truesee's Blog

Boy, 11, charged in scooter robbery with gun

Cincinnati Enquirer
Last Updated: 8:37 pm 

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Boy, 11, charged in scooter robbery



Jennifer Baker 

July 28, 2009

PRICE HILL – An 11-year-old boy has been charged with holding up two children and trying to steal their scooters with what turned out to be a plastic toy gun.

Cincinnati police arrested the boy, locked him up and accused him of trying to take the children’s silver push scooters Monday evening at Rapid Run Park in the 4400 block of Rapid Run Road.

The children were not injured, but the frightening experience is one the family will never forget, their father, Rich Harrison, said Tuesday.

“There are so many bad things anymore. Kids with real guns and fake guns,” he said. “You just never know what to do or who to trust anymore. I have been in a daze since yesterday, having it in my mind there could have been a chance my kids could have gotten shot over a scooter.”

The startling incident unfolded at the top of the hill in the park, where there are athletic fields, he said. His two sons, Kyle, 8, and Kevin, 10, and daughter Ryan, 11, all attend St. Williams School. The family was headed to his youngest son’s football practice for the school team.

The two older children were on their beloved scooters, Christmas gifts from an uncle. They wanted to ride around the pond and meet their father and Kyle on the other side.

But about halfway around the pond, a boy they did not know approached them.

“We’re going to play a game,” he told the children, according to a police report. “I’m going to take your scooter.”

What happened next was no game. He pointed what appeared to be a real gun at the children and tried to take the scooters.

The siblings tried to get away, scooting as fast as they could toward their father.

The boy, still holding the plastic toy gun, gave chase

“It was aggressive,” Rich Harrison said. “He came down with no fear whatsoever to try to take the scooters.”

The boy stopped and retreated when he saw the father, heading toward two friends waiting for him under a shelter.

Rich Harrison said he called 911 and when police arrived, they found the boy and two friends nearby. All seemed to have fake guns or BB guns, he said, but he wasn’t sure.

“The police didn’t tell me,” he said. “They looked like real guns. It scared all of us. There were several different ages of kids up on the hill at practice. All the parents were up there in fear for a little while.”

He is using the experience as a learning moment for his family.

“Let this just be a lesson when I tell you guys to stay by my side so I can keep an eye on you,” he said he told his children. “That’s why I do that. Times are different.”

The boy remains in the Hamilton County Juvenile Court Youth Center. Hamilton County Juvenile Magistrate David Kelly scheduled an Aug. 7 hearing to determine the boy’s competency, said Harvey Reed, the youth center’s administrator.

A public defender questioned the boy’s ability to understand the consequences of his behavior, Reed said.

photo
Zoom Photo 

Ryan Harrison, 11, and her brother Kevin, 10, ride their scooters around the pond at Rapid Run Park. Not long ago, they were doing just that when a gun was pulled on them by a would-be thief.

(The Enquirer/Malinda Hartong)

Entry #817

After 100 alcohol arrests judge draws line

After 100 alcohol arrests, judge draws line

 

Sharon Coolidge 

Cincinnati Enquirer

Last Updated: 12:27 pm July 28, 2009

Jesse Shadrick has more than 100 alcohol related arrests in Hamilton County, Kentucky and Tennessee after nearly drinking himself to death his whole life.

The homeless man shuffled into court Tuesday, knowing the robbery charge he pleaded guilty to carried a possible sentence of up to five years in prison.

But Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Pat DeWine said enough is enough: the cycle of arrest and release must be broken.

Instead of sending Shadrick, 41, to prison or giving him another probation term, which Shadrick would likely violate anyway, DeWine sentenced Shadrick to get alcohol and mental health treatment and Talbert House program that will keep him locked up until it's done.

"You have over 100 alcohol-committed offenses, in and out of here," DeWine said. "Frankly, you're going to kill yourself if you don't get this under control.

"I am going to try and get you some treatment," he said.

Though tears, Shadrick told the judge: "I have been in this state of alcoholism for quite some time now. I have been in oblivion you might say for 22 or 23 years."

Shadrick, who apologized for his unkempt appearance, said he wants to get off the streets, tired of life how it is.

"I want to get sober and be somebody, someday, any way," Shadrick said.

If Shadrick doesn't comply with treatment, DeWine said the second chance would evaporate and he'd sentence him to three years in prison.

Born in Cincinnati, but raised in Tennessee, Shadrick started drinking at a young age, and really, never stopped. He dropped out of school in the eighth grade and the arrests started shortly thereafter.

In his mid-20s he began hitch-hiking from Ohio to Tennessee to Florida, never settling in any one place. He's racked up numerous arrests - mostly alcohol related - in all three states.

He lists his home as the Drop Inn Center in downtown Cincinnati.

Looking at Shadrick, the first thing a person notices is his nose, bent to the side.

He broke in during a skirmish with Tennessee police and never had the money to get it fixed, he said.

The crime that landed Shadrick in court this time was a felony charge of robbery. He stole an 18-pack of Budweiser from the Sunoco on West 8th Street downtown. When store owner Christopher Zimmerman chased Shadrick outside, Shadrick hit Zimmerman in the stomach with the stolen contraband.

That confrontation upped the charge from misdemeanor theft to felony robbery.

Entry #816

Woman ran a strip club from her basement

Woman charged with running strip club in basement

 Updated July 28, 2009

By Megan Matteucci and Alyse Knorr

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

 

An alleged illegal strip club inside a Lawrenceville home attracted up to 200 people, including teenagers in the middle of the night, a neighbor said.

Jim Ferguson, who lives next door to the makeshift club, said he called police around 2:30 a.m. July 18 to complain about a noisy party.

“I heard a young woman ... yelling ‘I’m going to kill you,’” Ferguson recalled Tuesday.

He went outside and saw dozens of cars parked along his street and around the block. Teenagers were roaming around the street and the parking lot of the Georgia Power office across the road, Ferguson said.

Gwinnett County Police said the homeowner, Constance Trahan, was operating a strip club in the basement and garage of her home in the 1400 block of Purcell Road.

Police said they found a sign that read “1 Dollar Jello Shots,” along with minors consuming alcohol on July 18.

“There were about 200 people there,” Ferguson said Tuesday. “It took an hour and half to clear the house.”

Trahan was at work Tuesday afternoon and not immediately available for comment, but her friends said there is no club at the home.

“It was a regular gathering,” said Christyan Hall, who lives with Trahan. “It’s just a misunderstanding.”

Trahan, a carpenter, had just finished renovating her Lawrenceville home. She set up a lounge area for the group to relax, Hall said.

Friends threw Trahan, 28, a party to celebrate her birthday and the newly remodeled home, Hall said.

The party ended with police at the door and guests fleeing.

“The music was loud, but it’s a quiet home. There were no strippers, no club, no underage drinking,” Hall said Tuesday. “What people do in the privacy of their own home is their own business.”

Hall said the Jell-O shots were for the adult guests.

Trahan was charged with maintaining a disorderly house, a misdemeanor. She remains fee on a $1,300 bond.

Police also arrested party guest Lester Ramirez, 20, who told officers there were dances in the garage/basement area and that Trahan was selling alcohol, according to a police report.

Ramirez, who lied about his age, was found carrying marijuana in his mouth, according to a police report.

Ramirez was charged with marijuana and alcohol possession, along with providing police with a false date of birth. He has since been released on a $3,900 bond.

Ferguson said he never saw any dancers, but knew there something more than a birthday party going on next door.

“It was just too intense to be a house party. This was like a bar,” he said. “There were lots of people who don’t know each other coming.”

Neighbors said Trahan rents rooms inside her home to several adults.

The July 18 party was the latest in a series of noisy gatherings at Trahan’s home, neighbors said.

Ferguson said he also called police last month after being awoken to excessive noise and traffic in front of his home. Ferguson said he had to stand in front of his driveway to prevent people from parking and doing wheelies on his property.

On Tuesday, Trahan’s ranch style house was quiet. Several friends talked in the driveway, but there were no signs of a club. Lawn chairs sat in the yard and a basketball lay next to the driveway.

Ferguson said he hopes the arrests will send a message to his neighbors, especially since his 7-year-old son will have to start school soon.

“For the past few nights, I’ve finally been able to sleep,” Ferguson said. “I hope it stays this way. ... In a situation like this, anything could happen.”

 

 

Gwinnett County Police Lawrenceville resident Constance Trahan has been charged with maintaining a disorderly home for allegedly operating a strip club in her basement.

Gwinnett County Police Lester Ramirez,
 20, was charged with possession
of alcohol and marijuana and lying
about his age

 

Gwinnett County police allege Constance Trahan, a carpenter by trade, ran a strip club in the basement of this home on Purcell Road in Lawrenceville. Friends of Trahan deny the charge.

