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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/9/2017 2:17:21 PM

3,000 people evacuated, helicopters deployed as market outside Moscow erupts in flames (VIDEOS)



© Maxim Blinov / Sputnik

A fire has broken out at a busy building supplies market just outside of Moscow to the north-west. Plumes of black smoke could be seen rising from the site, with around 55,000 square meters (592,000 square feet) of the premises reportedly ablaze.


The popular Sindika market has been on fire since Sunday afternoon.

Around 3,000 people have been evacuated from the site, emergency services reported.

Three people were injured in the fire, having suffered from smoke inhalation. One had to be hospitalized.




Witnesses reported hearing explosions, as TASS news agency, citing sources in emergency services, said several cars exploded in the market’s underground parking.

The “entire parking lot is ablaze,” according to the source.


A large area to the north-west of Moscow has been covered in black smoke, with a number of residential complexes located nearby.



When the fire broke out, customers fled the building in panic, according to eyewitnesses.

Three helicopters have been deployed to deal with the blaze, emergency services reported, adding that around 230 tons of water have been dropped by helicopters on the burning structures.

The firefighters managed to contain the blaze by 11pm local time. It is not yet clear what caused the building to go up in flames. The investigation into the causes of the fire will be led by forensics experts from the Russian Emergencies Ministry.

At least 400 square meters (4,305 feet) of the market building have collapsed, the local emergency services official told Ruptly.

More than 1,200 shops are located on the premises of the construction market, which occupies around 130,000 square meters (32 acres).

The estimated damage from the fire is some 5 billion rubles ($86 million).


More here


(RT)


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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?
10/9/2017 4:35:34 PM
Head, legs of missing journalist Kim Wall found by divers, police say

Updated 2359 GMT (0759 HKT) October 7, 2017



Police say headless torso belongs to journalist 01:01

Copenhagen, Denmark (CNN) Divers have found the head and legs of Swedish journalist Kim Wall, Danish police said Saturday at a news conference.

The freelance journalist went missing after boarding a privately built submarine with its Danish inventor, Peter Madsen, on August 10. She was working on a story.
    Madsen is accused of killing Wall. He denies the allegation and has called her death an accident.
    The police conducted an autopsy on Wall's head and found no sign of cranium fracture or violence, said Jens Moeller Jensen, who is leading the murder investigation for Copenhagen police. Identification was based on dental records from Sweden, he said.
    "We found a bag with Kim Wall's clothing; shirt, skirt, socks and shoes, and also a knife and lead pieces weighing them down," Moeller Jensen said. "Around noon we found a leg, then another leg, and shortly thereafter we found a head, also in a bag weighted down by several metal pieces."
    The submarine dove for several hours overnight from August 10 to 11, during which time police believe Wall's body was cut to pieces, Moeller Jensen said.

    Officers search for missing body parts of Swedish journalist Kim Wall on August 23, close to the site where her torso was found two days earlier.
    Divers continued to search Koege Bay on Saturday for the journalist's arms.
    Police were still working to determine Wall's cause of death, Moeller Jensen said, adding that investigators were focusing on her neck and throat area.
    Wall's headless torso washed up on August 21 on an island near Copenhagen, and investigators were able to match blood in the submarine and torso. The charge sheet alleges Madsen cut Wall's body into pieces, punctured her torso and tied pipes to it to make it sink to the bottom of the sea.

    Madsen: Wall was hit by metal hatch

    Madsen testified in court last month that Wall was hit in the head by 155-pound metal hatch on the submarine and fell into the water, DR reported.
    According to Madsen, Wall was climbing to the top of a platform where he was holding the hatch. He slipped and lost his grip on the hatch, which then hit her on the head, he said. He told the Copenhagen City Court that Wall was badly injured and probably dead.
    The inventor said he panicked and thought about suicide before deciding instead to dump her body at sea and sink the submarine.
    He denied having a saw on his vessel when Wall accompanied him, DR reported.
    Madsen remains in custody while the investigation continues. He has denied accusations that he was responsible for her death.
    Peter Madsen, pictured on August 11, claims Kim Wall died in an accident aboard his submarine.

    Talented writer goes missing

    The submarine was found on August 11, about 15 hours after it had departed Copenhagen. Madsen was rescued from the sinking vessel and brought ashore, where he was picked up by police, but there was no trace of the missing journalist.
    Madsen was later arrested and held in custody on suspicion of killing Wall. The inventor originally claimed he had dropped Wall off on land on the night of August 10, according to a police statement.
    If Madsen is charged with murder and convicted, he faces a sentence of five years to life. The next pre-trial hearing is scheduled for October 31.
    Wall, a graduate of Columbia University and London School of Economics, was based between Beijing and New York. A talented writer, her work appeared in The New York Times, the Guardian and TIME, among publications.
    Correction: This story has been updated to clarify that some of Wall's remains were found in a separate bag from her clothing.

    "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?
    10/9/2017 5:22:27 PM

    Australian police ran world’s biggest child porn site for a year in massive undercover op

    Edited time: 9 Oct, 2017 06:15

    © QueenslandPolice / YouTube

    Task Force Argos, a Queensland police unit, took over ‘Childs Play,’ the world’s biggest child porn exchange, between October 2016 and September 2017, and impersonated the administrators – even posting images themselves – in a bid to catch pedophiles.

    “We don’t create these sites. We do not want them to exist. When we do find them, we infiltrate and get as high as possible in the networks administrative structure to destroy it. But we will never create a forum for child sex offenders,” Jon Rouse, the head of Task Force Argos, which led an operation jointly conducted by the US, Canadian, and European authorities, said in an interview with Norwegian newspaper VG, which investigated and broke the story.

    “Our job is to make sure we play at the same level as the abusers. If we don’t, they will always be one step ahead,”added Rouse.

    ‘Childs Play’ appeared in April 2016 on the dark web – an anonymized part of the internet – with the identities of its operators and the location of its servers concealed, offering its equally anonymous users a feeling of security while posting not only images of child abuse, but underage torture videos and other extreme material.

    The police had identified the administrators of the site – its creator, Canadian Benjamin Faulkner, and his associate, American Patrick Falte – but the real breakthrough came after the arrest of the two men in October 2016. The men, now aged 27, had met up and raped a four-year old girl provided by another site user in the state of Virginia. They have since been sentenced to life behind bars.

    After capturing the pedophiles, officers made them hand over their passwords and other means of administering the site.

    “Once you have control of the site, you can do whatever you want. Then you can move it wherever you want in the world,” said Paul Griffiths, one of the lead investigators.

    The content of the site had been stored on servers of unnamed European countries, but control of the investigation, termed Operation Artemis, were turned to Task Force Argos. Founded in 1997, the unit, which specializes in underage exploitation online, not only had experience of previous stings, but also took advantage of Australian laws which allow police to engage in criminal behavior to catch child predators.

    The task force copied the content of 'Childs Play' to an Australian server, and began posting under the identities of the administrators. One of the established means of showing that the website had not been infiltrated was a monthly post of explicit underage content by the administrators – something police in several countries were not allowed to do, even if they had acquired the handles. But this was no obstacle to Task Force Argos, whose officers posted images to prove their credibility.

    Under police control, 'Childs Play' flourished. The number of registered accounts doubled in 2017 alone, while the number of posts with pornographic pictures tripled during their 11 months in charge.

    But officers told VG that they had homed in on the tens of thousands of active, regular users, and even more importantly, on the 100 or so producers of underage porn, who posted their own original content.

    Their operation was nearly derailed by VG itself. The newspaper had begun its own investigation of 'Childs Play', and managed to figure out that the servers were located in Australia and run by the police. While the journalists raised a number of ethical questions with Task Force Argos about officers operating illegal, and posting images of child abuse, they agreed to hold off publishing until the investigation was complete.

    On September 13, 2017, Childs Play went offline. Australian police say they have evidence for implicating up to 90 forum members, and information has been sent out to teams around the world, with one country working through a list of 900 people they believe should be prosecuted.

    Despite controversy, including from a parent who said her child was used as “bait,” Task Force Argos says it will persist with similar stings.

    “Our team, and units like ours across the world are singularly focused on stopping the sexual abuse of children and we will continue to work together to infiltrate, disrupt and dismantle child sex offender networks like this one,” Rouse said.

    (RT)

    "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?
    10/9/2017 6:41:47 PM

    Sheriff And Deputies Indicted For Locking Down Entire School And Sexually Assaulting Kids

    "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?
    10/10/2017 10:23:27 AM

    At least 10 dead as fires rage in California wine country

    JEFF CHIU and ELLEN KNICKMEYER

    SANTA ROSA, Calif. (AP) — Wildfires whipped by powerful winds swept through California wine country Monday, killing at least 10 people and injuring at least 100, destroying 1,500 homes and businesses and sending thousands fleeing as flames raged unchecked through high-end resorts, grocery stores and tree-lined neighborhoods.

    The fires broke out nearly simultaneously and then exploded overnight, sending residents fleeing as embers rained down and flames raged around them. Two hospitals in Santa Rosa, the largest city in the region with 175,000 people, were forced to evacuate patients.

    Taken as a group, the fires are already among the 10 deadliest in California history, and the death toll is expected to grow.

