Society's ChildS


Bad Guys

One-third of California town's police force arrested for stealing cars for profit from poor Hispanics

king city police
© Reuters / Michael Fiala
A six-month-long investigation in Central California culminated this week with the arrests of five members of the King City Police Department, the former police chief and the owner of a local towing company.

According to the Monterey County district attorney, for at least three-and-a-half years the city's top police officers participated in a scheme that took advantage of poor area Hispanics by essentially stealing their cars for profit.

Investigators say King City police ordered hundreds of vehicles to be impounded - most often those driven by Hispanic immigrants - and then either kept the cars for themselves or re-sold them for profit.

Arrow Down

'Shameful': World loses up to third of all food produced according to World Bank

Image
© Spencer Platt / Getty Images / AFP
The world loses a staggering one-quarter to one-third of all food produced for human consumption, according to the World Bank's quarterly Food Price Watch report, with the developed world leading the wastage.

The world is losing 25 to 33 percent of the food it produces - nearly 4 billion metric tons - according to estimates from the World Bank, the Food and Agriculture Association (FAO) and the World Resources Institute.

In regions suffering from malnourishment, such as Africa and South East Asia, this translates as 400 to 500 calories per person per day and in the developed world up to 1,520 calories.

Cereals were highlighted as representing more than half food lost or wasted at 53 percent by calorie content, but by weight fruits and vegetables represent the largest share of global food loss at 44 percent.

Most of the wastage takes place at the consumption stage (35 percent), followed by production and handling and storage (both 24 percent).

Airplane

Brutal Winter is causing 'desperation' sez travel agent

Image
© Scott Olson/Getty ImagesSnow and ice covers the shoreline of Lake Michigan on Feb. 18, 2014 near Chicago, Ill.
Shannon Frauenholtz has had it with winter. Barely able to stomach the television news with its images of snowbound cars, she heads to the tanning salon, closes her eyes and imagines she's back in Mexico, where she's already vacationed once this winter.

She's toyed with the idea of joining her mother in Hawaii or just driving to an indoor water park, figuring that while the palm trees might be plastic and the "beach" smells of chlorine, at least it's warm.

"I don't need a vacation. I don't need the relaxation," said Frauenholtz, of New Ulm, Minn. "I just need the heat."

All over the Midwest and the East Coast, travel agents are being inundated with a simple request: Get me out of here. And travelers fortunate enough to have escaped are begging hotels to let them stay a little longer.

Bullseye

The video that AIPAC would prefer you not to see

Parody video AIPAC
© UnknownA screenshot from a parody video posted on YouTube that has angered AIPAC
A new copy of a satirical version of an AIPAC policy conference promotional video has been posted online after YouTube shut down the account that posted the original video.

The parody video was posted on YouTube prior to the American-Israeli Public Affairs Committee's annual policy conference, which is to be held from March 2 to 4.

The video contains real footage of several US and Israeli officials at previous AIPAC policy conferences but their voices are dubbed over.


Handcuffs

British justice now determined by politics, not law

politics law courts
© Guy Corbishley/Demotix/CorbisBNP supporters with mock gallows gather outside the Old Bailey in London on 26 February during sentencing of the killers of Lee Rigby.
From amnesties for the IRA to calls for the Woolwich murderers to be lynched, crime and punishment is now a politicised mess


There is one law for their terrorists and another for ours. "Theirs" kill a soldier in Woolwich and get slammed up for life. They get a verbal lynching from the red-tops, with Rot in Jail headlines and screams the rope would be too good for them, the filth and scum. "Our" terrorists get royal pardons and "letters of assurance", even if, as may be the case, they slaughter four soldiers and eight horses in cold blood in Hyde Park. That is how it must seem to many people.

Suppose the Woolwich murderers of Lee Rigby had not pranced about the street and waited to be arrested. Suppose they had gone on the run in the souks of Waziristan or Somalia. Suppose, years later, a future Tony Blair was desperate to "feel the hand of history" on his shoulder and get out of whatever Muslim country he had just invaded. Suppose he offered a "side deal" to pardon 200 Islamist terrorists wanted for killing British soldiers. The killings were, he might claim, all in time of war and a deal would serve a lasting peace.

That is the gist of the excuse given yesterday by Blair apologists and the former Ulster secretary Peter Hain for the de facto amnesty to IRA killers under the 1998 Good Friday agreement. It was meant to "lock in the peace" and "achieve closure on the horror and the violence". Would Hain say the same of today's terrorists, who justify their deeds as revenge for Britain's occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan? Would he barter it for al-Qaida calling off its cells that might, even now, be plotting revenge on British drone operators who sit in Lincolnshire bunkers killing Islamist foreigners without any legal or judicial process?

Nothing separates the progressive mind from the conservative as much as the handling of crime and punishment. It is the one realm of public policy that British liberals have not come near to conquering. As a result it has become not so much a moral maze as a moral morass, awash in double standards, racist subplots and an everlasting dread of popular backlash.

