Showing posts with label Safe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Safe. Show all posts

Friday, February 14, 2014

The People"s Valentine: Safe Guide to Dating Dictators

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The People"s Valentine: Safe Guide to Dating Dictators

Monday, February 10, 2014

Citizens For A Really, Really, Really Safe Community…

At Those Damn Liars, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Those Damn Liars and how it is used.

Log Files

Like many other Web sites, Those Damn Liars makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.

Cookies and Web Beacons

Those Damn Liars does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.

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  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Those Damn Liars.
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These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Those Damn Liars send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.

Those Damn Liars has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.

You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Those Damn Liars"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.

If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.


Citizens For A Really, Really, Really Safe Community…

Monday, February 3, 2014

HK a safe place to come out for domestic workers



By Dennis Chong, AFP
February 4, 2014, 8:15 am TWN





HONG KONG–Working long hours away from home for low pay and little time off, life is tough for foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong, but for some the city has brought sexual liberation unheard of in their home countries.

To Jenny Patoc, a 41-year-old Filipina helper, Hong Kong is the place where she met her girlfriend 15 years ago and where they unofficially tied the knot at their own “holy union” ceremony last year — despite the semi-autonomous territory’s failure to recognize same sex marriages.


“In Hong Kong, we are free. We can show who we are,” Patoc told AFP in the southern Chinese city’s packed Central financial district on a recent Sunday, where thousands of helpers congregate every week on their one day off.


While conservative attitudes still prevail in aspects of Hong Kong society, for many migrant workers the former British colony is an easier place than home to be gay, particularly those from Muslim Indonesia and the deeply Catholic Philippines.


Roughly 300,000 domestic workers make about HK$ 4,000 (US$ 515) a month as helpers for Hong Kong families, doing household chores and looking after children while the parents are out at work.


They are mainly from the Philippines, Indonesia or Thailand, many supporting their families by sending earnings home.


Conditions can be tough. In a report last year Amnesty International condemned the “slavery-like” conditions faced by thousands of Indonesian women who work in Hong Kong as domestic staff, accusing authorities of inaction.


The findings came just weeks after a Hong Kong couple were jailed for a shocking string of attacks on their Indonesian housekeeper, including burning her with an iron and beating her with a bike chain.


Last month thousands of domestic workers took to the streets demanding justice for another Indonesian helper who claimed that she was left unable to walk after eight months of abuse at the hands of her employer who has subsequently been arrested.


And this week another Hong Kong housewife was arrested for allegedly assaulting her Bangladeshi maid.


‘I wanted to be free’


For Marrz Balaoro, a member of local lesbian support group Filguys Association, coming out was much easier in Hong Kong compared to her home in the Philippines in the 1980s.


“I came to Hong Kong because I wanted to be on my own. I wanted to be free,” Balaoro said.


“My first employer was considerate and she understood my situation.”


After witnessing a lesbian being bullied by fellow Filipinas in Hong Kong, she formed the Filguys Association to help homosexual migrant workers from her country facing discrimination.





China Post Online – China News



HK a safe place to come out for domestic workers

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

TYT Network Reports - Is Your Backyard Safe From Drones?


Is Your Backyard Safe From Drones?

“When a drone flies into its airspace, Deer Trail will consider it an act of war. You can only shoot at drones flying lower than 1000 feet. Unless your life…



TYT Network Reports - Is Your Backyard Safe From Drones?

Sunday, December 22, 2013

NY Post: Snow falling on Navy ship was from Fukushima radioactive steam… “Is that aluminum foil I taste?” — Sailor: People were defecating on themselves in hallways from excruciating diarrhea — Officer: We saw radiation 300 times ‘safe’ levels (VIDEO)

NY Post: Snow falling on Navy ship was from Fukushima radioactive steam… “Is that aluminum foil I taste?” — Sailor: People were defecating on themselves in hallways from excruciating diarrhea — Officer: We saw radiation 300 times ‘safe’ levels (VIDEO)
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Published: December 22nd, 2013 at 9:04 pm ET
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New York Post, Dec. 22, 2013: Navy sailor Lindsay Cooper knew something was wrong when billows of metallic-tasting snow began drifting over USS Ronald Reagan. [...] she and scores of crewmates watched a sudden storm blow toward them from the tsunami-torn coast of Fukushima, Japan. The tall 24-year-old with a winning smile didn’t know it then, but the snow was caused by the freezing Pacific air mixing with a plume of radioactive steam [...] Senior Chief Michael Sebourn, a radiation-decontamination officer, was assigned to test the aircraft carrier for radiation. The levels were incredibly dangerous and at one point, the radiation in the air measured 300 times higher than what was considered safe, Sebourn told The Post.


Lindsay Cooper, Navy sailor aboard USS Ronald Reagan during 3/11 rescue operation: “I was standing on the flight deck, and we felt this warm gust of air, and, suddenly, it was snowing [...] We joked about it: ‘Hey, it’s radioactive snow! I took pictures and video [...] Japan didn’t want us in port, Korea didn’t want us, Guam turned us away. We floated in the water for two and a half months [until Thailand took them in] “People were s- -tting themselves in the hallways [All the while crew members had been suffering from excruciating diarrhea].”


Cooper interviewed by EON, published Dec. 20, 2013: (at 4:30 in) “As soon as you step foot on the flight deck and went outside you had this taste of like aluminum foil.”[...] (at 10:45 in) We thought that we had felt a plume because there was kind of this warm air that went past the ship and you could kind of tell the differences between jet exhaust — we didn’t have any jets going around at the time. It was like 20 degrees outside and you could feel this warm air and you kind of enjoyed it at first and then you’re like, ‘Is that aluminum foil that I taste?’


Watch the interview here





Published: December 22nd, 2013 at 9:04 pm ET
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WHAT REALLY HAPPENED




Read more about NY Post: Snow falling on Navy ship was from Fukushima radioactive steam… “Is that aluminum foil I taste?” — Sailor: People were defecating on themselves in hallways from excruciating diarrhea — Officer: We saw radiation 300 times ‘safe’ levels (VIDEO) and other interesting subjects concerning The Edge at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, December 1, 2013

DREAM TOY STORE ATTORNEY GENERAL KKK INDIANA SAFE STREETS CIVIL RIGHTS ALLEN COUNTY SHERIFFS

At Those Damn Liars, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Those Damn Liars and how it is used.

Log Files

Like many other Web sites, Those Damn Liars makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.

Cookies and Web Beacons

Those Damn Liars does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.

DoubleClick DART Cookie

  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Those Damn Liars.
  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to Those Damn Liars and other sites on the Internet.
  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Those Damn Liars send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.

Those Damn Liars has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.

You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Those Damn Liars"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.

If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.


DREAM TOY STORE ATTORNEY GENERAL KKK INDIANA SAFE STREETS CIVIL RIGHTS ALLEN COUNTY SHERIFFS

Friday, October 18, 2013

No safe bets for Obama despite toned-down agenda







In this Oct. 17, 2013, photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington. Regrouping after a feud with Congress stalled his agenda, Obama is laying down a three-item to-do list for Congress that seems meager when compared to the bold, progressive agenda he envisioned at the start of his second term. But given the capital’s partisanship, the complexities of the issues and the limited time left, even those items – immigration, farm legislation and a budget – amount to ambitious goals that will take political muscle, skill and ever-elusive compromise to execute. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)





In this Oct. 17, 2013, photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington. Regrouping after a feud with Congress stalled his agenda, Obama is laying down a three-item to-do list for Congress that seems meager when compared to the bold, progressive agenda he envisioned at the start of his second term. But given the capital’s partisanship, the complexities of the issues and the limited time left, even those items – immigration, farm legislation and a budget – amount to ambitious goals that will take political muscle, skill and ever-elusive compromise to execute. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)













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(AP) — Regrouping after a feud with Congress stalled his agenda, President Barack Obama is laying down a three-item to-do list for Congress that seems meager when compared with the bold, progressive agenda he envisioned at the start of his second term.


But given the capital’s partisanship, the complexities of the issues and the limited time left, even those items — immigration, farm legislation and a budget — amount to ambitious goals that will take political muscle, skill and ever-elusive compromise to execute.


“Those are three specific things that would make a huge difference in our economy right now,” Obama said. “And we could get them done by the end of the year if our focus is on what’s good for the American people.”


A breakthrough on any of the three issues would be a welcome development for a political system whose utter dysfunction was put on full display when the government was partially shut down for 16 days and the nation came perilously close to default. Both parties are looking for signs of whether that squabble and its eleventh-hour resolution will make it easier or harder for the two parties to find common ground in the future.


Still, the scaled-back vision for what might be feasible in the short term could be disappointing for Obama’s liberal supporters, who have been looking expectantly to the president to enact as much of his agenda as possible before Washington is consumed next year by midterm elections and the end of Obama’s presidency draws nearer.


Obama began the year calling for gun control legislation, expanded preschool education, an immigration overhaul, a higher minimum wage and for initiatives to address climate change. But like other moments in Obama’s presidency, fierce interparty divisions and fiscal showdowns have at times overwhelmed the capital and sapped it of any energy to move on other legislation.


Obama’s gun control push, spurred by a shocking elementary school shooting in Connecticut, collapsed in the Senate. And immigration legislation attracted bipartisan support in the Senate but has stalled in the Republican-led House, a blow to Obama’s hopes that Republicans would be motivated to support it after losing the Hispanic vote by wide margins in 2012.


Meanwhile, legislative efforts to increase wages, expand access to pre-K schools and reduce pollution have been nonstarters in the divided Congress.


White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama will continue to press other priorities such as college affordability, gun control and climate change, where the president has resorted to executive action after determining Congress was unlikely to act. But he said achieving a bipartisan budget deal or an immigration overhaul would represent no small accomplishments for the country.


“There’s no question they’re all difficult, given the current environment,” Carney said, adding that “the president is not at all convinced by the skeptics who say that we can’t get things done.”


By focusing on the budget, immigration and the farm bill, which combines agriculture policy with anti-hunger measures, Obama chose three heavy lifts that are already in the congressional pipeline. Yet each is fraught with difficulties, and chances of success for each one are limited.


“This White House hasn’t really demonstrated that it can walk and chew gum any more than Congress has,” said William Galston, a Brookings Institution scholar and former Clinton administration official.


Even in the first hours after the government shutdown ended and Democrats and Republicans opened budget negotiations, fault lines were beginning to emerge that could lead to deadlock if both sides adhere strictly to their previous positions. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., rejected the possibility that Democrats might agree to cuts to entitlement programs in exchange for relief from automatic spending cuts.


In exchange for entitlement cuts, Reid said, Republicans would have to agree to higher taxes — setting up an eerily familiar ideological clash between the two parties now charged with reaching consensus on a budget. Republicans will face intense pressure in their districts not to raise taxes, while Democrats will press Obama not to chip away at the nation’s safety net.


“If he buys into the idea that cutting Social Security benefits or cutting Medicare benefits is going to improve the economy, that’s a disaster for him and it’s a disaster for his party,” said Roger Hickey, co-director of the liberal advocacy group Campaign for America’s Future.


Republicans are smarting from a failed strategy that exposed deep GOP divisions, potentially giving Obama a temporary upper hand.


Further complicating the chances for any legislative successes this year is the poisoned atmosphere created by the recent fiscal standoff. House Republicans in particular bristled at Obama’s refusal to negotiate on the debt ceiling and at his belittling view of House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.


“This recent fight has spoiled the opportunity for getting anything major done by the rest of the year,” said Ron Bonjean, a former top House and Senate Republican leadership aide. “There are a lot of hard feelings.”


But at least publicly, both sides are downplaying the notion that bad blood will preclude important deals in the weeks to come.


“If your punditry suggests finding big agreements is hindered by a bad relationship” between Obama and Boehner, “you’re doing it wrong,” Boehner’s spokesman, Brendan Buck, wrote Friday on Twitter.


“Agree,” Carney replied.


___


Follow Josh Lederman on Twitter at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP and Jim Kuhnhenn at http://twitter.com/jkuhnhenn


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



No safe bets for Obama despite toned-down agenda

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Missing teenager Erika Kacicova found safe


“Our primary aim now is to concentrate on Erika’s well–being and begin to piece together her movements since she left home.”


Erika went missing from her family’s house in the Darnall area of Sheffield – 30 miles from where she was eventually found – on August 5.


Earlier yesterday, Det Insp Tate, the officer in charge of the hunt for Erika, had appealed directly to her to get in touch and said that an arrested man was known to her.


The 37–year–old, who was arrested on suspicion of child abduction yesterday, was detained in Bradford and taken to Sheffield to be interviewed by officers from the South Yorkshire force.


Det Insp Tate said she believed the man had been in contact with Erika during the previous 96 hours.


The teenager, who is of Slovakian descent, had gone missing once before but not for such a long time, Det Insp Tate said.


She added that there was nothing to suggest a “street grooming” gang had targeted Erika.


Police had earlier released another man from Bradford, a 22–year–old arrested on suspicion of her abduction, on bail.




Crime News – UK Crime News



Missing teenager Erika Kacicova found safe

Sunday, August 11, 2013

California Kidnap Victim Found Safe; Abductor Killed





CASCADE, Idaho — A harrowing weeklong search for a missing California teenager ended Saturday when FBI agents rescued the girl and shot and killed her apparent kidnapper at a campsite deep in the Idaho wilderness.


Hannah Anderson, 16, appeared to be uninjured and will be reunited soon with her father at a hospital, authorities said. Her suspected abductor, James Lee DiMaggio, 40, was killed after his campsite was found in Idaho’s rugged Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness, roughly 40 miles from the tiny town of Cascade.


Hannah was taken to a hospital where crisis counselors and health care providers were assisting her. Her father was expected to arrive in Idaho on Sunday to reunite with her.


“We will make sure she gets as much care as possible, physically and emotionally,” said Andrea Dearden, a spokeswoman from the Ada County Sheriff’s Department who has been leading the communication team for the interagency effort in Valley County.


The shooting came after officers participating in a massive manhunt for the pair spotted the campsite from the air and an FBI hostage recovery team trekked to the site near Morehead Lake.


“No one really knows where an investigation like this will lead,” said Mary Rook, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Salt Lake City division. “In this case, our team faced a very challenging situation.”


The FBI said it was sending a team to investigate what unfolded before, during and after the shooting. Authorities offered few details Saturday night.


The location wasn’t far from what had been the last known sighting of the pair. A horseback rider called authorities Thursday night to report that on Wednesday he had seen two people who resembled Anderson and DiMaggio with camping gear on a trail near the lake. The rider, whose name wasn’t released, didn’t realize they were subjects of a massive search until he got home and saw news reports.


The case began when the charred bodies of Hannah Anderson’s mother, Christina Anderson, 44, and the teen’s 8-year-old brother, Ethan Anderson, were found in DiMaggio’s burning house outside San Diego, near the Mexico border.


DiMaggio was close to the family. Christina Anderson’s husband, Brett Anderson, has described him as a best friend and said the children thought of him as an uncle.


Authorities have said DiMaggio had an “unusual infatuation” with Hannah, although the father said he never saw any strange behavior.


An Amber Alert was issued, and tips led investigators to Oregon after DiMaggio and the teen were reportedly spotted there.


But it wasn’t until the Idaho horseback rider called in his tip that investigators found a major lead – DiMaggio’s car, hidden under brush at a trailhead on the border of the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness in central Idaho.


A contingent of about 270 law enforcement officers from the FBI, the Valley and Ada County sheriffs’ offices, Idaho State Police, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the Border Patrol, aided by experts from federal land management and wildlife agencies, worked around the clock to figure out the best way to track DiMaggio and the teen in the roadless area.


San Diego County Sheriff William D. Gore announced Hannah’s rescue and DiMaggio’s death from a news conference in California. He said members of his office notified Hannah’s father, Brett Anderson, of her rescue.


“He was very relieved and very excited and looking forward to being reunited with his daughter,” Gore said.


At a separate news conference in Idaho, Dearden said she didn’t know if DiMaggio fired shots at officers but there were no reports of any injuries to authorities involved in the encounter. Cascade residents gathered behind Dearden, Rook and the other officials gathered at the news conference and cheered at the news of Hannah’s rescue.


Rook said FBI victim specialists were working with Hannah and her family to get them the resources they need.


“As grateful as we are that she was recovered safely, we also remember the other victims in this case who lost their lives,” Rook said.


