Posts Tagged ‘police’

Early morning attacks across Baghdad kill 35

Monday, February 27th, 2012

(AP) ? A swift series of bombings and shootings killed 35 people across the Iraqi capital early Thursday in attacks that mostly appeared to target police, officials said.

In the worst attack, a car bomb went off near a security checkpoint in Baghdad’s downtown shopping district of Karradah killing nine people. Twenty-six people were wounded in that attack, including four policemen, the officials said.

Associated Press footage of the scene showed blood-covered people walking away, and storefronts at several nearby shops were damaged. A gray cloud of smoke hung over the blast site where cars were charred and crumpled.

At least eight more bombs exploded during the morning across Baghdad, killing 18 more people.

And on opposite sides of the capital, gunmen with silenced pistols killed a total of eight policemen at security checkpoints, officials said.

The casualties were confirmed by Baghdad hospital officials. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information.

The violence did not stop at Baghdad. Attacks in Baqouba, Kirkuk and in Salahuddin provinces were also reported in the relentless string of assaults that unfolded over a two-hour period.

Officials in Baqouba, 35 miles (60 kilometers) northeast of the capital, said a suicide bomber blew up his car outside a police station near a market. Two people were killed and eight wounded.

In the ethnically mixed city of Kirkuk, 180 miles (290 kilometers) north of Baghdad, two police patrols hit roadside bombs. Twenty policemen were injured in the attacks, said police Maj. Gen. Sarhat Qadir.

Bombs in the town of Tuz Khormato outside Kirkuk, wounded three guards outside the office of a Kurdish political party. And south of Baghdad, eight policemen were wounded by a roadside bomb in the town of Madain, said Mayor Jalal Baban. Madain is about 14 miles (20 kilometers) southeast of the capital.

Widespread violence has decreased since just a few years ago when Iraq teetered on the brink of civil war. But bombings and deadly shootings still happen almost daily.

Iraq’s police are generally considered to be the weakest element of the country’s security forces. Earlier this week, 20 policemen and recruits were killed by a suicide bomber outside the Baghdad police academy that angry residents blamed on political feuding that is roiling Iraq.

The country has been besieged by political turbulence that began the day after U.S. troops pulled out of Iraq, when an arrest warrant was issued for Sunni Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi on charges he commandeered death squads targeting security forces and government officials.

Al-Hashemi, the country’s highest-ranking Sunni, has denied the charges that he described as politically motivated, and blamed the Shiite-led government of trying to unseat him.

Experts worry the case will hike Iraq’s already-simmering sectarian tensions.

___

Associated Press Writers Lara Jakes and Sinan Salaheddin contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-02-23-ML-Iraq/id-0a318105b02b42c8b61164bbf20e2e38

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U.S. authorities bust Mexico drug network in Arizona (Reuters)

Saturday, January 7th, 2012

TEMPE, Ariz (Reuters) ? U.S. authorities have arrested 203 people and smashed a Mexican trafficking ring that funneled millions of dollars in drugs to Arizona for the powerful Sinaloa cartel, officials said on Tuesday.

The multi-agency bust, led by Tempe police and the Drug Enforcement Administration, dismantled a cell running heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine and marijuana to Arizona for the Sinaloa Cartel, headed by Mexico’s most wanted man, Joaquin “Shorty” Guzman.

“Operation Crank Call” began when a Tempe police officer arrested two men in a street-level drug deal last year. One of the suspects was later identified as a delivery driver for the Mexican smuggling ring.

It subsequently led to 203 arrests, the seizure of more than 1,200 pounds of narcotics, $7.8 million in drug cash and 44 guns across the Phoenix valley area over a 15-month period, police said.

“Operation Crank Call deals another significant blow to the drug trafficking organizations that continue to try and make the Phoenix metropolitan area a primary hub of drug distribution,” said Doug Coleman, the DEA’s acting special agent in charge.

“By dismantling this group, DEA and our partners have taken large quantities of drugs, millions of dollars in drug trafficker assets, and powerful weapons off our streets,” he added.

The Sinaloa cartel is fighting rival traffickers in Mexico, where surging drug-related violence has killed more than 44,000 people since President Felipe Calderon took office in 2006 and sent the military to crush the powerful smugglers.

The cartel funnels narcotics through the Mexico border state, sneaking loads through the ports of entry, through clandestine tunnels and over the porous border and through the desert.

Police said those arrested included U.S. and Mexican citizens. Charges brought in the case ranged from simple possession and drug paraphernalia offenses to trafficking charges.

Coleman said the investigation was ongoing and expected further arrests.

(Reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by Jerry Norton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111220/us_nm/us_usa_mexico_drugs

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South China villagers riot over land dispute: police (Reuters)

Monday, November 14th, 2011

BEIJING (Reuters) ? South Chinese villagers wielding clubs and stones attacked an industrial park, incensed by reports that an official had sold land without compensating them, police and media said on Sunday in the latest flare-up over commercial development.

The riot broke out on Saturday in Zhongshan in Guangdong province, where rice paddy land has given way to factories that make many of China’s exports.

Authorities said the violence was quelled by police who took away suspected organizers.

Residents of Yilong Village “attacked the Jinrui Industrial Park in Xiaolan Town, and took part in attacking, smashing, looting and arson,” the Zhongshan city public security office said on its blog (http://weibo.com/gdzs110).

Reports that villagers died in the latest eruption of land unrest were untrue, the Zhongshan police bureau said in a statement.

The Zhongshan police said the dispute over a patch of land had festered since August and become so heated that factories in the area had to halt production.

Caixin Magazine, a Chinese business journal, reported that the dispute was sparked by complaints that a former village official had illicitly sold off land without paying residents compensation.

Villagers had begun vigilante patrols to “prevent employees of the developer concerned from going to work,” the magazine reported on its website (http://china.caixin.cn), citing residents.

In China, most rural land is officially under village collective ownership, but in reality government officials control its development, leading to frequent disputes over land control and compensation.

Local protests are common in China, but are not generally seen as a serious challenge to the authority of the ruling Communist party.

In September, thousands of villagers in Lufeng, another part of Guangdong province, rioted and ransacked government offices, protesting against land requisitions by officials.

Earlier this year, Zhou Ruijin, a former deputy editor-in-chief of the official party newspaper, the People’s Daily, said there had been more than 90,000 “mass incidents” — a term for riots, protests and demonstrations — every year from 2007 to 2009.

A recent poll found disputes over land acquisitions had reached a new peak amid rampant development and were a leading cause of rural clashes across China, a magazine run by the official Xinhua news agency reported last month.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111113/wl_nm/us_china_land_protest

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Occupy Sydney protesters take to the streets

Monday, November 7th, 2011

(AP) ? Hundreds of Occupy Sydney protesters have taken to the streets of Australia’s largest city amid a heavy police presence.

The activists, who are part of a worldwide protest against corporate greed, have vowed to reoccupy a pedestrian mall in the heart of Sydney’s central business district. They converged on Town Hall on Saturday bearing banners with slogans such as “You can’t eat money” and “Stop police brutality.”

There was a significant police presence at the rally, with riot squad officers, mounted police and two police trucks on standby.

Last month, police were accused of using excessive force after 40 protesters were arrested in a dawn raid that ended the group’s weeklong protest at the mall, known as Martin Place, which is home to several banks and other corporations.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-05-AS-Australia-Occupy-Sydney/id-9202ec7a4bfb48c58aa6e14b2e73469d

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Mexican mayor slain ahead of elections (AP)

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

MORELIA, Mexico ? The mayor of La Piedad was handing out campaign fliers outside a fast-food restaurant when a black SUV pulled up, a hand holding a pistol appeared at its window, and he went down with a shot.

Ricardo Guzman, 45, died late Wednesday in an ambulance racing to the hospital, one of more than two dozen Mexican mayors who’ve been assassinated since 2006, the majority presumed victims of drug violence.

But Guzman’s killing raised new questions about organized crime’s impact on Mexico’s democracy, specifically the Nov. 13 elections in the western state of Michoacan, where Guzman had been handing out campaign material for gubernatorial candidate Luisa Maria Calderon, President Felipe Calderon’s sister.

Before Guzman’s assassination, polling firm workers were kidnapped in August while trying to conduct surveys on the election, though they were later released unharmed. The three major political parties all say they have local candidates who have received some kind of pressure or threats in the Calderon family home state, where the president launched his drug war five years ago.

Michoacan “appears to be the state that is most infected with narco-politics,” said political analyst and columnist Raymundo Riva Palacio. He noted that while mayoral candidates, and even one gubernatorial candidate, have been killed in other states, nowhere is the cartel pressure on candidates as systematic as in Michoacan.

The Calderons, like Guzman, are all in the conservative National Action Party, or PAN. When asked by local media Thursday if she thought a drug gang may have been involved in Guzman’s death, Calderon said “probably.”

“I don’t think he had any political enemies,” said Luisa Maria Calderon.

“He stayed to defend his city from the incursion of organized groups, and his police force had suffered casualties,” she said. “He told me ‘I’m going to stay in my city, to protect it.’”

Gunmen killed La Piedad police chief Jose Luis Guerrero in March, just a couple of months after he took the job; shell casings from AK-47 assault rifles, the cartels’ favored weapon, were found littered at the scene. His successor, Miguel Angel Rosas Perez, was recruited from the better-trained federal police, but he too came under attack in July, when more than 40 armed men pulled up to his police station in a 10-vehicle convoy, sprayed his station with gunfire, and then lobbed hand grenades at it.

Though he survived, at least six municipal police chiefs have been killed in Michoacan in 2011. Twenty-five mayors have been killed throughout Mexico since December 2006, when the drug war began.

Witnesses said Guzman was hit in the torso and still alive as he was loaded into the ambulance.

Michoacan state prosecutor Jesus Montejano said the black Jeep Liberty had plates from the neighboring state of Jalisco, which borders La Piedad. Drug cartels have “been very active” in the area around the city of about 100,000 on a key transit route where the territory of three gangs intersect: the Zetas, The Knights Templar and the Jalisco New Generation.

La Piedad has been hit deeply by the violence, said municipal policeman Jose Castro. The local force beefed up security Thursday for Guzman’s funeral, which was attended by top PAN political figures.

Castro called the mayor “someone who really looked out for people, who was really dedicated to his work.” He also said groups of drug cartel gunmen roam the outskirts of the township.

The Knights Templar, and their predecessor, La Familia, appear to be deeply involved in Michoacan politics, boosting their favored candidates by pressuring opponents to drop out of mayoral races, running for legislative seats themselves or through proxies and sponsoring public marches and protests, according to party leaders and state security officials.

The Knights Templar is a pseudo-religious gang specializing in methamphetamine production and smuggling, extortion and other crimes.

Victor Lopez Landeros, the spokesman for the Michoacan State Electoral Institute, says problems are limited to a few of the state’s 113 townships, and expressed confidence the elections can be held normally. But leaders of the state’s three main political parties ? the PAN, the Democratic Revolution and the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI ? all say they have mayoral candidates who have dropped out of races. Though the candidates cite health and other reasons, party leaders suspect at least some resignations were the result of cartel pressure designed to favor one candidate.

“Organized crime is getting involved in discouraging (mayoral) candidates,” said PRI gubernatorial candidate Fausto Vallejo. “And that is not only happening to the PRI, but in all of the three political parties.”

Gunmen believed to be working for cartels also kidnapped workers carrying out opinion polls on the Michoacan elections in August. While all nine workers were later released, the kidnappings increased concerns about the overt or covert disruption of next Sunday’s vote.

Labor Secretary Javier Lozano had few doubts about what the effects of Guzman’s killing would be. In his Twitter account, Lozano wrote, “this cowardly crime seeks to discourage citizens from voting in the Nov. 13 elections.”

