Mesmerizing NASA photographs capture the twinkling lights of cities around the world from 240 miles high

These are the breathtaking photographs captured by NASA showing cities around the world from 240 miles above ground. 

From Baltimore, Maryland to the shores of Tokyo, Japan, astronauts on the International Space Station have pictured the twinkling lights of urban sprawl.

The photographs, taken by Expedition 33 crew members as the space station orbits the Earth, show the mesmerizing light patterns of different metropolises.

Cities on the coast have the densest light by the water’s edge while cities with major new development like in Kuwait have a more grid-like pattern.

 

 
The biggest little city in the word: Reno, nestled in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, as seen from the International Space Station

The biggest little city in the word: Reno, nestled in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, as seen from the International Space Station

 

 
By the sea: The city of Porto (left) and Vila Nova de Gaia (right) astride the Douro River on the northwestern coast of Portugal

By the sea: The city of Porto (left) and Vila Nova de Gaia (right) astride the Douro River on the northwestern coast of Portugal

 

 
Miles below: Crew on the space station took this picture of Cleveland, Ohio, flying at an altitude of approximately 240 miles

Miles below: Crew on the space station took this picture of Cleveland, Ohio, flying at an altitude of approximately 240 miles

 

 
London calling: Astronaut Chris Hadfield took this photograph of the British capital

London calling: Astronaut Chris Hadfield took this photograph of the British capital

 
Sparkling: A nighttime view of Istanbul, Turkey with the Bosporus strait separating the two halves of the city

Sparkling: A nighttime view of Istanbul, Turkey with the Bosporus strait separating the two halves of the city

 

 
Intricate: The north west side of Tokyo Bay in Japan. The mammoth city has a population close to 13million

Intricate: The north west side of Tokyo Bay in Japan. The mammoth city has a population close to 13million

 
World web: Liege in Belgium sprawls out into the darkness of the surrounding countryside like a spider's webb

World web: Liege in Belgium sprawls out into the darkness of the surrounding countryside like a spider’s webb

 

 
Little Italy: The county's boot-like shape and nearby Sicily as seen from 240 miles above ground

Little Italy: The county’s boot-like shape and nearby Sicily as seen from 240 miles above ground

 

 
Eastern delight: A nighttime view of Kuwait City with its neat urban planning. The metropolitan area has a population of two and a half million

Eastern delight: A nighttime view of Kuwait City with its neat urban planning. The metropolitan area has a population of two and a half million

 

 
 
Pretty as a picture: A view of Baltimore, Maryland. The city is situated on the mid-Atlantic coastline along the terminus of the Patapsco River into Chesapeake Bay

Pretty as a picture: A view of Baltimore, Maryland. The city is situated on the mid-Atlantic coastline along the terminus of the Patapsco River into Chesapeake Bay

On the grid: Shenyang on China at night with the smaller city of Sujiatun (pictured left)

On the grid: Shenyang on China at night with the smaller city of Sujiatun (pictured left)

Brawling mothers on school run hit, scratched and ripped out hair of another parent leaving her bleeding so badly she needed an ambulance

Two mothers brought terror to the playground of a primary school when they became involved in a brawl with another woman in front of children.

Victim Elizabeth Smart had just dropped her kids off at school when she became involved in a foul-mouthed row with a relative of Sharon Nyberg, 43.

Ms Smart was offered refuge in the school, but when she left Nyberg was waiting for her outside the school gates.

 

A court heard Nyberg barged another parent holding a toddler out of the way then launched a ferocious attack on Ms Smart.

 
Mothers Sharon Nyberg (left) and Jolene Angus (right) have been given community orders after a brawl in a school playground in Alnwick, Northumberland

Mothers Sharon Nyberg (left) and Jolene Angus (right) have been given community orders after a brawl in a school playground in Alnwick, Northumberland

As terrified children looked on, Ms Smart was put to the ground, had clumps of hair pulled out, was scratched, hit and was left bleeding so heavily an ambulance had to be called.

During the attack at St Michael’s Church of England First School, in Alnwick, another parent, Jolene Angus, 26, also joined in with the attack.

After the incident, Angus and Carlene Balmbra, 28, set up fake Facebook accounts in the names of two witnesses in an effort to scupper the case.

They printed off made-up conversations between the women which appeared to undermine the case and sent them to the Crown Prosecution Service and the school.

But their lies were exposed, and now Nyberg and Angus have admitted affray and Angus and Carlene Balmbra admitted attempting to pervert the course of justice.

The court heard the incident outside the school happened on June 27, 2011.

John Cleasby, prosecuting, said: “This was in broad daylight outside a school with small children in the vicinity.

‘It was witnessed by a number of teaching assistants, who were sent out in order to bring the violence to a conclusion.

‘In due course the assault stopped and Nyberg and Angus readjusted their hair and left the scene calmly.’

Ms Smart had become involved in an angry exchange with a member of Nyberg’s family and feelings were running high.

The school secretary came out and offered Ms Smart refuge .Mr Cleasby said: ‘She thought she would be fine going home with friends and had been offered a lift.

‘While exiting the school premises she became aware that Sharon Nyberg had waited for her.

 

‘She came directly at her and it was clear she was intent on violence from the outset.

‘She barged one lady out of the way who had a two-year-old child in her hands.’

Nyberg, of Howling Lane, Alnwick, admitted affray and was given a 12 month community order with 60 hours of unpaid work.

Angus, of Windsor Gardens, Alnwick, pleaded guilty to affray and perverting the course of justice and was given six months prison suspended for 12 months with 100 hours of unpaid work.

Mother-of-three Balmbra, also of Windsor Gardens, Alnwick, admitted perverting the course of justice and was given a 12-month community order.

The Defense Department has released its top picks for the most memorable images of 2012.

Portrait 1st Place: 'Getting Back Up', U.S.M.C., Staff Sgt. Mark Fayloga

Portrait 1st Place: ‘Getting Back Up’, U.S.M.C., Staff Sgt. Mark Fayloga

 
News Photography 2nd Place: 'Urgent Care', U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Greg C. Biondo

News Photography 2nd Place: ‘Urgent Care’, U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Greg C. Biondo

 

 
Combat Training 2nd Place: 'Name, Rank, and Service Number', U.S. Air Force, TSgt Michael R. Holzworth

Combat Training 2nd Place: ‘Name, Rank, and Service Number’, U.S. Air Force, TSgt Michael R. Holzworth

 
Combat Training 1st Place: 'Operation Patriot Hook 12', U.S. Air Force, TSgt Chris Hibben

Combat Training 1st Place: ‘Operation Patriot Hook 12’, U.S. Air Force, TSgt Chris Hibben

 

 

 

 
Sports 2nd Place: 'Dive In', U.S.M.C., Staff Sgt. Mark Fayloga

Sports 2nd Place: ‘Dive In’, U.S.M.C., Staff Sgt. Mark Fayloga

 

 
News Photography 1st Place: '3 Alarm Fire', U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Perry M. Aston

News Photography 1st Place: ‘3 Alarm Fire’, U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Perry M. Aston

 

 

 

 
Pictorial Honorable Mention: 'Brothers in Arms', U.S. Air National Guard, Private First Class Allison Lampe

Pictorial Honorable Mention: ‘Brothers in Arms’, U.S. Air National Guard, Private First Class Allison Lampe

Pictorial Honorable Mention: 'Starry Ground Control', U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Jonathan Snyder

Pictorial Honorable Mention: ‘Starry Ground Control’, U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Jonathan Snyder

 

 

 

 
Combat Training Honorable Mention: 'Untitled', U.S. Air Force, Sr. Airman Allen Stokes

Combat Training Honorable Mention: ‘Untitled’, U.S. Air Force, Sr. Airman Allen Stokes

 

 
Combat Operational Honorable Mention: 'Corpsman Up', USMC, Cpl. Reece Lodder

Combat Operational Honorable Mention: ‘Corpsman Up’, USMC, Cpl. Reece Lodder

Combat Operational Honorable Mention: 'Looking Through the Pain', US Army, Spc. Ken Scar

Combat Operational Honorable Mention: ‘Looking Through the Pain’, US Army, Spc. Ken Scar

 

 

 

 
News Photography Honorable Mention: 'Fallen', U.S. Air Force, Tech. Sgt. Daniel St. Pierre

News Photography Honorable Mention: ‘Fallen’, U.S. Air Force, Tech. Sgt. Daniel St. Pierre

 

 
Combat Training Honorable Mention: 'Poke', U.S. Army, Sgt. Markus Fichtl

Combat Training Honorable Mention: ‘Poke’, U.S. Army, Sgt. Markus Fichtl

 

 
Combat Operational 3rd Place: '1st LAR Marines Patrol Through Sre Kala', US Air Force, Sgt. Alfred V. Lopez

Combat Operational 3rd Place: ‘1st LAR Marines Patrol Through Sre Kala’, US Air Force, Sgt. Alfred V. Lopez

 

 
Portrait 2nd Place: 'Culture', U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Joshua L. DeMotts

Portrait 2nd Place: ‘Culture’, U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Joshua L. DeMotts

 

 
Portrait 3rd Place: 'Female Engagement Team', U.S. Army, Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod

Portrait 3rd Place: ‘Female Engagement Team’, U.S. Army, Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod

 

 
Combat Training Honorable Mention: 'Helping Hands', U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt.d Christopher Griffin

Combat Training Honorable Mention: ‘Helping Hands’, U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt.d Christopher Griffin

 

 
News Photography Honorable Mention: 'Untitled', U.S. Air Force, Airmen 1st Class Tiffany DeNault

News Photography Honorable Mention: ‘Untitled’, U.S. Air Force, Airmen 1st Class Tiffany DeNault

 

 
Combat Operational: 2nd place: 'Bazaar QA/QC', USAF, Staff Sgt. Tim Chacon

Combat Operational: 2nd place: ‘Bazaar QA/QC’, USAF, Staff Sgt. Tim Chacon

 

 
Combat Operational 1st Place: 'Afghan Soldiers Searching in the Dark', US Army, Staff Sgt. Sean K. Harp

Combat Operational 1st Place: ‘Afghan Soldiers Searching in the Dark’, US Army, Staff Sgt. Sean K. Harp

Horror in Mexico as seven men are executed and dumped on chairs in city centre with chilling signs pinned to their chests with ice picks

These shocking photos show how the bodies of seven men were found on plastic chairs in Mexico having been shot in the head, with threat messages nailed to some of their chests using ice picks.

A placard on one of the bodies, which were found early on Saturday morning in Uruapan, Michoacan state, said: ‘Warning! This will happen to thieves, kidnappers, sex offenders and extortionists.’

Seven bodies had bullet wounds and had been placed individually in the sitting position in chairs near a roundabout, local authorities said. The local attorney general’s office did not provide a motive.

Onlookers: Seven bodies had bullet wounds and had been placed individually in the sitting position

Onlookers: Seven bodies had bullet wounds and had been placed individually in the sitting position

Some of the bodies had their hands and feet bound, outside a Pepsi bottling plant. The men were believed to have been aged from 15 to 40. The bodies were found at 05:30 local time (11:30 GMT).

Meanwhile another seven people were killed in neighbouring Guerrero, where armed men opened fire in a bar in Ciudad Altamirano late on Friday. Four civilians and three off-duty federal agents died.

In Guerrero state, authorities said armed men opened fire in a bar in Ciudad Altamirano late on Friday, and four civilians and three off-duty federal agents were killed.

 
Location: The bodies were found early on Saturday morning in Uruapan city, Michoacan state, Mexico

Location: The bodies were found early on Saturday morning in Uruapan city, Michoacan state, Mexico

The officers were pursued by gunmen while walking to a local bank, and were killed after seeking refuge in a nearby hotel, an official with the federal police said.

Both states on Mexico’s western coast have seen a rise of violence in recent years attributed to drug cartels. Around 70,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence in Mexico in seven years.

President Enrique Pena Nieto, who took office in December, has vowed to quell the lawlessness and killing that have stained Mexico’s image as a tourist destination and rattled investors.

Source: dailymail.co.uk

 

Killer heels KO’d me! Carol Voderman in hospital with a broken nose after falling down the stairs

Carol Vorderman has been forced to cancel her TV appearances after she tripped while wearing 4in heels and broke her nose.

The Cambridge graduate, whose mathematical abilities wowed the nation on Countdown, admits the accident has left her feeling ‘a complete idiot’.

In a picture released by ITV, the 52 year-old presenter is seen with her nose heavily bandaged after she came to grief running down stairs with her hands in her pockets.

 
Broken: Carol has had to cancel her Loose Women appearances for a few weeks after she fell while wearing heels and broke her nose

Broken: Carol has had to cancel her Loose Women appearances for a few weeks after she fell while wearing heels and broke her nose

 
Embarrassed: Carol returned to Twitter on Monday morning after her accident was made public

Embarrassed: Carol returned to Twitter on Monday morning after her accident was made public

 

Miss Vorderman – known for her love of figure-hugging dresses and killer heels – was leaving a meeting in central London on Thursday when she decided to take the stairs instead of the lift.

Feeling cold, she put her hands in her pockets. In her hurry, she slipped and fell face first into the corner of a wall.

Her boyfriend Graham Duff, 37, a former squadron leader with the Red Arrows, was called and she was taken to hospital.

 
vorderman
vorderman
 

Glamour: Carol is often seen in skyscraper heels when leaving the Loose Women studio

 
Star quality: She has had to cancel her forthcoming appearances on daytime TV show Loose Women

Star quality: She has had to cancel her forthcoming appearances on daytime TV show Loose Women

 

 

The presenter of ITV’s Loose Women and Food Glorious Food was kept in overnight as her nose was reset and cuts to her eyelid and forehead were stitched.

Her nose is in plaster as she recovers at home.

Mother-of-two Miss Vorderman said: ‘I’m feeling okay but because I had my hands in my coat pockets, I had nothing to break my fall except my head. I really do look like I’ve done eight rounds with Muhammad Ali.

‘I am just counting my blessings that I didn’t damage my skull or the left eye itself… feel like a complete idiot.’

 
Fabulous: The Cambridge graduate celebrated her 50th birthday wearing her trademark heels in 2011

Fabulous: The Cambridge graduate celebrated her 50th birthday wearing her trademark heels in 2011

 

 

 
Red-faced: Carol Vorderman, who loves wearing skyscraper heels, admits the accident has left her feeling a 'complete idiot'

Red-faced: Carol Vorderman, who loves wearing skyscraper heels, admits the accident has left her feeling a ‘complete idiot’

The family tragedy that sent ‘Evil Evan’ off the rails: How lawyer’s son became a white supremacist who ‘shot prisons chief dead’

The parents of a white supremacist gang member, who died in a shoot-out while wanted in connection to two murders on Thursday, desperately tried to correct his ways, it has emerged.

28-year-old Evan Spencer Ebel, who allegedly signed his name Evil Evan, was gunned down in north Texas after he shot and wounded a sheriff’s deputy and led police on a dramatic 100mph chase.

Police have now named him as the gunman in the slaying of Colorado’s state prisons chief Tom Clements at his home in Colorado Springs on Tuesday, March 19, and of pizza delivery man Nathan Leon in Golden, Colorado, two days before.

 
v
Slain: Colorado Department of Corrections Director Tom Clements, 58, was shot to death when he answered his front door
 

Suspect: Detectives are investigating whether Evan Spencer Ebel, 28, (left) a member of a Colorado prison gang, was responsible for the murder of state prisons chief Tom Clements (right)

 
 
Father and son: Jack Ebel, pictured with his son, raised Evan Ebel in a middle-class Denver suburb. However, Evan fell into crime despite his efforts to put him on the straight and narrow

Father and son: Jack Ebel, pictured with his son, raised Evan Ebel in a middle-class Denver suburb. However, Evan fell into crime despite his efforts to put him on the straight and narrow

 

 
'Over-the-edge: Ebel's Mother Jody Mangue said it was the death of his sister Marin, pictured with her brother, that pushed her son into a life of crime. She also said solitary confinement altered him psychologically

‘Over-the-edge: Ebel’s Mother Jody Mangue said it was the death of his sister Marin, pictured with her brother,  that pushed her son into a life of crime

 

But rather than a family history of crime, violence and racist teachings, Ebel was raised in a middle class Denver suburb by loving parents Jack Ebel and Jody Mangue.

 

It has emerged the couple fought for years to keep him off his ‘bad streak’ sending him to behavioral programs in Jamaica, Samoa, Mexico and Utah.

They did so against a backdrop of overwhelming grief after losing their youngest daughter Marin in a car accident when she was 16 and he was 19 in 2004.

Before that, his mother writes on her blog that he was an ‘amazing spirit.’

In the blog, which was first reported by the the Denver Post, Jody recalls her son accompanying her to hand out food and blankets to the homeless in Denver when he was about six years old, and noted that he could start a conversation with anyone.

But that all changed after her untimely death.

 

 

'Basically dead': Emergency personnel carry the suspect away on a stretcher after he was shot in the head following a 100mph police chase

Shot dead: Emergency personnel carried Ebel away on a stretcher after he was shot in the head following the 100mph police chase

 

 
Wrecked: The suspect's black Cadillac, which matches the description of the car seen fleeing the home of murdered Colorado prisons chief Tom Clements, is seen after it collided with a tractor trailer rig during a police chase

Wrecked: The suspect’s black Cadillac, which matches the description of the car seen fleeing the home of murdered Colorado prisons chief Tom Clements, is seen after it collided during a police chase

She writes: ‘Evan drifted into a dark period, he was struggling prior, but that event threw him over the edge. They were three years apart. He was the protective big brother and in this case, was unable to protect her.’

According to friends, it was that tragedy that pushed Ebel into a life of crime, racism and possibly murder.

On Friday, Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, who appointed Clements, revealed in a chilling coincidence that he is friends with Jack Ebel, a well-regarded gas and oil attorney.

 

He put out a statement explaining his friend’s struggles over the years with his wayward son.  

 

‘Every killer has a mother and father, usually with broken hearts,’ he said.

 

‘I met Jack Ebel some 30 years ago when working for an oil company soon after moving to Colorado. Jack is one of the most kind and generous people I know. His son had a bad streak that I know he tried desperately to correct.’

Evan Ebel’s black Cadillac sedan matched the description of the car seen fleeing the Monument home of Clements, who was shot dead when he answered his front door.

 

Investigators are also looking into Ebel’s connection to the murder of pizza deliveryman Leon, 27, a father-of-three who was found shot dead after going missing on an afternoon of deliveries.

Long journey: Ebel was killed 650 miles from Monument, Colorado, where prisons chief Tom Clements was murdered

Long journey: Ebel was killed 650 miles from Monument, Colorado, where prisons chief Tom Clements was murdered

 

 

Fiery wreck: Ebel's Cadillac burst into flames when it struck a tractor trailer rig during a high speed chase with officers

Fiery wreck: Ebel’s Cadillac burst into flames when it struck a tractor trailer rig during a high speed chase with officers

 

Ebel had been imprisoned numerous times over the years for a variety of charges from assault to robbery and had previously violated his probation.

 

He was a member of the ‘211 Crew,’ also known as the Brotherhood of Aryan Alliance, which was founded at Colorado’s Denver County Jail in 1995.

 

The white supremacist prison gang has been responsible for numerous high-profile crimes in Colorado.

 

Ebel was most recently on parole after serving four years for assault on a correctional officer inside the Colorado State Penitentiary.

 

His mother Ms Mangue, who separated from Ebel’s father before their daughter’s death, documented much of their work to help and support their son via a blog set up in Marin’s memory.

 
Heartbroken: Leon, who had worked for Domino's Pizza, leaves behind a wife (pictured left) and three daughters

Heartbroken: Leon, who had worked for Domino’s Pizza, leaves behind a wife (pictured left) and three daughters

 
Leon
Leon
 

Innocent victim: Leon went missing Sunday while making deliveries, and his bullet-riddled body was discovered later that day near a recycling center

Thewebsite is directed to her late daughter, but over the years includes letters to Evan in prison and speaks of her hope for a better future for him on his release.

 

In her latest post she addresses her son’s death: ‘After Marin died at age 16 and a half, Evan drifted into a dark period, he was struggling prior, but that event threw him over the edge, they were three years apart.

 

‘He was the protective big brother and in this case, was unable to protect her. His life deteriorated after that and he just became numb and lost his direction altogether, between using drugs and commiting crimes, he was soon put in prison for 8 long years…Like others, I am trying to make sense of what has occurred in our lives. We did not see this coming, but had great hope.

 

‘Our son, Evan was very loved and cherished and although there have been so much negative and depraved references to him, these do not define the person he was to his family and friends from many walks of life who he reached out for and found help.

‘But the years of solitary and surviving some brutal treatment while in prison both psychologically and physically, did absolutely take its toll.’

Jack Ebel, said in a statement yesterday that he was ‘profoundly saddened by the recent events involving my son’.

 

He also testified before a Colorado Legislature committee in March 2011 against the use of solitary confinement.

 

‘What I’ve seen over six years is he has become increasingly … he has a high level of paranoia and [is] extremely anxious. So when he gets out to visit me, and he gets out of his cell to talk to me, I mean he is so agitated that it will take an hour to an hour-and-half before we can actually talk,’ he told lawmakers.

 
 
Shattered family: Clements is survived by his wife, Lisa, far right, and two daughters

Shattered family: Clements is survived by his wife, Lisa, far right, and two daughters

 

 
Witness: Lisa Clements, left, was home at the time of her husband's deadly shooting but said she did not see the gunman

Witness: Lisa Clements, left, was home at the time of her husband’s deadly shooting but said she did not see the gunman

Ironically it appears Hickenlooper and Clements were moved by that testimony to ease the use of the technique in state jails.

 

Clements didn’t know Ebel or his son, who went on to kill him, but felt compelled to make the reforms. Police are looking for possible motives.

 

Ebel dropped out of school after being put on a special education program for ‘severely impacted students’ following his sister’s death.

 

Friends said that’s when he ‘lost it’.

 

‘He was depressed a lot,’ Ryan Arici, told the broadcaster. ‘And he was a dark person. His walls were painted black and his windows were blacked out.’

 

The police chase in which Ebel died on Thursday was the result of a routine drug stop – it is not known why the 28-year-old was in Texas.

 

He fired multiple times at police and shell casings reportedly matched those found at Clements’ home.

 

Montague County sheriff’s deputy James Boyd was shot three times by Ebel, twice in the chest and once in the head.

 

He was saved by his bulletproof vest and is still in hospital.

 

‘He didn’t plan on being taken alive,’ said Decatur Police Chief Rex Hoskins said of Ebel’s death.

 
Crime scene: Clements was found dead from a gunshot wound to the chest at his wooded home in Monument, Colorado (pictured)

Crime scene: Clements was found dead from a gunshot wound to the chest at his wooded home in Monument, Colorado (pictured)

 
 
Cordoned off: A police vehicle blocks the road to the home of the head of Colorado's prison system, who was shot and killed in Monument

Cordoned off: A police vehicle blocks the road to the home of the head of Colorado’s prison system, who was shot and killed in Monument

Items found in Ebel’s car believed to include a Domino’s pizza uniform jacket and a cardboard pizza box, have led authorities to investigate links to the murder of Leon.

 

His bullet-riddled body was discovered in Golden, Colorado, and Ebel has now officially been declared a suspect in both cases.

 

 

‘211 Crew,’ named after the California penal code for armed robbery, recruits its members in prison.

According to reports when released, they join up with the gang’s drug and gun running operations on the outside.

 

Hickenlooper, who appointed Clements to his post in January 2011, said he was horrified by Ebel’s possible connection to the death of the ‘dedicated public servant’ but was also forced to make clear he hadn’t had a hand with helping Evan Ebel get parole.

 

‘Although Jack loved his son, he never asked me to intervene on his behalf and I never asked for any special treatment for his son,’ he said.

‘Based on information we received today, we understand that Evan Ebel served every day of his original sentence and was released on mandatory parole at the end of the time he was ordered to be incarcerated.’

“The events of the past few days have been devastating for all involved. I am in shock and disbelief about how everything seems connected in this case. It makes no sense. Tom’s death at the hands of someone hell-bent on causing evil was tragic in every way. It also now appears Tom’s killer may have had another victim. Our hearts and prayers are with Nathan Leon’s family as well.’

 

Clements is survived by his wife, Lisa, who is director of the state Office of Behavioral Health, and their two daughters, Rachel and Sara.

 

Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper
 

Somber: Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper appeared emotional during a press conference about Clements’ shooting. In a chilling coincidence he was also friends with Jack Ebel – the killer’s father

Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk

The hidden Jaguar: Police find £88,000 vintage car behind false wall of criminal who had told court he was broke

This is the secret compartment a conman built in his lock-up to hide an £88,000 classic car from the authorities.

Fraudster Alan Dykes made a false wall in the storage unit where he sneakily kept the Jaguar XK120.

The 55-year-old, from Poole in Dorset, had been convicted in 2011 of obtaining a money transfer of £45,000 by deception.

 
Deception: Alan Dykes hid the vintage Jaguar in this secret compartment to conceal it from police officers, to no avail

Deception: Alan Dykes hid the vintage Jaguar in this secret compartment to conceal it from police officers, to no avail. He has now been jailed for perjury and perverting the course of justice

 
The hidden Jaguar XK120. Dykes told officers it was abroad but they found it at the lock-up following an investigation

The hidden Jaguar XK120. Dykes told officers it was abroad but they found it at the lock-up following an investigation

In the confiscation hearing that followed he told the authorities he had no realisable assets and that his beloved Jaguar had gone abroad.

But a police investigation led them to a set of agricultural buildings linked to Dykes and an eagle-eyed officer noticed one stud wall protruded 2ft from another.

Officers knocked the flimsy wall down to find the silver Jaguar behind it.

Fraudster Alan Dykes. In the confiscation hearing that followed his 2011 conviction he told the authorities he had no realisable assets

Fraudster Alan Dykes. In the confiscation hearing that followed his 2011 conviction he told the authorities he had no realisable assets

Dykes was re-arrested and charged with perjury and perverting the course of justice.

He was found guilty and jailed for a year.

His car will be signed over to Dorset Police and sold in order to raise the £68,000 he made out of his deception and to cover the court costs involved.

Detective Sergeant Andrew Kennard, of Dorset Police, said: ‘It sends a message that you can’t hide this kind of asset and expect to get away with it.

‘The investigative work that led to finding the Jaguar was a good old-fashioned bit of detective work.

‘Without finding the Jaguar, we would never have identified the fact that he had committed perjury or perverting the course of justice.’

The XK120 was launched at the 1948 London Motor Show as a show car for the new Jaguar XK engine but was such a hit Jaguar put the model into production.

In 1949 the first production car was delivered to superstar actor Clark Gable.

Skydive site owner: Men didn’t deploy parachutes

 

Tragic: Orvar Arnarson, 41, was a veteran skydive instructor from Iceland who had completed thousands of jumps

Tragic: Orvar Arnarson, 41, was a veteran skydive instructor from Iceland who had completed thousands of jumps

Two Icelandic skydivers who died during weekend jumps at a popular southwest Florida camp did not deploy their main parachutes, the co-owner of the facility said.

Deputies found the bodies of the skydiving instructor and a student Saturday after the two didn’t return from a jump with a group, setting off an hours-long air and ground search around the Zephyrhills facility, about 50 kilometres northeast of Tampa. Pasco County sheriff’s authorities identified the victims as 41-year-old instructor Orvar Arnarson and 25-year-old student Andrimar Pordarson of Iceland. The men jumped separately, not in tandem.

The fact that the men didn’t deploy their main parachutes could mean that they lost altitude awareness and didn’t know where they were during the dive, which is unusual, said T.K. Hayes, co-owner of Skydive City.

Both men had backup automatic activation devices, which deploy if the main parachutes are not deployed in time.

“Those devices activated on both of them … but the reserves did not have time to deploy fully,” Hayes said. “They were out of the containers but not inflated in time before they impacted.”

Hayes was at the scene with officials Saturday, sorting through the men’s gear to determine whether all parts had been functioning properly.

 

“Like most accidents, most of the time it’s human error,” he said. “I doubt there’s an equipment problem here, to be honest.” But he stressed that authorities are still investigating.

The two men had successfully completed two other jumps Saturday morning with 20 other people. But when they didn’t return from their third jump, their disappearance tipped off a search, Pasco County sheriff’s spokeswoman Melanie Snow said.

The bodies were discovered by spotters from the air early Saturday evening in woods south of the Zephyrhills Municipal Airport, Snow said.

The victims were part of a group of about 12 who travel from Iceland to Florida every year to jump, Hayes said.

Arnarson, the instructor, had been to the facility before, but Pordarson had not, Hayes said.

The area is a popular destination for skydivers. Skydive City is a 14-acre property that includes RV campgrounds, a tiki bar, cafe and regular shows by a reggae band, according to its website.

Hundreds of skydivers jump each day at the site this time of year. Hayes estimates that overall, the facility assists about 75,000 jumps a year. Accidents are rare, but they happen, he said.

Last year, Dr. T. Elaine McLaughlin died on a jump at Skydive City on New Year’s Day after her chute failed to open properly. She was a resident of the Tampa Bay area and practiced family medicine in St. Petersburg.

Last year across the US, 19 skydivers died out of 3.1 million jumps, according to the United States Parachute Association.

“As an industry, the safety record continues to improve as the decades go on as we improve training and equipment … but it’s not a fail-safe sport,” Hayes said.

Last month, near Seattle, dozens of volunteers spent four days searching through snowy weather and fog after a 29-year-old Florida man didn’t return from a skydiving jump above Washington’s Cascade foothills. Kurt Ruppert, of Lake City, was wearing a special wing suit with fabric under the arms to allow him to glide like a flying squirrel.

“With skydiving of course the consequences of small mistakes are going to be pretty grave,” Hayes said.

The Federal Aviation Administration does not regulate the United States Parachute Association. The group is a self-regulated, but the FAA may get involved in accident investigations to determine whether the pilot or the plane were to blame. Hayes said that was not the case in Saturday’s incident.

Meanwhile, Icelandic officials said Sunday that they were still contacting family and friends of the men who died.

“We will assist the families if they request our assistance. I’m not aware of them contacting us,” said Urdur Gunnarsdottir, press officer for the Foreign Ministry of Iceland.

Source: nzherald.co.nz

Switched On owner may lose properties

 Photo / File photo

Photo / File photo

The owner of the Switched on Gardener chain of hydroponic supplies shops could lose his million-dollar properties – one north of Auckland and the other in Queensland.

Michael Maurice Quinlan was last year convicted of possessing and supplying equipment to grow cannabis and faces up to seven years in jail.

He was acquitted of the more serious charge of belonging to an organised criminal group.

The Crown have filed papers in the High Court at Auckland to restrain the 53-year-old’s $1.3 million home at Gulf Harbour, north of Auckland.

The property’s official valuation describes the four-bedroom house as being in an “exclusive subdivision” known as Le Grande View.

With spectacular sea views and a “gourmet kitchen”, it is billed as “a superior quality executive home” .

Crown lawyers have also restrained his $1 million Queensland property that includes a spa pool and swimming pool.

A bank account in Quinlan’s name holding A$189,352 has also been frozen, according to the court file released to APNZ today.

Police affidavits show authorities went to great lengths to discover Quinlan’s assets, including secretly downloading information from a cellphone belonging to Quinlan’s wife as she passed through Customs.

Quinlan did not oppose his properties being restrained but in an affidavit filed with the court he said there was no “concession that the properties in question were in any way contributed to by criminal proceeds”.

The applications date back to 2010 – soon after Quinlan was arrested as part of operation Lime.

During the police investigation, undercover police officers saw some staff members smoking cannabis, and others were willing to sell seedlings and the finished product.

More than 25 staff, including an area manager and the operations manager, have been convicted of drugs charges but the Crown said the drug offending went right to the top.

In a separate legal move, the Crown is also seeking to seize Quinlan’s companies Hydroponic Wholesalers and Stoneware 91 – the supply and retail arms of Switched on Gardener. The two companies were also convicted of drugs charges.

The Crown says the companies were an integral part of Quinlan’s offending. Quinlan is opposing the move.

The application is known as an “instrument forfeiture”. Under the Sentencing Amendment Act, an asset can be forfeited if considered an “instrument of crime”, although a judge can decline the application if the seizure would cause undue hardship to offenders or their families.

It also means a judge must take into account the financial loss from a frozen property, and consider a lighter sentence or even a discharge.

If the Crown’s application is successful, the assets will be transferred to the Official Assignee. It is not known what would happen to them.

The Switched On Gardener business was born in the early 1990s when Quinlan and his brother opened the first store in the west Auckland suburb of Henderson.

From those modest beginnings sprang a business that eventually expanded nationwide with 16 stores and an annual turnover estimated to be $10 million. Switched on Gardener general manager Peter Bennett told the trial that up to 14,000 customers a month passed through its doors.

The court file shows that between November 2008 and July 2009 the turnover for Stoneware 91 alone was over $6.6 million.

Quinlan and Switched on Gardener general manager Peter Bennett are due to be sentenced in the Auckland District Court later this year.

Three Switched on Gardener employees were acquitted of all charges. They include business development manager Ricky Cochrane, distribution manager Andrew Mai and South Island manager Paul Barlow.

Source: nzherald.co.nz

Amanda Bynes Refuses To Move

Amanda Bynes Refuses To Move

Amanda Bynes’ family want her to move back to Los Angeles.

But the troubled starlet – who was recently forced to move out of her New York apartment, after being threatened with eviction – refuses to move back so her concerned family can keep a closer eye on her.

A source close to the family told E! News that the ‘What I Like About You’ actress’s family are extremely worried about her strange behaviour of late, including her raunchy tweets to Drake, and are eager for her to move home.

Her family are still hopeful that she will return to her normal self but are ready to step in to help her get her life back on track if necessary.

Amanda has had a series of legal troubles in the past few months and in December settled two hit-and-run cases after reaching a civil compromise with her victims, saving herself from a potential 12 months in jail.

Along with her legal troubles, Amanda, 26, was involved in two bizarre episodes in September 2011, locking herself in a store changing room for nearly two hours and refusing to come out and stripping off during a gym class and friends say her parents don’t know what to do as Amanda has cut contact with everyone.

The insider explained: “Amanda shut them out and isn’t speaking to them. She is doing everything on her own. She has no direction.

“Amanda is out of control. She won’t accept help from anybody . . . She’s completely lost.”

BANG Showbiz

Beyonce’s Father Found Split ‘Incredibly Painful’

Beyonce’s Father Found Split ‘Incredibly Painful’

Beyonce’s father found it “incredibly painful” to cut their professional ties.

Matthew Knowles, 61, admits it was hard for him to let his 31-year-old daughter – whose career he managed during her rise to stardom as a teenager with Destiny’s Child until 2011 – take complete control of her own life but has hit back at reports she fired him.

He told the Sun On Sunday newspaper: “It was hard for me to let her go — it was hard for both of us to let each other go. And let’s be clear on that. She didn’t let me go, we both let each other go. That’s a big difference.

“This was not a normal ending of a business agreement. This was a dad and a daughter and it was incredibly painful and it had some difficulties.”

Their personal relationship was said to have suffered as a result of ending their business contract and Beyonce, who has a 14-month-old daughter Blue Ivy with her rapper husband Jay-Z, recently hinted they are still in the process of rebuilding it.

She recently said: “It took a while for me and my dad to have an understanding. When I turned 18 and started handling my business more, he went into shock. And we had our issues. I’d say ‘No’ to something, and he’d book it anyway. Then I’d have to do it because I’d look bad [if I didn’t]. We would fight sometimes, and it took about two years, to when I was 20, for him to realise, ‘Oh, she is an adult now, and if she doesn’t wanna do something, I can’t make her do it.'”

In her recent HBO documentary ‘Life Is But A Dream’, the ‘Bow Down’ singer also claimed she rarely got to make her own decisions while working with her father and said: “Every time he pushed me, I got stronger.”

When asked if she got her dad back after relieving him as her manager, she responded: “No, I had to sacrifice my relationship with dad. I had to let go.”

BANG Showbiz

My Chemical Romance Break Up

My Chemical Romance Break Up

My Chemical Romance has disbanded.

They thanked fans in a statement and said the experience was ”a true blessing.”

Lead singer, Gerard Way, wrote a “letter” today saying:

“A Vigil, On Birds and Glass.

I woke up this morning still dreaming, or not fully aware of myself just yet. The sun poked through the windows, touching my face, and then a deep sadness overcame me, immediately, bringing me to life and realization- My Chemical Romance had ended.
I walked downstairs to do the only thing I could think of to regain composure-
I made coffee.
As the drip began, in that kind of silence that only happens in the morning, and being the only one awake, I stepped outside my home, leaving the door open behind me. I looked around and began to breathe. Things looked to be about the same- a beautiful day.
As I turned to step back into the house I heard sound from within, a chirp and a rustle. And I noticed a small brown bird had flown into the library. Naturally, I panicked. I knew I had to see the bird to safety and I knew I had to retain the order of things in our home, and he very well couldn’t take up residency with us. I chased him (still assuming he was a he) into my office, where I have these very large windows.
Just then, and luckily, I heard Lindsey’s footsteps coming down the stairs, and naturally being composed as she is, she grabbed a blanket and stepped into the office. He was impossible to catch, and I began to open the windows, via Lindsey’s direction, only to find out they were screened. The bird began to fly into the glass, over and over and in all different directions.
Smack.
Smack.
Smack!
I heard another set of footsteps, Bandit’s, running down the stairs in anticipation of the new day. Her entrance into the situation caused just the right amount of chaos (she was very excited to meet the bird) and we found ourselves chasing the bird into the living room. Knowing that this where it could potentially get sticky, being the high ceilings and the beams to perch on, I opened the front door as Lindsey did her best to encourage our new friend out the door. After some coaxing, flying, chirping, a wrong turn back into the library and a short goodbye to Bandit, he simply hopped out the front door- taking off on the fifth leap.
We cheered.
I was no longer sad.
I didn’t realize it, but I stopped being sad the minute that bird had come into my life, because there was something that needed doing, a small vessel to aid and an order to keep. I closed the door. I decided to write the letter I always knew I would.

It is often my nature to be abstract, hidden in plain sight, or nowhere at all. I have always felt that the art I have made (alone or with friends) contains all of my intent when executed properly, and thus, no explanation required. It is simply not in my nature to excuse, explain, or justify any action I have taken as a result of thinking it through with a clear head, and in my truth.
I had always felt this situation involving the end of this band would be different, in the eventuality it happened. I would be cryptic in its existence, and open upon its death.

The clearest actions come from truth, not obligation. And the truth of the matter is that I love every one of you.
So, if this finds you well, and sheds some light on anything, or my personal account and feelings on the matter, then it is out of this love, mutual and shared, not duty.
Love.
This was always my intent.

My Chemical Romance: 2001-2013

We were spectacular.
Every show I knew this, every show I felt it with or without external confirmation.
There were some clunkers, sometimes our secondhand gear broke, sometimes I had no voice- we were still great. It is this belief that made us who we were, but also many other things, all of them vital-
And all of the things that made us great were the very things that were going to end us-

Fiction. Friction. Creation. Destruction. Opposition. Aggression. Ambition. Heart. Hate. Courage. Spite. Beauty. Desperation. LOVE. Fear. Glamour. Weakness. Hope.

Fatalism.

That last one is very important. My Chemical Romance had, built within its core, a fail-safe. A doomsday device, should certain events occur or cease occurring, would detonate. I shared knowledge of this “flaw” within weeks of its inception.
Personally, I embraced it because, again, it made us perfect. A perfect machine, beautiful, yet self aware of it’s system. Under directive to terminate before it becomes compromised. To protect the idea- at all costs. This probably sounds like something ripped from the pages of a four-color comic book, and that’s the point.
No compromise. No surrender. No fucking shit.

To me that’s rock and roll. And I believe in rock and roll.

I wasn’t shy about who I said this to, not the press, or a fan, or a relative. It’s in the lyrics, it’s in the banter. I often watched the journalists snicker at mention of it, assuming I was being sensational or melodramatic (in their defense I was most likely dressed as an apocalyptic marching-band leader with a tear-away hospital gown and a face covered in expressionist paint, so fair enough).
I’m still not sure if the mechanism worked correctly, because it wasn’t a bang but a much slower process. But still the same result, and still for the same reason-

When it’s time, we stop.

It is important to understand that for us, the opinion on whether or not it is in fact time does not transmit from the audience. Again, this is to protect the idea for the benefit of the audience. Many a band have waited for external confirmation that it is time to hang it up, via ticket sales, chart positioning, boos and bottles of urine- input that holds no sway for us, and often too late when it comes anyway.

You should know it in your being, if you listen to the truth inside you. And voice inside became louder than the music.

Now-
There are many reasons My Chemical Romance ended. The triggerman is unimportant, as was always the messengers- but the message, again as always, is the important thing. But to reiterate, this is my account, my reasons and my feelings. And I can assure you there was no divorce, argument, failure, accident, villain, or knife in the back that caused this, again this was no one’s fault, and it had been quietly in the works, whether we knew it or not, long before any sensationalism, scandal, or rumor.

There wasn’t even a blaze of glory in a hail of bullets…

I am backstage in Asbury Park, New Jersey. It is Saturday, May 19th, 2012 and I am pacing behind a massive black curtain that leads to the stage. I feel the breeze from the ocean find its way around me and I look down at my arms, which are covered in fresh gauze due to a losing battle with a heat rash, which had been a mysterious problem in recent months. I am normally not nervous before a show but I am certainly filled with angry butterflies most of the time. This is different- a strange anxiety jetting through me that I can only imagine is the sixth sense one feels before their last moments alive. My pupils have zeroed-out and I have ceased blinking. My body temperature is icy.
We get the cue to hit the stage.

The show is… good. Not great, not bad, just good. The first thing I notice take me by surprise is not the enormous amount of people in front of us but off to my left- the shore and the vastness of the ocean. Much more blue than I remembered as a boy. The sky is just as vibrant. I perform, semi-automatically, and something is wrong.
I am acting. I never act on stage, even when it appears that I am, even when I’m hamming it up or delivering a soliloquy. Suddenly, I have become highly self-aware, almost as if waking from a dream. I began to move faster, more frantic, reckless- trying to shake it off- but all it began to create was silence. The amps, the cheers, all began to fade.

All that what left was the voice inside, and I could hear it clearly. It didn’t have to yell- it whispered, and said to me briefly, plainly, and kindly- what it had to say.

What it said is between me and the voice.

I ignored it, and the following months were full of suffering for me- I hollowed out, stopped listening to music, never picked up a pencil, started slipping into old habits. All of the vibrancy I used to see became de-saturated. Lost. I used to see art or magic in everything, especially the mundane- the ability was buried under wreckage.

Slowly, once I had done enough damage to myself, I began to climb out of the hole. Clean. When I made it out, the only thing left inside was the voice, and for the second time in my life, I no longer ignored it- because it was my own.

There are many roles for all of us to play in this ending. We can be well-wishers, ill-wishers, sympathizers, vilifiers, comedians, rain clouds, victims-

That last one, again, is important. I have never thought myself a victim, nor my comrades, nor the fans- especially not the fans. For us to adopt that role right now would legitimize everything the tabloids have tried to name us. More importantly, it completely misses the point of the band. And then what have we learned?

With honor, integrity, closure, and on no one’s terms but our own- the door closes.

And another opens-

This morning I awoke early. I quickly brushed my teeth, threw on some baggy jeans, and hopped in my car. I gently sped down the 405 through the morning fog to a random parking lot in Palo Verde, where I was to meet a nice gentleman named Norm. He was older, and a self-proclaimed “hippie” but he also had the energy of Sixteen year old in a garage-rock band. The purpose of the meeting was the delivery of an amplifier into my possession. I had recently purchased the amp from him and we both agreed that shipping would jostle the tubes- so he was kind enough to meet me in the middle.
A Fender Princeton Amp from 1965, non reverb. A beautiful little device.

He showed me the finer points, the speaker, the non-grounded plug, the original label and the chalk mark of the man or woman who built it-

“This amp talks.” he said.
I smiled.
We got coffee, talked about gold-foil pickups and life. We sat in the car and played each other music we had made. We parted ways, promising to stay in touch, I drove home.

When I wanted to start My Chemical Romance, I began by sitting in my parent’s basement, picking up an instrument I had long abandoned for the brush- a guitar. It was a 90’s Fender Mexican Stratocaster, Lake Placid Blue, but in my youth I had decided it was too clean and pretty so I beat it up, exposing some of the red paint underneath the blue- the color it was meant to be. Adding a piece of duct tape on the pick guard, it felt acceptable. I plugged this into a baby Crate Amp with built in distortion and began the first chords of Skylines and Turnstiles.

I still have that guitar, and it’s sitting next to The Princeton.
He has a voice, and I would like to hear what it has to say.

In closing, I want to thank every single fan. I have learned from you, maybe more than you think you’ve learned from me. My only regret is that I am awful with names and bad with goodbyes. But I never forget a face, or a feeling- and that is what I have left from all of you. I feel Love.

I feel love for you, for our crew, our team, and for every single human being I have shared the band and stage with-

Ray. Mikey. Frank. Matt. Bob. James. Todd. Cortez. Tucker. Pete. Michael. Jarrod.

Since I am bad with goodbyes. I refuse to let this be one. But I will leave you with one last thing-

My Chemical Romance is done. But it can never die.
It is alive in me, in the guys, and it is alive inside all of you.
I always knew that, and I think you did too.

Because it is not a band-
it is an idea.

Love,
Gerard”

New Zealand firm offers US market new games

Matt Walsh

MAARTEN HOLL/Fairfax NZ

PLAY WITH DIGITS: Resn’s Matt Walsh hopes games played using fingers and gestures will catch on.

 

New Zealand has a new computer games company, with digital creative agency Resn about to try its hand at selling a new breed of computer games to United States consumers.

The eight-year-old firm, which employs 24 people at its offices in Wellington and Amsterdam, has developed social media and online advertising campaigns for the likes of Toyota, Google and French power giant EDF Energy, winning about 90 per cent of its work from overseas.

Its American expat business development manager, Matt Walsh, who settled in Wellington five years ago, said the company was little known in the capital but probably better recognised in his home town of Los Angeles.

Resn now hopes to capitalise on a new matchbox-sized plug-in gaming device, Leap Motion, developed in the US, that will let people play games on Windows and Apple computers using finger and hand gestures.

US magazine Forbes described Leap Motion as a device “straight out of science fiction that makes Minority Report real” – a reference to the motion-based computer interface depicted in the 2002 film noir.

Leap Motion will go on sale from US retail giant Best Buy in May priced at about US$80 (NZ$96). Resn has developed four games for the platform that it will sell online for a few dollars each through Leap Motion’s “app store”.

These include a gunslinger game where players need to “quick draw” and shoot, shaping and using their hand as an imaginary gun, and another that lets players control on-screen puppets, with their fingers pulling the “virtual strings”.

Unlike motion sensors such as Microsoft’s Kinect, the more sedentary Leap Motion has a range of about 50 centimetres and is designed to be used by players sitting at or near a computer screen.

Walsh said some hits such as Angry Birds were being modified to run on the platform but he believed that, aside from a couple of freelance developers, Resn was the only Kiwi company making games for it.

Resn believed the controller could be a hit because of the accuracy and speed of its sensors, which let people control gaming action using very fine movements, he said. “We were very sceptical before we got the units, but when we plugged it in and saw it really was ‘zero latency’, we were really impressed.”

The interface lets players navigate through virtual on-screen terrains at any pace, accelerating and decelerating at will, which is hard to achieve using traditional input devices such as a keyboard or mouse.

Unlike devices such as Kinect, the Leap Motion controller leaves it to game-makers to work out how to interpret players’ gestures, outputting the “raw data” detected by its twin cameras and three infra-red LEDs rather than a limited set of interpreted actions.

On the one hand, that represented a technical challenge for developers, Walsh said, but it also allowed for much greater creativity in game-making.

Resn was founded in 2004 by Wellingtonians Steve Le Marquand and Rikki Campbell.

Campbell now heads the company’s smaller Amsterdam office, which Walsh said the company set up in part just so that it could continue to employ staff who wanted to head to Europe for an “OE”. Its Wellington office is located in the Anvill House office building on Wakefield St that was originally home to Trade Me.

Walsh said it was not yet known whether or when Leap Motion might go on sale in New Zealand.

– © Fairfax NZ News

Veronica Mars rattles movie industry

Firefly

 

LATEST SIGNAL: Firefly creator Joss Whedon says a Kickstarter campaign for a sequel to Serenity is unlikely.

