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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/20/2016 1:20:16 AM

Mystery Surrounds Last Moments of Missing EgyptAir, Feared Downed by Terrorists

Good Morning America


Mystery surrounds the final moments of the missing EgyptAir flight, which disappeared en route to Cairo from Paris.

Egyptian officials have suggested that the incident was more likely caused by terrorism than a technical problem.

“I don’t want to go to assumptions like others, but if you analyze the situation properly, the possibility ... of having a terror attack is higher than having a technical” failure, the Egyptian aviation minister told reporters today.

Flight MS804 went missing about 174 miles off the Egyptian coast, shortly after entering Egyptian airspace, the airline said overnight. An official from EgyptAir released a statement this afternoon saying that the country’s Ministry of Civil Aviation had received official word that a floating object found in the waters of the Mediterranean Sea near the island of Karpathos most likely belonged to wreckage of the missing plane.

But this statement was later disputed, with EgyptAir Vice President Ahmed Adel saying on CNN that no wreckage was found.

French President François Hollande, speaking at the Elysee Palace in Paris, told a news conference earlier today that authorities there fear that the flight, with 66 people aboard, had crashed but it was too soon to speculate on the cause.

"When we have the truth, we need to draw all the conclusions," Hollande said. "At this stage, we must give priority to solidarity with the families" of the victims.

According to the airline, 56 passengers, three EgyptAir security personnel and seven crew members were aboard the aircraft, an Airbus A320 manufactured in 2003.

The flight's passengers included two infants and one older child, the airline said.

There were no Americans on board, according to the airline. The nationalities of the passengers: Egyptian, 30; French, 15; Iraqi, 2; Algerian, 1; Belgian, 1; British, 1; Canadian, 1; Chadian, 1; Kuwaiti, 1; Portuguese, 1; Saudi, 1; and Sudanese, 1.


Grieving relatives of those on board gathered at the Cairo International Airport in Egypt this morning, awaiting word on their missing loved ones.


The plane left Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport at 11:09 p.m. local time and lost contact with the radar tracking system over the Mediterranean Sea at 2:45 a.m. at 37,000 feet, after entering Egyptian airspace, the airline said. The flight was expected to arrive at 3:15 a.m. (France and Egypt are in the same time zone.)

Officials at the Greek Ministry of Defense told ABC News that the EgyptAir pilot made a 90-degree turn to the left and then a 360-degree maneuver as the plane plunged about 20,000 feet just before officials lost contact.

About four hours after news of the missing plane was reported, EgyptAir tweeted that military search and rescue received a distress call from the airplane's emergency equipment.


Airbus confirmed the loss of its plane in a statement early this morning and said the aircraft had accumulated about 48,000 flight hours.

EgyptAir said on Twitter that the pilot had 6,275 of flying hours, including 2,101 flying hours on Airbus 320s. The co-pilot had 2,766 flying hours.

Egyptian armed forces rescue teams have been deployed, the airline said, and Greece has joined the effort as well.

A spokesman for the Hellenic National Defense General Staff told ABC News that rescue teams are battling strong waves and wind in their efforts.

The U.S. Embassy in Cairo tweeted, "We are tracking reports of missing #EgyptAir flight #MS804, and our thoughts are with the relatives of passengers at this time."

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry expressed his condolences to the victims of the tragedy while addressing a meeting of NATO foreign ministers this morning.

"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?
5/20/2016 11:06:28 AM

Teen killed his girlfriend’s parents and celebrated with sex. He’s being released after 5 years.

A Texas teen killed his girlfriend's parents when he was thirteen. Now, after five years in prison, he is getting released. Here's what you need to know about the juvenile's crime. (Monica Akhtar,Deirdra O'Regan/The Washington Post)

When police arrived at the yellow-brick house in Garland, Tex., on the afternoon of Aug. 17, 2010, they found Alan Nevil lying near death in a neighbor’s yard. He had been shot five times. One bullet was lodged in his throat. His wife, Darlene, was found dead inside the house, shot in the back and head.

Despite the blood in his mouth, Alan managed to gargle the name of their attacker.

It was his stepdaughter’s 13-year-old boyfriend, he said.

Minutes later, police pulled up outside the boyfriend’s house, just a few blocks away. There, they found Darlene’s 12-year-old daughter and her boyfriend — having celebratory sex.

When Alan Nevil succumbed to his injuries 16 days later, the young couple was charged with capital murder. Adults convicted of the charge can be executed. Charged as juveniles, though, the youths faced a maximum of 40 years in prison. The boyfriend and girlfriend both pleaded guilty and were sentenced to 28 years and 20 years, respectively. Neither has been publicly named because they were juveniles.

