Rabu, 31 Oktober 2012

Grand Ma Kirby's self-aggrandizing testimony called a lie by I.A.D. Sgt. Joseph Stehlik as Anthony Abbate civil trial continues


In riveting testimony Tuesday, high-ranking law enforcement officials tripped over themselves trying to explain to a federal jury how they handled the early days of the explosive reports that an off-duty Chicago police officer had pummeled a female bartender half his size — and that it all had been caught on video.
Debra Kirby, who was head of the Internal Affairs Division at the time and remains a high-ranking member of the department, told the jury at the civil trial stemming from the 2007 beating that during a phone call she told a Cook County prosecutor she wanted Officer Anthony Abbate charged with a felony. She denied ever seeking a misdemeanor offense.
"Absolutely I never said that," Kirby said of the lesser charge. "I wanted him charged with a felony."
Minutes later, internal affairs Sgt. Joseph Stehlik told the jury that he, Kirby and others discussed the beating as a misdemeanor, or simple battery, and that he heard Kirby tell that to the prosecutor during the same phone call. He never heard her seek a felony charge in the conversation, he said.

Mom of Tinley Park man, Eric Bartels, 29, paralyzed in Mokena bar fight sues Joliet area hospitals - A course he is a single dad in late night bar fights... BUT LET'S SUE THE HOSPITALS THAT TRIED TO SAVE THIS BUST OUT'S LIFE!


The mother of a Tinley Park man who was paralyzed after a fight outside a Mokena bar has filed a lawsuit against the hospitals and two doctors that treated her son.
Eric Bartels, 29, a single dad who was working on an MBA, has been blind and paralyzed since he was hurt in a 2009 fight with Joseph Messina of New Lenox.
Janet Bartels filed the lawsuit on her son’s behalf Tuesday in Cook County Circuit Court.
She claims the staff of Silver Cross Hospital, which was located in Joliet at the time, miscommunicated with the responders who brought Bartels to Silver Cross, and miscommunicated with staff at Provena Saint Joseph Medical Center in Joliet when he was transferred there, which delayed the treatment of his brain injury.

SHOCK VIDEO: Crown Heights (NYC) white student brutally beaten, robbed for iPhone by BLACKS while he raced home as Hurricane Sandy closed in



A Crown Heights yeshiva student was brutally beaten and robbed by a several assailants as he raced home before the peak of the storm, a video shows.
One thug tripped Jeremy Furchtgott, 21, and others pummeled him in the head and body before stealing his wallet with $40 and iPhone at the corner of Albany Ave. and President St. at 6:47 p.m. Monday.
“It was the last thing I was expecting,”  recalled Furchtgott , who was walking to his home near Chabad headquarters on Eastern Parkway before the attack. “I found myself on the ground and first thought that I tripped over a branch. Until I heard someone yell, ‘Give me your phone! Give me your wallet.’”
The violent assailants rolled the recent Princeton University grad on his stomach to check his back pockets, the grainy video posted by CrownHeights.info shows.
“One of them said, ‘Stay down! Don’t look up until you count to 100 or I’ll shoot you!’ ” Furchtgott said.
One attacker then viciously drives Furchtgott’s head into the ground before he races off.
Sruly Halon, who was walking home after a Talmud study session nearby, discovered Furchtgott lying motionless on the sidewalk seconds after the attack.
“At first I didn’t know why he was lying there,” Halon recalled. “I wasn’t sure if something happened to him physically. Maybe a tree hit him.”
Furchtgott, who had just finished counting to 25, told him Halon he had been mugged, but initially didn’t remember being beaten. He suffered several bruises and cuts on his legs but declined hospital care.
Halon called 911 but the lines were down due to huge number of storm related calls.
Binyomin Lifshitz, a Shomrim volunteer, arrived shortly afterwards, and reached out directly to police in the area for help.
An NYPD captain showed up shortly afterwards and several other cops tried to find the attackers, scouring nearby blocks, to no avail.
“We have a complaint and it is under investigation,” said detective Brian Sessa Tuesday night.
City Councilman David Greenfield (D-Flatbush) condemned the attack, and offered a $1,000 reward for any information leading to the arrest of the perpetrators.
“It’s shocking. What kind of sick people would attack an individual who is trying to get home during a hurricane?” he asked.

What's the big deal... LAPD leaves out small detail in police shooting.... Offender was handcuffed and face down when he was shot.


The Los Angeles Police Department's news release on an Oct. 12 officer-involved shooting seemed fairly routine.
Officers searching for several suspects who had fled after being stopped for questioning found one hiding under an SUV on Woodlawn Avenue in South L.A. The officers pulled the suspect out by his ankles, saw what looked like a metallic object in his hands and opened fire, critically wounding him.
But one crucial piece of information was left out of the release: The suspect's hands were cuffed behind his back at the time and he was lying on his stomach.
In response to questions by The Times, LAPD officials acknowledged this week that before the suspect was shot, he had escaped the custody of other officers who had handcuffed him earlier.
LAPD Cmdr. Andy Smith said investigators are trying to understand the circumstances that led to an officer shooting a restrained and unarmed man. The inquiry will focus, in part, on radio transmissions that will show what the officers had been told about the situation before they confronted the suspect.
The case marks the second time in as many months that the LAPD has withheld important and potentially unfavorable information from the public in cases involving serious uses of force by officers.
Last month, the department released an account of an incident in which a woman died after several officers forced her into the back seat of a police car. The news release made no mention of the fact that a female officer was under investigation for berating the woman and stomping on her genitals during the encounter. Police officials confirmed those details after the Times inquired about the case.
LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said Wednesday that the news release on the shooting was not an attempt to distort the incident. Rather, he said, the information was withheld to preserve the integrity of the investigation and not taint potential witnesses.
"I am concerned about any time one of our officers is involved in a shooting. If a suspect is handcuffed, I am even more concerned, not only with the shooting itself but with the circumstances that led up to the shooting," he said.
"The details of the use of force will be made public when the investigation is complete," he said. "Many times our desire to give out information on an incident has to be tempered with the needs of the investigation. When there is the possibility of misconduct in any investigation, we need to be even more circumspect."
The events that led to the shooting began around 8:30 p.m., when two patrol officers reportedly saw a man spray-painting gang graffiti on a wall near 41st Place and Woodlawn Avenue, according to the LAPD account. As the suspected vandal tried to leave in a waiting vehicle, the officers intervened and ordered him and an unknown number of other men out of the car, Smith said. The officers were in the process of handcuffing the men when one of them, 23-year-old Kennedy Garcia, bolted, according to the LAPD account.
One officer gave chase on foot and the other pursued in their patrol car. As they radioed for additional police to be sent to the scene, the officers described the situation to the dispatcher as a disturbance involving a man with a gun, according to the LAPD account.
The officers told investigators afterward that they had done so because they saw Garcia holding his waistband as he ran and so believed he had a gun concealed there, the department account said. No gun was recovered, Smith said. The radio transmission recordings are expected to show what information the officers gave to dispatchers about Garcia and the other men they left behind.
Among the officers who responded to the call for backup were Jonathan Rocha and Louis Garcia, both of whom joined the LAPD less than four years ago. In the 4000 block of Woodlawn Avenue, the officers saw a man on the ground trying to conceal himself beneath an SUV, according to the LAPD's account. One of the officers pulled the man out by his ankles, the police statement said, and they "observed what they believed was a chrome/stainless steel handgun in the detainee's hand at which time an officer-involved shooting occurred." Both officers fired their weapons. The man was struck once in the lower back.
It is not known whether Rocha and Garcia mistook the metal of the handcuffs for a gun, Smith said.
As in all officer-involved shootings, investigators will spend months collecting witness statements and other evidence and will then submit their findings to an internal review board that will suggest to Beck whether the officers' decision to use deadly force fell within department policies. After the chief makes his decision, the Police Commission, which oversees the department, will vote whether to uphold or overturn it.
Rocha and Garcia did not respond to emails seeking comment.
The LAPD publishes news releases on all officer-involved shootings. Their content releases must be kept vague, Smith said, to not interfere with the investigations into the shootings.
Connie Rice, a longtime L.A. civil rights attorney and observer of the LAPD, said the department's caution in releasing information about shootings was plausible "but raised as many questions as it answered."
Do they also keep troubling information out of news releases, Rice questioned, "so an investigation can go on smoothly without the department having to deal with the community's ire?"

Pat Bruno, former Sun-Times restaurant critic goes to the big all you can eat buffet in the sky... Former Sun-Times restaurant critic Pat Bruno dead at 79


Longtime Sun-Times restaurant critic Pat Bruno, a key and colorful voice on Chicago’s dining scene for more than a quarter century, died Tuesday night after a lengthy battle with brain cancer. Mr. Bruno was 79.
Glioblastoma multiforme ultimately took Mr. Bruno’s life, but the cancer couldn’t take away his undying passion for the things he loved most: family, travel, adventure, writing and food. Especially Italian food.
“One of the last emails he sent me he talked about going to get another round of chemo and how he was excited because there was a good Italian restaurant near the hospital,” said Mr. Bruno’s niece, Debra Bruno, who lives in Beijing, China.

Cook County Assistant Public Defender Henry Hams testifies he felt threatened by white Cook County Assistant State’s Atty. Mike McCormick

Two sharply divergent stories emerged in court today during the trial of a Cook County public defender charged with assaulting an assistant state’s attorney two years ago in a Chicago courthouse.

Both sides essentially agree that the two lawyers exchanged harsh words in June 2010 following a hearing at the Criminal Courts Building in Chicago in which the two men were opposing attorneys on a case.
 
But Cook County Assistant Public Defender Henry Hams is charged with felony aggravated battery in the case, and at the Skokie courthouse this morning he told the jury he was defending himself against an assault when he grabbed Assistant State’s Atty. Mike McCormick by the neck, threw him to the floor and straddled him to prevent him from getting up.

Ald. Matthew O'Shea: Jack up the fines of any violations during South Side Irish Parade - From open liquor on the street or public urination or defecation

The Southwest Side alderman whose ward hosts the South Side Irish Parade wants to stiffen the repercussions for drinking or publicly relieving oneself around Chicago parade routes to try to prevent a return of the drunken mayhem that briefly forced cancellation of the annual event.

Under a proposal Ald. Matthew O'Shea introduced to the City Council Wednesday, fines for having open liquor on the street or public urination or defecation would increase, from between $100 and $500 to between $500 and $1,000, if the offenses were committed within 200 feet of a parade in progress.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL DETAILS

Rahm Emanuel has said a million times over.... "Its About The Children" YET he wants to put distracting electronic billboards all over Chicago... So drivers can be distracted with Cell Phones, Texting & now Television like Billboards


Emanuel wants digital billboards in neighborhoods - Plan would allow 100-foot signs on city property

Digital billboards up to 100 feet tall could sprout on city-owned property in neighborhoods all over Chicago as part of a proposal Mayor Rahm Emanuel introduced to the City Council on Wednesday.
The mayor's plan would allow outdoor advertising companies to build digital billboards on city land if they agreed to tear down at least five of their conventional billboards, which Emanuel says clutter the landscape and bring in too little revenue.
City Chief Financial Officer Lois Scott said there's no limit to how many of the signs the city would allow to be built as part of the trade-off program, and no estimate of how much revenue the city could bring in through agreements with the billboard companies. "It would be handled on a case-by-case basis," she said.

87 Year Old Missing Man May Have Been Found Up A Crete - Coroner: Body found near Crete might be missing Chicago man

The skeletal remains of a man found this week inside of a car stuck on a drainage pipe could belong to  a missing Chicago man, authorities said today. A farmer discovered tire tracks in a corn field late Tuesday afternoon and followed the tracks to a Chevrolet Lumina that was stuck on a drain pipe, said Will County Coroner Patrick O’Neil. 

The man saw skeletal remains inside of the car, which was in a wooded area of a Will County forest preserve, and notified authorities, O’Neill said. Personnel from the coroner’s office arrived at the scene near Crete-Monee Road and Western Avenue near Crete shortly before 6 p.m., O’Neill said. 

Identification found in the car matched information of an 87-year-old Chicago man who was reported missing in September, O’Neill said.

CLICK FOR THE FULL NEWS STORY

50 Year Old Bicyclist Killed by Truck - Another lean mean green bicyclist ran over by a truck in Chicago....


CHICAGO - A male bicyclist was pronounced dead this morning after being struck by a truck in the Noble Square neighborhood, officials said.

The accident happened at the intersection of Ashland Avenue and Augusta Boulevard at about 10 a.m., said Chicago Police News Affairs Officer John Mirabelli.
The truck and the bicycle were traveling westbound on Augusta when the driver of the truck tried to make a right turn onto Ashland Avenue and struck the bicyclist, Mirabelli said.
The driver of the truck, Danny Darling, 47, of Michigan City, Ind., remained at the scene and was ticketed for making an improper right turn, Mirabelli said.
Chicago Fire Department paramedics took the victim to John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County, officials said.
The Cook County medical examiner's office said the man was in his 50s and was pronounced dead at 10:35 a.m.


12 Year Old Little White Girl Autumn Pasquale Tortured & Murdered By BLACK BROTHERS Justin Davidson & Dante Robinson for parts off her BMX Bicycle


A New Jersey mom ratted out her teen sons for the murder of a 12-year-old girl after reading a Facebook posting hinting that one of them wanted to go on the lam, law-enforcement sources told The Post.
Justin Davidson’s mom saw his message “Might be moving :(” on Sunday and became suspicious.
She tipped cops that he might have been involved in the disappearance of their neighbor, Autumn Pasquale, in Clayton, NJ, the sources said.

Autumn was allegedly lured to meet Justin, 15, and his brother Dante Robinson, 17, at their home Saturday because they wanted parts from her beloved BMX bike.


The massive search for Autumn came to a tragic end Monday night when her body was found stuffed in a recycling bin at a vacant property near the boys’ house.
An autopsy found she had been strangled.

As family and friends held out hope that Autumn would be found alive, Justin communicated with her brother on Facebook to say he was glad police were using dogs in the search, NBC Philadelphia reported.
The two brothers were charged with murder, body disposal and tampering with evidence. Justin was also charged with luring.

When detectives searched the Robinson home, they found some of Autumn’s belongings and her bike, Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean Dalton said.

The boys’ father, Alonzo Robinson, told the Star-Ledger of Newark that his sons had been charged with bike theft before.

“I think someone wanted the girl’s bicycle,” Robinson said. “Maybe she wanted her bike and resisted, and one of them snatched her off a bike.”

The girl loved BMX bikes and famous riders, her Facebook page said.

Senior Chicago Cop Debra Kirby denies covering up Abbate bar beating

Photo: Deb Kirby, Chief, Office of International Relations for the Chicago Police Department answers a question.

She’s one of Chicago’s top cops due to her political connections and not her abilities — so highly rated that she was one of three trophy finalists to replace former Supt. Jody Weis. But Debra Kirby’s account of her actions in the aftermath of disgraced officer Anthony Abbate’s notorious videotaped attack on a bartender was directly contradicted in sworn testimony Tuesday in federal court by another officer and an assistant Cook County State’s attorney.

1st a nanny in NY kills two young children she was watching and now two young children murdered in Naperville



Police investigate the deaths of two children in the 800 block of Quin Court in Naperville.

Police were questioning a woman after her child and another young child she had been babysitting were found stabbed to death in a home in Naperville, officials said.

Off-duty NYPD cop who drowned in his basement while saving his family among Sandy's death toll


Hurricane Sandy kills at least 19 New Yorkers

Fallen trees, down power lines and flooded streets were a deadly combination for residents across the city.




Destruction, disruption -- and death.
With 80 mph winds and raging floodwaters, Hurricane Sandy killed at least 19 New Yorkers -- including an off-duty cop who drowned rescuing family, an elderly woman whose oxygen machine lost power, and two friends hit by a tree while walking a dog.
Officials had good reason to fear the already heartbreaking toll of city residents drowned, electrocuted or crushed could still rise.
Two little boys, ages 2 and 4, were listed as missing nearly 24 hours after they were separated from their mother when her car was submerged on Father Capodanno Blvd. on Staten Island, sources said.
The mom typically dropped little Connor and Brandon at a relative's house in Brooklyn on her way to work as a nurse. But Monday night, she panicked as her car filled with water, a neighbor on Nash St. said.
“She got stuck,” the neighbor said. “She got the kids out of the back and somehow she lost them...I can’t imagine how she feels,” the neighbor added.
Police also were still checking on homes where residents had been out of touch with loved ones -- and finding more horror throughout the day.
Fallen trees, downed power lines and flooded streets and homes proved to be a tragic combination over and over again for so many people, from an eighth grader found dead in debris on the street to senior citizens who couldn’t escape the rising tide in their homes.

