Trinity Mount Ministries

Showing posts with label Blogger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogger. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Welcome to NotFound.org. What is it?

brand-e
404 children

404 child not found

Welcome to NotFound.org. What is it? Well, it’s a joint initiative of Missing Children Europe and Child Focus, charities which support missing kids or those suffering from abuse. And they want website owners to take advantage of their dead digital assets by making use of their 404 ‘not found’ error pages.
On participating websites, visitors to such pages get to read the message ‘Page not found, neither is XX’ with the name of a missing child inserted. Plus there’s is a photo of the person along with the date he/she went missing.
At the moment, the app largely shows missing children in Belgium, but in the next few weeks, NotFound.org will add support for further European countries, with the US and Canada to follow later.
Brands onboard include media giant RTL and UK new media company Affinity, with the latter busy selling the idea on.
“We are in the process of contacting all of our clients that we have produced websites for and offering to update the code on their websites for free so that their 404 Page Not Found pages will publish data about children currently missing in Europe,” says Affinity.
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Monday, October 22, 2012

Father, two children are missing; New Albany Police ask for help in finding them:

WDRB.com

Father, two children are missing; New Albany Police ask for help in finding them:

Posted: Oct 22, 2012 12:19 PM PDT Updated: Oct 22, 2012 12:25 PM PDT WDRB 41 Louisville - News, Weather, Sports Community


Michael Mann Michael Mann

Madden Mann Madden Mann

Macy Mann Macy Mann

LOUISVILLE, KY. (WDRB) -- A father and his two children are missing, and New Albany Police are asking for help in finding them.
34-year-old Michael Mann and his daughter, 5-year-old Macy and son, 3-year-old Madden were reportedly headed to Mann's mother's home in Versailles, Ky. on Sunday.  They never arrived.
Mann is described as a white male, 6'-1'', weighing 175 lbs., with black hair and blue eyes. He was last seen wearing a dark jacket, camouflage hat, and shorts. Macy was last reported wearing a skirt of unknown color and boots. Madden was last seen with a red jacket, blue jeans, and boots.
They were in a white 2006 Kia van which Kentucky State Police found abandoned on I-75 near London, Ky.  New Albany investigators are on there way to that scene to meet with Kentucky State Police.
New Albany Police ask that anyone with information about Michael Mann or the children call (812) 948-5300.
Copyright 2012 WDRB News.  All Rights Reserved.

 




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A Free Way To Keep Your Child Safer - Photo ID:

CBS Denver  CBS4
Denver

The Most Important Photo In Your Wallet

A Free Way To Keep Your Child Safer


(credit: ww2.valdosta.edu)
(credit: ww2.valdosta.edu)
Written by Brooke Wagner
All of us parents know how quickly papers pile up in our kids’ backpacks. But there’s one take-home item you may want to make sure you save from the recycling bin.
Does your child’s school use Lifetouch Photography for school portraits? If so, you can expect to receive a free SmileSafe Kids photo ID card. You don’t have to order photos to get the card, it should come home either way if your child takes a school picture.
Sadly, we’ve all learned recently how important clear photos of a missing child’s face can be. This ID card allows parents to contact the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, who can use a code on the card to send the photo to law enforcement agencies across the country within minutes.
Look for this card to come home after school pictures. Stick it in your wallet. It could be the most important photo you have.When I first received these ID cards for my children from Lifetouch years ago (the company has distributed 300 million of them over the last ten years) I immediately thought, “But I have plenty of photos of my kids I could give police.” When you think about it though, how many of them are really an accurate, detailed and recent representation of your child’s facial features? Plus, is the clearest one readily available at a moment’s notice?
About The Blogger
- In her Brooke’s Bargains blog Brooke Wagner writes about finding bargains and saving money for her family. She calls it one of her favorite hobbies. Blog entries cover everything from the latest steals, deals, and freebies to cheap family activities, saving for college, and what to buy right now. Tweet Brooke your ideas at @BrookeCBS4.

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

A different take on sex trafficking in California:


Berkeley's Newspaper | The Daily CalifornianOPINION





Redefining stereotypes

A different take on sex trafficking in California


BY FARAH KADER | SPECIAL TO THE DAILY CAL

oped2

Among the many issues being debated in this upcoming election, the subject of human trafficking is being spotlighted via the Californians Against Sexual Exploitation Act. Named Proposition 35 on this year’s ballot, the initiative aims to increase prison sentences and fines for persons convicted of trafficking, pushing the extra funds toward victims services. It also develops stronger protocol for law enforcement officers who may come across sex trafficking cases in the future. In its campaign for support, CASE presents facts to show us that this problem is not just a third-world crime. The FBI tracks 13 places in the U.S. known as high sex-trafficking areas. Three of them are in California.
The main reason why there is even a Prop. 35 debate at all is the ambiguity surrounding the idea of sex trafficking and exactly what kinds of crime it entails. There are many well-established laws in place to define certain criminals as such, and they become hard-wired into our brains — killers, thieves and terrorists are all part of the felony bubble that our country strives to eradicate. And the rigid lines that separate us from the perceived delinquent population are rarely blurred in the language of government legislation. However, in the little-publicized context of human trafficking, child pornography, and prostitution, our distinctions between the criminal and the victim are not so clear. Widespread ignorance of this topic is due in part by the mass media and in part by the narrow ideologies of many political entities that govern us. These social institutions build up barriers of apathy that have lead to our collective desertion of the men, women and children who have been forced into California’s underground sex slave industry.
Prop. 35 is an ambitious program, aimed at locking down traffickers while providing resources and services to their victims. But it also creates a dialogue centered on the sex industry and brings it to the forefront of the political sphere. It is important for students to recall that the Bay Area is home to some of the greatest innovators and revolutionaries in the world. We are a body of sharp minds and diverse interests embedded in the fabric of our university’s history of overcoming struggle and apartheid of all forms. In the wake of this election, it is time for college students to demonstrate more initiative in promoting awareness of human trafficking, or more specifically, sex trafficking and abuse. These conversations with young people often begin with how little underage prostitution is understood in this country. We must shift our narrow perceptions of the sex industry from a voluntary service between consenting adults to a source of brutal abuse and child exploitation.
The influences on young minds are direct and far-reaching. A specific example is the “pimp and ho” culture trend that is normalized by popular music and made humorous by entertainment figures. The image of scantily-clad women on street corners, at the mercy of a domineering character in a fur coat, is now a joke far too distant from our personal reality to be examined critically. The truth is that the sex industry in America is very real, and it feeds off of the degradation and manipulation of women and children. There are many circumstances that lead one to the cyclical and inescapable path of forced labor on domestic ground, such as poverty or early exposure to abuse. Regardless, any time someone takes advantage of another human being for profit, it is human trafficking. The young women, usually minors, who we dismiss as hookers and whores, are subjected to physical and psychological torture because they have not been privileged with our opportunities and good fortune. And we, the bright and gifted individuals of higher education, allow celebrities to teach us how to glorify such human mistreatment.
As a society, we are constantly snowed under by massive volumes of misinformation regarding the underground sex industries in our own state. Those opposed to the CASE Act would venture to say that prostitution is a victimless crime, a phenomena so insignificant that it deems unworthy of taxpayer dollars, something I have heard many times at anti-trafficking events. The members of Cal Not for Sale and I firmly believe in education as a crucial step to making wise voting decisions, and we implore this campus to investigate the issue further, beyond the extent of glossed-over mainstream media sources. I sincerely hope that you are all able to develop fact-supported opinions on Prop. 35 in time to place a carefully thought out vote this November.
The resources and connections I attained through Cal Not for Sale have uncovered many hidden facets of this complex global issue for me, and I attest with confidence that Prop. 35 is a small but momentous step toward justice for abuse victims nationwide. The full text of the legislation is currently available on www.caseact.org.
Contact the opinion desk at opinion@dailycal.org.

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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Suspect in Whitney Heichel slaying found through intense investigation by police, volunteers:

OregonLive.com
Oregon

Suspect in Whitney Heichel slaying found through intense investigation by police, volunteers:

Helen Jung, The OregonianBy Helen Jung, The Oregonian 
on October 20, 2012 at 5:00 PM, updated October 20, 2012 at 5:44 PM

Condolences for Starbucks barista Whitney Heichel, found murdered Friday
EnlargeGresham, Oregon---October 20, 2012-- Early Saturday afternoon, friends and acquaintances of Whitney Heichel gathered outside and inside the Starbucks where Heichel was a barista. Police announced Friday night that they had found the body of Heichel, 21, who had been missing since Tuesday, and arrested Jonathan Holt in her killing. A candlelight service is planned for 6 p.m. Saturday at the Starbucks, 2442 E. Burnside, Gresham, where Whitney Heichel worked. Ross William Hamilton /The OregonianCondolences for Starbucks barista Whitney Heichel, found murdered Fridaygallery (4 photos)
On the morning that she vanished, Whitney Heichel kissed her husband goodbye before heading out into the chilly, damp air. 

It was dark -- sunrise was still 45 minutes away last Tuesday morning -- and Heichel had a 7 a.m. shift at a Starbucks just a short drive away. 

But she wasn't the only one outside the Heatherwood Apartments at that time, detectives would learn, as they investigated why the 21-year-old woman never made it to work. 

Over the next four days of intense investigative efforts, Jonathan D. Holt, another resident of the Gresham apartment complex, would go from potential witness to prime suspect in Heichel's disappearance. 

Around the clock, police officers, church members, friends, family and other community members searched for clues, uncovered evidence and sent tips. Investigators interviewed Holt, noting inconsistencies in his answers. And results from forensic tests Friday, together with his statements and other evidence, culminated in Holt's Friday night arrest on accusations of aggravated murder. 

"It was a totality of information that got us to the point we believed we had enough information that Holt was responsible for her disappearance," Gresham Police Chief Craig Junginger said in an email Saturday. 

Around the same time that police arrested Holt, searchers on Larch Mountain in east Multnomah County found Heichel's body. The discovery crushed hopes that somehow the woman known for her compassion and friendliness and who dreamed about having children with her beloved husband would be found alive. 

"Really, words can't begin to express the sadness that our families are experiencing tonight," Jim Vaughn, a spokesman for the family, said Friday night. "Whitney was a very loving person, one who was loved by everyone. She had no enemies, she had no people that didn't love her." 

Holt is scheduled to be arraigned Monday afternoon in Clackamas County Circuit Court. Heichel was killed in Clackamas County, not in Multnomah County where her body was found, according to Gresham police. A Multnomah County prosecutor will continue to work with Clackamas County on the case. 

The medical examiner completed an autopsy on Heichel Saturday afternoon, but the results were not made public. 

The investigation that would span two counties, pull personnel from eight different agencies and command the efforts of hundreds of church and community volunteers, started with a morning phone call. 

Sometime after 8 a.m. Tuesday, Heichel's Starbucks manager called Clint Heichel to alert him that his wife had failed to show up at work. 

Her husband tried several times to reach Whitney Heichel on her cellphone. Other friends and family also tried texting her. Unable to reach her, Clint Heichel called police just before 10 a.m. 

Whitney Heichel disappearance
Here's a timeline of events, based on police reports and family statements:
Monday evening: Whitney visits her mother, Lorilei Ritmiller, and talks about how much she wants to be a mother.
Tuesday, 6:45 a.m.: Whitney leaves the Heatherwood Apartments in the 700 block of U.S. 26
Tuesday, 7 a.m.: Heichel fails to show up for work at the Starbucks near Powell and Burnside in East Gresham.
Tuesday, 9:14 a.m.: Someone uses Whitney's ATM card at a gas station at 257th and Stark.
Tuesday, 9:56 a.m.: Clint Heichel, Whitney's husband, calls 9-1-1.
Tuesday, 11:17 a.m.: Whitney's Ford Explorer is left in the parking lot of the Walmart at 23500 N.E. Sandy in Wood Village.
Tuesday, 1 p.m.: Family and friends looking for Whitney find her Explorer at the Wood Village Walmart.
Wednesday: The East County Major Crimes Team is activated and a team of 24 detectives starts following leads. In addition to other areas, they search in Dodge Park and on Larch Mountain.
Thursday, 10 a.m.: Gresham police call a news conference to talk to reporters about events related to Whitney's disappearance. Among other things, they reveal they have received more than 40 tips over two days.
Thursday at 4 p.m.: In a second news conference, police say that they have been searching Larch Mountain all day and are still doing so. They have been joined by Search and Rescue volunteers and Oregon State Police forensic experts.
Thursday at 5:24 p.m.: A woman reports that kids playing outside a Troutdale apartment complex have found a cellphone that turns out to belong to Whitney Heichel.
A group organized by the Heichels' Jehovah's Witness church also soon hit the streets. They searched extensively -- and effectively -- finding Heichel's black 1999 Ford Explorer at 1 p.m. in the Walmart parking lot at Wood Village. The passenger side window had been broken. 

Gresham detectives arrived at the lot and soon found some of Heichel's belongings in a garbage bin there and, later, at another shopping center. Video surveillance footage from Walmart would later show investigators the vehicle had been left at 11:17 that morning. 

But the footage did not show a suspect to an identifiable degree, Junginger said. 

Meanwhile, investigators led by Gresham Lt. Claudio Grandjean developed information that suggested Heichel's vehicle had been driven to Clackamas County. Church volunteers fanned out, finding evidence linked to her near Dodge Park. 

By Wednesday morning, authorities were able to determine that Heichel's ATM card had been used at a gas station at Southwest 257th and Southeast Stark, at 9:14 a.m. the previous day. Authorities launched a search at Dodge Park. Around the same time, more church members and other community volunteers theorized how far Heichel's vehicle could travel in the window established by the ATM card being used and the vehicle being found at the nearby Walmart, said Vaughn, the family friend. They also considered places where a suspect might leave someone, focusing on waterways and wooded areas. 

That strategizing yielded a big find -- the volunteers discovered Heichel's vehicle license plate at Larch Mountain. Search and rescue crews shifted to that area, uncovering a large amount of evidence over the next two days -- and eventually, Heichel's body. 

It was also Wednesday that police heard that Holt, a neighbor in the Heichels' apartment complex, might have been outside the complex that morning. 

Police wondered whether Holt might have seen anything suspicious that morning, and he agreed to come in for an interview. 

But in a follow-up interview the next day, Holt's story started to change, Junginger said. He gave different times and places in answering some of the same questions investigators had posed previously. Police collected his DNA and took his fingerprints. 

On Thursday, children discovered Heichel's cellphone in a field near a Troutdale apartment complex, giving police additional unspecified evidence implicating Holt, Junginger said. 

And then Friday, investigators received results of forensics tests of Heichel's vehicle that linked Holt to her SUV, Junginger said. The evidence, bolstered by Holt's conflicting accounts and other statements he made, built a case that led police to make the arrest. 

Police have not said what they think happened outside the apartment complex Tuesday morning between Holt and Whitney Heichel. Holt was acquainted with both the Heichels and may have been familiar with them through Jehovah's Witness gatherings, Junginger said. But there was no evidence of any relationship between Holt and Whitney Heichel beyond being acquaintances, he said. 

On Saturday, many of those involved in the investigation were decompressing after 18- and 20-hour shifts. While they work their best on every major crime, Junginger said, the Heichel case was "a tough investigation." The more they learned about her and the more time they spent with her family, the more "detectives could relate to their own families." 
At times, officers kept at the investigation so much that Grandjean, the lead investigator, had to tell them to eat and to go home and rest.
"When we're in the trenches, working the long hours, I think we're motivated by justice," he said. "It is inspiring to work with people who sacrifice like that for others in that way."

Junginger credited the volunteers for their contribution and their discoveries, noting that their assistance "almost tripled the amount of people" who could search. 

Vaughn, the family friend, said the church and community pulled together to just do what they could to help find someone they loved. 

"We're just normal everyday people that wouldn't know our right hand from our left on how to do something really good other than pounding the pavement. That's what Jehovah's Witnesses are known for." 

They just wish the outcome had been better, he said. 

"We're 7 million strong," he said. "When one of us hurts, we're all hurting, because we consider ourselves to be brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers and friends. It's just the way we are." 

--Helen Jung


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Gosch: Kids need more protection...child abuse prevention:

The Des Moines Register.com


Gosch: Kids need more protection

Mom shares her story of a missing son as she urges child abuse prevention.

Noreen Gosch, center, and others gathered recently in West Des Moines where her son Johnny was last seen in 1982. / ANDREA MELENDEZ/THE REGISTER

Great strides have been made in Iowa and nationally to protect children from kidnappers and other predators, but more needs to be done, Noreen Gosch told more than 100 people Friday at a conference in Des Moines.
Gosch and other advocates shared some sobering facts about child abductions and human trafficking in the U.S. during a daylong Iowa Preventing Child Abuse Conference.
The disappearance of her 12-year-old son Johnny in 1982 captivated the country and Gosch has been working in the 30 years since to improve the response by law enforcement and others once children go missing.
“I vowed my son’s case would not go down as just another tragedy that happened,” she said.
It’s still unclear what exactly happened to Johnny, though Gosch believes his disappearance was the result of organized crime.
“Just because you may not want to believe something doesn’t mean it isn’t true,” she told an audience that included Drew and Heather Collins of Evansdale whose daughter Elizabeth, now 9, and niece Lyric Cook-Morrissey, now 12, have been missing since July 13.
About 800,000 children are reported missing each year, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Of those, 98 percent are recovered, said Bob Lowery, executive director of the missing children division of the center.
He said it is critical to educate children that it is alright to fight back when they are in danger.
Gosch was successful in passing a Johnny Gosch law after her son’s disappearance, which said police did not have to wait a certain time frame before investigating a missing child case.
Now new legislation is being proposed to help alert the public of such a disappearance.
Robin Arnold of Cedar Falls did not know either of the cousins abducted from Evansdale this summer, but she began advocating for changes after hearing the case didn’t meet the criteria for issuing an Amber Alert.
Chuck Hurley, vice president of the Family Leader, a faith-based nonprofit organization in Des Moines, said Iowa made strides earlier this year when stricter human trafficking legislation was signed into law.
The law broadens the definition of the crime to include purchasing “commercial sexual activity” from a victim of human trafficking. It also added that ignorance of a victim’s age is no defense against human trafficking charges and creates a new felony offense for force or recruit of a minor to engage in commercial sexual activity.
Now Hurley said the key is to push the state Department of Public Safety to aggressively investigate and prosecute human trafficking cases.
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Friday, October 19, 2012

