Showing posts with label Illegal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illegal. Show all posts

Video shows soldier surrendering


Afghan official: Video shows soldier surrendering — The U.S. soldier suspected of killing 16 Afghan villagers on a rampage was caught on surveillance video that showed him walking up to his base, laying down his weapon and raising his arms in surrender, according to an Afghan official who viewed the footage.

The official said Wednesday there were also two to three hours of video footage covering the time of the attack that Afghan investigators are trying to get from the U.S. military. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.


U.S. authorities showed their Afghan counterparts the video of the surrender to prove that only one perpetrator was involved in Sunday's shootings, the official said. The shootings, which claimed the lives of nine children among the 16 dead, has further strained already shaky relations between the U.S. and Afghanistan.

Some Afghan officials and residents in the villages that were attacked have insisted there was more than one shooter. If this disagreement persists, it could deepen the distrust even more.

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta arrived in the country Wednesday, the first senior American official to visit since the killings. He and other American officials have said the tragedy should not derail the U.S. and NATO strategy of a gradual withdrawal of most troops by the end of 2014. But the shooting spree has fueled calls in both countries for foreign troops to leave more quickly.

It has also complicated already tense negotiations between the two nations over an agreement governing the presence American troops after 2014.

A member of an Afghan government delegation investigating the killings said Wednesday that the group has concluded they were carried out by more than one soldier. Parliament member Sayeed Ishaq Gilani said the delegation had heard from villagers who said they saw more than 15 troops at the scene.

But it is unclear whether the soldiers the villagers saw were part of a search party that left the base to look for the U.S. soldier who was missing. The delegation is slated to formally release the results of its investigation later Wednesday.

On Tuesday, the delegation visited the two villages in southern Kandahar province where the shootings took place. Two villagers who lost relatives insisted that at least two soldiers took part in the shootings.

U.S. military officials — and some villagers who have spoken to The Associated Press — have so far insisted that only one soldier was involved.

"We are still receiving, reviewing and investigating all leads in connection with this terrible incident, but at this time everything still points to one shooter," said Lt. Col. Jimmie Cummings, a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan.

The surveillance video, taken from an overhead blimp that films the area around the base, shows a soldier in a U.S. uniform approaching the south gate of the base with a traditional Afghan shawl hiding the weapon in his hand, the Afghan official said. He then removes the shawl as he lays his weapon on the ground and raises his arms in surrender.

Ahmad Shah Khan, a resident of a nearby village that was not involved in Sunday's shooting, said a soldier from the base had threatened their kids three days before the incident, after an armored vehicle hit a roadside bomb, causing damage but no casualties.

The soldiers arrived in Mokhoyan village — 500 yards (meters) east of the base — with their Afghan army counterparts and made many of the male villagers stand against a wall, said Khan.

"It looked like they were going to shoot us, and I was very afraid," said Khan. "Then a NATO soldier said through his translator that even our children will pay for this. Now they have done it and taken their revenge."

Several Afghan officials, including Kandahar lawmaker Abdul Rahim Ayubi, said people in the two villages that were attacked — Balandi and Alkozai — told them the same story. It's unclear if the soldier that threatened the villagers is the same one accused of carrying out the shooting spree.

The killings have stirred more anti-American sentiment in Afghanistan, but the reaction has not been as intense the wave of deadly riots that followed the burning of Qurans at a U.S. base last month. That set off nearly a week of violent demonstrations and attacks left more than 30 dead, including six U.S. soldiers killed apparent reprisal attacks.

Still the two events together have pushed the Afghan-U.S. relationship to crisis level.

The Taliban has vowed revenge for the shootings.

A bomb hidden in a motorcycle exploded Wednesday about 600 meters (yards) from where the Afghan government delegation investigating the shootings was meeting in the southern city of Kandahar, said a spokesman for the provincial governor, Zalmai Ayubi.

The attack killed one Afghan intelligence official and wounded two. A civilian was also wounded. The bomb went off about 300 meters from the Afghan intelligence headquarters in Kandahar, said Ayubi.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Taliban insurgents opened fire on the Afghan delegation Tuesday while they were visiting the villages that were attacked. One Afghan army soldier was killed and two other army personnel were wounded.

Afghan lawmakers have demanded that the alleged shooter, identified by U.S. officials as a staff sergeant, face a public trial inside Afghanistan. They have called on Karzai to suspend any negotiations with the U.S. on a long-term military pact until this happens.

"No final decision has been made yet" on the location of the trial, said Col. Gary Kolb, a U.S. military spokesman in Afghanistan.

