surveillance sees woman burned alive in elevator

The surveillance video, its images disturbingly clear, ends with a woman being burned alive in the elevator of a Brooklyn apartment building on SaturdayBut in the beginning, it seemed routine: a man dressed as an exterminator, wearing gloves, with a protective mask perched atop his head and carrying a container on his back, takes the elevator to the fifth floor.

http://liarcatchers.com/electronic_surveillance.html

Sometime later, an older woman carrying groceries took the same ride to the fifth floor.

Two cameras recording from different positions, one inside the small tiled elevator and another in a hallway, show the doors open and the man with the container approach. The man, who appeared to be in his 40s, first sprays the woman in the face, then douses her methodically from head to toe with what a city official said was an accelerant as she turned and cowered, raising her hands, the grocery bags hanging from her wrists.

Having cornered the woman in the elevator, the man struggles to light a barbecue lighter. He then ignites a Molotov cocktail — a wine or Champagne bottle filled with accelerant with a rag stuffed in its neck. He retreats and comes back again, spraying more liquid on his victim. And suddenly the silent video goes white with a conflagration in the small space: the woman, on fire.

Investigators are poring over the footage, a disturbing silent film capturing what is perhaps a singular act of violence: a woman being burned alive.

The crime took place Saturday afternoon at 203 Underhill Avenue in Prospect Heights. Detectives and fire marshals were reviewing the footage and interviewing neighbors.

The police identified the victim as Doris Gillespie, 64. One neighbor said that Ms. Gillespie was a postal worker.

As of early Sunday morning, there had been no arrests, but investigators were already following a major lead: the man appeared to have been burned on his face and hands. Investigators immediately began looking for him at local hospitals.

The Police Department released photographs of the suspect, taken from the video, late Saturday night.

Firefighters and the police arrived about 4 p.m. after callers to 911 reported fire and smoke in the building, unaware of what had happened in the elevator.

A resident of the fifth floor, John, 29, who would not give his last name, said he had heard screaming and saw smoke coming from the elevator. “I thought it was kids because the screaming was high-pitched,” he said. “I looked out the door and saw smoke coming out of the elevator.”

Residents were evacuated from the building after the fire. Hours later, some, like Maria Daley, wept while sitting on a city bus that had been provided for the displaced tenants. “She was my friend,” Ms. Daley said. “I just spoke to her yesterday.”

Another neighbor, Heidi Matthews, 46, said Ms. Gillespie had given her a plant on Mother’s Day. “It’s hard to believe somebody would do that to her,” she said.

“We all loved her,” Ms. Matthews said. “She was a part of this neighborhood for years.”

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Travis Wayne Millar charged with identity theft

On October 31st, 2011 the City of Bend Police Department responded to the Shell Stop and Go, located at 2699 NE Highway 20, for the report of a person using a stolen credit card to make a purchase. Officers were able to stop the individual and identified him as Travis Millar. During this investigation, several stolen items were located on Millar and within the vehicle he was operating. These items included checkbooks, credit cards, identification cards, tools and clothing. Millar was lodged at the Deschutes County Jail on one count of Identity Theft and Possession of Stolen Property.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Detectives with the Bend and Redmond Police Departments were able to identify this property as either being purchased fraudulently with stolen credit cards or property taken from previously reported thefts inside the City of Bend and the City of Redmond.

In the afternoon of December 13th, 2011, the Bend Police Department responded to a call from Macy’s, located at 3188 North Highway 97. Macy’s employees reported a suspicious male inside the store was using a stolen credit card for a purchase. This investigation revealed Millar was the person using the stolen credit card and stolen identification. Millar was taken into custody without incident and transported to the Deschutes County Jail, where he was lodged on multiple counts of Forgery II, Fraudulent Use of a Credit Card, Identity Theft, Theft II, Theft III, Computer Crime, Theft by Receiving, Attempted Fraudulent Use of a Credit Card and Attempted Identity Theft.

At the time of this release, the City of Bend Police Department, with the assistance of the Redmond Police Department, has been able to clear no less than six cases within the City of Bend and six cases from the City of Redmond. This investigation is on-going and has been referred to the Deschutes County District Attorney’s Officer for other charges, to include Aggravated Identity Theft.

Charges:

1. Forgery II x 7 counts
2. Fraudulent Use of a Credit Card x 24 counts
3. Identity Theft x 32 counts
4. Theft II x 11 counts
5. Theft III x 19 counts
6. Computer Crime x 24 counts
7. Theft by Receiving
8. Attempted Fraudulent Use of a Credit Card
Attempted Identity Theft

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background check read improperly

SAN FRANCISCO A clerical error landed Kathleen Casey on the streets.

Out of work two years, her unemployment benefits exhausted, in danger of losing her apartment, Casey applied for a job in the pharmacy of a Boston drugstore. She was offered $11 an hour. All she had to do was pass a background check.

http://liarcatchers.com/background_checks.html
It turned up a 14-count criminal indictment. Kathleen Casey had been charged with larceny in a scam against an elderly man and woman that involved forged checks and fake credit cards.

There was one technicality: The company that ran the background check, First Advantage, had the wrong woman. The rap sheet belonged to Kathleen A. Casey, who lived in another town nearby and was 18 years younger.

Kathleen Ann Casey, would-be pharmacy technician, was clean.

“It knocked my legs out from under me,” she says.

The business of background checks is booming. Employers spend at least $2 billion a year to look into the pasts of their prospective employees. They want to make sure they’re not hiring a thief, or worse.

But it is a system weakened by the conversion to digital files and compromised by the welter of private companies that profit by amassing public records and selling them to employers. These flaws have devastating consequences.

It is a system in which the most sensitive information from people’s pasts is bought and sold as a commodity.

A system in which computers scrape the public files of court systems around the country to retrieve personal data. But a system in which what they retrieve isn’t checked for errors that would be obvious to human eyes.

A system that can damage reputations and, in a time of precious few job opportunities, rob honest workers of a chance at a new start. And a system that can leave the Kathleen Caseys of the world — the innocent ones — living in a car.

Those are the results of an investigation by The Associated Press that included a review of thousands of pages of court filings and interviews with dozens of court officials, data providers, lawyers, victims and regulators.

“It’s an entirely new frontier,” says Leonard Bennett, a Virginia lawyer who has represented hundreds of plaintiffs alleging they were the victims of inaccurate background checks. “They’re making it up as they go along.”

Two decades ago, if a county wanted to update someone’s criminal record, a clerk had to put a piece of paper in a file. And if you wanted to read about someone’s criminal past, you had to walk into a courthouse and thumb through it. Today, half the courts in the United States put criminal records on their public websites.

Digitization was supposed to make criminal records easier to access and easier to update. To protect privacy, laws were passed requiring courts to redact some information, such as birth dates and Social Security numbers, before they put records online. But digitization perpetuates errors.

“There’s very little human judgment,” says Sharon Dietrich, an attorney with Community Legal Services in Philadelphia, a law firm focused on poorer clients. Dietrich represents victims of inaccurate background checks. “They don’t seem to have much incentive to get it right.”

Dietrich says her firm fields about twice as many complaints about inaccurate background checks as it did five years ago.

The mix-ups can start with a mistake entered into the logs of a law enforcement agency or a court file. The biggest culprits, though, are companies that compile databases using public information.

In some instances, their automated formulas misinterpret the information provided them. Other times, as Casey discovered, records wind up assigned to the wrong people with a common name.

Another common problem: When a government agency erases a criminal conviction after a designated period of good behavior, many of the commercial databases don’t perform the updates required to purge offenses that have been wiped out from public record.

It hasn’t helped that dozens of databases are now run by mom-and-pop businesses with limited resources to monitor the accuracy of the records.

