Earl Jones - Mandatory Minimums
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Ce blogue est une investigation de le meurtre de ma soeur, Theresa Allore. Il y a 30 ans Theresa est mort aux secteurs de Compton, Sherbrooke et Lennoxville, Québec.
Life isn't fair, Justice is blind... and dysfunctional, and some cops aren't smart and dedicated like on tv.
Si vous avez information contact Sue Sutherland: CP 45 Succursale Lennoxville, Sherbrooke J1M 1Z3,Canada:justice4theresa@hotmail.com Tel: 514-264-7830
What I would do if I was a victim of financial fraud in Quebec:
Step 1 - Learn from Madoff
The Bernard Madoff case precedes Earl Jones by about 18 months. Madoff has gone to trial, been sentenced and is now serving time about 30 miles up the road from where I live. Consequently I would study everything victims did in regard to Madoff and learn from it. Start by contacting NOVA, The Office of Victims of Crime and theAttorney General's Office for the state of New York. True, Canada has very different laws and will undoubtedly follow a different process, but it would be good to understand the Madoff process for victims in the event that Canada / Quebec has yet to develop a procedure for handling financial crime victims of this scope (which is more likely the case).
Step 2 - Know your Quebec Acronyms
BAVAC is the crime victims assistance office set up in the Ministry of .
CAVACs are divisions of BAVAC and are the actual regional victims assistance offices.
CSST is the commission of health and safety and they oversee the Act for victims compensation but the...
IVAC is the agency that actually doles out victims compensation.
Step 3 - Ethics violations
Autorite Des Marches Financiers is the Montreal-based securities regulator for Quebec that is being blamed for poor oversight of financial investors in the Province. They are undoubtedly under the control of a Quebec agency probably housed in the Finance Minister's portfolio and as such either they and / or the Finance Minister should fall under the authority of of a pretty strict ethics process (deotologie). If an ethics violation is suspected, a complaint should immediately be placed with the agency / Ministry.
Step 4 - Other short term resources
- Heidi Illingsworth with the Canadian Resource Center for Victims of Crime
- Randy McCall with Victims Assistance Online
At the very least both are very knowledgeable about Canadian victims issues and should be able to tell you what's happening with victims of financial crimes in other areas of the country.
Step 5 - Long term resources
If you are aiming for eventual reform of legislation and better oversight of investors you will need the assistance of either the Canadian Crime Victims Ombudsman and the Policy Center for Victims Issues. Understand that these two bodies work at the high level of victims issues and cannot be expected to assist you with immediate needs.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina's General Assembly has made the state the second in the country to allow attorneys to use statistical data to try to show that racial bias was behind the decision of prosecutors to seek or jurors to impose the death penalty.
The Senate voted 25-18 on Tuesday for a measure the NAACP and other advocates said was needed in a state that has released three black men from death row since December 2007. Only Kentucky has similar legislation, enacted 11 years ago.
District attorneys, sheriffs and victims advocates lined up against the measure that supporters called the Racial Justice Act. Opponents said it would make death penalty prosecutions too difficult.
North Carolina has not had an execution in nearly three years.
I learned today that Mel died. A guitarist. Depressive. He took his own life.
As absurd as the "boating accident" theory in Jaws, the "Owl Theory" in the Michael Peterson murder trial just won't die. It would not matter to me if the deceased was found clutching the bird itself, one look at the blood spatter evidence is enough to convince even the coroner of Amity that Kathleen Peterson was murdered:
I have been asked by a financial crime victim from the Earl Jones fallout in Montreal to give some advice on where to go / who to contact for victims' assistance. Since, we now have word of a second Ponzi scheme in Montreal, and that there is the likelihood that these types of crimes are to increase, I will post my comments here so they may be beneficial to any financial fraud victim.
What I would do if I was a victim of financial fraud in Quebec:
Step 1 - Learn from Madoff
The Bernard Madoff case precedes Earl Jones by about 18 months. Madoff has gone to trial, been sentenced and is now serving time about 30 miles up the road from where I live. Consequently I would study everything victims did in regard to Madoff and learn from it. Start by contacting NOVA, The Office of Victims of Crime and the Attorney General's Office for the state of New York. True, Canada has very different laws and will undoubtedly follow a different process, but it would be good to understand the Madoff process for victims in the event that Canada / Quebec has yet to develop a procedure for handling financial crime victims of this scope (which is more likely the case).
Step 2 - Know your Quebec Acronyms
BAVAC is the crime victims assistance office set up in the Ministry of .
CAVACs are divisions of BAVAC and are the actual regional victims assistance offices.
