Showing posts with label faces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faces. Show all posts

Thursday, January 29, 2015

District constable faces court on sexual offence charges

Wednesday, January 28, 2015 | 4:07 PM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica – The Office of the Director of Public Prosecution (DDP) on Wednesday ruled that a district constable be arrested and charged with breaches of the Sexual Offences Act.

He is 24-year-old Phillip Thomas who was assigned to the Morant Bay Police Station.

Thomas appeared before the Morant Bay Resident Magistrate’s Court Wednesday, where he was granted bail and ordered to surrender his travel documents and a stop order issued.

His next appearance in court will be March 11.

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District constable faces court on sexual offence charges

Monday, January 19, 2015

"DIGITAL MUGSHOT" New DNA tech may reveal faces from speck of blood

SCmurdervictims.jpg Candra Alston, 25, (left) and her 3-year-old daughter, Malaysia Boykin (right) were murdered in Columbia, S.C., on Jan. 9, 2011, in a case that remains unsolved.

There were no witnesses to the gruesome murder of a South Carolina mother and her 3-year-old daughter inside a busy apartment complex four years ago. But a new technology that can create an image of someone using DNA samples left at crime scenes might bring police closer to catching the killer.

Reston, Va.-based Parabon Nanolabs, with funding from the Department of Defense, has debuted a breakthrough type of analysis called DNA phenotyping which the company says can predict a person’s physical appearance from the tiniest DNA samples, like a speck of blood or strand of hair.

The DNA phenotyping service, commercially known as “Snapshot,” could put a face on millions of unsolved cases, including international ones, and generate investigative leads when the trail has gone cold.

“This is particularly useful when there are no witnesses, no hits in the DNA database and nothing to go on,” Dr. Ellen McRae Greytak, Parabon’s director of bioinformatics, told FoxNews.com.

“This is particularly useful when there are no witnesses, no hits in the DNA database and nothing to go on.”

- Dr. Ellen McRae Greytak, Parabon Nanolabs

“Traditional forensic analysis treats DNA as a fingerprint, whereas Snapshot treats it as a blueprint — a genetic description of a person from which physical appearance can be inferred,” Greytak said.

Parabon’s new technology reads the parts of the human genome that code for the differences in physical appearance between people. Snapshot is able to predict such critical traits as skin color, hair color, eye color and face shape. It can also predict the individual’s ancestry as well as highly-detailed traits, like freckles.

Using sophisticated computer algorithms that have been trained on thousands of reference samples, Snapshot translates this raw genetic code into predictions of physical traits. These are then combined to create a composite profile, or “digital mugshot” of an unknown suspect — with remarkable accuracy, according to the company.

“Traits are generally predicted with more than 80 percent confidence, and importantly, Snapshot also reports which phenotypes can be excluded with more than 95 percent confidence,” said Greytak.

While developing the technology, the company “made thousands of predictions on people who we knew” to ensure accuracy, she said. 

The investigator or crime lab sends evidence or extracted DNA to a Snapshot partner lab, where the DNA is run on a genotyping machine to produce the genetic information, according to the company. This genetic information is then securely transferred to Parabon, where an analyst runs it through Snapshot’s predictive models to produce a prediction. A report of the results is then delivered to the agency that requested it.

The new DNA analysis, however, is not able to predict age and height — traits Greytak described as “very complex.”

For investigators in Columbia, S.C., a digital mugshot created by the company might provide a break in a 4-year-old double homicide that remains unsolved.

The bodies of 25-year-old Candra Alston and her 3-year-old daughter Malaysia Boykin were found inside their home at the Brook Pines Apartments in Columbia on Jan. 9, 2011. There were no signs of forced entry, leading police to believe Alston and her daughter knew the killer or killers.

Police have not disclosed how the mother and child died, only saying Alston and her daughter were killed by different means. A laptop, Gucci purse and trash can were stolen from the apartment, as well as gifts the 3-year-old had received for Christmas.

The one clue detectives had was an unspecified DNA sample left at the crime scene.   

Throughout the course of the investigation, police interviewed close to 200 people, 150 of whom submitted their DNA to authorities. But none of the samples proved to be a match, according to Mark Vinson, a cold case investigator with the Columbia, S.C., Police Department.

The police department then turned to Parabon’s DNA phenotyping to create a facial image based on DNA left at the crime scene. Vinson said the computer-generated photo is a “person of interest” in the murders.

“This is DNA from just one person and it’s possible more than one person was involved,” Vinson told FoxNews.com. The person of interest is dark-skinned with brown hair and brown eyes. The picture does not indicate an exact age, so the individual could be older than he appears.

“We suspect the child also knew the person who did this, which might explain why she was killed,” Vinson noted.

“We’re very hopeful this composite

could be the thing that prompts someone to come forward,” he said.

While several agencies are now using Snapshot to help solve cold cases, including international ones, the Columbia, S.C. Police Department is first in the nation to publicly release a digital image generated by the new DNA analysis.

Anyone with information on the murders of Alston and her daughter is urged to contact CRIMESTOPPERS at 888-CRIME-SC or log onto www.midlandscrimestoppers.com.


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"DIGITAL MUGSHOT" New DNA tech may reveal faces from speck of blood

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Ukraine faces cluster bomb claim

21 October 2014 Last updated at 18:01 A man shows a dud cluster bomblet in Donetsk, Ukraine, 25 August A cluster bomblet found in Donetsk in August A leading human rights group says it has strong evidence Ukraine attacked populated areas of Donetsk with cluster bombs, banned by many other states.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) accuses the army of using the deadly weapon, which scatters bomblets, to shell the rebel-held city earlier this month.

Ukrainian forces denied using “banned weapons” or shelling civilian areas.

Violence has continued in eastern Ukraine despite a ceasefire which came into place on 5 September.

At least 3,700 people have been killed in the conflict which broke out in April between Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian separatist rebels in the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko agreed in a telephone conversation on Tuesday with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin that the ceasefire agreed on 5 September should be fully observed, Mr Poroshenko’s office said.

Meanwhile, the Ukrainian government has asked the EU for an extra loan of €2bn (£1.6bn; $2.5bn).

A source at the European Commission in Brussels told BBC News the money was not linked to Ukraine’s ongoing gas debt talks with Russia, which are being brokered by the EU.

Russia is accused of using gas as a political tool against Ukraine.

In a separate development, a senior Polish official has alleged that Mr Putin suggested partitioning Ukraine with Poland six years ago in a conversation with Donald Tusk, who was Poland’s prime minister at the time.

‘Shocking to see’

In its report, the New-York based rights group said use of cluster munitions in Donetsk this month was “widespread”.

Scene of rocket attack in Donetsk that killed Laurent DuPasquier (2 Oct) International Red Cross worker Laurent DuPasquier was killed in a rocket attack on 2 October A man passes a cafe destroyed by shelling in Spartak, on the outskirts of Donetsk, 21 October Vladimir Shramko, 48, stands next to a cafe destroyed by shelling in Spartak, on the outskirts of Donetsk Women in a bomb shelter near Donetsk airport, 21 October Women in a bomb shelter near Donetsk airport

“While it was not possible to conclusively determine responsibility for many of the attacks, the evidence points to Ukrainian government forces’ responsibility for several cluster munition attacks on Donetsk,” it found.

“It is shocking to see a weapon that most countries have banned used so extensively in eastern Ukraine,” said Mark Hiznay, senior arms researcher at HRW.

Ukraine did not sign up to the 2008 global treaty banning cluster bombs.

Responding to the report, Ukrainian “anti-terrorist operation” spokesman Vladyslav Seleznyov described the accusations as “utter nonsense”.

“We do not use banned weapons,” he told AFP news agency by telephone. “Neither do we shell civilian neighbourhoods because this endangers lives.”

The Convention on Cluster Munitions has been ratified by 86 states while a further 28 have signed it. Russia and the US are among those that have not signed it.

‘Just a coincidence’

EU Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger has opened a new round of gas talks in Brussels between Ukraine and Russia, amid concerns the gas dispute between Russia and Ukraine could affect supplies to EU states.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko visits an arms factory in Dnipropetrovsk, 21 October Campaigning for Ukraine’s parliamentary election on Sunday continued on Tuesday. Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (holding gun) visited an arms factory in Dnipropetrovsk Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatseniuk on an armoured personnel carrier near Lviv, 21 October Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatseniuk inspected a peacekeeping training centre near Lviv

A spokesman for the European Commission, Simon O’Connor, confirmed Ukraine had asked for an additional €2bn on top of the €15bn the EU offered in March.

“This will now be evaluated in consultation with the IMF and Ukrainian authorities, and a proposal will be made to the European Parliament and the EU Council,” Mr O’Connor said.

A source at the Commission told the BBC that the request was “not related to today’s trilateral gas talks”, which were “just a coincidence”.

Asked what reason Ukraine had given, the source said it was to “cover their most urgent financial needs”.

Russia is demanding €4.2bn in unpaid debts, to be repaid in instalments.

‘Split Poland’

Poland’s parliamentary speaker, Radoslaw Sikorski, alleged Mr Putin had suggested dividing up Ukraine, in talks in 2008 with Donald Tusk, who will shortly take over as president of the European Council.

“He wanted us to become participants in this partition of Ukraine…” Mr Sikorski told US website Politico. “He [Putin] went on to say Ukraine is an artificial country and that Lwow [Lviv] is a Polish city and why don’t we just sort it out together.”

“We made it very, very clear to them – we wanted nothing to do with this,” Mr Sikorski added.

Speaking later, Mr Sikorski said his words to Politico had been “over-interpreted”, without elaborating.

