truesee's Blog

Church blesses congregation with $50,000

Church blesses
congregation with $50,000

Updated: Monday, 25 May 2009, 10:21 PM CDT
Published : Monday, 25 May 2009, 9:13 PM CDT

  • Hubert Tate
  • Charissa Cowart
  • Photojournalist, LaKeya Stinchcomb

MALBIS, Ala. - Trey Taylor is in charge of creative worship at Bay Community Church in Malbis. This past Sunday he and other church leaders came up with a really creative idea.

"We gave away $50,000," he said. The church handed each member in the 2,000 member congregation money. But the gesture came with a stipulation.

"The instructions were simple, you can't give it back to the church and you can't spend it on you and your family," said Taylor.

Some members got $20, others got as much as $100. "Every person that was here got an envelope."

Taylor says when some members saw the white envelopes come around, they thought the pastor was going to ask for tithes and offerings, but boy were they wrong.

"The reason behind it was simple. We wanted our people to turn around and bless somebody," Taylor said.

Taylor says this might sound a little crazy. But he tells us the government has an Economic Stimulus Package, well this is the church's version of a Faith Stimulus Package. "An act of faith...absolutely, 100-percent."

The church's leadership admit tithing is down amongst churches. But the pastoral team says now is the best time to help others.

Link to Video:

Church gives out money

 

Entry #521

15 Words You Won't Believe They Added to the Dictionary

15 Words You Won’t Believe They Added to the Dictionary

The Oxford English Dictionary is constantly updating, adding new words to reflect the vibrant changes in language and culture.  Here are some recent additions 
 
#15.
Muggle

n. In the fiction of JK Rowling: a person who possesses no magical powers. Hence in allusive and extended uses: a person who lacks a particular skill or skills, or who is regarded as inferior in some way.

The people at the Oxford English Dictionary acknowledge that the work of an author entering the dictionary is rare, but the use of "muggle" had become so widespread they had to include it, ensuring that the future will remember us for standing in line at Borders in wizard costumes.

Wait, does this mean if we invent a new word right now they'll be forced to include it in a few years, as long as enough readers use it? Good. Guys, the word is "dongtacular."

#14.
Blamestorming

n.A method of collectively finding one to blame for a mistake no one is willing to confess to. Often occurs in the form of a meeting of colleagues at work, gathered to decide who is to blame for a screw up.

There already is a word for when a group of people blame someone for a mistake. It's called blaming. Blamestorming, however, cutely mimics "brainstorming" and office politics dictates the more cringe-inducingly "clever" a word sounds, the more often in needs to be used.

"We're so witty! Just like the people on The Office! Somebody should make a sitcom about us!"

#13.
Gaydar

n.a homosexual person's ability to identify another person as homosexual by interpreting subtle signals conveyed by their appearance, interests, etc.

Ah, there's nothing like a cutsey pun to sum up this awkward and nervous era when we finally acknowledged there was such a thing as gay people without treating it as a national emergency, yet were not so cool with it that people felt OK about openly acknowledging their gayness.

Thus we had to invent this word to represent the rush of personal pride felt by the perceived ability to instinctively tell if someone prefers sausage to tacos, whether they wanted you to know it or not.

#12.
Grrrl

n.a young woman regarded as independent and strong or aggressive, especially in her attitude to men or in her sexuality.

Now, remind us, is "grrrl" a word used by "grrrl" types, or the people who make fun of them? You know what, it doesn't matter, because, there's no vowel.

What the is that? Call us tools of the male chauvinist patriarchy, but even the wacky sound effects from the 60s Batman TV show had vowels in them. That's right, this is less of a word than ZWWAP!

#11.
Threequel

n.the third film, book, event, etc. in a series; a second sequel.

Hey, thanks Hollywood, for making enough of these that we had to invent a whole new word. So will fourquel be next? Quadrology? Will we all be buying the Star Wars sixantium box set?

#10.
Mini-me

n. a person closely resembling a smaller or younger version of another.

Hey, remember when you thought we couldn't get any lower than "muggle"? Those were the days, right?

