Posts Tagged ‘police’

Trayvon Martin case reveals confusion over how Stand Your Ground works

In the wake of the Trayvon Martin tragedy, as well as the rampage last week in Oklahoma, some critics are now wondering whether Stand Your Ground has created a legal no man?s land.

Stand Your Ground laws were sold in US legislatures primarily as a victims? rights measure, to limit what many saw as prosecutors second-guessing situations where someone had a split second to make a life-or-death decision to defend themselves with force.

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But in the wake of the Trayvon Martin tragedy in Sanford, Fla., as well as the racially charged rampage last week in Tulsa, Okla., some critics are now wondering whether the gutting of prosecutorial discretion in many self-defense cases has created a legal no man?s land.

George Zimmerman has claimed self-defense in the fatal shooting of Trayvon, an unarmed teen. Although reports Wednesday indicated that Mr. Zimmerman would be charged, the initial decision by police to not arrest him spurred protests and threats. On Monday, for example, an empty police car was riddled with bullets near the scene of the Feb. 26 shooting.

In the Oklahoma case, part of the motivation for the rampage may have been a police judgment about self-defense in an earlier incident. Oklahoma has had a Stand Your Ground law since 2006. In the shootings last Friday, two white gunmen wounded five random black people, killing three.

The way that Stand Your Ground laws have operated in these cases ? particularly the Florida one ? has offended many people?s sense of justice. In their eyes, it even signals the changing of a basic social compact, as they wonder whether the government has the tools to properly administer street justice.

At the least, the cases have revealed confusion among both the police and the public over how Stand Your Ground is supposed to work.

?The waters get muddied because a lot of this legislation changes the burden of proof and standard of review,? says Steven Jansen, a spokesman for the Association of Prosecuting Attorneys in Washington, which has opposed tenets of the Stand Your Ground laws. ?Before, you would have an objective standard: What would a prudent person have done in a similar situation? And now, it?s more of a subjective test: You have to get inside the mind of the person that has used deadly force.?

Pushed by pro-gun-rights groups like the National Rifle Association (NRA) and the American Legislative Exchange Council, Stand Your Ground laws seem simple on their face. Under such laws, legally carrying citizens have no legal obligation to retreat from a dangerous situation, and they need not fear prosecution if they reasonably meet force with equal or deadlier force to protect themselves or someone else in public.

In the mid-2000s, the US public was ready to listen to that logic, according to a study of the laws by the National District Attorneys Association. Events including 9/11 and hurricane Katrina had shaken Americans? sense of security, and many felt that the justice system could not adequately protect crime victims.

But as the Trayvon Martin case has taken twists and turns, it?s become clear to many legal experts that the Stand Your Ground concept has many inherent ambiguities, undermining faith in the justice system in the process.

At a legislative task force last week on Stand Your Ground called by Florida state Sen. Chris Smith (D), it was ?clear that there was lots of confusion around the statute,? even among seasoned police officers and prosecutors, says Jo?lle Anne Moreno, a former federal prosecutor and now a law professor at Florida International University in Miami who is part of the task force.

?The fact is, we haven?t had this law for that long, and we?re still working with it, still trying to figure it out,? she says.

In fact, of the nearly 100 Stand Your Ground defenses in Florida since 2005, the majority were successful ? suggesting to police that the benefit of the doubt should primarily go to the person claiming self-defense.

“If police expect and anticipate there might be a Stand Your Ground defense, they’re specifically instructed to act with much more deference,” says Professor Moreno.

Stand Your Ground legislation also seems to have played a role in the Oklahoma rampage. That became more apparent on Monday, when one of the two suspects, Jake England, admitted that he was in a depressed and vengeful mood in part because of the circumstances of his father?s death in 2010.

Carl England, the alleged shooter?s father, was fatally shot by a black man who had threatened his daughter and tried to kick in the door of her home. That man, Pernell Jefferson, was charged with robbery and weapons offenses, but not with homicide ? after police determined he acted in self-defense after being hit with a stick by Mr. England.

?Today is two years that my dad has been gone, shot by a [expletive n-word],? Jake England recently wrote on a social networking website.

In 2009, Florida prosecutors used Stand Your Ground to decide that a homeowner who shot (but did not kill) an unarmed neighbor, Billy Kuch, in his front yard would not be prosecuted, since the homeowner had felt ?threatened.?

“I have no problem with people owning guns to protect themselves,” Bill Kuch, Billy’ s father, told The Washington Post. “But somehow, we’ve reached the point where the shooter’s word is the law. The victim doesn’t even get his day in court. I don’t think most Americans realize it, but that’s where we are.” http://www.oregonlive.com/newsflash/index.ssf/story/stand-your-ground-laws-coincide-with-jump/a3790f550b3adad2fbf3730fe6976180

For their part, supporters of Stand Your Ground and other gun laws say many of the reactions to the Trayvon Martin shooting smack of political opportunism.

Officials should not be ?stampeded by emotionalism,? Marion Hammer, an NRA lobbyist who helped write Florida?s law, told The Palm Beach Post. ?This law is not about one incident. There is absolutely nothing wrong with the law.?

Others are more skeptical.

The problem is, ?you lose faith in the legitimacy of the justice process if you feel cases are unresolved or resolved in a way that suggests a sort of unfair or biased result,? says Moreno, the former federal prosecutor. ?At a very sort of basic level, [these laws] change how we view the sanctity of human life. If we?re allowed to shoot somebody for reaching into your car to grab a purse, does it mean that we don?t value human life the way we thought we did??

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Young disabled stay silent over hate crimes – Health Nutrition and …

Nearly two in three young disabled people say they have been victims of disability hate crimes, such as being verbally or physically abused or suffering threatening behaviour, a survey by the Muscular Dystrophy Campaign found. The research, by the campaign?s Trailblazers, a 400-strong group of disabled 18-to-30-year-olds, raises concerns that nationally hundreds of attacks on disabled people are going unreported.

Only four out of 10 victims of disability hate crimes reported the incident to the authorities, the survey found.

Reported disability hate crimes in England, Wales and Northern Ireland have been increasing, rising by 20 per cent between 2009 and 2010, from 1,294 to 1,569 incidents.

The group?s new report, Under Investigation, found that up to 80 per cent of young disabled people believe that the police do not take disability hate crimes seriously enough. The charity is now urging police authorities to review their handling of disability-motivated hate crime. Over the past year, the UK?s leading disability charities have voiced increasing concern over the escalation of disability-motivated hate crime. Today the Minister for Disabled People, Maria Miller, and the Chief Executive of Disability Rights UK, Liz Sayce, will launch guidance on tackling disability hate crime.

The Trailblazers? survey reveals that 62 per cent of young disabled people have been taunted or verbally abused because they are disabled

Meanwhile, eight out of 10 young disabled people who completed the survey think the police do not take disability hate crime seriously enough.

Young disabled people reported their reluctance to report incidents of verbal abuse, spitting and confrontational behaviour, due to the belief that their local police force would fail to take action or that the incident was not ?significant enough? to warrant police time.

The charity is now calling for a nationwide initiative between forces to crack down on disability-motivated crime by building links with local disabled groups, providing alternative ways for reporting abuse, and reviewing approaches to recording and tackling incidents.

Bobby Ancil, Project Manager of the Muscular Dystrophy Campaign Trailblazers, said: ?It?s disturbing that in 2012 young disabled people are still facing these kinds of offences.

?Many of those who tell us about incidents of unprovoked abuse and threatening behaviour have no idea that they have been victims of a ?hate crime? in the eyes of the law.

?People feel that attacks have to be sustained and physical for the police to take them seriously, and that sadly, day to day intimidation and verbal abuse must just be tolerated.?

Case study: ?I often faced such aggression?

Becky Oughton, 35, from Lancaster, has limb-girdle muscular dystrophy and uses a wheelchair. She was violently attacked in a nightclub

She said: ?I was attacked a while ago and decided not to report it to police as I had no faith they would do anything about it. One evening, I was approached by a stranger who claimed to know me. She and her friends encircled me.

?She started claiming loudly that she had been to school with me and that I wasn?t disabled then. Aside from this being utterly untrue, like most muscle-wasting conditions, mine is progressive ? I could walk as a teenager but my disability is getting worse the older I get. She lunged at me and grabbed my hair, and tried to pull me out of my wheelchair by it.

?At the time, I didn?t think there was any point in reporting it. I faced this kind of aggression so regularly that it didn?t seem to be worth bringing it up. However, Lancashire Police has done a lot of outreach work since then. I?m now confident that the next time it happens, people in authority will take it seriously. If the police don?t tolerate disability-motivated abuse, then nor do you.?

Article source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/young-disabled-stay-silent-over-hate-crimes-7282146.html

Source: http://health-nutrition-fitness.net/health-news-and-facts/young-disabled-stay-silent-over-hate-crimes/

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LA police search for escapee who stalked Madonna (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Police are asking for the public’s help in locating a man who was convicted of threatening to kill Madonna and walked away from a Los Angeles-area mental hospital last week.

Los Angeles police say Robert Dewey Hoskins left the state hospital Friday. He had been committed there last year.

Hoskins, 54, is “highly psychotic” and can be extremely violent and should not be approached by members of the public, police said in a news release Thursday. They urged anyone who sees him to call authorities immediately.

Hoskins served a 10-year prison sentence for stalking and threatening Madonna after being convicted by a jury in 1996. The singer reluctantly testified against the man, who was shot by her personal security after he jumped the fence of her Hollywood Hills home.

Court records show he was convicted of vandalism in July 2011.

Police say they have searched areas where Hoskins may try to go, including the city of Long Beach south of Los Angeles, but they have been unable to find him.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120210/ap_en_ce/us_madonna_stalker

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Death toll in Nigeria attack rises, stuns leader

A group of Nigerian police stand near the site of the police headquarters bombed by a suicide bomber in Kano, Nigeria, Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012. More than 150 people were killed in a series of coordinated attacks by a radical Islamist sect in north Nigeria’s largest city, according to an internal Red Cross document seen Sunday by an Associated Press reporter. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

A group of Nigerian police stand near the site of the police headquarters bombed by a suicide bomber in Kano, Nigeria, Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012. More than 150 people were killed in a series of coordinated attacks by a radical Islamist sect in north Nigeria’s largest city, according to an internal Red Cross document seen Sunday by an Associated Press reporter. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

An unidentified man walks past the site of the police headquarters bombed by a suicide bomber in Kano, Nigeria, Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012. More than 150 people were killed in a series of coordinated attacks by a radical Islamist sect in north Nigeria’s largest city, according to an internal Red Cross document seen Sunday by an Associated Press reporter. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

Soldiers ride on a back of a truck prior to Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan’s visit to the site of the suicide bombing at the police headquarters Kano, Nigeria, Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012. More than 150 people were killed in a series of coordinated attacks by a radical Islamist sect in north Nigeria’s largest city, according to an internal Red Cross document seen Sunday by an Associated Press reporter. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

Police officers stand guard prior to Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan’s visit to the site of the suicide bombing at the police headquarters Kano, Nigeria, Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012. More than 150 people were killed in a series of coordinated attacks by a radical Islamist sect in north Nigeria’s largest city, according to an internal Red Cross document seen Sunday by an Associated Press reporter. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

Residents watch the convoy of Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan, who visit the site of the suicide bombing at the police headquarters Kano, Nigeria, Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012. More than 150 people were killed in a series of coordinated attacks by a radical Islamist sect in north Nigeria’s largest city, according to an internal Red Cross document seen Sunday by an Associated Press reporter. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

KANO, Nigeria (AP) ? People in this north Nigeria city once wore surgical masks to block the dust swirling through its sprawling neighborhoods, but swarming children hawked the masks for pennies apiece Sunday to block the stench of death at a hospital overflowing with the dead following a coordinated attack by a radical Islamist sect.

The Nigerian Red Cross now estimates more than 150 people died in Friday’s attack in Kano, which saw at least two suicide bombers from the sect known as Boko Haram detonate explosive-laden cars. The scope of the attack, apparently planned to free sect members held by authorities here, left even President Goodluck Jonathan speechless as he toured what remained of a regional police headquarters Sunday.

“The federal government will not rest until we arrest the perpetrators of this act,” Jonathan said earlier. “They are not spirits, they are not ghosts.”

However, unrest continued across Nigeria as unknown assailants in the northern state of Bauchi killed at least 11 people overnight Saturday in attacks that saw at least two churches bombed, a sign how far insecurity has penetrated Africa’s most populous nation.

Friday’s attacks by Boko Haram hit police stations, immigration offices and the local headquarters of Nigeria’s secret police in Kano, a city of more than 9 million people that remains an important political and religious center in the country’s Muslim north. The assault left corpses lying in the streets across the city, many wearing police or other security agency uniforms.

On Sunday, soldiers wearing bulky bulletproof vests stood guard at intersections and roundabouts, with bayoneted Kalashnikov rifles at the ready. Some made those disobeying traffic directions do sit-ups or in one case, repeatedly raise a bicycle over their head.

Signs of the carnage still remained. Police officers wearing surgical masks escorted a corpse wrapped in a white burial shroud out of Murtala Muhammed Specialist Hospital, the city’s biggest. Hospital officials there declined to comment Sunday, but the smell of the overflowing mortuary hung in the air.

An internal Red Cross report seen Sunday by an Associated Press reporter said that hospital alone has accepted more than 150 dead bodies from the attacks. That death toll could rise further as officials continue to collect bodies.

At least four foreigners were wounded in the attack, the report showed. Among the dead was Indian citizen Kevalkumar Rajput, 23, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.

Jonathan arrived to the city late Sunday afternoon, traveling quickly by a motorcade to meet with the state governor and the Emir of Kano, an important Islamic figure in the country. His motorcade later rushed to what used to be the regional command headquarters for the Nigeria police, with an armed personnel carrier trailing behind, a soldier manning the heavy machine gun atop it.

The Christian president, wearing a Muslim prayer cap and a black kaftan, looked stunned as he stood near where the suicide car bomber detonated his explosives. Officers there said guards on duty shot the tires of the speeding car, forcing it to stop before it reached the lobby of the headquarters.

However, it didn’t matter in the end as the powerful explosives in the car shredded the cement building, tore away its roof and blew out its windows. Blood stained the yellow paint near a second-story window, just underneath a 10-foot-tall tree uprooted and tossed atop the building by the blast.

“Whether you are a policeman or not a policeman, when you see this kind of thing, definitely you’ll be worried,” said Aminu Ringim, a senior police officer. “You’ll be touched.”

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also condemned the multiple attacks Sunday.

“The secretary-general is appalled at the frequency and intensity of recent attacks in Nigeria, which demonstrate a wanton and unacceptable disregard for human life,” a statement from his office read. He also expressed “his hope for swift and transparent investigations into these incidents that lead to bringing the perpetrators to justice.”

A Boko Haram spokesman using the nom de guerre Abul-Qaqa claimed responsibility for the attacks in a message to journalists Friday. He said the attack came because the state government refused to release Boko Haram members held by the police.

The coordinated attack in Kano represents Boko Haram’s deadliest assault since beginning a campaign of terror last year that saw a suicide bomber strike the United Nations headquarters in Abuja and at least 510 people killed by the sect, according to an AP count. So far this year, the group has been blamed for 226 killings, according to an AP count.

