Archives

Former Pennsylvania altar boy says he stole from church to avenge abuse

Mike McDonnell was an altar boy who loved to sing Latin hymns at his church in suburban Philadelphia, but his Roman Catholic faith became a source of torment at age 12 when he woke up to find a priest molesting him in the vacation bed the clergyman forced him to share.

“From that day forth, I would never be that same child,” said McDonnell, now 49. “I went into shock mode and shut down. I would hold onto those secrets for 20-plus years.”

McDonnell, now a peer counselor at a drug and alcohol treatment facility, agreed to share his personal story with Reuters in the wake of a stunning grand jury report of Roman Catholic priests accused of abusing more than 1,000 children across Pennsylvania. He said he wanted to encourage other victims to emerge from the shadows to begin their own healing.

While the incident at age 12 broke him, he said the abuse started at age 10, when another priest molested him. “At that age, I wasn’t sure the things that were going on,” he said.

His decades-long road to recovery was fraught with alcohol abuse, broken marriages and even a criminal record. The Archdiocese of Philadelphia paid for McDonnell’s counseling sessions but he seldom attended. Instead he forged receipts and eventually was convicted of pocketing more than $100,000 in a theft he called payback for the abuse.

Continue reading…

Brooklyn street co-named after Jean-Jacques Dessalines

A street sign on Newkirk and Rogers avenues in East Flatbush, Brooklyn now bears the name of Haitian Revolution leader and Haiti’s first ruler, Jean-Jacques Dessalines.

An unveiling ceremony took place last weekend is the newly designated area in East Flatbush called “Little Haiti.” The celebration coincided with the Little Haiti Street Fair.

Several elected officials were on hand for the unveiling, including Assemblymember Rodneyse Bichotte, Councilmember Jumaane Williams, Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke, Borough President Eric Adams, Assemblymember Charles Barron, City Council Majority Leader Laurie A. Cumbo and Councilmember Inez D. Barron.

Dessalines became the first ruler of an independent Haiti in 1804. Born into slavery and working until he was 30, he joined the Haitian Revolution. Dessalines eventually became a top lieutenant of renowned Haitian Revolutionary leader Toussaint L’Ouverture. After L’Ouverture’s capture, Dessalines took control of the Haitian Army, leading it to several victories over the French, securing the country’s independence.

“Jean-Jacques Dessalines is an individual whose historical importance is difficult to understate,” said Bichotte. “He was a man who led the first successful slave revolt in world history and, in so doing, created the first free Black Republic in the Western Hemisphere and the second independent country in the region right after the United States of America gained their independence in 1776.”

Williams, who introduced the proposal for the co-naming to the New York City Council, noted the powerful symbolism of Jean-Jacques Dessalines Boulevard.

“Jean-Jacques Dessalines was a revolutionary who fought for his people and overthrew an oppressive regime who brutally enslaved and persecuted the Haitian people,” he said. “This revolutionary spirit, to fight for independence against oppression, burns bright in Haitian culture today. Haiti and its proud people are an intrinsic part of my district and it is only right to honor that spirit with this co-naming.”

Charles Barron said he was a longtime supporter of the initiative to co-name the street after Dessalines, calling him a true revolutionary hero.

“All Americans owe a debt to Haiti and Jean-Jacques Dessalines because of the successful revolution in Haiti over France,” said Barron. “Because of the Haitian Revolution, America was able to expand by way of the Louisiana Purchase. This street co-naming is most deserving.”

The area where the street was co-named was designated “Little Haiti” and is set within the boundaries of East 16th Street, Parkside Avenue and Brooklyn Avenue, and along Church Avenue between East 16th Street and Albany Avenue.

According to numbers from the Migration Policy Institute, Brooklyn is home to the largest percentage of foreign-born Haitian residents in New York State, with more than 40 percent of the foreign-born population residing in Flatbush.

Source

Mollie Tibbetts murder suspect worked less than 3 miles from where she was staying

The man who was arrested in the murder of Mollie Tibbetts, the University of Iowa student who vanished last month, worked less than three miles from where she was staying the night she vanished.

Cristhian Rivera was employed by Yarrabee Farms for the past several years, according to a source with knowledge of the situation.

The Des Moines Register reported that it reviewed documents that listed several owners of the farm, which included Dane Lang and Eric Lang, both relatives of Craig Lang. Craig Lang, who owns a dozen property deeds in Brooklyn, Iowa, is reportedly a former 2018 Republican candidate for secretary of agriculture in the state.

Dane Lang said Rivera worked there for the past several years, and was an “employee in good standing.” He also noted that Rivera passed the government’s E-Verify employment verification system, despite his status as an undocumented immigrant. The system is intended to maintain a database of I-9 forms and tax records of employees across the country.

“This is a profoundly sad day for our community. All of us at Yarrabee Farms are shocked to hear that one of our employees was involved and is charged in this case,” Dane Lang said in a statement. “On Monday, the authorities visited our farm and talked to our employees. We have cooperated fully with their investigation.

Continue reading…

Mollie Tibbetts, missing Iowa student, found dead

The Iowa college student who vanished more than a month ago has been found dead, according to a report.

A woman’s body found Tuesday is believed to be Mollie Tibbetts, according to Greg Willey, vice president of Crime Stoppers of Central Iowa.
The 20-year-old’s body was found in Iowa, two law enforcement sources and her father, Rob Tibbetts, told Fox News. No other details were immediately available.

The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation confirmed in a press release that a body had been found in Poweshiek County, which includes Tibbetts’ town of Brooklyn, Iowa, where she was last seen jogging on July 18.

Investigators said they were working to confirm the identity of the body and would provide updates at a press conference at 4 p.m. local time.
The remains were found near a rural farm property in Guernsey, about 10 miles from Brooklyn, according to local outlets. Trucks blocked 460th Ave. there Tuesday and a medical examiner was on the scene.

Tibbetts was reported missing July 19 when she didn’t show up for work at a nearby day care center.

The University of Iowa student’s disappearance sparked a massive search by local law enforcement and the FBI, with authorities receiving more than 2,300 tips.

Her father returned home to California over the weekend, saying authorities had urged him to take a break from the case for his well-being. Mollie was born in San Francisco but moved to Iowa with her mother and two brothers when she was 2 years old.

Both her father and mother, Laura Calderwood, suggested that Mollie had been abducted, likely by someone she knew, and pleaded publicly for her safe return.

The night she vanished, Tibbetts had been dogsitting at her boyfriend’s home alone while he and his brother were out of town.

No one has been arrested in connection with her disappearance. Investigators questioned a pig farmer named Wayne Cheney and searched his property.

They also looked at Tibbetts’ Snapchat and FitBit data as part of the investigation.

The nearly $400,000 reward for information leading to her discovery will now become a fund to help police search for the person or people responsible for her death.

Mollie was studying psychology, like her mother, and would have started her junior year in college this week. Her Facebook account was turned into a memorial page on Tuesday, with friends posting photos and tributes to her there.

“I knew what I was going to say to her the first time I saw her again. I knew she’d hug me with one of her Mollie hugs that make you forget anything was ever wrong. Now all I know is I have to learn how to live in a world without my best friend,” wrote Kelsey Marie. “I promise I’ll do everything I can to keep your memory alive.”

With Post wires

Source: https://nypost.com/2018/08/21/college-student-mollie-tibbetts-found-dead/

A 93-year-old fan of reality show ‘Cops’ gets arrested for her birthday

(Record scratch, freeze frame.) Yep, that’s 93-year-old Simone Dumont sitting in the back of a police car, and you’re probably wondering how she wound up there.

Sitting in the back seat of a cop cruiser probably isn’t your idea of a good birthday, but to Simone Dumont, it “made [her] life.”

Simone, a hardcore fan of the reality show Cops, is a supporter of the boys in blue. According to her daughter, Anne, “She goes on about how the police have the worse job and what they have to deal with … and she wondered what it was like to be arrested and sit in the back seat.”

Anne reached out to the Augusta Maine Police Department to see if they would be willing to arrest her mother — not on any charges, of course, but so that she could have the experience of being a criminal suspect.

So, on July 9, Simone was led into the back of a police car. She also got to sit in front and play with the sirens, which most suspects don’t get to do unless they steal a cop car.

Story continues

Wikipedia Turned To Streetwear To Keep Knowledge Free

To keep access to its platform free, Wikipedia often relies on branded merch. This time, however, the company dropped a surprise collaboration with a famous LA streetwear brand.

Wikipedia teamed up with Advisory Board Crystals to release a surprise collaboration. The collection is made out of a single long-sleeve T-shirt with ABC pledging all proceeds toward the Wikipedia Foundation.

The T-shirt combines the Wikipedia logo with the tagline “Internet Master” in bright red text and several visual elements of Internet design.

“Knowledge is power and awareness is survival” – ABC explained why the collaboration was important for Wikipedia – which relies on donations to exist – and how all proceeds from the collection sales will help fund the Internet biggest library of knowledge.

Wikipedia worked with LA streetwear ABC to create an awesome (and already sold out) “Internet Master” T-shirt.
CLICK TO TWEET

It’s not the only branded merch Wikipedia has put on the market of course. The brand already has an online store where they sell all kinds of merch. But now, maybe for the first time, you can look super cool and on top of your street game, while proudly showing your nerdiness and thirst for knowledge.

Unfortunately for you, ABC’s Internet Master Wikipedia Shirts are already sold out. Although that is great news for Wikipedia. Nonetheless, it is highly likely that ABC will restock soon, so be ready to grab yours. It will cost you $85 but you will feel awesome for having played your role in saving free knowledge for all.

SOURCE : wersm.com

Chinese vice governor, mayor fired over vaccine scandal

A Chinese provincial deputy governor and the mayor of a major city were fired Thursday as the ruling Communist Party tried to defuse public outrage over revelations of misconduct by a major vaccine producer.

The officials were among four people ordered dismissed following a meeting of the party’s ruling Standing Committee led by President Xi Jinping. It ordered a criminal investigation of a fifth official, a former national drug regulator.

The revelation in July that Changchun Changsheng Life Sciences Ltd. falsified production records for an anti-rabies vaccine added to a string of politically damaging scandals over deaths and injuries due to fake or shoddy drugs, food and other products.

Public anger was fueled by disclosures regulators found possible misconduct by the company last year but failed to take prompt action.

Continue Reading: FoxNews.com

Massachusetts man indicted on murder charges after women’s bodies found at home

A Massachusetts man suspected of killing three women whose remains were found at his Springfield home was indicted on multiple charges by a grand jury Thursday — including first-degree murder, aggravated rape, and aggravated kidnapping.

The 52-count indictment against Stewart Weldon, 41, includes three counts of first-degree murder, nine counts of aggravated rape, eight counts of strangulation, two counts of rape, five counts of aggravated kidnapping, four counts of kidnapping and two counts of assault with intent to rape.

According to the Boston Herald, Weldon was arrested on May 27 by Springfield police after he was pulled over for a broken taillight. A female passenger told police that Weldon had held her captive for the previous month, repeatedly raping and beating her.

“Thank you guys for saving my life,” the woman reportedly told police as she was taken to an ambulance. I didn’t ever think I was going to get away.”

Police said the woman suffered “grotesque and violent” injuries, including a possible fractured jaw, stab wounds to her abdomen, marks from being hit with a blunt object and a leg infection

When police when to Weldon’s home, they found the bodies of three women “in and around” the property, according to Hampden County District Attorney Anthony Gulluni. They have since been identified as 47-year-old Ernestine Ryans and 34-year-old America Lyden, both of Springfield; and 27-year-old Kayla Escalante of Ludlow, Mass.

In addition to the three women, the indictment covers alleged crimes committed by Weldon against eight other people. At the time of his arrest, Weldon was wanted on a warrant for assault and battery of a police officer and numerous traffic violations.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: FoxNews

Aretha Franklin, “Queen of Soul,” is dead at 76

Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul, died Thursday morning at her home in Detroit after a long battle with cancer, her family said in a statement. She was 76 years old.

The family said Franklin died from advanced pancreatic cancer of the neuroendocrine type. The cause of death was confirmed by Franklin’s oncologist, according to the statement.

“In one of the darkest moments of our lives, we are not able to find the appropriate words to express the pain in our heart,” the family said. “We have lost the matriarch and rock of our family. The love she had for her children, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, and cousins knew no bounds.”

Within minutes of the news of her death, musicians, actors, producers, high-profile executives, political figures and others paid tribute to the powerful singer. On Twitter, President Trump called Franklin’s voice “a wonderful gift from God.”

In a statement, former President Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama said every time Franklin sang “we were all graced with a glimpse of the divine.

“Through her compositions and unmatched musicianship, Aretha helped define the American experience,” the Obamas said. “In her voice, we could feel our history, all of it and in every shade – our power and our pain, our darkness and our light, our quest for redemption and our hard-won respect. She helped us feel more connected to each other, more hopeful, more human. And sometimes she helped us just forget about everything else and dance.”

