Friday, October 28, 2011

Is this the worst UK child killer?

Robert Black is convicted of murder of a fourth schoolgirl... and linked to 13 other unsolved deaths

  • Black guilty of killing Jennifer Cardy, nine, in 1981
  • He is already serving ten life sentences for the murders of Susan Maxwell, Caroline Hogg and Sarah Harper
  • The 64-year-old is also linked to 13 deaths in UK, Ireland, France and Holland
By James Tozer
A depraved delivery driver who cruised the length of the United Kingdom looking for young girls to abduct could be one of the country’s most monstrous child killers.
Robert Black, who was found guilty yesterday of murdering a fourth schoolgirl, has been linked with another 13 unsolved child killings in Britain, Ireland and the Continent.
The 64-year-old is already serving ten life sentences for the murders of 11-year-old Susan Maxwell, Caroline Hogg, five, and Sarah Harper, ten, during the 1980s.
Robert Black has been convicted of murdering a fourth schoolgirl: 'He is a lost cause to humanity' said one police officer
Jennifer Cardy
Killer: Robert Black, left, was convicted of abducting nine-year-old Jennifer Cardy, right, in his van as she cycled to a friends house in 1981, sexually abusing and killing her then dumping her body at a beauty spot nearby
Sarah Harper
Victim: Sarah Harper, ten
Caroline Hogg
Victim: Caroline Hogg, five
Susan Maxwell
Victim: Susan Maxwell, 11
He was yesterday convicted of abducting nine-year-old Jennifer Cardy in his van as she cycled to a friend’s house in 1981, sexually abusing and killing her, then dumping her body in a nearby beauty spot.
Only Moors Murderers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley – whose five victims were aged between ten and 17 – killed more children in modern British criminal history. Dunblane killer Thomas Hamilton killed 16 but he is not considered a serial killer as his massacre happened in one brutal day.
The jury in Black’s latest trial was not told about the other girls whose lives Black may have cruelly taken during two decades in which he criss-crossed the British Isles and Europe delivering posters in his van.
As many as 40 cases were examined by police in the 1990s, but 13 possible killings are understood to remain potentially linked to Black.
As Jennifer’s family told of their relief after more than 30 years of waiting for a conviction, the father of the girl detectives most strongly suspect was killed by Black begged him to ‘come clean’ about his crimes.
Terminally ill John Tate, whose 13-year-old daughter Genette vanished in 1978 from a country lane in Aylesbeare, Devon, spoke as detectives there revealed they now planned to look again at the case against Black.
A white Datsun van similar to the one used by the serial killer, who abducted and murdered nine-year-old Jennifer Cardy. Black kept a mattress in his van and a 'kit' to truss up young girls
A white Datsun van similar to the one used by the serial killer, who abducted and murdered nine-year-old Jennifer Cardy. Black kept a mattress in his van and a 'kit' to truss up young girls
Other murders linked to Black include:
  • April Fabb, aged 13, killed in Norfolk in 1969;
  • Christine Markham, six, Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, 1973;
  • Mary Boyle, seven, from Ballyshannon, Co Donegal, 1977. Her body has never been found;
  • Susanne Lawrence, 14, Essex, 1979;
  • Pamela Hastie, 16, Johnstone, Scotland, 1981;
  • Colette Adam, 16, Keyworth, Nottingham, 1983;
  • Patsy Morris, 14, Feltham, west London, 1990.
In addition detectives in France are examining links between Black and the killings of four schoolgirls who were abducted near Paris in 1987, and a seven-year-old in Amsterdam in 1986.
Black was jailed for life in 1994, but detectives were determined to put him on trial for other killings, and two years ago he was charged with murdering Jennifer as she cycled to a friend’s house in the quiet Co Antrim village of Ballinderry in August 1981.
Her body was found six days later 15 miles away at Hillsborough, Co Down.
Yesterday, after just over four hours of deliberation, a jury at Armagh Crown Court unanimously found Black guilty of her kidnap and murder.
Only Moors Murderers Ian Brady and Myra Hindle, pictured, ¿ whose five victims were aged between ten and 17 ¿ killed more children in modern British criminal history
Only Moors Murderers Ian Brady and Myra Hindle, pictured, - whose five victims were aged between ten and 17 - killed more children in modern British criminal history
Black – already with no prospect of release until 2029 at the earliest – was given another life sentence, and is likely to be told he will never be released.
Afterwards, Chief Superintendent Raymond Murray, who led the Police Service of Northern Ireland investigation into Black, said the killer was ‘to a great extent a lost cause to humanity’.
Backing the possibility that further murders will be looked at, he added: ‘I certainly think that the story of Robert Black does not end with this verdict today.’
A detective involved in the original investigation went further, highlighting ‘gaps’ between Black starting his delivery job in 1976 and the first confirmed murder, that of Jennifer in 1981.
‘My gut feeling is there are gaps there, he’s done more,’ said Roger Orr, a former detective chief superintendent at Lothian and Borders police who gave evidence in Black’s latest trial.
Mr Orr believes Black is one of Britain’s most dangerous criminals.
‘He’s a child molester on one level, he’s an aggressive predatory paedophile on another, and I think unique in the history of serious offending against children in the United Kingdom.’
Innocent: A family photo of Jennifer Cardy with her bike. She was cycling to a friends house in 1981 when she was abducted and killed
Innocent: A family photo of Jennifer Cardy with her bike. She was cycling to a friends house in 1981 when she was abducted and killed
Black has never spoken about the killings, but immediately after his arrest in 1990 he opened up about his depravity, telling police: ‘I’ve always liked young girls since I was a young kid.’
When interviewed 15 years later by detectives investigating Jennifer Cardy’s murder, Black admitted seeing being attracted by her outfit of short socks, shorts and a T-shirt.
Outside court yesterday, Jennifer’s father Andy said the family’s strong Christian faith had sustained them through the years of uncertainty and the trial.
‘Robert Black stole the life of our daughter but he didn’t steal the lives of me and my family,’ he said. ‘We’ve lived a happy, prosperous life, but we miss Jennifer each and every day.’
Flanked by wife Patricia, daughter Victoria and sons Mark and Philip, he said they had prayed for Black in the wake of the verdict but believed he should suffer the death penalty.
‘Somebody who commits murders like this, I believe their lives should be taken, I believe they should be put to death,’ he said.

Tell us the truth, begs Genette's father

The disappearance of 13-year-old Genette Tate has remained unsolved for even longer than Jennifer Cardy¿s murder.
The disappearance of 13-year-old Genette Tate has remained unsolved for even longer than Jennifer Cardy's murder
The dying father of a girl who was snatched off the street 33 years ago has pleaded with Black to ‘come clean’ and end his suffering.
The disappearance of 13-year-old Genette Tate has remained unsolved for even longer than Jennifer Cardy’s murder.
Genette was on her paper round near her home in Aylesbeare, Devon, in August 1978. Her bicycle was found in the country lane, surrounded by scattered newspapers but no trace of her has ever been found.
Yesterday her father called on ‘cowardly’ Black to confess whether he was responsible.
John Tate, who is 69 and has terminal prostate cancer, said: ‘I am relieved for Jennifer’s family. After 30 very long years they finally have some closure.
‘I just wish Black would now give the rest of us the same sort of closure without going through the hell of a trial.
‘Why doesn’t he come clean for the sake of the families? He is never going to be released from prison.
‘To me Robert Black is not a man in any sense – this big, burly Scotsman is a feeble coward who can only use his strength over defenceless little girls.
‘He left his victims to rot in unidentified places, never giving their families the chance to bury their loved ones.’ Black has long been suspected of killing Genette. He was arrested in his cell in 2005 by detectives investigating her murder, but prosecutors decided there was insufficient evidence.
Mr Tate had divorced from Genette’s mother Sheila by the time of her disappearance.
She remarried and moved to Bristol, while Mr Tate has been married five times and now lives in Wythenshawe, Manchester.
A spokesman for Devon and Cornwall Police confirmed the inquiry into Genette’s disappearance remained open and that detectives would study the latest trial.

He prowled the country hunting for little girls to bundle into the back of his van

Cuffed and arriving at court: Black had murdered at least four victims by the time of his capture
Cuffed and arriving at court: Black had murdered at least four victims by the time of his capture
When he saw a little girl being bundled into a van, a sharp-eyed retired sub-postmaster took down its registration number.
It was a sunny July day in 1990, and the chance sighting by pensioner David Herkes in Stow, in the Scottish Borders, sparked a massive search.
After stopping to sexually abuse the terrified six-year-old in a lay-by, Black returned through the same village. Police were waiting and pulled him over.
When they opened the doors of the van, the child was lying trussed up in a sleeping bag, with tape over her mouth, and barely alive.
Black’s appalling catalogue of crime leaves little room for doubt as to what would have happened had it not been for that stroke of luck.
Hector Clark, the senior detective probing three similar killings of schoolgirls snatched off the street at random, had a gut feeling the arrested man was the serial killer he had been hunting for nearly a decade.
‘I knew it was our man,’ he later recalled. ‘I knew by his appearance and even his smell. I sensed, with all my senses, that this was him.’
Searches of Black’s home hardened their conviction when they found a newspaper cutting about the bungled attempt to abduct 15-year-old Teresa Thornhill from a street in Nottingham in 1988 – for which he was also later convicted.
We now know that Black had murdered at least four victims by the time of his capture.
Cruising the length of the British Isles and beyond in anonymous-looking delivery vans loaded with posters and billboards, the paedophile was on the look-out for lone young girls to abduct.
Targeting children out on errands or riding their bikes, and always during the school holidays, he almost invariably sought out girls wearing skirts and white socks.
Black was jailed for life for the 1990 kidnap, but it was the crucial discovery of petrol receipts from the firm where he worked that enabled a dogged team of detectives finally to convict him of murdering three schoolgirls.
Evidence: It was the crucial discovery of petrol receipts from the firm where he worked that enabled a dogged team of detectives finally to convict him of murdering three schoolgirls
Evidence: It was the crucial discovery of petrol receipts from the firm where he worked that enabled a dogged team of detectives finally to convict him of murdering three schoolgirls
Susan Maxwell, 11, was abducted as she walked home to her family’s farmhouse in a remote part of Northumberland in July 1982.
She had been playing tennis with a friend, and had persuaded her mother to let her walk home by herself for the first time.
Two weeks later her body was dumped 264 miles away in Staffordshire. It was the beginning of a grim pattern.
Twelve months later, five-year-old Caroline Hogg vanished after going to a playground near her home in Edinburgh.
In March 1986 ten-year-old Sarah Harper was abducted on her way home from a shopping errand for her mother in Morley, near Leeds.
In March 1986 ten-year-old Sarah Harper was abducted on her way home from a shopping errand for her mother in Morley, near Leeds
In a princess dress she had worn to a friend’s party, she was allowed out for only five minutes. Her naked body was found ten days later in Leicestershire.
In March 1986 ten-year-old Sarah Harper was abducted on her way home from a shopping errand for her mother in Morley, near Leeds.
Her body was found more than three weeks later in the River Trent near Nottingham, within what detectives were now describing as the ‘Midlands triangle’.
By that time, hundreds of detectives from six forces were working on the case.
Following Black’s capture, they discovered he had a long and troubling history of abusing young girls and hoarding child pornography.
Born in Falkirk, near Edinburgh, in 1947, he was reluctantly put into a Barnardo’s home by his unmarried mother Jessica before being fostered by a widow who lived at Kinlochleven in the Highlands.
Black’s twisted interest in young girls began when he was just 12 and was accused of trying to rape a young girl.
He was sent to a children’s home and then to the boys-only Red House care home at Musselburgh, near Edinburgh, where he was abused by a staff member.
In 1963, months after leaving care at the age of 16, he molested a seven-year-old girl in an abandoned air raid shelter on the pretext of showing her a box of kittens, choking her to within an inch of her life.
It was the start of a campaign of attacks during which he admitted to ‘touching up’ more than 40 young girls over three years, eventually being sent to Borstal in 1967.
Twisted: Robert Black, pictured, starting being interested in young girls when he was just 12 and was accused of trying to rape a young girl
Twisted: Robert Black, pictured, starting being interested in young girls when he was just 12 and was accused of trying to rape a young girl
His only known girlfriend was Pamela Nicoll, a dental nurse living at Bo’ness, near Edinburgh, in his late teens. Unaware he was already a convicted sex offender, she left him for a new boyfriend after a year.
Black moved to London, living in rented flats and immersing himself in illicit Dutch pornography.
Then came an opportunity to start afresh – he met a respectable Scottish couple, Edward and Kathy Rayson, who took pity on his tale of a loveless, deprived childhood.
They invited him to move into their home in Stamford Hill, North London, with their five children, and he lived there for more than a decade.
While concerned that he a loner with appalling personal hygiene, and mystified by his constantly changing looks – moustaches and beards appearing and disappearing – they accepted his eccentric ways.
Detectives are convinced Black's crimes began in 1978 with the murder of 13-year-old Genette Tate from Aylesbeare, Devon
Detectives are convinced Black's crimes began in 1978 with the murder of 13-year-old Genette Tate from Aylesbeare, Devon
It was only after his arrest that their children, who by then had left home, revealed that Black had alarmed them by trying to show them child pornography and hoarding girls’ swimming costumes in his bedroom.
His warped sexuality was also made plain when he was sacked from his job as a lifeguard at Hornsey baths for fondling young girls.
It was his landing of a job driving a van for the Poster Despatch and Storage Company in 1976 which gave him the opportunity to turn his sinister fantasies into grim reality.
The lonely job meant regularly criss-crossing the British Isles and even travelling into France and the Netherlands.
Black would take with him a mattress plus a horrific ‘kit’ with which to truss up any girl who had the misfortune to catch his eye.
It later emerged that he had apparently dumped the bodies of Susan, Caroline and Sarah on trips to visit the trusting Raysons, who by then had moved to Leicestershire.
The crucial petrol records and delivery invoices painstakingly gathered by detectives placed him close to the scenes of all three abductions.
He was duly given ten more life sentences after being convicted of the three murders at Newcastle Crown Court in 1994.
Detectives had long suspected he was responsible for more murders, but the paper-trail did not provide the crucial evidence to charge him.
They are convinced his crimes began in 1978 with the murder of 13-year-old Genette Tate from Aylesbeare, Devon.
But it was the case of nine-year-old Jennifer Cardy, snatched in Ballinderry, Co Antrim in 1981, where the breakthrough was made.
While no receipts from Northern Ireland were found among more than half a million detectives examined, one from near the M6 fitted with the route he would have taken back to London.
In addition, he was driving a white Datsun panel van his firm used for delivery runs to the province as it was cheaper on ferries.
Crucially, a change in the law in 2003 meant details of Black’s previous murders could be given to the jury trying him for Jennifer’s murder. Last night survivor Teresa Thornhill said her ordeal still haunted her 23 years on.
Now a mother of two, she said: ‘I see his face almost every day. I can smell the oily hands. I can picture the clothes he was wearing. It just never goes away.
‘I sometimes feel so guilty because I’m here and they’re not.’
READ MORE - Is this the worst UK child killer?