    Fires from ruptured gas lines dotted the smoky landscapes of blackened Santa Rosa hillsides. Fire trucks raced by smoldering roadside landscaping in search of higher priorities.

    The flames were fickle in some corners of the city. One hillside home remained unscathed while a dozen surrounding it were destroyed.

    One of the homes that was reduced to ash had a Mercedes Benz in the garage. Two cars parked across the street were untouched.

    The large majority of the injured were treated for smoke inhalation, according to St. Joseph Health, which operates hospitals in the Santa Rosa area. Two were in critical condition and one was in serious condition. The number of injured is expected to climb as information comes in for all the other areas affected by the firestorm consuming the state.

    The flames were unforgiving throughout Santa Rosa, torching block after block with little to salvage.

    Hundreds of homes in the Fountain Grove area were leveled by flames so hot they melted the glass off of cars and turned aluminum wheels into liquid. One neighborhood of older homes was scorched, leaving only brick chimneys and downed power lines.

    Residents who gathered at emergency shelters and grocery stores said they were shocked by the speed and ferocity of the flames. They recalled all the possessions they had left behind and were lost.

    "All that good stuff, I'm never going to see it again," said Jeff Okrepkie, who fled his neighborhood in Santa Rosa knowing it was probably the last time he would see his home of the past five years standing.

    His worst fears were confirmed Monday, when a friend sent him a photo of what was left: a smoldering heap of burnt metal and debris.

    In the rush to leave, Okrepkie and his wife were able to gather important documents, photos and mementos, like letters from his wife's late father. Still, Okrepkie was tortured by the things he left behind, including a framed photo of his grandfather that his grandmother had carried with her for a decade after he died.

    Some of the largest of the 14 blazes burning over a 200-mile region were in Napa and Sonoma counties, home to dozens of wineries that attract tourists from around the world. They sent smoke as far south as San Francisco, about 60 miles (96 kilometers) away. The causes of the fires were unknown.

    Winds have posed a challenge to firefighters in the state this year despite a relatively wet winter that followed years of drought. The fires that broke out Sunday burned "at explosive rates" because of 50 mph winds, said Ken Pimlott, director of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

    October has generally been the most destructive time of year for California wildfires. What was unusual Sunday, however, was to have so many fires take off at the same time.

    Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency in Napa, Sonoma, Butte, Lake, Mendocino, Nevada and Yuba counties. Authorities imposed a sunset-to-sunrise curfew in Santa Rosa, saying they were on the lookout for looters.

    The ferocity of the flames forced authorities to focus primarily on getting people out safely, even if it meant abandoning structures to the fire.

    Elsewhere in the state, a fire churning through canyons in hilly neighborhoods of Orange County burned at least half a dozen homes and forced residents of about 1,000 homes to evacuate. Brown also declared a state of emergency for Orange County.

    The inferno in Northern California blackened miles along Highway 12, one of the main gateways into wine country.

    Wooden fence posts and guard rails burned fiercely. Thick smoke roiled from the JR Cohn winery.

    The fires also damaged the Silverado Resort in Napa and a Hilton hotel in Santa Rosa.

    Kim Hoe, a 33-year-old tech worker from Penang, Malaysia, was staying at the Hilton Sonoma Wine Country, which was gutted by flames. He said the power went out around 1 a.m., and he and his colleagues started packing up when someone knocked on the door and told them to run.

    "We just had to run and run. It was full of smoke. We could barely breathe," Hoe said.

    They returned in the morning to find the hotel had been destroyed along with most of their possessions. Hoe was relieved he had taken his passport and a few essential items.

    Santa Rosa lost a Kmart, restaurants, businesses and homes.

    Firefighters rushed to a state home for the severely disabled when flames reached one side of the center's sprawling campus in the historic Sonoma County town of Glen Ellen. Emergency workers leapt from their cars to aid the evacuation.

    Crews got the more than 200 people from the threatened buildings, one firefighter said, as flames closed within a few dozen feet.

    Mike Turpen, 38, was at a bar in Glen Ellen early Monday when a stranger wearing a smoke mask ran in and yelled that there was a fire. Turpen raced home through flames in his Ford F-250.

    "It was like Armageddon was on," Turpen said. "Every branch of every tree was on fire."

    He stayed to try to defend his own rental home.

    By late morning, Turpen, wearing shorts, a kerchief mask and goggles, was the last man standing for miles along one abandoned road. His yard and all those around him were burned, smoking and still flaming in a few spots. But his home was still standing.

    ___

    Knickmeyer reported from Sonoma, California. Associated Press writers Paul Elias, Jocelyn Gecker, Sudhin Thanawala and Juliet Williams in San Francisco, John Antczak in Los Angeles and Martha Bellisle in Seattle contributed to this report.


    (Yahoo News)


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

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