Showing posts with label jailed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jailed. Show all posts

Monday, January 19, 2015

Jailed Virginia lawmaker regains seat in special election

virginialawmakerinternal.jpg Jan. 11, 2015: Candidates Joe Morrissey and Matt Walton appear during the Richmond Crusade for Voters, Inc. 74th District forum at Hobson Lodge in Richmond, Va. (AP Photo/Richmond Times-Dispatch, Mark Gormus)

RICHMOND, Va. –  A state lawmaker who resigned his seat following a sex scandal involving a teenage employee won it back during a special election Tuesday.

Apparently the majority of voters in Joseph D. Morrissey’s Richmond-area House of Delegates conviction were OK with his conviction in the scandal involving his 17-year-old secretary, whose nude photo was found on his cellphone and allegedly shared with a friend. Morrissey has repeatedly denied the allegations, saying his phone was hacked. The young woman, who denies they had sex, is now pregnant.

In unofficial returns, Morrissey defeated Democrat Kevin J. Sullivan and Republican Matt D. Walton by a comfortable margin. Morrissey won 42 percent of the vote, compared to 33 percent for Sullivan and 24 percent for Walton.

Morrissey’s victory was not unprecedented: Through four previous elections, most voters overlooked or even embraced the lawmaker’s flamboyant history of fistfights, contempt-of-court citations and disbarment. The 57-year-old bachelor, who fathered three children out of wedlock with three different women, repeatedly won at least 70 percent of the vote as a Democrat.

Morrissey said in a telephone interview that the results show people aren’t interested in the drama that landed him in jail.

“They’re interested in my body of work in the General Assembly,” Morrissey said. “Nobody works harder for their constituents than I do.”

He also said Sullivan’s ads focusing on his latest scrape with the law backfired.

“People hate negative campaigns,” Morrissey said.

The lawmaker has made a career of never backing down. He hung boxing gloves in his office and promised “Joe will fight for you” in campaign ads on city buses. At one point, he waved an assault rifle inside the House chamber while arguing for gun control.

He resigned his seat — effective Tuesday, the day of this special election — after he was convicted last month of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. His agreement to serve six months in jail for the misdemeanor avoided a felony trial that could have barred him from office and put him in prison for years.

But Morrissey wouldn’t give up — he promptly quit his party to run as an independent for his seat, sleeping in jail and wearing an electronic monitoring device as he campaigned during the day.

Legislators from both parties denounced him as unfit to serve and began studying how to expel him if he won.

“Mr. Morrissey’s election tonight does not change the fact that his actions fall grievously short of the standards of a public servant in the House of Delegates,” House Speaker William J. Howell, a Republican, said in a statement.

House Democratic Minority Leader David J. Toscano and party caucus chairman Scott Surovell said in a joint statement that Morrissey’s “conviction and actions over the past two months were reprehensible, and we will be exploring every avenue in regard to his status as a member of the House of Delegates.”

According to House Clerk G. Paul Nardo said it takes two-thirds of the 100-member House to expel a member, which hasn’t happened since 1876. The Virginia Constitution says a legislator can be kicked out for disorderly behavior, but does not define it.

But Morrissey says the people, not politicians, should decide who represents them — and vowed a voting rights battle if they try to remove him.

His latest troubles began when Coleman Pride told authorities that the lawmaker was preying on his daughter when she worked at his law office in 2013 — allegations he repeated in campaign ads last week for Morrissey’s Democratic opponent.

But Morrissey’s staunchest defender is Myrna Pride, now 18, who went public this month with her side of the story.

The Associated Press does not usually identify victims of sex crimes, but Myrna Pride’s name has become well known in the district since she was named in Morrissey’s criminal case. She denies they had sex — while declining to identify the father of her unborn baby — and she publicly defended Morrissey on Monday in a radio interview.

Richmond radio host Jack Gravely was interviewing Coleman Pride on WLEE about his daughter’s relationship with Morrissey when the lawmaker called in to defend himself. Myrna Pride then showed up in person, accusing her father and others of manufacturing the entire scandal to get back at Morrissey for his help in a dispute over her father’s child support.

It was Morrissey’s role in the family’s dispute that reportedly prompted police to serve a search warrant of his office Monday afternoon, with only hours to go before the voting started. Morrissey called that a political dirty trick.

“The only person that has shown any respect or kindness, or been there for me, is Mr. Morrissey,” Myrna Pride told a WTVR reporter on Monday. “Right now it’s a friendship. I don’t speak with him often. I call here and there to check on him. I want to see how his spirits are going.”

Morrissey supported her in turn.

“She is a very smart young lady,” he told the radio host. “She is kind, she is considerate. She will go on to do very well.”


View the original article here



Jailed Virginia lawmaker regains seat in special election

Thursday, October 23, 2014

#MARINEHELDINMEXICO: Mom pleads with lawmakers for "despondent" Marine"s freedom - Full Coverage: Marine jailed in Mexico

The mother of the U.S. Marine imprisoned in Mexico after mistakenly crossing the border with three legally-registered guns told lawmakers Wednesday her son is rapidly deteriorating and pleaded with them to press for his return.

Jill Tahmooressi, whose 26-year-old son, Andrew, served two tours in Afghanistan, appeared before a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee to push her case for the U.S. to pressure Mexico to release him. The condition of Tahmooressi, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder from his service, has deteriorated since he was locked up March 31 on gun charges.

“My son is despondent, without treatment, and he needs to be home,” she said, her voice cracking with emotion.

The longtime nurse, who lives in Weston, Fla., recounted several emotional calls from her son, including one from Afghanistan, where he told her about blacking out after an IED exploded near him. Upon returning home, Andrew Tahmooressi abandoned his dream of becoming a commercial pilot because, he told his mother, “I can’t concentrate on the academic work.”

Then, on March 31, he called her from a Mexican border checkpoint to say he was in trouble.

“Mom, I got lost; I made a wrong turn,” Jill Tahmooressi recounted her son saying. “I’m at the Mexican border. You need to know this because I’m surrounded by Mexican military.”

Hours later, in another call, he told her, “Mom, I’ve been arrested, please secure me an attorney.”

Appearing with the distraught mother before the Western Hemisphere Subcommittee were television personality and former Navy Lt. Commander Montel Williams, who is also a former Marine, and Pete Hegseth, the CEO of Concerned Veterans for America and a Fox News contributor.

“We know for a fact that A’s time in this prison has been worse than his time in both tours of combat,” Williams said. “How dare we, how dare we as a nation, hesitate to get that young man back?”

The hearing took place just hours after Tahmooressi’s attorney, Fernando Benitez, told Fox News he plans to rest his case today, possibly opening the door for Tahmooressi’s release within a matter of weeks.

“We have more than enough for an acquittal,” Benitez said. He said a crucial development in the case came within recent days, when the prosecution acknowledged that Tahmooressi’s PTSD may have played a role in the immediate aftermath of his detention. That stipulation could pave the way to Tahmooressi’s release on humanitarian grounds, he said.

Lawmakers said it is outrageous for a U.S. ally to hold an ailing American on gun charges that clearly stem from an honest mistake. Tahmooressi was in the San Diego area to get PTSD treatment, and living out of his pickup truck when he mistakenly crossed the border at a poorly marked checkpoint. He immediately declared that the guns were among all of his possessions in the truck, according to Benitez.

“As a direct result of his honorable service in Afghanistan, U.S. Marine Sergeant Andrew Tahmooressi now suffers from combat-related PTSD,” said Rep. Matt Salmon, R- Ariz. “Tragically, instead of receiving the treatment he needs, he is being held in a Mexican prison.

“Our war hero needs to come home,” he added.

Hegseth, a former infantry officer in the Army National Guard who served tours in Afghanistan, Iraq and at Guantanamo Bay, said the administration needs to do more to bring Tahmooressi home.

“Shame on anyone, at home or abroad, who does not move heaven and Earth to ensure that those who given so much, receive the care they deserve,” Hegseth said.

Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce, R-Calif., noted that the Obama administration traded five Taliban detainees held at Guantanamo Bay for the release of Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, accused of desertion by several men who served with him.

“Sgt. Tahmooressi is an American hero, whose wrong turn at the Mexican border has had the devastating effect of delaying his much-needed PTSD treatment for too long,” Royce said.

Royce said he and Salmon have been in contact with Mexico’s attorney general, who has the power to release Tahmooressi on humanitarian grounds. They said they impressed upon Jesus Karam that Tahmooressi had been diagnosed with PTSD by the VA San Diego Healthcare System just five days before his arrest.

“I am confident the humanitarian release of Andrew Tahmooressi will occur very soon,” Royce said.

More than 100,000 people have signed a petition asking the Obama administration to demand Tahmooressi’s release, prompting White House officials earlier this summer to ask Mexican authorities to quickly process the Marine’s case.


View the original article here



#MARINEHELDINMEXICO: Mom pleads with lawmakers for "despondent" Marine"s freedom - Full Coverage: Marine jailed in Mexico

Saturday, October 11, 2014

#MARINEHELDINMEXICO: Mom pleads with lawmakers for "despondent" Marine"s freedom - VIDEO: Montel: Marine case "ridiculously politicized" - Full Coverage: Marine jailed in Mexico

The mother of the U.S. Marine imprisoned in Mexico after mistakenly crossing the border with three legally-registered guns told lawmakers Wednesday her son is rapidly deteriorating and pleaded with them to press for his return.

Jill Tahmooressi, whose 26-year-old son, Andrew, served two tours in Afghanistan, appeared before a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee to push her case for the U.S. to pressure Mexico to release him. The condition of Tahmooressi, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder from his service, has deteriorated since he was locked up March 31 on gun charges.

“My son is despondent, without treatment, and he needs to be home,” she said, her voice cracking with emotion.

The longtime nurse, who lives in Weston, Fla., recounted several emotional calls from her son, including one from Afghanistan, where he told her about blacking out after an IED exploded near him. Upon returning home, Andrew Tahmooressi abandoned his dream of becoming a commercial pilot because, he told his mother, “I can’t concentrate on the academic work.”

Then, on March 31, he called her from a Mexican border checkpoint to say he was in trouble.

“Mom, I got lost; I made a wrong turn,” Jill Tahmooressi recounted her son saying. “I’m at the Mexican border. You need to know this because I’m surrounded by Mexican military.”

Hours later, in another call, he told her, “Mom, I’ve been arrested, please secure me an attorney.”

Appearing with the distraught mother before the Western Hemisphere Subcommittee were television personality and former Navy Lt. Commander Montel Williams, who is also a former Marine, and Pete Hegseth, the CEO of Concerned Veterans for America and a Fox News contributor.

“We know for a fact that A’s time in this prison has been worse than his time in both tours of combat,” Williams said. “How dare we, how dare we as a nation, hesitate to get that young man back?”

The hearing took place just hours after Tahmooressi’s attorney, Fernando Benitez, told Fox News he plans to rest his case today, possibly opening the door for Tahmooressi’s release within a matter of weeks.

“We have more than enough for an acquittal,” Benitez said. He said a crucial development in the case came within recent days, when the prosecution acknowledged that Tahmooressi’s PTSD may have played a role in the immediate aftermath of his detention. That stipulation could pave the way to Tahmooressi’s release on humanitarian grounds, he said.

Lawmakers said it is outrageous for a U.S. ally to hold an ailing American on gun charges that clearly stem from an honest mistake. Tahmooressi was in the San Diego area to get PTSD treatment, and living out of his pickup truck when he mistakenly crossed the border at a poorly marked checkpoint. He immediately declared that the guns were among all of his possessions in the truck, according to Benitez.

“As a direct result of his honorable service in Afghanistan, U.S. Marine Sergeant Andrew Tahmooressi now suffers from combat-related PTSD,” said Rep. Matt Salmon, R- Ariz. “Tragically, instead of receiving the treatment he needs, he is being held in a Mexican prison.

“Our war hero needs to come home,” he added.

Hegseth, a former infantry officer in the Army National Guard who served tours in Afghanistan, Iraq and at Guantanamo Bay, said the administration needs to do more to bring Tahmooressi home.

“Shame on anyone, at home or abroad, who does not move heaven and Earth to ensure that those who given so much, receive the care they deserve,” Hegseth said.

Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce, R-Calif., noted that the Obama administration traded five Taliban detainees held at Guantanamo Bay for the release of Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, accused of desertion by several men who served with him.

“Sgt. Tahmooressi is an American hero, whose wrong turn at the Mexican border has had the devastating effect of delaying his much-needed PTSD treatment for too long,” Royce said.

Royce said he and Salmon have been in contact with Mexico’s attorney general, who has the power to release Tahmooressi on humanitarian grounds. They said they impressed upon Jesus Karam that Tahmooressi had been diagnosed with PTSD by the VA San Diego Healthcare System just five days before his arrest.

“I am confident the humanitarian release of Andrew Tahmooressi will occur very soon,” Royce said.

More than 100,000 people have signed a petition asking the Obama administration to demand Tahmooressi’s release, prompting White House officials earlier this summer to ask Mexican authorities to quickly process the Marine’s case.


View the original article here



#MARINEHELDINMEXICO: Mom pleads with lawmakers for "despondent" Marine"s freedom - VIDEO: Montel: Marine case "ridiculously politicized" - Full Coverage: Marine jailed in Mexico

Friday, October 3, 2014

Psychiatrist to examine jailed Marine for PTSD - VIDEO: Psychiatrist to evaluate Marine - VIDEO: The painful ordeal of Sgt. Tahmooressi - FULL COVERAGE: #MarineHeldinMexico

The trial of former Marine Sgt. Andrew Tahmooressi on gun charges in Mexico will take a new turn this week, one that will move the focus to the defendant’s health. 

A prosecution psychiatrist will be sworn in at Tijuana federal court Monday, empowering him to interview Tahmooressi to determine whether he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). After being sworn in, the psychiatrist is expected to travel to the Tecate prison where Tahmooressi has been held for the last 6 months so he can make his own conclusions about whether Tahmooressi suffers from PTSD.  

Tahmooressi attorney Fernando Benitez tells Fox News that the psychiatrist could interview Tahmooressi either on Monday afternoon or Tuesday. Benitez is optimistic that the psychiatrist will come to the same conclusion that the defense has: That Tahmooressi suffers from PTSD and cannot receive treatment for it in Mexico.

“There’s no scientific way for him not to concur,” Benitez said. “He would have to find a completely different person to diverge from that diagnosis.”

Benitez believes that Mexico is violating Tahmooressi’s constitutional human rights by keeping a PTSD victim in prison without the possibility of rehabilitation. Tahmooressi has been held since March 31, when he says he mistakenly crossed into Mexico with three legally-purchased and registered guns in his truck. If he is convicted, he faces six to 21 years in prison.

“If our expert and the state’s expert both agree there is no rehabilitation to be had for Andrew … then we have a very good shot of making a constitutional argument and we might cut this whole thing short,” Benitez said.

If things go as the defense hopes, Benitez said he would then file a motion for a mistrial based on humanitarian grounds, which could happen as early as this week. If that happens, Benitez says the judge will then have a week to consider the mistrial motion.


View the original article here



Psychiatrist to examine jailed Marine for PTSD - VIDEO: Psychiatrist to evaluate Marine - VIDEO: The painful ordeal of Sgt. Tahmooressi - FULL COVERAGE: #MarineHeldinMexico

Saturday, September 27, 2014

OPINION: Why jailed Marine will be home soon - VIDEO: The painful ordeal of Sgt. Tahmooressi - VIDEO: Bikers rally for Marine - FULL COVERAGE: #MarineHeldinMexico

I strongly believe that within the next four weeks U.S. Marine Sgt. Andrew Tahmooressi will be released from El Hongo Federal Prison in Mexico and able to walk on American soil once again.

Young lawyers are taught to manage expectations. “Under-promise and over-deliver” is the rule – but there are exceptions. When the evidence is coming out so strongly in his favor, an experienced lawyer can take the gamble and say what he really thinks.

I have been providing legal and spiritual support to Andrew and his mom, Jill, since May. I assisted Jill in hiring Fernando Benitez, Andrew’s Mexican lawyer, and have worked closely with him during the last three court hearings.

No purveyor of justice could honestly believe that Andrew posed a threat to Mexican authority or its people.