Friday, October 21, 2011

CBI questions head of Syrian Jacobite Church in murder case

Kochi: The supreme head of the Syrian Jacobite Church, Catholicos Baselios Thomas-I, appeared before the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) at its office here Friday in connection with a murder case.
CBI questions head of Syrian Jacobite Church in murder case
According to CBI sources, the supreme religious head was closeted with investigating officials for three hours. The CBI made the first breakthrough in the case when in April last year it arrested Joy Varghese alias Cement Joy, who confessed he had hired criminals to murder Malankara Varghese in December 2002 for a large sum of money.
The murder is believed to be a fallout of the long standing feud between the Malankara Orthodox Church, headquartered in Kottayam, and the Syrian Jacobite Church, which has its headquarters in Ernakulam district. The century-old feud between the two churches has always been a bother for successive governments in the state and, on several occasions in the past, feuds between the followers of the two churches have ended in brawls.
In May last year, the CBI filed its chargesheet, naming priest Varghese Thekekara, manager of the Angamali diocese of the Syrian Jacobite Church, as the first accused in the murder of Malankara Varghese.
CBI questions head of Syrian Jacobite Church in murder case

The priest is currently out on bail. Soon after the chargesheet was filed, Saramma Varghese, widow of the murdered Malankara Varghese, said that without the help of church higher-ups, this would not have happened. She later filed a petition before the Ernakulam chief judicial magistrate that the investigation could not be completed without questioning the church higher-ups and the magistrate gave the nod to the CBI to go ahead with their job.
CBI sources pointed out that the bishop denied any knowledge in the murder of Thomas and has been a strong votary against anyone indulging in violence. It was the CBI's Chennai unit which began the investigation in September 2007, after five long years of probe by the state police's crime branch yielded nothing conclusive.
READ MORE - CBI questions head of Syrian Jacobite Church in murder case

Friday, October 14, 2011

Married man injects girlfriend with poison

After struggling between life and death for 16 days, the woman died in Kanpur's LLR Hospital on Wednesday.
Lucknow: A 30-year-old man in Kanpur poisoned his 24-year-old girlfriend when she tried to distance herself from him after coming to know that he was married and had a daughter.

After struggling between life and death for 16 days, the woman died in Kanpur's LLR Hospital on Wednesday.

Pooja Tiwari of Unnao, who was pursuing her M. Sc. from PG College in Kanpur and lived in Harbansh-Mohal, met Shailendra Singh three years ago. He introduced himself as a Ph. D. student in Kanpur University.

He also told her that he was single and willing to marry her after completing his education.
S. K. Tiwari, a school teacher and Pooja's father, said she found out last year that Singh was a school dropout and had a family of his own in Kanpur.

Singh, a caterer by profession, started terrorising and blackmailing Pooja when she tried to sever her relation with him. So she shifted from Kanpur to her father's house in Bamba Khera colony of Om Nagar area in Unnao. But Shailendra continued to call her up. "He came to our house on September 29, when my wife Shakuntala and Pooja were at home. He told Pooja that he would leave her alone after explaining everything to her. So Pooja went out with him," the aggrieved father said.

The woman was later found unconscious on the side of a Kanpur road. She was taken to a hospital, where she said that Shailendra tried to force her to continue their relation and threatened that he would kill her. When she declined, he suddenly injected some poison in her body and escaped.

DIG Kanpur Ashfaq Ahmed said a case has been registered and an inquiry ordered. "The accused is at large. But we will arrest him soon," he added.
READ MORE - Married man injects girlfriend with poison

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Two held for duping 1,000 people over jobs

New Delhi: A retired Indian Army personnel and a woman from Assam were arrested here for duping thousand of people across the country on the pretext of providing jobs in the Indian Army and health ministry, police said Wednesday.
Two held for duping 1,000 people over jobs
Archana Singha, 45, who hails from Jorhat in Assam, was arrested from her house on Oct 9 and Ravinder Chauhan, 27, who hails from Gwalior in Madhya Pradesh, was held from Hazrat Nizamuddin railway station here Sep 9, said Deputy Commissioner of Police Ashok Chand.
"More than 90 Bank accounts of different banks were freezed," said Chand.
The Crime Branch of Delhi Police received a complaint that Chauhan claiming to be a Major of Indian Army has duped 38 job seekers to the tune of Rs.1 crore on the promise of getting them jobs in Assam Rifles and health ministry.
Ravinder Chauhan was nabbed from the railway station in his Honda City car following a on tip-off. "He was carrying a pistol along-with 15 live cartridges and an arm licence purportedly issued from Jammu and Kashmir," said Chand adding that the license was found be to be fake.
Chauhan told police that he used to impersonate as a Major in Indian Army duped crores of rupees from job seekers and Singha of Assam was the mastermind of the racket.
A raid was conducted at Jorhat and Singha was also arrested. Singha told police that she was behind the racket.
Chauhan joined Rastriya Rifles as jawan in 2003 and in 2007, while he was posted at Baramula in Jammu an Kashmir, he got injured and was declared unfit for further service. He got in touch with Singha and collected money from more than 400 people to the tune of more than Rs.3 crore.
In 2007-2008, recruitment of Assam Rifles was held in Jorhat where she came in contact with a doctor who was Major in Assam Rifles and succeeded in getting three to four people appointed.
She earned Rs.10,000 to Rs.15,000 from candidate in the recruitment.
Similarly, in 2008-2009 she got a few candidates appointed of Assam Rifles held at Cooch in Bihar, however, she collected money from several candidates.
She began to appoint agents in different parts of India. Agents were made in Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, MP, Uttar Pradesh, Assam, Meghalya, Manipur, Nagaland and Hyderabad.
The agents used to allure students by promising them jobs and used to collect Rs.25,000 to Rs.1 lakh per candidate as advance.
Thereafter, Singha would ask her agents to bring all the candidates to Assam and would ask them to stay in some hotel.
She would manage some fake doctors and officers and would get candidates of Assam Rifles medically examined in the hotel.
She would also get signed a blank answer sheet from them. Thereafter, she would send them back and would ask them to wait for the result and appointment letters.
After some time, she would send a photocopy of provisional appointment letters to her agents and would ask them to deposit rest of the money before giving them original appointment letters.
She used to earn Rs 1.5 lakh to Rs 2 lakh per candidate from the agents. After collecting rest of the money she and her agents would not take their calls.
During the same period she also came in contact with T. Israil who told her that he has contacts in the health ministry.
At the instance of Israil, she also collected money from hundreds of candidates. She paid around Rs.1 crore to Israil but not a single candidate was selected. But she succeeded in giving fake appointment letters to the students.
Till now, they have cheated around more than 1000 job seekers and have collected money to the tune of more than Rs.10 crore.
READ MORE - Two held for duping 1,000 people over jobs

