Farmer jailed in Hong Kong for burning flag

A man has been jailed in Hong Kong for burning the national flag, in the first sentence of its kind.

S Korea suspends savings banks citing weak finances

South Korea has suspended seven local savings banks citing the weak state of their finances.

Japan urges mass evacuation ahead of Typhoon Roke

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Burma begins swap scheme for cars over 40 years old

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Polio strain spreads to China from Pakistan

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Showing posts with label CrossCountry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CrossCountry. Show all posts

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Dougherty Gang: Cross-Country Chase Trio Were Headed South of the Border

Authorities searched for the three siblings using this digital billboard poster
Reuters
Three sibling suspects in a multi-state crime spree that ended in a shootout with Colorado cops planned to escape to Mexico, investigators have revealed.
Ryan Edward Dougherty, 21, his sister Lee Grace Dougherty, 29, and brother Dylan Stanley-Dougherty, 26, are accused of robbing a Georgia bank, shooting at cops in two states and stealing cars in Utah. The pursuit ended in an Aug. 10 high-speed chase along I-25 near Walsenburg, about 150 miles south of Denver.
(SEE: Busted: Fugitive Sibling Trio Caught Near Colorado Springs)
After firing at police, the trio eventually crashed their getaway car – leading to their arrests and the discovery of at least nine firearms in or near the vehicle. These included two AK-47-type rifles, two machine pistols, two shotguns and three handguns. All but one of the weapons was loaded.
Colorado Springs police Detective Larry Dyer revealed the latest details in the case at a court hearing Sept. 20 – in which he also said the younger brother was the brains behind the enterprise.
Dyer said that after Dougherty was sentenced to register as a sex offender following a conviction for sending sexually explicit text messages to an 11-year-old girl, he decided to mount the crime spree. "During the interview, he pretty much led me to believe that he was the mastermind of this plan," added the detective.
(LIST: TIME's Top 10 Bandits)
Each defendant faces five counts of attempted second-degree murder and five counts of first-degree assault. They have also been charged with vehicle theft, theft by receiving, and displaying fictitious or altered license plates. Each is being held on a $1.25 million bond and have yet to enter pleas. (via Newser)

Monday, September 19, 2011

Has the Curious Case of Willow the Cross-Country Cat Been Solved?

Bebeto Matthews / AP Willow sits in a cage at her temporary home on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in New York's Animal Care and Control facility.


Bebeto Matthews / AP
Cast aside all fanciful, homespun stories of the 6-year-old calico pawing her way across the country or stowing away on a truck or train. The solution could be much simpler.
Willow may have been brought to New York on a plane from Colorado, according to a tipster who wrote into Gothamist Friday. The tipster explains Willow's keeper fell in love with the (then-young) cat while on a ski trip in Colorado.
Indeed, the story reads like a quaint romance novel. Unable to leave her with no caregiver in sight, the finder decides to bring Willow back east. After clearing the cat with a vet prior to flying, the still-anonymous keeper wanted to make sure he or she wasn't stealing someone else's cat.
The tipster – who explains he or she merely cat-sat and was not Willow's New York owner – says none of the cat's prior history came up during the vet visit. Even though Willow was microchipped, which should have revealed her true owners' details, as the story goes, such information was not uncovered.
(READ: Missing Cat Turns Up in Manhattan)
Rescued from the Colorado streets and allegedly brought back to cushy Brooklyn, the cat seemed to be cared for quite well – until she turned up last week, wandering on East 20th Street in Manhattan. A good Samaritan brought Willow to an animal shelter, where her five-year, thousand-mile journey was revealed.
Willow's former owners were shocked when their cat was found, 1,800 miles away from her former home in the Denver suburb of Broomfield. The Squires family said Willow ran away five years ago when a contractor left the door open during a renovation.
But it was good news on Wednesday: the found cat most certainly was theirs, as the microchip displayed their details this time. Shocked that the cat was alive, healthy and, most astoundingly, so far from home, questions arose about how she managed to make it such a distance. That's where Gothamist's anonymous tipster helps to connect the dots.
The story is certainly quaint, but does it reveal the whole truth? NewsFeed is ever the cynic, knowing how many people are looking to cash in on this bit of good news.

Nick Carbone is a reporter at TIME. Find him on Twitter at @nickcarbone. You can also continue the discussion on TIME's Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIME.