truesee's Blog

Police with rifles subdue shopper denied a refund

4:47 p.m. Dec. 2, 2009

Armed cops subdue angry shopper denied a refund at Oakland Mall

KORIE WILKINS
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

Four Troy police officers, armed with rifles, stormed into an Oakland Mall store today after a man angry that he couldn’t return an Xbox without a receipt threatened to kill someone.

It was an interesting day here at the GameStop,” said store employee David Roman.
According to Lt. Michael Lyczkowski, the 43-year-old Detroit man went into the store at about 11 a.m. After a store employee wouldn’t allow him to return the Xbox, the man became irate and made threats. A store employee called 911, saying the man went out to get something from his vehicle.

When police arrived, they used a tactic called active shooter response, meaning a team of officers works to stop an immediate threat. Roman said coworkers told him officers put employees and a handful of customers in a back room and threw the man up against a counter, handcuffing him.

The man, whose name is not being released pending the issuance of charges, did not have a firearm. But officers found a stun gun in the man’s handbag, which is illegal in Michigan, Lyczkowski said.

“He said he needed it for protection,” Lyczkowski said.

No one was injured in the incident and the man remains in police custody. Lyczkowski said the man could face charges for possession of a stun gun, a four-year felony, and disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor.

Entry #1,423

Man lied about being robbed so wife...

Video proves man lied about being robbed

 

Admits to deputy he needed to explain to his wife what happened to his money

November 30, 2009 09:31:00 AM

TONY SIMMONS / Online Editor

PANAMA CITY BEACH – A man who initially claimed he had been robbed outside a beach store admitted to deputies that he had lied when surveillance video showed no attack.

The man conceded that he had reported the fake robbery “just so that he could tell his wife that his money had been taken and that he had not just spent it,” a Bay County Sheriff’s Office report said.

According to the report, Jordan Paul Dominque, 30, of Panama City Beach was charged with making a false report of a crime. He was arrested and taken to the Bay County Jail.

Dominque had called 911 from inside the Pop Inn Store at 8701 Front Beach Road, claiming he was getting into his car when a man dressed in black hit him and took $100 cash from him.

A deputy consulted the store’s surveillance video and saw no such attack. According to the report, the video showed Dominque enter the store, then leave the store and go to his vehicle. He sat in his car for a short amount of time, then reentered the store and used the store’s phone to call 911.

“When I confronted him, he admitted to me he was having money problems at home,” the deputy noted. “He stated he called 911 knowing that no such crime had actually been committed, just so that he could tell his wife that his money had been taken and that he had not just spent it.”

Entry #1,422

Jesus Christ booted off the jury

Woman named Jesus Christ called for Jefferson County jury duty

Erin Stock -- The Birmingham News

December 01, 2009, 4:30PM

Jesus Christ was called for jury duty this week in Jefferson County.

Court officials were skeptical at first when on Monday a potential juror submitted a name change form with "Jesus Christ" on it. But the 59-year-old Birmingham woman, who previously went by Dorothy Lola Killingworth, assured the presiding judge that was her name.

"It raised eyebrows, so I asked her if that were truly her name," Circuit Court Judge Scott Vowell said. "She assured me that it was. She had her name changed in the Probate Court, and she presented her driver's license."

Christ was sent to Judge Clyde Jones's courtroom for a criminal case. She was excused because she was disruptive, court officials said. Instead of answering questions, she was asking them, a court employee in Jones's office said.

Efforts to reach Christ today were unsuccessful.

Court administrator Sandra Turner said she and others in the jury assembly room were somewhat shocked at first when the woman insisted Christ was her name. And when her name was called, several potential jurors laughed out loud.

Unlike some Jefferson County residents, Christ did not try to get out of jury duty, Turner said.

"She was perfectly happy to serve," said Turner.

Entry #1,420

25 Days of Weird Christmas: Day 1

25 Days of Weird Christmas: Day 1

A very merry South Korean Xmas.

