Tag Archive | "Breaking News"

Terrorism trial told of talk with she-devil

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THE key witness in Australia’s biggest terrorist trial lived a life of luxury, communicated with birds and saw a she-devil, a court heard yesterday.

The witness, Izzydeen Atik of Newport, told the court on Tuesday the group’s alleged leader, Abdul Nacer Benbrika, told him the group planned to attack the 2005 AFL grand final at the MCG and Melbourne’s Crown Casino during the 2006 Grand Prix.

Mr Atik is a key witness in the trial of 12 men accused of being members of a terrorist organisation. All have pleaded not guilty.

Remy van de Wiel, QC, a lawyer for Benbrika, told the court of a psychiatric report in 2002 in which Mr Atik claimed that birds often told him their problems.

“If you spend a day with me you will see the birds follow me and talk to me,” Mr Atik told the psychiatrist who compiled the report.

Mr van de Wiel told the court the report quoted Mr Atik as saying: “I see another one, a girl, not human, a devil. She says she loves me [and] she won’t let me have a relationship. She scares me.”

But under cross-examination yesterday, Mr Atik told the jury he had no recollection of hearing the voice of the girl.

The jury heard Mr Atik lived a life of luxury, funded by credit card fraud while receiving a pension in 2003 and 2004.
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Polygamous Sect Encouraged Fear

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Texas child welfare officials have brought in mental health professionals and behavioral experts as the agency tries to ensure a sense of normalcy for the more than 400 children removed from a polygamous sect’s enclave, an agency spokeswoman said.

But for all their lives, the boys and girls of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints have been told the outside world was hostile and immoral. Venturing beyond the brilliant white limestone walls of their compound would consign them to eternal damnation, their church leaders preached.

Now, if the state gets its way, hundreds of children could be put in foster homes, in what could be a wrenching cultural adjustment that may require intensive counseling.

“What they are up against is having to deprogram an entire community,” said Margaret Cooke, who left the sect with seven of her eight children near the end of 1994. The children “are so naive and they have been sheltered to the point that they don’t even trust their own judgment.”

Marleigh Meisner, a spokeswoman for the state Children’s Protective Services, said the agency is working with mental health and other experts to meet specific needs of the children. That information would be passed to foster families if a judge decides the children should be transferred to foster homes, she said.

“We want to keep their world as normal as possible,” Meisner said. “We also want to be certain that these children have gained a trust with us. We want these children to know that even if they may not have been safe in the past, they will be safe as long as they are with us.”

Meanwhile, in court papers unsealed Friday, authorities said they found a “cyanide poisoning document” in their search of the compound in the town of Eldorado. But the 80-page list of items seized gave no further explanation.

Texas Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Tela Mange said the document consisted of pages torn out of a first-aid book on how to treat cyanide poisoning. But she said she didn’t know why the sect would have such information on hand.

Child welfare officials seized more than 400 children, most of them girls, in the raid on the FLDS compound known as the Yearn for Zion ranch, saying the youngsters were in danger of physical, emotional and sexual abuse.

The renegade Mormon splinter group requires girls at puberty to enter into polygamous marriages with much older men and produce children, authorities say. The sect also teaches children to fear the outside world, including the very authorities who removed them until a court hearing Thursday that will help determine their future.

“You’re taught to fear everyone and everything,” said Cooke, herself a 16-year-old bride.

The children and the 139 women who followed them voluntarily out of the compound are being so secretive that child welfare officials are having trouble sorting out who the youngster’ parents are.

Most of the children are the offspring of the faith’s inner circle - including its now-imprisoned prophet, Warren Jeffs - who were born since construction began on the compound in 2003, or were hand-selected by Jeffs to come to the enclave, which the sect regards as part of Zion on Earth.

In 2003 and 2004, Jeffs, the spiritual leader of an estimated 6,000 followers in two adjoining towns along the Utah-Arizona line, plucked children under the age of 6 to bring to Texas, some without their parents, former sect member Isaac Wyler said.

“Over age 6 they were too contaminated for the world to be of use to God,” said Wyler, who still lives in Colorado City, Ariz., and has 38 siblings. “He picked the ones that would be the most obedient, the ones that would be qualified to go to Zion.”

Authorities raided the Eldorado ranch April 3 after a girl from the clan made a whispered telephone call for help to a family violence shelter. The 16-year-old, who indicated she was a few weeks’ pregnant, said her 50-year-old husband beat and raped her. The girl has not yet been identified among the 416 children and may not even be among them.

In the call, the girl said that sect members warned her that if she ever left, outsiders would hurt her and force her to cut her hair, wear makeup and have sex with many men.

Most of the sect’s children have never attended public schools or worn modern clothing. The girls wear long, pioneer-style dresses and keep their long hair pinned up in a braid.

In their search of the compound, police uncovered dozens of journals and other documents that contain birth, marriage and other genealogical records. That may help social workers match children with their parents.
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Miracle baby survives after being hit by a train

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Associated Press news agency reports today of a miraculous survival in Switzerland.

