truesee's Blog

Boy, 15, stripped of shoes, socks by Police, left 90 min from home

A West Baltimore teen says police picked him up and dropped him off in a park two counties away, barefoot.

Howard County police say they got a call from a gas station in the 8300 block of Baltimore National Pike, where officers met a teenage boy who said he was stranded. A Howard County officer took the boy home.

City police have suspended two detectives. Nine-year veteran Milton G. Smith III and six-year veteran Tyrone S. Francis, who are assigned to the department's elite Violent Crimes Impact Division, have been assigned to administrative duties.

The State's Attorney's Office will decide if criminal charges will be filed after City police are finished with their investigation.


Officers Accused of Leaving Teen in State

Video Link to teenager

http://www.foxbaltimore.com/newsroom/top_stories/videos/wbff_vid_533.shtml

Entry #442

Woman sues Wal-Mart over nutria in store

Woman sues Wal-Mart over nutria in store

By Chris Rosa

May 7, 2009

A nutria like this one was seen in Wal-Mart

The last thing one expects to see running down the aisles of Wal-Mart in Abbeville while shopping is a nutria. But according to a lawsuit filed this week, a nutria called “Norman” is what Rebecca White saw in an aisle.


Randal and Rebecca White of Abbeville hired Anthony Fontana to represent them in the lawsuit.


According to the lawsuit, Rebecca was in the grocery aisle shopping on Oct. 11, 2008. Her basket was full of food when suddenly and without warning, a large nutria came from behind the Coke rack and ran straight towards Rebecca, the lawsuit said.


Rebecca, fearing for her safety, pulled the shopping cart towards her to protect her from the nutria andas she did, the cart rolled over her left foot causing her to stumble and causing her to suffer an injury.


Wal-Mart’s employees came to assist her and told Rebecca that, “she had an encounter with Norman” a name the employees had given the nutria, the lawsuit stated.


Rebecca was transported to Abbeville General by Acadian Ambulance for treatment.


The lawsuit state that Wal-Mart and its employees are negligent. The lawsuit said Wal-Mart did not: 
• Warn her of the nutria prior to her entering the store. 
• Did not take steps to protect her from the nutria. 
• Did not warn her that she is shopping at her own risk because there is a     wild animal loose in the store. 
• Did not attempt to capture the nutria.
      As a result of the above, White suffered:
• Pain, suffering and mental anguish.
•Fear of being bitten by a wild animal causing a panic attack.
• Painful disabling injury to her back and foot.
• Interference with her daily activities.

 

http://www.newsvine.com/_news/2009/05/07/2787191-woman-sues-la-wal-mart-over-norman-the-nutria

Entry #441

Woman faces theft charges for returning lost wallet minus cash

Woman faces theft charges for returning lost wallet minus cash

May 06, 2009 • 1:25 pm
By Diana Fasanella

An elderly Florida woman is facing theft charges after she found a wallet and mailed it back to its owner, minus the cash. 

What's in your wallet?

What's in your wallet?

A Publix grocery store security video caught the woman, who was not named, pushing her cart over a wallet that had fallen to the floor to hide it until the victim left the area, according to TC Palm.

On Monday, the 76-year-old Jensen Beach woman returned to the store and was recognized by a manager who contacted police. 

When police questioned the woman, she said she mailed the wallet back to the owner but kept the $115 that was inside because she found it and was entitled to it. 

Entry #440

Dad Accused Of Using Dog Shock Collar On Kids

Dad Accused Of Using Dog Shock Collar On Kids
Police: Father Thought It Was Funny

Posted: 3:20 pm EDT May 6, 2009Updated: 4:59 pm EDT May 6, 2009

SALEM, Ore. -- A father was accused of using a dog shock collar on his four children.

 

Salem police Lt. Dave Okada said the 41-year-old man was jailed Tuesday on charges of criminal mistreatment. He said the father acknowledged putting the electronic dog collar on his four children and shocking all of them at least once.

 

According to Okada, the father didn't do it as a punishment. Rather, he thought it was funny.

 

The children, all younger than 10, are in the custody of their mother.

 

The case has been referred to state Department of Human Services.
Link with video and photo
Entry #439

Delaware family sets trap to nab teen joyriders

Teens accused of stealing SUV for joyrides

Vehicle's owners grow suspicious after smelling gas, tobacco, finding damage

 

By TERRI SANGINITI • The News Journal • May 6, 2009

Two New Castle teenagers were arrested Sunday, accused of repeatedly stealing an SUV in the middle of the night, taking it on joyrides and returning it to the owners' home.

 

photo

Andrew Harrison (left) and Daniel Rojas, both 18, are charged

with felony theft and other offenses

The owners of the 2003 Acura MDX became suspicious when they noticed the smell of tobacco and gasoline and that the gas gauge seemed to fluctuate.

The owners also set a trap inside the vehicle that led to the pair's arrest after a month-long investigation, according to police records.

Andrew Harrison, 18, of the 900 block of Young St., and Daniel Rojas, 18, of the 900 block of Gray St., each was charged with felony theft and four other offenses.

Rojas, the reported driver, also was charged with leaving the scene of a collision and another traffic violation, said New Castle City police Lt. Adam Brams.

It started several months ago when the teens were rattling car doors to find an unlocked vehicle and came upon the unlocked MDX parked on West Third Street, police said.

There also was a spare set of keys inside, Brams said.

Since then, the pair repeatedly took the SUV on joyrides and returned it to its original parking space -- while keeping the spare keys, police said.

In September, they returned the SUV with an estimated $1,750 in damage.

The owners reported the damaged to police. On Dec. 13, they also found a broken passenger side mirror, valued at about $400.

Meanwhile, the owners were growing suspicious about odd odors in the SUV.

At one point, they returned it to a dealer thinking there was a gas leak, only to be told that someone spilled gasoline on the seat and rear carpet.

The victim's husband then decided to "take a motion sensor from the home alarm system and place it in the SUV," police said.

Just after midnight March 31 -- 30 minutes after he installed it -- the alarm activated and the owners reported that the vehicle had been stolen from their Old New Castle home.

Responding Officer Tina Shughart spotted the SUV and tried to stop it in the 1200 block of Delaware St.

The driver and passenger pulled over, bailed out and ran.

Brams said the officer got a good description of the pair and thought she recognized them, which led to their arrest Sunday.

Both suspects were committed to Young Correctional Institution after failing to post $3,000 bail each.

 

Entry #437

Smuggler's Indicted for bringing into country live Asian songbirds strapped to legs

Two charged with illegal import of Asian magpies, robins, bul-buls

MAY 5--Two California men were indicted today on federal charges that they illegally smuggled

Smuggler's Plot For The Birds

MAY 5--Two California men were indicted today on federal charges that they illegally smuggled Asian songbirds into the country, most recently last month when one of the defendants, returning from a trip to Vietnam, was found with 14 live birds strapped to his legs. As seen in the below evidence photo, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents at Los Angeles International Airport discovered the birds under the pants of Sony Dong. According to a Department of Justice press release, CBP agents inspected Dong and "found bird feathers and droppings on his socks, as well as birds' tail feathers visible under his pants." A subsequent search "discovered 14 live birds attached to two flat pieces of cloth that were wrapped around his calves. The birds included three red-whiskered bul-buls (which is listed as an injurious species under federal law), four magpie robins and six shama thrush." The birds each appear to have been placed in sleeves that were hooked on to the cloth around Dong's legs. A second man, Duc Le, 34, was later arrested in connection with the bird smuggling. According to a criminal complaint, Dong told investigators that he purchased birds for $50 each and re-sold them for $300-$400 apiece. into the country, most recently last month when one of the defendants, returning from a trip to Vietnam, was found with 14 live birds strapped to his legs. As seen in the below evidence photo, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents at Los Angeles International Airport discovered the birds under the pants of Sony Dong. According to a Department of Justice press release, CBP agents inspected Dong and "found bird feathers and droppings on his socks, as well as birds' tail feathers visible under his pants." A subsequent search "discovered 14 live birds attached to two flat pieces of cloth that were wrapped around his calves. The birds included three red-whiskered bul-buls (which is listed as an injurious species under federal law), four magpie robins and six shama thrush." The birds each appear to have been placed in sleeves that were hooked on to the cloth around Dong's legs. A second man, Duc Le, 34, was later arrested in connection with the bird smuggling. According to a criminal complaint, Dong told investigators that he purchased birds for $50 each and re-sold them for $300-$400 apiece.

 

Link to Press Release

 

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2009/0505092birds1.html

Entry #436

Woman is five-time Lottery winner

May 5, 6:13 PM EDT

Lady Luck: W.Va. woman wins 5 lottery cash prizes since September, including $100,000

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -- Brenda Bailey is on a roll.

Since September, the 59-year-old South Charleston woman has won five West Virginia Lottery cash prizes, totaling $167,600.

All of Bailey's winnings came from the Lottery's instant games. Her latest win is her biggest -- the $100,000 top prize in the Price is Right game.

Bailey claimed that prize Tuesday. Her other winnings from various instant games include $50,000 in April, $1,000 in March, $6,000 in January and $10,000 in September.

