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Fri, 29 Oct 2021
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Russia to ban citizenship change for adopted children

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Russian MPs intend to ban changing of citizenship of adopted Russian kids over fears that NGOs specializing in adoptions might send children to the United States via third countries.

"Despite the fact that we are no longer sending orphans for adoption to US families, the USA has not given up on its policy of purchases of children. If we fail to impose a legal ban on the shipping of children across the ocean, they will transport them through third countries," State Duma deputy Yevgeniy Fyodorov (United Russia) has told the mass circulation daily, Izvestia.

Handcuffs

Murder, grifting mastermind Sante Kimes dead in prison at 79

Kimes, who involved son Kenneth in her devious plots, passed away Monday evening about 7:30 p.m., according to a New York state Corrections Department spokeswoman. She was convicted for murdering Upper East Side widow Irene Silverman and a Los Angeles businessman.

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© Ric Francis/Associated Press
Convicted murderer Sante Kimes is shown in court in 2004 awaiting the guilty verdict in her trial for the murder of Los Angeles businessman David Kazdin. She died Monday in a New York prison.
Sante Kimes, the mastermind of a murderous mother-son grifter team in which he killed on her command, has died of natural causes at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility.

The conniving Kimes, 79, passed away Monday evening about 7:30 p.m. in the suburban New York prison's maximum security unit, state Corrections Department spokeswoman Linda Foglia said.

Kimes was serving out a life sentence plus 125 years for a pair of grisly murders - one on each coast - that turned the prostitute's daughter into a made-for-television villain.

No less a star than Mary Tyler Moore portrayed the cold-blooded Kimes in one of two small screen biopics based on her bicoastal killings.

In New York, Kimes was convicted for the murder of wealthy Upper East Side widow Irene Silverman in a plot to steal her $7.5 million townhouse.

Alarm Clock

Chicago police caught on video brutally abusing woman


A recent lawsuit filed against Chicago police shows a woman was physically and verbally abused by the US city's police officers last year.

Jianqing "Jessica" Klyzek, 32-year-old manager of a tanning salon and massage parlor, was subject to police brutality last year as the officers tried to place her under arrest, according to the lawsuit which was filed on May 14.

Info

10 ways to survive skyrocketing food prices

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Food prices are getting out of control. As meats, dairy, and eggs climb to record high prices and over 50 million Americans are now on public food assistance, family budgets are being stretched like never before just to survive.

Yet official statistics say Americans only spend about 11% of their post-tax income on food. I don't know about you, but food is my family's biggest monthly expense no matter what percentage of my income it is. I suspect that the same goes for most households reading this.

The causes for higher prices are many: currency inflation, fuel costs, bad weather, commodity speculation, higher demand, etc. I refer to the causes only to illustrate that this trend is very likely to continue. Therefore, it is wise to manage this crucial household expense more closely.

2 + 2 = 4

What makes Ohio State the most unequal public university in America?

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© Courtesy of Bob Hall, CC 3.0
The Ohio State University library
"Congratulations, Class of 2014, you're totally screwed" - that was the graduation message offered this season by Thomas Frank, Salon columnist and author of Pity the Billionaire. The average student-loan borrower graduating in 2014 is $33,000 in debt, according to the Wall Street Journal - the highest amount ever. And a new study of public universities shows that student debt is worst at schools with the highest-paid presidents.

The "most unequal" public university in America, according to the report, is Ohio State. Between 2010 and 2012 it paid its president, Gordon Gee, a total of almost $6 million, while raising tuition and fees so much that student debt grew 23 percent faster than the national average.

Che Guevara

Smart move! Chilean activist sets fire to $500 mn worth of student debt documents

Chilean artist Francisco Tapia
© Unknown
Chilean artist Francisco Tapia
Chilean activist and artist Francisco Tapia, also known as 'Papas Fritas,' has stolen and burnt $500 million worth of "pagares," or debt papers. He then uploaded the video onto social media, claiming he had "freed" students by setting the papers alight.

The artist made his claim in a video that went viral on May 12, where he says that debt owed to the Universidad del Mar is now worthless.

The ashes of the burnt legal papers were later confiscated by police after they were displayed at the Centro Cultural Gabriela mistral (GAM) exhibition.

"It's over, it's finished. You don't have to pay another peso [of your student loan debt]. We have to lose our fear, our fear of being thought of as criminals because we're poor. I am just like you, living a shitty life, and I live it day by day - this is my act of love for you," Tapia says in the five minutes of the video, parts of which were translated by the Santiago Times.

