Rape charges won’t be refiled against Contra Costa County prosecutor

A judge had dismissed sexual assault charges against the sex crimes prosecutor accused of raping a colleague during their lunch hour.

Los Angeles Times
By Maura Dolan
February 15, 2012

A Contra Costa County sex crimes prosecutor accused of raping a colleague during their lunch hour will not be recharged with the crime, a spokeswoman for Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris said Tuesday.

A judge in October dismissed sexual assault charges against Contra Costa Deputy Dist. Atty. Michael Gressett after determining that county and state prosecutors failed to inform a grand jury of potentially exculpatory evidence.

The spokeswoman declined to comment on the decision.

A junior prosecutor who worked with Gressett said he raped her in May 2008 in an assault that involved an ice pick, ice and handcuffs. Gressett said the sex was consensual.

The woman later collected a $450,000 settlement from the county after alleging she was denied a permanent job in retaliation for the rape charge. She now practices law in Florida.

The case revealed a raucous, sexually charged atmosphere in the D.A.’s sex crimes unit, where prosecutors boasted of belonging to an anal sex club. Prosecutors are now required to receive training in what constitutes sexual harassment and a hostile work environment.

Daniel Russo, Gressett’s attorney, said Gressett was unlikely to return to work in the prosecutors’ office and would sue the county for malicious prosecution and civil rights violations.

The county fired Gressett after a grand jury indicted him, but a labor arbitrator reinstated him with back wages. Russo said he did not expect Gressett to return to the D.A.’s office. “After what he went through, it would be difficult for him to prosecute anybody,” Russo said.

 

Direct Link:  http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-prosecutor-rape-20120215,0,3396443.story

 

O.C. union backs deputy who killed unarmed Marine

Deputies union says the Feb. 7 shooting of Marine Sgt. Manuel Loggins prevented his two daughters from being harmed.

Los Angeles Times
By Christopher Goffard
February 15, 2012

 

Shooting probe

 

Marine Sgt. Manuel Loggins Jr. was shot and killed by O.C. sheriff’s deputies Feb. 7 in the parking lot of San Clemente High School.

 

In an unusual move, the union representing an Orange County sheriff’s deputy who shot and killed an unarmed Marine last week is now blaming the Marine for creating “a situation that put his children in danger and ultimately cost him his life,” according to a statement released Tuesday.

The statement, which the Assn. of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs said was based on information gathered from the Sheriff’s Department and the unnamed deputy’s attorney, purports to offer new details of the Feb. 7 confrontation that resulted in the fatal wounding of Sgt. Manuel Loggins Jr., 31, in the dark parking lot of San Clemente High School.

After Loggins crashed through a gate in his GMC Yukon about 4:30 that morning, he left his two daughters, ages 14 and 9, in the vehicle and walked to the athletic field, where he could be heard uttering what the union characterized as “irrational statements.”

The deputy, described as a 15-year veteran of the force and a decorated former Marine himself, radioed dispatch to report a “child endangerment situation,” the union said.

Other sheriff’s personnel arrived and comforted the children, who said their father “had been acting oddly,” the statement said. When Loggins abruptly returned to his SUV, he ignored orders not to start the car and instead put it in gear, preparing to drive “and further endanger the children.”

The union said the deputy, positioned by the driver’s window, fatally shot Loggins as he began to pull the vehicle forward.

“The actions of our deputy clearly prevented serious harm from coming to Loggins’ two children and anyone else on the road that morning,” union President Tom Dominguez said in the statement.

Loggins’ friends and fellow Marines, who said they were baffled by the incident, described him as a deeply devout Christian who often took his family to the track for predawn “prayer walks.” Aaron Banks, who served with Loggins and saw him as a mentor, said he didn’t believe the union.

“Of course they’re going to blame him for his death — why would they admit to murder?” he said. “He would never hurt his daughters. He loved his daughters more than anything.”

Banks also noted how statements from the deputy’s side had shifted. The Sheriff’s Department originally reported the deputy had fired in fear for his life, but now it’s saying he fired for the girls’ safety.

“I believe they’re saying what needs to be said to cover their deputy,” Banks said of the union. “They could at least have the dignity to release a statement saying they could have handled it differently. They could have shot the tires out. They could have Tased him.

“How many deputies were there?” he asked. “Putting a bullet in an SUV knowing there were two children inside is safer? Really?”

Sheriff’s spokesman Jim Amormino confirmed that Loggins was not armed. The incident is under investigation by the Orange County district attorney’s office.

 

 

Direct Link:  http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-deputy-shooting-20120215,0,4257621.story?track=rss

 

Sheriff’s deputy claims colleague pointed gun at him

Los Angeles Times
by Robert Faturechi and Jack Leonard
February 15, 2012

It was just minutes into his workday when Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Sgt. Mark Moffett saw a gun aimed straight at his head.

The man gripping the gun, he told investigators, was a fellow sergeant staring at him from a glass office inside the Compton’s sheriff’s station.

“I’m gonna kill you,” Moffett said his colleague mouthed at him. “I’m gonna kill you.”

Moffett said the threat was one of many that Sgt. Timothy Cooper directed at him over the years, a vendetta he alleges was motivated by Cooper’s ties to a secret deputy clique. The sergeant’s allegations — of public threats made with impunity, of deputies divided by cliques, of a code of silence — mirror the challenges facing the Sheriff’s Department as it tries to change its culture amid a jail abuse scandal and intensifying outside scrutiny.

The case was taken to the department’s discipline committee, with a recommendation that Cooper be demoted. But the group of executives opted for a more lenient punishment: a 15-day suspension, sources said.

Sheriff Lee Baca questioned the committee’s decision when he learned about it, according to sources familiar with the case, who spoke on condition of anonymity because it involves confidential discipline.

Earlier this month, Baca dissolved the committee and created a new system in which he plays a larger role in determining significant punishment. The move comes after Baca, and other officials, said in recent months that the sheriff often was kept in the dark by his top executives about bad behavior inside the department.

In an interview, Baca said he could not comment on the gun-pointing case because of privacy constraints, but he said that his streamlining of the department’s discipline structure would ensure that in the future “there aren’t any gaps in the decision-making process.”

Moffett, who is suing the department, said that for years he stayed mum about the abuse because he feared being labeled a snitch and the possibility of retaliation from others inside the Sheriff’s Department. But he came forward after that morning at the station in May 2009.

His allegations were investigated internally by the department. Prosecutors declined to file charges against Cooper, saying that he could claim that his actions were “just another in an ongoing series of pranks.”

According to district attorney’s records, Moffett believed Cooper had ties to the Vikings, a deputy clique that in the 1990s was alleged to have brutalized minorities, falsely arrested suspects and engaged in wrongful shootings.

As part of a 1996 settlement, the county agreed to retrain deputies to prevent such conduct and pay $7.5 million to compensate victims of alleged abuses. In addition to the Vikings, the department has identified other cliques with names such as the Cavemen and the Regulators.

Recently, there have been fresh allegations of deputy cliques operating in the county jails. A group of jailers, who were known to brandish gang-like hand signs, were involved in a brawl with other deputies at a 2010 department Christmas party.

They were known as the 3000 clique because they worked on the third floor of Men’s Central Jail.

Cooper’s attorney in a civil lawsuit declined to say whether her client was affiliated with the clique, or comment on the case.

Bradley Gage, Moffett’s civil attorney, said the department had grounds to fire Cooper.

 

Direct Link:  http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/02/sheriffs-deputy-claims-colleague-pointed-gun-at-him.html

 

Another parent murders baby by microwave: 4th known case occurs in Sacramento

Stockton Headlines Examiner
Nor Cal News 
June 22, 2011

Another infanticide death is suspected in the Northern California city of Sacramento. Ka Yang, a 29-year-old mom, was arrested yesterday on two felony counts for the death of her 6-week-old baby girl. Investigators allege that the mom of four put her infant into the family microwave and cooked her baby to death. Yang will appear in court on Thursday.  This is the fourth known case of microwaving an infant in the country. Details of the previous three cases are below.

 

 

 

More information on the Yang case available here.

 

The most recent conviction in a death by microwave case was handed down only last month when an Ohio mom, China Arnold, was found guilty of aggravated murder of her 28-day-old baby. The Huffington Post reports that prosecutors have said Arnold, 31, intentionally put the baby in the microwave after a fight with her boyfriend. The initial incident occurred in 2005 but Arnold faced three trials prior to the conviction in May of this year and has been sentenced to death.

A 19-year-old dad in Texas eventually admitted to putting his 2-month-old daughter in a hotel microwave in 2007 after being frustrated. Joshua Maudlin’s son survived the torture which was determined to last from 10 to 20 seconds and was treated for third-degree burns. She was said to have had to have a portion of her ear amputated and several skin grafts. A news station reports that Maudlin called 911 saying the baby was burned with hot water. The baby’s mom claimed her husband was overtaken by the Devil. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison.

 

 

In 1999, Elizabeth Otte, a 19-year-old Virginia mom, was also charged with murder when her infant son was actually found dead in the microwave. The baby was recovered from the household appliance by a family member. The Washington Post reports the defense position held that the mom mistook her baby for a bottle of milk that she was warming in the microwave due to an epileptic disorder. Otte received 5 years for the death, still claiming no memory.

 

 

Direct Link:  http://www.examiner.com/headlines-in-stockton/another-parent-murders-baby-by-microwave-forth-known-case-occurs-sacramento

 

1-year-old dies after mother tries to drown daughters, police say

 

A father returns to his South L.A. home Wednesday to find his wife attempting to drown their daughters, authorities say. The younger girl dies, and the 5-year-old is in extremely critical condition.

 

 

Los Angeles Times

By Rick Rojas and Richard Winton
February 15, 2012

 

 

 

Police remove evidence from a South L.A. home

 

Los Angeles police remove evidence, including an infant bath, from a South L.A. home, where a woman apparently tried to drown her two daughters. One girl, who was 1, died. (Bob Chamberlin, Los Angeles Times / February 16, 2012)

The man described as a doting father to his two little girls left for the market Wednesday morning to buy juice and milk. He returned to his South Los Angeles home to find his wife trying to drown his young daughters in an infant tub, authorities say.

It appears the mother — who may have been battling depression or other mental illness — “snapped,” killing her 1-year-old daughter and leaving her 5-year-old gravely injured, Deputy Police Chief Pat Gannon said.

By the time firefighters arrived at the home in the 900 block of West 50th Street about 7:30 a.m. Wednesday, the young girls were unconscious and not breathing. The 1-year-old, identified as Lindsay Taque, died shortly after being taken to a local hospital. And although they were able to regain a pulse on the 5-year-old, she remained in extremely critical condition at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

Lorna Valle, 32, was arrested Wednesday evening on suspicion of murder and attempted murder and was being held on $1.5-million bail, Officer Karen Rayner said. No one else in the family has been identified.

The family lived in a modest space made from a converted garage, and neighbors described them as quiet and reclusive, yet cordial. The little girls seemed happy and healthy.

So on Wednesday morning, neighbors were startled by screams coming from the home.

One witness said they heard the father shouting, “My babies! My babies!” Other witnesses said the father had to be restrained as he tried to confront his wife, who was emotionless with an empty gaze.

Neighbor Dina Ceballos, who lived across the street, heard the father say, “If I didn’t get out, my girls would still be alive.”

“He was screaming and saying, ‘Why didn’t she kill herself instead of trying to kill my girls?’ ” Ceballos said.

Ceballos, who was still shaken and nauseated hours later, said the image of the girls being carried out by rescuers, limp and pale, is ingrained in her memory.

“It broke my heart to see those girls,” Ceballos, 46, said.

Even the first responders, who are accustomed to difficult situations, were traumatized and were being offered counseling.

“I don’t know what made her snap. This is a tragic and horrific incident,” Gannon said. “Something no one likes to see.”

Authorities are investigating whether the woman has a history of mental illness. She was taken to a hospital for evaluation.

A relative of the family told Ceballos that the woman had shown signs of depression recently and asked the relative to care for the children should anything happen to her. Her husband told her to go to the doctor, but she never sought that help, Ceballos said.

To neighbors, it was a confounding and chaotic scene Wednesday. The typically quiet street was clogged with police vehicles and news vans, with reporters asking them questions about a family they hardly knew.

The family kept to themselves but seemed like good people, they said. They would greet their Latino neighbors in Spanish but said little else. Some knew they were from Guatemala and had come here about a decade ago. But none said they knew their names.

“She stays in the house,” said Judy McCann, who has lived on the street for 30 years. “She never comes out.”

Neighbor Jennifer Houston, 37, said she’s had little interaction with the family but has four children, including two daughters almost the same age as the girls.

“That hurts me,” she said. “I got to tell my baby. She’s going to want to know what happened. I’ll tell her, ‘Your little friend is in the hospital; she had an accident.’ I can’t just come out and tell her.”

A few feet away, Joyce Williams, an elder at a neighborhood church, held hands with neighbors and led them in a prayer: “Let them know there is help in the midst of their storm.”

Times staff writer Rong-Gong Lin II contributed to this report.

 

Website operator pleads guilty to terrorist threats

Jesse Curtis Morton ran several jihadist websites and threatened the writers of ‘South Park’ and other people, the DOJ says

COMPUTER WORLD
By Grant Gross
February 9, 2012

IDG News Service –

The founder of several Muslim jihad websites has pleaded guilty to three charges related to making online threats, including threatening the writers of the television show “South Park,” the U.S. Department of Justice said.

Jesse Curtis Morton, 33, of New York City, pleaded guilty Thursday in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia to conspiring to solicit murder, making threatening communications and using the Internet to place others in fear. Morton, also known as Younus Abdullah Muhammed, founded Revolution Muslim, a group that used multiple websites and other Internet services to encourage Muslim radicals to commit violence against enemies of the religion, the DOJ said in court documents.

Morton faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison for each of the three charges when he is sentenced in May.

Morton founded Revolution Muslim in December 2007 and spread the group’s pro-violence message on websites such as Revolutionmuslim.com, Revolutionmuslim.info and Revolution4muslim.com, according to court documents. The group also used Google Groups, YouTube, Facebook and other services to distribute its message, the DOJ said.

Morton’s websites encouraged Muslims to support terrorist Osama bin Laden and groups including al-Qaeda and the Taliban, the DOJ said. Revolution Muslim’s members posted messages in support of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, according to court documents.

“Jesse Morton operated Revolution Muslim to radicalize those who saw and heard his materials online and to incite them to engage in violence against those they believed to be enemies of Islam,” said U.S. Attorney Neil MacBride of the Eastern Virginia District in a statement. “We may never know all of those who were inspired to engage in terrorism because of Revolution Muslim, but the string of recent terrorism cases with ties to Morton’s organization demonstrates the threat it posed to our national security.”

Through his online forums, Morton conspired with blogger Zachary Chesser of Fairfax County, Virginia, and others to solicit the murder of an artist tied to the Everybody Draw Mohammed Day movement in May 2010, including posting a magazine that included the artist in a hit list for violent extremists to take out, according to court documents. Morton posted online a speech of his asserting that “Islam’s position is that those that insult the Prophet may be killed” and exhorting his listeners to fight the “disbelievers near you,” the DOJ said.

Morton, in his plea, said he aided Chesser in taking repeated steps in April 2010 to encourage violent extremists to attack the writers of “South Park” for an episode that featured Muhammad in a bear suit. The two published information about the location of the residences of the show’s writers and urged online readers to “pay them a visit,” the DOJ said in court documents.

Morton and Chesser also published information explaining the Islamic justification for killing those who insult or defame Muhammad.

Chesser was arrested on July 21, 2010, charged with providing material support to militant Muslim group Al-Shabaab and later also pleaded guilty to communicating threats and soliciting violent extremists to desensitize law enforcement. Four days after Chesser’s arrest, Morton fled to Morocco, where he resided until his arrest on U.S. charges on May 26, 2011.

Revolution Muslim was connected to several U.S. and U.K. residents arrested on terrorism-related charges, the DOJ said.

Muslim jihadists connected to the group included Colleen LaRose, also known as Jihad Jane, of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. LaRose was charged in March 2010 with several terrorism-related offenses, including plotting to kill Lars Vilks, a Swedish cartoonist who depicted Muhammad. LaRose subscribed to the group’s YouTube accounts, the DOJ said.

Also connected to the group was Antonio Benjamin Martinez, of Baltimore, Maryland, who was arrested and charged with plotting to bomb a military recruiting station in December 2010. One month before his arrest, Martinez viewed multiple terror-training-camp video clips on a Revolution Muslim website, the DOJ said.

Rezwan Ferdaus, of Ashland, Mass., was charged in September 2011 with plotting to attack the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol using large, remote-controlled aircraft filled with plastic explosives. In February 2010, Ferdaus emailed Morton asking for counsel regarding his duties as a Muslim and whether martyrdom operations were proper practice. Morton replied that martyrdom operations must be judged by intention but can have “enormous benfits (sic) in a war of attrition.”

 

Direct Link:  http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9224121/Website_operator_pleads_guilty_to_terrorist_threats?taxonomyId=82

 

 

Trojan gang targets BT, Talk Talk and Sky customers

Thieves target phone service logins to fool verification checks

 

 

TechWorld

By John E Dunn

02 February 2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

Criminals using a dangerous variant of the Zeus bank Trojan have started hacking BT, Talk Talk and Sky phone accounts as a way of redirecting phone calls from bank fraud services away from victims.

As with other financial malware, the Ice IX Trojan is designed to steal bank logins, emptying accounts of much money as it can without setting off the bank’s fraud protection systems that normally pick up on odd or unusually large transactions.

Security company Trusteer has discovered that criminals controlling Ice IX are now throwing up a browser screen as part of the web injection hijacking process that tries to engineer users into give up phone service logins too.

Armed with this data – plus keylogged passwords for the same service – criminals then try to set calls to forward to a number controlled by them.  Banks that phone users to query transactions would then be told by imposters that transfers were genuine.

Screens have been discovered for three of the UK’s largest phone providers, BT, Talk Talk and Sky, but it is likely that almost any provider could be targeted.

”Faudsters are increasingly turning to these post-transaction attack methods to hide fraudulent activity from the victim and block email and phone communication from the bank,” said Trusteer CTO, Amit Klein.

“This allows attackers to circumvent security mechanisms that look for anomalies once transactions have already been executed by the user.”

Ice IX is one of a number of versions built using the source code from the most prodigious banking malware ever to appear, Zeus. Over time, attacks crafted using this family of malware have become increasingly targeted, with the phone service ruse another example of that phenomenon.

Malware gangs are wary of post-transaction verification and will typically test the system to work out the fraud threshold for different institutions and customers.

In one recent example, a New Jersey County lost $19,000 from a business account that had been compromised by Zeus, despite the fact that it contained $13 million in funds. The best explanation for this criminal modesty is that the gang attacking the account wanted to keep its theft as discrete as possible in the short term to avoid detection.

 

Related Articles on Techworld

 

 

Direct Link:  http://news.techworld.com/security/3334682/trojan-gang-targets-bt-talk-talk-and-sky-customers/

 

 

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