Society's ChildS


Handcuffs

Former top Vatican diplomat to US arrested on child pornography charges

Saint Peter's Basilica at the Vatican.
© Reuters
Vatican police have arrested a clergyman and diplomat who has reportedly been identified as a suspect in a child pornography case.

Monsignor Carlo Alberto Capella was detained by Holy See security officials on Saturday, the Vatican said. The suspect formerly worked as a Vatican City diplomat to the US, reported La Republica, but was suddenly recalled from his position in Washington last year.

The US State Department identified Capella as having possibly violated child pornography laws. It's alleged the monsignor downloaded and disseminated child pornography during a visit to Canada.

Fire

1 dead, 4 injured as 120+ firefighters battle blaze at Trump Tower in New York

Firetrucks
© Andrew Kelly / ReutersFDNY crew respond after a fire broke out at Trump Tower in Manhattan. January 8, 2018.
The New York fire department has dispatched dozens of units and over 120 firefighters to tackle a four-alarm blaze that erupted on the 50th floor of Trump Tower in Manhattan.

One person has died after suffering serious injuries in the blaze, while four firefighters received non-life-threatening injuries, the New York City fire department said. FDNY crews were called to the 50th floor of the building on Fifth Avenue shortly before 6pm Saturday.

Thirty-six units and 126 firefighters responded to the four-alarm fire. People have been evacuated from the building.

The extent and the severity of the fire was not immediately clear. "Smoke and debris," one eyewitness wrote next to his video post of the fire, which shows smoke rising above Manhattan.

Blue Planet

Russian lawmaker wants 'vice squad' to target prostitution during 2018 World Cup

A sign with the logo of the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia is on display near the Kremlin before the events, dedicated to the upcoming World Cup Final Draw, in central Moscow
© Sergei Karpukhin / ReutersA sign with the logo of the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia is on display near the Kremlin before the events, dedicated to the upcoming World Cup Final Draw, in central Moscow
A Russian pro-Christian MP says ahead of the 2018 World Cup the police should launch special units manned by "true patriots" and deploy them in cities to fight "asocial persons" including prostitutes and pimps.

Vitaly Milonov, widely known as the key sponsor of the Russian law that bans the promotion of "non-traditional" sexual relations to minors (also known as the Russian gay propaganda ban), detailed his proposal in an open letter to Interior Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev.

Pistol

Vote for me or else: South Carolina lawmaker draws loaded gun at speech

Ralph Norman
© AP Photo/ Chuck Burton
On Friday, a South Carolina state congressman pulled out a loaded 38-caliber handgun during a meeting with constituents, apparently to make a point about freewheeling gun ownership laws in the US.

"I'm not going to be a Gabby Giffords," said representative Ralph Norman - referring to a former Arizona congresswoman who was shot in 2011 outside a grocery store during a public appearance - displaying the loaded weapon during a Coffee with Constituents meeting in Rock Hill, South Carolina.

Laptop

Damage control? Facebook kicks out Canadian political consulting firm entangled in Cambridge Analytica scandal

Facebook energy efficient data center in Prineville, Oregon
© FacebookFacebook energy efficient data center in Prineville, Oregon
Canadian political consultancy AggregateIQ has been suspended on Facebook for alleged mishandling of user data, the social network said, as it continues damage control activity in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

Last month a former Cambridge Analytica (CA) employee, Chris Wylie, told a UK parliamentary committee that the London-based company, deeply embedded in the ongoing data mining scandal, had potentially shared some of its Facebook harvested data with the Canadian AggregateIQ consultancy, which is accused of targeting social media users for political campaigns - including during the 2016 US election and the UK's Brexit campaign.

Comment:


Arrow Down

The harsh reality of Mexico's migrant caravan

Central American Migrant
© Victoria Razo/AFP/Getty ImagesA Central American man taking part in the ‘Migrant Via Crucis’ caravan, which travels the length of Mexico to the US and often raises awareness of the plight of migrants.
As Donald Trump decries an 'invasion' and sends troops to the border, David Agren speaks to Central Americans fleeing poverty and violence

Swaying on a swing in a park teeming with Central American migrants in southern Mexico, Henry Juárez hardly looks like an invader ready to rush the US border - and certainly not an enemy the national guard forces being sent to the southern frontier by Donald Trump would have trouble stopping.

A slight 16-year-old with copper streaks in his hair wearing a singlet, sandals and baggy pants, he hit the perilous road through Mexico last month after seven gang-bangers burst into his home in El Salvador, put a pistol in his face and threatened to kill him and his family if he didn't make an extortion payment of $100 (£71).

"I was going to stay in my own country. I had a good job," said Juárez, who had worked for a company installing utility poles. "But they were asking me for money that I didn't have."

Attention

Several dead in Germany as van ploughs into crowd in Muenster - UPDATE

Muenster truck attack
Images on social media showed furniture strewn at the scene around the city's Kiepenkerl statue
Several people have been killed in the city of Muenster, in western Germany, after a van drove into pedestrians.

