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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Sunday, November 2, 2014

ISIS fighter offers UK paper bribe for revealing ‘Jihadi John’

A British Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militant offered to reveal the identity of “Jihadi John” – the ISIS fighter who was featured in a series of gruesome videos released by the group in which Western hostages were beheaded – in exchange for a bribe from the London-based Mail on Sunday, the newspaper reported.
In online correspondence with the Mail on Sunday, 20-year-old Junaid Hussain, - who was imprisoned for six months in 2012 after publishing on the internet former UK Prime Minister Blair’s address and social security number - for the sum of $4,800.
Although the newspaper did not pay and contacted UK police, Hussain reportedly revealed that “Jihadi John” was of Arab origins, was born a Muslim and has been in Syria “for ages.”

Cash not principles

In exchange for the money, Hussain said that he could give the newspaper the name and old Twitter account information of “Jihadi John.”
The money, he explained, would be used to pay for a car that would use to transport his family around the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa.
Jihadi John - who is wanted for executing two American journalists and two British aid workers - was identified by the FBI in late September, although the bureau did not release his name to the public. UK Prime Minister David Cameron has ordered UK intelligence agencies to capture him.
Although drones earlier this month managed to track “Jihadi John” in Syria, British Special Forces fear a mission to either kill or capture him may end in failure.
Last Update: Sunday, 2 November 2014 KSA 17:31 - GMT 14:31

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Iran defends executions record, says most drug-related

Responding to a United Nations report criticizing death sentences in Iran, a senior official in the Islamic Republic is saying that 93 percent of executions in the country involve drug smuggling.


Mohammad Javad Larijani, secretary of Iran's Human Rights Council, made the comments in a report posted on the judiciary's website Saturday.

The Oct. 23 report by the United Nations said at least 852 people were reportedly executed between July 2013 and June 2014 and called it an alarming increase.

Delegates from many European countries have urged Iran to adopt a moratorium on the death penalty at an ongoing human rights meeting in Geneva.

Iran previously has threatened to allow drug smugglers through its territory to Europe if the West continues to criticize it for executing convicted drug traffickers.

ISIS kills 85 more members of Iraqi tribe

Islamic State of Iraq and Syria militants have executed 85 more members of the Albu Nimr tribe in Iraq in a mass killing campaign launched last week in retaliation for resistance to the group’s territorial advances, a tribal leader and security official said on Saturday.

Sheikh Naeem al-Ga’oud, one of the tribe’s leaders, told Reuters that ISIS killed 50 displaced members of Albu Nimr on Friday. In a separate incident, a security official said 35 bodies were found in a mass grave.

The sustained bloodshed shows how the al Qaeda offshoot has proven resilient despite U.S. airstrikes against militant targets in parts of Iraq and Syria it controls.

It has been killing at will, with no signs that Iraq’s armed forces will come to the tribe’s rescue anytime soon.

Members of the Albu Nimr tribe had held out for weeks under siege by ISIS fighters in Anbar Province to the west of Baghdad, but finally ran low on ammunition, fuel and food.

Hundreds of tribal fighters withdrew and hundreds of members of the tribe fled their village. ISIS rounded many up and shot them at close range. Over 300 people have been executed since the killing began in the middle of last week
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Friday, October 31, 2014

Police detective arrested for recording women naked at tanning salon

Los Angeles News | FOX 11 LA KTTV

TUCSON AZ ( Police release sketch of Tumamoc Hill assault suspect )

TUCSON- University of Arizona Police have released a composite sketch of the man they say assaulted a female on Tumamoc Hill Monday morning.
According to University of Arizona Police Sergeant Filbert Barrera, the female was at Tumamoc Hill around 7:30 a.m., when a Hispanic male ran into the female, knocking her to the ground. The man then attempted to pin her to the ground.
Barrera said the female was able to get away from the man and yell for help.
The suspect is in his 40s, between 5 feet 7 inches and 5 feet 9 inches tall, and weighs between 150 and 170 pounds.
He was last seen wearing light brown shorts and a grey hooded sweatshirt.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or 621-8477.

A 14-year-old Nigerian girl accused of murdering her 35-year-old husband with rat poison

Gezawa (Nigeria) (AFP) - A 14-year-old Nigerian girl accused of murdering her 35-year-old husband by putting rat poison in his food could face the death penalty, Nigerian prosecutors said Thursday.
The trial of Wasila Tasi'u, from a poor northern Nigeria family, has sparked a heated debate on the role of underage marriage in the conservative Muslim region, especially whether an adolescent girl can consent to be a bride.
Prosecutors at the High Court in Gezawa, outside Nigeria's second city of Kano, filed an amended complaint that charged Tasi'u with one count of murder over the killing of Umar Sani two weeks after their April wedding in the village of Unguwar Yansoro.
Lead prosecutor Lamido Abba Soron-Dinki said that if convicted, the charge is "punishable with death" and indicated the state would seek the maximum penalty.
Nigeria is not known to have executed a juvenile offender since 1997, when the country was ruled by military dictator Sani Abacha, according to Human Rights Watch.
Tasi'u entered the court wearing a cream-coloured hijab and was escorted by two policemen.
Her parents, who have condemned their daughter's alleged act, were in the public gallery -- the first time the three were in the same room since Tasi'u's arrest in April, her legal representatives said.
The English-language charge sheet was translated into Hausa for the accused by the court clerk.
Tasi'u refused to answer when asked if she understood the charges.
The case was adjourned for 30 minutes so the charges could be better explained to the defendant, but when the alleged offences were read again Tasi'u stayed silent, turned her head to the wall and broke down in tears.
"The court records (that) she pleads not guilty," Judge Mohammed Yahaya said, apparently regarding her silence as equal to a denial of the charges and adjourned the case until November 26.
Activists, including in Nigeria's mainly Christian south, have called for Tasi'u's immediate release, saying she should be rehabilitated as a victim and noting the prospect that she was raped by the man she married.
But in the north, Islamic law operates alongside the secular criminal code, a hybrid system that has complicated the question of marital consent.
The affected families have denied that Tasi'u was forced into marriage, arguing that girls across the impoverished region marry at 14 and that Tasi'u and Sani followed the traditional system of courtship.
According to Nigeria's marriage act, anyone under 21 can marry provided they have parental consent and so evidence of an agreement between Tasi'u and her father Tasiu Mohammed could undermine claims of a forced union.
But defence lawyer Hussaina Aliyu has insisted the case is not a debate about the role of youth marriage in a Muslim society.
Instead, she has argued that under criminal law a 14-year-old cannot be charged with murder in a high court and has demanded that the case be moved to the juvenile system.
Nigeria defines the age of adulthood as 17 but the situation is less clear in the 12 northern states under Islamic law, where courts theoretically have the right to consider people under 17 as legally responsible.
Guidelines for how courts should blend Islamic and secular legal codes have not been well defined.

Thursday, October 30, 2014

James Darryl Hickey accused of snapping pics under woman's skirt (Wanted)

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