Society's Child
Assistant U.S. Attorney Sara Woodward disclosed the information while trying to convince a judge to keep a doctor and his wife locked up in the historic case. It involves allegations that two Minnesota girls had their genitals cut at a Livonia clinic in February as part of a religious rite of passage and were told to keep what happened a secret.
"Due to the secretive nature of this procedure, we are unlikely to ever know how many children were cut by Dr. (Jumana) Nagarwala," Woodward said, referring to the lead defendant in the case, later adding, "The Minnesota victims were not the first victims."
Against Woodward's wishes, U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedman granted bond to two other defendants in the case: Dr. Fakhruddin Attar, 53, of Farmington Hills, who is accused of letting Nagarwala use his clinic to perform genital cutting procedures on minor girls; and his wife, Farida Attar, 50, who is accused of holding the girls' hands during the procedure to keep them from squirming and to calm them.
For the first time in U.S. History, more Americans died in 2016 of drug overdoses than were killed in the Vietnam War. Let that sink in.
Last year's death toll in the War on Drugs was 59,000 killed, while during the entire Vietnam War, 1955 to 1975, 58,220 American service members' lives were lost. And, thanks to the immoral and futile police approach to the drug problem, there appears to be no hope in sight for the tide to change.
As The Free Thought Project had previously reported, drug overdose deaths outnumber the number of Americans killed in automobile accidents each year. Answering the question of who is responsible for so many overdose deaths requires a careful examination of the crisis which has now reached epidemic proportions.

A specialist trader works at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange
Instead of buying low and selling high, you're buying high and crossing your fingers," said Gross at the Bloomberg Invest New York summit.
The 73-year-old bond guru blamed central bank policies for low and negative interest rates which are artificially driving up asset prices while creating little growth in the real economy and punishing individual savers, banks and insurance companies.

Thousands of radical extremists must be locked up in new internment camps to protect Britain, a Muslim former police chief declares today (Photo of the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland, built on the site of the Long Kesh internment camp)
Writing exclusively for The Mail on Sunday, Tarique Ghaffur warns there are too many extremists on the streets for police and MI5 officers to monitor.
Mr Ghaffur, an Assistant Commissioner at Scotland Yard when the 7/7 bombings took place, proposes that special centers be set up to detain as many as 3,000 extremists, where they can be kept from launching attacks.
Comment: If Ghaffur was in charge during the 7/7 bombings, then he is either an idiot for not realizing that it was likely a Mossad/MI5 false flag operation - or he was in on it. Either way, he is suggesting a solution that seems part and parcel of a long-term plan to demonize and oppress the Muslim world and provide a "solution" to what is clearly a manufactured "problem". You can be sure that interning some real jihadists is just a slippery slope leading to the imprisonment of many innocent Muslims, and political undesirables.
"I'm very proud of my country, proud of my president, and was once proud of my community," said Brian Talbert, who said he's proud to be gay and proud to be a Trump supporter.
His truck has a Trump-Pence bumper sticker and 'Not a liberal' sign on the back window.
"I'm very proud of my vote. I don't regret my vote. I will vote for Donald Trump again. I'm proud of my president. I don't think I should be vilified because I'm proud of a U.S. president as an American."
Talbert, a member of "Gays for Trump, which is not affiliated with the "Gays for Trump" based in Greensboro, NC, said he and a fellow gay Trump supporter sent in an application to Charlotte Pride so they could have a float in this year's Charlotte Pride Parade.
Hashem and his father Ramadan were arrested by Tripoli's Special Deterrence Force (RADA) in the days following the May 22 attack on Manchester Arena.
Salman is said to have been influenced by members of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, a small Al-Qaeda affiliate group listed since 2005 as a terrorist group in the UK.
Comment: For more on this developing story:
- Crowds flee Ariana Grande concert in Manchester following reports of explosion; at least 22 killed and 59 injured - UPDATES
- The Connection Between MI6, Theresa May & the Manchester Attack
- The Manchester atrocity - What did the British Prime Minister know?
- Manchester attack: Blowback for UK's support of terrorism in Libya, Syria and beyond
The 35-year-old had shut himself away to practise his lines for an English-language stage role.
But a passing train guard who overheard his soliloquy raised the alarm, telling his bosses there was someone talking about weaponry in the WC.
The high-speed train, en route to Paris from Marseille, made an unscheduled stop in the city of Valence where security forces took the man for questioning at a police station. He was later released without charge
France is still under a state of emergency imposed after the November 2015 attacks in Paris, when jihadists killed 130 people in a night of carnage at venues across the city.
The Continuous Air Monitoring alarms went off just before 8am local time at the site. The demolition crews in the area immediately stopped work, took cover "as a precaution" and applied adhesive paint as a fixative material that "is used as part of demolition to control contamination," the Hanford Site said in a series of tweets.
Crews found radioactive contamination as they were removing a gallery glove box in a demolition area that was used to process plutonium throughout the Cold War, Hanford said in an email sent to employees. Recovery crews have entered the area to conduct additional surveys and apply additional fixatives "to mitigate any further contamination spread."
The lawsuit was filed late last month in federal court in eastern Washington state and was announced Wednesday by the London-based human rights group Reprieve. The suit details what it describes as the torture of Abu Zubaydah, who was held in the CIA black site, or secret interrogation facility, in Stare Kiejkuty, Poland, from Dec. 5, 2002-Sept. 22, 2003.
Zubaydah, described in official U.S. documents as a "facilitator" for al-Qaida, has been held at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba since September 2006.
The footage, obtained by Univision and filmed by a bystander on Tonnelle Avenue Sunday night, shows officers allegedly kicking the man in the stomach and head before roughly dragging him away from the nearby burning vehicle.













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