Coroner to probe garden spray death

Emergency authorities say it will be up to the coroner to decide whether a man died in Sydney’s west on Wednesday because of exposure to a herbicide.

Just after 8:00am AEST emergency crews were called to a Horsley Park home where a 56-year-old man collapsed and died.

He was spraying herbicides on his market garden at the time, but police and fire authorities say it is not yet known whether the chemicals caused a heart attack.

Police Superintendent Peter Lennon says 21 other people were contaminated with the chemicals when they tried to help revive the man.

“Three were so serious they had to be taken to a nearby hospital. They’ve since been assessed and been released,” he said.

WorkCover New South Wales is investigating the incident.

The man’s family has thanked members of the public who stopped to help him.

Police take credit for lower road toll

A police Superintendent says the hard work of police has led to a reduction in road fatalities across Gippsland.

Transport Accident Commission figures show the Morwell region had a 6 per cent reduction in road fatalities in the 12 months until March this year compared to the same time last year.

The Bairnsdale region had a 25 per cent reduction in road fatalities.

The Acting Superintendent for division three, Tess Walsh, says it has been a successful road policing strategy.

“Any reduction in fatalities is wonderful news and testament to the work of a combination of both the traffic management unit and the general duties police,” she said.

Police take credit for lower road toll

A police Superintendent says the hard work of police has led to a reduction in road fatalities across Gippsland.

Transport Accident Commission figures show the Morwell region had a 6 per cent reduction in road fatalities in the 12 months until March this year compared to the same time last year.

The Bairnsdale region had a 25 per cent reduction in road fatalities.

The Acting Superintendent for division three, Tess Walsh, says it has been a successful road policing strategy.

“Any reduction in fatalities is wonderful news and testament to the work of a combination of both the traffic management unit and the general duties police,” she said.

Pilot found after gyrocopter crash

A 43-year-old far north Queensland man, who has been missing since crashing his gyrocopter on Sunday afternoon, has been found.

The pilot left Weipa airport on Sunday afternoon to test mechanical problems.

Police Superintendent Brent Carter says the man was found this morning.

“He made his way to the development road and he’s since been picked up by a passing motorist,” he said.

“He’s been taken to the forward command post where QAS [Queensland Ambulance Service] will check him out and we’ll be getting a debrief.”

Forensics database set up in Perth

Researchers in Perth are building a database of skeletons to help identify bodies more quickly and accurately.

The University of Western Australia has been given a $400,000 grant for the project, which involves mapping the shape and co-ordinates of bones.

Assistant Professor Daniel Franklin has told WA’s Stateline program, police will then use the database to identify specific features of skeletons such as the age, sex and ethnicity.

“They could digitise various parts of the skeleton whether it be the skull, hip bone or various leg bones, we should have data for all of that,” he said.

“The police should be able to get an answer as to whether the individual was a male or a female, potentially how old they were.”

WA Police Superintendent, Haydn Green, was in charge of identifying the victims in Phuket from the 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami.

He says the database will be extremely helpful in the future.

London police stopped five under-10s a day in 2008, says Scotland Yard report

London, Aug.19 (ANI): Nearly 2,000 children aged under 10 were stopped by members of Britain’s largest police force last year, according to figures from Scotland Yard.

According to a report by The Independent, that means that at least five children aged ten or less were stopped for questioning.

Of the 1,954 stopped, 1,715 were boys and 239 girls.

Children under 10 are under the age of criminal responsibility in Britain.

The new statistics came to light after a mother, Sandra Shepherd, 40, complained that her nine-year-old son Jadan was stopped and searched by officers in Camberwell, south London, while out with his older brother and friends. A senior officer confirmed police are investigating a formal complaint about the incident.

Officers searched Jadan under section 60 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act (1994).

This allows police to search anyone they believe is carrying a weapon or anyone in the area of a violent attack.

A detailed breakdown of figures for 2008 revealed 115 under-10s were stopped and searched by officers using section 60 powers. Officers also used section 44 of the Terrorism act 2000 to stop 58 under-10s.

Jenny Jones, a member of the Metropolitan Police Authority, said police must tackle crime without alienating the public but questioned whether searching children as young as nine was an appropriate or effective use of police resources.

Lambeth Police Superintendent David Musker said: “I confirm this matter has been reported to the Directorate of Professional Standards and will be investigated.” (ANI)

Mahant Gyandas statement on Ram Mandir triggers tension in Ayodhya

Ayodhya, May 22 (ANI): The convener of the ‘religion protection organization’, Mahant Gyandas, has triggered a fresh controversy in Ayodhya by saying that the Ram temple will be built in the city.

He said a final decision about what approach to take for fulfilling the Ram temple dream will be taken in March 2010 when the saints from across the country will gather in Haridwar to take a dip in the holy Ganges on the occasion of ‘Maha Kumb’.

“It will be a battle till the end. Whatever we do, but the Ram temple will be constructed. If Ram temple is not constructed in Ayodhya, where will it be made, not in Mecca-Medina. This belongs to us and we should get it. It belongs to the Hindus and Ram temple will be made,” Gyandas said.

He added that the Hanumangarhi temple would be the new center for struggle to make the Ram temple.

His statements have triggered fresh tension in the area.

Reacting to Gyandas’s statements, Mohammad Hashim Ansari the complainant in the Babri Mosque demolition case said that the stones for the temple construction should be kept where they are and till the time the judgment of the court is not given.

“If the nation wants a secular government then the mosque should be made where it originally was. If instead of the mosque temple is constructed then history will have to be repeated,” said Ansari.

Ayodhya’s Police Superintendent Gyaneshwar Tiwari visited the Mahant Gyandas’ residence to enquire about issue. (ANI)

Michelle Obama’s cousin given charge of Chicago Public Schools security

Chicago, May 2 (ANI): Michelle Obama’s cousin has been given charge of Chicago Public School’s security.

Michael Shields, who is a 21-year Chicago Police veteran, was a deputy chief when new Police Superintendent Jody Weis promoted him in early 2008 only to demote him months later, the Chicago Sun Times reports.

The Bureau of Safety Director Durbak resigned after finishing his eight-year tenure.

School CEO Ron Huberman said Shields, brings critical law enforcement skills needed as he embarks on new anti-violence efforts.

The police and CPS officials currently are worried about the record number of students who have died violently this school year — 38, with 11/2 month to go before summer break.

“Shields has a solid understanding of law enforcement, school communities and neighborhoods. He brings expertise and experience from three areas of law enforcement that intersect with our new school violence initiatives.,” Huberman said Thursday.

Shields was a deputy chief in the Detective Division from 2002 to early 2008, when he was promoted by the newly sworn-in Weis to deputy superintendent of the Bureau of Strategic Deployment.

Weis, who claimed Shield’s 2008 appointment as deputy superintendent was based on resumes, interviews and gut feelings, demoted him to a lieutenant at the Belmont Area headquarters, earning far lower pay.

“I’ve worked with him. This is an upright gentleman. What differences he and Jody Weis had, I just don’t know” Ald. Carrie Austin (34th) said.

“Maybe you saw someone who was more knowledgeable than yourself, and you didn’t like that. Maybe you felt threatened. That could have been the case. But Weis lost an asset in Michael Shields, and we are the better off for it at CPS,” Austin added. (ANI)

West Bengal government moves to end Lalgarh impasse

Kolkata, April 20 (IANS) Officials of the Election Commission, the West Bengal government and representatives of agitating tribals will hold a meeting Wednesday to end the stalemate at Lalgarh on holding Lok Sabha polls on April 30.

The meeting will be held in Midnapore town, the district headquarters of Midnapore West.

Earlier, the tribal body Peoples’ Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) had submitted a 23-point charter of demands and said that it would allow central forces to be deployed for 12 hours on polling day for conducting the polls only if its demands were met.

Confirming the meeting, state home secretary Ardhendu Sen said the charter will be discussed, but the government will not give in to the demand that former police superintendent of police Rajesh Singh apologise to the tribals for alleged police atrocities.

‘We will discuss their demands but it does not mean that we will accept all of them,’ Sen said.

Besides state chief electoral officer Debashis Sen, the district superintendent of police, the district magistrate and the central observer for the Jhargram parliamentary constituency will attend the talks.

State’s special secretary (home), special secretary (backward class welfare) and special secretary (rural development) would take part in the deliberations, said the home secretary.

Trouble erupted in Lalgarh last November after the police arrested some school students and allegedly harassed tribal women following a landmine blast on the route of the convoy of Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and central ministers Ram Vilas Paswan and Jitin Prasada near Bhadutala area.

Lalgarh residents have been protesting police ‘excesses’ and resisting a planned government crackdown ahead of the elections.
Indo Asian News Service

Police arrests BJP’s Party divisive Kandhmal candidate Ashok Sahu in Phulbani

Going by the instructions given by the Election Commissioner, the police Tuesday arrested BJP’s Kandhamal candidate, Ashok Sahu, when he was addressing a public gathering in Phulbani. The arrest comes in reaction to Sahu’s April 5 inflammatory speech at an election meeting at Raikia; an FIR was lodged against him on April 9.

Sahu, who ironically is an ex-police officer, was arrested for going against the established code of conduct by making hate speeches against Christians in Kandhamal district, which is considered a communally-susceptible area. According to the information provided by the Kandhamal Police Superintendent S Praveen Kumar, Sahu would be produced in a local court.

The police traced the divisive BJP candidate on Sunday night in Nayagarh district of Orissa, and surrounded the Phulbani hotel where he was staying; but could not arrest him for want of arrest warrant. By the wee-hours of Monday morning, Sahu had managed to flee. When he was questioned about his imminent arrest by NDTV on Sunday, Sahu had said that instead of surrendering to the police, he would prefer appealing to the court for bail.

As the police was taking Sahu away, hordes of BJP activists and Sahu’s followers raised slogans in his support. Terming Sahu’s arrest as “undemocratic” and “arbitrary,” the BJP called it a “black day for democracy in Orissa.”

Illegal immigrant shot dead by police officer in Hong Kong

Hong Kong – An illegal immigrant has died in hospital after being shot in the head at close range by a police officer in Hong Kong, police said Wednesday.

The unidentified man was shot on Tuesday as he attacked the constable in a city park with a wooden chair, after being challenged to produce his identity papers.

The officer, who had been called to the scene after complaints about the man from residents, used pepper spray and shouted warnings before opening fire on his attacker, police said.

When the illegal immigrant continued to attack him, the officer fired twice, missing with the first shot and inflicting a head wound with the second round, according to a police spokesman.

The incident has raised concerns from some legislators and human- rights advocates, who questioned whether it was necessary for the police officer to use deadly force.

Senior Police Superintendent Wong Chun-chin said that an initial investigation shows that the officer was justified in opening fire because he believed his life was in jeopardy.

“When all the lesser degrees of force have failed and the officer is still under attack, it was the only option left as he felt his life was at threat,” he told government-run radio station RTHK.

All police officers in Hong Kong carry guns, but use of firearms is rare in the city of 7 million people, which has a reputation for its safe streets. (dpa)