HEADLINE NEWS

Wednesday, 8 June 2011

THE man suspected of shooting dead his daughter and her mum blasted his face off when he tried to kill himself,

THE man suspected of shooting dead his daughter and her mum blasted his face off when he tried to kill himself, it emerged yesterday.
The kick of his double-barrelled shotgun forced it to slip as he pulled the trigger.

He was left "unrecognisable" but is expected to survive. A source told The Sun: "Many will see the horrific wounds as some sort of justice."

Chrissie Chambers, 38, and two-year-old daughter Shania were gunned down in their home on Sunday. Chrissie's ex, David Oakes, was taken to hospital with terrible face wounds.

Oakes - 6ft 4ins and 18 stone - had split with Chrissie seven weeks earlier. He was due to face Chrissie in court over a custody battle for Shania.

Chrissie's other daughter Chelsea, ten, fled the house in Braintree, Essex, after her mum begged her: "Run! Save yourself while you can."

Chelsea clambered from a window in her nightie as the killer forced a gun into her mother's mouth. She ran half a mile to her father Ian Flitt's home.

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POLICE are investigating reports of a mass grave in Texas containing dozens of bodies following a tip off to police.


Cops were called to a house where dismembered remains of 25 to 30 people including children were thought to be found.

Police activity was focused on a rural area of fields and a small wooded zone, with police positioning themselves near a house surrounded by trees.

A neighbour said the occupant of the house lived there with her fiance but moved out of the property a week ago. Her parents also lived at the house but were long-haul truck drivers.

Police rushed to the property between Hardin and Daisetta, Liberty County, and are now seeking a search warrant to search the home after finding blood at the scene.

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Police in Texas may have found a mass grave containing up to 30 dismembered bodies, possibly all children

Police in Texas may have found a mass grave containing up to 30 dismembered bodies, possibly all children, according to local media reports.

But the Liberty County sheriff's office said there was no evidence yet that any bodies had been discovered.

Liberty County sheriff's department spokesman Rex Evans said the office had received an anonymous report on Tuesday that there were bodies in the house in a rural location around 70 miles east of Houston.

KPRC television, a local station, said 25 to 30 bodies were found by officers acting on a tip-off.

FBI spokeswoman Kim Barkhausen in Houston confirmed to the Reuters news agency that the FBI had been asked to help with an investigation, but would not elaborate.

Preliminary reports indicated the bodies are those of children, the TV station reported.

One local paper, the Cleveland Advocate, said the tipster told authorities dozens of dismembered bodies were buried at the scene.

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Thursday, 26 May 2011

CCTV footage shows the victim of a fatal stabbing at a train station in Sydney's south-west pulled the knife out of his own chest and stabbed his alleged killer.



Brandon Nunu Asiata, 16, managed to stab the 22-year-old man in the face, head, wrist and leg before he collapsed and died on the platform at Bankstown railway station in front of commuters yesterday evening.

The boy's 15-year-old brother was stabbed in the leg.

The alleged killer, Mosa Julius Mbele, has been charged with murder over the stabbing death.

Superintendent Dave Eardley says Mbele has faced a bedside court hearing in hospital. Mbele has serious stab wounds.

"Earlier this afternoon, the 22-year-old Bankstown man was remanded in custody charged with the murder of the 16-year-old boy," he said.

"He's currently remaining in hospital being treated. As soon as he's able, he'll be transferred to the care of Corrective Services."

Friends say they cannot understand why the 16-year-old was stabbed to death.

Some are gathering at the station dressed in red to remember him, while hundreds have left tributes on Facebook.

RailCorp says there was one security guard there, who acted appropriately, when the fight broke out.

Police say they had spoken to the victim in the past month.

Friends say the boy was a good person who made them laugh.

Brandon Asiata's cousin, Julia Kepu, says she warned him not to go to the train station last night.

She says Brandon had promised he would not go.

"I'm still shocked by what's happened. I couldn't even make it down the stairs to put his flowers down for him," she said.

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Sunday, 15 May 2011

Belgrade court approved a plea bargain Monday allowing Serbia's biggest folk music star, the widow of the Serbian warlord known as Arkan, to avoid jail time over charges of embezzlement and illegal weapons.

Belgrade court approved a plea bargain Monday allowing Serbia's biggest folk music star, the widow of the Serbian warlord known as Arkan, to avoid jail time over charges of embezzlement and illegal weapons.

Under a deal some saw as evidence that the rich and famous get preferential treatment in Serbia's legal system, Svetlana Raznatovic, best known by her stage name Ceca, will serve a year under house arrest and wear an electronic surveillance bracelet.

She will also pay a 1.5 million euro ($2.16 million) fine.

"This plea bargain is an insult to common sense and justice," said Marko Karadzic, a Belgrade-based human rights activist.

Ceca (pronounced TSE-tsa) gained fame in the 1990s Balkans with her patriotic folk tunes set to a techno beat. She married nationalist warlord and mafia boss Zeljko (Arkan) Raznatovic and the two became the country's most prominent couple after then Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic and his wife.

Serbian prosecutors indicted Svetlana Raznatovic, her sister and two associates in March on charges of embezzling four million German marks (two million euros) and $3.5 million from murky sales of 10 players from Belgrade's Obilic soccer club, which she owned in the early part of the last decade. The prosecution alleged Raznatovic and her associates sold soccer players to foreign clubs and shared profits without paying taxes or declaring the deals through the Obilic club.

Ceca took over the club, previously owned by Arkan, after a rival gang gunned him down in 2000 in the lobby of a swanky Belgrade hotel.

Judge Sladjana Markovic said that the plea bargain was aimed at preventing a long trial after an eight-year investigation.

"Raznatovic is a single mom ... Her sister is a family woman, the Obilic club did not file charges and the two did not commit any crimes since 2002, a testimony to their good character," Markovic said.

Dragan Krgovic, Raznatovic's lawyer, highlighted the money element of the plea deal. "The state will cash in 1.5 million (euros) and ... this is a real bargain for the state and prosecutors," he said.

Some ordinary citizens disagreed. "This is an outrage, it shows crime pays ... how can I tell my children to be honest and hard working?" said Dragisa Savic, 44, a security guard.

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Wednesday, 6 April 2011

Questions have been raised about the role played by a sawmill foreman convicted of Russia's largest tax fraud

Victor Markelov, 43, confessed in April 2009 to a vastly complex $230m theft of taxes paid to the Russian people and was jailed for five years with no fine in an apparent attempt to draw a veil over what was becoming an embarrassing episode for senior state officials implicated in the crime.
According to claims filed with the Russian prosecutor's office, Mr Markelov may have been paid to take the fall. Two days after being arrested for the alleged kidnapping of a company director in late 2006 and attempting to extort $20m out of his boss, Mr Markelov was transferred ownership of a company with a book value of $1m.
One month later and still in custody, he became owner of another company worth $1.1m. He was released six months after his arrest and just months before the alleged $230m tax fraud was perpetrated in summer 2007 with the alleged involvement of the same policemen and financier as in the kidnapping.
The larger tax fraud was uncovered by Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer working for the UK hedge fund Hermitage Capital who presented evidence against the police allegedly involved. He was later arrested on tax evasion charges and held in custody for a year awaiting trial before dying of medical complications that were left untreated.
Mr Magnitsky has since become a symbol of the struggle against corrupt forces in Russia. This week, the Foreign Office cited his case in a report into "human rights violations" in Russia.

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Tuesday, 5 April 2011

New York police search for more bodies on Long Island beach

Police have returned to an overgrown stretch of land off Long Island a day after three more bodies were found, taking the number of victims of a suspected serial killer in the New York city area to eight.

It is a huge crime scene – several square miles of windswept sand dunes and thick undergrowth – that has been scoured several times by police searchers, but more bodies keep turning up.

All of the corpses identified so far are young, white women who worked as prostitutes, and police believe they are dealing with a serial killer, or killers.

The victims found their clients on Craig's List or other similar websites and police believe some of them, perhaps all, were killed elsewhere and then dumped on Oak Island, a narrow barrier island an hour's drive from Manhattan.

The grisly harvest of bodies has come in several batches.

In December, police began to search for a missing prostitute, Shannan Gilbert, 24. She had fled a client's beachside house early one morning in May, screaming for help then disappearing into the dunes. They never found her. The client was cleared from being a suspect after police searched his home and vehicle.

While looking for Gilbert, they found four bodies hidden in and around Gilgo Beach. All were wrapped in hessian sacks and appeared to have been deposited during the past three years. None were Gilbert.

More than three months later and with no one caught for the crimes, police have made yet more grim findings. At the end of last month and about a mile from the original dumping ground, a policeman passing Oak Beach in his patrol car noticed an object. It turned out to be yet another body of a young woman.

Immediately a mini-army of police and firefighters, helicopters and dog handling teams, sealed off the huge area with police tape, scouring the tick-infested scrub. They later found three more bodies.

The authorities are working 12-hour days, searching the area again and again.

None of the new bodies has yet been officially identified, but police are working on the assumption that they fit the pattern of the earlier victims.

Investigators are appealing for information from people involved in the local sex trade. "They certainly must have some information. Anything that they may deem to be significant or even insiginificant may be significant to us," said Thomas Spota, the Suffolk County district attorney.

Forensic experts are trying to identify the latest remains and see if they include Gilbert. Her disappearance might harbour key clues. She was last seen running from a client's house and shouting: "They're trying to kill me."

She banged on a neighbour's door but ran off before the police were called. Police spoke to her later on her mobile phone but she was disorientated and told them she was on a different beach. She was never heard of or seen again.

The victims identified so far are Maureen Brainard-Barnes, 25; Melissa Barthelmy, 24; Megan Waterman, 22; and Amber Lynn Costello, 27.

Police insist that they have devoted huge resources and they continue to appeal to the public not to be prejudiced by the fact that at least some of the victims so far have been sex workers.

"What activities these victims may have engaged in prior to their murder does not matter. They were young women whose lives were cut tragically short," said Richard Dormer, Suffolk County's police commissioner.

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Saturday, 12 March 2011

Senator Raymond Lavigne has been found guilty of fraud and breach of trust.

Senator Raymond Lavigne has been found guilty of fraud and breach of trust.

Ontario Superior Court Judge Robert Smith handed down the ruling yesterday, saying Lavigne "committed a false and dishonest act" when he requested $12,365.50 from the Senate for travel actually made by former staffer Michel Gendron, when the true cost had been $2,700.

The judge said he believed the testimony of Gendron, who said Lavigne gave him $50 for return trips from Ottawa to Montreal while the senator personally claimed $217 for the trips.

The judge said he believes Lavigne received more than $9,665.50 for expense claims that were not owed to him.

The judge said he believed another witness, Daniel Côté, who testified Lavigne filed travel claims on his behalf.

The senator was convicted of the breach-of-trust charge for directing Côté to cut trees on his property in Wakefield, while he was paid by the Senate in order to not spend on hiring an external contractor.

The Mounties charged Lavigne in 2007 with fraud over $5,000, breach of trust and obstruction of justice after a yearlong investigation by the Senate.

He was found not guilty yesterday of obstruction of justice.

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Monday, 28 February 2011

Gmail snafu leaves thousands of users missing emails | News | TechRadar UK

Gmail snafu leaves thousands of users missing emails | News | TechRadar UK: "Google Gmail hit a bit of a snag over the weekend with around 150,000 users missing old emails, folders and contacts from their accounts.

The problems surfaced on Sunday, and while the reason behind them is not entirely clear, Google is working feverishly to fix the issues and restore all user data."
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Sunday, 20 February 2011

'Gun concealment' jeans: the disturbing new craze in our jails

Guide GearĀ® Pocket Holster'Gun concealment' jeans: the disturbing new craze in our jails | Mail Online: "Prisoners are wearing specially designed jeans imported from America which can conceal handguns and knives, according to leaked confidential documents.

A security bulletin distributed among prison governors warns of the need to ‘proceed with caution’ when encountering an inmate wearing denim trousers. The trousers are favoured by American street gangs but have only recently been seen in British prisons.

The development is the latest indication of the disorder in Britain’s prisons which reached a flashpoint in January when drunk prisoners rampaged through HMP Ford, near Arundel, burning down buildings and attacking officers.

Investigations into the riot’s ringleaders and the smuggling of contraband into prisons are ongoing. However, the security bulletins for September and October 2010 make clear that the problems are not unique to that institution."

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Wednesday, 16 February 2011

US Immigration Agent Shot Dead in Mexico

Special Agent Jaime Zapata and a second unidentified agent were attacked on the country's north-south highway about 200 miles north of Mexico City.
ICE Immigration & Customs Enforcement Baseball CapThe two were on duty for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency when they were stopped by unknown gunmen at what appeared to be a military checkpoint.
However, Mexican officials said there were no authorised checkpoints in the area.
Agent Zapata was shot dead and the second agent was wounded in his arm and leg, but is said to be in stable condition.
The US embassy said the two workers were making their way from Mexico City to Monterrey in the north when they were stopped.DISCLAIMER:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.
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Thursday, 30 December 2010

U.S. Refuses to Help Polish Probe of Secret CIA Prisons

U.S. Refuses to Help Polish Probe of Secret CIA Prisons: "An international human rights group has revealed the Obama administration has refused to help the Polish government investigate claims that the CIA ran a secret black site prison inside Poland. Polish prosecutors launched a probe in August 2008, but U.S. authorities have refused to cooperate, claiming that they consider the matter closed. Flight records show that seven CIA planes landed in 2002 and 2003 at Szymany, a Polish military base in northeast Poland."

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Wednesday, 22 December 2010

Crossbow cannibal Stephen Griffiths - stalked and beat ex-girlfriend - mirror.co.uk

Crossbow cannibal Stephen Griffiths - stalked and beat ex-girlfriend - mirror.co.uk: "EX-GIRLFRIEND Kathy Hancock has told how she was stalked by Griffiths – who she calls Psycho Steve – for 10 YEARS.

Former prison officer Kathy, 37, repeatedly fled but time and time again he tracked her down.

She shuddered: “I was completely brainwashed by him. It was 10 years of mental torture and abuse. I couldn’t get away.

“He wants control of everything but he does it in such a passive way. He would make you doubt the way you are.”

Kathy was introduced to Griffiths in February 2000 and at first she enjoyed talking to a man she saw as a shy loner."

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Man shot dead on Cheshire street - Crime, UK - The Independent

Man shot dead on Cheshire street - Crime, UK - The Independent: "man has died after being shot in the street.

Officers were alerted after residents in Hale, Cheshire, heard gunfire shortly after midnight.

The 30-year-old victim, from nearby Widnes, was found on Pepper Street with serious head injuries and was taken to hospital where he later died.

His next of kin have been informed."

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Tuesday, 21 December 2010

Crossbow cannibal may have killed six women, police fear

When he was first arrested he indicated to detectives that he had murdered five or six women in total.
He held up one hand with his fingers outstretched and put up a finger on another when asked about killings he had carried out.
But he only named Susan Rushworth, Shelley Armitage and Suzanne Blamires, refusing to co-operate further about the identities of the others.
It is not known if he was attempting to exercise some form of control over investigators, exaggerating his notoriety or hinting at the truth.
West Yorkshire Police’s Homicide and Major Enquiry Team is considering the possibility that he has killed before.DISCLAIMER:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.
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Sunday, 12 December 2010

A lot of drugs, a lot of money.”U.S. authorities deport Salvatore Montagna, a reputed New York crime boss to Montreal

Gangland Gotham: New York's Notorious Mob BossesU.S. authorities deport Salvatore Montagna, a reputed New York crime boss to Montreal, the city of his birth.Within months, bodies begin to fall.The decimation of Montreal’s ruling crime family, the Rizzutos, has begun.Montagna, 39, known as Sal the Ironworker because of his family’s metal business in Brooklyn and who was dubbed Bambino Boss by New York media, was reportedly acting boss of New York’s powerful Bonanno family.What part — if any — Montagna is playing in the bloody mob war in Montreal is unclear.He arrived back from the States in April 2009.In August 2009, the assault on the crime group starts with the murder of convicted drug trafficker Federico del Peschio, 59, a former cellmate and friend of the godfather, Nicolo Rizzuto, Sr.In December 2009, Nicolo Rizzuto Jr., 42, son of Vito Rizzuto and grandson of the don, his namesake, is shot to death.



In May 2010, Rizzuto consigliere Paolo Renda vanishes.



That is followed with the June 2010 murders of Agostino Cuntrera, 66, who was in charge of the Rizzuto crime family’s daily operations and of his bodyguard Liborio Sciascia, 40.



And on Nov. 10, Nicolo Rizzuto Sr., 86, was assassinated by a sniper in his home.



Montreal police refused to comment on Montagna because of ongoing investigations but they don’t seem to be paying much attention to the Bambino Boss.



In a decision that stunned police intelligence officers in the GTA, some Montreal and U.S. cops apparently took him at his word when he said — while being deported — that he was retiring.



“They got to make this guy for who he really is,” a veteran organized crime investigator in the GTA said.



“You know he’s not going to hang up his reins.



“Who in the right mind is going to believe that he’s retired?”



The violence in Montreal has spawned a number of theories.



One scenario police are considering is that the Bonanno mob of New York that Montagna reportedly controlled is consolidating its hold on Montreal and with it southern Ontario.



Yet another theory is that Italian crime families between Hamilton and Montreal, a lethal mix of Sicilian and Calabrian mobs, are now operating as one.



The Sicilian Bonanno family’s ties to Quebec go back to shortly after the Second World War when New York’s Joe “Bananas” Bonanno gave his blessing to the Montreal mob.



The Cotroni family, of Calabrian heritage, was put in charge but the relationship between them and Sicilian families within the Montreal organization crumbled during the 1970s.



The Sicilians, through Nicolo Rizzuto Sr., made a push for control and his son, Vito, would later struggle for more independence.



Police say the Rizzutos’ influence in southern Ontario was spread through the crime family run by Toronto’s Pietro Scarcella, the last man to see mob boss Paul Volpe alive — his body was found in a car trunk at Toronto International Airport in 1983, and through the Musitano family in Hamilton.



The Rizzutos forced their way into the Niagara-Hamilton area in the late 1990s, police investigators say. Two of the casualties in 1997 were Hamilton mob boss John Papalia and his Niagara associate Carmen Barillaro.



But suddenly in 2009 the tables were turned on the aggressive Rizzutos.



“It’s almost like the entire annihilation of an entire family,” the police intelligence officer said. “The Rizzutos were responsible for a lot of pain and suffering.”



n n n



When Montagna arrived in Montreal the crime scene was chaotic.



The once powerful Rizzutos were in trouble.



Their ranks were decimated by Ontario’s Project R.I.P. and Quebec’s Project Colisee, that stripped away layers of mob middlemen.



“It created a power void,” the source said, but added “the demand for organized crime, via drugs, money-laundering” remained.



Colisee also picked up in wiretaps that mobsters were ripping off and betraying each other.



When the evidence was released through disclosure before trial “it showed how everybody f---ed each other.”



The Rizzutos were suddenly vulnerable.



Montagna, who was born in Montreal and spent his youth in Sicily before moving to the U.S., was arrested April 6, 2009, by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and deported later that month on the strength of a Sept. 2, 2003, conviction when he pleaded guilty to criminal contempt for refusing to testify to a grand jury.



Montagna refused to answer questions put to him during his Sept. 24, 2002 grand jury appearance.



A police source said Montagna lived up to the code of “omerta”, the organized crime rule of not revealing anything to authorities, when he failed to testify to the grand jury. He was sentenced to five years probation.



The contempt charge was filed in November 2002 when the Manhattan district attorney’s office announced the arrest of 19 mobsters for their “participation in the criminal activities of an organized crime crew of the Bonanno organized crime family.”



The crew was involved in gambling and loan-sharking, uncovered after a New York City Police undercover detective infiltrated the group based at the Aquarius Social Club on Waterbury Cres. in the Bronx.



It was during the racketeering investigation of three men, Bonanno soldiers Baldassare “Baldo” Amato and Stephen “Stevie” Locurto, and associate Anthony Basile, that FBI investigators realized Montagna’s role in the Cosa Nostra family.



U.S. immigration argued Montagna took over the Bonanno crime family at the age of 36 and police say he behaves like a seasoned, mature boss.



The contempt conviction was enough for U.S. immigration officials to deport Montagna to Montreal.



“Following that,” said the GTA police source, “the level of violence in Montreal is more active than in New York City.”



He suggested the list of motives and possible suspects for the elimination of the Rizzuto crime family could be long but in the end it’s all about the business of crime.



What’s occurring is a collaborative settling of disputes based on common goals, he said.



“A gun is pointed at a man, but how many hands are on that gun?” the cop said.



Determine how many are involved and “then you get to understand how (Italian organized crime) works,” he said.



“The key to remember, it was clear at a time, that Montreal was the centre of the universe for organized crime,” the police source said, adding there is a seismic shift taking place.



“Clearly what we’ve seen is that true power is in Ontario. We’re now one, Hamilton, Toronto, Montreal is one criminal enterprise,” he said.



“They have business plans,” the source said. “The money they have is insane. They have millions.”



Police estimate, for example, the Caruana-Cuntrera faction had in the late 1990s an estimated net worth of more than $1 billion in property and businesses.



“At the end of the day, this has to do with drugs and money,” the source said.



“A lot of drugs, a lot of money.”DISCLAIMER:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.
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S.African police probe Dewani case link to 2007 murder

The Presumption of Guilt: The Arrest of Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Race, Class and Crime in AmericaAFP: S.African police probe Dewani case link to 2007 murder: "South African police are probing a link between a Cape Town murder of the wife of a British businessman and a 2007 killing of a local doctor under similar circumstances, media said Sunday.
The Sunday Times said the doctor, Pox Raghavjee, was found shot dead in his car in Bhisho, a small town in the Eastern Cape region, but nothing was stolen from him.
His widow, Heather Raghavjee, travelled to Cape Town to comfort businessman Shrien Dewani after the murder of his wife Anni last month, the paper said.
'National police commissioner Bheki Cele confirmed yesterday that police were probing links between the 2007 killing of an Eastern Cape doctor to Anni's murder,' said the paper.
She was killed in a poor suburb outside Cape Town, after a taxi she was travelling in with her husband was hijacked.
The hijackers released Dewani and made off with his wife. Her body was later found with a single bullet to her neck.
One of the men who have been arrested for the killing, Zola Tongo, turned state witness and implicated Dewani in his wife's murder."

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Now Wikileaks suffers its own leaks - Telegraph

Access Controlled: The Shaping of Power, Rights, and Rule in Cyberspace (Information Revolution and Global Politics)Now Wikileaks suffers its own leaks - Telegraph: "The development comes as a senior WikiLeaks activist told The Sunday Telegraph that she and others had resigned from the organisation because of their deep concern about its treatment of sources and 'lack of transparency with relation to large sums of money'.
This newspaper has learned that one of WikiLeaks's main funding channels, the Germany-based Wau Holland Foundation, has been issued with two official warnings by charity regulators after failing to file financial records.
It has also emerged that the online payment service PayPal, which last week cut off donations to WikiLeaks, suspended the site's account twice before, once under money laundering regulations."

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Russia 'tracked' spy killers in UK - Europe - Al Jazeera English

Russia 'tracked' spy killers in UK - Europe - Al Jazeera English: "Russia was following the suspected killers of former spy Alexander Litvinenko before he was poisoned in London in 2006, but had been told to stand down by British authorities, according to remarks in leaked US diplomatic cables.

'[Russian Special Presidential Representative Anatoly] Safonov claimed that Russian authorities in London had known about and followed individuals moving radioactive substances into the city but were told by the British that they were under control before the poisoning took place,' the cable said.

Litvinenko, a former KGB agent turned Kremlin critic, died in hospital after being poisoned with the radioactive substance polonium-210 in a restaurant.

The leaked US cable, quoting a meeting in Paris between a Russian official and Henry Crumpton, US Ambassador-at-Large, was released by WikiLeaks and published on The Guardian's website on Saturday."

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Mark Madoff in suicide 2 years on from dad Bernard Madoff's arrest - mirror.co.uk

The Club No One Wanted To Join-Madoff Victims In Their Own WordsMark Madoff in suicide 2 years on from dad Bernard Madoff's arrest - mirror.co.uk: "The son of jailed financier Bernard Madoff was found dead yesterday - on the second anniversary of his father's arrest.
Mark Madoff, 46, was found hanging from a dog collar attached to a pipe in an apparent suicide at his New York apartment. His two-yearold son was sleeping nearby. Bernard Madoff, 72, was jailed for 150 years for swindling billions from investors in a fraudulent 'Ponzi scheme'.
Mark had also been under investigation even though he is said to have turned his father in. But he had yet to face criminal charges.
Last night close friends say he had been left 'unalterably bitter' by his father's crimes."

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WikiLeaks backlash: The first global cyber war has begun, claim hackers | Media | The Observer

WikiLeaks documents expose US foreign policy conspiracies. All cables with tags from 1 5000 [DOES NOT CONTAIN TEXT OF CABLES]WikiLeaks backlash: The first global cyber war has begun, claim hackers Media The Observer: "He is one of the newest recruits to Operation Payback. In a London bedroom, the 24-year-old computer hacker is preparing his weaponry for this week's battles in an evolving cyberwar. He is a self-styled defender of free speech, his weapon a laptop and his enemy the US corporations responsible for attacking the website WikiLeaks.
He had seen the flyers that began springing up on the web in mid-September. In chatrooms, on discussion boards and inboxes from Manchester to New York to Sydney the grinning face of a Guy Fawkes mask had appeared with a call to arms. Across the world a battalion of hackers was being summoned.
'Greetings, fellow anons,' it said beneath the headline Operation Payback. Alongside were a series of software programs dubbed 'our weapons of choice' and a stark message: people needed to show their 'hatred'."

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Police chief suspended over 'fraud' - mirror.co.uk

Police chief suspended over 'fraud' - mirror.co.uk: "senior police officer has been suspended after a fraud probe was launched.
Acting deputy chief constable Gordon Fraser, who joined Leicestershire Police in January, is being investigated over foreign property investment deals.
Two other officers are also being investigated."

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Among the pressures Mark Madoff faced was a strongly worded lawsuit by Irving Picard.

Almost a year after the multibiliion dollar fraud conducted by his father, Bernard Madoff, was revealed, both Mark and Andrew Madoff were sued by Mr. Picard, the trustee gathering assets for Bernard Madoff's victims. Also named were their uncle Peter and cousin Shana, who worked with them at the firm. Mr. Picard accused Mark Madoff in the October 2009 lawsuit of receiving at least $66.9 million improperly through the investment company.






"Mark Madoff lived a high-end lifestyle with homes in Manhattan, Nantucket, and Greenwich, Conn. Investment firm funds paid for all aspects of his lavish lifestyle from the purchases of his high-end homes to the mattress and box spring he slept on, the television he watched in his home gym, and the outdoor shower in his home," the lawsuit said.



According to Mr. Picard, Mark received "astronomical compensation"— $29.3 million from 2001 to 2008, including bonuses of $4.8 million in 2006 and more than $9 million in 2007.



He said Mark deposited a total of $745,482 into seven customer accounts he held and his family held, but redeemed $18.1 million.



"It was—or at the very least, should have been—obvious to Mark that the massive gains reflected in his customer account statements did not reflect actual securities transactions or market conditions," the suit said.



In one account, opened in 1998, no money was ever invested, but account records reflected shares of Dell that were purportedly purchased in early 1997, 18 months before it was opened, Mr. Picard alleged. In 1998, nearly $2 million was allegedly redeemed from the account.



Mr. Picard alleged that Andrew Madoff withdrew $17 million from his accounts over the years, also with an investment of less than $1 million. Mr. Picard described Bernard Madoff's firm as a "family piggy bank" that relatives used to support lavish spending habits.



A lawyer for the sons said they strongly disagreed with Mr. Picard's "baseless" complaint and were seeking to have it dismissed. At a hearing in October, their lawyer, Martin Flumenbaum, said the sons had been "incredibly victimized by their father's sociopathic fraud."



"The time has come for the sins of the father not to be visited on the children," he said.



Mark and Andrew Madoff agreed with Mr. Picard not to transfer or sell certain assets.








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Friday, 10 December 2010

Madoff trustee files lawsuits worth $20bn

BBC News - Madoff trustee files lawsuits worth $20bn: "trustee charged with recovering funds for the victims of Bernard Madoff's multi-billion dollar fraud scheme has filed lawsuits seeking nearly $20bn (£12.6bn) in damages.
Irving Picard has charged nearly 60 people, including a key shareholder in Austria's Medici Bank.
Mr Picard accused Sonja Kohn of 'masterminding an illegal scheme' to help Madoff defraud investors.
Earlier this week, Mr Picard sued HSBC bank for $9bn."

DISCLAIMER:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.
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BBC News - Madoff trustee files lawsuits worth $20bn

BBC News - Madoff trustee files lawsuits worth $20bn: "trustee charged with recovering funds for the victims of Bernard Madoff's multi-billion dollar fraud scheme has filed lawsuits seeking nearly $20bn (£12.6bn) in damages.
Irving Picard has charged nearly 60 people, including a key shareholder in Austria's Medici Bank.
Mr Picard accused Sonja Kohn of 'masterminding an illegal scheme' to help Madoff defraud investors.
Earlier this week, Mr Picard sued HSBC bank for $9bn."

DISCLAIMER:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.
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Sunday, 28 November 2010

Don Ching Trang Chu, the “expert-network” executive arrested this week

Don Ching Trang Chu, the “expert-network” executive arrested this week on insider-trading charges, had a roster of Asia-based employees of North American technology companies to feed information to clients, court documents show.
Insider Trading
Chu, who lives in the Somerset section of Franklin Township, worked for Primary Global Research of Mountain View, California. He offered to set up hedge-fund manager Richard Choo-Beng Lee with employees of Sierra Wireless, Broadcom and Atheros Communications when he planned to travel to Taiwan in 2009, U.S. prosecutors said in a criminal complaint filed this week in Manhattan. Lee, co-founder of Spherix Capital, was secretly cooperating with the government after being ensnared in the Galleon Group insider-trading probe.
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former secretary who funded a luxury lifestyle on the proceeds of a £12 million VAT fraud in areas including Walsall has been jailed for 10 years,

former secretary who funded a luxury lifestyle on the proceeds of a £12 million VAT fraud in areas including Walsall has been jailed for 10 years, according to Her Maisto 1:24 Al Ferrari Enzo: Assembly Line Model KitMajesty's Revenue & Customs (HMRC).

Jayne Mitchell, 40, bought Ferraris, luxury properties and went on lavish shopping sprees with the cash she made from the huge tax fraud involving the importation of vehicles from across Europe, HMRC said.

Mitchell, along with six others, imported more than 7,000 new vehicles which they sold on through a complex web of fake companies with a turnover of more than £80m in two years.

Revenue officials said the cars were imported VAT free, passed through a chain of fake companies, and eventually sold on to unsuspecting car supermarkets and dealerships across the UK. But many of the fake companies disappeared without paying the VAT due on the sales.

The companies were spread around England including some based in Selby, North Yorkshire; Pudsey, West Yorkshire; Walsall, West Midlands and in Northamptonshire.

Mitchell, who was originally from Selby, had a luxury home near the North Yorkshire town and another in Belgium, where she was arrested.

She once worked as a secretary and is a well-known pigeon fancier. Mitchell, of Wilsden Road, Allerton, Bradford, was found guilty on Friday at Bradford Crown Court of conspiracy to cheat the public revenue. She was jailed for 10 years by Judge Jonathan Durham Hall.
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Tuesday, 23 November 2010

Cobb lawyer gets prison for fraud  | ajc.com

Cobb lawyer gets prison for fraud  | ajc.com: Steven Zagoria, 59, was sentenced to one year and nine months in jail for bilking his law firm of $343,639 and using the money to pay his mortgage, credit card bills and child’s college tuition, the U.S. Attorney’s office said.
U.S. District Judge Marvin Shoob on Monday also ordered Zagoria to pay $318,000 in restitution as well as $4,000 in a special assessment.
Zagoria was found guilty of forging the signature of one of the law firm’s principals on checks that were actually for attorney’s fees – and then depositing that money into his own personal bank account, the U.S. Attorney’s office said.
Zagoria also gave some of the money to his wife so she could buy a second home, the U.S. Attorney’s office said.
“An attorney has an obligation to put his clients’ best interests before his own. Instead, this defendant betrayed this trust by stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from not only his clients but his partners,” U.S. Attorney Sally Quillian Yates said"
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Officers of prepaid funeral business charged with fraud - KansasCity.com

Officers of prepaid funeral business charged with fraud - KansasCity.com: "Officers at a prearranged funeral business defrauded customers, funeral homes and states out of as much as $600 million, according to a 50-count federal indictment announced Monday.
The U.S. attorney’s office in St. Louis announced indictment on fraud, money laundering, conspiracy and other charges against Randall Sutton, 65; Sharon Nekol Province, 66; Doug Cassity, 64; his son Brent Douglas Cassity, 43; Howard Wittner, 73; and David Wulf, 58.
All six defendants are from St. Louis County, and all were controlling officers for National Prearranged Services Inc., based in Clayton.
Brent Cassity is listed in the Missouri secretary of state’s office as the owner of Mount Washington Forever Funeral Home in Independence, which closed in July."
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Ralph Esmerian, Jeweler, Is Charged With Fraud - NYTimes.com

Ralph Esmerian, Jeweler, Is Charged With Fraud - NYTimes.com: "Duchess of Newcastle diamond brooch, circa 1887. A gilded album commissioned by Marie Antoinette in 1781. A carved ivory, enamel and jeweled case made at the request of Czar Nicholas II in 1893.
The Endymion butterfly brooch, worth about $2.4 million, figures in the case. Taken together, these intricate pieces and sparkling objects are valued at about $3 million. But they make up only a fraction of the jewelry and other collectibles that federal prosecutors say were at the center of an equally intricate series of frauds orchestrated by Ralph O. Esmerian, the former owner of the jewelry company Fred Leighton, who has draped his glittering treasures around the necks and wrists of celebrities in what some have called a red-carpet marketing campaign.
Agents from the United States Postal Inspection Service arrested Mr. Esmerian, 70, a former board president of the Museum of American Folk Art and one of its biggest patrons, on Monday morning. He was charged with bankruptcy fraud and wire fraud and concealing assets, and he appeared later in the day before a federal magistrate in United States District Court in Manhattan."
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Wednesday, 17 November 2010

He's known as the "Merchant of Death" and the "Lord of War,"

-- an alleged international arms dealer straight out of a cloak-and-dagger spy novel who eluded authorities for years and inspired Hollywood villains.
But in reality, according to those who have seen or met Viktor Bout, he is a somber man, sometimes nattily dressed, a wheeler-dealer who has insisted he is innocent of the allegations leveled against him.
Bout, a Russian citizen and former military officer, speaks six languages "and I could see him bargaining in all six at the same time," wrote CNN's Jill Dougherty in 2008, recalling her meeting with Bout in 2002 in Moscow, Russia.
Bout arrived in New York late Tuesday after being extradited from Thailand. He faces charges in the United States of conspiring to kill U.S. nationals, conspiring to kill U.S. officers or employees, conspiring to acquire and use an anti-aircraft missile and conspiring to provide material support or resources to a designated foreign terrorist organization. American law enforcement officers have spent years pursuing him, and the extradition process from Thailand was an arduous one for them.
Before his 2008 arrest, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents led a sting operation by posing as members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), officials said.
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Monday, 15 November 2010

British woman killed in carjacking on honeymoon - Scotsman.com News

British woman killed in carjacking on honeymoon - Scotsman.com News: "YOUNG woman has been killed in a carjacking while she and her British husband were honeymooning in South Africa.
The horrific attack happened after the newlyweds were being taken back to their hotel in Cape Town and asked to drive through a township because they 'wanted to feel the vibe'.

As they were driving through the area, masked gunmen forced the driver
and her husband from the car before driving off with the 28-year-old woman.

The body of the woman, believed to be Indian, was discovered just 15 miles from where the attack took place on Saturday night. Police said she suffered a 'violent death'. Her husband, who is 31, was unhurt, and is being comforted by relatives who live in South Africa."
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Monday, 8 November 2010

Hell's Angels lose bid to quash convictions - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Hell's Angels lose bid to quash convictions - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation): "Two Hell's Angels members have lost their appeal against aggravated assault convictions they received for a brawl at the Darwin Airport Hotel.
Nicholas Frank Cassidy and James Parnwell Knight were convicted and sentenced to more than two years' jail for the brawl in December 2007.
The men appealed against their convictions and the length of their sentences.
But the Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed all grounds of the appeal, and upheld both men's sentences, angering Cassidy's brother Ray Padden.
'We'll be fighting the decision,' he said outside court.
'It's not fair. We'll be putting it to the public as well, so everyone will know what's going on.'
Knight has been released on parole and Cassidy is still serving time in jail.
Cassidy became a full member of the Hell's Angels after the assault, but argued that it would not affect his prospects for rehabilitation."
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Accused drug kingpin will go to Venezuela: Chavez | Top News | Reuters

Accused drug kingpin will go to Venezuela: Chavez | Top News | Reuters: "Colombia will extradite a businessman accused of being a major drug kingpin back to his native Venezuela to face justice, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said on Sunday on Cuban television.Chavez said Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos promised in a recent meeting that Walid Makled, known as 'The Turk,' would go to Venezuela, not the United States, where he is also wanted.
Chavez fears that the United States, with whom he has frosty political relations, would use Makled to try to discredit him.
Makled was captured in August in Colombia in a joint operation with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, and the head of Colombian police said at the time he would be extradited to the United States.
He is accused of shipping tons of cocaine each month to the United States and Europe, in an alliance with Colombian leftist rebels."
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Andy Carroll set to face police quiz over 'drugs orgy' - mirror.co.uk

Andy Carroll set to face police quiz over 'drugs orgy' - mirror.co.uk: "Newcastle bad boy Andy Carroll celebrates his winning goal at Arsenal yesterday - as police get set to quiz him over an alleged drug-fuelled orgy.
The striker, 21, managed to put aside his latest scandal to become the hero of the 1-0 victory.
But police said they were taking 'very seriously' reports of his 14-hour booze bender when a substance which appears to be cocaine was taken at club captain Kevin Nolan's mansion. There is no evidence the two Premier League stars snorted the white powder at the house.
Carroll apparently yelled 'Ride me! Ride me!' as he romped with two young women, one in a cat suit, in a bedroom. It is understood Nolan was not involved with any of the girls."
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Thursday, 21 October 2010

Ex-Deutsche Bank, AIG Executive Charged With Fraud - WSJ.com

Ex-Deutsche Bank, AIG Executive Charged With Fraud - WSJ.com: "former Deutsche Bank AG and American International Group Inc. executive has been charged with diverting company money to her husband's marketing firms, in part to cover expenses for their upstate New York horse farm.
Heidi Walker allegedly caused false invoices to be filed with Deutsche Bank's asset management unit, and later AIG's Global Investment Group, on behalf of companies owned by her husband,"
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Hedge Fund Hit With Side-Pocket Fraud Charges | FINalternatives

Hedge Fund Hit With Side-Pocket Fraud Charges | FINalternatives: "pair of hedge fund managers have been accused of using a side-pocket to conceal losses and overcharge investors.
The Securities and Exchange Commission said that PEF Advisors, run by Paul Mannion and Andrew Reckles, overvalued the hedge fund's investment in World Health Alternatives by more than a factor of 10. The Atlanta firm's Palisade Master Fund had about 20% of client assets invested in the company five years ago, when WHA announced that it was under investigation for accounting fraud.
PEF moved the WHA investment into a side-pocket as the stock's value plummeted by more than 90%. But according to the SEC, PEF continued to value the stake at $4.12 million, when it was worth $362,000, 'at most.'"
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Thursday, 7 October 2010

gang known as the Harlem Boys has terrorized the Bartram Village housing development

gang known as the Harlem Boys has terrorized the Bartram Village housing development, federal authorities said, selling drugs and enforcing their rule with carjackings, shootings, and robberies.
One of their members was known by the fearsome nickname "Murder," and another recently gained citywide notoriety when he escaped from police by leaping from a van taking him to jail.

The gang members marked their territory with graffiti and their skin with tattoos, and prosecutors said they visited violence on anyone who strayed too close - rival dealers and innocent victims alike.

Since 2001, the Harlem Boys sold $3.5 million worth of crack cocaine and distributed a smorgasbord of other drugs, including prescription narcotics, prosecutors said.

At least six gang members were residents of Bartram Village, a Philadelphia Housing Authority property in Southwest Philadelphia.

Prosecutors said the gang controlled an area near the 5400 block of Harley Terrace and 2700 block of 54th Street, which the gang referred to as Harlem.

The gang used at least two apartments there for storing and cooking crack cocaine, according to a federal indictment unsealed Wednesday.

The 73-count indictment named 17 defendants, 10 of whom were arrested Wednesday in a joint operation between the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives and the Philadelphia police.



Read more: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/local/20101007_Drug_raid_in_S_W__Philly_housing_complex_targets_Harlem_Boys_gang.html#ixzz11iIUg2on
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Friday, 1 October 2010

Judge: Conrad Black's crimes 'old-fashioned fraud' :: CHICAGO SUN-TIMES :: Business

Judge: Conrad Black's crimes 'old-fashioned fraud' :: CHICAGO SUN-TIMES :: Business: "Attorneys for media mogul Conrad Black argued to an appeals court panel Wednesday that the conviction of the onetime newspaper baron should be overturned, given a Supreme Court ruling earlier this year.
However, an attorney for Black bristled under questioning by Appellate Judge Richard A. Posner, who at one point called one of Black’s crimes “old-fashioned fraud.”

“You get $600,000 without an agreement . . . that’s old-fashioned fraud,” Posner said.
Black was convicted in 2007 of stealing millions of dollars from publisher Hollinger International, the former owner of the Chicago Sun-Times. He was convicted of attempting to disguise some of the money as “non-compete” payments. Black was also convicted of obstruction of justice for carting documents out of an office — some of which were sought by the Securities and Exchange Commission, prosecutors said."
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Saturday, 18 September 2010

Real IRA Threatens British Banking Industry - Infoshop News

Real IRA Threatens British Banking Industry - Infoshop News: "guerrilla group, the Real IRA (RIRA) has threatened to attack the British banking inustry. The question is can they actually do it. Some say the group is little more than a rag tag operation of Northern Irish dissidents. Others give it more credence than that.
The group has set off bombs in London before including attacks at MI5 headquarters, and the BBC.
The Real IRA (RIRA), also known as Ɠglaigh na hƉireann, is a socialist republican guerrilla group that was formed by hardliners who broke out of the provisional IRA when it was clear that the provisionals would go along with the good Friday agreement and subsequently call a ceasefire with the northern Ireland Unionists. The group believes 'that Ireland should be ruled by the Irish and that the only way to acheive that end is through armed struggle."
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Thursday, 24 June 2010

Prison for £9.5million drug smuggling gang (From Brentwood Weekly News)

Prison for £9.5million drug smuggling gang (From Brentwood Weekly News): "GANG has been jailed for smuggling £9.5million worth of cannabis into the country.
A dozen men were jailed for a total of 64 years and eight months for a conspiracy to import two huge shipments of the drug, hidden in boxes of cucumbers in the back of lorries from Spain.
They were all arrested during an undercover operation by the Serious and Organised Crime Agency last summer.
The first wave of arrests were made as they attempted to process nearly two tonnes of cannabis, with a street value of £4.5milion, at the Convoys Commercials industrial yard, in Baker Street, Orsett, on June 27 last year.
Then, just a fortnight later on July 12, undercover officers watched other members of the gang unload another two tonnes, worth an estimated £5million, from a lorry in Hounslow, West London.
Judge Alan Saggerson, sitting at Basildon Crown Court, said it had been a “sophisticated operation” which would have netted “significant financial rewards”."
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Witness loses his protection - Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca

Witness loses his protection - Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca: "career criminal who helped put a Halifax Hells Angel and three other men away for a Dartmouth murder says he has been pulled from Canada’s witness protection program.
'As of last Friday, they’ve officially given me the boot,' Paul Joseph Derry said in a telephone interview.
'Happy to see me gone, I’m sure.'
On May 28, Assistant Commissioner Stephen White wrote that 'all protection provided to you pursuant to the protection agreements . . . between you and the RCMP and pursuant to the Witness Protection Program Act is hereby terminated effective immediately.'
Derry, who now goes by another name, had been fighting to stay in witness protection since October, when RCMP first sent him a letter saying it was going to end its contract.
News outlets reported at the time that Derry had 13 alleged breaches to the terms of his witness protection agreement. The Chronicle Herald hasn’t seen the list of breaches, but Derry said those incidents included interviews with reporters and radio shows, especially following a book he published in April 2009 about the killing — Treacherous: How the RCMP Allowed a Hells Angel to Kill."
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NJ.com : Teens shot in front of Carteret home were Crips gang members, officials say

NJ.com : Teens shot in front of Carteret home were Crips gang members, officials say: "Isilma Samuel knew her son was involved with the wrong people, so she moved from Orange to Carteret, two counties away, believing her children would be safer.
Her efforts weren’t enough. Late Tuesday night, Devon Mbachu, 19, was shot and killed, and another teenager was wounded, in front of the Lowell Street home in Carteret where Samuel lived with her two sons.
Police told the mother that her son had again become involved with the wrong people.
'I warned him not to hang out, not to draw attention to himself,' Samuel said of her son, who was to graduate from Carteret High School today."
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Thursday, 22 April 2010

Air Marshal Accused of Rape at Gunpoint - CBS News Investigates - CBS News

Air Marshal Accused of Rape at Gunpoint - CBS News Investigates - CBS News: "woman claims a federal air marshal forced himself on her after he stood naked with his government ID badge around his neck holding a gun.
A U.S. federal air marshal was arrested Saturday, accused of raping a woman at gunpoint inside a Seattle hotel room while on a layover for his job."
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Wednesday, 21 April 2010

former CEO of Homestore.com has been sentenced to four-and-a-half years in federal prison for artificially inflating the company's ad revenue.

The former CEO of Homestore.com has been sentenced to four-and-a-half years in federal prison for artificially inflating the company's ad revenue.
Prosecutors say 46-year-old Stuart Wolff was sentenced Monday in Los Angeles and ordered to begin serving his time in June.
Judge Gary A. Feess says the scheme was a "calculated deception of the public."
Wolff pleaded guilty in January to conspiracy to commit securities fraud through "round-trip" transactions in 2001.
Homestore paid vendors for products and services that the company didn't need or use. Those vendors then returned the money to the company, which listed the funds as $60 million in phony advertising revenue.
When the scheme was revealed, the company's stock plummeted and at least 1,000 jobs were cut.
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promotion for the new Splinter Cell game in Auckland New Zealand ends with police nearly shooting a man.

Someone, somewhere is getting fired right now. In a promotion for the newly released game, Splinter Cell: Convictions, a marketing company in New Zealand thought that it might be fun to send an actor down to the busy Viaduct Basin section of Auckland and engage with shop goers and bar patrons. With an imitation gun. Police were not amused.The NZ Herald is reporting that a man with a bandaged hand and carrying a plastic gun (the gun and bandaged hand are visually distinctive marks of the game’s title character Sam Fisher) was seen wandering by a pub, when the actor pointed a gun at several people. Hilarity ensued.Terrified screams filled the street, as people began to scramble for cover, diving behind tables and running in every direction. Police quickly responded, fully prepared for a shootout. Luckily for the Sam Fisher wanna-be, the New Zealand police have never been to LA, so a brief conversation turned the possibly tragic shootout into an incredibly stupid incident.
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Monday, 19 April 2010

Daily Herald | Arlington Hts. police working to ID body parts found Saturday

Daily Herald | Arlington Hts. police working to ID body parts found Saturday: "Arlington Heights police are investigating the discovery of a partial human corpse found in an alleyway behind 21 N. Dryden at the Marketview Apartments in Arlington Heights."
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Friday, 12 February 2010

Alberto Hurtado Osorio, 60, was behind bars in Colombia last night

Alberto Hurtado Osorio, 60, was behind bars in Colombia last night. His arrest came two years after the Australian Federal Police and counterparts in South America and Latin America launched a sting to smash his cartel, which is suspected of smuggling drugs across the world through the post.Osorio, who served two years in Sydney on drug charges in the early 1990s, had been on the AFP's secret "top 10" target list for years.But the Colombian, a senior member of a well-known Bogata-based cartel, had eluded police by constantly moving throughout the South American country and keeping the operation at arm's length.It is alleged the drug cartel was smuggling cocaine to contacts in Australia in comparatively small amounts -- about 300g -- via air mail, certified mail and private parcel companies.Police have no idea how much cocaine the cartel had managed to smuggle into Australia. It was sent from Peru and Argentina in a bid to disguise its Colombian origins.Police began to close in on Osorio late last year after the AFP intercepted three consignments of 300g of cocaine in Sydney. At the same time, Peruvian authorities seized two consignments bound for Australia.
The gang is also suspected of smuggling drugs into other major Western markets worldwide.Peruvian police arrested two men at the same time Osorio was picked up. All three have been charged with trafficking and will face trial in their respective countries.
The investigation into the cartel's Australian connections is continuing.
AFP investigators said yesterday drug-smugglers had returned to using the post after the post-September 11, 2001, security crackdown on ports and airports made it increasingly difficult to smuggler large amounts of drugs.AFP national manager for serious and organised crime Kevin Zuccato said Osorio's arrest was a significant development in Australia's fight against drugs."This guy has been on our radar since 1992," Mr Zuccato said. "Increasingly, smugglers are sending comparatively smaller amounts of drugs through the post and with `swallowers' on planes."It is difficult to know how much drugs this gang got in to Australia. It is not about the quantity of the drugs seized but the quality of the crook we arrest and stop from bringing drugs into this country. He was a very senior member of a significant drug syndicate in Colombia, with suspected links to other syndicates."
Police arrested 25 people in Australia this week for allegedly mailing drugs around the country hidden in different items, including a teddy bear.The AFP said it had seized 145 parcels and 73kg of drugs.The teddy bear was used to hide a new drug called "miaow", which has been likened to ecstasy.
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Scott William Schneider, 30, was sentenced Thursday after pleading guilty to driving while impaired and possession of a prohibited firearm.

Scott William Schneider, 30, was sentenced Thursday after pleading guilty to driving while impaired and possession of a prohibited firearm.He was handed a two-year and nine-month sentence, a 10-year firearm ban and a two-year driving ban.
Schneider was carrying a loaded handgun when he was arrested early Christmas Day after a hit-and-run in the 800-block Parker Street in White Rock.His passenger, a 27-year-old White Rock man, is scheduled to appear in Feb. 18 in Surrey Provincial Court, where he will face charges of uttering threats and failing to remain at the scene of an accident.In 2008, Schneider was acquitted, alongside White Rock Angel Villy Roy Lynnerrup and chapter president Douglas Falconer Riddoch, for assault charges stemming from a home invasion and assault in 2007.
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Bomb blast killed two men in Adelaide.

The man, of suburban Munno Para West, has not been charged in relation to the fatal explosion that claimed the lives of a Hells Angels bikie gang associate and a convicted drug dealer.The pair died when a homemade bomb went off in a car at suburban Enfield before dawn.Police believe the bomb was triggered by accident and a rival gang member was the intended target.The man charged was detained after police went to the home of one of the dead men and found a second bomb.He was also charged with drug and firearms offences and was remanded in custody to appear again in the Elizabeth Magistrates Court in March.
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Joseph Ferraiolo was targeted.

"To me it seems like there was some inside or some targeting here because we never ever had problems here," says Steve Frydman who has owned a real estate business on the second floor of this building for 20 years.
In that time he says he's never experienced the violence police say took place right below his office, "the space that they rented here was always quiet and discrete I never saw any unusual amount of people at once that would come here."
Things changed Tuesday just after 8pm. Hamden Police were called to a Touch of Color tattoo parlor where they found 64-year-old Ferraiolo shot to death.
There were signs of a struggle inside the shop but few clues pointed to the shooter. Now investigators are looking at all leads, including Ferraiolo’s possible affiliation to motorcycle gangs.
"Summer time they have a lot of bike guys coming over there," Jimmy Patel owns a package store close to Touch of Color, he remembers seeing the bikes parked outside.
But Kaleb Edgar, a tattoo artist at the parlor tells NBC Connecticut News that nothing illegal happened in the shop.
Bob Piccirillo, the owner of Hamden Barber Shop, also calls the connection police are trying to make between Ferraiolo and a gang a stretch, "have I seen bikes? I’ve seen some but it’s not like they all congregate. Like I said, I’ve seen a couple of them but that is kind of surprising to me."
Edgar says Ferraiolo is survived by four adult children. Anyone with information on the shooting is asked to call the Hamden Police Department.
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“RIP King Of The Hill.”



Another said: “True Bad Man. RIP bro. Never forgotten.”
And another said: “Words cannot explain how we all feel as you were a true friend to us all and you did many good things for us all and helped us out in ways others would not.
“You were at the top but still had time for us at the bottom. Just to know you and call you a friend was an honour. The respect you had for others around will be very missed. We all turned to you in our times of need. And now we all seem so lost now you have gone.”‘King of the Hill’ who was found shot dead in the Cheshire mansion of a controversial businessman Arran Coghlan.

Stephen ‘Aki’ Akinyemi, 44, was said to be a prominent member of the notorious Cheetham Hill gang, which is believed to be behind major crime and the supply of drugs in Manchester.He was known for enjoying champagne and cruising Manchester’s clubland in his silver Porsche, with the private registration AKI.He had a string of previous convictions and most recently had been jailed for 13 months in 2006 for violent disorder.At the time of his death, he was on bail for allegedly attacking someone with a baseball bat outside the Lounge 31 nightclub in the city centre in November.He was found with serious stab injuries at Mr Coghlan’s Alderley Edge home on Tuesday afternoon. He was wearing a stab vest.But a post-mortem examination revealed he had died of a gunshot wound, not knife injuries.Mr Coghlan was also discovered with stab injuries at the scene and he was taken to hospital under police guard. He was later discharged although he remains in police custody after being arrested on suspicion of murder.Last night a tribute page to Mr Akinyemi on social networking website Facebook, titled ‘RIP AKI’, had more than 600 members.
Another said: “True Bad Man. RIP bro. Never forgotten.”
And another said: “Words cannot explain how we all feel as you were a true friend to us all and you did many good things for us all and helped us out in ways others would not.“You were at the top but still had time for us at the bottom. Just to know you and call you a friend was an honour. The respect you had for others around will be very missed. We all turned to you in our times of need. And now we all seem so lost now you have gone.”Mr Coghlan was cleared in 1996 of murdering Stockport ‘Mr Big’ Chris Little, who was shot dead at the wheel of his Mercedes.In 2003, Mr Coghlan stood trial for the murder of drug dealer David Barnshaw, who was kidnapped and forced to drink petrol before being burned alive in the back of a car in Stockport in 2001.But the case collapsed when it was revealed police had failed to pass on important information about another possible suspect.
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Thursday, 11 February 2010

Chris Little was known to police in Stockport as an empire-builder


Chris Little was a product of Greater Manchester, a city now coping with some of the most viciously criminal neighbourhoods in urban Europe. As a local villain, he was known to police in Stockport as an empire-builder rather than 'self-employed builder' as he had lately styled himself. In reality, he was a feared racketeer. One man who betrayed him was bundled into a small dark room with only the Rottweiler for company.
Little's gangs of doormen provided 'security' at nightclubs in Stockport. One club run by rivals was targeted in a gun attack recently.Earlier this year, Little recruited young men to launch a spate of arson attacks in Stockport in which schools, shops and vehicles were damaged by firebombs. No one was hurt, but about pounds 1m worth of damage was done.Although the police suspected Little of organising the attacks (thought to have been carried out as a show of strength), he was never charged.Lately, Little had tried to expand his empire into the Stretford area, stepping on the toes of drug barons there.He owned a nice house in a good area of Stockport, but probably his greatest pride and joy was the Merc - a black 500 SLE. With the Rottweiler, nobody would surprise him; with the car, nobody would catch him. It turned out to be a fatal double delusion.As he stopped at traffic lights in Stockport Road, Marple, on Friday night, a white Ford Granada travelling in the same direction pulled up alongside. The shots came from its open window.Under the dying man's foot, the automatic Merc sped off, colliding with two vehicles and injuring four people.At the dead man's home yesterday, the Rottweiler could be heard barking.
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Arran Coghlan, 39,guarded by armed police in hospital while being treated for knife wounds.

Arran Coghlan, 39,guarded by armed police in hospital while being treated for knife wounds.His business associate Stephen ‘Aki’ Akinyemi, 36, was found stabbed to death in his bathroom following an alleged row.Yesterday, officers were searching Coghlan's £2million converted chapel in Alderley Edge, Cheshire – known as ‘Millionaires’ Row’ where Premiership footballers rub shoulders with soap stars.
Members of his family have been taken into protective custody.Police said yesterday: ‘A 39-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder and is receiving hospital treatment.’Akinyemi, from Cheetham Hill, Manchester, suffered fatal knife wounds despite wearing a stab proof vest.Coghlan, dialled 999 as Akinyemi lay dying, suffered serious knife injuries to his upper body.The call, made at 2pm on Tuesday, occurred after father of one Coghlan - who survived an attempt on his life in a bar on New Years Day 2009 - was suspected by police of building a multi-million pound crime empire.In 1996 he was acquitted of the gangland murder of drug baron Chris Little dubbed the Devil Dog Mobster because he set rottweilers on rivals.
Little, 32, was shot dead at the wheel of his Mercedes.Coghland was cleared .In 2002 Coghlan stood trial accused of murder again after claims he kidnapped and burnt to death petty drug dealer David Barnshaw, 32, in the boot of a car in September 1999.
Jurors were told that Coghlan – who has a bed shaped like a pirate ship – had ‘built an empire through ruthless violence, demanding respect and loyalty from all those who worked for him.’ The case against him and others collapsed when it was revealed police had failed to pass on important information about another possible suspect.
Coghlan, nicknamed ‘Az’ on the registration plate of his Bentley Turbo, has always denied any involvement in wrongdoing and claimed detectives were involved in a ‘campaign to get him at all costs’.
He is now suing the Greater Manchester force after it emerged a disgraced senior detective had withheld vital evidence from a file which linked the second of the murders to another suspect.
Despite his alleged underhand connections, many neighbours thought he was an accountant. Residents of Alderley Edge include Manchester City star Carlos Tevez, cricketer Freddie Flintoff and Coronation Street actress Samia Ghadie.
On New Year’s Day 2009, Coghlan was stabbed in the head face and back as he partied with friends at Cobdens bar in his native Stockport, Greater Manchester.
The knifeman was never traced but police suspect the attack was linked to mobsters from the Cheetham Hill gang.
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Thursday, 4 February 2010

notorious crime boss Manny Buttar arrests include 12 gang associates of Buttar's

notorious crime boss Manny Buttar arrests include 12 gang associates of Buttar's, as well as a woman who allegedly hired one of gangsters to kill her ex-husband and was charged last fall.Buttar, 35, is a former associate of the late Bindy Johal, who once bragged in a drunken rant to a stranger that he killed Johal, though he has never been charged in the case.Desmarais said the Buttar gang is led 'by men who have a socio-pathic disregard for morals, right and wrong, and common decency."
He singled out Buttar and his right-hand man Bobby Gill as "reputedly two of Vancouver's most notorious gangsters.""They are willing to commit any crime, resort to mindless violence and impose any toll on their victims as long as it makes them money," he said Wednesday.Buttar is charged with obstruction of justice and conspiracy to obstruct justice. Gill faces the same two charges plus assault, extortion, conspiracy to extort and five other counts.Desmarais stood in front of a table with 14 guns seized during the investigation, called Project Torrent, including a handgun with silencer, as well as body armour and a jacket with Integrated Gang Task Force printed on it.He said the crudely put together jacket was particularly disturbing to investigators."Our theory is that the targets that we were investigating at that particular moment were utilizing that material to portray themselves as police officers," he said.Demarais said Buttar and Gill are the leaders of the gang that has six or seven core members and many more associates that have been sub-contracted for specific crimes.One of those charged, Brandon Monette, is facing a new count of conspiracy to commit murder. The other charges range from driving offences and breaches of probation to firearms offences, extortions and assaults.Another gang leader who was not charged Wednesday is Tejinder Singh Malli, who was one of the founders of the Red Scorpions a decade ago.None of the charges include trafficking, though Desmarais said the group is involved in the drug trade as well as other criminal enterprises.
"They will commit any crime that will make a buck. It could be drug-trafficking, but in this case you see multiple extortions. You see murder for hire. You see a plethora of criminal code offences," he said.
The extortion allegations involve doing debt collections for customers, using threats, violence and intimidation, Desmarais said."We have concentrated on the crimes that hurt real people," he said, adding that it was hard to get victims to cooperate."They have raised [extortion] almost to an art form. And virtually every victim we came in contact with...was scared stiff of these people. That represents a significant challenge."Also charged Wednesday were: Amandeep Manj, who is facing seven firearms charges and two assault counts, Bimal Datt Sharma, who is charged with uttering death threats to police officers, Richard Thomas, Matthew Arsenault, Bikramjit Biky Khakh, Christopher Barr and Anthony Christensen, all facing firearms counts, as well as Jasdeep Dhaliwal, Jordan Doiron and David Laidlaw who are all charged with extortion.
Laidlaw and Doiron were also charged last fall, along with Liza Belcourt, with plotting to kill her former spouse.Desmarais said about 100 more charges are coming as part of Project Torrent, which began last April as an earlier investigation called Project Rebellion was winding down."I would say right now the gang is effectively disabled and I would say in March, April, they will effectively cease to exist," he said.
Rebellion focused on a south slope Vancouver gang dubbed the Sanghera Family, which police said was effectively dismantled by arrests of most of its member.
Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson called the arrests "a very significant advance in this fight against the gangs .""Rather than waiting for these crimes to be committed, the VPD now targets the most violent criminals pro-actively hitting them with as many charges as they can," he said.He said the arrests were not timed to clean up the streets for the Olympics.
"The timing is fortuitous really given that the world is at our doorstep," Robertson said."But this work has been going on for years now."
Supt. Dan Malo, who heads the Gang Task Force, praised the efforts of the VPD for making so many arrests. The GTF, part of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, assisted in Torrent in a supporting role."Over the past several months, together and united in dealing with issues of gang crime, we have announced over 50 significant arrests," Malo said. "The result is a lowering in gang conflict and, therefore, safer communities. Our work isn't done."
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notorious crime boss Manny Buttar arrests include 12 gang associates of Buttar's

notorious crime boss Manny Buttar arrests include 12 gang associates of Buttar's, as well as a woman who allegedly hired one of gangsters to kill her ex-husband and was charged last fall.Buttar, 35, is a former associate of the late Bindy Johal, who once bragged in a drunken rant to a stranger that he killed Johal, though he has never been charged in the case.Desmarais said the Buttar gang is led 'by men who have a socio-pathic disregard for morals, right and wrong, and common decency."
He singled out Buttar and his right-hand man Bobby Gill as "reputedly two of Vancouver's most notorious gangsters.""They are willing to commit any crime, resort to mindless violence and impose any toll on their victims as long as it makes them money," he said Wednesday.Buttar is charged with obstruction of justice and conspiracy to obstruct justice. Gill faces the same two charges plus assault, extortion, conspiracy to extort and five other counts.Desmarais stood in front of a table with 14 guns seized during the investigation, called Project Torrent, including a handgun with silencer, as well as body armour and a jacket with Integrated Gang Task Force printed on it.He said the crudely put together jacket was particularly disturbing to investigators."Our theory is that the targets that we were investigating at that particular moment were utilizing that material to portray themselves as police officers," he said.Demarais said Buttar and Gill are the leaders of the gang that has six or seven core members and many more associates that have been sub-contracted for specific crimes.One of those charged, Brandon Monette, is facing a new count of conspiracy to commit murder. The other charges range from driving offences and breaches of probation to firearms offences, extortions and assaults.Another gang leader who was not charged Wednesday is Tejinder Singh Malli, who was one of the founders of the Red Scorpions a decade ago.None of the charges include trafficking, though Desmarais said the group is involved in the drug trade as well as other criminal enterprises.
"They will commit any crime that will make a buck. It could be drug-trafficking, but in this case you see multiple extortions. You see murder for hire. You see a plethora of criminal code offences," he said.
The extortion allegations involve doing debt collections for customers, using threats, violence and intimidation, Desmarais said."We have concentrated on the crimes that hurt real people," he said, adding that it was hard to get victims to cooperate."They have raised [extortion] almost to an art form. And virtually every victim we came in contact with...was scared stiff of these people. That represents a significant challenge."Also charged Wednesday were: Amandeep Manj, who is facing seven firearms charges and two assault counts, Bimal Datt Sharma, who is charged with uttering death threats to police officers, Richard Thomas, Matthew Arsenault, Bikramjit Biky Khakh, Christopher Barr and Anthony Christensen, all facing firearms counts, as well as Jasdeep Dhaliwal, Jordan Doiron and David Laidlaw who are all charged with extortion.
Laidlaw and Doiron were also charged last fall, along with Liza Belcourt, with plotting to kill her former spouse.Desmarais said about 100 more charges are coming as part of Project Torrent, which began last April as an earlier investigation called Project Rebellion was winding down."I would say right now the gang is effectively disabled and I would say in March, April, they will effectively cease to exist," he said.
Rebellion focused on a south slope Vancouver gang dubbed the Sanghera Family, which police said was effectively dismantled by arrests of most of its member.
Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson called the arrests "a very significant advance in this fight against the gangs .""Rather than waiting for these crimes to be committed, the VPD now targets the most violent criminals pro-actively hitting them with as many charges as they can," he said.He said the arrests were not timed to clean up the streets for the Olympics.
"The timing is fortuitous really given that the world is at our doorstep," Robertson said."But this work has been going on for years now."
Supt. Dan Malo, who heads the Gang Task Force, praised the efforts of the VPD for making so many arrests. The GTF, part of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, assisted in Torrent in a supporting role."Over the past several months, together and united in dealing with issues of gang crime, we have announced over 50 significant arrests," Malo said. "The result is a lowering in gang conflict and, therefore, safer communities. Our work isn't done."
Read more »

Colin Gunn, who is serving a 35-year sentence in a maximum-security prison. used Facebook to intimidate people on the outside


Colin Gunn, who is serving a 35-year sentence in a maximum-security prison.

Gunn, who is behind bars for ordering the execution of a couple of grandparents, used Facebook to intimidate people on the outside and to communicate with some of his partners in crime over the last two months. Here's a peek at what one of "Britain's most dangerous gangsters" was posting: "It's good to have an outlet to let you know how I am, some of you will be in for a good slagging, some have let me down badly, and will be named and shamed, f****** rats." Gunn's account was deactivated around the end of January, leaving his 500-odd friends to come up with more creative ways to communicate with their boss. (The ol' contraband hidden inside a loaf of bread has always been a favorite of ours.)

The Times speculates that prison authorities were afraid of violating Gunn's human rights by denying him access to Facebook; but we're not buying it, seeing as social networking sites are supposed to be banned in British prisons. More likely, they were afraid of Gunn "violating" them with a shank. [From: Times Online, via: Huffington Post]
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Wednesday, 3 February 2010

Danielle Bardsley, 30, wept as she was imprisoned after ignoring a court order


Danielle Bardsley, 30, wept as she was imprisoned after ignoring a court order demanding she pay back some of the money stolen by her boyfriend Peter Anderson.
Last year the M.E.N. revealed how Bardsley, of Barrow Street, Salford, enjoyed a footballer's ‘WAG’ lifestyle thanks to Anderson’s life of crime.
A court ruled she had benefited to the tune of £112,000 but a VW Golf car and a few pounds in a bank account were the only assets of hers police could find.
She was handed a suspended prison sentence and given four months to hand over £5,036 of ‘realisable assets’, mainly the VW Golf.In December, she flouted her suspended prison sentence by failing to keep appointments with her probation worker as required.But judge Anthony Gee gave her another chance after hearing she had become ‘depressed’ because her boyfriend was locked away.She was allowed to walk free although she was handed a curfew to prevent her partying over the Christmas period.But she still couldn’t stay out of trouble.Bardsley was arrested on Monday after snubbing six police letters and a court summons.Yesterday Bardsley sobbed as magistrates in Bolton invoked the jail term handed down last year in the event she failed to pay up.The court heard she had paid £2,000 on November 27 after selling the Golf but she later ignored two letters and a court summons about the outstanding amount.
She claimed she had again been ‘depressed’ and that the value of the Golf had been slashed due to damage.Giving her 72 days behind bars, chairman of the bench Dr Derek Tate told her: “We believe there’s no evidence that you have made a concerted effort to discharge this order.”He added there was ‘no merit’ in her bid to adjourn the hearing to, as her solicitor Vic Wozny said, ‘beg or borrow’ the money from her family.Bardsley’s boyfriend Anderson was jailed for six years in 2006 for a terrifying armed bank raid in Preston.At the previous hearing, a court was told how she had enjoyed a luxury lifestyle while claiming benefits.She wore Prada designer clothes and jewellery, went to a private gym and lived behind wrought iron gates in a comfortable semi-detached house equipped with the latest mod cons, including a Bang & Olufsen flat-screen TV.Bardsley boasted a permanent tan thanks to holidays in Mexico, Florida and Tenerife and had access to a fleet of cars including a Porsche Cayenne, Range Rover Sport and Audi A4.Despite all that, for nearly 10 years the mum-of-two claimed she was unemployed and sponged £30,000 from the state in income support as a ‘single mother’.
She also claimed free school meals for her two children.She admitted money laundering but escaped jail at the first hearing because of concerns over the care of the two children she has with Anderson.
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Tuesday, 2 February 2010

Stephen Marshall, 38, admitted having butchered the bodies of four other men while working as a doorman for a London nightclub

Stephen Marshall, 38, also admitted having butchered the bodies of four other men while working as a doorman for a London nightclub run by gangsters in the 1990s. Police will reopen a number of cold cases involving missing people and body parts found in the past 15 years.Described as both "charming" and "highly volatile", Marshall will serve a minimum of 36 years for murdering Jeffrey Howe and then scattering his body parts across two counties before emptying his bank account and selling his possessions. His 21-year-old girlfriend, Sarah Bush, was sentenced to three years and nine months for helping Marshall cover up the murder.
Howe's body had been so expertly dismembered that pathologists who examined the macabre finds correctly concluded that the person responsible must have "previous experience of such activity". St Albans crown court heard that Marshall had previously boasted that he used to cut up and bury bodies on behalf of the notorious Adams family, who ran a crime empire in north London. One witness told the jury that Marshall worked as a bouncer for the family and would carry out "additional jobs after hours" – decapitating and dismembering murder victims and burying them without a trace.
Today Marshall's barrister Peter Doyle, QC, told the jury his client had described between 1995 and 1998 working as a doorman at clubs where on four occasions he had been asked to assist in the dismemberment of four unidentified men who had been killed earlier and brought to the clubs during the night. Doyle said Marshall had thought it "sensible" not to ask questions, and following the chopping up of the bodies the parts would be collected by others and taken to Epping Forest in north-east London and buried.After sentencing it emerged that Marshall had a string of previous convictions, including one for battering his first wife in 2003. He was also arrested on suspicion of murdering Minesh Nagrecha, whose corpse was disfigured and burnt when found by police in 1996. Marshall was never charged with the crime, instead appearing as a witness.

When the trial opened three weeks ago Marshall denied being the murderer, instead blaming Bush, a "vulnerable" young sex worker who had given birth to the first of her three children just a few days after her 15th birthday. But in a dramatic about-turn last week Marshall changed his plea and admitted being responsible for the whole crime.Sentencing him, the judge, Mr Justice Cooke, said that Marshall, a heavy cocaine user, now admitted stabbing Howe twice on March 8 last year. The judge said Marshall carried out the murder in a "muddled and no doubt drug-befuddled state" as Howe lay sleeping in bed in his house in Southgate, north London, which he shared with the couple.Today Bush finally admitted perverting the course of justice by helping Marshall cover up Howe's murder. She said she was with Marshall when he dumped Howe's head, unwrapped, in a field near Ashfordby in Leicestershire.
She admitted misleading police and friends of Howe by claiming he had simply "upped and left" while secretly using his money to buy shoes, a laptop, takeaways and other goodsHer barrister told the judge she was "terrified" of Marshall and helped him because she was scared of becoming his next victim. To Bush, the judge said: "You were well aware of what Stephen Marshall had done. You took advantage of Mr Howe in life and then after his death you used his money."Bush was acquitted of murdering Howe but pleaded guilty to helping to dispose of his body parts and giving false information about his whereabouts when police were investigating his disappearance.She was sentenced to three years and nine months for the first offence and to two years and three months for the second one, with the two terms to run concurrently.
She received a relatively lenient sentence because of her upbringing. The court heard she had spent most of her life in care before falling into prostitution and that her first baby died when he was 10 days old. After the verdict, police admitted being "quite surprised" when Marshall's previous involvement in dismembering bodies was aired in court.Detective Superintendent Michael Hanlon, who was in charge of the investigation, said Marshall would be visited in prison and asked to expand on the 11th-hour admissions made moments before his life sentence was handed to him.
Parts of Howe's body began turning up last March, a few days after Marshall had stabbed him to death. Police quickly realised they were dealing with a murder victim whose identity at the time was not known. As more pieces were discovered the victim became known as the "jigsaw man".
Howe's hands have not been found and police say they hope Marshall will show "decency" to the victim's family by giving their location. After the verdict Howe's family issued a statement that described him as a "a jovial, charming character who had a heart of gold". They said they would never be able to comprehend "Jeffrey's death and the macabre actions of those who killed him".
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