Showing posts with label Kidnapping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kidnapping. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Nigerian wife fakes kidnapping to dupe ransom from husband



ONITSHA, Nigeria | Tue Oct 15, 2013 9:10am EDT




ONITSHA, Nigeria (Reuters) – A Nigerian woman faked her own kidnapping to extort a $ 1,200 ransom from her husband, police said on Tuesday, in a region of the west African nation plagued by abductions.



Authorities arrested the woman and her accomplice, a motorcycle taxi man who helped her stage it, after tracing the bank account given for her husband’s payment of 200,000 naira ($ 1,200) to the taxi man himself.


“They have confessed to the crime and we are corroborating our investigation to be able to charge them in court,” said Ebere Amarizu, a police spokesman in Enugu state.


Kidnapping for ransom is rife in southern Nigeria, particularly in the oil-producing Delta region, in the ethnic Igbo area to the north of it, where Enugu lies, and the commercial hub of Lagos.


In some cases, police suspect the victims collude with their abductors.


The multi-million dollar criminal enterprise pushes up the insurance and security costs for businesses, including foreign oil majors who have often been targeted in the past. ($ 1 = 160.1 naira)


(Reporting by Anamesere Igboeroteonwu; Writing by Tim Cocks, Editing by Gareth Jones)



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Reuters: Oddly Enough

Nigerian wife fakes kidnapping to dupe ransom from husband

Monday, August 12, 2013

VIDEO: Horseback Riders Help Foil Kidnapping







Law enforcement authorities credit a retired sheriff, his wife and another couple with helping to rescue 16-year-old Hannah Anderson. The four spotted her with alleged kidnapper James Lee Dimaggio in the Idaho wilderness last week. (Aug. 12)













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VIDEO: Horseback Riders Help Foil Kidnapping

Friday, July 26, 2013

Deposed Egyptian president faces murder, kidnapping charges: report

CAIRO (Reuters) – Egyptian authorities have detained President Mohamed Mursi for 15 days over an array of accusations, including killing soldiers and conspiring with the Palestinian group Hamas, the state news agency said on Friday.



Reuters: Top News



Deposed Egyptian president faces murder, kidnapping charges: report

Plea deal talks under way in Ohio kidnapping case


(AP) — Attorneys and prosecutors for a man accused of kidnapping three women, keeping them captive in his Cleveland home for nearly a decade and raping them repeatedly said they have entered into plea negotiations.


Both sides are scheduled to appear in court Friday morning for a final pretrial hearing for Ariel Castro, 53, and to update a Cuyahoga County judge on the talks.


Plea deal negotiations are hinging on whether the prosecutor would rule out the death penalty as the defense has demanded.


Castro, whose trial is slated to start Aug. 5, has pleaded not guilty nearly 1,000 counts of kidnap, rape and other crimes. His 576-page indictment includes two counts of aggravated murder for allegedly punching and starving one of the women until she miscarried.


Cleveland TV stations reported Thursday that a plea offer had been made. Defense attorney Jaye Schlachet declined to comment on the status of the talks but said offers and counteroffers would be expected.


“We’re in the middle of plea negotiating, that’s where we’re at,” he said. “Plea negotiations have been undertaken which, when there’s plea offers and like any other negotiations, there’s offers, there’s negotiations, there’s acceptance of offers, things of that sort.”


Friday’s hearing was a “final pretrial,” Laura Creed, chief judicial staff attorney for the Cuyahoga County Clerk of Courts, said in an email.


Cuyahoga County prosecutor Tim McGinty’s office had nothing to add beyond Wednesday’s mention in court of plea negotiations, spokesman Joe Frolik said in an email.


There was no immediate comment from the legal team representing the three women.


Castro is accused of repeatedly restraining the women, sometimes chaining them to a pole in a basement, to a bedroom heater or inside a van. His indictment charges him with 512 counts of kidnapping, 446 counts of rape, seven counts of gross sexual imposition, six counts of felonious assault, three counts of child endangerment and one count of possessing criminal tools.


The women disappeared separately between 2002 and 2004, when they were in their teens or early 20s. Each said she had accepted a ride from Castro.


