Pedophile Returns Hockey Awards

The Hockey News says twice-convicted pedophile Graham James has returned a plaque the magazine gave him in his heyday as a junior coach.

The hockey publication declared James “man of the year” at its annual awards luncheon in June 1989.

Columnist Ken Campbell says The Hockey News stripped James of the award when he pleaded guilty last December to the latest sex assault charges against him.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

Campbell says he wrote at the time that James should give back the plaque he received.

Campbell says that happened recently when James approached a longtime NHL scout and asked him to return the plaque to The Hockey News.

James was sentenced last week to two years in jail for sex assaults on retired NHL star Theo Fleury and his cousin Todd Holt when they played junior hockey in the 1980s and ’90s.

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Adultery Workaholics Could Push Spouse into It

When people first get married it’s usually under the premise of being for the long haul with promises to love and cherish each other for the rest of their lives. Fidelity is generally an assumption that’s contained within those promises. But what happens once the honeymoon phase is over and reality sets in? What happens when one spouse is a workaholic and the fire of romance becomes a barely glowing ember? Here are ten reasons why the spouse of a workaholic might look outside the marriage for satisfaction.

Feelings of abandonment – No one likes to feel like they’ve been abandoned. If you’re a workaholic and never home or available, your spouse may very well feel like he or she has been left alone, and in an attempt to remedy those feelings may turn to someone else.
Loneliness – The spouse of a workaholic can become lonely. When you first get married, you don’t expect to have to spend a lot of time alone or that you’ll have to compete with your spouse’s job for their time and attention. When the loneliness gets to be chronic then the situation becomes ripe for adultery.
Pay back – Some may feel wronged by the fact that their spouse is choosing work over their relationship. He or she may choose involvement in an extramarital affair as a way of getting back at their mate.
Friendship – Sometimes a friendship will develop between the spouse of the workaholic and someone else. This friendship can fill a certain need for communication and attention, and before you know it, the connection turns into something more. It may not be an intentional affair, but one that happens as a natural progression of the relationship.
Excitement – Workaholics have their work to keep them busy and entertained. Not so with their spouses. The spouse may go looking for some excitement and find it in a willing sex partner.

http://liarcatchers.com/adultery.html
Not satisfied with home life – It would be difficult to be satisfied with your home life when your spouse is always gone and never available. Some spouses may try to make it work for a while, but after realizing that nothing is changing they may decide to find satisfaction elsewhere.
Lack of sexual satisfaction – A workaholic is most likely going to come home tired and crabby from over working. The last thing they will be interested in is sex. Meanwhile the spouse has to deal with this lack of sexual stimulation night after night. Along with that, the times when there is sexual activity may not be that rewarding. This could cause the spouse to search out a partner who can be more sexually fulfilling.
Boredom – While the workaholic has his or her work to occupy their time, the spouse most likely will get stuck in a boring routine day after day. When boredom sets in, it can create fertile ground for thoughts to occur about roaming in greener fields. In an effort to conquer the boredom the spouse may go seek out thrills with someone else.
Unhappiness – Being the spouse of a workaholic can lead to a lot of personal unhappiness. If the spouse is constantly trying to get the workaholic to be a little more considerate of home life and the marriage, but is continuously met with more of the same, the unhappiness will grow. This in turn can lead to one who strays from the marriage in order to find some kind of happiness elsewhere.
Frustration – A workaholic may not realize how selfish they are being. They may honestly feel that they are doing what’s best for the family. Meanwhile the spouse may be trying to get the message across that the relationship is the more important of the two. As the message continues to fall on deaf ears the frustration will mount. The spouse may initiate an affair out of frustration thinking that infidelity might just be the wakeup call their spouse needs.

Whatever the reason, and there are many, it’s best to seek counseling before choosing to have an affair. If both partners are willing to work together to save the marriage, chances are it can be saved and possibly made even be stronger.

Information provided by http://www.topdatingsites.com/blog/2012/10-reasons-workaholics-might-force-their-spouse-to-adultery/

 

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Fraud Investigation Tax Refunds and Drugs found in Florida

TAMPA —

With tax season in full force, police say tax fraud is continuing full-steam ahead among street criminals.

Detectives investigating suspected drug dealers during the weekend uncovered an income tax refund fraud scheme where hundreds of identities had been stolen, according to Tampa police. Investigators seized an estimated $600,000 worth of pre-loaded debit cards, more than $32,000 in fraudulent tax return checks and nearly $15,000 in cash.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

They also found a cardboard box with ledgers and personal information for hundreds of people, police said.

“This is a perfect example of what we’re up against,” said Detective Sal Augeri, who is overseeing the department’s investigation into the explosion in tax fraud. “Now you have bad guys dealing with the typical crimes that they do, but they also have the added benefit of the added cash surplus of the refund fraud which, in my opinion, makes them more dangerous.”

Tax refund fraud has exploded among street criminals across the U.S., but particularly in the Tampa area in recent years. Known in street parlance as TurboTax for the popular online filing program, the fraud involves the use of stolen Social Security numbers and other information to file tax returns that include falsified income amounts and deductions used to secure fraudulent refunds.

Augeri said the fraud this year is at least as prevalent as it was last year, when authorities say crooks stole hundreds of millions of dollars from federal taxpayers in the Tampa area alone.

According to police, detectives with ROC Squad 334 posed as customers Friday night to buy drugs from three suspects in the 5000 block of East 10th Avenue. Once the men arrived to sell the drugs, officers boxed in the suspects’ vehicle with patrol cars and caught the men after a brief chase, police said.

Officers searching the suspects’ vehicle found 67 TurboTax debit cards, the four fraudulent tax return checks, as well as the cash and the box of ledgers.

Although police estimated the debit cards were preloaded with $600,000 in fraudulent refund money, Augeri said there was really no way to know how much money is on the cards until the information is subpoenaed. “There could be zero on the card,” he said. “There could be up to $10,000 on the card.”

Police said they also found 48.7 grams of powder and rock cocaine, 100 grams of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

Arrested were Jason J. Christopher, 22, of 6216 N. 49th St., Tampa; Sondonnie Christopher, 22, of 7808 Donna Michelle Place No. 104, Tampa; and Damian L. Bowie, 21, of 13122 Leisure Wood Place, Tampa.

The three men were each charged with trafficking in cocaine, possession of marijuana, possession of marijuana with intent to deliver and possession of drug paraphernalia. Jason Christopher and Sondonnie Christopher also were charged with delivery of cocaine.

Augeri said the case was “a good arrest,” but that there is a lot of this type of crime in Tampa. These particular detectives, he said, “hit the mother lode.”

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Wrongful Death Couple arrested in Sexual Homicide

Melissa Jenkins was allegedly murdered by a couple whom she’d somewhat known, and they’ve both been arrested and charged. Allen Prue and his wife Patricia Prue allegedly committed an act that’s as unthinkable as it is rare. It’s not often that couples partake in sexual homicides together, and when they do it’s possible that without immediate apprehension the risk of becoming serial predators rises. It’s reported that Allen Prue “wanted to get a girl,” which led him and his wife to luring the 33-year-old prep school teacher to her demise.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

The disappearance of Melissa Jenkins had lasted less than 24-hours before her body was discovered, but during that time she had been lured out of her vehicle, bound and then brutally beaten and strangled. When her body was discovered there were condoms found near her body.

Allen and Patricia Prue allegedly used a disposable cellphone to call the woman and tell her they had broken down near their home. She shouldn’t have agreed to assist the couple, for this was the beginning of the end for the attractive missing woman. After Allen Prue presumably had his way, sexually, with the woman, he strangled her. She was tied and weighed down with blocks before thrown into a body of water. However Patricia Prue allegedly strangled her a second time to assure that she was in fact dead.

There is currently a second degree murder charge against these animals, and possibly because a first degree charge would be harder to prove. However, it certainly seems like there is more than enough evidence to put this sick couple away for a long time.

