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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Thursday, December 19, 2013

China ( Chinese police shoot dead 14 during riot in Xinjiang )

 

Two policemen also killed during violence near Kashgar in Xinjiang after attempted arrest of "criminal suspects" according to local government officials

Chinese police shoot dead 14 during riot in Xinjiang
In October a vehicle ploughed into tourists on the edge of Beijing's Tiananmen Square (pictured) killing the three people in the car and two bystanders Photo: Ng Han Guan/AP
Chinese police shot and killed 14 people during a riot near the old Silk Road city of Kashgar in which two policemen were also killed, the regional government said on Monday, in the latest incident of unrest in the far western region.
Police were attacked by a mob throwing explosive devices and wielding knives on Sunday when they went to arrest "criminal suspects" in a village near Kashgar in Xinjiang province, the government said on its official news portal Tianshan.
"Police responded decisively," the government said in a brief statement, adding that two people had also been detained and that an investigation had been launched.
Reuters was unable to immediately reach government officials for comment.
At least nine civilians and two policemen were killed when a group of people armed with axes and knives attacked a police station also near Kashgar last month, state media has said

EL Paso ( man arrested after allegedly posting woman's info on Craigslist )

By Daniel Borunda / El Paso Times

Posted:   12/19/2013 01:19:26 AM MST


Click photo to enlarge
Alejandro Mata (Photo courtesy El Paso Police Department)
REPORTER
Daniel Borunda
A 22-year-old El Paso man was arrested Tuesday for allegedly harassing a woman by posting her telephone number on a dating website, police officials said. Police investigators and FBI agents on the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force arrested Alejandro Mata at his home in the 700 block of Espolon Drive on the West Side. In September and October, Mata allegedly posted the woman's information and phone number on the "women seeking men" and "casual encounters" section of Craigslist, a classified ads website, police said. The posting was allegedly intended to annoy, embarrass and harass the woman and caused her phone to keep ringing. Mata was charged with felony online impersonation and misdemeanor harassment. He was jailed in lieu of a $71,000 bond.

New Mexico ( A woman Sues over " Anal and Vaginal probes " by federal officers ) 6 hrs long

 
By Aaron Bracamontes / El Paso Times
Posted:   12/18/2013 10:39:21 PM MST


REPORTER
Aaron Bracamontes
›› View a copy of the lawsuit A New Mexico woman claims in a federal lawsuit that she underwent a brutal and inhumane six-hour full-body cavity search by federal officers that included anal and vaginal probes that made her feel like an "animal."
The woman, a Lovington, N.M. resident, also is suing University Medical Center, where she was forced to have an observed bowel movement, was X-rayed, had a speculum exam, vaginal exam and had a CT scan.
The suit claims the hospital "violated her" and then gave her the $5,000 bill.
The lawsuit names the El Paso County Hospital District's Board of Managers, University Medical Center, Drs. Michael Parsa and Christopher Cabanillas, two unknown supervising U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers and two other CBP officers only identified by their last names of Portillo and Herrera as defendants. The doctors and the agents could not be reached for comment.
The 54-year-old woman, who is not identified in the suit, is asking for an unspecified amount of money and to end the policy that gives federal agents and officers the authority to stick their fingers and objects up people's cavities when they search for drugs.
The lawsuit was filed Wednesday by the American Civil Liberties Union in federal court in El Paso on behalf of the woman who was stopped as she crossed at the Bridge of the Americas a year ago. Despite the six-hour search at the port and then later at UMC, no drugs were found.
The woman is identified as Jane Doe in the lawsuit.
According to the lawsuit, the woman was first frisked and strip-searched at the port of entry, where officers stuck their fingers inside her rectum and vagina. When that search came up negative, she was taken to University Medical Center.
"These extreme and illegal searches deeply traumatized our client," ACLU of New Mexico Legal Director Laura Schauer Ives said in the news release. "The fact that our government treated an innocent 54-year-old woman with such brutality and inhumanity should outrage all Americans. We must ensure that government agents never put another person through a nightmare like this ever again."
A spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a prepared statement that the agency could not talk about a specific lawsuit.
"As a practice CBP does not comment on pending litigation," the statement said. "CBP stresses honor and integrity in every aspect of our mission, and the overwhelming majority of CBP employees and officers perform their duties with honor and distinction, working tirelessly every day to keep our country safe. We do not tolerate corruption or abuse within our ranks, and we fully cooperate with any criminal or administrative investigations of alleged misconduct by any of our personnel, on or off-duty."
University Medical Center also declined to get into specifics of the lawsuit.
"Hospital policy is to obtain consent from all patients who receive medical services at UMC," spokeswoman Margaret Altoff-Olivas said in a statement. "Because this case involves litigation, UMC will not be commenting further."
The search took place at about 2 p.m. Dec. 12, 2012, when the woman was coming back from seeing a family friend, whom she calls "uncle" and tries to visit once a month.
As her passport was swiped, a CBP officer told her she was "randomly" picked for a secondary inspection, where Portillo and Herrera frisked her through her clothing.
"One of the agents ran her finger over Ms. Doe's genital area during the frisk," the lawsuit said.
Then the woman was told to squat as one of the officers "inserted her finger in the crevice of Ms. Doe's buttocks." The frisk did not show any evidence of contraband or drugs, the lawsuit said.
Then the woman was told to stand in a line with other people as a drug-sniffing dog walked by.
The officer with the dog "hit the ground by her feet, but did not hit the ground by any of the others in the line," the lawsuit said. "The dog responded by lunging onto Ms. Doe and landing its front paws on her torso."
Ives said she does not believe this was a proper signal to indicate a drugs were present, but officers used it to continue the search.
The woman was taken to another room and asked to take off her pants and crouch as her anus and vagina were examined with a flashlight, the lawsuit said.
The woman, now crying, was taken to University Medical Center after the strip search did not find anything.
"During the car ride to the Medical Center, Ms. Doe asked if the agents had a warrant," the lawsuit said. "One of them responded that they did not need a warrant."
While handcuffed to an examination table, the woman was searched again by both officers and Cabanillas and Parsa. She was given a laxative and had a bowel movement in a portable toilet in front of both officers, the lawsuit said.
Then the woman's abdomen was X-rayed, but there were no signs of drugs or any other contraband in the woman's body. A speculum was used to probe her vagina and Parsa's fingers were used to inspect both her vagina and rectum while the door to the examining room was left open, the lawsuit said.
At this point the lawsuit claims, "Ms. Doe felt that she was being treated less than human, like an animal."
The last test was a CT scan of the woman's abdomen and pelvis, which resulted in no evidence of illegal activity being found.
The lawsuit said after the CT scan one of the officers told the woman she could sign the medical consent form and CBP would pay for the exams, but if she did not sign, she would be charged. The woman refused to sign and eventually she was charged more than $5,000 for the examinations.
According to the lawsuit, she repeatedly refused to consent to any of the searches.
University Medical Center's search of patients policy states, "Associates, members of Medical Staff, Residents or Allied Health Professionals may search a patient only when necessary to comply with a search warrant." Under the subhead procedure, the policy states, "...unless a patient consents, an invasion of the patient's body to obtain evidence requires a search warrant."
A warrant was not obtained, the lawsuit said.
"However, in practice, the Medical Center staff and CBP agents routinely conduct invasive cavity searches without warrant, consent or sufficient suspicion to justify the searches," the lawsuit said. "When Ms. Doe expressed dismay about the unreasonable searches she suffered, a Medical Center employee responded that these procedures were routinely followed when an individual is brought in by CBP agents."
In a phone interview, Ives said searches like the one the 54-year-old woman went through are illegal and becoming common among law enforcement.
"When the less intrusive search didn't find any evidence of drugs, more intrusive searches should have not been used," Ives said. "Any one of those searches should have eliminated any suspicion of drugs. A second search should make it clear and at most a third search should have been the last."
She said: "The fact that this happened to a 54-year-old woman should outrage anyone. She did ask to talk to an attorney and she did ask for a warrant. I don't know what guarantees there are to our rights other than a lawsuit like this one that hold the government agencies responsible."
Last month, a Deming man sued Deming police officers who gave him three enemas, two anal probes and a colonoscopy after he was suspected of having drugs. The search found nothing, and lawyers for the man said the warrant used to conduct the search failed to show probable cause.
Aaron Bracamontes may be reached at 546-6156.

JAPAN ( University student arrested for kicking stroller with baby in it )

Crime ( 43 )


OSAKA —
A 20-year-old male university student has been arrested in Ibaraki City, Osaka Prefecture, for violently kicking a stroller which had a baby inside, police said Wednesday.
According to police, the incident occurred on Nov 18. TV Asahi reported that the suspect, Daiki Sugimoto, approached a 36-year-old woman pushing her four-month-old baby along in a carriage on a sidewalk, and proceeded to violently kick the stroller without saying anything.
Police said they are questioning Sugimoto in connection with a recent series of assaults on young women with baby strollers in the vicinity of the Nov 18 attack. 

