Society's Child
The frightening incident was caught on camera from a building overlooking the street in Kayseri, Central Anatolia.
It first shows the driver plough through the street, crashing into parked cars before reversing and coming to a standstill.
Crowds then gather around the vehicle to try stop the man and help the passenger, reportedly his girlfriend. They quickly disperse, however, when the man produces a machete.
Dash cam video obtained exclusively by NBC affiliate WKYC shows Pele Smith being escorted to the squad car while handcuffed in Lorain, Ohio.
Instead of opening the car door for Smith and placing him in the backseat, the officer escorting him throws him against the windshield so hard that the glass shatters.
According to the local Seychelles newspaper, there was no sign of violence on the bodies of the women who were on a one week vacation at the resort. The mother and brother of the sisters are currently in Seychelles "pressing U.S. and local officials for details" and making arrangements to bring the sisters back to the U.S. according to a news report in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, which covered the story because the sisters had attended high school in the area.
This latest unusual death of a JPMorgan Chase employee adds to a stunning roster of bizarre deaths since 2014 - a period which has also seen three felony counts leveled against the firm by the U.S. Justice Department and billions of dollars in fines for wide-ranging charges of wrongdoing.
It also collected multimedia recordings from Grand Central Station demonstrations according to court documents filed by the NYPD in response to a lawsuit, The Guardian reported.
The disclosures were made after a group of New York attorneys filed a suit against the NYPD after they refused requests to release records under the freedom of information law.
Firefighters believe a furnace is to blame.
"It was kind of scary," said homeowner Kattie Gamble.
Eighty -three-year-old Kattie Gamble 's Ethel Street home, of 56 years, exploded overnight.
"I lit the furnace today because it got so chilly in there, I lit the pilot," said Gamble.
Then she fell asleep.
"I was laying in there on the couch sleep and all of a sudden all this crashing noise came down," said Gamble.
Palestinians are now losing their freedom and place in cyberspace as well as in the space that was once their homeland.
The world's largest social media network has been deleting Palestinian accounts and posts at the behest of Israel for alleged "incitement".
Facebook has allowed Israel to delete any Palestinian content that they deem inappropriate.
Palestinian activists have launched a campaign to boycott Facebook:
"We will not stop our campaign until Facebook withdraws from the agreement and respects international laws and standards safeguarding the freedom of opinion and expression."
Lawrence McKinney spent 31 years living the Kafkaesque nightmare of being imprisoned for a crime he did not commit. After DNA evidence proved him innocent of a 1978 rape charge, he has fought to have his name cleared by exoneration. His request was denied by a parole board for the second time on Tuesday.
The parole board voted 7-0 to not recommend formal exoneration to Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam. Doing so would allow McKinney to receive compensation from the Tennessee Board of Claims for up to $1 million.
During the hearing, the parole board used McKinney's lengthy record for fighting in prison to protest reversing his conviction. Former inmate James Beasley testified at McKinney's hearing. Beasley was another inmate at the Hardeman County Correctional Complex and claimed that McKinney stabbed him while there. McKinney owned up to the 97 incidents on his prison record but explained that "only the strong survive" in prison culture, the Tennessean reported.
David Raybin, one of McKinney's attorneys, said that Beasley's accusations were false. In addition, McKinney has not been in trouble with the law in the seven years he has been free.

Sisters Ann Marie Korkki, 38, and Robin Marie Korkki, 42 on vacation found dead in their upscale room with no cause of death at this time
Editor's notes: Remember the 2 sisters from Quebec found dead in their Thai resort which turned out to be pesticides? (see link at bottom) Or do you recall the family of four poisoned by pesticides at an upscale villa just months ago in the Virgin Islands? With all the luxury resort pesticide poisonings, it does make one have to wonder.
On to the story:
Members of a grieving American family are on their way to the tropical island paradise of the Seychelles to try and solve the mystery of what killed two sisters in their shared resort room, and to bring their bodies home.
CBS reports:
The Seychelles Nation newspaper said the women had to be helped to their room by resort staff after drinking the night before they were found, according to CBS Denver. Resort staff found the women in their room and reported it to the police on Sept. 22.Annie Korkki, 37, and Robin Korkki, 42, were found dead in their villa at the posh Maia Luxury Resort on the Seychelles, a chain of islands in the Indian Ocean about 900 miles from the coast of East Africa.
Local media have reported the sisters were found without any clear signs of physical attack or obvious trauma to their bodies.
Facebook pictures showed the sisters enjoying their time in the Seychelles for at least a week before they were found dead. According to the Seychelles News Agency's website, they had been due to depart the island and fly home on Sept. 24.
"They were certified dead by the doctor at the Anse Boileau health center where they had been transported for examination," the agency quoted a police spokesman as saying. "Preliminary examination done by the police on the bodies of the two Americans is not showing any signs of violence."
Officials in the Seychelles, and the Korkki family, were awaiting the results of the autopsies.
Comment: Indeed. And on this last point, see: 8 years after US banking collapse, implosion of Deutsche Bank is poised to decimate the global economy.
Members of the Standing Rock Sioux and other Native American Nations and their supporters had gathered to pray and sing songs at the construction site Wednesday, when Morton County, North Dakota, Sheriff's Office deployed an insanely disproportionate response to break up the unarmed and otherwise wholly peaceful gathering.














Comment: