Wednesday, 23 January 2013

'Jewelry thief' syndicate apprehended in Lagos!


Lagos

A woman simply identified as Freedom James was arraigned along side her husband,  James and one Hassan, a commercial bus driver that plies the "Obalende - Ajah" route;  and a jewelry Hassan,  for conspiring and stealing Gold jewelry estimated to worth about 2.8 million NGN, (one million, three hundred thousand naira). while the fourth accomplice, a certain Dennis is still at large.


Freedom and James

According to the culprit (Freedom James) , it all started when Dennis, who posed as an Agent, got her a job as a house keeper in the home of Mrs Esu and gave her a hand set, with an instruction never to use it to make or receive calls, until he calls her and tell her what to do. 

Five days into her new job, Dennis called her to "act", by stealing her 'madam's  Jewelry. By now, Freedom has surveyed the house and taken note of where some of the valuables are kept; and the best time to strike. Hence it was not very difficult for her on the said day, as she dressed to work prepared for her mission. she wore a "boubou" gown, monitored her boss, and quickly went into her bosses room as soon as (she her boss) left the house; she went to the dressing table where the jewelry are, picked them up, hid them in her bougous gown and left.

On getting to the gate, the gate keeper, asked her where she was going to at that time of the day, as he was aware that their boss was not around and it is not proper leaving the house without permission, especially in the boss's absence. Freedom feigned ailment, lied to the gate keeper that she was not feeling too good, and will like to go get some medications.

 According the statement she gave, the gate keeper (acting out of concern) told her to go back in and rest, while he rallies round to see what he can get for her until their 'madam' gets back. But she told him not to worry that she knows exactly where to go get her medications. After some pressure, and pretense that her condition was getting worse, the gate keeper permitted her to "go get her medications". That was how she left the premises with the stolen Jewelry

After she left the house, she immediately contacted and gave the stolen jewelery to her husband, who in turn sold them to Hassan for 1.3 million naira. James testified that he got the sum of 400 thousand naira from the deal.


Hassan, the jewelry dealer







Shooting reported At Lone Star College In Houston Texas





Investigators say a fight between two people erupted in gunfire Tuesday at a Lone Star College campus in suburban Houston. A maintenance man was caught in the crossfire, and students and others were sent cowering in classrooms.
A 22-year-old man has been charged in the shootings at a Houston-area community college campus that left him and two others wounded.
A statement from the Harris County Sheriff's Office identifies the suspect as Carlton Berry. Spokesman Alan Bernstein says Berry is charged with aggravated assault but remains hospitalized with wounds suffered in the shooting.

No one was killed, but the volley of gunshots heard shortly after noon fear of another campus massacre just over a month after 26 were killed at a Connecticut elementary school.
Police and emergency personnel evacuate an injured male on a stretcher outside a building on the Lone Star College Campus near Houston, Texas in this still image taken from video courtesy of KPRC-TV Houston January 22, 2013. Multiple people have been shot according to news reports. REUTERS/KPRC-TV Houston/Handout

The incident occurred at a campus of Lone Star Community College, which is located in the Houston area, at about 12:30 p.m. local time (1830 GMT) on Tuesday. 

Monday, 21 January 2013

'I let myself down, I let my family down', Prince Harry admits!

           
                          

"I probably let myself down, I let my family down, I let other people down", Prince Harry has said of an incident when he was pictured naked in a Las Vegas hotel room last year.
But he said his treatment by the press over the photographs was not "acceptable", as he was at a party where he had expected privacy.
"I don't believe there is such a thing as a private life anymore", he said, adding "I'm not going to sit here and whinge".
He was speaking just before he completed a five-month deployment to Afghanistan flying Apache helicopters.

Prince Harry walks around a military base in Helmand province on his recent tour of duty in Afghanistan. His deployment meant he could step back from the public eye and live in contrast to his privileged upbringing. 

FILES SHOW HOW Los Angeles CHURCH LEADERS CONTROLLED DAMAGE!


 In this Sept. 22, 2007 file photo, Cardinal Roger Mahony speaks during an annual multi-ethnic migration Mass at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles. Cardinal Mahony and other top Roman Catholic officials from the Archdiocese of Los Angeles maneuvered behind the scenes to shield molester priests, provide damage control for the church and keep parishioners in the dark, according to church personnel files. Mahony, who is retired, issued a statement Monday, Jan. 21, 2013, apologizing for his mistakes and saying he had been "naive" about the lasting impacts of abuse.

Cardinal Mahoney

Retired Cardinal Roger Mahony and other top Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles officials maneuvered behind the scenes to shield molester priests, provide damage control for the church and keep parishioners in the dark, according to church personnel files.

The confidential records filed in a lawsuit against the archdiocese disclose how the church handled abuse allegations for decades and also reveal dissent from a top Mahony aide who criticized his superiors for covering up allegations of abuse rather than protecting children.

Notes inked by Mahony demonstrate he was disturbed about abuse and sent problem priests for treatment, but there also were lengthy delays or oversights in some cases. Mahony received psychological reports on some priests that mentioned the possibility of many other victims, for example, but there is no indication that he or other church leaders investigated further.
"This is all intolerable and unacceptable to me," Mahony wrote in 1991 on a file of the Rev. 

Lynn Caffoe
Lynn Caffoe, a priest suspected of locking boys in his room, videotaping their crotches and running up a $100 phone sex bill while with a boy. Caffoe was sent for therapy and removed from ministry, but Mahony didn't move to defrock him until 2004, a decade after the archdiocese lost track of him.
"He is a fugitive from justice," Mahony wrote to the Vatican's Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who is now Pope Benedict XVI. "A check of the Social Security index discloses no report of his demise, so presumably he is alive somewhere." 

Caffoe died in 2009, six years after a newspaper reporter found him working at a homeless mission two blocks from a Salinas elementary school.

Mahony was out of town but issued a statement Monday apologizing for his mistakes and saying he had been "naive" about the lasting impacts of abuse. He has since met with 90 abuse victims privately and keeps an index card with each victim's name in his private chapel, where he prays for them daily, he said. The card also includes the name of the molesting priest "lest I forget that real priests created this appalling harm."

"It remains my daily and fervent prayer that God's grace will flood the heart and soul of each victim, and that their life journey continues forward with ever greater healing," Mahony wrote. "I am sorry."

The apology stands in contrast to letters Mahony was writing to accused priests more than two decades ago.
In 1987, he wrote to the Rev. Michael Wempe - who would ultimately admit to abusing 13 boys - while the priest was undergoing in-patient therapy at a New Mexico treatment center.
"Each of you there at Jemez Springs is very much in my prayers and I call you to mind each day during my celebration of the Eucharist," Mahony wrote to the priest, adding that he supported him in the experience.

The church's sex abuse policy was evolving and Mahony inherited some of the worst cases from his predecessor when he took over in 1985, J. Michael Hennigan, an archdiocese attorney, said in a separate series of emails. 

Priests were sent out of state for psychological treatment because they revealed more when their therapists were not required to report child abuse to law enforcement, as they were in California, he said.

At the time, clergy were not mandated sex abuse reporters and the church let the victims' families decide whether to contact police, he added.
In at least one case, a priest victimized the children of illegal immigrants and threatened to have them deported if they told, the files show.
The files are attached to a motion seeking punitive damages in a case involving a Mexican priest sent to Los Angeles in 1987 after he was brutally beaten in his parish south of Mexico City.

When parents complained the Rev. Nicholas Aguilar Rivera molested in LA, church officials told the priest but waited two days to call police - allowing him to flee to Mexico, court papers allege. At least 26 children told police they were abused during his 10 months in Los Angeles. The now-defrocked priest is believed to be in Mexico and remains a fugitive.

The personnel files of 13 other clerics were attached to the motion to show a cover-up pattern, said attorney Anthony De Marco, who represents the 35-year-old plaintiff. In one instance, a memo to Mahony discusses sending a cleric to a therapist who also is an attorney so any incriminating evidence is protected from authorities by lawyer-client privilege. In another instance, archdiocese officials paid a secret salary to a priest exiled to the Philippines after he and six other clerics were accused of having sex with a teen and impregnating her.

