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Sunday 31 July 2011

former NYPD officer was killed - shot in the back - after a dispute over a curbside dice game in Jamaica, Queens.



Colin Bowlin, 28, had been rolling dice on Sutphin Blvd. near 113th Ave. about 4 a.m. yesterday, when an argument broke out over money, said a police source.

Bowlin left the game and was walking away when he was shot once in the lower back, police said.

His cousin, who was with him at the time, loaded him into a car and rushed him to North Shore University Hospital in Rego Park, where he died a short time later, said police.

"The guy fired and hit him in the back," said Bowlin's brother, Mark, 33, calling the shooter a coward.

"If he was such a brave guy, why not fight him? If he was man enough to pull the trigger, he's man enough to take responsibility for it," he said, urging the shooter to surrender.

Bowlin, who lived in Hollis, joined the NYPD in 2005, when he was 22 years old and worked in the 101st Precinct in Far Rockaway, his brother said.

Bowlin resigned from the NYPD in 2008, said police.

He had been working as a security guard for an armored courier service, family said.

Police yesterday were still hunting for the shooter.Clare Trapasso

Tuesday 26 July 2011

“Fast and Furious” put guns in the hands of some of Mexico’s most notorious drug gangs.



Representatives of the Bureau for Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms admitted that mistakes had been made in the operation, but officials at the Government Oversight and Reform Committee hearing tried to defend the operation as a well-intentioned effort gone wrong.


ATF representatives said they knew that guns — according to one estimate just over 1,000 firearms — were going to Mexico and ending up in the hands of criminals there, but that was the point: The ATF was attempting to trace the guns through criminal networks in order to track gun- and drug-trafficking routes.

“The goal of the operation was to disrupt, dismantle, and destroy drug cartels purposely, knowingly allowing the guns to go to Mexico,” said William Newell, the former special agent in charge for the ATF Phoenix field division.

Newell said in prepared testimony that the purpose of the operation was to get beyond the straw purchasers on the street and to make arrests up the chain of command in criminal organizations, but lawmakers criticized the operation as misconceived from the start.

Under questioning from Peter Welch (D-Vt.), Newell said that ATF agents would sell guns to buyers involved in criminal networks and would then follow those individuals and place them under surveillance.

“So a load of assault rifles has been delivered to a middleman. Was there a plan by which you would follow where those guns went?” Welch asked.

Newell said that agents would continue surveillance of the individuals but that because of resource constraints, agents would be called away to other cases and surveillance would cease, seemingly leaving the buyer to travel freely with the guns he had purchased from government agents.

Newell said that, in hindsight, the operation should have included greater risk-assessment in order to gauge progress and to check where the guns involved had turned up.

It is unclear to what extent senior officials at ATF knew about the operation, but agents said Tuesday that they had passed information about the operation up the chain of command. William McMahon, the ATF deputy assistant director, said that he had informed his superiors about the operation, but when pressed during questioning he said he was unaware of some details.

Tuesday’s hearing came on the heels of a report released by the oversight committee that found U.S. officials in Mexico City had known about the operation and had tried to have it stopped but were rebuffed by their superiors.

Mexican federal police in four helicopters attacked a drug cartel in a mountain redoubt. They were rebuffed by heavy fire, including from a massive .50 caliber rifle.


A bullet hole left in one helicopter's plate glass window is one exhibit in an exhaustive House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform report released Tuesday showing the breadth of a high-stakes, unprecedented, and, ultimately, ill-advised US scheme called "Operation Fast and Furious."

The .50 caliber bullet hole, the report says, likely came from a gun trafficked via Fast and Furious, an operation to allow nearly 2,000 arms to leave US gunshops via certain traffickers who the US government had identified and thought it could track. The idea was to trace these "straw buyers" to key cartel figures in an attempt to score major gun busts to prove the US was serious about stopping arms trafficking across the border.



Instead, the report alleges that the operation – which one US official has called "a perfect storm of idiocy" – likely allowed hundreds of powerful guns to cross into Mexico, possibly changing the outcome of cartel battles with Mexican police, leading to the deaths of many Mexicans and one federal agent, Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry, and damaging diplomatic relations between the US and Mexico.

The Fast and Furious scandal is still playing out, with hearings in the House Oversight Committee Tuesday. Chairman Rep. Darrell Issa (R) of California says he is intent on finding out how high in the Obama administration knowledge of the operation went.

The report, "Fueling Cartel Violence," backs reports that leaders in the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) were aware of the operation. But it also names several key Department of Justice officials, such as Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer, as "clearly" being aware of the operation – a charge that the Obama administration denies.

According to whistleblowers and key witnesses, however, the real lesson behind Fast and Furious, a two-year operation that ended in January 2011, is how "groupthink" clouded decision-making at the highest levels of government, causing an agency to go against its basic instincts – which is to not allow arms to be trafficked illegally – and consequently contribute, not detract, from border violence.

"These guns weren't going for a positive cause, they were going for a negative cause," ATF attaché Carlos Canino told the congressional oversight committee. "The ATF armed the [Sinaloa] cartel. It's disgusting."

Despite repeated pushback from some agents and the attaché office in Mexico City, ATF Acting Director Kenneth Melson assessed it as "a good operation," the report says. According to witnesses, Assistant Attorney General Breuer appeared to cite Fast and Furious in meetings with Mexican officials, saying the US had a major gun-interdiction effort underway out of Phoenix, the report adds.

Where the guns went

The plan was to trace the guns through straw buyers to major cartels, to then build cases and make arrests. But early on, it became evident that tracking the guns had become a problem and that hundreds had made their way across the border and disappeared into cartel gun caches. According to the report, Fast and Furious guns made their way to three prominent Mexican cartels: Sinaloa, El Teo and La Familia.


ATF Chief Says He Didn't Approve Tactics

The acting head of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives told congressional investigators he didn't approve the tactics of a federal operation that lost track of firearms purchased by suspected smugglers.

The testimony by acting ATF chief Kenneth Melson and other top officials, released Tuesday, rebutted suspicions voiced by Republican lawmakers that the tactics used in the ATF's Operation Fast and Furious received high-level approval.

But testimony by lower-level officials at a House hearing Tuesday pointed to mismanagement and lack of oversight in letting Fast and Furious move forward in 2009 and 2010. In some cases, senior officials appear not to have asked questions once signs of trouble emerged.

The operation was aimed at catching top smugglers who funnel weapons from the U.S. to drug-cartel gangs in Mexico. To do so, ATF agents let some gun purchases by suspected smugglers go forward.

GOP lawmakers argue the ATF should have known it couldn't keep track of those firearms. They released a report Monday saying that more than 1,000 of the weapons haven't been recovered or traced.

Democrats on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee released their own report Tuesday with excerpts from interviews with Mr. Melson, his deputy, William Hoover, and others.

"I don't believe that I knew or that Billy Hoover knew ... that the strategy in the case was to watch people buy the guns and not interdict them at some point," the Democratic report quotes Mr. Melson as saying in a July 4 interview.

The interview with Mr. Melson was conducted without Justice Department lawyers present. The acting ATF chief has split with his bosses after reports in The Wall Street Journal and elsewhere that Justice officials wanted to oust him from his post.

According to the report, a congressional interviewer asked Mr. Melson: "Did anyone at the Department of Justice ever tell you or tell anyone else at headquarters and it got to you that those tactics were authorized as part of a new strategy in order to follow the guns, let the guns go, see where they might end up?"

Mr. Melson answered: "No."

However, Lorren Leadmon, an ATF intelligence agent, testified at Tuesday's House hearing that Mr. Melson and other senior officials received briefings in late 2009 and 2010 indicating trouble with the Fast and Furious operation.

Mr. Leadmon said he and others provided details at these briefings of weapons seizures in the U.S. and Mexico tied to Fast and Furious. In addition to the ATF leaders, an official from the criminal division at Justice Department headquarters received the briefings, Mr. Leadmon said.

Also at the hearing, Darren Gil, the ATF's attache in Mexico City during the operation, compared the Fast and Furious missteps to the ATF's performance in its 1993 raid of a religious sect in Waco, Texas, where a gunbattle left four ATF agents dead.

He said the operation exposed how "poor management, poor judgment and poor leadership resulted in disaster. Operation Fast and Furious, as I have come to understand it, is indeed a disaster."

Another ATF official, William McMahon, who led regional field operations, apologized at Tuesday's hearing for apparently not reading some of the documents that he approved, including wiretaps connected to the operation.

Rep. Darrell Issa, the California Republican who is chairman of the House oversight committee, and Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa have led the congressional probe of the operation.

The hearing Tuesday led by Mr. Issa offered an unusual scene, as active ATF agents chastised their bosses, sitting a few seats away, for letting the operation continue.

William Newell, the chief of the ATF Phoenix office during the Fast and Furious operation, defended the way the operation was conceived, saying "it was not the purpose of the investigation to permit the transportation of firearms into Mexico, and to the best of my knowledge none of the suspects in this case was ever witnessed by our agents crossing the border with firearms."

Mr. Hoover told the congressional investigators that he raised concerns and asked in March 2010 that the operation be shut down. It wasn't ended until December 2010, after a border patrol agent was killed in a shootout in Arizona. An assault rifle found at the scene was traced back to a suspect in the Fast and Furious operation.

Mr. Issa scolded Mr. Newell and others who he said were being evasive. He said it remains his goal to have Mr. Newell or his bosses at the ATF and the Justice Department admit that "you knowingly let guns walk."

Tracy Schmaler, a Justice spokeswoman, said the House committee's report didn't include details and testimony that "makes clear that operational details relating to this investigation were unknown to senior Department of Justice officials." She noted that the department's inspector general is investigating the matter.

 

122 weapons recovered at crime scenes in Mexico have been linked to a US government weapons sting operation

At least 122 weapons recovered at crime scenes in Mexico have been linked to a US government weapons sting operation gone awry, two US members of Congress said in a report Tuesday.
Operation "Fast and Furious," run by the US Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms (ATF), allowed some 2,000 weapons -- including .50 caliber sniper rifles -- to be sent into Mexico between 2009 and 2010 in an attempt to track gun smuggling routes. Of those, some 1,400 remain unaccounted for.
"So far, the Justice Department has provided documents that reference at least 48 separate recoveries involving 122 weapons" connected to the operation, read the report, issued by two Republican legislators, Representative Darrell Issa and Senator Charles Grassley.
Two of the weapons were found at the scene of the killing of Brian Terry, a US Border Patrol agent shot and killed in Arizona on December 14 while trying to arrest armed men preying on illegal immigrants.
The Mexican government of President Felipe Calderon has loudly complained about the program. Mexico estimates that 90 percent of the weapons seized from drug traffickers come from its neighbor to the north.
"The faulty design of 'Operation Fast and Furious' led to tragic consequences. Countless United States and Mexican citizens suffered as a result," read the report.
Several ATF agents reportedly opposed the operation, which has since been canceled.
Issa has said the program was approved at the highest levels of the US government, and has directly blamed acting ATF director Kenneth Melson and other members of the agency's leadership.
President Barack Obama in March said that neither he nor Attorney General Eric Holder authorized the program, and that the Justice Department is investigating the case.
In a Tuesday hearing on Capitol Hill, Issa -- chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee -- complained of what he described as "the administration's effort to impede this investigation," which "slows our work down."
Members of the US public "have a right to know, once and for all, who did authorize it and who knew about it," he said.
"These guns went to ruthless criminals," said Carlos Canino, the ATF acting attache to Mexico. "It infuriates me that people -- including my law enforcement, diplomatic and military colleagues -- may be killed or injured with these weapons."
"I believe what happened here was inexcusable -- and we in Mexico had no part in it," said Canino.
Jose Wall, an ATF special agent posted in the far northwestern Mexican border city of Tijuana, said he fears the guns "will continue to exact a terrible toll long after these hearings are over."
More than 41,000 people have been killed in Mexico's drug wars since president Calderon launched a crackdown in late 2006.
The leading Democrat on the committee, Elijah Cummings, said the ATF leadership took 10 months to close the program after problems first surfaced in March 2010.
But he also called on reforming US gun laws that allow weapons to be easily sold in border states and smuggled into Mexico.
Separately, the McClatchy-Tribune news service reported Tuesday that, according to diplomatic cables, US embassy officials in Mexico City had not been informed about the ATF sting program.

2 held in shooting of girl in have prior arrests

Court records show the two men being held in the shooting of an 11-year-old girl in San Francisco have a history of arrests for alleged property crime.
Nineteen-year-old Lazarus Thomas of Daly City and 20-year-old Caprice Shadon Mitchell are accused in the shooting late Friday night in the city's Western Addition neighborhood that left Linda Ngo with a life-threatening wound. Police say the men were in an argument when one of them pulled a weapon and opened fire.
A stray bullet went through a nearby apartment and hit Ngo in the chest.
Thomas and Mitchell have been booked on suspicion of assault, shooting into an inhabited dwelling and brandishing a firearm.
The San Francisco Chronicle reports that Thomas was sentenced last week for a second-degree burglary conviction. Mitchell has been arrested before on suspicion of burglary, but not convicted.

 

Ben and Catherine Mullany were shot in the head on the last day of their honeymoon at a luxury resort on the Caribbean island of Antigua in 2008.

Ben and Catherine Mullany were shot in the head on the last day of their honeymoon at a luxury resort on the Caribbean island of Antigua in 2008.

Qualified doctor Mrs Mullany, 31, died instantly, while her 31-year-old physiotherapy student husband was flown back to Swansea on a life support machine. He died a week after the shooting.

Final stages of trial

Kaniel Martin, 23, and Avie Howell, 20, deny shooting the Welsh couple. They also deny murdering 43-year-old local shopkeeper Woneta Anderson.

The two-month long trial, which has seen more than 90 witnesses give evidence, is now in its final stages.

If a verdict is reached tomorrow it will be three years to the day after Mr and Mrs Mullany were killed.

