truesee's Blog

Kindergaten class sees hard-core porn in school

OOPS! KIDS SEE 'SEX ED'

KINDERGARTEN PORNO PEEK

ANGELA MONTEFINISE

New York Post     

Last updated: 5:21 am
June 14, 2009
Posted: 2:18 am
June 14, 2009

Debbie does grade school.

An auditorium full of unsuspecting Brooklyn students -- some as young as 5 years old -- got a surprise lesson in reading, writing and raunchiness on May 29 when hard-core porn was accidentally screened at PS 17 in Williamsburg.

The kindergartners, first-graders and fifth-graders were exposed to a topless woman and sex acts in the 45 seconds the obscene clip played on the jumbo screen -- as shocked teachers screamed, "Don't look at it!" and frantically tried to turn it off.

Finally, one horrified teacher ripped the DVD player's plug out of the wall to silence the smut.

"My son told his friend he saw a naked lady at school," fumed Rona Easton, whose 6-year-old son, Cass, viewed the stunning reel with his kindergarten class. "I thought he was just being silly. It's appalling."

"My daughter is 6 years old; she doesn't need to see that," said another angry parent whose daughter is also in kindergarten. "I don't even like to kiss in front of her because I think she's too young. So I'm very angry."

The five classes were in the auditorium for a "film festival," and were supposed to watch "Camp Rock," a Disney Channel movie starring the Jonas Brothers, according to a letter Principal Robert A. Marchi sent home to parents the day of the incident.

A teacher powered up the DVD player, then walked away to get the G-rated disc.

But the decidedly un-Disney skin flick was already loaded into the machine -- and began to play.

"A very explicit pornographic video came on the screen," Marchi wrote. "This was extremely upsetting to the students and staff members in attendance . . . I am deeply sorry that this episode took place at PS 17. I know that we will make every effort to find out who was responsible for this despicable act."

Parents first heard the DVD player had been locked in the principal's office before the impromptu X-rated screening but were later told it was moved to another office where anyone could have accessed it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CUT! PS 17 Principal Robert Marchi (above) is furious after kids saw 45 seconds of hardcore porn, a la Jenna Jameson, instead of the Jonas Brothers.

CUT! PS 17 Principal Robert Marchi (above)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CUT! PS 17 Principal Robert Marchi (above) is furious after kids saw 45 seconds of hardcore porn, a la Jenna Jameson, instead of the Jonas Brothers.
CUT! PS 17 Principal Robert Marchi is furious after
kids saw 45 seconds of hardcore porn, a la Jenna J
ameson (above), instead of the Jonas Brothers.

 

 

 

CUT! PS 17 Principal Robert Marchi (above) is furious after kids saw 45 seconds of hardcore porn, a la Jenna Jameson, instead of the Jonas Brothers.
CUT! PS 17 Principal Robert Marchi is furious
after kids saw 45 seconds of hardcore porn,
a la Jenna Jameson, instead of the Jonas
Brothers (above).
Entry #611

Umpire ejects entire crowd

High school umpire tells entire crowd: You're out!

BRYCE MILLER

The Des Moines Register

June 13, 2009

 

Few high school baseball umpires have gotten more mileage out of one "Yer outta here!" than Don Briggs.

Briggs briefly ejected the entire crowd — estimated at more than 100 fans — during a game between Winfield-Mount Union and West Burlington on Thursday night in West Burlington.

"It was something else — I'll tell you that," Winfield-Mount Union coach Scott McCarty said.

Dave Anderson and Bud Legg of the Iowa High School Athletic Association said they know of no other sanctioned high school event in Iowa where an entire crowd has been asked to leave.

"I have no recollection of that ever happening," Anderson said.

The ejection came in the fifth inning of the game, after McCarty left the dugout to argue whether a batted ball was fair or foul.

West Burlington coach Jeff Housel, who said he did not see or hear time called, tried to send a runner from third base to score during the debate — but Briggs sent the runner back.

Briggs said the crowd became unruly, and had been unruly during the game. McCarty and Housel, however, said the situation was overblown.

Because no administrator from West Burlington was in attendance, Briggs said, the rules indicate that the head coach of the home team makes management decisions at the site.

