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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/17/2017 2:30:51 PM
The Pentagon said it wouldn’t use depleted uranium rounds against ISIS. Months later, it did — thousands of 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?
2/17/2017 4:34:21 PM
‘This is really unprecedented’: ICE detains woman seeking domestic abuse protection at Texas courthouse


A hearing in El Paso County in Texas went from ordinary to “unprecedented” last week when half a dozen Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents showed up at a courthouse where an undocumented woman was seeking a protective order against the boyfriend she accused of abusing her.

The woman, a citizen of Mexico who was living in El Paso had been driven to the courthouse by a victim’s advocate from the Center Against Sexual and Family Violence, a shelter for victims of domestic abuse where she had been living.

She left under arrest.

“This is really unprecedented,” El Paso County Attorney Jo Anne Bernal told The Washington Post.

It was the first time in her 23 years at the courthouse, Bernal said, that she can remember ICE agents making their presence known during a protective order hearing. The agents had come to stake out the woman, identified by her initials I.E.G., because, Bernal speculates, they likely received a tip from the only other person who knew the time and place of the hearing — the woman’s alleged abuser.

The woman had a prior criminal record and had been previously deported, but, according to Bernal, had no current outstanding state warrants.

“It really was a stunning event,” Bernal said. “It has an incredible chilling effect for all undocumented victims of any crime in our community.”

It is county policy not to ask about citizenship status, Bernal said, because officials want to make clear that all victims of crime in El Paso are entitled to the same protections within the criminal justice system.

The arrest of the domestic violence complainant comes at a time of considerable unrest and anxiety within the immigrant community nationwide as President Trump begins to make good on the strict immigration policies that defined his campaign. Since taking office just four weeks ago, Trump has threatened to cut off federal funding to “sanctuary cities,” which have a policy of protecting illegal immigrants and not cooperating with federal authorities to deport them. And, Trump says, he started the planning process for his Mexican border wall.

Already the policies have led to the deportation of an undocumented mother from Arizona who, rather than dodge her check-in with immigration officials, dutifully went and was detained. In Seattle, a 23-year-old man who had been living legally in the United States under the Obama administration’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program was arrested and detained last week by ICE officials who claimed he was a gang member, something his lawyers deny.

And in Denver, an undocumented mother of four who had been living in the United States for 20 years sought refuge in the basement of a church this week rather than check in with authorities, for fear she too would be deported.

Jeanette Vizguerra, an undocumented immigrant who has lived in the U.S. for 20 years, is under a deportation order and was supposed to check in with authorities on February 15. Instead, the mother of four and immigration activist is seeking sanctuary 15 miles away in the basement of First Unitarian Society of Denver. She plans to remain there indefinitely. (Alice Li/The Washington Post)

In El Paso, Bernal said her office, which prosecutes criminal cases and represents alleged victims of domestic violence, like I.E.G., has felt the weight of this policy shift in recent weeks. Call volume has increased from concerned El Paso residents, she said, who have reported checkpoints in certain parts of town and the appearance of ICE agents at routine traffic stops.

What concerns her and other local officials most of all, though, is how last week’s courthouse incident could have a greater impact on the way crime is — or isn’t — reported within the immigrant community.

“An incident like what happened in the courthouse last week really puts fear in people,” Bernal said. “One of the things that really worries me is that it only takes one isolated incident like this.”

Whether the courthouse stakeout was indeed an isolated incident remains unclear. An ICE spokeswoman declined to comment Wednesday in response to questions from El Paso Times reporter Marty Schladen, who first wrote about the case.

Bernal is trying to mitigate the situation and ease anxiety, she told The Post, by reaching out to Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Tex.), an El Paso native. The county attorney asked Beto Wednesday to set up a meeting with her office and the local ICE director to get “assurance from ICE that this is an isolated incident and that this isn’t going to happen again,” Bernal said.

After the courthouse incident last week, Bernal’s office launched an investigation, which unearthed a narrative of the day’s events that differs from the one outlined in court documents filed by ICE.

Based on eyewitness accounts from several attorneys in Bernal’s office, the judge who granted the undocumented woman’s protective order and the victim’s advocate assisting her, there were six ICE agents inside the courthouse that day — one inside the courtroom and others standing by the door and stairwells. They escorted her down the hallway, into the elevator and outside the building, where they detained her, Bernal said.

The narrative of the ICE affidavit, however, does not mention any contact inside the courthouse or the courtroom.

The affidavit claims that agents were “conducting surveillance” at the courthouse “in attempts of seeing” the woman. At 9:30 a.m., the affidavit says, agents saw the woman “exiting the El Paso County Courthouse and proceeded to walk along the side walk on San Antonio Avenue.” Agents identified themselves and questioned I.E.G., who admitted to being a Mexican citizen who was in the United States without legal status.

According to the affidavit, I.E.G. has a criminal and immigration history that dates back to 2010 and includes numerous deportations and arrests for assault, violating probation, domestic violence, false imprisonment and possession of stolen mail.

Even so, Bernal said, “it’s hard to imagine how they would justify the rationale” for staking out a courtroom that deals in granting protective orders.

“If that person was that dangerous, state law enforcement would have been looking for her,” Bernal said. “It doesn’t make sense why the resources would be used to go after a victims of domestic abuse. … It seems to be they are continuing to victimize our client.”

Last fall the undocumented immigrant filed her first of three police reports against her live-in boyfriend, whom she accused of punching, kicking and choking her, and of pulling her hair. A report from December alleged, according to Bernal, that after failing to stab her with a knife, the boyfriend threw the blade at her instead. He missed.

Out of fear, the woman fled the city, Bernal said, and returned several weeks later to live at the Center Against Sexual and Family Violence. She filed a police report with El Paso Police and filed for a protective order on Jan. 26.

The ICE affidavit does not identify from whom they learned of the woman’s undocumented status, but it says the department “received information that an individual who had been previously deported was in the United States.” The information “mentioned” that the woman had filed a protective order against her boyfriend, who, at the time the affidavit was filed, was in custody for forgery of a financial instrument. The affidavit also states the exact time and place of the woman’s court hearing and that she was living at the domestic violence shelter.

District Judge Yahara Lisa Gutierrez oversees the court that issued the woman’s protective order and told the El Paso Times that it isn’t uncommon for abusers to threaten to report their undocumented partners to immigration officials as a means of control.

Gutierrez told the Times that ICE agents should not act on tips from abusers.

“There’s no place for that,” Gutierrez said, “especially in family court.”

(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?
2/17/2017 5:01:05 PM

Michigan Man Pleads Guilty to Killing Wife’s 4 Children – 25 Years After Murdering Former Wife

Chris Harris
People
Michigan Man Pleads Guilty to Killing Wife’s 4 Children – 25 Years After Murdering Former Wife

A Michigan man who spent 16 years behind bars for killing his pregnant wife in 1991 pleaded guilty Wednesday to the murders of four children, including his own two daughters, PEOPLE confirms.

According to court records obtained by PEOPLE, Gregory Green admitted before a Wayne County judge that he killed his two daughters and his stepdaughters in late September — eight years after his release from prison for his first wife’s stabbing death.

Accepting a plea deal from prosecutors, Green pleaded guilty to manslaughter, torture and assault for the Sept. 28. 2016, crime.

According to court records, Green, 49, fatally shot his stepchildren — 19-year-old Chadney Allen and 17-year-old Kara Allen — in front of their mother, Faith Green. Faith Green was stabbed and shot but survived the attack inside the couples’ Dearborn Heights residence.

Green’s own daughters — Kaleigh, 4, and Koi Green, 5 — both died from asphyxiation caused by carbon monoxide poisoning. Records verify that Green placed them in a car; toxic fumes from the tailpipe were routed into the vehicle through a plastic hose.

