Man Tries to Take 247 Animals On Plane

 

A Czech national was nabbed in Argentina for trying to board a transatlantic flight with 247 live animals including poisonous snakes and endangered reptiles packed in a bulging suitcase, reports said Monday.

The man identified as Karel Abelovsky, 51, was caught while trying to board a flight for Madrid when shocked baggage X-ray technicians and staff at the Iberia Airlines desk at Ezeiza Airport in greater Buenos Aires noticed “organic substances moving inside,” local media reported.

When they opened the bag, they found more than 200 reptiles and mollusks, among them nine species of poisonous snakes including South American pitvipers, packed in clear plastic containers.

There were also 15 venomous vipers, including two yararas — which can measure up to 1.50 meters (five feet) — and several young boas.

Some of the animals were reported to be extremely rare and protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

Two of the animals were found dead and most of the others could have suffered the same fate due to a lack of oxygen if the suitcase had been placed in the plane’s cargo area.

The discovery was made on December 7 but only recently came to light. A judge has charged Abelovsky with attempted smuggling, and he faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

Researchers suspect that an exotic species smuggling ring was behind the trafficking attempt.

http://news.yahoo.com/man-tried-247-animals-plane-165607848.html;_ylc=X3oDMTNrOGxvc3VhBF9TAzc2NDUzNjUEYWN0A21haWxfY2IEY3QDYQRpbnRsA3VzBGxhbmcDZW4tVVMEcGtnA2E3OWJjYjZiLWVhZTYtMzY2OC1hN2I0LWNjMzZmZDlmODY2YgRzZWMDbWl0X3NoYXJlBHNsawNtYWlsBHRlc3QD;_ylv=3

Thanks to Mr. C for bringing this to the attention of the It’s Interesting community.

Woman sues family of teenager killed by train after she was injured by his flying body parts.

 

A teenager killed while crossing train tracks can be sued for injuries caused to a woman on the platform, when one of his severed body parts hit her, a court has ruled. 

Hiroyuki Joho, 18, died when he ran in front of a 70mph Amtrak train at Edgebrook Metra station in Chicago in 2008. It was pouring with rain and the teen had an umbrella over his head.

His body was severed on impact, and a large part became airborne, flying about 100 feet onto the southbound platform, where it hit a commuter.

Gayane Zokhrabov, 58, was knocked to the ground, her leg and wrist broken and her shoulder injured, the Chicago Tribune reported.

A Cook County court judge initially dismissed Zokhrabov’s lawsuit against the boy’s estate, ruling that Joho could not possibly have anticipated Zokhrabov’s injuries.

But ruling in what it called a ‘tragically bizarre’ case, a state appeals court disagreed.

It found that ‘it was reasonably foreseeable’ that the high-speed train would kill the college hopeful and fling his body toward a platform where people were waiting.

Lawyer Leslie Rosen, who handled Zokhrabov’s appeal, argued that the case was a straightforward negligence case, albeit with ‘very peculiar and gory and creepy’ circumstances.

‘If you do something as stupid as this guy did, you have to be responsible for what comes from it,’ she said.

The teenager’s mother Jeung-Hee Park, had left the bright high-school student at the station that morning.

Seeing what he thought was his local train approaching and expecting it to slow down, Joho went to cross a same-level pedestrian walkway across the tracks to get to the right side of the track.

But in fact Joho’s train was delayed by the bad weather, his mother’s lawyer Keith Davidson said.

The train  which hit him was an Amtrak high speed express speeding at 70mph towards the city centre.

Park had previously filed her own suit claiming that Metra and the Canadian Pacific Railway were negligent

The express Amtrak train had overtaken his Metra train which was running late that morning, but no announcement was made on the platform, the suit said.

But a Cook County judge ruled that the railway companies had no compulsion to warn people about such an ‘open and obvious danger’ as a travelling train. The decision was upheld on appeal

Keith Davidson, one of Park’s attorneys, said that the crossing where of high speed trains cross a slow commuter train track is inherently hazardous.

The whistle that warns people to keep clear is no longer in use and the view of the track is partly blocked by foliage, he said.

He said: ‘It really reflects a failure of the courts to get to grips with the limits of cognition and human reaction.

‘It has been shown that objects, in this case as train, approaching from a distance from a wide angle appear to be going much more slowly than they are.

‘Hiroyuki would have thought he had plenty of time to cross the track.’

Lawyers for Mrs Park are seeking a further appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court.

The popular teen known to friends and friends as Hiro- was a member of the soccer and tennis teams,  a dancer and demonstrated Taiko Japanese drumming on International culture days.

Classmates paid tribute to him as Northside’s ‘Hero’ and remembered him as a kind, friendly boy who enjoyed making people laugh. He had been especially kind to foreign exchange students, inviting them to hang out at his house.

At the time of the accident, Tiffany Monreal told Hoof Beat, the newspaper at Northside College Prep: ‘He made everyone smile as he joked around, and his jokes were never hurtful. He always meant them with the truest sense of humor.’

Tennis team partner Roldan Alegre said: ‘He was always smiling and laughing, a very happy person. Many people loved him. He had an enormous amount of friends.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2079940/Dead-man-killed-tragic-train-collision-CAN-sued-woman-injured-flying-body-parts.html#ixzz1i1jISano

R.I.P. Ben Breedlove

A Texas teenager who said he cheated death three times despite a dangerous heart condition died Christmas night from a heart attack, but not before posting a two-part video on YouTube telling his story and describing a series of powerful visions.

In the videos that have since gone viral, 18-year-old Ben Breedlove of Austin can be seen silently sitting in a room and using handwritten note cards to tell his story. The teen suffered from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a condition in which one part of the heart is thicker than the other parts, making it difficult for the heart to pump blood.

He described cheating death three times.

The most recent scare was Dec. 6, when he passed out at school and awoke surrounded by EMS medics preparing to use shock pads to revive him.

He posted a two-part video Dec. 18 titled “This is my story.” One week later, on Christmas night, he suffered a heart attack and died. As of this afternoon, the first video had been viewed online more than 476,000 times.

“It was obvious to all of us that knew him that he knew what he was doing when he made that video,” close family-friend Pam Kohler said. “There are times that [the family is] overwhelmed by the pain and the loss of Ben, but then it’s replaced with knowing that he was at peace with what was going to happen.”

Kohler said Breedlove loved coming to her house in the country where he taught her how to make and post YouTube videos for her husband’s business and loved going hunting with him.

He had two popular YouTube channels, “BreedloveTV” and “OurAdvice4You,” on which he would talk about his own life as well as dishing out relationship advice for his peers. Facebook and YouTube have been inundated with tributes to Breedlove.

“When you think of Ben, you can’t help but smile,” Kohler said. “He was curious, creative. You never knew what he was up to. He was always full of surprises. We look on all of it as a gift from God through Ben.”

Kohler and her husband, Mark Kohler, were driving to the Breedlove home Christmas when they first realized something might be wrong.

“We were going over to share Christmas dinner with them that night and on our way over there, a police car passed us with sirens on,” Kohler said. “My husband said, ‘Start praying because it could be Ben.'”

When they arrived at the house, they saw ambulances and fire trucks. Breedlove had had a heart attack and medics were trying to revive him. He made it to the hospital, but died there.

At this point, Kohler said the family did not know about Breedlove’s last videos. He had shared his visions with his sister, but no one had seen the videos.

He said in the video, through note cards, that the first time he cheated death was when he was 4 and described an experience he had in the hospital as he was being wheeled on a stretcher.

“There was this big bright light above me … I couldn’t make out what is was because it was so bright. I told my mom, ‘Look at the bright light’ and pointed up. She said she didn’t see anything,” Breedlove wrote. “There were no lights on in this hall. I couldn’t take my eyes off it. And I couldn’t help but smile. I had no worries at all, like nothing else in the world mattered.”

As Breedlove held up each card telling the story, he alternated serious looks with broad smiles. “I cannot even begin to describe the peace, how peaceful it was,” he wrote. “I will NEVER forget that feeling or that day.

“Because of the experiences he’d had, he was ready and he was prepared. He really wanted to know that peace again. He was facing more hospital stays and he was tired of it,” Kohler said. “He wanted [his family] to know that he wasn’t scared and was looking forward to returning to that place.”

In the videos, Breedlove went through the details of his journey.

 

Newborn’s Aunt Saves It From Being Improperly Disposed By Hospital

 

InFoshan, China, a woman was recently rushed to the Nanhai Red Cross Hospital with stomach cramps and internal bleeding. Although only eight months pregnant, Liu Dongmei gave birth to the baby, but the doctors pronounced it dead.

The baby was born with purple skin and wasn’t crying or breathing, prompting the medical team to get rid of it in a manner that didn’t follow standard guidelines. However, shortly after the birth, the young mother’s sister-in-law asked to see the baby, only to discover that it was still breathing.

To add insult to injury, the baby is a boy, not a girl, a lie told to the mother to apparently lessen the impact of its death.

In China, boys are considered prized. Consequently, due to China’s one-child policy, baby boys are most often more desired than girls.

Thankfully, the baby is now in stable condition, but the hospital has yet to answer for this mistake.

http://www.weirdasianews.com/2011/12/16/chinese-baby-mistaken-stillbirth-disposed-doctors/

iPhone Captures Video of Grandma Shooting Her Son-In-Law

 

Sal Miglino was going through a messy divorce with his estranged wife and it would appear that her mother, Cheryl Hepner, was definitely taking sides. When Miglino went to pick-up his three-year old son from his grandmother’s house, she met him at the door with gun in hand and started firing. Unfortunately for Hepner, Miglino had his wits about him, as he recorded the event in its entirety on his iPhone.

The video shows shaky footage of the scenery outside Hepner’s house as she fires the first shot then he falls to the ground screaming, “You shot me.” More shots can be heard, Miglino yells in pain and in the background you hear grandma talking, however, it’s unclear what she’s saying exactly.

Miglino made it back to his car where he called 911. At the same time, Hepner rushed inside her house and called 911 claiming she was the victim and her son-in-law tried to shoot her. Thanks to the iPhone video police have come to the conclusion that Hepner is the one who fired the shots and had planned the whole thing.  

http://blogs.findlaw.com/legally_weird/2011/12/iphone-captures-vides-of-grandma-66-shooting-her-son-in-law.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

 

The Big Comfy Couch

The Big Comfy Couch is a Canadian children’s television series about Loonette the Clown and her doll Molly, who solve everyday problems on their “Big Comfy Couch”. It aired from 1992 until early 2006. Re-runs of the show are still being aired on Treehouse TV. It was produced by Cheryl Wagner and Robert Mills, directed by Wayne Moss and Mills. It premiered on March 2, 1992 in Canada and in 1995 in the USA on public television stations across the country.   The show’s format revolves around Loonette the Clown, who lives with her doll Molly on the eponymous Big Comfy Couch. Episodes are generally focused on a theme or a lesson.

Man Arrested After Hiring Strippers for his Son’s Wedding

 

Chinese police have arrested a man who hired two strippers to perform at his son’s wedding after the performance was mobbed by villagers, a newspaper reported on Wednesday.

Zhang Cheng, from Xuzhou in eastern Jiangsu province, had originally wanted a band to play at the nuptials, but was then advised he could get performers whose show would have “special features,” the Global Times said.

“After watching the show, Zhang decided it would be appropriate for his son’s wedding and requested two strippers for the event,” it added. “…Barely five minutes had passed before hundreds of villagers in the conservative community were swarming to the venue, trying to catch a glimpse.”

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/14/us-china-stripper-idUSTRE7BD05W20111214

Runaway Golf Cart at Cowboys Stadium

In a bizarre episode that you have to see to believe, the winning coach and several others were plowed into by a runaway, unmanned electrical cart during an interview near the 50-yard line following a victory in a state title game Saturday at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

Spring (Texas) Dekaney head coach Willie Amendola was being interviewed near midfield following his team’s 34-14 victory in the Texas 5A Division II final when a cart plowed into the group.

Many were knocked to the ground, but Amendola was thrown into the passenger’s seat. He tried unsuccessfully to gain control of the cart before falling to the turf about 25 yards from the initial impact.

A field worker eventually jumped into the cart and brought it to a stop.

An emergency medical technician who declined identification by name told The Associated Press that one man who was conscious and talking was taken to a hospital with an apparent leg injury. The Arlington medical technician said he had no further information on the man’s condition but he said others hit or grazed by the cart were checked out by emergency workers onfield as a precaution.

Separately, a Texas sporting league official said a male staffer also was injured, not seriously, when the pilotless cart raced across field after the Texas 5A Division II football championship game. That official also declined identification to the Associated Press.

A few hundred people were still on the field, celebrating and talking following Dekaney’s victory. Stadium workers had begun cleaning up the field. Orange yard markers are seen stacked in the back of the cart, but it was unclear as to why the cart took off without a driver. (A number of viewers have noticed that pylons appeared to have been placed near the accelerator.)

An announcer, still on the air during the postgame activities, was shaken while describing the sequence.

“We have a disturbance down the field,” he said. “Apparently one of the carts on the field got loose and I think there have been some folks injured in this. Oh my! That’s like a runaway cart there. And it finally took someone to stop it. That’s a scary thing.”

It was a bizarre ending to the first state title for Dekaney, which upset favored Cibolo (Texas) Steele.

http://highschool.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1308327