Andrew had no intention of entering Mexico with firearms, and there is proof. The video evidence taken by Mexican customs officials at the border, which was entered into evidence at the hearing in Tijuana Federal Court on Sept. 9, confirms Andrew’s version of the facts and impeaches the testimony of customs officers who previously testified under oath. 

It is clear that Andrew received the green light to enter Mexico without being stopped, and that he was the one who decided to contact a customs officer in an effort to find a way to turn around. Therefore, he lacked the necessary criminal intent to commit the crimes alleged.

The border video also contradicts the customs officer’s testimony on the constitutional issues of illegal search and prolonged detention. 

The Mexican Constitution requires that a search warrant be issued prior to a search of a vehicle stopped at the border. The video clearly shows customs officials searching the truck long before the search warrant was issued, a point specifically denied by customs officers when they testified. 

Further, the timestamps on the video show that Andrew was subjected to a prolonged detention and was not timely provided an interpreter, both of which are violations of Mexican law. These violations are sufficient for the judge to declare a mistrial and suppress the introduction into evidence of the firearms and ammunition illegally seized in the search.

Finally, and perhaps most profoundly, Mexican law requires that inmates in Mexican prisons receive rehabilitation treatment to prepare them for reinsertion into society. 

On Sept. 9, a psychiatrist was sworn to testify about his testing of Andrew for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Should he confirm the diagnosis of at least three other experts that Andrew suffers from PTSD, Andrew could be released for humanitarian reasons, as Mexico does not have the ability to properly treat such a condition. Mexican military personnel have not suffered through the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and therefore there is no recognized protocol for PTSD.

Enough evidence has been submitted to prove Andrew’s lack of criminal intent and the violation of his human rights at the border, and soon – within 10 days – we expect further confirmation will surface that he continues to suffer from PTSD.

Despite having another hearing within the Mexican court system scheduled for Sept. 29, the time has come for Sgt. Andrew Tahmooressi to be released from El Hongo Prison. 

No purveyor of justice could honestly believe that Andrew posed a threat to Mexican authority or its people. Since Mexican law provides for humanitarian considerations regarding the care and treatment of its prisoners, a just and/or compassionate ruling ordering his release should be forthcoming.

Philip R. Dunn is president of Serving California, a non-profit foundation dedicated to the care and treatment of veterans suffering from PTSD. He has also been a criminal defense attorney for 30 years. He  is representing Sergeant Tahmooressi and his family in the U.S.


View the original article here



OPINION: Why jailed Marine will be home soon - VIDEO: The painful ordeal of Sgt. Tahmooressi - VIDEO: Bikers rally for Marine - FULL COVERAGE: #MarineHeldinMexico

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Guyanese man jailed for raping eight-year-old

Jail-Cell-keys-740GEORGETOWN, Guyana, Monday July 28, 2014, CMC – Talbert McPherson has begun serving the remaining 20 years of a 25-year prison sentence for raping an eight-year-old girl.

The court Friday passed the sentence on the man for the 2009 crime in the village of Hopetown in Berbice.

The incident occurred at the home of the girl’s relatives, where she was sleeping-over and where McPherson, then 37-years-old, was residing.

The girl testified that after going to bed, McPherson, whom she recognised despite dim lighting, entered her room and raped her. The matter was reported to the police the following day.

A medical examination revealed bruises on the vaginal wall and anus of the eight-year-old, and McPherson was arrested. He pleaded his innocence throughout the trial.

Click here to receive free news bulletins via email from Caribbean360. (View sample)


View the original article here



Guyanese man jailed for raping eight-year-old

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Jailed businessman to know his fate on Wednesday

Jailed St. Ann businessman, Christopher Carr, will know on Wednesday, whether he will be released on bond.

On Monday, lawyers for the real estate developer renewed their bail application before the Corporate Area Criminal Court, as questions continued about his true identity.

Carr was charged last week with uttering forged documents, after investigators alleged, that he has more than one name.

The Resident Magistrate, on Monday instructed the police to question him further about his true identity, after investigators claimed he has two birth certificates, in breach of  the Forgery Act.   

Investigators from the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Taskforce (MOCA) reported that Carr, whose given name is Donovan Carr, has been conducting business in the name Christopher Carr.


View the original article here



Jailed businessman to know his fate on Wednesday

Friday, June 27, 2014

Man jailed for assaulting cop

Bjorn Burke, Staff Reporter

A man accused of injuring a police officer and escaping custody was sentenced to three months’ imprisonment when he appeared before the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday.

Charged with escaping custody and assault occasioning bodily harm is 25-year-old conductor, Kareem Gordon, of Bowes Road, Kingston 13. Gordon pleaded guilty to both charges.

On June 7, the accused man was reportedly being transported to the Hunts Bay lock-up by police personnel, on suspicion of rape and simple larceny. It is believed that, on arrival, in transferring Gordon from the guard room, officers unlocked the grill to a cell for him to enter, but he started behaving boisterously, saying “Yow, yu see how di [expletive] gyal lie, a betta she did seh me only thief har phone.”

It is alleged that Gordon assaulted the female officer, twisting her right hand, saying, “Yow mi nah go no jail”, and made his getaway. Police personnel reportedly gave chase, and caught the accused along a section of Marcus Garvey Drive. He was hauled back to the lock-up.

“Your Honour, I went down to the station on June, the seventh. The police dem start to accuse me, lick mi up, and I run off leff dem. Me nuh used to dem kind a lick deh, Your Honour.” said Gordon.

“I don’t believe yu, yu nuh. Dem say yu almost break the officer hand,” said Senior Resident Magistrate Judith Pusey.

“Your Honour, I don’t know how her hand bruck,” Gordon replied.

The magistrate sentenced the accused to three months’ imprisonment, on each count, to run concurrently. A fingerprint order was also made.


View the original article here



Man jailed for assaulting cop

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Silent witnesses to child abuse could be jailed – new Barbados law

Sunday, June 22, 2014 | 3:05 PM    

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) — Persons who may be aware of instances of child abuse, but do not inform the authorities, could be brought before the courts and face possible jail according to a looming law.

Child Care Board Director, Joan Crawford, says Cabinet is about to consider a proposal making it mandatory for school principals, church leaders, social workers, court officials, and media workers, among others to report knowledge of child abuse.

“There are no ifs or buts. It will be that you … are bound to report,” she said Thursday. “The only exception there is that lawyer-client privilege, but all others are not considered that way.”

Further explaining the proposal before the Cabinet she said, “Failure to report a suspected case should carry a sanction in the form of a fine, with the alternative of imprisonment”.

Crawford’s revelation came during a symposium on student sexual abuse, where UNICEF Representative, Knu-Sandi Lwin, suggested that education officials and others involved in the delivery of education can be blamed for not disclosing all information on probable cases of child abuse.

“All of us, in one way or another, have been sinning, the sins of omission,” she said.

Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserver

Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver


View the original article here



Silent witnesses to child abuse could be jailed – new Barbados law

Monday, September 9, 2013

Bermuda"s youngest ever murderer jailed indefinitely

HAMILTON, Bermuda (CMC) — A teenager who was just 15 at the time — and said to be the Bermuda’s youngest ever convicted murderer — has been jailed indefinitely by a Supreme Court judge for stabbing his 18-year-old friend to death.

Rashaun Codrington, now 17, has been imprisoned “at the court’s pleasure” for the murder of Malcolm Outerbridge.Codrington must spend a minimum of seven years in jail before he is eligible to request parole.Described by prosecutor Carrington Mahoney as “the youngest convicted murderer in the history of Bermuda”, Codrington was 15 years old and legally a child when he stabbed Outerbridge to death on October 28, 2011.Following the attack on the old railway trail near his home, Codrington dragged his dying victim into nearby bushes. The court heard that an unknown person helped him try to conceal the crime.“Malcolm Outerbridge was an exceptional young man, and a friend of yours,” Puisne Judge Stephen Hellman told him before sentencing.“You murdered Malcolm Outerbridge, and here you are ¬— what a wicked, stupid and senseless act.”Noting the “ferocity of the assault”, Justice Hellman said the victim had been stabbed 27 times, three of which were mortal injuries.From the dock, Codrington rose to address the Outerbridge family, saying he was sorry for the pain he had caused them.“If I could change what happened that day, I would,” he added, prompting the victim’s father to rise and demand why he had murdered his son.There was no reply.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

HOUSE RULES


1. We welcome reader comments on the top stories of the day. Some comments may be republished on the website or in the newspaper – email addresses will not be published.


2. Please understand that comments are moderated and it is not always possible to publish all that have been submitted. We will, however, try to publish comments that are representative of all received.


3. We ask that comments are civil and free of libellous or hateful material. Also please stick to the topic under discussion.


4. Please do not write in block capitals since this makes your comment hard to read.


5. Please don’t use the comments to advertise. However, our advertising department can be more than accommodating if emailed:mailto:advertising@jamaicaobserver.com.


6. If readers wish to report offensive comments, suggest a correction or share a story then please email: community@jamaicaobserver.com.


7. Lastly, read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy

comments powered by

View the original article here



Bermuda"s youngest ever murderer jailed indefinitely

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Venezuela strip club attacker jailed

30 August 2013 Last updated at 19:07 ET Entrance of Antonella 2012 Club (28 May 2013) The Antonella 2012 Club is located in an upscale neighbourhood in Caracas A Venezuelan man has been sentenced to five and a half years in prison for opening fire on two US diplomats in a Caracas strip club.


The attorney general’s office said Carlos Mejias admitted wounding the military attaches after a brawl in May.


“He pulled out a gun and repeatedly fired at the Americans,” it said in a statement.


One of the diplomats was shot in the leg, the other in the stomach. But neither had life-threatening injuries.


The incident took place at the Antonella 2012 Club, a pole dancing bar in the Chacao neighbourhood of Caracas, the statement said.


Mr Mejias surrendered to the authorities five days later and was charged with attempted murder.


A second Venezuelan has been charged with being an accessory to attempted murder.


Caracas is considered one of the most dangerous cities in Latin America.


Diplomats have been targeted by criminals in recent years with officials from Costa Rica, Chile, Mexico and Belarus being briefly abducted.


Last year, the government introduced a new gun law banning the sale of firearms and ammunition.


View the original article here



Venezuela strip club attacker jailed

Monday, July 29, 2013

Man jailed for Royal Marine death

29 July 2013 Last updated at 09:04 ET Wesley Clutterbuck Wesley Clutterbuck became a Royal Marine in 2012 A 20-year-old man who killed a Royal Marine with one punch has been jailed for four years.


Wesley Clutterbuck, 19, hit his head on the ground after the attack in Fleece Street, Rochdale, on 30 June. He died in hospital the following day.


Reece Kay, of Waithlands Road, Rochdale, admitted manslaughter at a hearing on 4 July at Manchester Crown Court.


He will serve the sentence at a young offender institution.


Elizabeth Reed, Branch Crown Prosecutor said: “A young man, who was loyally serving our country, has lost his life in this senseless and unprovoked attack which clearly demonstrates the cost of just one punch.


“Kay ran towards the victim, who was a complete stranger to him, with a clenched fist and punched him once to the head causing him to fall over and hit his head on the pavement.


“He then turned and ran from the scene showing complete disregard to the harm he had caused.


“Nevertheless, he later admitted the crime and as a result we have been able to bring him to justice promptly, less than a month after the incident took place.”


View the original article here



Man jailed for Royal Marine death

Indecent child image teacher jailed

29 July 2013 Last updated at 08:30 ET Simon Clannachan Simon Clannachan admitted 14 counts of making indecent images of children A primary school teacher who was caught with indecent images of children and extreme pornography involving animals has been jailed for six months.


Simon Clannachan admitted 14 counts of making indecent images of children and seven of possessing pornographic images portraying a sexual act with an animal.


The 40-year-old was sentenced at Bournemouth Crown Court.


Clannachan, of Richmond Park Avenue, Bournemouth had resigned from his job at Kingsleigh Primary School.


He was placed on the sex offenders register for seven years and disqualified from working with children.


In a statement, Richard Gower, the head teacher at Kingsleigh Primary School, said the school “accepts the six month sentence”.


“This brings closure of the matter and allows everyone in our school community to continue to move on. We have much to be proud of at Kingsleigh and look forward to staff and pupils returning in September,” he said.


None of the offences are believed to have involved pupils attending the school.


View the original article here



Indecent child image teacher jailed