges of premeditated murder and 32 charges of attempted premeditated murder against Hasan, officials at Fort Hood confirmed Wednesday.
Pohl also found reasonable grounds for a death-penalty trial. In military law, that requires a finding that a crime involves aggravating factors, such as the death of more than one person.
The recommendations will initially be considered by a Fort Hood brigade commander, who is also awaiting findings from a board of military mental health experts assigned to examine Hasan's mental state.
Ultimately, a general will make the final decision on how Hasan is tried and how he is punished if he is found guilty.
Pohl's report followed a nine-day preliminary proceeding known in military law as an Article 32 hearing."

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Man's death penalty set aside in '99 kidnap-slaying in Dallas | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News | Breaking News for Dallas-Fort Worth | Dallas Morning News

Man's death penalty set aside in '99 kidnap-slaying in Dallas | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News | Breaking News for Dallas-Fort Worth | Dallas Morning News: "Texas' highest criminal court on Wednesday tossed out the conviction of a man sent to death row for kidnapping and killing a 20-year-old man during a robbery at a Dallas ATM in 1999.
But Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins said 32-year-old Roderick Newton will never go free.
'He'll never get out,' Watkins said.
Expecting the court to set aside the death penalty conviction, Watkins said Newton has already pleaded guilty to capital murder and attempted capital murder of a police officer in exchange for two life sentences after the district attorney's office agreed he should receive a new trial.
The sentences are 'stacked,' meaning that if Newton is paroled on one charge, he would then have to serve the other sentence."

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Australia to deport US man wanted in wife's death

The Associated Press: Australia to deport US man wanted in wife's death: "Australian officials said Thursday they would deport an American convicted in the death of his wife on a scuba-diving honeymoon after U.S. officials pledged not to seek the death penalty if he is convicted again at home.
Gabe Watson was released from prison last week after serving an 18-month sentence for the manslaughter of his wife, Tina, in 2003 during a trip on Australia's Great Barrier Reef. He was being held in immigration custody until Australia — a staunch opponent of the death penalty — received assurances that he would not face capital charges in his home state of Alabama.
Prosecutors in Alabama, a pro-death penalty state, want to try Watson again over his wife's death, and are expected to seek murder charges.
An immigration spokeswoman, speaking on condition of anonymity because of department policy, said the Australian government had received assurances from U.S. officials that 'the death penalty would not be sought, imposed or carried out.'
'We are now satisfied that our international obligations have been met and are commencing plans for Mr. Watson's removal,' she said.
She would not give details on the timing of his deportation but said it would be 'as soon as possible.'"

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Reggae Artist Buju Banton Gets Bail in Immigration Court | Entertainment/Music | Peacefmonline.com

Friday, 12 November 2010

Reggae Artist Buju Banton Gets Bail in Immigration Court | Entertainment/Music | Peacefmonline.com: "Buju Banton - Reggae Artist Buju Banton, whose real name is Mark Myrie, was offered bail with tough conditions following a hung jury in his gun and drugs trial.

After close to a year in jail, Buju Banton walked out of the Pinellas County lock-up in Florida yesterday after he was granted bail in an immigration court.

According to the Jamaica Observer, 'Attorney Marc Seitles, a member of Banton's legal team, said the artiste was overjoyed that he had gained some 'measure of freedom'."

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death-sentence-reinstated-for-Corcoran

Thursday, 11 November 2010

death-sentence-reinstated-for-Corcoran: "U.S. Supreme Court has thrown out a lower court ruling and reinstated the death sentence for convicted killer Joseph Corcoran of Fort Wayne.
The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had erred in January when it said the death sentence violated Indiana law. The high court said federal courts can review state cases only for violations of federal law.
The lower court had ordered a new sentence.
The now 34-year-old Corcoran was convicted in 1999 of killing the four men, including his brother and his sister's fiance. Corcoran's attorneys have said he was mentally ill.
Indiana attorney general spokesman Bryan Corbin says Corcoran may ask the U.S. Supreme Court review the case again."

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Georgia man gets death sentence for killing Alabama store clerk  | ajc.com

Georgia man gets death sentence for killing Alabama store clerk  | ajc.com: "death sentence was ordered for a Georgia man in the shooting death of an Oxford convenience store clerk that was captured on a surveillance camera.
Circuit Judge Malcolm Street imposed the sentence Tuesday on Jesse Scheuing, 24, of Waycross, saying the 2008 killing was 'an especially cold and calculated intentional murder.'
The judge said the death sentence was proper because Scheuing was on parole for a felony when he killed 27-year-old Sean Adam Cook and it took place during an armed robbery.
'The video clearly showed it was the defendant's intent to kill Sean Adam Cook,' Street said as Scheuing looked at the floor, crying silently.
The jury, which had seen the videotape during the trial, had recommended death on a 10-2 vote. Street imposed it after a hearing in which Scheuing's mother, Marilyn Scheuing, begged the judge to sentence him to life without parole.
'Please don't kill my baby,' she said. As her son put his head on a desk in front of him, she continued, 'I love him. I hate what he did.'"

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The Canadian Press: US man convicted in death of wife during honeymoon scuba dive on reef leaves Australian jail

The Canadian Press: US man convicted in death of wife during honeymoon scuba dive on reef leaves Australian jail: "American man convicted in the death of his wife during a honeymoon scuba dive was released from an Australian jail Thursday and taken into immigration custody, where he will remain until officials are convinced he won't face the death penalty if sent home.
Australia is a staunch opponent of the death penalty and is seeking assurances that Gabe Watson won't face capital charges if he is returned to Alabama, a pro-death penalty state that wants to try him again over his wife's death.
Watson, dubbed the 'Honeymoon Killer' by the Australian media, pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the death of his wife of 11 days, 26-year-old Tina Watson, during a 2003 scuba diving trip on the Great Barrier Reef.
Officials in Queensland state initially charged him with murder, arguing he killed Tina by turning off her air supply and holding her underwater. Watson pleaded guilty to a lesser charge last year in an Australian court and was sentenced to 18 months — a punishment Tina Watson's family and Alabama authorities slammed as far too lenient."

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Sentencing in Bull Rider’s Death - NYTimes.com

Sentencing in Bull Rider’s Death - NYTimes.com: "Honduran man who pleaded guilty in Denver to selling heroin was sentenced to 20 years in prison for supplying the drugs that killed a professional bull rider and two other people last year. United States District Judge Alan B. Johnson told Juan Antonio Bustillo-Perez that he essentially pulled the trigger to kill the three people when he sold them the drugs. The bull rider, Bryan Guthrie, 21, was ranked third in January 2009 by the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association."

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Houston man gets death sentence in 2008 triple killing | Houston & Texas News | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle

Wednesday, 20 October 2010

Houston man gets death sentence in 2008 triple killing | Houston & Texas News | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle: "Harris County jury deliberated three hours before sentencing Garland Bernell Harper to death Monday for fatally stabbing his 38-year-old girlfriend and strangling her two daughters.
Harper, 40, was living with Triska Lashaun Rose in a southwest Houston condo for several months before beginning to stalk her and accuse her of cheating on him. He eventually tied her up, stabbed her and slit her throat on Oct. 24, 2008, prosecutors said.
Harper also was accused of binding, then strangling Briana Roberson, 15, and Mya Love, 7. Harper was not the children's father.
After being sentenced by state District Judge Jeannine Barr, Harper would not look at Rose's brother who said he was 'not a man' during a victim impact statement.
'You're weak. You prey on women,' said Terrence Rose. 'I want to say, 'May God have mercy on your soul' but I can't say that now.'
Defense lawyers described Harper as a mentally ill man with a drug problem, which made him delusional, believing Rose was having an affair with a man Harper could never catch."

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cocaine possession charges against Phillies prospect Tyson Gillies have been dropped.

Tuesday, 12 October 2010

The Kamloops Daily News in British Columbia reported Saturday that cocaine possession charges against Phillies prospect Tyson Gillies have been dropped.

The Phillies had no comment.

Gillies' lawyer, Kevin Hayslett, told the newspaper that the state of Florida looked at the evidence and decided not to proceed with the case.

"I'm glad that this order is over," Gillies told the newspaper. "But I'm still very upset that it happened to me and that my character, which I've worked so hard to build, can even be questioned. ... I was drug-tested five hours after the incident happened and it had obviously come back negative. I know who I am and what I'm about as a person and was stunned [with] the thing I had to go through."

Philadelphia acquired Gillies as part of the Cliff Lee trade with Seattle in December.

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"Star Wars" actress Carrie Fisher admitted Monday to taking cocaine on the set of "The Empire Strikes Back"

"Star Wars" actress Carrie Fisher admitted Monday to taking cocaine on the set of "The Empire Strikes Back", saying she didn't even like the drug but was intent on getting high.
The Princess Leia actress, now 53, said her life had been defined by addiction, with stints in psychiatric hospitals and rehab clinics -- even the emergency room with an overdose.
"We did cocaine on the set of 'Empire', in the ice planet," Fisher told Australian newswire AAP, referring to the setting of the second film in the original "Star Wars" trilogy.
"I didn't even like coke that much, it was just a case of getting on whatever train I needed to take to get high," she said while visiting Sydney for her "Wishful Drinking" stand-up comedy show.
Now a writer and comedienne, Fisher's turn as Princess Leia in the 1977-1983 "Star Wars" saga was by far her most famous role.
"The Blues Brothers" co-star John Belushi warned her that she had a problem prior to his own death from a drug overdose in 1982, and Fisher said she ultimately came to realise how dangerous her habits were.
"Slowly I realised I was doing a bit more drugs than other people and losing my choice in the matter," she said. "If I'd been addicted to booze I'd be dead now, because you just go out and get it."
Fisher was born into Hollywood -- her mother, musical starlet Debbie Reynolds, was married to veteran crooner Eddie Fisher. Fisher, who died last month, left the family for Elizabeth Taylor when Carrie was just two.
The former star said she did not blame her broken family or the pressures of celebrity for her addictions.
"It's always been my responsibility," she said. "If it was Hollywood (to blame), then we'd all be dope addicts."

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Rolling Stone's Keith Richards has revealed that he carried guns when he went to buy drugs at the height of his addiction

Rolling Stone's Keith Richards has revealed that he carried guns when he went to buy drugs at the height of his addiction to protect himself.

And even today the reformed Street Fighting Man admits to always carrying a four-inch knife tucked in his belt to deal with muggers.

"You make a cut across the forehead - doesn't hurt," News of the World quoted him as saying in an interview to publicize his explosive new autobiography 'Life'.

"All the blood comes down, and then you kick the f****r in the balls. It's a very efficient way of dealing with problems," he said.

Keith has been off cocaine after suffering a blood clot in his brain during his tree fall in Fiji four years ago.

The guitarist says he took no chances when buying heroin on US streets where everyone has the right to carry a gun.

"The first one I bought was a Luger I picked up in the East Village in New York City," he said.

"After that I went into Kieth Richards the guitarist affectionately known as "Keef" has revealed that he frequently carried firearms when copping heroin at the height of his addiction in the 1970s. He said, "The first [gun] I bought was a Luger I picked up in the East Village in New York City. After that I went into rifles for a bit just because they go further."

He continued, "I've carried a piece or two now and again -- most of that was to do with the heroin business and being involved in, like, scoring. Especially in America, it bodes you well to be armed.

"A .38 Smith and Wesson Airweight revolver -- that is the f---ing gun. No safety [catch] on it."

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State seeks death penalty for Ana Cardona in Lolly Pop murder case - Fort Lauderdale Domestic Violence & Abuse | Examiner.com

Wednesday, 6 October 2010

State seeks death penalty for Ana Cardona in Lolly Pop murder case - Fort Lauderdale Domestic Violence & Abuse | Examiner.com: "Ana Cardona, twice convicted of the same crime, awaits sentencing for the brutal murder of her 3 year old son Lazaro ``Baby Lollipops'' Figueroa. Lazaro, badly beaten and weighing just 18 pounds at three years old, was discovered dead in the bushes of a Miami Beach bayfront home in November 1990. Unidentified at first, Lazaro was dubbed Baby Lollipops for the design on his T-shirt.

Cardona was convicted at trial in 1992 of Lazaro's murder, and became the first woman in Florida to be sentenced to Death Row for her own child's murder. The Florida Supreme Court later overturned her conviction and ordered a retrial. Prosecutors said Cardona tortured Lazaro over months, eventually dumping his bloodied body before fleeing with her lover to the Orlando area."

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Death penalty ordered for killer of two in Harbor Gateway - latimes.com

Thursday, 30 September 2010

Death penalty ordered for killer of two in Harbor Gateway - latimes.com: "Los Angeles jury ordered the death penalty Monday for a 22-year-old Latino gang member convicted in the hate-crime killing of a 14-year-old black girl and the stabbing death of a potential witness in the Harbor Gateway area.

Jonathan Fajardo, who was 18 at the time of the killings, nonchalantly looked around the courtroom as the verdict was read. The jury found that he should receive death for his first-degree murder convictions for the slayings of Cheryl Green and Christopher Ash.

Fajardo was eligible for the death penalty because the jury accepted special circumstance allegations including multiple murder, killing a witness, committing a hate crime based on race and committing the crime for a gang. Fajardo was a member of the 204th Street gang, which prosecutors said intimidated and attacked African Americans in Harbor Gateway."

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The Associated Press: Three decades on, Calif. family awaits execution

The Associated Press: Three decades on, Calif. family awaits execution: "Albert Greenwood Brown was convicted in 1982 for Susan's murder and sentenced to death.
Though Susan's killing on Oct. 28, 1980, sparked a flurry of media attention in Riverside, a sprawling inland city about 60 miles east of Los Angeles, much of the publicity around the case has focused on Brown and his exhaustive legal maneuvers to avoid the death penalty.
But a series of letters and messages her relatives recently sent Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger pleading with him not to grant clemency provide a glimpse into the family's anguish. Susan's younger brother James Jordan, who was 7 at the time, described how he was standing next to his mother when Brown called.
'I remember her pleading with him and the look of terror on her face,' James Jordan wrote.
Susan's mother and two of her three siblings have written to Schwarzenegger expressing anger over the length of the process.
After decades of appeals and reversals, the courts ultimately upheld Brown's death sentence and he was scheduled for execution Wednesday, though it was pushed back until Thursday to allow his defense team time to file more motions.
U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel said Tuesday that he halted the Thursday execution because he didn't have enough time 'to render a reasoned decision and permit adequate appellate review.'"

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Alfredo R. Prieto, convicted of three murders and suspected of four othersVa. makes third try at seeking death for convicted killer

Va. makes third try at seeking death for convicted killer: "Virginia's third attempt to impose the death penalty on Alfredo R. Prieto, convicted of three murders and suspected of four others, began Tuesday in Fairfax County, with Prieto's defense team apparently abandoning its claim that he is mentally retarded and therefore ineligible for capital punishment.
Prieto, 44, faces a death sentence in California for the 1990 rape and shooting of a 15-year-old girl. His appeals have lasted 18 years with no end in sight, so when he was linked by DNA to a 1988 double homicide near Reston, Fairfax prosecutors decided to extradite him and try to complete his legal process in Virginia."

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Death row inmate to get new trial | montgomeryadvertiser.com | Montgomery Advertiser

Death row inmate to get new trial | montgomeryadvertiser.com | Montgomery Advertiser: "Jodey Wayne Waldrop, who has been under a death sentence nearly three years, was granted a new trial by a state appeals court in March and the Alabama Supreme Court recently declined to hear the state's appeal.A date for his retrial in the killing of Jodey Jo 'Chance' Waldrop has not been set.Prosecutors contend the boy was shaken by his father so violently that it caused brain damage that led to his death. Waldrop testified that he dropped his son while lighting a cigarette.The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that Circuit Court Judge Terry Dempsey should have instructed jurors not to consider testimony about Waldrop having been convicted of assault in Mississippi.Franklin County District Attorney Joey Rushing was notified during the weekend that the Alabama Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal."

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Death penalty reversed for Egyptian tycoon - The Boston Globe

Death penalty reversed for Egyptian tycoon - The Boston Globe: "Egyptian real estate tycoon accused of hiring a hit man to kill his pop-star lover was spared the death penalty yesterday after a retrial changed his original sentence to 15 years in prison.
The reduced sentence of Hisham Talaat Moustafa, a prominent member of Egypt’s ruling party, for the brutal murder of a Lebanese singer is likely to spark new accusations of political influence. Moustafa, the builder behind the luxury suburbs for the rich that now ring impoverished Cairo, was close to the powerful son of Egypt’s president and has come to symbolize the close bond between businessmen and politicians.
The judge convicted Moustafa for conspiracy to murder the 30-year-old Suzanne Tamim and gave him 15 years in prison. The timing of the verdict came as a surprise because there had been no indication the retrial was ending and the defense still had more witnesses."

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Bombay high court admits Ajmal Kasab's appeal against death sentence - Mumbai - DNA

Bombay high court admits Ajmal Kasab's appeal against death sentence - Mumbai - DNA: "Bombay high court on Wednesday admitted the appeal filed by Pakistani terrorist Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, 22, against his conviction and the death sentence handed out to him for his role in the 26/11 terror attacks.
Saying that “substantial ground was made out,” justice Ranjana Desai and justice RV More condoned the delay in filing the appeal. The court said the appeal filed by Kasab will be heard along with the confirmation of his death sentence, referred to the high court by the trial court.
However, the question is whether the arguments in the case will be opened by the prosecution or the defence. The court will hear the case on a day-to-day basis, October 18 onwards. Kasab will follow both proceedings through video conferencing from Arthur Road jail.
Kasab’s advocate Amin Solkar told the court that Kasab’s conviction and death sentence should stay suspended until the high court confirms them."

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Pete Doherty charged with cocaine possession | Music | guardian.co.uk

Pete Doherty charged with cocaine possession | Music | guardian.co.uk: "Pete Doherty has been charged with cocaine possession following an inquiry into the 24 January death of Robyn Whitehead. Whitehead, a filmmaker who was making a documentary about Doherty, died of a drug overdose at a flat in Hackney.
Doherty was one of three men arrested yesterday in relation to an offence allegedly committed 'between 21 and 25 January', according to the Metropolitan police. Musician Peter 'Wolfman' Wolfe, 42, was charged with the supply and possession of cocaine, while Alan Wass, singer for the Lipstick Melodies, was charged with possession. All are free on bail pending an 18 October court date.
The Libertines' former frontman was first questioned in March about Whitehead's death. Whitehead, 27, had been working on Road to Albion, a film about Doherty, Babyshambles and the Libertines."

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Man facing death penalty linked to more murders

Wednesday, 22 September 2010

Man facing death penalty linked to more murders: "DNA evidence has linked a convicted murderer facing a possible death sentence in Virginia to two more killings in California committed 20 years ago.
The new evidence from a pair of unsolved killings in 1990 in Riverside County means that Alfredo Prieto has been now been linked to six killings and four rapes in Virginia and California between 1988 and 1990.
Jury selection is under way for a new sentencing trial in Fairfax County. Two juries have convicted Prieto and one sentenced him to death, but the Supreme Court of Virginia ordered a new sentencing because it said a verdict form was unclear.
Prieto was already on death row in California when he was extradited to Virginia in 2006 to stand trial on the rationale that Virginia was more likely to carry out a death sentence."

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Iranian-Canadian blogger may face death penalty

Iranian-Canadian blogger may face death penalty: "Derakhshan, often nicknamed the Iranian 'blogfather,' has been in an Iranian prison since he was arrested when he returned to that country on Nov. 1, 2008.
The charges against him include 'collaborating with enemy states, creating propaganda against the Islamic regime, insulting religious sanctity and creating propaganda for anti-revolutionary groups,' the organizations said in a statement.
His trial began three months ago. 'We know the Iranian government listens to outside voices -and it's vital that they hear our voices now,' CJFE president Arnold Amber said.
'The proposed sentence is a travesty. Action must be taken right away, because in Iran there is not necessarily a lengthy period before executions can be carried out."

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Craig M. Kitts, 44, was indicted earlier this year by a Portage County grand jury on one count of carrying a concealed weapon, a fourth-degree felony,

Sunday, 1 August 2010

Craig M. Kitts, 44, was indicted earlier this year by a Portage County grand jury on one count of carrying a concealed weapon, a fourth-degree felony, and one count of possession of heroin, a fifth-degree felony.

Ravenna police spokesman Lt. David Rarrick said officers came into contact with Kitts on Sept. 4, 2009, while responding to a report of a suspicious person in the 400 block of South Walnut Street.

Officers checking the area located Kitts and questioned him, Rarrick said. While questioning Kitts and patting him down to make sure he was not armed, officers found a spring-loaded knife and heroin, he said.

Rarrick said Ravenna police have had numerous contacts with Kitts in the past. He said the seizure of the knife was a positive outcome as “someone with a concealed weapon is a concern to us.”

Kitts, who is currently incarcerated in a community-based corrections facility in Summit County, was granted a personal recognizance bond June 30 by Judge John Enlow during his arraignment on the charges in Portage County Common Pleas Court.

A trial date is set for Nov. 30, according to court records. The weapons charge is punishable by up to 18 months in prison, and the drug charge up to a year in prison.

The concealed weapons charge is a felony because of Kitts’ prior conviction on involuntary manslaughter and felony domestic violence charges in the November 2000 death of his wife, Lori Kitts.

According to prior accounts of the case in the Record-Courier, Craig and Lori Kitts got into an argument on Nov. 4, 2000, in their home at 121 Brady St. in Kent. A police investigation later revealed that Craig Kitts smashed his wife’s head between the front door and a wall of the house.

Lori Kitts, 27, was found unconscious 60 feet from the couple’s home in front of another house on Brady Street. She died the next day at Akron City Hospital. The couple were parents of an 18-month-old child.

An autopsy found that Lori Kitts had suffered numerous blunt force injuries to her head. Kent police arrested Craig Kitts on Nov. 17 and he was indicted a week later on murder and felony domestic violence charges.

A jury convicted Craig Kitts in February 2001 of involuntary manslaughter, a third-degree felony, and domestic violence, a fifth-degree felony, and he was sentenced in March 2001 by Portage County Common Pleas Judge Joseph Kainrad to six-years in prison, the maximum allowable by law on the two charges.

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Ali Osman Gok,The man, who was a senior member of an international drugs gang, arranged to smuggle £30 million of heroin into Britain

Ali Osman Gok,The man, who was a senior member of an international drugs gang, arranged to smuggle £30 million of heroin into Britain hidden inside the fuel tank of an articulated lorry.
The Home Office spent two years trying to deport Ali Osman Gok after he was freed from prison in 2008.But his lawyers successfully overturned their efforts by mounting a lengthy series of appeals, focusing on a little-known, 30-year-old treaty between the EU and Turkey which mainly deals with import duty on fruit and vegetables.
Gok, 40, who lives in north London with his wife and two daughters, is now free to remain in Britain indefinitely.
Immigration campaigners have described the decision is "ridiculous" and criticised lawyers for using "obscure" rules to prevent deportation of serious criminals.
The treaty which enabled Gok win his case governs tariffs on goods between Turkey and Europe, and includes a detailed list of aubergines, watermelons, marrows and other foodstuffs covered by the agreement.
Known as "Decision 1/80 of the Association Council of September 19, 1980", it also includes a number of "social provisions" which were the key element of the case put forward by Gok's solicitor.
It meas that Turkish nationals can only be denied the right to live and work in European Community states if they pose a "specific risk of new and serious prejudice to the requirements of public policy".
The Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) made its decision despite hearing that Gok had been a key member of one of the biggest heroin smuggling plots the UK has ever seen.
The plot saw 345lbs (157 kilograms) of heroin smuggled through a British port hidden in a secret compartment in a Slovenian-registered truck.
Police used a helicopter and plain clothes officers to observe the lorry's progress through Folkestone and around the M25 to the Rookery Cafe on the Great North Road at Welham Green, Hertfordshire, where the driver transferred the drugs from the customised fuel tank to the cab.
Shortly afterwards police intercepted the lorry, and arrested the driver as well as Gok and his co-defendant Mahir Kaynar.
Gok's crime was described as "despicable" by the trial judge who sentenced him to 30 years' imprisonment, later reduced to 20 years by the Court of Appeal. He served a total of nine years and three months before being released in February 2008.
The AIT Judge, Peter Moulden, said: "It is clear that his offence, involving the importation of a very large quantity of heroin worth at street value in the region of £30 million, was an offence with the potential to do enormous damage to many people.
"There was no doubt that when he was convicted the appellant posed a serious and current threat to public policy and security and there was likely to be a propensity to re-offend.
"However, that was in 1997 and I must consider the position now."
He added: "Looking at all the evidence in the round I find that the appellant does not pose a genuine or sufficiently serious threat to one of the fundamental interests of society."
Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch, said: "This is getting increasingly ridiculous. If a major drugs smuggler can't be thrown out then who can be?
"Lawyers are finding one obscure means after another to prevent the deportation of serious criminals who we would be much better off without."
The drug smuggler launched his appeal against deportation based on Article 8 of the European Convention of Human Rights, which guarantees the right to a family life.
Gok argued that he had a 13-year-old daughter and an infant daughter born after his release from prison who would suffer if he was deported.
He also argued that he would be at risk of retribution from Turkish criminals who helped organise the plot.
Because the court accepted his argument on Decision 1/80, the AIT made no further ruling on the human rights arguments.
A Home Office spokesman said: "We were very disappointed with the court's ruling in this case and it was in the public's interest that we tried to remove this individual from the UK.
"Any foreign criminal serving more than 12 months in prison is automatically considered for deportation."
Earlier this year The Sunday Telegraph disclosed that an Iraqi immigrant who stabbed two doctors to death had been awarded the right to stay in Britain by the AIT because he would pose a danger to the public in his homeland.

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Scott tried to sell the First Folio in order to wipe out his debts and also allow him to marry his Cuban girlfriend

What lifts the case out of the ordinary is not just the property – one of the rarest books in the world – but Scott himself, a man who has committed a crime so iconic that even a classic Ealing comedy couldn’t do justice to its daring, its eccentricity and its downright silliness.

The champagne-drinking, cigar-smoking, Ferrari-driving 53 year old was found guilty at Newcastle Crown Court on July 9 of handling stolen goods and smuggling a stolen copy of Shakespeare’s First Folio, reportedly worth £3 million, to the US.

He was warned by Judge Richard Lowden that he faces an “inevitable substantial custodial sentence”, having already been branded by the chief prosecutor as a “dishonest conman and serial thief”.

The colourful case has drawn in the FBI, rare book experts in America, the world-renowned Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington DC, the British Embassy in the city ... oh, and a humble Pot Noodle.

This is a man who thinks he’s James Bond.
Durham detective
It began when Scott, a man who favours Tiffany sunglasses even indoors, walked into the Folger unannounced one morning in June 2008 and told chief librarian Richard Kuhta that he would like them to examine an “old Shakespeare book”.

He had come to the right place. The Folger has no fewer than 79 copies of the First Folio, which dates from 1623 and includes the Bard’s complete works. Of the 700-plus copies originally printed, only 231 are known to exist. Of these 231, nine are unaccounted for.

“I met Mr Scott at the security desk,” Kuhta says. “I was greeted by a gentleman in very tropical gear.He had an oversized T-shirt on with large fish on the chest, lightweight summer pants, loafers with no socks, and sunglasses which he never removed the entire time we were together that morning.”

Scott produced a First Folio which he said he had acquired in Cuba and which he wanted the Folger to authenticate. Kuhta, aware that First Folios, the most documented book in the world, were not in the habit of walking in off the street, looked at it and quickly deduced that it had been mutilated.

He told Scott that he would like to retain the book for 48 hours to examine it. What he did not know at the time was that the First Folio had been stolen from Bishop Cosin’s Library, part of Durham University Library, 10 years earlier in an incident that had shocked scholars all over the world.

Scott was happy to oblige, and returned to his room at DC’s plush, five-star Mayflower Hotel. He then took it upon himself to inform the Washington Post that he had found an “unrecorded”First Folio.

But alarm bells had already begun to ring in Kuhla’s mind. Was this book really one of the missing nine folios?

