Raging garage fire caught on camera before help arrives

CHULA VISTA (CBS8) – A Chula Vista family is now staying with other family members after a fire tore through part of their home.

Smoke billowing from the house fire at 1680 Country Vista Lane in Chula Vista could be seen for miles away shortly after 5:15p.m. Thursday. Neighbors nearby report feeling the heat from the flames more than fifty-feet away.

Private Investigator Patrick Schneemann stopped taking video during a surveillance job nearby and instead captured video of the fire ripping through the garage, before Chula Vista Firefighters were ever on scene.

“When I rolled up I saw someone who was in the truck was backing out of the driveway the front of the truck was a little bit on fire,” recalls Schneemann.

The front of that truck now features a melted headlight and charred marks from the fire. Another truck parked in the driveway couldn’t be moved in time and was consumed partly by the flames.

The owner of the truck and others in the home weren’t even aware their garage was being taken over by the flames until Donald Wood, a former CAL Fire and Sycuan Wildland Division firefighter, told them.

He noticed the smoke and pulled down the street. He says he told another driver to call 911 and he walked to the front door.

“A lady came out, once she came out I asked if there was anyone else inside and she said her husband was inside,” Wood said.

He adds he went in the home and helped get everyone out. Moments later the first fire trucks arrive and firefighters begin to tackle the blaze.

“Those guys are brave man,” Schneemann says. “They go inside the front door and fought the fire in the garage from inside the house it was pretty scary.

Though the fire primarily stayed in the garage, it was seconds away from spreading further.

“There was fire that was creeping into the eves and going into the 2nd floor,” said Chula Vista Fire Captain John Bates. “We got up inside the attic and stopped it up there before it could run the attic and take off the roof.”

Captain Bates says it’s no surprise to him that a former firefighter played a heroic role to get those inside to safety.

“No, I would be surprised if he didn’t do that.”

News 8 is told the family was renting the home and are now staying with family members.

While fire investigators were at the home Thursday evening, the cause of the fire has not been determined.

http://liarcatchers.com/arson_investigation.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigation | Tagged | Comments Off on Raging garage fire caught on camera before help arrives

Ottawa’s corruption test case

By Bangladeshi standards, the red-brick compound of A.K.M. Mosharraf Hossain is a country estate. A four-foot wall encircles the property in the capital city of Dhaka. The only way inside is past a guard booth and a metal gate that leads to the politician’s roundabout driveway.

But there was no problem gaining admission on May 23, 2005, when two representatives from Niko Resources (NKO-T53.31-3.02-5.36%) , a Canadian natural gas company, arrived at the gate. They were waved through with a brand-new, shiny gift—a black Toyota Land Cruiser. The two Niko officials, both Bangladeshi, stood by while the car keys were handed over to Hossain’s driver. This sort of thing is a routine transaction in many Third World countries—yet this one would go down in legal history.

This past June, slightly more than six years after the delivery of that $190,000 vehicle, lawyers for Niko stood before an Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench judge and, on behalf of the company, pleaded guilty to bribing Hossain, then Bangladesh’s state minister for energy and mineral resources.

The $9.5-million fine Niko agreed to pay was heralded as the arrival of a new era in white-collar law enforcement. The RCMP had officially waded into the shadowy intersection of big business and foreign powers, and enforced the Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act, enacted in 1998. Canadian multinationals were put on notice—just because you are overseas doesn’t mean you aren’t being watched. “Canada and Alberta will not stand by and let this happen,” Steven Johnston, head of Alberta’s special prosecution branch, told Mr. Justice Scott Brooker at the hearing.

But, for about a decade, that’s exactly what government did. The two-hour hearing was a long-fated collision of three dynamic forces—an ambitious and daring company; one of the most corrupt countries in the world; and the international movement to crack down on payoffs.

Still, the hearing only revealed a smidgen of the evidence that the RCMP unearthed. It took the Justice Department and the Mounties a long time to start seriously enforcing Canada’s foreign bribery laws, but once they started digging, it took them to some surprising places—including Parliament Hill.

**********************************************

Niko Resources was built on one thing—the gumption of its two controlling minds.

In a crowded space like oil and gas exploration, where behemoths like Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.B-N63.32-2.12-3.24%) , Exxon (XOM-N71.77-1.77-2.41%) and BP (BP-N37.47-2.08-5.26%) control the global sandbox with an iron fist, lesser players can only thrive where others dare not venture. In Niko’s case, that meant not being shy about exploring countries renowned for corruption and governmental red tape.

The company’s founder, Robert Ohlson, spent the early 1990s combing just such a country, India, for opportunities. Profiles of Ohlson in the media portrayed the University of British Columbia graduate as an adventurous soul, a 6-foot-3 engineer bopping around crowded Indian roads on a moped. (Ohlson passed away in 2004.)

Niko’s executive other half, CEO Ed Sampson, is also tall, with the perpetual dark rims under his eyes that are typical of can-do entrepreneurs. He grew up in rural Melfort, Saskatchewan, launched his own furniture store at the age of 24, and later expanded his small-business empire with a Smitty’s Pancake House franchise. But after dabbling in some local oil and gas plays—investments that connected him with Ohlson—he caught the energy bug.

Around 1995, Sampson sank $10 million into Ohlson’s overseas vision. At the time, Niko was struggling to maintain its listing on the Alberta Stock Exchange. But Sampson’s bold bet would eventually transform him from a small-town retailer into one of Canada’s highest-paid executives, as well as one of its wealthiest citizens.

Thanks to the success of Niko’s Indian gamble, the company’s stock has skyrocketed from about $1 per share to highs of $114 over the past 15 years. As the first North American company to drill in India, a mushrooming economy with one billion potential customers, Niko’s leadership seemed visionary. In a 2005 interview, Sampson summed up the secret of his success: “I think the key is never say ‘never.’ You’ve decided it’s the right way to go, you put your shoulder to the wall and, no matter what negativity might come, if you’re comfortable you’re doing the right thing, you just keep pushing.”

But with its next venture, Niko’s interpretation of “doing the right thing” would become the subject of much scrutiny.

In the late 1990s, the discovery of a massive gas deposit in Bangladesh, India’s poorer neighbour to the east, attracted scores of oil and gas players, including majors such as Mobil and Chevron. Though still relatively unknown, Niko competed alongside the majors for the attention of the Bangladeshi government, then formed by the centre-left Awami League. In 1998, Ohlson told The Globe and Mail that he regularly dropped $10,000 in expenses during each of his frequent trips to Dhaka. Yet these entreaties did not persuade the Bangladeshis. The company was disqualified from bidding on access to gas fields on technical grounds in the late ’90s.

But by 2002—just before Niko was applauded as the biggest gainer on the TSX—the political winds had changed considerably. The recent election of the centre-right Bangladesh Nationalist Party, led by Khaleda Zia, the widow of a former Bangladeshi leader, offered Niko a second chance.

So in April, 2002, Ohlson was back in Dhaka. By design, his visit coincided with a trade mission by a delegation of Canadian politicians. Among them was Liberal MP Mac Harb, a colourful and quirky politician who was a long-time supporter of then-prime minister Jean Chrétien. Harb, a former Ottawa city councillor, had a reputation for speaking his mind, a mind that contained some unusual ideas—including the belief, which he once declared on a talk radio show, that human clones had been created and were walking among us.

Ohlson urged Harb and the rest of the delegation to support a joint-venture agreement between Niko and Bangladesh’s state-owned gas company, BAPEX, to start drilling near a village called Tengratila.

Perhaps Harb was keen on helping a Canadian company deliver a modicum of prosperity to a land of such vast poverty. Perhaps Harb and Ohlson bonded over their shared backgrounds as engineers. Whatever the appeal, the politician soon took a keen interest in the company.

In the autumn of 2003, Harb and Niko both received good news. Chrétien was stepping down as prime minister, but before he did, he made Harb’s long-rumoured appointment to the Senate a reality. And on the other side of the world, the government of Khaleda Zia came around and handed Niko a joint venture agreement with BAPEX. Times were flush: That same year, Ohlson and Sampson landed on a list of Canadian executives with the most generous stock-option packages, each receiving $5.1 million worth.

But the spell of good luck in Bangladesh ended with a bang.

On Jan. 7, 2005, just eight days after the company plunged its first drill bit into one of its fields near Tengratila, the morning sky lit up with fiery orange flames. The ground exploded with such force that it left a crater the size of a baseball field.

Nobody was killed—luckily, the blast occurred before the start of the day at a nearby school. But the village was evacuated, parts of the school were condemned and the fire burned for weeks, wasting millions of dollars’ worth of gas.

**********************************************

Geographically, Bangladesh is cursed. Situated on the largest delta in the world, the country is fertile but flood-ravaged. Every year, the Ganges’ waters sweep over 25% of the country’s land mass, destroying infrastructure, spreading disease and setting back its impoverished masses—a population of more than 160 million.

Corruption in the government is as much a given as spring flooding—and the government of Khaleda Zia, which gave drilling rights to Niko, was more corrupt than most. Zia’s son, Tarique Rahman, was known throughout Dhaka’s coffee shops and slums as “Mr. 10 Per Cent.” His notorious racketeering spawned a small industry of middlemen and lobbyists—mostly his friends—all boasting of access to the Prime Minister’s office and all looking for a cut of the action.

(This rampant corruption has not deterred aid organizations. The country ranks amongst the largest recipients of funding from the Canadian International Development Agency, which, in addition to promoting neonatal health care, fair elections and transparent government, also handed Niko a $67,000 grant in 2001 for helping the Bangladeshi economy to grow.)

Given their low standard of living and dismal prospects, the villagers of Tengratila were not in a mood to forgive and forget when a Western company backfired so spectacularly on their home ground. When Niko’s Canadian executives visited the blast site, they were greeted by mass protests and vociferous demands in the press for compensation.

It was in this hostile climate that Zia’s government was tasked with deciding how Niko should compensate the villagers. It only took a month for it to determine that the blowout was due to the “faulty and negligent operation of Canadian company Niko Resources” and that the government had the power to order payments. The decision about how much, however, would be heavily influenced by the say of one man, shortly to be the owner of a new Land Cruiser—Energy Minister A.K.M. Mosharraf Hossain. Hossain was also an important voice in an ongoing dispute between Niko and the government over a gas purchase and sale agreement.

Less than two weeks after he received Niko’s gift in May, 2005, Hossain checked into a Calgary hotel to attend an oil and gas exposition. Accompanying him was his friend, a man he described as his “brother,” Selim Bhuiyan. At the time, Bhuiyan was the manager of the Dhaka Club, an exclusive hangout for the city’s elites. The job immersed him in the milieu surrounding the Prime Minister’s son.

Niko paid for the men’s flights and their rooms, as well as subsequent side trips Hossain made to New York and Chicago to visit family. However, the company’s largesse never had an impact on his decision-making, Hossain insists.

In an interview conducted at his home in Dhaka, about a year before Niko formally admitted in court that it tried to bribe him, he denied being influenced. Seated directly under a large oil portrait of himself, Hossain chain-smoked and offered a rambling response as to whether he had ever accepted any benefits from the company. “Do you think they are such fools that they will offer me directly? If they had offered, if they wanted to offer, they would offer indirectly,” he said, before issuing an emphatic denial. “I have not been offered indirectly by…Niko, or Niko agents or anybody,” he said.

Later on, though, he allowed that, perhaps, he received something. “Niko…maybe, at times helped me in some way or other. Say for instance when I was in Canada. Maybe they have looked after me..…That is hospitality. But not financially,” he said. “I’ve not taken a single pie from anybody.”

**********************************************

Ever since the United States prohibited its companies from paying foreign bribes in 1977, the merits of the law have been hotly debated. The complaints from industry are many: The law will never end bribery because the practice is innate and as old as business itself; it has placed Western companies at a disadvantage to Russian and Chinese multinationals that can bribe with impunity; the law’s primary purpose is to help accountants, lawyers and other “specialists” in corruption-fighting to accumulate billable hours.

Supporters of the law counter that bribery undermines the rule of law, erodes trust and enables political leaders to hoard proceeds that should be spread among the masses—practices that the world’s leading democracies cannot allow their corporations to facilitate.

If there is common ground, it’s that if foreign bribery is illegal, the law needs to be universally enforced.

A key figure in the push for universality is Peter Clark, a former official with the United States Department of Justice who spent the 1990s trying to persuade the other member nations of the OECD to follow the lead of the United States and ban foreign bribery. It was a process that Clark describes as “faster than watching grass grow, but slower than golf.”

By 1997, he had garnered enough support, including a vote from Canada, to pass the OECD’s anti-bribery convention and force laggard Western countries to catch up. And on Dec. 7, 1998—just four days before Niko’s shares started trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange—Canada’s Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act quietly passed through Parliament.

For a tiny group of Canadian trade lawyers who had been clamouring for such a law, it seemed like the dawn of a new era. But almost before they had a chance to celebrate, they were told to lower their expectations.

Milos Barutciski, a regulatory expert who advised the government on the drafting of the law, quickly arranged a professional conference concerning the new prohibition. Afterward, over a meal with a senior lawyer from the Department of Justice and several other colleagues, Barutciski pressed the federal official, whom Barutciski declines to identify by name. How many police officers and prosecutors was Ottawa going to devote to this new international effort?

“We’re not dedicating any resources,” he says he was told.

“It was disheartening,” says Barutciski, now a partner at Bennett Jones. “At the same time the government was issuing press releases out of Foreign Affairs about how Canada was doing the right thing…these guys were saying, ‘That’s it. We’re not doing anything more.’

“I was blown away. If you’re not dedicating resources to it, then you effectively have no law.”

Canadian officials have never explained why Ottawa did not take the convention more seriously in its early days. In an interview, one federal government lawyer theorized, “It was an international political convention and it probably sailed through cabinet without skin off anyone’s nose.…Why did it take so long [to enforce]? If you’re suggesting that there wasn’t enough attention put to it, I can’t argue with that.”

But if the federal government believed it could shirk its obligations, it underestimated the will of the OECD and the power of public shaming.

While other member nations were dedicating investigators and prosecutors to the anti-bribery cause, and racking up staggering fines against major corporations along the way, Canada largely did nothing. In 2007, at a Washington, D.C., conference of anti-corruption lawyers, Canada was included in a list of countries dubbed the “coalition of the unwilling.” Transparency International, the anti-corruption group, routinely ranks Canada alongside countries like Bulgaria and Greece for its poor performance. As part of the OECD convention, each member country is graded on its efforts, and Canada’s reviewers have repeatedly expressed dismay about how a country that is home to so many international mining and oil giants has garnered only one conviction.

(Even that conviction was not the product of government initiative. An energy service company called Hydro Kleen pleaded guilty to bribing a U.S. immigration inspector in 2005. Almost all of the evidence was collected by a private investigator who had been hired by one of Hydro Kleen’s competitors.)

As recently as May, the chair of the OECD anti-bribery group was still chastising Canada. “It’s quite astonishing that, having so many operations in such difficult areas, one has not more cases,” said Mark Pieth, a Swiss lawyer who has overseen the OECD group since its inception in 1990. “What I have to say to Canada is, wake up to your responsibilities. And be what you’re actually assuming to be, and that’s an economic superpower—a G7 superpower. That brings obligations with it.”

The message had in fact resonated, even if it had yet to produce results. By April, 2008, the RCMP had hand-picked 15 officers, at a cost of $3.1 million annually, to exclusively investigate cases of foreign bribery by Canadian companies.

On the other side of the world, the corruption of Zia’s government became too much for Bangladesh to bear. In a quasi-coup, the country’s military disbanded Zia’s regime and began arresting all of her son’s associates, as well as Minister Hossain, extracting confession after confession. (The crackdown went right up to the Prime Minister’s office, and included the 2007 arrest of Zia herself. She has since been released, but her son remains in exile in the United Kingdom.)

What they had to say would lead investigators to suspect that it was more than just steely resolve that landed Niko its Bangladeshi foothold.

**********************************************

Before rousing Giasuddin al Mamun from his prison cell, the soldiers waited until the sun was dropping from Dhaka’s smoggy skies. It was always wise to conduct videotaped interviews after the work day, when the city’s intermittent blackouts finally subsided.

It was Nov. 1, 2008, a tense time. The military was still in power. Officially, al Mamun had been found guilty of weapons possession. Unofficially, he was guilty of being friends with Tarique Rahman, Mr. 10 Per Cent.

Al Mamun was delivered to a nondescript house in an affluent neighbourhood. He could be forgiven for thinking that whatever waited for him inside would be deeply unpleasant. Instead, he was greeted by two affable, middle-aged Canadians with buzz cuts and dark suits.

The one with the big smile was Corporal Lloyd Schoepp, an RCMP officer who had quit a career as a retail banker in Banff to pursue a lifelong dream of being a cop. The other, Corporal Kevin Duggan, was an expert in recovering the illicit profits from drug dealing.

Over the next two days, with breaks for rest and Domino’s pizza, al Mamun gave the RCMP officers a crash course in Third World corruption.

Al Mamun’s candid interviews with the Mounties, as well as other evidence gathered by the RCMP during their trip to Dhaka, have been detailed in a 72-page affidavit filed in Alberta court by Corporal Duggan. The police officer’s sworn statement—which he filed in support of an application to access banking records—had been sealed by court order, until The Globe and Mail launched a court challenge to have the material released. After a six-month legal battle with the Crown Attorney’s office and Niko, Mr. Justice William Tilleman agreed to release a heavily redacted version.

Al Mamun told the police officers that his introduction to Niko came in 2002 when someone—whose name has been redacted from the affidavit—dangled an offer of $1 million if al Mamun could land drilling rights for the Canadian company. As an appetizer, al Mamun said he was given a retainer of about $10,000. But he was ultimately unable to make the deal happen on his own. As a mere buddy of the Prime Minister’s son, there was only so much he could do. “My power is 50%,” he said.

During Schoepp and Duggan’s time in Dhaka, the military handed over all documents requested by the Mounties, including a signed confession made by Selim Bhuiyan—the same social-club manager who travelled with Minister Hossain to Calgary, at Niko’s expense, for the energy exposition.

After sitting in a jail cell for four days, Bhuiyan had been hauled before a magistrate, where he made an admission similar to al Mamun’s: Someone—whose name has also been redacted from Duggan’s affidavit—offered him more than $1 million if he successfully helped land the gas fields for Niko.

After Niko was handed drilling rights, more than $500,000 (U.S.) appeared in Bhuiyan’s bank account, the confession stated. From there, Bhuiyan said he dispersed some of the money to the cast of characters surrounding Prime Minister Khaleda Zia—including al Mamun. A portion of the payment, Bhuiyan believed, would go to al Mamun’s friend, the Prime Minister’s son. Hossain, the former minister who would not take “a single pie” from anyone, received a total of $102,000, the confession alleged.

Niko begs to differ. “We have consistently denied that any bribes were paid on Niko’s behalf to secure the Agreement,” the company said in a recent statement. “This matter was fully investigated by the authorities and no charges were laid against Niko in relation to those allegations.”

For their part, the Mounties were able to corroborate parts of the confession: Al Mamun confirmed that he had been paid a retainer of at least several thousand dollars; they followed some of the money flows through bank records; they even negotiated a meeting with Bhuiyan in Montreal in a failed bid to persuade him to become an informant. (In Duggan’s affidavit, he stated that Bhuiyan confirmed most of his confession, except that he said some of the bank transfers were actually a “series of loans between friends.” Bhuiyan also claimed he confessed under the duress of torture.)

The evidence was sufficient for Duggan to state in the same court filing that he had “uncovered information that [Niko] used bribes to influence [Bangladeshi] public officials in order to secure the Joint Venture Agreement.” But when Niko’s day in court arrived this past June, it made no admissions about any impropriety concerning its drilling rights. (Indeed, lawyers for Niko claim that Bhuiyan later recanted his confession on that score in a Bangladeshi court filing.) The guilty plea strictly related to Hossain’s luxury SUV and vacation, which were given to mitigate damage from the blowout. And, as is standard with most plea agreements, the RCMP agreed to end its investigation of the company’s Bangladeshi operations in return for the admission of guilt.

So why didn’t the police pursue the other charges?

For one thing, gathering evidence in Bangladesh is a challenge. Alleged recipients of graft never make the most credible witnesses, and an unfettered security apparatus complicates life for even the most capable prosecutor. When word got out that the military was rounding up interview subjects in Dhaka for the Canadian police, at least two people on the RCMP’s wish list simply fled the country.

Then there’s the logistics of getting Bangladeshi witnesses before a Canadian court. “How are you going to get them into court for trial? Are you going to use a video link? All sorts of problems kick in,” Duggan says. “We play to win.…With what we had, we had them dead-to-rights. So, if the investigation went on forever, could we prove everything bad that was ever done? Yeah, we could. Maybe. Maybe. But eventually you’ve got to draw a line in the sand.”

That line has not been drawn for Senator Harb, whose relationship with Niko is being probed by the RCMP as part of a criminal breach of trust investigation.

As the Mounties combed through diplomatic cables and interviewed former Canadian high commissioners, they learned that, after being appointed to the Senate, Harb returned to Bangladesh at least four times between 2004 and 2006 to help Niko navigate the fallout from the explosion. Foreign Affairs officials were keeping their distance from Niko because of concerns it might have paid bribes. Yet Harb, against the wishes of the diplomatic corps, advocated for the company with Bangladeshi ministers. He was paid $65,000 for acting as a consultant in a private capacity, Niko said in a statement.

Senators are allowed to accept employment outside of their duties in the Red Chamber, and many work for law firms and sit on corporate boards, but they are forbidden from using their title as a public office holder for private gain. Duggan has alleged in that same affidavit that Harb’s trips to Bangladesh, which he made on his special green passport reserved for public officials, were “contrary to the bona fide interests of the Canadian public.”

The senator was repeatedly warned by Foreign Affairs to cease his lobby efforts, Duggan’s affidavit shows. On one of his final trips to Dhaka, the then-Canadian high commissioner to Bangladesh was so incensed that she confronted the senator at his hotel. In an interview with the Mounties, she said that she was “not happy” Harb “had actually met with the [Bangladeshi] Minister of Foreign Affairs at his home, at night without me, and without me being aware of the meeting.”

The senator has issued a statement saying he has never used his office for personal gain and that his work for Niko was cleared by the Senate ethics officer. However, he has not said what he told the ethics officer about the work he was doing in Bangladesh. Nor has he explained why a well-paid senator needed to actively solicit work from a corporation (Niko chief Sampson has said that the relationship began with Harb approaching the company). Duggan’s affidavit, however, provides a hint.

As part of their probe, the Mounties scrutinized the senator’s finances and learned that, during the years he worked for Niko, he had 26 active credit facilities—including more than a dozen credit cards—and was carrying a debt load of more than $560,000. That total does not appear to include a mortgage.

Harb was questioned by investigators in early 2011, but the Mounties will say nothing about where their investigation is headed. In his statement, Harb has said he is confident he will be cleared of any wrongdoing.

As for Niko, the former stock market darling has seen a precipitous drop in its share price. It was fluctuating between $60 and $70 as of late July, a decline of about 40% from a year ago, shedding $1.7 billion from its market capitalization. Though the descent started long before the bribery admission, Niko’s new criminal record will do nothing to ingratiate it with investors and analysts. Institutional investors may remain wary, at least while Niko wears what the sentencing judge, Mr. Justice Brooker, called a “dark stain.”

“Difficult headlines like this will lead to companies suffering some pain in the currently weak equity markets,” Nathan Piper, an analyst with RBC Dominion Securities, said shortly after the guilty plea.

Sampson, who in 2010 became the highest-paid CEO in Canada by one calculation, remains optimistic. In the company’s annual report, he highlighted Niko’s newest explorations in Trinidad and Tobago, as well as a deepwater drill in Indonesia. “Two thousand and twelve could prove to be Niko’s most exciting year,” he said in the report.

Next year promises to be equally exciting for the RCMP’s international anti-corruption unit. The force has said that it is investigating more than 20 cases of alleged overseas bribery.

During their trip to Dhaka, the Mounties discussed the anti-bribery law, and what good it might do in the world, with their military helpers. “Everyone saw how important this is. This was good for Bangladesh,” Corporal Duggan says.

But there is at least one naysayer in the country’s elite. During the interview at his home, former minister Hossain offered a meandering diatribe against the “lies” and “conspiracy” that landed him in jail for two years.

“Corruption is there everywhere in the world. Corruption was there, is there, will be there.”

http://liarcatchers.com/employee_investigations.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Court Ruling | Tagged | Comments Off on Ottawa’s corruption test case

Millions of US court records bound for shredder

CHICAGO (AP) — Wrestling with the challenges of documents in the digital age, U.S. officials are destroying millions of paper federal court records to save storage costs — but the effort is raising the ire of some historians, private detectives and others who heavily rely on the files.

The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration says at least 10 million bankruptcy case files and several million district court files from between 1970 and 1995 will be shredded, pounded to pulp and recycled. Only a small percentage of files designated as historically valuable will be kept in storage.

Federal archivists spent years consulting legal scholars, historians and others about which files to purge after realizing that sorting and digitizing just the bankruptcy cases alone would cost tens of millions of dollars. None of the civil or criminal cases up for destruction went to trial, and docket sheets that list basic information such as names of defendants and plaintiffs will be saved from each case.

But such reassurances haven’t allayed concerns of some of those whose work relies on the paper documents.

Cornell Law School professor Theodore Eisenberg said it’s precisely the mundane, every day records with no clear historical significance that are so critical to establishing legal trends upon which court policy is often based.