CSST is the commission of health and safety and they oversee the Act for victims compensation but the...
IVAC is the agency that actually doles out victims compensation.
Step 3 - Ethics violations
Autorite Des Marches Financiers is the Montreal-based securities regulator for Quebec that is being blamed for poor oversight of financial investors in the Province. They are undoubtedly under the control of a Quebec agency probably housed in the Finance Minister's portfolio and as such either they and / or the Finance Minister should fall under the authority of of a pretty strict ethics process (deotologie). If an ethics violation is suspected, a complaint should immediately be placed with the agency / Ministry.
Step 4 - Other short term resources
- Heidi Illingsworth with the Canadian Resource Center for Victims of Crime
- Randy McCall with Victims Assistance Online
At the very least both are very knowledgeable about Canadian victims issues and should be able to tell you what's happening with victims of financial crimes in other areas of the country.
Step 5 - Long term resources
If you are aiming for eventual reform of legislation and better oversight of investors you will need the assistance of either the Canadian Crime Victims Ombudsman and the Policy Center for Victims Issues. Understand that these two bodies work at the high level of victims issues and cannot be expected to assist you with immediate needs.
Police investigate human remains found by West Point on Eno
DURHAM -- Durham Police are investigating remains found in a wooded area near West Point on the Eno Park. Shortly before 6 p.m. a person flagged down a patrol officer and told him that there appeared to be human remains in the woods off North Roxboro Road.
Officers responded and confirmed that the remains appear to be human and appear to have been in the woods for an extended time.
No information is available yet on the race, sex, age or cause of death.
Anyone with information about this case is asked to call the Criminal Investigations Homicide Unit at 560-4440 or CrimeStoppers at 683-1200. CrimeStoppers pays cash rewards for information leading to arrests in felony cases and callers never have to identify themselves.
ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. — Relatives and friends of eight missing or slain Rocky Mount women held a fundraiser Saturday to keep up three electronic billboards aimed at raising awareness about the cases.
The families have formed the community group MOMS (Murdered or Missing Sisters). They used fish fries and motorcycle rides to raise money for the billboards, which show each woman individually and then all together. A question mark represents a sixth unidentified victim.
“Each of us has lost someone so we know how the other one feels,” said Tynatta James, whose sister, 50-year-old Ernestine Battle, was reported missing Feb. 2, 2008.
Battle’s remains were discovered on March 14, 2008, along Seven Bridges Road in Edgecombe County.
The bodies of Jarniece Latonya Hargrove, 31; Taraha Shenice Nicholson, 28; Melody LaShae Wiggins, 29; and Jackie Nikelia Thorpe, 35, were all found in the same area. A sixth body discovered in February has yet to be identified.
Each of the known victims was black, from Rocky Mount, had a history of drugs and had a history of run-ins with the law. Each was reported missing before their bodies were discovered in a rural area of Edgecombe County.
Three other women with similar descriptions and backgrounds – Christine Marie Boone, Renee Joyce Durham and Yolanda Renee Lancaster – remain missing.
The family members of the missing women have also joined MOMS for support.
“It was really bad for me, because my mother was the only person I could really talk to,” said Rashida Mitchell, Durham’s daughter.
Durham has been missing for two years. Mitchell said she still waits every day for her mother to come home.
“You get no closure from it,” Mitchell said.
Saturday's chicken and barbecue fundraiser was held at Stith-Talbert Park, 729 Pennsylvania Ave.
Lamar Advertising gave the community group a significant discount on the billboards, which went up on July 28. The group paid $1,300 for all three signs. They will stay up for at least a month.
Two billboards are on U.S. Highway 301, and the other is near Winstead and Sunset avenues.
We all know the issues. So do we need one more voice to weigh in on the gun debate? When that voice is as funny and insightful as Gail Collins'; Yes we do.
Plaxico Burress, the former football star, appeared before a grand jury in Manhattan this week to explain how he came to carry a concealed weapon into a nightclub. Burress, you may remember, had cannily tucked his loaded pistol into the waistband of his sweatpants when he went out for a night on the town. The gun started to slip, as objects in waistbands are wont to do. When he grabbed it, he accidentally shot himself in the thigh.
Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
This is what is known as a bad plan.
The reason I am bringing all this up is that Burress’s spokespeople keep pointing out that he did have a permit to carry a handgun in Florida. (It was expired, but as the waistband business demonstrates, this guy does not excel in attention to detail.) So the story gives us an excellent entry into the question of whether states should be required to recognize other states’ gun carry permits.
The Senate recently held a debate on just such a proposal, during which the sponsor, John Thune of South Dakota, said that if people from his state were able to go to New York and visit tourist attractions while carrying their concealed weapons, “Central Park would be a much safer place.”
This suggests how much Americans have to learn about each other. Central Park is way safer than South Dakota. There were no murders and three serious assaults in Central Park in 2008, compared with five murders and 341 assaults in Sioux Falls alone. There was a horrible near-fatality in the park this week, but it involved a rotting tree limb that fell and hit a man on the head. If South Dakotans would like to come to visit carrying concealed chain saws, it is possible that we can do some business.
The vote on the Thune amendment was 58 to 39 in favor, which, of course, in the Senate world means that it was defeated. But it will be back. These days, whenever Congress feels the yen for a good old-fashioned debate about a hot-button social issue, it goes for guns. This year, we have already been blessed with legislation giving people the right to carry concealed weapons in national parks. Maybe soon there will also be a Plaxico’s Law, affirming that a gun permit, once granted, is good for a lifetime, just like Social Security numbers.
I like to think this gun obsession is progress of a sort, since it has almost completely replaced the offering of divisive gotcha amendments on abortion or gay rights.
Given the fact that lawmakers yelling about assault rifles and Glocks very seldom feel compelled to quote from the Bible, you’d think we could work toward a sensible national consensus on guns. Senator Charles Schumer of New York offered to work on a compromised concealed weapon bill that would only apply to truck drivers who haul valuable cargo around the country. Maybe, in turn, the other side would be a little more rational about regulating weapons sales at gun shows.
One barrier, of course, is the National Rifle Association, which is dedicated to the cause of making everybody as loony as possible on the subject. Another is the suspicion on the part of gun owners that people who favor gun control look down on them.
In that Senate debate, opponents of loosening the current laws did get a tad carried away, particularly when they kept equating carrying a concealed weapon with being a mass murderer. Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey claimed that the newly empowered gun owners coming into his state would be “like Richard Poplawski, the white supremacist, armed with an AK-47, who allegedly murdered three Pittsburgh police officers on his front porch.”
Perhaps Menendez was having a bad day, what with a large chunk of the New Jersey Democratic Party teetering on the verge of indictment. But given the fact that nearly half the householders in America have guns, it doesn’t make sense to suggest that they’re all homicidal or that only good gun owners are the hunters. There are an estimated 250 million guns in America. Jim Kessler of the Third Way, a nonpartisan think tank, noted that if the noncriminals only used them for hunting, “there wouldn’t be a varmint left in the country.”
Gun advocates tend to think of themselves as representatives of small-town or rural values. But their worldview is so dark, you’d think they were living in a dystopian Gotham City. Senator Thune said he was worried that his daughter might have to drive home from college through states that would not allow her the protection of a pistol in the glove compartment. Senator Jim Webb of Virginia fretted about his elderly father checking into a motel without a loaded gun to keep the criminals at bay.
In New York, I have never heard a single parent say they were afraid their kid couldn’t make it home from school unarmed. However, we do worry a little bit about idiots wandering into nightclubs with Glocks tucked in their sweats.
SANTA CRUZ -- Two Santa Cruz men have been arrested and a third is wanted in connection with the kidnapping and killing of a Los Angeles man last heard from on July 20. Friends last talked to Elias Sorokin, 29, as he drove from Oakland to Santa Cruz. Two days later, people tried to use his credit cards and checks at businesses in Santa Cruz and Watsonville, which prompted local authorities to become involved in his disappearance. His burned-out truck was discovered Tuesday night on Empire Grade Road in Bonny Doon on State Parks property. Sorokin's body has not been found, though police believe he was killed before his truck was dumped. Santa Cruz police Capt. Steve Clark said Kenneth Clamp, 29, and Stewart Skuba, 31, are being held in County Jail. Skuba, who identified himself as a hair stylist, is being held on $1 million bail. Clamp, who identified himself as a construction worker, was arrested early Friday at or near his home at 407 Liberty St. in Santa Cruz and is being held without bail, according to jail reports. Skuba was first arrested Thursday morning in South County after he fled on foot from a stolen car, according to Watsonville police, who linked evidence on Skuba and in the stolen car to the Sorokin case. He was then turned over to Santa Cruz police, and after questioning was booked on charges of kidnapping with intent to hold for ransom or extortion, robbery and conspiracy to commit a crime with another person. Clamp is being held on a drug-related parole violation and thought to be "peripherally involved," Clark said. Both will be arraigned on those charges Monday afternoon or Tuesday morning, according to prosecutor Rob Wade from the District Attorney's Office. A $1 million arrest warrant has been