Polish Prime Minister Ewa Kopacz, who is in the same party as Mr Sikorski, criticised him for evading reporters’ questions on the issue.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed the reported conversation as a “fairy tale”.

Map

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Ukraine faces cluster bomb claim

Friday, September 26, 2014

Cop charged in connection to larceny faces additional charges

Additional charges have been laid against a police corporal of the Protective Services Division in connection to the theft of a motor vehicle, according to a press release from the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency.

Corporal Stafford Barrett, who had been on bail for the offences of simple larceny and receiving stolen property, was yesterday charged with fraudulent conversion and fraudulent use of registration plates.

Barrett was initially charged for simple larceny and receiving stolen property on May 23, 2014 by detectives from the then Anti-Corruption Branch. He was taken into custody following the recovery of a stolen Toyota Corolla motor car at his home in Spanish Town, St Catherine. The motor car was reported stolen in Hopewell, Hanover, on May 9.

He appeared in the Spanish Town Resident Magistrate’s Court on May 27, where he was granted bail in the sum of $800, 0000.

Barrett is scheduled to appear in the Spanish Town Resident Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday, October 28, to answer to all charges.


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Cop charged in connection to larceny faces additional charges

Monday, July 21, 2014

Guyana offshore oil exploration faces setbacks

Oil Rig at late evening Guyana’s offshore exploration for oil in areas being contested by neighbouring Venezuela is being faced with setbacks. (file photo)

GEORGETOWN, Guyana, Thursday July 17, 2014, CMC – Guyana’s offshore exploration for oil in areas being contested by neighbouring Venezuela is being faced with setbacks.

Natural Resources and Environment Minister Robert Persaud in making this revelation said this is linked to the expulsion and temporary seizure of the Malaysian seismic research vessel, RV Teknik Perdana, by Venezuela’s Navy last year.

Persaud in responding to questions from the Parliamentary Sectoral Committee on Natural Resources, on Monday said Guyana is now depending on an eventual resolution in its favour.

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“However, we are engaged in the companies who might be affected and we have remained optimistic that those matters will be resolved in a manner that will allow us to continue and proceed with those activities,” he said.

Concerning activities outside of that particular zone “where we had difficulties with Venezuela, those activities have not been hampered in any way, and they in fact are proceeding apace,” the Minister said.

Persaud also stated that applications are being processed for additional companies interested in oil exploration and this information will be shared with the committee.

The Minister also revealed that the Esso Exploration initiative in collaboration with Shell is on stream and the companies have commenced work.


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Guyana offshore oil exploration faces setbacks

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Man faces court for injuring complainant"s eye

A man accused of punching another in his face, causing an eye injury, had his bail extended in the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate’s Court last Thursday.

Michael Phillips, charged with unlawful wounding, is to return to court on July 14 with compensation for the complainant.

The court heard that, the accused had punched the complainant during a dispute.

The complainant told the court he has been unable to work, because of his injury, and wanted to be compensated.

“Your Honour, I didn’t pay much at hospital, but I had to buy medication and I lost a week’s pay, because its a driving job that I do,” the complainant said.

Phillips agreed to compensate the complainant and is to pay over $20,000 on the next court date.


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Man faces court for injuring complainant"s eye

Monday, February 3, 2014

China faces obstacles on road to consumer society

“Prices are rocketing up. People’s incomes can hardly catch up,” said Zhao, 38. “Daily necessities, yes, I still have to buy them. But anything I don’t necessarily need, then no.”

The reluctance of Zhao and his customers to open their wallets wider is one of a thicket of obstacles facing communist leaders as they try to rebalance China’s economy away from reliance on investment, a big share of which comes from the government and is losing its ability to boost growth.


The government is walking a fine line, however, as an abrupt shift in the economy could hurt growth, with consequences not just for the country but the global economy. China’s economic importance was laid bare last month, when a report showing a drop in manufacturing activity caused turmoil on world markets.


Combined with an export boom, a flood of spending on new factories, highways and other assets powered the past decade of explosive growth. That helped China rebound quickly from the 2008 global crisis. But it was paid for with a surge in borrowing that economists warn looks like debt booms in other developing countries that spiraled into financial crises.


As urgency for change mounts, so do potential hurdles. Consumer spending accounts for only about 35 percent of gross domestic product, well below neighboring India’s 60 percent, and that percentage declined last year. Curbs on investment will mean less money flows to wages in construction and building materials industries such as steel and cement.


“It is a pretty narrow path that policymakers have to push the economy along,” said Mark Williams, chief Asia economist for Capital Economics. “The risk is that if investment spending slows too much, then that starts to undermine consumer spending and you get a downward spiral.”


Forecasts of this year’s growth range from 7 to 8 percent, far ahead of the United States and Europe but down from China’s double-digit rates of the past decade. Last year’s 7.7 percent growth tied with 2012 for the weakest performance in two decades. And it hit that only after the government launched a mini-stimulus in mid-2013 with more spending on building new railways and other public works.


The impact of a government clampdown on lending and construction is showing in slower economic activity, raising the risk of politically difficult job losses.


A survey by HSBC Corp. found manufacturers cut jobs in January at their fastest rate in five years. Profits at China’s biggest companies grew in December at their slowest rate in nine months. Growth in factory output and retail sales weakened, suggesting that the quarter’s headline growth of 7.7 percent might mask a deepening downturn.


Moves to encourage consumer spending are part of a marathon effort by the Communist Party to transform China from a low-wage factory into a high-income creator of technology with self-sustaining economic growth.


A broad-strokes plan issued by the party leadership in November promises to give entrepreneurs who generate most of China’s new jobs and wealth more access to state-dominated industries.


Regulators announced last month that they will allow the creation of five privately financed banks this year. The government has announced plans for a dozen new free-trade zones in Shanghai and other cities with promises of easier restrictions on business.


But such changes will take time to show results.


“Our expectation is that there isn’t going to be any national-level substantive reform within 2014,” said economist Brian Jackson of IHS Global Insight. “They’re going to launch small experiments.”


The biggest potential growth risk cited by many analysts: A rapid buildup of debt in China’s government-owned banking system.


China’s banks avoided mortgage-related turmoil that battered Western lenders but ramped up lending under orders from the government to help fend off the effects of the 2008 global slowdown.


The IMF and industry analysts warn they might be hit by a rise in defaults if toll roads and other projects approved in haste fail to earn enough.


The central bank says debt levels are manageable, but economists say the speed of the increase is a warning sign. Outstanding bank loans have swelled by the equivalent of 70 percent of China’s gross domestic product over the past five years. Analysts point to countries such as Thailand that have plunged into financial crises after seeing smaller debt increases of as little as 30 percent.


China “needs to contain the building of risks in the financial sector without excessively slowing growth,” said the IMF chief economist, Olivier Blanchard, at a news conference last month. “This is always a very a delicate balancing act.”


At the same time, the government’s effort to clamp down on credit and tighten control over informal lending that support entrepreneurs has sent shock waves through financial markets. Markets in which banks lend to each other ran short of cash twice last year, causing interest rates to spike and fueling unease about the availability of credit.


“The uncertainty related to rate spikes and liquidity squeezes may affect business spending more broadly,” said UBS economist Tao Wang in a report.


Wages in some areas such as the manufacturing-intensive southeast are forecast to rise this year by as much as 10 percent. But workers complain that gains are eaten up by rising living costs — a bad sign for government hopes for higher consumer spending.


Lei Qiang, a logistics manager in Shanghai, said he and his wife have little left every month after paying for basics and save whatever they can. They plan to return to their hometown of Xi’an in western China with their 2-year-old daughter to escape Shanghai’s high cost of living.


“Living in Shanghai for three years, my rent went up every year by 20 to 30 percent,” said Lei, 38. “That was far more than my pay rose.”


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China faces obstacles on road to consumer society

Monday, December 30, 2013

Brazilian football faces courtroom drama

World Cup year in Brazil could hardly be more fascinating.


No other society gears itself up so much for international football’s main event, painting and decorating its streets as if for a jubilee.


But no other society has also seemed set to protest about World Cup spending on the scale that could happen in a few months. We are living in interesting times.


For the diehard, week-in week-out fan, though, the club game is the main driver of passions, in Brazil as elsewhere.


And how to get excited about 2014 if 2013 shows no signs of ending? After 38 rounds, the Brazilian Championship has had two more in the courtroom – and there will probably be more to come.


At the centre of the hurricane is a traditional yet modest club from Sao Paulo, Portuguesa, gamely getting by on crowds often as low as 2,000.


Seen as relegation certainties, they battled their way through the campaign to finish 12th in Brazil’s 20-strong first division. But, as it stands, they are still going down.

Brilliant Brazil at the World Cup

In the last game,  with safety seemingly assured, Portuguesa fielded an ineligible player  – they have been found guilty by the sports justice system, and their appeal was unsuccessful.


The penalty handed out to them is the loss of the point gained in the (drawn) match, plus the docking of a further three points. This is enough to drop them into the relegation zone.


There are two problems here. The first is that the team who benefit from this situation are Fluminense, the politically powerful club of the Rio elite.


The 2012 champions lost Deco to retirement,  sold some important players and had an awful run of injuries, including one to international centre forward Fred.


Fluminense have twice benefited from behind-the-scenes manoeuvres. In 1996 they were saved when, as a consequence of a refereeing scandal, all relegation was cancelled, and four years later they were allowed to jump straight from the third to the first division.


Now, only the fact that the full penalty has been handed out to Portuguesa has saved Fluminense from another trip to the second division. That makes three off-the-field actions in their favour.