The exhibits offer a glimpse at some 30,000 pages to be made public as part of a record-setting $660 million settlement. The archdiocese agreed to give the files to more than 500 victims of priest abuse in 2007, but a lawyer for about 30 of the priests fought to keep records sealed. A judge recently ordered the church to release them without blacking out the names of church higher-ups after The Associated Press and the Los Angeles Times intervened.
They echo similar releases from other dioceses nationwide that have shown how church leaders for decades shuffled problem priests from parish to parish, covered up reports of abuse and didn't contact law enforcement. Top church officials in Missouri and Pennsylvania were criminally convicted last year for their roles in covering up abuse, more than a decade after the clergy sex abuse scandal began to unfold in Boston.

Mahony, who retired in 2011 after 26 years at the helm of the 4.3-million person archdiocese, has been particularly hounded by the case of the Rev. Michael Baker, who was sentenced to prison in 2007 for molestation - two decades after the priest confessed his abuse to Mahony.

  

Mahony noted the "extremely grave and serious situation" when he sent Baker for psychological treatment after the priest told him in 1986 that he had molested two brothers over seven years.

Baker returned to ministry the next year with a doctor's recommendation that he be defrocked immediately if he spent any time with minors. 

Despite several documented instances of being alone with boys, the priest wasn't removed from ministry until 2000. Around the same time, the church learned he was conducting baptisms without permission.

Church officials discussed announcing Baker's abuse in churches where he had worked, but Mahony rejected the idea.
"We could open up another firestorm - and it takes us years to recover from those," Mahony wrote in an Oct. 6, 2000, memo. "Is there no alternative to public announcements at all the Masses in 15 parishes??? Wow - that really scares the daylights out of me!!"

The aide, Msgr. Richard Loomis, noted his dismay over the matter when he retired in 2001 as vicar for clergy, the top church official who handled priestly discipline. In a memo to his successor, Loomis said Baker's attorney disclosed the priest had at least 10 other victims.


"We've stepped back 20 years and are being driven by the need to cover-up and to keep the presbyteriate & public happily ignorant rather than the need to protect children," Loomis wrote.

"The only other option is to sit and wait until another victim comes forward. Then someone else will end up owning the archdiocese of Los Angeles. The liability issues involved aside, I think that course of complete (in)action would be immoral and unethical."

Mahony preferred targeted warnings at schools and youth groups rather than a warning read at Masses, Hennigan said. Parish announcements were made two years later.

Baker, who was paroled in 2011, is alleged to have molested 20 children in his 26-year career. He could not be reached for comment.

The files also show Mahony corresponded with abusive priests while they underwent treatment out of state and worked to keep them out of California to avoid criminal and civil trouble.

One case involved the Msgr. Peter Garcia, a molester whom Mahony's predecessor sent for treatment in New Mexico. Mahony kept Garcia there after a lawyer warned in 1986 that the archdiocese could face "severe civil liability" if he returned and reoffended. 


Garcia had admitted raping an 11-year-old boy and later told a psychologist he molested 15 to 17 young boys.

"If Monsignor Garcia were to reappear here within the archdiocese, we might very well have some type of legal action filed in both the criminal and civil sectors," Mahony wrote to the director of Garcia's New Mexico treatment program.

Mahony then sent Garcia to another treatment center, but Garcia returned to LA in 1988 after being removed from ministry. He then contacted a victim's mother and asked to spend time with her younger son, according to a letter in the file.


Mahony moved to defrock him in 1989, and Garcia died a decade later.

Ivory Coast charges youth leader Charles Ble Goude with war crimes, murder,!


Ivory Coast's former youth minister and ally of ex-President Laurent Gbagbo, Charles Ble Goude, has been charged with war crimes, murder and theft of public funds.

                       Charles Ble Goude, Ivory Coast"s Minister of youth and employment and leader of the "young patriots" greets the crowd on Febuary 5, 2011 in Abidjan


Charles Ble Goude, was arrested on an international warrant in neighbouring Ghana last week and was handed over to Ivorian authorities at the weekend.

                                

Ble Goude was a powerful figure in the inner circle of Gbagbo, who is now awaiting trial before the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity. He eventually rose to become minister of youth.

Rights groups accuse his followers of committing grave human rights abuses including ethnically motivated killings and torture during a brief post-election civil war in 2011 that killed over 3,000 people.

   

"He is currently before a judge for his hearing ... The charges were war crimes, murder, economic crimes and kidnapping,"

Ble Goude fled Ivory Coast at the end of the conflict, which was triggered by Gbagbo's refusal to accept a 2010 election  defeat to Alassane Ouattara.