The theft and subsequent destruction of the documents happened during a 'toma,' or student takeover, of the campus.

Authorities began closing down Universidad del Mar last year due to financial irregularities, and while most of the students had to find an alternative school, the university is still collecting student loan payments. Now the owners of the university will have to sue each of the individual students - a very time consuming and costly process.

MIB

Journalist Politkovskaya killer suspect delivered guilty verdict by jury

Anna Politkovskaya
© AFP
A file picture taken on October 16, 2002 , shows investigative journalist and human rights activist Anna Politkovskaya
A Moscow city court jury has found five men guilty of taking part in the murder of Russian investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya. One of the convicted men, a nephew of a Chechen crime lord, was named the reporter's killer.

The jury on Tuesday announced a guilty verdict for three Chechen brothers, Rustam, Ibragim and Dzhabrail Mahmudovs, their uncle Lom-Ali Gaytukayev and the ex-police officer Sergey Khadjikurbanov.

The panel also decided that the investigation presented convincing evidence of Rustam Mahmudov's role as the actual killer in the 2006 murder.

None of the suspects have pleaded guilty. Mahmudov has claimed that neither him, nor his brothers were complicit in the murder, while Khadjikurbanov has asserted that he was slandered by another figure in the case, ex-police colonel Dmitry Pavlyuchenkov, who earlier struck a deal with the investigation. Pavlyuchenkov, who was initially suspected of organizing the murder, was sentenced to 11 years in jail and was also obliged to pay nearly $100,000 in damages to Politkovskaya's family.

Gaytukayev, on the other hand, is already serving a 2008-imposed 15 year jail sentence for organizing a separate contract killing. He had become known as a crime boss for carrying out large-scale fraud in the early 1990-s, known as "Chechen letters of advice."

Airplane

Cooperation: Russian, Chinese companies agree to build joint long-range airliner which will rival Boeing and Airbus

The leaders of Russia's United Aircraft Corporation and the Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China have signed an
UNAC CEO Mikhail Pogosyan
© RIA Novosti/Sergey Guneev
UNAC CEO Mikhail Pogosyan
agreement to cooperate on the development of a new wide-body long-range passenger airliner, the Russian company said in a statement Tuesday.

"The combined efforts of COMAC and UNAC on the joint creation of a new series of long-range planeswill bring cooperation between the two countries in the aircraft industry to a completely different level," UNAC CEO Mikhail Pogosyan said, according to the statement.

The memorandum on cooperation was the result of two years of consultations between Russian and Chinese experts.

Handcuffs

Occupy activist Cecily McMillan sentenced to 3 months in prison, 5 years probation

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© Image from facebook.com
Cecily McMillan
A judge in New York City on Monday morning sentenced Occupy Wall Street activist Cecily McMillan to three months in jail and five years' probation for assaulting a police officer during a 2012 protest.

Judge Ronald A. Zweibel's Monday morning decision was handed down in a Manhattan courtroom 14 days after a jury there found McMillan, 25, guilty of deliberately striking a plainclothes New York Police Department officer in the face with her elbow. She faced a maximum of seven years in prison as a result of the second-degree assault conviction.

"A civilized society must not allow an assault to be committed under the guise of civil disobedience," Justice Zweibel said during Monday's hearing, according to a New York Times report published shortly after the sentencing was announced.

Comment: So, she elbowed a cop who was trying to molest/arrest her at an Occupy Wall Street protest. She was detained as a result, received multiple cuts, bruised ribs and had a seizure. How much time did the cops get that "detained" her...?
Welcome to the police state!


Sheriff

Mistrial for cop who blew up woman's eye balls with pepper spray

Pepper Spray
© Reuters / Sergiy Polezhaka
Pepper Spray
A hung jury forced the judge to declare a mistrial in the case of a California police officer who permanently blinded a woman with pepper spray while arresting her for a traffic violation. The former cop was charged with excessive force.

After four days of deliberation, the jury deadlocked at 10-2 in favor of conviction on Tuesday morning, causing Riverside County Superior Court Judge Mac Fisher to end the proceedings. The District Attorney's Office already said it intends to retry the case. In the original trial, Enoch "Jeremy" Clark faced up to 20 years in prison for assault by a peace officer causing injury, assault with a less lethal weapon, battery causing serious injury and assault resulting in great bodily injury after the February 2012 incident. If convicted in a new trial, he would only face seven years in prison, CBS Los Angeles reported.