“I feel nothing but disgust for you,” Alan’s sister, Fran Nevil Cawley, said to the girl in court.

Less than six years later, the Nevil family’s disgust has suddenly deepened.

On Wednesday, a Dallas judge ordered the boy released when he turns 19 next month, the Dallas Morning News reported.

The ruling was an astonishing — and for the Nevil family, terrifying — twist on the 2010 double murder. Judge Andrea Martin could have transferred him to adult prison for 10 years. Instead, he will now face nothing more than parole and anger-management classes.

Juvenile justice experts and officials said the boy had turned over a new leaf behind bars, accepting responsibility for the crime, getting his GED and becoming a role model for other inmates at his juvenile-detention center.

But the ruling left the Nevils furious, and fearful.

“He gets to see his mom, and my dad is in a box,” Susan Nevil told Fox4, displaying Alan Nevil’s ashes. “This is how my kids get to visit their grandfather. And it’s just not right.”

She added that she has dreams in which her father’s murderer tracks her down and kills her, too.

The judge’s ruling raises questions about the age at which juveniles can be charged as adults — in Texas, it is 14 — as well as the severity of sentences they should face when convicted. In 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court outlawed the death penalty for crimes committed before age 18. Some scientists say adolescents’ brains aren’t as capable of controlling impulses and understanding long-term consequences as adult brains. In the past decade, many states have moved away from life sentences for minors.

For the Nevils, no amount of expert testimony can justify the judge’s ruling.

“Five years?” shouted Alan Nevil’s son, Alan Jr., as he left the courtroom, according to the Morning News. “For capital murder?”

The saga began June 6, 2009, when the girl joined her mother, Darlene, and her stepfather, Alan, in Garland, a suburb of Dallas.

“We decorated the house in Garland, bought a cake and welcomed you with open arms,” Fran Nevil Cawley, Alan’s sister, would later tell the girl in court, according to the Morning News.

But problems quickly appeared. The girl claimed her father back in Ohio had thrown away her clothes and ice-skating medals, but her belongings later arrived.

It wouldn’t be the last time the girl lied.

In the spring of 2010, the girl began dating a boy who lived nearby. He had had a hard life, psychiatrists would later testify in court. One of his uncles had murdered a family member. Another uncle had been killed. And he watched his mother endure domestic violence. He began smoking marijuana at age 10 and became involved with a gang.

But the two seemed normal together. Neighbors saw them walking around the neighborhood, holding hands.

“I just thought they were two teenagers having a teenage relationship,” neighbor Michelle Campbell told the Associated Press.

Jasmine Sepulveda, a 14-year-old who lived across the street from the girl, detected something odd about the relationship.

“She was a really cool person but when she hung out with him, her boyfriend, that’s when she got weird,” Sepulveda told the AP. “She didn’t want to talk to me anymore.”

The Nevils didn’t approve of the relationship. In July, a month before the murders, the girl ran away from home. When she returned, she began to plot to kill her mother and stepfather, according to police.

“Her parents had grounded her to where she couldn’t see [the boy],” Garland police detective Bruce Marshall testified in court, according to the Morning News. “And she told me, ‘The final straw, Detective Marshall, is when they took away my coloring books. I knew they had to die.’ ”

The girl was smarter than the boy and easily manipulated him, she told Marshall. Over several weeks that summer, she tried to persuade her boyfriend to kill her parents. When she first showed him Alan’s gun, he wouldn’t touch it, Marshall testified. When the Nevils insisted that the two break up, the boy was furious, according to text messages later introduced as evidence.

Finally, the girl lied to her boyfriend.

“She told [the boy] she was pregnant and that Alan Nevil tried to sexually abuse her,” Marshall testified, according to the Morning News.

It wasn’t true, but it worked: The boy agreed to the plot.

On Aug. 17, he was waiting for Darlene when she came home from work. The boy shot her twice, killing her, then waited for her husband. When Alan arrived, the boy shot him five times. When the gun jammed, he used it to beat Alan over the head.

But Alan clung to life, crawling out a window and toward a neighbor’s house for help. When police arrived, he told them his stepdaughter’s boyfriend had shot him.

Police officers found the couple having sex and arrested them. Meanwhile, Alan underwent surgery. For a while it appeared as if he would live. Whenever he regained consciousness, he would ask for Darlene.

“We’d tell him Darlene was dead and he’d start fighting and they would put him under again,” Alan Jr. told the Morning News.

When Alan Sr. suddenly died after 16 days in the hospital, it seemed as if his stepdaughter and her boyfriend might spend most of their lives in prison.

“They deserve everything they’ve got coming,” neighbor Juan Garcia Jr. told the AP. “Kids nowadays, they don’t think twice.”