A U.N. experts panel last year accused him of continuing to raise money from exile in order to purchase weapons used in a series of attacks against security and infrastructure installations that began last August.

on the  other hand, Ble Goude's supporters say the charges against him are politically motivated, and accused the governments of both Ivory Coast and Ghana of rushing his transfer.

Charles Ble Goude (L), leader of the "Young Patriots" movement, and supporters of incumbent Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo attend a rally at Champroux stadium in Abidjan January 23, 2011. REUTERS/Thierry Gouegnon

President Obama's Inauguration!


Barack Obama has been sworn in publicly to his second term as president of the United States, calling for an end to the deep political divisions that defined his first four years in office and declaring “we are made for this moment”.


U.S. President Barack Obama is sworn in as US President. Picture: Getty
 President Barack Obama is sworn in as US President.
                           
                                   

Watched by up to 900,000 spectators in Washington DC – 
                         

About half the number that thronged the National Mall for his first inauguration in 2009 – he urged “common effort and common purpose” to tackle issues such as the burgeoning US national debt, gun control, immigration and the lingering debate over healthcare.
                          

The president, who became only the 17th of 44 holders of the office to win a second term...
                               President Barack Obama
 ...laid out the challenges for the years ahead in an 18-minute address that avoided specifics.

                               
“We are made for this moment and we will seize it, so long as we seize it together,” President Obama said after his swearing-in by John Roberts, chief justice of the US Supreme Court.
“Being true to our founding documents does not require us to agree on every contour of life. But [progress] does require us to act in our time. Decisions are upon us and we cannot afford delay. We cannot mistake absolutism for principle, or substitute spectacle for politics, or treat name-calling as reasoned debate.

Obama called for an end to divisive politics and for national unity in facing a raft of challenges
The speech served as an epilogue to his first inaugural address, which was defined by the stern tone he employed “in the midst of crisis.” He echoed some of the same broad themes, including the need for the nation’s political leaders to act in common cause to adapt to a changing country and world.
Mr Obama said the presidential oath he swore was to “God and country, not party or faction” and promised he and his cabinet would “faithfully execute that pledge during the duration of our service”.
His words, which touched on the massacre at Connecticut’s Sandy Hook Elementary School that claimed the lives of 20 children last month, his proposals to offer some illegal immigrants a path to US citizenship, and even climate change, struck the required tone, according to some analysts.
“He realises that if anything’s going to be done in his second term, it’s going to have to be done on a bipartisan basis,” said presidential historian Henry Brands, professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin.
Presidents in their inaugural addresses always speak in bipartisan fashion. The real question is whether the actions follow through. People will forget the words the day after tomorrow and he’ll get back to business.”
Mr Obama was formally sworn in during a brief ceremony in the White House on Sunday, fulfilling a constitutional requirement to complete the process by noon on 20 January. In a ceremony full of symbolism, yesterday’s public swearing-in took place on Martin Luther King Jnr Day, a national holiday commemorating the assassinated civil rights leader
                       
                        
Myrlie Evers-Williams, the widow of Medgar Evers, another murdered pioneer of the civil rights movement, delivered the invocation.
                            

The celebrations also incorporated showbusiness, with Mr Obama’s daughters, Sasha and Malia, enjoying the national anthem from pop star BeyoncĂ©.

                               Beyonce sings American national anthem at President Obama's inauguration

Many prominent politicians attended the event, including previous US presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton and former and present members of Mr Obama’s team.

                     Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton speak with former President Jimmy Carter at the ceremonial swearing-in for President Barack Obama at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Sunday, 20 January 2013

Oyo state Deputy Chairman of Nigeria’s National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) Killed!

Nigeria:

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Some unidentified gunmen have killed the Oyo state Deputy Chairman of Nigeria’s National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Alhaji Kamorudeen Beyioku.
He was shot in Ibadan sunday evening and died at the University College Hospital (UCH), where he was rushed after the incident. Newsmen gathered that armed police officers kept vigil at the ICU while the battle to save his life lasted.
Confirming the incident in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, the Oyo State Police Public Relations Officer, Ayodele Lanade, disclosed that he was yet to be fully briefed on the death.