truesee's Blog

Devil arrested for felony battery

The Devil arrested for messing with man's world vision, cops say


Last Update: 5:04 pm

 

PORT ST. LUCIE, FL -- A man's trip to a Cumberland Farms store turned into a chance encounter with a scraggly version of Beelzebub, according to Port St. Lucie cops.

The victim told officers he was leaving the store when he was approached by a man later identified as John Eugene Yale, Jr.

They chatted for a few minutes when Yale suddenly announced, “I am the Devil and I am going to kill you!”

Police said Yale jumped on the victim, hit him on the head and jammed his thumbs in the man's eyes, causing them to bleed.

The victim fought back and managed to escape to his house, where he called 911.

Yale was arrested and hauled off to his own private hell. 

He's charged with felony battery.

 

 

Link to Photo of the Devil:
Entry #716

Rubik's Cube inventor's creates new 360 puzzle

Rubik's Cube inventor's new 360 puzzle on sale next week

The 360, a new game by Professor Erno Rubik, inventor of the Rubik's Cube, is set to go on sale next week.

By Chris Irvine
Published: 8:32AM BST 06 Jul 2009

The 360: a new game by Professor Erno Rubik, inventor of the Rubik's Cube, is set to go on sale next week.
Players must get the coloured balls from an inner sphere into matching slots on the outer sphere by shaking them through a middle sphere that has only two holes Photo: AFP/GETTY

The 64-year-old reclusive Hungarian professor, who has seen his cube achieve 350 million sales since 1980, was heavily involved in creating the new brain-teaser.

The 360 is a clear plastic ball holding six small balls of different colours. Players must get the coloured balls from an inner sphere into matching slots on the outer sphere by shaking them through a middle sphere that has only two holes.

Using the original principles applied to the Rubik's Cub, it will be available next week, costing £18.

David Hedley Jones, senior vice president of the Rubik brand, said: "It doesn't need batteries and looks as though it should be quite easy.

"But it is incredibly complicated. There are some really cunning tricks to it."

Hamleys, the London toy store, has already had thousands of inquiries for the 360. It's head of sales Nigel Wheatley said: "It is our biggest item on the web. I expect thousands to be sold in days."

Invented in 1974, the Rubik's Cube was an instant success when it was first exported from Hungary in 1980, becoming the world's fastest-selling toy.

Still obtaining a cult following, almost 40,000 entries on YouTube feature tutorials and video clips of quick solutions.

Entry #715

Police cadet charged with burglary

Police cadet charged with burglary

CHIP TOWERS

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Monday, July 06, 2009

A Gwinnett County police cadet has been offered the option of resigning in lieu of being fired after his arrest on burglary charges over the weekend, police said.

Sean Filyaw, 24, was arrested after a former neighbor discovered the wannabe cop stealing a PlayStation from the neighbor’s home in Auburn. Auburn police called to the scene arrested Filyaw when they found him in his car outside the house on Mount Moriah Road. The suspect was still wearing his cadet uniform.

“The Gwinnett County police does not tolerate the actions of any of its members that may reflect negatively on this department,” Gwinnett spokesman Cpl. David Schiralli said Monday.

Filyaw is currently free on bond.

 

LINK TO PICTURE AND VIDEO OF SEAN FILYAW:

http://www.wsbtv.com/video/19967229/index.html

Entry #714

Man charged with twice failing to appear in court fails to appear in court

Man charged with twice failing to appear in court fails to appear in court

Top Photo
Police say Gary Isabelle failed to appear in court to face charges that he twice failed to appear in court.
Elizabeth Dinan
Elizabeth Dinan
Sea Coast
July 06, 2009 4:09 PM

PORTSMOUTH — A warrant has been issued for the arrest of a Suzanne Drive resident who failed to appear in court Monday for two counts of failing to appear in court.

Gary Isabelle, 44, of 2 Suzanne Drive, was scheduled to appear in the district court July 6 on charges alleging he previously failed to appear for a criminal loitering charge and a civil complaint alleging he failed to pay rent to his former landlord. 

For failing to appear for the criminal charge, Judge Sawako Gardner forfeited $200 cash Isabelle posted as bail following his arrest on a prior warrant. She also ordered a new warrant for his arrest and set additional bail at $500 cash. That charge alleges Isabelle sat in a parked van after dark causing public alarm.

Isabelle was also scheduled to appear in the court Monday for a small claims complaint alleging he failed to pay a former landlord $4,081.68 in rent. When Isabelle’s absence was noted, the landlord told the court he had not heard from Isabelle with the exception of two threatening emails, one of which said the landlord “should spend (his) time making sure (his) daughter is safe.”

The landlord alleges Isabelle violated his lease agreement for a Benson Street apartment by not paying rent, then “in retaliation to a demand for payment, attempted to blackmail” the landlord in an effort to get “huge deductions.”

For Isabelle’s failure to appear in the court for that hearing, Judge Gardner set additional bail at $1,000 cash.

Entry #713

New rollercoaster crowned the world's steepest

New rollercoaster crowned the world's steepest

Thrill-seekers are set to be scared senseless by a new record-breaking rollercoaster ride which is the steepest ever.

Daily Telegraph UK

Published: 7:00AM BST 06 Jul 2009

New rollercoaster crowned the world's steepest

The "Mumbo Jumbo" coaster at the Flamingo Land Park, near Malton, North Yorks, plunges passengers down 112 degrees and puts them through similar forces to those experienced by jet pilots.

The £4 million ride, which lasts for 38 seconds, has been confirmed as the world's steepest by Guinness World of Records.

As well as the drop, the ride boasts another 30-foot plunge and the ability to throw riders round thrilling corners.

Gordon Gibb, Chief Executive of the park, said: "This is a fantastic achievement for Flamingo Land. We are extremely proud of our new ride. It's a world beater, and it definitely puts us in the theme park premier league.

"There's nothing like it anywhere in the UK or Europe. In fact, you'd have to travel to Indiana Beach in the USA to come anywhere close and even then, our 'coaster is steeper by one degree.

"It is exciting for a relatively small family business like Flamingo Land to be punching well above its weight. Mumbo Jumbo looks set to become a National icon, we are all very excited.

Mr Gibb's family have owned the park, which attracts nearly 1.5 million visitors a year, for 32 years, with the 33-year-old taking the reins as a teenager.

"The name is meant to be a tongue-in-cheek description of the way other theme parks boast about their new rides and attractions. We're not talking mumbo jumbo - our new rollercoaster is definitely the real deal."

Carl Saville from Guinness World of Records said: "Now it has successfully completed ten rides it has definitely claimed the world record.

"We have confirmed that the angle of descent in a particular part of the ride is 112 degrees which constitutes a new world record."

Entry #712

85,000 pounds of trash removed from property

85,000 pounds of debris removed from Mastic Beach property

BY PATRICK WHITTLE

Newsday

1:03 PM EDT, July 6, 2009

Garbage

A Mastic Beach father and son face nearly $20,000 in fines after officials had to use 10 garbage trucks to remove 42 tons of tires, car parts, hoses and other trash from their home. (Handout / July 6, 2009)

 

A Mastic Beach father and son face nearly $20,000 in fines after code enforcement officials removed about 85,000 pounds of debris from the dad's property, officials said.

John W. Mallgren, owner of 57 Daisy Dr., and his son, John R. Mallgren, a tenant there, allowed 42 tons of tires, car parts, hoses and other trash to pile up on the residential lot, which is also the site of a single-family home, Brookhaven Town officials said.

The elder Mallgren must pay $8,742 for the removal of the rubbish - which required 10 garbage trucks - and his son likely will face more than $10,000 in fines, officials said.

The building was condemned on June 24, and the younger Mallgren's case is winding its way through the court system, officials said.

 

PHOTOS OF GARBAGE:

http://www.newsday.com/news/local/ny-garbage-pg,0,6078689.photogallery

Entry #711

British family have rainbow children

British family have rainbow children

A mixed race couple have nicknamed their kids the Rainbow Children after a genetic quirk left them with a remarkable spectrum of skin colours

 The Daily Telegraph

Published: 6:48PM BST 06 Jul 2009

Cornel and Carla from Lowestoft, Norfolk with their three children Tanisha 4, Jermaine 6 and Jayden 2 : British family have rainbow children
Cornel and Carla from Lowestoft, Norfolk with their three children Tanisha 4, Jermaine 6 and Jayden 2 Photo: MASONS NEWS SERVICE

White mum Carla Nurse, 27, and her black husband Cornel, 31, were not surprised when their first child Jermaine was born with a mixed race complexion.

But they were amazed when daughter Tanisha arrived with an Afro-Caribbean appearance -and their second son Jayden was born with white skin and blonde hair.

"Where I live it is a predominantly white town and I admit it looks pretty strange when I walk around with my brood of rainbow children," said Mrs Nurse.

"I am at a complete loss to explain why they are all different colours - I can only think that it is some type of freaky genetic thing.

"After Jayden was born and he looked Aryan my friends nicknamed us the United Nations."

Mrs Nurse , a part-time model from Lowestoft, Suffolk, said her only concern is that many people assume the children have different fathers.

She said: "I remember giving birth to each one of them at the hospital and all the doctors were looking at me thinking I had all these children to different men.

"When people think I've cheated it makes me so angry. "I would never stray from Cornel and never have - I'm totally devoted to him and always will be."

Mr Nurse ,whose Afro-Caribbean father came from Barbados and white mother came from London, grew up in the Suffolk village of Halesworth just 30 miles away.

Their eldest son Jermaine, now six, has brown eyes with golden brown skin while daughter Tanisha, four, takes after her father with Afro-Caribbean skin, dark eyes and tight black curls.

Youngest son Jayden, now two, has white skin, blonde hair and bright blue eyes.

All three siblings have their mother's nose and big eyes while Tanisha has full lips similar to Mr Nurse.

Mr Nurse said: "They are definitely all mine and the whole thing is just a freak of nature. Tanisha was dark from the start but as the boys got older one has gone darker and one has got whiter.

"All of the kids were planned - Jermaine was conceived on holiday in Florida and Tanisha and Jayden were conceived at home.

"They all have our facial features it's just the colour of their skin which is different - it's hard to believe."

Dr Jess Buxton, of the British Society for Human Genetics, said it was rare for three children with totally different skin colour to be born to the same parents.

She said: "I have never heard of this before and I'm sure it can't happen often. But several different genes control skin colour in a similar way to eye and hair colour.

"This is a random process, so it is certainly possible for the same parents to have children with different skin colours, although because we don't know all of the genes involved it isn't possible to predict when this will happen."

Entry #710

Tiny New Battery Is Printable

Tiny New Battery Is Printable

LiveScience

02 July 2009 01:00 pm ET

Updated 6:05 p.m. ET 

A new battery, small and thin, weighs almost nothing and can be printed in a process similar to silk-screening shirts.

The printable battery is expected to be cheap and easy to mass produce and could be used in disposable receipts or cards, engineers in Germany announced today.

"Our goal is to be able to mass produce the batteries at a price of single digit cent range each," said Andreas Willert, of the Fraunhofer Research Institution for Electronic Nano Systems ENAS, where Reinhard Baumann led the battery's development.

The battery weighs less than 1 gram and is less than 1 millimeter thick. It runs at 1.5 volts. Placing several in a row can produce up to 6 volts.

A standard AAA battery weighs about 11.5 grams and also runs at 1.5 volts.

The newly developed battery has a life span more limited than traditional batteries, however. Here are the technical details:

The battery is composed of different layers: a zinc anode and a manganese cathode, among others. Zinc and manganese react with one another and produce electricity. However, the anode and the cathode layer dissipate gradually during this chemical process. Therefore, the battery is suitable for applications which have a limited life span or a limited power requirement.

The battery new contains no mercury and so is said to be more environmentally friendly than some.

Actual products with the battery could be ready by the end of the year, the engineers said.

 

 

 

The small, thin battery comes out of the printer and can be applied to flexible substrates. Credit: Fraunhofer ENAS

The small, thin battery comes out of the printer and can be applied to flexible substrates. Credit: Fraunhofer ENAS

Entry #709

The Strange Ingredients in Fireworks

The Strange Ingredients in Fireworks

By LiveScience Staff

posted: 02 July 2009 04:41 pm ET

Fireworks for the 4th of July are all about light, color and sound. But inside, there are some bizarre ingredients, from aluminum to Vaseline and even the stuff of rat poison.

An ancient mix of black powder, essentially gunpowder little changed from its invention in China a millennia ago, gets each rocket in the air by creating pressure in gas trapped in a tube, or mortar.

Two fuses are lit at once: one to ignite the black powder, and another that burns slower, creating a well-timed explosion high in the sky.

The shells of commercial fireworks contain a powdery concoction of chemicals that produce the bangs and the whistles, as well as the pretty effects. Tubes, hollow spheres, and paper wrappings work as barriers to compartmentalize the effects. More complicated shells are divided into even more sections to control the timing of secondary explosions.

Big booms and whistles come from flash powder. Once used for flashes in photography, it is a combination of fuel-like metal and a chemical that feeds oxygen to fire up the fuel.

Different combinations of metals and oxides produce a whole array of sounds.

While ancient Greeks and Romans used bismuth in their beauty care products and coins, chemists add bismuth trioxide to the flash powder to get that crackling sound, dubbed "dragon eggs." Ear-splitting whistles take four ingredients, including a food preservative and Vaseline.

The variety of color in a fireworks show depends on the mix of metals.

  • Copper produces blue sparks.
  • A mix of strontium salts, lithium salts and other stuff makes red.
  • Aluminum and titanium put the white stars in an aerial flag.
  • Barium, also used in rat poison and glass making, makes green.
  • Calcium burns orange and sodium, yellow.

In recent years, chemists have worked to develop more environmentally friendly fireworks, in part because one ingredient, perchlorate, was found in higher than normal concentrations in a lake where fireworks were shot off, and the chemical is known to cause thyroid problems in humans.

Meanwhile, to light up a red, white, and blue flag, chemists can lay out the emblem's design on wax paper. The pattern you see up in the air, whether it's a smiley face or a bow tie, mirrors the arrangement of the metals in the shell.

Because the flag, or any other pattern, shoots out from the shell as a two-dimensional image, people watching the show from different angles can't always tell what they're looking at. To make sure everyone has a good view, pyrotechnists tend to send duplicates into the sky at the same time.

You can see fireworks before you hear them because light travels faster than sound.

Entry #708

World's smallest car enters Ripley's Believe it or Not museum

World's smallest car enters Ripley's Believe it or Not museum

 

Saturday, 04 July 2009

 

small carThe Peel P50, a single door, three wheel microcar went on display at New York's Ripley's Believe It or Not! Museum on Monday.

The Peel Engineering Company manufactured 50 to 100 of the one-seater vehicles which weighed 130 lb (59 kg), and are 52.8 in (134 cm) in length, 47 in (120 cm) in height and 39 in (99 cm) in width.

The little car can travel as fast as 38 mph (61 kph), and comes equipped with a handle on the car so the driver can pull the car to back up.

Only twenty of the vehicles have survived since 1963, and the original price of £199 has soared to approximately £40,000 (US$ 65,000) today.

Information from: Wikinews, http://www.wikinews.org

Image: Philip (flip) Kromer.

Link to Video: 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGd8OTxVtt8

Entry #707

Police fired over posting suggestive photos on MySpace

Altoona officer forced to quit over MySpace photos

C Kauffman

Des Moines Register

July 5, 2009

 

An Altoona reserve police officer who allegedly posted suggestive photos of herself on a social networking site was forced to resign earlier this year.

Abigail L. Keller, 27, is the latest in a string of Iowans who have been fired over questionable material on Internet message boards, Facebook pages or MySpace profiles.

Keller, of Pleasant Hill, resigned in February after a local businessman gave a city police officer print-outs of pages from Keller's MySpace page.

Keller was in her fifth month of service as a full-time reserve officer for the department. She had previously spent three years as a volunteer reserve officer.

Police Chief John Gray, at a recent state hearing that dealt with Keller's request for unemployment benefits, said photographs on Keller's Web site "depicted Officer Keller in a bar surrounded by male and female patrons. ... In one photograph, she is displaying her naked buttocks or mooning the person who is taking the picture. In another, she is performing simulated sex acts on both males and females."

Keller testified that one photograph showed her "making kissy faces" with a friend, and in another she and a few female friends faced each other in a circle with their tongues out.

She said she did not post a photo to her site in which she exposed her buttocks. Gray disputed that, and said he had the photo in question.

"You're pulling your pants down," he testified. "Your naked buttocks are showing."

Administrative Law Judge Debra L. Wise asked Keller whether she had posted such a photo to her site.

"No, I didn't, "Keller replied. "I took that down way before I was hired with Altoona."

Keller said she posted the bar photos in 2005, months before she was appointed as a volunteer reserve officer, and forgot about them. She said she believed access to the site was restricted.

Gray testified that he was particularly concerned about the site because it included a photo of Keller in her police uniform.

"What I found to be inappropriate was that she was associating her conduct with the police department," he testified.

Wise ruled that although Keller might have been justifiably fired, she did not intentionally disregard the police department's interests and was entitled to unemployment benefits.

"In this technology age, she used poor judgment when she posted these pictures in albums on her social-network pages and naively believed no one but close personal friends could access these pictures," Wise wrote in her ruling.

Entry #706

Man Robs Bank He Patronized

Jul 4, 2009 11:28 am US/Pacific

Police: Man Robs Bank He Patronized

MIAMI (CBS)

 
 CBS News

 

In real estate, the first rule is always location, location, location. For one alleged South Florida bank robber, he might want to remember that old axiom.

Fort Lauderdale police say David Lotridge faces felony charges for allegedly robbing a local Citibank.

According to police, Lotridge walked into a Citibank at 899 Cypress Creek Rd. in Fort Lauderdale on Friday. He showed a teller a note implying he had a weapon and walked out with an undisclosed amount of cash, according to CBS station WFOR-TV news partner the Miami Herald.

Bank employees were shown a photo lineup by police and quickly recognized Lotridge as the alleged robber. Employees said Lotridge was a previous customer of the same bank that was robbed.

Entry #705

11 arrested in theft of jeans valued at $10,000

11 arrested in theft of blue jeans

A tipster alerted Atlanta Police; suspects were removing clothes’ tags.

By Mike Morris

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Saturday, July 04, 2009

A tip led Atlanta Police on Friday to an arrest of 11 people suspected of being blue jean bandits, and about $10,000 in stolen jeans, a spokeswoman said.

The tipster alerted police of suspicious activity in the backyard of a house in the 900 block of Farrington Road, Sgt. Lisa Keyes said.

Officers arrived to find 11 people removing tags from shirts and hundreds of high-end jeans, Keyes said.

Six of the suspects tried to hide in a crawl space over the home’s ceiling, but all were arrested, police said.

Much of the merchandise still had labels and security tags on it, Keyes said. Police also found two stolen cars —- one apparently taken in an armed robbery, she said.

Earlier Friday, police linked two Atlanta men arrested after leading police on a high-speed chase Thursday afternoon to a gang of burglars targeting high-end clothing boutiques, Keyes said.

Dominique Copeland, 21, and Quantavious Guffie, 18, waived their initial court appearance at the Fulton County Jail Friday morning.

The men are being held without bond, awaiting a preliminary hearing before a Fulton County Superior Court judge at a later date.

Keyes said Friday that investigators have linked the pair to Thursday morning’s attempted break-in at eModa, a Midtown clothing boutique that was hit twice last month by smash-and-grab burglars.

In each of the May burglaries, thieves made off with thousands of dollars in high-end blue jeans and other clothing. After the second burglary, the owners of eModa reinforced a metal gate inside the back door of the store. Early Thursday, would-be thieves smashed the glass door, but were unable to get past the metal grating.

Investigators are still trying to determine if Copeland and Guffie are involved in other smash-and-grab burglaries, Keyes said.

She said both are “known affiliates” of 30 Deep, a street gang that has been connected to at least one of the previous burglaries at eModa.

Copeland has been charged with felony obstruction, reckless conduct, auto theft by receiving, entering an auto and six counts of criminal damage to property in the second degree.

Guffie is facing charges of theft by receiving, felony obstruction, entering an auto and giving false information.

Entry #704

$1,000,000 In Prizes For Fastest Keyboard Typists

 

Contest Offers $1 Million In Prizes To Fastest Keyboard Typists



July 3, 2009 2:16 p.m. EST

Windsor Genova - AHN News Writer

Mountain View, CA (AHN) - A company that supplies color-coded keyboards has launched a nationwide speed typing contest offering $1 million worth of prizes to the fastest typists in the U.S.

KeyRight USA said its America's Fastest Typist contest aims to improve the nation's keyboard literacy by offering cash prizes and educational scholarships to participating individuals, students, school teams and corporate teams.

"It (contest) will have local, regional, state and national 'on-line' qualifying heats culminating in national fame for individuals and school and corporate teams in a televised final to be staged in Las Vegas in June, next year," Keyright said in a press release.

Aside from fame and prizes, contestants will have an opportunity to improve their keyboard typing skills through the use of Keyright's Look & Learn Keyboard. The keyboard's colored keys guide users on learning touch typing.

Jerome Whitcroft, inventor of the Look & Learn keyboard, said over 130 million PC users in the U.S., including scores of millions of children, can't type properly or have no basic typing skill.

"Over 85% of all PC users have deficient keyboard skills, resulting in learning difficulties, reduced productivity and keyboard-related injuries," Whitcroft said.

The problem can be solved through the use of the Look & Learn Keyboard, which is gaining wide acceptance from school teachers, individuals and business owners and corporations right across America, he said







http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7015685506#ixzz0KL2SBQGk&D

Entry #703

Woman, 85, laid dead FIVE YEARS before anyone noticed

Woman, 85, lay dead in her flat for FIVE YEARS before anyone noticed

Steven Henry
Last updated at 6:05 PM on 03rd July 2009

 

Forgotten: Isabella Purves' body lay undiscovered for five years

The badly decomposed remains of an 89-year-old woman were discovered in her flat five years after she died, police revealed today.

Isabella Purves' body was only found after a downstairs neighbour noticed water dripping through the ceiling of her tenement flat and reported it to the local council.

Officers forced their way into her flat, fighting through the piles of unopened mail which had gathered behind her front door, before making the gruesome discovery.

It is thought nobody noticed Miss Purves was missing as her pension was paid directly into a bank account and bills were paid by direct debit.

Today, as detectives tried to trace the elderly woman's relatives, neighbours, pensioners' charities and politicians spoke of their horror over the tragic case, which one described as a glaring example of the country's fractured society.

Isabella Purves's flat in Edinburgh

Tragedy: Isabella Purves is believed to have lain dead in her flat - the top bay window - in Edinburgh since 2004

The last reminder was sent out in 2004. His wife, Dorothy, who co-owns the business, said the discovery was 'an indictment' of society.

She said: 'Nobody cares any more, that's pretty sad. It's down to basic neighbourly behaviour. I would hope people would be looking out for others.'

Giovanni Cilia, who owns the Fioritalia florist below Miss Purves's traditional tenement flat, said he was shocked at how long it took to find her. He said: 'How did no one notice the smell, or wonder where she was?

'I heard there was a big pile of letters and bills behind the door. I used to see her walk past the shop maybe four times a week. She would often go across the street and pick up litter to clean the place up.'

Mr Cilia, who has run the shop for 20 years, added: 'It's shocked everyone here. When I saw her she looked quite fit and healthy for her age. 'She used to wear boots and would often carry a rucksack like she enjoyed going for walks.'

Isabella's neighbour Lucy Balloch, 28, added: 'It's very saddening and a real shock. There are a lot of people moving in and out all the time in here and it's not easy to get to know the neighbours that well.

'That's maybe why nobody suspected anyone was in there.'

 Isabella Purves's flat in Edinburgh

Tragic: Isabella Purves' name is still on the doorbell to her flat

Little is known about Miss Purves, although it is thought she never married.

The windows of her top-floor flat were left open today in the tenement building, which occupies a block on the busy junction with Broughton Road, above a pub and row of shops.

Douglas McLellan, of Age Concern and Help the Aged in Scotland, said it was a 'tragic case'.

He said: 'If she was not receiving care treatment from anyone and not receiving social care, then the likelihood of being found quickly is minimal.

'The question is not just about public services finding people and neighbours checking up, it's about how elderly people themselves are living their lives. If they're leading private lives, then how are people going to find them?'

Mr McLellan urged people to take more notice of their neighbours and 'knock on doors' if there is any concern.

'Society has fractured. We're not in the same units as we used to be. People might not phone their own gran more than once a month,' he added.

Meanwhile, Labour leader Iain Gray, MSP, said he was 'shocked and troubled' by the case. 'These sad circumstances are a reminder to us all to make an effort to speak to our neighbours whenever we get the chance, especially those who are elderly and on their own,' he added. 

Malcolm Chisholm, Labour MSP for Ms Purves' constituency of Edinburgh North and Leith, said: 'It is deeply disturbing that the body of an elderly person can lie undiscovered for five years.

'In the city of Edinburgh there is a great sense of community but with such a bustling sometimes transient population it is worthwhile and really important that young and old reach out and build those bridges.'

Edinburgh City Council confirmed it was contacted about a leak from the tenement but said Miss Purves was not a council tenant.

A spokesman for Lothian and Borders Police said: 'Police were called to an address in Rodney Street in Edinburgh on June 30, after concerns were raised over an elderly resident.

'On entering the premises, officers discovered the body of a 90-year-old woman. There are no suspicious circumstances surrounding her death, and a report has been sent to the procurator fiscal.'

Entry #702