Briggs said Housel declined to eject the crowd, so he did so himself. He called West Burlington police on a borrowed cell phone to monitor and assist in the situation.

"I know it sounds like I'm the bad guy — but it was the crowd," Briggs said. "If I got the control to ask one person to leave, I feel like I can ask them all to leave."

The crowd, estimated to be more than 100 people, lingered. Some people refused to leave. Others moved 30 feet away to a sidewalk officially off school property.

The delay lasted nearly 40 minutes.

Eventually, West Burlington Superintendent James Sleister arrived and persuaded the umpire to allow the game to continue.

Fans returned and the game resumed, under the agreement that "anyone making a negative comment toward the officials would be ejected from the premises and could be charged with disorderly conduct," according to the Burlington Hawk Eye.

"I talked to people from both school districts and both coaches, and they didn't seem to believe that the crowd was anything out of the normal," Sleister said. "They questioned some calls, but they said nobody was yelling loudly or yelling profane. I think it was an overreaction."

Briggs said the situation required some type of action. "In one area, most of the people were really being mouthy — not all of them, but most of them," he said. "And they don't say nothing when you look at them. They waited until you turned your back.

"I can get it to the point where we can play it safely with the kids. There was a lot of people yelling and arguing, so I made the decision. The kids were great, so I didn't have any problems with the kids."

The game was almost as eventful as the delay.

Winfield-Mount Union led 11-3 in the fifth inning before West Burlington rallied to win, 12-11, on a steal of home in the bottom of the seventh inning.

"I've heard a lot worse during a game, I guess I'll say that," McCarty said. "But it turned into a playoff atmosphere after that (delay). People were cheering, making plays. They had a great diving stop. It turned into a heck of a game."

For Briggs, who said he has umpired Iowa high school games for about a decade, there is no hesitation to umpire again.

In fact, he was preparing call a game Friday night. The matchup: a junior varsity between WACO of Wayland and ... Winfield-Mount Union.

"I'm not really worried," Briggs said. "They should know I won't take nothing from them."

Housel, the West Burlington coach, said it was a once-in-a-lifetime night.

"Like I told the other coach after the game," Housel said, "this is one you'll never forget."

Entry #610

High school football coach accused of cooking coke dealer's body

Mass. men accused of cooking coke dealer's body

By RUSSELL CONTRERAS

Posted June 8, 2009

Updated June 10, 2009

Associated Press Writer

A  high school football coach and another man killed a cocaine dealer to avoid paying a debt, dismembered his body and cooked the remains at a concrete business, prosecutors said Monday. Daniel Bradley, 47, of Westwood, and Paul Moccia, 48, of Dedham, pleaded not guilty Monday in Wrentham District Court to murder charges in the death of Angel Antonio Ramirez, a construction worker from Guatemala who lived in Framingham.

Moccia met Ramirez near the concrete company in Walpole that Bradley co-owns and shot him in the back with a .357-caliber pistol, said Norfolk Assistant District Attorney Robert Nelson.

Moccia owed Ramirez $70,000 from drug deals and decided to kill him instead of paying up, authorities said.

Bradley dismembered the man's remains and then tried to get rid of the evidence once and for all, Nelson said.

"It was cooked," he said.

Prosecutors didn't say how they arrived at their theory, or how the body was cooked or disposed of.

Defense attorneys said their clients are innocent and noted prosecutors haven't produced a body.

Prosecutors believe forensic evidence from the concrete factory will bolster their case against the suspects, Nelson said.

Investigators found blood spots inside the concrete business, RJ Bradley Co. Inc., Nelson said, as well as on a pair of Bradley's boots at his Westwood home.

Bradley is an assistant football coach at Xaverian Brothers High School; the school didn't return a message left after business hours Monday.

Moccia is a longtime Mass Pike toll collector. Colin Durrant, a spokesman for the Executive Office of Transportation, said Monday that Moccia has been suspended without pay and a disciplinary hearing has been scheduled.

Both men were ordered held without bail in Wrentham District Court. A pretrial hearing has been scheduled for July 7.

 

Daniel Bradley stands in district court Monday, June 8, 2009, in Wrentham, Mass., during his arraignment for first-degree murder of Angel Antonio Ramirez, who has been missing since March.
Erin Prawoko, Pool
Daniel Bradley stands in district court Monday, June 8, 2009, in Wrentham, Mass., during his arraignment for first-degree murder of Angel Antonio Ramirez, who has been missing since March

 

 

Daniel Bradley, left, and Paul Moccia, right, stand in district court Monday, June 8, 2009, in Wrentham, Mass., during their arraignment for first-degree murder of Angel Antonio Ramirez, who has been missing since March.

Daniel Bradley, left, and Paul Moccia, right, stand in district court Monday, June 8, 2009, in Wrentham, Mass., during their arraignment for first-degree murder of Angel Antonio Ramirez, who has been missing since March.

 

Relatives of Angel Ramirez sit in district court Monday, June 8, 2009, in Wrentham, Mass., during the arraignment of Daniel Bradley and Paul Moccia, not visible, for the first-degree murder of Ramirez, who has been missing since March.

Relatives of Angel Ramirez sit in district court Monday, June 8, 2009, in Wrentham, Mass., during the arraignment of Daniel Bradley and Paul Moccia, not visible, for the first-degree murder of Ramirez, who has been missing since March.
Entry #609

Woman finds $5,000 in cab rides gets interesting

Restaurant gets money back, despite cabbie

$5,000 | Woman finds it, tells driver -- night gets 'interesting'

 

June 14, 2009
MARY WISNIEWSKI
Staff Reporter
Sun Times

The bag Ginny Narsete found on the back seat of the taxi bore the logo of a Mexican restaurant, but the contents "didn't feel like a taco," she said.

"It felt weird," added Narsete, 57, of Lisle, who was riding the cab to a train station Thursday night and had planned to take the bag to the trash as a favor to the driver. "It felt heavy."

Ginny Narsete of Lisle, pictured with husband Jim, found a bag containing $5,000 lost by a restaurant manager.
(Keith Hale/Sun-Times)



Narsete looked in the La Bamba bag and found two bundles of cash totaling $5,000, along with a bank deposit slip. The money had been dropped accidentally by a La Bamba manager who had meant to take it to the bank.

Narsete, who owns her own small cabin rental business in Ohio, said she didn't even consider keeping the money. She told the driver what she had found and asked him to take her to a police station so she could turn over the cash.

But she said the cabdriver began acting strangely, insisting that the money should be taken to a cab stand, and drove Narsete around and around, running up the fare.

"He wouldn't let me out of the car," Narsete said.

Narsete phoned her husband for advice, and Jim Narsete got on the phone to yell at the driver to take his wife to a police station -- or he'd call 911.

At the station, police determined that the cash did indeed come from La Bamba and called the restaurant, which gratefully took back the money.

"There are good people in this world," said Ramiro Aguas, co-owner of the La Bamba chain, which has 19 locations, including one downtown and another in Lincoln Park. "It was very nice of her to bring that money back."

Narsete doesn't want any reward -- she said she was just glad to help. Her only regret now is telling the cabdriver what she'd found because she may have put herself in an unsafe situation.

What happened to the driver? At the police station, he took Narsete's last $20 for the fare, and disappeared into the night, she said.

"The police ended up driving

Entry #608

Student charged with keeping teachers from grading

Student charged with keeping teachers from grading

High school student charged with designing computer software to shut teachers out of grading
 
Associated Press
Last updated: 1:45 a.m., Sunday, June 14, 2009

 

CLIFTON PARK, N.Y. -- A high school computer whiz didn't get a high grade for a recent feat: designing software to shut teachers out of the grading system.

 

A New York State Police spokeswoman says 16-year-old Matthew Beighey has been charged with unauthorized use of a computer and third-degree identity theft. He was ordered to return to court Wednesday.

The school district says the teenager temporarily blocked teachers' ability to enter grades at the high school in upstate Clifton Park. They needed technical support to regain access.

                       RELATED STORY

Shen computer case has familiar ring

Student charged this week with identity theft is same one accused last year, officials say
 The Times Union

First published in print: Saturday, June 13, 2009

 

CLIFTON PARK -- Matthew C. Beighey is a Shenendehowa student with a knack for computers he keeps putting to the wrong uses, police say.

Last fall, the 16-year-old sophomore was accused of posting personal information on 250 district employees on his personal Web site. And now police say he built an application to shut teachers out of the grading system.

State Police spokeswoman Maureen Tuffey said Beighey was arrested Wednesday and charged with two misdemeanors: unauthorized use of a computer and third-degree identity theft. He was issued an appearance ticket and ordered to return to court Wednesday. His parents could not be reached for comment.

District spokeswoman Kelly DeFeciani said the student never got access to the grading system, but he temporarily blocked teachers' ability to enter grades.

"If I log on with an incorrect password three times, it locks me out," she said. The district's user names all are easily determined based on a specific number of letters from their first and last names, she said. The employees have unique passwords that enable them to access the grading and attendance system.

The student built a computer application using teachers' names that entered false passwords three times, she said, making it impossible for teachers to get into the system. They would then have to call the technical support staff to unfreeze their access.

"We began seeing, at 12 o'clock at night, we'd have a group of teachers locked out," DeFeciani said. "He actually went through and created a user ID and started throwing in random passwords. Teachers weren't able to get in and enter their grades."

Teachers were able to change their passwords and will file year-end grades on time.

The student has been disciplined, although DeFeciani declined to say how or whether he was still able to attend classes. She did not disclose his identity but said he was the same student who had accessed personnel records in October.

The files contained Social Security numbers, drivers' licenses numbers, home addresses and other data on past and present transportation employees, many of them bus drivers.

He was charged with identify theft, a felony, for using another student's identity to access the district's computer system. Beighey was 15 at the time, so his case was referred to Family Court and his name was not publicly released. Tuffey would not discuss the resolution of the earlier case, saying any incident that occurred when Beighey was 15 would be sealed.

At the time of the earlier incident, Beighey informed the district of his own actions through an anonymous e-mail. The data he retrieved accidentally was left on an unsecured part of the computer network.

At the time, the district said the student previously had been disciplined for violating the acceptable use policy for using district computers.

 

 

16-year-old Matthew Beighey

 

Entry #607

Founder of anti-drug program caught in drug sting

Founder of anti-drug program is held in drug sting

KTLA News

June 13, 2009

Kendall Craig Farris

Kendall Craig Farris (Booking Photo / June 12, 2009)

 

Kendall Craig Farris, who heads the Over the Wall Foundation in Marina del Rey, is arrested after an undercover Redondo Beach officer is sold fake methamphetamine and ecstasy tablets.

By Jeff Gottlieb
June 13, 2009
Kendall Craig Farris' website is filled with influential endorsements for the drug prevention program he founded. Los Angeles City Councilman Bill Rosendahl called them "amazing tools which our schools and communities desperately need" and thanked Farris for meeting with him and his staff.

Something went wrong, however, and Farris was arrested Thursday at a Starbucks in El Segundo after Redondo Beach police set up a drug buy over the phone.

Farris, 47, arrived at the coffeehouse in a taxi, police said. An undercover officer gave him an envelope containing $480 in exchange for methamphetamine and ecstasy tablets, which turned out to be fake, authorities said. Farris was arrested at 3:40 p.m.

Farris was arraigned Friday on charges of selling a substance that he alleged was drugs. He is being held on $106,500 bail and could not be reached for comment.

Farris, according to his website, was founder of the Over the Wall Foundation in Marina del Rey and a recovering alcoholic and addict. His mission, he says, is "to help youth, schools, and families prevent drug and alcohol abuse before it starts, and intervene in any drug abuse which may already have begun."

He is the author of "Drugs, Kids and Crime: Surviving Our Drug Obsessed Culture."

 

 

RELATED STORY

Local Drug Counselor Busted in Narcotics Sting

KTLA News

June 13, 2009

 

REDONDO BEACH -- The founder of a Marina del Rey-based anti-drug organization has been busted in an undercover drug sting.

Kendall Craig Farris is charged with selling pills to an undercover Redondo Beach police detective.

The 47-year old former addict is the co-founder and chief executive officer of the Over the Wall Foundation.

He was arrested Tuesday at the Starbucks coffee shop on Sepulveda Boulevard in El Segundo.

