truesee's Blog

Woman steals $12,000,000 in gold-uses her handbag

http://www.nypost.com/seven/04302009/news/regionalnews/gold_digger_166944.htm

GOLD DIGGER

WOMAN STEALS $12M LOOT - IN HER PURSE

By MURRAY WEISS, WILLIAM J. GORTA and LUKAS I. ALPERT

Last updated: 2:09 am
April 30, 2009
Posted: 1:56 am
April 30, 2009

What a gold digger!

A larcenous longtime employee of a major Queens jewelry manufacturer walked off with a staggering 500 pounds of gold she smuggled out piece by piece over six years -- in her handbag, prosecutors said yesterday.

Teresa Tambunting, 50, of Scarsdale, sneaked the hoard out of a Long Island City vault by stashing "a few ounces" at a time in a false bottom she created in the lining of her pocketbook, authorities said.

"I am a very sick woman. I took the gold," she told her stunned bosses once the jig was up, according to sources.

Officials at Jacmel Jewelry caught on that they were being bled dry after doing an internal audit in January and noticing they were missing as much as $12 million worth of gold, which now trades for around $900 an ounce.

"The defendant is accused of establishing a virtual mining operation in Long Island City which siphoned off millions of dollars' worth of the precious metal," said Queens District Attorney Richard Brown.

Tambunting had worked for Jacmel for 28 years, joining the company shortly after emigrating from the Philippines, and had been made a vault manager in 1991. She was paid $160,000 a year and was one of only a handful of "highly trusted" employees who had access to the company's safe, sources said.

But even those people were subject to searches by security -- which Tambunting got around with the makeshift hole in a beaten-up black leather, banana-shaped purse she carried for years.

A few days after company officials started going over their books to see if they had made an accounting error, Tambunting walked into work wheeling a piece of luggage containing 60 pounds of "fine gold" -- or buck-shot-sized pellets of unrefined precious metal.

When asked if that was all she had taken, she said yes, but days later, she changed her tune and came in with her lawyer --and a couple of dozen five-gallon paint buckets filled with 447.8 pounds of gold necklaces, rings, earrings and other jewelry. There was enough gold to fill 12 large storage bins.

The size of Tambunting's haul stunned employees.

"When they walked in the first time, they were shocked and their jaws dropped," a source said. "When she came back three weeks later, their jaws dropped even heavier."

The stash took company officials nearly three weeks to inventory. During that period, they discovered some pieces that dated back to early 2004. Then they went to the DA.

In all, the value of the returned gold is roughly $7.3 million, meaning $4.7 million remains missing. Some of that, sources said, could have been lost in routine manufacturing processes.

They said Tambunting and her husband, Edgardo, a director at Cantor Fitzgerald, appeared to be living within their means, but probers were still investigating their finances.

The couple lives with their three children in a million-dollar home.

Jacmel Jewelry President Jack Rahmey called Tambunting "a longtime employee and a trusted one," but declined to comment any further.

She was released Tuesday on $100,000 bail. She faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted. Her lawyer did not return messages.

Officials say as much as $12 million worth of gold -- which trades at roughly $900 a troy ounce -- disappeared. With a single gold bar weighing 400 troy ounces, or 27 pounds, that's the equivalent of 833 pounds of gold, or just shy of 31 gold bars.

Additional reporting by Lorena Mongelli

 

HEAVYWEIGHT SCHEME: Prosecutors say employee Teresa Tambunting took 500 pounds of gold from a Queens jewelry manufacturer (bottom) to her Scarsdale home (top).
HEAVYWEIGHT SCHEME: Prosecutors say employee Teresa Tambunting took 500 pounds of gold from a Queens jewelry manufacturer (bottom) to her Scarsdale home (top).
Entry #411

Sisters, age 65 and 70 arrested as heroin dealers

Stroud Township sisters, age 65 and 70, sold drugs, cops allege
Julio Cesar Checo, left, Elaine Volkert, middle, and Elizabeth Grube.Contributed photos
ADAM McNAUGHTON
Pocono Record Writer
April 30, 2009

 

STROUDSBURG — Two elderly sisters arrested Tuesday don't look like drug dealers, but police charge they made about $10,000 a week selling heroin out of their Stroud Township homes for at least the past six months.

