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Friday, 13 February 2009

Gangster disciples in early morning bust netted plenty of illegal drugs and dangerous weapons.

Dozens of convicted murderers, robbers, high level drug dealers, and even members of the gangster disciples off Memphis streets tonight, after an early morning bust netted plenty of illegal drugs and dangerous weapons.Armed with search warrants and battering rams, Memphis Police made their presence known in a big way Thursday morning, with an early morning roundup that netted dozens of offenders.Eleven teams, out to lock up drug dealers in known gangs, checked homes and hangouts for suspects. Sometimes the bad guys decide to run, and cops were ready to chase. Our cameras were there when one suspect who tried to flee got caught, in possession of marijuana.For him, the morning is off to a bad start. He begged officers to call his wife for help.In addition to seizing drugs and vehicles, police found a number of weapons, like an AK-47 that cops found sitting in a suspect's bathroom. Police also uncovered a stash of weapons and ammunition at an apartment complex at 334 Georgia.Less than an hour later, another suspect was taken into custody as part of Operation "Blue Star". His new pickup truck was seized along with this bullet proof vest.One of the bullet proof vests recovered in the operation actually belonged to a Memphis Police Officer.As far what's next for these guys, especially since most of the people arrested were repeat offenders with lengthy histories. District Attorney Bill Gibbons says he promises to prosecute to the fullest extent of the law.


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Gregory Wooley, an influential member of the Hells Angels former underling network who is currently serving time at a penitentiary in Kingston, Ont.

Gregory Wooley, an influential member of the Hells Angels former underling network who is currently serving time at a penitentiary in Kingston, Ont.Wooley, a former member of the Rockers, a Hells Angels puppet gang, is serving time for offences that took place during the biker gang war in the 1990s. But he is now facing new charges related to the current investigation which targeted at least two major Montreal-based street gangs. Wooley was scheduled to have a parole hearing in the coming weeks.A 38-year-old inmate at another federal penitentiary, the Leclerc Institution in Laval, Que., is also expected to be placed under arrest. The man at Leclerc is believed to be the head of the Syndicate street gang and was arrested in another large drug bust that struck his gang and the Hells Angels.A Quebec police source said the investigation targeted the Syndicate and other groups aligned with the Blue or Crips side of Montreal street gangs.``This operation targeted people involved with cocaine trafficking,'' said Montreal police Sgt. Ian Lafreniere, adding suspects were involved in importing and trafficking in Montreal and in Ottawa.``It's not only the people selling on the street level. It's top people (in the gangs) as well,'' he said. ``This investigation began in January 2006. So this was a long investigation and a huge operation today. We believe we've hit the top of the chain.''In executing search warrants the police hope to seize drugs and firearms.Police are expected to hold a news conference about the operation Thursday afternoon.

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Friday, 19 December 2008

Robbers blew up an ATM in a florist in the Evans Road shopping centre at Telopea.

Retailers are living in fear of the next bamraid blitz on their ATMs, amid warnings from experts that there is little they can do to prevent the explosive attacks.As the spate of audacious robberies continued with another two explosions early yesterday, shopkeepers are petrified they could be the next targets. Veterinarian Sam Haynes, of the Sydney Animal Hospital in Erskineville, said he feared the consequences of an attack."Absolutely it's a big concern," "I'm pretty worried about it if it was to go off, not just the damage it would do to the building but also it's a veterinary hospital. It's got animals in it."Dr Haynes said his business had already been hit by crime. "We've had an armed hold-up," he said."They came in at night, they held a gun to one of the girls who works here."Retail security exper Mike Ramsay said that while there were some measures one could take against conventional ramraids, it was almost impossible to defend against explosives.
"Explosives is a pretty hard thing to deal with," he said.Mr Ramsay recommended enhanced CCTV monitoring so that offenders could possibly be identified.The stark warning came as police continued their search for a group of bandits blitzing the city.At 2.30am yesterday, robbers blew up an ATM in a florist in the Evans Road shopping centre at Telopea. The ATM in the shopfront and several neighbouring stores were damaged. Police said a sum of cash was taken. Witnesses told police a group of men escaped in a dark-coloured vehicle.Earlier, police were called to a shopping centre in West Pennant Hills about 2am after reports of an explosion.The stand-alone ATM was found largely intact and no cash appeared to have been taken, but a stairwell was damaged. It brings the number of ATM attacks in Sydney to six since Tuesday.Criminals pump gas into ATM money slots before detonating the machines from a distance.The Government has offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of ATM bandits, in addition to $50,000 that banks put up in 2006.A furious Premier Nathan Rees said on Thursday he hoped the thieves would blow themselves up before they hurt someone else.

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Senator-elect Hirram Monserrate was arrested early this morning after he brought a woman believed to be his girlfriend to Long Island Jewish Hospital


Senator-elect Hirram Monserrate was arrested early this morning after he brought a woman believed to be his girlfriend to Long Island Jewish Hospital with severe lacerations on her face that will require multiple sitches to close, sources confirmed.Monserrate and his girlfriend arrived at the hospital at approximately 4:30 a.m. where he was detained for questioning and subsequently arrested, according to an NYPD source. The incident occurred at an apartment at 37-20 83rd St. in Jackson Heights, Queens.Monserrate was charged with assault one.City Councilman Hiram Monserrate, a Queens Democrat who was elected to the State Senate last month, was arrested and charged with assault early Friday morning in connection with an injury to his girlfriend, law enforcement officials said.Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s top spokesman, said that Mr. Monserrate had been arrested and charged with assault in the first degree. Officials said that Mr. Monserrate had taken his girlfriend, Karla Giraldo, 30, to Long Island Jewish Medical Center with what appeared to be a serious injury in or around her left eye. Ms. Giraldo told hospital staff members that it was Mr. Monserrate who had assaulted her, officials said. It appeared that she had been punched and slashed in or around her left eye with a shard of glass, and officials said it took 20 to 40 stitches to close the wound. A doctor at the hospital, which straddles the border between Queens and Nassau County, called the police at 4:50 a.m. New York City police detectives arrived at the hospital, arrested Mr. Monserrate and took him to a Queens precinct house for questioning. The episode occurred in Mr. Monserrate’s apartment, at 37-20 83rd Street in Jackson Heights, officials said.

Officials said that when the police arrived at the hospital, Ms. Giraldo said that she did not want Mr. Monserrate to be arrested. But under New York law, such arrests are mandatory in domestic violence cases, even if the victim does not want the case to be pursued. Michael Nieves, a spokesman for Mr. Monserrate, declined to comment on the case, saying he needed to learn more about the situation.
Another spokesman, Wayne Mahlke, said: “We’re not making any statement right now. We will be doing one shortly.”

Mr. Monserrate — a former marine and a former police officer, who served 12 years with the New York City Police Department — was less than two weeks away from resigning his seat on the City Council, where he has served since 2002, to join the State Senate. Indeed, Thursday was a big day for the councilman. Mr. Monserrate gave a departing speech on the floor of the City Council, where his colleagues praised his service. And on Thursday evening, he attended a holiday party held by the Queens County Democrats. The arrest startled officials on the Council. “Yesterday was a happy day for Hiram and people were happy for him, so this would be really weird,” Councilman John C. Liu, a fellow Democrat from Queens, said on Friday morning.
The City Council speaker, Christine C. Quinn, said in a news conference on Friday:

I have heard of the allegations against Councilman Monserrate. You can imagagine they are deeply, deeply troubling allegations. Of course, they’re allegations. Councilmember Monserrate, just like any individual in the city or anywhere else, is innocent until proven guilty, and I’m glad that the N.Y.P.D. is taking up these charges and is going to pursue them quickly and thoroughly.


That said, the charges which relate to domestic violence speak to the problem of domestic violence in our city. And domestic violence is really a cancer in our city and it is just outrageous and unacceptable. When that crime is perpetrated the individual who commits it needs to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law regardless of any position that individual might hold.
Mr. Monserrate became the first Latino to be elected from Queens when he won his Council seat in 2001. In 2003, days after a Brooklyn councilman was assassinated at City Hall, a campaign volunteer for a rival candidate running against Mr. Monserrate was charged with threatening to shoot Mr. Monserrate and two of his aides because he thought they were engaged in dirty campaign tricks. The volunteer, Julio Abreu, had accused the aides of pulling down posters for the rival candidate, Luis Jimenez, and harassing his workers.