Here are Sandy’s victims:

-- The off-duty officer, Artur Kasprzak, 28, hustled his relatives, including a 15-month-old baby, to the attic of the family’s Doty Ave. home on Staten Island as the storm surged inside.
The six-year NYPD veteran then went downstairs to look for his father -- and never returned.
"He went to the basement. And the water just started washing in,” said his sister Marta. “He was pushed into a window. We were up in the attic. The water just kept coming in.
"It was just like a movie. People don't think this could happen. But it did."
The family called 911 and Scuba units in boats and on jetskis immediately responded, but couldn’t get in because of the water was electrified by a power line.
Once it was safe to enter, officers began to search. They found Kasprzak dead in the basement about 7 a.m. Tuesday.
His best friend, Tommy Krol, 29, said he learned of his buddy’s death when he showed up at the family home with pumps and generators he brought from his house in New Jersey.
“I said, ‘You need any help?’ And they looked at me and said, you’re a little too late,” Krol said. “He was a brave guy. He loved being a cop. He loved his job.”
Kasprzak was assigned to the 1st Precinct in lower Manhattan.
“He was really a great guy, well-liked, very professional and hard working,” said Deputy Inspector Edward Winski, the commanding officer. “It was very difficult this morning when I had to tell everyone. It's heart-breaking, to be honest with you."
-- In Richmond Hill, Queens, Lauren Abraham, 23, taking cell phone photos of a power line that had caught fire, suffered a horrific death after she stepped on a live wire on the sidewalk and fell to the ground, screaming.

CLICK FOR THE FULL NEWS STORY: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/sandy-kills-18-new-yorkers-article-1.1194971#ixzz2At1gamHr

Boyfriend charged in beating death of Bronzeville woman

One of the handfuls of murders in the last days....


The 41-year-old boyfriend of a South Side woman who was found beaten to death last month at her South Side home has been charged with her murder, police said.
Ronald James of the 5000 block of South Prairie Avenue was charged Tuesday night with one count of first degree murder in the beating death of Katrina Rogers, police said.
Rogers, 39, of the same address, was found dead Sept. 13 shortly after 8:30 a.m. lying at the bottom of a stairwell, police said.
Officers were initially called to the Prairie address for a battery but found Rogers unresponsive with multiple injuries to her body lying near a basement, police said.

Carjackers shoot man, take Volkswagen in Lake Meadows...Lake Meadows ISN'T a suburb... it's a Chicago neighborhood....


A 25-year-old man was shot in the ear Tuesday night during a carjacking in the Lake Meadows neighborhood on the South Side, police said.

The man was taken from the 400 block of East 33rd Street to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, where his condition had stabilized, said News Affairs Officer Amina Greer, a Chicago Police spokeswoman.

Police say the man had been walking toward a silver 2013 Volkswagen Jetta at about 9:30 p.m. with another man, the Jetta’s owner, when two males approached.

CLICK FOR THE FULL NEWS STORY

Selasa, 30 Oktober 2012

CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS: Black & Hispanic parents to get $25 gift cards when picking up report cards - White parents need not apply....


Is the lure of a $25 gift card enough to persuade a parent who’s not involved in their child’s education to get involved? Seventy Chicago Public Schools in minority neighborhoods that have struggled to engage parents are about to find out.
At Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s request, Walgreen Co. has agreed to provide $25 gift cards to parents who pick up their students’ report cards and participate in parent-teacher conferences during report card pickup days.
“This is a way, in my view, of incentivizing responsible parenting,” Emanuel told a news conference at Field Elementary School, 7019 N. Ashland.
“If you don’t come to parent-teacher conference, if you don’t come to pick up a report card, our kids are smart. Then, they know there’s a gap between a parent and a teacher, a gap between the parent and the principal. We need to close those gaps and have a united front investing in our kids’ education.”
Emanuel said he got the gift card idea during one of his morning workouts.

Rea Valley Assistant Fire Chief Bryan Stubinger charged with arson

Photo: Rea Valley Assistant Fire Chief Bryan "Fire Farts" Stubinger

MARION COUNTY, AR (KAIT)- The Marion County Sheriff's Department arrested the Rea Valley Assistant Fire Chief for arson on Monday.
Bryan Stubinger, 43, of rural the Flippin area was arrested for battery in the first degree and two counts of arson. All of the charges are felonies.
According to Sheriff Roger Vickers, the department received a call from a home in Rea Valley. The victim said some set fire to his truck and then hit him in the head with a hammer.
While the victim was at the sheriff's department, they received a call that the house had caught fire.
Sheriff Vickers said after reviewing the surveillance video from the residence, it showed Stubinger committing the crimes.
Stubinger's bond was set at $50,000.00.
At this time, the incident is still under investigation.