The boy admitted to shooting the Nevils because his girlfriend told him to, according to police.

“He was cooperative. He took responsibility almost immediately,” Marshall testified Wednesday, according to the Morning News.

But the boy’s first couple of years in juvenile detention did not go smoothly. He was involved in 64 incidents, 21 of which required him to be moved to a security unit, officials testified. Six were major offenses, including assault and possession of a controlled substance.

Those same officials said the boy had matured, avoiding trouble over the past two years, earning his GED, learning carpentry and working as a groundskeeper.

“Having a job has built his confidence,” testified Kathryn Hallmark, a psychiatrist who runs the therapy program at the boy’s center. “He can be at peace while being focused on his work.”

But the judge’s decision to release the boy next month, rather than send him to adult prison for up to 10 years, is unlikely to give the Nevil family any peace.

“I’m going to be graduating in 11 days and my grandpa isn’t going to see me walk the stage,” Destiyne Nevil, Alan’s granddaughter, who is the same age as the teen murderer, told Fox4. “We didn’t get the outcome that we wanted. The guy, he only served 6 years of a 28-year sentence and I don’t think that was just for my family.”

“They’re considering him a good candidate for parole, well my dad was a good candidate to live,” added her mother, Susan. “My kids are still suffering. I’m suffering. My brother is suffering. It’s just not right.”

Adding to the family’s agony is the fact that Alan’s stepdaughter — convicted five years ago of killing him — could also soon be released.

She faces her own hearing later this year.

Correction: The original version of this story said the accused boy would have been eligible for the death penalty had he been a year older. As the story points out, the Supreme Court outlawed the death penalty for those under 18 in 2005.


(The Washington Post)

"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?
5/20/2016 1:40:55 PM

Iceland’s Biggest Political Party Is Now The “Pirate Party” — and It’s Amazing


by Michaela Whitton, The Anti-Media

Iceland’s anti-establishment Pirate Party continues to lead nationwide polls as the most popular choice for the next elections. The party — whose policies include internet freedom, drug decriminalisation, and open democracy — has consistently led the polls for the last year and, as a result, has secured more funding than any of its rivals.

The 2008 financial crisis hit Iceland hard. The following year, the krona was devalued by around 50%, unemployment doubled, and capital controls were introduce. Miraculously, the country rose from the ashes to become one of Europe’s top performers in terms of growth. More recently, the political establishment has been in turmoil since three government ministers were implicated in the global Panama Papers scandal.

Despite their struggle, or perhaps because of it, the list of reasons to admire Icelanders keeps on growing. Whether it’s the sentencing of senior bankers — or the mass outrage at the offshore leak, which propelled 10% of the population to the streets and ousted the Prime Minister — the radical refusal of Icelanders to bow down and accept establishment corruption is admirable.

Because of this, the surge in popularity of the once-fringe Pirate Party comes as little surprise — recent polls suggest almost half the nation supports them. In Iceland, financial support for political parties is allocated based on how well they have done in polls.

Although the party doesn’t have formal leadership, chair of the parliamentary group and spokesperson, Birgitta Jonsdottir, said they did not expect the funding. Claiming their campaign was, so far, funded at a flea market, she said that was enough and that all the party needs is to be able to pay the salaries of its employees.

“We did not expect this. We don’t care. Democracy doesn’t revolve around getting loads of money from the government,” she added.



This article (
Iceland’s Biggest Political Party Is Now The “Pirate Party” — and It’s Amazing) is free and open source. You have permission to republish this article under a Creative Commonslicense with attribution to Michaela Whitton and theAntiMedia.org. Anti-Media Radio airs weeknights at 11pm Eastern/8pm Pacific. If you spot a typo, email edits@theantimedia.org.



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"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?
5/20/2016 2:02:18 PM

EGYPTAIR FLIGHT MS804 WRECKAGE FOUND IN MEDITERRANEAN: EGYPTIAN MILITARY

BY ON 5/20/16 AT 10:42 AM

An Egyptian military boat takes part in a search operation for the EgyptAir plane that disappeared in the Mediterranean Sea in this still image taken from video, May 19. The army said on Friday that its search operation had discovered the wreckage of flight MS804.
EGYPTIAN MILITARY/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

The Egyptian military has said that its search operation found the missing wreckage of EgyptAir flight MS804 in the Mediterranean sea.

“Egyptian aircraft and navy vessels have found personal belongings of passengers and parts of the wreckage 290 kilometers (180 miles) north of Alexandria,” Egyptian military spokesman Brig. Gen. Mohammed Samir said on his Facebook page on Friday.

The Airbus A320 disappeared from aviation radars on Thursday after making two sharp turns, falling 22,000 feet and crashing into the Mediterranean sea, according to Greek officials. The aircraft was carrying 66 passengers and crew.

