Posts Tagged ‘Associated Press’

Illegal aliens from Mexico had 27,000 rounds of ammo in Texas

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

Texas (AP) – A man and a woman from Mexico face up to 10 years in prison for illegally having about 27,000 rounds of ammunition in South Texas.

Investigators in Laredo say 35-year-old Abraham Garcia-Perguero and 33-year-old Maria Isabel Rodriguez-Olivio pleaded guilty Monday to weapons charges. No sentencing date was immediately set. Both remain in custody.

Associated PressAssociated Press
Posted: 05/14/2012

Authorities say the suspected illegal immigrants had been living in Laredo, where they ran a stop sign March 14 and were questioned by police. Officers found the ammo in more than two dozen boxes in the pickup truck.

Garcia-Perguero and Rodriguez-Olivio told investigators they had picked up the ammo from a Laredo gun store. Prosecutors say the pair expected to be paid about $500 to deliver the items to a designated pickup spot.

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Indians closer fined $750 for `reckless’ tweet

Saturday, April 21st, 2012

Cleveland Indians closer Chris Perez is considering appealing a $750 fine from Major League Baseball for a “reckless” message on his Twitter account after a bench-clearing scuffle last weekend in Kansas City.

The pitcher said Friday he wants an explanation from MLB about what is and isn’t acceptable on Twitter, because he believes his post was far from egregious.

“Obviously MLB did. It caught me off guard,” Perez said Friday in an interview with The Associated Press before Cleveland opened a weekend series at Oakland. “I can go through the union and I’m still waiting to hear back what my agent wants to do. It’s not really about the money, it’s about the principle. I don’t know if I’m the first one ever. I’m getting the most publicity out of it. I don’t want to just lie down and let them have full reign, because right now there are no guidelines, so how are we supposed to know? That’s what I want to get out of it. If I crossed the line, fine, but what’s the line?”

After batters for both the Indians and Royals were hit by pitches, touching off two bench-clearing dustups last Saturday, Perez posted a message on his account, (at)chrisperez54, that said: “Huge team win tonight; time for a sweep to tell the Royals it’s not ‘Our Time’, it’s (hash)TribeTime. P.S. You hit us, we hit you. Period.”

On Wednesday, Perez received a fine from Joe Garagiola Jr. in the commissioner’s office. He told Perez he “demonstrated a reckless disregard for the safety of the players on both clubs.”

“I think he overreacted,” Perez said. “If I were to tweet and then I pitched on Sunday and hit somebody or we did, then that could be intent. That’s a little different. We had a normal game. The way we look at it, I think everything’s in the past. I don’t think the next time we play them there’s going to be a beanball war. We’ve been competing against each other, basically the same teams, for four years now. We both want to get to the same spot.”

Perez isn’t sure Garagiola Jr. even saw the post, which the pitcher said “our fans, obviously they liked it, and the Kansas City fans hated it.”

Cleveland won the game Saturday at Kansas City 11-9 in 10 innings and had won five of six entering the series with the Athletics.

“It’s not like I called out a particular person. It wasn’t even meant toward the Royals,” Perez said. “It was more meant for my teammates that I know are on Twitter: ‘It was a great win, let’s go, let’s turn it into something,’ which we have.”

Perez, who earned his fourth save Thursday, said he always abides by the Indians’ rules for Twitter, too: No tweets 30 minutes prior to the game or for an hour afterward, so not in the clubhouse.

“There’s no need for it inside the locker room, which is fine. I totally agree with that,” he said. “With them pushing it – everywhere you look it’s hashtag whatever – so if they’re going to push it, of course the players are going to push the envelope a little bit sometimes. I’m not one to back away. I stand by what I said. I don’t really care. I really don’t think it was too bad. I mean, it’s the unwritten rule, but you can’t infer what I meant. It’s so vague. Nobody knows what my true intent was. Maybe I was talking about, ‘you hit our pitching staff, our hitters are going to come back and hit your pitching staff.’ In that series, we had a lot of hits.”

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Prosecutors charge 4 more in Ohio Amish attacks

Friday, March 30th, 2012

Several members of the group living in Bergholz carried out the attacks in September, October and November by forcibly cutting the beards and hair of Amish men and women and then taking photos to shame them, authorities have said.

Mullet told The Associated Press in October that he didn’t order the hair-cutting but didn’t stop his sons and others from carrying it out. He said the goal was to send a message to other Amish that they should be ashamed of themselves for the way they were treating Mullet and his community.

In addition to Mullet, the indictment also charges four of his children, a son-in-law, three nephews, the spouses of a niece and nephew and a member of the Mullet community in Bergholz.

Authorities said previously that some Amish refused to press charges, following their practice of avoiding involvement of the courts.

Ohio has an estimated Amish population of just under 61,000 — second only to Pennsylvania — with most living in rural counties south and east of Cleveland.

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Holocaust Memorial Vandalized in Ukraine

Saturday, March 24th, 2012

A Jewish group said on Friday that a Holocaust memorial has been vandalized in the western Ukrainian city of LvivThe Associated Pressreported.

Oleksandr Nazar of the city’s Sholem Aleichem Jewish Culture Center told the news agency that unknown assailants on Wednesday smeared red and blue paint over the memorial in central Lviv.

Nazar told AP the vandals also wrote a statement on the memorial which, as he put it, “humiliates both Jews and Ukrainians.”

He said that activists have cleaned off most of the paint and that Lviv police have launched an investigation.

Lviv, a vibrant center of Jewish life before the Holocaust, is now home to a few thousand Jews, Nazar told AP. Some 1.4 million of Soviet Ukraine’s 2.4 million Jews were executed, starved to death or died of disease during World War II.

Jewish groups have said that anti-Semitism persists in Ukraine. Two years ago, Chabad-Lubavitch yeshiva student Aryeh Leib Misinzov was murdered by a gang of neo-Nazis.

Channel 2 News on Friday quoted a statement by the Sholem Aleichem Jewish Culture Center condemning the incident.

The statement, according to the report, said, “It is hard to ignore the surprising apathy of bystanders who were at a bus stop nearby while the memorial was being vandalized. There is no doubt that they saw what was going on, but none of them bothered to call the police. Only when our people saw the damage was a complaint filed.”

The organization said it intends to turn to the mayor of Lviv and to the Ukrainian Interior Ministry to demand that the criminals who desecrated the monument be punished “to the full extent of the law.”

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Asif Ali Zardari booed during address to joint session of Parliament

Saturday, March 17th, 2012

President Asif Ali Zardari was repeatedly interrupted by boos and slogans from opposition lawmakers as he made his fifth consecutive address to a joint session of Parliament today to outline his government’s policies for the final year of its five-year term.

The slogans began even before Fehmida Mirza, the speaker of the National Assembly or lower house of Parliament, invited Zardari to address the joint session shortly before 2 pm.

As Zardari walked to the rostrum, the slogan-shouting increased and opposition lawmakers could be heard saying, “Loot maar bandh karo.”

Zardari initially smiled and continued reading his speech in English.

However, he appeared to get flustered as the slogans and boos from the opposition benches continued for almost 15 minutes.

The members of the treasury benches responded by thumping their desks before the opposition finally stopped shouting slogans.

The opposition lawmakers did not quieten down despite several calls from Speaker Mirza for order and maintaining the decorum of the house.

Zardari became the first elected President to address a joint session of Parliament for the fifth consecutive time.

His address largely focussed on the Pakistan People’s Party-led government’s efforts to deal with various challenges facing the country, including terrorism and a crippling power crisis.

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Hitler’s Mein Kampf Unlawfully Reprinted in Albania

Tuesday, March 13th, 2012

Adolf Hitler’sMein Kampf,” (“My Struggle”), infamous for its unparalleled anti-Semitism upon which the hate-ridden Nazi ideology was founded, has been released in Albania for the first time, the European Jewish Press reported on Sunday.

The manifest, which has been available in bookstores for about a week, was reprinted by a localpublisher, who now risks possible charges for inciting racial hatred, officials said this week.

Ermir Nika of the culture ministry said Hitler’s book would be “judicially treated as it violates Albanian legislation” for inciting racial hatred.  He also noted that the book breached copyright regulations.

The editor of the book claimed it was published as a “warning for future generations in order not to repeat such madness ever again.”

Yet, Jewish groups have a hard time accepting this rationale. The Association of Jews in Albania condemned the publishing of the book and said its plans on filing a complaint.

Bavaria holds the rights until 2015, 70 years after Hitler’s death, and has successfully prevented the publication of the book in Germany since the end of World War II. Last week, a Munch court ruled that London publisher Peter McGee, could not reprint the memoir in Germany, the Associated Press (AP) reported.

He had proposed publishing three 16-page segments of “Mein Kampf” with critical commentary as an insert to his weekly magazine “Zeitungszeugen,” which reproduces Nazi-era newspapers alongside expert analysis, noted the AP.

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Obama Birth Certificate Ruled a Forgery by Police

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

While there are some serious problems for many viewers with the live stream of today’s press conference, World Net Daily has released this synopsis.

It appears that the Maricopa County Sheriff’s department has determined there is PROBABLE CAUSE to believe the long form birth certificate of “Barack Obama” released by the White House is a forgery. Police also believe that Obama’s Selective Service card is a “poor forgery”. Dr. Jerome Corsi is reporting that he spoke with Andrew Breitbart yesterday around 5pm and arranged an interview for him with Sheriff Arpaio. Corsi says it may have been Breitbart’s last interview.

Andrew Breitbart died unexpectedly shortly after midnight this morning on this auspicious day.

Sheriff Joe Arpaio is one of America’s most respected lawmen, but the Associated Press is attacking him over this as we expected since the Associated Press has been caught lying and distorting the truth on numerous occasions.

They are elevating their investigation now to a CRIMINAL PROBE and calling for Congress to launch a Congressional investigation.

Here is the synopsis of the report and the supporting videos.

Sheriff Joe’s posse: ‘Probable cause’ Obama certificate a fraud
Arpaio elevates to criminal probe, person of interest ID’d

Sheriff Joe’s posse: ‘Probable cause’ Obama certificate a fraud

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Immigrants trickling back to Alabama

Monday, February 20th, 2012

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Ana Jimenez and her husband were so terrified of being sent back to their native Mexico when Alabama’s tough crackdown on illegal immigrants took effect that they fled more than 2,000 miles to Los Angeles, cramming into a two-bedroom apartment with more than 20 other relatives.

Now they are among the families coming back to cities like Birmingham, as the mass deportations never materialized and courts blocked parts of the law. No one knows how many people initially left the state, so it’s impossible to say how many have returned. But some illegal immigrants are trickling back, unable to find work elsewhere and missing the place that had been home for years.

Of 18 Hispanic immigrants interviewed by the Associated Press in the Birmingham area, six said they had friends or relatives who had returned to Alabama after fleeing because of the law.

As for Jimenez, she left Birmingham with her husband, father and brother three days after the law took effect. Now, all except her brother are back. Jimenez said through a translator that not much had changed, though she can’t reclaim her job at a McDonald’s restaurant because managers are checking citizenship papers.

“Everything is the same. I just can’t work now,” Jimenez said through a translator. She said the family is living off the income of her husband, who installs carpet and flooring.

The Obama administration, immigrant groups and others sued over Alabama’s law, and the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is set to consider arguments about it March 1. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments a month later over Arizona’s crackdown on illegal immigration, which isn’t considered as strict as Alabama’s.

Republicans who supported the crackdown had said they hoped the tough provisions – which made it difficult if not impossible to legally find work and housing, among other things – would force people to “self-deport” and move out of the state.

Among those who self-deported were Verenece Flores and her husband. They sold their home in metro Birmingham and moved with their three young children to Chicago. But the couple, originally from Mexico and living in the U.S. without legal documents, also could not find work, and relatives told them people weren’t being deported after traffic stops as some had feared.

The family is staying with relatives and doesn’t have their own place, and Flores remains “a little scared” of the law. But she said she was happy to be back. Flores had lived here for 15 years before the short move to Chicago, and her children are happier and her husband is back working construction jobs.

“I missed everything about it – friends, family, the weather,” Flores said. She knows two more families that left Alabama for Washington state only to return.

Estela Fuentes said friends of hers moved to Atlanta because the law required that public schools verify the citizenship status of students, yet they returned late last month after learning courts had put that section of the law on hold. The family was sad throughout its exile to Georgia, she said through a translator.

“One of their daughters cried and cried because she had no friends over there,” said Fuentes, who is originally from El Salvador.

And while there are families returning, some officials say they haven’t heard anything to suggest the numbers are huge. Zayne Smith, an immigration attorney with the nonprofit Alabama Appleseed legal center in Montgomery, said she had been hearing that some people wanted to wait until after the 11th Circuit considers the case in March.

State agriculture officials who say the new law led to a chronic shortage in agricultural labor said they haven’t seen evidence of large numbers of immigrants returning to the state. Many immigrants worked in the state’s poultry processing plants or out in tomato fields, planting and harvesting crops.

Gwen Ferreti, a researcher and activist in the Hispanic community, said some immigrants remain wary but are coming back because of their deep ties to the state.

Some initially feared the law would mean that people would be rounded up, or that “you’d be stopped just for being Hispanic,” said Ferreti, an anthropologist from the University of Texas who is living in Tuscaloosa, about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham, for her studies. “That has not happened, but people are aware that racial profiling is going on if you are Hispanic. They are still uneasy.”

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NC mom can’t donate pagan books to son’s school

Saturday, January 21st, 2012

WEAVERVILLE, N.C. (AP) — A Buncombe County school that last month made Bibles available to young children is turning away an offer to do the same for books on pagan beliefs.

Ginger Strivelli’s fifth-grade son last month brought home a Bible given away at North Windy Ridge school, but when she offered free copies of books explaining her pagan faith on Wednesday she was told administrators were not accepting any religious materials while they review current policies.

“I’m not surprised a bit. That’s fully what I expected,” Strivelli said. “They’re changing the policy, which is wonderful. They shouldn’t (allow) it, but they shouldn’t have done it to start with. That makes it unfair after they have given out Christian propaganda.”

Strivelli said her son felt peer pressure to collect the Bible he brought home last month. While she’s happy the school district is reviewing its policies on religious materials, “they should’ve had the correct policy in place to start with.”

Local members of Gideons International who dropped off the Bibles called and apologized for the attention and picked up the remaining copies less than 48 hours after they were dropped off, county schools spokeswoman Jan Blunt said.

The re-evaluation comes after the state’s largest civil liberties group said the school overstepped its bounds. A 1998 federal court decision in a West Virginia case determined that religious literature can be left for high school students, but not at elementary schools, American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina Legal Foundation legal director Katy Parker said last month.

The resulting reaction made the school system review its practice of making Bibles available in an office and giving students the option to pick them up, Blunt said.

“This whole thing has raised an issue of ‘were we in compliance with any laws or were we not?’” Blunt said. “Perhaps we were in the wrong, and that’s why we’re going to review.”

Buncombe County schools received mixed feedback after word of the Bible give-away reached the news, Blunt said, including an offer from someone in New York who offered 500 copies of the Quran.

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Swedish document backs claims KGB intervened stop Wallenberg research

Monday, January 16th, 2012

STOCKHOLM – Researchers investigating the fate of World War II hero Raoul Wallenberg say a newly found Swedish document shows the Soviet secret police intervened in the early 1990s to stop an international commission probing his disappearance.

The 1991, memorandum from the Swedish Embassy in Moscow cites the former head of the Soviet “Special Archive” as saying the KGB instructed him to stop a search for documents by researchers working for the commission.

The memo was made available to The Associated Press by Susanne Berger, a German researcher based in the United States.

The Swedish diplomat, who would have turned 100 this year, is credited with rescuing tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Nazis. He disappeared after being arrested by the Soviet Red Army in 1945.

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