truesee's Blog

Police beating of drunk driver on tape

POLICE officers who dragged a drunken driver from his car and bashed him with their fists, boots and batons are being investigated by the NSW Police Professional Standards Command and the NSW Ombudsman.

Police bashing caught on tape

By Nick Leys and Brendan Hills

Daily Telegraph

May 31, 2009 12:00am

 

The investigation will determine whether unjust force was used during the arrest of Mount Druitt man Sione Peaua, 43, who was beaten by as many as five police officers after a 45-minute car chase on May 25 last year.

Video footage from a police patrol vehicle and the Polair police helicopter was tendered in court on Friday during Peaua's trial for serious traffic offences.

The videos show Peaua being dragged from his four-wheel drive after it hit a power pole, then being punched, kicked and bashed with retractable batons as he struggled on the ground.

Peaua, a Tongan father of six who is a boilermaker and local rugby league coach, had a blood-alcohol reading of 0.13 when he went on a high-speed rampage through Mount Druitt and Rooty Hill in a Toyota LandCruiser.

For the early part of the chase - during which speeds of 145km/h were reached - Peaua had his six-year-old daughter in the vehicle.

On Friday, he was sentenced to four months in jail after pleading guilty to driving with a suspended licence, mid-range drink-driving and dangerous driving.

Police prosecutor Alan Baghurst unsuccessfully argued in court that incriminating video footage should not be released to the public and described it as "not a pretty sight''.

He said both sets of footage were being investigated by the NSW Police Internal Affairs unit.

Ian Lloyd, QC, representing Peaua, told the court both sets of video were the subject of a NSW Ombudsman's inquiry. Peaua would be making a statement to the inquiry, Mr Lloyd said.

The court heard that Peaua did not receive any lasting injuries from the beating.

Mr Lloyd, however, called it a "savage and unjustified attack''.

A statement from Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione's office said the investigation had been initiated by police and was being ``closely oversighted by the NSW Ombudsman''.

Both videos were tendered to the court, along with photographs of Peaua's injuries. He suffered severe bruising to his upper arms and thighs, as well as an injury to his hand and left forearm.

The Sunday Telegraph understands Peaua is considering launching a civil action against police in relation to the injuries.

 

LINK TO VIDEO OF HIGH SPEED CHASE:

http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,25562843-5001021,00.html

 

LINK TO VIDEO OF BRUISES:

http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/gallery/0,22056,5055817-5010140,00.html

 

It is also understood a female constable who was at the scene contradicted statements by other officers that Peaua had resisted arrest and assaulted police before they used force to subdue him.

Two charges of resisting arrest and assaulting police were dropped by the police prosecutor. Peaua's legal defence received a $41,000 cost order as a result.

A fact sheet tendered to the court said Peaua had also been sprayed with a "burst'' of capsicum spray, but did not mention him being punched and kicked.

The fact sheet said Peaua grabbed one officer's left foot "with both hands'' and had "continued to pull away from police, swinging his arms around forcefully''.

Several critical moments of the beating were missed because the Polair crew panned the helicopter's camera away as police lashed out and used batons.

Nor is it clear why, at the beginning of the beating, three police officers stand in front of the police patrol car's video camera, obscuring vision of the incident.

The statement from the Commissioner's office says: "Standard operating procedure for police helicopters involved in pursuits is to resume patrol once an offender is in custody.''

In the sound track of the incident, a police officer can be heard saying, "Don't you f****** move'' before telling Peaua to lie on his side.

Peaua then screams, "Get me out of here'' and is told by the officer: "You shut the f*** up, c***, and lay there.''

Peaua: "You know what I'm going to do to you.''

The officer then tells Peaua: "Let go of my f***ing leg.''

Peaua can then be heard screaming, "What the f*** are you doing to me?''

Close examination of the Polair vision reveals four officers standing over a handcuffed Peaua, trying to hold him down, when one officer kicks him twice in the back of the thigh.

The same officer then punches him and kicks him again in the back of the thigh before punching him in the vicinity of his arm.

The vision then cuts to a wide shot, in which two officers can be seen punching and kicking.

As the shot becomes wider, it appears one or more officers is using a retractable baton.