Funeral arrangements would be announced “in the coming days,” Franklin’s family said.
Franklin’s prolific career spanned six decades and included hit songs like “Respect,” “A Natural Woman” and “I Say a Little Prayer.” Even in her 70s, she was still performing. In 2015, her performance of “A Natural Woman” at the Kennedy Center Honors brought Mr. Obama to tears.

Franklin, whose father was a Baptist preacher, was born in Memphis but grew up in Detroit, where she began singing in the church choir at an early age. By many accounts, the young prodigy learned to play piano by ear. By the age of 14, with her father’s encouragement, Franklin started making records. Her early music blended gospel and jazz. By 1961, she made the transition into pop; between 1961 and 1969, she recorded 10 albums with Columbia Records.

The singer’s career took off when she recorded her 1967 hit “Respect,” which won two Grammy Awards. The song was off her first platinum album, “I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You.” She would go on to win 18 Grammy Awards in total and perform at three presidential inaugurations. Franklin was also the first woman to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

But Franklin did not have an easy road to success. Her mother moved away when Franklin was just 6 years old, and died four years later from a heart attack. Franklin’s father raised her as a single parent.

Franklin herself was already a mother before she struck fame. Just before she turned 13, Franklin gave birth to her first child, and she had the second of her four children less than two years later.

The singer also struggled with depression, alcoholism and her weight. A biography said that Franklin was “overwhelmed by fear and obsessed with control” and was afraid her fans would forget her. Franklin was also known for her fear of flying; she frequently took buses instead.

In spite of her fears, Franklin’s legacy remained strong even in recent years. In 2015, she sang for Pope Francis in Philadelphia. But last year, she announced her semi-retirement, saying she was no longer going to perform regularly after the release of her newest album, “A Brand New Me.” She said last February, “This will be my last year. I will be recording, but this will be my last year in concert. This is it.” Franklin said she wanted to spend more time with her grandchildren.

Rumors swirled that Franklin’s health was in decline over the last decade. In 2011, she told Anthony Mason for “CBS Sunday Morning” that there was nothing to worry about. She said, “My health is wonderful. It is fabulous now.” Franklin added of any health issues, “It wasn’t anything well, it wasn’t bad.”
Her last known performance was in November, for Elton John’s AIDS Foundation Fall Gala. Franklin died in Detroit, which is where she spent most of her childhood and adult life. In 2016, she made headlines when she donated hotel stays and food to nearby Flint residents during their water crisis.

Two other famous musicians also died on Aug. 16. Thursday marked the anniversary of the deaths of Elvis Presley, who died in 1977 at the age of 42, and of famed blues guitarist and singer Robert Johnson, who died in 1938.

 

Continue Reading and watching

Police: Pharmacy intern staged suicide to seem like murder

He worked his final shift as a pharmacy intern and never returned home. Alvin Ahmed’s family was perplexed, fearing the 25-year-old had been abducted.

More than three weeks after the recent University of Georgia graduate was reported missing, the search ended Wednesday. A body found in a small lake in Gwinnett County, Georgia, has been identified as Ahmed, and investigators said all indications are that he committed suicide. Ahmed left behind clues, including data from a cellphone app indicating he staged his disappearance to seem suspicious, according to police.
“The phone data contained a note which indicated that Mr. Ahmed staged certain elements of the case to cast suspicion that he had been murdered,” Cpl. Michele Pihera said in an emailed statement.

The same note also spelled out the details of Ahmed’s final night, including the groceries he bought and his plan to turn off his watch and phone, discard them at a nearby restaurant, Atmosphere Bar and Grill, and walk to Lake Carlton, about 2 miles from the Publix where he worked. Ahmed’s phone has not been located, his brother said late Wednesday. The two-sentence note was found in a “reminders” app and could have been typed on the phone or through a web browser, Kalvin Ahmed said.

Alvin Ahmed was last seen July 16 after leaving the Loganville grocery store where he worked as a pharmacy intern. After working his shift, Ahmed had purchased a few groceries to take to his mother, according to his family, but he never made it home. His car, with the groceries and white pharmacy coat inside, was in the grocery store parking lot.

 

Continue reading :https://www.wsoctv.com/news/trending-now/police-pharmacy-intern-staged-suicide-to-seem-like-murder/809156814?utm_source=taboolafeed