Showing posts with label probe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label probe. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2015

Behavior of SUV driver under scrutiny in deadly NY commuter train crash probe - 6 killed, 15 hurt when NY commuter train slams SUV - VIDEO: Six dead after train hits SUV

APTOPIX Train Car Col_Cham640360020515.jpg Feb. 4, 2015: Emergency personnel work to remove the wreckage of a deadly SUV and commuter train accident in Valhalla, N.Y. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow)

Federal investigators probing a deadly crash involving a New York commuter train and a SUV have focused on the behavior of the vehicle’s driver, who was identified Wednesday as a 49-year-old mother of three. 

Five men on the train, as well as the SUV’s driver, were killed late Tuesday in the deadliest accident in the 32-year history of the Metro-North commuter rail. The train smashed into the Mercedes ML350 driven by jewelry store employee Ellen Brody, which had become stuck on the tracks between the railroad crossing gates. 

“The big question everyone wants to know is: Why was this vehicle in the crossing?” said Robert Sumwalt, National Transportation Safety Board vice chairman.

The wreck happened after dark in backed-up traffic in an area where the tracks are straight but driving can be tricky. Motorists exiting or entering the adjacent Taconic State Parkway have to turn and cross the tracks near a wooded area and a cemetery.

Witnesses said Brody calmly got out of her vehicle after the crossing gates came down around her and hit her car. She then got back in and drove forward before the train hit the car, killing her instantly. 

“It looks like where she stopped she did not want to go on the tracks but the proximity of the gate to her car, you know, it was dark — maybe she didn’t know she was in front of the gate,” Rick Hope, who was in the car behind Brody, told WNYW.

“I said to myself, ‘The clock is ticking here, the gate is down, the bells are ringing — what are you going to do here?"” Hope added. “She looked a little confused, gets back in the car and pulls forward on the tracks.”

Traffic was moving slowly at the time, choked with drivers seeking to avoid the Taconic State Parkway because of an accident, Hope noted.

As of Wednesday evening, investigators had no evidence the crossing gates weren’t working properly, but their examination was just beginning, Sumwalt said.

Among other things, investigators also planned to examine the tracks, interview the crew and find out whether the SUV had a data recorder of its own.

Railroad grade crossings typically have gate arms designed to lift automatically if they hit a car or other object on the way down, railroad safety consultant Grady Cothen said. The wooden arms are designed to be easily broken if a car trapped between them moves forward or backward, he said.

Acknowledging that collisions between trains and cars rarely cause rider deaths, Sumwalt said the NTSB would also examine the adequacy of the train’s exits and the intensity of the fire, which investigators believe was sparked by the SUV’s gas tank.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said early indications are that the train was going 58 mph, or within the 60-to-70-mph speed limit in that area. The NTSB said it wanted to confirm speed and other data extracted from the recorder before releasing it.

It was not the first deadly crash at the site: A Metro-North train hit a truck, killing its driver, at the same Commerce Street crossing in 1984, according to Federal Railroad Administration records.

Rep. Patrick Maloney, D-N.Y., said Tuesday’s accident underscores the need for positive train control, a technology that uses WiFi and GPS to monitor trains’ exact position and automatically applies the brakes to prevent collisions or lessen their severity. While not specifically designed to address grade-crossing accidents, the technology can be expanded for such purposes, he said.

Congress passed a 2008 law that requires all railroads to install positive train control by the end of 2015, but it’s clear most of them will not meet the deadline.

The crash was so powerful that the electrified third rail came up and pierced the train and the SUV, and the SUV was pushed about 1,000 feet, Sumwalt said. The blaze consumed the SUV and the train’s first car.

Elizabeth Bordiga was commuting home from her New York City nursing job when she suddenly felt the train jerk a few times. She and other passengers in the middle part of the train started calmly walking to the back. But then they started smelling gasoline, and somebody said there was a fire.

But they couldn’t open the emergency window or figure out how to escape until a firefighter got a door open, she said. Commuters lifted each other down from the train to the ground about 7 feet below, said Bordiga, who uses a cane.

“When I was on the ground, I looked to the right and saw flames,” she said. “I couldn’t believe it.”

The train’s engineer tried to rescue people until the smoke and flames got so severe that he had to escape, Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino said

While officials did not immediately release any victims’ names, employers confirmed that the dead included Walter Liedtke, a curator of European paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Eric Vandercar, 53, a senior managing director at Mesirow Financial.

