Monday, 30 June 2014

How 14-yr-old married girls are divorced by husbands in Northern Nigeria


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Beaten: Maimuna Abdullahi, left, is pictured recently at the school in Nigeria which has taken her in after her ordeal
Beaten: Maimuna Abdullahi, left, is pictured recently at the school in Nigeria which has taken her in after her ordeal

Maimuna Abdullahi was sold into marriage by her parents for £120 and abused by her new husband, who locked her away and forced hard labour on her.
When she ran home she was beaten, first by her father, then her husband, and was summarily divorced by her husband for daring to flee - and she is still just 14 years old.
She is one of thousands in Nigeria with similar stories - and, shockingly, her husband blames his beaten former bride for her ordeal, saying she was disobedient and over-educated.

Ordeal: Maimuna's former husband, Mahammadu Saidu, said she had 'too much ABCD' from her limited schooling
Ordeal: Maimuna's former husband, Mahammadu Saidu, said she had 'too much ABCD' from her limited schooling

After fleeing her husband Mahammadu Saidu, who locked her away for days at a time, she was whipped by her family for daring to come home, then attacked by her furious husband as well.
Her battered face swelled so much that doctors feared her husband had dislocated her jaw. Her back and arms bristled with angry welts from the whipping her father gave her.
She was gaunt from hunger, dressed in filthy rags. And barely a year after her wedding, she was divorced. 
It would be a tragic story for a woman of any age. But for Maimuna Abdullahi, it all happened by the time she was 14.
'I'm too scared to go back home,' she whispers, a frown crinkling her brow as she fiddles nervously with her hands. 'I know they will force me to go back to my husband.'
    Maimuna is one of thousands of divorced girls in Nigeria, children who were forced into marriage and have since run away or been thrown out by their husbands.
    They are victims of a belief that girls should get wed rather than educated, which drew the world's attention after Boko Haram terrorists abducted more than 200 schoolgirls two months ago and threatened to marry them off. Most are still missing. 

    Attacker: Saidu, pictured, said he feared marrying someone more educated would make him 'the wife'. After Maimuna fled him, he divorced her
    Attacker: Saidu, pictured, said he feared marrying someone more educated would make him 'the wife'. After Maimuna fled him, he divorced her

    Maimuna's former husband, Mahammadu Saidu, blames her few years of school for her disobedience. A handsome man of 28 who is obviously proud of his ankle-high boots, he does not deny beating his wife. 
    'She had too much ABCD,' he says. 'Too much ABCD.'
    Nigeria, a young country of about 170 million, has one of the highest rates of child marriage in the world.
    The law of the land states that the age of consent, and thus of marriage, is 18. However, the custom of child marriage is still ingrained enough that even a middle-aged federal senator has married five child brides and divorced at least one. 
    Across the country, one in five girls are married before the age of 15, according to the United Nations.

    Escape: Maimuna ran away while her husband was looking for work out of town - but was whipped by her father for daring to come homeEscape: Maimuna ran away while her husband was looking for work out of town - but was whipped by her father for daring to come home
    In the desperately poor Muslim north, where child marriage is often considered acceptable by shariah or Islamic law, that number goes up to one in two. 
    This is also where Boko Haram is trying to impose its extreme version of Islam, changing the face of the region and especially of its girls.
    Children as young as five now hide their heads and shoulders in hijabs, a rare sight just a few years ago. Some girls become wives as early as nine. 
    There are no official numbers for just how many of these girls get divorced, often ending up destitute and shunned by their families.
    But they are all too visible. A few miles from where Maimuna lives, children her age and younger sell their bodies to truck drivers, flitting in and out of vehicles. 
    Maimuna was saved from this fate by Saadatu Aliyu, who has turned an old family home into a school for divorced girls.
    At the Tattalli Free School, which gets by on private donations, a couple of dozen girls gather in the courtyard for a sewing lesson. Toddlers mill around, the children of divorced girls who came in pregnant. 
    'Nobody knows how many thousands of them there are,' says Aliyu of the girls. 'That's why we have so many prostitutes, and very young ones, in the north.'
    Maimuna grew up on the outskirts of Kaduna, in a half-finished brick building on the edge of a middle-class suburb.
    Her father, a farmer called Haruna Abdullahi, picks up a stone and throws it at a stray dog as scrawny as he is. At 45, he's been married for 30 years and has fathered eight children. 
    'It's our culture to give our girls in marriage,' he says in a reasoning tone. 'From the age of 12, a girl can go to her husband's house.'
    His wife, Rabi Abdullahi, nods, and asks her husband's permission before talking. She too was a child when she married, although she does not know exactly how old. 
    'It is our way of life,' she says. 'In my day, a bride would never dare to run away.'
    Her life is hard, she says, but her marriage good. She insists that her husband is not a cruel man, pointing to a well he built so she did not need to walk more than a mile to collect water. 
    The tradition of child marriage is rooted partly in poverty. This is an area where most people do not have running water, electricity or indoor toilets, where children get only three or four years of schooling.

    No sanctuary: Maimuna's parents, Rabi Abdullahi, left and Haruna Abdullahi, right, have seven other children and say it is not unusual to marry as young as 12
    No sanctuary: Maimuna's parents, Rabi Abdullahi, left and Haruna Abdullahi, right, have seven other children and say it is not unusual to marry as young as 12

    A marriageable daughter can bring in a bride price and mean one less mouth to feed. 
    So in late 2012, Maimuna's father arranged to marry his eldest daughter to his best friend's eldest son.
    The son, Saidu, paid a dowry of 35,000 naira (£120) for Maimuna - more cash than Abdullahi has had in his life. She was 13, and he twice her age. 
    Saidu farms his own plot of land and owns a small motorbike, making him relatively well off and eligible.
    He says he has known Maimuna all his life, and waited years for her to reach what he considers marriageable age. 
    'When she was a kid, I would bring her candy and call her "wifey",' he says. 'We were always meant to be together.'
    Saidu left his village school at fifth grade, the highest level offered, and says he regrets it.
    The high school was in another village, too far to walk. Now he cannot write, and must find someone else to read him even the most personal of letters. 
    He says he promised Maimuna she could carry on going to school, even if it meant he had to find work in town. But he also worried. 
    'If she is educated, she will be looking down on me because I didn't go to school, so she will be the husband and I will be the wife,' he explains.
    Maimuna said she did not love him and begged her father to let her stay in school. She had always been a good daughter, obedient, hard-working and popular among her friends, so her stubborn refusal to accept her marriage surprised her parents. 

    Rescue: Sympathetic family members took Maimuna in, and she is now able to attend school again
    Rescue: Sympathetic family members took Maimuna in, and she is now able to attend school again

    But her wishes were not up for discussion. Her father was clear on what counts: 'It's what is good for the family and the community.'
    The link between child marriage and education is clear. Only 2 percent of married girls in Nigeria go to school, compared to 69 percent of unmarried girls, according to the United Nations.
    Some 73 percent of married girls received no schooling, and three out of four cannot read at all. 
    Many of Maimuna's friends from school were already married and not one was happy, but they had no idea how to escape. 
    Nobody prepared Maimuna for the marriage bed. There was no advice, no warning of what to expect, even from her married friends. 
    She settled into a new life where she felt like a slave. When she wasn't working in the fields, she was cleaning, carrying water and firewood, cooking and at the beck and call of her husband's demanding parents.
    Every day she was exhausted, and when she finally got to bed, her husband wanted to 'bother' her, she says.
    He never kept his promise to let her go to school. 
    When she objected to her treatment, her husband locked her into their hut, for days. He would not even allow her to visit her parents. 
    Maimuna bided her time until the rainy season was over and her husband went to town to find work. 
    Nine months ago, she took off, escaping to her father and begging him to let her return home. 
    Instead, he whipped her until her back was raw. Then he summoned her husband and forced her to go back to him.
    Saidu, humiliated and furious, slapped her repeatedly in the face, jerking her head from side to side with the force of his blows.
    She fled once again, first to a sympathetic aunt in a nearby village and then to a cousin in Kaduna. 
    She now shares one cramped room with her cousin's family, just a short walk away from Tattalli school, down a dusty alley and along a road lined by open drains stinking of stagnant water. 
    When Maimuna showed up at the school, she had been badly beaten and refused to speak, says teacher Victoria Dung.
    They took her to the hospital, where doctors found she was badly malnourished. The whip marks on her back may last a lifetime. 
    Her husband waited the customary three months to make sure there was no baby. Then he divorced her, as a husband can do under shariah or Islamic law by declaring the divorce aloud three times.
    He informed her parents of the divorce in a letter dated Feb. 14, which he could not write himself. 
    Maimuna considers herself among the lucky ones. She balances a broken chair on a tree stump at the school to sit in front of a sewing machine, learning to make garments she can sell in the market. 
    She thinks she'd like nursing, and wants to master English and Arabic. 
    'I don't know what I want to be when I grow up but, even if I get married, I want to have some education to back me up,' she says in her native Hausa, with a teacher translating.
    'I pray that what I have done will help the younger ones, that my parents learn from the experience of my running away from home.'
    It is by no means certain. 
    After her departure, Maimuna's father called a community meeting to discuss the problem with elders. 
    He says he knows of many girls who ran away from home because of marriages, but the elders have not yet come up with a solution. 
    Some girls are rebelling in other ways. A 14-year-old forced to marry a 39-year-old in April poisoned the groom's food a week after their wedding, killing him and three of his friends. 
    Abdullahi denies beating his daughter, and says he is no longer angry with her.
    He insists he is happy that she has found a place where she can get the education she craves.
    Yet he gets visibly upset, the tendons in his neck standing out, as he describes the financial problem she has left him. 
    Maimuna's former husband is demanding back his money, but Abdullahi has spent it on land.
    And Saidu already has land - what he wants is cash, so he can look for another bride. Abdullahi does not know where he will find it. 
    Asked if he will treat his five younger daughters differently, he is ambivalent. The eyes in his chiseled face narrow, and he looks down at the ground. 
    'I would allow my daughters to go to school if I had the money. I have seen what happens, otherwise,' he says.
    'But my reason is poverty, always financial problems. What can I do but give them out in marriage?'
    Saidu, in the meantime, says he no longer cares for Maimuna and will move ahead with his life. 
    'This time I will marry a girl of 12, so that she will do what I want to do,' he says. 'Because if you marry a girl who is older, then she will not listen to you.'
    As he speaks, his eyes slide to the porch where Maimuna's 10-year-old sister, Hafsat, is cuddling a neighbor's baby. A sly smile curls his lips.

    Culled from DAILY MAIL

    BLASPEMY: 'Jesus would have supported gay marriage', says Elton John

    Jesus would have supported gay marriage, Sir Elton John has claimed. In an interview with Sky News' Murnaghan programme, the musician also said that rules preventing gay clergy from marrying and those which require Catholic priests to be celibate were 'old and stupid things'
    Jesus would have supported gay marriage, Sir Elton John has claimed. In an interview with Sky News' Murnaghan programme, the musician also said that rules preventing gay clergy from marrying and those which require Catholic priests to be celibate were 'old and stupid things'

    Jesus would have supported gay marriage, Sir Elton John has claimed.
    In an interview with Sky News’ Murnaghan programme, the musician also said that rules preventing gay clergy from marrying and those which require Catholic priests to be celibate were 'old and stupid things'.
    The singer will marry his civil partner David Furnish next year in a 'very quiet' ceremony. He said: 'The church hierarchy, the traditionalists, might be up in arms about it but times have changed. 
    'If Jesus Christ was alive today, I cannot see him, as the Christian person that he was and the great person that he was, saying this could not happen.
      'He was all about love and compassion and forgiveness and trying to bring people together and that is what the church should be about.'
      During the interview, Sir Elton said that the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby was 'doing a good job' and described Pope Francis as 'wonderful'.

      During the interview, Sir Elton said that the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby was 'doing a good job' and described Pope Francis as 'wonderful'
      During the interview, Sir Elton said that the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby was 'doing a good job' and described Pope Francis as 'wonderful'

      He said: 'He’s excited me so much by his humanity.
      'He’s taken everything down to the humility of faith.
      'He’s stripped it down to the bare bones and said it’s all basically about love and inclusiveness. That has to be encouraged by the Church of England as well.'
      Sir Elton also spoke of his plans to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin when he visits the country in November. 

      Sir Elton also spoke of his plans to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin when he visits the country in November
      Sir Elton also spoke of his plans to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin when he visits the country in November

      He said he offered to introduce him to members of the gay community earlier this year to show the impact of 'deeply divisive' legislation.
      Sir Elton said: 'It’s no good putting up a wall and saying I’m not talking to these people; the only way things get solved is by talking to people.'
      He said that he and his partner were not able to get married until next year because they were already in a civil partnership.
      He said the marriage would be 'very quiet and very off the cuff' as the couple had a big celebration for their civil union.

      Culled from DAILY MAIL

      Facebook renders apology for deceiving people during controversial News Feed experiment


      During one week in 2012, Facebook manipulated feeds of just over 689,000 users to highlight either positive or negative items, and then monitored responses over the course of a random week. The site has since apologised for the way the paper described the research, and any anxiety that was caused
      During one week in 2012, Facebook manipulated feeds of just over 689,000 users to highlight either positive or negative items, and then monitored responses over the course of a random week. The site has since apologised for the way the paper described the research, and any anxiety that was caused

      Following reports Facebook manipulated the feeds of almost 700,000 users, the site has issued a statement claiming it 'never met to upset anyone'. 
      During one week in 2012, the social media giant edited feeds to highlight either positive or negative items, and then monitored responses.
      The site has since apologised for the way the paper described the research, and any anxiety that was caused, adding, 'the research benefits of the paper may not have justified all of this.'

      FACEBOOK'S FEED EXPERIMENT

      The California-based firm carried out the experiment during a week in 2012. 
      During that time, negative posts were deprioritised in the data feeds of 689,003 users, to see if it generated a more positive response. 
      Posts were determined by the experiment to be positive or negative if they contained at least one positive or negative word.
      The experiment affected around 0.04 per cent of users - or 1 in 2500.
      According to Facebook, nobody's posts were 'hidden,' they just didn't show up on some feeds.
      It found that negative posts elicited a swell of positive responses, but also that a reduction in positive news led to more negative posts.
      ‘When positive expressions were reduced, people produced fewer positive posts and more negative posts; when negative expressions were reduced, the opposite pattern occurred,’ said the researchers.
      ‘The reason we did this research is because we care about the emotional impact of Facebook and the people that use our product,' said Facebook data scientist Adam D. I. Kramer. 
        ‘We felt that it was important to investigate the common worry that seeing friends post positive content leads to people feeling negative or left out. 
        ‘At the same time, we were concerned that exposure to friends' negativity might lead people to avoid visiting Facebook. We didn't clearly state our motivations in the paper.
        'Having written and designed this experiment myself, I can tell you that our goal was never to upset anyone.'
        During the experiment, Facebook deprioritised content in News Feeds, based on whether there was an emotional word in the post. 
        Tests affected around 0.04 per cent of users - or 1 in 2500 - for a week, in early 2012.
        According to Kramer, nobody's posts were 'hidden,' they just didn't show up on some feeds.
        'Those posts were always visible on friends' timelines, and could have shown up on subsequent News Feed loads.'
        It found that negative posts elicited a swell of positive responses, but also that a reduction in positive news led to more negative posts, according to the results of a study published in PNAS Journal.

        Facebook data scientist Adam D. I. Kramer issued a statement over the weekend (pictured). He said: 'The reason we did this research is because we care about the emotional impact of Facebook. Having written and designed this experiment myself, I can tell you our goal was never to upset anyone'
        Facebook data scientist Adam D. I. Kramer issued a statement over the weekend (pictured). He said: 'The reason we did this research is because we care about the emotional impact of Facebook. Having written and designed this experiment myself, I can tell you our goal was never to upset anyone'

        ‘When positive expressions were reduced, people produced fewer positive posts and more negative posts; when negative expressions were reduced, the opposite pattern occurred,’ said the researchers.
        ‘These results indicate that emotions expressed by others on Facebook influence our own emotions, constituting experimental evidence for massive-scale contagion via social networks.’
        Of the millions of posts analysed, 4 million were found to be positive and 1.8million were determined to be negative.
        The findings led the team to conclude that ‘in-person interaction and nonverbal cues are not strictly necessary for emotional contagion.’
        This experiment was limited to users who viewed Facebook in English, but it is not known across which geographic boundaries. 
        'At the end of the day, the actual impact on people in the experiment was the minimal amount to statistically detect it - the result was that people produced an average of one fewer emotional word, per thousand words, over the following week,' continued Kramer.
        'I can understand why some people have concerns about it, and my coauthors and I are very sorry for the way the paper described the research and any anxiety it caused. 
        'In hindsight, the research benefits of the paper may not have justified all of this anxiety.'
        Commenting on the reports, Brett Dixon, director of the digital marketing agency DPOM, said:  'Despite Facebook's insistence this was merely an academic experiment, it sails perilously close to the illegal world of subliminal advertising.
        'There's a reason this insidious form of manipulation is banned - it is an abuse of people's freedom to choose.
        'But let's keep some perspective. This was a research project, not the birth of some social media thought police.'

        Culled from DAILY MAIL

        Friday, 27 June 2014

        140 kidnapped boys are being trained by ISIS to become suicide bombers


        'Brainwashed': Some of the 140 schoolboys reportedly captured by ISIS militants in Syria while travelling back home on a convoy of buses after taking their final exams in the city of Aleppo
        'Brainwashed': Some of the 140 schoolboys reportedly captured by ISIS militants in Syria while travelling back home on a convoy of buses after taking their final exams in the city of Aleppo

        More than 140 schoolchildren are being 'brainwashed' into becoming suicide bombers for Islamist militants after being kidnapped in Syria, it emerged today.
        The Kurdish pupils, aged between 14 and 16, are being held hostage in the ISIS-controlled city of Manbij, where they are being forced to take lessons in radical Islamic theology.
        One 15-year-old boy, known as Mohammed, said masked fighters made him watch a video of fighters beheading a man on their first day - then warned he would face the same fate if he tried to escape.

        Snatched: The Kurdish pupils, aged between 14 and 16, are being held hostage in the ISIS-controlled city of Manbij, where they are being forced to take lessons in radical Islamic theology
        Snatched: The Kurdish pupils, aged between 14 and 16, are being held hostage in the ISIS-controlled city of Manbij, where they are being forced to take lessons in radical Islamic theology

        He said the men, armed with AK-47 machine guns, told him: 'This is jihad for the sake of God.'
        Despite the barbaric threat, he and a friend managed to escape after creating a diversion, climbing a fence and running to safety.
        His account comes days after a human rights group revealed how ISIS militants waging war in Iraq and Syria are recruiting children for roles ranging from soldiers and snipers to stretcher bearers and suicide bombers.

          Mohammed told CNN that he was kidnapped by armed fighters while travelling on a convoy of buses carrying children back from their final exams in the city of Aleppo on May 29.
          He said the men angrily questioned why the boys were sitting with the girls, yelling at them: 'It is forbidden!'
          Mohammed added: 'We were all so scared. We were excited to go home and see our families. We didn't know why they took us.'

          Boy jihadis: An Al Qaeda fighter stands with two children holding machine guns while watching ISIS parade in commandeered Iraqi security force vehicles in Mosul, Iraq
          Boy jihadis: An Al Qaeda fighter stands with two children holding machine guns while watching ISIS parade in commandeered Iraqi security force vehicles in Mosul, Iraq

          He was among more than 140 Kurdish schoolboys kidnapped in Syria last month by ISIS, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and local activists.
          The children were then taken to a mosque in Manbij, handed blankets and forced to sleep in a single rooms with 17 boys in each one.
          They are woken up at dawn each day for prayer, made to take lessons for several hours on Sharia law then forced to watch horrific videos of executions and suicide missions, he said.
          A father of one of the captured pupils, who is a senior Kurdish leader but didn't want to be identified in fear for his son's safety, said: 'They are trying to brainwash them.
          'We have raised our children well, but we are worried how this will affect them psychologically.'

          Earlier this week, a report by Human Rights Watch revealed how rebel groups across the ideological spectrum have employed children in the civil war in Syria.
          Military and police forces in Kurdish-controlled areas have also used teenagers, it said.
          'Syrian armed groups shouldn't prey on vulnerable children — who have seen their relatives killed, schools shelled and communities destroyed — by enlisting them in their forces,' said Priyanka Motaparthy, the author of the 31-page report.
          'The horrors of Syria's armed conflict are only made worse by throwing children into the front lines.'
          Human Rights Watch said the extremist Nusra Front and the Islamic State have both targeted children as young as 15 through education programs, which include military training.
          The group, which said the number of children fighting in the conflict is unknown, based its report on interviews with 25 children and former child soldiers in Syria.

          Thursday, 26 June 2014

          Woman slashed husband's throat with knife for peeing on floor

          Shery Lynn Downs (Image credit: Billings Police Department)
          Shery Lynn Downs

          A woman in Billings, Montana, allegedly slit her husband's throat after he peed on the floor, according to court documents given to The Huffington Post.
          Shery Lynn Downs, who also goes by the last name Brooks, told police that her spouse angered her Monday by urinating on the bathroom floor and lying to the cable company about his name so the house could receive free service, according to papers.
          But the 52-year-old Downs, "who appeared intoxicated," told cops that the cut was self-inflicted and that she never saw the injury. She said in an affidavit that she gave her 68-year-old husband whiskey through the bedrom door when he told her to call 911. The several-inches-long cut required facial surgery.
          The victim, identified only as S.D., was still recovering at a local hospital as of Wednesday afternoon, a Billings Police Department spokesman told HuffPost.
          The husband said in court records that his wife was enraged by the urine on the floor. She entered the bedroom a first time to threaten him with the cleaver, then she re-entered and actually cut him. She said she hoped he would die, the man claimed.
          According to the charging papers, the man told police on their arrival that his wife had sliced his throat, but police told HuffPost the cut was down the man's cheek.
          Downs' bail was set at $5,000 during a Tuesday court appearance, where she faced a charge of felony weapons assault. She remained in custody Wednesday at the Yellowstone County Detention Center, police told HuffPost.
          Culled from HUFF POST

          Woman who tore son's scrotal sac and gummed it with superglue bags 2 yrs in prison




          A Texas woman who seriously injured her son and then tried to repair the injury with superglue pleaded guilty and was sentenced Thursday to two years in prison.
          Jennifer Vargas, 34, was arrested last fall by the FBI and charged with assault after she admitted to yanking her 6-year-old son's genitals out of anger.
          The sudden pull tore a 1.6-inch laceration in the boy's scrotum. Vargas then cleaned the wound with alcohol before trying to seal the gaping hole with superglue, according to KENS.
          “She applied superglue to the [boy's] scrotum until the bleeding stopped, stuffed his underwear with paper towels, and then told him to go to bed,” a criminal complaint affidavit said. “Vargas did not seek any type of medical treatment for the child.”
          The boy only received medical attention after his father -- an enlisted man at Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston, where the family lived -- came home to find his son crying. He underwent surgery at San Antonio Military Medical Center.
          Vargas expressed remorse for her actions when she went before a judge last week.
          “I would like to say that I regret my actions, that I do love my children with all my heart,” Vargas said, calling her kids the “most important thing to me," according to the San Antonio Express-News.
          WOAI reports that after 11 years of marriage, the couple filed for divorce. Prosecutors told the station that the boy has recovered and is doing well.
          "He's recovered," Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Wannarka said. "He's living with his father and doing very well in school."
          Culled from HUFF POST

          Mother pushed toddler out of moving car to get hubby's attention

          Lasasha Allen

          A Louisiana mom was jailed Sunday after allegedly pushing her toddler from a moving car to get a reaction from the girl's father.
          Lasasha Allen, 23, told the child's father on Saturday that their 20-month-old daughter was injured after falling out of the car window, despite this having not happened, MyArkLAMiss.com reports. The father didn't seem to care, so the Winnsboro woman decided to actually injure the child and see if that would raise more of a response from the man, according to the Franklin Parish Sheriff's Office.
          On Sunday, Allen took the toddler, along with the toddler's 7-year-old sibling, for a drive on a curvy road in a rural area. Deputies say she accelerated to a speed of 45 miles per hour before opening the passenger side door and shoving the girl out of the car.
          “She thought going around the curve the child would only receive minor injuries and she would get the attention she wanted and prove she was not lying,” Franklin Parish Sheriff Kevin Cobb told The News Star.
          The toddler's injuries were so severe that she ended up having to be airlifted to a hospital, KTBS reports. She is now in stable condition.
          Allen was charged with second-degree attempted murder. Her five other children were placed in protective custody.
           Bond has been set at $750,000.

          "This was a horrendous act, one that is beyond explanation, Sheriff Cobb said. "I hope that everyone will pray for that child and its siblings through this ordeal."

          Culled from HUFF POST

          Burglar arrested after signing into Facebook on victim's computer: Cops



          Nicholas Wig , 26, is accused of breaking into a home and stealing credit cards, cash and a watch.
          Nicholas Wig , 26, is accused of breaking into a home and stealing credit cards, cash and a watch.



          A Minnesota man is in jail because he logged on to Facebook.
          Police say 26-year-old Nicholas Wig checked his profile from a home he broke into, and then he didn’t log off. It happened June 19 in South St. Paul.
          Wood had come home to find his house ransacked. His credit cards, cash and watch were all gone.
          In their place, the thief had left a pair of Nike tennis shoes, jeans and a belt, that were all wet.  Wood said it had been raining outside.
          'I started to panic but then I noticed he had pulled up his Facebook profile.” Wood said.
          Wood posted to Facebook using Wig’s profile, saying Wig had burglarized his home. He even shared his phone number to see if someone would call with information. Wig texted him later that day.
          “I replied you left a few things at my house last night, how can I get them back to you,” Wood said.
          Wig agreed to meet with Wood later that night. Wood believes Wig was under the impression he would give him back some of his clothes he had left at his home in exchange for a recycled cell phone Wig had stolen.
          Wood, at his friend’s house, left for home. On his way back to his house he saw and recognized Wig, from his Facebook profile, walking on the street. He immediately called police.
          “I’ve never seen this before,” Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom said. “It’s a pretty unusual case, might even make the late night television shows in terms of not being too bright.”
          Wig was wearing Wood’s watch when he found him. Police arrested him at the scene.
          He could face up to 10 years in prison and $20,000 in fines if convicted.
          Culled from CBS News

          Wednesday, 25 June 2014

          Headmistress 'had sex' with 13-yr-old pupil in school uniform


          On trial: Anne Lakey was married and aged around 28 at the time of the alleged offences
          A respected headteacher groomed an underage boy and had a sexual relationship with him, a court heard.
          Anne Lakey, 54, engaged in a number of sexual acts with the boy when he was 13 and 14, including having sex with him, Durham Crown Court was told.
          The alleged offences are said to have taken place in the late 1980s when she was a married teacher living aged around 28.
          Judge Christopher Prince and a jury heard how the alleged victim, who was not one of Lakey's pupils, would visit the home she shared with her husband, with a group of youths.
          Eventually, Miss Goodwin explained, he began to visit alone.
          The court heard how Lakey asked the complainant if he would play a game of ‘dare’ with her, which resulted in her baring her breasts and allowing him to touch them. 
          Later she allowed the boy to sit on a step outside the bath as she washed and then stood up and walked into the bedroom, dropped her towel and asked him ‘what are you going to do then?’

          The prosecutor also explained how the boy would visit while Lakey was in the bath and that on one occasion she allowed him to see her in the bath.
          Eventually, the court was told, Lakey had sex with the boy at her home, his first experience of intercourse, while he was wearing his school uniform.
          The jury heard the pair had sex a number of times and engaged in other sex acts, with the boy visiting her home while Lakey’s husband was out and playing truant from school to do so.
          The court heard that Lakey told the boy she loved him and he would say it back. Miss Goodwin said the opportunities to have sex were ‘plentiful’ and Lakey would sometimes call the boy’s school, refer to herself as the boy’s ‘mummy’ and say that he was not coming in because of illness.
          The complainant came forward in 2012 after seeing a piece of literature which said that Lakey was committed to giving young people the best chance in life.

          Miss Goodwin also outlined how the defendant had phoned the boy’s school pretending to be his mother.
          The complainant came forward in 2012 after seeing a piece of literature which said that Lakey was committed to giving young people the best chance in life.
          In a letter, he called the defendant a ‘disgusting sexual monster’. Lakey, from Stanley, County  Durham, was described as an ‘inspiring leader’ by the Chief Inspector of Education after improving GCSE pass rates at her struggling school by focusing on vocational education. 
          But she was suspended from her position as chief executive of the Durham Federation of Schools last December after the allegations came to light. 
          Lakey denies nine charges relating to a boy under the age of 16 including inciting him to commit acts of gross indecency, gross indecency and indecent assault.
          The trial continues.

          Culled from Mirror

          Friday, 20 June 2014

          52yr-old paramedic jailed for sexual assault of accident victim inside ambulance

          Mark Powell 

          A former paramedic who sexually assaulted an unconscious woman in an ambulance in Connecticut was on Wednesday, sentenced to 3½ years in prison.
          Fifty-two-year-old Mark Powell of North Haven told police he had made “a very bad judgment call” when he touched the woman’s breast and genitals. He claimed he did so in order to “apply pain stimuli to elicit a response or wake the female.”
          The victim, who was 22 at the time of the assault, had needed treatment because she became intoxicated at a holiday party and fell into a mirror. Powell and the ambulance driver responded to the Hamden residence at about 3 a.m. on Christmas Day 2011.
           She reported that she had been awakened during the ride when she felt her breast being rubbed and her vagina touched. She said she remembered yelling at her assailant to stop.
          She called Powell “a coward in a professional position he used to his sexual advantage.” She said he was “this monster sexually pleasing himself at my expense.”
          The victim, who was accompanied to court by her mother, sister and boyfriend, came forward and read a detailed statement describing how Powell’s actions will affect her “for the rest of my life, every single day.”
          Powell declined to make a statement in court. He just shook his head when Clifford gave him an opportunity to say anything.
          His attorney, Norm Pattis, told Clifford, “He knows he made a mistake.”
          On April 1, Powell pleaded guilty to second-degree sexual assault because he was willing to accept serving 3½ years rather than risk a much longer sentence if he were convicted at a trial. Powell pleaded under the Alford doctrine, in which a defendant does not admit guilt but concedes there is likely enough evidence to secure a conviction at trial. The plea results in a finding of guilt by the court.
           Assistant State’s Attorney Kevin Doyle  said Powell had abused his position when the victim was “at her most vulnerable moment.”
          Doyle noted the woman was under restraint in the vehicle and was “in and out of consciousness.”
          Three days afterward, the woman called police and reported she had been awakened during the ride when she felt her breast being rubbed and her vagina touched. She said she remembered yelling at her assailant to stop.
          The victim said she had been hesitant to contact police but that her mother persuaded her to do so.
          Clifford noted that Powell’s statement to police “is what makes the case.” Powell initially told police he had not touched the woman, then said he had “accidentally” touched her, and then finally admitted what had happened.
           Culled from New Haven Register 


          Ohio attorney who raped woman for refusing sex with judge is suspended by CBA

          Javier Armengau
          An Ohio attorney is accused of raping a woman in a courthouse conference room after she refused to have sex with a judge.
          Columbus-based criminal defense attorney Javier Armengau, 52, allegedly tried to convince the mother of his client to perform oral sex on a judge, The Columbus Dispatch reports. Armengau said that the judge was "in his pocket" and that by pleasing him the woman could obtain a favorable sentence for her son, the alleged victim said in her testimony.
          After the woman refused, Armengau allegedly assaulted her in a conference room.
          The woman said that she made numerous visits to Armengau’s office and that on at least 10 occasions he stripped naked and masturbated in front of her.
          The rape, she said, occurred when Armengau took her into a conference room outside the courtroom after her son’s sentencing and forced her to perform oral sex on him, the Columbus Dispatch reports.
          Those allegations come from the third of the five women who have brought accusations against Armengau, currently on trial for charges of rape, sexual battery, gross sexual imposition, kidnapping and public indecency.
          The Marion Star reports that the Columbus Bar Association has asked the Ohio Supreme Court to suspend Armengau's law license.
          “I have not engaged in any wrongful conduct nor have I done anything that should warrant a complaint,” Armengau said Monday.
          Armengau is a member of the Ohio Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the
          National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, according to his website.
          Meanwhile, the Columbus Bar Association (CBA) has asked the Ohio Supreme Court to suspend immediately the law license of Javier Armengau who has handled a number of high-profile criminal cases in Marion County. The bar association filed a motion for a court order that would impose an “immediate interim remedial suspension of Javier Armengau’s privilege of practicing law in Ohio because he has engaged — and continues to engage — in serious misconduct that is harmful to his clients, the public, and the administration of justice.”
          Culled from HUFF POST

          Sex offender raped teacher inside Arizona prison facility

          Jacob Harvey 
          A teacher at an Arizona prison was alone in a room full of sex offenders before being stabbed and raped by a convicted rapist, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press about an attack that highlighted major security lapses at the facility.
          The attack occurred Jan. 30 at the Eyman prison's Meadows Unit, which houses about 1,300 rapists, child molesters and other sex offenders. The teacher was administering a high school equivalency test to about a half-dozen inmates in a classroom with no guard nearby and only a radio to summon help. The Department of Corrections issued only a bare-bones press release after the attack, but the AP pieced together what happened based on interviews and investigatory reports obtained under the Arizona Public Records Act.
          After the last of the other inmates left, Jacob Harvey asked the teacher if she could open the bathroom and then attacked her, records show. Harvey is accused of stabbing her in the head with a pen, forcing her to the ground and raping her.
          The teacher told investigators that she screamed for help, but none came. Afterward, Harvey tried to use her radio to call for help. It had apparently been changed to a channel the unit's guards didn't use, so Harvey let the woman use a phone, according to the reports.
          Harvey was in the first year of a 30-year sentence for raping a Glendale woman in November 2011. Just 17 at the time, he had knocked on the woman's door in the middle of the day, asked for a drink of water, then forced his way inside, where he repeatedly raped and beat her while her 2-year-old child was in the apartment. He fled naked when the woman's roommate arrived home.
          He was arrested after DNA evidence connected him to the crime, and he pleaded guilty.
          Carl Toers Bijns, a former deputy warden at the prison, said the assault highlights chronic understaffing and lax security policies that put staff members at risk.
          State prison officials, however, dismiss the concerns. They say the assault at the prison about 60 miles southeast of Phoenix is a risk that comes with the job of overseeing violent prison inmates.
          Department of Corrections spokesman Doug Nick said classrooms at prisons across the state are having cameras installed. But he said no administrative investigation was launched because there was no need, and no one was disciplined. He said all prisons are dangerous places and staff are trained accordingly.
          "This is an assault that reflects the fact that inmates in our system often act out violently, and it is the inmate suspect who is responsible for this despicable act," he said.
          After the attack, Harvey was calm when confronted in the classroom, refused to talk to investigators and asked for a lawyer. He was charged last month with sexual assault, kidnapping and assault with a deadly weapon. A public defender was appointed, and he pleaded not guilty at his arraignment. The public defender assigned to his case, Paula Cook, declined to comment.
          Harvey was convicted in a prison administrative hearing of sexually assaulting the staff member. Three weeks after the rape, he assaulted another prison employee, although records don't show any details. His security classification was raised two levels, to the highest, nearly three months after the teacher was assaulted.
          Culled from Huff Post

          Thursday, 19 June 2014

          Charles Taylor takes Britain to court over human rights violation




          The former Liberia President, Charles Taylor has taken the British Government to courtclaiming his detention in Britain denies his human rights. 
          He says his wife and 15 children – some of them criminals too – should not have to travel from Africa to visit him, adding that he fears being attacked in Frankland jail. His wife, Victoria Addison Taylor, claimed his incarceration among 'common British prisoners' was humiliating. She said: 'They took him to this prison where high [risk] criminals, terrorists and other common British criminals are kept and he is being classified as a high-risk prisoner.