In 2006, Mr. Monserrate unsuccessfully challenged an incumbent state senator, John D. Sabini, in a hard-fought Democratic primary. In 2007, Mr. Sabini was arrested in Albany for driving while intoxicated. He pleaded guilty to a reduced charge and paid a $300 fine. But the arrest helped to cost him the support of party leaders in Queens, who shifted their support to Mr. Monserrate.In May, The Times reported that the authorities were investigating whether a Queens social service agency that received city money through Mr. Monserrate’s efforts also helped politically with his campaign for the State Senate. The Queens district attorney’s office and the city’s Department of Investigation are looking into allegations that more than two dozen workers for the nonprofit agency, Libre, collected signatures to help Mr. Monserrate get on the ballot in 2006. Mr. Monserrate has directed more than $2.7 million in Council discretionary and capital funds to the group. He said that he was unaware of any investigation and knew nothing about any efforts by Libre to collect signatures for his nominating petitions. (In October, The Times reported that Libre could not produce paperwork to show how it spent nearly $250,000 in city money that the councilman had directed to it in recent years.)In June, Gov. David A. Paterson announced that he would nominate Mr. Sabini to be chairman of the State Racing and Wagering Board, sparing the party from another bitter primary. Mr. Monserrate won the Democratic nomination for Mr. Sabini’s Senate seat in an uncontested primary in September, and sailed to election in November.
After the election, in which Democrats won control of the chamber for the first time in decades, Mr. Monserrate was part of a so-called Gang of Four that balked at electing Malcolm A. Smith, the Senate Democratic leader, as majority leader. Mr. Monserrate eventually backed down and threw his support to Mr. Smith, who is also from Queens, but the future leadership of the Senate remains in turmoil.

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Joshua “JJ” Matthews, 23, of Division Street had agreed to sell two “eight-balls,” or eighth-ounce quantities (about 3.5 grams each), of crack

Joshua “JJ” Matthews, 23, of Division Street had agreed to sell two “eight-balls,” or eighth-ounce quantities (about 3.5 grams each), of crack for $300 to a person who was working with the government in an undercover operation. The witness indicated that he/she had $400, and Matthews agreed to sell 10 grams. Matthews made the sale at his residence, and agents later discovered he had sold 4.7 grams, not the 10 grams he had promised. Matthews was indicted by a grand jury in January 2008 and arrested in February. While his case was pending, he underwent a competency examination and a judge determined he was fit to stand trial.

He had preveiously been convicted of third-degree assault and possession of marijauna and was on probation at the time of his arrest. Matthews had faced three to four years in prison for distribution of crack cocaine under federal sentencing guidelines.
His attorney, public defender Thomas G. Dennis, argued in a sentencing document that other sentencing carrying “the same preassigned level of seriousness” include involuntary manslaughter, reckless operation of a means of transportation, aggravated assault.Chief United States District Judge Robert N. Chatigny sentenced him to 12 months and one day of imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised release.

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Federal agents in Puerto Rico on Friday arrested three island police officers accused of providing security for drug traffickers

Federal agents in Puerto Rico on Friday arrested three island police officers accused of providing security for drug traffickers, an FBI spokesman said.A fourth officer indicted by a U.S. grand jury remained at large, spokesman Harry Rodriguez said.The U.S. territory police officers, all members of an extradition unit, are among six people indicted on charges including conspiracy and weapons possession related to drug trafficking.Police arrested one of the two suspects who are not police officers, Rodriguez said. The raids took place in and around the Puerto Rican capital of San Juan.The investigation of the drug ring began more than a year ago, Rodriguez said.The island's 8,000-strong police force is reeling from accusations of corruption. In June, federal authorities charged six officers with planting evidence and building false cases against people in a northwest coastal town

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Federal agents in Puerto Rico on Friday arrested three island police officers accused of providing security for drug traffickers

Federal agents in Puerto Rico on Friday arrested three island police officers accused of providing security for drug traffickers, an FBI spokesman said.A fourth officer indicted by a U.S. grand jury remained at large, spokesman Harry Rodriguez said.The U.S. territory police officers, all members of an extradition unit, are among six people indicted on charges including conspiracy and weapons possession related to drug trafficking.Police arrested one of the two suspects who are not police officers, Rodriguez said. The raids took place in and around the Puerto Rican capital of San Juan.The investigation of the drug ring began more than a year ago, Rodriguez said.The island's 8,000-strong police force is reeling from accusations of corruption. In June, federal authorities charged six officers with planting evidence and building false cases against people in a northwest coastal town

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Christine Starkey, 59, diverted funds from the independent and relatively poor St Chad’s College, part of Durham University, over a period of five yea