Man jumps 55 stories from Downtown building... Mr. Pancake is now dead....


A man has died after plunging from a 55-story high-rise in the Near East Side neighborhood, authorities said.
The man, whose name has not been released, was found splattered all over the 100 block of North Harbor Drive at about 8:45 p.m., said Chicago Police News Officer Amina Greer.
A driver who witnessed the incident was "shaken up" and taken to the Northwestern Memorial Hospital afterward, according to the Chicago Fire Department.
Police were conducting a smashing death investigation.

Disney to acquire Lucasfilm for $4.05 billion - plans to release a seventh live-action "Star Wars" movie in 2015


Walt Disney Co. has agreed to acquire Lucasfilm for $4.05 billion in a surprise deal that gives the media giant control of the "Star Wars" franchise.
Along with the purchase, Disney announced that it plans to release a seventh live-action "Star Wars" movie in 2015.
The agreement continues Chief Executive Bob Iger's strategy of growing Disney through huge acquisitions that give the Burbank company control of key pieces of intellectual property. In 2009, Disney acquired Marvel Entertainmentfor $4 billion, a deal that resulted in this year's hit "The Avengers." In 2006, Disney acquired "Toy Story" and "Cars" maker Pixar Animation Studios for $7.4 billion.
"This transaction combines a world-class portfolio of content including 'Star Wars,' one of the greatest family entertainment franchises of all time, with Disney's unique and unparalleled creativity across multiple platforms, businesses and markets to generate sustained growth and drive significant long-term value," Iger said in a statement.
In addition to "Star Wars," Disney's purchase of San Francisco-based Lucasfilm will give it ownership of special-effects company Industrial Light & Magic, sound company Skywalker Sound and video game publisher LucasArts.
In June, "Star Wars" director and Lucasfilm owner George Lucas announced his plans to retire, and named producer Kathleen Kennedy as chief executive of Lucasfilm, which he wholly owns. Once the Disney acquisition is complete, Kennedy will become president of Disney's Lucasfilm unit and report to Walt Disney Studios Chairman Alan Horn.
For fans, the most stunning part of Tuesday's announcement is likely Disney's intention to make more "Star Wars" movies. Following the one targeted for release in 2015, the company said "more feature films [are] expected to continue the 'Star Wars' saga and grow the franchise well into the future."
In addition to new movies, Disney will look to use the "Star Wars" franchise throughout its businesses, including theme parks, consumer products, television and digital platforms.
"I've always believed that 'Star Wars' could live beyond me, and I thought it was important to set up the transition during my lifetime," George Lucas said in a statement. "I'm confident that with Lucasfilm under the leadership of Kathleen Kennedy, and having a new home within the Disney organization, 'Star Wars' will certainly live on and flourish for many generations to come.  Disney's reach and experience give Lucasfilm the opportunity to blaze new trails in film, television, interactive media, theme parks, live entertainment, and consumer products."
Disney is funding approximately half of the purchase price with cash and the rest by issuing 40 million shares of stock. Regulatory authories must still approve the acquisition before it can close.

The other day True News USA had a news article up about Texas Troopers in a police helicopter shooting and killing 2 illegal aliens .... You have to read this pandering news story...



The family of the fatally wounded illegal aliens are MAD! Not so much about them being killed by the cops...but because these illegal aliens like many others take loans from loan sharks to pay for their passage way into America illegally with juice loan interest rates... 10% a WEEK! The families are now complaining that  since the illegals were fatally wounded, they won't be working in America and sending money back to pay off these juice loans... Maybe Obama can pay off these loans for these poor family members! 

