RTSun, 06 Aug 2017 14:34 UTC

© Polizia Di Stato / ReutersA person taking part in a reenactment by Italian police shows how a kidnapped British model was kept in a bag, in this handout picture provided by the Italian Police in Milan on August 5, 2017.
A Polish man has been arrested in Italy for kidnapping a 20-year-old British model for a $300,000 ransom. He threatened to otherwise sell her off to the highest bidder on the dark web should the money not be paid. The victim was drugged and kept handcuffed in an isolated hut outside Turin.
Italian State Police (Polizia di Stato)
announced Saturday that they arrested Lukasz Pawel Herba, 30, a Polish citizen with a British residency permit, and charged him with "kidnapping for extortion purposes" of a British model who was lured into a fake photo shoot.
The unnamed 20-year-old victim arrived in the Lombardy capital on July 10 to participate in a photo shoot that was arranged through her agent. As soon as she entered the apartment located on Via Carlo Bianconi she was attacked by two men.
Comment: This story could indeed be more or less as told - Lord knows it wouldn't be the first time such horrors have happened - but there also appears to be something fishy about it.
For starters, it's highly unlikely 'the goods' would suddenly be freed because a perpetrator suddenly had a pang of conscience when he discovered that she was a mother.
Secondly, such a well-fleshed-out package of information - complete with the victim's promo shoots - does not typically emerge right at the outset. The overall picture usually takes time to emerge as details trickle out, and there is usually pushback and 'smoke' because such organized crime activity as human trafficking is often just a connection or two away from implicating people in networks of power and influence.
Today, a further odd detail has emerged; at some point during her 6 days held hostage tied naked to a radiator, the model's captors
apparently took her shoe-shopping. It has also emerged that the alleged victim and her captor-turned-liberator were previously acquainted...
A close friend of Ayling told the Daily Mail that the pair had met when she was in Paris for a photoshoot before Herba called her agency and booked the job in Milan.
"During the kidnapping, Chloe lost her shoes. He took her to buy some new ones during her ordeal."
Italian newspaper La Repubblica reported that when the model was questioned about the shoe shopping trip, she cried.
Ayling's lawyer, Francesco Peschi, told the BBC that she had been acting under duress when she was taken shopping by her captor.
"She was told that people were there watching her and were ready to kill her if she tried anything," Peschi said.
"So she thought that the best idea was to go along with it and be nice to her captor, because he told her he wanted to release her somehow and some time."
Ayling, who is now back at her home in Coulsdon, south London, told reporters outside her home on Monday: "I've been through a terrifying experience. I feared for my life second by second, minute by minute, hour by hour.
"I'm incredibly grateful for the Italian and UK authorities for all they have done to secure my safe release. I have just arrived home after four weeks of being in Italy and I haven't had the time to gather my thoughts.
"I'm not at liberty to say anything further until I have been debriefed by the UK police."
It's all very plausible, but we'll have to wait and see before assessing the validity of the basic claim.
Update - Aug 8Ayling's agent
reportedly said it's "hard" for her to give an answer to whether or not she has any doubts about the kidnapping story. But she has confirmed that Ayling did a topless photoshoot today, speculating that perhaps that is her way of "coping with the trauma":
Asked on This Morning whether she had any doubts about the story, her agent, Carla Bellucci, said: "I mean, that is so hard. I've only spoken to Chloe briefly. Um, that is such a hard one."
She went on to describe her as a "beautiful girl... just a little naive." She added that "like everybody, they go into this industry wanting to be famous. I think she was willing to go all the way, which obviously, she wants to be known which is fine."
In a separate interview with BBC Derbyshire, Bellucci said she understood Ayling was doing a Page 3 photoshoot on Tuesday.
"For me, I wouldn't - I think that would be the last thing on my mind," Bellucci added.
She said she had spoken to Ayling on Sunday and discussed meeting up, but she believed she couldn't do so today due to the photoshoot.
"She has her reasons, and maybe it's her way of dealing what's happened to her - to get back out there, maybe it's her way of coping."
Ayling had "always wanted to be a glamor model" and that hasn't changed, Bellucci said.
Ayling's lawyer, Francesco Pesce, said he believes she is telling the truth and that the authorities have satisfied themselves about any doubts in her story. He said anyone who thinks she is lying is "evil."
"The story is frankly incredible. Why would the captor bring the detainee to the police, to the consulate? However, everything matched out and the story turned out to be true," he told Sky News.
Pesce said Ayling's story had convinced the prosecution, the police, and the judge who had conducted pre-trial hearings enough that proceedings were still ongoing.
"There must be some clarification on some elements, however I believe the investigators will be excellent in doing their job and everything will emerge."
Clearly, the girl has mental health issues and thus every part of her story must be corroborated.
Update - Aug 9So apparently the Polish-British captor, who had originally confessed to the crime by giving himself up and bringing Ayling to a police station... is now saying that he had nothing to do with it (whatever 'it' is exactly):
The chief suspect in the kidnapping of a British model in Milan has denied knowingly taking part in any crime and said his involvement stems from wanting to raise money to treat his leukemia.
Lukasz Pawel Herba told investigators he was hired by a group of Romanians to rent properties around Europe to store garments they were selling. He also said he posed as a photographer and met with Chloe Ayling.
Herba said he was paid £500,000 ($650,000), found out the Romanians intended to kidnap her, and backed out of the plan, the Telegraph reports.
Update - Aug 9 (ii)More details. It's starting to look like fake news...
Yesterday a waiter at the city's Farina Cucina cafe told how he saw Chloe with Herba before they walked into the British consulate.
He said: "She seemed happy and relaxed, they stayed for about two hours.
"They were laughing and joking."
A shopkeeper from whom they bought groceries three or four times also said he thought they were a couple.
Herba claims he was forced into the plot by Romanians.
He also claimed to have £14million in the bank, yet he lived in a rented council flat with his brother.
Herba told an acquaintance of an outlandish scam to steal from American billionaires.
Deputy prosecutor Paolo Storati said he was "a person affected by mythomania" - an abnormal or pathological tendency to exaggerate or tell lies.
And his girlfriend, Natalia, described him as a narcissist who claimed he ran an international business making synthetic chicken feed, that he had land in Scotland and owned a sniper rifle.
During the kidnap, he continued to text Natalia, pretending he was in Texas on business.
He had a business card with a picture of the Grim Reaper and the words "Permanent solution".
Mr Storati said: "He presented himself as a professional killer."
Herba emailed at least two papers to sell the story.
His email was headed: "British model kidnapped by the Russian mafia."
He later confessed he'd lied about the mafia to "attract attention".
On Sunday, Chloe spoke to the media, wearing just a tiny pair of hotpants and a cleavage-revealing vest top, while beaming at the cameras.
She has also ditched her former agent for a celebrity agent.
Yesterday, she leapt on the back of a motorbike as she headed to a topless photoshoot, something even her close friend, Carla Bellucci admitted would be "the last thing on my mind".
Chloe's former partner Conor Keyes claims she has not seen her son, Ashton, since returning to the UK.
He claims he has cared for him for the past year to let Chloe pursue her career.
Update - Aug 10'Kidnapped' model signs up as £2,000-a-time after-dinner speaker on sex trafficking
The British model who was allegedly kidnapped in Italy to be sold as a sex slave in the Middle East will be available for hire after signing up to give after-dinner talks at £2,000 (US$2,600) a time.
Chloe Ayling, 20, has joined London-based agency Kruger Crown and plans to speak to audiences about internet safety, sex trafficking and vulnerable women following her own ordeal in Milan, the Sun reports.
Also, her alleged kidnapper-and-liberator is now saying he was paid £500,000 ($650,000) to abduct and sell her, rather than $300,000.
Update - Aug 16Police have
arrested the brother of the man who allegedly kidnapped Ayling:
Michal Konrad Herba, 36, was arrested at an address in Tividale on Wednesday in a joint operation by West Midlands Police and East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU).
He was apprehended on a European Arrest Warrant issued by Italian police, the National Crime Agency (NCA) said. He is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates Court on August 17.
Michal is the brother of chief suspect Lukasz Pawel Herba, who has been charged with kidnapping and extortion after Ayling was reportedly abducted in Milan.
Update - Sept. 25Michael Herba's lawyer says Ayling's claims may be a "
publicity stunt", that there is "a real risk that the entire case is a sham":
"The same complainant, it seems, generated publicity from the fact she was nearby the scene of a terrorist attack at the Champs-Elysees in Paris," Hepburne Scott told district judge Paul Goldspring.
"Prior to the release of the complainant, the kidnapper apparently issued a press release to a tabloid newspaper setting out that this lady was being held for auction."
Scott also referred to an alleged trip made by Ayling and one of her captors to a shoe shop, something he described as a "wholly anomalous feature of a hostage situation."
"It would amount to an abuse of process of the court if there was any evidence to suggest this was a publicity stunt," he said.
"This case has a unique set of anomalies which might lead to the conclusion that the Italian authorities have been duped and that their process has been abused."
Judge Goldspring said even though claims have appeared in the media suggesting the kidnapping was faked, nothing has been proven.
"Some believe it to be a sham," he said. "This material doesn't prove that."
The case continues, with a verdict expected on Friday.
Lolita C. Baldor
Yahoo NewsMon, 25 Sep 2017 23:56 UTC
Struggling with an embarrassing series of misconduct and behavior problems among senior officers, the Army is putting together
new mental health, counseling and career management programs to shape stronger, more ethical leaders.
The programs stem from a broader worry across the military about the need to bolster professionalism within the officer corps while holding accountable those who abuse their power.
The Army plan appears to focus more on building character than berating bad conduct.In recent years, general officers from the one-star to four-star level have violated the military code of conduct they've lived under and enforced - often for decades. Some infractions involved
extramarital affairs, inappropriate relationships with subordinates or improper use of government funds.
"The idea that we'll be perfect, I think, is unrealistic, but we can be better and we strive to be better," said Lt. Gen. Ed Cardon, tasked by the Army's top officer to review the problem and devise ways to strengthen the senior officer corps.
"Competence is no longer enough. Character is as or even more important."
Comment: This could be a good thing for the military. But it will only work if the programs actually work. It would be interesting to know if any of their ideas are culled from actual research of successful programs. Additionally, the military will continue to have problems if certain mental disorders are not screened out before promotion (e.g., personality disorders like psychopathy).
There's also the question of just how possible it is to have truly good character while being in the military. Character implies the ability and willingness to disobey an order that is wrong. But isn't that very thing actively discouraged in training and throughout service?

© Triple J's BBQ/FacebookA food truck, who was offering free food to utility workers, was kicked out of town for not having a permit. But he couldn't get a permit, because city hall was closed.
After Irma devastated Florida, most restaurants and stores were shut down in certain areas. Green Cove Springs was one of those places. So, when Jack Roundtree, owner of the Triple J BBQ food truck, arrived in town, not only was he welcomed with open arms - he was desperately needed. As he sold BBQ to paying customers, Roundtree used the extra money to feed utility workers
for free for all their hard work. However, once officials saw a man who'd dare sell food in their town without paying them first, police were called in to make quick work of this entrepreneurial good samaritan.
Shut down and get out of town is what Roundtree was told by local authorities for both providing charity and a much-needed product and service. Why was Roundtree told to get out of town, you ask? Well, he hadn't paid the local government for the 'privilege' to sell food to those in need inside Green Cove Springs.

© AP Photo/Gene J. PuskarU.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt, left, shakes hands with coal miners during a visit to Consol Pennsylvania Coal Company's Harvey Mine in Sycamore, Pa., Thursday, April 13, 2017.