Nigeria’s weak central government repeatedly has been unable to stop attacks by Boko Haram, whose name means “Western education is sacrilege” in the Hausa language of Nigeria’s north. The group has carried out increasingly sophisticated and bloody attacks in its campaign to implement strict Shariah law and avenge the deaths of Muslims in communal violence across Nigeria, a multiethnic nation of more than 160 million people split largely into a Christian south and Muslim north.

While the sect has begun targeting Christian living in the north, the majority of those killed Friday appeared to be Muslim, officials have said.

Violence continued Sunday in Nigeria’s north. In Bauchi state, local police commissioner Ikechukwu Aduba said at least 11 people were killed in assaults there that also saw two churches attacked.

It was unclear what started the violence, though communal violence remains occurs between the area’s different ethnic groups. Bauchi, about 200 miles (320 kilometers) from Kano, is also a region where Boko Haram has staged attacks before.

___

Shehu Saulawa in Bauchi, Nigeria; Salisu Rabiu in Kano, Nigeria and Carley Petesch in Johannesburg contributed to this report.

___

Jon Gambrell can be reached at www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-22-AF-Nigeria-Violence/id-c71c1e7197784302ae762096b36d6466

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Big Brother Brazil participant probed for rape (Reuters)

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) ? A participant in the Brazilian version of reality TV show “Big Brother” is being investigated for suspected rape of a fellow housemate while she apparently was asleep during the program.

Police on Tuesday questioned male model Daniel Echaniz, 30, who was shown in live images in bed with 23-year-old Monique Amin apparently having sex under the covers.

“The young woman denies she was raped and has not pressed charges,” Rio police spokeswoman Edileide Macedo said. “We continue to investigate the case because it is a public matter.”

Television network Rede Globo expelled Echaniz from the program on Monday after a seven-minute video of the bed scene was posted on the Internet and police were called in to investigate.

Police collected possible evidence from the set of the reality show, including the bed sheets, the police spokeswoman said.

“Big Brother” is a television show in which a group of people live together in a large house, isolated from the outside world but are continuously watched by television cameras. Housemates try to win by avoiding periodic evictions from the house. Localized versions run in countries around the world.

It was not clear from the images taken with a night camera whether Amin was asleep. In the video, she barely moves. Brazilian media reported she had passed out from drinking alcohol at a party before going to bed.

Her mother was sure she was out of it. “Without any doubt, my daughter was asleep,” Claudia Amin told a local newspaper.

(Reporting by Pedro Fonseca and Anthony Boadle; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120118/tv_nm/us_brazil_bigbrother_rape

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Hollywood gunman shot dead by policeman from movie set (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? A gunman opened fire on motorists in the heart of Hollywood on Friday, wounding three people before he was shot to death by an off-duty police officer who had been working on a nearby film set.

The bizarre mid-morning incident, which some witnesses initially mistook for a movie, touched off fear, confusion and panic at the famed Hollywood intersection of Sunset Boulevard and Vine Street.

Police said on Friday night they were still trying to determine why the 26-year-old gunman, whose name was not immediately released, began firing randomly at motorists and pedestrians.

A 40-year-old man who was struck by a bullet while driving through the intersection in a silver Mercedes was listed in critical condition at a local hospital, Los Angeles Police spokeswoman Norma Eisenman said.

Two other men suffered minor injuries, one when he was grazed by a bullet and the other when glass from a car window shattered near his face, Eisenman said. None of the wounded were identified by name.

Eisenman said a plainclothes detective and an off-duty motorcycle officer who was working a security detail on the set of a film in the area were the first to engage the gunman.

“He was the one who shot the suspect,” Eisenman said of the off-duty officer.

Police said they didn’t know which production the officer was working on when he responded to the call.

‘THEY’RE SHOOTING AT US’

A spokesman for FilmLA, an agency that coordinates film and television permits in Los Angeles, said the closest movie set was “Gangster Squad,” a crime drama starring Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone and Sean Penn.

That set was several blocks away from the intersection of Sunset and Vine, the spokesman said, although he could not confirm that the officer had been working there.

