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NEWS of the Day - September 21, 2011
on some NAACC / LACP issues of interest

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NEWS of the Day - September 21, 2011
on some issues of interest to the community policing and neighborhood activist across the country

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following group of articles from local newspapers and other sources constitutes but a small percentage of the information available to the community policing and neighborhood activist public. It is by no means meant to cover every possible issue of interest, nor is it meant to convey any particular point of view ...

We present this simply as a convenience to our readership ...

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From the Los Angeles Times

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35 bodies dumped on street in Mexico

The dead spill from two trucks left on a street under a busy overpass in Boca del Rio, a popular tourist spot in Veracruz. Officials say at least some of the dead are criminals.

by Ken Ellingwood, Los Angeles Times

September 20, 2011

Reporting from Mexico City

Gunmen dumped the bodies of 35 people with suspected ties to organized crime under an overpass filled with motorists Tuesday on the outskirts of the Mexican port city of Veracruz, officials said.

The bodies were left in a pair of trucks and on the road near a major shopping center in the community of Boca del Rio, a popular site for Mexican tourists to the port city, along the Gulf of Mexico.

Reynaldo Escobar, prosecutor for the state of Veracruz, said the dead bore signs of torture. In an effort to calm residents who have been appalled by rising drug-related violence, Escobar said the seven victims identified by late Tuesday had criminal records for involvement in organized-crime activities, including kidnappings, extortion, drug sales and murder.

"This is something that can calm the population," he said in a telephone interview with Milenio Television. "This is not about civilians. These are people involved in illicit business, in drug sales."

Photographs of the crime scene showed bodies spilling from two parked vehicles below an overpass. At least 11 of the deceased were reported to be women, but Mexican news reports gave conflicting figures. Some motorists reportedly had used social networking to indicate that gunmen had been blocking Manuel Avila Camacho Boulevard.

Veracruz state has become increasingly violent in the last few years as it has fallen increasingly under the sway of the ultra-violent drug-trafficking gang known as the Zetas.

State officials have frequently been accused of corruption and even collusion with the drug gang, which has branched out into migrant smuggling, kidnapping and extortion.

The Zetas, once the armed wing of the so-called Gulf cartel based along the U.S. border, has been at war for more than a year with its former allies. It was possible that the latest killings were linked to that feud.

A day earlier, more than 30 prisoners escaped from separate state prisons, but Escobar said authorities had not established a tie between the two events. Veracruz is the site of a planned gathering of prosecutors from across Mexico this week.

The grisly scene Tuesday was the latest sign of the spiraling violence that has engulfed Mexico since President Felipe Calderon launched a military-led offensive against drug cartels soon after taking office in late 2006.

The death toll nationwide has climbed above 40,000, largely as a result of fighting between trafficking groups that have shed old alliances or split apart as leaders have been arrested or killed during the government crackdown.

The Calderon administration, citing those takedowns, claims it is winning a war against crime groups that it says was long overdue. But critics say the offensive has spurred more killing, and many Mexicans believe the government is losing.

Mexicans were horrified last month when an arson attack attributed to the Zetas killed 52 people — many of them middle-aged and older women — at a casino in the northern city of Monterrey.

That city, Mexico's third-largest, has also been buffeted for months by the struggle between the Zetas and the Gulf cartel.

Veracruz made the news recently after two people were arrested on terrorism charges of using social networks to spread unconfirmed rumors of an attack on local schools.

Amid an outcry, state leaders pushed legislation through Tuesday that would allow them to prosecute the pair on a lesser charge of disturbing the peace.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-bodies-20110921,0,1429353,print.story

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The cold, cold case of Jack the Ripper

A retired homicide detective is trying to force Scotland Yard to release uncensored versions of files that might offer fresh leads on the identity of Britain's most notorious serial killer.

by Henry Chu, Los Angeles Times

September 20, 2011

Reporting from London

It's been called the world's most famous cold case, a source of endless fascination and speculation ever since the first mutilated victim was found in a bloody heap 123 years ago on the gas-lighted streets of East London.

