Society's ChildS

Health

Seven die in Peru copter crash

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© AFPA helicopter used by an oil and mining company crashed into a commercial building in a village in northern Peru, killing at least seven people, including five Americans
A helicopter used by an oil and mining company crashed into a commercial building in a village in northern Peru on Monday, killing at least seven people, including five Americans, an official said.

The accident occurred at 2:57 pm (1957 GMT) in the village of San Juan, in the northern jungle region of Ucayali, and police and specialists investigators were looking ino the cause, local prosecutor Marcos Ochoa told Peru's RPP radio.

"There are seven dead, including five Americans and two Peruvians," Ochoa said after villagers reported seeing the helicopter exploding and splitting in two as it hit the ground.

Sheriff

Kenya: Man arrested for impersonating a senior police officer for over ten years

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© Photo:Boniface Thuku/StandardRift Valley PPO John M'Mbijiwe
Rift Valley PPO John M'Mbijiwe, the commandant of Anti-Stock Theft Unit Michael Rimi Ngugi and Njoro OCPD Peter Njeru Nthiga have been interdicted over the saga surrounding a man who was arrested and charged with impersonating as a senior police officer.

The National Police Service Commission also named new commanders to replace the interdicted officers.

Mr Levin Mwandi will replace Mr M'Mbijiwe in Rift Valley, Ngugi's deputy Solomon Makau takes over at ASTU while Nthiga's deputy Esau Ochokorodi will take over in Njoro.

Commission chairman Johnston Kavuludi said they have established a committee to investigate the matter and report within 21 days.

The team will comprise three officers from the Police Service Commission- Major Muiu Mutia, Mary Owuor and Inspector General of Police David Kimaiyo who will nominate a representative.

Handcuffs

Police: Suspect chokes girlfriend with his dreadlocks

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© Multnomah County Detention CenterA man is facing assault charges, accused of choking his girlfriend using his dreadlocks in Southeast Portland. Portland police report that 32-year-old Caleb Grotberg is facing counts of second-degree kidnapping, second-degree attempted assault, fourth-degree assault, menacing and domestic violence. Jan. 7, 2012.
A man is accused of using his dreadlocks to choke his girlfriend early Monday morning.

Caleb Grotberg, 32, faces counts of second-degree kidnapping, second-degree attempted assault, fourth-degree assault, menacing and domestic violence.

Nuke

Lottery winner poisoned with cyanide in Chicago

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Not long after winning a $1 million jackpot with a scratch-off lottery ticket, a Chicago man was poisoned with cyanide, officials said Monday.

Urooj Khan, 46, had planned to use the money to pay off bills and invest in his dry cleaning business. Instead, he was poisoned, the Cook County Medical Examiner's office said, adding that it had classed his death as a homicide.

Khan was accompanied by his wife, their daughter and several friends when he accepted an oversized check from Illinois lottery officials on June 26.

He described his initial reaction in a press statement.

Syringe

Booty model Pebblez allegedly arrested in association with 'butt-injection murder'

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Famous booty model Pebbelz
Here's three words you probably thought you'd never hear: "Butt-injection homicide."

Hip-hop booty-video babe Pebbelz Da Model (aka Natasha Stewart) has gained some fame in certain circles for her tremendously exaggerated 48-inch rear end, and now Bossip reports that she has been arrested in connection with a homicide.

Red Flag

California school slaying suspect found unfit for trial

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© Paul Sakuma In this April 30, 2012, file photo, One Goh appears in an Alameda County Superior courtroom in Oakland, Calif. A judge ruled on Monday, Jan. 7, 2013, that Goh, accused of killing seven people at a small Northern California Christian college, is not mentally fit for trial. A public defender representing Goh said a psychiatrist has determined that he suffers from paranoid schizophrenia that dates back several years.
A man accused of killing seven people at a small Northern California Christian college is not mentally fit for trial, a judge ruled before temporarily suspending criminal proceedings until the defendant is deemed competent.

Alameda County Superior Court Judge Carrie Panetta on Monday put on hold the criminal case against One Goh. Two psychiatric evaluations concluded that Goh suffers from paranoid schizophrenia.

Goh is charged with seven counts of murder and three counts of attempted murder in the April 2 attack at Oikos University in Oakland. He has pleaded not guilty and remains jailed.

Alameda County Assistant Public Defender David Klaus said after Monday's brief hearing that both doctors who examined Goh found that he suffers from hallucinations and delusions and harbors a deep mistrust of people, including those trying to help him.

"He's certainly a deeply troubled man," Klaus said. "He's locked up in shame, remorse and sadness. He's not eating, he's not taking care of himself."

Laptop

Game over? Chinese father orders son's virtual assassination

 World of Warcraft (wallpaper)
World of Warcraft (wallpaper)
A Chinese man hired experienced gamers to kill his son's avatar in a desperate attempt to stop his gaming addiction and make him find a job.

Mr. Feng chose a peculiar way to handle his son's gaming addiction. He hired game professionals to kill his son's persona over and over again until he lost interest in the games, Chinese People's Daily Online reports.

The younger Feng started playing online games while at school, but his father was not concerned as his academic performance was not affected and his son still received good grades.

However, sometime later the son's keen interest in online gaming began to worry Feng, who saw it as the main reason the 23-year-old could not find a job.

Book 2

'Scientologists believe the Holocaust was planned and carried out by psychiatrists'

John Sweeney
© BBCJohn Sweeney in Panorama - The Secrets Of Scientology.
Five years on from the Panorama outburst that resulted in a worldwide viral viewing, John Sweeney has written a book on the dangers of the cult religion

The Church of Scientology is a cult whose core aim is to fight a space alien Satan that's brainwashed the rest of us. The Church fights the world's insanity, its celebrity followers argue, and people who tell you differently are bigots. So who's right?

Lawrence Wright is a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter who has written what promises to be a great book on Scientology. Going Clear is due to be published everywhere on 17 January - except Britain. Just before Christmas, Transworld, Wright's British publishers, pulled it, leading to questions about whether it had fallen to the Church's reputation for going after its detractors and Britain's libel laws.

Wright had a huge advance negotiated by รผber-agent Andrew Wylie, publishers around the world primed to publish on the same day, a reported print run of 150,000 in the US and a team of researchers checking every fact. He will have things to say in his book that readers - especially young people, the audience the Church seeks to recruit - may think they have a right to know. American readers will learn all, while Wright's potential British readers will have no book to buy.

By way of explanation, Transworld's publicity director Patsy Irwin said: "The legal advice that we received was that some of the content of the book was not robust enough for the UK market, that an edited version would not fit with our schedule and the decision was made internally not to publish."

Padlock

Crying judge gives 'Dating Game killer' life

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© Pool photoRodney Alcala at his emotional Manhattan sentencing yesterday for 1970s murders.
Even the judge cried.

Tears flowed throughout a packed Manhattan courtroom yesterday as serial killer Rodney Alcala was sentenced to 25 years to life yesterday for raping, torturing and strangling two women, both 23, in the 1970s.

Dubbed "The Dating Game Killer" for his 1978 TV game-show appearance as "Bachelor No. 1," the mop-haired Alcala now returns to San Quentin prison in California, where he will languish on death row for a '70s West Coast murder spree that claimed four women and a 12-year-old girl.

"This is the kind of case I've never experienced, and hope to never again," Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Bonnie Wittner told yesterday's courtroom audience, which was packed with family members and friends of the two young New York victims.

Then the judge turned away from her microphone and broke into sobs before gathering herself and continuing.

"Sorry," she said. "In 30 years, I've never had a case like this."

V

Internet shifts rape stigma to perpetrators

Hacktivists, Anonymous
© Reuters/Stefano Rellandini
Last weekend, more than 1,000 people gathered in Steubenville, Ohio, a small town with a history of high school football glory, to support the victim of an alleged rape. These kinds of rallies happen from time to time, largely on college campuses. What made this one striking was the fact that many protesters were wearing Guy Fawkes masks.

Those masks are a trademark of Anonymous, the shadowy collective of hackers that has taken on Steubenville as a vigilante cause. In terms of criminal justice, this is far from ideal. But for our culture at large, it represents an unlikely glimmer of hope.

The Steubenville story began with old power dynamics, the ones that stem from a mix of athletic glory, power, and sex. At a series of parties last August, according to news reports, a 16-year-old girl, unconscious due to alcohol or drugs, was allegedly gang-raped by at least two members of the beloved Steubenville High School football team. The girl learned about the attacks the next day, the press reported, after various boys posted photos and mocking tweets - which they later deleted - on social media.

Two of the football players were charged, as juveniles, with rape. Their trial begins next month. But some locals, including a crime blogger, kept hammering at the story, claiming town officials were protecting other athletes, circling around a subgroup that is treated as untouchable. Last month, The New York Times published a long, meticulously researched account, which included a pointed threat to a reporter from the high school football coach.

Then Anonymous took up the cause.