truesee's Blog

El Nino Is Back!!

El Nino Is Back!!!

LiveScience

11 July 2009 12:27 pm ET

We told you last month that El Nino was poised to return. Now NOAA scientists this week announced its formal arrival.

The good news: possibly reduced hurricane activity. The bad news: possibly heavier rain in the Southern United States (which is actually good news for drought-stricken areas).

El Nino is the periodic warming of central and eastern tropical Pacific waters. It occurs on average every two to five years and typically lasts about 12 months. Weekly eastern equatorial Pacific sea surface temperatures were at least 1.0 degree C above average at the end of June, scientists said. The most recent El Nino occurred in 2006.

 

 

What Is El Nino?

 

El Nino is marked by warmer water in the Pacific off the coast of South America. It alters weather patterns in the United States and around the world.

El Nino was originally recognized by fisherman off the coast of South America. Today, climate experts track it with ocean buoys and satellite data. El Nino means The Little Boy or Christ child in Spanish. This name was used for the tendency of the phenomenon to arrive around Christmas. The cool sister to El Nino is La Nina, which means the Little Girl.

Here's how it works (click on the image to see this visualized):

What happens when El Nino is not present:

In normal, non-El Nino conditions (top panel of schematic diagram), the trade winds blow towards the west across the tropical Pacific, away from South America.

These winds pile up warm surface water in the west Pacific, so that the sea surface is about 1-2 feet (1/2 meter) higher at Indonesia than at Ecuador (in South America).

The sea surface temperature is about 8 degrees Celsius higher in the west, with cool temperatures off South America, due to an upwelling of cold water from deeper levels. This cold water is nutrient-rich, supporting high levels of primary productivity, diverse marine ecosystems, and major fisheries.

When El Nino kicks in:

During El Nino, the trade winds relax in the central and western Pacific. Surface water temperatures off South American warm up, because there is less upwelling of the cold water below to cool the surface. This cuts off the supply of nutrients, resulting in a drastic decline in the food chain, including commercial fisheries in this region.

Among the known effects of El Nino:

  • Increased rainfall across the southern tier of the United States and in Peru, which has caused destructive flooding.

  • Throttles hurricane formation in the Atlantic by pumping energy high into the atmosphere and fueling wind currents that cross the Americas and shear the tops off some Atlantic storms before they can fully develop.

  • Drought in the West Pacific, sometimes associated with devastating brush fires in Australia.

In recent years, El Nino has been blamed for just about everything. Mapping yearly changes in rainfall around the globe, the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite showed in 2004 that El Nino is the main driving force for rainfall amounts in different locations.

 

 

 

 

During El Nino, the surface of the Pacific Ocean off the coast of South American (brown region at right) is warmer (red) as cool water below (blue) does not upwell effectively. Click to see how it\'s different during non-El Nino times. Credit: NOAA

During El Nino, the surface of the Pacific Ocean off the coast of South American (brown region at right) is warmer (red) as cool water below (blue) does not upwell effectively. Click to see how it's different during non-El Nino times. Credit:

Entry #731

Americans swap homes for hotels

Americans swap homes for hotels as recession bites

Fri Jul 10, 2009 2:28pm EDT

Jason Szep

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts (Reuters) - Some Americans are swapping homes for motels as the ranks of the homeless swell during the recession, crowding out shelters and forcing cities and states across the country to find new types of housing.

In Massachusetts, a record number of families are being put up in motels due to high unemployment and the rising number of homes going into foreclosure, costing taxpayers $2 million per month but providing a lifeline for desperate families.

"I feel like this has saved my life," said Tarya Seagraves-Quee, a 37-year-old former nurse.

Seagraves-Quee has lived in a cramped one-bedroom suite in a hotel in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with three of her four children for nearly two months. "I'm managing the best way possible. I've learned to make things in the microwave oven."

In Massachusetts, homeless shelters are at capacity. State law requires temporary accommodation for those without shelter, leading authorities to place 830 families, including 1,125 children, in 39 motels -- an unprecedented number.

"This truly is the highest we have ever seen it," said Nancy Paladino, director of the family team for the Boston Health Care for the Homeless.

Other cities are noticing a similar trend. In Indianapolis, Indiana, overcrowded homeless shelters are turning families away, forcing growing numbers to seek vouchers for hotels provided by nonprofit groups such as United Way.

"Anecdotally, it's increased," said Michael Hurst, director of the Coalition for Homeless Intervention and Prevention Indianapolis. The advocacy group started to compile statistics on the number of homeless families living in hotels this year after noticing signs of an increase.

"The hotel owners will tell you it has increased. The homeless service providers and the school officials will say we know there are more people living in hotels and putting their kids in school because that is the address they are giving us."

'JUST A STEPPING STONE'

In the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, the large Wilson family turned to a budget motel as a weeklong transition between a homeless shelter and an apartment.

"Each step we're going it's just a stepping stone," said 42-year-old Frederick Wilson as he sat with his wife, Annette, in a one-bedroom suite they share with four of the six children in their care, including a grandchild.

Called by God, they said, to move from Minnesota to Texas, the family has rapidly made a shift from homeless status to paid employment. Annette has just landed a job as a bus driver, while Frederick said he will work in an office that offers clerical support to Medicaid patients.

They spent two-and-a-half weeks in a homeless shelter in Dallas and were preparing to move into an apartment from the motel. The Urban League, an organization that helps struggling African Americans, is paying the $204 cost of their suite, which does not include sheets, pillows or toilet paper.

In Phoenix, demand for emergency accommodation is swamping available services as the recession and spiraling foreclosures turn even more families out of their homes

One nonprofit bought two former hotels -- a Days Inn and a Super 8 -- in a gritty downtown neighborhood to provide emergency accommodation for homeless and low income families. When the $23 million project is finished in September, it will be able to house 156 families, up from 112 now.

"We've seen a whole new subset of homeless families due to job loss and foreclosures, and our waiting list has doubled in the past year," said Nichole Barnes, chief fund development officer of the UMOM New Day Centers.

"Some were previous homeowners. Due to the housing market out here, they'd got into a mortgage with a flexible interest rate. Some were working full time, but lost their jobs, went through their savings trying to save their home, and then found themselves without a home due to foreclosure," she said.

FORECLOSURES AND FAMILIES

In many cities, foreclosures are a big part of a spike in homeless and rise in families living in hotels or motels.

Nearly 80 percent of homeless services providers and advocacy agencies say at least some clients became homeless as a result of a foreclosure, according to a joint report by four of the largest U.S. homeless advocacy groups.

Staying with family or friends and in emergency shelters were the most common post-foreclosure living conditions, followed by hotels or motels, according to the June report.

"In many areas shelters are now completely full, so the only option to keep their families together is to rent a motel room for $200 a week. That's pretty standard for many who lost their homes to foreclosure," said Michael Stoops, executive director of the National Coalition for the Homeless.

Unlike Massachusetts, most states do not pick up the tab. "People are spending 80 percent of their total income on hotels," he said. "And food costs are higher because they can't cook."

In Cambridge, Massachusetts, Seagraves-Quee found refuge at a budget hotel after losing her job in Georgia more than a year ago and going without health care for 10 months. She suffers from multiple sclerosis, anemia and lupus, and was recently found to have two cancer spots on her breast. Two of her children, aged 16 and 6, are autistic.

She spent $700 -- almost all her savings -- on plane tickets to Boston, where she had relatives. Soon the family was in a shelter.

Local authorities later moved her to the hotel and Seagraves-Quee was given medical treatment as part of a program carried out by Boston Health Care for the Homeless.

"Right now, I am picking up from where I left off in Georgia 10 months ago. When I got here I was in really bad health," she said. "I've heard some people say 'Oh that is a ghetto shelter.' But to me it's a wonderful place."

(Additional reporting by Ed Stoddard in Dallas and Tim Gaynor in Phoenix; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

 

 

LINK TO SLIDE SHOW:

http://www.reuters.com/news/pictures/articleslideshowarticleId=USTRE5694XV20090710&channelName=topNews#a=1

Entry #730

Teenager Pregnant By Swimming?

Pregnant By Swimming?

Sally Worsham

Jul 10th 2009 2:00PM

swimming pool

Did a teenager get pregnant from swimming in a hotel pool?

Photo: sxc.hu

The pool can be a dangerous place: Kids can get sunburned or slip on the wet deck. But can the pool get you pregnant?

Magdalena Kwiatkowska of Poland thinks you can.  She is suing an Egyptian hotel because she claims her 13-year-old daughter became impregnated after swimming in its pool during their recent holiday.   Ms. Kwiatkowska says that there must have been errant sperm floating around just waiting to implant themselves in an unsuspecting female taking a dip.   She swears that her daughter did not meet any boys during their vacation, so the mysterious sperm in the pool had to be the culprit.

 

Surely this lawsuit will be thrown out of court on inconceivable (pun intended) grounds.   First off, wouldn't the chlorine kill any random sperm?   But even further, did Ms. Kwiatkowska follow every moment of her vacationing daughter to prove, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that she spent absolutely no time with anyone of the opposite sex during their Egyptian holiday?

 

The only reassuring thing about this story, perhaps, is that frivolous lawsuits are not exclusively an American thing.

Entry #729

Man, 84, Gets High School Diploma

At 84, Colorado man gets high school diploma

GREELEY, Colorado (AP) — There's at least one guy with a new high school diploma who's not worrying about getting into college or finding a job.

After all, Takeshi Murata is 84.

Murata was 18 and a student at University High School in Greeley, Colorado, in 1944 when he was drafted to fight in World War II, according to the Greeley Daily Tribune newspaper.

Though he was the son of Japanese immigrants, he grew up speaking English. In the Army, he was trained in an intelligence unit and given some studies in Japanese. After the war, he was sent to serve in U.S. military headquarters in Tokyo.

"I really didn't know Japanese that well," Murata told the Tribune. "But I'd learned a little in the intelligence schools, so they sent me."

He met his wife, Chikako, there, he said. They married in Japan and in 1947 returned to northeast Colorado.

Murata approached his old school, thinking his military intelligence classes should suffice for any coursework he missed when he left school at 18.

"The school officials told me I wasn't qualified to graduate," he told the Tribune.

Murata dropped the diploma quest and followed in his father's footsteps, becoming a farmer. He raised five children — each of whom earned college degrees.

But Murata still had no diploma of his own until a teacher at the school, Jeanne Lipman, heard his story last year. She found Murata's report cards, got an original diploma from one of his old classmates and turned them over to University of Northern Colorado President Kay Norton. The high school is now called University High; the university ran it when Murata attended.

Norton presented the diploma to Murata on Wednesday night, and his family celebrated with cake and a party. Murata, smiling, joked about the lengthy process.

"I'm 84 years old now," he said. "What am I going to do with a diploma? Look for a job?"

Entry #728

Man lives with bullet in head for 38 years

Man lives with bullet  in head for 38 years 

X-ray ... pellet sits next to Sandor's brain

 

X-ray ... pellet sits next to Sandor's brain

 

HAYLEY DOYLE

The Sun

Published: 7/10/09

rigTeaserImage

BRAVE Sandor Cevek has survived for 38 years with a rifle bullet lodged in his head.

Sandor, 57, had been celebrating a wedding when his cousin accidently shot him in 1971.

Doctors refused to remove the bullet because it was too close to his brain.

The retired butcher, from Suza, Croatia, takes four different types of medication to cope with paralysis to his left hand and foot caused by the wounds.

It is tradition for families at Croatian weddings to let fly with a volley of gunfire to mark the ceremony.

Tough Sandor told local newspaper 24 Sata: "I never even asked my cousin Istvan about it. I just wanted to keep the family ties.

"I didn't want there to be any bad feeling."

Entry #727

Brothers live on building's wall

Going vertical: Brothers live on building's wall

RIO DE JANEIRO — Two brothers in Rio are living over the edge — literally: sleeping, working and eating on the side of a building 33 feet (10 meters) up in the air. Twenty-seven-year-old Tiago Primo and his 20-year-old brother Gabriel spend 12 hours a day in the bed, hammock, chair and dining table they've attached to a bright red-and-yellow wall as part of an art exhibit in Rio's old center.

The brothers are equipped with mountain climbing gear, and if nature calls, can scramble over to the verandah of a neighboring art gallery, where an indoor bathroom awaits.

The brothers have been hanging out wall-side since the end of May. They plan to continue the display until Aug. 20.

July 9, 2009 - 4:57 p.m. EDT

 

 

Brazilian artists Gabriel Primo, left, and Tiago Primo sit in ...
AP
Thu Jul 9, 1:49 PM ET

Brazilian artists Gabriel Primo, left, and Tiago Primo sit in their installation art work, exhibited on the wall of a building, in Rio de Janeiro, Thursday, July 9, 2009.

(AP Photo/Ricardo Moraes)

 

Brazilian artist Gabriel Primo, top, hangs in a hammock in his installation art work, exhibited on the wall of a building, in Rio de Janeiro, Thursday, July 9, 2009. (AP Photo/Ricardo Moraes)

 

 

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://cosmos.bcst.yahoo.com/up/player/popup/?rn=3906861&cl=14425678&ch=4226726&src=news

Entry #726

Woman jailed after man complains about her cooking

Woman jailed after man complains about her cooking

AP 
This photo provided Thursday, July 9, 2009 by the Lee County Sheriff's office
 AP – This photo provided
Thursday, July 9, 2009 by the
Lee County Sheriff's office shows
Meredith Hart Mulcahy …
 
Thu Jul 9, 3:39 pm ET

NAPLES, Fla. – A southwest Florida woman was arrested after deputies said she assaulted her 71-year-old common-law husband after he complained about her cooking. A Lee County Sheriff's Office arrest report shows 66-year-old Meredith Hart Mulcahy was charged with battery on an elderly person Tuesday night.

Deputies said the man got into an argument with her about undercooked potatoes and burnt bread. He went to the bedroom and began eating, and authorities said the woman then threw a phone at him.

Deputies said Mulcahy became belligerent in the back seat of the patrol car and told them that she "burned the bread she was cooking because she was so intoxicated." She was in the Lee County Jail on Wednesday pending a $1,500 bond.

 

Entry #725

Woman arrested after high speed chase trying to light crack pipe

Fleeing woman captured while trying to light crack pipe

Arrest follows Sandy Springs car chase

By MIKE MORRIS

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Thursday, July 09, 2009

An Alpharetta woman who led Sandy Springs police on a high-speed chase Wednesday night was allegedly trying to light a crack pipe even as officers broke out a window of the vehicle to arrest her.

The chase began in the 7800 block of Roswell Road after a tag check on a 2005 Hyundai Santa Fe revealed that the registered driver’s license had been suspended for driving under the influence, Sandy Springs police Lt. Steve Rose said.

When the officer attempted to stop the Santa Fe, Lisa Beth Solanik, 43, made a U-turn and sped northbound on Roswell Road.

Rose said officers deployed “stop sticks” at Dunwoody Place and Roswell Road, deflating two of the suspect’s tires.

“The car then drove onto Verdun Drive off Roberts Drive, where it struck one of the police vehicles,” Rose said. “The suspect’s car was then cornered and pinned to a stop by two Sandy Springs police vehicles.”

Rose said that as officers were breaking the side window of the Santa Fe to take Solanik into custody, she was “in the process of trying to light what appeared to be a crack pipe.”

Solanik was charged with obstruction of a police officer, fleeing and/or attempting to elude a police officer, disorderly conduct, driving under the influence of drugs and eight traffic charges. She is in the Fulton County Jail, awaiting an initial court appearance on Friday.

Rose said one Sandy Springs police officer was treated and released for a minor injury sustained during the chase.

Entry #724

Worker finds $10,000 in garbage

Japanese waste worker finds $10,000 in garbage

A.M. Kuchling
 
19:2209/07/2009
TOKYO, July 9 (RIA Novosti) – A worker at a Japanese garbage recycling plant has found more than one hundred banknotes worth over 1 million yen (around $10,000), Japanese media reported on Thursday.

The worker found the banknotes, both whole and torn, when he was sorting plastic and paper waste on an automatic conveyor at a plant in the prefecture of Yamanashi, some 100 kms east of the capital, Tokyo.

The worker informed the police about the find. However, the authorities have so far been unable to locate the owner of the money. Waste comes to the plant not only from Yamanashi but also from neighboring regions, which makes the investigation more complicated.

Last year, 14.1 billion yen (some $146 million) in lost cash was handed in to police in Japan. Almost 4 billion yen of this went unclaimed and was handed back to the finders.

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Entry #723

Cemetery workers dug up graves and resold plots

Submit to Windy Citizen

New estimate on cemetery bodies: 200 to 300

Chicago Tribune

July 9, 2009 12:21 PM

UPDATED STORY
  webcemetery.jpg
Authorities today sharply increased the estimate of the number of bodies disinterred at Burr Oak Cemetery in southwest suburban Alsip in a scheme to illegally resell grave sites.

Two hundred to 300 bodies were dug up and dumped into an isolated, weedy area of the cemetery, Assistant State's Atty. John Mahoney said at a bond hearing for four cemetery employees charged in the scheme.

Former cemetery manager Carolyn Towns, 49,  foreman Keith Nicks, 45, and dump-truck operator Terrence Nicks, 39, all of Chicago, and back-hoe operator Maurice Dailey, 59, of Robbins, were each charged with one count of dismembering a human body, a Class X felony.

Bail for Towns, who was described as the scheme's mastermind, was set at $250,000, and for the other defendants at $200,000 by Cook County Judge Maria Kuriakos Ciesil.

cemetery.jpg
Cook County Sheriff's Police Chief DeWayne Holbrook greets a woman at the entrance of Burr Oak Cemetery in Alsip. Relatives of those buried there came today looking for answers. (David Pierini/Chicago Tribune)

An arrest warrant was also issued Tuesday for a fifth person, a 45-year-old woman who was a secretary at the cemetery, according to Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Brittney Blair.   But the woman was not charged after investigators became convinced that she did not profit from the scheme and was only carrying out orders from Towns, who was the office manager.

"Carolyn Towns was the brains behind the operation, the one calling the shots," Blair said.

The defendants were able to successfully carry out the scheme, prosecutors said, because bereaved relatives often came into the cemetery office to buy grave sites with cash. Towns would take the cash and destroy the deeds and other paperwork for the existing graves, they said. Towns would keep the cash and pay off the other defendants by increasing their overtime pay, which she controlled as cemetery general manager.

Mahoney described the defendants's actions as "cold, calculating and showed a total disregard for human souls."

Detectives discovered a pile of  bones decomposed, above ground and uncovered in an overgrown, fenced-off portion of the cemetery, according to Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart.

In addition, bodies apparently were double-buried in already existing plots, Dart told WGN-AM 720 this morning. Dozens of FBI agents are expected in Chicago early next week to help sift through the evidence at the cemetery, Dart said.

The charges against Towns allege that "numerous graves were excavated and the human remains were then buried in a rear vacant lot in Burr Oak cemetery, Alsip ... She then sold the vacant gravesites for her own personal financial gain." Authorities said she earlier had been fired by the cemetery's owners because of theft allegations.

One of the first predominantly African-American cemeteries in the area, Burr Oak is the resting place of many historic figures, including civil rights symbol Emmett Till, blues legend Dinah Washington and heavyweight boxing champion Ezzard Charles.

Dart said he was certain Till's remains were not disturbed, but he could not be sure about the others.

This morning, a large crowd converged on the cemetery, most of them African-American, saying they wanted to find out if their loved ones' remains had been moved.  The families expressed outrage, disgust and discouragement.

Dart said this morning that none of the cemetery's workers came to work today, so the sheriff's office was aiding residents walk through the plots.

"This is just heartbreaking.  The people I have talked to have made me want to cry," Dart said. "The sense of violation is horrible." 

"Some people come back from the grave site and it's not what it's supposed to be and I don't know what to tell them," he said.

Sheriff's employees are having concerned families first take a number. When their number comes up, they are taken to the site. But the wait is long so Dart's office has brought out chairs for the elderly as well as water, drinks and chips for relatives.

Some people who know where the location of their loved ones' graves are just heading to them on their own.

Dart said he believes the alleged scheme has been going on for about four years.

"We have evidence...There were also people being double-buried, that they would just sort of pound down the one casket or remains and put another set of remains on top," he told WGN-AM.

 

The disinterred graves appeared to be older, neglected ones, Dart said. "They specifically looked to older graves, where there might not be someone coming out there every week," he said.

Dart said it would take weeks, if not months, before it will be known who the bodies are.  Between 30 and 40 FBI agents "from all over the world" who specialize in identifying remains will arrive on Monday to work on the case, he told WGN-AM. It will take four or five weeks to sift through the area in the cemetery in which the bodies were dumped and which has been fenced off as the main crime scene, Dart said.

No remains have been removed yet, Dart said. The bones were scattered above ground, along with casket and other related debris, over an area of about four blocks in a hilly portion of the cemetery. There's a lot of overgrown vegetation there, he said, and the area stretches from Kostner to Cicero Avenues.

The FBI is conducting tests to determine the identities, but Dart said he was not familiar with their methods. He said it was possible not all bodies would be identified. Compounding the problem, many cemetery records appear to have been destroyed.

Dart said people have complained about the cemetery for months and have not received any answers.  The families have complained specifically of flooding and even markers being moved.  The Tribune in May wrote about the cemetery and residents' complaints.

Simeon Wright of the La Grange area, a cousin of Till, said: "This is reprehensible if it's true. I've got several generations of my family buried there, and I've never had any problems. ... But this is a pretty ghoulish story."

On Wednesday night, as news of the grim discovery spread, devastated families started trickling onto the cemetery grounds to check on their loved ones' graves.

Donetta Newman, 35, whose father and both of her grandparents are buried at Burr Oak, stood in the rain trying to get inside to see if their grave sites had been disturbed. "You always think this is the final resting place," she said. "This is just shocking. I'm very distraught."

None of the remains had been removed from the site, said Steve Patterson, a sheriff's spokesman. The state's attorney's office and  FBI are also investigating, Dart said.
In recent years the cemetery at 4400 W. 127th St. has drawn complaints for overgrown grass, sunken grave sites and  flooding.

Police told industry experts, consulted as they investigated the case, that the conspirators probably took in around $300,000.

Sheriff's police learned of the grave-reselling scheme six weeks ago when they were contacted by the Arizona-based cemetery owners, Perpetua Inc., who told police they were concerned about possible financial wrongdoing, Dart said. The scheme came to light after another cemetery employee told the owners of the re-sold deeds and the owners contacted the sheriff's police department, Blair said.

Perpetua Holdings of Illinois, Inc. has owned the cemetery since 2001. Trudi McCollum Foushee, a Missouri-based attorney for company president Melvin Bryant of Richardson, Texas, would only confirm the company went to police, triggering the investigation.

Authorities alleged that Towns and the other suspects targeted graves they knew had not been visited in a long time and then Towns fraudulently altered the deeds to the plots, sheriff's spokeswoman Blair said. The plots were then resold to unsuspecting families seeking a grave site for a loved one.

All targeted grave sites were very old, though some still had headstones, Blair said. The caskets, vaults and bodies were dumped in a large back portion of the cemetery, where investigators found human remains lying in plain sight amid piles of dirt, she said.

Once a plot was resold, Blair said, "They would dig up the body, toss it and by the time the (newly) deceased person got there, they were put in the grave and their family was none the wiser."

When investigators went out to the cemetery, Dart said, "We originally thought it was just a pure financial crime that we were walking into and then ... within minutes of being out here, we had a pretty good handle on what we were dealing with, and it went well beyond anyone's idea of a financial crime"

Blair said that financial crimes charges could be added later, but it was unclear how much money was netted from the scam. Authorities are still trying to piece together the scheme with what few records exist.

"Unfortunately, they destroyed so much paperwork," Blair said. "I think that [the secretary] was tasked with destroying documents relating to the sale and resale of the deeds."

The Tribune is not naming the secretary because she has not been charged with a crime.

 

                           ORIGINAL STORY

Cemetery workers accused of digging up graves, reselling plots

July 9, 2009

CHICAGO, Illinois (CNN) -- Employees at a historic African-American cemetery near Chicago allegedly dug up more than 100 graves as part of an off-the-books scheme to resell burial plots to unsuspecting customers, authorities said Wednesday.

Cook County, Illinois, Sheriff Tom Dart says the discovery was "beyond startling and revolting."

Cook County, Illinois, Sheriff Tom Dart says the discovery was "beyond startling and revolting."

 

 

Dozens of graves at Burr Oak Cemetery were desecrated by workers as part of a financial scheme, authorities say. 

Dozens of graves at Burr Oak Cemetery were desecrated by workers as part of a financial scheme, authorities say.

Cook County authorities began investigating the cemetery about six weeks ago after receiving a call from the owners of Burr Oak Cemetery in Alsip, Illinois, located about 20 miles south of Chicago.

The owners had concerns about possible "illegalities going on" regarding finances at the business, said Sheriff Tom Dart.

"What we found was beyond startling and revolting," Dart told reporters at the cemetery.

The workers at Burr Oak, where lynching victim Emmett Till, blues legend Dinah Washington and some Negro League baseball players are buried among others, allegedly resold the plots, disinterred the bodies, dumped the remains and pocketed the cash, Dart said.

Most of the excavations occurred in back lots, where the plots were older and not frequently visited, he said. However, other plots may have been disturbed as well.

At least four people are in custody facing a slew of felony charges, authorities said. The current owners, who could not be reached by CNN for comment Wednesday, have run the place for more than five years, but are not believed to be involved, Dart said.

"We are sensitive to the fact that individuals have loved ones buried here and also the sensitivities as it pertains to this particular cemetery," Dart said. "This is the cemetery where Emmett Till is buried. Numerous other significant members of the African-American community are buried there as well."

He said authorities are "very confident" that the grave of Till, whose lynching at 14 helped spark the Civil Rights Movement, has not been disturbed.

Still, investigators are trying to determine the scope of the scheme and are faced with trying to track down the families of those whose graves were disinterred and those who, unbeknownst to them, purchased occupied plots, Dart said.

He said the workers may have doctored records to cover their tracks.

The FBI, expert forensic scientists and local funeral directors have been called in to help, he said.

"We cannot give people definitive answers at this point," Dart said. "Our biggest challenge right now is the attempt to bring peace of mind."

 

 

LINK TO VIDEOS:

 

http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/07/09/illinois.cemetery.scheme/index.html#cnnSTCVideo

 

http://www.wgntv.com/videobeta/watch/?watch=f0599df8-8684-4114-b6ec-be018f90aba0&src=front

 

PHOTOS FROM CEMETERY:

 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-090529-burr-oak-cemeterypictures,0,2332072.photogallery

Entry #722

Man uses Twitter to fight $11,000 cell phone bill

Mythbuster Tweets His Way Out of $11k Phone Bill

Adam Savage Recruits Twitter Followers to Fight $11,000 AT&T Bill for Web Surfing in Canada

By KI MAE HEUSSNER
June 30, 2009
Last updated July 7, 2009
 
 

What would you do if you opened up your cell phone bill to face a dizzying five-digit charge?

high bill
Mythbuster Andrew Savage recently faced an $11,000 bill from AT&T for using a wireless modem to surf the Web in Canada.
(/ABC News)

You might do well to follow Mythbuster Adam Savage's lead.

When the host of the Discovery Channel's "Mythbusters" learned he had rung up $11,000 in charges from AT&T while in Canada, he headed straight for Twitter. The culprit, he tweeted, was the USB modem plugged into his laptop that was running on a wireless plan suitable for the U.S., but not for Canada.

"AT&T is attempting to charge me 11k for a few hours of web surfing in Canada. Pls RT!," he posted to his Twitter feed Friday. Later, he wrote, "Almost forgot: Hey AT&T! I will fight this bull****."

Still later, he added, "They're claiming I uploaded/downloaded 9 million kilobytes (9 gigs) while in Canada. Frakking impossible."

Before too long, thanks to many of his 50,000 followers, 'AT&T' became a top Twitter trending topic, according to the tech blog TechCrunch.

By later Friday afternoon, the tweeting became too intense for even AT&T to ignore.

"Today the tweeps became twoops. Just got off the phone with AT&T and they've taken care of everything to my great satisfaction.#twitterrules," Savage wrote.

But though Savage's story may be an extreme, he's not the first – nor will he likely be the last – to suffer a cellular bill snafu.

Entry #721

Pastor Stops Baptism To Announce Robbery

Pastor Stops Baptism To Announce Robbery

2 Men Seen Robbing Church During Service

Reported By Regina Raccuglia

 POSTED: 1:21 pm CDT July 7, 2009

UPDATED: 5:49 pm CDT July 7, 2009
 
 

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- It's the one place you expect to be safe, but one Nashville church was robbed during service.

 
"It was kind of scary to know all of our children were here, all of our wives were here," said Pastor Melvyn Warfield of Hillcrest Seventh-Day Adventist Church. Warfield stopped mid-baptism during a packed, midday service Saturday to spread another message.
 
"If you had anything open, if your windows were down, if your car was unlocked, somebody's out in the parking lot walking around," Warfield said he told the congregation.

 

From the pulpit, he could see two men stealing from the church's multi-purpose building.

 

"I think we baptized 12 that morning, and so I was actually standing in the water," Warfield said. "It's kind of bold to see individuals coming out and robbing you during worship."

 

Warfield saw the men using a wheelbarrow owned by the church to carry hundreds of dollars worth of the church's equipment, such as electrical equipment and DVDs.

 

"It's a warning for all of our churches that are here and servicing this community," said Warfield, who said the two men are already forgiven but that the church plans to prosecute if the men are found and arrested.

 

"We do want to redeem them and we do want this to be a life-changing experience for them, but they do have to kind of own up to what they have done," he said.
 
 
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Entry #720

Man calls police about hostage cops find pot growing

Man calls police about hostage situation, cops find his pot-growing operation

By Emily Kaiser in Crime, Drugs
Wednesday, Jul. 8 2009 @ 12:26PM
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Photo by Joe M500
It's another round of America's Dumbest Criminals, say Minneapolis police. A man allegedly connected to a major pot-growing operation in a South Minneapolis home still thought it was safe to call police to the house about a hostage situation and ended up in trouble with the law himself.

Minneapolis police showed up at the home on 57th Street and Bryant Avenue South early Tuesday when a man called to say he had been tied up in a robbery attempt and another man was still bound. He called police asking them to help the other man and find the robbers.

That's not exactly what they found.

Police showed up to find no hostage, no armed robbers, and 35 marijuana plants in the house. The men who claimed they were hostages were arrested for their connection to the pot.

Police also said the home had been rewired to bypass the electrical meter and housed a boa constrictor and a large lizard. Good one, guys.

"This is another one of those stories that you can chalk up to an episode of 'America's Dumbest Criminals,'" MPD's Jesse Garcia told the Star Tribune.

 

Related pot story

 

WSAV-TV/Savannah Morning News
Published: July 7, 2009

 

 

GA Man Loses Home, Pot In Late Night Fire

A late-night fire consumed part of a Savannah man’s home and all of his pot. A call to extinguish the blaze at a home in the 2200 block of Louis Mills Boulevard turned into a drug bust just before 2 a.m. Saturday when firefighters and police discovered nine marijuana plants and a .22-caliber Ruger semi-automatic pistol.



Savannah, GA—A late-night fire consumed part of a Savannah man’s home and all of his pot.

A call to extinguish the blaze at a home in the 2200 block of Louis Mills Boulevard turned into a drug bust just before 2 a.m. Saturday when firefighters and police discovered nine marijuana plants and a .22-caliber Ruger semi-automatic pistol.

Savannah-Chatham police arrested homeowner Brett Napier, 44, who is being held at the Chatham County jail. Napier was charged with two felonies - possession and manufacturing of marijuana and possession of a firearm in committing a crime.

Several Southside Fire & Emergency Service fire engines, three ambulances, a rescue truck and about 20 firefighters responded to the scene, said Assistant Chief Hugh Futrell.

There were no injuries, and fire damage was limited to the back half of the house. The front portion of the home was not burned, he said.

“The attic was heavily damaged by the fire, and an area in the back of the roof burned off,“ Futrell said. “The downstairs was good - just damage from falling debris and, of course, water. The front part of the house, none of that burned.“

The fire reached the attic through a scuttle hole in a back room, he said.

All nine marijuana plants were found in a rear room. In addition to the live plants, police also found a bag of leafy marijuana, a bag of marijuana stems, a glass vile of marijuana buds, a green glass bong and two heating lamps in the house.

Chatham-Savannah Counter Narcotics Team and forensics investigators were called to the scene.

The cause of the fire is unknown, and the incident is still under investigation, Futrell said.

Entry #719

Robber sets fire to getaway car arrested on foot

Robber who set fire to getaway car arrested on foot

A bungling robber who set fire to his getaway car before he carried out an armed raid was arrested moments later as he fled on foot.

 Daily Telegraph

Published: 7:07AM BST 08 Jul 2009

The hapless offender parked his Ford Scorpio motor next to a Securicor van as it made a delivery to a building society.

But in a bizarre move, he torched the vehicle in an apparent attempt to destroy any forensic evidence before holding up the security guard at gunpoint.

He snatched the cash box and, with his blazing car out of action, ran off. Police arrived and witnesses pointed them towards the offender.

The suspect was arrested minutes later in a nearby park. Officers managed to put the out the fire in the car, which has now been removed for forensic examination.

The incident happened at about 9pm on Monday night outside the Nationwide building society in Bournemouth, Dorset.

Detective Inspector Craig Travers, of Bournemouth CID, said: "There was a car that had been driven to the scene and parked in a normal manner nearby by the offender.

"The car was deliberately set fire to by the offender, rendering out of use. We don't yet know why he has done this.

"Normally when you get a robbery a vehicle is used to make off from the scene in and swapped for an exchange car later on, at which point the first car is set alight.

"At about the same time of the car fire a man pointing what is believed to have been a handgun approached a Group 4 Securicor officer outside the building society.

"The security guard put the cash box on the pavement and it was picked up by the robber who made off on foot with it.

"A 44-year-old man fitting the description of the offender was arrested a short time later at Horseshoe Common, not far from the scene.

"Officers managed to put the car fire out with an extinguisher. There was some damage to it but it has been removed and is being examined by forensic officers."

Witnesses reported hearing a minor explosion from the car fire at the time of robbery.

Entry #718

Drunken tractor driver leads police on slow chase

Drunken tractor driver leads police on slow chase

Tue Jul 7, 2009 2:33pm EDT
 
Photo
 
   

BERLIN (Reuters) - A drunk German sparked a slow-speed police chase after stealing a tractor to get home from a nightclub after his girlfriend left without him, said police, who used pepper spray to try to stop the vehicle. 

 

"After his girlfriend abandoned him in a night club, the 23-year-old driver, who doesn't own a license, commandeered the vehicle to make his way home," a police spokesman said on Monday.

 

Six police cars began trailing the tractor, which was chugging along at 20 km (12 miles) an hour, after they were alerted to the theft at about 5 a.m. Saturday.

 

Officers tried holding up stop signs and directing pepper spray through the open window to bring the driver to a halt.

 

They then tried unsuccessfully to end his getaway by throwing nail belts on the road, but the tractor's tires proved too thick, said the police spokesman.

The 40-minute chase finally came to an end when officers shot at the tractor's tires after it rammed into a police car and collided with another vehicle.

(Reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by Sophie Hares)

 

 

Entry #717