The people of Concrete, WA sent a loud and clear message last night to CAIR:
“Not in our town!”
Despite Concrete’s population of just over 700 people, an estimated 450 people overflowed a community meeting to show their support for teacher Mary Janda and the Concrete community, who are being maliciously bullied and maligned by the Muslim Brotherhood/HAMAS front-group, CAIR.
The crowd was so large that people spilled over into the foyer, nursery, and kitchen of the church, and another 40-50 people were standing outside listenting through the open windows. It was incredible to see the overwhelming outpouring of support for this courageous teacher, and to see the crowd rise in a standing ovation for her at the end of the night! People drove long distances to come and communicate to the people of Concrete, “You are not alone.” They came from as far as Olympia, Pierce County, Bellingham, Canada, Walla Walla, and Idaho.
Investigators check the scene
where two agents with the Mexican Attorney General's Office were slain Tuesday
in Juarez. (Special to the Times)
››
Photos: 2 agents killed in Juarez
JUAREZ -- Two agents with the Mexican Attorney General's Office, or PGR, were
fatally shot Tuesday while traveling in an unmarked agency truck in the
south-central part of Juárez.
Another man who was traveling with them was wounded and taken to a local
hospital in critical condition, according to officials.
The shooting occurred before noon at Tecnológico Avenue and Pedro Meneses
Hoyos Street, near Central Park, one of the main family attractions in the city,
officials said.
Preliminary reports
Reporter
Lorena
Figueroa
said that a group of heavily armed men shot
at the agents from a moving vehicle. The agents were in a blue truck.
One of agents apparently got out of the truck in an attempt to escape. He
fell facedown on the Tecnológico Avenue a few yards from the truck and died at
the scene.
Officers with the Attorney General's Office confirmed that the two men killed
were agents from the agency's Ministerial Federal Police.
The PGR did not disclose the names of the agents killed or of the man who was
wounded.
Federal and Chihuahua state investigators and agents arrived at the scene and
blocked off the northbound lanes of the Tecnológico Avenue for most of the
afternoon. The PGR also launched an investigation.
Arturo
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Sandoval, spokesman for the Chihuahua Attorney General's Office, said the
evidence state investigators and experts collected will be given to the PGR.
The state Attorney General's Office also will make its forensic lab available
to support federal agents in the investigation, Sandoval said.
Lorena Figueroa may be reached at lfigueroa@elpasotimes.com; 546-6129.
US colonel charged with giving security secrets to Chinese girlfriend
An American defence contractor has been charged with giving national
security secrets to his younger Chinese girlfriend.
The home of civilian defense
contractor Benjamin Pierce Bishop in Kapolei, Hawaii Photo: AP
By Rebecca Hartmann and
agencies
8:12PM GMT 19 Mar 2013
Benjamin Pierce Bishop, 59, stationed at the US Pacific Command in
Hawaii, was arrested on Friday on allegations that he had sent his 27-year-old
girlfriend, identified as "Person 1", highly sensitive information about US
defence.
The classified information allegedly included details, sent to the woman via
email, on nuclear weapons and US relations with international partners.
Mr Bishop was also accused of giving the woman information about America's
ability to detect foreign governments' low- and medium-range ballistic missiles,
the use of US early warning radar systems in the Pacific Rim, and the planned
deployment of US strategic nuclear systems.
He is charged with one count of wilfully communicating national defence
information to a person not entitled to receive it, and one count of unlawfully
retaining documents related to national defence.
If he is convicted he could face a maximum of 20 years in prison.
Mr Bishop was working as a civilian defence contractor, though it is not
known at which organisation.
The couple met at a conference about international military defence issues
and began an intimate romantic relationship in July 2011.
Although Mr Bishop has had top secret security clearance since July 2002, his
girlfriend had no clearance. He allegedly hid their relationship from his
employers, despite his position and security clearance requiring him to report
and contact with foreign nationals.
In November 2012, a court authorised search of his home found twelve
documents all classified as "secret.
According to the affidavit, the woman asked Mr Bishop what Western countries
knew about the "operation of a particular naval asset of People's Republic of
China". Mr Bishop researched the issue, which was not part of his mandate, and
was seen reading and collecting classified information, according to the claims.
Mr Bishop's court appointed lawyer, Birney Berver, stated, "Colonel Bishop
has served his country for 29 years. He would never do anything to harm the
United States".
Mr Berver said the man was a lieutenant colonel in the US Army Reserve.
A preliminary court hearing has been scheduled for 1st April and Mr Bishop is
due to appear in court again later this week for a bail hearing.
China and the United States, the world's two largest economies, have long
engaged in spying against each other.
The mother of a missing New Orleans-area school teacher said it is time to broaden the nearly three-week search for her daughter.
"It should be nationwide now," Toni Enclade of Long Beach, Calif., said. "As a mother, my instincts were leading me to know that she is not in any of the areas where they've been searching. I feel and believe that someone has Terrilynn."
Police are in their third week of searching for second-grade teacher Terrilynn Monnette, 26.
Originally from Long Beach, Monnette was last seen March 2 with friends at a bar called Parlay's in the Lakeview section of New Orleans. She left the bar around 4 o'clock that Saturday morning with a male acquaintance, ABC New Orleans affiliate WGNO-TV reported, telling her friends that she was going to take a nap in her car before driving home because she'd had a few drinks.
The bar manager told WGNO that Monnette and the man were talking in the parking lot "for a little while," but the bar's video surveillance showed they left in separate cars. "He went one way, she went the other," the manager said.
The man has been cleared by police, who say they have no suspects or persons of interest as their investigation continues.
NCRI – The people across Iran have defied the security forces and used the annual Fire Festival to express their anger at the tyrannical regime.
In cities across the country, youth ignored threats of arrest and prison and lit fires and set off home-made explosives in protest at the ruling mullahs. Iran regime's leaders had feared people would use the festival to demonstrate against their dictatorship.
In Tehran, police tried but failed to prevent young people lighting fires and exploding hand-made bombs and firecrackers. In the north of the city, youths attacked the Saderat bank.
In Lavasan district of Tehran, police were too concerned for their own safety to tackle youths lighting bonfires in the street.
And in one district of Shiraz, people chanted, 'Damn high prices, Down with mullahs' and even set ablaze a police car in the city’'s Chamran Street.
In Zanjan, youth defied the police and army by setting off fireworks. In Karaj, SSF and plain clothes agents were too terrified to break up gatherings, INLA reported.
Also, in the Kian Pars district of Ahwaz, the SSF were unable to disperse large crowds, while in Sanandaj, the mullahs deployed an anti-riot unit and established an unofficial martial law to regain control of the city.
During the festival - which dates back to the 7th Century - Iranians traditionally celebrate by lighting bonfires and jumping through the flames.
In recent years, security forces have been cracking down on celebration up to two months before it begins by banning firecrackers, sparklers, rockets and even home-made grenades.
NCRI - The Iranian regime’s judiciary in city of Sarab, northwest of Iran, has sentenced a student to six years imprisonment on charges of distributing propaganda against the regime. Babak Baqaii, a student in Tabriz University, was arrested on July 29 of this year in his father's house without an arrest warrant. He was then temporarily had been released on a 500 million Toman bail.
Committee of Human Rights Reporters – On Monday March 18, journalist and former student activist Nasim Soltan Beigi was granted furlough and released from prison on bail.
According to CHRR, Nasim Soltan Beigi who has had 2 prior arrests, has worked at several media outlets including Shargh and Arman. On November 30, 2010, Branch 15 of the Revolutionary Court handed this student activist and journalist a 6-year prison sentence; 3 years on the charge of “acting against national security,” one year for “propaganda against the regime,” and a 2-year suspended term stemming from a prior arrest in 2006. Soltan Beigi appealed this ruling and it was sent to the Appeals Court.
Nasim Soltan Beigi was a leftist student who was among students arrested in a widespread crackdown on student activists in November 2007. She spent 56 days behind bars in ward 209 of Evin prison before being released on bail. She had previously been arrested on June 12, 2006 at a rally of women activists and at that time was handed a 2-year suspended prison sentence.