Reporters and special interests groups critical of President Trump's Environmental Protection Agency have filed Freedom of Information Act requests at a record-breaking pace, a rate of over 60 a day.
Through last week, 10,970 have been filed,
many so broadly worded that it will take years to answer. What's more, there are still several weeks left in the fiscal year for more to come in. The most ever filed for a full year has been 11,820 in fiscal year 2007.
Critics have assailed some actions by Trump's EPA and Administrator Scott Pruitt and many FOIA's seek emails on their decisions.
But some are poorly focused and broad. Several seek all emails that include "climate change" in them, a list in the millions and will be costly in money and hours to retrieve.

Storm in a Pentagon-created teacup
It was ESPN's Stephen A. Smith, of all people, who brought it the world's attention that despite all the recent conservative anger at NFL players kneeling in protest for the national them - anger fomented, of course, by Donald Trump -
the so-called "tradition" of the players standing for the anthem only began in 2009. Per
Vice:
Responding to a tip from one of his "boys," Smith brought up the fact that until 2009-eight years and a new Presidential administration after 9/11-players weren't on the field for the national anthem and instead generally remained in the locker room. According to Smith's boy (and the researcher at ESPN who checked it), the switch happened "because it was seen as a marketing strategy to make the athletes look more patriotic."
That's right - the whole idea of reverence for the anthem was
a PR move. Turns out this had been
reported in late August, by Tom Curran of Comcast Sportsnet New England, who got the following response from NFL spokesperson Brian McCarthy:
Comment: This furor over players standing or kneeling for the US national anthem at American football games is THE news in the US at the moment.
Central to it is the assumption/belief that players have always stood for the anthem; they haven't - the Pentagon recently pushed for them to do so because appetite for war dropped way off during the Bush years. In the US, apparently patriotism is synonymous with war.
TASSFri, 22 Sep 2017 19:54 UTC
A series of explosions rocked an arms depot near the Ukrainian settlement of Maloyanisol in the Donetsk region, 36 kilometers from Mariupol, the press service of the regional police's chief department reports.
"Several blasts at the depots located in a field, came at about 16:20 local time (coincides with the Moscow time). A fire broke out practically right after the explosions," regional police reports.
The site has been cordoned off by law enforcement officers, while emergency services are dealing with the aftermath of the blasts, it said. Regional police authorities left for the site. "The territory is cordoned off to prevent people from getting into a fire trap," police reports.
There have been no immediate reports about possible victims. Depots belong to a local military unit. Earlier, the Ukrainian Defense Ministry said the fire had broken out at an ammunition depot of a military unit in the Donetsk region. It said military were being evacuated. According to the Defense Ministry, the fire spread to the military unit's compound from nearby agricultural land.

© Peter CihelkaRachel Myrick, with boyfriend Mike Clem, was bitten by a baby copperhead snake while walking into LongHorn Steakhouse in Spotsylvania.
Rachel Myrick's first thought as she walked through the entrance to the LongHorn Steakhouse at Southpoint II and felt a sharp pain in her left foot was that she'd been stung by a bee, or possibly a hornet.
She tried to brush it off and keep going, but said that she felt such an excruciating pain as she took the next step that she dropped her cellphone, her wallet and her 13-year-old son Dylan's hand.
"I had my fingers under my foot and that's when I felt something moving," said Myrick, a Fredericksburg Realtor.
She'd been bitten twice on her toes and once on the side of her foot by a roughly 8-inch-long copperhead that had managed to get into the Massaponax restaurant's foyer. It was still attached to her sandal-shod foot until she shook it loose."I freaked out," said Myrick, who recalled yelling, "I got bit! I got bit!"
Myrick had gone to the restaurant for dinner on Sept. 12 with her son, boyfriend Michael Clem and some of Clem's friends and family.

© Associated Press/Cliff Owen (file)
U.S. Sen. John McCain says doctors have given him a "very poor prognosis" as he battles brain cancer.
McCain underwent surgery in July for a brain tumor that was later found to be a form of glioblastoma, the same type of cancer that took the life of his former Senate colleague Edward M. Kennedy in 2009. McCain tells CBS' "60 Minutes" in an interview that aired Sunday night that he thinks about Kennedy a lot. He says Kennedy continued to work despite the diagnosis and "never gave up because he loved the engagement."
McCain says he has "feelings sometimes of fear of what happens," but counters that with gratitude for having lived "had a great life."
He adds: "it's not that you're leaving, it's that you - that you stayed."
Source: Associated Press

© Dr_Flash/Shutterstock
Flyover country. Bible belt. Middle America. Coastal elites in liberal cities have all sorts of terms for "red states," but they all seem to convey one message: Conservative areas of the country are somehow backward and should be avoided.
That's the impression one California writer had about America's heartland. Leah Singer never imagined that she would end up in Trump Country... but when she moved to Indiana not long ago, her entire perception changed.
In an editorial piece published last weekend in the
Indianapolis Star, the author sent a clear message to liberal friends back in California and throughout the country: You might be wrong about "red states."
"I used to say I'd never move to a red state. And then I did. And it's changed my life for the better," Singer admitted.

© Sacramento Bee/Jack Ohman
An Oregon parent wanted details about school employees getting paid to stay home. A retired educator sought data about student performance in Louisiana. And college journalists in Kentucky requested documents about the investigations of employees accused of sexual misconduct.
Instead, they got something else: sued by the agencies they had asked for public records.
Government bodies are increasingly turning the tables on citizens who seek public records that might be embarrassing or legally sensitive. Instead of granting or denying their requests, a growing number of school districts, municipalities and state agencies have filed lawsuits against people making the requests - taxpayers, government watchdogs and journalists who must then pursue the records in court at their own expense.
Comment: This story could indeed be more or less as told - Lord knows it wouldn't be the first time such horrors have happened - but there also appears to be something fishy about it.
For starters, it's highly unlikely 'the goods' would suddenly be freed because a perpetrator suddenly had a pang of conscience when he discovered that she was a mother.
Secondly, such a well-fleshed-out package of information - complete with the victim's promo shoots - does not typically emerge right at the outset. The overall picture usually takes time to emerge as details trickle out, and there is usually pushback and 'smoke' because such organized crime activity as human trafficking is often just a connection or two away from implicating people in networks of power and influence.
Today, a further odd detail has emerged; at some point during her 6 days held hostage tied naked to a radiator, the model's captors apparently took her shoe-shopping. It has also emerged that the alleged victim and her captor-turned-liberator were previously acquainted... It's all very plausible, but we'll have to wait and see before assessing the validity of the basic claim.
Update - Aug 8
Ayling's agent reportedly said it's "hard" for her to give an answer to whether or not she has any doubts about the kidnapping story. But she has confirmed that Ayling did a topless photoshoot today, speculating that perhaps that is her way of "coping with the trauma": Clearly, the girl has mental health issues and thus every part of her story must be corroborated.
Update - Aug 9
So apparently the Polish-British captor, who had originally confessed to the crime by giving himself up and bringing Ayling to a police station... is now saying that he had nothing to do with it (whatever 'it' is exactly): Update - Aug 9 (ii)
More details. It's starting to look like fake news... Update - Aug 10
'Kidnapped' model signs up as £2,000-a-time after-dinner speaker on sex trafficking Also, her alleged kidnapper-and-liberator is now saying he was paid £500,000 ($650,000) to abduct and sell her, rather than $300,000.
Update - Aug 16
Police have arrested the brother of the man who allegedly kidnapped Ayling: Update - Sept. 25
Michael Herba's lawyer says Ayling's claims may be a "publicity stunt", that there is "a real risk that the entire case is a sham":