The bust was made after Farris handed over an envelope in exchange for $480 dollars.

The envelope was supposed to contain methamphetamine and Ecstasy.

Inside it was filled with rock salt and antihistamines.

Farris won praise from local agencies for turning his life around to preach against drugs to schools and youth groups.

He started Over the Wall in 2007 after overcoming 15 years of drug and alcohol abuse that landed him in prison.

He was convicted of various crimes, including robbery, theft and forgery, which he said he committed to fund his drug habit.

While in prison, he wrote a book, "Drugs, Kids and Crime: Surviving our Drug Obsessed Culture," which drew attention from schools and youth groups.

After his release, Farris started giving talks about his experience and even developed a workshop program.

Betsy Spier, a marriage and family therapist who is on the Over the Wall board of directors, said she was shocked by the arrest.

She said she did not know if Farris had relapsed or needed money, but that he had having trouble sustaining the foundation.
Entry #605

ATM ripped out of bank wall

Saturday, June 13, 2009

ATM ripped out of bank wall

 

The scene of the ATM raid at the Bank of Ireland in Graiguenamanagh, Co Kilkenny, yesterday. Four masked men stole a JCB mechanical digger and drove it into the front of the building, partly demolishing it. They fled in two stolen cars with a trailer carrying the ATM.
Photograph: Dylan Vaughan

MICHAEL PARSONS

Irish Times

“AUDACIOUS”, WAS how gardaí in Co Kilkenny described a spectacular early morning bank raid in the town of Graiguenamanagh yesterday.

Four masked men stole a JCB mechanical digger and drove it into the front of the Bank of Ireland branch – partly demolishing it. They fled in two stolen cars with a trailer bearing an ATM, believed to have contained “a substantial sum of money ”.

The raid occurred at about 5.30am across the street from a Garda station which, like many in rural areas, operates on a part-time basis, and was closed at the time.

A man who lives just yards away “heard a digger going and knew something was being knocked down”. He leaned out of an upstairs window in his house and managed to film the incident on his mobile phone camera.

Gardaí, who arrived at about 6am, are examining the footage as well as CCTV film from the bank.

An eyewitness who did not wish to be named told The Irish Times he came across “four men wearing black balaclavas” on the street outside the bank. They told him to “f*** off”, and he saw them place the ATM on a green trailer. The one-storey building was badly damaged and engineers were due to inspect it. Supt Gerry Redmond said once the structure was deemed safe to enter, his priority would be to remove remaining cash from safes inside.

Supt Redmond appealed to the public to be on the lookout for the stolen vehicles used by the gang to escape. A blue hatchback Volkswagen Golf, registration number 08 D 29796, had been stolen in Mooncoin, Co Kilkenny, during a burglary on Thursday morning. And an “old style” blue BMW, for which he had a partial registration only of “94 D”, and a “flat green trailer” were stolen in the Graiguenamanagh area yesterday morning.

The JCB was stolen from a building site on the edge of the town. Supt Redmond said the gang could have gone east into Co Carlow, or towards New Ross and south Co Wexford.

The people of Graiguenamanagh are unlikely to have banking facilities for some time. Bank of Ireland is the only bank in the town, and a spokeswoman said customers should avail of services in neighbouring towns.

Perhaps reflecting current antipathy towards financial institutions, local people expressed little sympathy. One young man said he was “delighted” by the “cheeky” raid; an older man said the raiders had “done no worse than the robbers in charge of the banks”. Another said: “I’m not one bit sorry; the f****** have been robbing us for long enough.”

Onlookers agreed that the scale of the damage meant the bank would have to be entirely rebuilt. One man described it as “a terrible eyesore; you wouldn’t see the like of it in communist Europe.”

Entry #604

Man had broken leg for 29 years

Man had broken leg for 29 years

A businessman has discovered he has been walking around with a broken leg for 29 years.

 

Ben Leach

Telegraph UK
Published: 11:26AM BST 13 Jun 2009

Steve Webb: Man discovers he has had broken leg for 29 years
Steve Webb discovered he has had a broken leg for 29 years and will now have an operation to grow back 6cm of dead bone Photo: GEOFF ROBINSON

Steve Webb, 49, broke his left leg in a motorbike crash when he was 20-years-old. But after suffering decades of pain he found it had never actually healed.