“Something really important will be lost here,” said Eisenberg, a former clerk at the U.S. Supreme Court for the late Justice Earl Warren. “We would lose any ability to assess trends over time. This is not just a matter of history, it is a matter of influencing basic policy today.”

Christina Boyd, who teaches public law at the University at Buffalo, said only about 2 percent of federal court cases ever make it to trial and little research has been done to explain why that percentage dropped from about 12 percent in the 1960s. One question, she said, is whether federal judges began pushing settlements in the 1970s and 1980s as public aide to indigents dramatically increased, possibly to the advantage of corporations or other institutions being sued by the individuals.

“This was a crucial period in legal history,” she said. “We need to understand the trends — and that means looking at files that could be going away.”

Marvin Kabakoff, a senior analyst with the NARA who himself holds a Ph.D. in history, told The Associated Press on Thursday that he sympathizes and ideally would want all the records digitized, “but keeping everything is just not realistic.” He said it would be “outrageously expensive” and since some documents are mashed or stapled together, merely sorting through the millions of papers would be a gargantuan, labor-intensive task.

By the end of the year, 140,000 boxes of civil case files — out of a total of around 270,000 from the 35-year period — are expected to be destroyed, Kabakoff said. Starting next year, about 390,000 of the 400,000 total boxes of bankruptcy case files from the same period will be destroyed and a far smaller number of criminal case files — about 40,000 boxes — would be destroyed later.

Preparing for this first-of-its-kind destruction, federal archivists decided to keep thousands of records deemed historically relevant or that fell into other categories. With the civil files, for instance, authorities decided to save around 110,000 boxes of files, including all civil rights or government corruption case files regardless of whether those cases went to trial.

Federal documents meticulously detail which files should be saved, including those related to the shooting down of Korean Air Lines Flight 007 by a Soviet jet fighters in 1983 and files on young men accused of trying to evade the Vietnam War draft.

“We tried to be very careful about what we are destroying,” Kabakoff said The issue came to the fore as the federal court system, like other government entities, struggled to cut costs. The pre-1995 files posed a particular challenge because they were created before nearly all court documents were kept electronically. Comparatively, few paper-only documents were created after 1995.

Also, 1970 to 1995 was a period of explosive growth in litigation, creating mountains of paperwork that could only be stored in boxes at courthouses or federal archive centers with dwindling space.

Historians argue that it is impossible to say what records will be historically significant in 10, 50 or 100 years, since an inconsequential file today might one day shed light on a figure who emerges to prominence, from a presidential candidate to a murder suspect.

Beyond historians, among those concerned is Don Haworth, a 35-year veteran private investigator in Chicago who said he frequently uses those same 1970-95 federal court records. In his work, the slightest clue in the seemingly most mundane records could make or break a case.

He said that applies to run-of-the-mill bankruptcy records that could show a pattern of a businessman over a 30- or 40-year period of opening a business, then declaring bankruptcy and jilting creditors. He recently found that a target of his investigation lied when she said she’d never been involved in a federal case: She showed up as a witness in a federal case decades ago.

“While a record may not be pertinent to one individual, they may be a gold mine to others,” Haworth said.

He also runs into other private investigators, scholars, historians and even writers doing research at Chicago’s Federal Records Center, which houses records from Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin.

But certainly not everyone in the law business is alarmed.

Most trial attorneys deal with civil and criminal cases that arose in recent months or years, and they aren’t likely to need decades-old archives. Chicago-based bankruptcy attorney Brad Foreman said he usually only needs to do research dating back seven or eight years, which is readily available online.

“As a lawyer, I am not concerned,” he said. “In bankruptcy cases, I can’t think of ever once having to go back as far as 1995.

http://liarcatchers.com/public_record_searches.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Court Ruling | Tagged | Comments Off on Millions of US court records bound for shredder

NYPD: CIA Officer Works At Department (VIDEO)

New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly confirms that a CIA officer is working out of police headquarters but says the spy agency’s role at the department is an advisory one.

Kelly was responding Thursday in New York to questions about the NYPD’s unprecedented relationship with the CIA since the 9/11 attacks.

An Associated Press investigation revealed that the NYPD, with help from the CIA, has become one of the nation’s most aggressive domestic intelligence agencies.

Kelly says the CIA trains NYPD officials and provides information about what’s going on overseas. The CIA says it is not involved in domestic spying and says the collaboration is exactly what Americans want.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

Even as the New York Police Department sent undercover officers into Muslim neighborhoods to detect possible terrorist activities in the years after the Sept. 11 attacks, government officials there and elsewhere have sought to build relationships in Muslim communities and pledged to ensure that Muslims aren’t targeted for discrimination.

Outreach programs have operated in Boston, Cleveland, Detroit, Minneapolis, Portland, Ore., and Washington – all have large Muslim communities – while law enforcement around the country has stepped up investigative efforts to stave off attacks. But the inherent tensions caused by this duality of missions is perhaps most visible in New York. It is the only U.S. city that al-Qaida has successfully attacked twice and continues to be the target of terror plots. New York also is home to the country’s most aggressive local police department investigating counterterrorism.

“It seems to many of the leadership here, there are two kinds of authorities they are playing – one is in the forefront which is very cooperative,” said Zaheer Uddin of the Islamic Leadership Council of New York. “And there is another authority, which is playing against Islam and Muslims, going against the First Amendment and the security of this country.”

Uddin asked, “Are we partners, or are we a suspicious community?”

A months-long investigation by The Associated Press, published Wednesday, revealed that the NYPD has dispatched teams of undercover officers, known as “rakers,” into minority neighborhoods as part of a human mapping program, according to officials directly involved in the program. They’ve monitored daily life in bookstores, bars, cafes and nightclubs. Police have also used informants, known as “mosque crawlers,” to monitor sermons, even when there’s no evidence of wrongdoing. NYPD officials have scrutinized imams and gathered intelligence on cab drivers and food cart vendors, jobs often done by Muslims.

The NYPD denied that it trolls ethnic neighborhoods and said it only follows leads. The mayor on Thursday defended the police department’s efforts.

“In the end the NYPD’s first job is prevention, and I think they’ve done a very good job of that,” New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said when asked about the police practices. “The law is pretty clear about what’s the requirement, and I think they’ve followed the law.”

On Wednesday, the Justice Department said it will review a request by a Muslim advocacy group to investigate.