Castro, a former school bus driver, has been jailed since his arrest on May 6 shortly after the women escaped to freedom.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Plea deal talks under way in Ohio kidnapping case

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

VIDEO: Ohio Kidnap Survivors Thank Public for Support









The three women held captive in Cleveland for about a decade have ended their public silence. In a YouTube video, Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight thanked the public for their emotional and financial support. (July 9)













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VIDEO: Ohio Kidnap Survivors Thank Public for Support

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Mass Kidnapping Puts Mexican Legal System On Trial





Images from posters made by relatives show 10 of the 12 young people kidnapped in broad daylight from a bar in Mexico City on May 26. No one has claimed responsibility for the brazen abduction.



Marco Ugarte/AP

Images from posters made by relatives show 10 of the 12 young people kidnapped in broad daylight from a bar in Mexico City on May 26. No one has claimed responsibility for the brazen abduction.



Images from posters made by relatives show 10 of the 12 young people kidnapped in broad daylight from a bar in Mexico City on May 26. No one has claimed responsibility for the brazen abduction.


Marco Ugarte/AP



Josephina Garcia Rodriguez and Leticia Ponce Ramos sip coffee and console each other at a restaurant in front of Mexico City’s prosecutor’s office. They’re about to head into a meeting with the lead investigator in the case of their kidnapped sons.


“We’re going on three weeks since they were kidnapped,” Garcia says. “It’s been some difficult days, really hard for us mothers. We just want our sons back home with us.”


Garcia’s 19-year-old son Said was taken from the Heaven bar at about 11 a.m. on May 26. Twelve young adults in all were snatched, just blocks from Mexico City’s skyscraper-filled main boulevard near the U.S. and British embassies. Ponce’s 16-year-old-son Jersey was among those kidnapped.


She says since then she just feels like the walking dead, as if someone has taken a piece of her. It’s not fair, she says, as the tears stream down her face.





A woman holds up a sign with details of her recently disappeared relative during a protest in Mexico City, on May 30.



Eduardo Verdugo/AP

A woman holds up a sign with details of her recently disappeared relative during a protest in Mexico City, on May 30.



A woman holds up a sign with details of her recently disappeared relative during a protest in Mexico City, on May 30.


Eduardo Verdugo/AP



Despite the violence that rages in many parts of Mexico, the capital had been unusually calm, with relatively low crime rates. The kidnapping case has put a spotlight on one of the roughest neighborhoods in the capital, Tepito, notorious for selling bootleg merchandise and drugs, and put the city’s popular mayor on the defensive.


A Plea For More Police


Kidnappings, which plague a number of countries in Latin America, have skyrocketed in Mexico over the last decade.


The missing are all from Tepito, an outdoor shopping area where vendors sell everything from a 9 mm pistol to a bootleg copy of the latest Iron Man movie.


Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera says he wants to see this crime solved. He’s peppered with questions about the case almost daily.


On Monday, Mancera told reporters that he has given everyone in his Cabinet clear instructions: He wants results, and if he doesn’t get them, they’ll be out of a job.


The next day, his top official for social development was in Tepito highlighting the work she has done in the rough neighborhood. Rose Isela Rodriguez ordered city workers to paint crumbling sidewalks, pick up trash and clear clogged sewer drains.


Juana Consuelo Moreno is an elderly man, playing his guitar and singing for pesos, in front of a soup stand selling migas, day-old bread soaked in chili broth flavored with boneless pork shanks.



He says that the strong arm of the law is needed in the neighborhood — a firm police crackdown to bring order and civility to Tepito.


‘A National Scandal’


Authorities say a rivalry between local gangs may have led to the kidnapping. Two of the people taken from the bar are sons of jailed crime bosses.


Mancera, the mayor, says all the bad press about the case is hurting Mexico City’s image and chastised reporters for talking poorly about the city.


Juan Francisco Torres Landa heads a group called Mexico United Against Crime.


“This is now a national scandal,” he says.


Residents aren’t worried about their image, Torres says, they want justice. As a result, all of Mexico’s judicial system is on trial.


“If they fail, I can assure you the effects will be felt by police departments and district attorneys all over the place,” he says.


Four people are under investigation in the case, including one of the club’s owners. The Heaven bar remains closed. And no one has claimed responsibility for the mass kidnapping.




News



Mass Kidnapping Puts Mexican Legal System On Trial