Ahn Young-joon/AP

 

A very merry South Korean Xmas.

 

And so it begins.

 

WATCH IT AND LISTEN

 



http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/culture/detail?entry_id=52655

For some, December 1 marks the beginning of that time of year when family and tradition take precedence over all else; when you pull out that thick reindeer print sweater and sip that sweet eggnog and dream dreams of baby Jesus doing a jig with sugar plum fairies, etc...

But for many of us--dare I say, most of us--the beginning of the holiday season mostly forebodes inevitable cold sweats in crowded department stores as you try to remember if your sister already has a blender, or hearing Bing Crosby warble on six different radio stations, or watching (and re-watching) all those Gap ads, with hyperactive be-scarfed dancers frolicking all over the place. If you're like me, you need an antidote to all the sugary sweetness and corporate manipulation of the mainstream holiday traditions. Well, you're in luck.

Starting today, the SFGate Culture Blog presents: 25 Days of Weird Christmas. We'll be sharing bizarre holiday traditions from around the world, unfortunate Christmas cover albums, forgotten Santa origin stories, tacky and disturbing seasonal gifts and all sorts of other bizarro holiday goodies. It's like an Advent calendar, but instead of waxy and stale chocolate bits, you'll get subversive, unexpected and slightly inappropriate factoids, anecdotes and low-cultural gems.

To start things off, I'd like to share one of my favorite pieces from the great master of dissident Christmas commentary--David Sedaris. From the man who brought you the seminal classic in disgruntled elf literature Santa Land Diaries, here's a piece about Sedaris' journey to the Netherlands where he learns about the Dutch version of Santa Claus--a former minister of Turkey with an entourage of six to eight black men. Click below to hear Sedaris read his essay aloud, it's a worthwhile and very hilarious listen.

 

December 01 2009 at 01:15 PM

Entry #1,419

Woman Assaulted With Hot Pecan Pie

Woman Assaulted With Hot Pecan Pie

Woman Suffered First-, Second-Degree Burns

POSTED: Tuesday, December 1, 2009

UPDATED: 5:33 pm CST December 1, 2009

ALGOA, Texas -- A man has been accused of assaulting his sister with a piece of pie, KPRC Local 2 reported.

 

  • WATCH IT: 

 http://www.click2houston.com/news/21770972/detail.html

Galveston County sheriff's deputies said a family gathered for Thanksgiving dinner at a home in the 16700 block of Fir Road in Algoa.

A man, 26, and his sister, 23, got into an argument, investigators said. Their mother tried to stop the argument, but it escalated and the man threatened his sister with the pie.

Detectives said the man shoved a piece of pie that had just been microwaved into his sister's face.

The woman went to an Alvin-area hospital for treatment of first- and second-degree burns to the left side of her face and neck.

Officials said the woman asked for the case to be dropped, but Texas law requires that the state continue with prosecution of cases of family violence.

Assault charges were pending against the brother.

Entry #1,418

Prominent black Americans condemn Cuba on racism

Posted on Tuesday, 12.01.09

 

Prominent black Americans condemn Cuba on racism

JUAN O. TAMAYO

Miami Herald

A group of prominent black Americans has for the first time publicly condemned Cuba's rights record, demanding Havana stop its "callous disregard'' for black Cubans and declaring that "racism in Cuba . . . must be confronted."

"We know first-hand the experiences and consequences of denying civil freedoms on the basis of race," the group said in a statement Monday. "For that reason, we are even more obligated to voice our opinion on what is happening to our Cuban brethren."

Among the 60 signers were Princeton professor Cornel West, actress Ruby Dee Davis, film director Melvin Van Peebles, former South Florida congresswoman Carrie Meek and Dr. Jeremiah Wright, former pastor of President Barack Obama's church in Chicago.

The declaration could add powerful new voices to the chorus pushing for change on the island, where Afro-Cubans make up at least 62 percent of the 11.4 million people yet are only thinly represented in the top leadership, scientific, academic and other ranks.

"This is historic," said Enrique Patterson, an Afro-Cuban Miami author. Although predominantly white Cuban exiles "tried to approach these people before, they lacked credibility. Now they [black Americans] are listening."

A news release accompanying the statement acknowledged that "traditionally African Americans have sided with the Castro regime and condemned the United States' policies, which explicitly work to topple the Cuban government."

But recent changes in black Americans' perceptions of Cuba, the growth of racial activism on the island and the continuing complaints of racial discrimination there created a need for the statement, said U.S. and Cuban activists involved in the declaration.

More black Americans traveling to Cuba have been able "to see the situation for themselves," said David Covin, one of the statement's organizers and former president of the National Conference of Black Political Scientists.

An increase in the numbers of Cubans identifying themselves as racial rights activists also has led more blacks to pay attention to the issue on the island, the California State University at Sacramento professor emeritus told El Nuevo Herald.

The twin developments helped to create "a critical mass of people who have bucked the tradition of support [for Cuba] in the black community," Covin added.

At the same time, Afro-Cuban activists have been casting their struggle more as an issue of civil rights than of human rights, said Victoria Ruiz-Labrit, Miami spokeswoman for the Cuba-based Citizens' Committee for Racial Integration.

"The human rights issue did not make a point of the race issue, and now we have an evolution," she added. "Cuban blacks moved closer to the term ‘civil rights' because those are the rights that the movement here in the U.S. made a point of -- the race issues."

Alberto González, spokesman for the Cuban diplomatic mission in Washington, said it was ‘‘absurd'' to accuse of racism a Cuban government that "has done more for black Cubans than any other in all areas, including health, education and welfare."

The black Americans' statement was "part of a campaign of subversion against Cuba," he added, designed to impact the administration of the first black president of the United States.

The four-page "Declaration of African-American support for the Civil Rights Struggle in Cuba'' demands that Raúl Castro end "the unwarranted and brutal harassment of black citizens in Cuba who are defending their civil rights."

"We cannot be silent in the face of increased violations of civil and human rights for those black activists in Cuba who dare raise their voices against the island's racial system," it added. "As of late, these isolated, courageous civil rights advocates have been subject to unprovoked violence, state intimidation and imprisonment."

The statement also demanded the immediate release of Darsi Ferrer, a well-known Afro-Cuban physician and activist jailed since July while under investigation on charges of illegal possession of two sacks of cement. It called Ferrer a political prisoner.

The black Americans added that while they support Cuba's right to sovereignty "and unhesitatingly repudiate any attempt at curtailing such a right," they "cannot sit idly by and allow for peaceful, dedicated civil rights activists in Cuba, and the black population as a whole, to be treated with callous disregard for their rights as citizens and as the most marginalized people on the island."

"Racism in Cuba, and anywhere else in the world, is unacceptable and must be confronted," their statement declared.

A "briefing sheet'' issued with the statement noted that Afro-Cubans make up 85 percent of the prison population and 60 of the 200 political prisoners, but only 20 percent of the Havana University professors and own only 2 percent of the land in private hands.

The statement was largely driven by Carlos Moore, a highly regarded Cuban author and black-rights activist living in Brazil who has long criticized racial discrimination in Cuba.

Moore persuaded Abdias Nascimiento, a founder of Brazil's black movement and longtime Castro supporter, to send Raúl Castro a letter earlier this year denouncing racism in Cuba, then appealed to friends and contacts in the black community to add their support.

"Without this historic figure, no one would have listened," said Patterson, who predicted that other high-profile black Americans will soon add their signatures to the statement.

Entry #1,416

3 Rob dying man in Emergency Room

3 rob dying man in hospital

Monday, November 30, 2009

LINK TO VIDEO

November 30, 2009 (WPVI) -- He was an icon in the Philadelphia Puerto Rican community. And in the end police say the man who was revered by many was robbed as he lay dead in the waiting area of a hospital emergency room.

 

With his skillful artistry as a musician and long track record in the community, 63-year-old Joaquin Rivera was easily the most frequent guest on 6abc's Puerto Rican Panaroma.

"He was also someone who was very active in a number of community based organizations, always fighting to insure that Latino's were and are part of the Philadelphia landscape," said Wilfredo Rojas.

"Let me tell you this guy was great, a great loss, great great loss," said Oscar Rosario who was a close friend.

The story of Joaquin Rivera is portrayed in a mural at 5th and Somerset. He moved here from Puerto Rico when he was 18-years-old. He worked at a factory while going to night school to learn English and complete his GED. Late he studied at community college and Rutgers. For the last 30 years he was a counselor at Olney High School and his family says his second home was the church.

"He was a great man, I can honestly say I've never met a man like him, he's the greatest person I've ever known, I don't think he was a man, I consider him a saint," said Joaquin Rivera Jr.

Tragically, Rivera Sr., who suffered from high blood pressure, experienced chest pains Saturday night and walked himself two blocks to the emergency room of Aria Health Frankford Hospital.

Police say while waiting to see a doctor he died while sitting in the waiting room and was robbed of his watch by 3 other people in the room. One of them, 45-year-old Richard Alten of Port St. Lucy, Florida has been arrested and charged. Two others are being sought.

But that is not how Rivera's family wants him to be remembered.

"I want him to be remembered for what he did to preserve the Puerto Rican culture in Philadelphia. That was his idea that every kid born knew his roots," said is wife Maria.  While the police investigation is ongoing, services for Rivera are being finalized. A viewing will be held at Givnish Funeral Home on Red Lion Road Friday night and another viewing and funeral Mass on Saturday morning at St. Ambrosio Catholic Church at 6th and Venango.

Entry #1,415

Disney Harasses Paraplegic Mayor Over High-Tech Wheelchair

Tuesday, 12.01.09

Disney stops disabled mayor over wheelchair

 Myron Rosner and his ibot wheelchair at Walt Disney World on Sunday.
Myron Rosner and his ibot wheelchair at Walt Disney World on Sunday. ROSNER FAMILY

JOSE PAGLIERY

Miami Herald

North Miami Beach's paraplegic mayor said his pleasant Thanksgiving weekend at Walt Disney World Resort turned into a demeaning experience after park officials harassed him because of his high-tech wheelchair.

According to Mayor Myron Rosner, theme park employees at both Epcot and Animal Kingdom questioned his use of his $30,000 iBOT 4000 -- a four-wheeled vehicle capable of balancing and moving on only two wheels.

Rosner, paralyzed during a construction accident, prefers to ride on two wheels -- allowing him to be eye-level with his wife, Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Sarah Zabel.

But park employees mistook his wheelchair for Segway, according to Rosner and a Disney World spokeswoman.

In front of his wife and four children, park employees demanded Rosner lower himself and use four wheels, citing a Disney policy that prohibits the use of Segways, which it deems as unsafe.

``I was totally harassed by Disney World. It was a nightmare for my wife, myself and my four children,'' he said. ``They gave me the impression I was not welcome here.''

That's not the case, spokeswoman Zoraya Suarez said.

Employees were simply confused, mistaking the wheelchair for a Segway.

``The guest was provided with conflicting guidance. We apologize for any inconveniences this may have caused,'' she said.

In 2007, three disabled people filed a lawsuit against Disney for not allowing Segways at its parks. The lawsuit was recently settled out of court, but the Segway ban remains.

Unlike a Segway, which is used while standing, Rosner's iBOT 4000 keeps the driver seated.

Rosner said Monday he plans to file lawsuits against Disney for what he called an embarrassing experience.

`ON ALL FOURS'``He said I needed to go down on all fours, and I said . . . the only way I'm going down is if the sheriff takes me down,'' Rosner said, noting his wife cried during the incident.

Ironically, Rosner said he was inspired to buy the high-tech wheelchair after seeing it on display at Epcot's Innoventions, which exhibits products that help make human lives better.

FINALLY GETS IN

Although Rosner's entrance to Epcot was delayed Friday, a park manager finally let him through.

But the questioning didn't end there.

Employees and a security guard surrounded Rosner and his family as they toured Disney's Animal Kingdom on Sunday afternoon, when he was again told to lower the chair.

FAMILY LEAVES

The family soon left after employees followed them around the park, Rosner said.

Rosner said he appreciated Disney's apology, but said, ``it still doesn't make up for how they treated us.''

``It made us feel dirty, disgusted, undignified,'' he said.

Entry #1,414

Jail Guard Smuggles iPods to Inmates

Jail guard admits smuggling iPods to inmate

 

Houston Chronicles

Nov. 24, 2009, 11:57AM

MIDLAND — A former guard at the Reeves County Detention Center faces up to 15 years in prison in a bribery and smuggled iPods investigation.

Prosecutors in Midland say 28-year-old Katherin Elizabeth Terry of Pecos on Tuesday pleaded guilty to accepting bribes.

Terry acknowledged that three times during 2008 she accepted money from the mother of an inmate, totaling $500, in exchange for agreeing to smuggle banned iPods to the prisoner.

A federal judge in March will sentence Terry, who also faces a fine of up to $250,000.

Entry #1,413

Woman makes bomb threat to help boss make flight

lse report made to delay plane's takeoff

JENNIFER LEBOVICH

Miami Herald

Thursday, 11.26.09

Police say a woman went to great lengths to make sure her boss didn't miss his flight Wednesday -- she called in a bomb threat.

Her delay tactics weren't taken lightly.

Police on Thursday arrested Claudia De La Rosa, 31, of Sunny Isles Beach, on a charge of false report of planting a bomb.

Here's what happened, according to the arrest affidavit.

On Wednesday, a call and e-mail came into Miami International Airport, saying in Spanish there was a bomb on an American Airlines plane. It listed the flight number and departure time.

``The flight was delayed while MDPD searched the aircraft and all the luggage,'' the arrest form said.

The investigation, and the computer's IP address, led police to De La Rosa.

De La Rosa spoke to police, and said ``that her boss was booked on the flight to Honduras, but because she arrived late to work he missed the flight. [De La Rosa], in an attempt to delay the flight, called in the bomb threat,'' according to the arrest affidavit.

 

Entry #1,412

Mom mad at son's arrest also jailed

ACSO: Mom mad at son’s arrest raises ruckus, also jailed

News Sentinel

November 30, 2009 at 3:06 p.m.

Robert_Stooksbury
Robert_Stooksbury

 

Sarah Stooksbury

Sarah Stooksbury

 

CLINTON — A mom upset that her son had been arrested for allegedly shooting at a man ended up being arrested herself for tailgating the cruiser holding her son, driving into the jail’s unloading area behind the arresting deputy, and then hitting the arresting officer in the face.

The incidents occurred Thanksgiving afternoon.

Robert D. Stooksbury, 39, is accused of shooting at Johnathon Goodman of Andersonville, according to Anderson County Deputy Mark Hobbs.

Hobbs reported he noticed Sarah Jane Stooksbury tailgating his cruiser while he was transporting her son to jail and radioed to the jail to close the lockup’s sally port door as soon as he pulled in.

Sarah Stooksbury pulled into the drop-off area directly behind him, blocked the door with her vehicle and refused to leave until her son was released, Hobbs reported.

Hobbs tried to grab the woman’s hand to detain her and calm her down, and she hit him in the face, he reported.

Sarah Stooksbury, 59, is charged with six misdemeanors — from aggravated criminal trespassing to assault. Her son is accused of aggravated assault. Both are free on bonds, and both reside in Andersonville.

