Thursday, 9 October 2014

Horrifying....Teen Confesses To Killing His Mom And Losing Virginity To Her Corpse!

Kevin Davis
A Texas man identified as Kevin Davis pleaded guilty Monday to first-degree murder, when he admitted to killing his mother and raping her corpse in a trial that just commenced. 
According to news, prosecutors played a videotaped confession Tuesday to jurors, who heard the 18-year-old admit he tried to strangle Kimberly Hill with the power cord from a video game console on March 27, but when she did not stop screaming, he struck his mother’s head repeatedly with a hammer. 
Now this is horrible....Davis reportedly told investigators on the recording that he stuck his hand into the open wound and moved her brain around to make sure she was dead, then he raped his mother’s dead body, as reported KZTV-TV.
“Guess I lost my virginity to a dead corpse,” Davis said.
It was gathered that Davis told detectives he had long fantasized about killing his mother and sister, and he waited a while for his sister to return home before deciding to leave his family’s Corpus Christi apartment and move away.
“I had my fill of killing,” he said. “It seemed a little much.”
He allegedly rode his bicycle along some train tracks before knocking on a couple’s door and asking them to call police because he’d murdered someone.
Davis waved at the couple as they testified and prosecutors asked them to identify him in the courtroom, the newspaper reported.
Police found a trail of blood from the living room to the master bedroom, along with handwritten notes from Davis.
Chase me,” one read. “Sorry for the mess. KD.”
....Jurors cringed and covered their faces as Davis told detectives that he had once choked and drowned a cat and then performed a sexual act with its remains, the Caller Timesreported.
He also described his fantasy of dressing in a suit, decapitating a girl, putting her in a dress, and having sex with her corpse. He told detectives....“It would be a night to remember,” 
Surprisingly, Davis told detectives during the videotaped interview that Hill was “the best mother” and didn’t deserve to die, and police asked him if he regretted killing her.
In a way, yes, but I wouldn’t take back what I did,” he said. “I did love her in a way. I’m a terrible, disgusting person.”
Davis told police he asked his mother for permission to die because he was bored with life and did not like other people, and he said she was upset but told him she could not control what he did.
So he decided to kill her, Davis told detectives.
I don’t have standards, I don’t have morals. A body’s a body — a piece of meat,” Davis said.
Admitting he would kill again, Davis who was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison, reportedly told detectives he deserved 100 years for what he had done.  I’m not mentally disturbed, I’m sane,” he told detectives. “I know what I did.”
Source: RS and Fox News



Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Escape from "Sobibor"...Sorry North Korea: 'How I escaped horrors of life under Kim Jong-il'!

To think that years after the Nazi German  most cruel inhuman treatment to Jews, the situation persists under the watchful but helpless eyes of Human Rights organization, and voices that matters around the world.
This is a touching story of a determined young North Korean girl, whose family was among the thousands that suffered (some still suffereing) from the iron fisted regime of the Kim Jong's dinaasty, one that remind me of the film "Escape from Sobibor, and The Great Escape". 
The Story below:
Yeonmi Park was nine years old when she was invited to watch her best friend’s mother being shot.
Growing up in North Korea, Yeonmi had seen executions. She remembers her mother piggy­backing her to public squares and sports stadiums to watch the spectacles used by Kim Jong-il’s Workers’ Party to silence even the slightest whisper of dissent.
Yeonmi Park in Seoul, where she now studies and raises awareness for the plight of her compatriots in North Korea PHOTO: JeongMee Yoon
These killings lodged in her mind, Yeonmi watched in horror as the woman she knew was lined up alongside eight other prisoners and her sentence was read out. Her crime was having watched South Korean films and lending the DVDs to friends. Her punishment in this most paranoid of dictatorships was death by firing squad.
As the executioners raised their weapons, Yeonmi covered her face. But she looked up again, just in time to see an explosion of blood and the woman’s body crumple to the ground. ‘It was a shock,’ she remembers. ‘It was the first time I felt terrified.’
Yeonmi is recounting the horrific incident over a milkshake in Seoul, the ultra-modern capital of South Korea that is only 35 miles from the North Korean border but, with its luxury cars and 10-lane motorways, feels like another planet. 
Twelve years have passed since that day, and Yeonmi, now 21, is one of tens of thousands of North Korean defectors who have escaped one of the world’s most reclusive and repressive regimes.
Yeonmi has become a globetrotting activist intent on raising awareness about the plight of her people. She appears on South Korean television and uses Facebook, Twitter, Skype and WeChat to spread the word about the human rights abuses inside North Korea. She has travelled the world to talk about her experiences. And next month she will attend the annual One Young World Summit in Dublin, where she will appear alongside figures including Kofi Annan, Sir Bob Geldof, the former Mexican president Vicente Fox, and Dame Ellen MacArthur, the world record-breaking sailor.
Yeonmi was born on October 4 1993 in Hyesan, a notoriously cold river port along North Korea’s 850-mile northern border with China. The following year, on July 8, Kim Il-sung, the country’s 82-year-old founder and ‘Great Leader’, died of a heart attack. Hopes that he might have been ready to gradually open North Korea to the world evaporated as his son Kim Jong-il took power and set about transforming the hermit nation into a member of George W Bush’s notorious ‘axis of evil’.
Meanwhile, the economy was collapsing and the Great Famine, which would eventually claim up to 2.5 million lives, according to Andrew Natsios, the former head of USAID, was beginning to take hold. As Barbara Demick describes in Nothing to Envy, her definitive book on the period, those too young, too poor or too honest to find food quickly died. ‘The killer targets the most innocent, the people who would never steal food, lie, cheat, break the law or betray a friend.’
Yeonmi Park with her parents and sister Eunmi (left); and with her father (right) in Pyongyang in 2002, before he was arrested PHOTO: Courtesy of Yeonmi Park
Yeonmi’s father was a mid-ranking civil servant and Workers’ Party member who worked at the Hyesan town hall. He kept his family afloat through an illegal sideline in selling gold, silver and nickel (which he had acquired through middle men in Pyongyang, the capital) to Chinese over the border. That income helped insulate his family from the worst of the suffering as North Korea was plunged into famine. But the bodies Yeonmi saw at the railway station: ragged, skeletal waifs collapsed on the pavement and slumped against walls, told her something was badly wrong. She caught a glimpse of corpses in the river, too. ‘I think they were trying to escape,’ Yeonmi says matter-of-factly. ‘But they didn’t succeed
Initially shielded from the effects of the famine, Yeonmi’s world started to disintegrate when, in 2002, her father was arrested for illegal trading. ‘Everything changed,’ she recalls. Yeonmi’s father was taken to a prison near Pyongyang and given a 17-year sentence. Her mother visited him once but that was enough to see the toll that the brutal torture had taken on her husband. He was beaten. Guards placed sticks between his fingers and crunched them together. He was made to sit in excruciating stress positions for interminable periods. Prisoners were deprived of water and food. ‘The environment was crazy. So many bugs and lice,’ Yeonmi says. ‘They treated them like animals. He was a really brilliant man. He was my hero, and the country just beat him. I couldn’t believe it.’
Yeonmi’s father was luckier than many North Koreans who were spirited off to the country’s Soviet-style gulags, never to return. According to a Human Rights Watch report in January this year, up to 120,000 political prisoners, among them children, are currently being held in secretive labour camps known in Korean as the kwan-li-so. Torture including ‘sleep deprivation, beatings with iron rods or sticks, kicking and slapping, and enforced sitting or standing for hours’, is routine, the group found.
After three years Yeonmi’s father managed to bribe his way out of jail. But by then he had been diagnosed with colon cancer. When Yeonmi saw him on his release, the once strapping figure had been transformed into a ghost of a man. ‘He had changed so much. He was so small. He spoke differently. I couldn’t believe it was my father,’ she says.
The Park family had been ruined by the imprisonment of Yeonmi’s father. Shortly after his arrest they were forced to move from a comfortable house in Hyesan to a minuscule apartment. After his release they almost immediately began plotting their escape into China to start a new life. But before the family could put its plan into action, Eunmi, Yeonmi’s 16-year-old sister, fled across the border with a friend without telling them. Terrified about how she might fare on her own, Yeonmi and her mother decided to follow her over the border and bring her home. Once reunited, the family would attempt a second escape altogether.
And so, on the night of March 30 2007, Yeonmi and her mother made their way towards the border with the help of a people smuggler. Yeonmi’s father stayed behind, to minimise the risks. They crossed three mountains and finally came to a frozen river that separated the two countries. It was desperately cold, Yeonmi says, and she remembers feeling terrified that the ice beneath them would give. But they eventually made it to the other side. On dry land, they ran. ‘I ran so fast. The only thing I could think was that I could get shot. I ran and ran and ran.’
When Yeonmi stopped she found herself in the Chinese province of Jilin. Here, Yeonmi and her mother set about trying to find her sister. But she was nowhere to be found and the local people smugglers refused to help. One even threatened to turn them in to Chinese authorities unless he was allowed to have sex with Yeonmi. Yeonmi’s mother implored the man to leave her daughter alone and offered herself instead. ‘She had no choice,’ Yeonmi says. ‘Literally, in front of me, he raped her.’
A few days later Yeonmi’s father, who had become concerned about their lengthy absence, slipped across the border and managed to join them. But the family’s slide continued. Yeonmi and her parents still had not managed to track down Eunmi but they decided to remain in China rather than attempt a potentially dangerous return to North Korea. A great-aunt who lived on the Chinese side of the border found them shelter in a filthy, cobweb-filled room in the countryside outside the city of Shenyang. ‘There was no electricity. We couldn’t pay for water,’ Yeonmi said. Her parents would collect water from a dripping tap.