Lottery Director John Musgrave says none of his staff can recall a similar streak of luck.

Entry #435

The Top 15 Most Bizarre Sea Animals

The Top 15 Most Bizarre Sea Animals

May 3, 2009

10:00am

#15. The Colossal Squid

On average, the Colossal squid is only about 3 feet longer than the Giant, but it’s much heavier, and it has light-emitting organs that marine biologists suspect may act as a cloaking device. That’s like a Klingon Bird of Prey that doubles as a Calamari buffet.

via National Geographic

#14. The Leafy Sea Dragon

The Leafy Sea Dragon is a type of seahorse that has evolved leaf-like fins that act as camouflage to give the fish the appearance of a clump of floating seaweed. If I had a salt-water aquarium, it would be filled with these things.

via Wikipedia

#13. The Frilled Shark

The Frilled Shark is one of only 5 species within the order Hexanchiformes; the order of the most primitive types of sharks, most closely resembling fossil specimens from the Jurassic period. The Frilled Shark was thought to be extinct long ago, until the remains of one washed ashore in Japan in the19th Century. Most recently a living specimen was caught in shallow water on January 21, 2007.

 via National Geographic

#12. The Ocean Sunfish

As a kid I spent countless summer days catching all sorts of sunnies, bluegill, and other panfish at the lake. But since a fish’s size is directly proportional to it’s container, and its ecological niche within that container, these fish have their gigantic ocean counterparts as well. Weighing 2,200 lbs, the Ocean Sunfish or Mola Mola is the heaviest bony-fish in the world.

via Wikipedia

#11. Axolotl

Axolotl, or the Mexican neotenic mole salamander is quite unique. While other amphibians are born with gills as larvae and breathe air as adults, Axolotl retains its larval attributes, including its gills through maturity. Also, it looks like a Mudkip.

via The Science Channel

#10. The Angler Fish

Deep Sea Anglerfish has an odd blue bioluminescent “lure” on it’s forehead. But their mating habit is even more strange. The tiny parasitic male bites into the side of the larger female, and attaches like a lamprey. The skin around the male’s mouth eventually fuses to the female, blood vessels join between both creatures, the male’s eyes, stomach, and other unnecessary organs atrophy, and he becomes essentially a sexual organ for the now hermaphroditic female.

via Oddee

#9. Hatchetfish

The Hatchetfish is named for its thin, silvery, hatchet-like appearance, but is on this list for the fact that its eyes are permanently fixed overhead in what looks like an adaptation to the ever-present horror of predators lurking overhead.

via MyInterestingFiles

#8. Deep Sea Tunicates


Deep Sea Tunicates are one of many strange prehistoric marine animals being discovered as the Antarctic ice is disrupted. These meter-long worms are thought to be some of the first lifeforms to colonize the Antarctic ocean floor.

via National Geographic

#7. Trilobitoides

Another species recently discovered in the Antarctic is the Trilobitoide. These creatures closely resemble the extinct Trilobites that died out during the mass extinction at the end of the Permean age 250 million years ago.

via Wikipedia via WeirdSeaMonsters

#6. The Giant Isopod

Another example of gigantism, the Giant Isopod is nearly identical to the tiny pillbugs that you’re likely to find crawling underneath that soggy burlap sack in your garden, except that it’s found in the ocean and is bigger than your cat.

via Oddee via Buzzfeed

#5. Blobfish

The Blobfish, nicknamed the Ziggy fish, lives so deep in the ocean that rather than expending energy on swimming in the immense pressure, its body is made of a gelatinous mass slightly less dense than water, allowing it to simply float slightly above the floor. The fish eats whatever food happens to be in front of it at the moment, proving that a creature with an utter lack of ambition still has a niche somewhere.

via Wikipedia via Greenpeace

#4. Dumbo Octopus

The Dumbo Octopus has fins on the sides of it’s head that resemble the ears of Disney’s Dumbo the Elephant. And yes, it can use them to get around.

via Geekologie

#3. Piglet Squid

This cute little guy swims upside-down, making its tentacles appear to be growing out its head, and making its head look like a chubby, limbless body.

via Seawayblog

#2. Barreleye Fish

You know how most fish can’t move their eyes very far? The Barreleye Fish can move it’s eyes around inside its head in any direction it wants. Since the fish’s head is transparent, it can look straight through it’s own head.

via MentalFloss

#1. The Psychedelic Frogfish

Native to the waters of Indonesia, the Psychedelci Frogfish has forward-facing eyes, a face with fleshy cheeks and chin that can flatten or elongate, pectoral fins adapted for walking along the sea floor, and a jet-propulsion system for swimming forward. It’s a fish, a frog, a zebra, and jet in one. Frogfish pwns platypus any day.

via MentalFloss via Wikipedia

Entry #434

Man busted stealing over 250 pair of ladies underwear

Teresa Collington

10 Connecs.com

May 4, 2009

ALLIANCE - Over the last three years female students at Mount Union College in Alliance have been reporting robberies. These were not your usual robberies.