Party Down

 
GOOD TIMES: Could Rob Thomas use Kickstarter to bring back Party Down?
 

Terriers

 
BOW WOW: Cancelled drama Terriers could get a Kickstarted follow-up.

After years of hope, stalled efforts and studio frustration, Veronica Mars creator Rob Thomas watched a long-held dream come to fruition in a sudden digital rush.

“There were a few minutes of nothing happening,” he says. “Then in an hour, watching that ticker go was mesmerising. I had an attention span of, like, four seconds because everything on my computer screen I wanted to look at at the same time. The Twitter feed was going crazy, the emails were going crazy and then watching that Kickstarter total go up.”

Thomas last week launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund a movie of his cult TV show, which was cancelled after three seasons in 2007. It met its stated goal of raising US$2 million in less than 11 hours, meaning it would be greenlit to begin shooting this summer. It’s surpassed US$3.7 million with more than two weeks still to go.

The resounding, immediate success of the crowd-funding campaign sent shockwaves through the movie business. Films had found much-needed financial support on Kickstarter before, but Veronica Mars is different. It’s a studio project, owned by Warner Bros, which produced the show.

The money given by the fervent fans of Veronica Mars, which starred Kristen Bell as a teenage private eye, will go not to a filmmaker operating on his own, but one with the distribution and marketing muscle of a very large corporation – just one that hadn’t previously been convinced to bankroll a Veronica Mars film.

Were donating fans spurring a goliath to action, or its unwitting pawns?

The wide majority of Veronica Mars fans couldn’t care less. They will get the movie they craved, as well as the proud feeling of having played an essential role in the show’s resurrection. Maryland fan Matt Clipp typified the eager contributors, writing: “I am MORE than happy to donate US$100 to this project. This movie has been a dream of mine ever since the series ended back in 2007. … LET’S GET THIS THING MADE, ‘VERONICA MARS’ FANS!”

While the emotional side is surely the biggest motivation for most donors, they’re also paying for tangible goods. Rewards range from an emailed copy of the script (US$10 contributions), all the way up to a speaking part in the film as a waiter who says, “Your check, sir,” (a single US$10,000 donation). All money is refunded if for any reason the film doesn’t get made.

“Most of the people who are pledging are getting in at the US$35 and US$50 range where they’re getting a download of the movie, a T-shirt, a copy of the script at US$35, and all of that plus the DVD and the making-of documentary at the US$50 price point,” says Thomas. “So I don’t think anyone’s being taken advantage of. I feel like the rewards are worth it.”

Typically in film financing, any investor has the chance to earn his money back and potentially share in the profits. Slate claimed the Veronica Mars project sets a “terrible precedent”.

Joss Whedon, whose devoted fanboy following is similar, if larger, than Thomas’, said that he reacted in “unfettered joy” at the Veronica Mars Kickstarter campaign. But Whedon, who realises he’ll now be hounded to follow suit with another movie of his cancelled cult TV series Firefly, acknowledged some trepidation about the financial arrangement for fans.

“I understand that it feels not as pure, and that the presence of a studio makes it disingenuous somehow,” Whedon told BuzzFeed. “But people clearly understood what was happening and just wanted to see more of the thing they love. To give them that opportunity doesn’t feel wrong. If it was a truly wrong move, I don’t think it would have worked.”

Thomas says he’s been in daily contact with Warner Bros, which approved the plan in advance. The studio hasn’t sought to flaunt its involvement. Executives for its digital wing, which is planning a limited theatrical release followed by video-on-demand early next year, declined to comment.

Kickstarter co-founder Yancey Strickler, too, declined to comment when asked through a spokesman about whether corporate involvement compromises Kickstarter’s mission. Kickstarter takes a 5 per cent fee from money raised for successful projects.

Since being founded in 2009, Kickstarter has raised more than US$500 million for some 35,000 creative projects. The Veronica Mars film is far and away its most lucrative movie project.

Earlier this year, the documentary short film Inocente became the first Kickstarter-backed Oscar-winner, having raised about US$52,000 on the platform. Kickstarter has drawn several big Hollywood names, including David Fincher (a producer of an animated project that raised more than US$440,000) and Charlie Kaufman (whose short animated film Anomalisa brought in US$406,000).

Some have derided Kickstarter’s growing influence (Gawker lamented its “online panhandling”), but few would argue it’s been a positive force for getting dozens of films made in an industry landscape that can be brutal for independent filmmakers.

Thomas admits some of the talk of the “revolutionary” impact of the Veronica Mars Kickstarter campaign has been “an overreach,” but he hopes it leads to more low-budget films finding their way in the world.

“I don’t know that I would bet that a Kickstarter model starts to work across the board and that everyone who wants to make a US$3, 4, 5 million movie can expect to go to Kickstarter and get financed,” he said. “When there is a brand name product that people have responded to and want to see and there’s already a built in following for it, people can be very successful. I hope that in that respect we are pioneers and we see more of them.”

Many are already seeing new potential to capitalize on small but dedicated fan support. (On the CW, Veronica Mars averaged less than 2.5 million viewers.) Shawn Ryan, whose FX drama Terriers was cancelled in 2010 after one season, tweeted that he was “very interested” in the Veronica Mars Kickstarter campaign. “Could be a model for a Terriers wrap up film,” he said.

Thomas also co-created another cancelled show – the Starz cult comedy Party Down – that may be reborn as a film. He’s still hopeful that will happen, but says funding is already lining up more traditionally.

In the meantime, he’s hoping the Kickstarter contributions keep coming. More money means being able to shoot in Southern California (where the show was set) and gradual boosts in production value. The screenplay, of which he has 37 pages written, features a 10-year high school reunion for Mars’ Neptune High – a gathering that will include inevitable strife.

“In the barebones version, angry words would have been exchanged,” says Thomas. “We’re now starting to look comfortable enough to say there will be a brawl.”

It already promises to be a different kind of filmmaking experience. He’ll have 100-plus Kickstarter contributors to use as extras. A documentary on the making of the movie has begun tracking Thomas with cameras. And the production schedule has been built to include two days purely for Thomas, Bell and others to sign the thousands of movie posters and other items they’ve promised their Kickstarter backers.

Source – stuff.co.nz

More spies questioned over Dotcom

Image

Police want to talk to more Government spies over the illegal surveillance of internet mogul Kim Dotcom.

The police investigation into Operation Debut, the lead-up to the raid on the German millionaire’s rural Auckland home, will be dragged out further because police say more Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB) staff need to be spoken to.

The investigation, named Operation Grey, has already faced delays over legal issues about whether the GCSB could reveal secret information.

In a letter to update complainant Green Party co-leader Russel Norman on the investigation’s progress, Detective Superintendent Peter Read said investigators had interviewed “some staff” involved in Operation Debut.

“Further GCSB staff need to be spoken to and the information gathered to date needs to be analysed to assess what additional inquiries will need to be completed,” he wrote.

He will provide a further update early next month.

The illegal spying emerged last year, when the agency confessed to spying in Dotcom before the raid on his Coatesville mansion in January 2012. The bureau is only permitted to spy on foreigners and Dotcom and his co-accused had New Zealand residency. Questions remain around how long the spying actually went on for.

The GCSB has admitted it acted illegally and Prime Minister John Key ordered an internal review, the results of which are due soon.

Norman lodged a complaint with police in September last year, saying the Government’s spies must be held to account.

In December police revealed disclosure issues related to Dotcom’s ongoing legal battle against extradition was hampering the investigation, but this was resolved last month.

The US wants to extradite Dotcom on internet piracy charges. Last week Labour accused the Government of casting around for legal advice that suited it in the case.

Deputy leader Grant Robertson released documentation showing legal advice provided to the GCSB changed five times in a week.

 

– © Fairfax NZ News

No investigation into newborn left in locked car

Baby in car - Porirua

LOCKED IN: This photo of a baby in a car was posted on Facebook.

 

Police cannot start an investigation into a woman who left her newborn baby locked in the car while she went shopping, because nobody has lodged a complaint.

A photo of the infant, which was wrapped in a blanket in a car seat with a note saying to call if there are any issues, was taken outside a Porirua supermarket on Saturday morning.

The mother’s cellphone number was left on the note.

After being posted on Facebook, it sparked outrage online, but Senior Sergeant Justin Rakena from Porirua Police said he could do nothing about it until someone complained.

“We weren’t called, and we’ve had no complaints,” he said.

“If they do call us, we’ll be acting on it.

“We were never called at the time, so we’ve got nothing to go on. We’d look at it like we look at anything.”

He said children being left in the car alone happened frequently in the area.

“I don’t know what the stats are, but anecdotally you might have a kid left in a car once a fortnight, something like that,” Rakena said.

“This is quite common, and quite often there’s an innocent explanation. At a guess I’d say 95 per cent of these things can be explained away.”

He said it was not acceptable to leave a person under 14 unaccompanied, but more often than not it just warranted a warning.

A cellphone number is on the note.

A man who spoke to the New Zealand Herald said he saw the baby and the note after he and his family parked next to it.

“It was written from the baby’s perspective, and it said, ‘My mum’s in doing the shopping, call her if I need anything’, and it had the cellphone number.

“We waited there for a little bit, wondering if the mum was just going to be two seconds and come back. And my wife said, ‘I’m not going in without someone being here with the baby’,” the man told the Herald.

The photo was posted on radio personality Polly Gillespie’s Facebook page last night and triggered many heated responses.

Commenter Cat Marie Horne wrote: “I’m sorry this is completely irresponsible! You do not leave children under the age of 14 unsupervised at all.

“Why did she have time to write a note?? Secondly, you do not put a capsule seat in the front of a car, due to dashboard airbags. Also, if you are that tired you should not be driving.”

There were more than 1100 comments on the post, with many outraged at the incident, but many felt sympathy for the mother involved.

Linda Gill wrote:”It was in Porirua, according to the original Facebook post… and it’s not something I would have done but I choose not to come on here and condemn her.

“It’s very easy to come on here and cast judgement on others, because I’m sure you’ve never, ever done anything wrong in your lives.

“The difference is someone took a photo this time. Aren’t you all glad that someone isn’t following you around with a camera. (Aimed at no one in particular, just food for thought).”

Porirua Pak ‘n Save compliance manager Marty Fryer said he didn’t know what had happened until somebody rang him about it yesterday.

“It’s not really an issue we deal with normally, although we get all sorts of things going on out here.

“We have staff in the carpark so if they saw something like a baby in a car they would bring it to our attention,” he said.

It is illegal for a parent or guardian to leave a child under the age of 14 alone for an unreasonable time or in unreasonable conditions. Doing so could result in a fine of up to $2000.

– © Fairfax NZ News

‘I hired a sex worker for my elderly dad’

Image

I hired a sex worker for my late 93-year-old father. He had dementia and lived in a nursing home when he said to me: “You’ll need to find me a woman.”

Perhaps a natural reaction from a daughter in this situation would be uncomfortably laughing it off, voicing disgust or flat out refusing. Rather than saying: “You shouldn’t be thinking about that any more Dad”, I took his request seriously and started looking for “a woman”.

My father was a sexual person. Much to my embarrassment growing up, he talked openly about sex and wouldn’t hold back from over sharing with anyone – not even his kids.

In his later years he had dementia with Lewy bodies, a degenerative disease that causes nerve cells in the brain to die. He shared a bed with his partner who also had dementia. She eventually did not recognise my father. This had a huge impact on him.

Changes to my father’s cognitive function saw a role reversal in our relationship. I began caring for the man who cared for me my whole life. I’m a disability support worker and I’ve seen how an individual’s sexuality needs to be considered. I always knew my father may eventually need help with his personal intimate life. Clearly, this wasn’t about me. It was about him, a person who could no longer do everything he used to.

I can only imagine how daunting it must be for an elderly person to ask family members or nursing home staff to find them a sexual partner. It’s crucial to consider how much that person would be missing intimacy and touch to even voice such a request. They may have lost much of who they used to be: their partner, mobility, cognitive function or continence and the ability to do simple things like eating or dressing. Some people, like my father did, have lost all of the above. It was important to me that his dignity be respected at all times.

Sometimes all an elderly person living alone is seeking is a companion and a bit of closeness and affection. This would be especially so at night because most of their adult life they’ve been fallen asleep holding their partner. My father, who passed away only recently, needed both.

I had to establish if Dad was serious about giving me this task or if it was merely a comment resulting from the depressing realisation that anything he had with his partner was well and truly in the past. He was serious, so I needed to work out if he wanted me to find him a companion or someone to have sex with. He wanted both.

The answer to Dad’s request fell in my lap before I even began my search for a sex worker online and through disability support groups. I was watching TV and a documentary called ‘Scarlet Road‘ was on. It’s about a sex worker who has disabled clients. I learned about Touching Base, an organisation that provides sexual services to the elderly and disabled. I could see from the documentary they were acutely aware of people’s intimate needs beyond sex. They saw how important other forms of contact were, like holding hands. I sent them an email.

Touching Base put me in contact with People with Disabilities who assessed how the service needed to be tailored to my father. I was then introduced to the person they thought most suitable: ‘Emma’.

They couldn’t have found anyone to equal her and what she gave to my Dad. Now that he is gone, I will remain connected with Emma.

The cost of ‘Emma’s’ services gob-smacked me at first. I found out it’s on par with what other sex workers charge but ‘Emma’ gave much more. She spent an entire afternoon and evening with Dad for the same price. Her time with my father included having drinks and a chat, a gentle massage, a cuddle and whatever else he wanted. If he fell asleep she would wait until he was ready to wake up.

After time with Emma, my father’s well-being and consequently his behaviour improved. His nocturnal wanderings ceased where he often experienced falls resulting in horrid skin tears. He wasn’t as agitated. He didn’t obsess over things like he used to. He was serene, happy and relaxed.

I could easily be shocked by the fact my father was enjoying the services of someone closer to my age than his, but hey, how many 90-year-old sex workers are there? They have a retirement plan too. And ‘Emma’ was perfect.

You have your life. Allow each elderly person in your life to gracefully have what’s left of theirs.

– FFX Aus

McDonalds staffer forced to perform sex act after hoax call

Louise Ogborn

Louise Ogborn was forced to perform sex acts on a co-worker at McDonald’s.

Ogborn’s ordeal was the result of a phone hoax which targeted managers at dozens of fast food outlets across America, and is now the subject of a new film.

In Ogborn’s case, it was the gullibility of her manager, Donna Summers, which resulted in three hours of abuse and humiliation after Summers received a phone call from a man posing as a police officer.

“Officer Scott” claimed Ogborn had stolen a customer’s purse and demanded Summers detain the young staffer until police arrived at the McDonald’s restaurant, in the Kentucky town of Mt Washington.

Following the fake cop’s instructions to the letter, Summers locked Ogborn in an office, took her car keys and phone, and then made the teenager strip so her clothes could be secured for later forensic examination, reports The Daily Mail.

Officer Scott’s demands and Summers’ willingness to carry them out didn’t stop there.

Occasionally breaking down to beg Summer to let her go, the now-nude Ogborn held her hands up, danced, jumped and performed deep knee bends.

While another manager and two employees watched on, she was made to sit on the lap of Summers’ 42-year-old fiance, who slapped the girl’s bottom and demanded she perform a sex act upon him.

The bizarre scene only ended when maintenance worker, Thomas Simms, 58, refused to join in the abuse of Ogborn and called for an area manager to intervene.

The incident, which happened in 2004, resulted in convictions for sexual abuse and five years’ jail for Summers and her fiance.

While Summers told prosecutors she “honestly thought” the hoaxer was a police officer, her victim said she obeyed the instructions because she was terrified of losing her $A6-an-hour job.

Ogborn sued McDonald’s for $A185m and accepted an out-of-court payment of $A1m.

Seven people in all have been jailed for performing strip searches on their employees as a result of the hoax calls.

The alleged mastermind of the scam, David Stewart, was charged with impersonating a police officer, unlawful imprisonment and solicitation to commit sex abuse, but acquitted because of lack of evidence.

The film which recreates the incidents, Compliance, has opened in US cinema

Magnetic Island hits botttom of the market

real estate

Agents said Magnetic Island was a lifestyle destination, typically attracting holiday investors, which had worked to its disadvantage in tough economic times / File

Palm-lined Magnetic Island has hit the bottom of its market, according to local agents, with prices making it never better to bag a holiday home.

Some luxury properties have been discounted by as much as 70 per cent.

Best of Magnetic real estate owner Kelvin Dyson said Magnetic Island was a lifestyle destination, typically attracting holiday investors, which had worked to its disadvantage in tough economic times.

“I’ve been here for 12 years and prices haven’t been at these levels since 2003/2004,” Mr Dyson said.

“Especially for vacant land.

“I think Magnetic Island has traditionally been an investment market and it has suffered like the whole of the Queensland coast, especially because it’s holiday land.”

Port Douglas and Airlie Beach have also taken price hits, he said.

Mr Dyson said the island’s market peaked in 2007, steadily declined, and now appears to have finally hit the bottom.

“Serviced residential blocks are now available for $100,000. You can’t even subdivide land for that on Magnetic Island if you were given it,” he said.

“I guess that’s the value on Magnetic, things are below the coast of replacing them.”

Mr Dyson said units around the harbour (Nelly Bay) were particularly good value with some originally worth $1.3 million now available for $400,000 – a 69 per cent discount.

“We are talking three-bedroom luxury units,” he said.

He is currently selling a one-bedroom fully furnished apartment at Nelly Bay’s Blue on Blue for $298,000, which was originally bought for $580,000.

Smith & Elliott Real Estate agent Alex Strens said Nelly Bay units were up for grabs for as little as $215,000.

“It (sale volume) is just starting to pick up now and while people are being a bit cautious buying, there has a been a fairly good turn around,” Ms Strens said.

What lies beneath: When sinkholes turn deadly

Authorities say a sinkhole opened between two homes in Seffner on Saturday night and the houses have been evacuated as a precaution.

Hillsborough County Fire Rescue spokeswoman Jessica Damico told The Miami Herald the hole was estimated at 3m across and more than 3m deep.

The new hole is about 3km from where  Jeff Bush was swallowed up by a hole on the night of February 28 this year. 

Bush, 37, was in the bedroom of his home at Seffner, that night when the earth opened and took him and everything else in his room.

The sinkhole – one of hundreds that open up each year in across the United States – was about 4-metres across and ended up destroying Bush’s house.

His body has not been found. And is unlikely to be, with engineners saying it was too dangerous to retrieve Bush’s body, so they demolished the home and filled the hole with gravel. 

 

Sinkhole Swallows Man

Demolition experts watch as the home of Jeff Bush, 37, is destroyed after a sinkhole opened up underneath swallowing Bush, 37, in Seffner, Florida. The 6m-wide opening of the sinkhole was almost covered by the house. Bush’s body was never recovered.

Mark Mihal was luckier.

Mihal was on the  fairway at the 14th hole of a southwestern Illinois golf course on March 12 when a pit – 5.5 metres deep and 3 metres wide – swallowed him.

“I felt the ground start to collapse and it happened so fast that I couldn’t do anything,” Mr Mihal said.

“I reached for the ground as I was going down and it gave way, too. It seemed like I was falling for a long time. The real scary part was I didn’t know when I would hit bottom and what I would land on.”

Friends managed to hoist Mr Mihal to safety with a rope after about 20 minutes.

 

Golfer Illinois Sinkhole

Hank Martinez,Ed Magaletta and Russ Nobbe, look into the sinkhole that swallowed fellow golfer Mark Minhal at the Annbriar Golf Course in Waterloo, Il

l. Mihal was hoisted to safety with a rope and suffered a dislocated shoulder. AP/Courtesy of golfmanna.com, Mike Peters)

One of the most spectacular sinkholes of recent years was in a crowded suburb of Guatemala City when a huge hole – 40m across and more than 30-storeys deep – swallowed an entire building in 2010.