Mr Mullany's parents Cynlais and Marilyn have visited the Caribbean island and have heard evidence in court on what would have been their son's third wedding anniversary.

Last week, they were joined by their daughter-in-law's mother and father, David and Rachel Bowen.

DNA evidence

The prosecution has based its case on DNA evidence and ballistics.

Director of Public Prosecutions Antony Armstrong said both defendants had gunshot residue on their clothing.

A bandana with Howell's DNA was found at the scene of shopkeeper Woneta Anderson's murder, while Mr Mullany's stolen Nokia mobile phone was later discovered at Martin's home.

Both defendants declined the option to testify at their trial.

Claims of 'fixed' evidence

However, Howell and Martin's defence team described the evidence against their clients as being "circumstantial".

Yesterday, Martin's barrister Marcus Foster went so far as to claim British detectives had "fixed" evidence in order to solve the murder of former police officer Mr Mullany and his wife.

Mr Foster said: "They came on a mission... when one of their own was taken. Not just a countryman, but an ex-soldier and police officer."

Tonch Weldon, 39, was charged with fatally shooting Amy Gephart in front of his wife

An Iowa County jury convicted a rural Blairstown man of first-degree murder Tuesday in the fatal 2009 shooting of a woman who was involved in a relationship with the man and his wife.

Tonch Weldon, 39, was charged with fatally shooting Amy Gephart in front of his wife, Amanda, after she threatened to leave him for Gephart. Tonch Weldon then shot himself.



The jury deliberated the case for almost five days following a weeklong trial that wrapped up July 20.

Weldon was emotional during the trial and cried at times but was nearly emotionless as the verdict was read and as deputies walked him back to jail, The Gazette reported.

Weldon faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole. Sentencing was set for Aug. 15 in Iowa County District Court in Marengo.

During the trial, Amanda Weldon testified her husband shot Gephart on June 7, 2009, after she threatened to leave him. She said the couple had an open marriage and Gephart lived with them and was their sexual partner until she fell in love with Gephart. The women decided to leave Weldon and after arguing that day, Amada Weldon testified her husband shot Gephart and then turned the gun on himself.

Prosecutors argued the shooting was deliberate and premeditated. The defense claimed the shooting was a "crime of passion."

"Amy was our only child and we had 35 wonderful years with her," her parents, Jim and Nancy Gephart, said in a statement after the verdict.

Murder charges have been filed against three people in the shooting death of a San Diego police officer

Murder charges have been filed against three people in the shooting death of a San Diego police officer, Dist. Atty. Bonnie Dumanis announced Tuesday.

Alex Charfauros, 26, Melissa Ortiz, 21, and Patrick Luangrath, 19, are charged in the death of Officer Chris Wilson, 50, a 17-year veteran of the police department.

Wilson was fatally shot on Oct. 27, 2010 as police attempted to storm an apartment in the Paradise Hills neighborhood in search of a possible probation violator.

The three are set to be arraigned Tuesday in San Diego County Superior Court. Each faces a variety of charges, including murder, attempted murder, conspiracy to obstruct justice and gun-related violations, Dumanis said.

"Officer Wilson's death shook the community and reminded us all about the daily dangers faced by law enforcement in San Diego," Dumanis said.

Two people were found dead inside the apartment, including the person believed to have fired the fatal shot at Wilson. Three others were arrested at the apartment.

Norway killer insane

The lawyer of a Norwegian who killed at least 76 people in a bombing and a shooting spree said on Tuesday his client appeared to be a madman. “This whole case indicated that he is insane,” Geir Lippestad said of Anders Behring Breivik, who has confessed to “atrocious but necessary”


actions, but denies he is a criminal.
The lawyer said it was too early to say if Breivik would plead insanity at his trial, expected to be a year away.

Lippestad said Breivik had stated he belonged to an anti-Islam network that has two cells in Norway and more abroad. Norwegian police and researchers have cast doubt on whether such an organisation exists.

Police believe Breivik probably acted alone in staging his bloody assaults, which have united Norwegians in revulsion.

Justice Minister Knut Storberget hailed “fantastic” police work after the attacks, deflecting criticisms that police had reacted too slowly to the shooting massacre. “It is very important that we have an open and critical approach...but there is a time for everything,” Storberget told reporters after talks with Oslo’s police chief.

An armed SWAT team took more than an hour to reach Utoeya island, where Breivik was coolly shooting terrified youngsters at a ruling Labour Party youth camp. He killed 68 there and eight in an earlier bombing of Oslo’s government district.

Storberget also denied police had ignored threats posed by right-wing zealots in Norway. “I reject suggestions that we have not had the far-right under the microscope,” he said.

Many Norwegians seem to agree the police do not deserve opprobrium for their response. At a march of more than 100,000 in Oslo on Monday night, people applauded rescue workers.


UK group admits links with killer


After initial denial, the far-right English Defence League (EDL) has admitted that Norwegian mass killer Anders Behring Breivik had links to the group.

Breivik reportedly met leaders of the EDL in March last year when he came to London for the visit of Geert Wilders, the Dutch right-wing politician.

Daryl Hobson, who organises EDL demonstrations, said Breivik had met members of the group.

Hobson said in an online posting: “He had about 150 EDL on his list ... barring one or two doubt the rest of us ever met him, altho [sic] he did come over for one of our demo [sic] in 2010 ... but what he did was wrong. RIP to all who died as a result of his actions.”

Scotland Yard was investigating Breivik’s claims that he began his deadly “crusade” after being recruited to a secret society in London, and that he was guided by an English “mentor.”

Prime Minister David Cameron said Breivik's claims were being taken “extremely seriously.”

 

Restaurant argument led to Richmond killing, police say

An argument in a restaurant led to a fatal shooting on Saturday, Richmond police say, not the tension between neighborhood gangs that resulted in several killings in the city this month.
Trouble began before 10 p.m., police said, in a restaurant on 23rd Street that advertises live music on weekends.
The parties involved apparently took their dispute outside.
"It does appear that it began inside a restaurant," Lt. Bisa French said. "We are still investigating what exactly happened."
A few minutes before 10, the department's acoustical gunshot detection technology directed patrol officers to 24th Street and Exchange Place, a short distance from the restaurant.
They found a 20-year-old man dead on the street, and a 29-year-old man who was critically wounded. Police said they expect the wounded man to survive.
The Contra Costa Coroner's Office had not conclusively identified the dead man as of Monday.
While police say that one victim was a member of a street gang in San Rafael, police say the conflict preceding the violence and the victims involved do not suggest that Saturday's killing extended a pattern of retaliatory shootings plaguing flatland neighborhoods this month.
Those shootings, between gangs in North Richmond and the Iron Triangle neighborhood, have claimed victims with no direct involvement in the feud who happened to walk or drive in the wrong neighborhood at the wrong time.
The city hasinvestigated nine homicides so far in July, and 21 total this year. Unincorporated North Richmond also had one homicide this month.
Richmond police, the Contra Costa Sheriff's Office and the District Attorney formed a task force last week to investigate and stop the feud.

 

Sunday 10 July 2011

slaughter in the Bar Sabino Gordo

 slaughter in the Bar Sabino Gordo, becomes the worst in the city of Monterrey, Nuevo León, showing that the state lives an intense war between cartels fighting for the important place of drugs. The figures are shocking slaughter, since 27 people were killed, seven injured, and eight clients were raised by the armed group. However, the authorities of Nuevo Leon only accepted 20 people died in the attack, said they know the situation of people who were raised . It also ensures that everything was a fight between rival drug, mentioning Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel

captured Mexican crime boss said his gang purchased weapons in the United States and smuggled them across the Rio Grande river,

according to testimony released Tuesday by Mexican authorities.

Jesus Enrique Rejon Aguilar, one of the founders and leaders of the feared Zetas drug cartel, said smugglers began transporting the weapons across the river following increased security at international crossings.

"All the arms are bought in the United States... Before we would transport them over the bridges, but now we transport them across the river, with difficulty," he said, according to the public security ministry.

The Rio Grande -- known as the Rio Bravo del Norte in Mexico -- forms the 1,200-mile (2,000 kilometer) border between Mexico and the US state of Texas.

Mexico has long called for stricter gun laws in the United States, which is believed to be the source of much of the weapons that end up in the hands of drug traffickers and is also one of their most lucrative markets.

Some 37,000 people have been killed in mostly drug-related violence in Mexico since 2006, when the government launched a massive military crackdown on the powerful cartels, which also battle each other over territory.

Rejon Aguilar was detained on Sunday in central Mexico as he was traveling to the south of the country to visit his mother in his home state of Campeche, according to Mexican authorities.

He was one of the founders of the Zetas cartel, a group of former soldiers who pioneered the use of military tactics and weaponry, at first in the service of the Gulf cartel, for which they worked as hitmen.

They later split from their employers and founded their own cartel, sparking a brutal turf war. The Zetas are accused of two mass killings, one in Mexico's northeast and one in a Guatemalan border province.

Tuesday 5 July 2011

Five robbers killed as cops foil farm attack

A farmer and five of his workers escaped a deadly farm attack on Sunday night after being warned by the police and a security company that they were the targets of a gang of murderous robbers.

Craig Marwick was told to leave his farm in the Eston area, near Pietermaritzburg, on Sunday.

The police planned to lie in wait for the gang.

