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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Thursday, October 11, 2012

COLORADO (Police still work to ID Dismembered body) Missing Girl


WESTMINSTER, Colo. (Reuters) - The search for a 10-year-old Colorado girl who authorities believe was abducted on her way to school has led to the discovery of a dismembered body at a park several miles from where the fifth-grader vanished, police said on Thursday.
But Westminster Police Inspector Trevor Materasso said authorities have not confirmed if the body is that of Jessica Ridgeway, who went missing on her way to school six days ago.
"The process is complicated because the body is not intact," Materasso said, declining to elaborate. He said authorities may release the identity of the body on Friday.
Jessica Ridgeway vanished last Friday after leaving for school in the Denver suburb of Westminster.
Her mother, Sarah Ridgeway, said she last saw her daughter when the girl left home for the short walk to school.
A night-shift worker, Sarah Ridgeway said she sleeps during the day and did not hear the phone call from the school notifying her that Jessica was absent, so it was several hours before she was reported missing.

BORDER Patrol (Kill man Nogales FENCE Line) Group Throwing Rocks

An agent opened fire on a group of people throwing rocks across the fence with Mexico in Nogales, Ariz., killing one of them, El Imparcial newspaper reported.
Agents had reports of two suspected narcotics smugglers near the border at about 11:30 p.m. Wednesday, the Border Patrol said in a news release. The agents watched the two abandon a load of narcotics and run back to Mexico.

People on the south side of the border fence then began throwing rocks at the agents and ignored orders to stop, the release said. One agent opened fire and it appeared he struck one of the people, news release said.
Bullets struck five spots on the outside of an office where medical exams are performed, El Imparcial reported.
The Border Patrol has not confirmed the victim was fatally shot, but it has been reported by news outlets in Sonora.

PAKISTAN (A Rebellion has Started ) OVER Shooting of 14 yr old GIRL

After being shot in the head and neck by Taliban gunmen on Tuesday, 14-year-old Pakistani blogger Malala Yousufzai is in critical condition today and will be transferred to a better equipped hospital. "Doctors have decided to shift Malala to the Combined Military Hospital (CMH) in Rawalpindi

where medical facilities are better," one doctor told the BBC, while another doctor, Mumtaz Khan, told the AFP Malala had a 70 percent chance of survival. Lt. Col. Junaid Khan, head of neurosurgery at the Peshawar hospital where Yousufzai was first treated, said she's in "critical" condition and is

suffering from severe edema—swelling in the body that's due to accumulation of fluid, report CNN's Nasir Habib and Reza Sayah. "Doctors say she needs 48-hours' rest," her uncle was quoted as saying in that CNN report.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

A Break (Music for Mexico) Una Palabra - Carlos Varela

A word does not say anything
And at the same time it hides everything

U.S Anti Doping Agency (11 Former teammates give details about Drugs) Lance Armstrong

Lance Armstrong challenged the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency to name names and show what it had on him.
On Wednesday, it did.
The anti-doping group released a report on its case against Armstrong — a point-by-point roadmap of the lengths it says Armstrong went to in winning seven Tour de France titles USADA has ordered taken away.

In more than 150 pages filled with allegations, USADA names 11 former teammates — George Hincapie, Tyler Hamilton and Floyd Landis among them — as key witnesses.
It details the way those men and others say drugs were delivered and administered to Armstrong's teams. It discusses Armstrong's continuing relationship with and payments to a doctor, Michele Ferrari, years after Ferrari has been sanctioned in Italy and Armstrong claimed to have broken ties with him.
It presents as matter-of-fact reality that winning and doping went hand in hand in cycling and that Armstrong's teams were the best at getting it done without getting caught. He won the Tour as leader of the U.S. Postal Service team from 1999-2004 and again in 2005 with the Discovery Channel as the primary sponsor.

Navajo NATION ( 4 murdered in 12 hour period) Police ask for help

Four people were found murdered in the Kayenta area in one 12-hour period that started on Thursday night and stretched into Friday.
The four victims were killed in three separate and unrelated incidents, according to information from the FBI.
“To have four murders in one district in 12 hours would probably be unusual in New York City, so to have that many murders in the Kayenta District is unusual,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge MacDonald Rominger.
The small community on the Navajo Nation is about 25 miles south of Monument Valley and has a population of around 5,200.
The first homicide was reported on Thursday night in Kayenta, with one victim reported dead at the scene and another transported to the Flagstaff Medical Center for treatment. The second two homicide reports came in almost simultaneously on Friday, according to FBI officials.

Two people were killed in an apparent double-homicide at Inscription House and the other suspected homicide was reported at Black Mesa.
All of the murders were within the Kayenta District. FBI officials say they are now working with the Kayenta Police Department and the Kayenta Department of Criminal Investigations to track down leads.
“We have no one in custody in any one of the three homicide cases, but we’re tracking down all logical leads at the present time and were awaiting some further information from the medical examiner’s office,” said Rominger.
Eric Betz can be reached at 556-2250 or ebetz@azdailysun.com.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

PAKISTAN ( 14 yr old GIRL more COURAGE then most ADULTS) Malala Yousufzai

Taliban Say They Shot 14-Year-Old Pakistani Girl Who Exposed Their Cruelty

by Mark Memmott, National Public Radio
October 9, 2012


"Shooting attacks happen every day in Pakistan," as NPR's Philip Reeves reports from Islamabad.
But the shooting of a 14-year-old girl who became nationally known after she documented the Taliban's cruelty in Pakistan's Swat Valley has caused particular shock in that country, he tells our Newscast Desk.
The Pakistani Taliban are claiming their fighters carried out today's attack. According to Philip, "officials say Malala Yousufzai was outside her school when a gunman approached, and opened fire, injuring her and at least one other child."

Pakistan's Dawn newspaper says it has been told by a spokesman for the Taliban that the girl was targeted for spreading "anti-Taliban and 'secular' thoughts among the youth of the area." Malala, Dawn says, was "hit by couple of bullets to her neck and head." While hospitalized, she is said to be "out of danger." She may, though, need to be sent overseas for treatment.
The Taliban reportedly say they'll target her again.

As Philip reminds us, "Malala is a national figure. She lives in Swat Valley and was there several years ago when the Taliban took control and began burning down girls' schools. The Pakistani army rolled in, in 2009, to retake the area. Malala wrote an anonymous diary, broadcast on the BBC, about life under the Taliban. She advocated education for girls, and defied the militants' ban on this by secretly going to school with her books hidden in her clothes. Her bravery was recognized last year when she was nominated for the International Children's Peace Prize."