truesee's Blog

Radiologist turns patients' scans into art

Radiologist turns scans into art

A radiologist has turned scans of his patients' hearts, teeth and other body parts into works of art.

 

Published: 11:39AM BST 23 Aug 2009

Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Curves in the ear' by Kai-hung Fung
'Curves in the ear' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Eye in the big hole' by Kai-hung Fung
'Eye in the big hole' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Moire Eggs' by Kai-hung Fung
'Moire Eggs' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung
'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung
'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung
'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media

Kai-hung Fung maps various organs using 3D computed tomography (CT) scans.

After feeding the data into a computer, he adds colour to his works using a method he invented called the 'rainbow technique'. But he makes no other alterations, preferring a pure picture of what body parts really look like.

He said: "The pictures I create are generated directly from the medical 3D workstation, representing what I see on it. I do not use software such as Adobe Photoshop to further change the image.

"My aim is to preserve the direct relationship between the data and the artwork.

"It is a true integration of art, science and technology and can be studied both scientifically and enjoyed as a visual art.

"The imagery is packed with information. Each line or point represents specific anatomical structures in the body in normal or diseased state. It creates an unusual perspective."

Since he started producing his works at Pamela Youde Nethersole Easter Hospital in Hong Kong they have been shown in galleries across the world.

Proceeds from sales of his pieces are donated to charity.

 

Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Eye in the big hole' by Kai-hung Fung
'Eye in the big hole' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Moire Eggs' by Kai-hung Fung
'Moire Eggs' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung
'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung
'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung
'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media

Kai-hung Fung

 

Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Moire Eggs' by Kai-hung Fung
'Moire Eggs' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung
'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung
'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung
'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media

Kai-hung Fung maps various organs using 3D computed tomography (CT) scans.

 

Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung
'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung
'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung
'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media

Kai-hung Fung maps various organs using 3D computed tomography (CT) scans.

 

 

Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung
'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung
'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media

Kai-hung Fung maps various organs using 3D computed tomography (CT) scans.

 

Radiologist turns scans into art: 'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung
'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media

Kai-hung Fung maps various organs using 3D computed tomography (CT) scans.

 
'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung
'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media

Kai-hung Fung maps various organs using 3D computed tomography (CT) scans.

 

 
'Nose from the inside' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung
'Teeth' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media
Radiologist turns scans into art: 'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung
'What lies behind our nose' by Kai-hung Fung Photo: Kai-hung Fung/Barcroft Media

Kai-hung Fung maps various organs using 3D computed tomography (CT) scans.

Entry #937

Police dog bites thief wearing Speedo

Police: Man Wearing Speedo Burglarized Cars

Man Caught By Police Dog, Officers Say

WFSB

5:43 pm EDT August 22, 2009
EAST HARTFORD, Conn. -- A robbery suspect wearing only a Speedo-style swimsuit was arrested in East Hartford after a police dog tracked him down and bit him on the leg.
The Journal Inquirer of Manchester reported that Daimien Tran was being held after his arrest Thursday on $50,000 bail. He was scheduled for arraignment Friday, but the result of that hearing was not immediately available.

 

Police said Tran tried to steal several vehicles, and also took items from them.  They said they spotted Tran wearing the bathing suit and holding a tool box that had been burglarized from a truck.
Police said Tran ran, but officers using a police dog found him hiding behind a car.

 

The 18-year-old Tran allegedly told police he'd been drinking heavily and smoking marijuana.
Entry #935

Winkers. Meet the jeans that wink as you walk

Winkers: the jeans that wink at you

Friday, August 21, 2009

The Daily Telegraph

 

Meet the jeans that wink as you walk.

 

Winkers jeans
Winkers jeans

 

The amusingly named Winkers, whose buttock-eyes appear to wink coquettishly at anybody following the wearer, are the invention of William A. Jones, a retired father of five and grandfather of seven who lives in Everett, Washington.

Jones says that the idea came to him when, naturally, he was checking out a woman as she walked past him. Nice.

 

He says he was sure that her jeans-clad bottom winked at him as she strolled by. A little more thought, and the idea of jeans with eyes in the buttock-folds was born.

 

Winkers jeans
Winkers jeans

 

Jones experimented with his daughter's jeans and discovered he could indeed make the jeans wink, and came up with the name Winkers.

His range isn't limited to just eyes, though - the range also features ducks that seem to quack, an owl that blinks, and a lion in a jungle scene.

Note for stalkers: they're not actually winking at you. This is not a sign.

Entry #934

Barber robs store over bad beef jerky

Bad beef jerky led irate customer to rob Cleveland party store, police say

Mark Puente

Plain Dealer Reporter

August 21, 2009 20:38PM

Police say some bad beef jerky upset a Cleveland barber so much that he decided to get revenge by robbing the store where he bought it -- even though it's two doors down from his barbershop.

The barber, who is 6 feet 3 inches, covered his mouth with a small cloth, walked into the party store in the 4700 block of Broadview Road in the Old Brooklyn neighborhood Thursday evening and demanded money, police said.

The store owner feared the robber had a gun.

Then he recognized the barber and told him so. The barber became irate, grabbed the cash register and sprinted outside, police said.

The store owner chased the barber with a baseball bat and caught him at a parked car. The owner called police as the barber got away. The officer who arrived first knew the barber too -- the barber cuts the officer's hair.

Detectives went to the barber's Brunswick house, which is right next to the police station. Police found him at his girlfriend's house a few miles away and arrested him. Police said $98 was taken.

The barber told police he took the money and bought a pizza in Little Italy. They asked the barber why he robbed the party store. His answer puzzled the longtime officers.

"He bought a beef stick, and it got him and his dog sick," Sgt. Tom Shoulders said, laughing. "That's why he robbed the place. He said it with a straight face."

The barber, 28, has not been charged but is in City Jail on suspicion of aggravated robbery. The status of the dog is unknown.

Entry #933

Walmart employee beats boss with bat

Boss beaten with baseball bat

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

William Kaempffer

Register Staff

NEW HAVEN — A Wal-Mart employee who had been reprimanded for poor job performance grabbed an aluminum baseball bat early Tuesday and repeatedly hit an assistant manager, police said.

The attack happened in the store’s toy section at about 12:20 a.m., and George Freibott, the assistant manager, was hit a dozen times with the bat. A female employee also was hit during the fray, police said.

Freibott, 29, of Seymour, suffered “serious injuries” in the assault, police said. He was treated in the emergency room at Yale-New Haven Hospital and was discharged later in the morning.

Police, meanwhile, were searching for the suspect, identified as Barry Griffin, 26, of New Haven, who fled the store before police arrived.

Court records show he had a 2007 conviction for third-degree assault and received a suspended sentence. He has a pending assault case in Superior Court in Meriden, according to a judicial database.

The injured assistant manager told police Griffin had been reprimanded for “poor work.”

Freibott could not be reached for comment.

Michelle Bradford, a corporate spokeswoman for Wal-Mart, referred questions about the incident to authorities.

“We are cooperating with the police, and we hope our assistant manager has a speedy recovery,” she said, declining further comment.

The Wal-Mart is at 315 Foxon Blvd. An employee told police Griffin appeared to be in good spirits earlier during the shift, but his mood turned.

According to police, the incident was captured on the store’s security system. It shows Griffin grabbing a bat from a display rack in the sporting goods section, finding Freibott in the toy area of the store, and then hitting him.

Entry #932

Boy, 6, Lands Job As Museum Controller

The Young Controller: six-year-old boy lands dream rail job at museum

A six-year-old boy has landed a dream job at the National Railway Museum after applying for a post he saw advertised in a newspaper.

 

By David Barrett
Published: 11:30AM BST 22 Aug 2009

 

Sam Pointon: Six-year-old boy made
Six-year-old Sam Pointon has been given his dream job as a director of a Railway museum. Photo: KIPPA MATTHEWS

Sam Pointon sent a handwritten letter headed "Application for director" asking for an interview at the centre, in York.

The letter listed his credentials for the role, including his expertise on his train set and the fact that he had been on "lots of trains including Eurostar and some trains in France".

"I am only six but I think I can do this job," wrote Sam.

"I have an electrick (sic) train track. I am good on my train track. I can control two trains at once."

Staff were so impressed they appointed Sam an honorary "Director of Fun" and invited him and his family to a VIP day at the museum, which is home to 280 locomotives including the Mallard and the Flying Scotsman.

Sam, from Leicester, said: "It is the best job in the world. I love it. My favourite is the steam engine, I like it when the wheels go round."

His mother Lorraine said: "Like any little boy of his age he is train-mad.

"He thinks now he has got this job he won't have to go to school. We had to tell him he still has to go to school."

Mrs Pointon said the family were on holiday when husband Robin noticed an advert in a newspaper announcing the retirement of museum director Andrew Scott.

"We started teasing Sam saying it would be his dream job," she said.

"When we got back from holiday he started to write a letter and we ended up posting it. The next thing we know we are invited to the museum and Sam is director of fun.

"We were invited back yesterday and had a great day at the museum. It was Sam's third trip there, but I think we might be going again soon."

The retiring director Andrew Scott said Sam's letter of application was a real delight to read.

"It's always fantastic to see such young children with a real passion for trains, just like I had when I was a boy," he said.

 

 

 

Entry #931

Popcorn Helps Prevent Cancer

Friday, August 21, 2009

Popcorn Helps Prevent Cancer: Study

Ironic, isn't it? While studies have shown popcorn fumes cause lung cancer, a new study shows that popcorn, which has high levels of antioxidants called polyphenols. Polyphenols reduce the risk of  heart, cancer and other diseases.

It's not just popcorn though. Other unlikely candidate foods also are high in polyphenols. According to The University of Scranton

(PA) study by Joe Vinson, a professor of chemistry, almost all whole-grain breakfast cereals and many common, grain-basedsnacks contain substantial amounts.

However, while popcorn is good for you, how many of you eat it without added butter, or even caramel or other sugary coatings? Raise your hands, please. Aha, not that many.

While the researchers said that popcorn can be healthy, they also added that consumers need to make sure the positive qualities of popcorn are not diminished by negative qualities of additives.

These were all whole grain foods, however, that showed the high polyphenol amounts. For example, wheat cereals had the most, followed by corn, oats and rice cereals. Fans of chocolate, cocoa or cinnamon can also take heart: researchers also found that cereals with added cinnamon or cocoa also had high rates of antioxidants
due to the polyphenols in cinnamon and cocoa.

 

Entry #930

Woman awarded $2,000,000 after dentist pulls 16 teeth

Friday, Aug. 21, 2009

Woman awarded $2M after dentist pulls 16 teeth

 The State

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- A South Carolina woman has won a $2 million jury verdict against a dental clinic that mistakenly pulled 13 teeth. The State reported that 28-year-old Elizabeth Smith wanted three teeth pulled when she went to the Sexton Dental Clinic in Florence in 2006. Her lawsuit said a dentist at the clinic pulled all 16 of her upper teeth.

State court records in Florence indicate the jury returned the award late last week.

One of Smith's lawyers, Robert Ransom, said the woman plans to have restorative surgery as soon as possible. That's estimated to cost about $80,000.

Clinic attorney Saunders Bridges said he is considering an appeal.

Entry #929

Girl, 9, leads officers on high speed chase

Girl, 9, leads officers on high speed chase

Posted: Aug 21, 2009 9:09 AM EDT Updated: Aug 21, 2009 12:56 PM EDT

SMYRNA, Tenn. - A nine-year-old girl led officers on a two-county high speed car chase early Friday morning.

According to authorities, the girl's grandmother called police shortly before 3:30 a.m. to say her autistic granddaughter was missing and had taken the keys to her car.

Police spotted the girl six minutes later driving with no headlights on Bell Road in Antioch.

They followed her onto Interstate 24 East, where she reached speeds of 90 miles-per-hour.

She then stopped in the middle of the interstate near the Sam Ridley Parkway exit in Smyrna.

Police pulled in front of her but she decided to take off again, crashing into the police cruiser.

The interstate was shutdown for a short period of time after the incident.

Police said they believe the girl would have stopped had she known right from wrong.

"You know it's kind of gut wrenching because we want her to stop," said Metro police Sgt. Kurt Reddick.  "It was kind of one of those, ‘let's get this ended as quickly as possible and nobody get hurt'."

No one was seriously injured, although the girl had a few scratches on her face.

She is now with her family.

The family says they didn't even know the girl knew how to operate a car and were taken by complete surprise.

Police said she will not face any charges.

 

LINK TO VIDEO LIBRARY:

http://www.wkrn.com/global/story.asp?s=10968626

Entry #928

Mom, 80, shoots at deputies son hides

Sheriff: 80-year-old woman fired at Haywood deputies

 
MARIANN MARTIN
Jackson Sun.

August 20, 2009

 

An 80-year-old woman is behind bars after a Friday night standoff with Haywood County deputies that included her firing several shots at authorities, according to Sheriff Melvin Bond.

Bond on Wednesday said deputies arrested Lorene Harrell and her son, Claude Featherstone, 60, who was found hiding in a closet in her mobile home. No one was hurt in the incident.

Harrell is charged with aggravated assault and is being held on $10,000 bond. Featherstone was charged with evading arrest and is being held on $7,500 bond. The sheriff did not know when they would appear in court.

Bond said authorities received an anonymous tip that Featherstone was at Harrell's mobile home on Daisy Bradford Road.

Featherstone, of Brownsville, had several outstanding warrants from Missouri and Crockett County.

Four deputies went to Harrell's home to serve the warrants because deputies had dealt with Featherstone before, Bond said.

Two deputies knocked on the door of the mobile home after hearing Featherstone talking inside. Harrell came to the door, and deputies told her they were looking for her son.

"She slammed the door in the officers' faces," Bond said.

Deputies started to leave the doorstep but heard Featherstone talking again. They knocked on the door, but Harrell refused to open it, telling them to get off her property, Bond said.

That is when a shot was fired through the front door and deputies took cover in a standoff that lasted more than an hour.

"I advised them to wait this thing out and make sure no one gets hurt," Bond said.

Bond said dispatchers called Harrell on the telephone and that he tried to talk to her, but she hung up on him. Bond said they continued to try to talk to her.

"Deputies could see her inside the door, brandishing a gun," Bond said.

Bond said Harrell fired two more shots through the back door during the standoff.

Dispatchers eventually told Harrell that Bond wanted to see her outside, and she came to the door. Deputies were then able to arrest her, Bond said.

Authorities found a .22-caliber rifle and a .38-caliber revolver in the mobile home, as well as a box of .38-caliber bullets on the coffee table.

Bond said Featherstone was found hiding in a closet in a back room.

Harrell was examined at a local hospital before she was taken to jail, Bond said.

"I'm thankful that no one was hurt and me and my men were able to handle it," Bond said.

Haywood County Mayor Franklin Smith praised Bond for how authorities handled the incident.

"It was a situation that could have ended very differently," Smith said. "But Sheriff Bond handled it well, and no one got hurt."

                                       

 

                                       

 

Mother accused of striking bus driver

 

Staff Reporter

News Star

August 20, 2009

 

Richwood police accused a Monroe woman of beating her daughter's school bus driver

Sherbert Bradley, 29, 114 Monterey Circle, was charged with battery of a schoolteacher and simple battery of the infirm.

According to an arrest affidavit, a Ouachita Parish School bus driver said Bradley showed up at her house Tuesday evening and struck her in the mouth, causing bleeding, because she thought the bus driver was mean to her daughter.

When a 60-year-old woman tried to intervene, Bradley allegedly pushed her down, causing her head to strike against the floor.

Bradley was arrested and taken to Ouachita Correctional Center. She booked on a bond of $15,000.

Entry #927

Deputies allow woman to pose with AR-15 assault rifle

Incident involving Midland County deputies ruled non-criminal by Williamson County, Round Rock authorities

 

Staff Reporter

The Midland Reporter-Telegram

Published: Wednesday, August 19, 2009 4:11 PM CDT
Round Rock police and Williamson County officials have decided five Midland County deputies who were investigated for taking photos of a waitress and one of their weapons at a Round Rock restaurant did not commit any criminal behavior.

In a document issued to the Midland Reporter-Telegram by Round Rock police Wednesday, authorities said the investigation into the incident “did not result in conviction or deferred adjudication” of any of the men.

Authorities were called after the deputies were seen posing with and taking photos of a waitress at Twin Peaks Restaurant and Bar in Round Rock around 9:50 p.m. Monday Aug. 10.

A police officer from Manor who observed the scene alerted Round Rock police and reported he saw subjects take a weapon out of the trunk of a vehicle in full view of the public.

After the Midland County-issued AR-15 assault rifle was removed from the trunk witnesses saw the Midland County deputies photograph a waitress holding the rifle while sitting on the trunk of a squad car, according to the police report.

During officials’ investigation at the scene, Midland County deputies Ronald Eugene Wright, 37, and Daniel Subia, 30, stated they were the ones who removed the weapon from the trunk.

When approached by Round Rock Detective J.D. Rowe about the incident, Wright and deputy Christopher Lee Evans, 34, stated “that they would hope for some form of professional courtesy” in Round Rock police’s response to the situation, according to the police report. Round Rock officials told the deputies their request was inappropriate, according to the report, to which the deputies acknowledged their actions had been unacceptable.

The Midland County deputies at the scene told Round Rock officials the event should never have occurred. They said the waitress had asked to have her photo taken, but that they should not have agreed.

Following the incident, Rowe contacted Midland County Patrol Commander Lt. Earl Stroup who, according to the police report, indicated the deputies’ actions were not in holding with his department’s standards and would be dealt with upon the deputies return to Midland.

When interviewed, the waitress stated the Midland County deputies had asked her to go outside and take pictures of her holding the weapon on their marked unit.

The digital camera used to take the photos was issued by the Midland County Sheriff’s Office. It was seized as evidence, but a search warrant was needed to retrieve the image in question from the camera, according to the police report.

The deputies were in the Round Rock area for training and were off-duty when at the restaurant.

The five men were investigated on a charge of disorderly conduct-displaying a firearm/weapon and the case has now been turned over in full to the Midland County Sheriff’s Department, which has been conducting an internal investigation.

The camera also has been turned over to Midland County since no charges were filed.

A copy of the 9-1-1 call that prompted authorities to respond to the scene at the restaurant will be released in the coming weeks, according to Round Rock officials.

Midland County Sheriff Gary Painter is holding a press conference in reference to the incident at 3 p.m. today.

 

In this photo provided by the Midland County, (Texas) Sheriff, ...

 

In this photo provided by the Midland County, (Texas) Sheriff, an unidentified waitress at Twin Peaks Restaurant and Bar posses for a photo in Round Rock, Texas, Aug. 10, 2009. Midland County Sheriff Gary Painter fired one deputy and suspended three others without pay for the photos of a waitress holding a rifle sitting on a Midland County patrol car. Round Rock officers were dispatched to the restaurant after someone reported the waitress with the weapon, which had been given to her by one of the deputies who had been attending a training session near Austin.

(AP Photo/Midland County Sheriff)  In this photo provided by the Midland County, (Texas) Sheriff, an unidentified waitress at Twin Peaks Restaurant and Bar posses for a photo in Round Rock, Texas, Aug. 10, 2009. Midland County Sheriff Gary Painter fired one deputy and suspended three others without pay for the photos of a waitress holding a rifle sitting on a Midland County patrol car. Round Rock officers were dispatched to the restaurant after someone reported the waitress with the weapon, which had been given to her by one of the deputies who had been attending a training session near Austin.(AP Photo/Midland County Sheriff)



http://www.mywesttexas.com/articles/2009/08/19/news/top_stories/doc4a8c310b92908011507831.txt#ixzz0OoOA6WAo

Entry #926

Woman hires 3 to beat man over stolen pot

4 busted in Monroe 'assault for hire'

Daniel Tepfer
Connecticut Post
Staff writer
Updated: 08/19/2009 11:16:25 PM EDT


MONROE -- In what is being termed by police as an assault for hire, a teenage girl from Redding is accused of hiring a homeless man and two local teenagers to assault a Monroe man she claimed had robbed her of marijuana.

The victim, a 21-year-old man police said was beaten with baseball bats Wednesday, was being treated at Bridgeport Hospital.

Emily Stearns, 18, of Black Rock Turnpike, was charged with first-degree assault. She was being held in lieu of $25,000 bond.

According to police, Stearns hired Spencer Knight, 18, described as being homeless; James Hacker, 19, of Redding; and Emily Taylor, 19, of Redding, for an undetermined sum to assault the man, who she claimed had stolen marijuana from her.

Police said Stearns told the others she wanted the man "especially hurt and humiliated." On Wednesday morning, police said Stearns lured the man to the Last Drop coffee shop on Main Street. Once there however, police said he was met in the parking lot by the others, who were wearing masks and carrying baseball bats.

While Stearns watched, police said, the others began beating the man until he fell to the ground.

Officers arrived on the scene while the beating was going on and arrested Knight, Hacker and Taylor. Police said Stearns was arrested after a short foot chase. Police said Hacker also had pepper spray and a pair of brass knuckles in his pocket.

Hacker, Knight and Taylor were charged with first-degree assault and were being held in lieu of bonds

Entry #925

Thieves Steal $1,500,000 Of Jewelry from JC Penney

JC Penney caper nets $1.5 million

St. Tammany store among five hit across country by jewelry thieves
Thursday, August 20, 2009
By Jeff Adelson
St. Tammany bureau
 
 
 

Carrying out a heist that could have been scripted in Hollywood, two men scaled the JC Penney store near Covington under the cover of darkness early Sunday.

They cut a hole in the building's roof, descended into the store using ropes and, somewhere along the way, disabled the security system, paving the way for them to browse the darkened store and stuff plastic garbage bags with jewelry, clothing and other goods.

After an hour in the store, the burglars disappeared through a fire door, taking with them more than $1.5 million in goods and pulling off what authorities called the largest burglary in St. Tammany Parish history.

It also was one of the most sophisticated.

The thieves planned their entrance and exit, knew how to shut down the store's security system and shielded their faces from the security cameras that dot the building.

It's expertise that may have come from practice.

Investigators said the thieves may be responsible for at least four other burglaries at JC Penney stores across the South and Midwest, including one in Lafayette on Wednesday morning.

Hours after that burglary and three days after the crime near Covington, St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Jack Strain held a news conference and provided details on what he described as an "incredibly sophisticated" burglary ring.

"The deployment of their plan was flawless," Strain said of the break-in at the store in the Stirling Covington Center at Interstate 12 and Louisiana 21.

The Sheriff's Office released surveillance footage of two men walking through the store shortly after midnight carrying garbage bags, which they later used to haul off their loot, and 2x4s. The men apparently had T-shirts wrapped around their heads as makeshift masks.

Investigators are unsure whether accomplices were waiting outside.

Authorities do not know whether all the burglaries were committed by the same suspects or carried out by different members of a larger organization. But the break-ins bear similarities that have prompted cooperation between agencies in three states and the retail company itself.

JC Penney is offering a $10,000 reward for information on the burglaries, Strain said. The company's security officers are working with law enforcement, he said.

"No stone is being left unturned; we're doing a careful analysis of the evidence that's there," Strain said.

Investigators do not believe the suspects are from St. Tammany Parish but are executing several search warrants in the area. Officials refused to say what the search warrants targeted.

This kind of burglary is one of the most difficult types of cases faced by law enforcement, and the ability of thieves to melt down and dismantle jewelry can impede efforts to recover the stolen goods, Strain said.

Officials did not notify the media or public about the break-in for days, time Strain said was needed to collect evidence and conduct the investigation.

"We don't make decisions on when to release things based on the needs of the media," he said.

It is common for cases involving a particular chain to be traced back to someone with an inside connection, often a former employee. Investigators said they do not have any suspects but have not ruled out the possibility that it is an inside job.

"We're looking at all aspects of it, security, management and sales," Lt. Bobby Juge said.

Strain also noted the burglars seem to have chosen an unlikely target.

"Personally, I would be climbing on the roof of a bank or a gold depository," he said.