Saturday, October 8, 2011

TV actress alleges doctor molested her

A TV actress has alleged that a cosmetic surgeon molested her when she went to his clinic in Khar over a complication she had with her breast implants.

The actress, Shikha Joshi, approached Khar police station yesterday to file a complaint against the doctor.

According to the actress, in 2006 she got breast implants done by the accused doctor. However, five years after the operation, she found a lump in her breast, which she wanted to have checked.



Joshi has alleged that the doctor molested her by touching her inappropriately, when she came for the checkup to his clinic.

A lady doctor, who practises in the same clinic, refuted the claims of the actress, saying that whenever any treatment takes place, they have two attendants in the cabin.

She also said that the actress did not pay the full amount of the treatment, and when asked for the money, she resorted to making false allegations.

The Khar police are recording the statement of the actress, and will verify the claims with the doctor and then file a case.
READ MORE - TV actress alleges doctor molested her

13 Indians among 111 charged in credit card scam in US

In the biggest identity theft scam in the US history, 111 people, including at least 13 of Indian origin, have been charged by federal authorities for stealing the credit card data of thousands of customers to buy high-end products worth over $13 million, including Apple gadgets and fancy bags from Gucci.
13 Indians among 111 charged in credit card scam in US
Among those indicted in 'Operation Swiper' are bank tellers, store employees and restaurant workers who allegedly skimmed customers' personal IDs.
Many of the defendants are accused of going on nationwide shopping sprees, staying at five-star hotels, renting luxury automobiles and private jets with forged credit cards that contained the account information of unsuspecting American and European consumers.
The defendants are members of five organised forged credit card and identity theft rings based in Queens County and have ties to Europe, Asia, Africa and West Asia.
Charged in 10 indictments, the defendants perpetrated fraud that cost financial institutions and retail businesses more than $13 million in losses over a 16-month period.
The indictments charge that Imran Khan, Ali Khweiss, Anthony Martin, Sanjay Deowsarran and Amar Singh were "bosses" of criminal enterprises and received the necessary raw material -- lists of credit card account numbers and various blank credit cards.
Among the Indian-origin people charged are Vishnu Harilal, Ravindra Singh, Amar Singh, Neha Punjabi Singh, Ravi Ramroop and Kamal Sanasi.
13 Indians among 111 charged in credit card scam in US
Eighty six of the defendants are in custody and 25 are now being sought. In addition, nearly 24 defendants are variously charged in six indictments with participating in burglaries and robberies throughout Queens County.
"This is by far the largest -- and certainly among the most sophisticated -- identity theft/credit card fraud cases that law enforcement has come across," Queens District Attorney, Mr Richard Brown, said.
He said credit card fraud and identity theft are two of the fastest growing crimes in the US, afflicting millions of victims and costing billions of dollars in losses to consumers, businesses and financial institutions.
According to the indictments, between May 2010 and September 2011 counterfeit cards were given to teams of "shoppers" who were sent out on shopping expeditions in New York, Florida, Massachusetts, Los Angeles.
They bought Apple iPads, iPhones, computers, watches and fancy handbags from Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Rolexe and Breitling.
The groups would then resell the merchandise oversees to locations in China, Europe and West Asia. They are also alleged to have used forged credit cards to rent such luxurious automobiles as Lamborghinis and Porsches.
The investigation involved intelligence gathering and electronic eavesdropping on dozens of different telephones in which thousands of conversations in Russian, Mandarin and Arabic were intercepted.
Mr Brown said as part of the investigation, search warrants were executed earlier this week at 15 locations throughout New York City and Long Island.
Among the items allegedly recovered were approximately $650,000 in cash, seven handguns, computers, card readers, embossers, blank credit cards and fake identifications.
READ MORE - 13 Indians among 111 charged in credit card scam in US

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Man walks 3 km to police station with severed head of wife

Samudra Gupta Kashyap

A man walked for about 3 km through the heart of Guwahati, holding the severed head of a woman in one hand and a blood-stained machete in the other in broad daylight, causing quite a sensation even as the Assam capital was in a festive mood on the last day of Durga Puja.