FBI policy calls for an investigation whenever an agent fires a weapon, Rook said. A team from Washington, D.C., was preparing to investigate the events at the campsite, and until that investigation is complete, Rook said she couldn’t share any other details.



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Crime on HuffingtonPost.com



California Kidnap Victim Found Safe; Abductor Killed

Teen found safe in Idaho; alleged abductor killed








FILE – This combination of undated file photos provided by the San Diego Sheriff’s Department shows James Lee DiMaggio, 40, left, and Hannah Anderson, 16. A massive search entered a seventh day Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013, for DiMaggio, suspected of abducting 16-year-old family friend Hannah. DiMaggio is suspected of killing Hannah’s mother Christina Anderson, 44, and her 8-year-old brother Ethan Anderson, whose bodies were found Sunday night in DiMaggio’s burning house in California near the Mexico border. (AP Photo/San Diego Sheriff’s Department, File)





FILE – This combination of undated file photos provided by the San Diego Sheriff’s Department shows James Lee DiMaggio, 40, left, and Hannah Anderson, 16. A massive search entered a seventh day Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013, for DiMaggio, suspected of abducting 16-year-old family friend Hannah. DiMaggio is suspected of killing Hannah’s mother Christina Anderson, 44, and her 8-year-old brother Ethan Anderson, whose bodies were found Sunday night in DiMaggio’s burning house in California near the Mexico border. (AP Photo/San Diego Sheriff’s Department, File)





James Dimaggio’s car is towed to the town of Cascade after dectives finished searsching it on a trail head bordering the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness on Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013. Dimaggio, 40, is suspected of killing a California woman and her young son and then fleeing with the 16-year-old daughter was found in the Idaho wilderness on Friday after horseback riders reported seeing the man and girl hiking in the area two days earlier, authorities said. (AP Photo/Robby Milo)





Map locates Boulevard, Calif., where the bodies of missing children were found; 1c x 2 inches; 46.5 mm x 50 mm;





This photo released by the San Diego Sheriff’s Department shows, Ethan Anderson, 8, whose mother, Christina Anderson, 44, was one of two people found dead in a house fire Sunday night. Late Friday evening, Aug. 9, 2013, the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department said its crime laboratory has identified the body of a child found in the rubble of the burned house as Ethan Anderson. A brief statement Friday night said that investigators identified the charred body through DNA extracted from the boy’s bone marrow. The body was found Sunday along with the body of the boy’s mother Christina Anderson, who investigators say was murdered. (AP Photo/San Diego Sheriff’s Department ,File)





Brett Anderson, the father of missing children 16-year-old Hannah Anderson and 8-year-old Ethan Anderson, speaks during a news conference Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013, in San Diego. Anderson, the husband of a Christina Anderson, whose body was found in a burned house near the U.S.-Mexico border, said Tuesday that he knew the man suspected of killing his wife and abducting one or both of their children. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)













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CASCADE, Idaho (AP) — A harrowing weeklong search for a missing California teenager ended Saturday when FBI agents rescued the girl and shot and killed her apparent kidnapper at a campsite deep in the Idaho wilderness.


Hannah Anderson, 16, appeared to be uninjured and will be reunited soon with her father at a hospital, authorities said. Her suspected abductor, James Lee DiMaggio, 40, was killed after his campsite was found in Idaho’s rugged Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness, roughly 40 miles from the tiny town of Cascade.


Hannah was taken to a hospital where crisis counselors and health care providers were assisting her. Her father was expected to arrive in Idaho on Sunday to reunite with her.


“We will make sure she gets as much care as possible, physically and emotionally,” said Andrea Dearden, a spokeswoman from the Ada County Sheriff’s Department who has been leading the communication team for the interagency effort in Valley County.


The shooting came after officers participating in a massive manhunt for the pair spotted the campsite from the air and an FBI hostage recovery team trekked to the site near Morehead Lake.


“No one really knows where an investigation like this will lead,” said Mary Rook, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Salt Lake City division. “In this case, our team faced a very challenging situation.”


The FBI said it was sending a team to investigate what unfolded before, during and after the shooting. Authorities offered few details Saturday night.


The location wasn’t far from what had been the last known sighting of the pair. A horseback rider called authorities Thursday night to report that on Wednesday he had seen two people who resembled Anderson and DiMaggio with camping gear on a trail near the lake. The rider, whose name wasn’t released, didn’t realize they were subjects of a massive search until he got home and saw news reports.


The case began when the charred bodies of Hannah Anderson’s mother, Christina Anderson, 44, and the teen’s 8-year-old brother, Ethan Anderson, were found in DiMaggio’s burning house outside San Diego, near the Mexico border.


DiMaggio was close to the family. Christina Anderson’s husband, Brett Anderson, has described him as a best friend and said the children thought of him as an uncle.


Authorities have said DiMaggio had an “unusual infatuation” with Hannah, although the father said he never saw any strange behavior.


An Amber Alert was issued, and tips led investigators to Oregon after DiMaggio and the teen were reportedly spotted there.


But it wasn’t until the Idaho horseback rider called in his tip that investigators found a major lead — DiMaggio’s car, hidden under brush at a trailhead on the border of the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness in central Idaho.


A contingent of about 270 law enforcement officers from the FBI, the Valley and Ada County sheriffs’ offices, Idaho State Police, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the Border Patrol, aided by experts from federal land management and wildlife agencies, worked around the clock to figure out the best way to track DiMaggio and the teen in the roadless area.


San Diego County Sheriff William D. Gore announced Hannah’s rescue and DiMaggio’s death from a news conference in California. He said members of his office notified Hannah’s father, Brett Anderson, of her rescue.