At least on this occasion the rulebook has been followed. But this brings us to the second problem. The punishment handed out to Portuguesa seems disproportionate to the crime; begging the question, although due process may have been carried out, has justice really been administered?


The circumstances are as follows. At the end of the 36th round, Portuguesa attacking midfielder Heverton, angry at the lack of stoppage time, swore at the referee. He was given the red card, and automatically suspended from the next match.


On the eve of the 38th and final round, he was judged and, based on the gravity of his offence, his suspension was extended to two games. It seems at this point that Portuguesa had gone to sleep.


They had – apparently – made sure of first division survival in their penultimate match, and it could well be that their legal department was not in a full state of concentration. But they were not the only ones.


The CBF (Brazil’s FA) has recently started an internet service aimed at informing clubs of disciplinary decisions. Heverton’s suspension was increased on Friday afternoon, and the match was on Saturday – at which time the information on the site had not been updated.


Diogo of Portuguesa Portuguesa, from Sao Paulo, finished 12th in Brazil’s 20-strong first division – but, as it stands, they are still going down.

All but two of the matches in the last round were played simultaneously on Sunday. Portuguesa’s game was brought forward a day precisely because there was nothing resting on it; barring a mathematical miracle they were guaranteed survival, while opponents Gremio had made sure of their place in the 2014 Libertadores.


Heverton came off the bench for the last 15 minutes of a tame goalless draw. And this has proved enough to relegate a club who finished 12th.


Portuguesa, in slightly confusing circumstances, were guilty of no more than an administrative lapse. No sporting advantage was sought, nor gained from their actions. Is the full penalty really appropriate in these circumstances?


Should their punishment really be exactly the same as one dished out to a club which knowingly fields an ineligible player in a crunch game and hopes to get away with it?


The STJD, Brazilian football’s sports tribunal, says that it cannot take any of these factors into account. The rules were broken and the penalty has been applied.


But there is a glaring contradiction in their position. In the opinion of the STJD, Heverton’s red card offence was sufficiently grave to warrant an extra punishment. So they can take into account the prevailing circumstances when punishing the player for the red card.


Why, then, are they utterly unable to take into account any of the circumstances when punishing his erroneous selection for the game against Gremio?


This leads to a further question. If they really believe that circumstances cannot be taken into account, how do they profess to administer justice?


Surely the principle of proportionality should apply – that the punishment should be proportional to the severity of the offence.


This principle is certainly part of the conventional justice system – and it would seem sure that is where this case is heading.


Any private individual can bring this case before the law courts, and many Portuguesa supporters are preparing to do just that. The whole thing could drag on for months.


At the turn of the year it is not entirely clear which, or how many, teams will contest the 2014 Brazilian Championship or what format will be used. These, then, are not just fascinating times for the World Cup.


Manchester United Will Manchester United’s Rafael feature in Brazil’s World Cup squad?

Send questions on South American football to vickerycolumn@hotmail.com, and I’ll pick out a couple for next week.


From last week’s postbag;


With such an array of midfield talent at his disposal, who will be left out when coach Scolari names Brazil’s World Cup Squad? Paulinho, Fernandinho, Luiz Gustavo, Lucas and Sandro can all play the anchor man role but two or three of them will surely have to miss out. JJ Williams


Paulinho is not the anchor man – he’s the one with more freedom to bomb into the opposing area. The holding role is Luiz Gustavo’s – putting him in the side in June was a crucial part of Scolari’s jigsaw, and barring injury he is a certainty. At the moment his back up is Lucas Leiva, who has taken over from young Fernando, who recently moved to Shakhtar.  Sandro and Fernandinho are on the outside looking in – clearly the latter has an opportunity to push his claims in the Champions League, and he is aware that the Premier League is giving him much more visibility than he had in Ukraine.


But the problem is lack of time – there is only one game (5 March v South Africa) before the squad is announced. And with everything going so well for the national team in 2013, it is not easy for anyone to force his way in.


Do you think that Man United’s Rafael will get in the Brazil team soon? He is playing very well now. I think he is a real threat going forward and has become an accomplished defender. David Crompton


Same problem as Fernandinho (above) – not enough time. Daniel Alves is first choice right-back, and, perhaps surprisingly, Maicon looked good when he was recalled in the last few months. Barring injury, it is hard to see them being displaced – and the competition has become fiercer now Rafinha is getting a game at Bayern Munich.