Witness Micah Williams told local KCAL-9 TV that he and a friend were walking nearby when the gunman began shooting “in every which direction.”

Williams said at first he and his friend thought the suspect was part of a movie.

“Then the third one ricocheted right by our head and I was like, ‘Dude, they’re shooting at us’,” Williams said.

A series of videos taken from a nearby office tower and posted on Twitter showed the gunman, dressed in black pants and a white shirt. walking in the intersection firing what appeared to be a handgun as motorists slammed on their brakes and veered out of the way.

Police were then seen arriving on the scene and running in the man’s direction. Several more shots were fired out of the camera’s view.

Another brief clip, posted on the Los Angeles Times website, showed the man firing at a black pick-up truck at close range.

Witness Oscar Herrera told local KCBS-TV he saw the shooter fire his gun at several cars traveling near or through the intersection.

Herrera told KCBS that when the suspect apparently ran out of bullets he put the gun into his waistband and took out a knife before he was shot by police.

(Editing by Jerry Norton, Greg McCune and Cynthia Johnston)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111210/us_nm/us_hollywood_shooting

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Colombian survivor: ‘I ran the other way’

Survivor rebel hostage police Sgt. Luis Alberto Erazo gives a thumbs up upon his arrival to the police airport in Bogota, Colombia, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011. Guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC, executed Saturday four of its longest-held captives in the jungles of the southern state of Caqueta. Erazo, who was with them, fled into the jungle and was later found by troops. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

Survivor rebel hostage police Sgt. Luis Alberto Erazo gives a thumbs up upon his arrival to the police airport in Bogota, Colombia, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011. Guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC, executed Saturday four of its longest-held captives in the jungles of the southern state of Caqueta. Erazo, who was with them, fled into the jungle and was later found by troops. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

Survivor rebel hostage police Sgt. Luis Alberto Erazo flashes a victory sign upon his arrival to the police airport in Bogota, Colombia, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011. Guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC, executed four of its longest-held captives Saturday in the jungles of the southern state of Caqueta. Erazo, who was with them, fled into the jungle and was later found by troops. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

An army officer embraces Johan Martinez, 13, the son of slain hostage, Army Sgt. Maj. Jose Libio Martinez, at a military base in Bogota, Sunday, Nov. 27, 2011. Martinez was among four captives executed Saturday by rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC, in the jungles of the southern state of Caqueta. Johan never met his father, who was seized in 1997 and was the longest-held rebel captive. (AP Photo/William Fernando Martinez)

In this photo released by the Presidency of Colombia, President Juan Manuel Santos, left, listens to survivor rebel hostage police Sgt. Luis Alberto Erazo at a military hospital in Bogota, Colombia, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011. Guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC, executed four of its longest-held captives Saturday in the jungles of the southern state of Caqueta. Erazo, who was with them, fled into the jungle and was later found by troops. (AP Photo/Cesar Carrion, Presidency of Colombia)

(AP) ? The Colombian police sergeant who saved himself when leftist rebels killed his four companions said Monday that he ran for his life into the jungle while his fellow captives ran the other way.

Luis Alberto Erazo, who spent nearly 12 years as a prisoner of Colombia’s main rebel force, said the leader of the guerrillas guarding the five captives had always told them that if government troops surprised the group the rebels would protect them.

But when he heard gunfire on Saturday, Erazo turned and ran for the jungle. Government troops had engaged the rebels’ outer security ring in combat.

“The only thing that occurred to me was to run for it,” he said from the safety of a police hospital bed in the capital, Bogota.

Erazo was folding a towel when gunshots rang out. He felt what turned out to be a bullet graze his face and something sting his neck, he said in an interview with Caracol TV, his left cheek bandaged with gauze.

The guerrillas were apparently shooting at him.

So he ran for his life, chased by two rebels whom he managed to evade before hiding under a felled tree trunk for hours.

The other four captives, all of whom had been held by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, for at least 12 years, were apart from him and ran toward their guerrilla jailers, said the 48-year-old Erazo.