Entry #1,411

12 Days Of Christmas Cost $87,000

'12 Days Of Christmas' Would Top $87,000'

Price Up $794 From Last Year

DAN NEPHIN

Associated Press Writer

POSTED: 12:02 am EST November 30, 2009
UPDATED: 11:52 am EST November 30, 2009

PITTSBURGH -- Making one's true love happy will cost a whopping $87,403 this year, a minuscule increase from last year, according to the latest cost analysis of the items in the carol "The Twelve Days of Christmas."

That's the grand total for the single partridge in a pear tree to the 12 drummers drumming, purchased repeatedly as the song suggests, according to the annual "Christmas Price Index" compiled by PNC Wealth Management. The price is up a mere $794, or less than 1 percent, from $86,609 last year.

The cost of buying each item just once is increasing this year to $21,466, up 1.8 percent from last year's $21,081.

Jim Dunigan, managing executive of investment for PNC Wealth Management, which has been calculating the cost of Christmas since 1984, attributed the modest increase to lower energy costs and fewer wage increases.

It's the smallest increase since 2002, when the cost actually decreased, according to PNC.

The main driver behind the higher cost is that the price of gold has increased 43 percent, bringing the five gold rings up $150 to $500.

Although wage increases were modest, nine ladies dancing, at $5,473 per performance, is the costliest item, surpassing that of any of the material goods.

The most expensive goods are the seven swans a-swimming at $5,250, but their cost decreased 6.3 percent from last year's $5,600. Dunigan said their cost tends to be the most volatile because of supply and demand; they were up 33 percent last year over 2007.

Costs for the 10 lords a-leaping ($4,414 per performance), 11 pipers piping ($2,285 per performance) and 12 drummers drumming ($2,475 per performance) remained the same as last year. Dunigan says that reflects the labor market in which the unemployment rate rose to near 10 percent after sitting below 5 percent for much of the decade.

And for those who would shop online, a word of caution.

PNC says you'll pay $31,435, which is down from last year's online price, but still about $10,000 more than in the traditional index.

"In general, Internet prices are higher than their non-Internet counterparts because of shipping costs for birds and the convenience factor of shopping online," Dunigan said.

PNC Financial Services Group Inc. checks jewelry stores, dance companies, pet stores and other sources to compile the list. While it is done humorously, PNC said its index mirrors real economic trends.

Besides putting out the list for fun, PNC makes it available to teachers across the country to teach economic trends.

While it's unlikely anyone would buy the items, Dunigan said one item is likely to please.

"We don't necessarily suggest picking just one, but it's hard to believe that gold rings wouldn't lead the list on a year-to-year basis," Dunigan said.

Entry #1,410

$1,920,000 The World's Most Expensive iPhone

World's most expensive iPhone costs $1,920,000

A British designer has produced the world's most expensive iphone - featuring almost 200 diamonds and costing $1,920,000.

 Telegraph UK 

9:54AM GMT 29 Nov 2009

iPhone 3GS: World's most expensive iPhone costs £1.92m iPhone 3GS: The front navigation button is made from a single diamond of more than seven carats. Photo: SOLENT

The casing of the exclusive iPhone 3GS Supreme was created using 271 grams of 22 carat solid gold.

The front bezel houses 136 flawless diamonds totalling a massive 68 carats while the Apple logo on the back is made from a further 53 gems.

The front navigation button is made from a single diamond of more than seven carats.

Designer Stuart Hughes, from Liverpool, Merseyside, took ten months to make the phone after it was commissioned by an anonymous Australian businessman.

Mr Hughes said: "The Iphone is the phone with the most tricks on the market.

"What possibly could we do to trick it up more? Bless it with the finest precious metal and jewels.

"Most of the ten months was spent trying to source the diamond for the navigation button."

The phone comes in a special 7kg chest made from a single block of granite and Kashmir gold with a Nubuck leather lining.

Entry #1,409