Society's Child
On Thursday, a US prison parole board said Shamiri could be transferred to an Arabic-speaking country, but not back to Yemen.
"Shamiri isn't the first case of mistaken identity," the release stated. "This goes directly against the myth that all remaining Gitmo detainees are 'the worst of the worst.'"
The woman reportedly threw a slab of concrete through the window of the General Assembly Building during a legislative committee meeting.
Nobody was injured in the incident, and Captain Randy Howard of the Capitol Police stated that it seems as though it was a desperate act to be jailed so she could have a warm place to sleep during the freezing night.
Comment: How sad it is that in America, some are forced to choose between being arrested or freezing to death.

Turkish journalists hold banners and shout slogans during a demonstration in support of jailed journalists Can Dundar and Erdem Gul on January 10, 2016 in Ankara during the "Active Journalists'Day"
Can Dündar, editor-in-chief of Cumhuriyet newspaper, and senior editor Erdem Gul were jailed on November 26 after publishing photos, videos, and a story in May which they claimed showed officials from Turkey's National Intelligence Agency (MIT) transporting arms to Syria in trucks, allegedly to opposition fighters.
The two were detained on charges of collecting and revealing secret documents for espionage and supporting an armed terrorist organization. They were reportedly held in solitary confinement for 40 days before being moved to the same prison ward.
In a faxed handwritten message to Reuters, the two journalists said the arrest was aimed at sending a message to other journalists.
"Our arrest is a clear message aimed at the press, saying: 'Don't write'.This is a direct drive at self-censorship," they wrote.
Comment: Erdogan is following in the footsteps of his masters in the US by silencing opposition and criticism of the government:
- Erdogan converting Turkey into authoritarian police state that arrests anyone who speaks up against government
- And so it begins: Turkish journalists and political rivals arrested as Erdoğan crackdown widens
- 'Sultan' Erdogan now targeting academic community to curb freedom of speech
The DEA has already been blasted by the DOJ's Inspector General for its confidential informant program. The DEA's informants were paid when they weren't producing intel. They were paid and sheltered from prosecution when they committed criminal acts falling outside their purview as informants. And the entire program was adrift in a sea of corruption and chaos, subject to no real oversight. To top it all off, Inspector General Michael Horowitz had to battle the DEA for every document and piece of relevant information just to arrive at these conclusions.
It's not just common criminals being added to the DEA's payroll as confidential informants. It's also other government employees. The DEA isn't running a government employee-focused sting, however. It's just looking for money. More eyes mean more money. And the eyes that will see the most money in transit will be those located at commuter hubs.
Comment: As above so below. The DEA isn't the only agency scamming money from citizens. Police departments are in on the game too.
- Cash for cops: How civil forfeiture laws are used to enrich police departments
- Police civil asset forfeitures exceed all burglaries in 2014 and rising fast
- New tricks in civil forfeiture scheme: Cops now using card swipers to steal funds from prepaid cards
- Get your own stolen goods: Dept. of Justice ends asset forfeiture sharing program with local law enforcement due to budget shortage
The men - Leland Ayala-Doliente, 22, and Holland Sward, 23 - were driving across the Nevada-Idaho border almost exactly a year ago when fear struck so deep it completely paralyzed their ability to reason.
The following police call might be really bad publicity for marijuana, as things like this rarely happen outside of movies. The two decided they were being followed by undercover police after crossing over the border. They saw cars everywhere that they thought were being driven by cops just itching to bust them but were keeping their distance for some inexplicable reason.
And so, the two pulled over after exiting a highway in Rexburg. Parked at a gas station, they made a 911 call that will go down in history:
On Tuesday, the North Dakota Public Service Commission approved permits for a pipeline that would transport crude oil through the Dakotas, Illinois, and Iowa. The all-Republican panel voted 2-0 in favor of the pipeline, with one member abstaining due to a conflict of interest.
Iowa is the only state yet to approve permits, however, The News and Observer reports that Energy Transfer Parts, the company behind the project, expects Iowa to approve by next month.
According to The News & Observer, the project is estimated to cost roughly $3.8 billion, with the North Dakota leg alone costing $1.4 billion. The Southern Illinoisan reported that Energy Transfer Partners, a Dallas-based company, claims to have easement agreements on 85 percent of the land the pipeline crosses.
Many of the children talked about tear gas, soldiers, and being scared of going outside. All of the children have seen family members killed, injured and detained by Israeli forces — as is the life in the occupied West Bank's many refugee camps. Still, the children have high hopes, telling Mondoweiss they want to be doctors, lawyers and engineers when they grow up.
Video: Sheren Khalel and Abed al Qaisi
Music: Bakr Khalifa
Interviews recorded: January 21, 2016

Striking Walmart workers and supporters protest at a store on Black Friday in Paramount, California, November 23, 2012.
The mega-retailer fired and disciplined workers at 29 stores for unexcused absences after they took part in a strike for better pay and working conditions in 2013.
But Administrative Law Judge Geoffrey Carter ruled on Thursday that Walmart violated labor law by "disciplining or discharging several associates because they were absent from work while on strike," adding that the strike was protected under the National Labor Relations Act.
Carter also ruled that the chain must give the employees back-pay for lost wages. Workers must be made "whole for any loss of earnings and other benefits suffered as a result of the discrimination against them," he said.
Comment: Kudos to Judge Geoffrey Carter. Pay up, corporate America.

The entrance sign is seen at the headquarters of Monsanto in St. Louis, Missouri.
Monsanto has filed a lawsuit against California's Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) and the agency's acting director, Lauren Zeise, arguing that glyphosate is "a widely used herbicide"approved in 160 counties worldwide and does not "present a carcinogenic risk to humans."
Under California's Proposition 65 law, enacted in 1986, the state is obliged to keep and publish a list of chemicals "known to the State of California to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity." Last revised in early December, the entire list currently takes up 23 pages and includes over 800 chemicals, according to the agency.
Comment: Monsanto continues on with its lies to make its evil fortune.
See more: Eighty-five percent of personal hygiene products contaminated with glyphosate
The teen is accused of making statements in favor of Islamic State (IS, formerly known as ISIS/ISIL) during the Pledge, Ansonia Police Lieutenant Andrew Cota said Thursday.
"As this is a juvenile matter there is no other information being released," he added.












Comment: So they illegally imprisoned him, without charges, for 13 years and at the end admitted that they were so incompetent that they couldn't figure out that they had the wrong guy the entire time. Then, to top it all off, they refuse to send him back to his own country. Could it be any more obvious that the entire war on terror is a fabricated sham? Truly shameful.