Nothing puts a society as firmly in its place as when you realize the language has been permanently changed by a franchise about a horny spy that repeated the same jokes and catchphrases dozens of times across two sequels. Is this one from the same movie where Mike Myers drank the cup full of ? We don't remember.

#9.
Screenager

n.a person in their teens or twenties who has an aptitude for computers and the Internet.

In a curious twist, there is no word for an Amish youth who has an aptitude for barn raising or a Scientologist youth who's developed some skills in picking the lock on his cage. Still, it's probably hard to make a really ty pun for either of those so that might explain things.

#8.
Cyberslacking

v.spending one's employer's internet and email facilities for personal activities during working hours.

Remember the dot-com bubble of the late 90s, when the internet was new and exciting and every novelty erotica site you found was like Christmas morning, only with fisting? Cyberslacking is the word product of that. In retrospect, using the internet to kill time at work wasn't the Tron-like revolutionary experience this word implies, so regular "slacking" would suffice just as well.

#7.
Lookism

n.prejudice or discrimination on the grounds of appearance.

Sometimes when attractive people get a raise or ugly people have to eat out of a trough in the cafeteria, the people on the wrong side of that scenario are tempted to equate it to generations of violence, oppression and bigotry experienced by any number of people who actually know what discrimination is.

So just stick "-ism" on the end and there you go.

#6.
Frankenfood

n.derogatory a food that contains genetically modified ingredients.

Really, it's looking like a memorable pun is all that's required for a word to be embraced by society as a whole. So even if you have something that has saved millions of lives like, say, genetically modified crops, if you can think of a kick ass and mildly amusing way to dumb it down and liken it to a shambling, murderous corpse-man, congratulations. You're making language!

#5.
Riffage

n.guitar riffs.

Slightly more annoying than making nouns into verbs for no reason ("hold on, I'm Twittering!") is the trend of pluralizing them with "age". No need to say "make love" when "humpage" will do just as well. And hell, we can label all fire alarms with ", burnage!" to make it that much clearer to everyone.

#4.
Bouncebackability

n.the ability to recover from near-defeat in a competition; the ability to recover from a setback.

While resilience is already a perfectly good word that means the exact same thing, bouncebackability does sound much more like something a semi-literate alcoholic might put on a resume, giving it that added appeal of mouthbreathability words like resilience lack.

#3.
Prebuttal

n.a rebuttal for an accusation before it is made.

The sad part about this one is that it only sounds completely insane until you realize it's mostly done by politicians, after which it sort of makes perfect sense. They know they're full of , but hope this somehow can preemptively stop anybody from pointing it out.

"Now, you're all going to accuse me of being a racist here, but let me explain why I think minorities shouldn't be allowed to drive..."

#2.
Ego-surfing

v.searching the internet for instances of one's own name or links to one's own website.

Googling yourself is like masturbation: everyone does it, but it's still embarrassing to get caught. Getting caught and then referring to what you're doing as ego-surfing is like trying to explain to the bus driver that you're simply looking for your bus pass which, when you last saw it, was drifting somewhere around your foreskin, instead of just pulling up your pants and walking home.

#1.
Meatspace

n.The physical world, as opposed to virtual.

Doubtlessly coined by a level 80 Druid tank somewhere in the World of Warcraft, it's a sad day for the species when what you may recognize as that in which everything exists, needs a special term to differentiate it from the "real" world of Facebook friends and LOLcats.

Soon you'll hear it used in sentences like, "So all of the crops are dying and the air is turning poisonous? Bah, who cares about all that stuff that happens in lame old Meatspace."

Entry #520

Man Has 21 Children 11 Mothers Pays $1.98 Child Support Per Month

Man has 21 children with 11 mothers!

Chris Mullen

Updated May 25, 2009

 

On paper, he has 20 possibly 21 children.

With a minimum wage job, he can't afford to support them all.

Desmond Hatchett, 29, says he wasn't out to set a record, though he certainly holds it in Knox County Juvenile Child Support Court.

Hatchett's children range in age from newborn 11.

There are at least 11 mothers; probably several more.

Constitutionally, there is nothing the state of Tennessee can do to limit him from having more.

On Friday, his name appeared on the docket 11 times; Representing about 15 of his 21 children.

Desmond Hatchett spent part of Friday afternoon jailed while a child support referee decided how to split up the $400 he brought to court.

If he doesn't pay what he owes, he will go back to jail because he is on an automatic jail order.

The mothers of Hatchett's children are supposed to get anywhere from $25 to $309 a month, but when his paycheck is garnished amongst them all, some women only get a $1.98 a month.

 

CBS
Link to photo of Desmond Hatchett:
Entry #519

Remote toy copter used to deliver mobile phones to prison inmates

Gang busted for prison mobile phone delivery with toy chopper

Brazilian police caught gang members using a remote-controlled toy helicopter to deliver mobile phones to colleagues locked up in a top-security prison.   



Last Updated: 12:13AM BST 26 May 2009

Telegraph Uk
Gang busted for prison mobile phone delivery with toy chopper  
 

Four suspects were arrested late on Sunday outside a maximum security facility in the southern town of Presidente Venceslau in Brazil's Sao Paulo state after the mini-chopper, 14 mobile telephones and the equivalent of 500 dollars in cash were found in their rented car, according to reports in local media.

They had been stopped for a routine inspection because of their proximity to the prison, which holds organised crime bosses and other dangerous inmates.

The youngest of the suspects, a 17-year-old boy, reportedly confessed to police that they had received £3,200 to pay for the operation and would receive another £3,200 if successful. He refused to say who was to receive the telephones.

Brazil's criminals often continue illicit activities while serving time, relying on mobile phones that are smuggled inside using increasingly creative methods. In the past, carrier pigeons and doctored Bibles have been used.

 

Entry #518

Boy, 2, The "Tiger Woods" of Pool

The 'Tiger Woods' of Pool

 

2 year old pool prodigy a real 'shark' in the making

May 21, 2009 - 4:24 PM
Jerry Gretzinger

More guppy than shark, Keith O'Dell Jr. is still new at the game of pool.

Of course he is.  He's just 25 months old. But the tender age and innocent face all part of this toddler's

hustle.

He's not only good for his age.  He's better than some people 10 times his age.

Anchor and reporter Jerry Gretzinger asks Keith's dad, "When did you first discover he had a knack for

playing pool?"

"It was right around christmastime," Keith Sr. says.

He says he and his wife love to shoot pool and their son always saw them play at home. Still, they were a

little surprised when "Keithy" asked for his own table.

"Keith found a small 36 inch pool table and we said there is no way we are getting this for you" dad

recalls.

But keith persisted and got the table, though he quickly lost interest in his new toy.

It wasn't challenging enough.

Like any 2 year old, Keith sometimes loses his focus, but when this kid is on his game it's almost hard to

believe.

"I find myself saying that a lot," says Keith Sr.  "You've got to be kdding me."

Already being called "the child prodigy" and "the Tiger Woods of pool"... Keith Jr. is racking up some

celebrity status. He's already filmed a commerical for the American Poolplayers Association, been featured

 in 2 national billiards magazines, and is about to appear on some national daytime talk shows. Dad, a

semi-pro player himself, says he didn't see the big deal at first.

That is, until Jr. beat him.

"Beat me in the rack of 9 ball," he admits, "and I said I am never playing 9 ball with him ever again."

Is he hoping Keith Jr. will be the Tiger Woods of pool?

"Maybe, eventually, hopefully," he says.  "We're treating him like a normal kid we dont want that to get

out of hand."

 

Keith O'Dell, Jr.

Link to Video:

 

http://www.cbs6albany.com/video/?bcpid=1137806146&bclid=1143371293&bctid=23960002001

Entry #517

Jigsaw Kid born with 5 spleens, hole in heart, 2 left lungs and...

'Jigsaw Kid' lives with jumbled up internal organs

A girl has been nicknamed the 'Jigsaw Kid' after she survived being born with five spleens, a hole in her heart, a diseased and back to front liver, two left lungs and her stomach on the wrong side.

Telegraph UK 

Last Updated: 8:38AM BST 22 May 2009

Bethany Jordan: 'Jigsaw Kid' lives with jumbled up internal organs
Bethany Jordan:Strangely, when she exercises too much, her heart can be seen beating through her back. Photo: CATERS

Bethany Jordan, six, was born with many of her organs back to front but amazed doctors who had warned her parents, Lisa, 37, and Robert, 44, there was little chance she would survive birth.

Her problems mean that, while she looks a picture of health, she cannot stand up to some of the normal rigours and strains of an average child.

Bethany, of Stourbridge, West Midlands, sufferers from Ivemark Syndrome, an extremely rare genetic disorder, characterised by a poorly-formed cardiovascular system and organs in the wrong place.

Strangely, when she exercises too much, her heart can be seen beating through her back.

There are so few sufferers that very little is known about the condition or what could be its cause.

Her mother Lisa, who is a full-time mum, said: "To look at her she just looks like a normal girl, but underneath her skin everything is back to front and jumbled up.

"When she was born the doctors said her insides were like a jigsaw.

"It has been a bit of a nightmare but she is my star and I love her the way she is - I always will."

Before Bethany was born, doctors at Birmingham's Women's Hospital discovered her jumbled-up insides following routine pregnancy scans.

Tests showed her brain was normal and Lisa chose to go ahead with the birth, despite the odds being stacked against her.

Dr Patrick McKiernan, who is Bethany's liver consultant at Birmingham Children's Hospital, said: "Essentially her organs are back to front and it's very rare to see something like this.

"She is doing very well despite all of her problems, I think she's a very tough little girl."

Ingrid Gladki, spokesman for the Ivemark Syndrome Association, said: "It's still a mystery as to why it occurs and I think more money needs to be put into research into it."

Entry #516

Boy 6, drives car after father passes out

One big hero

Tustin Mains, 6, is credited with helping to save his father's life after Phillip Mains passed out due to a diabetic episode while driving his children home from supper Sunday evening. Tustin jumped onto his father's lap and drove the vehicle from near the Platte River Mall past Cody Park before a police officer arrived to perform some heroics of his own.
By Mark Young
Published: Thursday, May 21, 2009 4:14 AM CDT
Updated Sunday, May 24, 2009 3:18 AM CDT
The North Platte Telegraph

A quick-thinking North Platte 6-year-old is credited with helping to save his dad's life after he noticed that his father, Phillip Mains, had passed out while driving due to a diabetic episode on Sunday evening.

Tustin Mains, a local kindergartner, reacted quickly from the backseat, jumping between the two front seats of the vehicle to grab the steering wheel of his father's Chevy Avalanche and climbing atop his father's lap in order to see out of the window.

According to Phillip, he took his two sons, Tustin and his 3-year-old brother, to Whiskey Creek for supper on Sunday evening and it was on the way back that Phillip's blood sugar dropped, sending him into unconsciousness.

"I remember backing out and circling around the road to the stoplight and I remember getting up to about the mall," said Phillip. "That was at about 6:45. The next thing I remember was waking up to the officers and paramedics and it was 8:15."

Witnesses reported to police that they observed a young boy driving a vehicle and that it appeared an adult male was passed out at the wheel. Phillip said he was told that other drivers got behind and in front of his vehicle with their emergency blinkers flashing while Tustin manhandled the vehicle through town.


Tustin drove the vehicle from about the time his dad passed out by the mall all the way past Cody Park, turned the truck around once he had found himself in unfamiliar territory and was on his way back into town at the North River Bridge when North Platte Police Officer Roger Freeze made contact with the vehicle.

Phillip said that thankfully his foot had slipped from the accelerator, but the police report indicates that the vehicle was still going between 10-15 miles per hour while idling in gear. Freeze exited his patrol car and chased the vehicle on foot, catching up to it after about a block's foot pursuit.

Freeze ran up to the driver's side door and reached for the handle, but the door was locked. Fortunately, Phillip had rolled down his window and Freeze was able to reach into the vehicle and throw it into park, bringing the Chevy Avalanche, Tustin, his 3-year-old brother and his unconscious father to a halt.

"Investigator Freeze's quick action possibly averted tragedy," said North Platte Police Chief Martin Gutschenritter. "I will be issuing him a departmental citation for his quick, professional action on this case. That is also a very special young man. He was able to take quick action when his dad was incapacitated and we are very proud of him too."

Phillip also credited Freeze for helping to what could have been "much worse," said Phillip.

"I just want to thank everybody from the people who saw it and called it in to those who helped out by driving behind Tustin with their hazards, but especially Officer Freeze," he said. "To chase down a moving vehicle and get it stopped the way he did took a lot of nerve and it weren't for him, things could have turned out much worse."

Tustin managed to do a pretty good job of driving the Avalanche. Phillip said there wasn't any significant damage to the vehicle and it appeared the only damage was a scrape that occurred when Tustin brushed the side of the bridge after he turned the vehicle around.

Phillip believes that Tustin was just trying to get home that evening and when he went past Cody Park got scared and turned the vehicle around to find more familiar territory. Tustin said the whole experience was pretty scary.

"I saw my dad fall asleep and I climbed over the seat and got on my dad's lap," said Tustin. "I was scared."

Tustin said he was scared when he saw his dad "fall asleep," he was scared when he was driving and he was even scared when Freeze suddenly appeared at his window. But when the truck finally came to a halt?

"I was just happy," he said.
Entry #514

New service allows final Tweet from grave

New service allows final Tweet from grave
Published: May 23, 2009 at 2:57 PM

STOCKHOLM, Sweden, May 23 (UPI) -- A new service by a Swedish design student will allow people to have a final Tweet or Facebook status update made after they die. Lisa Granberg told The Local her service will allow friends and family members to have the information necessary to access social networking accounts belonging to people who have died.
"We live a lot of our life online these days," she said. "There are lots of cases today where friends and relatives of young people who've committed suicide or died in other ways can't do anything to alter the information found online about whoever died."Granger's Webwill service will allow registered users to decide how they want their social networking profiles to change following their death. Webwill can also allow users to create a final blog post on Blogger, or have their goodbye e-mail sent to friends.

"The service is designed to let the individual decide what will happen with their online profiles after they're gone," she said.

Granberg developed Webwill as her final thesis at Beckmans College of Design

Entry #513

Businessman hunts down thief in his helicopter

Businessman hunts down thief in his helicopter
Millionaire businessman Jeremy Taylor used his helicopter to hunt down a thief who broke into his yard, tracking him relentlessly for more than two hours across "half of north Norfolk".

by Ian Johnston
Last Updated: 11:37AM BST 24 May 2009

Telegraph Uk
Businessman hunts down thief in his helicopter
Millionaire Jeremy Taylor used his helicopter to hunt down a thief who broke into his yard Photo: Albanpix

Mr Taylor, 38, was taking off in his £1.9 million aircraft for a business trip when he noticed his gates were open and a white van was speeding away from his home in Binham.

Having had other break-ins in the past, Mr Taylor was determined not to let this thief get away. And the fleeing burglar, who realised he was being followed, made an equally determined effort to get away during the ensuing chase of nearly 50 miles.

First he drove to Wells-next-the-Sea, performing a u-turn designed to throw Mr Taylor off the scent.

He then drove through Walsingham to Fakenham and tried to lose himself among other white vans in the town. Mr Taylor was forced fly higher because of air traffic regulations about flying over congested areas.

But dumper truck company executive, who has four children, managed to stay on the trail and the chase continued to Guist, where the burglar performed a sharp left and headed towards Hindolveston and Melton Constable.

At one point, the burglar went to ground in some woods and, for about 20 minutes, Mr Taylor hovered overheard.

The businessman said: "I was cross. I thought 'You are not going to get away from me'. I was determined to catch him because I have had break-ins before – but I have never had to chase anyone in a helicopter before.

"The thief knew I was following him all the time. I ended up chasing it around half of north Norfolk.

"The van was probably going at about 50 to 60mph but the helicopter is capable of 190mph and I was overhead or sitting behind him all the time."