The tabloids were this week howling for a return of the gallows. This year sees the 50th anniversary of Britain's last hanging, of two murderers in Manchester's Strangeways prison. Backbench attempts to bring back capital punishment were rejected by House of Commons majorities in 1988, 1990 and 1994. A current bid to raise 100,000 signatures to a parliamentary e-petition may succeed. But there is little chance of it stirring anything more than a parliamentary debate.

Cloud Precipitation

Los Angeles suburbs order mandatory evacuations ahead of powerful storm

Image
Police in two California cities have ordered mandatory evacuations for 1,000 homes due to the threat of mudslides, as a powerful rainstorm prepares to drench the drought-stricken state.

Homeowners in Azusa and Glendora, California - about 25 miles northeast of Los Angeles - were made aware of the orders on Thursday, after one rainstorm had already passed over the cities. No significant damage was done, but with 2,000 acres of mountain slopes near the suburbs denuded by a January wildfire, officials fear a stronger storm could trigger a series of devastating mudslides.

"You've got a recently burned hillside here with limited vegetation and a very steep slope. It's a recipe for what the experts say is potential for a great deal of damage," Sgt. John Madaloni said to local news outlet KCAL 9.

Prior to the first storm, local communities began preparing for possible damage by lining the streets with wooden barriers and sandbags, hoping to keep any traveling debris on the roads and away from homes. With the National Weather Service warning of a storm powerful enough to drop 1 to 2 inches of rain an hour into Saturday, however, allowing everyone to stay in their homes posed too great a risk for city officials.

Handcuffs

Police use violence against demonstrators in Turkey: EU AWOL

Image
© ReutersUniversity students burn a portrait of Turkey's prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan during a demonstration against the opening of a new road
Although not at the level of the deadly Gezi Park protests that hit Turkey last summer, pockets of discontent are flaring up again. IBTimes UK looks at the reasons for Turks' anger.

Highway in Ankara

Students from the Middle East Technical University (ODTÜ) clashed with police in a protest against the opening of a highway across the campus in Ankara.

Police fired teargas and water cannon to disperse several hundred people gathered in front of the university's main gate.

Some students burnt an image of prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and chanted slogans of "government resign" and "thief Tayyip Erdogan" within the campus. A barricade was set up.

Erdogan and several ministers attended the opening ceremony of the highway.

Cult

'Breatharian': Human Barbie Valeria Lukyanova believes she can live off light and air containing 'cosmic micro-food'‏

valeria human barbie
Valeria Lukyonova, the human Barbie, is reportedly not eating or drinking anything anymore
Ukranian model Valeria Lukyanova, who lives her life as a 'human Barbie' has revealed she doesn't consume food or water anymore.

Some have said she uses plastic surgery and Photoshop to create her doll-like image, but her impossibly thin waist could actually be down to not eating for weeks.

The model, 23, has said she is now converting to 'Breatharianism' - training herself to live off only light and air.

V

Police crackdown on protests in Greece: EU AWOL

Image
© AP photoProtesters scuffle with riot police outside the finance ministry during a rally in Athens, on Friday.
Scuffles broke out Friday between demonstrators and police outside the finance ministry in central Athens, as Greece's international debt inspectors met with ministers to discuss the pace of reforms.

The demonstrators, mainly finance ministry cleaning ladies, school guards and municipal workers, were protesting job cuts required under Greece's bailout agreement. They attempted to block a major avenue outside the ministry and jostled with riot police, who used small amounts of pepper spray. At least one protester was injured.

Later, about a dozen jeering protesters moved toward the motorcade carrying the debt inspectors away from the ministry, and threw a plastic water bottle at one of the cars. Police prevented any more demonstrators from getting close, and the vehicles were able to speed off.

Authorities detained 17 protesters who had attempted to enter another nearby government ministry.

Newspaper

Major updates in Justina Pelletier case: Lawmakers get involved

Image
© Image source: FacebookJustina Pelletier with her parents, Linda and Lou. Justina has been in the custody of the state of Massachusetts since last year.
Massachusetts lawmakers are getting involved in the Justina Pelletier case and have begun circulating a resolution asking the Department of Children and Families (DCF) to initiate the process of releasing the teenager to her parents.

State Reps. Marc Lombard and Jim Lyons, both Republicans, announced on Wednesday that 12 representatives have already signed on to support the resolution.

"The self-stated goals of the Department of Children and Families is to strengthen the link between families. Removing a child from her family is reserved for only the most egregious circumstances where evidence of malicious intent, negligence or the blatant inability to care for the child is present. No such findings are present in this case," Lombardo said in a press release.

Lyons argued the Pelletier case is a "dispute between conflicting medical opinions" and treatment decisions should be left to parents, not DCF."