Thursday, August 1, 2013

Σκάφος με 72 επιβάτες προσάραξε στο

Χωρίς να κινδυνεύσει κανείς από τους επιβαίνοντες, αργά την Τετάρτη το απόγευμα, προσάραξε στη θαλάσσια περιοχή της Σταλίδας στη Χερσόνησο Ηρακλείου τουριστικό σκάφος με 72 επιβάτες.
Το Black Rose πραγματοποιούσε μικρή κρουαζιέρα στην περιοχή.

Στο σημείο έσπευσαν για παροχή βοήθειας δυνάμεις του λιμενικού και παραπλέοντα σκάφη.

Οι 72 επιβάτες μετεπιβιβάστηκαν στα τουριστικά σκάφη Καλυψώ και Ποσειδών, με τα οποία μεταφέρθηκαν στο λιμάνι της Χερσονήσου.
Δεν έχει διαπιστωθεί ρύπανση από το συμβάν. Εντός της ημέρας θα επιχειρηθεί η αποκόλληση του σκάφους.
Διενεργείται προανάκριση από το το Β' Λιμενικό Τμήμα Χερσονήσου του Κεντρικού Λιμεναρχείου Ηρακλείου.
Πηγή: ΑΜΠΕ

Μ. Χρυσοβελώνη: Εικόνα ερασιτεχνισμού και προχειρότητας στην αναδιοργάνωση της ΕΛ.ΑΣ.




 Για ερασιτεχνισμό, προχειρότητα και δυστυχώς φαιδρότητα, από πλευράς των Υπουργών Δημόσιας Τάξης και Διοικητικής μεταρρύθμισης , σχετικά με την αναδιοργάνωση στην Ελληνική Αστυνομία, κάνει λόγο η Βουλευτής Μαγνησίας των Ανεξάρτητων Ελλήνων Μαρίνα Χρυσοβελώνη. Με ερώτηση που κατέθεσε προς τους αρμόδιους υπουργούς κ. Δένδια και κ. Μητσοτάκη επισημαίνει ότι επικρατεί σύγχυση και πρόχειρη προσέγγιση των προβλημάτων. Συγκεκριμένα το προσχέδιο νόμου για την αναδιάρθρωση της Ελληνικής Αστυνομίας έγινε αντικείμενο οξείας κριτικής από την Πανελλήνια Ομοσπονδία Αστυνομικών Υπαλλήλων (ΠΟΑΣΥ). Θλιβερή περίπτωση που επιβεβαιώνει τα ανωτέρω είναι η αναταραχή που προκλήθηκε πρόσφατα στις διοικητικές υπηρεσίες της ΕΛΑΣ από την μεταφορά προσωπικού ΔΕΚΟ. Κρουπιέρηδες από το καζίνο της Πάρνηθας, αεροσυνοδοί, σταθμάρχες του ΟΣΕ, υπάλληλοι διοδίων και οδηγοί αστικών λεωφορείων παρουσιάζονται για να αναλάβουν διοικητική υπηρεσία στην ΕΛΑΣ λόγω της
«κινητικότητας» στο ελληνικό δημόσιο. Την ίδια ακριβώς στιγμή εξετάζεται η απομάκρυνση 500 πολιτικών υπαλλήλων της ΕΛΑΣ που έχουν εξειδικευθεί στα θέματα που χειρίζεται η Αστυνομία (από το οργανωμένο έγκλημα και τα ναρκωτικά μέχρι τις προμήθειες). Αξιωματούχοι της λεωφόρου Κατεχάκη αντιμετωπίζουν πλέον μια τραγελαφική κατάσταση καθώς λόγω της «κινητικότητας». Απομακρύνονται έμπειροι υπάλληλοι για να αντικατασταθούν από 615 νέους που δεν διαθέτουν σχετική προϋπηρεσία στο χώρο αλλά θα μπορούσαν να αξιοποιηθούν αλλού στο Δημόσιο. ’’Η εμπλοκή ατόμων χωρίς εμπειρία και γνώση του αντικειμένου της δημόσιας τάξης σε συνδυασμό με τις πρόχειρες και ατεκμηρίωτες πολιτικές των δύο συναρμόδιων υπουργείων δημιουργούν μια εικόνα ερασιτεχνισμού και δυστυχώς φαιδρότητας που δεν διευκολύνει την αναγκαία αναδιοργάνωση της ΕΛΑΣ. Οφείλουν τόσο ο κ. Δένδιας όσο και ο κ. Μητσοτάκης να γίνουν πιο προσεκτικοί άμεσα στον χειρισμό αυτού του κρίσιμου θέματος’’ υπογράμμισε η κα Χρυσοβελώνη.

Florida: US groups bid to halt execution of mentally ill man

Medical experts filed a motion to the US Supreme Court on Wednesday calling for the execution of a mentally ill mass-killer in Florida to be halted.

The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) said in a statement it had requested that the execution of John Ferguson, sentenced to death for the murders of 8 people in the 1970s, be stopped because it violated the constitution.

Ferguson, a paranoid schizophrenic who refers to himself as the "Prince of God," is set to be executed on August 5 at 6:00 pm (2200 GMT) at Raiford prison.

NAMI has joined with 3 other organizations -- NAMI Florida, the Florida Psychiatric Society and the Florida Psychological Association -- to call for Ferguson's death sentence to be stayed.

NAMI said in a statement the execution would violate the constitution if it went ahead because Ferguson could not have a rational understanding of what was happening to him.

"The death penalty is not constitutionally allowable as a punishment for John Ferguson because his delusions prevent him from understanding the nature of what is happening to him," NAMI's national director of policy and legal affairs Ron Honberg said.

"The constitutional principle does not excuse his crimes, but it does point to life without parole as the appropriate sentence."

In a separate filing, the American Bar Association, representing US lawyers, had also requested that the Supreme Court review the case, citing similar concerns about Ferguson's mental health.

"Holding a person accountable is intended to be an affirmation of personal responsibility," the brief said.

"Executing someone who lacks a meaningful understanding of the nature of this awesome punishment and its retributive purpose offends the concept of personal responsibility rather than affirming it."

Ferguson, 65, has spent 35 years on death row. He was found guilty of 6 murders in a drug-related massacre in 1977 and was also convicted of murdering 2 teenagers in 1978.

His execution has been the subject of a long-running legal battle and was already suspended once in September 2012.

Source: Agence France-Presse, July 31, 2013

Georgia Appeals Execution Stay for Man with 70 IQ

Georgia Execution Chamber
Georgia's attorney general asked the State Supreme Court to revoke the current stay of execution for Warren Lee Hill on Friday, July 26.

Judge Gail Tusan had extended the stay of execution for Hill on July 18.

The drug that would have been used to kill him will expire in early August. The source of that drug won him his latest reprieve.

European pharmacies refuse to export pentobarbital the U.S. because it is used to execute people. Georgia passed an unusual law that treats the source of drugs for lethal injections as a state secret. Anonymous, out-of-state compounding pharmacies supply it. After passing the law, Georgia set a date to execute Hill.

Hill's lawyers had asked the court to halt his execution because of the Lethal Injection Secrecy Act. They said he had a right to know if the compounded pentobarbitol would be pure and effective, or if it would cause him to suffer, and violate his Eighth Amendment right to be free of cruel and unusual punishment.

Tusan found that the state's drug secrecy law was unconstitutionally vague.

"The State does not yet know if, and where, it will acquire the next supply of pentobarbital for use in this execution. Thus, the State must secure another execution order from the sentencing court and obtain a new supply of pentobarbital in order to reschedule Hill's execution. Hill is under no threat of immediate execution," wrote State Attorney General Sam Olens in his appeal.

Hill's death warrant has expired. The state would have to start his execution process again, but the Supreme Court is set to reconsider his case on Sept. 30.

Hill is intellectually disabled, and the Supreme Court will consider whether Georgia should allow new evidence about that. He murdered 2 people, but his supporters argue that because of his intellectual limitation, he should have been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

According to a statement from Brian Evans, director of Amnesty International USA's Abolish the Death Penalty campaign, "Beyond these important issues, Warren Hill has been determined to be 'mentally retarded' and thus his execution would have been unconstitutional, as the U.S. Supreme Court banned such executions in 2002."

Source: Epoch Times, July 31, 2013

Texas executes Douglas Feldman

Douglas Feldman
A former financial analyst with a history of disruptive behavior was executed Wednesday for the road-rage shooting deaths of 2 truckers in the Dallas area 15 years ago.

Douglas Feldman, 55, received lethal injection for gunning down Robert Everett, 36, of Marshfield, Mo., and Nicholas Valesquez, 62, of Irving.

Feldman mimicked the announcement a judge or jury makes when announcing a verdict, using the names of his victims and declaring he had found them guilty of crimes against him.

"I have sentenced them both to death. I personally carried out their executions," he said in a loud voice, adding that he carried out their executions in August 1998.

"As of that time, the state of Texas has been holding me illegally in confinement and by force for 15 years," Feldman said. "I hereby protest my pending execution and demand immediate relief."

He appeared very nervous, breathing quickly and his feet twitching under a sheet. As the drug began taking effect, he grimaced twice, took a few deep breaths and began snoring. Then all movement stopped.

Feldman was pronounced dead 13 minutes after the lethal drug was injected at 6:28 p.m. CDT.Feldman's attorney, Robin Norris, filed a clemency petition with the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles that was turned down Monday. Multiple courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, earlier rejected his appeals on Feldman's behalf.

Feldman, from Richardson, was riding his motorcycle the night of Aug. 24, 1998, and said Everett, driving an 18-wheeler, cut him off on a Dallas County freeway so he took out his 9 mm pistol, pulled up alongside the truck cab and shot him. Feldman testified at his capital murder trial that he was still angry about 45 minutes later when he spotted Valesquez, a gasoline tanker driver filling a Dallas service station, and shot him.

"A security camera catches him shooting the man in cold blood," Jason January, the former Dallas County assistant district attorney who prosecuted him, said. "Several counties were frightened as this unidentified motorcyclist was out acting like 'The Terminator.'"

Feldman was arrested more than a week later, after shooting and wounding a man at a fast-food restaurant and driving off. A bystander saw the shooting and reported his license plate number to police, who tracked him down and found Feldman with 2 pistols and nearly 300 rounds of ammunition. Ballistics tests confirmed 1 of the guns was used in all 3 shootings.

"It feels wonderful to cause their death and to watch their pain," he said in one of 81 letters he wrote to a former girlfriend while awaiting his trial. The writings from the magna cum laude Southern Methodist University graduate were introduced into evidence.

"God forbid I ever had my finger on the button to launch a nuclear explosive device because I guarantee that I would wipe as many of these bastards off the face of the planet as I am able!" he said in another letter.

Without remorse, he also acknowledged the killings while testifying at his capital murder trial. Evidence showed he got into trouble as a juvenile, had drug possession and selling issues and wound up in state custody. He also had robbery and drug convictions.

While in prison, records show Feldman racked up 136 disciplinary cases, including one for ripping out the phone in a visiting cage where death row inmates are interviewed by reporters. Texas prison officials subsequently refused him media access.

The day before the fatal shootings, evidence showed he shot up a Volkswagen dealership where he once had some work done.

"Obviously, Mr. Feldman was a very angry man," John Everett, said before witnessing the execution of his brother's killer. "I can say we looked forward to it. But it doesn't change anything. Bob is still gone."

Feldman became the 11th condemned inmate to be put to death this year in Texas, the 3rd this month, and the 503rd overall since the state resumed capital punishment on December 7, 1982. Feldman becomes the 264th condemned inmate to be put to death in Texas since Rick Perry became the state's governor in 2001.

At least 7 other inmates are scheduled to die in the coming months in the nation's busiest capital punishment state.

Feldman becomes the 22nd condemned inmate to be put to death this year in the USA and the 1342nd overall since the nation resumed executions on January 17, 1977.

Executions under Rick Perry, 2001-present -- 264

Executions in Texas: Dec. 7, 1982-present -- 503

Sources: Associated Press, Rick Halperin, July 31, 2013

New York Irish ancestors? Mark this for a good read

Now here's an irresistible headline: Marked men: The tattoos of New York Irishmen 1863.

You'll find the curious story revealed, together with the names and tattoo details of a few hundred Irish men, on the Irish in the American Civil War blog, a high quality and informative blog written by conflict archaeologist and historian Damien Shiels. Damien is also author of a 256-page book, published earlier this year, with the same name as his blog.

Both publications tell the often forgotten role of the 200,000 Irish men and women who were involved in various ways in the US Civil War. I recommend both, and not only to those whose Irish ancestors may have some connection to the War.

All 52 issues of 1913 Church of Ireland Gazette online

The Representative Church Body Library has released in a searchable online format all 52 issues of the Church of Ireland Gazette published in 1913. The collection makes up August's Archive of the Month and full details can be found here.

You'll then be directed to the Informa website where you can view the pages, which have been digitised to a very high quality. You can also save and print pages quickly and easily.

The Church of Ireland Gazette covered a vast range of topics and for anyone with ancestors who were connected with the Church, it is essential reading. But don't think it holds no interest beyond that group. As well as providing comment about national events, the Gazette published details of funerals, obituaries, school, church and community activities and received loads of advertising from service and goods providers.