Elizabeth Grube, 70, and her sister Elaine Volkert, 65, both of Ehler Street off Route 611 in Stroud Township, are charged with distributing drugs for an Allentown dealer.

"If you saw these ladies in the grocery market you would never in your wildest imagination believe them to be accused of being major heroin dealers in the county of Monroe," said David Christine, Monroe County district attorney.

Police executed a search warrant at the women's homes April 14, according to court papers. Police report they found 1,000 bags of heroin at Volkert's home and 400 bags of heroin at Grube's home.

According to documents, the women told police that for several months they had been buying hundreds to thousands of bags of heroin at a time from an Allentown drug dealer known as "Little Tony," later identified as Julio Cesar Checo, 28, of Allentown.

 

Police said Checo would deliver drugs to either their homes or the Burger King parking lot on Route 611 at the Stroud Mall. Both women told police that the day before police searched their homes, Checo delivered heroin to them.

Under the supervision of police, the women then made arrangements to meet Checo for a drug deal last Thursday in Stroud Township. When he arrived, he was arrested. The two women were arrested Tuesday.

The arrests came after a weeklong investigation by police from Stroud Area Regional Police, Monroe County Drug Task Force and State Attorney General's Office — with tips from the public, Christine said.

"People see things going on in the neighborhood, they're vigilant and law-abiding and they want it to stop, so they make complaints to police," Christine said. "Police send out undercover officers, use informants to make buys and get probable cause and a search warrant is issued. In this case it is a textbook case."

The sisters have been released on their own recognizance. Checo is in Monroe County Correctional Facility and will face a preliminary hearing next week, Christine said.

Entry #410

Deputy resigns after his wife, mother-in-law take patrol car out for a joyride

Apr 28, 9:00 PM EDT

Fla. deputy resigns after his wife, mother-in-law take patrol car out for a joyride

LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) -- A Polk County deputy has turned in his badge after his wife and mother-in-law took his patrol car out for a joyride. Officials said the 44-year-old deputy resigned Monday after serving 21 years with the sheriff's office.

The arrest report said his wife and mother-in-law face charges of vehicle theft, theft of a firearm and impersonating a law-enforcement officer. His wife also faces charges of possession of a firearm of a convicted felon.

A third person riding in the back seat also was arrested.

Witnesses reporting seeing the patrol car driving erratically in Lakeland on Sunday morning. The deputy apparently didn't know the car was taken.

Entry #409

Judge denies inmate's request to change name to 'Sinner'

Inmate's religious name change request denied

CORY MATTESON /Lincoln Journal Star

Tuesday, Apr 28, 2009 - 03:21:21 pm CDT

A Nebraska State Penitentiary inmate’s religiously based name change request has been smote down by Lancaster County District judge.

Jonathan L. Thomas, 23, had asked that his name be changed to “Sinner Lawrence Bilskirnir.”

The reason for the name change had to do with Norse religion, according to court documents.Story PhotoLancaster County District Judge Steven Burns wrote in his judgment that Thomas said he wanted the name change “because he is a heathen and Thor is his ‘High God.’”

However, Burns wrote, Thomas’ criminal and child support cases supercede the name change request.

Thomas is in prison on three Lancaster County felony convictions — attempted burglary, possession of methamphetamine and theft by receiving stolen property. His projected release date is Jan. 18, 2014.

He also has had three child support cases filed against him.

Burns wrote that several government agencies have an interest in keeping track of Thomas. “Granting a name change to the defendent in this circumstance would interfere with those governmental needs,” he wrote.

Burns wrote that Thomas’ reasons did not meet the burden of proof.

“Simply because a person is a Christian, a Jew or a Muslim, they do not change their name to Moses,” Burns wrote.

Entry #408

Baskin-Robbins Offering 31-cent Scoops to Honor Firefighters

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Baskin-Robbins Offering 31-cent Scoops to Honor Firefighters

As a way of honoring firefighters, tonight Baskin-Robbins will be selling scoops of ice cream for 31 cents. Yes, get your spoons ready!

Proceeds from Baskin-Robbins' 31 Cent Scoop Night sales will go toward a $100,000 donation to the National Volunteer Fire Council's National Junior Firefighter Program.