He contacted Daniel De Simone, from the Library of Congress, who saw that the book had been stripped of some of its leaves. He knew it had been cleaned and prepared, rather than having lain in a dusty attic.

“From my perspective there was a problem with the situation,” he said.

The Folger then consulted rare book expert Stephen Massey who, using data published by Anthony James West, a world expert on First Folios, realised that the book had come from Durham. But Scott had already left DC. Kuhta alerted the FBI, and Durham police in turn were alerted by the British Embassy in Washington.

The force was given details of the story that Scott had spun in Washington: that he was a millionaire who was selling the family heavy plant machinery business in Scotland. His mother lived in Monte Carlo, and he also had connections with Lichtenstein. The truth, as police found when they traced Scott in Wingate, County Durham, was more prosaic: he was unemployed, and lived in a three-bed semi with his mum, who was in her 80s.

“He’s an eccentric character,” says one Durham detective. “This is a man who thinks he’s James Bond.”

Scott has maintained all along that when he was in Cuba he had met, and fallen for, a 21-year-old dancer. He said he acquired the Folio from a Cuban man who, he claimed, used to be a personal bodyguard to Fidel Castro. The book, he explained, was simply this man’s family heirloom.

But police discovered that he was in the UK, indulging himself in a spending spree, in the dates he claimed he was in Cuba. When questioned by police about the discrepancy, he had no answer. He also maintained he had flown from Cuba to Washington DC via the Bahamas, but police found he had actually flown to DC from Heathrow. The net was closing in.

On one occasion Scott arrived at the police station to answer police bail in a Hummer, clutching champagne, a cigar and, for reasons best known by himself, an opened Pot Noodle.

He was subsequently charged with theft and handling stolen goods. The trial heard he had never worked and had piled up £90,000 in maxed-out credit-card debts.

In court he exercised his right not to give evidence, but he had earlier told police that the academics had conspired against him. He was acquitted of theft but convicted of handling stolen goods and removing stolen property from the UK.

Police have speculated that Scott tried to sell the First Folio in order to wipe out his debts and also allow him to marry his Cuban girlfriend, to whom he sent £10,000 in one five-month spell.

The First Folio itself, now back at Durham University library, will be the centrepiece of an exhibition of University treasures starting in January.

In this respect at least, it’s true that all’s well that ends well.

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Jose Figueroa Agosto jailed: 'Pablo Escobar of the Caribbean' caught for drugs | Mail Online

Tuesday, 20 July 2010

Jose Figueroa Agosto jailed: 'Pablo Escobar of the Caribbean' caught for drugs | Mail Online: "Jose Figueroa Agosto Caribbean's version of Pablo Escobar, the notorious Colombian drug kingpin of the 1980s.He is said to be one of the 'major drug traffickers in history'. Eight hours after he was arrested, his girlfriend Soleida Félix Morel turned herself in through a lawyer.
For 10 years, the 45-year-old Puerto Rican fed his underworld mystique by pulling off narrow escapes and taunting police in the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory that is attractive to traffickers as America's southernmost border."

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Drug baron Daniel Smith, 24 - on the run from British police for attempted murder

Tuesday, 8 June 2010


Drug baron Daniel Smith, 24 - on the run from British police for attempted murder - was with pals at a terrace table when he was shot three times in the face, blowing out his brains and teeth.
Tourists dived for cover as the gunman - riding pillion - struck in the fugitive's bolthole of Mijas, near Malaga. He emptied his gun, missing with three rounds.
But a horrified regular at the Lounge Bar said: "He kept firing at Dan even though he was on the ground. It was horrible."
Minutes earlier Smith had argued with an Irishman who stormed off, snarling: "You wait there - I will be back in a minute." Spanish cops, who suspect a drugs feud, were hunting for the Dublin criminal aged 27.
Smith fled to Spain as police here sought him over the 2007 shooting of an Essex businessman. Millionaire Doug Turner, 52, survived but lost three fingers


Read more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3004189/Bar-Brit-is-shot-dead-by-hitman.html#ixzz0qFhF5CXZ

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Gang member gets death penalty in murder-for-hire case | murder, martinez, montemayor - News - The Orange County Register

Wednesday, 2 June 2010

Gang member gets death penalty in murder-for-hire case | murder, martinez, montemayor - News - The Orange County Register: "Pacoima gang member sat silently without any outward sign of emotion Tuesday as an Orange County jury gave him the death penalty for his role in the kidnap and murder of a Buena Park businessman nearly eight years ago.
The 10-woman, two-man jury decided that Alberto Martinez, 32, deserves to die for acting as the getaway driver after David Montemayor, 44, was gunned down on a street not far from his home when he tried to escape from his kidnappers.Martinez was convicted by the same jury earlier this month of first-degree murder plus several special circumstances – including murder for financial gain, murder during a kidnapping and murder for the benefit of his street gang.
Those findings set the stage for the penalty phase, where the jury's only decision was whether to impose death or life without parole.
Martinez will be sentenced Aug. 6 by Superior Court Judge Francisco Briseno."

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Paul McCartney's tourbus attacked by Mexican gang members - Daily Gossip | News | NME.COM

Paul McCartney's tourbus attacked by Mexican gang members - Daily Gossip | News | NME.COM: "Paul McCartney's tourbus was attacked by a Mexican gang after his gig in Mexico City on Friday (May 28). McCartney was reportedly left terrified by the attack, which saw the gang surround his bus on a backstreet, before climbing onto the roof and jumping up and down on it. The former Beatle's security team called police immediately, and the gang scarpered when they heard the sirens (various)."

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New Yorkshire Ripper? Bradford crime student charged with prostitute murders | Chiltern Debt Management

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

New Yorkshire Ripper? Bradford crime student charged with prostitute murders | Chiltern Debt Management: "Following the shocking discovery of prostitute Suzanne Blamires’ body parts in the River Aire, Leeds, a student in Bradford has been charged with her murder.
Stephen Griffiths, 40, was studying for a criminology PhD at the University of Bradford before he was arrested in his flat in the town’s red light district.
After initially being suspected of murdering the 36-year-old prostitute, he has now been charged – sources are saying that CCTV footage has implicated him. Mr Griffiths is also under suspicion for the murder of two other prostitutes in the area, missing persons Shelley Armitage, 31, and Susan Rushworth, 43. Forensic experts are now preparing to spend around two weeks investigating Mr Griffith’s flat.
Police say that Ms Blamires was last seen on Friday 21st May arguing with her boyfriend after finishing work. Parts of her body were then found in the River Aire three miles away last Tuesday 25th May. Ms Blamires’ mother Nicky has spoken of the victim’s fates, saying that they were:
“…human beings who were also people’s daughters and didn’t deserve to die like this. Unfortunately, my daughter went down the wrong path and she didn’t have the life she was meant to have.”"

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BBC News - John Terry's father sentenced for cocaine dealing

BBC News - John Terry's father sentenced for cocaine dealing: "father of the Chelsea and former England captain John Terry has been given a suspended prison sentence after pleading guilty to dealing cocaine.
Edward Terry was given a suspended term of six months after he admitted supplying the class A drug.
Basildon Crown Court heard Terry, 56, from Chafford Hundred, Essex, supplied it to a News of the World reporter in a wine bar in 2009.
Judge Christopher Mitchell said it was a very clear case of 'entrapment'.
Terry was also ordered to carry out 100 hours of community service and pay £95 costs."