Afterwards, Green moved his daughters’ bodies into their beds.

Green called 911 not long after the murders and admitted he had killed his entire family. Police found him waiting for them on his front porch.

Inside, officers found Faith Green bound with duct tape and zip ties. Green cut his wife’s face with a box cutter before shooting her foot. He shot his two stepdaughters multiple times as their mother watched.

According to court records obtained by PEOPLE, Faith Green had filed for divorce a month before the murders, citing a “breakdown in the marriage relationship.”

Green pleaded no contest to his first wife’s 1991 murder. He was released in 2008.

Green will be sentenced on March 1.


(Yahoo News)


"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?
2/17/2017 5:28:43 PM

Woman arrested in death of Kim Jong Un's half brother

Updated 0127 GMT (0927 HKT) February 16, 2017

Officials: Kim Jong Un's half-brother murdered 02:23


Hong Kong (CNN)
A woman has been arrested in connection with the death of Kim Jong Un's half brother, Malaysian police said.

She was detained Wednesday at Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur International Airport carrying a Vietnamese travel document.
    Earlier, South Korea's intelligence committee said two Asian women were suspected of killing Kim Jong Nam, who died soon after being attacked Monday at the same airport.
    Investigators are awaiting the results of an autopsy on his body.
    Kim is believed to have been poisoned, South Korea's National Assembly Intelligence Committee Chairman Lee Cheol Woo told a press briefing Wednesday.
    Lee did not say how Kim was poisoned or how South Korea obtained the information. Kim's death has not been publicized in North Korea and is unlikely to be, given political sensitivities, according to CNN's Will Ripley, who is in Pyongyang.
    Kim was boarding a flight to the island of Macau, a Chinese territory, to visit his family when he was attacked, Lee said.
    He was spotted dining at one of Macau's ritzy hotels a little more than a week ago, a restaurant employee said.
    Kim went to a counter at the Kuala Lumpur airport asking for help, the Royal Malaysia Police said.
    A Malaysian official told CNN that he was then taken to an airport clinic, which decided to send him to the hospital. He died en route.
    "The deceased ... felt like someone grabbed or held his face from behind," Selangor State Criminal Investigations Department Chief Fadzil Ahmat told Reuters.
    South Korea's Unification Ministry said Wednesday it was working with Malaysian authorities, while the acting leader discussed the death at a National Security Council meeting.
    The North Korean Embassy in Malaysia said it had no information about Kim's death when contacted by CNN, but a car with a North Korean flag was seen entering the hospital mortuary, where Kim's body is believed to be held.

    Unsubstantiated reports

    Unsubstantiated reports of how Kim was attacked have circulated, but Malaysian police are providing few details.
    The Malaysian inspector general of police said in a statement Tuesday the deceased North Korean man was traveling with a passport bearing the name Kim Chol.
    Kim, who was in his mid-40s, had a reputation for traveling on fake passports -- doing so may have even been tied to his fall from grace in his home country.
    Kim was the most public of all Kim Jong Il's sons before half brother Kim Jong Un took power. It was reported he lost favor with his father after he used a forged document to try to visit Tokyo Disneyland in 2001.
    His absence from his father's funeral in 2011 fueled rumors he had been banished from North Korea.

    Image as a playboy

    Kim Jong Nam was the son of Kim Jong Il and Song Hye Rim, one of the late ruler's favored mistresses.
    Kim Jong Un, the youngest son, was born to another mistress, Ko Yong Hui.
    Kim Jong Nam didn't believe his half brother had the ability to lead North Korea properly, according to Yoji Gomi, author of the 2012 book "My Father, Kim Jong Il, and Me."
    But he never actually met Kim Jong Un due to the North Korean practice of raising potential successors separately.
    After his departure from North Korea, the older Kim became known as an overweight and careless playboy, who was willing to speak out about his family.
    "He spoke out against his father's 'military first' policy," Gomi told CNN in 2012. "He wants North Korea to embrace economic reform and open its doors."