The promotion runs tonight, from 5 - 10 PM, at any participating Baskin-
Robbins location. My guess is "participating" pretty much means them all, but still ...

If you're worried 31 Cent Scoop Night might slip your mind, don't be. If you send "scoop" in a text message to 31310, Baskin-Robbins will text you back later in the day to remind you.

Baskin-Robbins' site says:

The National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC) National Junior Firefighter Program gives fire departments and youth nationwide the resources, tools, and information they need to help develop, grow, enhance, promote, and participate in their local programs.

In the program, youth learn about local fire, rescue, and emergency medical services response organizations in a safe, controlled, educational, and fun way while providing departments with an excellent recruitment mechanism.

A donation of $100,000 will be made by Baskin-Robbins to the NVFC National Junior Firefighter Program. At select local stores throughout the country, you may also have a chance to donate to your local fire station.
Entry #407

Woman bites off part of boyfriend's lip

Posted on Tue, Apr. 28, 2009


Woman allegedly bites boyfriend's lip after fight

 

The Associated Press

SAN ANGELO - A woman has been charged with aggravated assault with a weapon , her teeth , after allegedly biting off part of her boyfriend's lip in a domestic dispute. Aubrey Joyce Garcia, 27, was accused of biting Antonio Zaragoza, 33, during a fight Sunday night.

She was arrested after police were called to a home where the two were fighting, police said.

Garcia remained in the Tom Green County Jail on Tuesday. Her bail is $30,000. Bradley Miles, her attorney, could not be reached for comment.

Zaragoza was treated at a hospital and released.

Teeth are considered a weapon because they allegedly were used to disfigure a person, officials said.

If convicted, Garcia faces up to 99 years in prison.

Entry #406

Radio Shack Employee Arrested for Punching Customer

Radio Shack Employee Arrested for Punching Customer  
Posted: 10:45 PM Apr 28, 2009
Last Updated: 10:45 PM Apr 28, 2009

WEAU-TV

A worker at Radio Shack was arrested for punching a customer.

Officers arrested 52-year-old James Knol of Eau Claire on Sunday night for disorderly conduct and battery.

According to the police report, 56-year-old Leigh Carey was trying to return something at the Radio Shack on Clairemont Avenue.

Carey told investigators Knol wouldn't let him, so he asked to talk to a manager.

That's when he says Knol started punching him and a witness called 911.

Knol is due in court May 19.

Entry #405

Men try to steal pickup truck that doesn't run

 

TWO CAUGHT TRYING TO STEAL COUNTY TRUCK

Pine Bluff Commercial

Ray King/OF THE COMMERCIAL STAFF

April 28 2009

9:15 pm

A Jefferson County Sheriff’s deputy leaving the adult detention center Sunday became suspicious when he saw a group of men pushing a pickup down the street, and even more suspicious when he saw a county decal on the side of the truck.

Within a few minutes, two of those men, Matthew Dillard, 18, and Matthew Jordan, 20, were under arrest for theft of property. Authorities are still searching for two other men who ran from the scene.

Reading from an affidavit from sheriff’s Lt. Steve McFatridge during a court hearing Monday, Deputy Prosecutor Jill Reed said Cpl. Andy Hoots was in the area of Fourth Avenue and Alabama Street at about noon Sunday when he saw three men pushing the pickup, and a fourth man behind the wheel of the vehicle.

Reed said the men ran when they saw Hoots, who caught Jordan at Fourth Avenue and Pine Street. Dillard was arrested by Pine Bluff officer Ralph Issac at Fifth Avenue and Walnut Street a few minutes later.

McFatridge reported that the truck had been parked across from the detention center and would not run, but was being kept for parts. It was valued at more than $500.

Reed said Dillard and Jordan, who are cousins, have pending charges of attempted commercial burglary and criminal mischief, stemming from an arrest in 2008.

Circuit Judge Jodi Dennis set bonds of $2,500 for each of the two, and told them to come back to court May 11.

Also Monday, Dennis set a $2,500 bond for James C. Williams, 62, after ruling prosecutors had probable cause to charge him with second-degree forgery.

An affidavit from Detective Bill Wiegand reported that Williams had gone to Pine Bluff National Bank on Friday and tried to cash a check that had been reported stolen.