It’s so rare for romantic couples to partake in crimes such as these. In fact the times it has occurred, the couples earned notoriety. For example, Paul Bernardino and Karla Homolka will forever be world-notorious for committing several sexual homicides against teen girls in Canada. Hopefully, these two aren’t released like Homolka was!

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Missing Persons Fort Bliss Soldiers

Three people, two of them Fort Bliss soldiers, were reported missing after going on a weekend kayaking trip in New Mexico and not coming back, the New Mexico State Police said on Monday.

The two soldiers were last seen on Saturday when they left the base at Fort Bliss, Texas, according to New Mexico State Police Lt. Robert McDonald.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

They were identified as Spc. Alton Weber and Sgt. Nicholas Mummert from the 4th Brigade, 1st Armored Division.

A third person, civilian Angelica Gonzalez, traveled with the two soldiers and was reported missing by her mother on Monday, McDonald said.

“We’ve activated a search and rescue in that area near Gila River where they went kayaking,” McDonald said.

Windy conditions in the area made the search on Monday difficult, he added, but they expected to launch an aircraft over the area on Tuesday.

A white Suburban believed to be used by the three missing people was found Monday afternoon, but there was “nothing suspicious” surrounding the find, according to McDonald.

The Gila River is a tributary of the Colorado River and flows through the states of New Mexico and Arizona. It is a popular tourist attraction, McDonald said.

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Electronic Surveillance with Facial Recognition

Privacy advocates, brace yourselves – the search capabilities of the latest surveillance technology is nightmare fuel. Hitachi Kokusai Electric recently demonstrated the development of a surveillance camera system capable of searching through 36 million images per second to match a person’s face taken from a mobile phone or captured by surveillance. While the minimum resolution required for a match is 40 x 40 pixels, the facial recognition software allows a variance in the position of the person’s head, such that someone can be turned away from the camera horizontally or vertically by 30 degrees and it can still make a match. Furthermore, the software identifies faces in surveillance video as it is recorded, meaning that users can immediately watch before and after recorded footage from the timepoint.

http://liarcatchers.com/electronic_surveillance.html

This means that the biggest barrier in video surveillance, which is watching hours of video to find what you want, is gone.

The power of the search capabilities is in the algorithms that group similar faces together. When a search is conducted, results are immediately shown as thumbnails, and selecting a thumbnail pulls up the stored footage for review. Because the search results are displayed as a grid, mistaken identifications can be ruled out quickly or verified by pulling up the entire video for more information.

The scenarios that this system could be useful for are endless. The police, for instance, could find individuals from old surveillance video or pick them out of large crowds, whether they are suspects or people who’ve been kidnapped. Or if a retail customer is caught stealing something on camera, the system could pull up footage from each time the customer has been in the store to identify other thefts that went unnoticed.

The company, which specializes in video cameras for the imaging, medical, and security markets, states that the system is ideally suited for large-scale customers, such as law enforcement agencies, transportation centers, and retail centers. The system will be released in the next fiscal year presumably customized to specific customer’s needs. Interested parties have to contact the company directly, which is probably wise in order to control whose hands it ends up in. And this means that soon, the only thing that’s going to be anonymous anymore are the agencies and organizations using the software.

While this news should make anyone concerned about privacy shudder, it really was only a matter of time before something like this was developed. Likewise, it means that competing systems will follow until systems like this are common. So it will be up to legislators to define how the technology can be used legally as with other surveillance systems, like license-plate recognition cameras.

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Insurance Fraud Can Be Deadly

There are sharks on our roads — criminals out to hit you with their vehicles. They’ll smash into your car, fake injuries with the help of crooked doctors and then fraudulently bill insurance companies under the state’s broken no-fault system.

It’s one of the fastest-growing crimes in New York, and most victims never know they were unwitting accomplices to a crime.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

New Yorkers have paid an estimated $1 billion in extra auto-insurance premiums over the last four years because of these scams. As if gas prices aren’t bad enough, fraud is a big reason we now pay 53 percent more than the national average for auto insurance.

Some have lost their lives to these crooks.

Alice Ross, a 71-year-old wife and grandmother, was tragically killed in a staged auto accident in Queens — committed by individuals hoping to cash in on the crash via fraudulent insurance claims.

On this tragic afternoon, the man responsible for the “accident,” in collusion with three others, intentionally hit a car being driven by Mrs. Ross, causing her to lose control of the vehicle and strike a tree, resulting in her death. He was convicted of second-degree manslaughter in Queens Supreme Court.

No-fault-insurance fraud happens far more often than most New Yorkers realize. A study released last year, conducted by the Insurance Research Council, found that nearly a fifth of all no-fault claims in 2010 had elements of fraud.

The costs to the rest of us go beyond higher premiums and more dangerous roads. These fraudulent cases are also clogging our judicial system. One Brooklyn state Supreme Court judge recently called them “the hydrogen bomb that have hit the courts.” The state’s chief justice calls the flood of cases “unsustainable.”

My bill in the state Assembly, supported by groups like New Yorkers Against Insurance Fraud, would impose tough criminal penalties on those who engage in staged accidents or who seek to defraud the system. It would give the system badly needed teeth to dissuade criminal gangs from perpetrating these crimes.

Just last month, authorities charged 36 people with racketeering and money laundering in the largest-ever fraud case involving the state’s no-fault-insurance law. The ring sought to defraud private insurers of more than $279 million — costs that would be passed onto consumers.

Under current law, no-fault insurers must pay up to $50,000 to a victim of an auto accident, regardless of fault, within 30 days. The No-Fault Law requires payment for medical treatment of those involved in car accidents, avoiding the need for claimants to file personal-injury lawsuits to get reimbursed.

While well-intended, these “reforms” invite fraud. Unscrupulous types game the system, arranging fake accidents and filing fake medical reports. Even if insurers learn that an accident was faked, they have no recourse to reclaim that money after the 30-day window. Criminal gangs are using this massive loophole in the law as a cash machine.

Staged auto accidents are serious. They inflict physical and economic harm — and, in the case of my constituent, death. The perps actually prefer to target seniors like Alice Ross, who they believe are less likely to be confrontational or to dispute an accident.

We need to send a clear message to the crooks roving our streets and highways in search of a pay day at our expense. The state Senate has already passed “Alice’s bill”; it’s time to make it “Alice’s law.”

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Wrongful Death After 31 years Suspect Arrested

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — On March 28, Andrew Sanford, 51, of Carmichael, Calif., was arrested on suspicion of the Aug. 14, 1980, murder of 16-year-old Richard Swanson, according to a statement released today by the South Lake Tahoe Police Department.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

The arrest is the result of an ongoing investigation by the South Lake Tahoe Police Department, the El Dorado County District Attorney’s Office, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the California Department of Justice, and the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Office, according to the statement.

“We want to thank the investigators, South Lake Tahoe Police Department and the El Dorado County District’s Attorney’s Office for pursuing this case and making this arrest possible,” Swanson’s parents, Ron and Sharon Swanson, said in the statement. “We have waited 31 years for this day, but we never gave up hope. It has been a long wait, but God told us to be patient and justice would come.”

Swanson’s body was found bound and gagged in the lube room of the South “Y” Shell Service Station at 6:50 a.m. on Aug. 14, 1980.

The murder shook the town.

“I remember it vividly,” said City Councilman Hal Cole. “It changed our little mountain town forever.”

“We were a small town. We didn’t lock our cars. Some of us didn’t lock our houses,” Cole added. “That kind of made us realize we were not as isolated as we thought.”

In 2007, Cole was a member of the City Council that voted to allocate special funds to the police department to continue the investigation into Swanson’s murder.

“I always felt uncomfortable knowing that this was never solved and that the family never knew who did it,” Cole said.

Sanford has been booked into Sacramento County Jail. Bail has not been set.

Specific details of the crime and investigation are not being released at this time, according to the statement.

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Strip Searches Appproved for Any Offense

The Supreme Court on Monday ruled by a 5-to-4 vote that officials may strip-search people arrested for any offense, however minor, before admitting them to jails even if the officials have no reason to suspect the presence of contraband.

http://liarcatchers.com/public_record_searches.html

Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, joined by the court’s conservative wing, wrote that courts are in no position to second-guess the judgments of correctional officials who must consider not only the possibility of smuggled weapons and drugs but also public health and information about gang affiliations.

About 13 million people are admitted each year to the nation’s jails, Justice Kennedy wrote.

Under Monday’s ruling, he wrote, “every detainee who will be admitted to the general population may be required to undergo a close visual inspection while undressed.”

Justice Stephen G. Breyer, writing for the four dissenters, said strip-searches were “a serious affront to human dignity and to individual privacy” and should be used only when there was good reason to do so.

The decision endorses a more recent trend, from appeals courts in Atlanta, San Francisco and Philadelphia, in allowing searches no matter how minor the charge. Some potential examples cited by dissenting judges in the lower courts and by Justice Breyer on Monday included violating a leash law, driving without a license and failing to pay child support.

The Supreme Court case arose from the arrest of Albert W. Florence in New Jersey in 2005. Mr. Florence was in the passenger seat of his BMW when a state trooper pulled his wife, April, over for speeding. A records search revealed an outstanding warrant based on an unpaid fine. (The information was wrong; the fine had been paid.)

Mr. Florence was held for a week in jails in two counties, and he was strip-searched twice. There is some dispute about the details but general agreement that he was made to stand naked in front of a guard who required him to move intimate parts of his body. The guards did not touch him.

“Turn around,” Mr. Florence, in an interview last year, recalled being told by jail officials. “Squat and cough. Spread your cheeks.”

“I consider myself a man’s man,” said Mr. Florence, a finance executive for a car dealership. “Six-three. Big guy. It was humiliating. It made me feel less than a man.”

The federal courts of appeal were divided over whether blanket policies requiring jailhouse strip-searches of people arrested for minor offenses violate the Fourth Amendment, which bars unreasonable searches. At least seven had ruled that such searches were proper only if there was a reasonable suspicion that the arrested person had weapons or contraband.

Justice Kennedy said the most relevant precedent was Bell v. Wolfish, which was decided by a 5-to-4 vote in 1979. It allowed strip-searches of people held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York after “contact visits” with outsiders.

As in the Bell case, Justice Kennedy wrote, “the undoubted security imperatives involved in jail supervision override the assertion that some detainees must be exempt from the more invasive search procedures at issue absent reasonable suspicion of a concealed weapon or other contraband.”

The majority and dissenting opinions drew differing conclusions from the available statistics and anecdotes about the amount of contraband introduced into jails and how much strip-searches add to pat-downs and metal detectors.

“It is not surprising that correctional officials have sought to perform thorough searches at intake for disease, gang affiliation and contraband,” Justice Kennedy wrote. “Jails are often crowded, unsanitary and dangerous places.”

“There is a substantial interest,” he added, “in preventing any new inmate, either of his own will or as a result of coercion, from putting all who live or work at these institutions at even greater risk when he is admitted to the general population.”

In separate concurrences, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. emphasized the limits of the majority opinion. Chief Justice Roberts, quoting from an earlier decision, said that exceptions to Monday’s ruling were still possible “to ensure that we ‘not embarrass the future.’ ”

Justice Alito wrote that different rules may apply for people arrested but not held with the general population or whose detentions had “not been reviewed by a judicial officer.”

In his dissent in the case, Florence v. County of Burlington, No. 10-945, Justice Breyer wrote that the Fourth Amendment should be understood to prohibit strip-searches of people arrested for minor offenses not involving drugs or violence unless officials had a reasonable suspicion that the people to be searched were carrying contraband.

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