Yeonmi (in white) at a wedding in South Hamgyong Province in 2005 after her family had been forced to move PHOTO: Courtesy of Yeonmi Park
It was an experience familiar to the tens of thousands of other North Korean refugees who have escaped to China, one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, only to discover a new world of poverty and exploitation. ‘Even in China we were hungry,’ Yeonmi says.
The year 2008 was an exciting time to be in China. A construction boom was under way in Beijing as it geared up to host the summer Olympics. But for the Park family the new year brought more misery. At 7.30 one cold January morning, Yeonmi’s father died. Without documents and facing arrest and deportation if they were caught by Chinese police, his family were forced to bribe a local crematorium to destroy his body by night. At three the following morning, Yeonmi and her mother took his remains to a nearby mountain and secretly buried them. ‘There was no funeral. Nothing,’ Yeonmi says. ‘I couldn’t even do that for my father. I couldn’t call anyone to say my father had passed away. He was 45 – really young. We couldn’t even give him painkillers.
For Yeonmi and her mother, the death signalled an end to their time in China. They took a bus south for two days and spent a short period at a Christian shelter run by Chinese and South Korean missionaries in the port city of Qingdao, which has a large Korean population. When a chance to flee to South Korea via Mongolia arose they seized it, even though they had still not been reunited with Eunmi.
In February 2009 Yeonmi and her mother found themselves deep in the Gobi desert, searching the night sky for the Plough to guide them over the border into Mongolia and towards freedom. Once there, they could request help from South Korean diplomats who were known to help refugees from the north escaping to Seoul. More than 1,500 North Koreans fled their country in 2012, hoping to build a new life away from the regime of Kim Jong-un, who became Supreme Leader after Kim Jong-il, his father, died in 2011. Their motives for fleeing are understandable. Earlier this year a UN inquiry concluded that the human rights abuses being committed by Kim Jong-un’s regime were ‘strikingly similar’ to those perpetrated by the Nazis during the Second World War. Torture, mass starvation, rape, forced abortion and execution were used as everyday weapons against its 24 million inhabitants, the report claimed. 
While a growing number of foreign tourists and international celebrities including Dennis Rodman, the American basketball star, and Pras Michel, the rapper, have recently visited the country, the freedoms of movement, information and belief are still almost non-existent for ordinary North Koreans. ‘The gravity, scale and nature of these violations reveal a state that does not have any parallel in the contemporary world,’ the UN report argued.
But escaping North Korea is far from easy. Refu­gees who make it to China face discrimination, the constant threat of arrest and, in the case of women, sexual violence, activist groups say. Those who attempt to reach a third country from which to fly to South Korea face deportation if caught, and the penalty for those forced to return is execution or life imprisonment.
That appeared to be Yeonmi’s destiny when Mon­golian border guards surrounded her group as it meandered through the Gobi desert. They told them they would be immediately sent back to China. Yeonmi and her mother begged for their lives. When that failed, they tried something altogether more radical. They grabbed the small knives they had brought and thrust them to their throats, threatening to commit suicide unless the guards let them stay in Mongolia. ‘I thought it was the end of my life. We were saying goodbye to one another,’ Yeonmi says.
Their actions, though, proved effective. Yeonmi and her mother were taken into custody and after 15 days were transferred to a detention centre in Ulan Bator, the Mongolian capital. Several weeks later they were handed over to South Korean officials and on April 1 2009 – just over a year after the death of her father – Yeonmi stood at Ulan Bator’s Chinggis Khaan airport preparing to board a plane for Seoul. It was her first time flying and her new-found freedom had not yet sunk in. ‘Oh my God,’ she thought when Mongolian customs officials waved her through. ‘They didn’t stop me.’
A few hours later the plane touched down at Incheon airport in Seoul. Yeonmi stepped off the passenger jet wearing a shabby prison uniform. She remembers gasping at the sight of the moving walkways – a contraption unimaginable in her broken and impoverished homeland – and the immaculate lavatory facilities. ‘It was the first time I had seen a fancy rest room. I thought, “It’s so clean. Do I wash my hands in the [lavatory bowl]?’’ ’ she says. ‘Every­thing was shiny. I’d never seen anything like it.’
At least 20,000 North Korean refugees have sought shelter in South Korea over the past two decades, and while adapting is far from easy, Yeonmi has fared better than most. She and her mother both worked (as a shop assistant and waitress) so Yeonmi would be able to pay to go back to school. 
Five years after she arrived, Yeonmi is a third-year student of criminal justice at Dongguk University, one of the city’s best, and is a regular guest on South Korean television programmes. She uses her fame to spread the word about the situation in North Korea and in her spare time has learnt to speak fluent English, with the help of YouTube and the Friends DVD box set. 
In April she was finally reunited with the sister she had long feared was dead; Eunmi, now 23, had reached South Korea via China and Thailand.
Still Yeonmi feels she has not entirely escaped the clutches of Kim Jong-un’s regime. South Korea allocates local detectives to keep an eye on all newly arrived defectors, and in May Yeonmi received a call from the official handling her case. He warned her that her name had been added to a ‘target list’ of outspoken defectors that the North Korean regime wanted to eliminate. The revelation made her more angry than scared, Yeonmi says. ‘I crossed the Gobi. I lost my father. But I am still not free. They still have power over me. They still try to control me. Until I can be really free, I will keep going.’
The detective and Yeonmi’s mother urged her to stop criticising Kim Jong-un. But she ignored them, convinced that she, as someone who had suffered the same fate, now had a moral obligation to draw attention to the thousands of women risking sexual violence and murder as they tried to escape North Korea.I thought about quitting,’ she says, with a grin that suggests she did not entertain the idea for very long at all. ‘When I was crossing the Gobi desert I thought nobody really cared, you know? Even though I was dying there nobody was going to remember me. These girls too. They are dying. They are being raped. But nobody is going to remember them. Nobody is going to care for them. That is why I thought, “I’m going to do this and there is no way I will stop doing this.’’ ’
The day we meet, Yeonmi is wearing a startling red dress and a near permanent smile. But the anger she feels towards those who have destroyed her country is clear. ‘Kim Jong-un and the regime don’t just oppress,’ she says, ‘they play with human lives. Kim Jong-un should be punished. He must be brought to justice. How many people did he kill?’
One day, she hopes to return home to rebury her father’s ashes in a free North Korea. ‘It was his dream,’ she says. ‘It is hard to imagine that day coming but maybe my daughter or my son will be able to do it. Kim Jong-un thinks he can keep going on being a king there. But nothing is for ever.’
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Two Ryanair planes clip each other on runway at Dublin Airport!

Two Ryanair planes have clipped each other while moving on the runways at Dublin Airport.
Minor delays to other flights were expected after the incident involving the Boeing 737 planes this morning.
Ryanair spokeswoman said no injuries were reported after the "winglet" of one of the aircraft scraped against the tail of the other.
"Two of our aircraft were taxiing slowly to the runway at Dublin Airport this morning," she said.
"The winglet of one aircraft appears to have scraped the tail of the other. There was no impact on customers on board."
It was gathered that Ryanair has apologized to its customers for any inconvenience.
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Morocco releases Briton detained for 'homosexual acts' on holiday!

Family members have confirmed the release of a British man reportedly jailed for "homosexual acts" while on holiday in Morocco.
Reports says that 69 year-old Ray Cole, a retired magazine publisher from Deal, Kent, was sentenced to four months in jail after police found images of a homosexual nature on his mobile phone.
He was arrested last month, when he was four weeks into his five week holiday in Morocco, alongside 20-year-old Jamal Jam Wald Ness, from Marrakesh whom Cole had allegedly gone on holiday to visit after meeting him online.
It was gathered that the pair were approached at a bus stop by police officers who detained them on suspicion of being homosexual,  a crime that carries a maximum sentence of three years' jail in Morocco.
The family feared that he was missing for nearly a week before he was finally able to contact them using another prisoner's mobile phone.
Following his release his family thanked the Moroccan authorities for "showing compassion".
A statement was posted on Tuesday evening on the Facebook page set up to campaign for Mr Cole's release.
"We are delighted to announce that our dad, Ray Cole has been released from prison and is on his way home," it said.
"We would like to thank each and every one of you here and in Morocco who has helped our campaign to secure the release of our wonderful father.
"We would also like to thank the Moroccan authorities for showing compassion.
"We would ask that you allow us some time as a family to absorb the news and to spend some time with Dad."
Mr Cole's son Adrian told the British website PinkNews that Moroccan authorities had failed to notify his family or the British consulate of the arrest.
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Ebola-infected nurse 'followed regulations', husband says, as EU demands an explanation from Spain!

The husband of the infected nurse who became the first person to contract the deadly Ebola virus in Europe has insisted that his wife stringently “followed regulations” while caring for the missionary priests who had the illness.
She did everything she was told to, and at no time was she concerned that she could have been infected,” Javier Limon, the nurse’s husband, said in a telephone interview with daily Spanish El Mundo newspaper from the hospital isolation where he has been quarantined.
His wife, 44 years-old Teresa Romero Ramos, has 15 years experience as a nurse in Madrid.
It is not yet clear how exactly she contracted the virus except that she was part of a special team that cared for a Spanish missionary priest who died of Ebola last month after being repatriated from Sierra Leone.
The couple were due to go on holiday the day after the priest died, explained her husband. But they delayed it because he had inured his leg.
She decided instead to spend a few days with her mother and then on September 30 she began to feel unwell,” the husband said.
Angry with health authorities, the quarantined man complained that he had been told his dog, a Staffordshire bull terrier, would have to be put down because it had shared close contact with his wife.
I won’t give permission, and they said that if I don’t they will get a court order to kill the dog. What next, will they sacrifice me too?”
His wife is believed to have been carrying the deadly virus for more than a week before being diagnosed on Monday after becoming infected while caring for missionaries who had returned to Spain from Sierra Leone.
Four people, including the nurse, have now been hospitalised and are being monitored for potential contagion of the deadly disease, Spain's health authorities said on Tuesday.
Officials for Madrid's health system told a press conference those hospitalised included the nurse's husband, a traveller from one affected country and another health worker.
The nurse is currently being treated with antibodies from previous infected patients in the hope of providing a cure, including blood from a Spanish missionary nun who was evacuated from Liberia in August and survived Ebola.
Another 21 medical staff who came into contact with the infected nurse when she was admitted into hospital in the early hours of Monday are also being monitored for signs of the virus.
"If appropriate containment measures were adopted this really should not have happened," said Jonathan Ball, a virology professor at the University of Notthingham. "It will be crucial to find out what went wrong in this case so necessary measures can be taken to ensure it doesn't happen again."
"As the African outbreak perfectly illustrates, healthcare workers put their life on the line, so everything should be done to ensure that risks are minimised as much as possible," he said.
"That is why it is so important for the international community to ramp up their efforts to combat this deadly disease."
The European Union has also demanded an explanation from Spain as to how she could have become infected.
In comments to Britain's Science Media Centre, experts said protective suits worn by health workers, coupled with safe disposal of patients' bodily waste, substantially reduced the risk.
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Horrible- Doctor kills wife hours after exchanging vows!

A newly-wed US doctor murdered his wife and then turned the gun on himself just minutes after the last guest had left their wedding reception.

George 'Scott' Samson and Kelly Ecker Samson
According to reports, George "Scott" Samson, an anaesthesiologist, was found with gunshot wounds in the basement of the mansion he shared with his bride, Kelly Samson née Ecker, within hours of their wedding in Terre Haute, Vigo County, Indiana.
Police were alerted by a 911 emergency call made by the new Mrs Samson three minutes after a fierce fight led guests to leave the couple's home, where they had held their wedding reception.
On a recording of the phone call made at 1.20am on Sunday and released by police, she can be heard saying that her new husband was beating her and had threatened to kill her.
The phone call ended but she called back twice before the third conversation was interrupted by gunshot noises, after which the line went dead.
Her body was found in a bedroom used by her 10-year-old son from a previous relationship.
It was 54-year-old Samson's second marriage, and friends said that while the wedding and much of the reception had passed off happily, the couple had a troubled relationship.
After a church service and reception in a marquee in the grounds of their home, the guests went inside to continue the celebration.
Witnesses said that the couple had already had a fierce argument which became so bad that the guests felt compelled to leave. The last departed at 1.17am, leaving the couple alone with Mrs Samson's son and an elderly couple thought to be her new parents-in-law. They were unharmed.
A marquee used to entertain wedding guests could still be seen in the grounds of their home two days after the murder-suicide.
In an email to the IndyStar newspaper, Vigo County Chief Deputy Sheriff Clark Cottom said: "The investigation has revealed that there was an [sic] verbal argument between the couple toward the end of the reception, which carried over to the after party at the couples' home.
"Shortly after the last guest left at around 1.17am Kelly Ecker Samson called 911 reporting that her husband had threatened to kill her.
"There were a total of three very brief 911 calls, which in the first two the caller disconnected."
Vigo County Coroner Dr. Susan Amos added: "'They had just got married and something went terribly wrong."
The police said that Samson owned the 45-caliber semi-automatic pistol used to kill both his bride and himself legally.
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Doctor says Ebola 'will remain embedded in Africa' after Spanish nurse contracts virus!

A nurse in Spain has contracted Ebola, becoming the first person known to catch the disease outside the outbreak zone in West Africa during the current epidemic.
The nurse's illness illustrates the danger health care workers face not only in poorly equipped West African clinics, but also in the more sophisticated medical centres of Europe and the United States.
The Spanish nurse was transferred early on Tuesday to Madrid's Carlos III hospital and her husband was placed in quarantine.
The nurse, whose name has not been released, was said to be in stable condition.

She was part of the medical team that treated a 69-year-old Spanish priest, Manuel Garcia Viejo, who died in the same hospital late last month, Spain's health minister said on Monday.
The sick priest had been flown home from his post in Sierra Leone; the nurse is believed to have contracted the virus from him.
She went to a Madrid hospital with a fever on Sunday, 10 days after the priest died, and was placed in isolation.
The World Health Organisation confirmed there has not been a previous transmission outside West Africa in the current outbreak.
Speaking to Sky News, Professor John Sydney Oxford questioned how the nurse was infected when the necessary precautions should have been taken.
"I was shocked to see that she got infected in the hospital," he said. But he added that he did not think the Spanish case meant the virus would become "embedded" outside of West Africa.
The unprecedented Ebola outbreak this year has killed more than 3,400 people in West Africa, and become an escalating concern to the rest of the world.
It has taken an especially devastating toll on health care workers, sickening or killing more than 370 in the hardest-hit countries of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone - places that already were short on doctors and nurses.