The driver of the vehicle has killed himself, police said, without providing further details. They are not looking for more suspects.

About 30 people are reported injured in the incident, which occurred near the Kiepenkerl statue in the old town. Some are said to be in a serious condition.

Police have closed the area and asked people to avoid the city centre.

Comment:

UPDATE: RT's latest on the story:
The suspect who allegedly plowed a minivan into an outdoor dining area of a café in the German city of Muenster reportedly had mental-health issues. He had no criminal record or any terrorist connections, German media report.

The man behind the incident, which left at least three people dead and several dozens injured, and who committed suicide after the attack, was a German citizen, the police confirmed without going into further detail.

The Suddeutsche Zeitung, the first news group to report about the alleged identity of the suspect, said that he was a local resident in his late forties. The man was known to have some mental problems back in 2014 and 2016, the daily added. The paper also identified him as Jens R.

The Der Spiegel weekly, citing its own sources, reported that the man was a resident of Muenster and that he worked as a graphic designer. According to the FAZ daily, the man was born in the town of Olsberg, located south-east of Muenster.

The suspect has no criminal record and has not been known to police before, the media report. He also had no known links to any extremist or radical groups. The man's motives remain unclear. The German Focus magazine reports that the suspect attempted to commit suicide not long before the incident. He shot himself immediately after Saturday's incident.

The region's interior minister, Herbert Reul, said that "nothing points to an Islamist motive" behind the incident.

It is unclear if the suspect had any accomplices. Following the incident, the police said it was verifying the information about some other suspects that got out of the car and fled the scene after the vehicle plowed into the café. Some German media, citing witnesses, have reported that two people left the minivan and fled after the incident. However, police also said that it is not currently looking for potential accomplices, adding that the danger is likely to be over.

The minivan itself was registered in Jens R's name, according to the German ZDF broadcaster. The suspect allegedly drove at high speed through the central area of the city before ramming his vehicle into the café, German media reported, adding that he even provoked panic among pedestrians at some point.

The police searched the minivan for explosives and found a "suspicious object," according to the local police spokesman, Andreas Bode. The Rheinische Post daily then reported that the police officers allegedly conducted a controlled explosion of the object. There has been no official confirmation of this report from the police, though. It also remains unclear if the object was, indeed, and explosive device.

A police special forces unit also searched the suspect's apartment for explosives, German media are also reporting. The results of the police raid have not yet been revealed so far.



Black Cat

Not 50 million, not 87 million... Zuckerberg admits data from 'most' of its 2 billion Facebook users compromised by 'malicious actors'

Zuckerberg london
© Noah Berger/Associated PressMark Zuckerberg: 'I still think that I'm going to do the best job to help run Facebook going forward.'
Buried in Facebook's announcement that Cambridge Analytica had improperly gathered data from up to 87 million users -- rather than the previously reported 50 million -- was the stunning admission that "malicious actors" exploited the social networking site's search features to collection information from "most" of its 2 billion users.

The detail was pointed out on Twitter by Wired journalist Matt Burgess, among others:

Comment:


Bizarro Earth

False alarm creates panic over 'Russian invasion' in Vadso, Norway

vadso
© UK Daily Mirror
A small Norwegian town just inside the Arctic circle and which lies close to the Russian border was jolted awake shortly before midnight on Wednesday as its Civil Defense warning system was triggered and sirens blared, causing locals to believe they were under threat of Russian invasion.

Vadso Norway is a town of only 5,000 but is positioned close enough to its neighbor that locals can see Russia on a clear day. There has long been a Norwegian military intelligence base in Vadso, which monitors the nearby Russian Murmansk naval base across the border to the East, long serving as an observation post for Severomorsk - the main administrative base of the Russian Northern Fleet, out of which at the height of the Cold War over 200 submarines operated.

The false alarm originated when one of the town's multiple defense early alert sirens was activated - subsequently discovered to be an alarm at the town's old fire station, according to Norwegian public broadcaster NRK. The Norwegian language broadcaster further reported panic ensuing as "anxious residents feared a war had broken out" and as local police were flooded with phone calls from residents who believed "they were under attack."

Comment: See Also: And check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: World in Chaos: Anti-Russia Hysteria, Israel Murders Palestinians, US Leaving Syria?


Whistle

WH considers using obscure law to gut omnibus spending bill

whitehouse
© Michael Weber / Global Look Press
Conservatives who were angry with President Donald Trump and Republicans with some of the expenditures approved as part of the recently signed omnibus spending bill may soon be in a slightly better mood.

Joseph Lawler of the Washington Examiner reports congressional conservatives want Trump to use the 1974 Impoundment Act to rescind some spending authorized by the $1.3 trillion government appropriations bill, and White House officials are reportedly considering doing so.

The measure referred to by the Examiner is officially known as the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974. For the most part, the act established the Congressional Budget Office and gave Congress more control over the budget process.

Comment: Sounds like Trump's got a bit of signer's remorse. If he didn't like what was in the omnibus bill, why did he sign off on it in the first place?

See also: