Society's ChildS

Question

Mystery explosions still plaguing Alhambra, California

Alhambra, California
© Keith Birmingham/ Pasadena Star-News
Susan Saunders began hearing the explosions at random hours, day and night, in February at her Alhambra home. The first one came at 3 a.m.

"I thought, 'Somebody's blowing things up,'" said Saunders, 60. "It really lifted my windows."

But she heard it again and again. Her neighbors started hearing it. Police were called. They received 114 calls about the noises since mid-February, according to Chris Paulson, the city's administrative services director. He told the Pasadena Star-News local government agencies did not know what the cause of the sound was.

City officials are baffled; one blast interrupted a city council meeting. "All of a sudden we hear this loud sharp explosion โ€” very quick," Paulson said. "We all flinched and looked around and didn't see smoke or flames or light."

They called Caltech seismologists. But they don't have an answer. "There's nothing seismic that I can see," said Jennifer Andrews, a staff seismologist at Caltech in Pasadena, who was asked by Alhambra city officials to check earthquake data for Feb. 22. "What that phenomenon might be, I don't know. I haven't heard the noises."

The seismograph picks up pressure waves from things like thunder and helicopter sounds. But the Alhambra explosions are baffling. "Whether it's a man-made or natural phenomenon, I don't know," Andrews said. She hopes to learn more by the end of the week.


Comment: Unexplained 'sonic boom type of sounds' shaking Alhambra, California


Pistol

Police execute Baton Rouge man Alton Sterling: Black community righteously enraged

Alton Sterling
Graphic cell phone video showing two officers execute a father at point blank range early Tuesday morning has prompted outrage in a Baton Rouge community. Shortly after seeing the video, The Game took to Instagram and voiced his rage over the death of 37-year-old Alton Sterling.

Sterling was killed by officers Blane Salamoni and Howie Lake II over a call about him selling CD's. Sterling was a father and a beloved member of the community who had permission to be selling CDs from the store owner Abdullah Muflahi.

Sterling was tackled and then executed by cops after simply asking them what it was he did wrong.

Yes, Sterling may have had a pistol in his pocket. However, having a pistol in your pocket without a CCW card in Louisiana is a misdemeanor. It was certainly no grounds for a death sentence.

This incident should be enough to shake even the most complacent Americans out of their slumber and realize that there is a problem with police violence in America. That was the sentiment of the Game's rant on Instagram.

Stock Down

Brexit currency fallout: The pound sinks and Deutsche Bank tanks

pound on fire
The fallout from the Brexit vote continues to rock the European financial system. On Wednesday, the British pound dropped to a fresh 31-year low as confidence in the currency continues to plummet. At one point it had fallen as low as $1.2796 before rebounding a bit. As I write this, it is still sitting at just $1.293. Meanwhile, the problems for the biggest banks in Europe just continue to mount. At one point on Wednesday Credit Suisse hit an all-time record low, and German banking giant Deutsche Bank closed the day at an all-time record closing low of 12.93. Overall, Europe's Stoxx 600 Bank Index closed at the lowest level in almost five years. What we are watching is a full-blown financial meltdown in Europe, but because it is not personally affecting them yet, most Americans are not paying any attention to it.

The collapse of the British pound that we have seen since the Brexit vote has been nothing short of breathtaking. In fact, CNN says that this "is what a currency crash looks like"...

Sheriff

Minnesota woman live-streams aftermath of boyfriend's shooting by police during traffic stop

Philando Castile
© Fox9
A man identified by relatives as Philando Castile, 32, a St. Paul schools employee, died Wednesday night at Hennepin County Medical Center. The police-involved shooting followed a traffic stop in Falcon Heights.

A St. Paul man died Wednesday night after being shot by police in Falcon Heights, the immediate aftermath of which was shown in a video recorded by the man's girlfriend as she sat next to him and which was widely shared on Facebook.


Comment: The video is graphic and disturbing. A transcript is available at the Star Tribune's website for those who would rather not watch.


The girlfriend started the live-stream video with the man in the driver's seat slumped next to her, his white T-shirt soaked with blood on the left side. In the video, taken with her phone, she says they were pulled over at Larpenteur Avenue and Fry Street for a broken taillight.

The "police shot him for no apparent reason, no reason at all," she says.

Friends at the scene identified the man as Philando Castile, 32, cafeteria supervisor at J.J. Hill Montessori School in St. Paul. Castile's cousin said on her Facebook page that he was dead. Castile's uncle, Clarence Castile, who was at Hennepin County Medical Center with other family members, said Philando died at 9:37 p.m., a few minutesafter arriving at the hospital.

The video was posted on a Facebook page belonging to Lavish Reynolds, but it's not clear if it is the girlfriend's page or whether she sent the video to someone else to post. Reynolds' page was not available for a time, but by then copies of the video had been shared many times.

Hardhat

No vague idea: Obama administration rubber-stamping fracking permits in Gulf of Mexico with no environmental risk assessment

O&G drilling, fracking
© Lee Celano / Reuters
US authorities "didn't even know what they were allowing" when permitting companies to conduct offshore fracking and dump billions of gallons of chemicals into the ocean, a lawyer for an environmental NGO has told RT.

"They were permitting fracking offshore in the Gulf of Mexico and [...] the agencies didn't know it was happening, they didn't even know what they were allowing," Kristen Monsell, a lawyer at the US-based Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), told RT on Thursday.

In late June, the CBD released a report suggesting the Obama administration have issued over 1,200 offshore fracking licenses between 2010 and 2014.


Controversial offshore fracking has been taking place in hundreds of wells in the Gulf of Mexico, including within the habitat of loggerhead turtles, CBD said in late June.

When deciding to license offshore fracking, the authorities "did so without conducting any real environmental analysis or any analysis on fracking-endangered species, without involving the public, and that's just unacceptable," Monsell said.

The US government "hasn't really studied it before, they haven't studied the impact of the chemicals that these companies are allowed to dump directly into the ocean including critical habitat and fracking-endangered species."

Comment: Shale Gas: Halliburton's Weapon of Mass Devastation


Pistol

Mother of cop-killed Philando Castile: "We are being hunted every day," "It's a silent war against African Americans as a whole"

Philando Castile
Philando Castile. Another black man in the US killed by police in cold blood.
The Minnesota woman who livestreamed on Facebook the dramatic moments after her African-American boyfriend was fatally shot by police issued an emotional plea for justice Thursday.

St. Anthony interim Police Chief Jon Mangseth said Philando Castile, 32, was fatally shot during a traffic stop at about 9 p.m. Wednesday.

Diamond Reynolds said she and her 4-year-old daughter were in the car. She livestreamed the immediate aftermath of the shooting, which showed Castile bleeding and dazed while the officer continues to point his gun, so that "the people can determine who was right and who was wrong," she said.

Gov. Mark Dayton expressed condolences to Castile's family and asked the U.S. Justice Department to investigate the shooting. FBI Director James Comey said he expects federal authorities to investigate the case.

Comment: Yet another horrifying and tragic example of what policing means today in the land of freedom.


Black Cat

Female psychopath? Ohio day-care worker who raped toddlers on video a 'charming young lady' say attorney

Heather Koon
There's no disputing that Heather Koon videotaped herself raping four children in an Elyria, Ohio, day care before sending the footage to her boyfriend, a convicted sex offender.

The 27-year-old Koon pleaded guilty last week to four counts of rape among other charges, her attorney, Dan Wightman, told The Washington Post.

What is up for debate, Wightman said, is whether Koon should be considered a violent sexual offender. Earning that designation at a future hearing would give the former child caretaker a mandatory life sentence without parole, he said.

"It's very unusual to have a female charged as a sexual predator โ€” almost unheard of," Wightman said. "Psychologists tend to think she's more along the lines of a battered woman. She was being influenced by her boyfriend."


Comment: Female sexual predators are less common, but they are capable of the same severity of abuse and are just as dangerous.


Authorities maintain that James Osborne instructed Koon to carry out the sexual assaults of children โ€” including a 1- and 2-year-old โ€” at ABC Kidz Child Care in March and April of 2013, according to the Chronicle-Telegram of Lorain County.

Comment: Listen to the SOTT editors interview Dr. Anna Salter, author of the best-selling book, Predators: Pedophiles, Rapists, and Other Sex Offenders, Who They Are, How They Operate, and How We Can Protect Ourselves and Our Children.

Behind the Headlines: Predators Among Us - Interview With Dr. Anna Salter


Life Preserver

Palestinian man rescues wounded Israelis

Palestinian saves
© AP Photo/Nasser ShiyoukhiIn this Friday, July 1, 2016, file photo, Israeli soldiers secure the scene of a car crash after a shooting attack near Hebron, West Bank, Friday, July 1, 2016. A few years ago, Islam al-Bayed spent seven months in an Israeli prison for allegedly throwing stones at Israeli troops. Now, the 26-year-old Palestinian man has become an unlikely symbol of coexistence after rescuing an Israeli family whose car crashed following a deadly roadside shooting by Palestinian militants in the West Bank
Ramallah, West Bank โ€” Just a few years ago, Islam al-Bayed spent seven months in an Israeli prison for allegedly throwing stones at Israeli troops. Now, the 26-year-old Palestinian man has become an unlikely symbol of tolerance after rescuing an Israeli family whose car crashed following a deadly roadside shooting by Palestinian militants in the West Bank.

Last week's shooting, along with the fatal stabbing of an Israeli girl as she slept in her bed, have ratcheted up tensions in the southern West Bank. Israel has responded by imposing a closure around the city of Hebron and beefed up its troop presence in the volatile area.

But al-Bayed, a private security guard who lives in the al-Fawar refugee camp near Hebron, says his actions last Friday transcended politics.

"This was a very human moment. I didn't think of the occupation or the conflict. I thought only of human beings, children who needed my help," he said in an interview.

Comment: This story shouldn't come as any surprise. There is nothing inherently "anti-semitic" or hateful about Palestinians in general who, most of all, just want to live in peace and have a decent quality of life - but are unable to under the yoke of occupation, brutality and the slow-motion plans of ethnic cleansing they are victims of.


Snakes in Suits

Former executives of France Telecom may be prosecuted over employee suicides

france telecom suicides
French prosecutors have called for telecommunications giant France Telecom, now renamed Orange, and its former executives to face trial over a wave of employee suicides, an investigation source said Thursday.

After a probe lasting seven years, prosecutors have asked an investigating judge to bring harassment charges against the company and its former chief executive Didier Lombard, the source told AFP.

Prosecutors want similar charges to be brought against the company's former number two, Louis-Pierre Wenes and its former human resources chief, Olivier Barberot.

Another four executives could be tried for complicity in the harassment, according to the requests, which were dated June 22.

A spokesman for Orange said the request for a trial was "a normal stage in the procedure (that) does not assume how the judge will decide."

Unions and management accept that 35 France Telecom employees took their own lives between 2008 and 2009.

Comment: French telecom Orange investigates second wave of suicides among staff - 'explicitly related' to jobs


Attention

High levels arsenic detected near Charlotte, NC main water supply source

arsenic duke energy plant
© duke_energy / Instagram
High level of arsenic have been detected near Duke Energy's Riverbend power plant, right next to Charlotte, North Carolina's main water supply source.

The toxins have been traced back to Duke Energy's coal ash pits, after abnormal levels of arsenic were discovered on June 20.

While the state safety threshold for arsenic in surface water is 10 parts per billion (ppb), June's reading showed levels of 95 ppb, according to Mecklenburg County officials.

The samples came from the water adjacent to the Duke Energy's Riverbend Steam Station Coal Ash Ponds in Mountain Island Lake. The two ponds at Riverbend hold 3.6 million tons of coal ash, which showed the high levels of arsenic. The discovery came after operators drained the coal ash ponds at the Riverbend Steam Station in January, in preparation for excavating the ash.

Comment: America's multi-billion ton toxic legacy: Coal ash
Duke Energy currently has around 150 million tons of coal waste stored in 4,500 acres of ash dumps, of which about 70% are in North Carolina. In the aftermath of the Dan River spill, the company admitted cutting corners and ignoring engineers' requests for better monitoring at the site, and agreed to pay $102 million in fines and environmental restitution fees.

America's coal plants produce 140 million tons of ash each year, making it the country's second-largest industrial waste stream. The vast majority of that ash is blended with water to make it easier to move, and then pumped into impoundments that are often little more than holes in the ground.

There are currently more than 1,100 such impoundments in the US, of which almost half lack any kind of lining to prevent seepage, and every state that has coal-ash impoundments has also had EPA-verified water contamination incidents linked to the sites.

That's troubling because coal ash contains toxic heavy metals such as arsenic, lead, selenium, and other agents that have been linked to cancer, learning disabilities, neurological disorders, birth defects, reproductive failure, asthma, and other illnesses.

According to an EPA risk assessment, people who live within a mile of an unlined coal-ash facility have a 1 in 50 risk of cancer due to arsenic exposure alone, without even considering the other toxins to which they're potentially exposed.