Reed said Williams claimed he had gotten the check from a woman, but admitted he signed the name of the account holder on the check.

Williams told the court he would represent himself.

Entry #404

Cop robs bank, uses police vehicle as getaway car

Cop robs bank, uses police vehicle as getaway car

April 28, 2009 • 10:23 am
Diana Fasanella

A German police detective faces charges of armed robbery after he allegedly walked into a bank without a mask, held up tellers with his police-issued pistol and made his getaway in an unmarked patrol car. 

Bungling and bumbling

Bungling and bumbling

Juergen Richter got away with close to $12,000 before a closed circuit TV recording led police to the 55-year-old man who they say robbed the Baden-Wurttemberg bank, Ananova reported. 

A police spokesman Norbert Schaetzle said Richter was having severe financial problems and wanted to solve them quickly. 

“He may as well have just walked into the bank, told them his name and where police could find him afterwards,” Schaetzle said. The inept robber had dealt with failed criminal plans over the years and should have known better, he added.

 Inspector Clouseau strikes again

Entry #403

Woman Sues Chase For Telling Hubby About Secret Cash

Woman Sues Chase For Telling Hubby About Secret Cash

2009_04_chasebank.jpg 

April 27, 2009

A Chase bank employee is being blamed for dropping the dime about a Long Island dentist's $800,000 individual account to her husband. The NY Post reports that while Nazita Aminpour and David Shamash "have a joint account at a Chase branch in Kew Gardens, Queens," Aminpour also had the secret account. Well, secret until a bank employee cold-called Shamash, "telling him he should take his small fortune out of the low-interest account and make other investments with Chase."

Aminipour's suit says that once Shamash heard about the money, he "began harassing [Aminpour], asking for money from the funds that he can invest in the stock market and to cover a margin call he had on his stock account." The suit adds that Shamash "alienat[ed]" Aminipour until she gave him $155,000 "to save her marriage and restore order in the marital home." Aminipour says Chase violated non-disclosure laws and wants the bank to pay her the $155K plus legal fees.

Entry #402

Pastor says his $660,000 salary and raise was Lord-approved

(Follow-up  to  story posted on April 23rd)

New Riverside Church pastor says his raise was Lord-approved

 
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Monday, April 27th 2009, 4:00 AM

Rev. Dr. Brad R. Braxton, Pastor of The Riverside Church.
Giancarli for News

Rev. Dr. Brad R. Braxton

Pastor of The Riverside Church

 

The incoming pastor of Riverside Church broke his silence over his massive pay package Saturday, saying God was behind him as he took the reins of the iconic Manhattan sanctuary.

"God told me all week, 'I got you.'" the Rev. Brad Braxton said to thunderous applause.

Braxton was installed as senior pastor despite some parishioners filing a lawsuit to trim his $600,000 in salary and perks.

The minister, a former professor at Vanderbilt University Divinity School, ascended to the pulpit to cheers from the congregation of 2,700.

Braxton, 40, tackled the controversy over his compensation, saying critics were "mistaking molehills for mountains."

In a sermon titled "Fear Not," Braxton vowed his priority would be "the sacred business of moving mountains."

Braxton, the married father of a young daughter, launched into his list of lofty goals, including promoting condoms to curb AIDS in Africa, immigration reform and gay marriage.

"I wonder if that will make the front page of the Daily News," the preacher said in reference to The News' page one headline last week, "Furor Over 600G Pastor."

News columnist Juan Gonzalez chronicled congregational infighting over Braxton's pay package, which includes a monthly housing allowance of $11,500 in addition to a base salary of $250,000.

Billy Jones, chairman of the Church Committee, challenged the facts of the lawsuit from the pulpit, saying Braxton's annual compensation tops out at $450,000.

Jones insisted that Braxton's base pay was similar to what his predecessor made and his perks do not include a full-time maid or any "equity payment" to help him buy a house.

The bulk of the congregation applauded when Jones noted that a judge denied a motion to delay Braxton's installation.

Parishioners like Naomi Griffin, 63, a 25-year member of the church, praised Braxton as "a spiritual man" and blasted the lawsuit as the work of idle minds.

"These dissidents don't seem to want to do things right," Griffin said.

At a service last night, Gov. Paterson, who was married at Riverside 17 years ago, said Braxton's "rare combination of skills" made him the right man to lead the church.With Erica Pearson

(Read first story posted on April 23rd)
Entry #401

Woman uses Taser on Trooper

Deseret News 

Trooper gets hit with own Taser

Published: Saturday, April 25, 2009 10:43 p.m. MDT

A woman who fought with a Utah Highway Patrol trooper on Saturday managed to use the trooper's Taser on him.

The trooper, suspecting a truck to be stolen, pulled it over near 1800 W. North Temple about 7 p.m. He attempted to arrest the female passenger, but the woman became belligerent, said UHP Sgt. Jeff Nigbur, and began fighting with the trooper, even drawing blood while hitting him with her shoe and biting him.

When the trooper tried to use his Taser, it didn't fire, Nigbur said, so he discarded it. But during the course of the fight, the woman picked it up.

She struck the trooper with the Taser, emitting a shock known as a "dry stun," Nigbur said.

A dry stun doesn't have the same effect as deploying the Taser's electrodes, he said, which deliver a shock to larger muscles of the body.

The trooper fought back, using his baton to rain blows on the woman.

A K-9 officer arrived as backup and let his dog take the woman down. But even in handcuffs, the woman continued to fight, and the backup trooper deployed his Taser to collapse the woman, Nigbur said.

By that time, the male driver of the truck had fled the scene, but he was arrested by Salt Lake police a short time later.

The injured trooper was taken to the hospital but is expected to be OK, Nigbur said. The woman was also taken to a hospital for treatment.

— Joseph M. Dougherty

© 2009 Deseret News Publishing Company | All rights reserved
Entry #400

Church giving sermon entitled 'Great Sex for You' need to find new home

Apr 26, 10:09 PM EDT

Church giving series of sermons entitled 'Great Sex for You' may need to find new home

MELBOURNE, Fla. (AP) -- A church giving sermons about sex may have to find a new home. Brevard Public School District's risk-management department has threatened to boot New Hope Church out of Sherwood Elementary because of a worship series titled "Great Sex for You."

Church leaders mailed 25,000 fliers, asking residents "Is Your Sex Life A Bore?" The three-week program kicked off inside the school auditorium. Pastor Bruce Cadle had said the Christian church has been "shamefully silent" on the taboo topic.

Mark Langdorf, the director of risk management, says the mailers generated complaints, were not appropriate for elementary school children and shouldn't be used to advertise the sermon in the school.

Langdorf says the church's lease contract is under review.

Entry #399

Flu Special Report: The Basics

Health

Flu Special Report: The Basics

By LiveScience Staff

posted: 26 April 2009 02:37 pm ET

A flu virus.
A false-color image of an influenza virus, or virion, taken with transmission electron micrography. The flu's protein-laced fatty coat (orange) toughens up in cold weather, helping it survive. Credit: CDC/Cynthia Goldsmith
A flu virus. A false-color image of an influenza virus, or virion, taken with transmission electron micrography. The flu's protein-laced fatty coat (orange) toughens up in cold weather, helping it survive. Credit: CDC/Cynthia Goldsmith Flu and Virus Special Report at LiveScience.com: Flu and Virus News, Features and Images Recreated influenza virions from the 1918 flu that killed an estimated 50 million people. Credit: CDC/Terrence Tumpey

With swine flu outbreaks creating what U.S. health officials Sunday called a public health emergency, LiveScience presents a 4-part Flu Special Report this week to examines the science of influenza, what you can do to be safe, and the risk of a pandemic. Part 1 today: Flu basics.

The flu virus is most commonly spread in liquid droplets made airborne by coughing or sneezing. Symptoms – such as fever, body ache, extreme fatigue, sore throat, and dry cough – begin showing in adults one to four days after being infected.

The new strain of swine flu is spreading from human to human, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) doesn't yet know how contagious it is. Bird flu, which has in recent years concerned scientists, has been slow to transmit between humans.

A study in 2006 showed that modern travel could contribute to spreading a flu pandemic across the United States in as little as three months.

An adult can begin spreading the flu virus one day before and three to seven days after symptoms show, and children can remain contagious even longer. Some infected individuals show no symptoms, yet they can still spread the virus to others.

Among the best preventative measures you can take, according to the CDC:

  • Wash hands with soap or alcohol-based sanitizers;
  • Avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth;
  • avoid contact with sick people;
  • and wear a face mask.

For the elderly and the young, flu vaccines can be crucial but they only work when designed for a specific flu strain.

Year-round problem

Many people think of the flu as a winter disease since incidence typically peaks from December to March. It's actually a year-round problem.

But people tend to stay indoors more in the winter, making person-to-person transmission of influenza, which is caused by a virus, easier, said Jennifer Morcone, a spokeswoman for the CDC. Further, a study in 2007 revealed that the influenza virus thrives on cold temperatures and low relative humidity, allowing them to remain virulent longer in the air or on surfaces after being sneezed out of an infected person.

Each year anywhere from 5 to 20 percent of the U.S. population gets the flu. Anyone can contract it, but children, the elderly and people with chronic medical conditions are more likely to experience complications, such as pneumonia, bronchitis, and sinus and ear infections. However, the swine flu currently sweeping through Mexico and the United States has proven more problematic among healthy young adults.

The flu can also worsen chronic health problems: asthmatics are more likely to have asthma attacks and people with chronic congestive heart failure may have their condition worsen.

On average, 36,000 people in the United States die from influenza and related complications each year, according to the CDC. More than 200,000 are admitted to hospitals for treatment.

A pandemic in 1918 killed more than 20 million people worldwide.

The flu is sometimes confused with the common cold, and for good reason. Both are respiratory illnesses brought on by viruses. They share many of the same symptoms, and it is nearly impossible to make the distinction based on the variety of symptoms alone.

Flu symptoms, however, are generally more intense, especially fever and fatigue, and can lead to dangerous complications.

Viral roots

Influenza is a virus – a pack of protein and DNA that lacks the capacity to self-reproduce. So it infects a cell, hijacks the inner machinery and uses it to reproduce. The virus reproduces until there are so many copies that the cell bursts and the virus spills out, spreading to other healthy cells.

There are three types of influenza viruses: A, B, and C. Swine flu (H1N1) and the much hyped avian flu (H5N1) are both Type A.

Type A: Infects people, pigs, birds, horses, seals, whales, and other animals. Wild birds are natural hosts. Divided into subtypes based on two surface proteins – hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA). There are 15 HA and 9 NA subtypes, and these can be combined in various ways. Currently, the three most common subtypes in general human circulation are H1N1, H1N2, and H3N2. These can cause epidemics – defined as a high incidence of disease in an area or population – and also a widespread geographic or global disease called a pandemic.

Type B: Normally occurs only in humans. No subtypes. Known to cause human epidemics, but not pandemics.

Type C: Only causes mild respiratory illness in humans, and is not included in flu vaccines. Not capable of epidemic or pandemic spread.

Types A and B are further characterized into genetic variants called "strains." New strains are constantly evolving and take the place of older ones. While your body may have built up resistance against one strain, it may not be able to fend off its replacement.

Link to Part II, III,IV and  other videos

http://www.livescience.com/health/090426-sr-flu-basics.html

Entry #398

Man sets house on fire trying to kill spider with lighter

Man sets house on fire while trying to kill a spider with a lighter

A man had to be rescued after setting the front of his house on fire while trying to kill a spider with a lighter.

Telegraph UK

Last Updated: 12:20PM BST 27 Apr 2009

Firefighters say the man, in his 40s, had been trying to set fire to the spider as it crawled up the front of the semi-detached property

But sparks reached material behind the cladding and caused a fire within the walls, shortly before midnight.

Three fire engines raced to the scene in Portsmouth, Hants, and found the man trying to put out the flames with a garden hose.

Firefighters in breathing apparatus removed the cladding and spent two hours putting the fire out.

Watch manager Steve Pearce said: "The man was trying to put the fire out with a garden hose when we arrived.

"The whole thing had clearly scared the life out of him.

"There was a gap in the cladding where he was trying to kill the spider and so the sparks got through to the material behind and started spreading upwards towards the roof.

"Our concern was that it would reach the roof and the property would be lost.

"We sent firefighters up into the loft to put it out and fortunately we were able to stop it in time.

"Surprisingly there wasn't much damage to the house other than to the cladding.

"We obviously had a chat with the man but I don't think he'll be doing this again."

Entry #397