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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Iran ( Small American plane breaks down in Iran - Lands in Iranian airport ) Iran helps with repairs

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — A small American commercial plane left Iran Sunday after it was repaired following an emergency landing at an Iranian airport this month, state TV reported.
The plane was forced to land 16 days ago at the airport of the southern city of Ahvaz due to technical failure, Mahmoud Rasoulinejad, head of the state-owned Iran Airports Company, told the TV station.
Rasoulinejad said three passengers left Iran for Arab countries in the Gulf, but the plane remained under repair in the airport. He said the plane took off from Iran Sunday upon arrival of needed spare parts and completion of repairs.

It was not clear why the announcement of the plane's landing was not made earlier.
Iran is a member of the International Civil Aviation Organization, or ICAO, which requires members to come to the aid of civilian aircraft when requested.
The service was provided though Iran and U.S. are at odds over Tehran's suspect nuclear program. The West believes it might be aimed at weapons development, a charge Iran denies.
A separate report by state TV said the Falcon-900 plane had one passenger and two crew members and was flying to Rotterdam in the Netherlands from Abu Dhabi in United Arab Emirates when it encountered mechanical difficulties.
It said a French team from Abu Dhabi repaired the plane at Ahvaz airport.
Every day some 500 foreign airplanes pass through Iranian airspace, including 30 American aircraft.

Mexico ( Juarez man tries to hide 74,900 dollars under doughnut box ) Gets busted at border

Juárez man arrested at border, agents seize grocery bag full of money






Money seized at border
U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers seized $74,900 that was in a car headed to Mexico on Tuesday at the Zaragoza Bridge. The cars driver was arrested for not declaring money over $10,000 as required by federal law. (Courtesy of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection)
A Juárez man was arrested after U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents seized a bag of cash hidden under a box of doughnuts in a car headed to Mexico, officials said Friday. Gerardo Nares Frias, 33, was arrested after $69,750 were found in a brown grocery bag, CBP officials said. Another $5,150 allegedly was found in Frias's pant's pocket and wallet. CBP officers seized the money and the car that Frias was driving because Frias allegedly did not declare the money. The seizure was made Tuesday by CBP officers checking Mexico-bound traffic at the Zaragoza Bridge. The seizure was part of more than $150,000 seized by CBP in four cases this week at the El Paso border. Drug proceeds are regularly shipped to Mexico is large
Reporter
Daniel Borunda
quantities of cash. Federal law requires that travelers make a declaration when transporting more than $10,000 out of the country.

Iran ( 4 more prisoners hanged yesterday 12-29 ) 3 rapists and 1 drug dealer -Hard liners

Four prisoners were hanged in central Iran today- 11 executions since the Christmas Eve
Saturday 29 December 2012
[English] [فارسى]


Iran Human Rights, December 29: Four prisoners were hanged in the prison of Yazd (Central Iran) early this morning Saturday December 29.
According to the state run Iranian news agency Fars, three prisoners identified as "A.B.", "R.D." and "N.B." were convicted of rape in two different cases. The fourth prisoner identified as "M. A. A." was convicted of possession and trafficking of 980 grams of heroin and 38750 grams of opium. The executions were carried out early this morning in the central prison of Yazd.
Since the Christmas Eve (5 days ago) 11 people have been executed in Iran

NRA -Tucson police ( NRA Wants more Guns on the streets of Tucson to Kill people ) Mind your own business




2012-12-29T00:00:00Z2012-12-28T23:01:46ZNRA may fight gun buyback in TucsonDarren DaRonco Arizona Daily StarArizona Daily Star
December 29, 2012 12:00 am
A proposed gun buyback program in Tucson could place the city in a legal fight with the National Rifle Association.
Councilman Steve Kozachik is trying to raise $5,000 so Tucsonans may have a hassle-free way to dispose of unwanted firearms while making a little money in the process.
"With the success other cities have had with voluntary gun buybacks, I want to test the water to see how Tucson residents respond," Kozachik said. "The rules are simple: Bring in your gun on a totally voluntary basis, no questions asked, and you'll trade it for a Safeway $50 gift card."
Safeway has already agreed to donate $1,000, and Kozachik said he raised the other $4,000 from various private donors to purchase 100 firearms. Kozachik will work with the Tucson Police Department so the guns will be disposed of properly.

Mind your own business NRA (They want more guns in the wild wild west ) !

It's a good way to take guns nobody wants anymore out of circulation, he says.
However, an NRA lobbyist said Arizona law renders any gun buyback meaningless since the Police Department would be required to return or resell them.
Todd Rathner, a member of the NRA's national board of directors, said the law was changed earlier this year because police departments were destroying firearms.
Sen. Rick Murphy, R-Glendale, last session sponsored an amendment to an Arizona statute that deals with how government entities sell property. The amendment said if the property being sold is a firearm, a court shall order it to be sold to any authorized business.
During a Judiciary Committee hearing, Murphy said he was trying to plug loopholes in the original 2010 law, which required cities to sell off weapons they seized. There was no discussion at all during the hearing about gun buyback programs, not from Murphy nor from John Wentling, lobbyist for the Arizona Citizens Defense League, which advocated for the change.
Rathner said the change means police departments can't destroy guns.
"The police would have to take the guns and run them through the national database. If they are stolen, they are returned to the owner," said. "If they are not stolen, (TPD) is mandated by state law to sell them to the public."
TPD runs checks on every gun it receives to ensure they aren't stolen or have been used to commit a crime, spokeswoman Sgt. Maria Hawke said. TPD holds several "destruction boards" throughout the year to dispose of things such as illicit drugs and guns. She said the same process would hold true for guns purchased through a buyback.
Hawke said TPD was researching to determine how this statute applies to TPD's practices regarding the disposal of firearms.
Any attempt to destroy a firearm would elicit a severe response from the NRA, Rathner said.
"If they destroy them, they will be in violation of state law," he said. "If they are in violation of state law, we will see them in a courtroom or we will change the law and have them sanctioned financially."
Rathner said the means the NRA chooses will depend on which one is most expeditious.
"If we can pass legislation faster, we'll pass a law that says we'll charge the city of Tucson and the Police Department some exorbitant amount of money for every firearm they destroy," he said. "We'll pursue it either through litigation or legislation."
City Attorney Mike Rankin said he believes the law would not apply to guns voluntarily surrended by their owners. The law is intended for guns that are seized by police.
Kozachik said he is confident Tucson police will abide by the law and dispose of the weapons properly, and doesn't understand why the NRA would oppose a voluntary program like the one he's proposing.
"This is geared to people who may have been given a weapon and have never felt comfortable having it around, or people who aren't trained in the safe use of the guns they own and simply want to get them out of their homes," Kozachik said.
"All of the gun-rights groups should absolutely embrace this idea. The NRA, Gun Owners of America and the others all say that only people who are trained and comfortable with weapons should own and use them," Kozachik said. "This program is intended to give people who don't fit that description a way to properly dispose of their weapons."
Once the money is collected, Kozachik said, he will work out with TPD the specific location for the event.
In a perfect scenario, Kozachik would like to hold the buyback around Jan. 8, to honor the anniversary of the 2011 mass shooting in Tucson.
If the program proves successful, Kozachik hopes another entity will continue the program.
"I am just trying to do a small one. … If it goes well, and the residents demonstrate that there's more of a demand for a program such as this, a nonprofit can pick up the mantle and do a bigger and better one later on," Kozachik said.
Ken Rineer, president of Gun Owners of Arizona, said he has reservations over losing guns committed during a crime, people unwittingly selling antique firearms and the legal issues regarding who is a licensed gun dealer when large numbers of weapons are purchased.
"I don't know if these issues can be laid to rest if they follow the no-question policy," Rineer said.
He said buybacks work well as symbolism or as a vehicle to pander for votes, but they have minor impacts in the real world.
"They're nice. They make people feel good. It makes council member Kozachik feel like he's doing something," Rineer said.
If Kozachik wants to get reelected he needs to remember that Arizonans of all political stripes support gun rights, Rineer said.
"I understand Kozachik is using this for political grandstanding for his election next year," Rineer said. "But council member Kozachik should know that even Democrats like guns in this city."
On StarNet: Read more about local and state government and political news at azstarnet.com/ news/local/govt-and-politics

LAPD (Gun buy back program - 2 Rocket launchers turned in ) See photo

2 Rocket Launchers Turned In During LAPD Gun Buyback (PHOTOS)

Categories: WTF
 
beck rocket launcher ted soqui.JPG
Ted Soqui for LA Weekly
LAPD Chief Charlie Beck and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
Yesterday's LAPD gun buyback was so successful that two-hour waits and gift-card shortages were reported.
The department says it picked up 75 assault weapons as part of its no-questions-asked effort that saw $100 dollar cards handed out for handguns and long guns and $200 for the kind of rifle used in the Newtown tragedy. The LAPD says 901 handguns, 698 rifles, 363 shotguns will also be destroyed.
Good stats. But this is the one that gut us saying WTF:

Cops picked up two -- count 'em two -- rocket launchers (!) (and not one, as other outlets are reporting), an LAPD official with close knowledge of the program told us. Holy hell why do people on our streets have military grade rocket launchers?

