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Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Sunday, May 10, 2015
2 Mississippi officers fatally shot; 3 suspects arrested
2 Mississippi officers fatally shot; 3 suspects arrested
HATTIESBURG, Miss. (AP) -- Two Mississippi police officers were shot to death during an evening traffic stop turned violent, a state law enforcement spokesman said Sunday. Three suspects were in custody, including two who are charged with capital murder.
| Law enforcement officers lead Curtis Banks, center, into Troop J of the Mississippi Highway Patrol in Hattiesburg, Miss., early Sunday, May 10, 2015. Banks and his brother, Marvin Banks, were arrested in connection with the fatal shootings of two Hattiesburg police officers. Warren Strain, a spokesman for the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, told The Associated Press that 29-year-old Marvin Banks and 22-year-old Joanie Calloway were each charged with two counts of capital murder. Curtis Banks, was charged with two counts of accessory after the fact of capital murder. |
HATTIESBURG, Miss. (AP) -- Two Mississippi police officers were shot to death during an evening traffic stop turned violent, a state law enforcement spokesman said Sunday. Three suspects were in custody, including two who are charged with capital murder.
The deaths
of the officers - the first to hit Hattiesburg in three decades - were
felt far and wide in this small southern Mississippi city. Gov. Phil
Bryant released a statement saying he was "mourning" the loss of the
officers.
"This should remind us to thank all
law enforcement for their unwavering service to protect and serve. May
God keep them all in the hollow of his hand," Bryant said.
Warren
Strain, a spokesman for the Mississippi Department of Public Safety,
said Marvin Banks, 29, and Joanie Calloway, 22, were each charged with
two counts of capital murder. Banks was also charged with one count of
being a felon in possession of a firearm and with grand theft for
fleeing in the police cruiser after the shooting, Strain said.
"He
absconded with a Hattiesburg police cruiser. He didn't get very far,
three or four blocks and then he ditched that vehicle," Strain said.
Banks' 26-year-old brother, Curtis Banks, was charged with two counts of accessory after the fact of capital murder.
The
three Hattiesburg residents were arrested without incident at different
locations overnight following the shooting, Strain said. They were
expected to face initial court appearances Monday. The three were being
held at undisclosed jails in the state and could not be reached for
comment. It was not immediately known if they had lawyers.
Strain said both officers died of their wounds at a hospital.
Lt.
Jon Traxler, a Hattiesburg Police Department spokesman, identified the
officers who died as 34-year-old Benjamin Deen, 34, and Liquori Tate,
25. Local reports identified Deen as a past department "Officer of the
Year," and Tate was a newcomer to the force who Strain said was a 2014
graduate of the law enforcement academy.
The
preliminary investigation indicated that Deen had pulled over the
vehicle on suspicion of speeding and then called for backup, which is
when Liquori arrived. Strain said it was too early to say who shot the
officers or how many shots were fired.
For
many in this small community of Hattiesburg the first death of an
officer in the line of duty in three decades was a shock. The pain hit
particularly close to home for Erica Sherrill Owens. Her mother - Sgt.
Jackie Dole Sherrill - was killed in the line of duty in 1984 while
trying to serve a warrant on a suspect.
When
she heard the news of the two officers, Sherrill Owens said, her first
thought was that she hoped it was someone she didn't know.
"I
know that sounds so selfish because you don't want to hear of any
police officer losing their lives. Then when I heard one of the names,
my heart just sank because I went to high school with him."
She was referring to Deen, who had graduated from Sumrall High School in 1998, one year ahead of Sherrill Owens.
"We
were great friends in high school. He married his high school
sweetheart and he's got two kids and a great family," she said. "It's
just heartbreaking."
Tate grew up in a tough
part of Starkville, 150 miles north of Hattiesburg, and decided to
become a police officer so he could make a difference in the black
community, said Jarvis Thompson, who knew him from childhood in church.
"He
wanted to become an officer because we've seen so much of our peers get
killed or end up in jail," said Thompson, 24, of Starkville. "He was
talking all the time about how he wanted to do better and make the place
better."
At a news conference, Hattiesburg
Mayor Johnny DuPree asked the community to pull together and support the
families of the fallen officers.
"We want to
ask everybody to pray for these families. We want everybody to pray for
police officers not only here but around the United States," DuPree
said.
Tony Mozingo, a local judge, left red roses near the scene of the shooting.
"We
all just are heartbroken because we know and work with these officers
every day," said Mozingo, who was accompanied by his wife and two
daughters. Deen was a "consummate law enforcement professional."
The state's chief law enforcement agency, the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, has taken up the investigation.
Hattiesburg
resident Tamika Mills was quoted by The Clarion-Ledger as saying some
bystanders came upon the officers on the ground, and that one of the
officers asked "... `Am I dying? I know I'm dying. Just hand me my
walkie-talkie,'" Mills told the paper.
She added, according to the account, that seeing the officers down was "shocking and heartbreaking."
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Baltimore mayor seeks federal civil-rights probe of police
Baltimore mayor seeks federal civil-rights probe of police
BALTIMORE
(AP) -- Baltimore's mayor was emphatic last week: She did not want
federal oversight of her police department.
"Nobody
wants the Department of Justice to come in here and take over our
city," Stephanie Rawlings-Blake declared as the National Guard enforced a
10 p.m. curfew.
But it was hard to find any
opposition Wednesday after she softened her tone and asked the U.S.
Justice Department to launch a broad civil rights investigation that
could eventually force the city to make changes under the oversight of
an outside monitor.
The Democratic mayor now
says she'll accept outside intervention to rebuild public trust in a
city torn by riots over the death of Freddie Gray, a black man who
suffered a fatal spinal injury in police custody.
"I
am determined not to allow a small handful of bad actors to tarnish the
reputation of the overwhelming majority of police officers who are
acting with honor and distinction," she wrote in a letter to the new
U.S. attorney general, Loretta Lynch.
The
mayor's announcement came the day after her closed-door meeting at City
Hall with Lynch, who pledged to improve the police department and told
faith and community leaders that "we're here to hold your hands and
provide support."
Lynch has received the mayor's request and is considering it, Justice Department spokeswoman Dena Iverson said Wednesday.
"I think that's probably a step in the right direction," Republican Gov. Larry Hogan said.
The city's police union and City Council president also welcomed the development.
A
key figure who didn't immediately respond was Police Commissioner
Anthony Batts, brought in from Oakland, California, by the mayor 2 1/2
years ago to reform the department.
The
mayor's request could put Batts' leadership under a microscope. A police
spokesman had no immediate response to requests for the commissioner's
reaction. An email and a text message were not immediately returned.
Baltimore
suffered days of unrest after Gray died April 19 after a week in a coma
following his arrest. Protesters threw bottles and bricks at police the
night of his funeral on April 27, injuring nearly 100 officers. More
than 200 people were arrested as cars and businesses burned.
Baltimore
has already been participating in a voluntary Justice Department
review, requested by Rawlings-Blake and Batts last fall. It would enable
police to implement reforms without a court order or independent
monitor.
But City Council President Jack Young said he's been warning since October that police won't change unless they're forced to.
"The
police commissioner could have said, `Well, now, I don't want to do
that,' and he didn't have to do it," Young said. "In my opinion, it was a
toothless tiger."
The Justice Department also
is investigating whether Gray's civil rights were violated, a much
narrower review than what Rawlings-Blake sought Wednesday.
Meanwhile,
six officers face state charges ranging from assault to second-degree
murder in Gray's death. At least two of them have filed motions
challenging the prosecutor's assertion that Gray was arrested illegally.
The
investigation the mayor now wants is a wide-ranging civil-rights probe,
examining how police use force, and search and arrest suspects. A
similar investigation followed the shooting of an unarmed, 18-year-old
black man by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. The
department ultimately concluded that Ferguson's police and courts
engaged in patterns of racial profiling, bigotry and profit-driven law
enforcement, and directed local authorities to make changes. Local
authorities still insist they did nothing wrong.
At
least 20 police departments have been investigated this way for a
variety of suspected systemic misconduct in the past five years, more
than twice the number of cases opened in the previous five years, the
Justice Department said when it opened the Ferguson inquiry.
Baltimore
police union president Gene Ryan said the union also has "issues with
many of the current policies and procedures of the department," and
pledged to cooperate with any investigation that could lead to
improvement in the department and officers' morale.
City Council Member Brandon Scott also welcomed the federal involvement.
"Like
they have in most places, they're going to find some things we're doing
well, they're going to find some things we're doing not so well, and
they're going to have to be stern and hard on our city to correct
those," Scott said.
Stephen Rushin, a visiting
assistant professor of law at the University of Illinois who is working
on a book about police reform, said Rawlings-Blake's announcement shows
she's serious about fixing the department.
He said mayors don't
typically request civil-rights investigations, but it can be smart to
embrace them.
"It's to everyone's benefit if
it comes up as a collaborative, unified effort to make reform," Rushin
said. "If the city feels this is going to happen either way, it's to
their advantage to support it."
The Rev. C.D.
Witherspoon, who leads the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in
Baltimore, said he's been asking for years for the Justice Department to
run the city's police force from Washington.
"If
this is just a probe and bring forth recommendations, as they have done
in the past, that won't be helpful.
If they find things that are
potentially problematic, I wonder if they will be willing to put the
department under receivership and take the reins," Witherspoon said.
White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said it's up to Lynch to decide what to do next.
"She
has a very good understanding of the way that those law enforcement and
prosecutorial enterprises should conduct themselves," Earnest said.
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Obama administration approves first ferry service to Cuba
Obama administration approves first ferry service to Cuba
| FILE - In this March 19, 2015, file photo, a woman jogs on the Malecon as the Thomson Dream cruise ship arrives in Havana bay. The Obama administration has approved on Tuesday, May 5, 2015, the first ferry service in decades between the United States and Cuba, potentially opening a new path for the hundreds of thousands of people and hundreds of millions of dollars in consumer goods that travel between Florida and Havana each year. |
HAVANA (AP)
-- The Obama administration approved the first ferry service in decades
between the United States and Cuba on Tuesday, potentially opening a new
path for the hundreds of thousands of people and hundreds of millions
of dollars in goods that travel between Florida and Havana each year.
Baja
Ferries, which operates passenger service in Mexico, said it received a
license from the U.S. Treasury Department. Robert Muse, a lawyer for
Baja Ferries, said he believed other ferry service petitions had also
been approved. The Treasury Department said it could not immediately
confirm that, but the Sun-Sentinel newspaper in Florida said approvals
also were received by Havana Ferry Partners of Fort Lauderdale,
United
Caribbean Lines Florida in the Orlando area and Airline Brokers Co. of
Miami.
Muse said Baja had yet to request
approval from Cuba, but added that he was optimistic the service would
allow a significant increase in trade and travel between the two
countries.
The Cuban government made no
immediate comment on the news and it is far from clear that it is
willing or able to allow a major new channel for the movement of goods
and people between the two countries.
"I think
it's a further indication of the seriousness of the Obama
administration in normalizing relations with Cuba," said Muse, an expert
on U.S. law on Cuba. "We're now going from the theoretical to the very
specific."
Before Cuba's 1959 revolution,
ferries ran daily between Florida and Cuba, bringing American tourists
to Havana's hotels and casinos and allowing Cubans to take overnight
shopping trips to the United States.
That
ended with the revolution, and the more than 600,000 people who travel
between the U.S. and Cuba each year depend on expensive charter flights.
About 80 percent of U.S .travelers to Cuba are Cuban-Americans visiting
relatives, and a large number travel with huge amounts of consumer
goods unavailable in communist Cuba, from baby clothes to flat-screen TV
sets. That cargo has become increasingly expensive and difficult to
bring in recent years due to the high prices charged by charters and
tightened Cuban customs rules.
Muse said he
believed ferries would allow lower-priced passenger and cargo service
and provide a potential conduit for new forms of trade allowed by Obama
when he announced a series of loopholes in the trade embargo on Cuba
late last year. Among other measures, Obama allowed the import of some
goods produced by Cuba's new private sector and allowed the virtually
unlimited export of products to entrepreneurs.
Ferries
also provide a new route for U.S. travelers to Cuba, who also depend on
the charter services. Travel from the U.S. has been rising since
Obama's Dec. 17 announcement, and new pressure groups are pushing for
Congress to end all travel restrictions and allow pure tourism,
currently prohibited by law.
Moments from safety, migrants die trying to reach Europe
Moments from safety, migrants die trying to reach Europe
| Dramatic footage emerged Tuesday May 5, 2015, filmed by a crew member, showing a Mediterranean Sea rescue of migrants on a sinking rubber boat desperately clambering up ropes and a ladder from the cargo ship Zeran that came to their aid on May 3, 2015, in the sea between Libya and Sicily. Five bodies were recovered and were brought ashore Tuesday along with the migrant survivors to the port in Catania, Sicily, Italy. |
CATANIA, Sicily
(AP) -- Young men piled over each other, some shimmying up ropes
dangling from the towering rescue ship and others falling into the
churning sea. Women and children were the last off the stricken dinghy
during a chaotic Mediterranean rescue in which at least five migrants
were crushed to death and more were feared drowned.
Dramatic
footage shot by a seaman aboard the Maltese freighter showed the
weekend rescue of more than 100 West Africans aboard the flimsy boat off
the coast of Libya. Survivors were brought Tuesday to the Sicilian port
of Catania.
The video, obtained by The
Associated Press, highlights the danger of marine rescue, where safety
and tragedy too often lie just moments apart. With tens of thousands
trying to cross the sea on small boats launched by human traffickers
from Libya - and hundreds dying in the attempt - the question of how
best to save migrants from drowning has taken center stage in Europe.
Crew
members interviewed by the AP said everyone aboard the cargo ship Zeran
had undergone rescue training. But while a previous rescue several
weeks ago happened calmly without any loss of life, on Sunday elation at
the prospect of being saved quickly turned to panic.
Unaware
that they would be thrown a ladder, frantic migrants trampled over one
another to reach the ropes that were meant to hold it in place, with
some dangling precariously as they clambered along the lines to reach
the tall freighter.
Some jumped or fell
overboard to catch lifesavers tossed into the water by crew members.
Others emptied jerry cans of gasoline to use as floats, as the dinghy -
already deflated at the front - began taking in water.
"Easy! Easy!" implored a crew member from Zeran's deck.
"There
was the big ship there and they threw down ropes," Astou Fall Dia, a 24
year-old migrant from Senegal, told the AP after disembarking from the
cargo ship.
"Someone grabbed onto the rope.
All the other people started pushing to try to save themselves but the
people started falling in the water."
Dia said
she survived because she stayed close to the dinghy, and because she
knew how to swim - unlike most of the migrants who come from poor
African countries.
Five bodies were recovered
from inside the dinghy, floating amid garbage and water that had seeped
in. A crew member said they died in the final rush to be rescued and the
Catania prosecutor's office said late Tuesday that a preliminary
investigation showed they were crushed to death.
At
least another five to nine people fell into the water and drowned, said
the seaman who shot the video, though one man floating away with the
current and clinging to a lifesaver was rescued by crew on a Zeran
lifeboat.
The seaman and other crew members spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Save
the Children, which interviewed the survivors upon their arrival, said
the migrants reported "dozens" of people died in the rescue 25 miles off
the Libyan coast.
The weekend saw a dramatic
increase in rescues as smugglers in Libya took advantage of calm seas
and warm weather to send thousands of would-be refugees out into the
Mediterranean in overloaded rubber boats and fishing vessels. The coast
guard reported that nearly 7,000 people were rescued in the three days
ending Sunday.
On Tuesday, the Italian Mission
to the United Nations tweeted that coast guard just rescued 300
migrants in the Mediterranean, 80 miles (130 kilometers) off the Italian
coast.
The latest deaths come on top of the
estimated 800 migrants who are believed to have drowned last month when
their boat capsized off Libya with hundreds of passengers locked in the
hold by smugglers. A few days earlier, some 400 people were feared
drowned in another capsizing.
After those
deaths, the European Union held an emergency summit and agreed to
contribute more boats and patrol aircraft to Mediterranean rescue
efforts.
Even with the increased EU response,
commercial cargo ships are increasingly being called on by Italy's coast
guard to respond to migrants in need, as required by the law of the
sea.
Catania prosecutor Giovanni Salvi
complained last month that the commercial crews sometimes aren't trained
or equipped to conduct rescues and that lives can be lost when migrants
suddenly rush to one side of their unseaworthy boats as they try to get
off.
Salvi later backtracked and praised the work and commitment of the commercial vessels.
But
when the coast guard rescues migrant boats, it usually sends out
inflatable speedboats and crews use loudspeakers to implore the
passengers in various languages to stay calm and in their place.
It
was clear from the footage obtained by the AP that either there was a
language barrier, or the migrants couldn't hear the crew's instructions
from high up on the deck - or both - in Sunday's rescue.
A
second dinghy, picked up by the Italian navy the same day, suffered no
casualties. Those migrants were later transferred to the Zeran.
Alpha
Sisse, a 17-year-old from Ivory Coast who was among those rescued from
the second boat, said he had talked to survivors from the stricken
vessel.
"At least five people drowned, more are missing," he said. "They say maybe 20 people died."
Sisse said he left Libya because of the growing danger from fighting there.
Asked where he hoped to go from here, Sisse said: "Anywhere there is work."
Monday, May 4, 2015
GOP field grows: Longshots Fiorina, Carson launch their bids
GOP field grows: Longshots Fiorina, Carson launch their bids
| FILE - In this April 18, 2015 file photo, Carly Fiorina speaks at the Republican Leadership Summit in Nashua, N.H. The former technology executive formally entered the 2016 presidential race on Monday. |
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- Former technology executive Carly Fiorina and retired
neurosurgeon Ben Carson joined the rapidly expanding 2016 Republican
presidential class on Monday, casting themselves as political outsiders
in underdog campaigns, eager to challenge the elite of both parties.
In
announcements separated by both geography and style, the two also
highlighted the possibility that they can help the GOP expand its appeal
among an increasingly diverse electorate. Fiorina is likely to be the
only prominent woman to seek the GOP nomination, with Carson the only
African-American.
"I'm probably never going to
be politically correct because I'm not a politician," Carson declared
at an announcement speech in his native Detroit, where he was raised by a
single mother in what he called dire poverty. To be sure, he's a
politician now. But not, he said, like the others.
"It's
time for people to rise up and take the government back," said Carson, a
favorite of the GOP's tea party wing. "The political class won't like
me saying things like that. The political class comes from both
parties."
Fiorina, former chief executive of
Hewlett-Packard Co., chose social media and a nationally broadcast
morning TV network show to launch her campaign. She is already
laser-focused on Hillary Rodham Clinton.
As the only woman in the GOP
field, she sees herself as uniquely positioned to go after the dominant
Democrat in the 2016 race.
"She is the
personification of the professional political class," Fiorina said after
releasing an announcement video that begins with an image of Clinton.
Earlier, on ABC's "Good Morning America," Fiorina lashed out at Clinton
for what she called a lack of transparency, including the use of a
private email server while Clinton was secretary of state and foreign
donations to her family's charitable foundation.
"I have a lot of admiration for Hillary Clinton, but she clearly is not trustworthy," Fiorina said.
Fiorina
and Carson both begin the race as longshots in a campaign expected to
feature several seasoned politicians, among them former Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and Texas
Sen. Ted Cruz.
On Tuesday, former Arkansas
Gov. Mike Huckabee is expected to announce an underdog campaign of his
own, fueled by support from the GOP's religious conservative wing. Like
Fiorina, Huckabee is expected to be a Clinton scold. He is announcing
his candidacy in Hope, Arkansas, his hometown as well as former
President Bill Clinton's.
In a field that
could ultimately feature more than a dozen notable candidates, the
Republican contest is considered wide open. It's also more diverse than
it was four years ago.
Republicans acknowledge
a pressing need to broaden the party's appeal beyond its traditional
base of older, white men. President Barack Obama won re-election in 2012
with the strong support of women and the ethnic minorities who are
becoming a larger portion of the electorate.
Both
Fiorina and Carson addressed the racial tension in Baltimore, among
other American cities, after the recent death of Freddie Gray while in
police custody. Six police officers face criminal charges related to the
death.
"I think we were all relieved to see
the six policemen involved in Baltimore charged," Fiorina said. She said
it is vital for all police officers and vehicles that transport
prisoners to be equipped with cameras "for everyone's protection."
Carson was far less specific in his remarks, saying that the underlying issue "is that people are losing hope."
"So
when an opportunity comes to loot, to riot, to get mine, they take it,
not believing that there is a much better way," he said.
Carson
rose from poverty and ultimately became the head of pediatric
neurosurgery for close to three decades at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins
Children's Center. He gained stature in conservative politics after
condemning Obama's health care law in front of the president at the 2013
national prayer breakfast.
Yet he has sometimes struggled under the glare of national politics.
Carson
once suggested Obama's health care law is the worst thing since
slavery, compared present-day America to Nazi Germany, and described
homosexuality as a personal choice.
Fiorina
became a prominent figure in Republican politics in 2010, when she ran
for a Senate seat in California and lost to incumbent Sen. Barbara Boxer
by 10 points. She said little on Monday about her background as the
head of Hewlett-Packard, a time marked by soaring revenue, a merger with
Compaq, sinking stock prices and infighting on the board that resulted
in her firing in 2005.
Friday, May 1, 2015
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Moments of joy in Nepal as 2 are rescued 5 days after quake
Moments of joy in Nepal as 2 are rescued 5 days after quake
| Pemba Tamang, 15, recovers at the Israeli field hospital for earthquake victims after being rescued in an operation led by a Nepalese team with American responders from the U.S. Agency for International Development assisting them, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Thursday, April 30, 2015. Crowds cheered Thursday as Tamang was pulled, dazed and dusty, from the wreckage of a seven-story Kathmandu building that collapsed around him five days ago when an enormous earthquake shook Nepal. |
KATHMANDU, Nepal
(AP) -- The 15-year-old boy had been buried alive under the rubble
of this quake-stricken capital for five days, listening to bulldozers
clearing mountains of debris, fearful the incessant aftershocks might
finally collapse the darkened crevice he was trapped in.
And
then, "all of the sudden I saw light," Pempa Tamang said, recounting
the moment Thursday he was pulled from a hole at the bottom of what was
once a seven-story building in Kathmandu.
Tamang did not know whether he was alive or dead. "I thought I was hallucinating," he said.