Christine Starkey, 59, diverted funds from the independent and relatively poor St Chad’s College, part of Durham University, over a period of five years.University bursar who stole almost £500,000 from her college employers and spent much of it on clothes has been jailed for three years.Durham Crown Court heard how the future of the 104-year-old college was now in jeopardy because of her dishonesty.Starkey made a total of 198 transfers from the college either to her matrimonial joint account,or her sole account, the court heard.Her husband, now living in Spain, knew nothing about the thefts, Steven Orange, prosecuting, said.Robert Mochrie, defending, said his client had a compulsion to buy clothes.She was mentally-ill with depression and sought happiness through buying, he said."By and large I would suggest that most of the money has gone to purchase absurd items," he said.When officers raided her £240,000 house in Eaglescliffe, Teesside - now sold - they found boxes of clothes strewn around, and many of the items were unworn.But Mr Mochrie conceded some of the stolen money went to pay the mortgage on the house, and on an extension.
The cash from the house sale has been frozen pending a Proceeds of Crime Act hearing next year.She admitted stealing £488,000 from 2002 to December 2007, when the college became aware that money was missing.She also admitted money laundering, in that she used the stolen cash to buy products.Mr Orange said: "St Chad’s has about 300 students and as bursar, Mrs Starkey’s responsibility covered all financial matters."She diverted money from the college’s staff salary account, from profits it made on commercial ventures and even took £10,000 in cash that students paid for laundry tokens.She then covered up the thefts by misreporting the accounts at finance meetings.At first she admitted to the college finance committee that she had stolen £93,000. She was then sacked, and officials contacted police.As detectives scoured her accounts, and those of the college, the true extent of the theft was revealed.In a victim impact statement, college principal Dr Joe Cassidy wrote that the breach of trust damaged staff morale, caused funding headaches because higher education authorities needed assurances about how it handled finances and had disillusioned benefactors, many of whom were retired clergymen and not wealthy people.Mr Orange said: "If funding is withdrawn, as has been threatened, the college would cease to exist as an independent charity."Judge Richard Lowden, the Recorder of Durham, said the victim in this case was all too real, and not merely a financial institution, and that the total stolen was more than the college held in endowment from supporters."No doubt they (the benefactors) have been terribly, terribly hurt by this," he said."The breach of trust is gross."Starkey was previously convicted in 1985 of taking £10,000 from a Teesside car dealership where she worked.

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Muslim woman arrested for refusing to take off her head scarf at a courthouse security checkpoint

Muslim woman arrested for refusing to take off her head scarf at a courthouse security checkpoint said Wednesday that she felt her human and civil rights were violated. A judge ordered Lisa Valentine, 40, to serve 10 days in jail for contempt of court, said police in Douglasville, a city of about 20,000 people on Atlanta’s west suburban outskirtsLast year, a judge in Valdosta in southern Georgia barred a Muslim woman from entering a courtroom because she would not remove her head scarf. There have been similar cases in other states, including Michigan, where a Muslim woman in Detroit…

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Friday, 1 August 2008

Police arrested Stephen Archer and Sidney Storms after executing search warrants allegedly uncovered loaded handguns

Police arrested Stephen Archer, 36, on Tuesday and Sidney Storms, 41, on Wednesday after executing search warrants that allegedly uncovered loaded handguns neither man is allowed to possess because of prior felony convictions.Police raided two homes and recovered handguns, drugs and more than 100 of rounds of ammunition from convicted felons in separate busts this week. Archer, who is on parole following a weapons-possession conviction, and a woman were arrested after a search of their Pulaski Street home in Elm Park turned up a loaded revolver and 115 bullets inside a living room safe, as well as eight ounces of marijuana and seeds in the kitchen, police said. Archer and Necola Ruddock, 29, are charged with criminal possession of a loaded firearm, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.
On Wednesday, a search of a Corson Avenue apartment in New Brighton led to Storms' arrest after cops said they found a .45 caliber handgun, a loaded magazine and a total of 67, .45 caliber and 9mm bullets, as well as used crack cocaine pipes and plastic bags. Storms has a prior conviction for felony attempted possession of a controlled substance. He is charged with possession of a loaded weapon and drug charges. Two women who shared the home, Emma Sanders, 43, and Ina Sanders, 19, also were charged with drug and weapons counts.

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