 

Link to Audio:

http://www.wwl.com/Heist-of--1-million-in-jewelry-and-perfume-from-No/5040916

 

Entry #924

Health Care or Prisons?

Op-Ed Columnist

Priority Test: Health Care or Prisons?

 

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: August 19, 2009
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

Nicholas D. Kristof

At a time when we Americans may abandon health care reform because it supposedly is “too expensive,” how is it that we can afford to imprison people like Curtis Wilkerson?

Mr. Wilkerson is serving a life sentence in California — for stealing a $2.50 pair of socks. As The Economist noted recently, he already had two offenses on his record (both for abetting robbery at age 19), and so the “three strikes” law resulted in a life sentence.

This is unjust, of course. But considering that California spends almost $49,000 annually per prison inmate, it’s also an extraordinary waste of money.

Astonishingly, many politicians seem to think that we should lead the world in prisons, not in health care or education. The United States is anomalous among industrialized countries in the high proportion of people we incarcerate; likewise, we stand out in the high proportion of people who have no medical care — and partly as a result, our health care outcomes such as life expectancy and infant mortality are unusually poor.

It’s time for a fundamental re-evaluation of the criminal justice system, as legislation sponsored by Senator Jim Webb has called for, so that we’re no longer squandering money that would be far better spent on education or health. Consider a few facts:

¶The United States incarcerates people at nearly five times the world average. Of those sentenced to state prisons, 82 percent were convicted of nonviolent crimes, according to one study.

¶California spends $216,000 annually on each inmate in the juvenile justice system. In contrast, it spends only $8,000 on each child attending the troubled Oakland public school system, according to the Urban Strategies Council.

¶For most of American history, we had incarceration rates similar to those in other countries. Then with the “war on drugs” and the focus on law and order in the 1970s, incarceration rates soared.

¶One in 10 black men ages 25 to 29 were imprisoned last year, partly because possession of crack cocaine (disproportionately used in black communities) draws sentences equivalent to having 100 times as much powder cocaine. Black men in the United States have a 32 percent chance of serving time in prison at some point in their lives, according to the Sentencing Project.

Look, there’s no doubt that many people in prison are cold-blooded monsters who deserve to be there. But over all, in a time of limited resources, we’re overinvesting in prisons and underinvesting in schools.

Indeed, education spending may reduce the need for incarceration. The evidence on this isn’t conclusive, but it’s noteworthy that graduates of the Perry Preschool program in Michigan, an intensive effort for disadvantaged children in the 1960s, were some 40 percent less likely to be arrested than those in a control group.

Above all, it’s time for a rethink of our drug policy. The point is not to surrender to narcotics, but to learn from our approach to both tobacco and alcohol. Over time, we have developed public health strategies that have been quite successful in reducing the harm from smoking and drinking.

If we want to try a public health approach to drugs, we could learn from Portugal. In 2001, it decriminalized the possession of all drugs for personal use. Ordinary drug users can still be required to participate in a treatment program, but they are no longer dispatched to jail.

“Decriminalization has had no adverse effect on drug usage rates in Portugal,” notes a report this year from the Cato Institute. It notes that drug use appears to be lower in Portugal than in most other European countries, and that Portuguese public opinion is strongly behind this approach.

A new United Nations study, World Drug Report 2009, commends the Portuguese experiment and urges countries to continue to pursue traffickers while largely avoiding imprisoning users. Instead, it suggests that users, particularly addicts, should get treatment.

Senator Webb has introduced legislation that would create a national commission to investigate criminal justice issues — for such a commission may be the best way to depoliticize the issue and give feckless politicians the cover they need to institute changes.

“There are only two possibilities here,” Mr. Webb said in introducing his bill, noting that America imprisons so many more people than other countries. “Either we have the most evil people on earth living in the United States, or we are doing something dramatically wrong in terms of how we approach the issue of criminal justice.”

Opponents of universal health care and early childhood education say we can’t afford them. Granted, deficits are a real constraint and we can’t do everything, and prison reform won’t come near to fully financing health care reform. Still, would we rather use scarce resources to educate children and heal the sick, or to imprison people because they used drugs or stole a pair of socks?

Entry #923