Society's ChildS


Pistol

Gun found in teddy bear opened by 8-year-old foster child

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© Sheeba Anderson
An 8-year-old foster child found a gun in a teddy bear she opened on Christmas day in New York City, according to a Dec. 28 Huffington Post report. Natasha Brunson, 8, had to be thrilled when she opened the mom and teddy bear gift, but shortly after, the pistol was found with the teddy bear set.

The gun fell out of the package, and at first the foster family believed it was another gift. However, they soon realized it was a weapon. The gun did not have a firing pin, and the serial numbers had been filed off. Obviously somebody was just doing something odd with this donated gift, which is really sad.

Natasha's foster mother Sheeba Anderson picked up the bag of toys from St. Anthony's Church in Soho. She said,

"This is something you never expect on Christmas. I feel like we narrowly avoided what could have been a terrible disaster. I couldn't calm down all day."

Attention

Unemployment in France at highest since 1998

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The number of people looking for work in France has reached its highest level in nearly 15 years.

Unemployment rose by 0.9 percent in November to 3.13 million, the highest since January 1998.

It represents an increase of 10.8% year on year and is the 18th consecutive month that unemployment has risen.

Including those who are working a reduced number of hours, the number of people seeking work in France stands at 4.61 million - up 9.2% on last year.

Eye 2

GOP Senator Mitch McConnell blocks unemployment benefits for 2 million Americans

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Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is demanding that government spending cuts be made to pay for an extension to the federal unemployment insurance program, which expires on Dec. 31, 2012, reports the Associated Press.

Without the extension, about two million people will lose their unemployment insurance. On top of that, another million will see their benefits run out after January 2013.

However, Sen. McConnell has not required the Bush tax cuts, which benefit the very wealthy, to be offset by any government spending cuts.

Dollars

Carrefour fined over unpaid breaks

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Supermarket chain Carrefour has been ordered to pay some of its staff for rest breaks, after a long legal battle in the north of France.

Some 540 staff at local branches of Carrefour Market had taken their case to the appeal court, claiming that they were being paid less than the legal minimum wage once compulsory breaks were taken into account.

Lawyers for the workers say they will receive between €2,000 and €5,000 in compensation.

Cowboy Hat

Three officers shot inside New Jersey police station by person in custody

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Police and rescue crews responded to the Gloucester County Municipal Building on Chews Landing Road this morning after shots were fired inside the Gloucester Township police station.

During an impromptu press conference, the deputy police chief told the media that the incident occurred around 5:30 a.m. inside the building when a suspect being taken into custody for a domestic violence-related incident got into a confrontation with officers.

The suspect was able to take a firearm and opened fire on the officers.

Three officers were reportedly injured, including at least one who was shot just below his bulletproof vest. He is said to be in stable condition after undergoing surgery. The other two officers sustained minor injuries and should be released from the hospital shortly as of 9:49 a.m.

The shooter was killed by police.

Snakes in Suits

Sick society: Nearly 1,000 British doctors could still be practicing despite convictions for possessing child porn and drug trafficking

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Patients are not being told about the disgraced physicians, surgeons and GPs, who are still working in surgeries and hospitals across the country
Up to 927 doctors could still be practicing despite being convicted for crimes such as possession of indecent child images, trafficking drugs, kerb crawling and causing death by dangerous driving.

Medical chiefs claim they cannot ban all sex offenders from working because it might breach their human rights.

But patients are not being told about the disgraced physicians, surgeons and GPs, who are still working in surgeries and hospitals across the country.

Those doctors, who have not been struck off the medical register and who have been found guilty of possessing child sex images are even thought to still be treating children.

The figures, obtained by the Daily Mirror through a Freedom of Information request, show that a total of 927 doctors have kept their jobs despite having a criminal record.

Some of them have committed more than one offence.

None of the patients treated have been informed.

Campaign groups yesterday asked the General Medical Council, who released the figures, to tell patients if their doctors have a criminal past.

Roger Goss of Patient Concern told the Mirror: 'Patients should be made aware if their doctor is found guilty of serious criminal offences that could affect their care and be allowed to make up their own minds if they want to risk being treated by them.'

'The problem is that the GMC is funded by doctors while their prime duty is to protect patients but these two things often come into conflict.'

Phoenix

Horror as man turns into 'walking fireball' on Shepherd's Bush Green, London

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© Fulham ChronicleEmergency services at Shepherd's Bush Green, London, where a man is thought to have set himself alight.
Witnesses have described their horror at seeing a man engulfed in flames on Shepherd's Bush Green on Thursday morning.

Bystanders said the man was a 'walking fireball' and 'head-to-toe' in flames before ambulances and fire crews rushed to the scene and helped douse them.

He was taken to hospital and, at this stage, it is not clear whether he survived his injuries.

It is believed the man doused himself in petrol at the BP garage by the Green before setting himself on fire and walking on to the park itself.

Pablo Jenkins, 29, was driving his daughter to nursery with his girlfriend when he noticed fire out of the corner of his eye. His disbelief turned to horror and then worry as he feared not only for the man's life but also that he could walk back to the petrol station and cause an explosion.

Heart - Black

Christmas Day robbery at Hurricane Sandy relief center shocks Staten Island volunteers

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© Nicholas FeveloShocked and saddened volunteers assess the damage. From left: Dean Malandro, Jack Biondo, Gary Malandro and Charles Milatta.
Christmas Day robbery at Hurricane Sandy relief center shocks Staten Island volunteers

A cruel Christmas crook robbed a Staten Island relief center of clothes intended for Hurricane Sandy victims.

"When people are down, the roaches come out," said Mike Hoffman, 33, who was among the volunteers working at the Boots on the Ground relief center.

"It was a punch in the stomach," the heartbroken New Springfield resident said Thursday. "But in my heart, I don't think it was someone from the community."

Nuke

More lessons from the Fukushima Daiichi accident: Containment failures and the loss of the ultimate heat sink

In this Monday's video, Fairewinds investigates a recently released report from Tokyo Electric. Arnie Gundersen discusses TEPCO's latest analysis that, almost two years after the accident, fully substantiates Fairewinds long held position that the explosion at Fukushima Daiichi Unit 3 was the result of a detonation shock wave. Arnie also discusses troubling reports that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has been avoiding the analysis of damage to many nuclear plants' emergency cooling systems (Ultimate Heat Sink) from storm surges, tsunamis or dam failures. The ramifications of both of these issues on old designs and also the AP1000 are also analyzed in depth.


Arrow Down

Florida man pleads guilty in New York in dinosaur dispute

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© The Associated Press/ U.S. Attorney Office For The Southern District Of New York This photo released by the U.S. Attorney's office shows the fossil of a Tyrannosaurus bataar dinosaur at the center of a lawsuit demanding its return to Mongolia. Florida resident Eric Prokopi has pleaded guilty, Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012, at Federal Court in New York to smuggling this fossil and others into the United States. In return for his cooperation, prosecutors say they will recommend leniency.
A Florida fossils dealer pleaded guilty to smuggling charges Thursday and agreed to give up a celebrated $1 million dinosaur skeleton seized by the U.S. government earlier this year for its eventual return to Mongolia.

Eric Prokopi, 38, said he would surrender the 70 million-year-old Tyrannosaurus bataar skeleton known as "Ty" and give up any claims to six other dinosaurs and various other bones in a cooperation deal that might win him leniency from charges that carry a potential prison sentence of up to 17 years.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Martin S. Bell read a list of the dinosaurs to Magistrate Judge Ronald L. Ellis, saying a second substantially complete Tyrannosaurus skeleton was found at Prokopi's Gainesville, Fla., home, while a third was believed to be in Great Britain.

Bell said the government will also get to keep a Chinese flying dinosaur that Prokopi illegally imported; a skeleton of a Saurolophus, a duckbilled, plant eating dinosaur from the late Cretaceous period; and two Oviraptor skeletons, one found at Prokopi's home and the other at another residential dwelling in Florida. The Oviraptors have parrot-like skulls.

"It's among the larger dinosaur shopping lists you'll see today," Bell told the magistrate judge.

In a release, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said: "Fossils and ancient skeletal remains are part of the fabric of a country's natural history and cultural heritage, and black marketers like Prokopi who illegally export and sell these wonders, steal a slice of that history. We are pleased that we can now begin the process of returning these prehistoric fossils to their countries of origin."