Mr Webb, from Dagenham, Essex, said he only realised he still had the injury after it showed up on a hospital scan.

He had feared the leg might have to be amputated under the knee but instead he is about to have an operation to stretch the broken bone back together.

"I think it's extraordinary. Everyone tells me that having a broken leg for nearly 30 years is unheard of.

"I've had trouble with my leg ever since the accident but I was repeatedly told the bone had healed so I carried on walking on it."

Mr Webb, a plumbing merchant, broke his leg when he crashed his Suzuki T250 Hustler motorbike into a lamppost when he was just 20.

The bone pierced his skin and he spent two months in hospital after his leg became infected and swollen.

He spent 17 months in a plaster cast and doctors believed his leg had healed but when he went into hospital for an operation on his toe they found it was wobbly and still broken.

He then had electro magnetic therapy for nine months, but five years after the accident he was still in pain. Doctors then found his leg was still broken so they put it in a metal plate.

Mr Webb had the metal plate for 24 years, then last year he suddenly had pains in his leg again.

Scans showed an infection in the bone and when the metal plate was removed they showed the bone was still broken after more than 29 years.

He will now have a metal Ilazarov frame fitted around his leg and foot to stretch the bone 1mm each day for seven to nine months. Then he will be in plaster for a further three months.

He has been told the new procedure, which he will have done at Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre, Oxford, has a 99 per cent chance of success.

Entry #603

Man blames his infant for hit-and-run accident

Police: Man blames his infant for hit-and-run

Top Photo
David Ponzer

 

By GEOFF CUNNINGHAM Jr.
Foster's Daily Democrat
Friday, June 12, 2009

 

PORTSMOUTH — A local man is charged with lying to authorities about his involvement in an alleged hit-and-run accident by telling them his son was driving the vehicle.

The problem with his story, police say, is David Ponzer's son is an infant.

Ponzer, 44, of 62 Porpoise Way, is charged with Class A misdemeanor counts of conduct after an accident and providing a false report to police following a motor vehicle accident on Dec. 31.

Ponzer was slated to go to trial this week on the charges, but his case has been continued.

A police affidavit filed by Officer Christopher Kiberd indicates a driver came to the police department on Dec. 31 and filed a report that his pickup truck had been struck from behind on Market Street by a motorist driving an older model Volvo station wagon.

The reporting party told police the driver of the vehicle who hit him did not stop, and that the Volvo in question would be missing its grill as a result of the accident.

Court papers indicate that on Jan. 2, the motorist who reported the accident had done some investigating of his own, learned the suspect Volvo was parked at Ponzer's address and provided police with the Volvo's grill.

According to the affidavit, Kiberd responded to the 62 Porpoise Way residence and found a damaged Volvo matching the description in the driveway with part of its grill missing.

The officer questioned Ponzer about who "normally" drives the Volvo and was told by Ponzer that his son drives the vehicle, but he told police his son was not at home.

Police informed Ponzer the vehicle had been in an accident and that they needed to speak to his son.

Police allege Ponzer told them his son is named William Ponzer and was born March 4, 1993.

Authorities say Ponzer told police he would have his son contact police.

Kiberd's affidavit indicates he was leaving the residence when he "happened upon one of the neighbors" and asked if they had seen Ponzer's son driving the vehicle recently.

"The subject laughed and informed me Ponzer's son is still an infant," Kiberd wrote in the affidavit.

Police followed up and found no police records for a William Ponzer matching the description, but did find a William David Ponzer who they say is David Ponzer's father.

Entry #602

Man wins $1,000,000-- no wait -- just $5,000

Man wins $1M -- no wait -- just $5K

Published: June 12, 2009 at 3:31 PM

OSHAWA, Ontario, June 12 (UPI) -- Video poker games that told an avid player near Ottawa twice he had won prizes totaling $1 million were wrong, and the man took home $5,000 instead.

 

The glitches happened to the unidentified man last weekend on separate Bonus Poker Deluxe video slot machines, the Toronto Star reported Friday.