Police began the pursuit when Peaua refused to stop after they saw him hit the kerb while making a turn in Zoe Place, Mount Druitt.

During the chase, Peaua ran seven red lights, drove on the wrong side of the road 11 times and knocked down two give-way signs before slamming into a power pole on the Great Western Highway at Rooty Hill.

Peaua, who was still serving a licence suspension from 2006 and had a prior drink-driving conviction, pleaded guilty to charges of driving with a suspended licence, mid-range drink-driving and dangerous driving.

He was sentenced to four months' jail and suspended from driving until 2014.

Peaua has lodged an appeal, which will be heard in the District Court later this year. He was granted conditional bail.

Entry #547

Octomom Signs Reality TV Deal

Monday, June 1, 2009

Octomom Signs Reality TV Deal

It took a while, but you knew it was coming, didn't you? Nadya Suleman, also known as "Octomom" because she world's longest-surviving set of octuplets has signed a deal to star in a reality television series.

However, Octomom is somewhat denigrating, and the reason for that is because, after the somewhat miraculous octuplet birth, it came to light that Nadya Suleman already had six children, and used in vitro fertilization for all of them, plus the octuplets. Admittedly, she herself said that she was basically obsessed with having a large family.

Suleman agreed to be filmed for a proposed television show by 3Ball Productions, attorney Jeff Czech said. Unlike many series, it won't be a 24x7 operation. Czech told USMagazine.com:

"[Nadya and the producers] are hoping to have an arrangement whereby several events in the children's lives would be filmed in a documentary series. One of the events in the children's lives might be their first birthday.”
The show has no title yet, and Czech wouldn't disclose how much Suleman will get paid. There's always the chance that Suleman will get perks besides just cash; part of the deal that Jon and Kate Gosselin made for their series "Jon and Kate Plus 8" was a tummytuck for Kate and hair plugs for Jon.
Entry #546

Classified Ad Seen As Assassination Threat Against Obama, Secret Service Investigating

 

Classified Ad Seen As Assassination Threat Against Obama, Secret Service Investigating

 


AHN | May 31, 2009"

                  THIS IS A FOLLOW-UP TO A STORY I POSTED ON 5/29/09

Windsor Genova - AHN News Writer

Warren, PA (AHN) - A Pennsylvania town newspaper has publicly apologized for running a classified personal ad that may be an assassination threat against President Obama and reported the incident to the local police.

The Times Observer based in Warren also stopped running the ad that appeared on the newspaper's Thursday issue as the Secret Service was called in to investigate the person who placed the ad.

John Elchert, the publisher of Times Observer, said one advertising staff did not suspect anything wrong with the ad that read: "May Obama follow in the steps of Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley and Kennedy!"

Upon realizing that all four presidents were assassinated, the newspaper reported the matter to the police.

The newspaper did not reveal the name of the person who placed the personal ad, but said the name was turned over to the Warren City Police, which forwarded it to federal authorities.


Entry #544

Pizza delivery man saves woman held hostage

Pizza Man Saves Abducted Woman

By DUNCAN MANSFIELD

5/30/09

AP

 

GATLINBURG, Tenn. (May 29) — Chris Turner normally wouldn't drive 30 miles into the remote Tennessee mountains just to deliver a pizza. The one time he did, he came upon a scene that drained the color from his face and made him "numb from head to toe" — a woman with her hands tied, silently begging him to call 911.
It was no joke, and Turner, 32, rushed to a nearby house and made that call.
 
 
Pizza deliveryman Chris Turner, shown Friday with wife Nease, is being hailed as a hero. Turner was dropping off a pizza at a remote cabin in the Tennessee mountains on Tuesday when he saw a woman pop up from behind a couch. She held up her bound wrists and silently mouthed, "Please call 911." Turner left the house and made the call -- and police rescued the woman.
 
Police say the woman was whisked away from the Atlanta neighborhood she was jogging in by a man who frequented her business. Authorities say he raped her and held her captive inside a cabin. The 24-year-old woman was rescued by Sevier County deputies Tuesday evening because of Turner's quick thinking.
Turner told The Associated Press on Friday that he noticed the woman pop up from a couch while her abductor signed the credit card slip.
 
"While I was standing in the door all you could see was the back of the couch," Turner said. "And then she popped over the back of the couch and showed me that her hands were bound. And she was just mouthing, 'Please call 911.'"
Turner at first thought it was a joke. "When I realized what was going on, I went numb from head to toe and turned pale white," he said.
Turner tried to look calm. "Have a nice day. Enjoy your food," he told the suspect. Then he rushed back to his van, where his wife was waiting behind the wheel. "Go, go, go!" he told her.
 
The cabin was out of cell phone range. So they drove to a nearby house and called police. They waited to make sure the suspect didn't flee. Then Turner stayed to see the man arrested and the victim taken away in an ambulance. "I wanted to make sure she was OK," he said.
 
The woman told authorities she was jogging near her home in Atlanta about 11:50 a.m. Tuesday when a frequent customer at a restaurant and bar owned by the woman and her husband asked her to see his new car. She got into the vehicle, which turned out to be a rental, and was immediately tied up.
She told police the suspect drove her more than 200 miles to the cabin in Tennessee and raped her. The Associated Press does not identify alleged sexual assault victims.
 
Police arrested David J. Jansen, 46, of Snellville, Ga., without a struggle on charges of aggravated kidnapping and rape, Sheriff Ron Seals said in a statement. He was released on $800,000 bond late Thursday. His attorney, Donald Bosch of Knoxville, had no comment Friday.
 
Capt. Jeff McCarter refused to discuss the case Friday. But he earlier told The Mountain Press newspaper that officials believe the woman was in imminent danger.
The victim and her husband visited Turner at Capelli's Pizza and Subs in Gatlinburg before heading home Wednesday. "She was just thanking me ... for trusting her," Turner said. "She said he was going to kill her ... after he got done with her."
 
Turner's boss, John Henry, said the cabin was about 30 miles from his pizza shop.
"We usually don't go out that far," he said. "But he said, 'Yeah, I will take it.' It was just luck. For her, it was."
 
 
Link to Video:
 
Entry #543

Quadriplegic drug lord sentenced to 10 years

Cripple drug lord caged for 10 years

By Marnie O'Neill

The Sunday Telegraph

May 31, 2009 12:00am

A QUADRIPLEGIC whose disability was compared to the late Superman actor Christopher Reeve, has been jailed for up to 10 years for conspiring to manufacture ecstasy.

Paul Baker, 36, of Colyton in Sydney's west, is the first quadriplegic in NSW history to receive a full-time custodial sentence.

District Court Judge Robert Toner's decision last Wednesday will force jail authorities to spend thousands of dollars modifying a cell for Baker - once they find a prison that can accommodate his considerable needs.

The NSW Department of Corrective Services has admitted it is yet to find a permanent jail cell for Baker, who is morbidly obese and needs 98 hours of care per fortnight, which will be provided by an independent care agency.

He cannot eat, drink, go to the toilet or wash by himself and requires a hoist to transfer him to bed from his motorised wheelchair - which he controls with a slight movement in one hand.

In court, Baker's lawyer compared his condition to that of Christopher Reeve, who became a quadriplegic after a horse-riding accident and died in 2004.

"We set up a committee to deal with (Baker) because we knew he would probably be getting a custodial sentence," a Corrective Services spokesman said.

"At the moment he is in Long Bay (jail) hospital in the aged-care and frailty unit. He'll be in there for an assessment and planning period while we look at various jails to figure out which would be most suitable to cope with his level of disability."

The department said it would cost about $200,000 per year to look after Baker, double the cost of an average "secure" prisoner.

Some $4000 was spent on modifying a truck to convey him from court to jail last week. It will be used again when, and if, authorities decide to relocate him.

His cell will have to be fitted with a hoist, special furniture and air-conditioning because Baker can no longer control his own body temperature, authorities said.

A former director of import companies, Baker pleaded guilty in 2007 to one count of conspiring with three other men to manufacture one tonne of ecstasy.

The court heard that Baker ordered importation of glassware used in the manufacture of the drug and a pill press found in his home. These were also used in a clandestine lab at Badgerys Creek.

