Disgraced gold dealer’s faux Versailles mansion in Florida available for $12.9m after being slashed to half price

  • Mark Yaffe agreed to sell ten-bedroom chateau in Tampa after money problems but it has languished on the market for four years

A sprawling mega-mansion owned by a disgraced gold dealer is now half price as he desperately tries to find a buyer.

The lavish home, which takes influence from the Palace of Versailles outside Paris, is being offered for $12.9million – a substantial cut from when the property was first placed on the market four years ago at $25million.

Mark Yaffe reportedly agreed to offload his custom-built mansion in the exclusive enclave of Avila in Tampa, Florida to pay off multimillion dollar debts. He is head of troubled coin wholesaler National Gold Exchange.

 
Opulent: The Florida mega-mansion once owned by disgraced gold dealer Mark Yaffe has halved in price from $25million to $12.9million

Opulent: The Florida mega-mansion once owned by disgraced gold dealer Mark Yaffe has halved in price from $25million to $12.9million

 
Wealth: The grandiose reception room at the custom-built Tampa mansion is crammed with antiques

Wealth: The grandiose reception room at the custom-built Tampa mansion is crammed with antiques

The mansion covers 29,000-square-feet and took four years to build to detailed specifications with marble archways, balconies and 14 fireplaces.

It has ten bedrooms and ten bathrooms along with 14 fireplaces, a grand ballroom, wood-paneled library, wine cellar and basketball court.

It was completed in 2004 but placed on the market only four years later.

The home has dropped in price three times since. However real estate agent Michelle Fitz-Randolph told tampabay.com: ‘When something isn’t selling, it’s always price, price, price. They are very motivated to sell.’

She said that there had been three potential buyers for the property including two from abroad.

 
Downsizing: Head of troubled coin wholesaler National Gold Exchange Mark Yaffe is selling his luxury mansion to clear millions of dollars of debt

Downsizing: Head of troubled coin wholesaler National Gold Exchange Mark Yaffe is selling his luxury mansion to clear millions of dollars of debt

 
Palatial: The huge mansion set in six acres draws influence from the Palace of Versailles in France

Palatial: The huge mansion set in six acres draws influence from the Palace of Versailles in France

 

 
Rich surroundings: The mansion has had 'three serious offers' since halving in price, according to the realtor

Rich surroundings: The mansion has had ‘three serious offers’ since halving in price, according to the realtor

 

 
Regal: The marble staircases were inspired by 17th century European architecture

Regal: The marble staircases were inspired by 17th century European architecture

 

 
Making a splash: Neighbors at the property include the New York Yankees' Derek Jeter and former Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Tony Dungy

Making a splash: Neighbors at the property include the New York Yankees’ Derek Jeter and former Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Tony Dungy

 

 
Welcome home: The property includes a formal ballroom, wine cellar and wood-paneled library

Welcome home: The property includes a formal ballroom, wine cellar and wood-paneled library

Mr Yaffe used the home as a backdrop for his collection of rare musical instruments, which also cost millions of dollars. 

The Avila estate is known for it sweeping driveways and secluded properties. Residents include New York Yankees’ captain Derek Jeter and former Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Tony Dungy.

According to theIndependent Coin Graders‘ website, Mr Yaffe has been a numismatist (coin dealer) since 1975 and is a ‘respected expert’. He was the first ever dealer to sell a single coin for more than $1million.

He has been married to wife Christel since 1988 and the couple have two children Sarah and Stephen.

 
Secluded: Each of the properties in Avila have acres of land and are hidden at the end of sweeping driveways

Secluded: Each of the properties in Avila have acres of land and are hidden at the end of sweeping driveways

 

 
Classic taste: Mr Yaffe collected rare and expensive musical instruments which were dotted around the property before he was forced to sell

Classic taste: Mr Yaffe collected rare and expensive musical instruments which were dotted around the property before he was forced to sell

 

 
Lap of luxury: The property has 14 fireplaces and ten bedrooms

Lap of luxury: The property has 14 fireplaces and ten bedrooms

 

 
Fine detail: The mansion took four years to build but was put on the market just four years later

Fine detail: The mansion took four years to build but was put on the market just four years later

FireMe! app shames people who hate their jobs

Tweet

Bad idea, random disgruntled worker. Perhaps think twice before putting that on Twitter.

 

DON’T tweet about how much you hate your job, or else a new app will tweet about it.

Researchers at the University of Hanover in Germany created the app FireMe! to warn people about the risks of tweeting bad things about their job.

Every time you tweet about your job, or your boss or colleagues, the app flags the tweet and sends the person who wrote it a reply encouraging them to consider whether that was really a good idea.

Users receive a message which reads something like: “Can you imagine if your boss gets to know that you said: ‘I hate my job so much’. You said that on Twitter and the whole world can see it!”

It also gives users a FireMetre! score, measuring the likelihood of that tweet getting you fired.

The app allows users to view a stream of people dissing their jobs, bosses and coworkers in real time.

You’d think that there wouldn’t be enough tweets in the world to make the app interesting but no, people really are that stupid. According to FireMe! it recorded more than 22,000 snarky work tweets during June last year.

The app also sent out more than 4300 tweets to offenders over the last three weeks and according to Digital Trends, 249 of those tweets were deleted in two hours. Clearly the FireMe! app is working to some extend.

The good news is you can also manually check your chances of being fired by entering your username and giving the app permission to scan your account. It ranks your chances of being fired as a percentage. (For the record, this journalist has a six per cent chance of being fired. Low odds. *Waves at HR*).

This app could have come in handy for the two Aussies who were fired for boasting about how little work they do on social media.

If only the app worked for Facebook too.

Source: http://www.news.com.au

How US Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano quit email

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US Secretary of Homeland Security Janet A. Napolitano speaks during a daily press briefing a the White House February 25, 2013 in Washington, DC. Picture: Getty/Brendan Smialowski

THE United States Homeland Security Secretary hasn’t used email in more than 10 years, because she thinks it’s a time waster.

Janet Napolitano told reporters on Tuesday that she quit email when she was Attorney General of Arizona, which was between 1999 and 2002.

“I think email just sucks up time … in a job like mine [it’s] inefficient,” she said.

“I stopped using email when I was the Attorney General of Arizona.

“Because I was just getting, I was starting to get hundreds and hundreds of things all the time and I was like: ‘Why I am spending the time scrolling through this and responding to stuff that doesn’t really need to be responded to?'”

Instead, she gets by with briefings from her staff, and does a lot of her own work over the phone.

“It allows me to focus where I need to focus,” she said.

And, no surprises here: She doesn’t text or “Twitter” either.

Ms Napolitano was Governor of Arizona between 2003 and 2009, and has been in her position since 2009.

In 2012, Forbes nominated her as the world’s ninth-most powerful woman.

Of course, if you don’t have a team of White House briefing staff to keep you on top of your schedule, you might not have the option of ignoring all your Outlook meeting requests and emails from your manager.

Arlington man repeatedly punched after penis drawn on

Beaten

Not happy… James Watson was taken into police custody after he turned violent after a prank.

 

A US MAN was taken into police custody after he repeatedly beat his flatmate for drawing a penis on his face.

Virginia man James Watson, 31, was furious when he woke up from a night of drinking to find the drawing, scrawled on his left cheek by a permanent marker, ARLnow.com reports.

Mr Watson ran upstairs to where his roommate was sleeping, jumped on the prankster and repeatedly punched him in the face, police say.

The victim’s eye was left swollen shut and bleeding.

A third roommate managed to separate the two and took the victim to hospital.

The victim waited about 90 minutes to call the police before deciding to turn his flatmate in.

Police understand the roommates play pranks on each other regularly while intoxicated.

Source: news.com.au

Insane photos of death-defying aerial daredevil hanging off buildings

Mustang Wanted

Mustang Wanted scales the buildings of eastern Europe. Picture: Mustang Wanted Facebook

A UKRAINIAN ‘Skywalker’ who hangs off cranes, pylons and high-rise buildings has been dubbed the real life Spiderman after his latest extreme stunt.

This crazy guy will leave you in shock when you see the heights he’ll dangle from.

Mustang Wanted

Mustang Wanted scales the buildings of eastern Europe. Picture: Mustang Wanted Facebook

A quick gust of wind or a slight wobble would spell the end of this daredevil who goes by the name of Mustang Wanted.

Source: news.com.au

Couple spend up on 10 Hilton apartments in Surfers Paradise, Australia

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A Brisbane couple have recently spent more than $7 million purchasing 10 apartments at the Hilton Surfers Paradise. Pic: Supplied

A BRISBANE couple have taken advantage of big price cuts and splashed out more than $7 million on 10 apartments in the $700 million Hilton Surfers Paradise.

The purchase — one of the biggest recent multiple property investments — takes total sales in the landmark Surfers Paradise tower to $35 million this year.

The businessman and his wife, who did not want to be named, snapped up the 10 two-bedroom apartments in the Orchid Tower, between levels 34 and 44.

The couple have placed eight of the apartments into the hotel’s letting pool and will hold on to the other two as an investment.

Agents said 42 apartments in Hilton had sold since January, off the back of a national marketing campaign after prices in the tower were reduced by more than 30 per cent.

The 360 Project Marketing managing director Peter Malady said it had been the Hilton’s strongest summer selling season since the project was launched in 2007.

Mr Malady said the couple’s pick-up was one of the largest recent single-line apartment investments on the Gold Coast.

“The buyer has opted to maximise his passive income by purchasing multiple apartments, which he has the option of renting or placing in the holiday letting pool, for the same price as a luxury home in some of the Gold Coast’s most prestigious suburbs,” Mr Malady said.

“The Gold Coast has just experienced its best summer for tourism in five or six years and in turn, the city’s prestige property sector recorded one of the its best summer sales periods since the global financial crisis.”

He said price reductions of up to 36 per cent had lured buyers from across Australia and internationally since early 2012.

“Properties less than $500,000 in the five-star development were the first to be snapped up,” Mr Malady said.

“Astute buyers are recognising the availability of new apartments in Surfers Paradise is on the decline and with little to no construction under way the opportunities to purchase a new property in the area will be few and far between in the coming years.”

Apartments are now available at the Residences at Hilton Surfers Paradise from $495,000, with three and four-bedroom Sky Homes selling from $1.75 million.

The final sub-penthouse is for sale at $2.75 million, and the two penthouses are still available.

Source: goldcoast.com.au

‘Professional sobbers’ who charge £45 to attend strangers’ funerals and pretend to mourn

Grieving relatives worried that their loved ones will not attract enough mourners at their funeral can now bump up the numbers by hiring ‘professional sobbers’.

A growing number of people are hiring out their services at £45 for a two-hour ceremony – and as well as attending the funeral they will weep and talk to friends of the deceased.

The trend started in areas such as the Middle East and China, but the rise of multiculturalism has made it increasingly popular in the UK.

 
Enterprising: A company based in Essex is hiring out professional mourners for £45 a go

Enterprising: A company based in Essex is hiring out professional mourners for £45 a go

 

Fake mourners, known as moirologists, are trained actors who specialise in the skill of appearing grief-stricken at public events.

Before the funeral services, they are briefed about the life of the deceased so they can talk to other mourners as if they had genuinely known him or her.

The unusual industry has become so popular that one Essex firm now has 20 staff on its books available for hire.

Ian Robertson, the founder of Rent a Mourner in Braintree, admits the idea may be unfamiliar to the British, but predicts it will soon catch on.

 
Trend: More and more funerals are now involving professional mourners (file photo)

Trend: More and more British funerals are now involving professional mourners (file photo)

‘We were actually inspired by the market growth in China,’ he said. ‘The Middle Eastern way is to provide wailers – crying women – as opposed to the quiet, dignified methods we use.

‘It is growing in the UK – our bookings are up 50 per cent year on year.’

‘Our staff will meet with the client beforehand and agree “the story”, so our staff will either have known the deceased professionally or socially. They will be informed of the deceased’s background, achievements, failures etc., so they can converse with other mourners with confidence.’

The company says on its website: ‘We are typically invited to help increase visitors to funerals where there may be a low turnout expected. This can usually be a popularity issue or being new to an area, or indeed, the country.’

 
Origins: 'Professional sobbers' are more popular in the Middle East and China (file photo)

Origins: ‘Professional sobbers’ are currently more popular in the Middle East and China (file photo)

 

Consumer expert Jasmine Birtles believes multi-cultural Britain is experiencing a ‘cultural shift’ in the way its mourners say their final farewell.

Ms Birtles, the founder of personal finance site MoneyMagpie.com, said: ‘Hiring a stranger to weep at a funeral may seem strange, but it’s a deep-seated tradition in the East.

‘It’s still a niche market at the moment but demand for professional mourners is increasing year on year as more people from East Asian and Middle Eastern countries move to the UK, bringing their customs with them.

‘The rise in popularity shows a cultural shift taking place in how we choose to pay our last respects and like with many other cultural imports, it’s only a matter of time before it crosses over into mainstream culture.’

‘At the moment it’s not the sort of thing most people can treat as a career, but if it continues to increase in popularity then crying on demand could soon become a highly-prized skill.’

Britain: ‘Out of control’ dogs maul, kill girl

Jade Anderson

Jade Lomas-Anderson was mauled by four dogs as she ate lunch at a friend’s house

A 14-year-old girl has been found dead in Britain after apparently being mauled by five “out of control” dogs, police say.

Police were called to a house in Atherton, near Manchester in northwest England, where they found the body and “were confronted by a number of dogs that were aggressive and out of control”, a statement said.

Four of the dogs, believed to be bull mastiffs and Staffordshire bull terriers, were put down humanely by armed response officers, while the fifth was secured inside the house.

The teenager named as Jade Anderson was believed to be visiting the house where she died and nobody else was present.

Superintendent Mark Kenny of Greater Manchester Police offered his condolences to the teenager’s family and said the incident was “extremely distressing”.

“While our inquiries to find out what happened are ongoing, this girl’s injuries are consistent with her having been attacked by dogs,” he said in a statement.

The dead dogs are being examined as part of the police investigation.

– AFP

 

Magnitude 6.1 quake shakes Taiwan

File photo / Getty Images

File photo / Getty Images

A strong earthquake has been felt throughout Taiwan, but no casualties or damage has been reported yet.

The Central Weather Bureau says the quake Wednesday registered at magnitude 6.1.

The tremor struck a rural township in Nantou County, about 250 kilometres south of Taipei where it swayed buildings.

Earthquakes frequently rattle Taiwan, but most are minor and cause little or no damage.

However, a magnitude-7.6 earthquake in central Taiwan in 1999 killed more than 2300 people.

Source: nzherald.co.nz

China admits firing on Vietnamese boat

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China said its navy fired flares at Vietnamese fishing boats but denied Hanoi’s claim that a vessel was damaged in an incident that is highlighting tensions over disputed South China Sea islands and surrounding waters believed to hold a wealth of oil and natural gas deposits. 

Sailors on board a Chinese navy craft fired two flares at four Vietnamese boats that had earlier failed to respond to whistles, shouts and signal flags demanding that they cease fishing and leave the area, which China claims as its territorial waters, the Defence Ministry said in a statement issued late on Tuesday(local time). 

It said the ships were fishing illegally in Chinese waters off the Paracel Islands on March 20 and both flares burned out in the air.

Chinese forces did not fire weapons and no Vietnamese boats caught fire.  Vietnam, which also claims the Paracels, said one of the boat’s cabin’s caught fire in the incident, which it called ”very serious.”

The government lodged a formal complaint with the Chinese Embassy in Hanoi, seeking compensation for the alleged damage and punishment of the Chinese sailors responsible.

The fishing boat was near the Paracels when an unidentified Chinese vessel chased it and fired the flare, the Vietnamese government said in a statement issued late Monday.

The claim that a Chinese ship started a fire was a ”sheer fabrication,” the Chinese statement said, citing an unidentified navy spokesman. 

China’s Defence Ministry said the boats were in Chinese territorial waters and China was acting within its rights by driving them off. 

”It is completely legitimate for Chinese vessels to expel boats that illegally enter China’s territorial waters to safeguard the country’s territorial sovereignty and marine interests,” the statement said. 

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Tuesday that China had taken unspecified but ”legitimate and reasonable” actions against Vietnamese boats working illegally in Chinese waters.

He denied that any boats had been damaged, but gave few other details. There have been other clashes in the waters, often related to claims of illegal fishing or violations of fishing moratoriums unilaterally imposed by the Chinese.

Vietnam and China each claim large parts of the South China Sea.

The Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei also maintain that parts of the sea are theirs.

The profile of the long-running disputes has been raised in recent years because of China’s economic and military growth and subsequent American interest. The Paracels, which were occupied by China shortly before the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, are a particular flashpoint.

China last year incorporated the Paracels and most of its other South China Sea claims within the newly declared Sansha city-level administrative unit as way of raising the region’s profile and increasing funds for infrastructure and economic development.

China is also boosting its civilian fisheries and maritime surveillance patrols in the area.

China’s navy also conducts missions in the South China Sea, although it has sought to keep military units out of conflict zones to avoid elevating tensions.

– AP

$60b to solve Auckland, New Zeland’s transport woes

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A $60 billion plan to address Auckland’s transport issues has been announced.

Auckland Transport’s programme – which they have dubbed “One System” – sets out the 30-year investment scheme, which has been developed by Auckland Transport and the New Zealand Transport Agency in collaboration with Auckland Council.

The programme covers state highways and local roads as well as railways, buses, ferries, footpaths, cycleways and supporting facilities such as parking and park-and-ride.

Auckland Transport chairman Lester Levy said the programme was visionary.

“It is not just aspirational, it is a realistic programme of work to be delivered over the next 30 years as we push to make Auckland a vibrant city with close to two and a half million people,” 

The cost of fully funding the transport programme over the next 30 years is estimated at around $60 billion but given current funding sources there was an estimated gap of between $10 billion and $15 billion to deliver the fully-funded programme. 

The costs will peak over the next 10 years due to major investments in projects such as the City Rail Link, the Western Ring Route, the Auckland Manukau Eastern Transport Initiative and the East-West Corridor. 

Dr Levy said funding would be a key issue in successfully addressing the challenges of growth in the years ahead.

The share of morning peak for walking, cycling and public transport would rise from the current 23 per cent to 32.2 per cent in 2022 under full funding.

Dr Levy said the investment was crucial, as the levels of congestion forecast for Auckland by 2041 are well in excess of the current levels experienced in cities such as Sydney and Melbourne. 

– © Fairfax NZ News

The bedtime bandit: Hilarious video shows two-year-old boy picking the lock of his sister’s bedroom door so he can steal her toys while she sleeps

The parents of a very crafty two-year-old boy probably don’t know if they should be proud or worried after capturing his night time exploits on camera.

After the boy’s eight-year-old sister complained to her parents about him coming into her room at night and taking her things – including her pillow pet – mom Joann Moser told her to lock the door.

A couple of days later the daughter again complained about her brother and even claimed that he had managed to unlock her door.

The young cat burglar gets up and opens the door of his bedroom The young cat burglar gets up and opens the door of his bedroom

He tries to open his sister's bedroom door but she has locked itHe tries to open his sister’s bedroom door but she has locked it

Using a flipped open fingernail clipper he works on opening the lock Using a flipped open fingernail clipper he works on opening the lock

Her flabbergasted parents, bemused at the sister’s allegation decided to setup a camera to see what was going on.

‘We were VERY skeptical so we set up the camera in the hall to see what would happen,’ she told The Huffington Post.

‘Sure enough within a few seconds of closing his door and locking hers he was at the door opening the lock. We could not stop laughing afterward and we let him sleep with the pillow pet that night.’

The footage shows the mini cat burglar open his sister’s door using a pair of nail clippers which he even goes as far as hiding before he goes back into his sister’s room to take her pillow pet.

Moser has uploaded the clip to YouTube with the following explanation: ‘This is what our 2 yr old does at night. He picks the lock to his sister’s room and takes her stuff…We caught it on video.’

The video is extremely funny and the young boy has a natural talent for opening locks, let’s hope he  doesn’t choose a life of crime when he’s older.

The boy goes back to his bedroom to hide the nail clippers The boy goes back to his bedroom to hide the nail clippers

Mission accomplished: The clever boy closes his sister's bedroom door with her pillow pet in his handMission accomplished: The clever boy closes his sister’s bedroom door with her pillow pet in his hand

 

Girl, 8, shot by an arrow while climbing on life-sized whale sculpture outside California science museum

 

A school trip to a California science museum ended with an eight-year-old girl getting struck by an arrow Tuesday.

University of California Berkeley Police Capt. Steve Roderick says the arrow pierced the child’s thigh while she was sitting on a life-sized model of a fin whale outside the Lawrence Hall of Science.

The child, whose named is not being released because she is a minor, was taken to a local hospital with non-life threatening injuries as the arrow was still lodged in her leg.

 
Unpleasant surprise: An eight-year-old girl climbing on this life-sized replica of a fin whale outside the Lawrence Hall of Science at UC Berkeley was struck by an arrow

Unpleasant surprise: An eight-year-old girl climbing on this life-sized replica of a fin whale outside the Lawrence Hall of Science at UC Berkeley was struck by an arrow

Roderick said the arrow does not appear to be a toy as police were searching the area.

He also said it’s not immediately known whether the girl was hit by accident or not as the incident doesn’t appear to be related to any experiments or demonstrations at the center.

Police received a 911 call at 10.10am about a girl who was struck by an arrow while climbing on the life-sized sculpture of a fin whale at the plaza outside the public science center at 1 Centennial Drive.

The victim was treated at the scene and then taken by ambulance to Children’s Hospital with the projectile still lodged in her left leg. The arrow had to be surgically removed.

Geoff Vassallo, who was accompanying a group of students on a field trip to the museum, witnessed the incident, saying that the child appeared calm.

‘She was crying a little bit,’ He told San Francisco Chronicle. ‘She said, “Oh, it hurts. One of the adults was comforting her.’

Vassallo, who is himself an archer, estimated that the arrow was 28 inches long – the kind used by an adult of average height.

After the shooting, the whale statue was cordoned off by yellow crime tape, but the museum remained open.

 
Projectile: The arrow that pierced the child's left thigh was about 28 inches in length and likely fired from a crossbow

Projectile: The arrow that pierced the child’s left thigh was about 28 inches in length and likely fired from a crossbow (not pictured)

Officers scoured an area north of the science center encompassing a residential neighborhood, hiking trails and a parking lot in search of the shooter or any possible clues.

UC spokeswoman Janet Gilmore toldMercuryNews.compolice did find a couple of arrows during their search, but they did not match the crossbow type that injured the girl.

Investigators will try to analyze the arrow’s trajectory to pinpoint where it came from – a task which may prove difficult since an arrow can travel 500-1,000 feet.

Roderick said throughout the ordeal, the eight-year-old girl remained a ‘trooper.’ She was joined at the hospital by her mother and is said to be doing fine, according to NBC Bay Area.

Gilmore said doctors were keeping the child overnight at a hospital for observation

Police are investigating if the girl was shot by mistake or was targeted by someone, although Roderick said that at this point it does not appear that the shooting was intentional.

Marine whose face was burned off in Iraq bomb attack returns to U.S. to meet his future wife ‘who saw beyond the scars’

A soldier, who had much of his face burned away and lost an arm in an explosion in Iraq, has found a wife and started a family on returning to the U.S despite the disfigurement. 

Marine corporal Tony Porta, 26, fell victim to an IED blast in May 2007 while serving in Iraq, CBS News reports.

The blast killed his two best friends and left him unrecognizable – burning off much of his face and taking his arm.

 
Attack

Attack: Marine corporal Tony Porta was left with devastating injuries caused by a roadside bomb in Iraq in 2007

 

 
Family life: Tony Porta now has a son, pictured, who he named Kenneth Charles in memory of his two best friends killed alongside him in Iraq

Family life: Tony Porta now has a son, pictured, who he named Kenneth Charles in memory of his two best friends killed alongside him in Iraq

The 20-year-old said he didn’t believe he had a life to return to and thought no one would love him given his disfigurement.

But he was wrong.

The Maryland man met Daisy, who refused to be put off by his injuries, and they soon fell in love.

The couple married and now have a son, Kenneth Charles, named after the two other soldiers killed in the blast. 

‘She didn’t care about my wounds. She cares about me in the inside,’ Porta told CBS.

‘I couldn’t recognize myself,’ he said. ‘I saw scars, I saw blood. I didn’t have lips, my nose was missing, my ears were gone…I felt, ‘How can I live like this?”

‘I said to myself, ‘Who’s gonna love me? Who’s gonna, who’s gonna love me the way I look right now?”

 
Before the blast: Tony Porta served in Iraq as a Marine corporal, pictured. He was left with horrendous injuries in an attack in 2007

Before the blast: Tony Porta served in Iraq as a Marine corporal, pictured. He was left with horrendous injuries in an attack in 2007

 
Love: The support of his new wife Daisy Porta has helped Tony come to terms with his injuries. The couple have a young son

Love: The support of his new wife Daisy Porta has helped Tony come to terms with his injuries. The couple have a young son

The Humvee carrying Porta, Charles Palmer and Kenneth Mack drove over the device in Al Asad on May 5.

Palmer and Mack were killed but Porta said he was inspired to fight by his two friends.

‘They were telling me to get up. ‘It’s not my time yet.’ They cheer me to get up — ‘Get up and get out.”
‘They were [dead] yes, but they were there. They were.’

He underwent 128 operations and was left unrecognizable by his injuries – also losing an arm. 

 
Beyond the scars: Tony Porta says his wife doesn't care about his wounds

Beyond the scars: Tony Porta says his wife doesn’t care about his wounds

‘I saw my body just burned. I saw my skin melting. It was like a hot candle.’

However, on returning to the U.S. he met wife Daisy with whom he had a son.

They now live in Beltsville, Maryland, in his childhood home.

‘I named him Kenneth Charles in memory of my two friends, Kenneth and Charles,’ Porta said.

‘They saved my life and now they will be remembered forever.’

Cheeky tree frog shows off his stunning suit of colours that will have you hopping mad with envy

A cheeky little tree frog takes time out to wave to the camera as he shows off his stunning range of colours.

The colourful little amphibian looks as if he’s about to leap from his perch on a branch at any moment.

But the red-eyed tree frog clung to reeds and climbed playfully along a branch for nearly an hour before hopping off.

 
Ribbit: This multi-coloured frog appears to wave to the camera as it shimmies up a reed in Costa Rica

Ribbit: This multi-coloured frog appears to wave to the camera as it shimmies up a reed in Costa Rica

 
Curious: The cheeky little fellow climbed playfully along a branch for nearly an hour before hopping off

Curious: The cheeky little fellow climbed playfully along a branch for nearly an hour before hopping off

Photographer Peter Reijners, 45, said: ‘To me this is one of the most beautiful frogs, with his nice contrasting colours.

‘I only have to look at one of the pictures to bring a smile to my face.

‘The little frog seems to be in a good mood as well, they always show a friendly face to the world.

‘My favourite shot is where he’s hanging between two reeds – I think it’s perfect.’

 
Smiler: The red-eyed tree frog lapped up the attention from photographers

Smiler: The red-eyed tree frog lapped up the attention from photographers

 

 
The striking creatures are found in Costa Rica as well as tropics in Central America and northern South America

The striking creatures are found in Costa Rica as well as tropics in Central America and northern South America

Mr Reijners, from Roermond, Netherlands, sat around 20 inches away to watch.

Mr Reijners, a planner and buyer at a fire and security systems firm, added: ‘I was careful to approach the frog very calmly, so he could get used to me.

‘Sometimes he sat still for a while, and then all of the sudden he started climbing again.’

The frogs – Agalychnis Callidryas – are found in Costa Rica as well as tropics in Central America and northern South America.

Despite their vibrant colours, they are not venomous.

Unmasked: The ‘English gent’ behind the UK’s biggest ever drugs racket worth £300MILLION who splashed his cash on fast cars, mansions and a race horse

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To his neighbours in one of Dublin’s swankiest suburbs, Philip Baron owed his conspicuous wealth to the improbable success of what he said was his company renting deck chairs on Spanish beaches.

The would-be beach-ware magnate, whose vast detached home backed on to one of Ireland’s premier golf courses, did indeed have a hugely lucrative income from a business enterprise based in the Costa del Sol. But it had nothing to do with deck chairs.

Instead, he was a kingpin in one of Britain’s most prolific drug smuggling networks, masterminding the transportation of vast consignments of cannabis and cocaine from Spain to the UK. He used the multi-million pound proceeds to fund a lavish lifestyle far beyond, he believed, the reach of the law.

Today justice finally caught up with the 57-year-old Mancunian when he pleaded guilty at Liverpool Crown Court to charges of conspiring to import 60 tonnes of cocaine, many tonnes of cannabis and money laundering. He will be sentenced in June.

The father-of-three, who used a reconciliation with his estranged daughter to pull her into his smuggling and money-laundering cartel, is the final suspect to be convicted following a five-year investigation by the Serious and Organised Crime Agency (Soca) which its officers say has “completely dismantled” one of Britain’s top 10 drugs rings.

Run by expat Britons, the network smuggled at least 110 tonnes of drugs estimated to be worth £350m over 15 years. Operation Beath, the Soca investigation, has resulted in the conviction of 29 people and jail sentences totalling 200 years.

Steve Baldwin, Soca’s head of investigations, said: “There’s no doubt Baron and his associates were operating at the top end of organised crime. He lived a lavish lifestyle abroad, portraying himself as a legitimate businessman, while orchestrating the importation of huge amounts of drugs into the UK.

“There is clear evidence that his criminal activity was having a direct impact on communities in many of our towns and cities. Baron thought he was untouchable.”

The inquiry, which involved police forces from Costa Rica to the Irish Gardai, has yielded a rare insight into the workings of a smuggling network – from the code and nicknames used by the drug barons to their overseas trust funds and their extravagant spending habits.

Along with his co-conspirators, Baron, known as “4x” or “four by” because of his liking for SUVs, had hit upon a novel way of bringing their illegal product into Britain.

Rather than going to the trouble of hiding drugs in suitcases, the network decided to use the services of freight and courier companies to send consignments to 12 addresses across Britain rented from office services companies.

At the rate of at least one delivery per month, drugs were packed into boxes and labelled as technical manuals or printed material sent to unconnected and legitimate UK companies. Once they had arrived, another member of the gang would collect the consignment and distribute it to dealers in cities including Glasgow, Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham.

Suspicions were raised about gang members as far back as in 2008 when staff at a Cheltenham office services company became suspicious about the quantity of packages coming through its premises and alerted police. Soca began the long process of tracing the network back to Baron and another drug lord, Walter Callinan – like Baron a former lorry driver – who had moved from Stoke to a sprawling villa in Malaga.

Mark, the Soca officer who led the investigation, said the men fed supplies into their own network as well as supplying other outlets in Britain’s £5bn drugs market.

Baron, originally from Bolton, maintained the façade of a respectable businessman, driving a Bentley GT Continental and attending black-tie dinners. His two children by his second marriage were provided for with trust funds set up by the network’s money launderer in locations from Switzerland to Uzbekistan.

Neither of these children nor his current wife were involved with the drug business. But Baron did not extend the same courtesy to his third child, Rachael, who was contacted by her father for the first time in many years after the birth of her first child about six years ago.

Within weeks, Baron had enticed his estranged daughter into his network, using her to make purchases on his credit card, ranging from paying his phone bill to spending £60,000 on watches during a single visit to a jeweller’s. Rachael, who was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment for laundering £1m of drugs money, also arranged the purchase of her father’s Bentley.

As the funds started to pour into the bank accounts of the network’s members, a sense of invincibility infected the main players. Baron, who was arrested in 2011, spent nearly two years fighting extradition to Britain, taking his case all the way to Ireland’s Supreme Court.

Mark added: “They hammered the UK’s streets with drugs in the belief that they could live a life of impunity from abroad.”

Ironically, it was the habit of Callinan and the network’s principal money launderer – a former Barclay’s IT worker, Malcolm “Sir Humphrey” Carle – of keeping meticulous records that led to their downfall.

When police raided Callinan’s villa they found a 200-page ledger detailing every transaction for 17 tonnes of cannabis sent to Britain over a 17-month period. The shipments accounted for 6 per cent of all cannabis sent to the UK in that time.

One-by-one the gang members were picked off by the investigation until Baron and Callinan, who was sentenced to 11 years’ imprisonment in 2011, were among the few major players left. Shortly after his arrest, Callinan phoned his son in a phone call which Soca investigators admitted they had found “enjoyable”.

The drugs overlord said: “There is documentation, spreadsheets of monies collected off motorways… 100 grand, 60 grand, 80 grand. We’re f***ed mate, they’ve got that much documentation. F***ing hell, the Pope wouldn’t get out of this.”

THE GANG: Butlins, Big Fella, Sir Humphrey and Spot

Philip Baron (aka “4x” or “Butlins”)

The 57-year-old former HGV driver masterminded his smuggling operation for at least 15 years from his mansion backing on to Dublin’s prestigious K-Club golf course. Nicknamed after his liking for luxury SUVs and his views on open prisons, Baron was a key player in the smuggling gang, negotiating a deal with Colombian drug cartels to send cocaine to Britain via Spain. His second wife and their two children were, like his neighbours, led to believe he made his money from a deck-chair rental company. He will be sentenced in June.

Walter Callinan (aka “JJ” or “Big Fella”)

Callinan, 60, is thought to have met Baron while the pair were lorry drivers. He set himself up in Malaga, co-ordinating consignments of cannabis and using the proceeds to fund a lavish lifestyle, which included a racehorse paid for under one of his false names, James Jones or JJ, and costing £40,000 a year to maintain. Callinan travelled the world following the England football team, spending thousands on first class travel. Sentenced to 11 years for drug importation.

Malcolm Carle (aka “Sir Humphrey”)

The former Barclay’s IT worker swapped a £50,000 salary to become the chief money launderer for Bishop and Callinan. Carle, 59, charged his employers 20p per mile to collect drug payments but also tried to double cross them. After buying a £1.2m pub to help launder some of the drugs money, he took out a loan against it to further his own business deals without telling Callinan. Carle was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment.

Paul Hewett (aka “Spot”)

The 55-year-old was the man on the ground, responsible for the packaging of drugs in Spain with the names of legitimate engineering or car components companies and renting space from office service companies in Britain to receive the packages. In return, Hewett rewarded himself with the toys and baubles of a player on the Costa del Crime, including a 64ft Sunseeker yacht and a Porsche Cayenne car. He was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment for drug importation.

Source: independent.co.uk

 

‘He manages the toilet rolls’: TV billionaire accused of bullying

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Accused of intimidation …. Bruce Gordon, the owner of WIN TV. Photo: Rob Homer

The billionaire owner of WIN television, Bruce Gordon, called a senior executive a “prick”, a “lump of wood” and someone who “manages the toilet rolls and the weeds”, according to court documents that have revealed an alleged culture of bullying and harassment at the regional media company.

The former general manager, Rodney Hockey, is suing WIN corporation for alleged deceptive conduct, claiming he was misled into accepting a new role at the network in 2011 rather than taking a redundancy payout, which would have been more lucrative.

In an affidavit tendered to the Federal Court of Australia this week, Mr Hockey alleged the culture at WIN was rife with bullying and harassment from Mr Gordon and that his son, executive chairman Andrew Gordon, was distracted by a failing relationship with a woman.

Mr Hockey, who worked his way up from being a tape operator in 1985 to network general manager in 2007, said before taking a telephone call from Bruce Gordon in July 2010, a colleague warned him the owner had been drinking.

“Bruce said to me the words to the following effect: ‘You’re a f—ing prick. You slandered me with your mate Don Clode and [former WIN managing director] David Butorac. I don’t want you working for this company. You don’t deserve to be here. If I was 20 years younger I would walk down there and knock you out,” Mr Hockey’s affidavit alleges.

Another executive, John Smithers, told Mr Hockey that Bruce Gordon had been talking about him and said, “Hockey manages the toilet rolls and the weeds”, the affidavit alleged.

An email from another WIN executive, Chris Rickey, included in the affidavit, detailed a November 2011 conversation with Bruce Gordon, who he said yelled in his face and called him a “f—ing idiot” and described Mr Hockey as a “lump of wood”.

In March 2011, when general manager roles were being disbanded, Mr Hockey raised his concerns about Bruce Gordon’s “intimidation” with Andrew Gordon and how it would affect any new role he took on.

Mr Hockey said Andrew Gordon told him: “We agree that if you accept one of the new roles and the intimidation starts again, you can just opt out and have your contract paid in full.”

At the time when he was negotiating details of his contract later that year, Mr Hockey alleged that Andrew Gordon was distracted by a failing relationship with a woman named Skye McKewan.

Mr Hockey said he was told Andrew Gordon had private investigators following Ms McKewan and had attached a GPS device to her car.

In Andrew Gordon’s affidavit before the court, he declined to respond to allegations that “appear to me to be irrelevant to the proceedings and some designed to embarrass me, my father and/or WIN”.

Mr Gordon said he advised Mr Hockey of the changing general manager roles and advised him he could apply for one of the jobs or be made redundant, but recommended he go for the network director of production role.

When Mr Hockey said he wasn’t getting a “fair go” from Bruce Gordon, Andrew Gordon again urged him to apply for that role as his “best opportunity to deliver results and make a real success at WIN”.

Justice Alan Robertson has reserved his judgment.

Asian handbag scam hits Melbourne, Australia

'Evil spirits'... Do you recognise this woman?

‘Evil spirits’… Do you recognise this woman? Photo: Supplied

Police are looking for a group of Asian women who are targeting victims and stealing cash and jewellery in Melbourne’s CBD and the eastern suburbs as part of a $1 million international scam.

Police said the women convince their Asian victims that they are possessed by evil spirits and then offer to help them rid themselves by praying over their bag containing money and jewellery.

The offenders tell the victim not to look in the bag for a period of time and when they finally look into the bag, they find their valuables have been stolen.

It's estimated the total value of the handbag scam is $1 million.

Rich pickings … It’s estimated the total value of the handbag scam is $1 million. Photo: Supplied

It is estimated that the total value for these scams was over $1 million and they have also occurred overseas in San Francisco, Honolulu and Vancouver, police say.

Detectives believe a group of three women are working together when they separately approach women on the street.

Monash Crime Investigation Unit detectives are investigating scams that occurred between August and November last year and most recent incidents in Melbourne and Glen Waverley.

The latest incident occurred in Melbourne on 12 March.

Investigators have been told that three women approached a woman in Spencer Street near Little Bourke Street around 12.30pm.

The women initiated a conversation with the victim and forced her to sit down.

The offenders then searched the victim and stole jewellery and cash after convincing her that she needed to part with the valuables to avoid bad things happening to her family.

The second incident occurred in Glen Waverley on January 26.

Investigators have been told that two women approached the victim at a shopping centre in Glen Waverley around 2pm.

The women have convinced the victim to accompany them to a Chinese doctor and have walked with her to a car park on Springvale Road.

The women and victim were then approached by a third woman who told the victim that they must perform a ritual over her valuables.

The victim then went to her home where she obtained cash and jewellery.

She returned to the car park where she handed over the valuables to the other two women.

In return the victim was given a bag and told to return home and not open it for 49 days or bad luck will befall her family.

Police said the offenders had all been described as being Asian in appearance, aged between 40 and 50-years-old and spoke Mandarin or Cantonese.

Detectives have released an image of a woman that may assist with their enquiries.

Anyone with information is asked to contact CrimeStoppers on 1800 333 000 or http://www.crimestoppers.com.au

US soft drink consumption fizzles out

Coca-Cola signage displayed on the window of a restaurant as patrons dine in San Francisco, California. Photo / AP

Coca-Cola signage displayed on the window of a restaurant as patrons dine in San Francisco, California. Photo / AP

Americans’ consumption of fizzy soft drinks, on the decline since 2005, fell last year to its lowest level since 1996. If it weren’t for increasingly popular energy drinks like Monster and Red Bull, the decline would have been worse.

That’s according to Beverage Digest, an industry newsletter that publishes a similar report every March.

The trade journal also found that the pace of decline for carbonated beverages has sped up down 1.2 per cent last year compared with a 1 per cent drop in 2011 and a 0.5 per cent drop in 2010. Without energy drinks, volume would have fallen 1.7 per cent.

A 3 per cent soda price hike helped revenue rise 1.8 per cent to $77.1 billion.

Despite the decline, carbonated soft drinks still make up the biggest category of non-alcoholic beverages.

Man stuck in Disney nightmare compensated

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An attorney says a disabled man was awarded US$8000 by Disneyland after the ‘It’s A Small World’ ride broke, stranding him for 30 minutes while the theme song played continuously.

Lawyer David Geffen said Jose Martinez was the only passenger not evacuated when the ride broke down in 2009, and staffers failed to call the fire department to free him.

The ride’s familiar song couldn’t be turned off the 30 minutes Martinez was stuck.

Geffen said Martinez uses a wheelchair, suffers from panic attacks and high blood pressure, and needed to urinate for much of the time he was stranded.

Geffen said half the award ordered Friday was for pain and suffering, and the other half for disability law violations.

Disney did not immediately reply to messages seeking comment.

Souce: stuff.co.nz

Bar rejects disabled man

David Bruce
MISLEADING APPEARANCE: David Bruce is shocked he was kicked out of a central city bar because staff mistook his disability for drunkenness

The owner of a bar that evicted a physically disabled man because staff mistakenly thought he was drunk is citing tough laws as a reason for the mishap.

David Bruce has cerebral palsy.

Because of the condition he is reliant on an electric wheelchair and has a significant speech impairment.

On his way to an Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra concert on February 28 he stopped at Queen St’s QF Tavern for dinner.

When he tried to order bar staff turned him away.

Perplexed, Bruce tried to question the refusal.

He was told he had to leave because he was “on pills” and was escorted outside.

“I was really embarrassed. It’s never happened to me before,” the Epsom resident says.

QF Tavern owner Ken Hix says the bartender thought Bruce was drunk.

“I hound my staff about the consequences of serving intoxicated and drugged people,” he says.

“I drill it into them that if you have any doubts about someone don’t serve them.

“The police are coming down really hard on us. I can’t afford to lose my business by serving someone who is drunk.

“In this environment I can’t slam her [the bartender].”

Mr Hix says the bar has a lot of disabled patrons and it is not his company’s policy to turn them away. He has since apologised to Mr Bruce.

He says the staff member who served Bruce has English as a second language and this probably added to the confusion.

“I am sorry this has happened, it’s terrible, but it was a mistake. She had to make a call and in this case she has made the wrong one,” he says.

Bruce says he only wanted an apology and is satisfied with knowing he is welcome back.

His long-time friend Graham Dawson says the explanation is ridiculous.

“It just makes me angry.

“I can see how someone might think he was drunk, but to refuse someone in a wheelchair a drink based on an assumption is wrong.

“Most places we go to go out of their way to accommodate him,” he says.

Disability Works executive director Philip Patston says this isn’t the first time he’s heard of an incident like this.

Source: stuff.co.nz