Kolb said that the U.S. has held courts-martial in Afghanistan before, and could try the alleged shooter in the country.

"They'll take a look at all the circumstances and determine if they do it here or if it goes back to the States."

The U.S. military is holding the soldier in Kandahar. Military officials say slipped off a U.S. base before dawn Sunday, walked to the villages, barged into their homes and opened fire. Some of the corpses were burned. Eleven were from one family. Five people were wounded.

The military held a hearing for the detained soldier on Tuesday and found there was probable cause to continue holding him. He has not yet been named yet. Panetta, the U.S. defense secretary, has said he could face capital punishment.

The killings have further soured relations with war-weary Afghans, jeopardizing the U.S. strategy of working closely with Afghan forces so they can take over their country's security by the end of 2014.

Afghan Defense Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak called the killings "deplorable" but said the country must remember the bigger issues at stake, likely a reference to the fear that the Taliban could capitalize on a precipitous foreign withdrawal.

"I mean the stakes are much higher than this incident, which we have all have condemned, and I think we are assured that the U.S. authority will take appropriate action," said Wardak in a news conference with German Defense Minister Thomas de Maiziere in Kabul.

President Barack Obama has pledged a thorough investigation, saying the U.S. was taking the case "as seriously as if it was our own citizens, and our children, who were murdered."

Protesters in the east called for the death of the accused U.S. soldier Tuesday and burned an effigy of Obama as well as a cross, which they used as a symbol of people who — like many Americans — are Christians.

It was the first significant protest since the killings.

Military commanders have yet to release their final investigation on the Quran burnings, which U.S. officials say was a mistake. Five U.S. service members could face disciplinary action in connection with the incident.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday expressed deep sadness at the "shocking incident" and said the U.N. expects that an investigation will rapidly establish the facts, that those responsible will be held accountable, and that the public will be kept informed.

Also Wednesday, eight civilians were killed in southern Helmand province's Marjah district when a roadside bomb struck their vehicle, the provincial governor's office said. ( Associated Press )


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Hitler's last bodyguard gives up on fan mail


Hitler's last bodyguard gives up on fan mail - More than 65 years after World War Two, Adolf Hitler's last surviving bodyguard says that he can no longer respond to the continuous deluge of fan mail he receives from around the world, because of his advanced age.

Rochus Misch is 93 and uses a walking frame to move around his apartment. He told the Berliner Kurier tabloid that, with most of the letters he receives asking for autographs, it was "no longer possible" to reply because of his age.


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Rochus Misch - Rochus Misch, who worked as a courier, bodyguard and telephone operator for former German Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, shows his picture book during a Reuters interview in Berlin August 8, 2007


"They (letters) come from Korea, from Knoxville, Tennessee, from Finland and Iceland -- and not one has a bad word to say," said Misch, who is believed to be the last man alive to have seen Hitler and other top-ranking Nazis in the flesh.

In the past Misch used to send fans autographed copies of wartime photos of himself in a neatly pressed SS uniform. Now the incoming fan mail, including letters and packages, piles up in his flat in south Berlin's leafy Rudow neighborhood.

Misch also served as Hitler's telephone operator and courier. His memoirs, "The Last Witness," were published in 2008 in Germany and are in the works to become a feature film. (
Reuters )

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Nude-Pic Teen Demands Saints Apology


Nude-Pic Teen Demands Saints Apology - The teenager at the centre of the Saints nude photograph scandal will meet the club's senior executives today to thrash out an agreement as she revealed she has been physically threatened by members of the public.

The meeting comes just a day after The Age revealed Saints captain Nick Riewoldt was embroiled in a scuffle outside a South Melbourne takeaway food shop this week with two men who waved a phone showing the infamous nude photo of him.

The 17-year-old, who caused a storm when she released nude photographs of Riewoldt and teammate Nick Dal Santo, said she had also been harassed by the public with one man even trying to punch her.


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The teenager at the centre of the St Kilda scandal watches the team train at Seaford.


The girl will today hold a mediation session in Melbourne's CBD with St Kilda vice-president Ross Levin and executive director Michael Nettlefold at which she will demand an apology from the club.

"I want a public apology from the club and from the AFL, but then they want me to apologise to Nick Riewoldt," the teenager said.

The girl claims she became pregnant to a St Kilda player, a pregnancy she says she later lost.

She told The Age last month she posted the nude photograph of Riewoldt on her Facebook page out of revenge. She said she hated St Kilda and the AFL 'because they treated me with disrespect'.

The schoolgirl said she initially laughed when she learnt of the skipper's confrontation at the Hunky Dory fish and burger bar in Clarendon Street.

Two men are believed to have exchanged words with Riewoldt before he brushed past them, making contact with his shoulder. One man grabbed Riewoldt's shirt and it tore before Riewoldt drove away.

"When I first heard about it, I sort of laughed," the teenager said.

"If I'm out at night a lot of people come up to me and harass me and do the same, more men than women.

"I had some guy try to punch me the other night, so I had to report that to the police. I can definitely relate to what he's going through but I find it hard to sympathise with him considering the team [he plays for]. I hate St Kilda so much."

At a Federal Court hearing into the release of the nude photographs last month, Justice Shane Marshall ordered the teenager and St Kilda to attend a mediation session before January 28.

Asked if she was willing to apologise to Riewoldt, she said she was undecided.

"They've said 'If you apologise to Nick publicly, then we'll apologise to you privately', but if it's private it's as though they've done nothing wrong. I want them to be public about it, that's what we're sort of trying to mediate," she said. ( sydney morning herald )

St Kilda has been contacted for comment.

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Hundreds arrested in Ky. prescription crackdown


Hundreds arrested in Ky. prescription crackdown. More than 300 people were arrested and 200 more targeted in a crackdown on a multi-state prescription pill pipeline, a bust that Kentucky officials said Thursday was the largest in the state's history.

Police officers fanning out across mostly eastern Kentucky this week had arrested 322 people by midafternoon in pursuit of about 500 suspects who face charges related to illegal trafficking of prescription drugs, officials said at a news conference.

Kentucky State Police Commissioner Rodney Brewer said the roundup, a joint state-federal effort, comes after a three-year investigation and is "striking at the heart of major drug trafficking organizations and crippling illegal prescription drug pipelines that are running from Florida into Kentucky."

Authorities have not identified a leader in the drug trafficking but did pinpoint one suspect who allegedly headed a group of 13 other accused traffickers.

That group, which operated from 2005 to 2008, traveled to Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida to obtain methadone and oxycodone pills to sell in eastern Kentucky, authorities said. The group's alleged leader faces at least 20 years and possibly life in prison if convicted.

Kentucky uses an electronic prescription monitoring program to try to prevent abuses.

Shelley Johnson, a spokeswoman for the state attorney general, said after the state started the system, many residents migrated to other states, particularly South Florida, to obtain multiple prescriptions from pain clinics. They then returned and sold the pills, she said.

"We are well aware that due to other states not having similar systems, we have pipelines that are emerging to bring too many of these addictive substances into our Commonwealth," Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway said.

Because Florida was the largest of just a handful of states without such tracking, it had become the nation's leading supplier of prescription drugs obtained for illicit purposes.

A bill signed this year by Florida Gov. Charlie Crist would set up such a system, designed to crack down on so-called "doctor shopping" by addicts and drug dealers who flock to Florida from throughout the Southeast.

Federal Drug Enforcement Administration officials say South Florida's Broward County, where doctors wrote prescriptions for more than 6.5 million oxycodone pills from June to December 2008, is the nation's top supplier of the narcotic.

In Kentucky, Brewer said that the number of illegal pills purchased or confiscated as part of the state police investigation numbered "in the tens of thousands." He said authorities had not yet determined a street value for the seized pills.

Last year, 877 deaths in Kentucky were caused by prescription drug overdoses, Brewer said.

Bob McBride with the U.S. Attorney's Office said he is unaware of charges against any doctors in the investigation.

Brewer said the majority of the state-level charges were for trafficking in controlled substances, offenses that could land people in prison for up to 20 years if convicted.

McBride said the federal charges include conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and distribution of controlled substances — mostly methadone and OxyContin_ as well as money laundering.

Kyle Edelen, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Kentucky, said he was only aware of arrests being made in Kentucky as part of the investigation.

Edelen said the federal government is seeking the forfeiture of about $1 million worth of assets from federal defendants, including vehicles, real estate, a boat and a bank account allegedly used as part of the alleged illegal activity.

Authorities got a glimpse into the trans-state pill-peddling operations in 2006 when investigators uncovered a group in eastern Kentucky that made trips to Philadelphia to obtain prescription drugs, said Kentucky State Police Capt. Kevin Payne.

"That was the first, I guess the tip of the iceberg," said Payne, commander of the drug enforcement/special investigations unit for the eastern end of Kentucky. / AP

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