"The thief has been stealing women's underwear, diaries, photos and lotions," says Alliance police Sgt. D.W. Bair.

On Wednesday they think they found their man, and when they raided the home of 25-year-old Thomas Williams, they couldn't believe their eyes.

"It was unlike anything I have ever seen," Bair said.

They seized over 250 pairs of women's underwear, dozens of stolen photos, diaries, lotions and film.

"According to a retired FBI profiler, this was his fetish, his fantasy," Bair said.

There is no evidence that he assaulted any of these women, believed to total 20 victims in all. But, police were alarmed at what they found in a travel bag.

"We found a rope, duct tape and handcuffs. And nearby, we found a stolen handgun. These items have a specific purpose - we don't know exactly what that purpose is, but you can draw your own conclusion," Bair said.

The victims were all female students at Mount Union, and all of them lived in off campus housing.

On campus, many female students didn't even know about the break-ins or the arrest.

"The talk of campus is swine flu, not this. In fact, this is the first time I've even heard about it," says Mount Union student Alissa Fetsko.

Williams was charged with receiving stolen goods, and bailed himself out of jail Thursday morning.

Police ask anyone who thinks they were a victim, or know someone who has been to call Alliance Police.

Link to video

 

http://www.tampabays10.com/video/default.aspx?maven_playerId=articleplayer&maven_referralPlaylistId=playlist&maven_referralObject=1109298179

Entry #433

Correctional officer shoots robber who had toy gun

Correctional officer shoots alleged robber

The Baltimore Sun

May 5, 2009

An off-duty correctional officer shot and wounded a 15-year-old who was part of a group of juveniles that tried to rob him with a toy gun, city police said. Shortly after midnight Monday, the correctional officer, who works at the Central Booking and Intake Center, was waiting for a food order at Wo Hing carryout in the 1600 block of W. North Ave. when three juveniles tried to rob him, according to Anthony Guglielmi, a Baltimore police spokesman. The officer pulled out a weapon and fired two shots, striking one of them; the other two juveniles fled, Guglielmi said. The wounded boy was taken to Maryland Shock Trauma Center, where he was in critical condition but stable, Guglielmi said. The Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services, which oversees Central Booking, said in a statement that officials did not believe the officer's weapon had been issued by the state agency, but a review was under way. Both DPSCS and the Baltimore Police Department declined to release the officer's name.

Gus G. Sentementes

Entry #432

Paramedic tried to buy wine wearing his thong

Paramedic tried to buy wine wearing only his thong after supermarket staff 'refused to serve him in uniform'

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 3:10 PM on 03rd May 2009

 

A paramedic was facing disciplinary action today after he walked into a supermarket crowded with shoppers wearing just a thong.

The ambulanceman had been on duty when he strode defiantly into the Tesco store wearing just the underwear and a pair of socks after staff refused to serve him while he was wearing his ambulance uniform.

Police were called in and interviewed the medic about his actions which were said to have left shop staff and customers embarrassed and stunned.

Tesco

Supermarket showdown:The Tesco store in Addlestone, Surrey, where a paramedic stripped down to his thong and socks after being refused alcohol because he was wearing his uniform

The man, aged in his 40's, had walked into the large Tesco shop at Addlestone, Surrey wearing his full all-in-one green coloured ambulance uniform.

He selected a bottle of wine but become annoyed when the check-out assistant told him it was the store's policy not to sell alcohol to people wearing uniform.

The paramedic then stormed out of the shop, walked to his vehicle in the car park and took off his uniform.

However, he didn't stop there - and stripped right down to the thong and pair of socks he was wearing. Then he walked back into the shop and asked the same cashier:

'Now, I'm not wearing my uniform any more. Will you serve me now?' The assistant refused and the manager was called, along with the police.

paramedic uniform

Refused: Tesco would not serve the man while wearing his full ambulance uniform (posed by models)

Rachael Monkton, who had been in the Tesco store shopping when the incident took place, said: 'He was shopping with a woman when the girl at the check-out said she couldn't let him buy alcohol.

'He got a bit agitated and the manager was called over but she took the side of her employee.

'So the paramedic stormed out, leaving the woman at the tills and when he came back he was just in his underwear.

'People were staring at him and laughing - I couldn't believe my eyes. Normally people would pay to see a man in uniform strip but we got a free show,' added Rachael.

