Monday, September 12, 2016

Missing U

New Low...

Notre Dame Cathedral
Notre Dame Cathedral
Three women were arrested in connection with gas cylinders found inside a car left in front of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. One of the women had a letter in her purse swearing allegiance to ISIS.
    In the letter, she said she was answering the call of one of the highest-ranking figures in ISIS, who was killed in late August.
    The letter also said that "I am attacking you in your lands in order to terrorize you," according to the prosecutor.
    Describing the women as radicalized, the three were likely planning an "imminent and violent" attack, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said after their arrests near Paris.
    A police officer was injured in the shoulder when one woman attacked him with a knife in Boussy-Saint-Antoine, southeast of Paris. The injury was not life-threatening.
    The minister said the women are 19, 23 and 39. CNN affiliate BFMTV said the owner of the car reported two daughters as missing and they were arrested. 
    This is a new low.             Just a thought.

    Legal?

    Image result for millionaire collect welfare


    He was born the son of a prince. He boasts that his companies developed multimillion-dollar properties across the globe — from St. Lucia to Southern California to the Middle East.

    His sprawling, 8,000-square-foot home in Russell Township, Ohio, complete with horses and an in-ground swimming pool, and the sports cars attest to the lifelong success of Ali Pascal Mahvi.

    Yet there he was, waiting his turn, a prince becoming a pauper, asking for food stamps in Geauga County, Ohio. And, he got for himself, his wife, and their three adult children.
    For two years, the family was handed about $300 a month in government food stamps. They also wanted help to pay their gas and electric bills. And Medicaid. 

    Detectives are now looking at Mahvi’s myriad bank accounts, trying to piece together his family’s total worth as they investigate potential theft as well as Medicaid and welfare fraud charges.
    “It’s outrageous to see a situation where somebody is living in a house almost worth a million dollars, a horse barn, driving luxury cars, have millions of dollars in overseas bank accounts and here they are accepting this type of assistance,” said Geauga County Prosecutor James R. Flaiz.
    “Certainly, they were very good at manipulating the system.”

    Mahvi, reached by phone, adamantly denied any wrongdoing. He said he is "not a wealthy man" and that the investigation "is all a misunderstanding."
    He said despite his appearance of wealth, he was and is eligible for aid. 

    Sad story. Just a thought.

    Swiss Cheese?

    Image result for mexico border

    A Customs and Border Protection officer has been arrested on suspicion of allowing unauthorized immigrants into the U.S. in exchange for sexual favors and money.

    Jose Cota, an officer at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, was arrested along with alleged co-conspirators.
    Cota, 50,  has been on duty for 15 years.  He allowed Juarez-Herrera and Aguilar-Martinez, a married Mexican couple, to illegally smuggle people from Mexico into the U.S. through his vehicle inspection lane on four occasions. 

    Cota admitted during an interview with FBI agents that in exchange he received sexual favors from Juarez-Herrera, according to the complaint. Bank records show Cota also received large amounts of cash deposited into his bank account.

    Juarez-Herrera and Aguilar-Martinez were pulled over in San Marcos by a sheriff’s deputy for traffic violations. Two undocumented immigrants, who Juarez-Herrera later admitted she had smuggled hours earlier, were also taken into custody.

    We need better border protection.       Just a thought.

    Saturday, September 10, 2016

    Understanding...*!





    Joy Hibbins, a former teacher in Gloucestershire, England, became suicidal following a devastating incident and developed symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. Her own traumatic experience in 2012 led Hibbins to set up the Suicide Crisis charity a year later  a lifeline she says helped her also recover personally.

    “Their person-centered approach and emphasis on being understanding, kind and gentle is very inspirational, yet so simple and practical. People who have used the service are in no doubt that it has helped save lives,"

    More than 800,000 people commit suicide globally every year and many more attempt it, the World Health Organization reported.

    Suicide was the second leading cause of death in 2012 among 15- to 29-year-olds, after accidents.
    Just a thought.