Egyptian officials have said that the cause of the crash is more likely to be an act of extremism rather than a mechanical failure.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said on Friday that there is “absolutely no indication” as to what downed the aircraft and junior minister for transport Alain Vidalies told French radio that “no theory is favored” this early in the investigation.

The discovery of the wreckage, if confirmed, will provide further information about the crash and its cause. EgyptAir said on Thursday that the wreckage had been found but Greek officials later said that this information was incorrect and that two large orange pieces of plastic found in the Mediterranean did not belong to an aircraft.

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.

(Newsweek)

"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?
5/20/2016 2:27:07 PM

Americans must know ‘shocking’ details of 9/11 report classified pages – congressmen

Edited time: 19 May, 2016 17:32


A woman looks at names of victims on the wall of the 9/11 Empty Sky memorial at sunrise across from New York's Lower Manhattan and One World Trade Center in Liberty State Park in Jersey City, New Jersey © Gary Hershorn / Reuters

The 28 classified pages from a congressional report on 9/11 contain many details on who supported the attackers, but “nothing about national security,” members of Congress from both parties say as they urge President Barack Obama to release the pages.


Following Tuesday's vote in the Senate to allow the families of 9/11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia for its alleged involvement in the attacks, there is a growing movement on Capitol Hill to pressure Obama to follow up on his April comments, when he indicated that he would declassify a 28-page report rumored to implicate the Saudis.

Congressman Rick Nolan, a Minnesota Democrat, characterized the documents as “shocking,” saying that there is plenty of material in the report that would open the door for the families to take legal action.

“It’s very detailed. It has the names of the people who supplied money to the 15 Saudi Arabians who participated in the bombing of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The bank account numbers, where the money went to,” Nolan told RT America’s Ed Schultz.

While he said that he wasn’t at liberty to give any details, Nolan said that people should “use [their] imagination a little bit” when trying to guess who funded the terrorists who participated in the 9/11 terror attacks.

“And I can tell you that the rumors that have been circulated, I didn’t see a whole lot of anything to negate those rumors.”

Representative Walter Jones (R-North Carolina) has been pushing for transparency on the matter for years. He introduced House Resolution 14, which urges the president to declassify the report, and believes that it will get enough sponsors attract the White House’s attention.

“I am very hopeful. Yesterday Senator Bob Graham flew up from Florida, who has been a real staunch advocate for declassifying the 28 pages,” Jones said in an interview with Schultz. “He and I and Congressman Steve Lynch… met with [Director of National Intelligence] James Clapper over in McLean, Virginia, to have a discussion about trying to get President Obama [to declassify the papers.]” Lynch is a Democrat from Massachusetts.

Jones said that Clapper and the directors of the CIA and the FBI will make recommendations of their own to the president as the heads of the nation’s intelligence agencies. However, the North Carolina congressman said that the papers contain no information that could have national security information to be worried about.

“We will hope that the president will keep his word that he has given twice to the 9/11 families that he would try to declassify this information,” Jones said. “I, along with many members of Congress… have read the 28 pages. There’s nothing about national security in there.”



In recent weeks, CIA chief John Brennan has warned against the release of the 28 pages, referring to the information contained within as “uncorroborated,” “unvetted” and “inaccurate.” Jones, however, said that he does not believe this characterization is correct, and that the issue at hand is revealing critical information to the American public.

“As members of Congress, when we go over there, they watch you read, you can’t even take notes in the classified setting. No one ever said ‘Congressman, you should not believe everything you read in these 28 pages.' Not one time did that happen to me or any of my colleagues,” Jones said.

“If this was about national security, if there was anything in here that threatened the national security of this country, I wouldn’t be supporting it, nor would my colleagues of either party.”

Nolan said that the release of information about activities leading up to the 9/11 attacks is critical for the public to make foreign policy decisions.

READ MORE: 10 things we know about US, Saudi Arabia and 9/11 so far

“If we’re gonna be spending trillions of dollars, if we’re gonna be taking America’s finest young men and women who’ve stepped up to serve our country and go to war, we better know who our friends and enemies are,” Nolan said.

“Decisions to go to war, with the profound impact that it has on treasury and on blood, are just so profound,” the Minnesota Democrat added. “And the American people are capable of good judgment on these matters.”

Nolan said that after he read the 28 pages, he believed much more strongly that families of the victims of 9/11 should be able to sue the Saudi government or whoever it may be who was responsible, adding that a bill giving them such power has a chance to pass in the House.

“The American people have a right to know. The American people who have been victimized by this have a right to sue. And that’s one of the hallmarks of what American democracy is all about,” he said.

(RT)

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

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