A spokesman for Tesco confirmed that it was company policy not to serve members of the emergency services if they were wearing uniform and stood by the cashier's actions.

'It is absolutely right that the cashier did not serve him when he was in uniform but what happened afterwards was unprecedented,' he said.

'We realise that the customer may not have understood why he was refused alcohol but it was simply a member of our staff following company policy and the actions which followed were wholly unnecessary,' the spokesman added.

The paramedic, who is employed by the South East Coast Ambulance NHS Trust, Surrey division, was understood to have been spoken to by his managers and to be facing the possibility of suspension and disciplinary action.

It was the second time in as many months that a customer at the Addlestone branch of Tesco has stripped in the store in protest at actions of the staff.

In February, 68-year-old Norman Matthews took off his clothes after being wrongly accused of stealing a scratch card from the customer service desk.

Entry #431

Expletives Not Deleted- Man Tells Court What To Do With Jury Duty

Jury Duty? Take This Summons And ...

Expletives Not Deleted: Montana Man Tells Court What It Can Do With Jury Duty

 

HELENA, Mont., May. 1, 2009 

 

 

 


(AP)  A Montana man who replied to a jury summons with an expletive-filled affidavit has apologized to the court on a judge's orders. The Smoking Gun Web site on Thursday posted the affidavit submitted by Erik Slye of Belgrade to the Gallatin County District court in January.

The document shows Slye asked to be excused from jury duty because he didn't want to lose income. It calls court workers "morons" and says that the service was "a complete waste of time."

The automobile painter was ordered by a judge to apologize to court clerks at a hearing last week.

His wife Jennifer says her husband couldn't be reached for comment Friday. She says she was the one who wrote it.

Entry #430

Criminal intruder returned everynight to eat sleep and shower

Sydney's curious case of the cereal intruder

  • Arjun Ramachandran
  • May 4, 2009 - 2:29PM

 

Caught on cerealcam ... the brekkie bandit.

Caught on cerealcam ... the brekkie bandit.

A mystery intruder has been plundering cereal and sleeping on the couches for weeks at one of Sydney's marketing agencies.

Staff at the The Marketing Store were perplexed and slightly amused when, almost daily, they would arrive at their Ultimo office to find a trail left by their unwanted nocturnal visitor.

"My office was the starting point for it,'' said the agency's Asia Pacific president Doug Chapman.

"I'd come in and I'd notice somebody had been sleeping on the lounge or doing something in my office.

"All the cushions would be on the floor and it would be all messed up. I kind of wondered whether it was someone bonking on the lounge.''

Even more peculiar, was the absence of large amounts of cereal  - about six bowls a night - from the stocks in the office kitchen, and evidence that the showers had been used.

Fingers were initially pointed around the office.

"I put the word out through the office but nothing eventuated,'' he said.

"About four weeks ago I came in and it was in a particularly bad state - there were some tablets lying around, and some tobacco or weed on the floor.''

After reporting the matter to the building landlord and checking security passes, the company ruled out an employee, concluding the intruder had to be entering the building overnight.

But office security cameras never managed to point in the right spot to detect anyone, Mr Chapman said.

While the company hires creative people to promote clients' brands, it was a moment of genius from the woman who runs the kitchen that snared the unwanted visitor.

She came up with the idea of hiding a camera in a cereal box.

"She knew we were either huge eaters or someone was stealing cereal,'' Mr Chapman said.

"She got a cereal box and hid a small camera inside and put it on a benchtop in the kitchen.''

The camera was linked to a computer and activated by motion sensors, snapping clear photos of the intruder on his next visit and emailing them to staff, Mr Chapman said.

They showed the man slipping into the office via an overhead ventilation panel (the office is on the building's fifth and top floor) and then leaving via the fire escape.

On his next visit, the intruder was greeted by a security guard. The company called police, warned the man, but decided against pressing charges.

"We didn't want to press charges but we did warn him - told him it's a bit off-putting for the girls, and those who have to work late night.

"We took it very seriously ... although it was a little funny getting the daily updates.

"But we knew he wasn't stealing anything ... he could've easily taken computers, he didn't take any drinks.

"He was a particularly neat guy. He'd come in at 4am, have breakfast - and it was a hearty breakfast, six bowls - clean up after himself, shower and then leave.

"He'd made his home here.''

The company doesn't know what the man's motives were - he wasn't interrogated - but it didn't appear that he was a typical vagrant.

"He was fairly young, in his mid 30s, and very clean cut for someone that was supposedly homeless.''

The company's office in Ultimo is situated close to a number of university and TAFE campuses, and also near a lot of students accommodation.

Entry #428