Megan Matteucci, mmatteucci@ajc.com Gwinnett County police allege Constance Trahan, a carpenter by trade, ran a strip club in the basement of this home on Purcell Road in Lawrenceville. Friends of Trahan deny the charge.

 

Entry #814

Boy, 7, drives family car to skip church

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

'Not gonna go!' / Boy, 7, drives away in family car to skip church

CARLOS MAYORGA
Standard-Examiner staff

PLAIN CITY -- Maybe he also missed the day the sermon covered the Eighth Commandment: Thou shalt not steal.

A 7-year-old boy led officers on a car chase Sunday through Weber County in an attempt to avoid going to church, authorities say.

"Most kids fake illness," said Weber County Sheriff's Capt. Klint Anderson. "They don't take the car out and go joy riding."

Dispatchers received reports of a child driving a vehicle recklessly near 4100 West and 1975 North around 9 a.m.

The motorist who called in the complaint followed the child and witnessed the boy drive through a stop sign at 4700 West, Anderson said.

Two deputies caught up with the boy a few blocks away and attempted to stop the car, but the child kept driving, Anderson said.

The boy drove through a parking lot, then went south on 4700 West before driving the family's white Dodge Intrepid into a driveway on the 5000 block of 1500 North. The driver reached 40 mph and ran stop signs along the way, Anderson said.

The boy reportedly entered the home through the garage and ran upstairs. When deputies questioned the child's father, he told them he had no idea his son had taken the car.

"They had to explain to him they had chased his car," Anderson said.

"The father confronted the kid, and the boy straight-up admitted he had driven it. When asked why he took the car, he said he didn't want to go to church."

The boy's father was told to make sure his car keys are kept where they are not accessible to children, and the child was lectured about the dangers of taking a vehicle out on the road, but authorities cannot do much else.

Police would not identify the family, as there would be no citations issued.

Anderson said the boy is too young to prosecute and that the boy's father won't be cited because he was unaware his son had taken his car.

For a 7-year-old, his driving wasn't too bad, Anderson said.

"He had a few near misses, but he didn't hit anything or crash."

Entry #813

Renter hit with $50,000 suit over Twitter comments

Chicago tenant's Twitter slam draws suit

Apartment manager says it has to protect its reputation

July 28, 2009
LISA DONOVAN
Cook County Reporter

It was a not-so-sweet Tweet about a Chicago apartment.

In response, Horizon Group Management LLC filed a libel lawsuit Monday against Amanda Bonnen, a former tenant of a North Side apartment building it manages.

The real estate management firm — which is seeking $50,000 in damages — says that one of Bonnen's Twitter posts “maliciously and wrongfully” slammed her building at 4242 N. Sheridan and the management company.

The May 12 Tweet from "abonnen" read in part: “Who said sleeping in a moldy apartment was bad for you? Horizon realty thinks it’s okay.”

The suit and Twitter account identifies "abonnen" as Amanda Bonnen of Chicago.

Jeffrey Michael, whose family has run Horizon for more than 25 years, said: "The statements are obviously false, and it's our intention to prove that."

Michael said that while Bonnen moved out recently, the company never had a conversation about the post and never asked her to take it down.

"We're a 'sue first, ask questions later' kind of an organization," Michael said, noting that the company manages 1,500 apartments in Chicago and saying it has a good reputation that it wants to preserve.

Bonnen couldn't be reached for comment.

 

Horizon Group Management has filed a lawsuit against Amanda Bonnen for publishing a false and defamatory Tweet on Twitter. Bonnen was living at an apartment managed by Horizon Group Management at 4242 N. Sheridan Rd.

 

LINK TO LAWSUIT:

http://media.suntimes.com/images/cds/pdf/twitterlawsuit.pdf

Entry #812

AT&T Charges A Fee To Get A Discount

AT&T Charges You A Fee For Getting A Discount

Meg Marco
Consumer Media
1:59 PM on Mon Jul 27 2009, 71,619 views  

Reader "ValentineHumphrey" has a part-time job with a company that gets a 25% discount from AT&T. It sounded like a good deal until she found out there was actually a fee for signing up for the discount. What?

VH says:

I call the 800 number for AT&T and ask the nice gentleman on the phone if there is anything he can do, can he add the discount even though I already signed a 2 year contract? YES! You (the consumer) can add a discount at any time. He is unable to do so, however, due to the computer program (they do not have access) but he is more than willing to walk me through the process. "Do you have a work email?" No, I'm out of luck online. I can add the discount myself with the discount sponsor code, but without an employee email for employment verification I will have to go to a store.

No problem, there is a store near my home. I called on Wednesday, and went to the store on Friday. I know they will want employment verification so I bring my name badge, photo id, the paper with the discount code. Go in and the man at the desk goes about setting me up. Then he says this "There is an activation fee of $36 to add this discount to your account."

I look at him shocked. I asked how long they were doing this for, the answer, it started just this week. He was unsure of his words, and seemed like he anticipated my reaction.
I asked "what?! Are you becoming an airline? You want to charge me for a discount, why? Is it because AT&T thinks they lose money on a discount?" He responds with "No, they don't think that". In shock I say "so what you are saying is I won't actually get my discount for 3 months, my discount comes to be about $12 (this was rough calculation in my head on the spot), so it will take 3 months for me to see any discount for my phone."

The guy was nice, I wasn't being belligerent, and let them know that I am sure others will feel the same. I signed my papers stating I worked where the discount was coming from and was on my way, along with a copy of their estimated bill.

I then immediately called the 800 and spoke with a very nice woman. While she was pulling up my account I told her why I was calling. "I just want to know why the gentleman I spoke to on Wednesday did not tell me of the $36 activation/sponsorship fee for adding the discount to my account." The agent was shocked "He didn't tell you!?"

It turns out the notification of the fee was JUST released to the call centers that week. It was brand spankin' new and she wasn't even aware stores had started charging it. I was willing to pay, was not on the phone to get the charge reversed (although that was my hope!) but said, in the future, if any fee is even being considered, they should let the consumer know that "we will soon be assessing X fee" so we can be informed.

She sympathized with me and said if she were in my place she would be upset too. She offered to speak with her supervisor to "see if there was something they could do". She had me on hold for a few minutes and came back saying they would reverse that charge.

Since my acount balance was zero (I had just paid the bill) I would have a credit of $36 on my account, so when the new bill hits (with the activation/sponsorship fee) the fee will essentially be gone.

So, just a heads up, being uninformed is good if you get wonderful customer service and someone who sympathizes. I was not rude, nor angry, nor beligerant. I was more sarcastic and shocked, and jokingly compared them to an airline - a fee for everything and everything for a fee! I went to the source of my information (the call center) to iron out why I was not informed and did not ask for anything... she offered it to me. Although had she not offered, I would have asked if there was anything she could do for me.

We're glad you got the fee reversed, but we're still blinking at the idea of charging a fee for a discount. It's like those coupon books that school kids try to sell you, only it doesn't help any school kids.

Entry #811

Officer Pulls Gun Over Slow McDonald's Service

Police: Denver Officer Pulls Weapon Over Slow Service

Derrick Saunders Faces Numerous Charges In Aurora

Wayne HarrisonABC News 7
Denver
Web Editor

 

POSTED: 4:48 am MDT July 21, 2009

Updated   2:56 pmJuly 27, 2009

AURORA, Colo. -- A Denver police officer assigned to Denver International Airport was on administrative leave Tuesday after employees at an Aurora McDonald's said he pulled a gun on them when his order wasn't filled fast enough.

The incident was reported in May, when Derrick Curtis Saunders, 29, ordered food at the restaurant at 18181 E. Hampden Ave.

According to employees, Saunders was with another police officer  AURORA, Colo. -- A Denver police officer assigned to Denver International Airport was on administrative leave Tuesday after employees at an Aurora McDonald's said he pulled a gun on them when his order wasn't filled fast enough.

 

The incident was reported in May, when Derrick Curtis Saunders, 29, ordered food at the restaurant at 18181 E. Hampden Ave.

 

According to employees, Saunders was with another police officer

Saunders was formally charged with menacing, prohibited use of a weapon, reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct, the Aurora Police Department said.

 

A booking photo of Saunders was not released by Aurora police.

 

He has been a Denver police officer since 2007, and has been on administrative leave for the past month, Denver police said.  Saunders was formally charged with menacing, prohibited use of a weapon, reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct, the Aurora Police Department said.

 

A booking photo of Saunders was not released by Aurora police.

 

He has been a Denver police officer since 2007, and has been on administrative leave for the past month, Denver police said.

Entry #810

Rabbi Arrested As Head of International Organ Trafficking Ring

N.J. corruption probe includes first organ trafficking case

by The Associated Press

Friday July 24, 2009, 7:41 PM


NEWARK -- Levy Izhak Rosenbaum of Brooklyn called himself a "matchmaker," but his business wasn't romance. Instead, authorities say, he brokered the sale of black-market kidneys, buying organs from vulnerable people from Israel for $10,000 and selling them to desperate patients in the U.S. for as much as $160,000.

The alleged scheme exposed this week by an FBI sting, rocked the nation's transplant industry. If true, it would be the first documented case of organ trafficking in the U.S., transplant experts said today.

Mitsu Yasukawa/The Star-LedgerLevy Izhak Rosenbaum, 58, of Brooklyn, N.Y, is taken into the back of the federal courthouse in Newark on corruption charges. He is charged with trafficking in illegal kidneys.

"There's certainly cross-national activity, but it hasn't touched the United States or we haven't known about it until now," said University of Pennsylvania medical ethicist Arthur Caplan, who is co-directing a U.N. task force on international organ trafficking.

Rosenbaum was arrested Thursday, 10 days after meeting in his basement with a government informant and an FBI agent posing as the informant's secretary. The agent claimed to be searching for a kidney for a sick uncle on dialysis who was on a transplant list at a Philadelphia hospital.

"I am what you call a matchmaker," Rosenbaum said in a secretly recorded conversation. "I bring a guy what I believe, he's suitable for your uncle." Asked how many organs he had brokered, he said: "Quite a lot," the most recent two weeks earlier.

As part of the scheme, the organ donors were brought from Israel to this country, where they underwent surgery to remove the kidneys, authorities said. Prosecutors did not identify which hospitals in the U.S. received the donors and their kidneys.

"The allegations about an organ trafficking ring in the United States are appalling," said John Davis, CEO of the National Kidney Foundation.

Israel Medical Association spokeswoman Orna Cohen said the organization had no reports there of Israelis selling organs. "If it's true, then it's shocking," she said.

Micky Rosenfeld, a spokesman for Israel's national police force, said Israeli police were not involved in the investigation, and he would not comment further.

Under 1984 federal law, it is illegal for anyone to knowingly buy or sell organs for transplant. The practice is illegal just about everywhere else in the world, too.

But demand for kidneys far outstrips the supply, with 4,540 people dying in the U.S. last year while waiting for a kidney, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. As a result, there is a thriving black market for kidneys around the world.

Nancy Scheper-Hughes, an anthropology professor at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of an upcoming book on human organ trafficking, said that she has been tracking the Brooklyn-connected ring for 10 years and that her contacts in Israel have called Rosenbaum "the top man" in the United States.

Scheper-Hughes said she was told Rosenbaum carried a gun, and when a potential organ seller would get cold feet, Rosenbaum would use his finger to simulate firing a gun at the person's head.

Rosenbaum was arrested in a sweeping federal case that began as an investigation into money laundering and trafficking in kidneys and fake designer bags. It mushroomed into a political corruption probe, culminating in the arrests this week of 44 people, including three New Jersey mayors, various other officials, and five rabbis. The politicians and rabbis were not accused of involvement in the organ trafficking.

Rosenbaum, 58, is a member of the Orthodox Jewish community in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn, where he told neighbors he was in the construction business.

For someone who was not a surgeon, Rosenbaum seemed in his recorded conversations to have a thorough knowledge of the ins and outs of kidney donations, including how to fool hospitals into believing the donor was acting solely out of compassion for a friend or loved one.

He was recorded saying that money had to be spread around liberally, to Israeli doctors, visa preparers and those who cared for the organ donors in this country. "One of the reasons it's so expensive is because you have to shmear (pay others) all the time," he was quoted as saying.

"So far, I've never had a failure," he bragged on tape. "I'm doing this a long time."

At a 2008 meeting with the undercover agent, Rosenbaum claimed he had an associate who worked for an insurance company in Brooklyn who could take the recipient's blood samples, store them on dry ice and send them to Israel, where they would be tested to see if they matched the prospective donor, authorities said.

Four checks totaling $10,000, a downpayment on the fictitious uncle's new kidney, were deposited in the bank account of a charity in Brooklyn, prosecutors said.

It was not immediately clear today who Rosenbaum's attorney was.