The drug was to be manufactured with other chemicals and combined with 11 200-litre containers of methylamine, imported from China in 2005.

Police moved in before any drugs were made, the court heard. Judge Toner sentenced Baker to a maximum of 10 years six months, with a non-parole period of three years and six months.

Baker became a quadriplegic in 1995, after a car accident.

Original Story
Costs dilemma in jailing quadriplegic drug maker
Conspired with others to make more than a tonne of ecstasy … Paul Baker outside his home yesterday.

Conspired with others to make more than a ton of ecstasy … Paul Baker outside his home yesterday.
Photo: Adam Hollingworth

 

Les Kennedy
February 8, 2009

A CAR crash has already given Paul Baker a life sentence - next week it will be up to the NSW legal system to decide if he gets another.

Baker, 36, who is a quadriplegic, has pleaded guilty to conspiring with three other men to manufacture more than a tonne of ecstasy in 2005.

The charge carries a maximum of life imprisonment either in jail or by home detention. The decision on whether he is to become the first quadriplegic in NSW to serve a custodial term has fallen to Judge Robert Toner, who will next week hear sentencing submissions in the Downing Centre District Court.

Baker's solicitor, Michael Jokovic, declined to comment on the care needs of his client, which prison officials privately believe will outstrip the $301,000 average annual cost of keeping an inmate in the high-security supermax prison at Goulburn.

In written submissions to the court by Baker's defence, occupational therapist Sue Lukersmith said there was not a jail cell big enough to accommodate him and the equipment for his care. She evaluated assessments from 12 doctors and specialists on Baker's quadriplegia and also examined his care needs at his home in Colyton.

Baker, who uses his slight movement in one hand to get around on a motorised chair, became a quadriplegic in a motor vehicle accident in 1995.

Baker, a director of a number of import companies, pleaded guilty in 2007 to one count of conspiracy to manufacture a large commercial quantity of MDMA or ecstasy. The court heard that Baker was involved in the purchase of glassware used in the manufacture of the drug and a pill press was found in his home. These were used in a clandestine laboratory at Badgerys Creek.

The drug was to be manufactured with other chemicals and combined with 11 200-litre containers of methylamine, imported from China in 2005.

Police who broke up the syndicate said Baker was unaware of the plan until some months later but then helped his co-offenders research information, acquire other chemicals and equipment and search for properties for the covert lab.

In her report to the court, Ms Lukersmith said Baker required a minimum of 108 hours of personal care a week in a daily care regime of four shifts, which included his showering and feeding.

She listed among his requirements air-conditioned accommodation because he can no longer control his body temperature.

Her report said specialist equipment Baker required included electric wheelchairs, beds and hoists and voice-activated controls for lights and television. "He is dependent upon attendant carers for all aspects of personal care. This includes transfers, showering, drying, dressing, grooming, personal hygiene, toileting and eating," Ms Lukersmith said. She did not think the prison hospital system could provide Baker "with the minimum requirements" outlined in her report.

These included experienced personal attendant care and the training of any new carers that would be needed with staff shift changes.

A Department of Corrective Services spokesman said: "The department can't go into details about care issues in this case because it might be seen as trying to influence the sentencing process. However, where a court hands down a jail sentence, then the department has a duty to provide imprisonment."

Entry #542

Man attempts drive-by shooting, misses all shots then crashes into pole

Erie police searching for suspect in drive-by shooting

Erie Times News



Published: May 29. 2009 2:50PM

Erie police are searching for a 23-year-old man accused of a drive-by shooting early today.


Police said Sylvester D. Tate shot four times at a man in the 300 block of West 20th Street about 2 a.m.

The victim, who identified Tate as the shooter, was not injured.

Police said that after speeding away from the scene, Tate crashed his Chevrolet Trailblazer into a utility pole in the 400 block of West 26th Street.

Tate fled the scene after crashing the vehicle, police.

Police found a handgun inside the vehicle that had been reported stolen Jan. 30. Police did not say who reported the gun stolen.

Police have issued a warrant for Tate's arrest. Tate, whose last known address was in the 200 block of West 21st Street, is being charged with aggravated assault, reckless endangerment, receiving stolen property and several traffic violations.

Entry #541

Prisoners being billed $60 for each night they stay in jail

Debt to society costs some criminals $60 a night
Tracy Loew
USA TODAY
May 28, 2009
Get arrested in Springfield, Ore., this fall, and you might spend the night in jail — then get a bill for your stay.

The city plans to charge convicted criminals up to $60 a night, depending on their ability to pay, when a new 100-bed lockup opens in October, Springfield Police Chief Jerry Smith says. Thus, the city could recoup most of its cost of about $70 a day.

"These people are the ones who cause the cost to operate a jail, so they ought to be the ones to pay it, not private citizens," Smith says.

The economic recession is spurring several local governments to turn to pay-to-stay programs, says Sara Totonchi, public policy director for the Atlanta-based Southern Center for Human Rights, which fights legislation that imposes such fees on inmates.

"In these difficult economic times, policymakers are looking for different options to save money," Totonchi says.

Springfield is one of at least five city and county jails that this year started billing inmates for jail time if they are found guilty.

• In Utah, the Salt Lake County Metro Jail charges inmates $40 each day, Sheriff James Winder says. The Box Elder County Jail in Brigham City, costs $10 per day. Since the plan started April 1, about a third of the inmates have paid the fee, Box Elder's jail commander Sandy Huthman says.

• Missouri's Taney County, which includes Branson, charges $45 for a day at the jail in Forsyth, county prosecuting attorney Jeffrey Merrell says.

•Richmond, Va., began charging inmates $1 per day April 15. The few who can't afford that small amount can work jobs in the jail to earn the money, Sheriff C.T. Woody Jr. says. The city hopes to raise between $60,000 and $200,000 a year, he says.

Woody says Richmond started the fee because taxpayers are tired of footing the bill to house criminals while other vital services are being cut from municipal budgets.

"I'm just getting on board to relieve some of the responsibility off of taxpayers," Woody says.

Not everyone can pay. In Springfield, unpaid accounts will be turned over to a collection service, Smith says, and debtors could end up in small claims court.

The Douglas County Jail in Roseburg, Ore., also uses a collection agency, jail spokesman Dwes Hutson says. The jail has charged inmates $60 per day since 2002 but recently cut the fee to $20.

"We found that inmates got such a huge bill that it was hard for them to pay," Hutson says. "We collect more money charging a more reasonable rate."

In Salt Lake County, indigent inmates are not billed, and some who participate in improvement programs can work off their debt, Winder says.

A few jails have been collecting similar fees for years. Klamath County Jail in Oregon has charged $60 per day since 2003, District Attorney Ed Caleb says. Overland Park, Kan., bills inmates $35 for a day in the county jail, Overland Park Municipal Court Administrator Robin Barnard says. Last year, though, Overland Park collected only 39% of the user fee, Barnard says.

Totonchi says the fee can be a burden on inmates' families, who often end up footing the bill. Jailers acknowledge that the fee can be difficult to collect.

"We're not stupid. We realize we're not going to recover 60 bucks from everybody," Springfield's Smith says.

Loew reports for the Statesman Journal in Salem, Ore.

Entry #540

Paper Runs Ad Calling for Obama's Assassination

Friday, May 29, 2009

Paper Runs Ad Calling for Obama's Assassination

A Pennsylvania newspaper should be expecting a visit from the Secret Service soon. The Warren Pennsylvania Times-Observer published an ad on Thursday that called for the assassination of President Barack Obama.

It wasn't like the ad was a want ad for an assassin; rather, it was one of those small personal ads that you might see run in the classified section of a local paper, but rather than saying something like "Happy Birthday, So-and-So," the ad said "May Obama follow in the footsteps of Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley & Kennedy!" All four of those presidents, of course, were assassinated in office.

The PT-O posted an apology:

"An errant classified 'personal' ad which appeared in Thursday's Times Observer has drawn the attention of law enforcement officials.

"A person from Warren placed the ad, which apparently alludes to the wish that President Obama meet an untimely end by linking him with four assassinated presidents. The ad representative didn't make the connection among the four other presidents mentioned and mistakenly allowed the ad to run.