Every day, trains travel across more than 212,000 highway-grade rail crossings in the U.S. There are an average of 230 to 250 deaths a year at such crossings, down over 50 percent from two decades ago, FRA figures show.

Risky driver behavior or poor judgment accounts for 94 percent of grade crossing accidents, according to a 2004 government report.

Metro-North is the nation’s second-busiest commuter railroad, after the Long Island Rail Road, serving about 280,000 riders a day.

Late last year, the NTSB issued rulings on five Metro-North accidents in New York and Connecticut in 2013 and 2014, repeatedly finding fault with the railroad.

Among the accidents was a 2013 derailment in the Bronx that killed four people, the railroad’s first passenger fatalities, The NTSB said the engineer had fallen asleep at the controls because of a severe, undiagnosed case of sleep apnea.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click for more from MyFoxNY.com.

Click for more from the New York Post.


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Behavior of SUV driver under scrutiny in deadly NY commuter train crash probe - 6 killed, 15 hurt when NY commuter train slams SUV - VIDEO: Six dead after train hits SUV

EXTORTION, BABY Vegas police probe alleged plot against GOP lawmaker

Las Vegas police are investigating accusations that a Republican state lawmaker was pressed to switch allegiances in a key vote, in a mysterious attempted extortion case that has allegations flying on all sides.  

In a statement, police said Nevada Assemblyman Chris Edwards is the “alleged victim” who was approached in December about changing his official vote for Assembly speaker. 

The Nevada Assembly voted unanimously on Monday, the first day of the session, to elect Republican John Hambrick as speaker. According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Edwards also backed Hambrick during a preliminary vote in December — but allegedly was pressured to switch. 

Police have not identified who may have tried to extort Edwards but confirmed that investigators from their intelligence section executed a search warrant at a Las Vegas home last week. The property searched is the home of Rob Lauer, a Las Vegas businessman who previously applied for an assembly seat when it was vacated but was not picked.

In a phone interview with Fox News, Lauer confirmed he met with Edwards. Lauer, though, said he met with Edwards because he wanted the assemblyman to take the role of chairman on an independent veterans committee he was organizing.  

Lauer claims Edwards was not interested in the position or the committee and instead asked for donations to pay some of his remaining campaign debt.

“I told him three times that I will not give you a commitment for a figure,” Lauer said. “That’s illegal.”

Edwards denies Lauer’s allegations. The assemblyman told Fox News that police have asked him not to discuss details of the investigation, but insisted that Lauer is not telling the truth.

“I heard that he was trying to revise a lot of things that happened,” Edwards said. “If he is not consistent with what transpired it will not go well for him.”

Lauer said investigators confiscated his cell phone and computer during the search of his home, because they’re looking for a recording of the alleged conversation between him and Edwards.

Lauer denies he made a recording. “The police came looking for the tape,” Lauer said. “There is no tape, I have no tape.”

Edwards said there is an ongoing investigation in which “multiple people are involved.” He wouldn’t describe the circumstances but said the potential case is much bigger than the alleged incident involving him and Lauer.

“I would hope that other folks would start cooperating, because we have a session that’s important to the voters of the state of Nevada,” Edwards said.

Lauer also alleges that Edwards alerted the police in an effort to hinder a movement to recall his recent election. A “Recall Edwards PAC” was recently filed with the secretary of state by Citizens Outreach, a conservative organization.

Edwards addressed the issue in a statement on Facebook. “Since the November election we have seen a lot of political hype about recalls and ‘holding people accountable’ it is nice to see that many of those people will soon be held accountable for their hypocritical actions,” Edwards wrote.

Lauer said he now plans to file a defamation suit against Edwards.

“It seriously attacks my character to say I recorded him,” Lauer said. “I don’t record people. I don’t rat people out. People have a conversation with me — it’s private.”

Edwards said he couldn’t address the tape but assured “the truth will come out at the appropriate time and it will disprove Lauer’s account.”

Lauer has a small history of run-ins with the law. Most recently, in 2010, he was cited with assault against a woman in a bar. The case went to court but the charges were ultimately dropped.

“I have a history of being accused of stuff that is not true and I’ve proven myself,” Lauer said.

No arrests have been made in the current case. Police are conducting more interviews.

Matt Finn is a part of the Junior Reporter program at Fox News. Get more information on the program here and follow them on Twitter: @FNCJrReporters


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EXTORTION, BABY Vegas police probe alleged plot against GOP lawmaker

Saturday, July 5, 2014

MIT makes breakthrough in probe of businessman's murder

The Major Investigation Task Force ( MIT) has made a breakthrough in the investigation into the murder of St. Andrew businessman, Robert Mendez.

Mendez, who operated Payless Car Mart off Maxfield Avenue in St Andrew, was shot dead by gunmen on April 1.

Video footage of the businessman being shot in his office was shown on Television Jamaica (TVJ)in May. The MIT is reporting that it has arrested and charged one of the suspects. He’s John Jarrett, 43, otherwise called “Tucker and “Wasp” of a Balcolmbe Drive address.

Superintendent Michael Phipps, head of the St Andrew Branch of the MIT, told RJR News that Jarrett was charged on Friday afternoon.

Jarrett who was picked up last week was seen on the video footage trying to remove a bracelet from Mendez’s hand after he was fatally shot.

Superintendent Phipps was tight-lipped on the status of the second suspect, but RJR News understands that he was captured in Canada on Thursday.

The suspect, who was seen shooting the businessman in the video, was nabbed by Canadian law enforcement agents following a request by the local police.

The suspect, who lived in Canada for sometime, has been arrested for immigration violations and is expected to be deported to Jamaica.


View the original article here



MIT makes breakthrough in probe of businessman"s murder

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

AG wants probe into leak of report by Police Complaints Authority in T&T

Anand Ramlogan, Trinidad & Tobago’s Attorney General, is reportedly asking acting Police Commissioner Stephen Williams to conduct an investigation into the leak of reports by the Police Complaints Authority (PCA) on the New Flying Squad Investigative Unit.

According to a report in the Trinidad & Guardian newspaper, Ramlogan made the request in a letter to Williams on Tuesday, hours after PCA director Gillian Lucky told a parliamentary Joint Select Committee hearing  that the report was not a confidential document, as claimed by Ramlogan.

It was Opposition Senator Faris Al-Rawi, the newspaper reports,  who first told the Senate about the report two weeks ago. He reportedly said then that he had two reports – one from the PCA and the other T&T Police Service – which recommended that the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) pursue criminal investigations into police officers for their role in the squad. The squad was re-established in 2012.

In a release on Tuesday, confirming that he had sent the letter to Williams, Ramlogan said the “belated admission by Ms Lucky that the report is not confidential is troubling.”

He insisted that section 21 (4) of the PCA Act states that all information and evidence obtained by the PCA in the performance of its duties is confidential and it is a criminal offence for anyone to disclose such information, an act which is punishable with five years imprisonment.

“If the report is not a confidential one that could be leaked to the PNM (the opposition People’s National Movement)why not simply give the parliament, the government and the media a copy,” Ramlogan said, while maintaining that it was “shocking and confusing” for Lucky to say the document was not confidential.


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AG wants probe into leak of report by Police Complaints Authority in T&T

Friday, June 27, 2014

Cops probe if ... MOM PIMPED 13-Y-O GIRL - Teen said to have had four abortions

Andr? Williams, STAR Writer

The St Andrew North police are pursuing the mother of a teen after it was unearthed that she profited from her child being engaged in prostitution, which led to four abortions, THE STAR has learnt.

Information reaching our news desk is that the teen, now 17 years old, had been allegedly introduced to prostitution from as early as age 13, while living with her mother in Ocho Rios, St Ann.

Allegations are that the teen raised money for them both before moving to live with her father in a St Andrew community.

The WEEKEND STAR gathered that the teen developed serious complications and after seeking medical attention, she was told that because of the multiple abortions, it is unlikely that she would be able to have a child.

The doctor, The WEEKEND STAR was told, advised her to make a report to the police in relation to issues discussed during her visit with the medical practitioner.

Relatives also told our news team that the teen often spoke of committing suicide and was involved in incidents of misbehaving.

Reports are that these were among the deciding factors, which led her to talk about what she had been put through.

The teen subsequently went in to the police and made a report following which a warrant was activated and her mother is now being pursued.

When our news team contacted the St Andrew North police, a senior officer confirmed the reports and told The WEEKEND STAR that the file had been turned over to the Centre for The Investigation of Sexual Offences and Child Abuse (CISOCA).

Investigations are ongoing.