Mexico ( Four dead in shootout - head " Gunman for Sinaloa Cartel " Killed )

Thursday, December 19, 2013 | Four dead, all alleged gunmen, was the result of intense shootout this morning in Puerto Peñasco, said at a press conference Attorney General of the State of Sonora.


Among the dead Gonzalo Inzunza Inzunza is the Macho Prieto, head of gunmen in the service of the Sinaloa cartel, and in recent years was operating in the states of Sonora and Baja California.

Carlos Navarro Sugich reported that there could be a fifth died but until mid morning had not been identified victims. Ríodoce sources confirmed that indeed, one of the dead is Inzunza Inzunza.


Read more: http://www.elblogdelnarco.net/ # ixzz2nxuab7WA
Follow us: @ MundoNarco on Twitter

MOSCOW ( Russia Amnesty to Free Greenpeace, Pussy Riot Members )



MOSCOW – Russia’s parliament on Wednesday passed an amnesty bill that extends to individuals charged or convicted of hooliganism, including Greenpeace activists who staged a protest against oil drilling in the Arctic and members of feminist punk rock group Pussy Riot.

Twenty-eight crewmembers of Greenpeace’s Arctic Sunrise icebreaker and two freelance journalists on board the vessel were arrested on Sept. 19, a day after some of the activists tried to scale the Prirazlomnaya oil platform – operated by Russian state energy giant Gazprom – in the Barents Sea.

They were jailed for two months before being released on bond pending trial on hooliganism charges and may not leave the country until their legal proceedings have concluded.

The protest will not halt Gazprom’s plans to produce oil with the Prirazlomnaya rig in the Arctic, according to the company.

In a statement on its Web site, Greenpeace said “legal proceedings against the ‘Arctic 30’ are now almost certain to come to an end and the 26 non-Russians will be free to return home to their families as soon as they are given exit visas by the Russian authorities.”

But the Arctic Sunrise’s captain, American Peter Willcox, one of the suspects expected to be allowed to leave the country, was quoted as saying the news was no cause for celebration.

“There’s no amnesty for the Arctic. We may soon be home, but the Arctic remains a fragile global treasure under assault by oil companies and the rising temperatures they’re driving. We went there to protest against this madness. We were never the criminals here.”

Meanwhile, two jailed members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alekhina, who were convicted on charges of “hooliganism motivated by religious hate,” are expected to be released from prison ahead of schedule.

The two women have already served most of their two-year sentence.

Ekaterina Samutsevich, a third member of the group who took part in the February 2012 protest against President Vladimir Putin and the Russian Orthodox Church hierarchy at a Moscow cathedral, had earlier been released on a suspended sentence.

The Duma, in its 446-0 vote on Wednesday, approved changes to an amnesty that was proposed by Putin and includes “the most unprotected social sectors” such as minors, pregnant women and mothers whose children are still under the age of 18.

Eric Snowden ( NSA Leaker Snowden Wants Asylum in Brazil )

NSA Leaker Snowden Wants Asylum in Brazil, Press Reports Say
According to the daily Folha de Sao Paulo, the former NSA analyst is still planning to seek permanent asylum in Brazil, even though this country has already refused to grant it

BRASILIA – The former analyst of the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA), Edward Snowden, is planning to seek permanent asylum in Brazil, even though this country has already refused to grant it, according to a letter that the daily Folha de Sao Paulo obtained and published Tuesday.

After Snowden revealed that the communications of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, several of her ministers and even the state-run oil company Petrobras were under surveillance by the United States, Brazil has headed several global initiatives to regulate online spying.

In an “open letter to the people of Brazil,” Snowden says he “stepped out from the shadows of the United States Government’s National Security Agency” and shared with the world “evidence proving some governments are building a world-wide surveillance system to secretly track how we live, who we talk to, and what we say.”

In the letter obtained by the daily Folha de Sao Paulo, Snowden refers to the way Brazil has been affected by U.S. espionage.

“The NSA and other spying agencies tell us that for our own ‘safety’ – for Dilma’s ‘safety,’ for Petrobras’ ‘safety’ – they have revoked our right to privacy and broken into our lives. And they did it without asking the public in any country, even their own.”

He adds that “today, if you carry a cell phone in Sao Paulo, the NSA can and does keep track of your location: they do this 5 billion times a day to people around the world.”

According to Snowden, “until a country grants (me) permanent political asylum, the U.S. government will continue to interfere with my ability to speak” and report on what it is doing.

Currently living in Brazil is journalist Glenn Greenwald, ex-columnist for the British daily The Guardian, who is one of Snowden’s “contacts” and who published many of the documents revealed by the one-time NSA employee.