    "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?
    2/17/2017 5:50:43 PM

    In 'liberated' Mosul, residents say danger remains

    Marisol RIFAI
    AFP


    While previous urban battlefields in Iraq's war against IS were largely depopulated, Mosul still sheltered a million-plus people when an offensive to retake it was launched (AFP Photo/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE)

    Mosul (Iraq) (AFP) - The Iraqi forces that retook east Mosul from jihadists last month have moved on to their next battle, leaving a security vacuum that has residents complaining of a job half-done.

    The traffic jams in the streets and the crowds swarming the shops of the eastern neighbourhoods that the Islamic State group controlled only weeks ago are deceptive, residents say.

    "Everything looks like it's back to normal but people know that bloodshed could be just around the corner and they live in constant fear," said Omar, from a civil society group that has been trying to breathe life back into Iraq's second city.

    "Everybody is talking about the liberation but Daesh (IS) is still here," the 25-year-old said. "Their drones are flying above our heads, target our homes, our hospitals and our mosques."

    The Joint Operations Command that has been coordinating Iraq's fightback since IS seized a third of the country in 2014 announced that the east bank of Mosul had been "fully liberated" on January 24.

    The Iraqi tricolour has replaced IS's black flag above official buildings but the atmosphere is tense.

    "The suicide car bombs are back and that brings back memories of Daesh," said Umm Sameer, a resident of Al-Zuhoor neighbourhood.

    On February 9, a suicide bomber blew himself up at a popular restaurant in east Mosul, injuring several people, according to officials.

    Contrary to some expectations, roughly three-quarters of the population of east Mosul stayed home and weathered the fighting that engulfed their neighbourhoods when elite forces from the Counter-Terrorism Service (CTS) punched into the city to take on the jihadists.

    - Fresh displacement -

    Yet some of them are leaving now, despite the fact that their areas have been officially liberated.

    Nuriya Bashir, in her sixties, left her home with her children and grandchildren this week.

    "My daughter's husband was killed when a drone dropped a grenade. Daesh knew where he was that evening. The sleeper cells are everywhere," she said, speaking from the Hasansham displacement camp east of Mosul where she and her family found shelter.

    "Just after the announcement that east Mosul was liberated, many displaced people left the camp to return to their homes," said camp manager Rizqar Obeid.

    "But over the past few days, we have received around 40 families who couldn't bear the situation in the city any longer," he said.

    There are security forces deployed in east Mosul but Umm Sameer accused them of "negligence" in their work.

    CTS fighters have now moved out to prepare for an assault on the city's west bank.

    "We have handed over this part of the city to the army," Abdulwahab al-Saadi, a top CTS commander, told AFP.

    He admitted that insecurity remained in the east and blamed it on the fact that "jihadists on the west side continue to fire mortar rounds."

    - IS still here -

    But weaponised drones and mortar fire are not the only security concerns for east Mosul residents.

    "The security shortcomings in east Mosul are obvious," said Amer al-Bek, an activist with a local civil society group, criticising "the lack of professionalism of some of the security forces."

    Residents of four villages that lie just north of the city limits on the east bank of the Tigris have said that armed IS fighters are still in their midst.

    "There are around 100 of them in the area, walking around freely with their weapons and combat gear," said one resident who would not give his name for fear of retribution, adding that the jihadists had recently executed several villagers.

    "Why is the army not liberating our villages," another resident asked.

    In the city proper, the number of residents who stayed on during the fighting made effective screening almost impossible.

    The Institute for the Study of War said last week that the "inability to find a suitable hold force is also creating openings for IS to reinfiltrate, as shown by several attacks in eastern Mosul."

    Besides the immediate impact on the lives of civilians, the think tank warned that such "re-infiltrations" could also affect upcoming efforts to retake the west side, "forcing the ISF (Iraqi security forces) to fight on two fronts to recapture the city."


    (Yahoo News)


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

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