The
improbable rescue was an uplifting moment in Nepal, which has been
overwhelmed by death and destruction since the 7.8-magnitude earthquake
hit Saturday. By late Thursday, the government said the toll from the
tremor, the most powerful recorded here since 1934, had risen to 6,130
dead and 13,827 injured.
After night fell,
police reported another dramatic rescue: A woman in her 20s, Krishna
Devi Khadka, was pulled from a building in the same neighborhood as
Tamang near Kathmandu's main bus terminal, according to an officer who
spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to talk to
the media.
"Life has become a struggle to
survive. It gives us hope," said Hans Raj Joshi, who watched Tamang's
rescue. "We thought they were only bringing out the dead. It's hard to
believe people are still alive."
When Tamang
was finally extricated, rescue workers inserted an IV in his arm,
propped him onto a yellow plastic stretcher - the same kind that has
helped convey countless dead - and carried him through the ruins on
their shoulders as if he was a newly crowned king.
Lines
of police stood on both sides, keeping back mobs of bystanders and
journalists. A dazed Tamang, wearing a dark shirt with the New York
Yankees logo and the words "New York Authentic," blinked at the bright
sky.
When the procession turned a corner and
entered the main road outside, there was a sound Kathmandu hadn't heard
in days: the jubilant cheers of thousands of ecstatic onlookers.
Nepal,
however, is far from normal. More than 70 aftershocks have been
recorded in the Himalayan region by Indian scientists in the past five
days, according to J.L. Gautam, the director of seismology at the Indian
Meteorological Department in New Delhi.
Shortages
of food and water and worry over the fate of relatives have triggered
an exodus from the capital, prompting thousands to board buses provided
by the government to their rural hometowns.
"I
have to get home. It has already been so many days," said Shanti
Kumari, with her 7-year-old daughter, who was desperate to see family in
her home village in eastern Nepal. "I want to get at least a night of
peace."
Although small shops have begun
reopening, and the once ubiquitous tent cities have begun thinning out,
an air of desperation remains. "We're still feeling aftershocks. It
still doesn't feel safe," said Prabhu Dutta, a 27-year-old banker from
Kathmandu.
Some residents have begun returning
to work, including at Dutta's bank, but he said it was impossible to
concentrate. "We roam around the office. We only have one topic of
conversation: the earthquake."
Tamang's dark
hair was disheveled, and he looked weak and tired but otherwise fine as
he recounted his story in an Israeli field hospital.
When
Saturday's quake began at 11:56 a.m., Tamang said he was having lunch
with a friend in the hotel where he worked. As he ran downstairs, they
shook. He saw walls cracking, ceilings caving in.
He
was in the basement when "suddenly the building fell down. I thought I
was about to die," he told reporters. Tamang fainted, and when he
regained consciousness, he could see little but darkness.
He was buried face down in a tiny crevice deep in the rubble. He was terrified.
For
days, Tamang survived on two cans of ghee, or clarified butter. He
rested his head on chunks of concrete and broken piece of corrugated
aluminum roof.
One Nepalese team had begun
combing the rubble in Tamang's neighborhood, a place they had found
another survivor Monday. They cried out and knocked on broken concrete
slabs, and then listened closely for any response.
Mostly there was silence. But when an officer named L. Bahadu Basnet, shouted "Is anyone there?" he was shocked to get a reply.
"Who is there? Brother, I am here!" Tamang shouted weakly back from a hole in the ground.
The
team used a jack to help support the rectangular entrance, and Basnet
took off his helmet, put on a headlamp, and crawled on his arms 10 feet
(3 meters) inside, pushed in by his colleagues.
He
could see Tamang wedged lying down in a crevice behind a motorcycle,
and was shocked how responsive he was. "He thanked me when I first
approached him," Basnet said. "He told me his name, his address, and I
gave him some water. I assured him we were near."
It
took a few hours to carefully clear the way for Tamang to be lifted
out. Members of the U.S. Agency for International Development's Disaster
Assistance Response Team brought in equipment to help and lowered a
pole-mounted rotatable camera into the hole, said one of the team's
members, Andrew Olvera.
Looking at a pair of
huge, ripped concrete floors hanging precariously like curtains on the
side of the destroyed building, just above the rescue site, Olvera said
the operation was dangerous. But, "it's risk versus gain. To save a
human life, we'll risk almost anything."
At
the Israeli field hospital, doctors X-rayed Tamang and injected him with
glucose. Lt. Libby Weiss of the Israeli Defense Forces said he was
dehydrated but lucid and "in remarkably good shape," with no other
injuries except scratches.
"It's a miracle," Weiss said. "I think it's an amazing thing to see in the midst of all this calamity."
Naryan
Pandey was standing on the main street outside when a dazed Tamang was
carried on the stretcher, blinking at the sky in a dark shirt with the
New York Yankees logo and the words "New York Authentic."
"I'm
surprised he's still alive. We've seen dead bodies coming out of the
rubble for five days," Pandey said. "But it doesn't change what we are
going through. I've barely eaten. We don't have enough water. I'm
hungry."
And then he added, eyeing the rubble beyond: "My friend is still in there. He was a cook. He's still there."
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
Colorado theater gunman's stoic behavior at heart of trial
Colorado theater gunman's stoic behavior at heart of trial
| FILE - In this April 27, 2015 file photo taken from video, Colorado movie theater massacre defendant James Holmes, far left, sits at the defense table at the opening of his trial in Centennial, Colo. The courtroom where the Colorado theater shooting trial is now unfolding is awash with emotion, as survivors recount the horrors of dodging gunfire and stumbling over loved ones' maimed bodies as they fled. |
CENTENNIAL, Colo.
(AP) -- The courtroom where the Colorado theater shooting trial is
unfolding is awash with emotion as survivors recount the horrors of
dodging gunfire and stumbling over loved ones' bodies as they fled.
But
the man tethered to the floor at the defense table seems impervious to
it all, hardly moving as witnesses share details of his carnage.
Interpretations
of James Holmes' stone-faced, nearly catatonic demeanor cut to the
heart of the case. His attorneys say he seems aloof because of
anti-psychotic medications he has taken since he killed 12 people and
injured 70 more in the packed movie theater. But prosecutors hint of
something dark and calculating below that emotionless exterior.
Holmes
has remained unaffected in the opening days of his death penalty trial,
stoic even as attorneys revealed the most intimate details of his
personal life, from his failures in romance to his family's history of
mental illness. He stares blankly ahead, rarely turning his head to
glance at jurors or the crowded gallery. He doesn't speak to the
attorneys by his side. Not even the sight of his parents seated two rows
behind him gives him any noticeable rise.
He's
so impassive that, even before his trial began, defense attorney Tamara
Brady asked prospective jurors if they would read anything into his
appearance, searching for those who wouldn't study him too hard.
"When
you look at Mr. Holmes, what do you think?" she asked. "Can you tell if
he's mentally ill? Does he look guilty? Does he look not guilty? If he
talks to his lawyers, or doesn't talk to his lawyers, does that mean
he's mentally ill?"
His appearance has been
the subject of speculation since his original booking photo showed him
with fiery orange-red hair, which he later told police he dyed in order
to be remembered. At an early court hearing shortly after the July 20,
2012, attack, Holmes looked dazed, sullen and disoriented.
"The way he appeared was the way he was," defense attorney Daniel King said "His appearance speaks for itself."
Dr.
Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist based in Scottsdale, Arizona, said
Holmes' appearance is consistent with someone who is mentally ill and
on psychotropic medications - drugs that affect mental activity, mood,
conduct and perception.
"The behavior that you
are seeing in court is an absolute byproduct of the nature and extent
of his mental illness and whatever psychotropic medications he may or
may not be taking," said Pitt, who often works on criminal cases but
isn't involved in the Holmes trial.
Pitt said
it was impossible to know, simply by observing Holmes, how aware he is
of the proceedings - that would require a conversation with him. But
since Holmes was found mentally competent to stand trial as part of his
first sanity examination, he probably understands what's going on and
can help with his defense, Pitt said.
When
jurors decide whether Holmes was legally insane at the time of the
shooting, the judge will order them to rely on evidence and testimony,
not his expressionless face. Still, it has been the subject of quiet
courtroom chatter.
King said 20 doctors who
treated Holmes since his arrest agree he suffers from a serious
psychotic illness. It flared up behind bars, where surveillance footage
and guards caught Holmes licking his cell walls, rearranging blankets,
eating lunch meat between flattened paper cups and sucking his thumb and
crying in November 2012. He told a jail psychiatrist he thought he was
Peter Pan. Doctors at a hospital where he was taken after repeatedly
ramming his head into walls prescribed him the prescription drug Haldol,
and King said he has been taking anti-psychotic medicine ever since
that episode.
"And it's been having a positive
effect on him," King said during opening statements. "If he appears
distracted or aloof or unconnected, that's in part due to the
medications he is on."
But the dramatic testimony isn't lost on Holmes, King said.
"He now regrets what took place in the theater," he said.
Holmes
has always had a crippling awkwardness that made it hard for him to
socialize and be successful in his study of neuroscience, District
Attorney George Brauchler said. He excelled at bookwork, for example,
but struggled with labs that required human interaction, the prosecutor
said.
Officials at one graduate school that rejected him said they found him aloof, quiet and disinterested, Brauchler said.
"He had a lifetime worth of social anxiety," he said, noting his "flat" demeanor.
Brauchler
said he was much more "sharp and witty" in writing, which helped him
conceal his plans for mass murder when sending benign emails about life
to his parents.
"He is smart," Brauchler said in noting that two court-appointed psychiatrists who examined him found him sane.
In videotapes of one of those interviews, Holmes' voice sounds thick and mechanical, even as he talks about his victims.
"I
only count fatalities," he told psychiatrist William Reid in a video
snippet shown in court. "The dead can't be repaired or come back to life
or be normal again. It's irreversible."
When Reid asked about the wounded, Holmes replied, "They're collateral damage, I guess."
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Nigerian army rescues 300 women and girls, none from Chibok
Nigerian army rescues 300 women and girls, none from Chibok
| This screen shot of the official Twitter feed of the Nigerian Armed Forces shows tweets announcing the rescue of 200 girls and 93 women from the Sambisa Forest in Nigeria and the destruction of three terrorist camps during the operation, Tuesday, April 28, 2015. An Army spokesman says the rescued females are not those kidnapped from Chibok by the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram in northeastern Nigeria in April 2014. |
MAIDUGURI,
Nigeria (AP) -- Nigerian troops rescued nearly 300 girls and women
during an offensive Tuesday against Boko Haram militants in the
northeastern Sambisa Forest, the military said, but they did not include
any of the schoolgirls kidnapped from Chibok a year ago.
The army announced the rescue on Twitter and said it was screening and interviewing the abducted girls and women.
Troops
destroyed and cleared four militant camps and rescued 200 abducted
girls and 93 women "but they are not the Chibok girls," army spokesman
Col. Sani Usman told The Associated Press.
Nearly
300 schoolgirls were kidnapped from the northeastern town of Chibok by
the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram in April 2014. The militants took
the schoolgirls in trucks into the Sambisa Forest. Dozens escaped, but
219 remain missing.
The plight of the
schoolgirls, who have become known as "the Chibok girls," aroused
international outrage and a campaign for their release under the hashtag
(hash)BringBackOurGirls.
Their kidnapping
brought Boko Haram to the attention of the world, with even U.S. first
lady Michelle Obama becoming involved as she tweeted a photograph of
herself holding the campaign sign.
Boko Haram
has kidnapped an unknown number of girls, women and young men to be used
as sex slaves and fighters. Many have escaped or been released as Boko
Haram has fled a multinational offensive that began at the end of
January.
A military source who was in Sambisa
told The Associated Press that some of the women rescued Tuesday
fought
back, and that Boko Haram was using armed women as human shields,
putting them as their first line of defense.
The
Nigerian troops managed to subdue them and rounded them all up, and
some said they were forced to
fight for Boko Haram, said the source, who
spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak
to the media.
Boko Haram also has used girls and women as suicide bombers, sending them into crowded market places and elsewhere.
A
month ago the Nigerian military began pounding the Sambisa Forest in
air raids, an assault they said earlier they had been avoiding for fear
of killing the Chibok schoolgirls, or inciting their captors to kill
them.
Two weeks ago, counterinsurgency
spokesman Mike Omeri said a multinational offensive that began at the
end of January had driven Boko Haram from all major towns in the
northeast and that Nigerian forces were concentrating on the Islamic
militant stronghold in the Sambisa Forest. Omeri said the military
believed that the Chibok girls might be held there.
In
Chibok, community leader Pogu Bitrus said townspeople were desperately
trying to verify the identity of the freed girls and women. He said the
town had learned of the rescue through social media, not from the
military.
"We are trying to verify if there
are Chibok girls among them. We are working hard to verify. ... All we
know is this number have been rescued," he said. His comments reflected a
distrust of the military, which has published many misstatements about
the girls and once even claimed to have rescued some, though that proved
to be untrue.
Unconfirmed reports over the
past year had indicated the girls were broken up into smaller groups and
had been forced to convert to Islam and that some were "married" off to
their captors. Some witnesses said they saw the girls being ferried by
canoe across Lake Chad and into neighboring Cameroon.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau published a video in which he threatened to sell the girls as slaves.
A
Muslim leader who had tried to negotiate their release told the AP that
at least three had died - from a snake bite, dysentery and malaria.
But
the military has reported that none of the girls they found as they
freed towns were the Chibok girls, indicating Boko Haram fighters might
have held on to their most famous assets and taken them with them when
they retreated to the Sambisa Forest, a national game reserve.
Unknown hundreds of people have been killed as the extremists retreated, according to reports from recaptured towns.
On
Monday, a local government committee reported the burial of hundreds of
skeletons of children, women and men believed killed by Boko Haram in
Damasak, a town on the border with Niger.
"I
know that there was a large-scale atrocity, but I cannot tell you the
precise number of dead bodies," Senator-elect Abubakar Kyari told
reporters in Maiduguri, the Borno state capital 180 kilometers (110
miles) southeast of Damasak.
Damasak was recaptured by troops from Chad and Niger last month and had been occupied by the Islamic extremists since November.
Boko
Haram continues to attack isolated communities. The government of
neighboring Niger said a Boko Haram attack on Karamga island in Lake
Chad over the weekend killed 156 militants, 46 soldiers and 28
civilians.
Monday, April 27, 2015
Riot, looting prompt state of emergency, curfew in Baltimore
Riot, looting prompt state of emergency, curfew in Baltimore
| A man carries items from a store as police vehicles burn, Monday, April 27, 2015, after the funeral of Freddie Gray in Baltimore. Gray died from spinal injuries about a week after he was arrested and transported in a Baltimore Police Department van. |
BALTIMORE
(AP) -- Rioters plunged part of Baltimore into chaos Monday, torching a
pharmacy, setting police cars ablaze and throwing bricks at officers
hours after thousands mourned the man who died from a severe spinal
injury he suffered in police custody.
The
governor declared a state of emergency and called in the National Guard
to restore order, and Attorney General Loretta Lynch, in her first day
on the job, said she would send Justice Department officials to the city
in coming days. A weeklong, daily curfew was imposed beginning Tuesday
from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m., the mayor said. At least 15 officers were hurt,
and some two dozen people were arrested. Two officers remained
hospitalized, police said.
"The National Guard
represents the last resort in restoring order," Gov. Larry Hogan told a
news conference.
"I have not made this decision lightly."
Officers
wearing helmets and wielding shields occasionally used pepper spray to
keep the rioters back. For the most part, though, they relied on line
formations to keep protesters at bay.
Monday's
riot was the latest flare-up over the mysterious death of Freddie Gray,
whose fatal encounter with officers came amid the national debate over
police use of force, especially when black suspects are involved. Gray
was African-American. Police have declined to specify the races of the
six officers involved in his arrest, all of whom have been suspended
with pay while they are under investigation.
Emergency
officials were constantly thwarted as they tried to restore calm.
Firefighters trying to put out a blaze at a CVS store were hindered by
someone who sliced holes in a hose connected to a fire hydrant, spraying
water all over the street and nearby buildings. Later Monday night,
mayoral spokesman Kevin Harris confirmed that a massive fire that had
erupted in East Baltimore was also related to the riots. He said the
Mary Harvin Transformation Center was under construction and that no one
was believed to be in the building at the time. The center is described
online as a community-based organization that supports youth and
families.
The smell of burned rubber wafted in
the air in one neighborhood where youths were looting a liquor store.
Police stood still nearby as people drank looted alcohol. Glass and
trash littered the streets, and other small fires were scattered about.
One person from a church tried to shout something from a megaphone as
two cars burned.
"Too many people have spent
generations building up this city for it to be destroyed by thugs, who
in a very senseless way, are trying to tear down what so many have
fought for, tearing down businesses, tearing down and destroying
property, things that we know will impact our community for years," said
Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, a lifelong resident of the city.
Gray's
family was shocked by the violence and was lying low; instead, they
hoped to organize a peace march later in the week, said family attorney
Billy Murphy. He said they did not know the riot was going to happen and
urged calm.
"They don't want this movement nationally to be marred by violence," he said. "It makes no sense."
Police
urged parents to locate their children and bring them home. Many of
those on the streets appeared to be African-American youths, wearing
backpacks and khaki pants that are a part of many public school
uniforms.
The riot broke out just as high
school let out, and at a key city bus depot for student commuters around
Mondawmin Mall, a shopping area northwest of downtown Baltimore. It
shifted about a mile away later to the heart of an older shopping
district and near where Gray first encountered police. Both commercial
areas are in African-American neighborhoods.
Later
in the day, people began looting clothing and other items from stores
at the mall, which became unprotected as police moved away from the
area. About three dozen officers returned, trying to arrest looters but
driving many away by firing pellet guns and rubber bullets.
Downtown
Baltimore, the Inner Harbor tourist attractions and the city's baseball
and football stadiums are nearly 4 miles away. While the violence had
not yet reached City Hall and the Camden Yards area, the Orioles
canceled Monday's game for safety precautions.
In
a statement issued Monday, Attorney General Lynch said she would send
Justice Department officials to the city in coming days, including
Vanita Gupta, the agency's top civil rights lawyer. The FBI and Justice
Department are investigating Gray's death for potential criminal civil
rights violations.
Many who had never met Gray
gathered earlier in the day in a Baltimore church to bid him farewell
and press for more accountability among law enforcement.
The 2,500-capacity New Shiloh Baptist church was filled with mourners. But even the funeral could not ease mounting tensions.
Police
said in a news release sent while the funeral was underway that the
department had received a "credible threat" that three notoriously
violent gangs are now working together to "take out" law enforcement
officers.
A small group of mourners started
lining up about two hours ahead of Monday's funeral. Placed atop Gray's
body was a white pillow with a screened picture of him. A projector
aimed at two screens on the walls showed the words "Black Lives Matter
& All Lives Matter."
The service lasted
nearly two hours, with dignitaries in attendance including former
Maryland representative and NAACP leader Kweisi Mfume and current
Maryland Rep. John Sarbanes.
Erica Garner, 24,
the daughter of Eric Garner, attended Gray's funeral. She said she came
after seeing video of Gray's arrest, which she said reminded her of her
father's shouts that he could not breathe when he was being arrested on
a New York City street. Garner died during the confrontation.
"It's
like there is no accountability, no justice," she said. "It's like
we're back in the `50s, back in the Martin Luther King days. When is our
day to be free going to come?"
With the Rev.
Jesse Jackson sitting behind him, the Rev. Jamal Bryant gave a rousing
and spirited eulogy for Freddie Gray, a message that received a standing
ovation from the crowded church.
Bryant said Gray's death would spur further protests, and he urged those in the audience to join.
"Freddie's
death is not in vain," Bryant said. "After this day, we're going to
keep on marching. After this day, we're going to keep demanding
justice."
Gray was arrested after making eye
contact with officers and then running away, police said. He was held
down, handcuffed and loaded into a van without a seat belt. Leg cuffs
were put on him when he became irate inside.
He
asked for medical help several times even before being put in the van,
but paramedics were not called until after a 30-minute ride. Police have
acknowledged he should have received medical attention on the spot
where he was arrested, but they have not said how his spine was injured.
Saturday, April 25, 2015
Thursday, April 23, 2015
Rough ride? Lawyer says fatally injured arrestee lacked belt
Rough ride? Lawyer says fatally injured arrestee lacked belt
| Protestors march for Freddie Gray through downtown Baltimore, Thursday, April 23, 2015. Gray died from spinal trauma a week after being arrested by a group of officers, hoisted into police van and driven to a Baltimore station. |
BALTIMORE
(AP) -- No video captured what happened to Freddie Gray inside the
police van where officers heaved him into a metal compartment after
pinning him to a sidewalk. The cause of his fatal spine injury has not
been revealed.
But a troubling detail emerged
as hundreds of protesters converged on City Hall again Thursday: He was
not only handcuffed and put in leg irons, but left without a seat belt
during his trip to the station.
Unbelted
detainees have been paralyzed and even killed by rough rides in what
used to be called "paddy wagons." It even has a name: "nickel rides,"
referring to cheap amusement park thrills.
Police
brutality against prisoners being transported was addressed just six
months ago in a plan released by Baltimore officials to reduce this
misconduct. Department rules updated nine days before Gray's arrest
clearly state that all detainees shall be strapped in by seat belts or
"other authorized restraining devices" for their own safety after being
arrested.
Gray was not belted in, said attorney Michael Davey, who represents at least one of the officers under investigation.
But he took issue with the rules.
"Policy
is policy, practice is something else," particularly if a prisoner is
combative, Davey told The Associated Press. "It is not always possible
or safe for officers to enter the rear of those transport vans that are
very small, and this one was very small."
Commissioner
Anthony Batts said there are no circumstances under which a prisoner
should not be wearing a seatbelt during transport.
"He
wasn't wearing a seatbelt and that's part of our investigation," Batts
told The Associated Press on Thursday. "It's our responsibility to make
sure people are safely transported, especially if their hands are behind
their back."
Batts also said another man who
was in the van during the tail end of Gray's ride told investigators
that Gray was "was still moving around, that he was kicking and making
noises" up until the van arrived at the station.
But Batts was careful to say that the investigation includes "everything the officers did that day."
The
Gray family's lawyer, Billy Murphy, said "his spine was 80 percent
severed" while in custody. It's not clear whether he was injured by
officers in the street or while being carried alone in the van's
compartment.
But if it happened on the way to
the station, it wouldn't be the first such injury in Baltimore: Dondi
Johnson died of a fractured spine in 2005 after he was arrested for
urinating in public and transported without a seat belt, with his hands
cuffed behind his back.
"We argued they gave
him what we call a `rough ride,'" at high speed with hard cornering,
said Attorney Kerry D. Staton. "He was thrown from one seat into the
opposite wall, and that's how he broke his neck."
Staton obtained a $7.4 million judgment for the family, later reduced to the legal cap of $200,000.
It
also has happened in Philadelphia, where police in 2001 barred
transportation of prisoners without padding or belts after The
Philadelphia Inquirer reported that the city had paid $2.3 million to
settle lawsuits over intentionally rough rides, which permanently
paralyzed two people.
Gray fled on foot and
was captured on April 12 after an officer "made eye contact" with him
outside a public housing complex, police said. Videos show Gray
screaming on the ground before being dragged, his legs limp, into a van.
Witnesses said he was crying out in pain.
Kevin
Moore, a friend of Freddie Gray's who recorded video of his arrest,
told The Baltimore Sun that police had Gray's legs bent "like he was a
crab or a piece of origami."
Police procedures require officers to get immediate medical help if detainees need it, and to avoid aggravating any injury.
In
Gray's case, he repeatedly asked for help during the trip, but the
driver instead diverted to another location to pick up another prisoner.
For
the first time, the fire department released a timeline for paramedics'
response. Gray was arrested at 8:42 a.m. Paramedics received a call for
an unconscious male at 9:26 a.m., Baltimore City Fire Department
spokesman Captain Roman Clark said.
Medics
arrived at the police station at 9:33 a.m., but didn't leave for the
hospital until 9:54, arriving roughly an hour and 20 minutes after his
arrest. Clark didn't say why it took more than 20 minutes to leave for
the hospital once paramedics arrived.
"How did
his injuries occur?" said Robert Stewart, a former chief who consults
with police and the Justice Department on use of force. "These guys are
picking up someone who is obviously injured."
The
driver also has a responsibility to refuse to take a seriously injured
prisoner to the station if he belongs in a hospital, Stewart said.
"If I'm the officer in the wagon, if the guy's hurt, I'm not taking him," he explained.
All
six officers involved in Gray's arrest have been suspended with pay
while under criminal investigation. Davey, whose firm is on contract
with the Baltimore Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3, said five of the
six officers gave voluntary statements the day of Gray's arrest, and one
- he didn't say who - declined to speak with investigators.
It's
quite common for prisoners to yell and complain, saying they've been
injured or feel sick or that their handcuffs are too tight.
"You
have to make a judgment call: is this a tactic, something to distract
me?" said Lt. Luis Fuste of the Miami-Dade Police Department. "You're
taught that these things are often done with an ulterior motive."
Yet Fuste and other law enforcement experts say rough rides aren't typical, and aren't worth the trouble to officers.
"Once
he is a prisoner he is absolutely your responsibility," said Peter
Moskos, a former Baltimore officer who teaches law and police science at
John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. "Even if there was no
malign intent, even if there was no assault, he's your prisoner. He
goes into the wagon alive, he can't come out dead."
The
Department of Justice is investigating whether Gray's civil rights were
violated, and an internal police investigation will be delivered by May
1 to the state's attorney's office, which will consider filing any
criminal charges.
But some details have
already been made public as authorities try to restore trust with a
community demanding transparency and justice.
Commissioner
Anthony Batts said Monday that officers repeatedly ignored Gray's
requests for medical attention before he was hospitalized in critical
condition. "He asked for an inhaler, and at one or two of the stops it
was noticed that he was having trouble breathing," Batts said. "We
probably should have asked for paramedics."
Prosecution rests in penalty phase of Boston bomber's trial
Prosecution rests in penalty phase of Boston bomber's trial
| In this courtroom sketch, Boston Marathon bombing survivor Steve Woolfenden, right, is depicted on the witness stand beside a photo of his injured son Leo being carried to safety, left, during the penalty phase in the trial of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Thursday, April 23, 2015, in federal court in Boston. Tsarnaev was convicted of all 30 charges against him. Three people were killed and more than 260 others were wounded when twin bombs exploded near the finish line of the marathon April 15, 2013. |
BOSTON (AP)
-- A video played Thursday at the trial of Boston Marathon bomber
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev showed a mother crouched over her 8-year-old son as he
lay dying on the sidewalk, a scene prosecutors hoped would linger in
jurors' minds while they determine whether Tsarnaev lives or dies.
Prosecutors
rested their case after playing the video during the testimony of a man
who lost his leg in the bombings, and jurors watched as the mother
pleaded with her little boy.
"I heard `please'
and `Martin' being uttered by Denise Richard," said Steve Woolfenden,
who was lying on the pavement next to Martin and his mother after the
second bomb exploded. "Just pleading with her son."
The boy bled to death.
Prosecutors
presented the testimony and searing images to give the jury one last
reminder of the brutality and heartbreaking consequences of the bombings
before the defense begins to present its case next week.
Prosecutors
argue Tsarnaev, now 21, deserves to be executed for his crimes, while
his lawyers say his life should be spared because his late older
brother, Tamerlan, was the mastermind of the attack.
Woolfenden's
left leg was sheared off below the knee. He described frantically
trying to get his 3-year-old son, Leo, out of his stroller after he
heard him screaming and saw he was bleeding from the side of his head.
As he lay helpless on the pavement, he spotted Martin and Denise
Richard.
"I saw Martin's face," Woolfenden said. "I could see a boy that was, looked like he was fatally injured."
Three
people were killed and more than 260 others were wounded when the bombs
exploded near the finish line of the marathon on April 15, 2013.
Tsarnaev
was convicted this month of all 30 charges against him. The jury that
found him guilty must decide whether to sentence him to life in prison
or to death.
Also Thursday, several relatives
of Tsarnaev, who's originally from Kyrgyzstan, flew into Boston,
according to a law enforcement official who wasn't authorized to release
that information and spoke on the condition of anonymity. Tsarnaev's
mother, who faces a 2012 shoplifting charge in a Boston suburb, was not
among them, the official said.
Tsarnaev's
lawyers are scheduled to begin presenting their witnesses on Monday, and
some of his relatives may be called to the stand.
Woolfenden described the terror he felt as he tried to help his son while trying to stanch blood pouring from his own leg.
"I
took off my belt, and I applied it on my thigh as tight as I possibly
could," he said. "Leo was crying and screaming uncontrollably. He was
saying, `Mommy, Daddy, Mommy, Daddy, Mommy, Daddy, Mommy, Daddy, Mommy,
Daddy.'"
A bystander came over and offered help.
Woolfenden said he told the man, "Please get my son to safety."
The man tied another tourniquet on Woolfenden's leg and then took his son.
"I was completely terrified because I didn't know if I was ever going to see my son again," he said.
Leo was hospitalized with a skull fracture, lacerations, small burns and a perforated eardrum.
An
FBI field photographer, Michelle Gamble, showed the jury a paper
mock-up of a metal grate where Tsarnaev placed the second bomb. She said
the bomb exploded about 3 1/2 feet from Martin Richard.
Trauma
surgeon Dr. David King testified Martin didn't die instantly and his
liver, spleen and intestines were painfully twisted and stretched by the
blast.
Martin's parents recently said they
want the Department of Justice to take the death penalty off the table
in exchange for a life sentence and Tsarnaev agreeing to give up his
rights to appeal.
Also testifying Thursday was Heather Abbott, whose left leg was amputated after the bombing.
Abbott,
of Newport, Rhode Island, said she was catapulted through the entrance
of a restaurant when the second bomb exploded. She said her foot felt as
though it were on fire, so she began crawling through the restaurant to
follow a crowd of people trying to get away.
Later,
in a hospital, a doctor recommended amputating her left leg below the
knee. Her heel had been blown off, and her foot was severely damaged.
"It was probably the hardest decision I've ever had to make," she said.
Abbott
identified photos of 16 other people who lost limbs. The photos showed
the amputees wearing prosthetic limbs, in wheelchairs and on crutches.
Another
amputee, Marc Fucarile, testified from a wheelchair and glared at
Tsarnaev as he sat about 10 feet away with his lawyers. Tsarnaev did not
look at him and stared straight ahead impassively.
Fucarile,
whose right leg was blown off, said he has had more than 60 surgeries.
Two years after the bombing, it's still unclear whether his left leg can
be saved, he said.
"We are going to try," he said.
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Smuggler's mistake turned rescue into tragedy
Smuggler's mistake turned rescue into tragedy
| In this Monday, April 20, 2015, file photo, the Tunisian navigator Mohammed Ali Malek, and one of the survivors of the boat that overturned off the coast of Libya, waits to disembark from Italian Coast Guard ship Bruno Gregoretti, at Catania Harbor, Italy. The United Nations refugee agency said Tuesday that more than 800 people were believed to have drowned in the weekend sinking of a boat packed with migrants trying to reach Europe, making it the deadliest such disaster in the Mediterranean. Prosecutors said that after ship captain Mohammed Ali Malek rammed a vessel, terrified migrants rushed around the overcrowded boat, which was already unbalanced from the collision. |
CATANIA, Sicily (AP) -- Rescue seemed so close at hand.
A
ship with experience plucking migrants from unseaworthy smuggler's
boats had arrived soon after the distress call went out. But then the
fishing trawler's navigator made a maneuver that would seal the fate of
the 850 people crammed inside: Instead of easing up alongside the
merchant ship, he rammed it.
Relief gave way
to panic. Terrified migrants rushed to one side, the trawler seized and
capsized. What might have been another rescue in a period of
unprecedented migrant crossings instead turned into a horrifying
statistic: The deadliest shipwreck ever in the Mediterranean Sea.
The
accounts of survivors who arrived early Tuesday in this Sicilian port
48 hours after the disaster offered new details of the tragedy. The
traumatized witnesses corroborated a death toll of at least 800, making
the capsizing "the deadliest incident in the Mediterranean that we have
ever recorded," the U.N. refugee agency said.
Just
28 migrants, all men and boys in their teens, survived. And despite the
enormous toll, only 24 bodies were recovered - frequently the case when
ships sink on the high seas, especially when most passengers are locked
below deck, as was the case Saturday night.
Aid
agencies were quick to issue another warning: At the current pace, 2015
is set to be the deadliest year on record for migrants making the
perilous crossing as they flee war, repression and poverty in the Middle
East and Africa. In April alone, 1,300 have died.
The
International Organization for Migration said the toll for the year
could top 30,000 - nearly 10 times the 2014 total of 3,279, itself a
record.
"We just want to make sure people
understand how much more ... rapid these deaths have been coming this
year," said Joel Millman, the IOM spokesman.
Italian
ships have rescued well over 10,000 people over the past two weeks, an
unprecedented number for such a short period, authorities say. The
rescues continued Tuesday, with another 112 migrants, all men, picked up
in a deflating rubber life raft in waters some 50 miles (70 kilometers)
north of the Libyan capital, Tripoli.
On Tuesday, seamen who participated in saving survivors of the weekend capsizing told tales of near-miraculous rescue.
Among
the ships to arrive in the pre-dawn hours Sunday was the coast guard
ship Gregoretti, which dispatched medics in two dinghies. By then, the
trawler had already disappeared into the sea.
`'We
found, literally, a floating cemetery. Bodies were everywhere. With the
dinghies we had to literally slalom among the corpses," said Enrico
Vitello, a 22-year-old medic from the Order of Malta.
Hearing screams, they killed the engines and shined a spotlight, locating a migrant floating in the sea.
"We
got close by and rescued him," said Giuseppe Pomilla, a 30-year-old
medic. "He asked our names and where we were from. We told him we were
Italians and came to rescue him. He was so happy."
Soon after, a boy floating in the sea grabbed their attention.
"We
couldn't understand if he was alive or dead. He had his eyes wide open
looking at us. He was not blinking, not moving or talking. We only
realized he was alive when he grabbed us suddenly," Pomilla said.
When they took him on board, he "exploded in tears," the medic said.
Among
the survivors were two alleged smugglers, who were detained for
investigation of aiding and abetting illegal immigration. The Tunisian
navigator, identified as 27-year-old Mohammed Alì Malek, could also face
multiple counts of manslaughter and causing a shipwreck - the same
charges the captain of the capsized Concordia luxury cruise liner was
convicted of earlier this year.
Prosecutors
said that after the trawler's captain struck the Portuguese-flagged
container ship sent to rescue it, terrified migrants rushed to one side
of the overcrowded boat, which was already unbalanced from the
collision. The trawler pitched in the water before finally tipping over
and sinking.
Most on board were unable to
escape because they were locked below deck on the trawler's lower two
levels. Hundreds more were squeezed on the upper deck.
"The
survivors said that the person who was steering the boat, their
smuggler, was navigating badly, and he did a bad move that made it crash
against the bigger ship," UNHCR spokeswoman Carlotta Sami said in
Sicily. "This obviously created a problem because the people on the
lower decks couldn't get out and the boat destabilized, until it
capsized."
She praised the merchant ship, the
King Jacob, for its response, noting it had participated in previous
rescues. These included saving about 100 migrants, including children
and pregnant women, in the Strait of Sicily just five days earlier, ship
officials said.
The weekend deaths have
jolted the European Union onto emergency footing to combat the crisis,
with Italy demanding that it not be left alone to shoulder the burden of
rescues and that the EU focus on preventing boats from leaving Libya.
Combatting
the traffickers by arresting ringleaders and destroying their boats has
emerged as the centerpiece of a 10-point proposal to be discussed at an
emergency EU summit Thursday in Brussels. Italy has arrested more than
1,000 smugglers - most of them boat navigators, not the masterminds of
the smuggling operations - and says it needs help.
On
Monday, the Gregoretti brought the 24 bodies to Malta for burial,
before continuing to Sicily with 27 of the survivors. One survivor, a
32-year-old Bangladeshi, had been flown Sunday to Catania, his
statements giving authorities the first hint of the tragedy's scale.
The
remaining survivors were brought Tuesday to a migrant holding center in
Catania and were "very tired, very shocked, silent," according to
Flavio Di Giacomo of the IOM.
The survivors were all men, including four teenagers; Sami described them as "very confused, fragile and scared."
For
most, the ordeal began well before stepping aboard the doomed boat.
They included 350 Eritreans, many of them young men fleeing forced
conscription, as well as people from war-torn Syria and Somalia, in
addition to migrants from Sierra Leone, Mali, Senegal, Gambia, Ivory
Coast and Ethiopia.
Prosecutors said Tuesday
that some had been held for as long as 30 days on a farm near where the
boat was docked before being transported in groups of about 30 in trucks
to the embarking point.
"In one instance, one
of the migrants was allegedly struck with a club because he stepped
away" to go to the bathroom, they said in a statement.
Save
the Children said witness statements indicated that 60 children and
adolescents were on board the ship, only four of whom survived. It said
if current trends continue, 2,500 children could die this year, calling
on European leaders to restart rescue operations.
The
children surviving the journeys are `'exhausted and traumatized not
only from the ordeal but also during their long and dangerous land
journeys," said Gemma Parkin, a Save the Children spokeswoman in Sicily.
"But they also tell us they are grateful to be alive and in a safe place - they know they are the lucky ones."
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