Saturday 14 May 2022

France Crime: Mosque Manager Arrested, Fraud & Embezzlement on Grand Scale

Manager of Radical French Mosque Arrested for Fraud and Embezzlement on a Grand Scale



The manager of a radical mosque, along with three others, was arrested this week in northern France over allegations of fraud and embezzlement of hundreds of thousands of euros of foreign cash.

The manager of the Al Houda mosque in Grande-Synthe, 49-year-old Ouarab A., two of his two sisters and the treasurer of the mosque were taken into custody on Wednesday by local police in an operation of the departmental anti-fraud committee.

Ouarab tried to grab the weapon of an officer during his arrest,

According to investigators, at least €350,000 (£297,738/$363,181) in foreign cash is thought to have been embezzled by the mosque, which is said to follow the ultra-conservative Islamic ideology of Salafism, French broadcaster CNews reports.

The four arrestees are also believed to have committed social benefit fraud in the amount of around €70,000 (£59,569/$72,649), according to investigators, who allege that the fraudulent transfers were made through associations run by the mosque manager’s sisters, who are aged 46 and 47.


The Al Houda mosque, which is also home to an unauthorized Qu’ranic school, is said to have been purchased using the embezzled funds.

The case is just the latest to see radical Muslims accused of fraud and financial crimes in recent years.

During the Wuhan virus pandemic, for example, there were several reports of Islamists using coronavirus schemes to defraud Western governments, as in May 2020 when German police in Berin raided the homes of several Islamic extremists over fraud allegations.

These included a man who had been investigated for plotting a terrorist attack against the Berlin marathon.

Investigators said that Islamists had claimed cash for emergency financial aid for businesses affected by the coronavirus and the associated lockdown restrictions imposed on German residents. Some claimed aid for businesses that were not in operation at all.

Just a month later, Berlin police raided even more Islamists, suspected of engaging in benefit fraud. Some suspects were linked to the Ibrahim al-Khalil mosque, one of the main gathering points for Salafists in the German capital.

Political cartoon of the day: Plugs

 

Plugs





https://www.foxnews.com/politics/cartoons-slideshow

The Coconuts Recipe Corner: CHICKEN ENCHILADAS

 

CHICKEN ENCHILADAS


Courtesy of Old El Paso website

Add a fiesta of flavor to chicken with garlic, lime and fresh greens. By Betty Crocker Kitchens






Prep20 Minutes
Total45 Minutes
Servings6



INGREDIENT LIST

  • 1 can (10 oz) Old El Paso™ enchilada sauce
  • 1/4 cup cilantro sprigs
  • 1/4 cup parsley sprigs
  • 1 tablespoon lime juice
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 2 cups chopped cooked chicken or turkey
  • 1 cup shredded mozzarella cheese (4 oz)
  • 6 Old El Paso™ flour tortillas for soft tacos & fajitas (6 inch; from 8.2-oz package)
  • 1 medium lime, cut into wedges

PREPARATION

  1. Heat oven to 350°F. Spray 11x7-inch (2-quart) glass baking dish with cooking spray.
  2. In blender or food processor, place enchilada sauce, cilantro, parsley, lime juice and garlic. Cover; blend on high speed about 30 seconds or until smooth.
  3. In small bowl, mix chicken and 3/4 cup of the cheese. Divide chicken mixture among tortillas. Roll tortillas around chicken mixture; place seam sides down in baking dish. Pour sauce mixture over enchiladas.
  4. Cover; bake 15 minutes. Sprinkle with remaining 1/4 cup cheese. Bake uncovered 5 to 10 minutes longer or until hot. Serve with lime wedges. Garnish with additional cilantro sprigs if desired.

Enjoy


The easiest way to open a Coconut is to whisper it a joke & it will crack up with laughter


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Canada Supreme Court: Drunk? High On Pills? On Shrooms? => NOT GUILTY

Canada's Supreme Court rules being DRUNK is defense for sex attacks and killing: Judges acquit suspect who stabbed mother because he thought she was ALIEN while high on pills and naked man who beat a professor with broom when on mushrooms

  • Supreme Court said defendants in violent crime cases can use drunk as defense
  • It found that a law passed in 1995 prohibiting the defense was unconstitutional
  • Judges ruled on cases Friday - with two being acquitted and one having a retrial
  • Matthew Brown from Calgary was charged with break-and-enter and aggravated assault after the attack on Janet Hamnett left her with broken hands in 2018

Sexual assault suspects can use being extremely drunk as a defense, Canada's highest court has said in a bombshell ruling.

The Supreme Court today said defendants accused of violent crimes can use self-induced extreme intoxication as a defense.

It found a law passed by Parliament in 1995 prohibiting the defense was unconstitutional and violates the country's Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Judges ruled on three cases on Friday - with two being acquitted and one having a retrial - for crimes committed while drunk.

The move has struck down the federal law that had been fervently supported by women's advocacy groups.

Supreme Court, Justice Nicholas Kasirer said: 'Its impact on the principles of fundamental justice is disproportionate to its overarching public benefits. It should therefore be declared unconstitutional and of no force or effect.'

As a 19-year-old student in 2015 Thomas Chan took magic mushrooms before stabbing his father to death and injuring her partner in Peterborough, Ontario

Supreme Court acquits two men over attacks while high and orders new trial for student who killed his father

Broke a woman's hands while on mushrooms

Matthew Brown from Calgary was charged with break-and-enter and aggravated assault after the attack on Janet Hamnett left her with broken hands in 2018.

He had taken about 2.5 grams of magic mushrooms and drunk about 12-14 ounces of vodka as well as a few beers before the incident.

He attacked the professor with a broom handle after breaking into her home while naked and high on mushrooms.

The court today restored his acquittal.

Student, 19, stabs his father to death while high on mushrooms 

As a 19-year-old student in 2015 Thomas Chan took magic mushrooms before stabbing his father to death and injuring her partner in Peterborough, Ontario.

Matthew Gourlay, representing Chan, said in October the Crown did not make a persuasive argument that Chan is a criminal.

He said: 'Our client, Thomas Chan, did something horrible when he was not in his right mind — but not every tragedy has a villain. The Crown in our case has never been able to articulate why Thomas Chan, in particular, needs to be convicted and punished as a criminal.'

The judge today ordered a new trial.

Tried to kill himself but stabbed his mother after thinking she was an ALIEN while he was taking Wellbutrin

in 2013 David Sullivan, from Whitby, Ontario, tried to kill himself by taking Wellbutrin but stabbed his mother, who later died of an unrelated heart attack.

Stephanie DiGiuseppe, the attorney representing Sullivan, previously said he could not have foreseen the harm his suicide attempt would cause.

She said: 'Intentional violence and inadvertent violence are not the same thing.

'If somebody hit someone else with their vehicle, we would be almost laughable to go to that person and say, 'We're going to convict you of assault.''

His acquittal was upheld by the court today.

At issue was whether defendants accused of a violent crime in criminal court can raise extreme intoxication known as 'non-mental disorder automatism' as a defense.

They can claim their actions were involuntary as a result of taking drugs or alcohol, and, as a result, cannot be held criminally responsible for their actions.

The court said it is the law in Canada that intoxication short of automatism is not a defense for the kind of violent crime at issue.

Canadian courts have been split on the issue, while women's advocacy groups have argued the law is needed to protect women and children.

Four out of five victims of intimate partner violence were women and they were five times more likely to experience sexual assault in 2019, government data shows.

In 1994, the court ruled in favor of an extreme intoxication defense by a suspect who was accused of sexually assaulting a woman in a wheelchair when he was drunk.

In response to the ruling, Canada's Parliament passed a law which prohibited defendants from using extreme intoxication as a defense in violent crime cases.

The court today restored the acquittal for a man who attacked a professor with a broom handle after breaking into her home while naked and high on mushrooms.

Matthew Brown from Calgary was charged with break-and-enter and aggravated assault after the attack on Janet Hamnett left her with broken hands in 2018.

He had taken about 2.5 grams of magic mushrooms and drunk about 12-14 ounces of vodka as well as a few beers before the incident.

Hamnett told CBC: 'Although I am very disappointed with this decision, it is not about me at this stage.

'What is most important to consider is this negatively impacts victims of aggravated assault across Canada — some of who are no longer with us because they died as a result of their attacks.'

