Monday, December 17, 2018

A Tale...


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It’s a tale as old as time: Man meets woman. Man and woman fall in love and get married. She had an affair. The man disappeared, then believed to have been eaten by alligators, happens
Mike Williams went duck hunting at Lake Seminole the morning of December 16, 2000,  on his and Denise’s sixth wedding anniversary, and didn’t return.   They found his boat, jacket, waders, and hunting license, but no body hence the investigators’ gator theory. 
In June 2001, a judge declared Williams dead by drowning. Denise then collected $1.75 million in life insurance money, written by Brian Winchester, Williams’s best friend.  

Five years after Mike Williams' death, Denise Williams and Winchester got married. But their marriage began to dissolve around 2012, and in 2016 Winchester kidnapped her at gunpoint.  He was sentenced to 20 years in prison.  
Mike Williams’s body was discovered in December 2017, and that he had definitely been murdered. Denise was then arrested

 The 48-year-old beauty faces life in prison for conspiracy to commit murder, first-degree murder, for masterminding and concealing a wicked plot to free her from the marriage and collect nearly $2 million in life insurance money.

Did any one think they can get away with it, or just how far can she manipulate his soul?





Imaginary...

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Danger...

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She lay by Lady Liberty’s foot, roughly 100 feet off the ground, swinging her legs, waving below and even taking off her shoes to try to climb farther.

All the while, NYPD officers surrounded her in helicopters and on the ground to get her down safely.

Visitors were evacuated from Liberty Island via tour boats, as two Emergency Services Unit officers climbed a ladder to the statue’s base, hoping to reason with the woman.

“In the beginning, she basically threatened to push us off, push the ladder off,” Police said.

Okoumou is charged with trespassing, interference with national park regulations and disorderly conduct. She’s being held at Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan and now she is facing a judge.

Okoumou is now facing up to 18 months in jail. A New York judge denied her a jury trial.  

Saturday, December 15, 2018

Private...

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For nearly two weeks in September, developers who created apps for Facebook were able to access user photos that they should never have. Up to 6.8 million users may have been affected, Facebook says

Between Sept. 13 and Sept. 25, other photos were available, as well: Photos that a user posted to Marketplace, Facebook's platform for selling or buying goods. Photos posted to Stories, the platform for sharing images that disappear after 24 hours.
Even photos that were never actually posted on Facebook at all,  if a user had started to post a photo, then changed their minds, that picture also could be shared with developers. It didn't matter what privacy settings a user had placed on their images or posts.
"We're sorry this happened and we're instructing developers to delete the photos," Facebook says. Facebook users can learn whether their photos were involved.

Test...



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A woman who is terminally ill with cervical cancer has encouraged women affected by the Cervical Check scandal to seek financial compensation after she agreed a settlement of €7.5 million.
Emma Mhic Mhathúna had sued both the HSE and Quest Diagnostics, the US laboratory it used to conduct smear tests. She was one of 209 women who received incorrect results, uncovered by a clinical audit into the screening program.

Ms Mhic Mhathúna, a mother of five from Kerry, was tested on three occasions in 2010, 2011, and 2013 but the results of all these three test were incorrect.  

Desert...

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Egypt says its security forces have killed at least 27 suspected militants in the restive northern Sinai Peninsula and along its porous border with Libya.

The military said that forces destroyed 342 hideouts and weapons depots, dismantled 344 explosive devices and detained more than 400 suspects and around 3,000 illegal migrants, without giving a timeframe. 

It says airstrikes destroyed 61 vehicles containing weapons and ammunition in the Western Desert.

Egypt launched a nationwide operation against militants in February. It has struggled to defeat a long-running insurgency in the Sinai that is now affiliated with a known militant group. Who pays these militant?

Wild...

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It’s been a wild few weeks for Michael Avenatti. The “street fighter” who can defeat President Trump, both as a candidate in 2020 and in court on behalf of Stormy Daniels.

For most of 2018, the lawyer has managed to stay in the national spotlight with the countless TV appearances. 

Then a stunning reversal, Avenatti was up against domestic violence accusations.
A $4.85-million judgment in favor of a former colleague, who alleges Avenatti funneled money to different entities to avoid paying his debts.

A public rift with Daniels, who told The Daily Beast that he launched a fundraising site in her name without her permission and filed a defamation suit against Trump against her wishes, then the pair appeared to have reconciled.

A
debtor’s examination related to unpaid child and spousal support in his divorce. According to one September court filing, Avenatti owes his ex-wife more than $1 million.  
The potential criminal probe into Avenatti and his client Julie Swetnick, who claimed she witnessed then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh spike girls’ drinks at high-school parties so they could be “gang-raped” by groups of boys... then inconsistencies.
More to come...?

Incarceration...

The cartoonist's homepage, courier-journal.com/opinion

Mass incarceration raises serious issues of social justice, because it has been heavily skewed toward poor minority men with less than high school educational attainments. 

African American male high school dropouts are one hundred times more likely to be sent to prison than college-educated white men. 

Remarkably, as of 2010, more than one-third of African American male high school dropouts aged 20 to 39 were in jails, state, or federal prisons.