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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/10/2015 1:09:39 AM

Federal judge orders last 'Angola Three' inmate released

Associated Press

Albert Woodfox, undated photo. For nearly four decades, 64-year-old Albert Woodfox hss been held in solitary confinement, mostly in the Louisiana State Penitentiary, known as Angola prison. (www.Angola3.org via Amnesty International)


NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The last of the "Angola Three" inmates, whose decades in solitary confinement on a Louisiana prison farm drew international condemnation and became the subject of two documentaries, was ordered released Monday.

The ruling would free 68-year-old Albert Woodfox after more than 40 years in solitary, which human rights experts have said constitutes torture.

U.S. District Judge James Brady of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ordered the release of Woodfox and took the extraordinary step of barring Louisiana prosecutors from trying him for a third time.

A spokesman for the Louisiana attorney general said the state would appeal Brady's ruling to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals "to make sure this murderer stays in prison and remains fully accountable for his actions."

Tory Pegram of the International Coalition to Free the Angola 3, who is working with Woodfox's lawyers on his release, said they are all "thrilled that justice has come for our innocent friend."

Woodfox was placed in solitary confinement in 1972 after being charged in the death of a Louisiana State Penitentiary guard in April of that year. The prison farm is more commonly known as the Angola prison and it is Louisiana's only maximum-security prison.

Woodfox and two other state prisoners became known as the Angola Three because of their long stretches in solitary confinement at Angola. Other members of the Angola Three were prisoners Robert King and Herman Wallace.

Woodfox and Wallace, who were both serving unrelated armed robbery sentences, had said they were singled out for harsh treatment, including isolation, because of their political activism. Woodfox and Wallace were former Black Panthers and helped establish a prison chapter of the Black Panther Party at the Angola prison in 1971, set up demonstrations and organized strikes for better conditions.

Wallace, convicted with Woodfox of murder in the death of guard Brent Miller, died last fall only days after a judge freed him and granted him a new trial. King was released in 2001 after his conviction in the death of a fellow inmate in 1973 was reversed.

Woodfox has been tried and convicted twice in the guard's death, but both convictions were overturned. Brady said the "exceptional circumstances" of the case had led him to bar the state from seeking a third trial. In his ruling, he cited doubt that the state could provide a "fair third trial"; the inmate's age and poor health; the unavailability of witnesses; "the prejudice done onto Mr. Woodfox by spending over forty years in solitary confinement," and "the very fact that Mr. Woodfox has already been tried twice."

Woodfox is in solitary confinement at a prison in St. Francisville, Louisiana, awaiting trial. His lawyers were headed there Monday to seek his release. Pegram said Woodfox gets to exercise for one hour three times a week during his confinement at the West Feliciana Parish Detention Center. He has a television to watch and a shower in his cell, she added.

Of Brady's order for an unconditional release, Pegram said, "I call it the unicorn. It's almost never done."

Jasmine Heiss, a senior campaigner with Amnesty International USA, called Brady's ruling "a momentous step toward justice."

Heiss said Woodfox has been "trapped in a legal process riddled with flaws."

"The only humane action that the Louisiana authorities can take now is to ensure his immediate release."

At the same time, though, state prosecutors were working to keep Woodfox in prison.

Aaron Sadler, a spokesman for Louisiana Attorney General Buddy Caldwell, said the state was seeking an emergency stay of Brady's ruling from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

"With today's order, the court would see fit to set free a twice-convicted murderer," Sadler said. "This order arbitrarily sets aside jury decisions and gives a free pass to a murderer based on faulty procedural issues."

___

This story has been clarified to point out that two of the inmates were convicted in the prison guard's death, while a third was convicted of a separate killing.

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Prisoner released after 43 years in solitary confinement (video)

"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?
6/10/2015 10:10:22 AM

Iran Brags Its Capable Of Destroying ISIS; Russia Agrees


By on

Mohammad Pakpour, head of Iran's Revolutionary Guards ground forces, attends a funeral in Tehran in 2009. Fifteen Revolutionary Guards were among those killed in Sunday's suicide bombing in the Islamic Republic's volatile southeast, state radio reported Tuesday. Reuters/Morteza Nikoubazl


The Islamic State is no threat to Iran, Brig. Gen. Mohammad Pakpour said Tuesday. The Revolutionary Guards commander assured Iranians that his ground forces would not “allow such threats.”

The armed forces' chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Hassan Firouzabadi, also said last week that ISIS militants would not dare approach Iran’s borders.

Pakpour, the Revolutionary Guards Corps’ commander, said his forces were doing their best to keep the country safe, but he had no fears about ISIS threats. “We are determined to destroy ISIL if it makes it to within 40 kilometers of any of our borders,” government-run Press TV quoted him saying.

Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli made a similar declaration May 25.

Russian MP Semyon Bagdasarov, comparing the Middle Eastern situation with the Ukraine conflict, held Iran’s capabilities against ISIS forces in high esteem. “The only force that can break ISIS is Iran,” Pravda quoted Bagdasarov.

