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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/15/2013 9:20:00 PM
Cops kill unarmed man

Police officer charged in fatal shooting of unarmed man who had just survived car accident

Randall Kerrick, left; Jonathan Ferrell (Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office/Charlotte Observer)

A North Carolina police officer was charged with voluntary manslaughter on Saturday after police say he fatally shot an unarmed man who had apparently just survived a car crash in Charlotte and was looking for help.

The victim, Jonathan Ferrell, a 24-year-old former Florida A&M University football player, was shot multiple times and pronounced dead at the scene early Saturday morning.

The 27-year-old officer, Randall Kerrick, was turned himself into police late Saturday. He was released on a $50,000 bond.

"The shooting of Mr. Ferrell was excessive,” the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department said in a statement. “Our investigation has shown that Officer Kerrick did not have a lawful right to discharge his weapon during this encounter.”

According to police, Ferrell crashed his vehicle into the woods, climbed out of his car and walked a half-mile to the nearest house. He began “banging on the door viciously,” Charlotte-Mecklenburg Chief Rodney Monroe said.

"It was quite possible he was seeking assistance based on his accident," Monroe said.

But the woman who answered the door thought Ferrell was a burglar and called police shortly after 2:30 a.m. to report an attempted break-in.

Kerrick and two other responding officers surrounded Ferrell, who “immediately charged” at the police, Monroe said. One officer tried unsuccessfully to subdue Ferrell with a taser. Kerrick then fired his weapon "several times."

“He immediately charged toward the three officers, one in particular," Monroe said. "That officer in particular fired his weapon several times, striking the individual multiple times."

“It’s with heavy hearts and significant regrets it’s come to this," Monroe added. "Our hearts go out to the Ferrell family and many members of the CMPD family."

According to the Charlotte Observer, police said initially that Kerrick's actions were “appropriate and lawful.” But a subsequent investigation found the officer, who joined the police department in 2011, had "violated the law regarding voluntary manslaughter." Under North Carolina law, voluntary manslaughter is defined as killing without malice using "excessive force" in exercising "imperfect self-defense," the paper said.

Monroe said there was no evidence Ferrell threatened the woman. Alcohol did not appear a factor in the crash, he added.

The two other officers involved in the incident were placed on paid administrative leave.




An officer is charged with manslaughter in the shooting of an ex-athlete who may have been running to him for help.
Shot multiple times




"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/15/2013 11:57:37 PM
A revealing testimony.

Colorado's Rainfall May Be "Biblical," But the Devastating Floods are Manmade
















I live in Denver, Colorado, and for the past few days, we’ve had nothing but rain. Three months of rain in 48 hours, to be exact. The surge of water has caused rivers and streams to overflow their banks, drowning Boulder, Loveland, Longmont, Estes Park and many other towns along the Front Range under several feet of rushing water.

Conditions were so bad, the National Weather Service felt compelled to use the words “biblical rainfall amounts” to communicate the risk to local residents.

Any other time, extra precipitation is cause for rejoicing in Colorado. Ongoing drought has facilitated massive wildfires across the state for two years running. We’ll take all the wet we can get, although as the past few days have shown, we’d prefer it doesn’t all fall at once.

Colorado floodsShipping containers washed downstream in Loveland, Colorado. Image © Ryan Schlaefer

As I write this, the rain has slowed, even stopped in some areas (although they say more is on the way). Soon, evacuated residents will be able to return to their neighborhoods to pick up the pieces. Later, the flood waters will recede, rivers returning to their regular boundaries. Life will return to normal, but what most people won’t realize is that “business as usual” is the reason this catastrophe occurred in the first place.

Yes, heavy rainfall can always cause flash flooding, but according to local meteorologists, what happened in Colorado was made worse by climate change. How? To find the connection, we have to look back at the opposite of wet — the very, very dry weather that’s become all too common in the Centennial State.

“[O]ne factor has made the flooding considerably worse: the wildfires that have stricken the forests in the region in the past few years,” Kari Bowen, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service (NWS) office in Boulder, told NBC. When almost all of the trees and vegetation in an area are wiped out by fire, the planet’s normal tools for fighting erosion are erased as well.

Okay, so wildfires set the stage for devastating floods, but what’s behind the fires?

“Huge, explosive fires are becoming commonplace, say many experts, because climate change is setting the stage — bringing higher temperatures, widespread drought, earlier snowmelt and spring vegetation growth, and expanded insect and disease infestations,” reported Climate Progress just last month.

What’s causing such persistent drought, which creates the perfect conditions for out of control fires?

You and me. Our cars, houses, companies, food choices and travel plans have resulted in the highest atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide in recorded human history. The fact that we’re content to destroy entire ecosystems–on the sides of mountains and teetering on the edge of coastlines–just so we can build our “dream homes.” We’re well over the tipping point that climate scientists warn us to avoid. Unsurprisingly, this is altering the planet’s normally efficient systems in negative ways.

In 2012, a 594-page report prepared by scientists from 62 countries concluded that global warming over the past half-century has indeed led to “changes in climate extremes,” such as heat waves, record high temperatures and, in many regions, heavy precipitation.

“Extreme rainfall events have become more frequent across the U.S. during the past several decades in part due to manmade global warming,” reports Climate Central. “Increasing air and ocean temperatures mean that the air is generally carrying more water vapor than it used to, and this moisture can be tapped by storm systems to yield rain or snow extremes. Trends in extreme precipitation events vary by region, though, and in general the biggest increases have taken place in the Midwest and Northeast.

That’s bad news, but this is worse: last month researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry in Jena, Germany, found that extreme weather events prompted by too much C02 also result in the release of more CO2. In the study led by Markus Reichstein, “researchers found ecosystems absorb 11 billion tonnes less CO2 every year because of extreme weather events – equivalent to a third of the total global CO2 emissions each year.” Essentially, our addition to fossil fuels has set in motion a dangerous reciprocal cycle of pollution and extreme weather that we can’t stop.

That’s pretty terrifying when you consider that it only took a few days of rain to bring the entire state of Colorado to its knees. What if next year, it lasts for a week?


Read more: , , , , , ,

Images used with permission, © Ryan Schlaefer.



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/colorados-rainfall-may-be-biblical-but-the-devastating-floods-are-manmade.html#ixzz2f0a2oFOY

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/16/2013 10:14:50 AM
Floods wash out Colorado towns

Floods transform Colorado's 'Gore-Tex Vortex'


As heavy rains return after somewhat abating for two days, a field fills with water from overflowing creeks nearby, outside Longmont, Colo., Sunday Sept. 15, 2013. The National Weather Service says up to 2 inches of rain could fall Sunday, creating a risk of more flooding and mudslides. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
Associated Press

LYONS, Colo. (AP) — The cars that normally clog Main Street in Lyons on the way to Rocky Mountain National Park have been replaced by military supply trucks. Shop owners in Estes Park hurriedly cleared their wares in fear that the Big Thompson River will rise again. A plywood sign encouraged residents mucking out their homes to "Hang in there."

Days of rain and floods have transformed the outdoorsy mountain communities in Colorado's Rocky Mountain foothills affectionately known as the "Gore-Tex Vortex" from a paradise into a disaster area with little in the way of supplies or services — and more rain falling Sunday.

The string of communities from Boulder to Estes Park, the gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park, is a base for backpackers and nature lovers where blue-collar and yuppie sensibilities exist side by side. Now, roadways have crumbled, scenic bridges are destroyed, the site of the bluegrass festival is washed out and most shops are closed.

Chris Rodes, one of Lyons' newest residents, said the change is so drastic that he is considering moving away just two weeks after settling there.

"It's not the same," Rodes said. "All these beautiful places, it's just brown mud."

Estes Park town administrator Frank Lancaster said visitors who would normally flock there during the golden September days should stay away for at least a month, but it could take a year or longer for many of the mountain roadways to be repaired.

Meanwhile, people were still trapped, the nearby hamlet of Glen Haven has been "destroyed" and the continuing rain threatened a new round of flooding, he said.

"We are all crossing our fingers and praying" he said.

The residents who remained or began trickling back — if they were allowed to do so — were left to watch out for one another. Restaurateurs and grocers in Lyons were distributing food to their neighbors as others arrived in groups carrying supplies.

Scott Martin, 25, drove the half-hour from Boulder Saturday to deliver drinking water and gasoline to a friend's parents. He fled Lyons amid a torrential downpour on Wednesday night after the mountain stream that cuts through town gushed into his basement.

Martin grew up tubing down the river and hiking the mountains, and like many residents, he still jumps in the water after work. Looking into the cottonwood and aspen trees at the outskirts of town, he wondered when he would be able to do those things again.

"Best case, it's just mud everywhere; in everyone's yard and all the streets," he said.

From the mountain communities east to the plains city of Fort Morgan, numerous pockets of individuals remained cut off by the flooding. Sunday's rain hampered the helicopter searches, and rescuers trekked by ground up dangerous canyon roads to reach some of those homes isolated since Wednesday.

The surging waters have been deadly, with four people confirmed dead and two more missing and presumed dead after their homes were swept away.

Some 1,500 homes have been destroyed and about 17,500 have been damaged, according to an initial estimate released by the Colorado Office of Emergency Management on its website.

In addition, 11,700 people left their homes, and a total of 1,253 people have not been heard from, state emergency officials said.

With phone service being restored to some of the areas over the weekend, officials hoped that number would drop as they contacted more stranded people.

As many as 1,000 people in Larimer County were awaiting rescue Sunday, but airlifts were grounded because of the rain, Type 2 Rocky Mountain Incident Management Team commander Shane Del Grosso said.

Hundreds more people are unaccounted for to the south in Boulder County and other flood-affected areas.

In Estes Park, some 20 miles from Lyons, hundreds of homes and cabins were empty. High water still covered several low-lying streets. Where the river had receded, it had left behind up to a foot of mud.

Ironically, the massive Estes Ark — a former toy store two stories high designed to look like Noah's Ark — was high and dry.

"I don't know if it's open anymore, but soon it's going to be our only way out," joked Carly Blankfein.

Supplies of gas and groceries had been running low until Route 7 was recently reopened. On Sunday, people were lined up at the one gas station where a tanker had arrived.

At the Aspen and Evergreen Gallery along the town's main street next to the Big Thompson River, owner Tamara Jarolimek was clearing out the shop Sunday in fear that the new wave of rain would cause another surge.

"We only have limited time to get out as much as we can," she said.

At the town's historic Stanley Hotel, the inspiration for Stephen King's "The Shining," clerk Renee Maher said the hotel was nearly empty. Though it sits on a hill overlooking town, the ground was so saturated that water was seeping in through the foundation, and had caused one suite's bathtub to pop out "like a keg," Maher said.

Despite the mess, some people staying in town turned out for the Stanley's nightly ghost tours.

"They said they came because they had nothing to do," Maher said.

In Boulder, often called America's fittest town, Mayor Matt Appelbaum warned people to stay out of the wide-open spaces that ring the city.

"I know that people are eager to get out there again, but it's truly unsafe." he said. "Places that I've known and loved for 30 years are gone."

Boulder remained a refuge for evacuees from the more isolated mountain towns. Meanwhile, water continued to back up in some parts of town and a water treatment plant remained down Sunday.

But the town was bouncing back. Libraries and recreation centers have reopened. Students are again spilling out of cutesy restaurants on Pearl Street, and classes at the University of Colorado are expected to resume Monday.

Deeper in the mountains, people wonder whether the rest of the state will move on without them.

"At least it's the slow season, so we have some time to rebuild," Lyons resident Kevin Cray said. "There's going to be cleanup for a long time. Folks are going to have to come together."

___














Floods have transformed Colorado's popular Rocky Mountain communities into a disaster area.
Known as 'Gore-Tex Vortex'



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/16/2013 10:36:19 AM
Deadly storms trigger floods

Big storms hit Mexico on opposite coasts; 21 dead


A man takes a photo with his phone as a car lies on its side after a portion of a hill collapsed due to heavy rains in the Pacific resort city of Acapulco, Mexico, Sunday, Sept. 15, 2013.Flooding and landslides unleashed by Hurricane Ingrid and Tropical Storm Manuel have claimed at least a dozen lives in Mexico and sparked the evacuations of thousands of people even before the weather systems had made landfall on the country's east and west coasts. (AP Photo/Bernandino Hernandez)
Associated Press

ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) — The remnants of Tropical Storm Manuel continued to deluge Mexico's southwestern Pacific shoulder with dangerous rains while Hurricane Ingrid headed for a Monday landfall on the country's opposite coast in an unusual double onslaught that federal authorities said had caused at least 21 deaths.

The heaviest blow Sunday fell on the southern coastal state of Guerrero, where Mexico's government reported 14 confirmed deaths. State officials said people had been killed in landslides, drownings in a swollen river and a truck crash on a rain-slickened mountain highway.

Mexico's federal Civil Protection coordinator, Luis Felipe Puente, told reporters late Sunday that stormy weather from one or both of the two systems also caused three deaths in Hidalgo, three in Puebla and one in Oaxaca.

Getting hit by a tropical storm and a hurricane at the same time "is completely atypical" for Mexico, Juan Manuel Caballero, coordinator of the country's National Weather Service, said at a news conference with Puente.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Ingrid, the second hurricane of the Atlantic storm season, could reach the mainland by Monday morning or early afternoon, most likely along the lightly populated coast north of the port of Tampico.

Authorities in the Gulf states of Tamaulipas and Veracruz evacuated more than 7,000 people from low-lying areas as the hurricane closed in, and the prospect of severe weather prompted some communities to cancel Independence Day celebrations planned for Sunday and Monday.

Manuel came ashore as a tropical storm Sunday afternoon near the Pacific port of Manzanillo, but quickly began losing strength and was downgraded to a tropical depression late Sunday, although officials warned its rains could still cause flash floods and mudslides. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said the system dissipated early Monday.

The rains caused some rivers to overflow in Guerrero, damaging hundreds of homes and disrupting communications for several hours.

Early Monday, Manuel's remnants had maximum sustained winds of about 30 mph (45 kph) and was moving to the northwest at 8 mph (13 kph). It was about 5 miles (10 kilometers) west of Puerto Vallarta.

Manuel was expected to dump up to 10 to 15 inches of rain over parts of Guerrero and Michoacan states, with maximums of 25 inches possible in some isolated areas. Rains of 5 to 10 inches were possible in the states of Colima, Jalisco and Nayarit. Authorities said the rains presented a dangerous threat in mountains, where flash floods and mudslides were possible.

Ingrid also was expected to bring very heavy rains. It had maximum sustained winds of 75 mph (120 kph) early Monday and was centered about 95 miles (155 kilometers) north-northeast of the port city of Tampico as it moved west-northwest at 7 mph (11 kph). A hurricane warning was in effect from Cabo Rojo to La Pesca.

More than 1,000 homes in Veracruz state had been affected by the storm to varying degrees, and 20 highways and 12 bridges had damage, the state's civil protection authority said. A bridge collapsed near the northern Veracruz city of Misantla on Friday, cutting off the area from the state capital, Xalapa.

A week ago, 13 people died in the state when a landslide buried their homes in heavy rains spawned by Tropical Depression Fernand.

___

Associated Press writers Rodrigo Soberanes Santin in Xalapa, Efrain Klerigan in Ciudad Victoria and Rodrigo Soberanes Santin in Veracruz contributed to this report.



Violent storms trigger floods, landslides in Mexico


Thousands are forced to evacuate as Hurricane Ingrid and Tropical Storm Manuel pound the Pacific and Gulf coasts.
Rising death toll



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/16/2013 10:44:20 AM
U.N. report on Syria due

France, Britain, US want 'strong' UN Syria resolution


French President Francois Hollande (2nd L) poses on September 16, 2013 with British Foreign Secretary William Hague (L), US Secretary of State John Kerry (2nd R) and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius (R) outside the presidential Elysee palace in Paris before their talks on the Syria crisis. France, Britain and the US want a binding UN resolution on Syria's chemical weapons handover. (AFP Photo/Fred Dufour)
AFP

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Britain, France and the United States on Monday agreed on the need for a "strong and binding" UN resolution on the transfer of Syria's chemical weapons to international control.

Kickstarting a week of intense diplomatic activity in the wake of a weekend US-Russia deal on the dismantling of Syria's deadly arsenal, French President Francois Hollande met here with US Secretary of State John Kerry and British Foreign Minister William Hague.

Aides to Hollande said the three countries were united in their determination to ensure Syrian President Bashar al-Assad complies fully and swiftly with Saturday's Geneva accord.

"They agreed that the resolution must be strong, robust and set a precise timetable," a spokesman said.

The Paris talks came ahead of the publication later on Monday of a keenly awaited report by UN inspectors who have been investigating an August 21 chemical attack near Damascus which the Western powers have blamed on the Syrian regime.

The US and Russia agreed in Geneva on Saturday that an ambitious accord aimed at eliminating Syria's chemical weapons by mid-2014 be encapsulated in a UN Security Council resolution backed up by the threat of unspecified sanctions in the event of non-compliance.

Russia has made it clear it will block any move to include an authorisation for the use of military force into the resolution.

The Geneva accord gives Assad a week to hand over details of his chemical weapons stockpiles and calls for inspections of what the US says are some 45 sites linked to the programme to be under way by November.

Hollande on Sunday described the deal as an "important step" but "not an end point", and reiterated his demand that Assad step down to pave the way for a political settlement of a conflict that has left more than 110,000 people dead in little over two years.

The UN inspectors' report was due to be presented in New York at 11:15am (1515 GMT) by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

Ban has already revealed that he expects the report to provide "overwhelming" confirmation that chemical arms were used in an attack near Damascus on August 21 in which hundreds died.

Rebels battling Assad fear that the international community's new focus on the chemical weapons issue will effectively consolidate his grip on power and put moves to provide them with more support on hold.

That impression was reflected in a Syrian minister's claim that the US-Russia deal was a "victory" for Damascus.

"On one hand, it helps the Syrians emerge from the crisis and on the other it has allowed for averting war against Syria," Minister of State for National Reconciliation Ali Haidar told Russian news agency Ria Novosti.

China, a veto-wielding permanent member of the Security Council which has helped Russia block previous UN resolutions on Syria, gave its blessing to the Geneva accord on Sunday.

"This agreement will enable tensions in Syria to be eased," Foreign Minister Wang Yi said.



U.N. to unveil key Syria weapons report



The findings are expected to confirm that poison gas was used in an August attack that killed hundreds.
Kerry: 'Threat of force remains'



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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