Tag Archives: busted

Hardee’s employees busted in alleged elaborate scheme to steal credit cards from customers to bail inmates out of jail – Law & Crime

  1. Hardee’s employees busted in alleged elaborate scheme to steal credit cards from customers to bail inmates out of jail Law & Crime
  2. Police: Several fast-food employees allegedly stole money to bail out inmates WKYT
  3. Hardee’s Employees Charged in Drive-Thru Fraud to Bail Out Jail Inmates: Sheriff Inside Edition
  4. Operation “Hard-Eez” serves up 20 felony counts at the drive-thru window 953mnc.com
  5. Northwest Indiana Hardee’s employees accused of stealing credit card numbers to bond inmates out WGN TV Chicago
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Catalytic converter theft ring at TDI Towing in Philadelphia busted: DA – CBS News

  1. Catalytic converter theft ring at TDI Towing in Philadelphia busted: DA CBS News
  2. DA: Multimillion-dollar enterprise specialized in theft of catalytic converters in Bucks, Montgomery; 11 charged 69News WFMZ-TV
  3. Bucks County DA announces bust of $8.2 million catalytic converter theft ring The Philadelphia Inquirer
  4. Philadelphia towing company charged in multi-million dollar catalytic converter theft ring WPVI-TV
  5. Catalytic Converter Ring Takedown: 10 adults, 1 juvenile arrested for $8M thefts across Delaware Valley FOX 29 Philadelphia
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TDI Towing Philadelphia PA: Multi-million dollar catalytic converter theft ring busted, kingpin Michael Williams among 11 charged – WLS-TV

  1. TDI Towing Philadelphia PA: Multi-million dollar catalytic converter theft ring busted, kingpin Michael Williams among 11 charged WLS-TV
  2. Towing company charged in multi-million dollar catalytic converter theft ring 6abc Philadelphia
  3. Bucks County DA announces bust of $8.2 million catalytic converter theft ring The Philadelphia Inquirer
  4. DA: Multimillion-dollar enterprise specialized in theft of catalytic converters in Bucks, Montgomery; 11 charged 69News WFMZ-TV
  5. Catalytic converter theft ring at TDI Towing in Philadelphia busted: DA CBS Philly
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Alleged Conversion Through Online Games Racket Busted, 23-Year-Old Arrested – NDTV

  1. Alleged Conversion Through Online Games Racket Busted, 23-Year-Old Arrested NDTV
  2. Gaming Jihad Victim Reveals Insidious Horror: Victims Lured, Converted To Islam Via Online Gaming India Today
  3. Ghaziabad Online Gaming Case: How Mumbra Police Tracked Key Accused Who Converted Young Boys to Islam News18
  4. Ghaziabad conversion case: Main accused Baddo alias Shahnawaz arrested in Maharashtra, had operated a conversion racket through online games OpIndia
  5. Accused Shahnawaz’s Appearance Today In Thane Sessions Court In Gaming Jihad Case India Today
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Radio New Zealand Editor Busted Adding Secret Putin Propaganda – The Daily Beast

  1. Radio New Zealand Editor Busted Adding Secret Putin Propaganda The Daily Beast
  2. New Zealand’s national broadcaster probes ‘inappropriate’ editing of Ukraine war stories | WION WION
  3. New Zealand public radio apologizes for publishing ‘pro-Kremlin garbage’ after wire stories altered The Associated Press
  4. New Zealand’s national broadcaster probes ‘inappropriate’ editing of Ukraine war stories Yahoo News
  5. Radio New Zealand employee placed on leave amid investigation into pro-Russia editing of Ukraine reports The Guardian
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The Outer Worlds, 2019’s Great RPG, Has A Busted New-Gen Update – Kotaku

  1. The Outer Worlds, 2019’s Great RPG, Has A Busted New-Gen Update Kotaku
  2. The Outer Worlds’ new version is getting slammed on Steam—’Spacer’s Choice Edition: now with 200% more performance issues!’ PC Gamer
  3. The Outer Worlds Spacer’s Choice Edition — A disappointingly appropriate name Windows Central
  4. The Outer Worlds: Spacer’s Choice Edition Review (PS5) – A Definitive Sci-Fi RPG Offering Let Down By Performance Issues PlayStation Universe
  5. The Outer Worlds: Spacer’s Choice Edition Fixes the Original’s Biggest Problem Yahoo Entertainment
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Burglar Shanice Aviles busted at Robert De Niro’s NYC townhouse

A recidivist burglar was caught rifling through Robert De Niro’s Manhattan townhouse early Monday — fiddling with the actor’s iPad and grabbing Christmas gifts around the tree, law enforcement sources told The Post.

The 30-year-old woman, identified as Shanice Aviles, crept down a stairwell leading to 79-year-old De Niro’s townhouse on the Upper East Side around 2:30 a.m., the sources said. 

Eagle-eyed officers with the NYPD’s 19th Precinct Public Safety team had spotted Aviles — a “known burglar” with more than 25 arrests on her rap sheet — trying to open doors to commercial buildings before she entered the townhouse, according to sources.

Known burglar Shanice Aviles was caught “stealing Christmas presents” from Robert De Niro’s NYC townhouse.
Shanice Aviles, 30, allegedly sneaked into the actor’s home around 2:30 a.m.
G.N.Miller/NYPost

The cops trailed her into De Niro’s building and found her on the second floor – fumbling around with the star’s iPad, the sources said. 

“She was stealing Christmas presents,” a police official added. 

There are photos of De Niro all over the house, according to the sources – but the actor himself was nowhere in sight. He was upstairs and his daughter was in a bedroom, according to the sources. None of the residents knew what was going on, the sources said. 

De Niro was upstairs when the burglar showed up, police sources said.
Erik Pendzich/Shutterstock

The officers busted Aviles inside the home, the sources said, and charges were pending. 

Aviles has at least 26 prior arrests, mostly for burglaries, according to the sources. 

The sticky-fingered thief began her crimes during the pandemic. 

This year alone, she has been busted 16 times for burglary and petit larceny, according to the sources.

“Back in the saddle with this perp,” said a police source. 

Charges are pending against Aviles.
G.N.Miller/NYPost

She was picked up for seven burglaries in the 19th Precinct – which covers the Upper East Side – between Nov. 25 and Dec. 8, the sources said. 

She was arrested for six burglaries on Dec. 8, the police official said.

“This is just another example of the catch and release justice system we’re dealing with,” the police official said.

A source described Aviles as “one of the [19th Precinct’s] top five burglars.” 

Reps for De Niro did not immediately return calls for comment.

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Myth, busted: Formation of Namibia’s fairy circles isn’t due to termites

Enlarge / Drone image of car driving through the NamibRand Nature Reserve, one of the fairy-circle regions in Namibia.

Stephan Getzin

So-called “fairy circles” are bare, reddish-hued circular patches notably found in the Namibian grasslands and northwestern Australia. Scientists have long debated whether these unusual patterns are due to termites or to an ecological version of a self-organizing Turing mechanism. A few years ago, Stephan Getzin of the University of Göttingen found strong evidence for the latter hypothesis in Australia. And now his team has found similar evidence in Namibia, according to a new paper published in the journal Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics.

“We can now definitively dismiss the termite hypothesis, as the termites are not prerequisite to form new fairy circles,” Getzin told Ars. This holds both for Australian and Namibian fairy circles.

As we’ve reported previously, Himba bushmen in the Namibian grasslands have passed down legends about the region’s mysterious fairy circles. They can be as large as several feet in diameter. Dubbed “footprints of the gods,” it’s often said they are the work of the Himba deity Mukuru, or an underground dragon whose poisonous breath kills anything growing inside those circles.

Scientists have their own ideas, and over the years, two different hypotheses emerged about how the circles form. One theory attributed the phenomenon to a particular species of termite (Psammmotermes allocerus), whose burrowing damages plant roots, resulting in extra rainwater seeping into the sandy soil before the plants can suck it up—giving the termites a handy water trap as a resource. As a result, the plants die back in a circle from the site of an insect nest. The circles expand in diameter during droughts because the termites must venture farther out for food.

The other hypothesis—the one espoused by Getzin—holds that the circles are a kind of self-organized spatial growth pattern (a Turing pattern) that arise as plants compete for scarce water and soil nutrients. In his seminal 1952 paper, Alan Turing was attempting to understand how natural, non-random patterns emerge (like a zebra’s stripes), and he focused on chemicals known as morphogens. He devised a mechanism involving the interaction between an activator chemical and an inhibitor chemical that diffuse throughout a system, much like gas atoms will do in an enclosed box.

It’s akin to injecting a drop of black ink into a beaker of water. Normally this would stabilize a system: the water would gradually turn a uniform gray. But if the inhibitor diffuses at a faster rate than the activator, the process is destabilized. That mechanism will produce a Turing pattern: spots, stripes, or, when applied to an ecological system, clusters of ant nests or fairy circles.

A researcher investigates the death of grasses inside fairy circles in a plot near Kamberg in the Namib. The recording was made about a week after rainfall in March 2020.

In 2019, Getzin’s team conducted a study of fairy circles in northwestern Australia, near an old mining town called Newman. The team dug more than 150 holes in almost 50 fairy circles in the region to collect and analyze soil samples, specifically to test the termite hypothesis. They also used drones to map larger areas of the continent to compare the gaps in vegetation typically caused by harvester termites in the region, with the fairy circles that sometimes form.

The vegetation gaps caused by harvester termites were only about half the size of the fairy circles and much less ordered, so they didn’t find any hard subterranean termitaria that would prevent the growth of grasses. But they did find high soil compaction and clay content in the circles, evidence for the contribution of heavy rainfall, extreme heat, and evaporation to their formation. “Termite constructions can occur in the area of the fairy circles, but the partial local correlation between termites and fairy circles has no causal relationship,” Getzin said at the time. “So no destructive mechanisms, such as those from termites, are necessary for the formation of the distinct fairy circle patterns; hydrological plant-soil interactions alone are sufficient.”

Having effectively disproven the Australian termite origin hypothesis, Getzin turned his attention to specifically testing the termite hypothesis for Namibia, using a similar methodology. While his earlier work on Namibian fairy circles did not specifically address the investigations of plant roots, this new study shows that plant roots are not touched by insect herbivores.

Investigating a fairy circle in Brandberg in Namibia 35 days after rainfall in March 2021.

“For the first time, we went right after rainfall to the fairy circles and checked the new grasses for termite herbivory,” Getzin told Ars. “Our excavations demonstrate that termites did certainly not cause the death of the grasses. If you come too late to the fairy circles, the grasses are long dead and detritivores like termites may have already fed on the lignified grass. But they did not kill the grass. We are showing unambiguously that the grasses die before and completely independent of any termite action.”

So what’s next for Getzin? He believes more research is needed on the swarm intelligence of plants, likening plants to beavers in the sense that they can act as “ecosystem engineers” that modify their environment. “Most people cannot believe this or are unwilling to believe that, because plants have no brains,” said Getzin. “But plants act similarly like the beaver as ecosystem engineers because their only way to survive is forming optimal, strictly geometric patterns”—in other words, Turing patterns.

DOI: Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics, 2022. 10.1016/j.ppees.2022.125698  (About DOIs).

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Four suspects busted for allegedly looting in Florida after Hurricane Ian

Florida sheriff’s deputies arrested four suspected burglars who allegedly looted in the wake of Hurricane Ian, while many impacted Floridians struggle to recover from the Category 4 storm.

Omar Mejia Ortiz, 33, and Valerie Celeste Salcedo Mena, 26, were arrested, along with 20-year-olds Brandon Mauricio Araya and Steve Eduardo Sanchez Araya. Lee County sheriff’s deputies arrested all four on charges of burglary of an unoccupied structure during a state of emergency, according to online jail records.

Ortiz was also charged with petit larceny, while the other three suspects were charged with grand larceny. It is unclear exactly when and where the burglaries took place.

All four suspected looters were released from jail after posting bond.

FLORIDA WEATHER BLOGGER TALKS HURRICANE IAN AND HOW STORMS UNITE PEOPLE: ‘NEIGHBORS HELPING NEIGHBORS’

The arrests came after Lee County issued a strict curfew and “zero-tolerance” policy for looting. The southwest Florida county was devastated by Hurricane Ian, prompting officials to issue warnings after burglars were spotted ransacking homes in Fort Myers.

“When law enforcement was unable to respond because of weather conditions, there was a break-in on Cleveland Avenue River,” Lee County Manager Roger Dejarlais said in a press conference last week.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis issued his own warnings against looters seeking to plunder abandoned homes and businesses.

HURRICANE IAN RESPONSE: FLORIDA COUNTY ANNOUNCES ‘ZERO TOLERANCE’ FOR LOOTING AMID CURFEW

Rescue personnel search a flooded trailer park after Hurricane Ian passed by the area Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Fort Myers, Florida. 
(AP Photo/Steve Helber)

“Don’t even think about looting,” DeSantis said in a press conference. “Don’t even think about taking advantage of people in this vulnerable situation.”

“When I say zero tolerance, zero tolerance means we will hunt you down, track you down, and you’re going to jail. If you’re lucky,” DeSantis warned.

“Florida is a law and order state,” the Republican governor tweeted the following day. “Looting and lawlessness will not be tolerated.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis gives an update Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, on the damage from Tropical Storm Ian.
(Florida Governor’s Office)

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Florida is still recovering from the billions of dollars worth of damage from the storm. Rivers in the Sunshine State are still rising, meaning even more flooding and damage could be on the horizon.

At least 97 fatalities have been confirmed in Florida due to Hurricane Ian.

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Roddy Ricch busted with firearm, large-capacity ammo mag: NYPD

Grammy-winning rapper Roddy Ricch was busted with a gun – and an extended magazine – at a security checkpoint before he was set to perform at the Governor’s Ball at Citi Field on Saturday night, cops say.

The 23-year-old rapper, whose real name is Rodrick Moore, was in 2020 black Cadillac Escalade with two other men stopped at a security checkpoint around 6:20 p.m. – just hours before the event was set to begin – when an employee with a private security firm hired for the Queens concert spotted the Canik 9mm under a seat, according to police.

Authorities also found an extended magazine that contained nine rounds of ammunition, a police spokesman said.

“The reason we do this checkpoints is for expressly this purpose. We don’t want people introducing guns in this venue,” an NYPD official told The Post on Sunday.

The rapper was busted right before he was set to perform at Governor’s Ball at Citi Field.
Photo by Taylor Hill/Getty Images for Governors Ball
A sign announcing that Roddy Ricch’s set had been canceled due to the arrest.

Moore of Los Angeles was charged with criminal possession of a weapon, possession of a large capacity ammunition feeding device and possession of an unlawful feeding device, cops said.

Carlos Collins, 57, of NJ and Michael Figueroa, 46, Brooklyn, are also facing gun charges, cops said.

Moore — who won a Grammy for Best Rap Performance in 2020 and has been nominated for a top music award 10 times — had been set to perform Saturday at the popular event.

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