So why is Scotland Yard suppressing information that some crime buffs think could offer fresh leads on the identity of Britain's most notorious serial killer, Jack the Ripper?

That's the question baffling Trevor Marriott, a retired homicide detective who's been waging a solitary legal battle to force "the Yard" to release uncensored versions of information recorded in thick Victorian ledgers that are gathering dust in an official archive.

The volumes contain tens of thousands of tidbits on the Yard's dealings with the public and police informants in the years that followed the Ripper's grisly two-month killing rampage in 1888. The shadowy figure is alleged to have slain five women in London's seamy Whitechapel district, slitting their throats and, in some cases, eviscerating them with almost surgical precision.

But the Metropolitan Police Service, as Scotland Yard is formally known, has staunchly refused to publish the documents in unexpurgated form, without names blacked out.

In a surreal tribunal hearing in May, which saw a senior officer give evidence from behind an opaque screen and cite Judas Iscariot to support his point, the agency argued that laying everything bare would violate its confidentiality pledge to informants, even those long dead, and undermine recruitment of collaborators in the present-day fight against terrorism and organized crime.

Naming names might even put the snitches' descendants at risk of revenge by the grudge-bearing heirs of those who were informed on, officials said. The three-person tribunal agreed.

And so the files continue to molder while Ripper enthusiasts like Marriott chafe, wondering what tantalizing clues remain hidden.

"There may be a little gem in there which corroborates something we already know," said Marriott, who has been working to unmask the killer since 2002. He has published a book outlining his own theory of whodunit centering on a lesser-known candidate who wound up convicted and executed for a brutal murder in the United States.

The ledgers, he said, could point out new avenues to dedicated "Ripperologists" and armchair detectives as they chase the solution to one of history's great unsolved mysteries.

Interest in the "Whitechapel murders" has seemingly never flagged since the gruesome crimes were committed toward the end of Queen Victoria's reign. The combination of sleaze (the victims were prostitutes), squalor (the East End was a den of poverty and drink), and blood and gore (buckets of it) has proved irresistible to amateur and expert sleuths alike.

Suspects at the time included an American quack who later fled London and a Polish Jew who lived in Whitechapel.

More recently, crime novelist Patricia Cornwell concluded in a 2002 book that Jack the Ripper was the painter Walter Sickert.

Conspiracy theorists finger a deranged member of the royal family and accuse Scotland Yard of colluding in a cover-up. And a Spanish author has just come out with a claim that the killer was a lead detective in the case.

"Unsolved murder — instantly everyone thinks, 'I can solve it,'" said Angela Down, a tour guide who has helped conduct a "Jack the Ripper Walk" around East London for 10 years. "We all love a mystery. If it were solved, all the interest would fall away."

The circuit is far and away the most popular attraction offered by tour company London Walks; on the nights that the walk is hosted by noted Ripper expert Donald Rumbelow, it can draw hundreds of participants.

As they meander through narrow streets and cross a square whose cobblestones were there when the fourth victim, Catherine Eddowes, was found dead, listeners are reminded that the name "Jack the Ripper" is almost certainly a hoax. A taunting letter purporting to be from the killer and signed "Jack the Ripper" was received by a news agency on Sept. 27, 1888, not long after the slaying of Annie Chapman, the second victim.

"Dear Boss," the letter began, before describing how the writer was "down on whores" and wouldn't "quit ripping them" until he was caught.

But the letter is now widely believed to have been the work of a tabloid journalist intent on making the story even more sensational than it already was. ("Nothing's changed," a woman murmured during the guided tour one recent evening.)

Marriott's theory, which he has put forth on the BBC and the National Geographic Channel, is that the killer was a German sailor named Carl Feigenbaum who eventually ended up in New York, where he cut the throat of his elderly landlady. Feigenbaum was executed in the electric chair in 1896, but not before telling his lawyer that he had always suffered from an uncontrollable urge to "kill and mutilate" women.

Shipping records show that the merchant seaman's vessel was docked in London at the time of the murders, close to Whitechapel, a red-light district likely to have been popular with sailors.

Marriott's research has uncovered similarly brutal killings in Germany that occurred a few years afterward.

As a police officer in Bedfordshire, north of London, Marriott maintained a cursory interest in the Ripper case but was more preoccupied with the murders he was investigating as a homicide detective.

He retired in the mid-'80s. Eight or nine years ago, in search of a hobby, he figured he would try his hand at the one riddle that ruled them all.

"I decided to look at it as a cold-case file," said Marriott.

"There are a lot of dedicated researchers and people who have followed the Ripper mystery, but nobody with any real professional knowledge or expertise had actually sat down or gone through it in any great detail," he said. "That's where I think my knowledge and expertise has helped look at this in a different light."

His quest has taken him around Europe and to North America. But Marriott is desperate to find fresh nuggets of information in the Scotland Yard ledgers.

After his request for access was denied in 2008, Marriott looked for help from the Information Commissioner's Office, which sided with Scotland Yard. He then took the matter before Britain's Information Rights Tribunal, which adjudicates appeals based on the Freedom of Information Act.

During the tribunal hearing in May, a senior officer identified only as "Detective Inspector D" said from behind a screen that the passage of time was not a good enough reason to reveal the names of informants.

"Look at one of the world's best-known informants, Judas Iscariot. If someone could draw a bloodline from Judas Iscariot to a present-day person, then that person would face a risk, although I know that seems an extreme example," the officer said, according to the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

Marriott rejects that argument, saying that it would be "almost 99.99% impossible to trace" the descendants of the informants, who are often identified in the registers by pseudonyms or by surnames only.

In July, the tribunal upheld the Yard's right to keep the files secret. In response to an appeal by Marriott, the panel reaffirmed its decision Aug. 31, which, coincidentally or not, was the 123rd anniversary of the death of the Ripper's first victim, Mary Ann Nichols.

Marriott's only remaining appeal would be to the home secretary or Queen Elizabeth. Chances of success: close to nil.

"I've spent fortunes on this case.... I don't know where we go now. I suspect this will probably be the end game," he said resignedly.

If so, what's in the ledgers "will be lost forever," Marriott said. And the identity of Jack the Ripper will vanish in the mists of time, like the London fog that swallowed up a bloody killer and left an enduring mystery eddying in his wake.

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From Google News

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New Jersey

Local P.D.s receive funds for community-policing initiatives

Twenty-four local police departments will benefit from $120,000 in grants to develop community-policing programs.

Carteret, Dunellen, East Brunswick, Edison, Helmetta, Highland Park, Metuchen, Middlesex Borough, Milltown, Monroe, New Brunswick, North Brunswick, Old Bridge, Perth Amboy, Piscataway, Plainsboro, Sayreville, South Brunswick, South Plainfield, South River, Spotswood and Woodbridge, as well as the Rutgers University Police Department and the Middlesex County Sheriff's Department, will receive the funds in order to enhance public awareness while combating such crimes as bias intimidation, bullying and vandalism.

The $5,000 “Law Enforcement Response to Community Concerns Grant” funds had been seized from criminal defendants who obtained proceeds though illegal activities, such as selling drugs, according to a statement from the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office. The program is sponsored by the prosecutor's office and the Middlesex County Board of Chosen Freeholders.

“These grants can help protect and improve the quality of life for all the citizens of Middlesex County,” Middlesex County Prosecutor Bruce Kaplan said. “This has always been a goal of the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office.”

“Our goal is for our residents to have safe communities to live in, to work in and to play in,” said Middlesex County Freeholder

Ronald G. Rios, chair of the county's Law and Public Safety Committee.

In order to qualify for a grant, each police department was required to develop a plan that seeks to deal with a quality-of-life issue, such as curbing graffiti, criminal mischief, bullying or bias-related crimes.

In addition, police departments may offer an educational component that enhances community awareness of relevant law, as well as the public's rights and responsibilities.

http://ns.gmnews.com/news/2011-09-22/Front_Page/Local_PDs_receive_funds_for_communitypolicing_init.html

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