He called his sister Caroline, 28, and his mother Anne on his satellite phone and they joined in the chase in their cars, managing to get the licence plate number of the van. His mother was forced to give up the hunt when he car ran out of petrol.

Eventually the burglar decided to abandoned the van in the village of Stody and flee on foot. However police traced him using the number plate and he was arrested at his home in Briston.

Mr Taylor said: "It annoys me that people are prepared to break in to other people's property. I did not want to let him get away when I had the opportunity to go after him."

On Friday, a 28-year-old man admitted stealing firewood, pitchforks, diesel cans and a tractor battery and was given a conditional discharge.

The chase cost Mr Taylor about £2,500 in fuel – much more than the cost of the stolen goods – but he said the "principle" was what was important.

However he expressed his disappointment at the court ruling. "I am annoyed that he got away with a slap on the wrist," Mr Taylor said.

PC Jason Pegden, of Norfolk Police, summed up the surprise that a chase straight out of US TV drama 24 or an episode of The Bill, in which DCI Jack Meadows uses a helicopter to track a suspect in London, had come to Norfolk.

He said: "I've never come across anything like this before."

Entry #512

Police seize 543 pounds of marijuana and $200,000 at Costco

Five arrested, 543 pounds of marijuana seized after North Shore delivery

May 21, 2009 03:02 PM

major_pot_bust_052109.jpg
(State Police)

Martin Finucane

Boston Globe Staff

State Police seized 543 pounds of marijuana and about $200,000 in cash, while arresting five men, as they broke up a major drug delivery Wednesday in Peabody, Essex County prosecutors said this afternoon.

State troopers set up surveillance at a Costco parking lot on Route 1 in Danvers on Wednesday morning. At about noon, a rented truck arrived. Troopers allegedly observed men loading pallets of marijuana from the tractor-trailer onto the rental truck, Essex District Attorney Jonathan W. Blodgett's office said in a statement.

Teams of troopers, agents from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Peabody police followed both vehicles as they headed in different directions.

Police later arrested three men at 134R Newbury Street in Peabody and found that the pallets of marijuna had been unloaded there. Meanwhile, another team followed the tractor-trailer to Route 128 and stopped it just before the Massachusetts Turnpike, arresting two other men and finding the approximately $200,000 in cash.

Brian J. Toto, 42, of Revere; Phillip Watson, 37, of Saugus; Michael Schrimpf, 36, of Saugus; and R.J. Norton Jr., 41, and Melvin Vanmeter, 38, both of Indianapolis, all pleaded not guilty today in Peabody District Court. Each man faces charges of trafficking Class D marijuana over 200 pounds and conspiracy to violate drug laws.

Judge Robert Brennan set bail at $250,000 for each defendant and set another hearing for June 18. The men, if convicted, face a maximum of 15 years in prison, with a minimum mandatory term of three years, prosecutors said.

Entry #511

$10,000,000 Bank Fugitive Enjoying Chinese Beer and the Heat

$10,000,000 fugitive drinking beer, enjoying heat

4:00AM Sunday May 24, 2009
By David Fisher

The New Zealand Herald

One of the fugitives sought over Westpac's missing millions has told friends she is drinking Chinese beer, enjoying the heat of Asia - and planning on returning to New Zealand.

Aroha Hurring, 22, has charted her and the fugitives' progress from New Zealand to Hong Kong, Macau and into mainland China on her Facebook page.

On China, she says: "It's crazy. The only thing I hate is that they look at me funny."

It is five days since it emerged Rotorua couple Leo Gao and Kara Yang-Hurring skipped the country after a Westpac staff member accidentally allowed a $10 million overdraft on their bank account, on or about May 5.

The bank spotted the error after $6.7m was withdrawn. They were only able to claw back less than half, leaving Gao with $3.8m.

A spokeswoman for Police National Headquarters said yesterday there were no developments in the investigation, which had traced "two individuals of interest" to Hong Kong.

Westpac has sought court orders that would eventually give it power over the business owners' assets if the money was not returned.

The couple's Rotorua BP service station went into receivership on May 8. By then they had already left the city, although it wasn't until 12 days later that it became known police were investigating the disappearance of the family - and the money.

Gao and Yang-Hurring, along with her seven-year-old daughter Leena, have been missing since. Gao's mother has also disappeared, along with his business partner Huan Di Zhang and Yang-Hurring's sister Aroha Hurring.

Yesterday, the Herald on Sunday learned Aroha did not leave New Zealand until after the others had already skipped the country.

A friend has been monitoring her Facebook page which carried the message: "Aroha Hurring is having a Tsingtao beer. It's 30 degrees plus - the heat is good though."

Just days before, Aroha was on the West Coast of the South Island, where overnight temperatures had dropped to zero.

She moved there from Otago about three years before with boyfriend Jesse Fenton, but had been behaving erratically since the couple separated just over a month ago.

Her trip from New Zealand into Asia began with a phone call, said the friend, who did not want to be named.

"She told me her sister had rung her from China and she was thinking of going over.

"She wanted to know where she was ringing from. She had the country area code so I Googled it."

The number was 00853 - the international code for Macau.

Like Hong Kong, Macau is a "special administrative district" of China allowing activities banned elsewhere. Among those are gambling - Macau is renowned as the Las Vegas of Asia.

Although frustrated by the lack of a passport and money to leave New Zealand, Aroha told a few friends she was "heading to China".

Then she was gone - and it was just over a week before the news of the missing money broke.

Since arriving, Aroha has updated family through her sister Chloe's Facebook page.

She writes about being in Hong Kong then crossing the border to China. She posted the update about China on Wednesday - the day police revealed they were hunting the missing money. It does not mention whether she is with her sister, Kara Yang-Hurring, or with Gao.

"I wish you were here," she wrote to her sister. "It's [a] bit weirder here in China. You have to be more aware...Jewlery, they snatch off you. But Hong Kong is richer. Got vidz [videos] of Ferarri and the boy racer cars."

Aroha also wrote about how impressed she was with the "bling" on the cars, including diamantes adorning the rear wipers. "Got vid of them too. Got heaps of videos of the buildings. You wouldn't believe at night it light up hard out. And you're allowed two smoke inside. I'm have one now while writing this to you.

"I'll keep in touch. Hard out till I get back. Love ya heapz!"

Friends have been writing messages of support.

But a close friend told the Herald on Sunday: "It didn't really seem like something she would do.

"She's obviously over there with them. I knew she was going - she told quite a few friends. We thought they were full of ."

The friend said there were fears the fugitives could be caught in China, a country notoriously harsh for prison inmates. The concerns were greatest for Leena.

He said the news would have been particularly hard on Kara and Aroha's mother Suzanne Hurring, a strong figure in a close family of four girls.

She has had one phone call from Kara since her daughters vanished but hung up because she "knew what she had done".

Last night, Suzanne said she had not heard from either daughter since. She did not know where they were and did not want to speculate. "We [the family] are in the middle of all of this and we just want to chill out."

Gao's brother Carter also came forward last night to say he had nothing to do with the missing money. Carter had worked with his brother at the Rotorua BP, and shared a home with their mother and Kara Yang-Hurring. "I wanted to stay here. I'm here. If I was involved, I'm not here."

The only staff member at the closed BP station has been left without a job, and is owed $2000 in holiday pay. Shybu Antony said he was given no warning the station was about to go into receivership, although he knew the business was struggling.

The last time he spoke to Gao was on the morning of May 8. Gao hadn't been at work since April 24, and Antony was told he was on holiday in the South Island.

He phoned his boss to check nothing was wrong. "He said: 'Nothing. I'm coming back in two days' and hung up."

Later that day a detective came to the station and showed Antony a picture of Kara, asking if he knew her whereabouts.

That night, the receiver rang to tell him he had lost his job.

Helaine Aim, who owns a neighbouring takeaway and was friendly with Kara, was shocked her friend could be on the run. "I just can't believe she would do that with her daughter. She was a good mum."

- ADDITIONAL REPORTING: HEATHER MCCRACKEN and ANNA LEASK

 

 

Aroha Hurring (top) and Chloe Hurring (bottom) with Leena, 7. Photo / Supplied

Aroha Hurring (top) and Chloe Hurring (bottom)

with Leena, 7. Photo / Supplied

 

Entry #510

Man Steals Solar Panels From School to Buy Drugs

Man Steals Solar Panels From School to Buy Drugs

Samuel R. Avro on Friday, May 22, 2009

The story of one guy’s innovative usage of

 some smokin’ hot solar panels, and a dumb

phone call from prison

mmmcrack

A school in Chico, Calif., that had 46 rooftop

solar panels valued at nearly $50,000 stolen

from its rooftop in February, has now learned

 how –and why– the heist occured.

 

An attorney for 32-year-old Christopher Bess, who was identified on surveillance video taken in the area of the school, said that his client stole the solar panels because he needed them to buy drugs. Bess entered into a plea bargain in court on Tuesday, and because he has a prior assault conviction can face up to 7 years in prison for the crime.

But the story gets even more interesting.

Bess was in jail and awaiting sentencing for a felony drug charge, a result of the surveillance footage which allowed police only to arrest him on a drug-transportation charge –but not for the solar heist–, when he made a call from prison to a friend, asking him to “empty out” the solar panels from two rented storage units where they were being hidden. Needless to say, his calls were being covertly monitored and the police were immediately dispatched to the location where 17 of the solar panels turned up along with various other stolen property.

His lawyer said that Bess could have faced a 15 year sentence had he gone to trial and been convicted on all counts.

The storage shed, rented under his girlfriend’s name, also contained stolen bicycles, lawn-care equipment, plus cold-weather gear stolen from a local non-profit group that assists military veterans.

“What was found in the storage shed, his behavior, is indicative of a drug addict going on a run,” the suspect’s lawyer observed.

Bess was ordered held without bail pending next month’s sentencing.

Entry #509

13's lucky for $49.9M lottery winners

13's lucky for $49.9M lottery winners
Published: May 22, 2009 at 8:52 AM
EDMONTON, Alberta, May 22 (UPI) -- The number 13 turned up $49.9 million lucky for 13 Canadian female clerks who work on the 13th floor of an Edmonton, Alberta, financial company.
The third-largest Lotto 6/49 jackpot was drawn Wednesday and won by the 13 payroll and human resources workers at ATB Financial, the Edmonton Sun said.
Employee Penny Stone, who is not part of the winning group, told the Edmonton Journal it was widely believed all the winning women would be resigning.

"The joke going around is that senior management must be worried that they have to replace 13 people," she said. "We don't know if we're going to get paid next week -- the whole payroll processing department is gone."

A spokeswoman for the Western Canada Lottery Corporation told the Sun only 15 percent of lotto tickets sold in Canada are bought in the prairie provinces, yet big wins aren't unusual there.

In October 2005, a group of 17 oil and gas workers southeast of Edmonton shared the largest jackpot of $54.3 million, the report said

Entry #508

Necklace Blocks Bullet Saves Woman's Life

Necklace Blocks Bullet Saves Woman's Life

 

Posted: 3:38 pm EDT May 21, 2009

Updated: 4:18 pm EDT May 21, 2009

ATLANTA -- An Atlanta woman is lucky to be alive thanks to a necklace she was wearing.

 

Jabriel Rump was leaving the Cascade Glenn Apartments Wednesday night in southwest Atlanta with her friend Octavia Miller when a man in another car spotted the two women and tried to get their attention.

 

The women told police that when they ignored the man and pulled away, he followed them and opened fire, apparently angry over being rejected.

 

Channel 2 Action News reporter Richard Elliot talked to Miller's roommate outside Grady Memorial Hospital about her wound.

 

"The bullet went into her cheek; it's stuck in her jaw," said Jazmine Wells.

 

"He followed them and shot them in the car," said Wells.

 

Rump was struck in the chest and her life may have been saved when the bullet hit a necklace she was wearing.

 

"They're in pain, but overall they'll be OK," said Wells. Two women remained hospitalized Thursday.

 

Police said the man was driving a red Eagle Talon.
Link to video:
Entry #507