Colombian officials said three of the men were executed with gunshots to the head, the fourth with two shots to the back.

Defense Ministry officials said military units acting on intelligence that FARC had hostages in the area had happened upon the rebels holding the five during what amounted to a reconnaissance mission.

The commander of the FARC’s 63 front, which held the men, had told the five that if ever there was a firefight “we should run toward (the rebels) because they would get us out of there and deliver us safe and sound to our families,” Erazo said.

His companions heeded that advice “and they were killed in a cowardly manner, without risk,” he added. One of them, Capt. Edgar Duarte, had a bad foot and couldn’t walk.

It is a long-standing FARC policy to kill captives rather than allow them to be liberated.

Erazo was slightly wounded in the cheek by a bullet and had a small wound in the back of his neck from a grenade fragment, Col. Adriana Camero, director of the police hospital where Erazo was recuperating, told The Associated Press.

“He’s a bit anxious, with some sadness, with mixed emotions at having regained freedom but having lost his friends,” Camero said.

The FARC took up arms in 1964. It is composed largely of peasants in a country with high rural poverty where land is concentrated in the hands of few and funds itself through cocaine trafficking, kidnapping and extortion.

Analysts see few prospects for a military solution to the conflict despite a series of major setbacks for the rebels including the combat death on Nov. 4 of the FARC’s top commander, Alfonso Cano.

Erazo said he had spent the past decade with Jose Libio Martinez, one of the slain men and the longest-held of the FARC’s captives. He had been held since being taken prisoner on Dec. 21, 1997 on a remote southern mountaintop called Cerro Patascoy.

The son who never met him, 13-year-old Johan Steven Martinez, publicly rebuked the FARC on Sunday.

“Gentlemen of the FARC,” he said, “you have broken my wings, broken my dreams, the longing to know my father personally.”

“I did not expect that you would kill him,” he added. “I never expected that you would send him to me in a box.”

He implored the rebels: “It’s time for you to throw away those weapons that have done so much damage to Colombia and to innocent people.”

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-28-LT-Colombia-Rebel-Captive/id-1081cb104a684f1c9369b8b1564bf492

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Chileans protest pro-Pinochet tribute; 7 injured (AP)

SANTIAGO, Chile ? Chilean police fired tear gas and clashed with demonstrators who protested against an event honoring a former military officer imprisoned for killings during the dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet.

At least seven people were injured, including six police officers, during the clashes Monday night outside an exclusive club in Santiago, where about 1,000 protesters had congregated. Protesters hurled rocks at police, and nine demonstrators were arrested.

Chilean human rights activists organized the protest to condemn the gathering in honor of ex-Brigadier Miguel Krassnoff, who is serving a 144-year prison sentence for crimes related to the kidnappings and killings of government opponents during Pinochet’s rule from 1973 to 1990.

Several hundred people attended the tribute, which was organized with the help of Cristian Labbe, the right-wing mayor of Santiago’s Providencia district, who also was a police official in Pinochet’s regime.

Krassnoff’s lawyer spoke at the club, criticizing the government for failing to speed the trials of military officers charged with crimes during the period. Krassnoff’s wife also demanded that her husband’s rights be respected. Labbe did not attend.

Krassnoff’s first trial began in 2003, and he was convicted and imprisoned in 2006. He has been charged in a total of 23 cases stemming from the kidnappings and killing of political opponents. He also is accused of overseeing the torture of opponents for Pinochet’s secret police.

Those hurt during the protest outside the club included a woman who was struck in the abdomen with a tear gas canister.

According to an official report by the civilian government that succeeded Pinochet, 3,197 people were killed for political reasons during Pinochet’s long reign and many others were tortured.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111122/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_chile_protest

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UC Davis cop pepper sprays famous works of art

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Lt. John Pike makes an unexpected appearance in Georges Seurat’s “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte.”

By Athima Chansanchai

It’s not enough that the police are pepper spraying Occupy protesters,?now they’re taking aim at famous works of art?? as an Internet meme, of course.