The industry of providing background checks has been growing to meet the rising demand for the service. In the 1990s, about half of employers said they checked backgrounds. In the decade since Sept. 11, that figure has grown to more than 90 percent, according to the Society for Human Resource Management.

To take advantage of the growing number of businesses willing to pay for background checks, hundreds of companies have dispatched computer programs to scour the Internet for free court data.

But those data do not always tell the full story.

Gina Marie Haynes had just moved from Philadelphia to Texas with her boyfriend in August 2010 and lined up a job managing apartments. A background check found fraud charges, and Haynes lost the offer.

A year earlier, she had bought a used Saab, and the day she drove it off the lot, smoke started pouring from the hood. The dealer charged $291.48 for repairs. When Haynes refused to pay, the dealer filed fraud charges.

Haynes relented and paid after six months. Anyone looking at Haynes’ physical file at the courthouse in Montgomery County, Pa., would have seen that the fraud charge had been removed. But it was still listed in the limited information on the court’s website.

The website has since been updated, but Haynes, 40, has no idea how many companies downloaded the outdated data. She has spent hours calling background check companies to see whether she is in their databases. Getting the information removed and corrected from so many different databases can be a daunting mission. Even if it’s right in one place, it can be wrong in another database unknown to an individual until a prospective employer requests information from it. By then, the damage is done.

“I want my life back,” Haynes says.

Haynes has since found work as a customer service manager, but she says that is only because her latest employer didn’t run a background check.

Hard data on errors in background checks are not public. Most leading background check companies contacted by the AP would not disclose how many of their records need to be corrected each year.

A recent class-action settlement with one major database company, HireRight Solutions Inc., provides a glimpse at the magnitude of the problems.

The settlement, which received tentative approval from a federal judge in Virginia last month, requires HireRight to pay $28.4 million to settle allegations that it didn’t properly notify people about background checks and didn’t properly respond to complaints about inaccurate files. After covering attorney fees of up to $9.4 million, the fund will be dispersed among nearly 700,000 people for alleged violations that occurred from 2004 to 2010. Individual payments will range from $15 to $20,000.

In an effort to prevent bad information from being spread, some courts are trying to block the computer programs that background check companies deploy to scrape data off court websites. The programs not only can misrepresent the official court record but can also hog network resources, bringing websites to a halt.

Virginia, Arizona and New Mexico have installed security software to block automated programs from getting to their courts’ sites. New Mexico’s site was once slowed so much by automated data-mining programs that it took minutes for anyone else to complete a basic search. Since New Mexico blocked the data miners, it now takes seconds.

In the digital age, some states have seen an opportunity to cash in by selling their data to companies. Arizona charges $3,000 per year for a bundle of discs containing all its criminal files. The data includes personal identifiers that aren’t on the website, including driver’s license numbers and partial Social Security numbers.

Other states, exasperated by mounting errors in the data, have stopped offering wholesale subscriptions to their records.

North Carolina, a pioneer in marketing electronic criminal records, made $4 million selling the data last year. But officials discovered that some background check companies were refusing to fix errors pointed out by the state or to update stale information.

State officials say some companies paid $5,105 for the database but refused to pay a mandatory $370 monthly fee for daily updates to the files — or they would pay the fee but fail to run the update. The updates provided critical fixes, such as correcting misspelled names or deleting expunged cases.

North Carolina, which has been among the most aggressive in ferreting out errors in its customers’ files, stopped selling its criminal records in bulk. It has moved to a system of selling records one at a time. By switching to a more methodical approach, North Carolina hopes to eliminate the sloppy record-keeping practices that has emerged as more companies have been allowed to vacuum up massive amounts of data in a single sweep.

Virginia ended its subscription program. To get full court files now, you have to go to the courthouse in person. You can get abstracts online, but they lack Social Security numbers and birth dates, and are basically useless for a serious search.

North Carolina told the AP that taxpayers have been “absorbing the expense and ill will generated by the members of the commercial data industry who continue to provide bad information while falsely attributing it to our courts’ records.”

North Carolina identified some companies misusing the records, but other culprits have gone undetected because the data was resold multiple times.

Some of the biggest data providers were accused of perpetuating errors. North Carolina revoked the licenses of CoreLogic SafeRent, Thomson West, CourtTrax and five others for repeatedly disseminating bad information or failing to download updates.

Thomson West says it was punished for two instances of failing to delete outdated criminal records in a timely manner. Such instances are “extremely rare” and led to improvements in Thomson West’s computer systems, the company said.

CoreLogic says its accuracy standards meet the law, and it seemed to blame North Carolina, saying that the state’s actions “directly contributed to the conditions which resulted in the alleged contract violations,” but it would not elaborate. CourtTrax did not respond to requests for comment.

Other background check companies say the errors aren’t always their fault.

LexisNexis, a major provider of background checks and criminal data, said in a statement that any errors in its records “stem from inaccuracies in original source material — typically public records such as courthouse documents.”

But other problems have arisen with the shift to digital criminal records. Even technical glitches can cause mistakes.

Companies that run background checks sometimes blame weather. Ann Lane says her investigations firm, Carolina Investigative Research, in North Carolina, has endured hurricanes and ice storms that knocked out power to her computers and took them out of sync with court computers.

While computers are offline, critical updates to files can be missed. That can cause one person’s records to fall into another person’s file, Lane says. She says glitches show up in her database at least once a year.

Lane says she double-checks the physical court filings, a step she says many other companies do not take. She calls her competitors’ actions shortsighted.

“A lot of these database companies think it’s ‘ka-ching ka-ching ka-ching,'” she says.

Data providers defend their accuracy. LexisNexis does more than 12 million background checks a year. It is one of the world’s biggest data providers, with more than 22 billion public records on its own computers.

It says fewer than 1 percent of its background checks are disputed. That still amounts to 120,000 people — more than the population of Topeka, Kan.

But there are problems with those assertions. People rarely know when they are victims of data errors. Employers are required by law to tell job applicants when they’ve been rejected because of negative information in a background check. But many do not.

Even the vaunted FBI criminal records database has problems. The FBI database has information on sentencings and other case results for only half its arrest records. Many people in the database have been cleared of charges. The Justice Department says the records are incomplete because states are inconsistent in reporting the conclusions of their cases. The FBI restricts access to its records, locking out the commercial database providers that regularly buy information from state and county government agencies.

Data providers are regulated by the Federal Trade Commission and required by federal law to have “reasonable procedures” to keep accurate records. Few cases are filed against them, though, mostly because building a case is difficult.

A series of breaches in the mid-2000s put the spotlight on data providers’ accuracy and security. The fallout was supposed to put the industry on a path to reform, and many companies tightened security. But the latest problems show that some accuracy practices are broken.

The industry says it polices itself and believes the approach is working. Mike Cool, a vice president with Acxiom Corp., a data wholesaler, praised an accreditation system developed by an industry group, the National Association of Professional Background Screeners. Fear of litigation keeps the number of errors in check, he says.

“The system works well if everyone stays compliant,” Cool says.

But when the system breaks down, it does so spectacularly.

Dennis Teague was disappointed when he was rejected for a job at the Wisconsin state fair. He was horrified to learn why: A background check showed a 13-page rap sheet loaded with gun and drug crimes and lengthy prison lockups. But it wasn’t his record. A cousin had apparently given Teague’s name as his own during an arrest.

What galled Teague was that the police knew the cousin’s true identity. It was even written on the background check. Yet below Teague’s name, there was an unmistakable message, in bold letters: “Convicted Felon.”

Teague sued Wisconsin’s Department of Justice, which furnished the data and prepared the report. He blamed a faulty algorithm that the state uses to match people to crimes in its electronic database of criminal records. The state says it was appropriate to include the cousin’s record, because that kind of information is useful to employers the same way it is useful to law enforcement.

Teague argued that the computers should have been programmed to keep the records separate.

“I feel powerless,” he says. “I feel like I have the worst luck ever. It’s basically like I’m being punished for living right.”

One of Teague’s lawyers, Jeff Myer of Legal Action of Wisconsin, an advocacy law firm for poorer clients, says the state is protecting the sale of its lucrative databases.

“It’s a big moneymaker, and that’s what it’s all about,” Myer says. “The convenience of online information is so seductive that the record-keepers have stopped thinking about its inaccuracy. As valuable as I find public information that’s available over the Internet, I don’t think people have a full appreciation of the dark side.”

In court papers, Wisconsin defended its inclusion of Teague’s name in its database because his cousin has used it as an alias.

“We’ve already refuted Mr. Teague’s claims in our court documents,” said Dana Brueck, a spokeswoman for Wisconsin’s Department of Justice. “We’re not going to quibble with him in the press.”

A Wisconsin state judge plans to issue his decision in Teague’s case by March 11.

The number of people pulling physical court files for background checks is shrinking as more courts put information online. With fewer people to control quality, accuracy suffers.

Some states are pushing ahead with electronic records programs anyway. Arizona says it hasn’t had problems with companies failing to implement updates.

Others are more cautious. New Mexico had considered selling its data in bulk but decided against it because officials felt they didn’t have an effective way to enforce updates.

Meanwhile, the victims of data inaccuracies try to build careers with flawed reputations.

Kathleen Casey scraped by on temporary work until she settled her lawsuit against First Advantage, the background check company. It corrected her record. But the bad data has come up in background checks conducted by other companies.

She has found work, but she says the experience has left her scarred.

“It’s like Jurassic Park. They come at you from all angles, and God knows what’s going to jump out of a tree at you or attack you from the front or from the side,” she says. “This could rear its ugly head again — and what am I going to do then?”

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peophile denied release

BARNSTABLE — Convicted pedophile William F. Mulcahy will remain in a treatment center indefinitely after a jury declared him a sexually dangerous person.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

At 80, Mulcahy, a former Sandwich resident, is probably the oldest person to go to trial at Barnstable Superior Court on a sexual dangerousness commitment petition, Cape and Islands First Assistant District Attorney Brian Glenny said.

“I think it’s absolutely appropriate given the facts of the matter,” Glenny said.

Mulcahy was convicted in February 2004 for six counts of rape of a child. His victims included a girl and a boy.

He finished serving a prison sentence in November 2010 but has remained incarcerated while the DA’s office established the groundwork for the civil commitment proceeding.

With the jury’s decision Thursday, Mulcahy was committed to the Massachusetts Treatment Center for a period of one day to life, with periodic reviews.

The first review most likely won’t take place for 3½ years, Mulcahy’s attorney William Korman of Boston said.

The commitment “is exceptionally unusual” for a man Mulcahy’s age, Korman said. At age 80, Mulcahy’s likelihood of reoffending “is almost zero,” he said.

After hearing from expert witnesses, the jury decided otherwise, Glenny said.

“The bottom line is (Mulcahy) was accused and convicted of crimes at an older age,” he said.

Mulcahy, a former state department official, has admitted to a lengthy history of abuse. He was put on trial after a mother found him raping her 8-year-old daughter.

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body guard has head cut off

The badly mutilated body of a security guard working at the Pacific Mall in southwest Delhi was found in Dwarka area on Friday morning.

The police said the deceased, identified as Suraj Paswan, a native of Bihar, was found lying in a pool of blood near a liquor vend located on a service road in Sector 20, Dwarka, by a local who made a call to the police control room at around 10.30 am.

http://liarcatchers.com/executive_protection.html

The victim, whose head was severed from the body, was taken to a nearby hospital; where doctors declared him brought dead. It took the police officials some time before the victim was identified and his family members were asked to come to Dwarka for his identification.
Police sources said the victim, who lived in Raghubir Nagar area in the city, had gone missing since Thursday evening after which his family had registered a police complaint. “The assailants had used a sharp weapon to commit the crime. There were multiple injuries on his body which suggests that he had put up resistance,” a source said.
Deputy commissioner of police (southwest) A.K. Ojha said that the motive behind the crime is not clear since some of his belongings may have gone missing.
“His family members are in a shock. Their statements have not been recorded so far. However, it seems that the deceased was killed over personal enmity but all angles are being investigated to crack the case,” he said.
The police has registered a case of murder at the Dwarka police station but no arrests have been made so far.

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Dad turns in son after seeing surveillance photo

As 73-year-old Walton Duplantis scanned a Times-Picayune newspaper article on Nov. 18 about the robbery of a Whitney National Bank branch in Metairie the day before, he lightheartedly told his son, David Duplantis, that he looked like the suspect in the surveillance photo. “He said, ‘You think I’m that fat?'” Walton Duplantis recalled. “I said, ‘No, I’m just kidding you.'”

http://liarcatchers.com/electronic_surveillance.html

When Walton Duplantis saw this surveillance photo of the suspect in the Nov. 17 robbery of a Whitney Bank in Metairie, he thought it looked like his son, David.
But the observation, first made in jest, became uncomfortably more difficult to ignore in the following days as his son avoided the Metairie home they shared, eventually fleeing to California.

“You get a gut feeling about some things,” Walton Duplantis said Friday by telephone, the day a federal grand jury charged David Duplantis, 52, with robbing that very same Whitney Bank branch, at 2200 Clearview Parkway. He surrendered to authorities in California last month.

It was Walton Duplantis and his other son, Stephen, who contacted FBI investigators and identified David Duplantis as the suspected robber in the surveillance photo. Turning in his son was a heart-wrenching decision.

“It had to be done,” he said. “I’ve been working all my life. I’m still working and I don’t believe in taking anything that doesn’t belong to you.”

Walton Duplantis isn’t sure what drove his son — a former security guard and Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office deputy – to rob a bank.

David Duplantis’ grandfather served with the New Orleans Police Department for 38 years, and he had always wanted to be a lawman. He joined the Sheriff’s Office in 1997 and worked in the Jefferson Parish Correctional Center in Gretna, according to Col. John Fortunato, spokesman for the department.

Duplantis resigned from the agency in 2005 while under investigation. Fortunato did not provide any other details about his departure.

Walton Duplantis said his son achieved the rank of lieutenant before leaving JPSO. He then found work as a security guard at Tulane Medical Center. But he tore his left rotator cuff while subduing an unruly patient.

Complications from surgery left him without the ability to grasp things with his hand. He received a settlement that was quickly depleted. His father said he was also suffering from diabetes and vision loss from macular degeneration.

David Duplantis had fallen on tough times.

“He had been staying with me for about a month or so. He had no money coming in, and he was having trouble finding a job,” Walton Duplantis said.

But that was no excuse for stealing, he said. Three days after the robbery, Walton Duplantis reread the article and noticed that the suspect fled in a gray Nissan Altima. David Duplantis had recently borrowed the same color and type of car from a friend, according to court records. Walton Duplantis also noted that his son had shaved his beard right around the time of the robbery.

Walton Duplantis shared his concerns with his son, Stephen, a preacher who lives near Fairbanks, Alaska. Stephen Duplantis found the surveillance photos online and took a look for himself.

“He called me up and he said, ‘Dad, that’s David,'” Walton Duplantis recalled.

David Duplantis didn’t contact his father again until about six days after the robbery. He had gone to California to see his daughter and granddaughter. Walton Duplantis said his son admitted to the robbery and agreed to surrender to authorities that evening.

David Duplantis was being held in a correctional facility there on Friday. It could be six weeks before he is returned to the New Orleans area.

“It’s hard to describe how I feel. He’s my son and I love him,” Walton Duplantis said. “”I’m sure he’s going to be angry with me for the rest of his life, but I’m sorry. That’s not the way he was raised.”

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NYPD cadet involved in identity theft

An NYPD cadet was arrested Wednesday for stealing his mother’s credit card as part of a $13 million identity theft ring, authorities said.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Raymond Gumti, 23, is accused of taking his mom’s TD Bank card and PIN numbers and using them to create a counterfeit credit card.

He put the phony card in the name of another defendant who was indicted as a shopper in the scheme and racked up nearly $13,000 in unauthorized charges at stores like Apple, Louis Vuitton and Bloomingdales, a spokesman for the Queen’s District Attorney’s Office said.

Gumti was arraigned on charges of grand larceny, criminal possession of a forged instrument, falsifying business records and criminal facilitation on Wednesday and released on $2,5000 bail, officials said.

The suspect’s mom, Patricia Gumti, 51, reached by phone at her son’s South Ozone Park home, declined to comment.

The five-count indictment could land the cadet – who was set to graduate from the Police Academy on Dec. 22 and has been suspended without pay – up to seven years in prison if he’s convicted.

Last October, 111 suspected crooks were indicted in Queens for their roll in the identity theft ring – the largest in U.S. history according to the DA.

They gang netting more than $13 million used to support lifestyles filled with five-star hotels, shopping sprees and private jets.

These “shoppers” also took the cards to buy high-end designer handbags, expensive jewels and electronics in New York and all over the country including Florida, Massachusetts, and California. The 16-month investigation, coined “Operation Swiper,” found that the ill-gotten goods were often sold over the internet.

In an unrelated case, NYPD civilian employee Todd Barnes, 52, was arrested Tuesday and charged with grand larceny for cashing stolen money orders for $10 a pop, accruing nearly $16,000 over the course of two years, cops said.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/queens/nypd-cadet-arrested-allegedly-stealing-mother-credit-card-a-13-million-id-theft-ring-queens-article-1.992407#ixzz1ghpN5YMl

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Salvation Army Won’t Accept $100k Donation

A Perry private investigator says he’s come across a Will that’s earmarked $100,000 for the Salvation Army. But the Salvation Army won’t accept the money.

“I think it’s ludicrous that any office, any non-for-profit should not want to participate or have gratitude that someone would bring them a large sum of money that would cost them ten percent,” says James Armstrong.

http://liarcatchers.com/public_record_searches.html

James Armstrong is a licensed private investigator. For the last fourteen years, Armstrong has worked cases across the globe, trying to obtain unclaimed assets and return them to their owners…at a fee.

In October, Armstrong says he located a Will, earmarking $100,000 to the Salvation Army.

Armstrong says he tried to give the money to the Salvation Army. But the Salvation Army wouldn’t accept it. The reason why? The Salvation Army is a member of the Association of Fundraising Professionals. And AFP members are not allowed to accept donations with fees attached to them, like the ten percent finders fee Armstrong is requesting.

Armstrong says the finders fees…in this case, $10,000….helps cover some of the costs he endures for locating those assets. But he says the real beneficiary of the money would be the people the Salvation Army is trying to help.

“It would pay for a lot of heat, blankets, beds rent maybe, possibly, buy a lot of food that’s going to waste because of a policy.”

The Salvation Army doesn’t know who’s donating the money…just that Armstrong says he could help them get it.

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Corzine gets served

Former MF Global CEO Jon Corzine was exiting the room during a recess in Thursday’s House Financial Services Committee, when a man attempted to serve him with papers on behalf of one of the firm’s former clients.

CNBC cameras captured a man walking up to Corzine as he exited the hearing room and attempting to serve him with a lawsuit. Corzine told the process server to see his lawyer and kept walking as someone in his party bent over to pick up the documents, which had been put on the ground in the former New Jersey senator and governor’s wake. The network’s Kayla Tausche said the suit is on behalf of a customer who had a $95 million MF Global account, filed in the Southern District of New York.