“He was very relieved and very excited and looking forward to being reunited with his daughter,” Gore said.


The father described a range of emotion in a text message to CNN.


“I am nervous excited saddened 4 my wife and son and worried what my daughter has been through,” he wrote to the network. “It’s now healing time. Keep us in your prayers.”


At a separate news conference in Idaho, Dearden said she didn’t know if DiMaggio fired shots at officers but there were no reports of any injuries to authorities involved in the encounter. Cascade residents gathered behind Dearden, Rook and the other officials gathered at the news conference and cheered at the news of Hannah’s rescue.


Rook said FBI victim specialists were working with Hannah and her family to get them the resources they need.


“As grateful as we are that she was recovered safely, we also remember the other victims in this case who lost their lives,” Rook said.


FBI policy calls for an investigation whenever an agent fires a weapon, Rook said. A team from Washington, D.C., was preparing to investigate the events at the campsite, and until that investigation is complete, Rook said she couldn’t share any other details.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Teen found safe in Idaho; alleged abductor killed

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Guys That Invented Encrypted Email Say Email Can Never Be Safe From NSA Snooping




Silent Circle, a company founded by Internet Hall of famer Phil Zimmermann, famous privacy expert Jon Callas, and a couple of Navy Seals, has shut down its secure email service.

They shuttered it because email can’t be secured in a way that would prevent a government agency like the NSA from snooping, the founders said.


All email messages “leak metadata” they say. That information includes data about who you are talking to and where you are. That info is visible even if the message itself is encrypted.


E-mail as we know it today is fundamentally broken from a privacy perspective,” Callas says. That’s a pretty strong statement coming from this particular guy.


Zimmermann and Callas were the creators and cofounders of Pretty Good Privacy in the 1990s. PGP was one of first technologies to encrypt email to prevent spying.


Last year, they launched a new service, Silent Circle, that encrypts mobile phone calls, video calls and texts. Since smartphones also handle email, Silent Circle was encrypting email.


But now it’s pulling the plug on the email portion of their service. The company says that it has not been asked to add a back door or to turn over emails. It is closing the service preemptively.


If you want to see what someone can learn about you by looking at your email metadata, here’s a tool called Immersion that will show you.  It was created by a team at the MIT Media Lab.





Politics



Guys That Invented Encrypted Email Say Email Can Never Be Safe From NSA Snooping

Friday, August 2, 2013

Heroin addict thought Guardian office was "safe place" to use drugs


A statement from Mr Rusbridger’s personal assistant said the “dazed” and “warm and sweaty” looking Earlington stumbled up to his office before saying he was lost and wandering off, the Camden New Journal reported.


Leather jacket-clad Earlington said he had been “desperate” to find somewhere to use in private after buying drugs in King’s Cross, and happened upon the newspaper’s offices as a potential location.


“Three to four weeks before that I had used the Guardian toilets – I had asked a guard and he had let me in,” he told the court.


“So I went back. This time there was no guard there so I tailgated some people. I had been there before but I couldn’t remember where the toilet was.


“At the time my state of mind was not good, I was ‘clucking’. That was why I didn’t want to talk to anyone or ask anyone where it was.


“But I found the toilet eventually. I ‘chased the dragon’, I burnt it on a piece of foil. I used the drugs, basically. And I went back out.


“That is all. I didn’t want to steal nothing, it was just to use the drugs. I left and I went back home.”


CCTV showed Earlington, who has a 20-year problem with Class A drugs and 38 previous convictions, walking into the Guardian building, following staff through security barriers, past groups of employees up the stairs, before leaving five minutes later.


Earlington added: “Sir, your honour, I know that was a really stupid thing to do, sir.


“When you are on drugs, you just don’t think clearly.


“I’m not trying to say it is right. I just felt desperate for a safe place.”


But Deputy District Judge Timothy King found him guilty of burglary.


The judge said: “Entering a building like the Guardian, where there were security barriers, there was significant risk to him of being stopped and police being called.


“The fact he tailgates through the barriers, he does not ask for directions to the toilet.


“The fact that he continues to look around – I’m satisfied his intention was to steal.”


Earlington will be sentenced next month.




Crime News – UK Crime News



Heroin addict thought Guardian office was "safe place" to use drugs

Friday, June 28, 2013

LIVE FROM THE IDEAS FESTIVAL: Are We Safe?





TIME: 7:00pm-8:00pm EST


On Friday, June 28, former US Director of National Intelligence and current Booz Allen Hamilton Vice President Mike McConnell speaks publically for what may be the first time since the leaking of surveillance information now known as PRISM. Director, President, and CEO of the Woodrow Wilson Center, former Congresswoman Jane Harmon, joins McConnell, The New York Times’ David Brooks, and Aspen Institute Vice President Elliot Gerson in debating questions of national security.


For more information and a schedule of events for the 2013 Aspen Ideas Festival, click here. For real time tweets from the festival, see below:




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Politics on HuffingtonPost.com



LIVE FROM THE IDEAS FESTIVAL: Are We Safe?

Monday, June 24, 2013

Assange: Snowden in "a safe place"

Julian Assange is shown. | AP Photo

‘Every person has the right to seek and receive political asylum,’ Assange said. | AP Photo





Julian Assange on Monday declined to reveal where NSA leaker Edward Snowden was camped out as he bashed the Obama administration for asking other countries to turn Snowden over to the United States.


Snowden is “healthy” and “safe,” WikiLeaks founder Assange told reporters on a press call, but he couldn’t provide further details “other than to say the matter is in hand.”







