Society's ChildS

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."

Sherlock

Las Vegas police find body believed to be missing 10-year-old girl

Jade Morris
© Las Vegas Metro PoliceJade Morris was last seen on Friday in Las Vegas near Martin Luther King Boulevard and Alta Drive. She was wearing blue jeans, a blue shirt and a long brown jacket, police said.
Authorities expect to know Friday whether a child's body found in an undeveloped housing tract belongs to a 10-year-old Las Vegas girl who has been missing for a week.

Las Vegas police homicide Capt. Chris Jones says investigators didn't immediately know if the body discovered Thursday is that of Jade Morris. But he says there's a "likelihood" that it's her.

Police say Jade was last seen by her family at about 5 p.m. Dec. 21 with Brenda Stokes. Stokes was arrested later that night after she was accused of slashing a co-worker with razor blades at the Bellagio resort casino.

Stokes is scheduled to make a court appearance in that case Friday morning.

Jones says Stokes hasn't cooperated in the investigation about the girl's whereabouts.

Source: The Associated Press

Phoenix

Woman set on fire in Los Angeles as she sleeps on bench


For more than 10 years, the homeless woman slept on the same plastic bus stop bench at a busy intersection in the San Fernando Valley, no matter how cold it was or if it was raining.

The 67-year-old, described by one church volunteer who saw her regularly as the "sweetest lady on the street," was nestled in her regular spot early Thursday when the unthinkable happened: A man came out of a nearby drug store, doused her with a flammable liquid and set her ablaze.

She was taken to a hospital, where she was listed in critical condition.

Witness Erickson Ipina called 911, and police arrested Dennis Petillo, 24, a short time later. He was booked for investigation of attempted murder and was held on $500,000 bail. It wasn't immediately known if he had retained an attorney.

"He just poured it all over the old lady," Ipina told reporters at the scene. "Then he threw the match on her and started running."

Police provided no possible motive and released no details on Petillo. The victim's name also was withheld.

LAPD Deputy Chief Kirk Albanese told the Los Angeles Times it was unclear whether Petillo spoke to the woman before he allegedly set her ablaze.

Pistol

Taking the gun out of society... by flooding society with guns: Several U.S. states work to allow teachers to carry arms at schools

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Several states in America are working to allow teachers to carry weapons at schools, following a deadly shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.

On Thursday, the Utah Shooting Sports Council (USSC) canceled its fee for educators who intend to take part in training sessions in order to be allowed to carry concealed weapons at schools.

Referring to the interests of education professionals to participate in the training sessions, USSC board member Bill Scott said, "We had about 400 that wanted to do it and we only had seating for about 180."

Heart - Black

Psychopaths in our midst: Gang-raped Indian girl commits suicide

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Demonstrators react as police in New Delhi fire tear gas during a protest calling for better safety for women following the rape of a student, December 22, 2012.
An Indian teenager who fell victim to a gang rape has committed suicide, a police official says.

Inspector General Paramjit Singh Gill said on Thursday that the 17-year-old girl had been "running from pillar to post to get her case registered" but officers failed to register a rape complaint.

"One of the officers tried to convince her to withdraw the case."

Meanwhile, the victim's sister told the Indian television that police pressured the teenager to "either reach a financial settlement with her attackers or marry one of them."

Map

Germany accused of 'deporting' its elderly: Rising numbers moved to Asia and Eastern Europe because of sky-high care costs

  • Country's elderly and sick being sent abroad due to rising care costs
  • Situation described as 'inhumane deportation' and a huge 'alarm signal'
  • Warning to Britain where pensioners are selling homes to pay for healthcare
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© Ocean/CorbisCriticism: Experts have described the 'time bomb' of increasing numbers unable to afford the growing costs of retirement homes, while others have spoken of 'inhumane deportation'
German pensioners are being sent to care homes in Eastern Europe and Asia in what has been described as an 'inhumane deportation'.

Rising numbers of the elderly and sick are moved overseas for long-term care because of sky-high costs at home.

Some private healthcare providers are even building homes overseas, while state insurers are also investigating whether they can care for their clients abroad.

Experts describe a time bomb' of increasing numbers unable to afford the growing costs of retirement homes.

And they say the situation should be a warning to Britain, where rising numbers of pensioners are forced to sell their homes to pay for care.

The Sozialverband Deutschland (VdK), a socio-political advisory group, said the fact that many Germans were unable to afford the costs of a retirement home in their own country was a huge 'alarm signal'.

'We simply cannot let those people, who built Germany up to be what it is, be deported,' VdK's president Ulrike Mascher told The Guardian. 'It is inhumane.'

Family

California mall fight sends fearful shoppers running, rumors of gunman prove false


Sacramento, California - Chaos erupted inside Arden Fair Mall in Sacramento Wednesday amid false reports of a gunman in the mall, CBS Sacramento reports.

Three people were arrested for causing a disturbance that was considered criminal in nature.

Officer Doug Morse told CBS Sacramento that the rumors of a gunman began just before 5p.m. Wednesday.

"There was a group of juveniles going through the mall, pushing people around and knocking over signs," Morse said.

The sounds of signs hitting the floor were immediately confused for gunfire, which caused an instant panic and sent shoppers scrambling.

"Everybody was just running past us. We didn't know what was going on, so we ran out the door," shopper Kendall Elin told the station.

Toys

After Newtown, some parents impose (toy) gun control

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© Shun MelsonShun Melson's son threw his toy gun in the trash after hearing about the Newtown school shooting.
As the nation debates gun policy following the mass shooting in Newtown, Conn., some parents are imposing a different kind of gun control in their own homes: They are taking away their children's toy guns.

One Chicago mother, Anupy Singla, had been wrestling for months with whether to keep the Nerf revolver-style blasters that her daughters, ages 7 and 10, enjoyed playing with, several times tossing them into the trash and then retrieving them.

Her indecision ended abruptly on Dec. 14, as she watched the coverage of the shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School, where 20-year-old gunman Adam Lanza killed 26 people and himself after fatally shooting his mother at home.

"It was just something that inside me really snapped," said Singla, 44, a cookbook author and food writer, and she threw the playthings away.

"It's me making a decision that this is not something that's right in our house," she said. "We don't believe in playing with something that represents something that could be potentially so dangerous."