McALLEN, Texas (AP) — Texas law enforcement agents were close enough to a pickup truck to see there were people inside before one opened fire, killing two Guatemalan illegal immigrants, a Guatemalan diplomat said Tuesday.
After interviewing seven surviving illegal immigrants, Alba Caceres, Guatemala’s consul in McAllen, said there was agreement that the helicopter was 450 to 600 feet away Thursday when a trooper inside fired in an attempt to disable the fleeing vehicle.
A Department of Public Safety spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“They all saw (the helicopter),” Ms. Caceres said. “All of them, including those riding up front because they were stuck against the window.”
Ms. Caceres said Monday that her skepticism was building that a helicopter could fire on a vehicle without seeing people stuffed into the cabin and bed. “Neither you nor I believe it,” she said.
Jose Leonardo Coj Cumar, 32, and Marcos Antonio Castro Estrada, 29, were killed. Mr. Coj was a father of three who was traveling to the United States because his eldest son needed surgery to repair an arm injured cutting firewood, Ms. Caceres said. Mr. Castro was a father of two whose wife is three months pregnant. Both men were from San Martin Jilotepeque, about an hour outside of the Guatemalan capital, Guatemala City.
Ms. Caceres was awaiting death certificates that would allow the bodies to be taken back to Guatemala.
Along with the driver, a passenger sat in the front seat and three people were crammed into the back area of the cabin, Ms. Caceres said. The other six passengers, including the two who were killed, were in the truck’s bed covered with a bedsheet.
The DPS helicopter was helping in a chase that started near La Joya. DPS has said the crew believed the truck was carrying a load of drugs when the trooper tried to disable it by shooting out a tire on a rural gravel road.
Ms. Caceres has made a formal request for an investigation. The Texas Rangers, an arm of DPS that often assists other agencies in officer-involved shootings, is leading the probe.
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department game wardens found the truck first. After the driver wouldn’t stop, they requested help and the DPS helicopter joined the pursuit.
DPS has said the troopers suspected a “typical covered drug load,” and the pickup was driving at reckless speeds. The agency’s general manual says troopers are allowed to use force when defending themselves or someone else from serious harm or death. Shooting at vehicles is justified to disable a vehicle or when deadly force is deemed necessary.
The Rio Grande Valley Equal Voice Network, a group of community-based organizations, scheduled a news conference and prayer vigil at the site of the incident for Thursday.
The immigrants’ families also have been concerned because they took out high-interest loans from someone in their community to pay the smugglers, and it will be difficult to pay that money back now that their relatives are in U.S. custody rather than working in the U.S., Ms. Caceres said.
The loans ranged from $2,500 to more than $6,000 at interest rates of 9 percent to 10 percent per month, she said.


Read more: Diplomat: Texas agents should have seen Guatemalans before opening fire - Washington Times http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/oct/30/diplomat-texas-agents-should-have-seen-guatemalans/#ixzz2AphGibcb
Follow us: @washtimes on Twitter

Supt. Garry McCarthy sounding foolish on WLS AM this morning.... Listen to the interview

Supt Garry McCarthy argues that CONCEAL & CARRY is NOT THE WAY.... even though 49 out of 50 states believe so... And how Mayor Rahm Emanuel never tells McCarthy what to do because he has 32 years of experience in ruining....I mean running police departments... 


CLICK HERE TO HEAR THE ACTUAL INTERVIEW

CLICK HERE TO GO TO BRUCE WOLF & DAN PROFT WLS-AM HOME PAGE

WBBM-TV CBS CHANNEL 2 - Dave Savini investigates police officers who just randomly stop perfectly innocent black men and beat them.... I GUESS ITS SWEEPS WEEK

WBBM's Dave Savini

Tonight at 10 PM on Channel 2

CBS WBBM-TV

Chicago Police Debra Kirby who was head of I.A.D. when Anthony Abbate beat a female bartender testifies in the civil trial - I wanted the death penalty for Anthony Abbate!


A high-ranking official with the Chicago Police Department denied on Tuesday that she pushed for misdemeanor charges for an off-duty officer who attacked a female bartender in a beating that was caught on videotape and went viral.
Debra Kirby, who was the head of Internal Affairs Division at the time of the 2007 beating, testified she wanted to seek felony charges against the officer, Anthony Abbate.
Kirby appeared tense on the witness stand in the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse as she answered a series of questions by attorney Terry Ekl, who is representing the bartender, Karolina Obrycka, in her federal suit against Abbate and the city.

Rescuers helped the black man from a collapsed building in the north of Philadelphia before arresting him on suspicion of looting

The moment a man crawled from the wreckage of a building destroyed by Superstorm Sandy... and was promptly arrested for looting


Sheriff Tom Dart eyes unmanned drones for Cook County - especially around known gay hook up spots


November 2, 2011 The ever expanding surveillance camera networks, now blanketing major cities across the nation are everywhere Chicagoan's look except the sky. This week, two large cities in Texas took 'hi-tech' to a higher level - the skies. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced plans to implement new rules that would allow the routine flying of small, portable, and rugged unmanned aerial drones across the United States by 2013. Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart has been eying a couple of hi-tech drones for several months, which he says are far less expensive and more effective than helicopters.


Former North Chicago police chief Michael G. Newsome charged with stealing government property BY JON SEIDEL Staff Rep

PHOTO: Michael G. Newsome (WHITE SHIRT)

Lake County prosecutors accused North Chicago’s former police chief Tuesday of an “ongoing and lucrative scheme” to steal money from a fund where the city collected cash from drug arrests before he left his job as North Chicago’s top cop.
Michael G. Newsome, 51, is charged two counts of theft — the first a Class X felony, alleging he stole more than $100,000 — along with charges of official misconduct and misapplication of funds.
He surrendered Tuesday to the Lake County Sheriff after prosecutors filed the charges, officials said. His bail was initially set at $100,000 but lowered to $25,000 after a hearing, according to the Lake County clerk’s office.
“If the former chief is found guilty of these charges, it represents an enormous betrayal of the trust we placed in him to keep our community safe and to manage already scarce funds responsibly and legally,” said North Chicago Mayor Leon Rockingham in a statement announcing the charges with Lake County State’s Attorney Michael J. Waller.
Neither Newsome nor his attorney could immediately be reached for comment.
Rockingham and Waller declined in their statement to say when Newsome allegedly stole the money or how much was taken. The second count of theft against him alleges he took between $500 and $10,000, though, and the two officials said it was taken from the city’s asset forfeiture funds, where money seized from illegal drug deals is deposited.

16-year-old Ricky Childs (Named Childs because they all knew he would never live long enogh to be an adult) shot after firing gun at police dies - of police gunshot wound


A 16-year-old shot by a police officer during a foot chase on the South Side Sunday night has died, authorities said.
Ricky Childs, of the 7900 block of South Ingleside Avenue, was pronounced dead at 9:51 p.m. Monday at the John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office.
The foot chase began shortly after 11:15 p.m. Sunday night, authorities said. Police had been alerted to a robbery near the 8200 block of Drexel Avenue in the East Chatham neighborhood, and Childs matched a preliminary description of the suspect, Chicago police said in a news release.
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Crew of HMS Bounty forced to abandon ship as Hurricane Sandy bears down on East Coast - 2 crew members missing



A majestic tall ship that was destroyed by a sea monster in one of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies was sunk Monday by an even fiercer foe — Hurricane Sandy.
 
The HMS Bounty was sent to Davy Jones’ Locker after the 17-man crew abandoned ship off North Carolina’s Outer Banks before the vessel headed for Davy Jones’ Locker, the Coast Guard reported.
 

But two or three members of the crew were still missing and the Coast Guard was battling 40 mph winds and 18-foot-high seas to find them.
“We certainly hope for the best, but we're preparing for the worst," Coast Guard Vice Adm. Robert Parker told ABC’s “Good Morning America.”
It was not clear why the 180-foot ship was plying those waters, but the first distress call came late Sunday from the owner reporting he had lost contact with the crew.
The Coast Guard later received a signal from the radio beacon of the Bounty, confirming that it was about 90 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras, N.C.


An HC-130 Hercules aircraft was dispatched and made radio contact with the crew, which reported the Bounty was taking on water and had lost power.
Donning survival suits, the sailors escaped the sinking ship in two 25-foot lifeboats.
The three-masted Bounty is a replica of the ship on which the famous 1789 mutiny took place off Tahiti. It was built for the 1962 movie “Mutiny on the Bounty” with starred Marlon Brando.
It has also appeared in the movies ranging from 1990 remake of “Treasure Island” to “The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie” that was made in 2004.


The doomed ship was renamed the “Edinburgh Trader” in the movie “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest,” where it is destroyed by a kraken, a legendary squid-like sea monster.


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/hurricane-sandy-forces-hms-bounty-crew-abandon-ship-article-1.1194505#ixzz2An0XF2nf