“We are aware of where Mr. Snowden is, he is in a safe place and his spirits are high,” he said when pressed again on Snowden’s location. “Due to the bellicose threats coming from the U.S. administration, we cannot go into further detail on that at this time.”


(PHOTOS: Pols react to Snowden on the run)


His comments came amid reports that Snowden, who was slated to leave for Cuba on Monday, was not on the designated plane, making his whereabouts uncertain. On Sunday, Snowden left Hong Kong and arrived in Moscow, despite U.S. wishes that Hong Kong officials assist in getting Snowden to American law enforcement. The administration has since called on Russia, China and Hong Kong to cooperate in bringing Snowden back to America.


“Every person has the right to seek and receive political asylum,” Assange said, adding, “It is counterproductive and unacceptable for the Obama administration to try and interfere with those rights. It reflects poorly on the [U.S.] and no self-respecting country would submit to such interference or such bullying by the U.S.” on this issue.


Assange, who said that WikiLeaks has funded some of Snowden’s travel and lodging since he left Hong Kong, pushed back on the judgment of some U.S. lawmakers who say Snowden undermines his promotion of civil liberties by seeking help from repressive countries including Russia.


“I simply do not see the irony,” he said. “Mr. Snowden has revealed information about mass, unlawful spying which has affected every single one of us. The U.S. administration has issued a series of bellicose, unilateral threats against him…it’s a very serious situation. Any country wishing to assist in upholding his rights must be applauded for doing so.”


When asked about the treatment of citizens in those countries, he rejoined, “that’s another matter,” and argued that “we do not criticize people for seeking refugee status in the U.S. despite its use of torture, drone strikes…and so on.”


Assange also blasted Secretary of State John Kerry, who said on Monday that Snowden has “betrayed his country.”


“This morning the U.S. secretary of state called Edward Snowden a traitor,” he said. “Edward Snowden is not a traitor. He is not a spy. He is a whistleblower who has told the public an important truth.”


Possible asylum options for Snowden include Ecuador and Iceland, WikiLeaks officials said.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Assange: Snowden in "a safe place"

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Is robot surgery safe?



The majority of the hundreds of thousands of robotic surgeries performed in the U.S. each year are done safely. However, as use of the machine increases, so are reports of injuries: The U.S. Food and Drug administration has received more than 200 reports since 2007 of burns, cuts and infections – including 89 deaths – after robotic surgery. Rock Center’s Dr. Nancy Snyderman investigates Intuitive Surgical Systems and meets a woman who blames her devastating complication on the robot.



By Ami Schmitz and Melissa Dahl
NBC News


The newlywed had been grappling with excruciatingly painful periods for as long as she could remember, when her doctor told her one way she could end the agony was a hysterectomy. Michelle Zarick, then 37, didn’t question it when the doctor wanted to use the latest high-tech option that medicine had to offer: a hysterectomy done with the help of a robot.


“She mentioned that doing the robotic-assisted hysterectomy would shorten my recovery time at home,” says Zarick, who had been diagnosed with fibroids, non-cancerous tumors that grow in the uterine walls.


So Zarick agreed – and initially, everything seemed fine. But in the weeks after the 2009 procedure with the machine, called the da Vinci, she suffered a horrifying complication that is still impacting her life.



Across the country, nearly 400,000 robotic-assisted surgeries were performed last year, according to Intuitive Surgical, the company that makes the robots. Use of the machine for performing hysterectomies is on the rise, increasing from .5 in 2007 to 9.5 percent in 2010, according to a study published in a February issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. Besides gynecological surgeries, the da Vinci can deftly perform procedures like heart surgeries, colorectal surgery, plus treatments for prostate, kidney, lung, throat and bladder cancers, among others.


The majority of the hundreds of thousands of robotic surgeries performed in the U.S. each year are done safely. However, as use of the machine increases, so are reports of injuries: The U.S. Food and Drug administration has received more than 200 reports since 2007 of burns, cuts and infections – including 89 deaths — after robotic surgery.


RELATED: Electrical burns may burst surgical robot’s bubble


The robotic surgery works like this: The patient is on the operating table while the doctor sits a few feet away at a console, where he or she can manipulate the robotic arms while watching the procedure through a 3-D viewfinder.


Many surgeons say the robot makes it easier to see and navigate to hard-to-reach places; plus, the robot-assisted surgery makes small incisions and causes minimal bleeding, leaving minimal scars and speeding post-surgery recovery time. But critics of the da Vinci worry that the high-tech, futuristic factor is driving the decision to use the robots, despite the fact that research has shown that for a hysterectomy, robotic-assisted surgery doesn’t lower complication rates for patients when compared to other surgical procedures and can cost about $ 2,000 more.


The first few days after Zarick’s surgery, she felt OK, she told Rock Center’s Dr. Nancy Snyderman, chief medical editor of NBC News. But five weeks after her hysterectomy, in February 2009, the unimaginable happened. There’s no delicate way to put this: Her intestines fell out of her vagina.


“I felt like I had to have a bowel movement, and — as I was bearing down — I felt something kind of pop inside me,” says Zarick, who looked down and saw her intestines where they were absolutely not supposed to be. “I knew that the situation that I was in at that moment was dire.”



When a hysterectomy is done, after the uterus and cervix are removed, surgeons suture the vagina at the top, where the cervix used to be. In Zarick’s case, that seal reopened, and her intestines spilled out. It’s rare, both in cases of robotic and non-robotic surgery. But published reports of this happening after robotic surgery are increasing. Researchers aren’t yet sure how often it happens.


