Retirement won’t get him out of this one. Manny Ramirez was arrested yesterday and charged with battery, after his wife, Juliana, told police he had slapped her in the face so hard that she banged her head on their bed’s headboard. Her injuries weren’t serious enough to require medical attention,…
Continue reading …More than two years after they were jailed on charges of spying, American hikers Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal may finally be headed home. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad tells the Washington Post he will grant a “unilateral pardon” to the two men, and that he is working to arrange for…
Continue reading …Blasts rang out today in Kabul’s embassy district, with the Taliban taking credit for a coordinated series of attacks that included suicide bombers, rocket-propelled grenades, and at-times heavy gunfire, reports the Wall Street Journal. The US embassy was among those targeted, with one western diplomat reporting gunfire within its perimeter…
Continue reading …Texas governor and Republican presidential candidate faces appeals for clemency in two highly charged death row cases • Amanda Marcotte: Rick Perry executes justice, Texas-style Rick Perry, the frontrunner to become the Republican candidate in next year’s presidential election, has just hours left to prevent a man being put to death in Texas in a case in which the jury was told the prisoner was a danger to the public – and should therefore be executed – because he was black. Duane Buck is one of four men scheduled to die by lethal injection in Texas , where Perry is governor, over the next eight days – an exceptional rate even in this execution-happy state. At Buck’s sentencing hearing, the jury that set his punishment was informed by a psychologist that black people had a higher rate of violent behaviour, a statement used by the prosecution as its key argument against giving him an alternative penalty of life imprisonment. On Tuesday night, another hotly contested case is scheduled to reach its climax with the execution of Steven Woods, who was sentenced to death for a double murder, even though an alleged accomplice later confessed to having pulled the trigger. How Perry reacts to the demands for commutation and clemency in these two highly controversial cases will give an indication of how he proposes to deal with the death penalty issue, which has welled up in the presidential race for the first time. Perry, as governor of Texas, has presided over more executions than any other US official in modern times. Perry was questioned about his enthusiasm for the death penalty at a televised Republican debate last week. When the TV moderator put it to him that his state had executed 234 prisoners since he became governor in 2000, the Republican studio audience cheered . Perry said he had never lost any sleep worrying that some of those individuals might have been innocent. “I’ve never struggled with that at all,” he said. When asked how he felt about the audience applauding so many deaths, he replied: “I think Americans understand justice.” Lawyers for both Buck and Woods are engaged in frenzied last-minute lobbying to Perry and to the courts to try to put off the executions. If their efforts fail, Woods’s execution on Tuesday night will be followed by Buck’s on Wednesday night. Buck, 48, shot and killed Debra Gardner, his former girlfriend, and a friend of hers, Kenneth Butler, in a drunken explosion of jealousy in July 1995. His guilt is not in dispute, but the testimony presented to the jury at his sentencing is. At the hearing, a psychologist, Dr Walter Quijano, was called by the defence and testified that he did not believe Buck would be a future danger as the murders had been a one-off crime of passion. But under cross-examination, the prosecution pressed him about Buck’s ethnicity as an African-American. “You have determined that the … race factor, black, increases the future dangerousness for various complicated reasons. Is that correct?” the prosecution asked. “Yes,” replied Quijano. The prosecution later exhorted the jury to make their decision on the basis of Quijano’s testimony. The jury found that Buck did pose a future danger of violence, and put him on death row. In 2000, the then attorney general in Texas, John Cornyn, admitted that the racial testimony of Quijano had wrongfully been allowed to prejudice sentencing in seven separate cases. Six of those cases were reheard as a result, but, in a legal oversight, Buck’s never was. Buck’s lawyer, Katherine Black, is petitioning Perry to commute his execution to allow resentencing . “This case violates the US constitution and undermines our moral values. A person has a right to be sentenced based not on the colour of their skin,” the petition reads. Further pressure has been brought to bear on Perry by a senior Texas lawyer who acted as prosecutor in Buck’s original trial. Linda Geffin has written to Perry calling on him to delay the execution. “It is inappropriate to allow race to be considered as a factor in our criminal justice system,” she wrote. Steven Woods, 31, who will die barring a last-minute stay of execution, was one of two men accused of murdering Ronald Whitehead and Bethena Brosz in a drugs turf war in May 2001. Woods was brought to trial in August the following year. The prosecution alleged that he had planned and carried out the shootings, and he was convicted and sentenced to death. Three months later, his alleged accomplice, Marcus Rhodes, who had cut a deal with prosecutors, was given a life sentence, despite having confessed that he had personally carried out the shootings. Rhodes was given life imprisonment, while Woods remained on death row. Amnesty International