___

Associated Press writer Mark Stevenson reported this story from Mexico City and Gustavo Ruiz reported in Morelia.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111104/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_mayor_slain

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Philly police: Disabled victimized by theft scheme

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

In this undated photo provided by the Philadelphia Police Department, Herbert Knowles smiles. Knowles has been identified by police as one of four mentally disabled persons locked in the squalid basement of a Philadelphia building. Police said four mentally disabled adults were rescued from the basement of the northeast Philadelphia apartment building on Saturday, Oct. 15, 2011, after the landlord shined a flashlight behind a steel door that had been chained shut. One victim had been shackled to the boiler, police said. Detectives have been able to make contact with the families of three of the victims, but were still trying to reach the family of Knowles, (AP Photo/Philadelphia Police Department)

In this undated photo provided by the Philadelphia Police Department, Herbert Knowles smiles. Knowles has been identified by police as one of four mentally disabled persons locked in the squalid basement of a Philadelphia building. Police said four mentally disabled adults were rescued from the basement of the northeast Philadelphia apartment building on Saturday, Oct. 15, 2011, after the landlord shined a flashlight behind a steel door that had been chained shut. One victim had been shackled to the boiler, police said. Detectives have been able to make contact with the families of three of the victims, but were still trying to reach the family of Knowles, (AP Photo/Philadelphia Police Department)

This undated photo provided by the Philadelphia Police Department shows Linda Ann Weston. Weston is one of three people charged following the discovery of four malnourished mentally disabled adults chained to a boiler in a locked northeast Philadelphia basement room that was too small for an adult to stand up straight and also reeked of waste from the buckets they used to relieve themselves, police said Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011. (AP Photo/Philadelphia Police Department)

This undated photo provided by the Philadelphia Police Department shows Eddie Wright. Wright is one of three people charged following the discovery of four malnourished mentally disabled adults chained to a boiler in a locked northeast Philadelphia basement room that was too small for an adult to stand up straight and also reeked of waste from the buckets they used to relieve themselves, police said Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011. (AP Photo/Philadelphia Police Department)

This undated photo provided by the Philadelphia Police Department shows Thomas Gregory. Gregory is one of three people charged following the discovery of four malnourished mentally disabled adults chained to a boiler in a locked northeast Philadelphia basement room that was too small for an adult to stand up straight and also reeked of waste from the buckets they used to relieve themselves, police said Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011. (AP Photo/Philadelphia Police Department)

A police officer stands in an alley doorway of apartment building Monday, Oct. 17, 2011, in Philadelphia. Police say four mentally disabled adults were chained in the sub-basement of the building and the building’s landlord discovered the malnourished victims on Saturday. Three people have been charged in connection with the discovery. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

(AP) ? The landlord of the apartment building at first thought a circuit breaker had tripped when he went to the basement Saturday and found all the lights were out. Then he realized all six bulbs had been removed, and he heard dogs barking inside a boiler room, its door chained shut.

He removed the chain, stepped into the dank, foul-smelling room and lifted a pile of blankets. Several sets of human eyes stared back at him.

Turgut Gozleveli had stumbled upon four mentally disabled adults, all weak and malnourished, and one chained to the boiler.

He may have also stumbled upon a vast scheme ? stretching from Philadelphia to Norfolk, Va.; West Palm Beach, Fla., and Texas ? to steal the Social Security disability checks of defenseless and vulnerable people, authorities said.

Philadelphia police on Saturday arrested three adults staying in an apartment upstairs, including the person accused of being the ringleader, Linda Ann Weston, who had been convicted of murder in a 1981 starvation death.

Detectives also found dozens of ID cards, power-of-attorney forms and other documents in the apartment, suggesting the theft scheme involved more than just the four captives.

“Without a doubt. This is just the beginning of this investigation,” Lt. Ray Evers said Monday. “We think she’s been doing this for quite some time.”

How long, how much money the scheme brought in, how the disabled were deceived and how many people in all were victimized are still unclear, investigators said. The FBI has joined the investigation.

Weston, 51, was charged with kidnapping, false imprisonment and other offenses, with bail set at $2.5 million. Also arrested and jailed were the man she described as her boyfriend, 50-year-old Eddie “the Reverend Ed” Wright, and 47-year-old Gregory Thomas.

“Talk about preying on the weak and weary,” Evers said. “You can’t get any lower than this person.”

As of Monday, the defendants did not appear to have lawyers. They couldn’t be reached for contact in jail.

The victims, a woman and three men, were found in a crawlspace that reeked of urine and was too shallow for an adult to stand up. There were mattresses and blankets, but the only food found was a container of orange juice. The adults shared their space with three dogs.

Gozleveli called police, suspecting they were squatters, then watched as officers and ambulance workers helped them up the steps to the street in a working-class section of the city’s Tacony neighborhood.

The victims, ages 29 to 41, had the mental capacity of 10-year-olds, along with some physical disabilities, authorities said. One could barely see.

Three of them ? Tamara Breeden, Derwin McLemire and Herbert Knowles ? told KYW-TV on Monday that they were mistreated by Weston, Wright and Thomas.

Breeden, 29, told the TV station that she was hit on her head and showed where she said some of her teeth were knocked out.

McLemire, 41, said he met Weston through an online dating service and tried to escape but didn’t get away “so they got me.”

Knowles, 40, was shackled to the boiler and said he was hit by one of the two men arrested with Weston.

Neighbors said the defendants and the basement captives had arrived in an SUV from West Palm Beach, Fla., about two weeks ago, though it does not appear the victims spent the entire time in the basement.

Danyell “Nicky” Tisdale, a block captain in the neighborhood, said that about a week ago a man and a woman and four mentally disabled adults held a yard sale, selling piles of shoes, jackets and other clothing on the sidewalk.

Since the arrests, police have slowly and patiently been trying to elicit information from the captives. All four were treated at hospitals and placed with social service agencies.

Breeden had been reported missing by her family in Philadelphia in 2005, police said. One of the men also is from Philadelphia, and a second, McLemire, is from North Carolina. Their relatives were contacted. Police were having trouble finding family members for Knowles.

According to an investigative report obtained by The Associated Press, Knowles was reported missing in Norfolk, Va., in December 2008 after a mental health case worker couldn’t reach him and family members failed to hear from him. The report described him as “slightly mentally retarded.”

The case worker reported that Knowles’ Social Security checks were going to a Philadelphia address. The report said Philadelphia police went by the address and were told no one there had ever heard of Knowles.

Knowles’ government benefits were stopped after his mail was forwarded to Philadelphia, but Weston took him to a Philadelphia social service agency in 2008 and showed identification, and the checks resumed, Norfolk police said.

Norfolk police spokesman Chris Amos said police did not continue looking for Knowles because as an adult he was under no obligation to report to his case worker.

“It’s not illegal to be missing,” Amos said. “A lot of people are missing by choice.”

Scam artists can get control of a disabled person’s checks by visiting the Social Security office with the victim, who then designates the other person to receive the payments, said Nora J. Baladerian, a clinical psychologist in Los Angeles and advocate for people with disabilities.

Only if there is a report of suspected abuse would social service agencies enter the picture, she said.

In Florida, Weston and Thomas appeared to live with several disabled adults, including a man and woman who had bruises on their faces, neighbors in a poor section of West Palm Beach said. The woman also had what looked like a large burn mark on her face, neighbor Ronald Bass said.

He said that he often heard yelling, apparently from the disabled women, and that police frequently went to the house.

Another neighbor, Sadie Pollard, said she saw bruised lips and other facial injuries on the disabled people but was told they had been fighting with each other.

Weston was convicted of murder and voluntary manslaughter in the death of her sister’s boyfriend. According to news accounts, Weston and her sister beat him and locked him in a closet because he refused to support the unborn child he had fathered. He died of starvation weeks later.

It was unclear from court records whether Weston served any prison time.

Gozleveli, the landlord who discovered the victims, freed the man chained to the boiler.

“He was just watching me when I cut the chain,” Gozleveli said. “I asked them what they are doing here and how they got in. There was no communication. I asked questions, and I don’t get any answers.”

Philadelphia police Commissioner Charles Ramsey said: “This case is going to be going on for a while. We don’t know how far it will extend.”

___

Associated Press writers Randy Pennell and JoAnn Loviglio in Philadelphia, Dena Potter in Richmond and Matt Sedensky in West Palm Beach contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-17-Locked%20In%20Basement/id-0061ee55a3434f8cb8a879499ea897b6

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