Brown's case was one of three involving the extreme intoxication defense heard at the Supreme Court on Friday, with Thomas Chan and David Sullivan also heard.

As a 19-year-old student in 2015 Chan took magic mushrooms before stabbing his father to death and injuring her partner in Peterborough, Ontario.

Meanwhile in 2013 Sullivan, from Whitby, tried to kill himself by taking Wellbutrin but stabbed his mother, who later died of an unrelated heart attack, because he thought she was an alien.

They were both convicted but Ontario's Court of Appeal overturned the decision - with the appeal going to the Supreme Court.

The court today upheld Sullivan's acquittal and ordered a new trial for Chan.

Justice Nicholas Kasirer said the Criminal Code preventing automatism defense infringed the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

He said an intent to get drunk was not an intent to commit an offense as well as the Crown needing to prove the person meant the attack.

The court urged Parliament to bring in legislation to help victims of crime caused by extremely intoxicated people.

It said 'protecting the victims of violent crime — particularly in light of the equality and dignity interests of women and children who are vulnerable to intoxicated sexual and domestic acts — is a pressing and substantial social purpose'.




Thursday 12 May 2022

Farm attack, farmer tortured with boiling water, family chocked, Newcastle

 

South Africa: Farm attack, farmer tortured with boiling water, family chocked, Newcastle

Oorgrens veiligheid

Farm attack, farmer tortured with boiling water, family chocked, Newcastle
Farm attack, farmer tortured with boiling water, family chocked, Newcastle

A farm attack took place on 11 May 2022, at 16:40, on a farm 12km outside Newcastle, in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa. Four armed attackers arrived at the farm under the pretence of wanting to purchase some items. When the farmer said they were closed one attacker asked for a glass of water.

When the farmer entered the home to get some water the one attacker pointed a firearm at him and forced him into the house.

The other attackers then also entered the home and the farmer and his family were overpowered, severely assaulted and tied up.

The attackers were demanding money and valuables and during the assault the farmer (67) was tortured with boiling water and other family members were choked and beaten.

The attackers then fled the scene with some cash and cell phones.

Police are investigating but there have been no arrests.

There is no other information available at this stage.

Read about more farm attacks here

Information supplied by Oorgrens veiligheid

South Africa Today – South Africa News

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/kwazulu-natal/farm-attack-farmer-tortured-with-boiling-water-family-chocked-newcastle/



President Bidenflation Blames Everyone Else

 

Bidenflation Blames Everyone Else

Inflation is up 8.3%, but the man most responsible has nothing but scapegoats.



https://patriotpost.us/articles/88288-president-bidenflation-blames-everyone-else-2022-05-11

New York City Mayor Doesn't Like Official Residence Because It's Haunted

Ghostly Gracie: NYC Mayor Eric Adams says he doesn't like living in the 18th century mayoral mansion because it's HAUNTED

  • The Democrat, 61, made the claims during a baseball game between the Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Asked if it was cool to live there on Tuesday, he said: 'No, it's not. Trust me. Trust me,' before adding: 'And I don't care what anyone says, there are ghosts in there, man'
  • The Mayor was booed by Yankees fans when his name was publicly announced as he walked onto the mound to throw the first pitch before the game
  • The ghost of the daughter-in-law of the mansion's architect - Elizabeth Gracie-Walcott - is said to haunt the home after she died there from apoplexy in 1819

NYC Mayor Eric Adams has complained his official residence Gracie Mansion is haunted while moaning that the storied Manhattan property isn't 'cool enough' for him or his family. 

Adams, 61, made the supernatural claim on the YES network Tuesday, with his comments first reported by Upper East Site

He spoke with announcers Michael Kay and Cameron Maybin shortly after pitching the first ball of the game between the Yankees and Toronto Blue Jays. 

'I know the mayor of New York lives in Gracie Mansion. That doesn't seem cool enough for you,' announcer Michael Kay began. 

'No, it's not. Trust me. Trust me,' Mayor Adams answered. 'And I don't care what anyone says, there are ghosts in there, man.'

'We just had a conversation about ghosts yesterday,' co-host Cameron Maybin then says.

He continued: 'I've been in some haunted buildings in my life. I'm not interested in revisiting those.'