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Brazilian football faces courtroom drama

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Pulse chooses new faces

Entertainment

BY CECELIA CAMPBELL-LIVINGSTON Observer staff reporter livingstonc@jamaicaobserver.comTuesday, September 10, 2013

SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD Francine James walked away with the coveted Caribbean Fashion Model title at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel in St Andrew on Sunday.The leggy 5ft 8.5in model’s win signals the beginning of a modelling contract with local agency Pulse and an opportunity to launch an international career like her predecessors, including Jaunel McKenzie, Gaye McDonald and Oraine Barrett.The evening’s other winners were Chrisna Chue, who copped Petite Model title; Ryan Stewart, Male Face; and Marsha Alexander, who took top honours in the Full Figure category.The runners-up in the Fashion Model category were Shanice Cutino and Janelle Watson. For the Petite Model, Tanecia Murray and Shanique Robinson, were second and third, respectively; while Raquel Ffrench and Collena Bryan, were first and second runners-up among the Full Figure ladies. Jamell Smith and Alex Graham were second and third, respectively in the Male Face category.Pulse’s CEO Kingsley Cooper, whose firm has hosted the event for more than three decades, was happy with Sunday evening’s event.He said a New York-based model agency representative — Tyron Barrington — was in attendance and offered a few contracts.“He was very impressed and offered contracts to a couple of the girls. He is also a casting director and presently looking models for an Avon commercial. He has expressed interest in some of them,” Cooper told the Jamaica Observer.Part of the evening’s entertainment came from Caribbean Model Search (CMS) Dancers, who displayed some of the latest dance moves.Model hopeful, Sadika Thompson’s solo performance drew a few laughs as she ran off stage after a few words in her song. She returned, composed and mimed it to the end.(From left) Chrisna Chue, who copped Petite Model title; Marsha Alexander, who took the Full Figure category; Ryan Stewart, Male Face; and Francine James, who took the Caribbean Fashion Model title. (PHOTO: KARL MCLARTY)

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Pulse chooses new faces

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Morgan, Cummings fresh faces in Boyz World Cup chase

LEICESTER City defender Wes Morgan, and Shaun Cummings, of Reading FC, are the newcomers in a 27-man squad released yesterday by new head coach Winfried Schafer for Jamaica’s World Cup Qualifying encounters away to Panama on Friday, and at home to Costa Rica next Tuesday.

Also returning to the Reggae Boyz fold are Marlon King and Chris Humphrey, who were banned from the national team for breaches of the team’s disciplinary code of conduct.Meanwhile, midfielder Jobi McAnuff, captain of Reading FC, and striker Luton Shelton, both of whom were absent from Jamaica’s last three World Cup Qualifiers for varying reasons, are back. McAnuff missed the games for personal reasons, while Shelton was surprisingly dropped from the team.Five local-based players have been named in the squad, including goalkeeper Gariece McPherson of Cavalier Soccer Club; defender Adrian Reid of Portmore United, who is no stranger to the Reggae Boyz squad, having been in and out of the set-up over the past few years; midfielder Wolry Wolfe, of Humble Lion, who like Reid, has been in and out of the set-up for a number of years from junior level; defender Kemar Lawrence of Harbour View gets a first-time call up, while striker Jermaine ‘Tuffy’ Anderson is the lone local-based forward among the seven named in the squad, which also included three goalkeepers, 10 defenders and seven midfielders.“We must go to Panama confident, with power,” German coach Schafer told the media prior to releasing the list of 27 players at the Jamaica Football Federation (JFF) headquarters yesterday.He indicated that the squad will be reduced to 24 at the end of Wednesday’s training session at the National Stadium East field, following late evening sessions yesterday, today and tomorrow.The head coach also noted that before arriving at the list of players, he had researched them on the Internet, as well as spoken with each of them. He said each player believed that the group of players had it within them to turn the team’s fortunes.“I want players who have heart for Jamaica,” he stressed. “If they don’t have heart, I don’t want them,” he added.“We have to be a team, not 11 players, but a team, with a strong bench, strong 11 on the field. We must give the players confidence, and we must trust the players, and the players must fight for each other.”Outstanding central defender Adrian Mariappa, who signed for English Premiership outfit Crystal Palace from Reading FC yesterday, has also been included, though he remains ineligible for Friday’s game against Panama, having received a red card in Jamaica’s last game against Honduras on June 11.The 29-year-old Morgan is the captain of Leicester City, and is connected to Jamaica through his grandparents. He’s looking forward to the challenge of turning around this faltering campaign.“It is time to get some wins under our belts, obviously,” he said yesterday, shortly after arriving at the Norman Manley International Airport.“I was approached after they looked at the position in the team, which probably needs strengthening, and they must have felt I fit the bill, so I am here to try and improve that.“We still have every chance, we still have four games and we just have to go out there and do the job on the pitch and get some points. We have plenty of time to train together and get to know how each other play, and hopefully when it comes to the game we can get it right.”He added that his job is to “keep the goals from going in and keep clean sheets”, while “giving the strikers the opportunities to score some goals and win some games”.Cummings, 24, said that he is happy to be here and “hopefully to get some good results”.The wing back added that his job is to “go up and down, keep the ball, that’s the main thing and get crosses in”.“I know a lot of the Boyz, so it’s all about the bonding over the few days and we could find those results that we need to qualify.”Meanwhile, JFF president Captain Horace Burrell once again called for support for the special charter flight, which is scheduled to leave at about 10:00 am on Thursday and return early Saturday morning, and Digicel’s Tahnida Nunes revealed that her company is “100 per cent behind” the Reggae Boyz.Full training squad: Goalkeepers — Donovan Ricketts, Dwayne Miller, Gariece McPherson; Defenders — Wes Morgan, Lloyd Doyley, Daniel Gordon, Alvas Powell, Shaun Cummings, Jermaine Taylor, O’Brian Woodbine, Adrian Mariappa, Adrian Reid, Kemar Lawrence; Midfielders  Rudolph Austin, Marvin Elliott, Jermaine Johnson, Joel McAnuff, Garath McCleary, Chris Humphrey, Wolry Wolfe; Forwards — Theo Robinson, Luton Shelton, Jermaine Beckford, Darren Mattocks, Ryan Johnson, Marlon King and Jermaine Anderson.(From left) Chris Humphrey and newly invited Reggae Boyz Shaun Cummings and Westley Morgan shortly after arriving at the Norman Manley International Airport yesterday. (PHOTO: GARFIELD ROBINSON)Jamaica striker Marlon King as he arrived at the Norman Manley International Airport yesterday. (PHOTO: GARFIELD ROBINSON)

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Morgan, Cummings fresh faces in Boyz World Cup chase

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Raheem Sterling faces trial in September for assaulting girlfriend

News

Friday, August 09, 2013 | 11:03 AM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Jamaican born Liverpool winger, Raheem Sterling will stand trial in September for assaulting his girlfriend Shana Halliday after he pleaded not guilty to the charge following his arrest on Thursday night.Sterling appeared at the city’s magistrate’s court on Friday to answer the charge after he was arrested at 10.30pm in Page Moss, Merseyside, England.According to DailyMail News online a Merseyside police spokesman said “Raheem Sterling, 18, of Woolton, was charged with Section 39 common assault. Sterling was remanded in custody to appear at Liverpool Magistrates’ Court today.”It is believed the couple had earlier been celebrating her 20th birthday with a meal out and a row is understood to have taken place afterwards.Sterling is due to travel with his team to Dublin on Friday for Saturday’s friendly against Celtic at the Arriva Stadium.“Raheem has denied the charges and as the case is ongoing, we will not be making any further comment at this time,” a Liverpool spokesperson said.The charge could lead to imprisonment should Sterling be found guilty.

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Raheem Sterling faces trial in September for assaulting girlfriend

Friday, August 2, 2013

Clarkson faces Jane Austen ring wait

1 August 2013 Last updated at 10:35 ET Ring owned by Jane Austen The £152,450 ring is one of only three items of jewellery known to have belonged to Jane Austen The British government is trying to stop US singer Kelly Clarkson taking a rare turquoise and gold ring once owned by Jane Austen out of the country.


The 2002 winner of the American Idol TV show bought the jewellery at auction last year for more than £150,000.


But Culture minister Ed Vaizey has put a temporary export bar on it and has appealed for UK buyers to come forward.


The ring is one of only three pieces of jewellery known to have belonged to the Pride and Prejudice author.


Mr Vaizey said he wanted the “national treasure” to be “saved for the nation”.


Buyers have until 30 September to match the £152,450 price tag.

‘Extremely rare’

The ring comes with papers documenting its history within the family of Jane Austen (1775 – 1817) who lived most of her life in Hampshire and is one of English literature’s most celebrated authors.


Kelly Clarkson Kelly Clarkson has sold more than 20 million records since winning American Idol in 2002

The ring passed first to her sister Cassandra, who then gave it to her sister-in-law Eleanor Austen on her engagement to Jane and Cassandra’s brother, the Reverend Henry Thomas Austen.


It had remained in the family until Clarkson, who grew up in Texas, bought it at auction.


If a UK institution or private buyer does not come forward by the deadline then the export licence for the ring will be granted.


But the deadline can be extended to 30 December if proof emerges of “a serious intention to raise funds” to match the six-figure price tag.


Mr Vaizey said: “Jane Austen’s modest lifestyle and her early death mean that objects associated with her of any kind are extremely rare, so I hope that a UK buyer comes forward so this simple but elegant ring can be saved for the nation.”


The ring is one of four “national treasures” recently to have had temporary export bars put on them by the government,


Sir Henry “Tim” Birkin’s famous Bentley Blower super-charged racing car could be exported if no UK buyer comes forward to match an offer of more than £5m made by an overseas buyer.


The other items are an archive of letters from General Wolfe and a collection of material that documents the Gregory Expedition to Northern Australia in the mid-1850s.


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Clarkson faces Jane Austen ring wait

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Bolshoi faces "difficult challenge"

29 July 2013 Last updated at 07:47 ET Bolshoi Ballet dancers The famed Bolshoi has been mired in controversy of late The new head of the Bolshoi Ballet has admitted he faces “difficult challenges”, following a series of scandals including an acid attack on the company’s artistic director.


Vladimir Urin told the BBC such events “are now in the past”.


He was put in place earlier this month after the Russian culture ministry said the Bolshoi needed “renewal”.


The Bolshoi is about to embark on a three-week run at London’s Royal Opera House to mark its 50th anniversary.


But in recent months it has been mired by allegations of vicious infighting and feuds – as well as the attack on artistic director Sergei Filin, in which a masked man threw acid in his face.


Veteran dancer Nikolai Tsiskaridze, who was in open conflict with the theatre since the attack, was forced out in June.


Leading soloist Svetlana Lunkina told a Russian newspaper she had moved to Canada amid claims of threats to her husband.


“Every theatre sometimes goes through difficult times – it’s a normal process of the human life,” Mr Urin told BBC arts correspondent Rebecca Jones.


“As human beings, some people might have glorious moments and some tragic events. I’m sure that all these events which happened in the life of the Bolshoi and which amazed all the world – all these things are now in the past.”


Mr Urin said, having only been in his post for 10 days, he had not had the opportunity to look into the history of the Bolshoi’s recent problems.


“I just need more time to understand the basics of what happened,” he said.

‘Untruthful things’

However, while he accepted the Bolshoi’s reputation had been tarnished by the controversies, Mr Urin said he believed it was unjust.


“Very often a lot of untruthful things were coming out. It doesn’t mean some events did not take place, they did take place – but very often it was a lot of rumours around these events and it was a wrong evaluation of what was going on.” he said.


“What is vitally important now for the people of the theatre is what they will see on stage. I’m sure that if the creative life of the company is organised in a good way, it will produce new creative interesting works and then everything shall be fine.”


Mr Urin’s predecessor Anatoly Iksanov was removed from his position with a year still left on his contract.


He had been accused of mismanaging the Bolshoi’s $1bn (£860m) renovation – which ran years over schedule and over budget.


Culture Minister Vladimir Medinsky said: “A difficult situation had developed around the theatre and the troupe – everything pointed to the need for renewal.”


Former Bolshoi dancer Nikolai Tsiskaridze Dancer Nikolai Tsiskaridze said he was forced out of the Bolshoi

“As always in the ballet world we do need some new blood – not only dancers but also choreographers and directors as well,” agreed Mr Urin.


“We would never say goodbye to the trouble makers if they are brilliant dancers. I’m sure we should be able to find a mutual language to co exist.”


Mr Urin’s comments came on the same day Mr Filin told the Daily Telegraph he had just undergone his 22nd operation following the attack in January.


“Some of the optimism that we had earlier has not been justified. My right eye sees nothing at all and my left is working at about 10%,” he said.


“I can make out light and dark; I can’t make out faces. But I want to concentrate on the fact that my doctors are amazing and there is a plan for treatment. There is hope that my left eye especially can improve.”


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Bolshoi faces "difficult challenge"

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Vybz Kartel trial faces further delay

KINGSTON, Jamaica — The murder trial of dancehall DJ Vybz Kartel failed to get underway Wednesday for the third day in a row.

The often-postponed trial is now expected to start Thursday, July 11.The trial scheduled to begin on Monday was postponed to Tuesday because of issues pertaining to the location of Kartel’s case files.On Tuesday the trial was again postponed, this time because of the unavailability of a courtroom.It failed to proceed further on Wednesday due to the involvement of the presiding judge, Justice Bryan Sykes in another trial.The entertainer whose name is Adijah Palmer is, along with Lenburgh McDonald and Nigel Thompson, charged for the July 2011 murder of St Catherine businessman, Barrington ‘Bossie’ Bryan.Bryan was reportedly shot to death while he was standing with friends in Gregory Park, St Catherine.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Vybz Kartel trial faces further delay

Saturday, June 29, 2013

St Ann Victim Support Unit coordinator faces sexual offense charge

Latest News

Friday, June 28, 2013 | 6:43 PM

ST ANN’S BAY, St Ann — A St Ann Victim Support Unit coordinator facing a sexual relation charge was remanded in custody when he appeared in the St Ann’s Bay Resident Magistrate Court on Friday, June 28.Thirty-nine-year-old Lincoln Dennis of Moneague, St Ann was reportedly charged by the Centre for Investigations of Sexual Offences and Child Abuse (CISOCA) with sexual touching of a child on Tuesday, June 25.Dennis who operates under the Minister of Justice counselling arm was allegedly asked earlier this year to counsel the child, when the incident occurred.The child is said to be under 16 years old; the sex of the child has not been revealed.The accused will reappear in court on Tuesday, July 2. Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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St Ann Victim Support Unit coordinator faces sexual offense charge