An armed carjacker, whom police described as having “leathery skin,”
failed to rob three women in the same shopping center parking lot in
Oceanside, Calif. The first drove away. The other ignored him and
proceeded to a store, where she called police. The third victim obeyed
his order to remove the steering wheel lock and get out of the car,Site
describes services including Plastic Mould.
but then she activated a kill-switch that disabled the ignition and
locked him inside. He smashed through a window and fled on foot.
Security
researchers exposed plans for a Russian cyberheist using fake wire
transfers to steal millions of dollars from 30 big U.S. financial
institutions when the purported brain behind the operation, known as
“VorVzakone”, posted notices in a criminal online forum advertising for
accomplices. Cybersecurity experts at Massachusetts-based RSA blogged
that VorVzakone’s notice said “accomplice botmasters” would be trained
“boot camp style” and receive “a percentage of the funds they will
siphon from victims’ accounts into mule accounts controlled by the
gang.”
The Iowa Supreme Court ruled that bosses could fire
workers they see as an “irresistible attraction,” even if the employees
haven’t engaged in flirtatious behavior or made other advances. The case
involved a dentist who fired an assistant that he and his wife decided
was a threat to their marriage.
Doctors at the Golden Jubilee
Hospital in Clydebank, Scotland, saved a man who overdosed on Brussels
sprouts on Christmas. They said the traditional holiday vegetable
contains plenty of vitamin K,We've had a lot of people asking where we
had our make your own bobblehead
made. which counteracted the effect of anticoagulants the man was
taking because he had a mechanical heart. “We think this is possibly the
first-ever admission to hospital caused by the consumption of Brussels
sprouts,” hospital chief executive Jill Young said.wind turbine
Police
revoked the concealed-carry permit of Gary Quackenbush, 61, after he
wriggled in his seat while watching a movie in Tillamook, Ore., and
shook loose a loaded weapon. A seventh-grade student found the weapon
the next day with a round in the chamber and the safety off. “In a time
of crisis, like somebody barging into a mall or a theater, you don’t
have time to do a two-handed cocking of the weapon,” Quackenbush
explained in a brief letter to the local news media after the incident.
“It is my mindset everywhere I go.” His letter noted that the movie,
“The Hobbit,” was “overly long and fairly boring.”
The number of
people seeking hospital treatment after consuming energy drinks has
doubled in the past four years, according to a government survey,
jumping to an estimated 20,000 cases. The Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration said most cases involved teens and young
adults. “A lot of people don't realize the strength of these things,”
Howard Mell,Manufactures and supplies laser marker equipment. an emergency physician in suburban Cleveland, said.Laser engravers and laser engraving machine
systems and supplies to start your own lasering cutting engraving
marking etching business. “I had someone come in recently who had drunk
three energy drinks in an hour, which is the equivalent of 15 cups of
coffee,”
Falling furniture killed 349 Americans between 2000 and
2011, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC.
It estimated that tipped-over items, mostly television sets, injure
about 43,000 people a year, 59 percent of whom are children climbing,
hitting or kicking them or playing nearby. “Small children are no match
for a falling dresser, wall unit or 50- to 100-pound television,” the
CPSC said.
After Lynette Lee told police in Clarksville, Tenn.,
that a man she met online raped her, she admitted lying. The
investigating detective reported she said they’d been on a date and had
consensual sex, but she claimed rape because “she did not enjoy it, and
it was bad.”
Sheriff’s deputies who arrested Jennie Scott, 50,
for battering her 32-year-old boyfriend explained she attacked him
because the two “were giving each other pleasure in the bedroom” and he
“finished first and stopped pleasuring her.”
A judge acquitted
Dalton, N.H., Town Clerk Sandy York of taking $100 from town funds after
Police Chief Mario Audit admitted he never checked to see if any money
was actually missing. Although a security video showed York putting cash
in her pocketbook, Audit never asked her for an explanation, but
witnesses testified that York often took large bills to the bank after
closing the office to get smaller bills to make change. An accounting
showed no shortage.
Police at the scene of a fatal accident in
Oklahoma City arrested Thomasine Harjo, 25, after she drove past
officers and crime scene tape. Several officers tried to get her to
stop, but she ignored them and nearly hit one of them. When she finally
stopped, officers smelled alcohol, but she denied drinking. When they
asked her why she didn’t stop when she saw the barricade, she told them
she was following the car in front of her, although no other vehicle was
in the area. When they arrested Harjo, she said she couldn’t go to jail
because she had to appear in court the next morning for driving under
the influence.
After a third-grade student at a school outside
Calgary was found unconscious stuck in the door of a washroom stall with
a lanyard around his neck, Alberta authorities banned lanyards in all
its 2,000 schools. The lanyards were used for hall passes, washroom
passes and identification.
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