The man, later identified as one Ranjit Das, was finally intercepted by some CRPF personnel on duty, who drove him to the Dispur police station where he was arrested.

“Ranjit Das claimed he had chopped off his wife’s head and was heading towards the police station on foot when the CRPF personnel spotted him and brought him to the police station,” a police officer at the Dispur police station said.

While the sentry at the Dispur police station said Das arrived at 11:40 am, the murder that he claimed to have committed had apparently taken place around 11 am. His wife Amaya Daimary Das’s headless body was later recovered by the police from a rented house at a locality called Bikrampur, close to Ganeshguri in Dispur.

Das, who worked as an autorickshaw driver in the city hails from Barpeta. While his wife worked as a health worker under the National Rural Health Mission, Das also ran a small grocery shop to make both ends meet.

While the police are yet to come to any conclusion regarding the exact motive behind the gruesome murder, Das claimed he had suspected his wife of having an affair with another person. The couple had two sons aged nine and six years.
READ MORE - Man walks 3 km to police station with severed head of wife

Sold off as ‘bride’, teen rescued from Haryana village

Dwaipayan Ghosh

New Delhi: A 14-year-old girl from Assam was rescued from a Haryana village in a joint operation by cops from the city and Haryana and NGO Shakti Vahini. The rescuers overcame stiff resistance by the villagers, who claimed their "daughter-in-law" was five months pregnant.

According to Rishi Kant of Shakti Vahini, Shabnam (name changed) was lured out of Assam by someone, who promised to marry her. He brought her to Delhi and sold her off to one Rakesh for Rs 25,000 at a Daryaganj hotel. She was then taken to Shahpur village of Jind district. "Rakesh married her forcibly and subjected her to the worst form of slavery. She would perform household chores the whole day; and at night, Rakesh would torment her sexually," said Rishi.

Earlier, the girl's family had lodged a missing complaint with the Hajo police station in Assam on May 3. "One day, I read in the local newspaper that an Assamese girl was rescued in Delhi. Instantly, my wife and I came to Delhi and got in touch with the Child Welfare Committee. They told us that the rescued girl was not my daughter. Then one of the committee members gave me the contact number of Shakti Vahini and I approached them," said Shabnam's father.

Meanwhile, the anti-human trafficking unit of Assam Police also contacted Shakti Vahini and requested them to assist the parents of the girl. The NGO then contacted the anti-human trafficking unit of Haryana Police. The girl was traced to Shahpur village and rescued. She was then taken for medical examination, where it was confirmed that she is five months pregnant.

"The girl was later produced before the SDM, Jind district, who sent her to the Nari Niketan at Karnal. Her parents were asked to produce documents to prove that they are her parents. An Assam Police team has arrived in the capital for further investigations and also facilitate the repatriation process of the victim," said a Haryana Police officer.

"Her parents are in Jind, but the district administration has made it clear that it doubts that the family itself had sold her off. The girl has, however, expressed willingness to return home. We have lodged an FIR under sections 366A and 346 of the IPC. We will get her back," said an Assam Police officer. Meanwhile, experts said trafficking in Haryana for forced marriages has reached an alarming proportion.
READ MORE - Sold off as ‘bride’, teen rescued from Haryana village

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Troops seize wildlife products, drug

Assam Rifles(AR) have launched an operation at Khudengthabi in Chandel district and apprehended a drug peddler along with drugs and banned wildlife products. Troops recovered from him 2.46 lakh 75 kg Mucoson tablets, 21 kg of Pangolin shells and one mobile phone yesterday. AR also launched operation in general area Khondong, Leirambi temple of Chandel district and apprehended another peddler. One bottle (approximate 15 gms) of Heroin, one mobile phone and Indian currency worth Rs 750 were recovered from him. All the seized were handed over to Narcotic Control Bureau and Wildlife Department, Imphal.
READ MORE - Troops seize wildlife products, drug