At the hospital, surgeons were able to repair the damage, though Zarick was left with a large abdominal scar — and lasting damage to her physical relationship with her husband of less than a year, Ryan, she told Rock Center. “Afterwards I felt like a monster. I mean, just the way that the scars and my abdomen looked,” she said. Zarick has filed a lawsuit against Intuitive; her case is one of more than a dozen filed in the last two years.


The FDA is looking into the issue to determine whether the growing number of injuries reported is simply because more robotic surgeries are being done, or if they’re being caused by the machine itself or by the surgeons, who, critics argue, may be given inadequate training.


CNBC



da Vinci robot idles in empty operating room




Catherine Mohr, the director of medical research at Intuitive, described the training process to Rock Center. The company requires surgeons to take online training to learn da Vinci-specific terms – like “remote center” – that wouldn’t be found in traditional operating rooms. Surgeons must also practice the robotic surgery at Intuitive in Sunnyvale, Calif., initially on an inanimate object, learning how to move the arms around and generally familiarizing themselves with the machine. After that, they practice on a cadaver or an animal, making the robotic arms move through surgical steps like dissection and sewing.


So they’re taught all the steps – everything that, when put together, makes up a surgery like a hysterectomy. But, in Intuitive’s training environment, a surgeon would not do a practice hysterectomy, something that worries critics of the da Vinci who fear doctors aren’t thoroughly trained on the device before using it with actual patients.


“What you’re not taught is how to actually do that hysterectomy, because that is something that is part of the surgical training,” Mohr told Rock Center. She later adds, “If you know how to do all of those surgical subtasks, putting them in the correct order on a hysterectomy is something that you would know how to do, as a surgeon.”


After the practice surgery on the cadaver or animal, Intuitive gives the surgeon a certificate of training completion. “The hospital then has to make the decision of whether they are going to grant them operating privileges, and what additional supervision, observed cases, or other things that they need to do before they’re allowed to operate solo,” Mohr told Rock Center.


In other words: Should surgeons do three supervised surgeries with the da Vinci before going it alone? Or 30, or 300? It’s up to the credentialing committee at the hospital, Mohr says, something some critics of the da Vinci take issue with.


CNBC



Patient on table during da Vinci robotic surgery




“So the real question is … is it still safe? In the hands of a good surgeon, yes,” Dr. Marty Makary, a surgeon at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, told Rock Center. “In the hands of someone who may not have the advanced skill sets, it could be a real danger. “


Additionally, Makary points out that while the da Vinci certainly brings a certain “wow” factor, it hasn’t been proven to be any better at reducing complications for patients than existing surgical techniques.


“We’ve got great, state-of-the-art, minimally invasive techniques that have worked for years, sometimes decades, that are now being replaced with more expensive robotic technology, without a benefit to the patients,” Makary said.


For example, surgeons can remove the uterus through the vagina, a procedure that may sound off putting, but is actually minimally invasive and speeds up the patient’s recovery time. (Zarick told Rock Center her doctor briefly discussed this option with her, but were much more “excitable” about the da Vinci.) And according to the JAMA study, the robotic surgery did not reduce complication rates for hysterectomy patients when compared to existing techniques – that report found that robotic surgery did not reduce complications for hysterectomy cases. But it did add about $ 2,189 to the cost of each surgery.


In March, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists released a statement on robotic surgery for hysterectomies, cautioning surgeons of the importance of separating “the marketing hype from the reality when considering the best surgical approach for hysterectomies.”


As Makary told Rock Center, “The robot is a technical tour-de-force, but I think patients need to know that for some procedures, there’s no benefit.”


Annual sales of the da Vinci have increased 41 percent in the last decade, as CNBC has reported, and a robot can cost a hospital as much as $ 1.5 million – meaning pressure builds for doctors to use them for as many surgeries as possible in order for the hospital to make up for that cost.


“It can take quite a long time, especially if you’re a smaller hospital that doesn’t do as many procedures,” says journalist Herb Greenberg, who’s extensively reported on the da Vinci for CNBC. “Again, that’s what’s remarkable when we look at the story. This was sold originally to major medical centers, major clinics, and now it’s filtering down to community hospitals.”


In Zarick’s case, Intuitive has denied all allegations that her complications were caused by the da Vinci.


Mohr declined to comment on Zarick’s lawsuit.


For years, Zarick says she’s carried the weight of her story and the impact it’s had on her physical relationship with her husband, Ryan. Somehow, her horrific injury and all that followed felt like something she brought on herself, by choosing a new type of procedure she says, even though she knows that’s not a rational thought. But with her husband’s support – and therapy – she’s beginning to realize all of this was not her fault.






Is robot surgery safe?

Victim of alleged rape at Marine base: "I thought ... I would be safe"


NBC News



Karalen Morthole, 23, alleges she was raped by a noncommissioned officer at a Marine base bar in Washington, D.C., in July 2012.




By Michael Isikoff, National Investigative Correspondent, NBC News


A 23-year-old Washington, D.C. woman who alleges she was raped on a Marine Corps base just blocks from the U.S. Capitol said she never thought she’d be in danger among members of the military.


“I thought I was going to a place where I would be safe,” said Karalen Morthole in an exclusive interview with NBC News. “In my head, I thought these are people who are supposed to be protecting me.”


This week a Marine Corps general ordered that Master Sgt. Ronald E. Bohlayer be charged with raping Morthole after a night of partying and drinking last July at the historic Marine Barracks on Capitol Hill. The charges come as the entire U.S. military is under fire for its handling of sexual assault cases, and barely a year after the release of an Oscar-nominated documentary, “The Invisible War,” that featured allegations of sexual assault and raucous drinking at the Barracks. The allegations got widespread attention from Congress despite strong denials from the Marine Corps. 