issued for 29-year-old Adam Hunt of Watsonville, Clark said. He is considered to be dangerous, but it is unknown if he is armed. Police said the three men are acquaintances and all have criminal records. Police believe the men had a prearranged meeting to sell a large amount of marijuana and that the deal went sideways at a condominium at 244 Felix St. in Santa Cruz. The FBI and Department of Justice were at the Felix Street location Friday collecting and cataloging evidence. "We have evidence that pretty strongly leads us to believe it's a homicide," Clark said. Clark declined to say whether they had located a weapon, how they think Sorokin was killed or if they found marijuana. Sorokin, co-owner of a clothing business called Kucoon in Los Angeles, was on a trip to Northern California when he disappeared. A man and a woman attempted to use his credit cards at Target in Watsonville July 22, and his cards were also rejected at two other businesses in the same shopping center on Saturday. Watsonville police on Thursday arrested two men suspected of trying to pass the cards, Gerardo Vasquez Rios, 32, and Jose Pedro Galvan, 31, but would not say if they were linked to Sorokin's disappearance. On July 24, a woman tried to cash a $4,500 check from Kucoon at Bank of America on River Street in Santa Cruz. Police have identified the woman who tried to cash the check, but she has not been arrested. Neither Clamp nor Skuba has been charged with murder. "We'll wait to apply that charge when we find a body," Clark said. Clark said police found evidence while serving a search warrant on the condominium on Felix that led them to believe Sorokin is dead and that he was killed there. He said they believe his 2007 Toyota Tacoma was torched to destroy evidence, but that the effort was unsuccessful. "We were able to pull evidence from the truck," Clark said. On Felix Street on Friday afternoon, FBI agents wearing white jumpsuits removed items through the back door of the condo, the last in a line of tan-colored homes along a driveway. They sorted evidence on folding tables set up in the parking lot of an adjacent apartment complex and loaded items into a waiting evidence van. The scene -- roped off with yellow crime scene tape -- was hardly visible from the street and attracted little attention from others in the neighborhood, which largely is composed of apartment complexes and college-age residents. Santa Cruz police asked the FBI to join the investigation because of their advanced means to collect and process evidence. Kidnapping is also a federal crime, which means the men could be prosecuted federally, though Clark said that is unlikely. FBI agents handling the search declined to comment on the investigation. Clark said he believes Sorokin was killed soon after he was last heard from and that the motive revolves around the drug deal. "I think at this point we have a pretty good picture of how the events transpired," Clark said. He declined to talk specifically about the marijuana transaction and didn't know how long Sorokin had been involved in drug trafficking. "Clearly he was involved in the business to some degree," Clark said. "You would have to have established some history and some credibility in the business to deal with these quantities." When information surfaced earlier in the week that his disappearance may have been related to pot sales, Sorokin's family and friends expressed shock. His mother, Anna Oleynik of North Carolina, said she had no idea that he was involved in drug trafficking. "It also surprises me that a lot of his friends ... none of them seemed to know about this," she said by phone Friday afternoon. "I don't understand who they were or why he went there and it doesn't seem like something he would do." They have described Sorokin as a warm, caring person who was beloved by many. His mother said he was the light in their lives. Santa Cruz police have informed Sorokin's family and met with his father, who came to Santa Cruz from L.A. this week to help with the search, on Friday afternoon. "I guess there's still a one in a million chance that he's injured and still alive out there, but I think not," said Oleynik, just before she left for a vigil in honor of her son. "I just don't understand." The search for Sorokin's body continued late Friday. "We have been looking," Clark said. "We have sort of set some concentric patterns that we're looking at right now to try to narrow down possible locations as to where the body might be." Police are using a cadaver dogs and also employed the U.S. Coast Guard to search off the coast, though Clark said investigators had no specific information that Sorokin's body was dumped in the ocean. Officers also searched in the forested area where Sorokin's pickup was found, but didn't find any sign of him, Clark said. Los Angeles police also were investigating the missing person case, and Sorokin's relatives and friends launched their own search in the area this week. They offered a $20,000 reward for information leading to his safe return, no questions asked. Information about Sorokin's disappearance was posted on Burning Man Festival blogs and Facebook pages. Friends held a vigil in Los Angeles for him Monday night and have put up fliers in the Santa Cruz area asking for tips. A contingent of friends came to Santa Cruz this week with search dogs to look for Sorokin after psychics and astrologers told them it's possible Sorokin was being held against his will by unstable people. At the time, friends said they were worried about his safety and that a psychic told them Sorokin may be in bad health.Santa Cruz police: Missing L.A. man killed in pot deal gone bad