Kay, the game's main commentator, went on to quiz the mayor on whether he's ever heard a ghost wandering around the Upper East Side mansion, where he's lived since taking office in January. 

'All the time, man. All the time,' Mayor Adams responds.

'You hear footsteps and all types of stuff?' Maybin then asked.

'Listen, they’re creeping around,' Adams claimed, discussing his mansion at East 88th Street, in Manhattan's Yorkville neighborhood. 

Mayor Eric Adams (centers) talks about ghosts inside Gracie Mansion -the official residence of the New York City Mayor - from the press box of Yankees stadium during the game against the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday

Mayor Eric Adams (centers) talks about ghosts inside Gracie Mansion -the official residence of the New York City Mayor - from the press box of Yankees stadium during the game against the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday

Adams said ghosts have been 'creeping around' Gracie Mansion since he took over the home from Bill de Blasio on January 1, 2002. Pictured: Adams throwing the first pitch on Tuesday before the state of the MLB game between the New York Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays

Adams said ghosts have been 'creeping around' Gracie Mansion since he took over the home from Bill de Blasio on January 1, 2002. Pictured: Adams throwing the first pitch on Tuesday before the state of the MLB game between the New York Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays 

Gracie Mansion is the official residence of the Mayor of New York City. Completed in 1799, it is located in Carl Schurz Park, at East End Avenue and 88th Street in the Yorkville neighborhood of Manhattan

Gracie Mansion is the official residence of the Mayor of New York City. Completed in 1799, it is located in Carl Schurz Park, at East End Avenue and 88th Street in the Yorkville neighborhood of Manhattan

Asked if it was cool to live there, Adams said of the matter: 'No, it's not. Trust me. Trust me,' before adding: 'And I don't care what anyone says, there are ghosts in there, man'

Asked if it was cool to live there, Adams said of the matter: 'No, it's not. Trust me. Trust me,' before adding: 'And I don't care what anyone says, there are ghosts in there, man' 

An interior room at Gracie Mansion, the mayor's official residence since 1942, except between 2002-2013, when Michael Bloomberg was the NYC mayor

 An interior room at Gracie Mansion, the mayor's official residence since 1942, except between 2002-2013, when Michael Bloomberg was the NYC mayor

'All the time, man. All the time,' Mayor Adams said in reaction to being asked if he hears ghosts walking around the traditional residence

'All the time, man. All the time,' Mayor Adams said in reaction to being asked if he hears ghosts walking around the traditional residence

The daughter-in-law of the Gracie Mansion's architect - Archibald Gracie - died of apoplexy at the home in 1819 and her ghost is rumored to be moving around the house.  Pictured: Elizabeth Stoughton Wolcott-Gracie, who lived between 1795 and 1819

The daughter-in-law of the Gracie Mansion's architect - Archibald Gracie - died of apoplexy at the home in 1819 and her ghost is rumored to be moving around the house.  Pictured: Elizabeth Stoughton Wolcott-Gracie, who lived between 1795 and 1819

The master bedroom in Gracie Mansion, where Adams and his family live since the beginning of the year after being elected as the new mayor in 2021

The master bedroom in Gracie Mansion, where Adams and his family live since the beginning of the year after being elected as the new mayor in 2021

The dining room at at the five-bedroom residence, built at the end of the 18th century and seized by the government in 1899

The dining room at at the five-bedroom residence, built at the end of the 18th century and seized by the government in 1899

One spooky tale frequently told about the 223-year-old mansion is that its haunted by Elizabeth Walcott-Gracie.

She is the daughter-in-law of the home's architect, Archibald Gracie and died at the residence in 1819 from apoplexy. 

Chirlane McCray, wife of former NYC mayor Bill de Blasio, said during an interview with Metro US in 2017 that she never saw the woman's ghost.

But McCray added that 'there are times when doors open and close by themselves and the floorboards creak as though someone is walking through the rooms.'

Gracie Mansion was initially built in 1799 as a country home overlooking Hells Gate channel along the East River, a couple of miles above what was then considered the New York City's northern edge. 

The 214-year-old mansion in Schultz Park has served as the official residence for New York City mayors since the middle of World War Two (1942), overlooking the East River

The 214-year-old mansion in Schultz Park has served as the official residence for New York City mayors since the middle of World War Two (1942), overlooking the East River