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Jodi Arias found guilty of murder

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 09 Mei 2013 | 14.41

Jodi Arias was convicted of first-degree murder after a lengthy trial for the killing of her boyfriend in Arizona. Courtesy Fox News

JODI Arias has been found guilty of first degree murder in the stabbing death of her one-time boyfriend Travis Alexander.

As the guilty verdict was read, Arias opened her mouth, licked her lips and swallowed hard, and then fought back tears with a look of disbelief. Alexander's family smiled and hugged each other. Outside, people cheered and hugged, then began chanting "USA, USA, USA."

Jurors reached a verdict after deliberating about 15 hours over four days on whether the former waitress should be convicted of murder in the 2008 fatal stabbing and shooting of her one-time boyfriend at his suburban Phoenix home.

Authorities said Arias, 32, planned the attack in a jealous rage after being rejected by Alexander, a motivational speaker and salesman, while he pursued other women.

The trial will now move into a phase during which prosecutors will argue the killing was committed in an especially cruel, heinous and depraved manner, called the "aggravation" phase. The outcome of their decision on aggravating factors will affect how harsh Arias' sentence could be. Both sides may call witnesses and show evidence during a mini trial of sorts. The jurors won't change.


Authorities said Arias, 32, planned the attack in a jealous rage after being rejected by Alexander, a motivational speaker and salesman, while he pursued other women.

The trial will now move into a phase during which prosecutors will argue the killing was committed in an especially cruel, heinous and depraved manner, called the "aggravation" phase. The outcome of their decision on aggravating factors will affect how harsh Arias' sentence could be. Both sides may call witnesses and show evidence during a mini trial of sorts. The jurors won't change.

Following news of the verdict, some racy modelling shots of Arias, never seen before, emerged.

A mob of spectators gathered outside the courthouse to learn the verdict, while TV crews, media trucks and reporters lined nearby streets. Family and friends of Alexander wore blue ribbons and wristbands with the words "Justice For Travis."

Travis Alexander and Jodi Arias. Picture: Supplied

Arias initially denied involvement and later blamed the killing on masked intruders. Two years after her arrest, she said she killed Alexander in self-defence.

Jurors got the case on Friday afternoon. They reached a decision overnight.

Testimony began in early January, with Arias later spending 18 days on the witness stand. The trial quickly snowballed into a made-for-the-tabloids drama, garnering daily coverage from US cable news networks, and spawning a virtual cottage industry for talk shows, legal experts and even Arias, who used her notoriety to sell artwork she made in jail.

Alexander suffered nearly 30 knife wounds, was shot in the forehead and had his throat slit before Arias dragged his body into his shower. He was found by friends about five days later.

Arizona woman Jodi Arias is about to hear her fate in the murder trial over the death of her boyfriend Travis Alexander. Picture: AP

Arias said she recalled Alexander attacking her in a fury after a day of sex. She said Alexander came at her "like a linebacker," body-slamming her to the tile floor. She managed to wriggle free and ran into his closet to retrieve a gun he kept on a shelf. She said she fired in self-defence but had no memory of stabbing him.

Arias acknowledged trying to clean the scene of the killing, dumping the gun in the desert and working on an alibi to avoid suspicion. She said she was too scared and ashamed to tell the truth at the time, but insisted at her trial she wasn't lying to jurors.

As deliberations dragged on, dozens of people gathered daily on the courthouse steps waiting for a verdict.

A first look at some old modelling shots from Jodi Arias.

Arias faces either life in prison or a death sentence.


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Castro 'marked captivity with cake'

An undated picture taken of Michele Knight before she was held in a house in Cleveland against her will with Gina DeJesus and Amanda Berry. Picture: Fox News 8 Source: Fox News

  • IN PICTURES: CLEVELAND'S HOUSE OF HORRORS  
  • Ariel Castro charged with four counts of kidnap, three of rape.
  • FBI investigators return to examine properties either side of Castro's house.  
  • Amanda Berry gave birth inside inflatable pool because of the 'mess'.

ARIEL Castro, the former US school bus driver charged with holding three young women in captivity and raping them in a decade-long horror, is due to appear in an Ohio court on Thursday local time, three days after their dramatic rescue.

Puerto Rican-born Castro has been charged for the kidnap and rape of 27-year-old Amanda Berry, 23-year-old Gina DeJesus and 32-year-old Michele Knight, all of whom went missing separately not far from each other in Cleveland, Ohio. Castro also faces a count of kidnapping related to Berry's six-year-old daughter Jocelyn, who was born in captivity.

WHO IS THE THIRD VICTIM?

IS THE CLEVELAND HERO A FRAUD?

RESCUED WOMAN AND MUM YET TO SPEAK

Aduio of police officers comments when responding to Cleveland house call

CASTRO'S 'DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE' PERSONALITY

Castro is due in court  in the next few hours for arraignment.

His two brothers are also scheduled to make a court appearance, but on misdemeanour charges unrelated to the kidnappings and rapes, authorities said.

Deputy Police Chief Ed Tomba said that a paternity test on Ariel Castro was being done to establish who fathered Berry's child.

Members of the FBI evidence response team carry out the front screen door from a house where three women were held, in Cleveland. Three women who disappeared a decade ago were found safe Monday, and police arrested three brothers accused of holding the victims against their will. Picture: Tony Dejak

The police chief refused to comment on reports that Castro had impregnated Knight at least five times and would punch her in the stomach until she miscarried.

Police Chief Michael McGrath earlier told NBC he was "absolutely" sure police did everything they could to find the women over the years.

He disputed claims by neighbours that officers had been called to the house before for suspicious circumstances.

Castro, a former school bus driver whose family hails from Puerto Rico, has been described as a friendly neighbour who raised few suspicions but who also kept to himself, rarely if ever allowing anyone inside his home.

Action News 19 reporter Ed Gallek confronts Ariel Castro in the Cleveland police station

"Ariel kept everybody at a distance," Tomba said. "He ran the show."

Castro 'marked captivity with cake'

Inside the Seymour Avenue house, the three women who last celebrated birthdays with their families about a decade ago saw year after year perversely marked by Castro's serving of a cake on the day each woman was abducted, according to one of DeJesus's cousins.

"He would celebrate their abduction day as their new birthday," the cousin said, adding that DeJesus had pleaded with family not to ask her about her years in captivity.
 

Technology helps thwart kidnappers: experts

Experts say the implementation of the amber alert system for a child abduction emergency which ensures saturation coverage on cable television and social media is helping them put pressure on abductors.

FBI agents search another Cleveland house close to where three women were held.

"When an Amber Alert goes out, there is so much public pressure on the abductor that they often release the child before they can get hurt," Robert G. Lowery Jr. from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children told The Washington Post. "The vast majority of children now escape death because of Amber Alert."

The system enacted means stories are quickly transmitted on 24 hour cable TV shows, CCTV vision is scrutinised by the police, known sex offenders are looked at, hotlines for tips are quickly set up, alerts are sent via Twitter and Facebook plus police study traffic images.  Lowery's non-profit group has also recently launched a service to send amber alert information to every mobile phone within range of the mobile phone tower where the child went missing.

The ability of computer programs to create realistic images of what a kidnapped child may look like years after they went missing is also vital.

Audio reveals moment of girls' rescue

A stunned police officer called "we found 'em, we found 'em" when three kidnap victims were rescued in Cleveland on Tuesday. Now they're not sure exactly how many were held at the house.

Dashcam footage shows the kidnapping suspect being questioned by an officer in 2008. Courtesy Fox News Official 16

The three women were subjected to prolonged sexual and psychological abuse and suffered miscarriages, a city councilman briefed on the case said.

At the time of the rescue, Michele Knight told police she was unsure exactly how many women were detained inside the house, but that there may have been other victims.

A source has reportedly told The Mirror: "Police are unsure as to how many victims there may have been over the past 10 years but they are following up on every single lead they get."

FBI investigators have begun examining houses on either side of the Seymour Ave, Cleveland, property in which the three captives were kept locked in separate rooms. Fox News reports these properties had previously been owned by the Castro family.

Cleveland's safety director Marty Flask said human remains have not been found at the Castro home on Seymour Avenue. More than 200 items of evidence have so far been taken from the house in which the three were held.

Meanwhile, Cleveland police have released the audio recording of the officers' point of view while responding to Amanda Berry's and Charles Ramsey's 911 calls.

Upon arriving at 5.55pm, the officers immediately realised the callers were not cranks.

"This might be for real," one of the officers said while asking for an ambulance.

A photo of Ariel Castro released by the Cleveland Police Department following his arrest.

"Georgina DeJesus might be in this house also," another said.

With the sound of a woman crying in the background, one officer calls: "We found em. We found em".

Later: "We also have a Michele Knight in the house. I don't know if you want to look that up in the radio, uh the system."

Police press conference

Police told media at a press conference this morning that the three captives never left the property and were only allowed outside twice.

Amanda Berry, left, and Gina DeJesus have been found alive after disappearing in the US city of Cleveland about a decade ago. Picture: AFP

The women were allowed to leave the home briefly, both times to go "into the garage in disguise,'' deputy police chief Ed Tomba told reporters.

"They were in that home. They don't believe they've been outside of the home for the last 10 years,'' he said.

"They were not in one room, but they did know each other and they did know each other was there.''

He refused to comment on reports that the women had become pregnant on several occasions and had lost the babies.

Details have emerged of the horrific circumstance in which the 3 women were held in a US house for 10 years

The house was found to be in "disarray" when investigators entered.

Monday was the first time Amanda, Gina or Michele tried to escape - ever,  Tomba said.

Councilman Brian Cummins said many details remained unclear, including the number of pregnancies and the conditions under which the miscarriages occurred.

He said the women were kept in the basement for some time without having access to the rest of the house.  Earlier, city police chief Michael McGrath had said the women were "bound and there were chains and ropes in the hall''.
 
"It sounds pretty gruesome,'' Cummins said.

Suspect 'needed help'

Sources told the local Cleveland news outlet that Ariel Castro "talks about a sex addiction and needing help" and that he "puts some blame on the victims for getting in the car with him."

WEWS-TV reports sources as saying Castro had offered Amanda Berry and Michele Knight rides home, but took them to his house instead.

Neighbors in the largely Puerto Rican neighborhood said he had taken part in the search for one of the missing women, performed music at a fundraiser for her and attended a candlelight vigil, where he comforted her mother.

The captives reportedly watched the vigils on television from their basement prison.

"When we went out to look for Gina, he helped pass out fliers,'' said Khalid Samad, a community activist who said Castro was friends with DeJesus' father.

Castro, just like everyone else in the tight-knit, mostly Puerto Rican neighbourhood, seemed shaken by the 2004 disappearance of Ms DeJesus.

Fox news reports the three Castro brothers are being held in separate cells under additional police protection as inmates - even though they are kept separate - are doing all they can to give the men "a hard time".

Prosecutors brought no charges against his brothers, Pedro, 54, and Onil, 50, saying there was no evidence they had any part in the crime. Police said they were detained because they were with Ariel at the time of his arrest and have outstanding warrants.

Audio has been released of the frantic emergency call Amanda Berry made after escaping a kidnapping lasting ten years.

"There is nothing that leads us to believe that they (the brothers) were involved or had any knowledge of this,'' Deputy Police Chief Ed Tomba said.

"We found no facts to link them to the crime.''

The police chief told the news conference that a paternity test on Ariel Castro was being done to establish who fathered Berry's now 6-year-old child.

As recently as 2005, Castro was accused of repeated acts of violence against his children's mother. A domestic-violence court filing at the time accused Ariel Castro of twice breaking the nose of his children's mother, knocking out a tooth, dislocating each shoulder and threatening to kill her and her daughters three or four times in a year.

Victims' families speak

Audio released by the Cleveland Police Department captures Charles Ramsey's call to emergency services.

Two of the women were welcomed home Wednesday by jubilant crowds. Neither Berry nor Gina DeJesus, about 23, spoke publicly, and their families pleaded for patience and time alone. The third captive, Michele Knight, 32, was reported in good condition at a local hospital.

Ms Berry was expected to front the media today to make a statement but instead her older sister, Beth Serrano, appeared outside her home overnight (about 2am AEST). 

Ms Serrano thanked everyone for their support over the years and requested privacy for the family.

"I want to thank the public and media for their support and courage over the years. At this time our family would request privacy so my sister and niece and I can have time to recover," she told a thicket of microphones and lenses.

"We appreciate all you have done for us throughout the past ten years. Please respect our privacy until we are ready to make our statements. And thank you," she added, before breaking down in tears.

Ms DeJesus also arrived home giving a thumbs up to those gathered outside her home but not speaking to reporters.

Her aunt Sandra Ruiz made a statement on behalf of the family in which she asked the community not to retaliate against the Castro family and to keep searching for another missing girl, Ashely Summers, who was 14 when she disappeared in 2007 from the same Cleveland neighbourhood.

Ms Ruiz described Amanda Berry and Michele Knight as "members of our family now."

"Thank you, again, for your prayers and support. There are not enough words to say or express the joy that we feel for the return of our family member Gina," she said. "Now we need to, as a whole, to rally together, to look next door, and bring our other family member that is missing, Ashley Summers, OK?"

"Be patient with us," she said.  "When we are ready ... we will talk to all of you."

Family members of Ms Knight said she remains in hospital but is doing well.  A cousin told CNN that she "has the mind of a child."

Life in house of horror

Details are emerging about the house that they were held captive in.  Police have confirmed that chains were found on the walls and that the women were only allowed outside for very brief periods of time.

WKYC reported that Ms Knight was forced to deliver Ms Berry's baby, Jocelyn, in an inflatable pool "so the mess was easier to clean up".

"Michele stated that Ariel told her that if the baby died, that he'd kill her," the police report states.

The report said Ms Knight put her mouth to the Jocelyn's mouth and "breathed for her" to keep them both alive.

NewsChannel5 reports Michele Knight was pregnant by Ariel Castro five times. They allege he forced an abortion each time by punching her in the stomach.

19 Action News says its reporter has been told Ariel Castro made a suicide note years ago detailing why he committed the kidnappings.

Police told media at a press conference this morning that the three captives had initially been chained in the building's basement. However, they were later allowed to live in separate rooms upstairs and were hidden in the attic when visitors came to the house.

"We have confirmation they were bound and there were chains and ropes in the hall," Michael McGrath, Cleveland's chief of police told the US Today show.

However, reports have suggested that six-year-old Jocelyn, who was born to Ms Berry while in captivity, was allowed out of the house to visit Ariel Castro's mother, Lillian Rodriguez, who she called 'grandmother'.  It is unconfirmed if Ariel Castro is the father of Ms Berry's child.

Neighbours say they reported seeing three women outside on leashes and a woman pounding on a window with a child in her hand's but that police did nothing.

Mr McGrath said that there had been no record of those calls coming into police over the past 10 years.  Asked if those calls could be made but that a recording was documented, Mr McGrath replied  "We have no record of those calls coming in over the past 10 years''.

CNN is reporting details about Amanda Berry's escape bid.

Castro had left the house without locking the main door. A lighter "storm door" was locked, however.

Castro had previously "tested" his captives by pretending to leave the house with the door unlocked. He would then return suddenly.

Amanda had "reached breaking point" before making her escape bid earlier this week.


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Sandwich thrown as Julia Gillard abused

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 08 Mei 2013 | 14.41

PROTEST?: A student throws a sandwich at Prime Minister Julia Gillard as she visits a school in Queensland. Picture: Nine News Brisbane Source: Supplied

A STUDENT in Logan, Queensland, threw a sandwich but others cheered support for the Prime Minister as she arrived for a morning tea at Marsden High this morning.

Some students lining the footpath to the school hall yelled "loser" at Julia Gillard, but the reception was largely positive and drew comparisons to the adulation afforded Kevin Rudd on his way to an election victory in 2007.

A sandwich was thrown at the Prime Minister but it missed the mark as she made her way through the school grounds.

The PM's security struggled to keep up with the PM as students "went crazy" according to one bystander.

Ms Gillard used the function to announce $2.4 million for data collection on cancer over four years. The Prime Minister said cancer touched literally every Australian family in some way.

But Australia also leads the country in cancer treatment and prevention. "That is a key priority for me and my government,'' she said. Hundreds swarmed towards the PM after the speech asking for photographs.

The Prime Minister was at the school to attend a Biggest Morning Tea and meet community leaders from Logan.

An onlooker said some teachers tried to calm students while others looked disgusted at some students who were yelling abuse.

iPhone vision of the scene at Marsden High School in Queenland, where students yelled abuse at the PM and hurled a sandwich as she passed by. Vision: Andre Grimaux

"It was complete chaos," she said.

Marsden High P & C president Michelle Campbell witnessed the incident, and said it was "disappointing".

"Kids will be kids though," she said.
 


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Run-down street 'perfect hiding place'

Fox News reports that police are investigating the 911 dispatch handling of the Amanda Berry call as well as digging for evidence. Fox News

THE RUN-down houses and derelict buildings near Ariel Castro's house made it easier to hide a secret, his neighbours said.

Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michele Knight, who all went missing separately about a decade ago, were found on Monday in a home in Cleveland, Ohio.

Those who live near the modest home where the women were kept, say their neighbourhood has a dark side which may have helped the main suspect keep the three women from prying eyes.

"That was a perfect place for him because people couldn't hear any noise," community organiser Khalid Samad told NBC News.

Mr Samad said main suspect Ariel Castro had accompanied him on local searches for the missing women.

The 52-year-old's job as a bus driver also made him relatively well- off in a neighbourhood where many houses are boarded up and others have been foreclosed on in an area that has clearly seen better days.

"In terms of money he probably made more money than anyone else on the street when he was driving the bus," he said.

Neighbours and relatives say they didn't have a clue about Ariel Castro's suspected crimes, even as his own daughter was interviewed in 2005 on Americas Most Wanted. Fox News

Jennifer Faykus who knew Gina DeJesus' sister, moved from the area because she felt it had lost its sense of community.

"In this kind of neighbourhood you don't [pry] because you're afraid to talk to your neighbours," she said.

Did Castro target his daughter's friend?

Ariel "Anthony" Castro said he fears his father may have targeted the 14-year-old who went missing in April 2004 as she was such a close friend of his daughter Arlene. She was the last person to see Gina before she disappeared.

The 31-year-old told The Daily Mail he thinks it is "conceivable" that Gina got into his father's car instead of walking home as she recognised the elder Mr Castro as her best friend's father.

"That's one of the thoughts that went through my head because Gina disappeared in broad daylight on a very busy street. It's probably the busiest street on the west side of Cleveland," he said.

Fox News reports that the three brothers under arrest will be facing multiple charges for the ten year period of captivity and assault they subjected three young women to. Fox News

"It make you think how could she possibly disappeared without any trace. If she was abducted forcefully somebody would have seen it."

It is thought the teenager knew the person who took her and initially willing went with that individual on the day she disappeared.


Victims say they are fine

Close relatives of the three abducted women have told of how they're coping as more details emerge about their horrific life over the last decade.

Amanda Berry's grandmother Fern Gentry said Amanda told her that she's "fine" and that the six-year-old girl named Jocelyn also rescued from the Cleveland home is hers.

"I love you honey, thank God," her tearful grandmother said, in a call recorded by CNN affiliate WJHL. "... I've thought about you all this time. I never forgot about you."

The sister of 23-year-old Georgina "Gina" DeJesus said 'Gina' is in "good spirits."

Local police efforts are in question after calls were made by several neighbours over the past years, and was the suspect deliberately trawling for younger and younger girls? Fox News reports

Five pregnancies

As the world waits to see what will happen to Ariel Castro and his brothers Pedro and Onil who were arrested, relatives have told of their shock, painting Ariel Castro as a recluse and violent man at times.

Sources told WKYC that as many as five pregnancies occurred in the house. They were also told the captors would beat the pregnant girls and that the babies didn't survive.

Police in Cleveland have been reportedly searching a property for "possible aborted babies" after finding the three women who had been kidnapped and held as sex slaves.

According to local reporter Scott Taylor of 19 Action News, "investigators are looking for possible aborted babies in the backyard" of the residence where three brothers allegedly held three young women.

There are reports that the three women were also tied up with chains and tape and kept in separate rooms, The Daily Mirror reports.  One of the women is thought to have suffered three miscarriages due to malnutrition.

Police to gently quiz victims

Reluctant hero Charles Ramsey tells how he helped rescue Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michele Knight ending the women's kidnapping ordeal. Courtesy WKYC3

Since the three women have found their freedom, questions have been raised about abductions in the local area, including whether 14-year-old Ashley Summers is the fourth victim of the kidnapping.

She vanished from the same Cleveland neighbourhood where Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michele Knight went missing.

FBI investigators have removed vehicles and items from the home where the women were held captive.

FBI spokeswoman Vicki Anderson said. An FBI child victim specialist has interviewed all three abducted women as well as Berry's 6-year-old daughter in a "comfortable setting."

The three brothers arrested in the abduction case will be interviewed tomorrow local time, likely by both federal and local law enforcement officers.
 

FBI forensic personels remove evidence from the house where three women were held captive for a decade, May 7, 2013 in Cleveland, Ohio. AFP PHOTO/Emmanuel Dunand Source: AFP

A photo of Ariel Castro released by the Cleveland Police Department following his arrest.

FBI forensic personnel remove evidence from the house where three women were held captive for a decade on May 7, 2013 in Cleveland, Ohio. AFP PHOTO/Emmanuel Dunand Source: AFP

Suspects' lives in spotlight

More photos and details of the suspects have also emerged as locals have come to show their support for the women.

Investigators removed a number of items from the Cleveland home of Ariel Castro, including an amplifier, a storm door and black trash bags full of items.

Young residents come to show their support near the house where three women were held captive for a decade, May 7, 2013 in Cleveland. AFP PHOTO/Emmanuel Dunand Source: AFP

 New photos of Ariel Castro have also surfaced.

This undated combination photo released by the Cleveland Police Department shows from left, Pedro Castro and Onil Castro.

 911 call reviewed

Cleveland officials are now reviewing the actions of the 911 dispatcher who took Amanda Berry's call.

The call-taker asked the name of Berry's captor, his age and ethnicity. But the dispatcher's repeatedly told her: "Talk to the police when they get there."

Cleveland Department of Public Safety Director Martin Flask said police were dispatched and on scene in the west side neighbourhood in less than 2 minutes.

"While the call-taker complied with policies and procedures which enabled a very fast response by police, we have noted some concerns which will be the focus of our review, including the call-taker's failure to remain on the line with Ms Berry until police arrived on scene," Flask said in a statement.

Audio has been released of the frantic emergency call Amanda Berry made after escaping a kidnapping lasting ten years.

Amanda Berry's family prepare a warm welcome. Picture: Twitter.

Locked house at centre of case

In another strange twist one of the brothers, Pedro Castro, was filmed by Fox News in July last year as excavating crews dug through an empty lot after a tip from an Ohio inmate that Ms Berry's body was buried there.

"That's a waste of money," Castro told Fox.

And even more bizarrely the son of suspect Ariel Castro, wrote a journalism piece in 2004 as a student on the disappearance of Ms DeJesus.  It is not believed that Ariel "Anthony" Castro knew she was locked up in his father's house.

Anthony Castro has also given an insight into the house where the three women were held captive.

"The house was always locked," he told The Daily Mail. "There were places we could never go. There were locks on the basement. Locks on the attic. Locks on the garage."

Amanda Berry, left, and Gina DeJesus have been found alive after disappearing in the US city of Cleveland about a decade ago. Picture: AFP

Amanda, Michelle and Gina according to sources were also gagged for years in the basement before moving to separate rooms.

WKYC says the windows had garbage bags over them so no one could see in or out.

Even more chillingly, Anthony Castro says he had a conversation two weeks ago in which his dad asked him if he thought the police would ever find Amanda Berry.

He responded that he assumed she was dead because she had been missing for a decade, to which his father responded "Really? You think so?"

'He doesn't deserve to have his own life anymore. He deserves to be behind bars for the rest of her life. I'm just thankful they're alive.'

Three brothers have been arrested in connection with three kidnapped US women found after being missing.

His account came as neighbours revealed they reported seeing a girl crawling on her hands and knees in a backyard but police did nothing.

Previous calls to the house

In a Tuesday morning media conference (midnight AEST) police said they had received no calls to the house other than a 911 call in March, 2000, after a fight broke out in the street, and again in January 2004, when child welfare authorities attended the home after Ariel Castro left a child on the school bus that he drove for work. Authorities deemed there was no case to answer and that the child had been left on the bus accidentally.

However, two neighbours said they were alarmed enough by what they saw at the house to call police on two occasions.

Elsie Cintron, who lives three houses away, said her daughter once saw a naked woman crawling on her hands and knees in the backyard several years ago and called police. "But they didn't take it seriously," she said.

A house where three women escaped is shown Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in Cleveland.

Other neighbours have reportedly seen naked women crawling in the backyard of his house on all fours with dog leashes around their necks and three men controlling them, The Daily Mail reports.

Another neighbour, Israel Lugo, said he heard pounding on some of the doors of Castro's house, in November 2011. Mr Lugo said officers knocked on the front door, but no one answered. "They walked to side of the house and then left," he said.

Neighbours also said they would see Castro sometimes walking a little girl to a neighbourhood playground. And Ms Cintron said she once saw a little girl looking out of the attic window of the house.

First taste of freedom

The three women have been enjoying their first day of freedom after being released from hospital at about 8am (10pm AEST).

Ms Berry was the one to raise the alarm, getting the attention of neighbour Charles Ramsey, and making a frantic call to 911 in which she told the dispatcher, "I'm free now."

Neighbour Charles Ramsey speaks to media near the home on the 2200 block of Seymour Avenue, where three missing women were rescued in Cleveland.

Heartwarming: Sisters reunited after a decade

Mr Ramsey, told WEWS-TV that he saw Berry, whom he didn't recognise, at a door that would open only enough to fit a hand through.

"I heard screaming," he said. "I'm eating my McDonald's. I come outside. I see this girl going nuts trying to get out of a house."

Anna Tejeda, who lives across the street, said Ms Berry was nervous, crying and appeared dressed in pajamas and old sandals after she kicked out the screen in a door to escape and call police. Ms Tejeda speaks Spanish, and a friend translated her comments to The Associated Press.

On a recorded 911 call Monday, Ms Berry declared, "I'm Amanda Berry. I've been on the news for the last 10 years."

"I'm free now." Amanda Berry, centre, with her sister and a young girl believed to be her daughter, told police she had been kidnapped and held for 10 years.

She said she had been taken by someone and begged for police officers to arrive at the home on Cleveland's west side before he returned.

"I've been kidnapped, and I've been missing for 10 years," she told the dispatcher. "And I'm here. I'm free now."

Ms Berry disappeared at age 16 on April 21, 2003, when she called her sister to say she was getting a ride home from her job at a Burger King. Ms DeJesus went missing at age 14 on her way home from school about a year later. They were found just a few kilometres from where they had gone missing.

Police said Ms Knight went missing in 2002 and is 32 now. They didn't provide current ages for Ms Berry or Ms DeJesus.

Police said Ariel Castro, 52, lived at the home, and Onil, 50, and Pedro, 54, lived elsewhere. Ms Berry also identified Ariel Castro by name in her 911 call.

Mr Ramsey, the neighbour, said he'd barbecued with Ariel Castro and never suspected something was amiss.

"There was nothing exciting about him - well, until today," he said.

Juan Perez, 27, who has lived two houses down from the home in question since he was 5, and has known the arrested man, Ariel Castro, since he was a child, he told US ABC News.

"My heart is feeling rough right now to know that this happened two houses from me and that none of us noticed anything," Mr Perez said. "I feel ashamed of myself and my community right now and this neighborhood that we didn't see anything."

Mr Perez said Castro was well known on the block as a "charismatic" guy who always wanted to take the neighbourhood kids on bike rides up and down the block.

Attempts to reach Ariel Castro in jail were unsuccessful. Messages to the sheriff's office and a jail spokesman went unanswered, and there was no public phone listing for the home, which was being searched by dozens of police officers and sheriff's deputies.

The uncle said Ariel Castro had worked as a school bus driver. The Cleveland school district confirmed he was a former employee but wouldn't release details.

Charles Ramsey said he heard a girl screaming before helping her escape the house she was being held captive in. Courtesy Fox News

Loving families never gave up hope

The women's loved ones said they hadn't given up hope of seeing them again.

A childhood friend of DeJesus, Kayla Rogers, said she couldn't wait to hug her.

"I've been praying, never forgot about her, ever," Ms Rogers told The Plain Dealer newspaper.

Ms Berry's cousin Tasheena Mitchell told the newspaper she couldn't wait to have her in her arms.

"I'm going to hold her, and I'm going to squeeze her and I probably won't let her go," she said.

Ms Berry's mother, Louwana Miller, had been in hospital for months with pancreatitis and other ailments, died in March 2006. She had spent the previous three years looking for her daughter, whose disappearance took a toll as her health steadily deteriorated, family and friends said.

Councilwoman Dona Brady said she had spent many hours with Miller, who never gave up hope that her daughter was alive.

"She literally died of a broken heart," Ms Brady said.

Mayor Frank Jackson expressed gratitude that the three women were found alive. He said there are many unanswered questions in the ongoing investigation.

At Metro Health Medical Centre, Dr Gerald Maloney wouldn't discuss the women's conditions in detail but said they were being evaluated by appropriate specialists.

"This is really good, because this isn't the ending we usually hear in these stories," he said. "So, we're very happy."

In January, a prison inmate was sentenced to 4 1/2 years after admitting he provided a false burial tip in the disappearance of Ms Berry. A judge in Cleveland sentenced Robert Wolford on his guilty plea to obstruction of justice, making a false report and making a false alarm.

Last summer, Wolford tipped authorities to look for Ms Berry's remains in a Cleveland lot. He was taken to the location, which was dug up with backhoes.

Two men arrested for questioning in the disappearance of Ms DeJesus in 2004 were released from the city jail in 2006 after officers didn't find her body during a search of the men's house.

One of the men was transferred to the Cuyahoga County Jail on unrelated charges, while the other was allowed to go free, police said.

In September 2006, police acting on a tip tore up the concrete floor of the garage and used a cadaver dog to search unsuccessfully for Ms DeJesus' body. Investigators confiscated 19 pieces of evidence during their search but declined to comment on the significance of the items then.

No Amber Alert was issued the day Ms DeJesus failed to return home from school in April 2004 because no one witnessed her abduction. The lack of an Amber Alert angered her father, Felix DeJesus, who said in 2006 he believed the public will listen even if the alerts become routine.

"The Amber Alert should work for any missing child," Felix DeJesus said then. "It doesn't have to be an abduction. Whether it's an abduction or a runaway, a child needs to be found. We need to change this law."

Cleveland police said then that the alerts must be reserved for cases in which danger is imminent and the public can be of help in locating the suspect and child.


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N Korea's Kim watches grass grow

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 07 Mei 2013 | 14.41

This undated picture released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency shows leader Kim Jong-Un inspecting grass at a new Turf Institute in Pyongyang. Picture: AFP/KCNA via KNS Source: AFP

NORTH Korea has hit the "provocation pause" button on its aggressive nuclear rhetoric after pressure from China, as Kim Jong-Un literally watches grass grow.

CBS News reports two Musudan medium-range missiles have been packed up and moved from their launch sites on the coast of the Sea of Japan.

US intelligence reportedly warns that the missiles are mobile, and the move does not necessarily mean they can't be set to fire with little or no warning.

The move coincides with the ending of joing US-South Korean military exercises.

Pentagon spokesman George Little, who would not confirm that the missiles have been moved, said "what we have seen recently is a provocation pause."

Mr Little said pressure from North Korea's main ally China, other regional powers and "a range of factors" are behind North Korea's decision to "rachet back" from recent military tensions.

China "made some helpful statements" to help put a lid on North Korea's bluster against the US, Mr Little said.

This undated picture released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) overnight shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un inspecting the newly built Turf Institute. Picture: AFP/KCNA via KNS

Meanwhile, it seems North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un has taken some time out from stoking nuclear fears to inspect grass growing.  A series of photos released by North Korea show the young dictator inspecting what is said to be the new Turf Institute of Bioengineering in a Pygongyang suburb.

Kim is seen examining the bright green grass as his officials take notes, and even shows them how to best hold some gardening equipment in the carefully staged photos

 The new, strategic silence from North Korea comes after escalating tensions that raised fear of a nuclear attack.

In February, North Korea conducted an underground nuclear test that was condemned by the international community. In March, US-South Korea military exercises on the Korean peninsula sent Pyongyang into a frenzy, sparking increasingly aggressive rhetoric from the rogue state, led by young leader Kim Jong-Un.

However, Mr Little downplayed the incidents as part of North Korea's history of military threats to force aid and concessions from the international community.

Kim continues his turf inspection. North Korea has pressed pause on its nuclear rhetoric after intervention from China, the US said. Picture: AFP/KCNA via KNS

This week, North Korea denied it was using jailed US citizen and tour guide operator Kenneth Bae as a "bargaining chip" after sentencing him to 15 years hard labour for alleged "hostile acts" it says were aimed at toppling the regime. Mr Bae is believed to have taken photographs of emaciated children in North Korea as part of efforts to raise outside aid.


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Abducted teens captive for 'decade'

Charles Ramsey said he heard a girl screaming before helping her escape the house she was being held captive in. Courtesy Fox News

THREE brothers have been arrested after three women abducted up to a decade ago were found alive in the United States.

Cleveland police have confirmed three Hispanic males, aged 50, 52 and 54, are under arrest.  The 52-year-old man was named by city council officials as Cleveland Municipal School District bus driver Ariel Castro.

Police are searching the house at 2207 Seymour Avenue after a 911 call led police to the three women and two children.

In a strange twist, it has been revealed that Anthony Castro, the son of suspect Ariel Castro wrote an article about the abduction of Gina DeJesus when he was a journalism student in 2004.

Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus have been missing "for years". They had each been abducted separately when they were teenagers in 2003 and 2004.

A third woman named Michele Knight was also found at the house. Police have since confirmed Michele had been reported as missing since 2002.

All three women all went missing on the same busy block, near West 110th St and Lorain Ave, in Cleveland.

Police search the house at 2207 Seymour Avenue where the three missing women were held captive.

One of the women reportedly begged a passer-by for help.

"I heard screaming ... And I see this girl going nuts trying to get outside,'' said Charles Ramsey, the neighbour who found the women.

"I go on the porch and she said 'Help me get out. I've been here a long time'. I figure it was domestic violence dispute.

"She comes out with a little girl and says 'Call 911, my name is Amanda Berry'. When she told me, it didn't register."

He said he kicked the bottom of the door open so Amanda could crawl out. Amanda emerged with a young child.

"Luckily  it was aluminum, it was cheap," he said,

Audio has been released of the frantic emergency call Amanda Berry made after escaping a kidnapping lasting ten years.

"She climbed out with her daughter. ... She went to my house, we called 911."

Ramsay said Berry had made her escape bid while her captor had gone for a meal at McDonald's.

Berry asked for a phone to call 911.

"Help me, I am Amanda Berry... need police! I've been kidnapped, I've been missing for ten years and  I'm here. I'm free now," she frantically told the operator. A baby can be heard crying in the background.

"Hello? I need them [the police] now, before he gets back."

WEWS news reports a detective told Ramsey: "Charles, do you realise who you just rescued?"

Ramsey added: "When the police got here, she said there are three more girls up there. And that's when Gina DeJesus (appeared), and they brought two more girls out."

Cleveland police said Berry, DeJesus and Michele Knight are talking to authorities and appear to be in good health.

"This isn't the ending we usually hear for these stories so we're really happy," a police spokesman told assembled media outside the house.

The three women are being treated at Cleveland's Metro Health Medical Centre.

Doctor Gerald Maloney says they are fair condition.

"Currently they're safe. We are in the process of evaluating their medical needs," he said.

Police outside the Cleveland house where Gina and Amanda were believed to have been held. Picture: RachelDissell / Twitter

"They appear to be in a fair condition at the moment. They are able to speak with us.

"I can't really go into any further details."

Hundreds of people gathered in the streets near the white timber house at 2207 Seymour Avenue in Cleveland, where the women were discovered.

Amanda Berry named her abductor in the 911 call as Ariel Castro.

He was in the house - believed to be only kilometres from where the two were abducted - at the time police arrived in response to the call.

Cleveland police have released a statement on the arrest: "Today, the Cleveland Division of Police confirms that three missing girls were located in a house on Seymour Avenue in the Second District. All three women, Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michele Knight, seem to be in good health. A 52 year old Hispanic male has been placed under arrest regarding this incident. A press conference is expected to be held tomorrow, late morning, to provide more details surrounding these missing persons investigations."

A crowd gathers outside the Cleveland house where Gina and Amanda were believed to have been held. Picture: RachelDissell / Twitter

WEWS news reports the missing women were malnourished and dehydrated. Two children were seen inside the Cleveland house.

CNN reports the two children were girls.

Berry disappeared at age 16 in 2003, after calling home to say she was getting a ride home from her job at a burger restaurant.

DeJesus vanished at age 14 on her way home from school about a year later.

Ramsey said he had "eaten ribs" with the neighbour who owned the house, and had no idea there were women in the property.

A neighbour quipped: "(He must have) big testicles to pull this off, bro, because we see this dude every day!"

Amanda Berry and Gina Dejesus were found in Cleveland US after decade in captivity.

Cleveland's Mayor has issued a statement welcoming the recovery of the women. "We have many unanswered questions regarding this case, the investigation will be ongoing," he said.


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Tomic's dad 'knocked player out'

Written By Unknown on Senin, 06 Mei 2013 | 14.41

The father of Bernard Tomic is set to face a Spanish court after an altercation with the hitting partner of Australia's top-ranked player.

Tennis Aust confirmed Bernard Tomic's father was involved in an incident with his son's training partner.

Bernard Tomic's dad John shows his frustration after a call against his son during the 2010 Australian Open. Picture: Fiona Hamilton Source: Herald Sun

John Tomic watches son Bernard train ahead of the 2013 Australian Open. Picture: Jason Edwards Source: Herald Sun

Australia's Bernard Tomic in action during his loss to Radek Stepanek at the Madrid Open. Source: Getty Images

JOHN Tomic is likely to face court in Madrid today after allegedly assaulting French player Thomas Drouet as reports emerge the infamous coach might also have attacked his son Bernard in Monte Carlo last week.

John Tomic is said to have been held in custody after his arrest at a Madrid hotel for allegedly attacking Drouet, who is employed by the Tomics as Bernard's regular practice partner.

The shocking news comes after a Monte Carlo news outlet claimed John Tomic had struck Bernard during a public practice session in Monaco last Tuesday.

There was speculation that the alleged incident at the swish Monte Carlo Country Club was the provocation for an argument between Drouet, 29, and John Tomic.

The pair reputedly argued on the flight from Nice to Madrid.

Kick him out: Assault must be final straw for Tomic Sr

The dispute continued once the Tomic group had checked into their hotel.

Drouet and John Tomic are alleged to have clashed in the street outside the hotel.

Drouet was knocked out and left with a broken nose, fractured vertebrae and stitches after the alleged attack which was witnessed by leading players, including Alexandr Dolgopolov and Janko Tipsarevic.

One report claimed a man was unconscious in the street 100 metres from the tournament hotel where Tomic and his son were staying for the Mutua Madrid Open, one of Europe's elite claycourt events.

Thomas Drouet (left) with Bernard Tomic at the Hopman Cup New Year's Eve ball last year. Picture: Alf Sorbello Source: PerthNow

Drouet was said to be bleeding from the nose, lips and face. An unnamed witness said police and an ambulance were called.

European media reported said a man - believed to be John Tomic - was arrested at the hotel and had blood on his face when taken into custody.

It is understood he spent a number of hours in custody before being released yesterday evening (local time).

Bernard Tomic subsequently lost to Czech veteran Radek Stepanek 6-3 6-2 in the first round of the Madrid Masters.

Tennis Australia has described the reports as "very concerning".

"We are working closely with ATP officials who are investigating the incident and are unable to comment further until the full facts are known," a statement released by the organisation this morning read.

John Tomic reacts after a Hawkeye call against Bernard during the 2010 AUstralian Open. Picture: Fiona Hamilton Source: Herald Sun

Todd Woodbridge, the head of men's tennis for TA, said they were still trying to confirm the details.

"We're still trying to ascertain if or what charges have been laid,'' Woodbridge told 3AW radio.

Woodbridge said reports that Bernard faced a potential 12-month suspension were incorrect.

"It's totally incorrect because this would have nothing to do with Bernard's behaviour.

"What's important for us at Tennis Australia is that this allegation is thrown toward John, his dad, and not to Bernard.''

Volatile history: John Tomic's shame file

Hall of shame: Tennis's five worst bad dads


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Fiery Delta v Seal clash wins ratings

Delta Goodrem and Seal took the showdown phase literally clashing openly over Michelle Martinez performance. Courtesy The Voice, Nine Network.

THE Voice coaches Delta Goodrem and Seal took the showdown phase of the reality TV competition literally, with the rival superstars clashing openly over one of his contestant's performances last night.

The pop diva had told Team Seal singer Michelle Martinez her sassy rendition of Lloyd's hip hop hit Dedication To An Ex was not up to her usual vocal standard, feedback which was later rejected by her coach Seal who attempted to "respectfully disagree" with Goodrem describing the performance as "flawless".

FOLLOW ALL THE ACTION LIVE FROM 7PM FOR  TONIGHT'S SHOW:

Goodrem was visibly angry at being chipped and when filming continued during the ad break, involving all four coaches and destined for The Voice's website, she took Seal to task over his public critique and defended her opinions.

After Ben Goldstein delivered a rousing performance, Delta Goodrem had no option but to flirt with him to get him in her team. Courtesy: The Voice, Nine Network.

The heated exchange left Ricky Martin and Joel Madden looking for the exits, while a calm Seal continued to back Martinez and Goodrem attempted to set the record straight and argued "she can do better".

Producers stepped in to play peacemaker, with Goodrem impressing her TV bosses by "gathering herself quickly and getting over it".

In some judicious editing, Goodrem's immediate reaction to Seal's correction, as well as the full debrief after the performance (which was also caught on film) was not put to air.

See Delta Goodrem's on air blunder after Steve Clisby's rendition of Barry White's 'I Can't Get Enough Of Your Love'

The show could have done with the drama to spike interest, with it's ratings enough to win it the night's 'most watched' title but tracking below the two-million-mark (1.96m).

Channel 7's heavily-promoted interview with Abba's Agnetha Falkskog helped spoil Nine's party, pulling enough focus (1.49m) to keep the talent series from an expected runaway victory.

Seven News gave the current affairs show a solid lead-in (1.5m), with Nine News (1.45m) and 60 Minutes (1.38m) rounding out the night's top five rating shows.

It is not the first time Goodrem and Seal have had words, with Delta left to cringe after Seal misunderstood her use of the word "brother" which he interpreted as being a reference to his skin colour as they gave American-born singer Steve Clisby feedback.

A more intense moment in the blind auditions - when Goodrem challenged Seal over his post-show coaching of last year's winner Karise Eden - also hit the cutting room floor.

The coaching battle was only overshadowed by stunning appearances from Team Ricky's Karen Andrews aka Miss Murphy and Team Seal favourite Harrison Craig.

Channelling the powerhouse alter ego that allows her to overcome behind-the-scenes nerves, Andrews was at her best with an emotionally raw rendition of Elton John's Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word.

The Voice contestant Kiyomi Vella has been told by Seal that there should be no safety net when going for your dreams. Credit: Nine

Melbourne's title contender Craig, who remains the iTunes chart leader to beat this year, was praised for his "spell-binding" performance of Michael Buble's Home.

Four singers from Team Ricky and Team Seal sang for survival, with viewers now given the power to vote their favourites through to the finals.

The artist with the highest public vote will advance immediately to the finals, while the lowest will be eliminated during Tuesday's live results show. The two left standing will then sing for their coach's vote.

Monday night's show will feature Team Delta's Rob Edwards, Jackie Sannia, Josh Kyle and Steve Clisby; as well as Team Joel's Danni Hodson, Adam Garrett, Kiyomi Vella and Michael Paynter.  

Here are the coaches' verdicts from last night:

TEAM RICKY
 
SIMON MELI
Showdown song: Sam & Dave's Hold On I'm Coming
 
This seasoned professional, who flew 30 hours from his rock band's tour in Sweden to audition, is challenged by his coach to focus on his vocals as well as his connection with the crowds.
 
What the coaches thought...
 
Seal said: "one word for that, it was measured. Hold on, I'm coming...you're here, man."
 
Ricky said: "you rocked the stage, man."
 
IMOGEN BROUGH
Showdown song: Celtic Woman's The Voice
 
Positioning herself as Australia's Celtic queen, this Geelong beauty snuck through to showdowns after a close battle with vocal teacher Katie Carr. Now she has to stand and deliver on her own.

The Voice Australia contestants. Photo: Channel 9 Source: Supplied


 
What the coaches thought...
 
Joel said: "I can't tell if it was great or not."
 
Ricky said: "I will always be her fan. Congratulations, I love you."
 
NICK KINGSWELL
Showdown song: Olly Murs' Army Of Two
 
His career false-started after the promise of success early on, after winning the 'Road To Tamworth' new talent prize. He put in a solid battle to beat whirling dervish, Kaity Dunstan.
 
What the coaches thought...
 
Joel said: "I think you are the real deal, man. You have got the whole package."
 
Ricky said: "I am very happy. You just showed Australia the connection you have with the audience. It was really fun to watch."
 
MISS MURPHY
Showdown song: Elton John's Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word
 
Shy singer Karen Andrews morphs into powerhouse diva, Miss Murphy on stage and it's a transformation that has Voice fans hypnotised. But her nerves continue to worry coach Ricky.

The Voice Australia contestant, Miss Murphy, aka Karen Andrews. Photo: Channel 9 Source: Supplied


 
What the coaches thought...
 
Seal said: "You are very lucky you have a great gift. Great song choice and incredible coaching."
 
Ricky said: "This performance was spell-binding. You are making a powerful career and this is only the beginning."
 
TEAM SEAL
 
MICHELLE MARTINEZ
Showdown song: Lloyd's Dedication To My Ex
 
The Adelaide-born now Sydney-based singer has built a 10-year career as a back-up singer for stars including Voice coach Delta Goodrem. Her challenge now is to make the stage her own.
 
What the coaches thought...
 
Joel said: "that just made me want to be your ex and your next."
 
Seal said: "I just want to say I respectfully disagree with Delta...I think your performance was flawless. You were spectacular and you can print that."

The Voice Australia contestants. Photo: Channel 9 Source: Supplied


 
ALEX GIBSON
Showdown song: Simon & Garfunkel's Sounds Of Silence
 
The Canberra busker has won a legion of fans with his brand of cool lounge meets street jazz vocals, which gave him the edge in his battle singing the Oscar-winning Bond anthem, Skyfall.
 
What the coaches thought...
 
Joel said: "you said the most with the least...you should not be anything but confident."
 
Seal said: 'you sing for all those people who don't get heard...that's why that performance was inspiring and you will have the career you deserve."
 
HANNAH DARLING
Showdown song: The Cranberries' Linger
 
Hard to miss the quirky, colourful stylings of Manly singer Hannah know how to sing for survival, after she was saved by Seal after losing a tough battle against Danni Hodson.
 
What the coaches thought...
 
Ricky said: "(The Cranberries singer) Dolores is such an unbelievable performer. I wanted something better and I didn't get that tonight."
 
Seal said: "I think you did a really good job...I know what you are going through. I think you need to work a little harder."

The Voice Australia contestant Harrison Craig. Photo: Channel 9 Source: Supplied


 
HARRISON CRAIG
Showdown song: Michael Buble's Home
 
One of the great discoveries of the blind auditions, Harrison has won Australia's hearts and charged his way up the music charts with his performance tracks.
 
What the coaches thought...
 

Ricky: "where's your brother, we love that guy...oh and by the way, my mum says hi, she loves you."
 
Seal: "such is the power of what you do, Harrison, you just make us all feel good."

The Voice Australia contestants. Photo: Channel 9 Source: Supplied


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No one wants to bury bomb suspect

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 05 Mei 2013 | 14.41

Protesters outside the Dyer-Lake Funeral Home in North Attleborough where Tsarnaev's body was taken following its release by the state medical examiner. Picture: AP/Charles Krupa Source: AP

A FUNERAL home director is scrambling to find a cemetery that would bury a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings, ignoring protesters gathered outside his business and saying everybody deserves a dignified burial service no matter the circumstances of his or her death.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died from ''gunshot wounds of torso and extremities'' and blunt trauma to his head and torso, said a Worcester funeral home owner, Peter Stefan.

He has Tsarnaev's body and on Friday read details from his death certificate.

The certificate lists the time of Tsarnaev's death as 1.35am on April 19, four days after the deadly bombing, Stefan said.

Tsarnaev died after a gunfight with authorities who had launched a massive manhunt for him and his brother, ethnic Chechens from Russia who came to the United States about a decade ago.

Police have said he ran out of ammunition before his younger brother dragged his body under a vehicle while fleeing.

People boo the hearse of Boston bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev as it drives to a funeral home.

Tsarnaev died in a shoot out with police three days after the bombing. Picture: AP/Julia Malakie

Tamerlan Tsarnaev's body was released by the state medical examiner on Thursday.

It initially was taken to a North Attleborough funeral home, where it was greeted by about 20 protesters, before being taken to Stefan's Graham Putnam and Mahoney Funeral Parlors, which is familiar with Muslim services.

''My problem here is trying to find a grave site. A lot of people don't want to do it. They don't want to be involved with this,'' said Stefan, who said dozens of protesters gathered outside his funeral home, upset with his decision to handle the service.

''I keep bringing up the point of Lee Harvey Oswald, Timothy McVeigh or Ted Bundy. Somebody had to do those too.''

Meanwhile, two US officials said Dzhokhar Tsarnaev told interrogators that he and his brother initially considered setting off their bombs on July 4.

Boston police said they planned to review security procedures for the Independence Day Boston Pops concert and fireworks display, which draws a crowd of more than 500,000 annually and is broadcast to a national TV audience.

Katherine Russell, right, wife of Boston Marathon bomber suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev, leaves the law office of DeLuca and Weizenbaum with Amato DeLuca. (AP Photo/Stew Milne) Source: AP

Authorities plan to look at security procedures for large events held in other cities, notably the massive New Year's Eve celebration held each year in New York City's Times Square, Massachusetts state police spokesman David Procopio said.

Governor Deval Patrick said everything possible will be done to assure a safe event.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was found hiding in a tarp-covered boat in a backyard in Watertown, a Boston suburb, faces a charge of using a weapon of mass destruction to kill.

Three of his college classmates were arrested on Wednesday for allegedly helping the alleged bomber by removing a laptop and backpack from his dormitory room before the FBI searched it.

The April 15 bombing, which used pressure cookers packed with explosives, nails, ball bearings and metal shards, killed three people and injured more than 260 others near the marathon's finish line.

The brothers decided to carry out the attack before Independence Day when they finished assembling the bombs, the surviving suspect told interrogators after he was arrested.

A vehicle believed to be carrying the body of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev backs into an underground garage at the Dyer-Lake Funeral Home, Thursday, May 2, 2013, in North Attleborough, Mass. The body of Tsarnaev, who was the subject of a massive manhunt and died after a gunbattle with police, was claimed on Thursday. (AP Photo/Stew Milne) Source: AP

Investigators believe some of the explosives used in the attack were assembled in Tamerlan Tsarnaev's home, though there may have been some assembly elsewhere.

It does not appear that the brothers ever had big, definitive plans, an official said.

The brothers' mother insists the allegations against them are lies.

Tsarnaev's widow, Katherine Russell, who has been living with her parents in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, learned this week that the medical examiner was ready to release his body and wanted it turned over to his side of the family, her attorney Amato DeLuca said days ago.

Tsarnaev's uncle Ruslan Tsarni, of Maryland, said Tuesday night the family would take the body.

"Of course, family members will take possession of the body,'' Tsarni said.

Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev posted links to Islamic websites on what appears to be his page on a Russian language social networking site. Lily Grimes reports.

Tsarnaev, who had appeared in surveillance photos wearing a black cap and was identified as Suspect No. 1, died three days after the bombing.

The April 15 bombing, using pressure cookers packed with explosives, nails, ball bearings and metal shards near the marathon's finish line, killed three people and injured more than 260 others. Authorities said Tsarnaev and his younger brother later killed a Massachusetts Institute of Technology campus police officer and carjacked a driver, who later escaped.

Authorities said that during the gunbattle with police, the Tsarnaev brothers, ethnic Chechens from Russia who came to the United States about a decade ago, set off another pressure cooker bomb and tossed grenades before the older brother ran out of ammunition.

In this picture taken by Bob Leonard about 10-20 minutes before the Boston Marathon blast, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev (Suspect Two) and Tamerlan Tsarnaev (Suspect One) watch runners pass by. Source: AP

Police said they tackled the older brother and began to handcuff him but had to dive out of the way at the last second when the younger brother, 19-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, drove a stolen car at them. They said the younger brother ran over his brother's body as he drove away from the scene to escape.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was captured later, wounded and bloody, hiding in a tarp-covered boat in a suburban Boston backyard. He is in a federal prison and faces a charge of using a weapon of mass destruction to kill.

The Tsarnaev brothers' mother insists the allegations against them are lies.

Three of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's friends, college classmates, were arrested on Wednesday and accused of helping after the marathon bombing to remove a laptop and backpack from his dormitory room before the FBI searched it.

A top Republican senator on Thursday asked President Barack Obama's administration to explain how one of the students entered the United States without a valid student visa.

Senator Chuck Grassley, of Iowa, in a three-page letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, asked for additional details about the student visa applications for Azamat Tazhayakov and Dias Kadyrbayev, college roommates from Kazakhstan charged with obstruction of justice in the marathon bombing case, and how Tazhayakov was allowed to re-enter the United States in January.

How did Boston terror suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev - whose mother was also on a terror database - slip through the cracks, despite warning signs?

Tazhayakov was a student at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth when he left the US in December. In early January, his student visa status was terminated because he was academically dismissed by the university.

Peter Boogaard, a DHS spokesman, said on Wednesday that when Tazhayakov arrived in January Customs and Border Protection had not been alerted that he was no longer a student. Boogaard said the department was working on a fix to the student visa system.

The third student arrested, Robel Phillipos, was charged with willfully making materially false statements to federal law enforcement officials during a terrorism investigation.

Three men accused of providing aid to Boston Marathon suspects have been arrested. Fox News

All three men charged in connection with the case began attending UMass Dartmouth with Tsarnaev in 2011, according to the FBI.

If convicted, Kadyrbayev and Tazhayakov could get up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Phillipos faces a maximum of eight years behind bars and a $250,000 fine.

The lawyers for the Kazakh students said their clients had nothing to do with the bombing and were just as shocked by it as everyone else. Phillipos' attorney said the only allegation against him was "he made a misrepresentation.''


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Waiting in line on Bali's death row

with Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran Meet The Press, Ep11, Seg 1

WE haven't thought much about them - except how stupid they were to smuggle drugs in Bali. But as these two men edge closer to the firing squad, CINDY WOCKNER tells the story of two young men who gambled away their lives and now realise that being sorry may not be enough

Convicted drug trafficker Myuran Sukumaran plays this scene over and over in his head. He is on a deserted Bali beach. A blinding floodlight breaks the night. Then suddenly everything is black.

A hood is bundled roughly over his head. He feels pressure on his chest - someone is drawing a target on his heart. Rope burns his wrists, which are tied hard to a post.

Beyond the darkness, beyond the mask, stand 12 paramilitary police. The breeze catches the clink and rattle of their rifles. In seconds - will it be three, will it be more - the firing squad will take aim and fire.

Sukumaran will only die once. In his head, on death row in Kerobokan Prison alongside his fellow Bali 9 drug smuggler Andrew Chan, he has died the same way every night for the past 2637 days.

It's been called a hellhole but these days Kerobokan jail is also a tourist mecca. Australian tourists - taking time out from beach and beer holidays - come to try to gawk at convicted drug traffickers like Schapelle Corby and the Bali 9. Of late, they haven't come as often. The novelty of Australian drug convicts in Indonesian jails has started to wear off.

GO BEHIND BARS WITH ANDREW CHAN AND MYURAN SUKUMARAN IN OUR INTERACTIVE.
FOR THE BEST MOBILE EXPERIENCE, CLICK HERE

Almost every religion and culture is represented. There is a Christian chapel, a mosque and a Hindu temple. At times the mix is uncomfortable - Andrew Chan's opponents on the played basketball courts sometimes included the terrorists behind the 2005 Bali bombing. They once encouraged Sukumaran to join the mosque, which at the time the terrorists used as a breeding ground for new recruits to the cause. He wasn't interested but Bali drug mule Scott Rush, 18 when arrested, went and was eventually circumcised in a secret mosque operation.

Death row isn't a row but a round block of cells called Super Maximum Security but known to everyone as 'The Tower'. Chan and Sukumaran live here in the same block that was once home to the smiling bomber Amrozi and the 2002 Bali bombers before they were executed. No-one gets to go home from here - even the Australian lawyers fighting for the two on death row know that a long life behind these bars will be the best outcome for Chan and Sukumaran.

Meet The Press, Ep11, Seg 2

It is 7am and - clink - the cell doors open. Small barred windows let in meagre light. The paintwork has seen better days. There are gas stoves and a tiny table top oven. Chan dreams about baking a honey-roasted ham. He knows the ham wouldn't fit in the tiny oven but that doesn't stop him thinking about the honey, the brown sugar and cloves... the smell of glazed ham.

Every prisoner does something to make their four walls special. Chan has a collage of family photos, a poster of Jesus and a world map to remind him that there is a life outside. Sukumaran loves art and his walls are crammed with postcards, artworks and his own paintings. His precious family photos have pride of place in a small album on a table next to his bed.

The Bali 9 have a special bond. Like a family that doesn't always get on. Friendships wax and wane. They swap cells, depending on who is getting on and who has fallen out. These days Chan, Sukumaran, Si Yi Chen and Matthew Norman are close. They share the passion for running rehabilitation courses and art.

"We all have to live together. All of us sit here and we have a talk and we have a laugh," Chan says.

But there's still plenty to drive them apart. Both Chan and Sukumaran say the both feel responsible for the others. "Yes, I kind of feel responsibility for everybody," Sukumaran says. "It is not just the others, it is their families ... I try to avoid seeing their families."

It's so easy to say you are sorry. Sorry I cut you off on the road this morning. Sorry I pinched your paper. Sorry I didn't say thank you.

Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran are very sorry for what they did as young and stupid punks from western Sydney. But they know that sorry isn't likely to be enough. They weren't the absolute bottom-of-the-chain drug mules in the drug-running operation. Indonesian police once described Chan as 'The Godfather', though he was living at home with his parents at the time. They didn't immediately plead guilty and or express remorse.

None of that went down well in Indonesia. It didn't go down any better here. The two admit they are unsure whether Australians will ever care about the plight of two drug smugglers on death row in a Bali jail.

Their lawyer Julian McMahon, part of a team which has represented them since 2006, is convinced that they've changed. The men he met seven years ago were young punks - unrepentant, brash and stupid. Today - he says with warmth - those punks have emerged from the fire as generous and caring young men. McMahon passionately believes they deserve the chance to live.

 Bali Nine Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran inside the workshop of Kerobokan jail in Bali. Picture: Bintoro Lukman

Chan wants to show how much he has changed. "I'm not trying to minimise what I did," he says. "For the last eight years you get to reflect on these things, that it did happen and how many lives I could have destroyed and the only way to prove how sorry I am is not just showing it by saying sorry with words. Anyone can say sorry. For myself, it is about actions."

As drug operations go it was neither sophisticated or clever. Nine young Australians decided to try to export heroin from Bali by strapping it to their bodies and going to the airport - where signs scream death for drug traffickers.

That they did it for as little as $5000 each is testament to the crazy invincibility of youth. And when the bravado ran out, the price was very high: six sentences of life in jail, one 20-year term and Sukumaran and Chan facing death by firing squad.

The death row residents went to Homebush Boys High School but, with Sukumaran four years older, didn't know each other in their school years. They met in 2002 at a mate's house.

When the drug plan was hatched, they were at its core. Chan's workmates in Sydney - Matt Norman, Martin Stephens and Renae Lawrence - were part of it. Three others - Tan Duc Thanh Ngyen, Scott Rush and Michael Czugaj - were from Brisbane.

They went out sightseeing and drinking for a couple of days in small groups while they waited for the drugs. Under the plan Lawrence, Stephens, Rush and Czugaj would fly home to Sydney with heroin strapped on their upper thighs and around their waists.

The drugs were strapped on in a Kuta hotel. On April 17, 2005, Rush, Lawrence, Stephens and Czugaj were arrested at Bali's Ngurah Rai international airport with 8.2kg of heroin - with a street value at the time of up to $4 million - strapped to their thighs and waist.

Chan, the supervisor who wasn't carrying drugs, was caught separately at the airport. Sukumaran was nabbed with three others in a hotel with the remnants of the heroin and the tape used to strap it on.

Chan admits that the effects of the drugs they planned to import to Australia - lives lost, families ruined - never crossed his mind.

EXCLUSIVE access inside Bali's Kerobokan Prison with Bali 9 members Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan, living day-to-day on death row. Adam Taylor

"I definitely didn't think of the impact," he says. "I was probably selfish and obnoxious. Everyone thinks it's a big pay day. You do feel invincible".

Sukumaran was equally blasaacé. "When you are young, you think about how much you would have made. It seems like a lot ... When you are young you think money is the only way to get happiness."

Chan had been using drugs since the age of 16. Sukumaran, who had dropped out of university and drifted with a crowd of old school friends who were into petty crime. For both the deal was about quick cash.

Ken and Helen Chan don't live far away from the Sukumarans.

A photograph hangs on the wall of a little boy - smiling and fresh-faced when in kindergarten. Nearby is another photograph - a family portrait taken four years ago when Andrew's sister graduated. The whole family is there - Ken and Helen, big brother Michael and his now wife and the two sisters. One person is missing - son Andrew was already in jail.

Ken Chan came to Australia in 1955 as a 20-year-old from China. His father and brothers were already here but he had stayed behind with his mother in China. After she died, he took a 21-day boat trip to Australia to join the rest of the family.

Initially he worked in his brother's fruit shop and the fruit markets. He was working in a Chinese restaurant when he fell in love with Helen. For 40 years Ken and Helen ran a string of Chinese restaurants. They worked seven days a week for decades.

Andrew is the youngest of their four children. Their youngest was a cute and likeable, his mum remembers. A bit of a larrikin. Somewhere along the way, this streak became more like a problem.

In 2003 Ken and Helen finally retired. It was to be a time they could finally relax after so many years of work, look forward to weddings and grandchildren. But then came a knock on the door.

Andrew Chan inside a workshop at Kerobokan Jail in Bali. Picture: Bintoro Luckman

For Ken, the day of his son's arrest was like a bomb going off.

Helen doesn't speak much English so her eldest son Michael translates from her native Cantonese. "Ever since this has happened she is always in pain," Michael translates as his mother speaks and weeps.

"She hasn't had a proper sleep in seven or eight years in the sense of, every second, it is on her mind".

Chan, who doesn't speak Cantonese, has always had a language barrier with his mother. The gulf gets wider the longer he is in jail. Ken is unwell so travel is difficult. Chan knows he may never see his parents again.

"I have only ever seen my parents three times since I have been here and my Dad's health is not so well," he says. "This is one of the things that affects me, their health. You don't think about those sort of things when you do (the crime)." Of course, you think about nothing much else as you do the endless time.

Raji Sukumaran remembers April 17, 2005 like yesterday.

Sukumaran is her eldest son and it was his 24th birthday. On holiday in Bali, he was due back in Sydney the following day. She had made his bed with fresh sheets, went to the market and bought seafood, her boy's favourite.

But approaching dinner time on April 18, her son hadn't shown.

Raji started to worry. Had he been in an accident?

Andrew Chan's brother Michael speaks for mum Helen, who has little English but her agony is painfully clear - no parent should outlive their child.

Hair wet from the shower, she went out into the street to look for his taxi.

Inside the house her youngest, daughter Brintha, saw the 6pm television news. Nine young Australians arrested in Bali.

It was the T-shirt one of the smugglers was wearing she recognised first. Then a familiar tattoo visible under the sleeve.

When Raji tried to get back into the house, the door was locked. Only after furious knocking did a shivering Brintha answer.

"Myu, Bali, arrested," she blurted.

Raji fainted. "I felt the whole chill run through me from top to bottom."

Moments later her middle child, son Chinthu, arrived home and the Australian Consulate was on the phone. Myuran could get at least 10 years in jail, they said.

The family prayed together until 2am, then left their home.

Raji didn't return for a long time. "I couldn't face the neighbours, I couldn't go there", she remembers.

Myuran Sukumaran inside Bali's notorious jail Kerobokan Jail. Picture: Adam Taylor

On the third day, they flew to Bali to see her son. She was in a rage.

"The first thing I wanted to do was go and slap him, I was angry. I really wanted to slap him, honestly. But I just couldn't, I hugged him, I cried," Raji says.

She had no idea her son, who lived at home with the family, had any involvement with drugs. He had been the son who always complimented her cooking, gave blood and had a calendar in his room with the days marked when $30 a month would be deducted from his bank account for UNICEF.

"I have never known anyone in prison, I don't even know anybody talking about anybody in prison, " Raji says. "When he got the death penalty I didn't know how things worked, I didn't know whether they will just take him one day and shoot him and kill him, I didn't know the procedures.

Raji is a gentle softly-spoken woman. Two weeks ago - as she has done every year since the arrest - she was in Bali on April 17 for her son's birthday. With her were her aging parents - her father, 83 and mother, 80, her brother and niece. After one visit she complained her son ate too much fatty food and not enough veggies. Funny the things mums still worry about.

The family inhabits a permanent grey zone. They can't grieve for their lost son while they are still alive, yet every time they kiss him goodbye they know it might be the last time. But despite everything they still don't live without hope. Those same fresh sheets are still there, ready to make his bed if he comes home.

As the family said goodbye at the end of this trip, Sukumaran's granddad cradled his grandson's face between his wrinkled hands, looked into his weeping eyes and said: "Come home soon."

The two's last hope of survival is in the hands of the Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

Sentenced to death in 2006, four appeals have failed. The country's most senior judges have decreed their crime so serious they deserve to die.

Myuran Sukumaran inside Bali's notorious jail Kerobokan Jail. Picture: Adam Taylor

The Indonesian political climate change has shifted in recent weeks.

Authorities have announced plans to execute up to 10 death row prisoners this year. An African was executed in March - the first execution since 2008. There are now more than 100 people on death row in Indonesia.

Chan and Sukumaran's cause suffered after a female prisoner who recently got clemency from the President and was found soon after to be dealing drugs in jail. The President was condemned by all sides of politics for going soft on drugs.

Chan and Sukumaran watched the story with dismay.

Their clemency pleas were lodged a year ago and no-one knows when the President will make a decision.

It is hard to describe what it is like living with a sentence of death by firing squad. Sukumaran puts it like this - living under the shadow of the death penalty is like the cold metal of a revolver pressed at your temple for seven years and never knowing when it might go off.

"It is like the gun has been there for a long, long time so you get used to the feeling. It comes as a shock having a gun being pointed at the side of your head but it has been there for a long, long time and at any time it could just go off," he says.

You've got to wonder whether any of us would have the will to change when hope is almost gone. When the best you can hope for is life behind bars.

Death row does many things to people. It can strip people of their will to live and destroy their faith.

Kerobokan jail in Bali. Picture: Lukman

Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran have had endless time to think about their existences and their limits. They can't change what they've done. But they can mould the hours to a degree of each day they have left in jail. They can, if they so choose, feel like they can make a difference. Chan - an atheist before he was jailed - has found God. He is studying theology and runs the church inside the jail, including a daily support group and Bible study for prisoners. With other current and former prisoners he is in the process of setting up a half-way house for freed prisoners when they are released. There are also plans for first aid courses so that inmates can save lives instead of watching people die in front of them.

Sukumaran's transformation is even more remarkable. Every day from 9.30am to 3pm you'll find him in the jail's workshop. It looks like a mini TAFE college. One room is full of computers. The walls of another are plastered with paintings.

This is the home of prisoner art, Mule Jewels and the Bali Nine clothing label. It is the brainchild and passionate endeavour of Sukumaran. It began several years ago with the donation of some computers and his idea to run computer and English classes for inmates, to give them skills to go out in the world and break the revolving door cycle of crime and jail. It evolved into painting classes. The endeavours are now self-sustaining. The art is sold and the money used to expand the workshops. The jail recently won first prize amongst Indonesian jails for its programs.

Sukumaran is passionate about his painting and is now doing a Fine Arts degree. Australians, including Archibald prize-winning artist Ben Quilty, have visited the jail to teach the 15 art students. Sukumaran runs workshops like a strict headmaster.

You'd expect the two's lawyers and families to promote the sincerity of the two's changes. But even guards and other inmates say they believe the changes are genuine.

It didn't just happen. Rather a gradual realisation that denials were not helping their cause and that they needed to make amends for those they had hurt. Two bad boys needed to find a way to come back from the brink and learn to become better men.

What they saw in jail - over all those years - changed them too. Chan woke on another birthday in jail to find a dead body outside his cell. "When you are selfish and on your own you don't think about these things... but now it is in your face, it is something I think about... how sorry I am that I could have destroyed other people's lives, families especially."

Other people have lent weight to their campaign. The then-governor of Kerobokan jail took the extraordinary step of supporting the two's last appeal, testifying they deserved a second chance.

When British grandmother Lindsay Sandiford, 52, was sentenced to death she sank deep into depression, refusing to leave her cell. It was Chan who was sent by the jail's governor to talk to her. Former prisoner Arif Mirdjaja says Chan helped him get off drugs and clean up his life. He now comes to the jail regularly for visits and to attend the monthly English church service.

Kerobokan jail in Bali. Picture: Lukman

Older brother Michael had a tough love message for Chan when he first visited his brother in jail. "I was very clear with him from day dot," he says. "If he wasn't going to help himself, don't expect me to come back."

He says he knows now that his younger brother heeded the words and says the family is now proud of how he has turned his life around.

Sukuamaran is a cell block leader - trusted by the governor and the guards. A year ago when prisoners rioted he stood guard at the jail's armoury to ensure the prisoners didn't get their hands on the guns.

Kerobokan senior prison officer Hermanus has worked in Indonesia's jail system for 28 years. "I have never had a prisoner like Myuran. He is the best prisoner I have seen in my career. I pray that he will have his sentence reduced."

One of Sukumaran's biggest supporters is Ivar Schou, from the Nordic Centre for International Studies who conduct computer and philosophy courses in the jail. "When I met him he was a really, really kind person, constructive, creative. He is an exceptional person." Peter - a German who says he is serving only one year in jail - says Sukumaran gave him hope and lifted him from depression.

Sukumaran and Chan put their case simply. "We are sorry for what we did," Sukumaran says. "We were young and stupid. I would ask please forgive us and give us a second chance, a chance to make up for what we have done. Clemency is not a get out of jail free card."

The men and their lawyers know they deserve to spend a long time in jail for their crimes. The question is do they deserve to die? Both men know they have little or so no say in the answer.

They relinquished control over the manner of their life - and death - when they carried out a dumb idea to make some bucks. They may be doomed to be judged by what they did wrong, not by what they do right.

And so they may die on a deserted beach, as they have in Sukumaran's head every night for the past 2637 days.


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Locals reject govt tattoo register

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 04 Mei 2013 | 14.41

Surf n' Ink event manager Lindsay Hall says the idea of a tattoo register is ridiculous and an invasion of privacy. Photo of her at Surf n' Ink Studio, Mermaid Beach with tattooist Kris Olsen. Picture: Richard Gosling Source: News Limited

TATTOOED Queenslanders would have to register their ink with the State Government under a radical proposal to crack down on bikie gang money-laundering operations.

However, a leading civil libertarian has already raised concerns about the plan, saying it would unfairly label people as criminals, The Gold Coast Bulletin reports.

Gold Coast MP Ray Stevens said bikie gangs were using tattoo parlours as a front to launder their ill-gotten gains, and a form of tattoo register would stop them using fake names and inflated tattoo prices to do this.

Mr Stevens said fake names were used at bikie-affiliated parlours, with cash payments of thousands of dollars for bogus tattoo work.

Tattoo festival Surf 'n' Ink event manager Lindsay Hall (pictured) said the idea was ridiculous.


"The Government doesn't need to know if I have a tattoo," she said.

More details at The Gold Coast Bulletin.


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Premier emotional as he signs NDIS

The Victorian government is set to receive $2.6B in federal funding after it agreed to host a NDIS trial.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard is in Melbourne with Victorian Premier to discuss the NDIS and meet resident Adam Grieves. Picture: Mark Dadswell Source: Herald Sun

Prime Minister Julia Gillard is in Melbourne with Victorian Premier to discuss the NDIS. Picture: Mark Dadswell Source: Herald Sun

VICTORIAN Premier Denis Napthine fought back tears as he became the latest state leader to sign up to the National Disability Insurance Scheme.

Dr Napthine sat side by side with Prime Minister Julia Gillard at Yooralla House today as he signed over Victoria's $2.5 billion contribution to the NDIS.

An emotional Dr Napthine, who has an autistic son, was on the verge of tears as he described the personal significance the NDIS had for him and his family.

"As a person, as a family member, as a carer, as somebody who's worked in the disability area, and as a politician, I'm very, very proud to be here today as a Victorian, with Victoria signing up to the full disability care system from 2019 and the lead-up to it," Dr Napthine said.

"It's a great day for Victoria, it's a great day for people with disabilities, their carers and their families. It is a day we can all be proud of."

The scheme, which aims to give people with permanent disabilities lifelong care, involves $2.6 billion of Commonwealth funding along with Victoria's $2.5 billion contribution.

The news comes after Ms Gillard and Tasmanian Government recently reached an agreement that will allow for the full roll out of DisabilityCare Australia, the National Disability Insurance Scheme, in Tasmania by July 2019.

Queensland could sign up to the National Disability Insurance Scheme as soon as next week, ahead of the likely passage of laws to hike the Medicare levy.

In a move that will deliver a boost to Prime Minister Julia Gillard's plans for the historic scheme, Premier Campbell Newman is set to consider a revised deal with the Federal Government within days.

WA Premier Colin Barnett says he will not sign up to the Federal Government's National Disability Insurance Scheme in its current form.

The Commonwealth wants to help pay for the scheme by increasing the Medicare levy by half of one per cent from July next year.

Mr Barnett supports the principle behind the NDIS and has offered to participate in a state-wide trial. But, he says he is uncomfortable with the prospect of funding and service delivery being controlled from Canberra.

Last year in December, the NSW government reached agreement on the full roll out of the NDIS in NSW.

It will roll out in Newcastle, Lake Macquarie and Maitland, in the Hunter area of NSW from the middle of 2013. By July 2018, all eligible residents across NSW will be covered by the NDIS.

South Australia was the first to sign up to the NDIS.

Find out how the NDIS will affect you below.


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