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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Walmart News ( Employee fired for telling a Customer its to hot to leave a Dog in the Car )

Carla Cheney, a former Walmart employee from Kemptville, Canada, claims she was fired for alerting a customer that he shouldn't leave his dog in a hot car.
On Wednesday, shortly before beginning her shift, Cheney saw the customer put his Newfoundland—a large breed with a heavy black coat—in his truck and roll up the windows, reports the Ottawa Citizen. Cheney, who worked in the Walmart pharmacy, called the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) and later confronted the dog owner after he left the store, telling him that "he should not be leaving his dog in the car." He responded that it was none of her business.

More on Yahoo!: How to Keep Pets Safe in Summer Heat
Later that day, Cheney was called into her the office of her manager to whom, she told CBC News, she had mentioned another dog being left in a car the previous week. "I was pretty upset and I said to [him], 'What do I do?' He said it was none of our business and went into the store." In this case, her manager said she should come to him directly with any problems in the future. Cheney said she didn't agree with that policy. "So I [told him] if I did see something unsafe, that I would just go to the police if I thought it was necessary." The manager then told her she was fired and she should gather her things and leave the building. According to reports, another employee, Sean Dhaliwal, was also fired in late June from the same Walmart for warning a customer against leaving a dog in his van.On Thursday afternoon, Walmart Canada posted a release on its Facebook page denying that Cheney was fired for "trying to help a dog in a locked car." It continues, "The decision to dismiss an associate is one that we take extremely seriously and must follow a comprehensive process. However, out of respect for the associate and for privacy reasons we cannot provide specifics about why this associate was let go." The release also claims that the manager did speak to the customer about the dog and adds, "Walmart is a major supporter and advocate for animal rights. Over the past year alone we have made donations to local SPCAs, the Humane Society and Animal Shelters. In addition, signs will be added to the front of all our stores across the country to advise customers of the dangers of leaving kids and pets in a hot car."

It's an issue that many animal lovers feel strongly about. On Wednesday, Cheney supporters started a Facebook page called Animal Rights for Kemptville Walmart, which already has more than 7,000 members. Shine hasn't been able to reach her for comment, but on Thursday she posted, "Thank you all for your support!! I am currently trying to find a lawyer to help me with all of this. I am feeling very overwhelmed by all the thoughtful words. Bless you all!!!" There is also a petition on Change.org to demand that Walmart train its employees on how to report dogs and children left in cars. In less than 24 hours it has received nearly 1,500 signatures.It may take days or weeks to sort out the facts behind Cheney's claims against Walmart, but what we do know for sure is that leaving a dog—or a child—in a parked car is extremely perilous. So far in 2013, at least 20 children have died of heatstroke from being in left unattended in a motor vehicle.
Some estimates put the number of dogs that die each year from being left in a hot car in the thousands.
"Many people do not realize how quickly cars heat up, people think its OK to leave your dog in a car for just a few minutes," Dr. Louise Murray, vice president of the ASPCA Bergh Memorial Animal Hospital, told Yahoo! Shine. Murray, who is also a veterinarian specializing in internal medicine, says cracking the windows won't make a difference, and the vehicle can also become dangerously hot on an overcast day.
According to Petfinder, on a day when it's about 70 degrees, the temperature inside a parked car can rise 40 degrees in an hour—mostly during the first 30 minutes. And it may not matter if the windows are cracked or the car is in the shade. The Chicago Tribune reports that on an 85-degree day, the dashboard can heat up to 170 degrees in a mere 15 minutes.
Last summer, Dr. Ernie Ward, a veterinarian, conducted an experiment that he videoed and posted on YouTube. He sat in a parked car with the windows cracked to a little more than an inch for 30 minutes on a 94-degree day. After five minutes, the temperature had reached 100 degrees. In 15 minutes, it was 110 degrees. After 30 minutes, the doctor felt ill and was covered in sweat, and the car's interior temperature had hit 117 degrees.But dogs don't perspire like humans—which is one of the reasons why they can succumb to heatstroke in a matter of minutes. The Maryland-based Partnership for Animal Welfare explains on its website,"Dogs cool themselves by panting and by sweating through their paws. If they have only overheated air to breathe, animals can collapse, suffer brain damage and possibly die of heatstroke. Just 15 minutes can be enough for an animal's body temperature to climb from a normal 102.5 to deadly levels that will damage the nervous and cardiovascular systems, often leaving the animal comatose, dehydrated and at risk of permanent impairment or death."
While the laws in the United States vary, given the health risks of parked vehicles, most allow peace officers and animal enforcement agents to break into cars in order to rescue a dog. Fourteen states specifically prohibit leaving an unattended pet in a car at all.
If you do see a dog left in a car, especially during the warmer months, the ASPCA recommends calling 911 or your local animal control immediately. If you suspect the owner is in a nearby store, alert the manager as well.

TEMPE Az ( 35-year-old Olivia Mosley forcibly removed her child from day care agency ) CPS wanted child

TEMPE, Ariz. -
Police are asking for the public's help to find a 21-month-old child who was last seen at 3 p.m. Thursday.
Olivia Mosely
 
Authorities say 35-year-old Olivia Mosley forcibly removed her child from day care agency in Tempe after learning that Child Protective Services was going to take custody of her child.
Mosley got into a physical altercation with daycare staff while removing the boy. She fled the area in a 1994 maroon 4-door Lexus with Arizona license plate BCD4654.
Javidson is described as a black male, 2' 6" tall, 30 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes. He was last seen wearing a blue and white striped shirt with orange design jean shorts.
Olivia is described as a black female, 5' 2" tall, 195 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes. She was wearing a pink shirt with gray pants.
Police say Mosely is considered a danger to herself and others. She suffers from mental illness and has not been taking her prescribed medication.
If you have any information about this case, call the Tempe police at 800-646-2475.

Iran News ( Female Human Rights blogger gets one yr in prison - Her computer seized in the middle of the night )

3 July 2013

فارسى
Committee of Human Rights Reporters – Journalist Fatemeh Kheradmand was handed a one-year prison sentence by Judge Pir Abassi presiding over Branch 26 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court. The journalist was charged with “propaganda against the regime through working with the ‘Ghalame Sabz’ website.”
According to CHHR, on January 7, 2012 Intelligence agents raided the home of Fatemeh Kheradmand in the middle of the night, conducted a search of her residence, confiscated personal items such as her computer and transferred her to ward 209 of Evin prison at 1:30am. After enduring 25 days in detention while being interrogated, on February 1, 2012 the journalist was granted temporary release pending her trial on 50 million Tomans bail.
On October 24, 2012 Kheradmand was put on trial along with Dr. Saeed Madani and Ehsan Hooshmand at Branch 26 of the Revolutionary Court presided by judge Pir Abassi on the charge of “propaganda against the regime through working with the ‘Ghalame Sabz” website.”
Fatemeh Kheramand, journalism major at Tehran Azad University was a staff member of the Mir Hossein Mousavi presidential election campaign in 2009. Her husband Masoud Lavasani is a journalist who was detained in September 2009 after the contested presidential elections of that year and faces a 2-year prison sentence handed by Judge Pir Abassi.

BAGHDAD ( At Least 7 Police Dead, 15 Others Wounded in Iraq Attacks )



BAGHDAD – At least seven police officers died Thursday and 15 others were wounded in different attacks on Iraqi police in the western province of Al Anbar, according to sources at the Interior Ministry.

A presumed suicide bomber detonated the car bomb he was driving near a police checkpoint in the Al Yazira zone, in the northern part of Al Ramadi, the capital of Al Anbar.

The blast killed three police officers and wounded six others, the sources said, adding that the checkpoint was destroyed in the attack.

In addition, two other suicide bombers detonated explosive belts they were wearing near a police checkpoint in the Al Andalus zone, in central Al Ramadi.

A few minutes later, another suicide attacker managed to blow up a car bomb in the same location, killing at least four police officers and wounding another nine.

In just the last few hours, at least 10 people, most of them Iraqi Turkmen, have died and 31 others have been wounded in still other attacks.

The most serious incident occurred when a car bomb exploded in the town of Tuz Khormato, 200 kilometers (about 125 miles) north of Baghdad, killing six Turkmen and wounding another 29, as well as damaging a dozen houses and several vehicles in the vicinity. EFE

Mexico Veracruz ( 330 kilo's of cocaine were seized off a boat in Veracruz )

XALAPA, Ver - The Attorney General's Office (PGR) highlighted the assurance of 330 kilograms of cocaine from Barranquilla, Colombia, the drug, according to the agency, had been concealed in ten rolls of aluminum wire.

The PGR explained in a statement that the seizure was made on a ship that arrived in the state of Veracruz by "the port of Boca del Rio."

"The vessel arrived at the port of Boca del Rio, Veracruz, and was to target a company located in the state of Tlaxcala. The PGR has already begun an investigation, as the container in which the drug was found, was to target a company located in the state of Tlaxcala "(sic), according to the release.

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Japan News ( Two teens held for beating younger boy to death in Sakai )

Crime

OSAKA —
Anti-bullying is the latest curriculum addition, becoming mandated in ...
A high school boy in Sakai, Osaka Prefecture, has died after allegedly being beaten by two older students, police said Wednesday.
The deceased, who has been named as 15-year-old Shota Hirayama, was attacked by two 16-year-old boys in a park in Sakai on Monday, police allege. TBS quoted officers as saying that Hirayama fell unconscious following the attack and later died from his injuries. Doctors believe the cause of death to have been a subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Police say Hirayama’s attackers, who are students at a vocational school, were in the year above him at junior high school and were acquainted with their victim, TBS reported. Police quoted the suspects as saying they beat Hirayama because “he was being disrespectful.”

Iran News ( Man and woman arrested for insulting Iranian Government on Facebook )


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NCRI - Two Internet users have been arrested in Iran for 'insulting government officials' on their Facebook page.
Cyber-police said they 'identified, arrested and interrogated' the pair as part of the regime's ongoing clampdown on free online activity.
Seyed Ali Mirahmadi, the cyber-police chief in Semnan province, said: "The police found a Facebook page that had published pictures insulting the government officials.
"The owners of this page were a 45-year-old man and a 35-year-old woman who were identified, arrested and interrogated.”
"With operations carried out in cities of Semnan and Mehdishahr the two were arrested and interrogated and turned over to judicial authorities."
Speaking on Tuesday this week, he added: "The most important job of the cyber-police is to increase the security atmosphere on the Internet by continuous scrutiny.”
Mirahmadi also warned other Internet users to respect online regulations and said: "The cyber police has full control over what goes on in the cyberspace."
Since the June election, Iran has stepped up measures to control online activity, with arresting anyone criticising the regime or those selling software that helps evade internet filtering.
On Monday, the regime's communications minister also said every citizen would be assigned an official state email address ending 'mail.post.ir' in order to 'foster mutual interaction and communication between the government and the people'.
The Iranian regime currently imposes one of the world's strictest national Internet filters, which is often sidestepped by those with the computing skills. The country has also been working on a 'national Intranet' which would allow Iranians to communicate electronically with one another but not with the outside world.