has issued an urgent action alert , accusing Texas of treating Woods unfairly in a case “where one defendant receives a death sentence and another who pled guilty to personally shooting the two victims receives a life sentence”. Mary O’Grady, a specialist in death row based in Austin, said that under the so-called “law of parties” in Texas, death penalties can be inflicted even on those who did not pull the trigger. Being present at a murder, knowing that an accomplice intended to kill, is sufficient. “A lot of people with no blood on their own hands get executed in Texas,” O’Grady said. The prospects of Perry granting clemency for Woods are not great. The governor has only once in 11 years shown clemency to a death row inmate unless forced to do so by the courts. “When it comes to death row, Perry is completely unfeeling and unemotional,” said Ray Hill, who runs the Execution Watch website and radio show in Texas. “It never strikes him that he should value the lives of those who are accused, even wrongfully.” Next week two further executions are scheduled, of Cleve Foster on Tuesday and Lawrence Brewer on Wednesday. Texas Rick Perry United States US elections 2012 Race issues Republican presidential nomination 2012 Human rights Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Sean Duffy targeted Facebook tribute pages and posted videos on YouTube taunting the dead victims and their families An internet troll who posted videos and messages mocking the deaths of teenagers, including a girl hit by a train, has been jailed. Sean Duffy, 25, targeted Facebook tribute pages and posted videos on YouTube taunting the dead and their families. Among his victims was Natasha MacBryde, 15, who died instantly when hit by a passenger train near her home in Bromsgrove, Worcestershire. The day after Natasha’s death in February, Duffy posted comments including “I fell asleep on the track lolz” on the Facebook tribute page created by her brother James, 17. Four days later he created a YouTube video called “Tasha the Tank Engine” featuring her face superimposed on to the front of the fictional engine. Duffy, who is unemployed and did not know any of his victims, pleaded guilty to two counts of sending malicious communications relating to Natasha. He asked for three other cases of Facebook trolling – posting offensive messages on the internet – to be taken into consideration when he appeared before magistrates in Reading, Berkshire. Jailing him for 18 weeks, the chair of the bench, Paul Warren, told him: “You have caused untold distress to already grieving friends and family. “The offences are so serious only a custodial sentence could be justified.” He went on to say that the case served as an illustration of the “harm and damage” that malicious use of social networking sites could do. Duffy was also given a five-year antisocial behaviour order to prohibit him from creating and accessing social network sites including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Bebo and Myspace. He will also have to inform police of any phone he has or buys that comes with internet access. The court heard that Duffy has Asperger’s syndrome and lived a “miserable existence” drinking alcohol alone at his home in Reading. Joanne Belsey, prosecuting, said Duffy’s series of online attacks began following the death of 16-year-old Hayley Bates, from Staffordshire, who died in a car crash in September 2010. Duffy defaced pictures of her, adding crosses over her eyes and stitches over her forehead. One caption underneath a picture of flowers at the crash site read: “Used car for sale, one useless owner.” He then went on to focus on Lauren Drew, a 14-year-old who died from an epilepsy attack at her home in Gloucester in January. Duffy posted offensive and upsetting images relating to her death and for Mother’s Day created a YouTube video with a picture of a coffin saying “Happy Mothers Day”. Public schoolgirl Natasha MacBryde was his next target. She killed herself after she was sent a message by an anonymous bully on a social networking website. She had also been teased by members of an all-girl clique at school. Duffy set up a fake tribute page on Facebook called Tasha the Tank Engine. On the official memorial page set up by her brother James he wrote: “I fell asleep on the track lolz,” and posted images of her with text saying she was spoilt. Other trolls joined the abuse. Duffy’s final target was Jordan Cooper, 14, from Washington, Newcastle upon Tyne, who was stabbed to death. Duffy created a group called “Jordan Cooper in pieces” with a profile picture of a knife with blood dripping off it. A further YouTube video was also made which contained pictures of his eyes crossed out and slashes across his face. Duffy’s lawyer Lance Whiteford said: “In terms of mitigation there is none. I cannot imagine the trauma and anxiety caused to the families of these horrible, despicable offences.” She said his condition meant he was not aware of the effect he was having on his victims. Duffy had been cautioned for a similar offence in 2009 and Whiteford said he lived an isolated life and had himself been bullied at school and work. Speaking outside court, Natasha MacBryde’s father, Andrew, said: “He is a disturbed individual who caused the maximum of grief for his own satisfaction. “I think he must be a very lonely man who unfortunately tried to get attention through the most disgusting way possible. “In a way I feel sorry for him and I think he needs some sort of counselling as it is obviously very odd behaviour. “I hope his sentencing shows other trollers that they are not anonymous and they will be caught if they continue their vile games.” He said he had not been able to watch the Tasha the Tank Engine video as it was too distressing. Following the sentencing, Lauren Drew’s father Mark spoke of the devastation it caused her family as they struggled to come to terms with her death: “We were already having a hard time. Lauren was my only daughter and I worshipped the ground she walked on and this person was hiding behind a computer. “He caused devastation to us and other families; for so many people. It hurts but he sits behind a computer with no feeling.” Drew called for the operators of social networking sites to take more responsibility for their content: “The web is a wonderful thing if used right but as you can see in this case it was used wrongly. These days children live on Facebook, it’s their lives and they’re just so vulnerable.” After the hearing police said they would continue to track down offenders like Duffy. Det Ch Insp James Hahn, of Thames Valley police, said: “Clearly this has been a very emotive case, that has caused additional distress and suffering for families who have been trying to cope with the loss of loved ones. “Malicious communication through social networking is a new phenomenon and unfortunately shows how technology can be abused. However, our investigation shows that offenders cannot hide behind their computer screens.” Crime Social networking Facebook Internet YouTube Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Lawyers have called for British troops responsible for the ‘violent assault’ to be charged with murder and other crimes British troops who contributed to the death of Baha Mousa should be brought to justice, his father has said, while lawyers acting for his and other victims’ families have called for the soldiers responsible to face charges of murder, war crimes offences and misconduct in public office. The call for prosecutions follows publication last week of a damning report on the fate of Mousa, 26, an Iraqi who had been arrested in Basra shortly after the invasion in 2003. The public inquiry concluded that there had been an “appalling episode of serious gratuitous violence” meted out by members of the 1st Battalion the Queen’s Lancashire Regiment (1QLR). Mousa’s father, Colonel Daoud Mousa, speaking through an interpreter, said that he would like to see those responsible brought to justice to “show the truth”. He added: “My son died as a result of torture at the hands of British armed forces in Iraq. I saw my son after he passed away. He had a bloody nose and bruised body. There were numerous impact marks on his body as a result of torture. It caused me a great deal of pain and I had a mild stroke as a result.” The family’s solicitor, Phil Shiner, announced he would be writing to the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, and the director of service prosecutions, Bruce Houlder, to urge them to bring charges against the troops involved. Shiner, from Public Interest Lawyers based in Birmingham, called for Corporal Donald Payne, who was found by the inquiry to have violently assaulted Mousa in the minutes before he died, to be charged with murder and manslaughter. Payne became the first member of the British armed forces convicted of a war crime when he pleaded guilty to inhumanely treating civilians at a court martial in 2006, although he was later acquitted of manslaughter. The long-standing legal principle of double jeopardy prevents people being tried twice for the same crime. But the Criminal Justice Act 2003 introduced exceptions for serious offences, such as murder and manslaughter, when significant new evidence comes to light. The inquiry’s chairman, Sir William Gage, said a number of British officers who could have stopped the abuse, including 1QLR’s former commanding officer Colonel Jorge Mendonca, bore a “heavy responsibility” for the “grave and shameful events”. His report named 19 soldiers who assaulted Mousa and nine other Iraqis detained with him, and found that many others, including several officers, must have known what was happening. Gage found that two 1QLR officers, Lieutenant Craig Rodgers and Major Michael Peebles, were aware that the detainees were being subjected to serious assaults by more junior soldiers. Shiner said prosecutors should consider bringing charges of conspiracy to commit breaches of the Geneva conventions, namely torture and inhumane treatment, and misconduct in a public office against Mendonca and Peebles. Seven members of 1QLR, including Mendonca, faced allegations relating to the mistreatment of the detainees at a high-profile court martial in 2006-07. The trial ended with them all cleared, apart from Payne. The defence secretary, Liam Fox, last week said Mousa’s death was “deplorable, shocking and shameful” and announced he had asked the head of the army, General Sir Peter Wall, to consider what action can be taken against serving soldiers criticised in the report. But Shiner said: “To respond to the very damning Baha Mousa inquiry report by again trying to sweep the horror of what happened under the carpet by administrative action internal to the armed forces would be an absolute disgrace.” One of the Iraqi detainees held and abused along with Mousa told the press conference of his ordeal. Radeef Muslim said through an interpreter: “We were tortured for three days. We were put in stress positions without any rest, we were hooded and beaten. We were deprived of food and water, and it was very hot at the time. “As a result Baha died and I was taken to hospital. I was there for 14 days. As a result of this day, I still suffer from flashbacks, nightmares and psychological issues. To date I am still suffering psychologically. I also would like to see those responsible brought to justice.” Fourteen of the soldiers criticised in Gage’s report are still serving in the army, and two have been suspended in the light of the findings. The Royal Military police are now conducting a review of the evidence given to the public inquiry. Baha Mousa Iraq Middle East Military War crimes Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The fall of Moammar Gadhafi’s regime has created a power vacuum in Libya that could be exploited by Islamic extremists, warns NATO’s secretary-general. As splits emerge in the rebel leadership and the remnants of Gadhafi’s forces launch fresh attacks, the former rebels need to form a stable government without delay,…
Continue reading …Space in Japan is so tight and facilities so crunched that there are even waiting lines for corpses. But they can cool their heels in bizarre new “corpse hotels,” where families can visit them until the bodies are turned to ash in overbooked crematoriums, reports Reuters . The death rate is…
Continue reading …The 64th Frankfurt motor show – the biggest in the world – runs until 25 September in Germany
Continue reading …Major US banks accuse Murdoch and News Corporation of corporate misconduct extending far beyond UK Full text of shareholders’ complaint A prominent group of US banks and investment funds with substantial investments in News Corporation has issued a fresh legal complaint accusing the company of widespread corporate misconduct extending far beyond the phone-hacking excesses of News of the World. The legal action, lodged in the Delaware courts, is led by Amalgamated Bank, a New York-based chartered bank that manages some $12bn on behalf of institutional investors and holds about 1 million shares of News Corporation common stock. Its lawsuit is aimed against the members of News Corp’s board, including Rupert Murdoch himself, his sons James and Lachlan, and the media empire’s chief operating officer, Chase Carey. In the complaint, the shareholders accuse the board of allowing Murdoch to use News Corp as his “own personal fiefdom”. In addition to the phone-hacking scandal at the News of the World, the complaint focuses on the controversial business tactics of two News Corp subsidiaries in America, its advertising arm News America Marketing and a manufacturer of satellite TV smart cards called NDS Group Plc. In legal documents, the shareholders allege that the two companies were accused by multiple parties of “stealing computer technology, hacking into business plans and computers and violating the law through a wide range of anti-competitive behaviour”. The complaint draws on several lawsuits and trial transcripts in which the News Corp subsidiaries were prosecuted by rival businesses for alleged misconduct. In the case of News America, the company reached settlements with three separate competitors amounting to $650m. In one trial, involving an advertising company called Floorgraphics, evidence was presented to the jury that News America had broken into its rival’s secure computer systems at least 11 times. The chief executive of News America, Paul Carlucci, was also quoted as having told Floorgraphics: “If you ever get into any of our businesses, I will destroy you. I work for a man who wants it all, and doesn’t understand anybody telling him he can’t have it all.” The complaint says that as Carlucci and Murdoch talk regularly, “it is inconceivable that Murdoch would not have been aware about the illegal tactics being employed by NAM to thwart comptetition”. In the case of NDS, the shareholder complaint refers to lawsuits launched by rivals Vivendi and EchoStar, who accused the company, which News Corp acquired in 1992, of illegally extracting the code of its smart cards used to unscramble satellite TV signals and charge subscribers. In court documents, Amalgamated Bank says NDS posted the Vivendi code on the internet, allowing hackers to break into broadcasts for free and inflicting more than $1bn in damages on its competitor. In a separate case, EchoStar accused NDS of illegally intercepting one of its satellite television broadcasts, and a court injunction was obtained preventing the News Corp subsidiary from “intercepting or receiving, anywhere in the US, EchoStar’s satellite television signal without authorisation”. Jay Eisenhofer, a lawyer representing Amalgamated Bank and its other leading complainants, the New Orleans Employees’ Retirement System and Central Laborers Pension Fund, said the details of the alleged misconduct at News America and NDS were significant as they suggested a wider culture of improper behaviour that went beyond the illegality at the now-defunct News of the World. “These cases establish a pattern of misconduct that extends far beyond the UK subsidiary. It demonstrates a corporate culture that allows this sort of misconduct to take place over a very long period of time.” Eisenhofer pointed out that several members of the News America and NDS boards were also directors of News Corp. The latest complaint from Amalgamated and its co-plaintiffs provides the most detailed and serious allegations yet against News Corp for alleged business improprieties carried out within the US. The company is already under investigation by the FBI, which is looking into suggestions that News of the World reporters tried to gain access to the phone records of 9/11 victims. The justice department is also carrying out a wide-ranging inquiry in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal into News Corp’s corporate behaviour to see whether any US laws were broken. There was no immediate response from News Corp to the allegations. News Corporation Phone hacking Rupert Murdoch James Murdoch United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk
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