Staff at the Rideau Carleton Raceway told the man they couldn't pay him, and the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp., which regulates all gaming in the province was notified.

OLG spokesman Don Pister said all 296 video poker games in Ontario with that game on it were shut down as a precaution.

"It was showing credits in the value of millions ... that cannot be generated on that machine," as there is a $40,000 cap on each machine, he said.

Technical officials with the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario were examining the software and Pister said there was nothing suspicious about the fluke.

"I don't think the person had anything to do with it," he said, adding there was no evidence of tampering on the machines.

 

 

Entry #601

Dog gets high on pot found in park

Jun 12, 8:33 PM EDT


Dog runs away from owner and gets 'stoned' after eating marijuana at Seattle park

 

SEATTLE (AP) -- A dog that ran off from its owner in Seattle's Seward Park found and ate some marijuana and got high. Owner Jen Nestor Waddell told KING-TV the 11-year-old black Lab mix named Jack was "just stoned" May 12 after they returned home from the park. The dog's eyes glossed over and he had trouble walking.

The vet said Jack had swallowed a large amount of dried, harvested marijuana. After some medication to induce vomiting and a night of rest Jack was back to normal.

Waddell told police about the drugs and joked they could borrow Jack to find them if they paid the $1,500 vet bill.

 

LINK TO VIDEO OF DOG:

 

http://video.ap.org/?f=PAREA&pid=SbhshgtGoYd_8lycCeNeAXBhwxrDdAZX

Entry #600

Mayor Angry Over Inmate Hosting Lavish Party Behind Bars

NY Mayor Angry Over Behind Bars Bar Mitzvah

Mayor Amazed Corrections Officials Allowed Inmate to Host Lavish Party in Jail

By RUSSELL GOLDMAN
June 11, 2009
 

New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg condemned city correction officials who allowed an inmate to host a bar mitzvah for his son behind bars at a city jail known as The Tombs where 60 guests rocked to the klezmer strains of the hora and dined on a fully catered kosher meal.

Con man holds Bar Mitzvah in NYC jail
Con man holds Bar Mitzvah in NYC jail
(AP Photo)

Tuvia Stern, 48, who was being held at the jail while on trial for larceny, was twice given unprecedented free reign of the grim Manhattan detention center that is adjacent to the city's criminal courts.

Stern hosted a bar mitzvah celebration for his son on Dec. 30 and then four months later held an engagement party for his daughter at which 10 guests attended, according to Stephen J. Morello, spokesman for the city's Department of Corrections.

While just yards away inmates ate city-supplied meals with plastic utensils, Stern's guests ate from silverware on fine china in the facility's visitors area.

Several prominent rabbis were in attendance and music was provided by as Yaakov Shwekey, a popular Orthodox Jewish singer, according to the New York Post which first reported the story and was confirmed by corrections officials.

In addition to metal forks and knives, guests flaunted other contraband inside the jail including cell phones.

At a press conference today, Bloomberg said the party was not "something that should have taken place. I don't care how you define it or how you sugar coat it."

He said he had ordered an investigation into the incidents and called reports of the party surreal, a "through the looking glass" occurrence.

Five corrections officials including two chiefs, two chaplains and a warden have been disciplined and are under investigation, Morello said.

"They have been disciplined for being aware of the plan, being involved in the plan, and failing to inform their superiors," he said.

"Uppermost management including the commissioner [Martin Horn] are outraged," he said.

Corrections chaplain Rabbi Leib Glanz was suspended for two weeks. Another chaplain, Muslim Imam Umar Abdul-Jamil, who in 2006 had been disciplined for anti-Semitic comments, was docked two weeks' vacation.

Warden George Okada, and two chiefs, Peter Curcio and Frank Squillante were also docked vacation time.

Stern first entered the correction facility in February 2008. He was convicted of larceny and sent to an upstate facility in April, just days after his daughter's engagement party. He was first arrested in 1989 for stealing $1.7 million and spent nearly 20 years on the lam, mostly in Brazil.

 

LINK TO  UPDATE:

http://newsfeedresearcher.com/data/articles_e24/stern-mitzvah-bars.html#hdng0

 

 

Entry #599

Gas station robber leaves his name and address at scene

Police say gas station robbery suspect left key clue behind -- a piece of paper with his name, address

by The Grand Rapids Press

Wednesday June 10, 2009, 9:28 AM

KENTWOOD -- As an armed robber fled from a Speedway gas station Tuesday, he probably did not realize the clue he left behind.

It landed him in jail less than 90 minutes later, when officers staked out his apartment.

How did police know where to find him? He left his address at the scene of the crime, authorities say.

 

The 42-year-old robber entered the Speedway at 4404 Eastern Ave. SE about 1:20 p.m., telling the clerk he had a gun, police said. He held the weapon under a piece of paper.

After getting cash, the suspect dropped the paper as the clerk made a motion toward the weapon. Speedway employees and police soon discovered the paper apparently contained the robber's name.

Witnesses also gave Kentwood Police a description of the getaway van.

Grand Rapids officers staked out his Traditions Apartments residence at 43rd Street and Breton Avenue SE. The suspect drove up to the complex about 2:30 p.m.

He bailed from the van as police moved toward him but was captured after a brief chase.

Police later determined the gun was a homemade fake.

Kentwood Police Chief Richard Mattice said the suspect's arrest could be important in solving other crimes. Investigators were looking for links between the man and several other robberies, including one at a Kentwood party store.

Entry #598

Meet the smallest girl in the world

Meet the smallest girl in the world

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Jyoti Amge does her homework, with refreshment close at hand
Jyoti Amge does her homework, with refreshment close at hand

Tiny Jyoti Amge is already a 'mini' celebrity in her hometown of Nagpur, India.

But she has one big claim to fame - at just under two-foot tall the teenager is the smallest girl in the world.

Standing just one foot 11.5ins at 15-years-old, she is half the size of her two-year-old nephew.

 

 

"When I tell people my age they don't believe me," she said.

Weighing just 12lb - only 9lbs more than her weight at birth, Jyoti dreams of becoming an actress and is believed by many to be the reincarnation of a goddess.

"When I was three I realised that I was different to the rest of the kids," she said.

"I thought that everyone was bigger and I should get bigger too."

 

Jyoti Amge and her school friends
Jyoti Amge and her school friends

 

Jyoti has her own mini grey uniform and school bag and even a tiny desk. But she looks like a doll next to her teenage classmates.

 

When I was three I realised that I was different to the rest of the kids

 

She said: "I am proud of being the smallest girl. I love all the attention I get.

"I'm not scared of being small, and I don't regret being small.

"I am sure there are many people in this world who are dwarves like me.

"I'm just the same as other people. I eat like you, dream like you. I don't feel any different."

Despite her tiny size Jyoti insists on living as normal a life as possible - including going to the local school where she is an average and sometimes naughty student.

"I used to get stressed and couldn't go out much but now I like going out and speaking to people," she said.

"When I first went to school everyone was so big I used to get scared but I'm okay now, I like it.

"I have a different desk and chair that were made for me. I'm a normal student.

"I would like to be an actress when I grow up. My dream is to do films." Jyoti has already had a taste of fame in a pop video for Indian star Mika Singh.

"They asked her to appear in the video for a song on his album," said her mum Ranjana Amge, 45.

However, Jyoti's dreams of stardom could be ruined because of fractures to both her legs that have never healed due to problems with her size.

"First I could walk, but I slipped on ice during a holiday and hurt my leg. Because of that I'm not able to do anything. I find it strange that my legs just don't heal. They should heal quickly. I don't like it, it causes me pain."

Doctors believe Jyoti is a pituitary dwarf but have never been able to pinpoint her condition.

Jyoti's mum said: "No-one knows why she is so small. We consulted a specialist and he said she will be this size all of her life.

"Jyoti is small, yet cute, and we love her very much."

People in the region of India where the family live flock to see the pretty teenager and some even treat her as a goddess.

Ambitious Jyoti dreams of making it as a Bollywood actress.

She said: "I would love to act in films. I would love to travel to London and to see the different world there.

"I want to see America as well. I'd love to work in a big city like Mumbai."

Now Jyoti is to be featured in Channel 4's Bodyshock series on Thursday, June 11 at 9pm.

Entry #597