"Police and men from Magma Security told us that they had received information just after 7pm that a robbery was planned.

"They told us to leave the farm and go to nearby relatives," said Marwick.

Marwick said his family does not live on the farm, only he and his workers.

Members of the police's National Intervention Unit waited for the gang on the farm. The robbers were believed to part of a gang that has been terrorising the area.

The gang arrived at the farm at around 10pm on Sunday and tried to get onto the premises by forcing the farm gate.

National police spokesman Colonel Vish Naidoo said police confronted the group and called on them to surrender. The men refused.

"A shoot-out ensued which resulted in five [men] being shot dead and two escaping. One of the two [men] was later arrested," he said.

Police recovered seven firearms from the dead men, one of which was a police-issue pistol.

"The firearms will be sent for ballistics testing to establish whether they were used to commit other crimes," said Naidoo.

Naidoo said the 23-member gang of which the men killed on Sunday night are believed to have been members, has been linked to 25 murders, attempted murders, armed robbery and car hijacking in the area.

Of the 23, 12 were arrested last week in Mariannhill for murder, attempted murder and armed robbery.

They were also linked to the killing of a businessman in Hammersdale two weeks ago.

In October, 12 people were killed in their homes in Mariannhill and Shongweni in three days.

Naidoo could not confirm that the gang was linked to these attacks.

National police commissioner Bheki Cele said he was "elated" that his officers had emerged from the ambush on Sunday unscathed.

"These [men] chose to open fire on police officers rather than surrender. Five of the gang of thugs were fatally wounded. I am elated that my officers emerged unscathed," said Cele.

"I should imagine that this incident will serve as a further reminder that police officers will not take kindly to being shot at."

Cele said the officers' actions proved that the police were prepared to protect South Africans.

Marwick said he could not imagine what would have happened if the police had not been alert.

"As a family, we are grateful that we are alive," he said.

"Had the police and private security people not acted the way they did, there would have been another farm murder in the province. The incident indicates that farmers need to be protected . but also that they need to beef up their own security," he said.

 

Five dead, 23 wounded in holiday weekend violence

It was a violent holiday weekend in Chicago, with five men dead and at least 23 people wounded in shootings and stabbings throughout the city since Friday afternoon. The men killed ranged in age from 19 to 25 years old.

The murders include:

• About 2:30 p.m. Friday, police found a 21-year-old man -- identified by the Cook County Medical Examiner’s office as David Cardine -- unresponsive in a van in the 1300 block of South Independence Boulevard, police News Affairs Officer Daniel O’Brien said.

Cardine, of Lombard, was pronounced dead at 3:05 p.m. at Mount Sinai Hospital, according to the medical examiner’s office.

• About 11:15 p.m. Friday, a male shot two men in the 1300 block of West Hastings Street and fled south on foot, police said.

One of the men -- identified by the medical examiner’s office as Javone Oliphant -- was shot multiple times, police said. The other man, 23, was shot in the buttocks and both legs and was treated and released from John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County.

Oliphant, of the 5000 block of West Maypole Avenue, was pronounced dead at 12:09 a.m. Saturday at Stroger Hospital, the medical examiner’s office said.

• A man and woman sitting in a vehicle in the 8500 block of South Givins Court were shot about 5:25 a.m. Saturday, police News Affairs Officer John Mirabelli said.

Charles Bell, 25, of Harvey, was pronounced dead at St. Bernard Hospital and Health Center at 6:15 a.m. Saturday, according to the medical examiner’s office.

A 34-year-old woman was taken in an unidentified condition to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, police said.

• About 8:50 a.m. Saturday, a man in his 20s was shot to death in a street in the Little Village neighborhood.

The man was crossing the street at South Karlov Avenue and West 30th Street when he and the driver of a van exchanged words, Mirabelli said. The driver of the van then shot the man in the head.

Jose Moldonado, 22, of the 3100 block of South Kedvale Avenue, was dead on the scene, according to the medical examiner’s office.

• A man was fatally shot in the 6400 block of South Wolcott Avenue at 7:10 p.m. Sunday, News Affairs Officer Veejay Zala said.

Ricardo Hall, 30, of the 7900 block of South Honore Street-- suffered a gunshot wound to the neck and was pronounced dead at 7:36 p.m. Sunday at Mount Sinai Hospital, according to the medical examiner’s office.

The following have not involved fatalities:

• About 6:05 p.m. Friday, an 18-year-old man was shot in the 4000 block of West West End Avenue, police said. Prior to the shooting, the man was arguing about money with the gunman.

The man was taken in “stable” condition to Mount Sinai Hospital with gunshot wounds to both legs, police said.

• About 7 p.m. Friday, a 22-year-old man standing on a corner in the 7700 block of South Essex Avenue ran when he heard gunshots, but still was shot in the leg, police said. He was taken in good condition to South Shore Hospital.

• About an hour later, an 18-year-old man standing in a driveway in the 1400 block of West 61st Street was shot in the back and taken to Stroger Hospital in serious condition, police said.

• An 18-year-old man standing with a “large” group of people in the 6500 block of South Campbell Avenue was shot by a gunman on a bike about 8:35 p.m. Friday, police said. He was taken in “stable” condition to Christ Medical Center.

• About 10:05 p.m. Friday, a man in his 20s was shot in the 3100 block of South Kedvale Avenue, News Affairs Officer Ronald Gaines said.

• About 10 minutes later, a 17-year-old boy was standing in the street in the 1800 block of South Allport Street when a male passenger in a sport-utility vehicle yelled gang slogans and shot him, police said.

The teen was taken to Stroger Hospital in serious condition with gunshot wounds to the head and back, police said.

• Just before noon Saturday a young man was shot near a South Side alley on the 1300 block of West 81st Street, Mirabelli said.

The victim, who was believed to be between 16 and 25 years old, suffered a gunshot wound to his right side, News Affairs Officer Darryl Baety said. He was taken to Christ Medical Center in an unidentified condition, though according to preliminary information his condition was “stable,” Mirabelli said.

• A 28-year-old man was shot in the ankle about 11:10 p.m. Saturday in the 7600 block of South Marquette Avenue and was taken in good condition to Jackson Park Hospital, police said.

• About 11:40 p.m. Saturday, a 24-year-old man was shot multiple times in the 3400 block of West Chicago Avenue, police said.

The man was initially taken in critical condition to Loretto Hospital and was transferred to Mount Sinai Hospital, police said.

• About 1 a.m. Sunday, a 20-year-old man was shot in the shoulder and taken to a local hospital in good condition after the car he was riding in was chased by another near East 87th Street and South Stony Island Avenue.

The two cars were going west on 87th Street when the car being chased attempted to turn onto Stony Island, Mirabelli said. At that point a third vehicle, which was not involved in the chase, crashed into the car being chased.

The occupants of the car doing the chasing then got out, approached the car they were chasing, and opened fire, wounding the victim.

• At 6:15 p.m. Sunday, a 26-year-old man was walking in the 6300 block of South Carpenter Street when he was approached by an assailant who displayed a gun, opened fire and fled the scene, according to police. He was taken in “stable” condition to Stroger Hospital with two gunshot wounds to the body.

• At 8:25 p.m. Sunday, a 26-year-old man was shot in the head in the 0-100 block of East 119th Street, Zala said.

The man was taken in critical condition to Christ Medical Center, Fire Media Affairs spokesman Richard Rosado said.

• A man walked into a South Side hospital Sunday evening with gunshot wounds to the elbow and side, police said.

He told police the shooting happened about 7:40 p.m. Sunday in the 6300 block of South St. Lawrence Avenue when someone approached and opened fire. He was able to drive himself to University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was treated for the gunshot wounds, police said.

• About 7:45 p.m. Sunday, a man and woman were wounded during a drive-by shooting. A vehicle was stopped in traffic in the 7100 block of South Greenwood Avenue when another vehicle pulled alongside and someone inside opened fire, according to a police. The second vehicle fled the scene.

A 21-year-old man was shot in the right leg and a 19-year-old woman was shot in the buttocks, police said. Both were taken in “stable” condition to Stroger Hospital.

• A man drove himself to a hospital late Sunday after he was shot while grabbing the gun from a man who was trying to rob him on the South Side.

The 33-year-old man was parked in a vehicle in the 7100 block of South Wentworth Avenue about 11:15 p.m. Sunday when a man approached with a handgun and demanded money, News Affairs Officer Hector Alfaro said.

The gunman opened fire when the man in the car reached for the weapon, police said. The gunman then fled the scene and the man in the vehicle -- who was shot in the forearm -- drove himself to Mercy Hospital and Medical Center, where he was listed in good condition, according to police.

• About 11:55 p.m. Sunday, a 25-year-old man was stabbed during a fight on a Lake View street.

The man was involved in a physical altercation on the 3300 block of North Halsted Street when he was stabbed, Baety said.

The man was taken to Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center in good condition, according to police.

• A 21-year-old woman was critically injured in a shooting early Monday on the West Side. She was standing in the 4800 block of West Augusta Boulevard when someone inside a light-colored vehicle opened fire at 12:54 a.m. Monday, police said. She was shot multiple times in the back and side and was taken to Stroger Hospital in critical condition, police said.

• About 5:02 a.m. Monday a man was stabbed on the West Side. He was stabbed on the 4000 block of West Roosevelt Road, Baety said, and was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital in an unspecified condition.

• About 3:20 p.m. Monday, a 20-year-old man was shot in the shoulder in the 9700 block of South Merrion Avenue, police said. He was taken in good condition to Advocate Trinity Hospital, police said.

• Monday afternoon, an 18-year-old man was wounded in a shooting in the South Side Back of the Yards neighborhood.

The man was shot at 3:37 p.m. in the 4800 block of South Damen Avenue, Zala said.

The man was taken in serious to critical condition to Mount Sinai Hospital, Fire Media Affairs Cmdr. Will Knight said. The shooting may have been a drive-by, said Zala, citing preliminary information.

Chicago Police detectives are investigating, but they have not announced any arrests or charges related to any of the incidents.

 

Monday 4 July 2011

man suspected of killing four people, including his wife and ex-wife, killed himself Sunday after leading police on a chase back to the scene of three of the slayings

man suspected of killing four people, including his wife and ex-wife, killed himself Sunday after leading police on a chase back to the scene of three of the slayings, authorities said.

Kenneth Myers, 46, was driving his dead ex-wife's car when deputies began chasing him early Sunday morning, Aiken County Sheriff's Capt. Charles Barranco said.
Officers fired several shots at Myers as he tried to ram their cruisers before the chase ended back at the home where deputies found three people dead around 6 p.m. Saturday. Myers then apparently shot himself.
Aiken County Coroner Tim Carlton identified the dead as Myers' wife, 25-year-old Angela Myers; her twin sister, Tabitha Brown; her mother, 50-year-old Vicki Brown; and Myers' ex-wife, 47-year-old Esther Baldwin. All four died from single gunshots.
Police were checking in with several more people who they thought could be threatened by Myers when they found him and he fled, Barranco said.
Investigators spent all night trying to piece together why Myers might have gone on the killing spree. Deputies weren't immediately familiar with him before Saturday night.
"It's hard to say at this point in the investigation why those people were killed," Barranco said.
Phone calls to several listings related to Myers were not answered Sunday.
Investigators have uncovered some threats Myers made to people in the past, but people who have been interviewed so far didn't think he would turn violent, Barranco said.
The first three bodies were discovered in a secluded, rural home near Wagener, about 40 miles east of Augusta, Ga. Deputies going to check on another person living nearby discovered Baldwin's body about seven hours later, authorities said.
Robin Halsey, who was a neighbor of Myers, told WRDW that only days ago the shooting suspect has discussed how he was feeding a "little stray dog."
"He was talking about how he was going to catch it and take it home and try to save its life, and he was saying, 'I don't see how people can just throw a stray dog out on the street,'" she added.
Investigators initially thought Myers might be heading for Alabama before finding him not far from where all the killings took place.
"We need to try to find some answers," Barranco said.

Sunday 3 July 2011

11-year-old central Indiana boy charged with killing his brother

An 11-year-old central Indiana boy charged with killing his brother is likely the youngest person to face a murder charge in Indiana in about 90 years.

The Indianapolis Star reported Saturday that the last time someone so young was charged with murder in Indiana came in the early 1920s, when an 11-year-old was charged with murder and tried as an adult in northwest Indiana's Starke County. That boy wasn't convicted.


Few details about the shooting Thursday night that killed 6-year-old Andrew Frye at his family's home near Martinsville have been released because a judge on Friday ordered details to remain sealed. Morgan County Prosecutor Steve Sonnega said some information might emerge Wednesday when the defendant appears for an initial hearing.

The 11-year-old was being held Saturday at the Johnson County Juvenile Detention Center.

"Murder can be knowingly or intentionally," Sonnega said. "There is a slight difference. Knowingly means when you engage in conduct you know there is a high probability of the outcome."

The boy currently is charged as a juvenile with murder and criminal recklessness. However, the case could eventually end up in adult court, as Indiana law allows anyone over age 10 to be tried as an adult. For that to happen, prosecutors would have to convince the county's juvenile court judge that there was strong evidence against him, that he likely cannot be rehabilitated in the juvenile system, and that waiving him to adult court is in the best interest of the safety and welfare of the community.

Sonnega said a decision on whether to seek to have the boy waived into adult court would be made later.

The 11-year-old called 911 to report the shooting about 6:15 p.m. Thursday. Officers arrived and found the 6-year-old on a bed in a bedroom with a .22 caliber gunshot wound to the head. The boy was taken to Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis, where he died at 8:03 p.m. Thursday, police said. Judge Christopher Burnham's order after a probable cause hearing Friday barred Sonnega from disclosing details of the case.

The boys were cared for by their mother and her boyfriend, but a sheriff's officer said no adults were home when the shooting occurred.

Prosecutors and police were investigating possible neglect charges against the adults, Sonnega said.

Martinsville is about 30 miles south of Indianapolis.

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