It was only a matter of time before the viral image of that UC Davis cop (Lt. John Pike, you’re famous now! Or infamous?) made it into certain images, but it’s a stroke of genius to incorporate it into famous works of art, as you can see below (and which we saw all over Facebook last night, too).

James Alex, an American artist living in Edinburgh, Scotland, created some of the images Sunday night?after seeing the Seurat mash-up (above), and expanded?it to others such as the Manet, the Eakins, Wyeth and Willard, posting them to his Tumblr.

“I started to think about the UC students using a peaceful method of?protest, i.e. sitting, and how truly revolutionary such a passive event?like sitting could be. Then I started to think about paintings being?passive yet revolutionary especially in their own time and yes, now too,” he wrote in an email to msnbc.com this morning. “Popping in the image of the officer resulted in something quite dynamic?with a multitude of meanings, the least of which is playing with the idea?of historical events and how unamerican a violent act can be.”

Here, Alex chose Andrew Wyeth’s “Christina’s World” to express his thoughts. Another creative soul chose Picasso’s “Guernica” to reveal the police presence now seen around the world.

James Alex

Unknown

Lt. John Pike makes a stealthy cameo in Picasso’s “Guernica.”

Others have done the random photoshop, and still more have merged memes (see the Leo diCaprio strut below, too).

Leo diCaprio strut meme merges with pepper spray image

There’s much more on Know Your Meme’s “Casually Pepper Spray Everything Cop” page.

UC Chancellor?Linda P.B. Katehi?has come under fire for her handling of the situation, putting the offending officers caught on camera on administrative leave. While these images conjure up the lighter side of the police action, we realize how serious the situation really is. If you haven’t seen the original image yet, here it is, followed by a video about the ensuing controversy.

NBC News

Students at UC Davis are pepper sprayed.

As faculty members call for her resignation, the chancellor of UC Davis launched an investigation into the pepper-spraying of apparently peaceful Occupy Davis protesters by campus police. NBC’s Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

More stories:

Check out Technolog on?Facebook, and on Twitter, follow?Athima Chansanchai, who is also trying to keep her head above water in the?Google+?stream.

Source: http://digitallife.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/21/8929646-uc-davis-cop-pepper-sprays-famous-works-of-art

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London student protest over fees draws thousands (AP)

LONDON ? Amid a heavy police presence, thousands of students marched through central London on Wednesday to protest cuts to public spending and a big increase in university tuition fees.

Police said more than 2,000 people took part in the march, which set off from the University of London at midday with chants of “No ifs, no buts, no education cuts.” Organizers estimated the crowd at 10,000.

About 4,000 police officers were deployed along the route.

Previous student protests have ended in violence by a minority of demonstrators, including a spontaneous attack on a car carrying Prince Charles and his wife Camilla in December.

Police said 24 people were arrested, most for breach of the peace and public order offenses, but the march was largely peaceful as demonstrators made their way through the city center.

At Trafalgar Square, a group of protesters erected more than 20 tents at the foot of Nelson’s Column in the latest spinoff of the Occupy Wall Street protest camp movement. The tents were quickly cleared away by police.

The marchers had planned to link up with an existing protest camp against corporate greed outside St. Paul’s Cathedral, but were stopped by lines of police in riot gear.

Annette Webb, an international development student at Portsmouth University, said tripling tuition fees to 9,000 pounds ($14,000) from next year “will price out most students.”

“It will mean that education is only for the rich and I believe it should be for everyone,” she said.

Police had warned that anyone involved in criminal activity during the march would face arrest and prosecution. Police said protesters may face being “kettled” ? contained inside a cordon ? if there is a threat of serious disorder.

Protest organizers accused the police of trying to intimidate marchers after reports that officers would be authorized to use rubber bullets if violence broke out. London police said officers along the route would not be issued with rubber bullets and they would only be used in “extreme circumstances.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111109/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_student_protests

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