"Upon realizing the mistake early Thursday morning, the ad was immediately discontinued and the identity of the person who placed the ad was turned over to Warren City Police as per newspaper policy. The local police department forwarded the information to federal authorities, as per department policy.

"The Times Observer apologizes for the oversight."
I can understand perhaps not making the connection, but I can't understand how anyone would think running this ad would not attract the attention of the Secret Service. The paper surely knows who the person who placed the ad is, and there will be a visit, that's for certain.
Entry #539

Man arrested after posting strong-armed robbery on YouTube

Videotaped Lutz strong-armed robbery posted on YouTube

Image from YouTube

A video posted on YouTube shows a man being beaten and robbed outside a nightclub in Lutz

By JOSH POLTILOVE | The Tampa Tribune

Published: May 28, 2009

 


William T. Bogan

 

TAMPA - A strong armed robbery in Lutz was captured on videotape and placed on YouTube.

Hillsborough County deputies have arrested the man they say shot the footage, and they are continuing to search for two people who removed the victim's wallet.

The attack occurred in the early morning hours of March 31 at L.A. Hangout Bar, 16411 N. Florida Ave. in Lutz.

Alexander R. Fernandez, 21, of Tampa, was struck in the face by an unknown person while inside the bar. Fernandez left the bar so he could get a bat from his vehicle. Deputies say William T. Bogan, 25, of Thonotosassa, was recording the events on a digital video camera and that Fernandez returned to the front parking lot looking for the person who struck him.

That's when Bogan told an unknown male to hit Fernandez, deputies say.

"As seen on the video the victim was tackled from behind and landed on the pavement," a Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office news release states. "An unknown individual kicked the victim in the head while he was incapacitated on the ground. Another subject removed the bat from the victim's hand."

Bogan told people to remove Fernandez's money, and two males took Fernandez's wallet.

Fernandez was struck in the head with a bat.

Fernandez was treated at University Community Hospital. He has since been released, but details on his condition weren't immediately available.

Days after the incident, Bogan returned to the L.A. Hangout Bar and distributed copies of the video, deputies say. The video was placed on YouTube by Bogan, sheriff's spokeswoman Debbie Carter said.

"We were investigating the incident and went to the bar and found out that copies had been distributed," she said.

Deputies got a search warrant and went to Bogan's home Wednesday. Inside, they found Bogan and several others: Owen Reid, Perry Quinn Paremore, Whitney Bogan and Fedell Jackson.

William Bogan was charged with solicitation to commit strong armed robbery. His bail was set at $2,000, and he has since been released from jail.

Reid, 22, of Thonotosassa, was charged with possession of marijuana and possession of a controlled substance. He was seen narrating in the beginning of video, but Carter said he won't face additional charges for being involved in the video.

Paremore, 25, of Thonotosassa, was charged with marijuana possession. He was seen in the video but also won't face charges for that, Carter said.

Whitney Bogan, 23, of Thonotosassa, was charged with marijuana possession. Bogan, who is William Bogan's brother, was released on his own recognizance.

Fedell Jackson, 24, of Tampa, was charged with marijuana possession. He was released on his own recognizance.

Deputies are seeking the public's help finding the two people who took Fernandez's wallet.

 

 

NOTE: YouTube has removed the videotape

Entry #538

Man sentenced for breaking into jail to deal drugs

Man sentenced for breaking into jail to deal drugs

Fri May 29, 4:13 pm ET

TEXARKANA, Ark. – A man caught breaking into the Miller County Jail last summer will soon leave his cell there for one in an Arkansas prison. Bobby Finley, 20, was accused of planning to sell drugs and tobacco inside the jail. Finley pleaded guilty Thursday to five felony counts and was sentenced to a total of 19 years in prison. But the sentences are to run consecutively and top out at five years.

Guards caught Finley using bolt cutters to get through the chain-link fence that surrounds the jail. Prosecutors said Finley had cocaine and marijuana in his possession.

"In 19 years of prosecuting you always encounter cases that make you believe you've seen it all — until you see a case of this nature," Deputy Prosecutor Carlton Jones said. "It never ceases to amaze me."

Finley was found mentally competent to stand trial following a psychological evaluation.

Finley will get credit for time served for the 316 days he spent in jail since getting caught.

In his deal with prosecutors, Finley was sentenced to five years each on two possession counts and three years each on three counts of furnishing prohibited substances: cocaine, marijuana and tobacco.

When Finley was arrested last summer, Arkansas State Trooper Scott Clark investigated and said Finley was a moment away from getting inside the fence.

"This is the first one I've ever worked where somebody went to so much trouble to remove an obstacle so they could bring contraband into the jail," Clark said at the time. "It's definitely a first for me."

 

 

Original Story with Picture and Video

http://www.kpxj21.com/news/Break-in-at-Texarkana-jail-14230/

Entry #537

Granny's forgotten 4 year old lotto ticket worth $2,000,000

Granny's forgotten lotto ticket nets $2,000,000

Posted Tue May 26, 2009 6:49pm AEST
Updated Wed May 27, 2009 7:17am AEST

The grandmother says she has no plans for a spending spree

The grandmother says she has no plans for a spending spree (ABC News: Gary Rivett)

A New South Wales south coast grandmother has had an unexpected $2 million windfall from a lottery ticket left forgotten for four years.

The 73-year-old, who has not been named, recently came across the unregistered ticket in an envelope of other unchecked tickets in a dressing table drawer.

She says she had left it a further two weeks and was not going to worry about it.

"My husband said to me that it would be too old to check," she said.

"But I took the ticket to the agent and they put me on the phone to someone from NSW Lotteries who told me it was worth $2 million."

The retired dairy farmer says she went limp and could not tell her husband the good news until they had left the shop.

However she says she has no plans for a spending spree despite not having much while growing up and some lean times on the farm.

"We will use the money to help the family down the track but they don't know we've won," she said.

"They'll find out when we leave this world."

Entry #536

Police fooled with fake no parking signs issue 233 tickets

Fake 'no parking' signs fool Tarpon Springs police, who write 233 tickets near Tarpon Turtle restaurant

By Demorris A. Lee, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Thursday, May 28, 2009

FAKE: The signs installed by developer Mike Bronson were mounted on round poles and had no city sticker on the back of them.
<b>FAKE:</b> The signs installed by developer Mike Bronson were mounted on round poles and had no city sticker on the back of them.
[DEMORRIS A. LEE | Times]

TARPON SPRINGS ­— Police blame a local developer for installing "no parking" signs around a popular city restaurant that resulted in 233 tickets being written in a two-year span.

At the same time, acting Tarpon Springs police Chief Robert Kochen acknowledged his department's failure to properly handle the matter in 2007.

"We messed up," Kochen said. "We did not look at this thing like we should have."

In a 23-page report released this week, Kochen said developer Mike Bronson admitted recently to installing the signs along the city's right of way after initially denying it.

"Mike Bronson advised that back around April of 2006 he installed all of the 22 signs due to the parking problems caused by customers of the Tarpon Turtle," Kochen wrote in the report.

Bronson could not be reached for comment.

The investigation was prompted by Commissioner Peter Dalacos, who recently had concerns about how the situation was handled in 2007 during an ongoing dispute over noise and parking at Jack Willie's Tarpon Turtle.

"I'm glad Mr. Bronson admitted to the act and the Police Department has been very proactive in this matter," Dalacos said. "I still have concerns about what action we can take to, at a minimum, have Mr. Bronson reimburse those tickets that were paid."

The report says criminal charges against Bronson would not be feasible at this time, but makes no mention of other possible penalties.

The signs installed by Bronson were mounted on round poles and had no city sticker on the back of them. The city's authorized signs are mounted on galvanized U-shaped poles with holes.

"The Police Department's patrol officers were doing their job and they had no reason (at the time) to believe any of these signs may have been unauthorized by the city," Kochen said.

Tarpon Springs is now working with the Pinellas County Clerk of the Circuit Courts to identify any outstanding parking ticket warrants that may have been issued for nonpayment. The city wants those tickets purged from the system. The city also wants to see if it can "remedy (or reimburse) the fine amounts that have been charged for the tickets."

The parking tickets were $20, with $15 going to the city and $5 going a fund that supports school crossing guards.

During a City Commission meeting earlier this month, Don Alvino, the owner of the Tarpon Turtle, alleged that Bronson was using the "no parking" signs to harass his customers.

Alvino and Bronson were business partners with Alvino initially leasing the Tarpon Turtle from Bronson with a five-month option to buy. In September 2006, Alvino exercised the option and purchased the restaurant for $3.4 million.

Since that time, Alvino says, Bronson has been out to destroy his business.

The investigation of the parking signs led Kochen to conclude that the city made several missteps.

In May 2007, Alvino had a meeting with the head of the city's code enforcement, Ed Hayden, about complaints being lodged against the restaurant. In that meeting, it was learned that the signs were fake.

During the investigation, Bronson told police he received permission from Sgt. Allen Mackenzie, who at the time handled all traffic-related matters involving signs and traffic studies.

Mackenzie, who retired from the department on Feb. 14, 2007, said he had no such conversation with Bronson, the report said.

Bronson was ordered to remove the signs in May 2007, but code enforcement officials never documented the incident and they never followed up.

"Apparently some signs were removed back in May of 2007 at the request of code enforcement, but the issue was not fully resolved because the signs remain there today," Kochen wrote in his report.

"Although I believe Officer Hayden was acting with good intentions, he did make some mistakes in this matter."

Kochen said a traffic study is currently being conducted to see where signs will actually be placed in the area.

For safety reasons, Kochen asked Bronson to leave his illegal signs up until a determination is made for the placement of city signs.

Officers were told not to write tickets in the area until the study is complete. Kochen said the matter will be completed quickly.

But the decision to keep the illegal signs up incensed Alvino, whose business was limited to 177 seats and weekend-only outdoor entertainment at a recent City Commission meeting.

"The city is not pro-small business," he said. "They already have taken away the number of seats I can have, they took away my ability to have outdoor entertainment during the week and now they are depriving me of on-street parking, even though they know the signs are illegal. It just doesn't make sense."

[Last modified: May 28, 2009 12:17 PM]

 


Entry #535

Man calls 911 over orange juice at McDonald's

Aloha man calls 9-1-1 over botched fast-food order

John Snell

The Oregonian

Wednesday May 27, 2009, 3:30 PM

Raibin Raof Osman

ALOHA - For most folks it's not a dilemma. Given a choice between "a day without sunshine" and a day without jail time, most people will skip the orange juice and stay out of jail.

But Raibin Raof Osman isn't most people. The 20-year-old Aloha man had a sleep-over at the Washington County Jail on Memorial Day after calling 9-1-1 to complain that McDonald's left out a box of orange juice from his drive-thru order.

 

Osman was booked Monday night on accusations of improper use of 9-1-1. He bailed out Tuesday. The offense is a Class B misdemeanor punishable in Oregon by up to six months in jail and a fine of $2,500.

Entry #534

Woman Having Bad Day Tries To Run Over Customer

May 27, 2009 12:59 pm US/Central

Woman Having 'Bad Day' Tries To Run Over Customer

MATTAPAN, Mass. (CBS) ?

 This image from surveillance video shows the black SUV to the right just before it slammed into the gas station.

 

A woman who told a witness she was "having a bad day" may have taken her frustration out on a gas station.

Police say the woman used her black SUV as a weapon, nearly hitting people and then repeatedly ramming her vehicle into a Mobil Service Station, reported CBS station WBZ-TV in Boston. 

Police are searching for the woman who they say pulled into the service station parking lot as a pedestrian was walking by. The pedestrian claims the woman drove too close and words were exchanged between the two. That's when the driver tried to run the pedestrian over twice by smashing her SUV into the building, police say.

"I just couldn't believe it was happening. I mean from an argument to that - I just couldn't believe it was happening," said gas station owner Stacey Thomas. "Then when she started hitting the building I was like 'what is going on?'"

Police say the woman was driving a black Pontiac Aztec with Georgia license plates. The SUV has significant front end damage.

The same gas station was robbed at gunpoint three weeks ago.
Link to Video:
Entry #533