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Cops probe if ... MOM PIMPED 13-Y-O GIRL - Teen said to have had four abortions

Monday, February 3, 2014

Parliamentary Committee says banking fee probe not a witch-hunt

BY ALICIA DUNKLEY WILLIS Senior staff reporter dunkleya@jamaicaobserver.com


Monday, February 03, 2014    


THE Economy and Production Committee of Parliament has insisted that the decision to scrutinise the fees charged by banks was “not a witch-hunt”, while at the same time berating financial institutions for the high costs associated with transactions conducted electronically and especially at automated machines.


During the meeting at Gordon House last Tuesday, chairman Karl Samuda noted that the Consumer Affairs Commission has been highlighting bank charges from as far back as 2008.


“I know that there are some who may be apprehensive about the approach we will adopt and I just want to assure everyone here that this is not about any kind of witch-hunt against the banking community or the financial institutions. It is just an attempt to unearth the facts and relate those facts to the present situation that confronts the country and the impact that the banking fraternity has on our economy and the creation of growth that we so badly need,” Samuda noted.


The BOJ, in response to a request by Parliament last November that it produce a full report on its survey of fees and charges by banks, has provided an interim report and requested time to produce a full report.


In a review of that interim document which was presented to the Committee Tuesday, the Consumer Affairs Commission said a comparative analysis of current fees as at November 2013 showed that of the five major banks, the Bank of Nova Scotia, the National Commercial Bank, First Global Bank, CIBC FirstCaribbean International Bank and the RBC Royal Bank recorded the highest fees.


It said this was the most noticeable in the area of e-financial services where First Global Bank had nine of the highest fees out of 24 services. It said out of 64 services overall, First Global accounted for 21 of the highest fees, while CIBC FirstCaribbean registered the most incidents of lowest fees, 16 of the 64.


The Commission said an analysis of data it gathered on the rates and fees charged by commercial banks in Jamaica for 2009 to 2013 revealed that since 2009 with respect to savings accounts both the withdrawal and deposit fees at the Bank of Nova Scotia have experienced a 115 per cent increase, moving from $100 to $215. It said for the National Commercial Bank withdrawal fees were also increased by 115 per cent, moving from $100 to $215 as well.


The Commission said withdrawing funds from savings accounts at RBC Royal Bank has increased by 100 per cent, from free in 2009 to $175 in 2013, while withdrawing from savings accounts at CIBC FirstCaribbean Bank increased 129 per cent, from $70 in 2009 to $160 in 2013. In the meantime, it said depositing funds in savings accounts at RBC was free of charge while with respect to First Global Bank, depositing and withdrawing from savings accounts were free of charge.


According to the commission, data from its Complaint Management Database revealed that the main issues consumers had were Automated Teller Machine (ATM) fees, overdraft fees, penalty fees, dormant account fees as well as interest charges on outstanding balances, credit card accounts and settlement of loan accounts. Other complaints surrounded system errors relating to payments posted to incorrect accounts, incorrect amounts posted and ATMs not issuing funds. Consumers were also concerned about stolen debit or credit cards and unauthorised deductions from accounts as well as the actions of banks when recovering outstanding funds.


Government committee member Julian Robinson, who was the first to raise the issue of the level of fees associated with electronic transactions, particularly withdrawals, argued that while banks are urging customers to use automated channels, the costs associated with doing so were a turn off.


“If the desire is really to move persons away from human channels which are clearly more expensive to automated channels and I would say the vast majority of persons who use ATMs do so for withdrawals then you are really not influencing persons to use your machines if that is one of your highest charges,” he noted.


Colleague Government Committee Member Sharon Ffolkes Abrahams was also concerned about the less than upfront approach taken and made the point that the Consumer Affairs Commission has asked that banks display electronic charges inside ABMs.


Dr Dwayne Henry, chair of the Public Policy and Legislative Committee of the Jamaica Banker’s Association and vice-president of Government Affairs at Scotia Bank contended that with the overall cost of providing banking services increasing, the global trend has been to move away from the banking hall to cheaper channels.


“Gone are the days when we could fully absorb for most institutions the cost of providing these services according to channel. So it is that electronic banking is still cheaper and very much so than in other means in the banking halls,” he said.


Responding to queries as to whether there was any provision in law mandating financial institutions under the BOJ’s watch to give notice to customers of the fees they are imposing, general counsel for the BOJ Robin Sykes said the issue of notification is one which is going to depend on the contractual terms.


President of the Jamaica Banker’s Association Maureen Hayden-Cater, while pointing out that the association was not involved with setting fees for the various organisations, said based on the existing code of conduct, all banks have agreed to make information on fees available on their websites, brochures in the banking halls, and through customer service representatives.


“As it relates to displays in ATMs that is a technology solution that has to be put in place, I know it’s not currently in place. If I speak on behalf of First Global, we do not own machines and so we do not have the capacity to put that information there, but other banks are looking at it,” she said.


That rationale, however, did not sit well with the Opposition’s Daryl Vaz.


“First Global’s explanation in relation to not being able to put information on fees up because they don’t own ATMs is unacceptable. For me to sit here and listen to that it’s difficult. The fact of the matter is that there is a reluctance to do so… The customer deserves to know… there can be no excuse for that,” he said.


View the original article here



Parliamentary Committee says banking fee probe not a witch-hunt

Parliamentary Committee says banking fee probe not a witch-hunt

BY ALICIA DUNKLEY WILLIS Senior staff reporter dunkleya@jamaicaobserver.com


Monday, February 03, 2014    


THE Economy and Production Committee of Parliament has insisted that the decision to scrutinise the fees charged by banks was “not a witch-hunt”, while at the same time berating financial institutions for the high costs associated with transactions conducted electronically and especially at automated machines.


During the meeting at Gordon House last Tuesday, chairman Karl Samuda noted that the Consumer Affairs Commission has been highlighting bank charges from as far back as 2008.


“I know that there are some who may be apprehensive about the approach we will adopt and I just want to assure everyone here that this is not about any kind of witch-hunt against the banking community or the financial institutions. It is just an attempt to unearth the facts and relate those facts to the present situation that confronts the country and the impact that the banking fraternity has on our economy and the creation of growth that we so badly need,” Samuda noted.


The BOJ, in response to a request by Parliament last November that it produce a full report on its survey of fees and charges by banks, has provided an interim report and requested time to produce a full report.


In a review of that interim document which was presented to the Committee Tuesday, the Consumer Affairs Commission said a comparative analysis of current fees as at November 2013 showed that of the five major banks, the Bank of Nova Scotia, the National Commercial Bank, First Global Bank, CIBC FirstCaribbean International Bank and the RBC Royal Bank recorded the highest fees.


It said this was the most noticeable in the area of e-financial services where First Global Bank had nine of the highest fees out of 24 services. It said out of 64 services overall, First Global accounted for 21 of the highest fees, while CIBC FirstCaribbean registered the most incidents of lowest fees, 16 of the 64.


The Commission said an analysis of data it gathered on the rates and fees charged by commercial banks in Jamaica for 2009 to 2013 revealed that since 2009 with respect to savings accounts both the withdrawal and deposit fees at the Bank of Nova Scotia have experienced a 115 per cent increase, moving from $100 to $215. It said for the National Commercial Bank withdrawal fees were also increased by 115 per cent, moving from $100 to $215 as well.


The Commission said withdrawing funds from savings accounts at RBC Royal Bank has increased by 100 per cent, from free in 2009 to $175 in 2013, while withdrawing from savings accounts at CIBC FirstCaribbean Bank increased 129 per cent, from $70 in 2009 to $160 in 2013. In the meantime, it said depositing funds in savings accounts at RBC was free of charge while with respect to First Global Bank, depositing and withdrawing from savings accounts were free of charge.


According to the commission, data from its Complaint Management Database revealed that the main issues consumers had were Automated Teller Machine (ATM) fees, overdraft fees, penalty fees, dormant account fees as well as interest charges on outstanding balances, credit card accounts and settlement of loan accounts. Other complaints surrounded system errors relating to payments posted to incorrect accounts, incorrect amounts posted and ATMs not issuing funds. Consumers were also concerned about stolen debit or credit cards and unauthorised deductions from accounts as well as the actions of banks when recovering outstanding funds.


Government committee member Julian Robinson, who was the first to raise the issue of the level of fees associated with electronic transactions, particularly withdrawals, argued that while banks are urging customers to use automated channels, the costs associated with doing so were a turn off.


“If the desire is really to move persons away from human channels which are clearly more expensive to automated channels and I would say the vast majority of persons who use ATMs do so for withdrawals then you are really not influencing persons to use your machines if that is one of your highest charges,” he noted.


Colleague Government Committee Member Sharon Ffolkes Abrahams was also concerned about the less than upfront approach taken and made the point that the Consumer Affairs Commission has asked that banks display electronic charges inside ABMs.


Dr Dwayne Henry, chair of the Public Policy and Legislative Committee of the Jamaica Banker’s Association and vice-president of Government Affairs at Scotia Bank contended that with the overall cost of providing banking services increasing, the global trend has been to move away from the banking hall to cheaper channels.


“Gone are the days when we could fully absorb for most institutions the cost of providing these services according to channel. So it is that electronic banking is still cheaper and very much so than in other means in the banking halls,” he said.


Responding to queries as to whether there was any provision in law mandating financial institutions under the BOJ’s watch to give notice to customers of the fees they are imposing, general counsel for the BOJ Robin Sykes said the issue of notification is one which is going to depend on the contractual terms.


President of the Jamaica Banker’s Association Maureen Hayden-Cater, while pointing out that the association was not involved with setting fees for the various organisations, said based on the existing code of conduct, all banks have agreed to make information on fees available on their websites, brochures in the banking halls, and through customer service representatives.


“As it relates to displays in ATMs that is a technology solution that has to be put in place, I know it’s not currently in place. If I speak on behalf of First Global, we do not own machines and so we do not have the capacity to put that information there, but other banks are looking at it,” she said.


That rationale, however, did not sit well with the Opposition’s Daryl Vaz.


“First Global’s explanation in relation to not being able to put information on fees up because they don’t own ATMs is unacceptable. For me to sit here and listen to that it’s difficult. The fact of the matter is that there is a reluctance to do so… The customer deserves to know… there can be no excuse for that,” he said.


View the original article here



Parliamentary Committee says banking fee probe not a witch-hunt

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Guyana police seeking Jamaican in probe of another Jamaican"s death

Friday, January 24, 2014 | 2:08 PM    


GEORGETOWN, Guyana (CMC) — Guyana police were searching for a 36-year-old Jamaican as they continue investigations into the death of a Jamaican woman, whose body was found in a hotel room earlier this week.


Police say they want to question Anthony Lloyd Neville Morrison in relation to the death of Beverley Anesta Gardner, whose body was found in a room of the New York Car Wash and Hotel on Wednesday.


The woman reportedly arrived in Guyana a few weeks ago and checked in at the hotel with her partner who has since disappeared. 


Jamaican passports belonging to Morrison and Gardner were found in the hotel room where her body was discovered.


The police said an autopsy would be performed on the body later Friday.


View the original article here



Guyana police seeking Jamaican in probe of another Jamaican"s death

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Italian doping probe of Jamaicans moving forward

BY AP reporter David McFadden in Kingston, Jamaica, contributed to this report.

ROME, Italy (AP) — The criminal doping investigation into former 100-metre world record-holder Asafa Powell, Jamaica teammate Sherone Simpson and their trainer has been delayed by bureaucratic problems but will go ahead.Udine prosecutor Andrea Gondolo told The Associated Press on Tuesday that his office has been unable to contact the athletes to ask whether they want to observe the testing of substances sequestered during a police raid in July on their training base in northern Italy.The athletes can observe the testing themselves or designate a lawyer to do so. They have 20 days to respond once contacted.“The problem has been finding an address to deliver the notification to see if they want to observe the tests, because some of the tests cannot be repeated,” Gondolo said. “But I think we should be able to move forward within a month.”If the athletes cannot be contacted, prosecutors could go to the Jamaica Athletics Administrative Association instead.The Canadian trainer, Christopher Xuereb, was already contacted.Milton Samuda, a Jamaican attorney who represents Powell and Simpson, did not respond to e-mails or calls seeking comment.Following the July hotel raid in Lignano Sabbiadoro, where the Jamaicans have been training for years, the athletes and Xuereb were formally placed under criminal investigation for violating Italy’s doping laws.The raid came after it was announced that Powell and Simpson had tested positive for the banned stimulant oxilofrine at the Jamaican championships in June.The athletes blamed Xuereb, their newly hired trainer, and said that new supplements he provided caused the positive tests. Xuereb responded by saying that he didn’t give the sprinters performance-enhancing drugs and suggested he was being made a scapegoat.Italy’s doping laws include sections for use, administration of banned substances and importation of banned substances.Administration and importation carry more severe sentences and therefore Xuereb risks harsher punishment, Gondolo said, adding that the athletes do not risk prison time.The confiscated substances appear to be from the United States, according to the containers they were found in, Gondolo said.Powell and Simpson also risk bans from sports authorities. They have already stopped competing and missed last month’s World Championships in Moscow.POWELL… former 100-metre world record-holderSIMPSON… tested positive for the banned stimulant oxilofrine at the Jamaican championships in June

View the original article here



Italian doping probe of Jamaicans moving forward

Friday, September 6, 2013

Gov"t to probe wage increases for 19 Puerto Rican mayors

Entertainment

Friday, August 30, 2013

PUERTO Rico’s justice secretary is investigating pay raises given to 19 mayors in the US territory amid an economic crisis.Luis Sanchez Betances said Tuesday that the municipalities being targeted have 10 days to hand over all documents related to the salary increases.He says he began the investigation following public complaints and concerns about the effect the raises could have on the island’s crumbling public pension system.Sanchez says mayors will have to repay the money they earned if justice officials find their increases to be without merit.— AP

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Gov"t to probe wage increases for 19 Puerto Rican mayors

Friday, August 9, 2013

Woman detained in Curacao politician murder probe

News

Monday, August 05, 2013

KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — Authorities in Curacao have detained a 43-year-old woman in their investigation into the May slaying of a lawmaker who led a major political party.Helmin Wiels was hit by five bullets as he socialised on a Curacao beach on May 5. Two assailants sped off in a gold-covered car after fatally shooting the leader of the leftist Sovereign People Party, a big player in Curacao’s coalition government.A brief Saturday statement by police identifies the detained suspect by her initials, MAB. Detectives also searched two homes on the island, confiscating several items.Police have not released further details.In June, police spokesman Reginald Huggins said two suspects had been identified in Wiels’ murder. One of them was Raul Jacinto Martinez, who was found decapitated on the island.

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Woman detained in Curacao politician murder probe

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Police probe fatal caravan blaze

28 July 2013 Last updated at 13:55 ET Police tent at the scene The fire broke out in a caravan parked on a driveway A police investigation has been launched after a person died following a caravan blaze in the Borders.


Firefighters were called to a property in Melrose after the fire broke out in the driveway of a house at about 22:00 on Saturday.


The caravan was completely destroyed and the body of what is believed to be a man was recovered.


Police Scotland confirmed there had been a fatality but gave no further details.


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Police probe fatal caravan blaze

Probe into Lamont injury claims

Claims by former Scotland full-back Rory Lamont that players are pressured to play through injuries is to be investigated by his home rugby union.


Lamont says treatment of concussions in particular is a ticking health time bomb waiting to explode worldwide.


But Scottish Rugby chief executive Mark Dodson expressed surprise at the suggestions by the now-retired Lamont.


“We’re right at the cutting edge of medical care and we mean to stay in that position,” said Dodson.


“We have a world-leading medical team led by Doctor James Robson, who is respected throughout the world and who’s a British Lions doctor.


“We look after our players extremely well and ensure these people are fit, looked after properly and only reintroduced to the field when they’re fit enough to do so”

Mark Dodson SRU chief executive “I’ll have a look at it and I’m sure James will.

“We look after our players extremely well and ensure these people are fit, looked after properly and only reintroduced to the field when they’re fit enough to do so.


“Moreover, we’re talking to the RIB at the moment about concussion protocols that exist and the experiment that’s taking place.”


Lamont failed to fully recover after breaking his leg against France in a 2012 Six Nations match and the 30-year-old former Glasgow Warriors full-back announced his retirement from rugby in April because of the injury.


He recalled the autumn Test against New Zealand in 2010 when he started the match nursing a hamstring injury and failed to finish the match.


“I didn’t feel that I could withdraw myself from that match,” he said.


“I was unsure if I was going to be able to make it through the game. I felt that I didn’t really have a choice if I wanted to keep on trying to be picked for Scotland and keep a good relationship with the coaches.”


Lamont said he had witnessed players cheating concussion tests in a bid to be back in action before they are safely ready.


“Unless people identify the issues and come out and actually speak about it then things aren’t going to change,” he said.


“At the moment, it’s a ticking time-bomb with the concussions. Sometimes you can be put under a huge amount of pressure, where you feel you have no other choice but to take the field, when you know there are possible consequences.”


Perthshire-born Lamont won 29 caps for Scotland after making his debut against Wales in 2005.


His first spell with Glasgow was from 2004 to 2007, when he scored 19 tries in 55 games before moving to Sale Sharks and then Toulon.


He left the French club to rejoin Glasgow in 2011 but only made six appearances in his second stint.


“I spent a whole season with a broken scaphoid when I was at Toulon and I was refused a scan on it,” added Lamont. “They just kept playing it down as something insignificant, whereas effectively I was running the risk of arthritis in later life by not having it fixed.”