Miraculously, only three people died.

The hole may have taken months or even years to form. But in seconds, it turned into a killer.

Experts suspect a tropical storm, which swept through the country and dumped more than a metre of rain, was likely the final trigger.

 

APTOPIX Guatemala Sinkhole

This gigantic sinkhole covered a street intersection in downtown Guatemala City in 2010. A day earlier authorities blamed the heavy rains caused by tropical storm Agatha as the cause of the crater that swallowed a a three-story building. At least three people died. AP Photo/Guatemala’s Presidency, Luis Echeverria

While sinkholes are less common in Australia, they do happen.

In 2011, at Inskip beach, north of Tin Can Bay,a 100m-wide section of beach was swallowed by a sinkhole.

Campers on Inskip Peninsula watched in awe as chunks of sand were sucked out to sea, followed by trees and signs.

Gympie police district duty officer Sergeant Vic Tipman said sinkholes – which can swallow portions of beach as big as houses – were common at Inskip.

“You’ve got to be careful driving up there,” he said.

 

Inskip Point sinkhole

Jack Reed is held back by granddad Darryl at the edge of a sinkhole which swallowed most of the beach at Inskip Point, north of Brisbane, in 2011. Picture: Glenn Barnes

Given the frequency of sinkholes – especially in some parts of the US – it’s surprising more people are not killed.

The scary thing is these subterranean terrors can happen without warning.

One minute you’re standing on terra firma; the next, the earth beneath your feet has disappeared.

Across Florida this time of year, it’s the start of what’s unofficially considered the “sinkhole season,” State Geologist Jonathan Arthur said.

It coincides with the beginning of the state’s rainy season and usually lasts until the end of the northern hemisphere summer.

“Florida is famous for bugs, alligators, pythons, hurricanes and now sinkholes,” said Larry McKinnon, a Hillsborough sheriff’s office spokesman. “I think our salvation is that for most of the time, our weather is picture-perfect.”

But it’s also the weather – along with man-made factors – that exacerbate sinkholes, experts said.

 

Arthur said February is usually when the state is at its driest, but it’s also the start of the rainy season. Acidic rain can, over time, eat away the limestone and natural caverns that lie under much of the state, causing sinkholes. Both extremely dry weather and very wet weather can trigger sinkholes, he said.

“An extensive drought can cause soil and sediment over a cavity to be extremely dry and collapse,” said Arthur.

On the other hand, following Tropical Storm Debby in 2012, dozens of sinkholes formed in counties north of Tampa because of the rain.

In Hillsborough County, an area particularly susceptible to sinkholes where Jeff Bush was killed, engineers and county officials don’t know exactly why the sinkhole formed and said they will likely never know.

In Pinellas County, about 50km away from Seffner, fire-rescue workers in the community of Palm Harbor said they asked two people to evacuate a home after the residents reported “extensive cracking on the interior and exterior of the home.”

 

APTOPIX Tropical Weather

A truck hangs over the edge of a sinkhole that opened up in the parking lot of Hughes Relocation Service in Salt Springs, Florida, in 2012. Sinkholes are common in Florida, especially during rainy season. AP Photo/The Ocala Star-Banner, Alan Youngblood

A county building inspector said the home was safe to live in, but the homeowner was seeking an engineer’s opinion.

Arthur said he looked at 50 years of data and found that there is usually an uptick of reported sinkholes in February, with an increase until about July, when activity tapers off. December and January have typically low sinkhole activity.

Florida tracks naturally-occurring sinkholes and other ground collapses following a busted water main, development and groundwater pumping for crops.

In 2010, strawberry farmers in eastern Hillsborough County pumped water from the aquifer onto their crops during cold weather so that the water would freeze on the crops, creating a layer of ice that protects the berries.

So much water was pumped that more than 65 sinkholes opened in the area and wells went dry.

“When they take water out of the ground it’s like taking air out of a balloon,” said Bill Fernandez, a Florida sinkhole repair expert.

 

Texas sinkhole 2008

This massive sinkhole opened up near Daisetta, Texas on May 7, 2008. A zigzagging hole believed to be as long as two football fields and up to 35m deep threatened to gobble up nearby tanks and other oilfield equipment. AP Photo/The Beaumont Enterprise, Dave Ryan

“When you suck water out of the ground, you change the hydrostatic pressure underground and that’s what can cause sinkholes.”

Arthur added that moving a lot of dirt around for development can also trigger sinkholes. On Sunday in Largo, a failure in a pipe in a mall’s stormwater control system under the parking lot caused the ground to collapse.

“There are a lot of variables,” said Arthur. “Sinkholes are naturally occurring. Regardless of human activity they would occur.”

Five men hospitalised after Sydney street brawl

Photo / File

 
Photo / File

A street brawl in Sydney’s west has left five men in hospital and a police officer with a knee injury.

Police were called to Ostend St, South Granville, shortly before 3pm (AEDT) on Sunday following reports of a brawl.

Officers found a group of males who had been fighting in the street, police said.

Five men were taken to Westmead Hospital for a range of injuries.

A male police officer also hurt his knee during the incident and was treated at hospital.

Police are urging with anyone with information to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

– AAP

Five men hospitalised after Sydney street brawl

Photo / File

Photo / File

A street brawl in Sydney’s west has left five men in hospital and a police officer with a knee injury.

Police were called to Ostend St, South Granville, shortly before 3pm (AEDT) on Sunday following reports of a brawl.

Officers found a group of males who had been fighting in the street, police said.

Five men were taken to Westmead Hospital for a range of injuries.

A male police officer also hurt his knee during the incident and was treated at hospital.

Police are urging with anyone with information to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

– AAP

Court martial for army officer

File photo / NZ Herald

File photo / NZ Herald

A New Zealand Army officer charged with beating a fellow soldier has appeared before a court martial this morning at Linton Army Camp.

Lieutenant Joshua Saua, 22, pleaded guilty to charges of injuring with reckless disregard and common assault.

The hearing was told Lt Saua was involved in an incident in Palmerston North in the early hours of August 5 last year.

Having broken up an altercation between the victim and another soldier, Lt Saua was escorting the victim home. The victim became aggressive, and Lt Saua assaulted him, continuing his attack even after the victim was unconscious.

The victim suffered extensive facial bruising, the court heard.

Lt Saua’s commanding officer, Major Faraday, described him as an “enthusiastic and professional” soldier, and believed the incident to be out of character.

Giving evidence this morning, Lt Saua said he had no history of violence before the incident – a yellow card during a rugby game was as bad as it got.

Lt Saua was deployed to Afghanistan between July 2011 and April 2012.

Asked whether he had seen action, he told the court his first patrol was attacked with a rocket-propelled grenade and described his involvement with the identification and arrest of a “person of interest”, in conjunction with local authorities.

The court heard that following a restorative justice session, and given Lt Saua’s contrition over the incident, the victim was more understanding of the incident’s circumstances.

Lt Saua is one of three Samoan officers in the New Zealand Army. His family lives in Palmerston North, although his father is a village chief in Samoa.

The court heard Lt Saua has a strong involvement in his native culture; he speaks fluent Samoan, and has previously caught media attention for his extensive pe’a – traditional Samoan tattoos.

Lt Saua expressed his intention to leave the Army, perhaps to study at university, but said he wished to remain a reservist.

His sentencing is expected to take place later today.

South Auckland street brawl: ‘It’s very bad’

Up to 100 youths attacked police in a brawl in south Auckland overnight. Photo / File photo

Up to 100 youths attacked police in a brawl in south Auckland overnight. Photo / File photo

Neighbours of an out-of-control Auckland party that was gatecrashed by up to 200 people say it is a recurring problem at the house and they fear for their safety.

Up to 100 youths who attacked police with bottles and fence palings were among gatecrashers of the birthday party that got out of hand in Manurewa on Sunday morning.

Six people were arrested as 40 police officers, two police dogs and the police Eagle helicopter tried to control the street brawl about 2.30am.

Police received 25 separate complaints from residents in the area.

A female living at the address declined to speak about the party, saying “we just want to forget about it”.

But neighbours said the incident was not an isolated one – there had been several previous parties at the address, all of which had got out of control.

“They’ve had five parties and every time it’s ended up with the riot squad,” said one man who did not want to be named.

 

He was also concerned about the violence of the party-goers, saying gang members were involved.

The man said invites to the party were posted on Facebook last week.

Another neighbour said she was unable to sleep the whole night because of she feared for her safety and that of her children.

“They came onto my property, broke my fence, they were doing funny things behind my fence – maybe sex.”

It was one of a number of out-of-control parties that had been held at the house, she said.

“It’s very bad. We’re very frightened.”

However another neighbour, Sandra Bailey, said there were balloons on the home’s letterbox to signal it was hosting a party and about six people were at the gate trying to manage the crowd that started arriving early on Saturday night.

She said those who lived at the house were “what you would class perfect neighbours”.

“Honestly, they were actually quite responsible,” Ms Bailey said.

“It looked as if they were trying their hardest [to stop gatecrashers]. We could actually hear them [trying to turn people away]. We could hear them saying ‘you’re not on the list, go away’.

“They hadn’t caused any problems at all, the noise wasn’t too bad, until sort of 2.30 when they all left en masse.”

At that time police received 25 separate complaints about up to 100 youths fighting in the streets around Russell Rd.

“You could hear yelling, swearing and the odd bang. It just didn’t sound good,” Ms Bailey said.

It took police more than half an hour to bring the crowd under control.

Ms Bailey said police were “brilliant” in keeping the street safe.

She said there was a neighbourhood police unit that had recently been implemented and in the 28 years she had lived on Russell Rd she had “never felt safer”, including during Saturday night’s incident.

The six people arrested were released with official warnings.

APNZ