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Robbery gang leader killed in Pampanga shootout | Home >> Other Sections >> Breaking News

Robbery gang leader killed in Pampanga shootout | Home >> Other Sections >> Breaking News: "leader of a notorious crime gang was killed after shooting it out with policemen in Pampanga province over the weekend.
Supt. Baltazar Mamaril, spokesman of the Central Luzon Police, identified the slain suspect as Ricardo Narciso, the alleged leader of the notorious and violent Narciso robbery-holdup gang.
Another gang member, identified as Marcos Pangan, was wounded in the shootout and brought to Ramos Hospital in Tarlac City.
Mamaril said elements of the Regional Intelligence Division of the Central Luzon Police was conducting a surveillance last Sunday at Brgy. Tabun, Mabalacat, Pampanga when they chanced upon the suspects."

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Jamie Daniel jailed for road rage | Glasgow and West | STV News

Jamie Daniel jailed for road rage | Glasgow and West | STV News: "Notorious Glasgow crime boss Jamie Daniel has been jailed for a year after chasing a driver and smashing up his car because he was 'having a bad day'.
The head of the infamous Daniels clan 'lost it' and chased 30-year-old Gerard Fullerton - who had never met him before - around Glasgow's Jordanhill area in his car in October last year.
The 52-year-old then got out of his Volkswagon Golf and smashed Mr Fullerton's car windscreen with a metal bar because he thought that the driver had taken too long to turn into a junction.
Glasgow Sheriff Court heard that the thug was later remanded in custody and tried to choke a fellow prisoner in Barlinnie. Daniel admitted breaching the peace by chasing Mr Fullerton, shouting and swearing at him and hitting his car with the bar at Jordanhill Drive, Jordanhill Crescent and Seggilea Road, Glasgow, on October 22 last year."

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James Bond’s Aston Martin From Goldfinger To Be Sold At Auction | ChattahBox News Blog

James Bond’s Aston Martin From Goldfinger To Be Sold At Auction | ChattahBox News Blog: "car that Sean Connery drove in ‘Goldfinger’ is set to be auctioned off in London, and the price tag is already expected to be incredibly high.
The silver Aston Martin is an iconic car in the film world, complete with all of the tools Q added on to make it one of the coolest vehicles in movie history.
Originally bought in the late 60’s by Jerry Lee for $12,000 USD, the price has gone up considerably in recent years."

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Alleged Irish drugs baron to be held in Spanish jail - Local & National, News - Belfasttelegraph.co.uk

Alleged Irish drugs baron to be held in Spanish jail - Local & National, News - Belfasttelegraph.co.uk: "leader of an Irish drugs clan implicated in crimes in 20 countries — including gangland murder, money laundering and cocaine trafficking — has been ordered to prison on Spain's Costa del Sol without the opportunity of bail.
Christopher ‘Christy’ Kinahan (53), who holds a British passport, was ordered to be held in prison at Malaga, the capital of the holiday coast dubbed the Costa del Crime, after appearing before an investigating judge at Estepona.
His two sons were also ordered to prison without a chance of bail after appearing at closed-door hearings."

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Prime Minister’s Reversal Ends Strained Relations with Washington over Christopher “Dudus” Coke

Friday, 21 May 2010

Jamaica to Extradite Drug Suspect Wanted by U.S.
Prime Minister’s Reversal Ends Strained Relations with Washington over Christopher “Dudus” Coke

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Interior Ministry refused to let linguist Noam Chomsky into Israel and the West Bank on Sunday.

Interior Ministry refused to let linguist Noam Chomsky into Israel and the West Bank on Sunday. Chomsky, who aligns himself with the radical left, had been scheduled to lecture at Bir Zeit University near Ramallah, and visit Bil'in and Hebron, as well as meet with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad and various Palestinian activists.


American linguist Noam Chomsky.


In a telephone conversation last night from Amman, Chomsky told Haaretz that he concluded from the questions of the Israeli official that the fact that he came to lecture at a Palestinian and not an Israeli university led to the decision to deny him entry.


"I find it hard to think of a similar case, in which entry to a person is denied because he is not lecturing in Tel Aviv. Perhaps only in Stalinist regimes," Chomsky told Haaretz.

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Eastside Crip Gang Member Indicted On Firearms Charges - Bakersfield News Story - KERO Bakersfield

Saturday, 8 May 2010

Eastside Crip Gang Member Indicted On Firearms Charges - Bakersfield News Story - KERO Bakersfield: "complaint also alleges the defendant is a member of the Bakersfield Eastside Crips criminal street gang as well.
“This case should leave no doubt about our collective resolve to attack and dismantle the street gangs that are terrorizing our neighborhoods,” said Michael Toms, resident agent in charge of ICE's Office of Investigations in Bakersfield. “ICE is committed to using every tool at its disposal to combat gang-related crime and violence here and in communities across the country.”
The maximum statutory penalty for the charge is 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The actual sentence, however, will be determined at the discretion of the court after consideration of any applicable statutory factors and the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which take into account a number of variables"

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Sacto 9-1-1: Sacramento gang member convicted in fatal shooting at party

Sacto 9-1-1: Sacramento gang member convicted in fatal shooting at party: "verdict against Billy Chan Saechao, 18. He was accused in the 1 a.m., March 21, 2008, shooting death of Koua Lee, 20.
According to a prosecution trial brief, Saechao, a member of the Mien Pride Gangsters, went to a party in the 7600 block of Millroy Way in south Sacramento to pick up his girlfriend.
When he and three friends got there, they saw another group of young men that included Lee, whom the prosecution brief identified as a member of the True Blue Crips.
After the two groups exchanged words, gunfire rang out, and investigators later recovered the 40 casings from several different handguns, the brief said."

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Top cop’s PC son Craig Flowers is cocaine dealer | The Sun |Home Scotland|Scottish News

Top cop’s PC son Craig Flowers is cocaine dealer | The Sun |Home Scotland|Scottish News: "Off-duty PC Craig Flowers was finally caught with £120 of the deadly drug after being put under surveillance by his own force.
son of former Scottish Police Federation boss Norrie FloweFlowers - the rs - told officers: 'I've got a habit but it's under control, there's no problem.'
But yesterday he appeared in the dock to admit supplying coke to high-flying pals at his home in Motherwell and across Glasgow between January 2007 and September 2008.
The Scottish Sun told how Strathclyde Police anti-corruption cops pounced in an 'intelligence-led' bust. Yesterday defence lawyer Mark Moir told Glasgow Sheriff Court his client was only concerned in the 'social supply' of coke.
But suspended Flowers' career lay in tatters last night as Strathclyde Deputy Chief Constable Neil Richardson said: 'He abused his position.'"

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U.S. Army interrogator known to captives at a lockup in Afghanistan as ``The Monster''

Thursday, 6 May 2010

A former U.S. Army interrogator known to captives at a lockup in Afghanistan as ``The Monster'' testified Wednesday that he felt sorry for a gravely wounded, recently captured Omar Khadr because ``he was probably in one of the worst places on Earth.''
``He was in the wrong place for a 15-year-old child to be,'' former Army Spc. Damien Corsetti testified as Khadr's first defense witness in the seventh day of a hearing seeking to persuade a military judge to exclude all of the Toronto-born teenager's confessions from his summertime trial on grounds of abuse.


Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/05/05/1614742/ex-army-interrogator-testifies.html#ixzz0n9toU8X5

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Suspected white supremacist charged after Hemet police booby trap raids - San Jose Mercury News

Monday, 3 May 2010

Suspected white supremacist charged after Hemet police booby trap raids - San Jose Mercury News: "suspected white supremacist has pleaded not guilty to possessing the same kind of homemade gun used in a booby trap intended to kill a police officer in Riverside County.
Patrick Nugent Jr. entered pleas on April 23 to having a zip gun and being in a criminal gang.
He remained jailed today. A call to his attorney, Justin Greenlee, wasn't immediateley returned.
Hemet police say a zip gun was attached to the gate of a gang task force building and fired a bullet that missed an officer in February.
Police say they found the gun on April 20 while arresting 23 people during a probe into a string of failed booby trap attacks.
Seven people have been charged with crimes — although none have been directly linked to the booby traps."

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San Luis Police officers guilty of drug smuggling | Cal Coast News

San Luis Police officers guilty of drug smuggling | Cal Coast News: "two San Luis Obispo police officers have pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges of bringing misbranded Mexican prescription drugs into the United States at the San Ysidro port of entry south of San Diego.
The officers, Dan McDow and Armando Limon, pleaded guilty to the misdemeanors in exchange for no jail time and a year of unsupervised probation, according to court documents obtained by CalCoastNews."

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The Associated Press: 5 killed while playing soccer in southern Mexico

The Associated Press: 5 killed while playing soccer in southern Mexico: "Gunmen drove up to a soccer field and shot five men to death as they played early Monday near the Pacific coast resort of Acapulco, police in southern Mexico said.
It was unclear why the five men were playing so late, but the region of Guerrero state is often so hot and humid by day by day that athletes wait until night to compete. Many people also work unusual hours in the local tourist industry.
The men were playing in the hamlet of Xaltianguis, on the northern outskirts of Acapulco, when gunmen in three vehicles pulled up beside the field and opened fire.
Two of the dead were identified as local men aged 25 and 34; the other three victims had not been identified because relatives quickly took the bodies away."

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FBI: Former Lee County sheriff dealt drugs from police SUV | GoUpstate.com

FBI: Former Lee County sheriff dealt drugs from police SUV | GoUpstate.com: "Federal authorities say a South Carolina sheriff dealt drugs from his police SUV and extorted money from drug dealers to try to keep them out of trouble.In a sworn statement released on Monday, an FBI agent said investigators have a witness who saw former Lee County Sheriff E.J. Melvin dealing drugs in November 2006.
Authorities tapped Melvin's phone and say he offered money to drug dealers to try to get state and federal agents to stop investigating them."

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11 suspected gang members arrested in, around Loveland following 5-day operation | LovelandConnection.com | Loveland Connection

11 suspected gang members arrested in, around Loveland following 5-day operation | LovelandConnection.com | Loveland Connection: "Turned over to the Loveland Police Department was:
• Eduardo Cortez-Hernandez, 34, of Mexico on 2 outstanding arrest warrants for domestic violence. He will face local charges before being returned to ICE custody for removal proceedings. Cortez-Hernandez has previous arrests for disorderly conduct, driving on a suspended/revoked license, assault, domestic violence, harassment, failure to appear, and contempt of court for failing to comply.
Loveland Police Chief Luke Hecker said “We are very thankful for the joint effort between our agency and ICE. This was a successful operation clearly demonstrating our resolve in reducing the number of gang members in our community.”
The arrests were made as part of Operation Community Shield, a national initiative where ICE partners with federal, state and local law enforcement agencies to target the significant public safety threat posed by transnational criminal street gangs.
Operation Community Shield has produced 16,700 arrests of suspected gang members nationwide since 2005, with 200 of those classified as gang leaders. ICE uses its broad immigration authorities (both criminal and administrative) against gang members, as well as its customs authorities in targeting gang-related narcotics smuggling, gun smuggling, money laundering, and in seeking the forfeiture of illegally derived assets."

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Prosecutor says judge erred in lenient sentencing of Hells Angels Punko

Prosecutor says judge erred in lenient sentencing of Hells Angels Punko: "prosecutor argued Monday that a judge made a number of “serious” errors in the sentencing of a Hells Angel for conspiracy to traffic in methamphetamines and trafficking in cocaine.
In March B.C. Supreme Court Justice Peter Leask sentenced John Virgil Punko, 43, to four years in jail each for the meth and cocaine offences, to be served concurrently. He reduced the sentence to 14 months after credit for pre-sentence custody.
Federal prosecutor Martha Devlin had sought a sentence of 16 years in jail for Punko, a full-patch member of the notorious motorcycle club’s East End chapter."

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Video may help NYPD in hunt for thug who killed homeless Good Samaritan who came to aid of woman

Sunday, 25 April 2010

Video may help NYPD in hunt for thug who killed homeless Good Samaritan who came to aid of woman: "homeless Good Samaritan trying to break up a fight was knifed to death and detectives are trying to identify his assailant, police said Friday.
Hugo Yax, 31, was stabbed several times in the chest when he came to the aid of a woman being menaced by a knife-wielding man on a Queens streetcorner on Sunday, police said."

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The Crime Report » Archive » Blood Brothers

Thursday, 15 April 2010

The Crime Report » Archive » Blood Brothers: "Even though the average Canadian is probably considered pretty boring by the rest of the world, the average Canadian biker is more dangerous. In the biker war in Quebec in the late 1990s and early 2000s there were more than 160 people murdered. The Hells Angels are absolutely entrenched here. There’s a scramble to feed the American drug market and right down the St. Lawrence Seaway is New York City. But I do think there is a difference in generations. Bikers over 35, many of them have long-standing marriages and kids in college. They know that if you get charged with something it’s like being fined hundreds of thousands of dollars even if you beat the charge. For those guys, moving a little bit of drugs just isn’t worth it. The younger guys are more ambitious—and more dangerous."

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The Crime Report » Archive » Blood Brothers

The Crime Report » Archive » Blood Brothers: "Early in the morning of April 8, 2006, eight Canadian members of the Bandidos motorcycle gang were murdered in a barn in the rural town of Shedden, Ontario. Twelve hours later, Toronto Star reporter Peter Edwards was on the phone with the ringleader, Wayne “Weiner” Kellestine, the Nazi-loving Bandido who’d lured his friends to his home, and to their deaths."

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Our Towns - Just Beyond Yale, a Million Miles Away - NYTimes.com

Our Towns - Just Beyond Yale, a Million Miles Away - NYTimes.com: "neighborhoods are strongholds for the Crips, some for the Bloods, some for subsets like the Tre Bloods or the local R2 gang.
The car stops in front of a chicken shack. Bloods territory. Two young men are on the corner. One in a gray hoodie says he is 31, served 13 years in prison and has a job that pays $9 an hour but can barely pay his bills. The other, thin and sweet-faced under his Celtics cap, says he is 20. He could pass for 16.
Asked about gangs, the younger one scoffs. “It’s more like personal stuff, person to person,” he says. “Say someone kills somebody. Well, of course, someone wants to go back and do it to them, like in retaliation. But it’s for your homeboy, it’s not for the gang. It’s like, people who love each other, you look out for the next person.”
The older one says he is trying to look out for younger guys. “What jobs are there? McDonald’s? Burger King? Dunkin’ Donuts? If your father is a bricklayer, he teaches you how to lay bricks, you might be a bricklayer. My father died from heroin and AIDS, sharing needles. My mom was a crackhead. She had me in jail. How did you think I was supposed to turn out?”
His tone is even, conversational, not self-pitying. Just a guy on the corner.
“You wake up,” he says. “You’ve got your job. You wake up thinking, ‘I really ain’t got no problems.’ I wake up wondering if I’m going to die today. And that’s the way things are right now.”"

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Bexley Times - Teens deny part in mafia gang's throat slashing

Bexley Times - Teens deny part in mafia gang's throat slashing: "TEENAGE gang known as the 'Black Mafia' slit a man's throat after smashing their way into a 16th birthday party, a court heard.Up to 17 youths battered down the front door of the house in Bellingham, Lewisham, in the early hours of the morning.
Most of the partygoers managed to flee upstairs to the bedrooms or into the garden, but 26 year-old Dameon Phillips was caught on the stairs. He was left bleeding heavily from his neck and had to have extensive treatment in hospital, jurors at the Old Bailey were told on Tuesday. Nine alleged gang members, aged between 15 and 18, are standing trial, including seven youths, from Blackheath, Catford and Lewisham, who can not be identified. They deny wounding with intent and violent disorder."

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SA wins backers in High Court bikies fight | Local World News, India News, Bollywood Gallery, Education, Answer Papers, Results, Exam Results

SA wins backers in High Court bikies fight | Local World News, India News, Bollywood Gallery, Education, Answer Papers, Results, Exam Results: "South Australian police have dealt with confrontation this week between the Hell’s Angels and the New Boys street gang.
Members of both are facing charges over a brawl in Adelaide’s Hindley Street in the early hours of Monday.
Police made a further arrest in Adelaide on Wednesday night, a man, 35, from Enfield they say is a New Boys member.
He has been charged with affray.
Police Commissioner Mal Hyde wants a faster legal process to outlaw bikie gangs.
“We’ll continue to press for some further changes in the law to help to make it more effective,” he said."

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Somali gangs building crime empires in the UK

Somali gangs building crime empires in the UK: "Violent Somali gangs are building crime empires in Britain through a brutal campaign of terror, the Daily Star reports.
The self-styled soldiers are raking in thousands of pounds a day through house raids and armed robberies. They are also committing savage acts of violence to protect their money-spinning businesses."

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Russell Brand Jokes More Pop Stars Should Take Heroin - Musicrooms.net

Russell Brand Jokes More Pop Stars Should Take Heroin - Musicrooms.net: "Russell Brand thinks more pop stars should take heroin to “weed out” those who aren’t rock and roll enough.
The British comedian has battled an addiction to the illegal substance and is now clean. Although he has previously said his life is much better now he doesn’t take drugs, Russell has encouraged musicians to dabble with them. The outrageous star insists the music industry is currently stagnant, explaining it would be shaken up if more artists were willing to take risks."

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Who are the Hells Angels? | gardenoftruth.org

Who are the Hells Angels? | gardenoftruth.org: "There are reports of the Hells Angels being one of the biker gangs involved in drug dealing and other illegal practices. Several of it’s members are rumored to be under the investigation of the FBI. There have even been post war articles portraying it’s members as being comprised of post war veterans who returned from war unable to fit back into American culture. Hells Angels was founded in San Bernadino, CA and opened it’s first chapter in 1948. Since then the Hells Angel Club, as they are known today have chapters all over the world. on two three"

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Vivian Blake, a former top leader of the Jamaican Shower Posse, which United States prosecutors say was responsible for more than 1,400 drug-related killings

Thursday, 1 April 2010

Vivian Blake, a former top leader of the Jamaican Shower Posse, which United States prosecutors say was responsible for more than 1,400 drug-related killings in this country in the 1980s, died Sunday night in Kingston, Jamaica. He was 54.Mr. Blake died after being brought to the University Hospital of the West Indies complaining of breathing problems, said Ruel Rainford, the senior director of administration and operations. He said an autopsy was planned. Mr. Blake’s daughter, Dominique Blake, said he had been suffering from kidney failure and diabetes. Since his release from prison in the United States 14 months ago, Mr. Blake had been living in Jamaica and writing a screenplay about his life, said his lawyer, George Soutar.Mr. Blake, who grew up in poverty in West Kingston, earned a scholarship to St. George’s College, a private high school in Jamaica. He first traveled to New York as part of a cricket team in 1973, and stayed there, establishing the American affiliate of the Shower Posse in Brooklyn.There are differing accounts of how the gang got its name. Many believe it was derived from a 1980 campaign speech by Edward Seaga of the Jamaican Labor Party, who promised “showers of blessings” in economic opportunity for Jamaicans. The gang was widely seen as aligned with Mr. Seaga’s party. Another version contends that the name came from the way the gang would spray its victims with bullets.In the United States, Mr. Blake developed a marijuana and cocaine distribution network that spanned major cities from Miami to New York to Los Angeles and even reached as far as Anchorage. A warrant for his arrest was first issued in 1988 after he and other members of the gang were accused in the November 1984 killing of five people in a Miami crack house. Mr. Blake escaped arrest by hopping on a cruise ship in Miami bound for Jamaica, according to a 2008 profile of the Shower Posse on the BET series “American Gangster.” While fighting extradition in Jamaica, Mr. Blake established a nightclub, motorbike rental agency and a loan company. Another arrest warrant was issued, and in 1999, he was extradited to Miami. As part of a deal to avoid trial, he pleaded guilty to racketeering, criminal conspiracy and drug possession while admitting his leadership role in the gang.
“But what he never admitted to was his responsibility in personally killing anybody,” said his lawyer at the time, David Rowe. “I think he always felt above the fray.” Ms. Blake said her father had shielded her and her older brother, Duane, from his activities. “It wasn’t until a couple years back that I started to learn things in detail,” she said in a telephone interview on Wednesday.
“There was not one day in my life I did not speak to him,” said Ms. Blake, who won an N.C.A.A. title in the 4-x-400-meter relay while attending Pennsylvania State University and who now directs Black Knight Investments, the loan company modeled after the one her father started, while training to make the Jamaican Olympic team. Her brother chronicled their father’s life in a 2003 book, “Shower Posse: The Most Notorious Jamaican Crime Organization.”“We are definitely saddened, as with any death,” said Dr. Peter Phillips, a former Jamaican minister of national security, “but I think it would do Jamaica well to examine his own admissions in his establishment of high-level criminal organizations in Jamaica.”Federal prosecutors in New York are seeking the extradition of Christopher Coke, the current Shower Posse leader, on charges of drug distribution and firearms trafficking.Besides his two children, Mr. Blake is survived by his wife, Valerie, and four grandchildren.

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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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