“These revelations send the message to American Muslims that they are being viewed as a suspect community and that their constitutional rights may be violated with impunity,” said Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which asked for the investigation. “The Justice Department must initiate an immediate investigation of the civil rights implications of this spy program and the legality of its links to the CIA.”

In the decade since the September 2001 attacks, government officials in New York also have met with Muslim leaders and exchanged cellphone numbers. They’ve attended religious services, dinners and teas, and spoken at community meetings. The FBI recently hosted an event for 500 young Muslims in Brooklyn to build trust and get to know federal law enforcement, with a bomb-sniffing dog, scuba boat and helicopter on display.

“I go and visit mosques on a regular basis,” NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly told the AP, adding that he also holds question-and-answer sessions and planned to attend several dinners with members of the Muslim community during the holy month of Ramadan this year.

The police department in 2006 hired Sidique Wai, an African immigrant and member of the New York Muslim community, to coordinate the NYPD’s citywide community outreach program. He said the interaction and outreach between the community and police is unprecedented.

“The majority of the faith-based – particularly the Muslim leaders throughout the city – are absolutely appreciative of the unprecedented relationship with the police department,” Wai said. “I’m not aware of a deliberate effort on the part of NYPD to profile people.”

The former head of the FBI’s field office in New York said he was aggressive and deliberate in reaching out to Muslim communities.

“I know it helped it terms of community relations, a sense of openness and acceptance by the FBI of the community, tamping down the inclination to think they might be singled out or (the) focus of untoward scrutiny,” said Mark Mershon, who ran the office between 2005 and 2008 and is currently a Colorado-based private detective and investigative consultant.

Some Muslim community leaders in New York aren’t satisfied. They have complained about aggressive tactics the department uses to collect intelligence and about a video, “The Third Jihad,” shown earlier this year to some members of the NYPD during a training session. Kelly, the police commissioner, explained in a letter in March that the film was not part of the department’s training program and said it was shown in the background while members of the NYPD were filling out administrative paperwork before a training session.

The video includes images of terror attacks, Osama bin Laden and U.S. Muslim leaders praising the 2001 hijackers, news reports about terror plots and experts talking about the threat of radical Islam. Muslim leaders were outraged by the film because they said it was anti-Islam.

“The NYPD’s use of certain intelligence tactics in houses of worship – such as paid informants, agent provocateurs and mosque surveillance – are not only misleading as security measures but compromise the duty of the law enforcement acting under the color of state law,” Muslim community leader Aisha Al-Adawiya wrote in a July 22 letter to Kelly.

Wai said these issues have been raised and addressed at the many forums held throughout the Muslim community. He said people ask about profiling, and they get answers. “They may not be the answers that they want to hear,” he said.

Not all New York Muslim leaders are complaining.

“There was a time when police would rush into the mosque with their boots on,” Mustapha Senghor, chairman of the Harlem Islamic Cultural Center, said during a July pre-Ramadan conference in New York. “They do not do that anymore. Congratulations, commissioner. For that we thank you, very much.”

“We love you, commissioner,” Senghor said. “You have imams who are extensions of the police force. You include us, you talk to us, you ask us what we are feeling. It makes us feel we are part of the city, and not that people are against us.”

http://liarcatchers.com/employee_investigations.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigation, Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on NYPD: CIA Officer Works At Department (VIDEO)

AG investigating affair, misconduct allegations involving SCHP interim director

Rowell would resign from the patrol in 1999. He returned in 2000.

The patrol fired Rowell in April 2008 after he “broke” and “used profanity in response to a request from Sergeant Chuck Wise for him to operate a patrol vehicle while intoxicated,” according to Rowell. Wise wanted Trooper Rowell to deliver a videotape of “the arrest of a prominent Columbia politician.” Wise’s request came on Rowell’s day off, while he was coordinating a surprise birthday party for his wife.

“I am of the opinion and personal belief that Colonel Lancaster used his authority to destroy my husband’s career to exact jealous revenge against myself and him,” Rowell wrote in her affidavit. The Rowell’s also think Lancaster has used his position to prevent Rowell from getting another job in law enforcement.

PHOTO GALLERY

Click here to view a gallery of photos of Lancaster, the Rowells, and investigators Ali Rowell told investigators that she was willing to provide witnesses and take a polygraph to confirm her allegations. “I’m sitting here telling you this and giving up what could be my reputation because it’s destroyed my husband, totally,” Rowell told WIS.

In May, the Rowells hired Orangeburg private investigation firm, M and M Investigations. Investigator Danny McDaniel spent the past three and a half months piecing together evidence to prove Rowell’s allegations. McDaniel confirmed to WIS that he is under contract with Rowell, “but since this case is open and active, I cannot discuss any particulars,” McDaniel said.

McDaniel confirmed to WIS that his firm was under contract with another Trooper, Ken Branham, investigating allegations of “infidelity” between his wife and interim director Kenny Lancaster. McDaniel would not comment on the details of his investigation.

Branham is a Sergeant on the patrol and is married to Shannon Branham, a State Law Enforcement agent. Agent Branham was assigned as head of Governor Nikki Haley’s security detail until SLED Chief Mark Keel removed her in July. Keel would not give his specific reasons for removing Branham from the security detail.

Keel admitted that he received an anonymous letter at his home, detailing the alleged affair between Branham and Lancaster. The letter came about a week before Keel removed Branham. Keel would not say whether SLED investigated the allegations, “I’m not going to comment on a personnel matter,” Keel told WIS.

WIS tried contacting SLED agent Shannon Branham on her cell phone and left messages at the SLED offices for her concerning this story. Those calls were not returned.

Sources close to the investigation tell WIS that approximately 100 calls were logged between Lancaster and Shannon Branham’s cell phones since April 1, 2011. WIS filed Freedom of Information Act requests with SLED and the Highway Patrol for Lancaster and Branham’s cell phone records, as well as text messaging records between the pair since April 1, 2011. We’ve also asked the Highway Patrol for a copy of all complaint letters sent to the Office of Professional Responsibility relating to Lancaster, since Jan. 1, 2011.

As of this report, the highway patrol has not responded to our FOIA request. They’ve asked us to pay a fee for the records and we are currently in the process of retrieving the records. SLED has not given WIS a timeline on when their documents will be released. A response from the agency is due to us by August 29, 2011.

The AG’s office does not have a timeline on when their investigation will be finished.

http://liarcatchers.com/corporate_investigations.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Fraud | Tagged | 2 Comments

Inquiry file against Times SUNDAY editor

POLICE have named Times SUNDAY Editor Innocent Maphalala as the person currently under investigation for allegedly attacking self-proclaimed private investigator Martin Dlamini with a bush knife on Tuesday night.
No charges have been preferred against the editor but this newspaper can confirm that an inquiry file has been opened. Dlamini was allegedly attacked by Maphalala with a bush knife and the reason behind the action has not been established. Dlamini called the police and laid charges against Maphalala. Police PRO Wendy Hleta confirmed that an inquiry file has been opened. “Police are currently investigating the matter you are talking about. What I can say is that an inquiry file has been opened,” said Hleta.

http://liarcatchers.com/corporate_investigations.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private detective | Tagged | Comments Off on Inquiry file against Times SUNDAY editor

Maurice Nasmeh murdered Jeanine Harms

For more than 10 years, police and prosecutors have been trying to unravel one of Silicon Valley’s biggest murder mysteries — the disappearance of Jeanine Harms.

On Wednesday, they held an elaborate news conference to name her killer. But he won’t be going on trial. Maurice Nasmeh — the prime suspect, all along — is already dead.

The news surprised no one connected to the decadelong investigation, including Harms’ grief-stricken friends and family. Nasmeh, killed this year by Harms’ brother during a chance encounter, had been free since 2007 after questions arose about the lab expert who linked threads found in the back of Nasmeh’s SUV to a Persian carpet that disappeared from Harms’ apartment.

District Attorney Jeff Rosen insisted Wednesday a new lab’s tests had provided all the answers he needed.

Rosen also highlighted what he said was Nasmeh’s history of violence against women and that Nasmeh took all of the beer cans, empty and full, with him when he left Harms’ duplex. That proved, he said, that Nasmeh “was determined to leave nothing behind that could incriminate him.”

“The only logical and rational conclusion to be drawn from all the evidence is that Nasmeh murdered Ms. Sanchez-Harms,” Rosen said.

Critics were quick to question why it had taken 3 ½ years to retest the fiber evidence — at a cost of $400,000 — especially because the testing revealed nothing new and two large boxes of evidence were not sent to a private lab in Illinois until Feb. 16, a month after Wayne Sanchez gunned down Nasmeh at a West San Jose shopping center in a stunning example of vigilante justice.

“The only thing they found was a few more fibers,” said Peter Barnett, a partner with Forensic Science Associates in Richmond who was hired as a consultant by Nasmeh’s attorney. “I’m no more convinced now than I was before.”

Spanning three DAs

But during the Wednesday morning news conference, Rosen, who until his election as DA was one of the top prosecutors in the office, said he could convince a jury that Nasmeh was the killer. His office released a 48-page summary report from one of the top forensic labs in the nation that detailed the laborious analysis of the evidence.

Rosen said he regretted it took so long to retest the evidence, but insisted it was largely unavoidable. He had inherited the investigation from two previous DAs — George Kennedy, who was in office when Nasmeh was charged, and Dolores Carr, the DA when Nasmeh was released.

Carr had hired Microtrace — a private lab specializing in high-profile cases — to retest the key fiber evidence. Just as the county’s crime lab had found, Microtrace’s founder and president, Skip Palenik, said 13 fibers found in the cargo area of Nasmeh’s 2000 Jeep Cherokee were from the missing Persian rug from Harms’ duplex and that 14 fibers found there were from a latch hook rug the 42-year-old woman had been working on. “These findings support the hypothesis that the Persian rug was placed in Nasmeh’s Jeep’s cargo area,” the 48-page executive summary states.

A long case

Nasmeh was arrested in December 2004 and spent 2 ½ years in jail before the case fell apart. It was revealed during the preliminary hearing that criminalist Mark Moriyama had failed some certification tests required for his job.

Charges against Nasmeh were dismissed in June 2007. The prosecutor on the case at the time, Dale Sanderson, said it would take a year to retest the fibers and vowed to refile the charges.

When Rosen took office in January, he told this newspaper he was committed to applying fresh eyes to the case and seeking a resolution.

“I was very careful about this case and very thorough and deliberate in everything that was done since I became district attorney,” he said. “That’s reflective in the fact that after he was killed, I didn’t just say, ‘Now the investigation is over.’ It was very important to me we completed the work.”

Rosen said he felt strongly enough about the evidence against Nasmeh that he was closing the case.

Closure for the family and friends of Harms will be much harder. Her father declined to comment Wednesday but Janice Burnham, Harms’ best friend, and Chigiy Binell, her former landlord and close friend, prepared a statement together:

“The DA’s finding came as no surprise to us. The case may be closed but it feels like there may never be closure. This tragedy has spanned over 10 years and taken two beloved children from the Sanchez family. Nothing can bring Jeanine and Wayne back and we will miss them every day.”

They and Los Gatos police Chief Scott Seaman made an appeal for the only information that matters to them now.

“I firmly believe someone does in fact know what happened to Jeanine,” Seaman said. “If somebody came forward and told us where the body was, that would be extremely appreciated.”

Dan Jensen, Nashmeh’s former attorney, heard the news on a radio report Wednesday afternoon.

“If the evidence was so good, they should have filed it when they had the chance,” he said. “It’s really easy to slam a dead man.”

History of violence

Jensen denied there was a “long history of violence” against women by Nasmeh, one of the factors Rosen said helped convince him Nasmeh killed Harms.

“That is such bull,” Jensen said. “There were two instances, one reported by a third party. When they contacted the woman, she said it was an accident, that Nasmeh’s dog jumped and bumped into her.”

The other incident involved a former college roommate, said Jensen and Nasmeh’s mother, Doris. “She said she was assaulted by him in the bathtub,” the attorney said. But a private investigator hired by Nasmeh’s mother proved “there was no bathtub in that house,” Jensen said.

In an interview Wednesday evening, Rosen said, “We stand by everything written in our report 100 percent” but conceded the violence allegations likely wouldn’t have made it before a jury.

“Maybe, maybe not,” Rosen said. “If the judge kept it out, it wouldn’t have been an unreasonable decision.”

But Nasmeh’s mother said prosecutors want to “close the case because he can’t defend himself.”

“I think this is a travesty of justice.”

http://liarcatchers.com/cold_cases.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigation | Tagged | Comments Off on Maurice Nasmeh murdered Jeanine Harms

Private eye gets probation for pipe theft

An Ottawa private investigator was sentenced Wednesday in La Salle County Circuit Court for stealing a piece of perforated plastic pipe worth $35.

On June 13, a jury found Ross B. Radke, 54, guilty of theft. At a hearing Wednesday, Chief Judge H. Chris Ryan Jr. sentenced Radke to two years of conditional discharge — a loose form of probation — to pay a fine and court costs of $300 and to pay $35 in restitution. The pipe came from a residential construction site on Ottawa’s South Side.

Radke and two police officers testified at the sentencing hearing. Radke still faces two counts of illegally carrying a pistol, with the next hearing for those charges set for Thursday, Oct. 20. He is out of custody on $650 bond.

Radke declined to comment to The Times about his cases. In reply to a question, Radke did say he is selling the building that serves as his home and houses his detective agency and martial arts academy at the southeast corner of State and Center streets. However, Radke noted he remains in business and plans to find another location after he sells the building. Radke is licensed by the state as a private detective.

http://liarcatchers.com/civil_investigations.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Court Ruling | Tagged | Comments Off on Private eye gets probation for pipe theft

Lost your ring? Try a metal detective

Andrea Bielecki was slamming some last-minute flowers into her front garden this summer when she slipped her wedding band and 1.5-carat diamond engagement ring into her bra so she wouldn’t lose them.

Company was coming, she had an eye on her toddler and it was only for a minute.

Then her daughter ran into the neighbour’s yard and Bielecki had to chase her, her mom arrived with groceries to be unloaded, Bielecki swept up some leaves in the backyard and suddenly it was bedtime.

Her wedding ring tumbled out of her clothes. Her engagement ring did not.

Armed with flashlights, Bielecki, her husband and her mother combed the front yard until 1 a.m.

Bielecki was distraught. Her husband had designed the ring and proposed to her with it in a cabin in Algonquin Park in 2006.

At work the next day, her colleagues suggested she rent a metal detector, but her Google search led her to Mark Ellis, a private investigator turned ring finder.

Twenty minutes after he arrived with his metal detector and kind concern, he found her ring on the front lawn, in a spot Bielecki had searched a dozen times. It was buried upside-down in the grass.

“I burst into tears. I was in shock,” says Bielecki, 33.

Ellis, 42, has spent most of his career as a private eye, investigating insurance fraud and slip-and-fall claims.

It’s gruelling work and when he was younger he loved it. He climbed trees, jumped fences, spent hours in a van in the heat of summer and bitter cold of winter, catching professional claimants on video. Once he caught someone who claimed to be disabled doing flips off a pool’s diving board.

“We make really good money, but it’s really for a young single guy,” says Ellis, who is married.

He loves mystery — he is a professional magician — and he loves the thrill of the hunt. But he wanted to do something that made people happy, not furious.

As a child, he’d been fascinated by the potential of metal detectors, but gave up in frustration after coming up with only bottle caps and nails.

He picked it up again at 21, and after long practice, became adept at distinguishing the slight differences in sound the detector makes when it locates rings and coins. His first big find was a 14-karat gold men’s wedding band on a baseball diamond in Toronto.

“Once you find a big item, you’re hooked, you’re always looking for the next big thing,” says Ellis.

It became his passion and now it’s his job. He’s set up shop at emds.ca — Ellis Metal Detecting Service. He will search for any metal object, from property markers to buried oil tanks. The cost varies, depending on the job.

“If it’s metal, I’ll find it,” says Ellis.

His treasured finds over the years include an enamelled Roman button and a hand-hammered silver coin from 1199 from a farmer’s field in Winchester, England.

Once he found a set of gold dentures he melted down for cash. He invests most of his cash in his equipment. He has three water metal detectors, seven land metal detectors, and sleuthing gear that can detect whether a stone from a fireplace has been removed, or if something in a house has been repainted or plastered over.

Rings seem to be the most commonly lost treasure. They tend to slip off in the cold, in the water, or when people lose weight — as little as five pounds.

They’re his favourite, to search and to find.

“Somebody’s heartbroken when they lose a wedding band. It doesn’t matter if they spent $30 on it and it’s all banged up,” he says.

“I drive home on a cloud.”

http://liarcatchers.com/asset_investigations.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private detective | Tagged | Comments Off on Lost your ring? Try a metal detective

Description misrepresents Herricks detective

Certainly the NHP Herald Courier is free to take strong issue with the comments in my 8/12 letter on the subject, such as, “Calling Mr.Wendling a private eye was hardly an abusive slander as Tom (not Tim) Coffey wrote.”

You’re certainly correct, but that was not the descriptive I called an abusive slander. What your initial editorial said, in fact, was; “Still we find the hiring of a low rent private investigator a heavy handed approach” and later, ” Do the numbers justify the hiring of even a low rent private eye?”.

Don’t the elementary rules of journalistic integrity require verbatim rather than selective quoting? Apparently not. Naming and then calling a retired NYPD detective low rent because you disagree with his mandate from the Herricks School Board, remains an abusive slander, despite your dissembling retort.

As for my observation that “the core reason the poor are poor is not because the rich are rich, rather it’s usually because they make bad life choices over, over and over again;” I stand by it, despite your assertion that my opinion is “unkind and somewhat bizarre”.

In fact, your reference to the “starving people of East Africa” as an example of those blameless for their life condition, makes my point.

Climatologists since the 19th century, have empirically demonstrated that the Horn of Africa region has been chronically hostile to human habitation. Further, given the high fertility rate and religious antipathy to birth control among these largely nomadic masses, the plagues of high infant mortality, cholera and typhus as well as famine, are a predictable result; a classic example of people making and then refusing to reverse a bad choice, in their case, where they choose to live.

Of course my contention will always be anathema to the secular left, in perpetual thrall to the fantasy of Rousseau, that mankind is inherently comprised of just good guys while those meanies with money and influence are the real problem. So let’s just change the power structure by redistributing wealth and all will be sweetness and light, the eternal cry of the progressives since Marx and Engels. Why of course it will!

Your supposition, “It is possible that if Herricks were to distribute the cost of illegal students over its five schools, the cost would be little more than the price of textbooks and far less than the $20,000 used to hire a private investigator”, is both beside the point and a telling example of excuse mongering on behalf of fundamental dishonesty.

Following that reasoning, if Herricks had say, eight schools rather than five, they could presumably reduce the cost of illegal students to several gross of No. 2 of pencils as well as colored chalk and washable glue for the kindergarten class. Sure.

At the end of the day and despite all the sanctimony, theft is a vice that should be admonished and discouraged for the sake of young people; regardless of circumstances and whatever presumed pious intentions motivated the activity. To do otherwise is to nod and wink at bad behavior as just another option, the siren song of modern relativism.

http://liarcatchers.com/corporate_investigations.html

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigation | Tagged | Comments Off on Description misrepresents Herricks detective