Showing posts with label victims. Show all posts
Showing posts with label victims. Show all posts

Thursday, January 22, 2015

UPDATE: Remains of plane crash victims Larry and Jane Glazer recovered

Wednesday, January 21, 2015 | 1:43 PM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica – Jamaica Civil Aviation Authority (JCAA) and the Maritime Authority of Jamaica (MAJ) have reported that wreckage from the small air craft that crashed in Jamaican waters on September 5, 2014 has been found.

The private aircraft, with US businessman Larry Glazer and his wife Jane aboard, left Rochester, New York, destined for Florida, but missed the southernmost US state, entered Cuban airspace, then the Jamaican airspace.

It is believed that the aircraft ran out of fuel some 14 miles north-east of Port Antonio, Portland, where it crashed.

A search of the area was immediately conducted by the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) Coast Guard, JDF Air Wing and US Coast Guard. However, after two days, the search was abandoned, based on the assessment that there was a minimal probability for a successful rescue and/or recovery operation, under the existing conditions.

The Glazer family subsequently retained the services of a recovery organisation to salvage the aircraft and find the remains of the couple, the joint release said.

Debris along with human remains were recovered from the site and is reportedly now enroute to the USA, “where the various authorities will observe the necessary post-incident protocols consistent with the national requirements of the USA”.

 The operation commenced on Tuesday, January 13 and was terminated on Monday, January 19.

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UPDATE: Remains of plane crash victims Larry and Jane Glazer recovered

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Parliament postponed as St Vincent mourn victims of bus accident

Tuesday, January 13, 2015 | 11:44 AM    

KINGSTOWN, St Vincent (CMC) – The St Vincent and the Grenadines parliament has been postponed for a second consecutive day as the island comes to grip with the tragic accident on Monday that claimed the lives of five people.

A brief statement from the Office of the Prime Minister acknowledged that the postponement is as “a result of the tragedy in the Fancy area” and that Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves, who was due to deliver the national budget, will provide a date for the parliamentary session later on Tuesday.

The Ministry of Health said it could verify that five people were killed as a result of the incident in which the minibus plunged into the sea at Rock Gutter, a community between Owia and Fancy in north-eastern St Vincent on Monday.

Teams Tuesday resumed their search for two people reported missing and Communications officer in the Ministry of Health, Wellness and the Environment, Neeka Anderson-Isaacs, confirmed that 10 people had been hospitalised at the Milton Cato Memorial Hospital (MCMH) while four others are at the hospital in Georgetown.

St Lucia Prime Minister Dr Kenny Anthony in a statement Tuesday extended condolences and sympathy to the people of St Vincent and the Grenadines and recalled that just over three years ago, St Lucia suffered a similar tragedy.

Anthony said while he understands “this must be a very difficult time for the people in St Vincent and the Grenadines…a loss of this nature touches all of us throughout the region, and draws us closer together as a people.”

He said it is never easy to deal with an accident of this magnitude and that the pain and sorrow are magnified when children are involved.

“I call on my fellow St Lucians to spare a thought and say a prayer for those families, who must be in such turmoil right now.

“Our children are of paramount importance, and I take this opportunity to add my voice, my thoughts and prayers for the schools, the communities and the homes that have been impacted by the terrible accident that took place on Monday morning,” Anthony said.

Meanwhile, Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretary General Irwin La Rocque said the accident has “deeply saddened” CARICOM and “in this trying time of such grave loss, the Community stands with St Vincent and the Grenadines”.

La Rocque said “the Community’s grief is heightened by the fact that many among the deceased were school children”.

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Parliament postponed as St Vincent mourn victims of bus accident

Friday, December 19, 2014

BILL COSBY FINALLY RESPONDS TO TEEN VICTIM’S LAWSUIT

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A woman suing Bill Cosby for sexual battery attempted to sell a story about the comedian to a tabloid a decade ago and tried to extort money in exchange for her silence, Cosby’s attorney said in a court filing Thursday.

Attorney Martin Singer wrote in the filing that the lawsuit by Judy Huth and her attorney followed a failed attempt to extort $250,000 from Cosby. In the filing, Cosby seeks more than $33,000 from Huth and her attorney.

The filing comes two days after Huth sued, claiming the comedian forced her to perform a sex act in 1974 when she was 15. The incident occurred in a bedroom of the Playboy Mansion after Cosby gave Huth and a 16-year-old friend alcohol, according to her lawsuit.

“(Huth’s) claims are absolutely false,” Cosby’s filing states.

The filings state that Singer and Huth’s attorney, Marc S. Strecker, had several conversations about the allegations in the weeks before the lawsuit was filed. Strecker first demanded $100,000, then raised the demand to $250,000 in order to keep from filing a lawsuit on Huth’s behalf, Singer wrote.