Dr. Francis Delmonico, a Harvard professor, transplant surgeon and board member of the National Kidney Foundation's Board of Directors, said similar trafficking is going on elsewhere around the world. He said an estimated 10 percent of kidney transplants -- 5,000 to 6,000 each year -- are done illegally. Hot spots are Pakistan, the Philippines and China, where it is believed organs are obtained from executed prisoners, he said.

Caplan, the University of Pennsylvania ethicist, said he expects the U.N. task force to make recommendations in October that would hold hospitals worldwide accountable for establishing the origins of each organ they transplant and whether it was freely donated without compensation.

"There is a black market, almost exclusively in kidneys," Caplan said. "All international medical groups and governments ought to condemn any marketing in body parts. It's simply too exploitative of the poor and vulnerable. The quality of the organs is questionable. People lie to get the money. The middle men are irresponsible and often criminals. They don't care about the people who sell."

Scheper-Hughes said her research has uncovered hundreds of cases of illegal organ transactions brokered by and for Israelis in Israel, South Africa, Turkey and other countries, with sellers recruited from poor communities in Moldova, Brazil and elsewhere.

A few transplant surgeons support changing the law to allow a system of regulated compensation to increase the pool of donor kidneys.

Arthur Matas, a transplant surgeon who directs the kidney transplant service at the University of Minnesota Medical School, said donors could be compensated with some combination of lifetime access to medical care, life insurance, a tax credit, help with college and a small direct payment.

"It would minimize the extraordinary black market and exploitation of impoverished people internationally," Matas said.

Martin Weinfeld, who lives around the corner from Rosenbaum in Brooklyn, said the allegations bring shame on the community.

"It puts a bad name on good people," he said. "Religion is supposed to be about God, helping others, not about the cash."

Entry #809

Burglars pick wrong place to sleep it off

Burglars who broke into drinks depot 'too drunk to escape'

 

Keith Cullen and Paul Wiggins, two burglars who broke into a Swansea drinks depot, drank until they were incapable of escaping.

 

Daily Telegraph

4:16PM BST 27 Jul 2009

Cullen and Wiggins were only able to make it to the yard next door during the incident in March, where police found them the following morning.

They had wheeled out more than £700 worth of alcohol causing £1,400 worth of damage, and could not resist drinking the stock.

They then turned up at Swansea magistrates' court so drunk that Cullen was not even allowed in the building.

When Cullin was turned away by security guards at the courthouse, Wiggins also left.

Wiggins disappeared from the foyer. Neither have been seen since and magistrates have subsequently issued arrest warrants.

Cullen, 33, of Waunarlydd, Swansea, and Wiggins, 45, of Townhill, Swansea, were tried in their absence and convicted of burglary and theft.

Andrew David, prosecuting, said CCTV cameras had filmed the duo breaking into the Kuehne Nagle Drinks Logistics depot in Plasmarl, Swansea.

Wiggins could be seen knocking back bottles of beer.

Police were called and officers found cases of beer and cider stacked up and ready to be removed.

They also found "a lot" of empty bottles and then came across Cullen and Wiggins asleep in a yard next to the depot.

They are expected to be sentenced later this week.

(Locked)
Entry #808

Drunk men steal 1,500 gallons of water

Jul 27, 4:16 PM EDT

Men face theft, public intoxication charges after allegedly stealing water for outdoor slide

ATLANTIC, Iowa (AP) -- Two men face theft and public intoxication charges after allegedly stealing water from a fire hydrant for an outdoor water game. Pottawattamie County Sheriff's Department spokesman Sgt. Dwayne Ritchie said the men were arrested Saturday after a trailer pulled behind the pickup they were driving blew a tire, sending the pickup and trailer into a ditch.

According to authorities, the trailer was hauling a 15-hundred gallon tank filled with water allegedly stolen from a fire hydrant in Underwood. Ritchie said a witness saw the men filling the tank from a city hydrant and reported the action to police.

Ritchie said the men indicated they were going to use the water for a water slide.

 

Information from: KJAN-AM, http://www.kjan.com

Entry #807

Grandmother Wanted in France Convicted 20 Years Ago

British Grandmother Wanted in France

Woman Says She Didn't Know She Was Convicted 20 Years Ago

Skip over this content
Deborah Dark
Fair Trials International

Deborah Dark, 45, didn't know she was convicted on drug charges in France.

(July 27) -- Deborah Dark, 45, has been a fugitive in France for 20 years -- without knowing it.
The grandmother from London has lost her job and gone into debt after discovering her criminal status when she attempted to travel internationally and landed in police custody.
When Dark was 24 in 1988, she was stopped at a French border while on her way home from a vacation in Spain. Agents searched her car and uncovered cannabis under the floor and in the sunroof, reported The Times of London.
A French court believed her when she said she hadn't known she was transporting the drug and suspected her boyfriend was responsible. She was acquitted and went home to Britain.
But what Dark and her lawyer said they didn't know was that the prosecution later appealed successfully and sentenced her to six years in prison in her absence.
It wasn't until 2007, when she tried to travel with a friend to Turkey, that she ran into trouble.
"I knew something was wrong as soon as I arrived at passport control," she said, according to Fair Trials International, a group based in London.
"Customs police arrested me at gunpoint," but no one there or back on her home turf could find an outstanding warrant.
"I assumed it must have been a dreadful error," Dark said.
She ran into the same problem when she returned from Spain a year later, though, and was arrested both in Spain and back in Britain. She finally learned that there was a warrant for her arrest issued in 2005.
Although courts in Spain and Britain have refused to extradite Dark, saying too much time had passed, the French are still seeking her return. She says that makes her a prisoner at home, unable to leave the country to visit her elderly father in Spain.
Fair Trials International is calling on French authorities to drop their request for her extradition.
Entry #806

911 Call: Man Catches Robber In His Home

911 Call: Man Catches Robber in Home

Updated: Sunday, 26 Jul 2009, 6:20 PM MDT
Published : Sunday, 26 Jul 2009, 6:20 PM MDT

GLENDALE - 911 calls normally aren't funny -- but when a Glendale man came home to a man robbing his house over the weekend, he tackled him and held him still while talking on the phone to a 911 dispatcher. 

Homeowner Perry Bigley told a 911 operator, "I have the robber in one hand and the phone in the other."

Officers arrived to the home in the 4600 block of W San Juan where they found the victim on top of the suspect, holding him down.

Bigley told police he came home through the garage about 4 a.m. and found the storage door open. He then spotted the suspect going rifling through his DVDs.

On the 911 tape, Bigley says, "All I am doing is holding him down on the ground… He's saying he can't breathe he's tried to run twice but I caught him in my home."

"Look please stop struggling... we're going to wait here and were going to wait for the cops to come."

The suspect told Bigley there were other robbers upstairs, but they got away and ran down the street. The burglars took six TVs, a stereo, a laptop and a digital camera -- about $11,000 worth of electronics.

 

LINK TO VIDEO/ 911 CALL:

http://www.myfoxphoenix.com/dpp/news/crime/glendale_robbery_911_call_07_26_2009

 

Entry #805

Man has flying tricycle

Sky-high ambition: Meet the man who's flying from Land's End to John O'Groats... by bike

By Tamara Cohen and Elizabeth Hopkirk
Last updated at 9:19 AM on 25th July 2009

It looks far too solid ever to get off the ground. But if John Carver pedals really hard, revs up his little lawnmower engine and thinks happy thoughts... he is soon 2,000ft up in the air.

Then, give or take the odd rain shower, he stays up for two glorious hours, pootling along at 25mph and enjoying the fabulous views unfolding below.

His flying bike, or flyke as it is known, is taking Mr Carver on an epic 800-mile trek this summer, from Land's End to John O'Groats, touching down to camp in fields along the way. 

John Carver

John Carver gets ready for lift-off as he prepares to travel from Land's End to John O'Groats in a flying tricycle

If he succeeds, it will be the longest ever journey taken by a flyke. He hopes to raise £10,000 for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation as well as break a record.

Mr Carver, an Old Etonian, bought the £8,000 German-built craft six years ago.

It weighs a mere 110lb and takes off at just 20mph, needing a 'runway' the size of a football pitch. The parachute canopy helps get it aloft and touch down.

The flyke has only recently been legalised in Britain and Mr Carver has registered it with the Civil Aviation Authority. 

John Carver

Mr Carver demonstrates his flying bike or flyke, in action

 

John Carver

Mr Carver shows the sky is the limit as he sets sail on a practice run

The 37-year-old IT teacher from Oxford will strap himself in for the ride on August 1, along with a tent weighing just 17oz. Its 15-litre tank takes unleaded petrol.

'When you wheel it into a petrol station and you tell them it flies, they don't believe you,' he said.

Like the British weather, two-stroke engines are notoriously unreliable and he is resigned to having to cycle some of his route.

He has learned the hard way not to risk flying in winds over 15mph, after being flipped over by sudden gusts.

But he is adamant there is no better way to travel. 'You are totally at one with the sky. It's that freedom that is quite special.' 

John Carver

The flyke can power along at 25mph and reaches heights of 2,000ft



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1202033/Sky-high-ambition-Meet-man-whos-flying-Lands-End-John-OGroats--bike.html#ixzz0MSCEJfG2

Entry #804

Prisoner had sex with girlfriend in exchange for confession

Prisoner had sex with girlfriend in exchange for confession

 

Madonna King

Courier Mail

July 25, 2009 12:00am

 

IT'S almost too fanciful to be true: a prisoner is picked up from jail and taken for a drive by police officers through the suburbs on Brisbane's southside.

He's handed a list of unsolved break-and-enters, perhaps as many as 300. He reads the details: how entry was gained, what was taken, the time the crime was committed.

And he's told that he needs to admit to at least 20 to make his reward worthwhile.

What was that? According to evidence given by the prisoner to the Crime and Misconduct Commission, police collected his girlfriend and delivered her to Morningside police station.

And it was there where they engaged in sex and the prisoner injected himself with drugs his girlfriend brought.

The prisoner, called RI in the scathing report into police released this week, was not the only person allowed to come and go from their jail cell.
Murderers and armed robbers were allowed out of custody: one to meet his partner and young children in Roma Street Parkland for a play; another to lunch at a swish riverside restaurant.

The CMC's Dangerous Liaisons report, based on its Operation Capri, is not a repeat of the Fitzgerald inquiry - but it's certainly a reminder of how a bad lot of eggs can stink out a whole refrigerator. And with more than 25 officers implicated in wrongdoing - ranging from stupidity to outright criminal activity - it should not be dismissed as easily as it was this week.

The sheer brazenness of some officers seems to know no bounds. Take this example, also outlined in the report.

An informant fund existed, courtesy of the Australian Bankers Association and the Credit Union Security Forum. And over the period of its operation, 77 payments were made, a total of $17,990.

But no records were kept, an "end justifies the means" mentality meant that few rules existed, and money was misappropriated.

Police also falsely claimed payments had been made to informants, signatures were forged and evidence of transactions faked.

There's no better example of the latter than one outlined by Robert Needham and his team in their comprehensive and temperate investigation report.

In that example, officers faked an audiotape and produced it as proof of a payment to an informant. The audio was supposed to support a meeting between two officers and an informant at a coffee shop at West End.

But investigations showed it was made in carpark bay 148 on level B2 of police headquarters, and that a police officer assumed the role of an informant for the recording.

The litany of misdemeanours, maladministration and outright corruption weaves its way throughout the report, but it is Lee Owen Henderson, who is shown to have more influence on one group of officers than their own commissioner, Bob Atkinson.

Henderson had 1241 calls diverted through one police station, at a cost of $2056, and his monthly telephone call bill was $535 - a big sum for a prisoner without any obvious source of income.

But he was no ordinary prisoner. Called "The General", he had his own police locker, was able to arrange a police drug raid and despite earning only $7500 as a prisoner in a six-year period, spent at least $100,272.17.

He helped one officer buy a car, organised a theft from prison, and even sent two fluffy toys and two bibs - worth $85 - to a couple of police officers who were celebrating the birth of their baby daughter. He signed it "loyalty and love always".

Henderson was allowed to pose as an underworld crime figure with connections to corrupt police, had his own locker at the Rockhampton police station, and had access to police computers to help someone who wanted to give a "flogging" to a person they couldn't find.

The revelations this week are terrible but so is the response to them at every level.

The Police Union decided to go in to bat for those police officers who were subject to the report, not the 99.9 per cent of others who are honest and law-abiding and who will be tainted by the accusations levelled at their colleagues.

Commissioner Atkinson, who accepts responsibility for the misconduct, has allowed many of those under a cloud to resign on full benefits.

That means they've got off scot free.

And the Government? Originally elected on a post-Fitzgerald reform agenda, it seems to have decided silence is the best policy.

Queenslanders deserve better, especially those law-abiding, honest and hard-working police officers who will now be unfairly tainted by the wrongdoing of their unscrupulous colleagues.

Entry #803