An attorney for Bohlayer, meanwhile, questioned whether the general’s order that his client be prosecuted for rape, despite the recommendations of an investigating officer that the charge be dropped, might have been influenced by the current publicity about sexual assaults in the military.


Morthole, who agreed to let NBC News use her name, is a local bartender and recent Catholic University graduate. She said that after attending a Washington Nationals game last July 3, she was partying with some friends at the Ugly Mug bar on 8th Street SE when she accepted an invitation from a Marine to go to a pub on the grounds of the Barracks, directly across the street. She was escorted onto the base by the Marine early on the morning of July 4, she said, without showing any identification to a guard.


Once at the Marine Barracks pub, she said, she and others present began drinking “a lot” of shots of Irish whiskey – and one Marine got sexually aggressive in a patio area outside. “The man who was doing this kept on making very vulgar advances toward me, sexual advances towards me,” Morthole said. He “pinned” her against a wall, she said, got “very close to my face and …kept repeating the phrase, ‘I’m going to (blank) you.’”


“I was very scared,” said Morthole. “I can just remember being in excruciating pain and crying and asking him to stop.”


After raping her, Morthole said, her attacker escorted her outside and tried to make her get into a cab with him so they could go back to her home. When she refused, “He got within six inches of my face and started screaming obscenities at me, which prompted the guard I was standing next to to hold up his arm and say, ‘Stand down.’ ”


Bohlayer, the noncommissioned officer now charged with raping her, is a 22-year veteran of the Marine Corps who served in Iraq and was awarded a Bronze Star in Afghanistan in 2010, according to his lawyer. The charge sheet alleges that he forced Morthole to have sexual intercourse at a time when she was “incapable of consenting . . . due to impairment by alcohol, and that her impairment was known or reasonably should have been known by the accused.”



Karalen Morthole, who claims she was raped by a Marine at a pub at a barracks in Washington, D.C., says, “I thought these are people who are supposed to be helping me.”



Bohlayer has adamantly denied the charges, and his lawyer, Maj. Joseph Grimm, said in a statement that both the local U.S. attorney’s office and a Marine investigating officer had investigated the incident and concluded there were no grounds to bring charges. Morthole says she first went to a local hospital about a week after the incident and didn’t report the alleged assault to the Washington, D.C. police until about a week after that. She later testified before a grand jury, but was told by a local prosecutor that no charges would be brought because the alleged assault amounted to a case of “he said-she said.”


In his statement, Grimm said that the Marine “Investigating Officer” — a reserve colonel who is a former military judge — reached the same conclusion at a pretrial hearing. “After hearing the testimony of Ms. Morthole and all the relevant witnesses, the investigating officer found that the allegations of sexual assault and rape were baseless,” said Grimm. “The Investigating Officer subsequently recommended that the sexual assault and rape charges be dismissed.” Grimm acknowledged that the investigating officer did recommend that other lesser charges be brought.


But Marine Maj. Gen. James A. Kessler, the commander or “convening authority” in charge of the case, overrode the recommendations of the investigating officer and directed that Bohlayer be court-martialed on charges of rape as well as indecent exposure and disorderly conduct.


In a court hearing on the case this week, Grimm suggested that Kessler’s decision was influenced by the current “wide publicity about sexual assaults in the military” as well as pressure from Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Amos, who in recent testimony on Capitol Hill said that “a single sexual assault in a unit can undermine everything.”


“We are currently investigating whether the Convening Authority’s decision to refer the case to a court-martial was caused by unlawful command influence,” Grimm said in his statement.


A Marine Corps spokesman declined any comment on the Bohlayer case, including Grimm’s charge that the case was being influenced by politics. “That’s going to be something for the court and the jury to decide,” said Capt. Eric Flanagan. “It would be inappropriate for us to comment.”


The case is, in some ways, the reverse of another celebrated recent sexual assault case – that of Air Force Lt. Col. James Wilkerson, who was convicted of aggravated sexual assault by a military jury last November only to have his conviction overturned by a top Air Force general who served as the “convening authority” in the case. The disclosure of that reversal outraged members of Congress and led to current demands by Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D.-N.Y., and others that military commanders be stripped of their authority to make decisions about sexual assault prosecutions.



Eugene Fidell, an expert on military justice at Yale Law School, explains why some accusations of misconduct within the ranks never get a fair trial and why this is a “mess” for our armed forces.



Eugene Fidell, who teaches military law at Yale Law School, said it is relatively unusual — but not unheard of — for a convening authority like Maj. Gen. Kessler to direct that court-martial charges be brought when the investigating officer recommends otherwise. “It’s not completely rare, but it’s not something that happens every day,” he said.


But Fidell said that “in the current political climate,” Maj. Gen. Kessler was “traversing a minefield.”


“If you send the case to trial against the recommendation (of the investigating officer), people will complain that you’re being too hard and politically correct,” he said. “If you refuse to send the case to trial against a recommendation, then it means you’re unwilling to bite the bullet and make the difficult decision. So most convening authorities right now are probably scratching their heads.”


Fidell also said that Morthole’s acknowledgement that there was heavy drinking that night should not be a barrier to convicting the defendant. “If anything [it] helps the prosecution,” he said, “because that would suggest that the victim was not in a position to defend herself, to say, ‘Stop, don’t do that,’ or scream out. It’s often the case that people in these situations have had too much to drink.”


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Victim of alleged rape at Marine base: "I thought ... I would be safe"