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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Sunday, January 13, 2013

India ( Another Gang Rape - 6 men arrested for the rape of woman on bus ) New Delhi

 
NEW DELHI (AP) — Police said Sunday they have arrested six suspects in another gang rape of a bus passenger in India, four weeks after a brutal attack on a student on a moving bus in the capital outraged Indians and led to calls for tougher rape laws.
Police officer Raj Jeet Singh said a 29-year-old woman was the only passenger on a bus as she was traveling to her village in northern Punjab state on Friday night. The driver refused to stop at her village despite her repeated pleas and drove her to a desolate location, he said.
There, the driver and the conductor took her to a building where they were joined by five friends and took turns raping her throughout the night, Singh said.
The driver dropped the woman off at her village early Saturday, he said.
Singh said police arrested six suspects on Saturday and were searching for another.
Gurmej Singh, deputy superintendent of police, said all six admitted involvement in the rape. He said the victim was recovering at home.
Also on Saturday, police arrested a 32-year-old man for allegedly raping and killing a 9-year-old girl two weeks ago in Ahmednagar district in western India, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. Her decomposed body was found Friday.
Police officer Sunita Thakare said the suspect committed the crime seven months after his release from prison after serving nine years for raping and murdering a girl in 2003, PTI reported Sunday.
The deadly rape of a 23-year-old student on a New Delhi bus in December led to the woman's death and set off an impassioned debate about what India needs to do to prevent such tragedies. Protesters and politicians have called for tougher rape laws, police reforms and a transformation in the way the country treats women.
"It's a very deep malaise. This aspect of gender justice hasn't been dealt with in our nation-building task," Seema Mustafa, a writer on social issues who heads the Center for Policy Analysis think tank, said Sunday.

An India woman lights candles in Gauhati, India, Thursday, Jan. 10, 2013 in remembrance of a young woman who was gang- raped on a moving bus in New Delhi. The case has sparked protests across India by women and men who say India's legal system doesn't do enough to prevent attacks on women. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath)
"Police haven't dealt with the issue severely in the past. The message that goes out is that the punishment doesn't match the crime. Criminals think they can get away it," she said.
In her first published comments, the mother of the deceased student in the New Delhi attack said Sunday that all six suspects in that case, including one believed to be a juvenile, deserve to die.
She was quoted by The Times of India newspaper as saying that her daughter, who died from massive internal injuries two weeks after the attack, told her that the youngest suspect had participated in the most brutal aspects of the rape.
Five men have been charged with the physiotherapy student's rape and murder and face a possible death penalty if convicted. The sixth suspect, who says he is 17 years old, is likely to be tried in a juvenile court if medical tests confirm he is a minor. His maximum sentence would be three years in a reform facility.
"Now the only thing that will satisfy us is to see them punished. For what they did to her, they deserve to die," the newspaper quoted the mother as saying.
Some activists have demanded a change in Indian laws so that juveniles committing heinous crimes can face the death penalty.
The names of the victim of the Dec. 16 attack and her family have not been released.

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Mexico City ( Dog with no legs recovering- Abused by drug cartel )

MEXICO CITY (AP) — A dog reportedly mutilated by Mexican drug traffickers is recovering at a sanctuary for abused and abandoned dogs.
Sanctuary owner Patricia Ruiz says Pay de Limon, or Lemon Pie, was fitted with prosthetic front legs last year. The Belgian shepherd mix now walks, jumps and runs.
"Milagros Caninos," sanctuary owner Patricia Ruiz shows some attention to Belgian shepherd mix, Pay de Limon or Lemon Pie, on the grounds of the sanctuary for abused and abandoned dogs, in Mexico City, Friday, Jan. 11, 2013. Ruiz says Pay de Limon who was fitted with prosthetic front legs, was found last February in a trash can where he was left to die after his two fronts legs were surgically removed. Pay de Limon is one of 128 abused dogs living in the vast Milagros Caninos sanctuary in southern Mexico City. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)Belgian shepherd mix, Pay de Limon or Lemon Pie, walks using his prosthetic front legs on the grounds of the "Milagros Caninos," sanctuary for abused and abandoned dogs, in Mexico City, Friday, Jan. 11, 2013. Sanctuary owner Patricia Ruiz says Pay de Limon, who was fitted with prosthetic front legs last year, was found last February in a trash can where he was left to die after his two fronts legs were surgically removed. Pay de Limon is one of 128 abused dogs living in the vast Milagros Caninos sanctuary in southern Mexico City. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)
Ruiz says the dog was left in a trash can to die after his two fronts legs were cut off. She says people who asked her to help Pay de Limon told her that drug traffickers used the dog to practice for mutilating humans.

Pay de Limon is one of 128 abused dogs living at the Milagros Caninos sanctuary. Dogs on wheelchairs, blind, deaf or ill frolic and run around the huge sanctuary in the southern part of Mexico City.

Miami ( Judge upped bond on parents of missing child ) Small body found

Judge increases bond for parents of missing child

While investigators finished excavating the remains of a tiny human on Saturday, a judge upped the bond amount for the parents of missing child Dontrell Melvin.

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Investigators and a team of forensic anthropologists concluded their excavation Saturday afternoon at the scene where tiny human remains were found Friday in Hallandale Beach.
Hallandale Beach Police Chief Dwayne Flournoy said he was told by the team the search for any additional remains would end Saturday afternoon.
"They have located other remains consistent with that of an infant or small child,” Flournoy said.
Brittney Sierra, 21, and Calvin Melvin Jr., 27, parents of Dontrell Melvin, who went missing 18 months ago, were arraigned on child neglect charges Saturday morning.
A Broward county judge increased bond for both parents to $100,000 on the charge of cruelty towards a child and abuse causing great bodily harm.
Melvin, also charged with obstruction of a criminal investigation or falsifying information to locate a missing person, was given an additional $50,000 bond.
Both parents remained in Broward County jails as of Saturday afternoon.
Investigators began searching for Dontrell this week, after the Department of Children & Families hotline received a call alleging child neglect.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/01/12/3179166/police-still-unearthing-tiny-human.html#storylink=cpy

Mexico ( Tijuana -9.4 tons of marijuana found in mechanic shop- Belongs to Sinaloa Cartel )

9.4 Tons of Marijuana Confiscated Was Chapo's Loss
|
Borderland Beat

The discovery occurred in an abandon mechanic workshop on the TJ street of Tehuacan in the colonia Ejido Francisco Villa.
The 9.4 tons of marijuana confiscated by the State Preventive Police in the border town of Tijuana allegedly belongs to the Sinaloa Cartel.
The assumption of ownership of the confiscation being the Sinaloa cartel was due to the name “Beny” that appears on some packages, and Beny is identified as collaborator of the Sinaloa cartel, a criminal organization lead by the drug trafficker Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.
Some packages had red spray paint and the name “Capulin”, but others were marked with a number representing its weight.
It was not verified if the weight was the correct one since the weighing of the drug was in total of all packages confiscated.
Authorities colluded that after the collection of the drug, it gave a weight of 9 tons with 43 kilograms.
The drug packages were not uniform in weight, size or shape. .
Source: El Debate

Friday, January 11, 2013

El Paso ( Disabled highway worker hit and killed by car- Suspect wanted )

Sheriffs deputies investigate the scene of a hit-and-run wreck that left a man dead. (Ruben R. Ramirez / El Paso Times)
A mentally disabled man was struck and killed by a vehicle Friday morning as he and two others were picking up litter from a roadway near Clint, El Paso County Sheriff's deputies said.
The victim, who was publicly identified only as a man in his 30s, died after he was hit on Gateway West about a mile west of the Clint exit off Interstate 10. Sheriff's spokeswoman Deputy Angelica Becerra said the man was with his supervisor and two co-workers when he was struck. Investigators were unable to get a description of the vehicle, which sped off after striking the man. Becerra said investigators believe the vehicle sustained front end damage. "We're still interviewing the witnesses," Becerra said Friday. "We don't know what he was doing

Reporter
Adriana M. Chávez
(on the roadway) when he was struck."
Becerra said the man was an employee of XCeed Resources, a nonprofit organization formally known as Border TM that employs people with mental disabilities. A spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Transportation said XCeed's employees had been doing contract work for TxDOT at the time of the accident. Graciela Arreola, the human resources manager for XCeed, said the man had been employed there since at least 2001. "Everybody is reeling," Arreola said. "It's devastating." Arreola said the man's supervisor was emotionally "totally broken" after the accident, while his two co-workers have been in shock and unable to speak about it.

TUCSON Az ( Man with 600 pounds of drugs asks Border Patrol for directions- Busted )

Lost smuggling suspect asks Border Patrol for help

Posted: Jan 11, 2013 3:02 PM by Leasa Conze
Updated: Jan 11, 2013 3:30 PM
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TUCSON - A suspected drug smuggler is under arrest, after asking directions from Sonoita Border Patrol agents, while allegedly hiding more than 600 pounds of marijuana in his truck.
The bust happened Thursday night.
Agents say the 21-year-old was hauling a load of lumber in the back of the pickup when he stopped to ask directions.
Based on the discussion, agents became suspicious that the driver might be involved in something illegal.
They brought in a canine unit and that's when they found 621 pounds of pot hidden in the stack of 2' by 4's covered with plywood.
The suspected smuggler is a U.S. citizen.

Arizona - Meteor Crater ( Man jumps in mine shaft to "appease the gods" ) Breaks leg

Meteor Crater
Meteor Crater, 35 miles east of Flagstaff off Interstate 40. The 570-foot-deep, mile-wide crater was formed 49,000 years ago by a meteorite weighing millions of tons.
Meteor Crater

The Arizona Republic-12 New Breaking News TeamFri Jan 11, 2013 12:59 PM
Rescuers pulled a 28-year-old California man from a mine shaft in the bottom of Meteor Crater Friday morning after he was seen trespassing in the crater Thursday afternoon.
An employee at Meteor Crater was watching Parminder Singh with binoculars when Singh jumped into the mine shaft. The shaft is more than 100 feet deep, authorities said.
The Coconino County Sheriff’s Office responded to a phone call from the employee saying that a man was at the bottom of the crater. While tourists can walk around the edge of part of the crater, the crater itself is off-limits.
The resue operation lasted more than eight hours. More than 30 people worked in below-freezing temperatures to save the man.
Rescuers cut through a seven-foot tall fence topped with barbed wire to access the opening of the mine shaft.
Food, water, a radio, warm clothing and a flashlight were lowered to Singh. Singh radioed that he believed he had a broken arm and leg.
A member of the Flagstaff Fire Department Technical Rescue Team was lowered into the mine shaft to assess Singh and lift him out.
Helicopters were used Thursday night to insert rescuers into the crater, but windy conditions Friday morning prevented the responders from flying Singh out.
Rescuers carried Singh out of the crater on foot. The hike out consisted of a 600-foot incline and a mile-long walk to the visitor center parking lot. The hike took more than two hours.
Singh suffered from severe hypothermia, according to the Sheriff’s Office. He is at the Flagstaff Medical Center in stable condition.
In an interview with deputies, Singh said he jumped in to “appease the gods.”