P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M

P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M
MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Monday, October 21, 2013

Iran ( A man who survived his own Execution - Has fallen into a coma )

Tehran (AFP) - A convicted Iranian drug trafficker who survived a botched hanging has fallen into a coma, the IRNA news agency reported on Monday.
"His level of consciousness is around six percent and the possibility of brain death will increase if the situation does not improve," IRNA quoted what it called an informed source as saying.
"The doctors cannot perform any surgery or other treatment while he is in a coma," said the source.
The prisoner, identified only as Alireza M., 37, was pronounced dead earlier this month by the attending doctor after hanging for 12 minutes from a noose suspended from a crane at a jail in northeastern Iran.
An Iranian judiciary staff ties ropes prior to an execution in east Tehran on September 29, 2002
But the next day, staff at the mortuary in the city of Bojnourd where his shrouded body was taken discovered he was still breathing.
The incident led to a heated debate between jurists, with some saying he should be hanged again and others arguing he had faced his punishment and should be spared.
Some jurists and attorneys even signed and sent a petition to judiciary chief Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani, appealing for a stay in the exceptional case.
Two Grand Ayatollahs published a fawta, or religious decree, saying the convict should not be hanged again.
Amnesty International called for an immediate stay of execution Alireza M. and for all other death row prisoners in Iran, which carried out more executions last year than any other country except China.
The London-based human rights watchdog said 508 people have already been executed in the country so far this year.
Tehran says the death penalty is essential to maintain law and order, and that it is applied only after exhaustive judicial proceedings.
Murder, rape, armed robbery, drug trafficking and adultery are among the crimes punishable by death in Iran.

Iran ( New generation in Iran faces bad nutrition )

Usage of chemical fertilizers was supposed to be reduced to one third and replaced with plant and living fertilizers, which has not been done so far giving out improper nutrition.
The usage of meat and dairy products has greatly reduced in the food basket of the Iranian people being replaced with fat, explained the head of the agricultural commission.
He said: “Based on recent research 10 per cent of children under the age of 5 are facing lightweight, and in villages percentage is higher.”

"Anemia from lack of iron is higher among girls between the ages of 15 to 19 than women of ages 20 to 45. This shows of an improper nutrition among the new generation.”
Around 2 per cent of the people suffer from digestive cancer. One third of this figure is related to the fertilizers and poisons remaining in the food product and 50 per cent of it comes from places with the most usage of chemical fertilizers.
This government official said: “The soil in South Tehran is contaminated with heavy metals causing great contamination in production with lettuce, mint and scallion containing the most lead.”
Food production in the country must increase to decrease at least 30 per cent of the damages caused in the production unit, he said.

Fox NEWS ( Breaking story - Two employee's on their lunch break )

Foxes-trampoline-play

Chicken Police ( Crime in progress - Chickens break up fight ) Video

SADDLEBROOKE, Ariz. ( Homeowner shoots man thats " In Bed with his wife " in the guest house )

 Posted: Oct 20, 2013 8:35 AM by Scott Oathout
Updated: Oct 20, 2013 8:51 AM     


Rating:
 
SADDLEBROOKE, Ariz.- Pinal County Sheriff's Deputies were called to a residence in Saddlebrooke early Saturday morning, after a homeowner fired a warning shot at a man he found in bed with his wife.
According to PCSD spokesman Tim Gaffney, a homeowner in the 38000 block of South Apache Peak Drive awoke around 1 a.m. Saturday to find his wife out of their bed.
The 68-year-old man went out back to their guest where he found his wife, 63, in bed with 22-year-old Stephen Trevor Chapman.
Gaffney says the homeowner told Chapman to leave the guest house, but Chapman became verbally abusive.
While the homeowner was calling police, he retrieved his gun for more protection.
The homeowner told police Chapman came towards him in a threatening manner and he fired a warning shot out of fear.
Chapman was injured after the bullet struck a nearby wall. Chapman refused medical treatment before being booked into jail on one count of Disorderly Conduct.
Pinal Sheriff Paul Babeu said this was an unusual case.
"This was an unusual call for our deputies in an active senior community. Clearly, this young man should have heeded the warnings of the home owner to leave his residence and to stop sleeping with his wife. The young man is lucky that he only got poked with a cane and hit with a stray pellet from the shotgun," Babeu said.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Kenya ( New CCTV footage appears to show Kenyan soldiers shoplifting ) See video

San Diego -Oceanside ( The " Second Locness Monster " see photo ) Oarfish

 
If good things come in pairs, the discovery of another giant, nearly mystical sea creature should portend positive things for a bunch of bewildered beachgoers who early Friday evening happened across the second so-called "discovery of a lifetime" in less than a week.
The 13-and-a half-foot-long oarfish, which washed up on a beach in Oceanside Harbor, Calif., is the second of the rarely seen creatures to be found in a matter of days.
"It's so rare to find in Southern California, especially in surface water," Suzanne Kohin, of the National Marine Fisheries Service said. "They thought it was a very rare event the first time, so these two events that we heard of in the last few weeks are the only ones I've ever heard of."
The first discovery was made by a snorkeling marine scientist who wrestled the dead 18-foot monster (with help) to shore near Catalina last Sunday.

Second Sea Serpent Washes up in California
"I was thinking I have no idea what that is and like it looks like a snake but it kind of looks like a giant eel," said onlooker Alexandria Boyle, who was one of a class of third-graders on a beach trip when the newest oarfish was found.
Boyle was among a crowd of about 75 who crowded around the creature as police were called, and waited around for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to come and collect the carcass.
Oarfish can grow up to 50 feet in length and live in depths of up to 3,000 feet. Little is known about their habits and life cycles, but the NOAA writes on their website they "probably only come to the surface when injured or dying."
When the first oarfish was found last week, the Catalina Island Marine Institute hailed it in a news release as a "discovery of a lifetime."
Mark Waddington, a school training guide with the Insitute told ABC News he spotted another instructor, Jasmine Santana, trying to bring the fish to shore, and immediately jumped in to help, along with 15 to 20 others.
"I had heard of it in studies, but never thought I would see one in person," said Waddington, who was "beside himself" when he saw the size of the fish.
Divers inspecting a navy buoy in the Bahamas were the first known to videotape a five-foot long oarfish in 2001, claims the NOAA.
The terrifying-looking and toothless oarfish is also known as a ribbon fish, possessing bony, silvery bodies and bright red-crested heads. They are thought to have spawned ancient folk tales about sea serpents.