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Probe into Lamont injury claims

Probe into Lamont injury claims

Claims by former Scotland full-back Rory Lamont that players are pressured to play through injuries is to be investigated by his home rugby union.


Lamont says treatment of concussions in particular is a ticking health time bomb waiting to explode worldwide.


But Scottish Rugby chief executive Mark Dodson expressed surprise at the suggestions by the now-retired Lamont.


“We’re right at the cutting edge of medical care and we mean to stay in that position,” said Dodson.


“We have a world-leading medical team led by Doctor James Robson, who is respected throughout the world and who’s a British Lions doctor.


“We look after our players extremely well and ensure these people are fit, looked after properly and only reintroduced to the field when they’re fit enough to do so”

Mark Dodson SRU chief executive “I’ll have a look at it and I’m sure James will.

“We look after our players extremely well and ensure these people are fit, looked after properly and only reintroduced to the field when they’re fit enough to do so.


“Moreover, we’re talking to the RIB at the moment about concussion protocols that exist and the experiment that’s taking place.”


Lamont failed to fully recover after breaking his leg against France in a 2012 Six Nations match and the 30-year-old former Glasgow Warriors full-back announced his retirement from rugby in April because of the injury.


He recalled the autumn Test against New Zealand in 2010 when he started the match nursing a hamstring injury and failed to finish the match.


“I didn’t feel that I could withdraw myself from that match,” he said.


“I was unsure if I was going to be able to make it through the game. I felt that I didn’t really have a choice if I wanted to keep on trying to be picked for Scotland and keep a good relationship with the coaches.”


Lamont said he had witnessed players cheating concussion tests in a bid to be back in action before they are safely ready.


“Unless people identify the issues and come out and actually speak about it then things aren’t going to change,” he said.


“At the moment, it’s a ticking time-bomb with the concussions. Sometimes you can be put under a huge amount of pressure, where you feel you have no other choice but to take the field, when you know there are possible consequences.”


Perthshire-born Lamont won 29 caps for Scotland after making his debut against Wales in 2005.


His first spell with Glasgow was from 2004 to 2007, when he scored 19 tries in 55 games before moving to Sale Sharks and then Toulon.


He left the French club to rejoin Glasgow in 2011 but only made six appearances in his second stint.


“I spent a whole season with a broken scaphoid when I was at Toulon and I was refused a scan on it,” added Lamont. “They just kept playing it down as something insignificant, whereas effectively I was running the risk of arthritis in later life by not having it fixed.”


View the original article here



Probe into Lamont injury claims

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

MVP denies Powell, Simpson under police probe

News

BY PAUL A REID Observer writer Wednesday, July 17, 2013

MONTEGO BAY, St James — President of MVP Track Club Bruce James last night described as “totally untrue” a report in the international media that two of their athletes — Asafa Powell and Sherone Simpson — were under investigations in Italy for breaches of the country’s drug codes.James said any investigations that are going on “must be secret as we have not being told anything”.Multiple reports quoted sources in Italy as saying that both athletes, along with trainer Chris Xuereb, were under investigations after police took “50 boxes of tablets, sprays and ointments, some unlabelled” from the hotel where they are staying.“At the instigation of Paul Doyle, agent for Powell, Italian police on Sunday raided the hotel where the MVP athlete were staying and detained Xuereb for questioning for about seven hours before he was released.Doyle told the Jamaica Observer on Monday that they had called in the authorities after they were notified on Friday that Powell — the former World Record holder — and Olympic silver medalist Simpson had failed drug tests at the JAAA National Championships in June.He said the positive tests raised red flags as “both Asafa and Sherone had been tested over 100 times each in their careers and have never failed a test, and soon after we hired a new trainer and he gave them new supplements, we get these results and we just wanted to make sure we checked out everything.”In an interview with the Observer from Florida, James said he was in constant contact with the MVP camp in Lignano, Italy, which categorically denied the reports.“… First of all, the athletes have not been contacted by any police or anyone official since the first contact on Sunday and they have been moving around Europe freely.”James said they had athletes all over Europe taking part at various meets and no one had attempted to restrict any of them, including Powell and Simpson who had discontinued training.Former world record holder Asafa Powell and Olympic medallist Sherone Simpson (right) have returned positive drug tests for banned substances.President of MVP Track Club Bruce James

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MVP denies Powell, Simpson under police probe