truesee's Blog

Man argues to increase lawyer's fee

James McMillan, paralyzed in S.I. Ferry accident, wants his lawyer to get full fee

John Marzulli
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Wednesday, June 3rd 2009, 12:59 PM

Ward for News

James McMillan, a surviving victim of the Staten Island ferry crash, wants to give his lawyer his full fee.

Take my money, please!

Believe it or not, that was the plea Wednesday from a former fish market worker who got $18 million from the city after being paralyzed in the Staten Island ferry accident.

James McMillan was back in Brooklyn Federal Court on Wednesday, urging a magistrate to reverse another judge's ruling which reduced his lawyer's fee by $2.5 million.

If lawyer Evan Torgan's fee of one-third of the settlement is restored, the money would come out of McMillan's pocket - but that suits him fine.

"I don't need that extra," McMillan said. "I want him to have it. He worked for it."

McMillan suffered a broken neck on Oct. 15, 2003, when the Andrew J. Barberi ferry crashed into a concrete pier, killing 11 passengers and injuring scores of others.

The city settled 146 cases - but Torgan told Mayor Bloomberg to stick his $10 million offer and gambled on a trial.

A federal jury awarded McMillan $22.9 million in September. Judge Jack Weinstein reduced it to an $18 million settlement and cut Torgan's fee to 20%.

The judge expressed concerns that McMillan didn't understand the retainer he signed in his hospital bed only four days after the catastrophic accident.

"If I could only tell the judge this man [Torgan] did a great job for me and I'm satisfied," said McMillan, who sported a fancy ring and massive watch.

"There's a hundred lawyers on TV saying, 'I'm the best,' but this man has walked with me through many things people wouldn't understand.

"He said, 'James I'm your lawyer' and I needed that comfort."

After McMillan signed with Torgan, he turned away the legendary Johnnie Cochran when he showed up at his hospital bedside.

McMillan's brother Tyrone testified that he explained to the victim that he didn't have to fork over the extra fee.

"I told him this is the jungle lawyers work in, but he said it was the right thing to do because he agreed to it and should honor it," said Tyrone McMillan.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2009/06/03/2009-06-03_james_mcmillan_paralyzed_in_si_ferry_accident_wants_his_lawyer_to_get_full_fee.html#ixzz0HZ6JqCLD&C

Entry #566

Man shot after busting into police station with a knife

Attacker at Queens Police Station Is Shot by Officers
Robert Stolarik for The New York Times

The Flushing police station where officers wounded a man they said was wielding a knife.

CHRISTINE HAUSER

Published: June 4, 2009

Just inside the blue double doors of the 109th Precinct station house in Flushing, Queens, the paces of standard police work shuffled along in the expected ways. A man picked up a copy of an accident report. A detective helped a couple fill out a complaint form. A police officer and another detective conferred near a central desk, and a community affairs officer was near the entrance.

Then, just before 11 a.m. Thursday, chaos erupted when Armando Torres, a 35-year- old Queens resident, burst in with a carving knife with an 8-inch blade, the police said.

The community affairs officer started to say, “Can I help you?” according to the police. An officer stationed at the switchboard also saw Mr. Torres, but saw the weapon as well, and shouted, “Knife! Knife!” the police said.

In the space of a few minutes, a man would be stabbed, three officers would fire their guns, and Mr. Torres would be shot and hospitalized.

Police officials were still trying to determine why Mr. Torres would stab someone who appeared to be a stranger, and why he would enter a police station brandishing a knife. But through the accounts of witnesses, the police were able to detail how the violence began, and how it ended.

On the steps of the station house, at 37-05 Union Street, Mr. Torres encountered Armando Ferreira, 48, who had come to pick up an accident report. Mr. Torres nicked Mr. Ferreira in the back from behind, and then slashed him on the arm when Mr. Ferreira tried to defend himself, the police said.

Then, Mr. Torres ran into the station, the police said. Knife in hand, he ran past the community affairs officer, past a desk and toward some stairs at the back leading to the detective squad on the second floor, the police said.

An officer and the detective near the desk gave chase. So did another detective, who had been taking a domestic complaint from Stephen Squerciati, 37, a construction worker, and his fiancée, Marie Woychowski, 35.

Mr. Squerciati said Mr. Torres tripped and fell as he ran through the room. “This guy was waving a knife up the stairs,” he said.

After Mr. Torres got up and started climbing the stairs, the officers ordered him to come down and drop the knife, the police said. Mr. Squerciati said that he heard the command 7 to 10 times.

Mr. Torres came down the stairs but did not drop the knife, said the Police Department’s chief spokesman, Paul J. Browne. At the bottom of the stairs, he “comes at them with the knife,” Mr. Browne said.

By now, the two detectives and the officer had drawn their weapons. They fired five shots, striking Mr. Torres several times in the left arm and left side of the chest, Mr. Browne said. Mr. Torres took a few steps into the room, stumbled and fell to the floor, breaking off the knife blade from the handle, Mr. Browne added.

The two detectives and the officer had never fired their weapons at a suspect before Thursday, Mr. Browne said. The three officers, whose names were not released by police officials, all tested negative for alcohol, Mr. Browne said, which is a routine measure the department takes after any police shooting.

Mr. Torres was taken to New York Hospital Medical Center of Queens and was in stable condition on Thursday, the police said. He faces charges of weapons and felony assault, they said.

“If there is one constant in the N.Y.P.D., it is that your world can change in a heartbeat, even in the station house,” said Mr. Browne, who said the police had not determined Mr. Torres’s motive.

It was not clear whether there was any link between Thursday’s attack and a previous arrest of Mr. Torres, also within the 109th Precinct. In 2007, according to a criminal complaint, Mr. Torres was accused of beating his roommate on the head with a metal bar and then slashing his midsection. He pleaded guilty to a lesser assault charge and later received a conditional discharge.

At a residential building at 147-25 Northern Boulevard, where Mr. Torres lives, neighbors said the ex-wife and children of his brother, Nelson, were staying there with him. Mr. Torres has lived in the apartment for about eight years, friends and people in the building said. Apparently, they said, Nelson, who lived there, too, moved out after having an argument with his ex-wife , but remains close to his brother.

Residents at the building said Mr. Torres worked in construction or landscaping.

A man who identified himself only as Javier, 25, who works in the building, said Mr. Torres was from El Salvador. “He seemed like a normal person,” he said. “He would drink sometimes. I saw him yesterday in the laundry room around 11 a.m.”

Mr. Ferreira, a construction worker, later returned to the station to speak to the police. He said that he had been reading his accident report on the steps of the station when Mr. Torres came up a ramp behind him, nicked him in the back with the knife and slashed him on the left forearm badly enough to require three stitches.

Mr. Ferreira said that he dashed into the station house and that Mr. Torres, who did not say a word to him during the attack, ran past him into the building.

“I heard a lot of yelling from the police and demands from them that he drop the knife,” Mr. Ferreira said. “For me, they did their job to protect people.”

Al Baker, Mick Meenan and Rebecca White contributed reporting.

 

Link to video:

New York Daily News

 

A man is treated after being stabbed in the back and arm at random outside of the 109th Police Precinct in Queens on June 4, 2009

Entry #565

Pastor invites his flock to bring guns to church

Valley station church to hold gun service

Peter Smith

Courier-Journal

Louisville, Kentucky

June 3, 2009What’s this?

A Valley Station Road church is sponsoring an "Open Carry Church Service" in late June, encouraging people to wear unloaded guns in their holsters, enter a raffle to win a free handgun, hear patriotic music and listen to talks by operators of gun stores and firing ranges.

Pastor Ken Pagano of New Bethel Church said the first-time event is "basically trying to think a little bit outside the box" to promote "responsible gun ownership and 2nd Amendment rights." 

The event, slated for late Saturday afternoon, June 27, is being promoted with online posters, including one using a red font resembling splattered blood with the words: "Open Carry Church Service."

Pagano said the poster wasn't intended to glorify bloodshed and that the lettering was just "a font that somebody developed." And he said he didn't want the event to be confused with regular Sunday worship at the Assemblies of God congregation.

"It's just a celebration we're doing to coincide with Fourth of July," he said. "There are people who own firearms and do so responsibly and enjoy them as a sport, maybe like golfing or bowling."

Some worry about the message that is being sent.

"Even if I were perfectly comfortable with open-carry handguns or gun rights, it seems to me a completely whole other thing to connect those rights to Jesus Christ," said the Rev. Jerry Cappel, president of the Kentuckiana Interfaith Community, a coalition of local leaders from various religions.

Tying in the event "with one who explicitly called us to put down the sword and pick up the cross and love our enemies and turn the other cheek, it just makes no sense," he said. 

The Rev. Nancy Jo Kemper of Lexington, who has lobbied against laws such as one allowing citizens with permits to carry concealed weapons, said the event "would nauseate Jesus."

The Rev. Marian McClure, incoming executive director of the Kentucky Council of Churches — which has lobbied for some gun restrictions — said she called Pagano after The Courier-Journal contacted her about the service. 

"Pastor Pagano assured me that the event is designed to help people who own handguns to be very responsible, and that the proceeds will all go for charitable causes in the community," she said in a statement. "Those two commitments are consistent with the high value the Assemblies of God churches place on human life."

Pagano said any proceeds exceeding the cost of the event will go to a local charity. People are also encouraged to bring canned food for the needy.

New Bethel Church has about 125 to 150 members, said Pagano, who has been pastor since 2000. The Marine veteran also works as a Louisville Metro Police chaplain.

Pagano said the event was planned several months ago — long before Sunday's shooting death of an abortion doctor at his Kansas church refocused attention on, among other things, churches and guns.

Other churches, including Baptist, independent and Unitarian Universalist congregations, have also been targets of gun violence over the past several years.

Pagano said a major impetus for the event was concern among many gun-rights advocates about then-presidential candidate Obama's legislative record in favor of some firearms restrictions — despite Obama's attempt to reassure gun owners.

Sales of guns rose significantly at the time of Obama's election, and a majority of gun owners supported his Republican opponent, John McCain, according to exit polls.

Pagano said the issue deserved discussion, but his approach at the time was, "Listen, guys, we can do this (discussion) as a religious person and be responsible about it," rather than "all this fear-mongering, ammo-hoarding."

That prompted the idea of an Independence Day-themed event, he said.

Pagano said he planned to invite managers of gun-related businesses and a police officer to talk about gun issues.

Win Underwood, one of the owners of Bluegrass Indoor Range, said he would try to attend the event if family responsibilities allow.

"I'm not aware that anybody's ever done anything like this before," he said.

New Bethel members regularly have outings at the firing rang, he said.

"You would be surprised how many churches use shooting for recreation with fellowship," he said.

Underwood said he's a religious person himself and believes the First and Second amendments are closely tied in the nation's Revolutionary War history.

"Guns are the one thing that secured freedom of religion for our country," he said.

Dave Lowley, an elder at the church and a military veteran, supported the event as part of the congregation's efforts to conduct creative evangelistic outreaches.

"We're advocating gun safety and gun awareness," he said.

Joseph Girdler, superintendent of the Assemblies of God Kentucky District Council, said he didn't know the details of the event but Pagano informed him of it.

He praised Pagano's creativity and community service in areas such as the police chaplaincy.

The service "would be an encouragement" for those who carry firearms legally, Girdler said. "If he wants to have a service to speak about those endeavors, it would be a great thing," he said.

But Pam Gersch of Louisville, who helped organize local participation in the Million Mom March against gun violence in 2000, said such violence has only worsened in the years since.

"People have a right to carry guns, but I also think they have a responsibility to do it with other people's safety in mind," she said. "If people want to carry guns to a church and the church is condoning it and the members think it's OK, that's their right to do that."

But she added: "You open the paper every day and there's multiple murders. We're not making any progress as far as responsibility goes with guns."

Pagano said he's open to dialogue.

"Not every branch of Christianity is pacifistic," he said. If someone is "not against the First and Second amendments, I'll be glad to sit down with anybody to say, 'How can we do this better?'"

"Pastor Pagano assured me that the event is designed to help people who own handguns to be very responsible, and that the proceeds will all go for charitable causes in the community," she said in a statement. "Those two commitments are consistent with the high value the Assemblies of God churches place on human life."

Pagano said any proceeds exceeding the cost of the event will go to a local charity. People are also encouraged to bring canned food for the needy.

New Bethel Church has about 125 to 150 members, said Pagano, who has been pastor since 2000. The Marine veteran also works as a Louisville Metro Police chaplain.

Pagano said the event was planned several months ago — long before Sunday's shooting death of an abortion doctor at his Kansas church refocused attention on, among other things, churches and guns.

Other churches, including Baptist, independent and Unitarian Universalist congregations, have also been targets of gun violence over the past several years.

Pagano said a major impetus for the event was concern among many gun-rights advocates about then-presidential candidate Obama's legislative record in favor of some firearms restrictions — despite Obama's attempt to reassure gun owners.

Sales of guns rose significantly at the time of Obama's election, and a majority of gun owners supported his Republican opponent, John McCain, according to exit polls.

Pagano said the issue deserved discussion, but his approach at the time was, "Listen, guys, we can do this (discussion) as a religious person and be responsible about it," rather than "all this fear-mongering, ammo-hoarding."

That prompted the idea of an Independence Day-themed event, he said.

Pagano said he planned to invite managers of gun-related businesses and a police officer to talk about gun issues.

Win Underwood, one of the owners of Bluegrass Indoor Range, said he would try to attend the event if family responsibilities allow.

"I'm not aware that anybody's ever done anything like this before," he said.

New Bethel members regularly have outings at the firing rang, he said.

"You would be surprised how many churches use shooting for recreation with fellowship," he said.

Underwood said he's a religious person himself and believes the First and Second amendments are closely tied in the nation's Revolutionary War history.

"Guns are the one thing that secured freedom of religion for our country," he said.

Dave Lowley, an elder at the church and a military veteran, supported the event as part of the congregation's efforts to conduct creative evangelistic outreaches.

"We're advocating gun safety and gun awareness," he said.

Joseph Girdler, superintendent of the Assemblies of God Kentucky District Council, said he didn't know the details of the event but Pagano informed him of it.

He praised Pagano's creativity and community service in areas such as the police chaplaincy.

The service "would be an encouragement" for those who carry firearms legally, Girdler said. "If he wants to have a service to speak about those endeavors, it would be a great thing," he said.

But Pam Gersch of Louisville, who helped organize local participation in the Million Mom March against gun violence in 2000, said such violence has only worsened in the years since.

"People have a right to carry guns, but I also think they have a responsibility to do it with other people's safety in mind," she said. "If people want to carry guns to a church and the church is condoning it and the members think it's OK, that's their right to do that."

But she added: "You open the paper every day and there's multiple murders. We're not making any progress as far as responsibility goes with guns."

Pagano said he's open to dialogue.

"Not every branch of Christianity is pacifistic," he said. If someone is "not against the First and Second amendments, I'll be glad to sit down with anybody to say, 'How can we do this better?'"

photo

Ken Pagano Pastor of New Bethel church talked about the importance of raising awareness of gun safety, which will be discussed at the "Open Carry Church Service" at New Bethel Church on June 27th. (By Aaron Borton, Special to The Courier-Journal) June 3, 2009

 

LINK TO VIDEOS:

http://gannett.a.mms.mavenapps.net/mms/rt/1/site/gannett-louisville-107-pub01-live/current/launch.html?maven_playerId=articleplayer&maven_referralPlaylistId=playlist&maven_referralObject=1141210524

 

Entry #564

Orlando homeowner includes Rolls Royce in sale

Orlando homeowner includes Rolls Royce in sale

By Mary Shanklin

| Sentinel Staff Writer June 4, 2009

Jim Benson

Jim Benson has been trying to sell his house in a historic district of downtown Orlando for about a year and a half. His asking price for the house is $699,000, and now he hopes his offer to include a 1967 Rolls-Royce will attract a buyer. (Tom Burton, Orlando Sentinel / May 29, 2009)

 


Jim Benson is kicking in more than the appliances to help sell his historic home in downtown Orlando.

He is also giving away his vintage Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow.

Frustrated with trying to sell the $699,000 house for the past year and a half, the 81-year-old put up yard signs recently advertising the car giveaway. The gleaming black Rolls hasn't sold the house so far, but Benson is hopeful.

"Someone who might want a classic home might appreciate a classic auto to go with it," said Benson, whose interests of late have turned to restoring pipe organs.

Selling a house in today's foreclosure-underpinned market is difficult for anyone: On average, Orlando-area homes took more than three months to sell in April, compared with less than a month at the height of the buying frenzy in July 2005, according to figures kept by local Realtors. Owners of custom homes have to work even harder to lure qualified buyers.

Realtor Margaret Barnes said the number of showings at the Benson house has increased in recent weeks, though she was unsure whether the car had anything to do with it.

Home sellers have given away cars before. Cambridge Homes, for instance, has tossed in a Mini Cooper with a purchase. But the keys to a chauffeur-worthy Rolls?

Benson knows he's competing against houses with furnishings staged by interior designers. His son has told him that buyers want granite counter tops and luxury master suites. Benson's yellow-brick, columned house at Broadway Avenue and Concord Street has none of those things.Both the house and the car, however, share a more understated appeal.

The four-story home rests on dense, fortresslike wooden beams that weigh more than cast concrete. Its long-hewn floor planks dwarf today's laminates.

Similarly, the 40-year-old car has no halogen headlights or LCD screens, but the back seat smells like hand-tooled leather from prized cowhide. The doors shut with a vacuum-seal sound rather than a metallic clang. The engine of the 2-ton behemoth, Benson said, runs so well that it "has never had a wrench touch it."

Benson said he first fell in love with the car of British royalty in the mid-1960s, when he was stationed with the U.S. Navy in Scotland and on temporary assignment in London. Four years after returning to the States, he still longed for the classic auto and went back for one. In England, he found a used 1967 Shadow in good condition for $12,000. After paying $1,000 for shipping, it was his. Silver Shadows, produced in greater numbers than other Rolls lines, retail today from less than $20,000 to $50,000 each.

For about eight years, Benson's collectible has been garaged at his son's home in Kissimmee. Tom Benson tools around the neighborhood in it each week to keep it in good condition. Even when Jim Benson kept it near him in Orlando, the regal set of wheels was cloistered in his garage.

"I didn't tell many people I owned it because people get the wrong idea — that you're rich," he said. "Better to play it low key."

Benson said he still prizes the quality of both the car and the house, but he no longer drives the one, and his knees complain about the flights of stairs in the other.

"I don't have a need for the house. I don't have a need for the car," Benson said. "But I've never fallen out of love with them."

 

Jim Benson bought his 1967 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow for $12,000. He says the engine runs so well that it ?has never had a wrench touch it.? His son stores the car at his Kissimmee home and drives it weekly to keep it in good condition.

 

(Tom Burton, Orlando Sentinel / May 29, 2009)

Jim Benson bought his 1967 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow for $12,000. He says the engine runs so well that it ?has never had a wrench touch it.? His son stores the car at his Kissimmee home and drives it weekly to keep it in good condition.
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Entry #563

Moms lift car off body of trapped 8-year-old

Superwomen lift car off crushed boy

Superwomen ... Abigail Sicolo and Donna McNameehad

Superwomen ... Abigail Sicolo and Donna McNameehad

WALES NEWS SERVICE



 The Sun UK

June 4, 2009

 

TWO "superwomen" saved a schoolboy's life — by lifting a CAR off his trapped body.

Mighty mums Donna McNamee and Abigail Sicolo sprang into action when eight-year-old Bailey Fowler was run over on their street.

The little lad screamed in agony beneath the weight of the engine of the 1400kg (3086lb) Renault Clio.

But neighbours Abi, 29, and Donna, 24, grabbed the bumper and managed to haul the car up so Bailey could be pulled free.

The schoolboy broke his leg and suffered crushing injuries needing plastic surgery in the accident — but was yesterday expected to make a full recovery.

His family thanked Abi and Donna — and believe Bailey would have died if he wasn't freed so quickly.

 

Screaming

 

The boy was playing water pistols with friends outside his home when he ran into the road and was hit by the car.

Mum-of-four Donna said: "It all happened so quickly. I was in my garden when I heard screaming and ran out.

"At first I thought it was one of my children. I had to help so I did the first thing that came into my head.

"All we could see were these little legs under the car. He was trapped right under the engine and screaming.

"But we knew we had to get him out. We just bent over, grabbed the underneath of the car and lifted.

"I must admit lifting the car was hard work. It's not something I practice for."

Abi's only child Jaydon, seven, was playing with Bailey at the time of the accident in Newport, Gwent.

She said: "I had to look under the car and check it wasn't my son.

 

"I saw a boy with blonde hair just lying there trapped - I was relieved it wasn't Jaydon but we had to try and get him free.

"The poor boy was screaming throughout - it was horrific.

"The car was so heavy. I bruised my arm and shoulder when we were lowering it.

"We're not heroes anyone would have done it."

Both women were surprised at summoning up the superhuman strength to lift the vehicle — because neither have a firm exercise regime.

Abi said: "You don't need to exercise when you have a young family to run around after.

"We do plenty of lifting and carrying around the house so perhaps that's why we could manage it."

Donna's dad Anthony McNamee, 42, helped the two to heave up the car before an ambulance arrived to take Bailey to hospital

He said: "The girls were magnificent - they are like Superwomen. We had to physically lift the car off the ground high enough for others to pull him clear.

"It was a horrible experience which I would never like to see again - I've never seen anything like it."

Bailey's dad Paul said: "We're really shaken up at the moment but it's great to know we've got neighbours like this around us."

His mother Wendy added: "He's in a bad way at the moment, but he's such a happy little boy and he's not letting it get him down too much. I don't know what I would have done without my neighbours."

Gwent Police are investigating and said enquiries are continuing with the driver of the Clio.

Entry #562

Great Grandmother, 72 Tasered and Jailed at Traffic Stop

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

72-Year-Old Great-Grandmother Tasered at Traffic Stop

All right, explain this one to me? A 72-year-old great-grandmother was tasered and arrested during a traffic stop in TX. Hard to believe she would have been a threat to the police officer, but there are some extenuating circumstances.

First, Kathryn Winkfein definitely was speeding excessively. The speed limit was 45, she was doing 60. She admitted the speeding, in fact, to MyFoxAustin. According to a police spokesperson, however, she didn't want to sign the ticket, but instead asked to be taken to jail.

Constable Richard McCain said:

"He explained to her, sign the ticket stub, it's not an admission of guilt. It's a promise to appear in court. She didn't want to. She said take me to jail.

"She refused to get off the side of the road, he said to her, Ma'am, you're under arrest. She used profanity."
At that point, according to the arresting officer, she became violent, and he tased her. Winkfein says the story is all a lie:
"I wasn't argumentative, I was not combative. This is a lie. All of this is a lie, pulled away from him, I did not."
 
                        Link to Video:

 

Entry #561

Man admits robbing 6 banks — all on Thursdays

Man admits robbing 6 banks — all on Thursdays
Wed Jun 3, 8:23 pm ET

TRENTON, N.J. –AP- If it's Thursday, it's time to rob a bank. That was the schedule followed by a man who admitted robbing six New Jersey banks on consecutive Thursdays between late January and early March. Peter Bielecke pleaded guilty Wednesday in federal court to a single count of bank robbery, but admitted he robbed five others as well.

The 41-year-old said he robbed banks in Brick, Toms River, Lakewood, Howell and Old Bridge on successive Thursdays.

No reason was given for choosing that particular day of the week, but authorities said the pattern made it that much easier to track him. He was arrested after a March 5 robbery in Old Bridge.

He faces up to 20 years in prison when he is sentenced Aug. 25.

 

 

                         ORIGINAL STORY

FBI, local law enforcement collaboration helped catch Ocean County serial robber

MaryAnn Spoto

The Star-Ledger

Monday March 16, 2009, 6:47 PM

Peter A. Bielecke was indicted Thursday for six bank robberies in Monmouth, Middlesex and Ocean counties.

When Wall Township Police Officer Doug Borst spotted the white 1991 Mercury Grand Marquis on Route 34, he jotted down the license plate number and he relayed the information to police, providing the final piece of information authorities needed to nab a suspect wanted in connection with a string of bank robberies.

As a result, an hour after Borst spotted the Marquis on March 5 -- just a few hours after the latest heist -- the man police claim was responsible for six robberies in Middlesex, Monmouth and Ocean counties was in custody.

The collaborative efforts between federal, state and local authorities had paid off. On Thursday, 40-year-old Peter Bielecke of Brick, a convicted felon who served prison time for attempted kidnapping, was indicted on federal bank robbery charges for those heists.

"He did six (robberies) in six weeks," said Frank O'Neill, supervisor of the violent crime squad of the FBI's Red Bank office. "He would still be doing them if we hadn't have (collaborated). We were able to cut his bank robbery career short because of the outstanding cooperation we had."

"We are solving a lot of bank robberies and the way we're doing it is a collaborative, coordinated effort between the FBI and the local agencies," O'Neill said.

The FBI is called in on every bank robbery, providing another set of eyes and ears to help local police and county prosecutors.

In this case, it wasn't long into the investigation authorities knew they had a serial robber on their hands, O'Neill said.

The first heist occurred Jan. 29 at a Provident Bank branch in Brick. The second was Feb. 5 at an Investors Savings Bank, also in Brick. Witnesses in both robberies gave similar descriptions of the bandit and said he passed a note to tellers saying he had a gun.

Beyond that, O'Neill would not reveal what other information led police to believe the same man had committed both jobs.

"After those two banks, we knew based on factors that we looked at that we had a serial robber and that there were some things we could hang our hat on to allow us to go out and be proactive and try to maybe catch him in the act," O'Neill said.

Law enforcement agencies also knew police weren't getting solid leads from the public. From images taken from surveillance cameras, police were having a difficult time discerning specific physical features of the culprit, O'Neill said.

Authorities tried to guess where the bandit would strike next, but were foiled each time. They set up surveillance in Brick; he hit a bank in neighboring Toms River as his third job. They set up more surveillance but the bandit struck a week later, in Lakewood.

From the beginning, police throughout the area were put on alert. The FBI recruited manpower from as many as 10 local police departments as the bandit struck further from his first targets, O'Neill said. Officers, aided only by images taken from surveillance photos, were instructed to be on the look-out for a man fitting those descriptions.

"They (investigators) gave the cops good descriptions, good directions, and the officers were on the ball," Brick Police Chief Nils Bergquist said.

On Feb. 26, an FBI agent spotted a man fitting the bandit's description near a bank and for the first time, investigators got a description of a car: a white Mercury Marquis. The information was then disseminated to police agencies.

The next day, the bandit struck again, at a Community Savings Bank in Howell. From witness descriptions, police knew it was the same man.

Then Borst, the Wall Township officer, spotted the Marquis on March 5, two hours after a Synergy Bank in Old Bridge was robbed. He followed the car into Brick, where he lost sight of it.

Brick police officer Jason Matthews spotted it a short time later, parked on a local street, in front of a house. Detectives kept the car under surveillance until Bielecke came out of the house and drove to a nearby shopping center where he was arrested.

Bielecke was indicted by a federal grand jury on Thursday on six counts of bank robbery.

"By giving the street officer the information - that was the key - the officer equipped with that information is able to be on the lookout and that's what happened in this case," said Toms River Police Chief Michael Mastronardy.

Entry #560

Mom accused of duct-taping daughter's boyfriend

Mom accused of duct-taping daughter's boyfriend

The Associated Press

 

Published: Tuesday, Jun. 2, 2009 - 8:54 pm
Last Modified: Tuesday, Jun. 2, 2009 - 9:14 pm

ADELANTO, Calif. -- Authorities say a San Bernardino County woman has been arrested for allegedly trying to kidnap her daughter's boyfriend and haul him away to Northern California.

A sheriff's spokeswoman said Tuesday that Anna Gaffney and Linda Chevalier went to the young man's home on Saturday afternoon and tried to tie him up with duct tape. The victim told authorities the women said they were taking him to Northern California to get him away from Gaffney's 21-year-old daughter.

Authorities say both women were arrested on suspicion of attempted kidnapping.

Officials say the girlfriend was later arrested for investigation of dissuading a witness and extortion for allegedly trying to get her boyfriend to recant his statements to authorities.

Entry #559

Bank robbers ran out of gas

Two arrested following Daytona Beach bank robbery

Gary Taylor

| Sentinel Staff Writer 4:41 PM EDT, June 2, 2009

Two men are in custody following a bank robbery this afternoon in Daytona Beach.

The robbery occurred about 12:15 p.m. at the Riverside Bank, 1290 S. Nova Road, Daytona Beach police Investigator Jimmie Flynt said.

A man entered the bank and approached a teller and demanded "all your hundreds and fifties." The teller complied and the man ran out of the bank, Flynt said. Witnesses saw the man get into a green Jeep Cherokee which was found abandoned in the 500 block of Bellevue Avenue where it ran out of gasoline, he said.

The driver of the Jeep, identified as Jason Warren Dietrich, 35, called a friend to pick him up, while the robbery suspect, Randall Fredric Walker, 38, paid a stranger $50 to take him home, Flynt said.

Dietrich, who faces a charge of principal to robbery, was arrested after he retrieved his Jeep, Flynt said. Walker, who is accused of bank robbery, was arrested at his home, where some of the stolen cash was recovered.

Entry #558

Robber, cries, begs, store owner gives him bread and $40

Jun 3, 8:11 AM EDT


NY store owner gives $40, loaf of bread to contrite would-be thief after he begs forgiveness

By FRANK ELTMAN


GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (AP) --A rifle-toting convenience store owner said he decided to show mercy on a would-be robber after seeing the man collapse into tears and claim he was only committing the crime to support his starving family.

The Long Island store owner provided the bat-wielding man with $40 and a loaf of bread and made him promise never to rob again.

"This was a grown man, crying like a baby," Mohammad Sohail, owner of the Shirley Express convenience store about 65 miles east of New York City, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview on Tuesday.

The man dropped the bat, picked up the bread and tucked the $40 into his waistband before fleeing, said Suffolk County police Sgt. John Best.

Sohail, who moved to the United States from Pakistan about 20 years ago, said he was getting ready to close his store shortly after midnight on May 21 when the man in his 40s entered with a bat in his hand. Sohail said he tried to stall for a moment and then grabbed a rifle he keeps behind the counter and ordered the assailant to drop the bat.

The would-be thief dropped to his knees and begged for forgiveness, Sohail said.

"He started crying that he was out of work and was trying to feed his hungry family," he said. "I felt bad for him. I mean, this wasn't some kid."

He said he tossed $40 to the man, who then stood up and told Sohail he was inspired by the act of mercy and wanted to become a fellow Muslim. Sohail said he led the man in a profession of Muslim faith and the two ended up shaking hands.

Sohail said he went to the back of the store to get some milk to give to the man, but when he returned the man had fled. He said he called police and reported the attempted robbery, but he doesn't want to press charges if the man is ever caught.

Best said detectives have reviewed a store surveillance video of the attempted holdup, but said it would be difficult for anyone to identify the suspect because he was wearing a mask.

Sohail, who said he had never been the victim of a robbery attempt, said he didn't expect any accolades for what he had done.

"I'm a very little man. I just did a good job," said the married father of one. "I have a good feeling in my heart. I feel very good."

 

 

 

Link to video:

 

http://video.ap.org/?t=By%20Section/U.S.&p=&f=PAREA&g=0602dv_nyc_mercy_robbery

Entry #557

Man wakes up from brain surgery as talented artist

Masterstroke: Man who couldn't even draw stickmen wakes from brain surgery... as a talented artist

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 7:05 PM on 01st June 2009 

Stoke of genius: Alan Brown was unable to draw even stick-men before his stroke

Stroke of genius: Alan Brown was unable to draw even stickmen before his life-saving brain operation

For most, stroke and brain surgery can be devastating but for Alan Brown it sparked a previously unseen talent... as an artist.

When Alan, 49, emerged from a gruelling 16-hour operation following his stroke, he found he had become a reborn 'Michelangelo' and was able to paint and draw with incredible detail.

Alan, from Malvern, Worcestershire, believes the surgery must have 'flicked a switch' in the creative part of his brain.

Until the stroke, Alan was unable to draw or paint, and the best he could manage was a simple 2D stickman.

The father-of-three spent two months recovering in intensive care before he was well enough to write and 'doodle' to pass the time and this is when he discovered his bizarre new talent.

 

Alan, who is divorced, said: 'I was out of the danger zone but still in intensive care and a nurse came up to me and said I looked bored and suggested I start drawing.

 

'She gave me a pencil and some paper and photograph of her dog which I copied almost perfectly.

'She looked at it and asked me if I was an artist. I said no and she said I should look into doing a course. Since then I've never looked back.'

 

Alan has just completed a fine art degree and has plans to open his own gallery

Alan has just completed a fine art degree and has plans to open his own gallery

 

Alan, who used to run a double-glazing firm, collapsed at his home six years ago after suffering a bout of migraines.

He was rushed to Worcestershire Royal Hospital for a scan where doctors discovered a burst blood vessel, or aneurysm, in his brain.

He was transferred to the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford for surgery.

 

  alan brown paintings

Creative streak: A display of Mr Brown's work

During a mammoth 16-hour operation - which involved a team of 15 surgeons - Alan almost died twice after suffering a major stroke.

He said: 'Going through this illness brought out a creative side of me that I never even knew existed.'

 

'I had never even set foot in an art gallery, let alone tried creating my own art work.'

Alan, who has three children, Joshua, 16, Ellie, 10 and Maisy, eight, is now about to graduate from Worcester university with a Fine Art Degree.

He has also decided to open his own art gallery in Malvern after turning his back on selling double-glazing.

He said: 'The stroke left me without the use of my left arm which would mean I'm pretty useless at work.

'I thought long and hard about what I wanted to do and art felt like my calling.

'I'm incredibly proud of my work. I don't have a particular style because I love all kinds of art from portraits to landscapes.'

Last month, Yorkshireman Chris Gregory, 30, shocked his family when he woke up from a brain-op with a thick Irish accent.

A spokesman for Headway, the brain injury association, said: 'It is always encouraging to hear about people with acquired brain injuries discovering new skills and talents.

'Brain injury can be devastating and can mean having to relearn even the most basic of life skills, but there is life after brain injury.

'An injury to the brain can result in varying and unpredictable effects.

'While most of the effects involve a loss of functioning, in some cases people have been known to acquire or discover new skills, although the exact reason for this is not fully understood.'

Entry #556

Man Gets Robbed After Tweeting That He is on Vacation

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Twitter Robbery of Arizona Man Could Freak Some Folks Out

Twitter -- you know what it is, obviously, please, in addition to followin PTG   and myself? -- doesn't have many downsides, provided you're not some cranky old person that hates "those dang kids and their blog machines!" Or if you're Twitter user "@IzzyVideo" who recently tweeted that he and his family were going on vacation. Good times, right? Um, no. He got robbed, likely as a result of the social media site's ability to reach hundreds of thousands of people.

On May 24th, Izzy dropped this:

We made it to Kansas City in one piece. We're visiting @noellhyman's family. Can't wait to get some good video while we're here. :-)
And then four days later ...

Well, it's confirmed. Someone stole my Mac Pro and two displays while I'm visiting relatives here in Kansas City.
But, fortunately (I guess) the robbers left his Xbox. Now, before everyone decides to freak out and blame the Twittermachinez for this horrible travesty, let's go ahead and point out the same thing that Izzy did: his Twitter account automatically updates his Facebook status. That means Izzy could have accidentally sent this message out to thousands of people (I'm not his friend, so I have no clue how many he has) in addition to the over 2,000 folks that follow him on Twitter.

And the other thing, as I tell my parents often, is that we live in a very transparent world when it comes to internet personalities -- most of the "interwebz people" aren't hidden behind some odd name or false front anymore, particularly if they earn their living online. Which means that if you see Person X tweet that they're somewhere on vacation, and that person has a website where they make a living, you can probably find out where they live (or at the very least, check the WhoIs.net registration for the site) or at the very least get your Google/White Pages on.

Izzy actually has his full name, Facebook, Myspace, Twitter and mobile phone number on his website. That's not particularly shocking, because it's his business site, but the thing is with a mobile number and a first and last name, you can track anyone in the world down to their home address pretty quickly. Which is what someone, obviously, decided to do.

Either that or one of Izzy's friends is a real jerk. The lesson? Well, it's not that "Twitter is evil" or the "Internet will kill us all" as many people will probably shout once they see his story all over the news (it's been picked up by ABC, NBC, CBS and then tweeted by IJustine, who's actually bigger than all of those, somehow).

The lesson is that you have to be careful when you broadcast something on the interwebz. Yes, it's that simple: just think before you tweet, folks.

 

Entry #555

Girl, 5, raised by cats and dogs

Russian police 5-year-old girl raised by cats and dogs

Wed May 27, 2009 7:07am EDT

MOSCOW, May 27 (Reuters) - Russian police have taken into care a 5-year-old girl who has been shut up in a flat in the company of cats and dogs for her entire life, police said on Wednesday.

The girl, who lived in the Eastern Siberian city of Chita, could not speak Russian and acted like an dog when police took her into care.

"For five years, the girl was 'brought up' by several dogs and cats and had never been outside," a police statement said.

"The unwashed girl was dressed in filthy clothes, had the clear attributes of an animal and jumped at people," it said.

The flat had no heat, water or sewage system.

A police spokeswoman said the girl, known as Natasha, is being monitored by psychologists in an orphanage. Her mother was being questioned but her father has not been found yet.

She appears to be about 2-years-old, though her real age is five, refuses to eat with a spoon and has taken on many of the gestures of the animals with which she lived, police said.

"When carers leave the room, the girl jumps at the door and barks," the police said.

Feral children, the stuff of folklore all over the world, usually exhibit the behaviour of the animals with whom they have had closest contact, a condition known as the Mowgli Syndrome after the fictional child from Rudyard Kipling's "The Jungle Book" who was raised by wolves in the jungle.

Such children have usually built strong ties with the animals with whom they lived and find the transition to normal human contact extremely traumatic. (Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge, editing by Farah Master)

Entry #554

Spiderman Arrested Again!

French 'Spiderman' Alain Robert arrested climbing Sydney skyscaper

Alain Robert, the French skyscraper climber nicknamed "Spiderman", was arrested after scaling a 41-storey building in downtown Sydney with his bare hands.

 

Published: 9:12AM BST 02 Jun 2009

 

Around 200 people gathered to watch as Robert, known for scaling some of the world's tallest and best-known buildings without ropes or other equipment, climbed to the top of the Royal Bank of Scotland Tower.

Police closed off a section of the busy street below, causing gridlock. The crowd cheered as Robert reached the top. He then climbed back down, where waiting officers arrested him.

The 46-year-old has climbed more than 70 skyscrapers around the world, including the Empire State Building, the Sears Tower, Taipei 101 and the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, according to his Web site.

Robert began climbing as a young boy, scaling rock cliffs in the area around his home. His buildering career began at the age of 12 when he forgot his keys and was locked out of his parents' eighth-floor apartment.

Instead of waiting for them to return home, he simply scaled the exterior wall to his home.

Robert continues his climbing career despite suffering from vertigo brought on after two accidents in which he broke multiple bones.

He has been arrested many times, in various countries, by law enforcement officials waiting for him at the end of his climb. The arrests and trials are normally little more than brief formalities and he has always been discharged.

 

 Link to video:

 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newsvideo/?bcpid=4464161001&bctid=24982522001

Entry #553

Bank robber jumps off 5-story parking garage running from police

Jun 1, 9:36 PM EDT


Police: Fleeing Calif. bank robber leapt off 5-story parking garage, was critically injured

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -- Authorities in Southern California say a bank robber leapt off a five-story parking garage while fleeing police and was badly injured.

Pasadena police spokeswoman Janet Pope Givens says the man in his early 30s was hospitalized in critical condition Monday. Police are trying to determine his identity and whether he was trying to kill himself or escape.

She says a California National Bank branch was robbed about 9:15 a.m. and a witness followed the robber, reporting via cell phone that he had run into the structure.

The man ran to the roof after officers arrived and jumped to the concrete below, suffering multiple fractures including broken legs.

Investigators found cash in the parking garage.

Entry #552