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Bribes-for-loans case:CBI files charge sheet against senior bank officials

Mumbai:  CBI has filed charge sheets in four cases registered by it last year against senior officials of a public sector bank and a private company for allegedly receiving kickbacks in sanctioning of loans. Chargesheets have been filed against former LIC Housing finance CEO Ramchandra Nair, the then General Manager of Bank of India R N Tayal, the then Deputy General Manager of Punjab National Bank Venkoba Gujjal and Rajesh Sharma, Chairman and Managing Director of private financial services firm Money Matters.
The charge sheets also named two employees of Money Matters – Sanjay Sharma and Suresh Gattani – as accused.
According to CBI, the accused bank officials colluded with the private company to sanction large loans to housing firms, overriding mandatory conditions for such approvals. They were also gathering confidential business information from financial institutions.
According to the charge sheets, Nair took a bribe of Rs 16 lakh, Tayal of Rs 45 lakh and Gujjal of Rs 25 lakh.
All the accused have been booked on the charge of criminal conspiracy under section 120-B of IPC and various sections of Prevention of Corruption Act. CBI had earlier also filed a charge sheet against Maninder Singh Johar, Director of
Central Bank of India in the same scam.
In the first charge sheet, CBI said the probe showed the then Secretary (Investment) LIC had received Rs 16 lakh as illegal gratification in three installments from the CMD of Mumbai-based private Financial Services Company.B Mathur/Reuters
In the first charge sheet, CBI said the probe showed the then Secretary (Investment) LIC had received Rs 16 lakh as illegal gratification in three installments from the CMD of Mumbai-based private Financial Services Company.
In the second case, CBI said the CEO and Director, LIC HFL, had allegedly received Rs 45 lakh as illegal gratification from the CMD of the Mumbai-based private company for sanctioning high value loans to the client of accused private Financial Services Company, the spokesperson said.
In the third case, the then General Manager, Bank of India, had allegedly received Rs 25 lakh as illegal gratification from the CMD of the Mumbai-based private Financial Services Company for sanctioning high value loans to the client of accused private Financial Services Company, the CBI alleged.
In the fourth case, CBI alleged the then Deputy General Manager of Punjab National Bank, Delhi, had allegedly received Rs 7.5 lakh as bribe against the demand of Rs 20 lakh from the CMD of Mumbai-based private Financial Services Company for sanctioning high value loans to the client of accused private Financial Services Company.
While all the accused were arrested soon after the cases were registered against them on November 22 last year by the economic offences wing of CBI, the accused were released on bail later.
During searches conducted by CBI, the agency had claimed to have found investments in crores of rupees by the accused
bank officials in real estate.
The agency also claimed to have recovered documents showing Nair allegedly made Rs two crore investment, Gujjal’s real estate investment was put at Rs 2.5 crore and Tayal’s at Rs one crore.
The agency had also recovered cash and gold and silver jewellery from the accused’s residences. Rs 21 lakh and gold ornaments worth the same amount was recovered from Gujjal’s house, Rs 2.5 lakh in cash and Rs 20 lakh in bank accounts was seized from Nair’s residence and Rs four lakh and 1.2 kilograms gold and one kilogram silver were found in Tayal’s residence.
CBI has also told the court that it was further probing the scam and may file supplementary charge sheets.
READ MORE - Bribes-for-loans case:CBI files charge sheet against senior bank officials

Monday, October 3, 2011

Four arrested for trying to sell blackbuck in Delhi


New Delhi: Four men were arrested today while trying to sell a blackbuck in a posh locality in south Delhi.

The accused, hailing from Meerut, were caught trying to strike a deal at Rs. 6 lakhs for the blackbuck - an endangered animal - in Greater Kailash - 1 area.

The blackbuck had been brought to the city in an Indica car. Following a tip-off, the police conducted searches and subsequently rescued the animal from the car.

"We received information that in view of Eid next month, some people were trying to sell blackbuck in Greater Kailash near W Block Park in order to get a good price...They had stolen the deer from Sanjay Van in Partapur", a senior police official said.
One of the accused, Pawan, was hired by the other three as a driver.
READ MORE - Four arrested for trying to sell blackbuck in Delhi