Bagdasarov said Iran could eliminate ISIS if it were allowed to move its army into Syria and Iraq. But he acknowledged that that might lead to “one big bloody massacre” as other Arab countries as well as the U.S. would intervene.

Brig. Gen. Ahmad Reza Pourdastan, meanwhile, said Iran would provide only advisory support to Iraq. The Iranian Army’s ground forces commander clarified that his country would not provide any missile defense system or weapons. He added that Iran was prepared to counter al-Nusra Front militants who were acting on behalf of the U.S., he charged, and committing crimes in Iraq and Syria.

(INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS 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?
6/10/2015 10:25:59 AM
More U.S. troops to Iraq?

Administration nearing decision on improving Iraqi training

Associated Press

WSJ Live
U.S. Reviewing Strategies for Training Iraqis


JERUSALEM (AP) — The Obama administration is nearing a decision on how to improve and accelerate the training of Iraqi security forces in light of recent setbacks against the Islamic State, including the possibility of setting up new training camps in Anbar Province, U.S. officials said Tuesday.

U.S. officials said the administration was considering sending up to 500 additional U.S. troops. The changes are aimed at bolstering the participation of Sunni tribes in the fight, but the plan is not likely to include the deployment of U.S. forces closer to the front lines to either call in airstrikes or advise smaller Iraqi units in battle, officials said.

The White House said it was considering "a range of options" to accelerate the training and equipping of Iraq's military, suggesting no final decisions have been made on the details of the plan.

"Those options include sending additional trainers to Iraq," said Alistair Baskey, a spokesman for the White House's National Security Council.

Other officials said earlier Tuesday that the number could be end up as high as 1,000, depending on training requirements and the ability of the Iraqis to identify trainees. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk publicly about the planning discussions.

Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters traveling with him in Israel that it's not clear yet whether opening new training sites would require additional American forces.

"To be determined," Dempsey said. He added that Gen. Lloyd Austin, the U.S. Central Command chief who is responsible for U.S. military operations across the Middle East, had not yet given Dempsey his assessment of whether more resources would be required to implement the proposed changes.

"And that's appropriate, because I want to first understand that we have a concept that could actually improve (Iraqi military) capability," he said.

There are currently slightly fewer than 3,100 U.S. troops in Iraq, including trainers, advisers, security and other logistical personnel.

Dempsey said he has recommended changes to President Barack Obama but he offered no assessment of when decisions would be made. He suggested the president was considering a number of questions, including what adjustments to U.S. military activities in Afghanistan and elsewhere in the world might be needed if the U.S. does more in Iraq.

Dempsey said the Pentagon also is reviewing ways to improve its air power in Iraq, which is a central pillar of Obama's strategy for enabling Iraqi ground forces to recapture territory held by the Islamic State.

Obama said Monday that the United States still lacks a "complete strategy" for training Iraqi forces. Obama also urged Iraq's Shiite-dominated government to allow more of the nation's Sunnis to join the campaign against the violent militant group.

Dempsey said Obama recently asked his national security team to examine the train-and-equip program and determine ways to make it more effective. Critics have questioned the U.S. approach, and even Defense Secretary Ash Carter has raised doubts by saying the collapse of Iraqi forces in Ramadi last month suggested the Iraqis lack a "will to fight."

Carter, during a recent trip to Asia, also said it's crucial to better involve Sunnis in the fight, and that will mean training and equipping them.

The viability of the U.S. strategy is hotly debated in Washington, with some calling for U.S. ground combat troops or at least the embedding of U.S. air controllers with Iraqi ground forces to improve the accuracy and effectiveness of U.S. and coalition airstrikes. Dempsey was not specifically asked about that but gave no indication that Obama has dropped his resistance to putting U.S. troops into combat in Iraq.

"What he's asked us to do is to take a look back at what we've learned over the last eight months of the train-and-equip program, and make recommendations to him on whether there are capabilities that we may want to provide to the Iraqis to actually make them more capable, ... whether there are other locations where we might establish training sites," and look for ways to develop Iraqi military leaders, he said.

Dempsey said there will be no radical change to the U.S. approach in Iraq, he said. Rather, it is a recognition that the effort has either been too slow or has allowed setbacks where "certain units have not stood and fought." He did not mention the Ramadi rout specifically, but Dempsey previously has said the Iraqis drove out of the city on their own.

"Are there ways to give them more confidence?" This, he said, is among the questions Obama wanted Dempsey and others to answer.

Dempsey said recommendations on how to improve and accelerate the Iraq training efforts were discussed at a White House meeting last week and said follow-up questions were asked about how the proposed changes would be implemented and what risks they would pose to U.S. troops and to U.S. commitments elsewhere in the world.

He stressed that the U.S. military is deeply involved across the globe, even as its budget is shrinking.

"You know our capabilities are in high demand to reassure European allies," he said. "We've got additional issues in the Gulf related to reassuring allies against Iranian threats."

Dempsey added that the U.S. is "still hard at it in Afghanistan," doing more in South Korea and accounting for the fact that some U.S. allies in Asia are "unsettled" by China's building of artificial islands in the South China Sea.

___

Baldor reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Josh Lederman contributed to this report.







Amid setbacks against the Islamic State, officials near a decision on how to improve the training of Iraqi forces.
General's perspective


"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?
6/10/2015 10:35:42 AM

Yazidi militia killed 21 in Iraq revenge attack: Amnesty

AFP

File picture shows displaced Iraqis from the Yazidi community, near a camp for internally displaced persons (IDP) in the Sharya area some 15kms from the northern Iraqi city of Dohuk (AFP Photo/Safin Hamed)


Baghdad (AFP) - Members of the Yazidi community, one of the Iraqi minorities hardest hit by jihadist atrocities, killed 21 Sunni Arab villagers in a January revenge attack, Amnesty International said Wednesday.

The London-based watchdog investigated attacks carried out on January 25 by a Yazidi militia in Jiri and Sibaya, two Sunni Arab villages in the Sinjar region of northern Iraq.

"Virtually not a single house was spared. Half of those killed were elderly or disabled men and women and children," Amnesty said in a report.

It said another 40 were abducted, 17 of whom are still missing.

Among other witnesses, Amnesty spoke to a father who lost two sons aged 15 and 20 in the attack. Their 12-year-old brother was shot four times in the back but survived.

"We could not imagine the assailants would target the old and the sick but they did," one man told Amnesty, describing how his 66-year-old father was shot dead in his wheelchair.

The Yazidis, a religious minority which lives mainly in Iraq's Sinjar region, are neither Muslims nor Arabs and follow a unique faith despised by the Islamic State jihadist group.

In 2014, IS jihadists massacred Yazidis, forced tens of thousands of them to flee, captured thousands of girls and women as spoils of war and used them as sex slaves.

The UN has said the atrocities committed against the small community may amount to genocide.

"It is deeply troubling to see members of the Yezidi community, who have suffered so much at the hands of the IS, now themselves committing such brutal crimes," Donatella Rovera, Amnesty's senior crisis advisor, said.

The rights group said some witnesses accused Kurdish security forces running the area of turning a blind eye.

The report, which included investigations into other sectarian massacres, was issued to coincide with the first anniversary of IS' massive offensive in Iraq.

Jihadist-led fighters took over around a third of Iraq last June, bringing it to the brink of collapse.

Violence has continued since as Iraqi government forces and a wide range of foreign allies have battled IS, so far failing to break the back of the jihadist group.

"Looking back at the carnage and chaos that has taken hold in the year since the IS takeover, the picture that emerges is of an Iraq more fractured and bitterly divided than ever and rival factions hell-bent on destroying each other, with no regard for who is actually a fighter or a civilian," Rovera said.

"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?
6/10/2015 11:02:44 AM

L.A. police commission says officer violated policy in shooting

Reuters

KTLA - Los Angeles
L.A. Police Commission Weighs Officers` Actions in Fatal LAPD Shooting of Ezell Ford


By Katherine Davis-Young

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Los Angeles police commissioners on Tuesday issued a mixed ruling in the shooting of an unarmed black man by two patrolmen, largely approving of one officer's actions while finding that the other had violated department policy.

The decision followed a tense administrative hearing into the shooting death of 25-year-old Ezell Ford last Aug. 11. The five commissioners briefly walked out of the hearing after sign-waving activists began chanting.

One man was arrested outside the meeting room for interfering with a police officer, a Los Angeles Police Department spokesman said.

Los Angeles police officials say the two policemen shot Ford, who a family lawyer has described as mentally challenged, after he struggled with one patrolman and tried to grab an officer's holstered gun.

Ford's death came days after the slaying of black teenager Michael Brown by a white officer in Missouri, and touched off demonstrations outside Los Angeles police headquarters.

The commission's ruling sends the matter back to the LAPD's Internal Affairs division for further investigation. A decision on discipline would ultimately rest with Chief Charlie Beck, who the Los Angeles Times reported last week had determined that the two officers were justified in their actions.

Investigators found evidence indicating Ford had struggled for control of the gun of one of the patrolmen, the newspaper cited two sources as saying.

"Nobody is above the law, everybody can make mistakes," Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti told an evening news conference. "Every life matters, but due process matters as well."

The Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office is conducting its own investigation into the matter and could decide to press charges in the case.

Ford's family has filed two lawsuits over the incident, which came during a time of heightened national scrutiny of police use of force against minorities and the mentality ill.

Following emotional remarks at the meeting, Ford's mother, Tritobia Ford, expressed gratitude for the ruling but said she would continue pushing for justice.

"In these coming months, we will ask some tough questions, we will call to answer those responsible, and as God as my witness, I will ask those who killed my precious boy to be brought to justice," Ford told reporters.

Commission members found that one of the two officers involved in the shooting violated policy in several areas: tactics, drawing of his gun, and use of lethal force.

The commission said the second officer mostly adhered to policy but should not have drawn his gun during the altercation.

(Reporting by Katherine Davis-Young; Additional reporting by Eric M. Johnson; Writing by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Peter Cooney, Sandra Maler and Eric Walsh)







The L.A. Police Commission ruling comes after a tense hearing on the death of 25-year-old Ezell Ford in August.
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