Society's ChildS


Bullseye

Triple homicide in California: Holistic doctor and his family murdered

Dr. Weidong Henry Han
Dr. Weidong Henry Han
It saddens me to break this tragic news to my readers. I actually met Dr Han when I lived in Southern California.

I was just back there speaking three days ago for a holistic doctor event.

Dr. Weidong Henry Han, 57, his wife, Huijie Yu, 29; and their daughter, Emily Han, 5, were found dead Wednesday in their home in the 4600 block of Greenhill Way.

Authorities said the trio were homicide victims and have said the killings were not random. Therefore authorities have concluded the public has nothing to worry about while holistic doctors keep being found dead at an alarming rate.

Comment: For more on this bizarre string of mysterious deaths of holistic doctors see:


Key

Florida makes it legal to break into a hot car to rescue children and pets

dog in car
© InquisitrA new law passed in Florida protects those who break into hot cars to rescue pets and “vulnerable persons,” such as kids or adults with mental impairments.

A quick errand into the store doesn't feel like a speedy trip to a child or dog. In fact, PETA estimates that in just 15 minutes, animals can sustain brain damage or even die from heatstroke.

Because an average of 37 children (in the U.S.) die every year from heatstroke in the car, legal action has been taken in twenty states to protect those who break into vehicles to rescue them. Florida is the most recent state to join the list.

Recently, Florida's Governor Rick Scott passed a bill which legalizes breaking into locked vehicles to rescue pets and people that are believed to be in danger of suffocation or harm. The law also applies to the rescue of "vulnerable persons," such as kids or adults with mental or physical impairments.

Eye 1

IDF terrorist executes injured Palestinian stabber, says 'he did the right thing'

IDF soldier executes Palestinian stabber
© btselem/ Youtube
An Israeli soldier filmed shooting dead an injured Palestinian stabber in Hebron has said that he "did the right thing" and believed the immobilized man "could blow himself up."

Talking to family members in a private conversation hours after he was arrested by Military Police, the unnamed soldier said, "I did the right thing at the right time in order to prevent anything else bad from happening," the Jerusalem Post reported.

Earlier on Thursday, the blood-chilling video emerged at B'Tselem human rights center's YouTube account. One of the Israeli soldiers is seen reloading his weapon, and cold-bloodedly firing a headshot at his motionless victim as he lay on the ground.

The soldier said that he believed the injured Palestinian, who had allegedly stabbed another solider, was going to try to attack others.

Comment: Watch the below video to see how much of a 'threat' this injured man posed:




Heart - Black

Police publicly execute unarmed, mentally ill man

Freddy Centeno shot 7 times
© Fresno Police
On September 3, 2015 at approximately 11:00 a.m., Fresno Police Officers, Zebulon Price and Felipe Miguel Lucero shot 40-year-old Freddy Centeno seven times causing severe injuries. Mr. Centeno was unarmed, was wearing shorts, no shirt on, and walking along the street when he was approached by Fresno Police who immediately started shooting.

Freddy Centeno would not recover from the multiple wounds suffered at the hands of these two Fresno cops.

According to Roger Centeno, the victim's brother, Freddy is bipolar and schizophrenic and abused drugs. The family had been asking the city and county for help and were told "something needs to happen" before Freddy could get help.

"Is this what needs to happen?" asked Roger, after the shooting.

Better Earth

Couple fosters wildlife sanctuary in India by letting barren farmland return to nature

Malhotra's sanctuary
© milestothewild
The husband and wife have spent 25 years buying up wasteland farmers no longer wanted; now elephants, tigers and leopards roam free there.

Sometimes it takes a village, sometimes it just takes a person or two, as in the case of Anil and Pamela Malhotra who together are creating what is likely India's first private wildlife sanctuary.

Having met and married in the United States in the 1960s, the couple moved to India in 1986 after visiting for the funeral of Anil's father. While generally it would be the beauty of a place to inspire relocation, for the Malhotras it was the opposite - the terrible state of nature in Haridwar was the attraction.

"There was so much deforestation, the timber lobby was in charge, and the river was polluted. And no one seemed to care. That was when we decided to do something to reclaim the forests in India," Anil tells the India Times.

Arrow Down

Austerity bites: UK experiencing devastating increase in homelessness

homelessness britain
© Stefan Wermuth / Reuters
Shocking new government figures reveal that homelessness has rocketed in England since 2010, with over 41,000 families destitute or living in temporary accommodation last year.

The figures analyzed by homelessness charity Shelter show the number of families without a home in England soared by 42 percent between 2010 and 2015. The charity says that people losing their privately-rented homes is the single biggest cause of the crisis.

In 2015 alone, around 17,000 families reportedly became homeless after being evicted from privately-rented homes.

Comment: What arch hypocrisy!! The austerity measures that have been imposed have had devastating repercussions on Britain's most vulnerable, while the fortunes of the most affluent continue to increase.


House

Demolition company wrecks wrong house and says it's 'not a big deal'

demolished home
© Todd Yates / Reuters
Two families that survived Christmas tornadoes are now back to square one after a demolition company tore down the wrong complex. The company blames Google Maps for the mix up and doesn't really see what the big fuss is about.

Lindsay Diaz and Alan Cutter shared a duplex that was badly damaged by a tornado that hit Texas on December 26. Both Diaz and Cutter had been waiting for insurance and FEMA to assist them in making repairs.

"We were geared towards getting the house ready; we were ready," Diaz told WFAA.

Yet, on Tuesday, Diaz found herself speeding over to her Rowlett home after receiving a panicked phone call from Cutter's wife.

"I pull up, and - sure enough - it's gone," Diaz said to WFAA. "There's nothing left."

Billy L. Nabors Demolition was responsible for the mistake. One worker told WFAA that Google Maps had led them astray. The house that Nabors Demolition had been hired to demolish was actually a block away.

Nabors CEO George Gomez insisted that his demolition crew believed they were working on the correct home. He told WFAA that the situation is "not a big deal."

Heart - Black

Cynthia McKinney: Homelessness is out of control in the U.S.

Homeless crisis US
© Eduardo Munoz / Reuters
It's hard to imagine that the country that controls so much nuclear firepower and drops so many bombs every day is unwilling to educate its children and house its own people.

The poor have been with us since there was an "us." And, as much as I would like to see zero poverty in the United States, a country that spends trillions on its domestic and international security apparatuses, I know that the political will for such policies is just not there today. This, despite the efforts of thousands of people just like me all over the country to alleviate the unnecessary suffering of the poor in the US. Instead, it has become clear from the rhetoric of the 2016 Presidential campaigns, that it is easier to preen oneself by boasting of increasing such security spending, and almost never to decrease it. Not even Democratic Party Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders discusses cutting back on military spending and cutting weapons systems. Thus, we can have a Presidential election and not one word is uttered about the criminalization of the poor and now the crisis of homelessness that afflicts a growing number of cities on the west coast of the US.

It is hard to estimate the number of homeless people in the US, but one indicator is the number of school children who do not have an address. According to the Child Trends Databank, at the start of the 2013 - 2014 academic year, there were approximately 1.4 million children in the United States who reported to school and did not have an address to give to school authorities. Child Trends asserts that while reporting has improved and can provide some background for the increased numbers, the sad fact is that the instance of homelessness among children is increasing.

Comment: Ms. McKinney has properly identified the rapaciousness of neoliberal capitalism as a major source of the problem of homelessness. Yet where there is political will, this crises can be addressed:


Clipboard

Utah: Establishes white-collar crime registry for fraud, financial crimes

hands and chart
© discovermagazine.comFinancial manipulation is fraud.
In an attempt to combat high levels of fraud, Utah has taken inspiration from the sex offender list, becoming the first state in the US to establish a white-collar felon registry for financial crimes.

An early version of the list has been online since February, and it already contains more than 100 people who were convicted of crimes such as tax, credit card or insurance fraud, the Wall Street Journal reported. This makes the state "the most aggressive jurisdiction in the country when it comes to publicly shaming financial criminals."

The registry features individuals' names, mugshots, any known aliases, physical descriptions and a list of the crimes they were convicted of. Utah is the first state to create such a registry, and it stands in contrast to the policy of the Securities and Exchange Commission, which does not publicize the identities of fraudsters.

To be listed on the registry, individuals will need to be convicted of second-degree felony charges of securities fraud, theft by deception, unlawful dealing of property by a fiduciary, insurance fraud, mortgage fraud, communications fraud or money laundering, according to the Salt Lake Tribune. Their information will stay on the list for 10 years after one conviction, and another decade after a second. If someone is convicted three times, their data will remain on the list for their entire lifetime. When the registry officially launches in the next few months, it is expected to contain some 230 names, according to the WSJ.


Comment: Will be interesting to see if any politicians find themselves on the list and how inclusive in the upper echelons of the oligarchy. The list is only as good as its gate-keeper. Is this registry of use or is it just another redundant layer of bureaucracy?


Heart - Black

Pregnant inmate denied prenatal care and forced to carry dead baby for days; files lawsuit

pregnant inmate
Time after time we hear of people dying in jail under suspicious circumstances or neglected health issues. This culture of disregard is highlighted by the case of Sentoria McMillon, who lost her unborn child at a Cole County jail soon after being booked as a pretrial detainee.

McMillon, whose due date was weeks away, began complaining of abdominal pains and continually cried for help, telling the nurse she felt increasing pain and pressure. Her child had died in the womb and, being denied a doctor visit for a week, she was forced to carry the decaying body for days.

Strangely, McMillon was released of her own recognizance hours before a scheduled appointment with the prison-contracted doctor. McMillon's normal prenatal physician sent her to the emergency room, where doctors induced labor and said the baby had been dead for a week.