Swiss police say a baby suffered little more than a bump after being blown onto railway tracks and being run over by a train.

The incident happened Wednesday in the northeastern Swiss town of Moehlin, close to the German border.

Police say the six-month-old was in a buggy when a strong gust of wind blew it off a platform and into the path of an oncoming train.

Luckily the infant fell between the rails. Rescuers heard the baby’s cries and found it lying beneath the train, virtually unharmed.

The child and its mother were taken to hospital and treated for shock before being released.

“There wasn’t much left of the buggy,” said Bernhard Graser of the Aargau cantonal police.

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Justice Finally Served

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HER mother always knew. From the moment Julie-Anne Hand was told her pregnant daughter’s body had been found in the Blue Mountains in January 2006, she was certain her son-in-law was guilty of the murder. She had already suspected that he had tried to poison her daughter, Jody Galante, then 26, but no one had believed her.

A devastated Mrs Hand had to spend the next five weeks pretending Mark Galante was innocent - comforting him about losing a wife, publicly supporting him and even holding his hand at Jody’s funeral - while police gathered evidence.

Yesterday, more than two years after her daughter was last seen, Mrs Hand cried and whispered “yes” in the Supreme Court as Galante was sentenced to 27 years’ jail, with a non-parole period of 20 years, for murdering his wife, who was three months pregnant. Galante, 29, wearing the same black suit as when he married Jody, did not react to the sentence. But Mrs Hand did.

Outside the court, she said: “We got justice for Jody and her baby. And although it won’t bring Jody back, he got one year for every year that he took - 26 for Jody and one for the baby. I’m more than happy with that.”

Mark and Jody Galante had been married since 2002 and had a two-year-old child. But the relationship was deeply troubled. Jody was upset by Mark’s heavy cannabis use and threatened to leave.

In an interview with the Herald this week, Mrs Hand revealed the pain she endured during her charade to help police. When police found a body they believed was Jody’s, “I knew she was gone, I just knew, and I knew it was him - I just knew it was.”

Julie-Anne Hand’s nightmare began when Galante called her on Saturday, January 7, 2006, to tell her Jody was missing. Galante told her he had last seen Jody before she went shopping at Parklea Markets. Police began investigating that day.

At a press conference the next Wednesday, Galante cried as he made a public plea to Jody: “We all love you. Please come home. We’re really worried about you.”

On the next Saturday, police told Mrs Hand they had found Jody’s body. She immediately knew Galante was the killer.

“When he said that he took their child to the park to feed the ducks on the day, I knew categorically that was a barefaced lie,” Mrs Hand said. “He just doesn’t go out in the sun. He hates the heat and wouldn’t have done that for any length of time and he tells us that he was there for two hours.”

Mrs Hand’s mind raced back to September 2005, when Jody ended up in hospital after eating a two lollies Galante had given her.

A doctor told her that her daughter had suffered some sort of drug psychosis brought on by a strong drug. “I know I have no evidence but I don’t think this was his first attempt on her life and nothing will ever convince me otherwise,” Mrs Hand said.

When the body was found, she told police of her suspicions about Galante and they told her they shared them. But they asked her to pretend that she thought Galante was innocent while they gathered more evidence.

“A policeman told me he knew how hard it was but said it would be helpful to the investigation, so I just had to find the strength to keep going,” Mrs Hand said.
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Government-issued credit card fraud

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Abuse of government-issued credit cards is all over the headlines this week. A Canadian bureaucrat made news by charging $230,000 to her state-issued credit card to buy souvenir coins from the Royal Canadian Mint which she then deposited in her personal bank account.

Veronica Topic, 24, later withdrew the money, and purchased laptop computers, palm pilots and other electronics, which she later sold on eBay. But almost daily delivery of packages to the office and her “extravagant” lifestyle finally caught the attention of her superiors.

News National reports that the credit card was properly authorized to an employee in November 2005 but was cancelled when she transferred to another position. Only 4 months later the card was reactivated with a forged signature of the CBSA’s enforcement division manager. Also the limit was hiked from 15 to 30 thousand dollars a month with a fraudulent signature and made up e-mail address.

“While the employee ultimately admitted wrong-doing and expressed remorse for her actions, the writer did not find any evidence to support her claims that she undertook these activities in order to provide financial support to her family. To the contrary, the writer found significant evidence indicating the employee indulged in a lifestyle not in keeping with her personal income,” concluded investigator Janice Paterson

Co-workers said the indicators of Topic’s lavish lifestyle included using the latest hi-tech devices, hockey tickets for the season, jewelry, a penthouse condo unit and a Mercedes Benz.

“Money never seemed to be an issue,” noted one co-worker, who mentioned a penthouse suite and a Mercedes.

Other colleagues stated that she used a personal BlackBerry and laptop, in addition to her desk computer at work.
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Popularity: 62% [?]

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