FBI - "Safe Online Surfing" - Podcasts and Radio:

Federal Bureau of Investigation

Safe Online Surfing

10/19/2012
Mollie Halpern: The FBI launches a new website where students can learn about cyber safety through games, videos, and other interactive features.
Scott McMillion: It’s a fun learning environment so that they will understand the keys to keeping themselves safe as well as participating in good cyber citizenship.
Halpern: I’m Mollie Halpern of the Bureau, and this is FBI, This Week. The free web-based initiative is called Safe Online Surfing, or SOS. It teaches kids in third through eighth grades how to recognize and respond to online dangers such as cyberbullying, online predators, and identity thieves. Scott McMillion is the unit chief of Violent Crimes Against Children.
McMillion: The FBI Safe Online Surfing initiative is designed to meet all federal and state Internet safety mandates so that students and teachers can use this as part of their curriculum in the classroom.
Halpern: Schools can compete with each other on a national level. Schools with the highest scores will earn an FBI-SOS trophy. To register, visit sos.fbi.gov.


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FBI - North to Alaska Part 2: An Explosive Situation in the Dead of Winter:

Federal Bureau of Investigation

North to Alaska
Part 2: An Explosive Situation in the Dead of Winter
10/18/2012
The call came in to the Anchorage Field Office early on a Sunday morning in January 2010. An explosion had taken place at a Fairbanks residence, and a 21-year-old man had been seriously injured.
After consulting with local authorities on the scene, our weapons of mass destruction (WMD) coordinator and other FBI personnel were not sure if the explosion was related to a drug manufacturing operation or linked to a terrorism threat. But everyone understood that our assistance was required, because the house contained a variety of hazardous, unstable materials.
Members of our Evidence Response Team (ERT), the Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF), and others from the Anchorage office gathered their equipment and prepared to drive to Fairbanks—365 miles to the northin the middle of a violent winter storm.
“It was 58 degrees below zero, with high winds, blizzard conditions, and black ice on the highway,” said Special Agent Derek Espeland, the WMD coordinator who is also one of Anchorage’s two special agent bomb technicians.
Based on the description of materials in the house, agents initially thought the man was making methamphetamine—meth labs are an unfortunate reality in many rural communities. The victim, who walked to a nearby fire station despite the sub-zero temperature, was burned and bleeding. He claimed he was building a rocket when it blew up. Before he could be questioned further, he was flown to a burn unit in Seattle for treatment.
After a harrowing drive from Anchorage that took more than seven hours, FBI personnel arrived on scene along with bomb techs from the Air Force and local law enforcement. The meth lab theory was ruled out, “but then you almost had to conclude that the guy could be a terrorist,” Espeland said. “Everything we saw in the house we had seen being used by terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
As it turns out, the 21-year-old was neither a drug maker nor a terrorist. He was just fascinated with explosives and blowing things up. He had legally purchased all his ingredientsof course, our agents didn’t know that at the time. And because the house was a public safety threat, Espeland said, “we couldn’t just walk away.”
To neutralize the threat, it was decided to employ several render-safe techniques using specialized equipment. But that was easier said than done. Robots and other battery-powered equipment were inoperable in the nearly 60-below temperature because the batteries were frozen. Espeland’s evidence camera froze to his face when he tried to take a picture—inside the house. Vehicles had to be kept running for fear they would freeze if turned off, even with warming blankets and engine block heaters. An extension cord designed for extreme cold snapped and disintegrated.
“The cold was drier than anything I ever felt before,” said Vicky Grimes, an ERT member. “It almost took your breath away.”
A command post was established at the nearby fire station, and after a joint effort, the house was finally rendered safe. “Responding to this incident reinforced our understanding that we have to rely on our state and local partners for assistance, just as they rely on us,” said Special Agent Sandra Klein, Anchorage’s JTTF supervisor.
The 21-year-old recovered from his injuries, andsince he had committed no federal crimeswas not charged. “This was a public safety threat that could have been something far more serious,” Espeland said. “That’s why we responded, despite the conditions. That’s what we’re here for.”
Next: A domestic terrorist with a deadly plan.

North to Alaska

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