Saturday, December 29, 2012

PAKISTAN ( 21 policemen found dead- kidnapped by the Taliban )

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — Twenty-one tribal policemen believed to have been kidnapped by the Taliban were found shot dead in Pakistan's troubled northwest tribal region early Sunday, government officials said.
Officials found the bodies shortly after midnight in the Jabai area of Frontier Region Peshawar after being notified by one policeman who escaped, said Naveed Akbar Khan, a top political official in the area. Another policeman was found seriously wounded, said Khan.
The 23 policemen went missing before dawn Thursday when militants armed with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons attacked two posts in Frontier Region Peshawar. Two policemen were also killed in the attacks.
Mother finds out son is dead
 
Militants lined the policemen up on a cricket pitch late Saturday night and gunned them down, said another local official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but suspicion fell on the Pakistani Taliban, who have been waging a bloody insurgency against the government for the past few years. The tribal region is the main sanctuary for the Taliban in Pakistan.
On Saturday, an explosion ripped through a passenger bus at a terminal in the southern city of Karachi, killing six people and wounding 52 others, some of whom were in critical condition, said Seemi Jamali, a doctor at the hospital where the victims were being treated.
Police were trying to determine whether the blast, which reduced the bus to a charred skeleton, was caused by a bomb or a gas canister that exploded, said police spokesman Imran Shaukat. Many buses in Pakistan run on natural gas.
Karachi has a long history of political, ethnic and sectarian violence. It is also believed to be home to many Taliban militants who have fled U.S. drone attacks and Pakistani army operations in the country's northwest.

EL PASO ( Homeless man died of cold weather- Two teenage girls start coat drive for homeless

Homeless man's death inspires teenage sisters to start coat drive




With temperatures expected to drop over the next few days, two sisters are attempting to keep the less fortunate of El Paso warm this season through their SisterHoodies Coat Drive.
Eastwood High School senior Ariana Martell, 17, and freshman Diana Martell, 14, are donating more than 200 coats and jackets to the Rescue Mission of El Paso and the Reynolds Home for Homeless Women and Children.
Friday, the sisters distributed 245 coats, sweaters and hooded sweatshirts to homeless men, women and children at the shelters.
"This is the first year they have been involved with the Reynolds Home," said Dorothy Truax, director at the shelter. "And we appreciate what they are doing. The coats were not only given out to the
Reporter
Alex Hinojosa
families here at the shelters but others who recently left and are in need."
The Martell sisters said they started the coat drive in 2011 after hearing about a homeless man who died of hypothermia.
"About a year ago, there was a homeless man that died behind the Bowl El Paso bowling alley," Ariana said. "And after speaking with the homeless man that used to be his friend, we found out that he died of hypothermia."
In November 2011, a 49-year-old homeless man was found dead behind Bowl El Paso on the East Side.
According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, hypothermia is caused by staying in cold temperatures for long periods. The condition is defined by low body temperatures that can result in confusion, memory loss, slurred speech, drowsiness, exhaustion, shivering and death.
In an effort to prevent another hypothermia-related death, Ariana and Diana began distributing fliers around the Vista Hills Country Club neighborhood and asking their parents' co-workers to donate coats. The sisters received more than 100 coats, sweaters and hooded sweatshirts.

"We felt pretty bad after hearing about the man that died from hypothermia," Diana said. "So we wanted to do something that could prevent something like that from happening again."

This year, the Martell sisters decided to expand their outreach and asked the Eastwood National Honor Society to assist with the coat drive.

It resulted in an increased donation of coats.
The sisters said they hope the coat drive will continue to grow, and they have plans to expand it.

Ariana said she plans to continue the coat drive while she attends Texas Tech University in Lubbock.

Diana said she will continue to spread the word about the coat drive while she's at Eastwood High and wants to encourage others to participate.

"During the winter it gets a lot colder and the coats will keep those in need really warm," Diana said.

"And I think that aside from being able to keep warm, they'll feel a little more loved because someone is thinking about them. I think it will lighten up their lives a little more."

Alex Hinojosa may be reached at ahinojosa@elpasotimes.com; 546-6137.

How to help
  • For more information or to donate coats to the SisterHoodies coat drive, email Diana and Ariana Martell at sisterhoodies.info@gmail.com.
  • Donations can be made year-round.