MF Global Goes Under
Steve Schaefer
Forbes Staff

Where Corzine Is Still Welcome
Emily Lambert
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Earlier during Thursday’s hearing, Corzine reiterated that he never authorized the misuse of customer money, never intended to do so and never said anything that could have been misconstrued to those ends.

http://liarcatchers.com/process_service.html

The testimony comes after CME Group Executive Chairman Terrence Duffy said in a Senate Agriculture Commitee hearing Tuesday that an MF Global employee told CME auditors that Corzine knew about a loan to the brokerage firm’s European subsidiary that came from commingled customer funds. (See “CME Chief Suggests Corzine Knew About Missing Money.”)

In Thursday’s hearing, Corzine said he could not specifically respond to such allegations without understanding their source. Later, once the hearing resumed following the recess, Corzine took umbrage at the conventional wisdom that he was trying to build MF Global into a smaller version of his former company, Goldman Sachs Group. (See “Weekend Reading: The Goldman Saga.”)

There will be no shortage of lawsuits in the wake of MF Global’s collapse, with the firm’s bankruptcy trustee James Giddens having estimated a $1.2 billion shortfall in customer funds. Reuters reported Wednesday that regulators at the CFTC have a sense of all the firm’s transactions and are just sorting out whether anything improper occurred. That was back up for debate Thursday though, after one of the CFTC’s commissioners, Bart Chilton, distanced himself from those claims in a statement that read, in part: “I do not have confidence that we know where all the money went.”

MF Global filed for bankruptcy Oct. 31, after a weekend scramble to sell the business to suitors including Interactive Brokers, fell through largely because a shortfall in customer funds was discovered. (See “Endgame At Hand For MF Global.”)

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Surveillance Drone was “tricked” to land

Iranian electronic warfare specialists were able to “trick” the recently downed U.S. surveillance drone to land on Iran soil intact, Iranian engineers said in an exclusive interview with the Christian Science Monitor on Thursday.
On Monday, U.S. President Barack Obama indicated that the United States had officially requested that Iran return the secret RQ-170 Sentinel drone, after Iranian TV displayed the craft in what they considered to be a great victory.

Speaking with the Christian Science Monitor on Thursday, Iranian military officials said that they were able to cut off communication between the U.S. drone and its operators, and reconfigured the drone’s GPS to make it land where it thought was its home base in Afghanistan.

http://liarcatchers.com/electronic_surveillance.html

“The GPS navigation is the weakest point,” the Iranian military official told the Monitor, calling the downing an “electronic ambush” of secret drone.

“By putting noise [jamming] on the communications, you force the bird into autopilot. This is where the bird loses its brain,” he added.
The engineer added that the Iranians were able to make the drone land “on its own where we wanted it to, without having to crack the remote-control signals and communications” from the US control center.”

Last week, Iranian state television displayed what it said was a downed U.S. surveillance drone, days after U.S. officials expressed concern that Tehran would be able to glean information about a classified military program.

According to the semi-official Fars news agency, in the televised segment, commander of the Revolutionary Guard’s Aerospace Forces Amir Ali Hajizadeh said that Iranian forces uncovered the aircraft as it was about “to infiltrate our country’s airspace for spying missions.”

“[A]fter it entered the Eastern parts of the country, this aircraft fell into the trap of our armed forces and was downed in Iran with minimum damage,” Hajizadeh told Fars.

According to the Iranian military official, the drone was “equipped with highly advanced surveillance, data gathering, electronic communication and radar systems,” saying that “this kind of plane has been designed to evade radar systems and from the view point of technology it is amongst the most recent types of advanced aircraft used by the U.S.”

“The technology used in this aircraft had already been used in B2 and F35 planes,” Hajizadeh added, saying the “aircraft is controlled and guided through satellite link and land stations in Afghanistan and the United States.”

“Military experts are well aware how precious the technological information of this drone is,” Fars quoted Hajizadeh as saying.

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