Strecker did not return phone messages seeking comment Thursday. “Your demand for money from Mr. Cosby is rejected,” Singer wrote in a Dec. 1 letter to Strecker.

Her lawsuit stated she only recently discovered that she had suffered psychological damage as a result of the incident, which under California law would allow filing of the case.

Cosby’s response, however, notes that Huth unsuccessfully tried to sell her story a decade ago and that her lawsuit was not accompanied by a certification from a psychologist that the trauma was newly discovered. The certification is required for the case to proceed under rules that extend the statute of limitations, Cosby’s filing states.

Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck also said Thursday that the department would investigate any reports of abuse against Cosby, even if they were outside the statute of limitations for prosecution. Beck said the department has no investigations into the comedian.

“We don’t turn people away because things are out of statute. You come to us, especially with a sexual allegation, we will work with you,” Beck said, according the Los Angeles Times. “We address these things seriously– and it’s not just because it’s Mr. Cosby.”

In recent weeks, more than a dozen women have alleged that Cosby drugged them and sexually assaulted them. Cosby was sued by a Pennsylvania woman, Andrea Constand, in 2005 and that lawsuit was settled before it went to trial. Cosby has never been charged in connection with either Constand’s suit or any of the recent allegations and Singer has denied some of the recent allegations, while another Cosby attorney called others “discredited.”

Since the allegations arose in early November, Cosby’s career has suffered. NBC canceled a comedy in development, Netflix postponed a special and performances have been canceled in at least nine cities in his current tour of the U.S. and Canada. Additionally, he resigned from the Temple University board of trustees this week and other colleges have pulled away from their associations with the comedian. On Thursday, the U.S. Navy revoked Cosby’s title of honorary chief petty officer, saying allegations of sexual abuse made against the comedian are serious and conflict with the Navy’s core values.

What do you think will happen with her lawsuit?

: BILLBOARD

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BILL COSBY FINALLY RESPONDS TO TEEN VICTIM’S LAWSUIT

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Brazil killer alleges 42 victims

11 December 2014 Last updated at 19:11 Ben Bland reports on the arrest of Sailson Jose das Gracas

Brazilian police have arrested a man who has confessed to the killing of 42 people over the last decade in the city of Rio de Janeiro.

Police say they arrested Sailson Jose das Gracas on Wednesday, shortly after he stabbed a woman to death in a city suburb.

He then confessed to killing another 37 women, three men and a two-year-old girl.

The police are searching for alleged victims and say they have found four.

In a police interview broadcast on Brazil’s TV Globo, the man said he would go out hunting, and he killed for the adrenaline.

He told police that if he was ever released from prison he would kill again.

‘Watched for months’

He said he preferred victims who were white females, whom he strangled.

His three male victims had been killed when he was operating for hire, he added.

Das Gracas said: ” I would wait for an opportunity to break into the house and kill,” adding that he would watch his victims for months before making his move.

Experts said Das Gracas appeared to be a psychopath who enjoyed the media spotlight and warned that what he said needed to be carefully checked.

Police said they had begun cross-referencing his confession with police reports and had already found four of his victims.

In October a security guard in the Brazilian city of Goiania confessed to killing 39 people.

Sailson Jose das Gracas, self-confessed serial killer, Rio de Janeiro police Dec 2014 Sailson Jose das Gracas, 26 said he began a life of crime at the age of 15 and killed his first victim at 17

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Brazil killer alleges 42 victims

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Terrified victims of Thai trafficking face uncertain future

18 October 2014 Last updated at 12:34 Jonathan Head By Jonathan Head BBC South East Asia Correspondent The trafficked men survived for 10 days eating leaves

For at least five years, the Andaman coast of Thailand has been the scene of some horrific abuses, mainly against ethnic Rohingyas, a Muslim minority group fleeing persecution in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

In 2009, the Thai Navy was found to be towing boats packed with Rohingyas out to sea, and leaving them to drift. Hundreds are believed to have died.

More recently Thai police and military personnel have been accused of selling Rohingyas who washed up on Thailand’s shores to human traffickers.

These abuses are in part what caused Thailand to be downgraded to the lowest rank in the annual US report on human trafficking.

Successive Thai governments have promised to stamp out this scourge.

But the recent discovery of 171 mainly Bangladeshi men being held captive in jungle camps shows how much still needs to be done.

What started as opportunistic exploitation of Rohingyas appears to have mutated into an organised slave trade.

Repeated beatings

Eighty-one of the men are now being sheltered in a local government hall in the town of Takua Pa. They sit there listlessly, some nursing ugly wounds inflicted by their captors.

At times, tears slide down their faces as they recall their ordeal, and think of homes and families in Bangladesh. They all tell very similar stories.

Absar Mia, a Bangladeshi human trafficking victim on October 2014 Absar Mia (C) hopes to return to his family in Bangladesh after his rescue from traffickers Ayub, a Bangladeshi human trafficking victim on October 2014 Ayub, another Bangladeshi trafficking victim, was threatened with death by his captors

Eighteen year-old Abdurrahim still hobbles from a savage blow to his knee inflicted by one of his guards after he asked for more food.

Originally from Bogra, in northern Bangladesh, he told me he was trying to find work in the capital Dacca when an elderly man offered him a job paying around $6 (£3.73) a day.

He travelled with this man to Cox’s Bazaar, he said, and was taken to a small house up in the hills. There he was tied up, drugged, and woke up on board a boat. He spent seven or eight days at sea, he says, where he was repeatedly beaten.

After that, the group was unloaded on the Thai coast, and taken to a camp hidden in a mangrove forest. They gave us no food, he said. “We survived by eating leaves.”

Absar Mia is 27, from Teknaf, close to the border with Myanmar. He is married with three young children. “My heart is burning for home,” he said.

“All I think about is how I can get home, how I can see my mother again, how I can see my little boys and girl again. That’s why I’m crying.”

He described being offered a job by a man, and waiting for him on a hill near Teknaf. Suddenly he was grabbed, his hands tied, his mouth gagged. He said he struggled as he was taken out to a boat, and was beaten.

Ayub was working as an agricultural labourer in Chittagong, southeast Bangladesh, but he said the work ran out. A man suggested he go to Cox’s Bazaar. There he suddenly found himself being grabbed, tied up and forced onto a boat which he said was already crowded with people.

He repeatedly asked where they were taking him, but said the guards threatened to kill him if he did not shut up. He, too, has three children.

Tracked down

That they were rescued from their captors is due to the determination of local district chief, Manit Pianthiong. A 28-year veteran of the area, who got the chief’s job nine months ago, he is all too familiar with the human trafficking which goes on along the indented coastline of Takua Pa.

Manit Pianthiong, local district chief in Takua Pa on October 2014 Manit Pianthiong, Takua Pa’s local district chief, is determined to end trafficking

Mr Pianthiong says he is trying to curb all forms of smuggling, but he is focusing in particular on the human trade, which he says is damaging the image of the entire country.

He encourages people in fishing communities along the coast to alert him to any signs of large groups of people being held. That is how he heard about these three groups of mainly Bangladeshi men, and a few Rohingyas.

The first group of 37 was found last month. Then, on 11 October, his men tracked down another group of 53.

The last group, of 81, was surrounded in a forest camp near the road on 13 October. They had been driven by their guards from one camp to another in an attempt to evade the authorities. Mr Pianthiong believes many more were not rescued, and may have been sold.

Two of the guards have now been detained. One of them was identified by the Bangladeshis as the most brutal of their captors, a man they called Keke.

Whether this man, and his bosses, are brought to justice, depends on the government in Bangkok.

Illegal immigrants

Mr Pianthiong said he wants to go after the trafficking kingpins in the region, people with powerful connections. But that would require him to get much stronger backing, and so far that is not happening.

A human traffickers camp in Takua Pa, Thailand on October 2014 All that remains of the traffickers’ camp, the gang leaders remain at large

Senior figures in the police and the social welfare ministry are resisting his efforts to have all the Bangladeshi men classified as victims of trafficking.

The second group of 53 has already been given that status, which gives them proper support and shelter, and would allow them to go back to Bangladesh quickly.

However, the police are talking about reversing that decision. Instead, they want then to be jailed as illegal immigrants.

It is difficult to know why they want this outcome, for people who have all the appearance of victims.

Perhaps it is to avoid having to admit that trafficking continues in Thailand. Perhaps it is because they are reluctant to go after the trafficking kingpins.

The result, though, could be disastrous for the Bangladeshis. People have been known to be stuck in Thai immigration prisons for many years. In the case of Rohingyas, some were actually sold back to human traffickers.

How Thailand handles the case of these men will surely be a test of its declared willingness to turn its back on a shameful record of trafficking, and take meaningful action to end the trade in people.


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Terrified victims of Thai trafficking face uncertain future

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Voice note warns of perfume rapist - Rape victim"s tale circulates

Unscrupulous persons have developed yet another scheme to harm the nation’s women.

THE WEEKEND STAR understands that a voice note that is currently being circulated online, details the horrific experience of a young woman who was reportedly rendered unconscious by perfume laced with a noxious chemical and molested.

In the almost two-minute voice clip, an unidentified man recounted an incident where a young girl who was reportedly missing, was allegedly found in an abandoned shop in downtown Kingston, naked, appeared to be sexually assaulted with her personal items also missing.

He also stated that when the girl was revived, she allegedly told the police that “someone gave her cologne to smell and she passed out.”

implore listeners

The man went on to implore listeners to be wary of their surroundings and use caution while going shopping.

THE WEEKEND STAR made checks with senior ranked police officers in the downtown area and they were unable to confirm the incident.

Checks were also made with the Centre for the Investigations of Sexual Offences and Child Abuse and head of the division, Veronica Gilzean, told THE WEEKEND STAR “I wont be able to confirm or deny it.”


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Voice note warns of perfume rapist - Rape victim"s tale circulates

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

22 St Mary Hurricane Sandy victims receive houses

KINGSTON, Jamaica (JIS) –Twenty-two families in Crooked River, St Mary, who were displaced following the passage of Hurricane Sandy in 2012 have been provided with new homes.

Family members were presented with keys to the 22 new houses as well as letters of possession for the units, during a ceremony at the Annotto Bay High School in St Mary on August 23.The 300 square feet, two bedroom houses, were provided through a partnership initiative involving Food for the Poor (FFP), which targeted people in the parish deemed worst affected by the hurricane.Junior Minister with responsibility for Housing, Dr Morais Guy, who spoke at the ceremony, said the units have been presented as “grants” to the beneficiaries. The dwellings, he outlined, comprise a living room, kitchen, and bathroom; a solar panel to provide power; a water tank; a sewage disposal treatment system; and a lot that allows for future expansion. The occupants have also been provided with the first full tank of water courtesy of the Ministry’s Rapid Response Unit. Dr Guy explained that while the lots will be subject to lease arrangements “over a time, and after that, you will have the option to purchase (them).” The Minister advised that allocation of the houses is in addition to grants awarded to the beneficiaries to repairs the houses they previously occupied, that sustained partially damage.Dr Guy said presentation of the houses represents a “major milestone” and prospects for a brighter and more prosperous future for the recipients.“We are cognizant that lives can be transformed through initiatives such as this one; and it is for that reason, among others, that we did not hesitate to get the project off the ground,” he said.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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22 St Mary Hurricane Sandy victims receive houses

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Inca child sacrifice victims drugged

29 July 2013 Last updated at 19:46 ET By Rebecca Morelle Science reporter, BBC World Service Johan Reinhard Tests on the 13-year-old’s hair revealed she was given large amounts of alcohol Tests on three mummies found in Argentina have shed new light on the Inca practice of child sacrifice.


Scientists have revealed that drugs and alcohol played a key part in the months and weeks leading up to the children’s deaths.


Tests on one of the children, a teenage girl, suggest that she was heavily sedated just before her demise.


The study is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


Dr Emma Brown, from the department of archaeological sciences at the University of Bradford, said: “The Spanish chroniclers suggest that children were sacrificed for all kinds of reasons: important life milestones in the lives of the Incas, in times of war or natural disasters, but there was a calendar of rituals too.”


Frozen in time


The mummified remains were discovered in 1999, entombed in a shrine near the summit of the 6,739m-high Llullaillaco volcano in Argentina.

Three children were buried there: a 13-year-old girl, and a younger boy and girl, thought to be about four or five years old.

Their remains date to about 500 years ago, during the time of the Inca empire, which dominated South America until the Europeans arrived at the end of the 15th Century.


“The preservation is phenomenal – they’ve been called the best preserved mummies in the world,” explained Dr Brown.


“These three children look like they are asleep.”


The international team of researchers used forensic tests to analyse the chemicals found in the children’s hair.


They discovered that all three had consumed alcohol and coca leaves (from which cocaine is extracted) in the final months of their lives.


Historical records reveal that these substances were reserved for the elite and often used in Incan rituals.


Death from exposure


An analysis of the teenage girl’s hair, which was longer than the hair of the younger victims, revealed more.


The girl, known as the “Llullaillaco maiden”, was probably considered more highly valued than the younger children, because of her virginal status.

Continue reading the main story
With the combination of being placed in the grave with the alcohol and the cold… she would have passed away quietly”
End Quote Dr Emma Brown University of Bradford Tests on her long braids revealed that her coca consumption increased sharply a year before her death.

The scientists believe this corresponds to the time she was selected for sacrifice. Earlier research also reveals that her diet changed at this point too, from a potato-based peasant diet to one rich in meat and maize.


Dr Brown explained: “From what we know of the Spanish chronicles, particularly attractive or gifted women were chosen. The Incas actually had someone who went out to find these young women and they were taken from their families.”


The results also revealed that the girl ingested large amounts of alcohol in the last few weeks of her life.


It suggests she was heavily sedated before she and the other children were taken to the volcano, placed in their tombs and left to die.


“In the case of the maiden, there is no sign of violence. She is incredibly well looked after: she has a good layer of fat, she has beautifully groomed hair, beautiful clothes,” said Dr Brown.


“In this case we think with the combination of being placed in the grave with the alcohol and the cold – the mountain is over 6,000m above sea level – she would have passed away quietly.”


The mummies are now housed in the Museum of High Altitude Archaeology in Salta, Argentina.


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Inca child sacrifice victims drugged