26 October 2011

Alleged Thief Caught on Tape

Police are on the hunt for a man who allegedly used a stolen debit/credit card to do some shopping at a South Jersey Walmart.

Investigators say the card was lifted from the Gloucester Township Public Library on October 17th. It was used at the Deptford Walmart later that day. The alleged thief was wearing a t-shirt that said “Loose Moose” and had a woman and two children with him.

If you recognize the man in the video, call police at 856-228-4500. You can also leave a message on the Gloucester Township Anonymous Tip Line at 856-842-5560.

Howard Student Killed in Prince George’s County

Howard Student Killed in Prince George’s County

A Howard University student was killed in a robbery attempt in Mount Rainier, Md., Tuesday morning, Prince George’s County police said.

Police found 24-year-old Alonzo James Guyton suffering from a gunshot wound in the 4200 block of Kaywood Drive. He was produced .

An impromptu vigil for Guyton was held Tuesday night on Howard’s campus, according to President Sidney A. Ribeau.

Guyton, a former Marine and high school football player, was a freshman music major and member of Howard's drum line, News4's Jackie Bensen reported.

Pedestrian Pinned Between Two Cars in Bronx

Pedestrian Pinned Between Two Cars in Bronx

A pedestrian was pinned between two vehicles in an accident in the Bronx Wednesday evening, and was taken to a local hospital.

The accident happened on Mount Hope Place, just north of the Cross Bronx Expressway, sometime after 5 p.m.

A red van was heading westbound along Mount Hope Place when the driver somehow lost control, and swerved into a white SUV, pinning a person against the SUV.

The pedestrian was taken to a local hospital with unknown injuries.

Mount Hope Place was closed down as police investigated.

Traffic along nearby Grand Concourse was moving.

USC Scientist, Swedish Researchers Crack Cryptic Code

USC Scientist, Swedish Researchers Crack Cryptic Code

We can safely say that there are few people in this world who have any knowledge of what the Copiale Cipher means, or even what it is. An old, yellowing manuscript with unfamiliar symbols and letters, it looks like it could be a movie prop from the Raiders of the Lost Ark series.

The Copiale Cipher is actually a 105-page document from an 18th century secret society in Germany, which reveals the rituals of its members, who according to the code, were fascinated with eye surgery and ophthalmology.

We know that now because Kevin Knight, a computer scientist at the University of Southern California’s Information Sciences Institute and Beáta Megyesi and Christiane Schaefer, two researchers from Uppsala University, cracked the cipher.

It took months of diligent work before the research team was able to focus on one familar word: ceremonie – a variation of the German word for ceremony, as the LA Times explains here.

Knight told the LA Times, they were able to figure out the rest.

"You start to see patterns, then you reach the magic point where a word appears," Knight said in the article. “You no longer even care what the document's about."

The centuries-old manuscript had been located in East Berlin after the end of the Cold War. Knight began working with Megyesi and Schaefer of Uppsala University in Sweden in January and finished in April, according to the article.

"For me, the fun is in cracking the code," he told the LA Times. "It has passed through a lot of hands, but you persevered and could read what other people couldn't."

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NJ Woman Fights Charge Over Fake Facebook Page

NJ Woman Fights Charge Over Fake Facebook Page

The attorney for a New Jersey woman indicted for allegedly creating a fake Facebook profile of her ex-boyfriend said Wednesday his client has not run afoul of the state's identity theft laws.

Dana Thornton faces a court hearing in Morristown next week at which attorney Richard Roberts will seek to have the indictment thrown out.

The Morris County Prosecutor's Office indicted Thornton last year on one count of fourth-degree identity theft, a crime punishable by a maximum of 18 months in jail if she is convicted at trial.

Thornton, of Belleville, could not be reached by phone Wednesday, but Roberts said the law and Thornton's actions don't mesh.

"The statute as it exists really is aimed at people who actually go into a store with a phony credit card, for instance, and use that number and assume that name while committing a crime," he said. "When you're talking about things that get put on the Internet you're getting into free speech."

Authorities allege Thornton created the Facebook page as if it was made by her former boyfriend, Parsippany police detective Michael Lasalandra, and made disparaging comments purportedly from him. Lasalandra didn't return a phone message seeking comment Wednesday.

The statute says a person is guilty of identity theft if he or she "impersonates another or assumes a false identity and does an act in such assumed character or false identity for the purpose of obtaining a benefit for himself or another or to injure or defraud another."

The Morris County Prosecutor's Office declined to comment on the case.

Jeffrey Pollock, an attorney who recently argued a case before the state Supreme Court that focused on whether bloggers have the same protections as journalists, said the case could break new ground in identity theft law.

He added that Lasalandra might have a strong civil claim for defamation.

"It's an unusual claim because the statements are not being made about him, but indirectly he's being made liable and that impairs his reputation," he said. "It's putting a false statement in writing that reflects on the morality of the person you're talking about."

Roberts said New York recently amended its identity theft statute to make it a crime to impersonate someone by electronic means, but that New Jersey has yet to do so.

"The legislative history of our statute makes no mention of electronic means," he said. "The statute doesn't fit the crime, which we don't even admit was a crime."

Glenn Ivey Running for Congress

Glenn Ivey Running for Congress

Former Prince George's County prosecutor Glenn Ivey plans to run for the congressional seat held by Democratic Rep. Donna Edwards, according to a spokesman.

Ramon Korionoff, who was Ivey's spokesman as state's attorney, said Tuesday that Ivey will file paperwork within days for the 4th District seat.

The district includes much of Prince George's County, but it has been redrawn to include part of Anne Arundel County. During redistricting approved last week, part of Montgomery County was eliminated over Edwards' objections.

The 50-year-old Ivey is a lawyer in private practice following two terms as state's attorney. He considered a run for Congress in 2009 but backed off.

Also Tuesday, Anne Arundel County Council member G. James Benoit, a Democrat, said he is also considering a run.

Whistle-Blower Gets 2 Years for Staging Evidence

A fired sales executive will spend two years in prison for staging evidence to bolster his claims of price-fixing in the oil-filter industry.

William Burch of Tulsa, Okla., doctored a letter to make it look like Champion Industries and its competitor were colluding to raise prices on oil filters. The competitor, Honeywell International,

makes Fram filters.

Burch, 53, told a judge Wednesday that he had audiotapes but needed better evidence to get a law firm to take his whistle-blower case against Champion.

The trick worked -- and then some. The 2008 whistle-blower suit he filed prompted the Justice Department to open a price-fixing probe.

Whistle-blowers can earn millions of dollars if the government backs their lawsuit and recovers large settlements for corporate wrongdoing.

Burch gave the forged letter to U.S. prosecutors in Philadelphia who opened a grand jury investigation into alleged price-fixing in the industry in 2008. And he continued to lie about it, even as questions surfaced.

Burch had added a Champion fax imprint on a letter from Honeywell announcing a price increase, and said his supervisor had gotten the letter weeks before the price hike was announced.

"You provided the proverbial 'smoking gun'... so you could get them (lawyers) to take the case?'' U.S. District Judge Timothy Savage asked Burch. "Did you think about the people you put in

jeopardy?''

"I should have," Burch replied.

Champion had fired Burch in 2004 for alleged expense-account fraud. Two years later, he and a lawyer shopped around his price-fixing complaints to large antitrust law firms around the country. The response was lukewarm.

"I became worried that he (his lawyer) was going to drop the case and drop me. So I tried to make it better," Burch told Savage.

He must now pay $83,000 to the government for the aborted grand jury investigation, and a $30,000 fine. Savage said he was getting off lightly, since he only had to repay the Justice Department's legal costs, and not those of Champion, Honeywell and the eight people called before the grand

jury.

Burch had asked for probation, while prosecutors sought a sentence at the high end of the 21- to 27-month guideline range.