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Biyernes, Mayo 3, 2013

US reels after 5-year-old kills sister with ‘my first rifle


10:38 am | Friday, May 3rd, 2013


WASHINGTON–The accidental shooting death of a two-year-old at the hands of her five-year-old brother has revived the perennial gun debate in the United States, where weapons are made just for kids.
The .22 caliber rifle used in Tuesday’s tragedy is marketed by Crickett to young ones with the slogan “My First Rifle.” It had been left loaded with a single shell in a corner of the family’s home.
But unlike other similar cases, the weapon actually belonged to the child from Cumberland County in Kentucky. He had received it last year as a gift.
“Just one of those crazy accidents,” Cumberland County Coroner Gary White told The Lexington Herald-Leader. “It’s a little rifle for a kid… The little boy’s used to shooting the little gun.”
Crickett declined to comment on the matter. The rifle can be purchased in green, blue or pink, for girls.
The shooting triggered outrage in the United States, still reeling from the shooting of 20 small children and six adults and Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.
Anti-gun lobby group Americans for the Protection of Children has launched an online petition to “stop Crickett Firearms, the NRA (National Rifle Association) and its allies from marketing guns to our kids.”
The NRA is planning to host a youth day on Sunday during its annual convention in Houston, Texas, featuring gun manufacturers who design weapons especially for children.
“It’s appalling,” the petition said about the youth day.
Crickett’s website, which was no longer accessible Thursday, had published dozens of photographs of children handling rifles — including a baby dressed in a camouflaged-patterned romper, grasping a weapon resting on its knees.
The Pennsylvania-based manufacturer of Crickett rifles, Keystone Sporting Arms, says it has sold 4,000 rifles when it first started in 1996, compared to 60,000 in 2008.
It says it aims “to instill gun safety in the minds of youth shooters and encourage them to gain the knowledge and respect that hunting and shooting activities require and deserve.”
Weighing just 2.5 pounds (1.1 kilograms) with a barrel measuring 16 inches (40 centimeters) for a total length of 30 inches (76 centimeters), the rifle can only shoot one shell at a time and its trigger can be locked. It costs $110 to $140 depending on the model and can easily be purchased at big retailer Walmart.
On firearms discussion forum “The Firing Line,” parents have been known to write enthusiastically about rifles purchased for children as young as three.
“I’m just excited he wants to hear it go bang and be there with me. I could care less what he hits, everything is a bullseye at this point,” user Saltydog235 wrote about his four-year-old in 2010.
“He’s learning gun safety and handling which is more important than accuracy at this juncture as well.”
Violence Policy Center executive director Josh Sugarmann said there is a “wide range” of guns targeted toward the youngest Americans.
“The gun industry and gun ownership is declining, it has been for decades, and like tobacco, the industry needs new customers,” he told ABC News.
“The most vulnerable years to entice children as future gun customers is during their youth.”
And in a bid to attract more customers, groups largely funded by the gun industry organize youth competitions and internships.
Gun violence kills more than 3,000 children and teens, and injures more than 15,000 each year in the United States, according to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. That’s more deaths than the number of US soldiers killed in nearly nine years of war in Iraq.
In this country, where the right to bear arms is enshrined in the constitution and with about as many weapons in the country as the 310 million Americans, accidents involving guns with the very young are far from rare.
A six-year-old shot and seriously wounded his four-year-old friend in New Jersey with a shot to the head in early April. Just two days earlier, a four-year-old killed a woman during a family barbecue in Tennessee.
“It is something you can prepare for, by storing the gun locked and unloaded, or by avoiding having guns in homes with children,” said Kid Shootings, a blog by authors from Ceasefire Oregon Education Foundation, Protect Minnesota and States United Against Gun Violence.
“You don’t have to accept that it was ‘her time to go’ when it was completely avoidable.”


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Asia stocks rise on US jobs data


12:57 pm | Friday, May 3rd
BANGKOK — Asian stock markets rose Friday, finding renewed strength from a fall in U.S. jobless benefit claims and an interest rate cut by the European Central Bank intended to boost the region’s ebbing economy.
Investors jittery over the state of the U.S. economy took heart from a U.S. Labor Department report that said applications for unemployment benefits fell last week to the lowest level in more than four years. That calmed fears that intensified Wednesday following the release of reports showing lackluster hiring and factory output.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 0.8 percent to 22,853.89. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 added 0.1 percent to 5,134.50. South Korea’s Kospi rose 0.1 percent to 1,958.41. Benchmarks in mainland China and the Philippines also rose. New Zealand and Singapore fell.
Markets in Japan were closed for a public holiday.
An interest rate cut by the European Central Bank gave markets in Europe a small lift Thursday. The central bank, which sets interest rates for the 17 European Union countries that use the euro, cut the rate by a quarter of a percentage point to a new record low of 0.5 percent.
The decision was widely anticipated following a grim run of economic data for the eurozone, which is expected to stay in recession when first-quarter figures are released later this month.
“Importantly, core countries have been increasingly affected by weakening growth prospects and it remains to be seen whether the German economy can rebound strongly any time soon,” said analysts at Credit Agricole CIB in a market commentary.
The Labor Department report and higher profits from CBS, Facebook and other companies sent Wall Street higher Thursday. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.9 percent to 14,831.58. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 0.9 percent to 1,597.59. The Nasdaq composite index climbed 1.3 percent to 3,340.62.
On Friday, the U.S. government’s closely watched monthly employment report will be released.
Benchmark oil for June delivery was down 19 cents to $93.80 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $2.96, or 3.3 percent, to finish at $93.99 a barrel on the Nymex on Thursday, the biggest one-day gain for crude since November.
In currencies, the euro rose to $1.3076 from $1.3058 late Thursday in New York. The dollar rose slightly to 98 yen from 97.96 yen.



30,000 cops to be deployed for May polls

By 
3:35 pm | Friday, May 3rd, 2013
MANILA, Philippines—Additional 30,000 police forces who will perform election duties are now ready for deployment, the Philippine National Police (PNP) said Friday.
Deputy Director General Ager Ontog Jr., PNP deputy chief for operations, said the additional police officers will be fanned out to different parts of the country as part of the tightened enforcement of security under PNP’s “Oplan Last Two Weeks.”
Most of them will be deployed to Metro Manila and Luzon where there is problem of election violence, Ontog said.
The PNP has named 15 provinces as hotspot areas, were the possibility for the occurrence of election-related violence is high. They are Abra, Pangasinan, Ilocos Sur, La Union, Cagayan, Pampanga, Nueva Ecija, Batangas, Cavite, Masbate, Samar, Misamis Occidental, Maguindanao, Lanao del Sur and Basilan.
He said the troops—18,000 of which are full pledged, and 12,000 new recruits— will be sent to their assigned areas, probably a week before the election day on May 13.
The PNP will raise its alert level when the distribution of PCOS machines and other election paraphernalia starts, Ontog said.
“As far as the PNP is concerned, halos nakalatag na po iyong ating security operations at siguro naman with our early preparations wala nang mangyaring kaguluhan,” Ontog said.


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Legarda: New York condo duly declared; fellow Team PNoy bet behind smear drive

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Sen. Loren Legarda: Fear of flying. INQUIRER FILE PHOTO
MANILA, Philippines — Having had enough, re-electionist Sen. Loren Legarda has lashed out at a publicist she identified as “Willie F.” who she claimed had been hired by a fellow senatorial candidate to dislodge her from the top spot in surveys.
Legarda called a press conference at the Team PNoy headquarters in Makati City to respond to allegations that she had failed to include in her statement of assets, liabilities and net worth (SALN) a Park Avenue apartment in New York City and a mansion reportedly worth hundreds of millions of pesos in Forbes Park.
The senator initially presented a certification signed by her lawyers indicating that the New York apartment had been listed in her SALN since 2007 when she won a fresh term after losing the  vice presidential race to fellow broadcaster Noli de Castro in 2004.
Legarda said the property was purchased while she was still married to former Batangas Gov. Antonio Leviste. Their marriage has been annulled.
A greater part of the news conference, however, centered on how Willie F. had allegedly sent to journalists “column feeds” about her supposed efforts to conceal the New York property and her eventual decision to reveal it only in her 2011 SALN submitted at the height of the impeachment trial of then Chief Justice Renato Corona last year.
It would be recalled that Corona’s failure to include significant assets such as condominium units and dollar deposits in his SALN convinced senator-judges to convict him of culpable violation of the Constitution and other offenses.
“The certification I have in my hand, prepared by my lawyers, is clear: The SALN I filed on June 30, 2007 includes the New York property subject of the black propaganda, described as ‘Other Investment’ in Annex A,” Legarda’s prepared statement said.
She noted that in that SALN, she disclosed the property having an amount of P7,175,000 “equal to one-fourth of the total investment in the acquisition of apartment amounting to P28,700,000.”
“Beginning December 31, 2007 up to December 31, 2010, the same property was also included in the SALN described as `Equity in Real Property,’ also one-fourth of the total P 28,700,000,” the statement said.
“As of December 31, 2011 and December 31, 2012 the New York property was also included in my SALN described as `Real Property-USA,’’’ it added.
Legarda named Philippine Star columnist Domini Torrevillas and Alvin Capino of Business Mirror as just two of the columnists who alerted her about e-mails supposedly sent by Willie F. with a request that these be used.
Legarda provided reporters with photocopies of an e-mail message apparently forwarded to her by Torrevillas.
Dated “1 May 2013,” the e-mail said: “Dear Domini, Hope you can use this for your col (sic) … Best regards, Willie F.”
The column feed is titled “Is Legarda the lady (sic) Corona?”
“Hindi ko po alam kung sino o baka naman kilala po nyo. Nakalulungkot na ang black propaganda nanggagaling po sa isang PR (public relations officer) ng isang senatorial candidate,” Legarda told reporters.
Her voice suddenly shaking, the senator added: “Kailangan na akong magsalita at di maaari na kung sinong malinis ang siyang binabato. (I have to speak out and somebody who is clean should not be hit.) The number one senator does not run away.”
Legarda said that apart from her, this rival was also targeting a third senatorial candidate who was also doing well in the surveys until recently.
“The other target is slowly going down because of their efforts,” she noted.
Reporters peppered Legarda with questions about Willie F. and his client.
Legarda would not reveal their identities on camera, only hinting that her rival was a male reelectionist senator who also spread wild rumors about President Aquino’s mental health during his presidential run in 2010.
“He is known in the media as ‘Boy Kuryente (bum steer),’” she added. Apparently, the moniker was coined when the senator’s allegation against Mr. Aquino was later debunked.
Legarda said she had a talk with the President before calling reporters. “Thank you for your patience, Loren,” she recalled the President telling her on the line.
She said she reminded the President that the other candidate also spread nasty rumors about his mental health when he ran for president in 2010.
Legarda added that Sen. Franklin Drilon, who managed the Team PNoy senatorial campaign, had given her permission to use the Makati headquarters after she told him of what the other candidate had been doing.
It would be recalled that Legarda first revealed the alleged effort to pull her down from first place in surveys after her appearance in the first Inquirer Senate Forum held in Diliman, Quezon City.
She told the Inquirer at the time that another candidate among those enjoying a comfortable ranking in the surveys was behind text messages maligning her.


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Thousands attend Team PNoy sortie in Visayas, Mindanao

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4:56 pm | Friday, May 3rd, 2013

TACLOBAN CITY, Philippines–Thousands of supporters gathered here on Friday for the campaign sortie of two Team PNoy senatorial bets joined by celebrity endorser Kris Aquino.
For second straight day, re-electionist Senator Francis “Chiz” Escudero and former MTRCB chairperson Grace Poe brought Aquino in their sorties, which started in General Santos City Thursday morning and in Davao City in the afternoon.
In Cebu, they kicked off the campaign with media interviews followed by a press conference at lunch time and a political rally held at Leyte Sports Complex in Tacloban City which started a little past 4 p.m.
The rally was also attended by local candidates, including mayoralty bet Florencio “Bem” Noel, who belted out the song “Nandito ako” before a cheering crowd.
The audience went wild when they first saw Aquino.


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Mancao: ‘Senator wants me killed’


Escapes from NBI detention

By 




Former police Senior Supt. Cezar Mancao on Thursday accused Sen. Panfilo Lacson of trying to get him killed, forcing him to escape from detention at the National Bureau of Investigation headquarters in Manila.
Mancao, accused of murder for the 2000 killings of well-known public relations agent Salvador “Bubby” Dacer and his driver, Emmanuel Corbito, bolted from the NBI jail early Thursday and embarrassed the government by calling news organizations to explain why he escaped.
“I know about the plan to have me killed,” Mancao said.
At first, Mancao did not say who was behind the alleged plot to kill him but when asked by the news anchor if he was referring to Lacson, he replied: “You said it.”
Mancao said Lacson was behind the move to transfer him from NBI custody to the Manila City Jail, where he said his life could be in danger.
Lacson, former chief of the Philippine National Police and the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Task Force (PAOCTF) some of whose agents allegedly killed Dacer and Corbito, shrugged off reports of Mancao’s escape.
“His escape is his problem, as well as his custodian’s,” Lacson said in response to questions from reporters.
He also refused to give a statement about Mancao’s claim that he was behind the move to transfer him from the NBI to the city jail.
His staff also refused to give any statement about Mancao’s claims that the senator was a threat to his life.
Defense’s move
Four policemen accused in the Dacer-Corbito case had asked Judge Carolina Icasiano-Sison of the 18th Branch of the Manila Regional Trial Court to order the transfer of Mancao to the city jail, where they and 21 other former police officers charged in the case are detained.
The policemen argued that since Mancao was no longer a state witness and an accused in the case, he should not be given special treatment.
The court granted the policemen’s petition and issued a commitment order late on Tuesday but as it was a holiday, the order could not be enforced.
Mancao was scheduled to be transferred to the city jail Thursday but he got wind of it and, with the help of two guards, escaped early in the morning.
“I will not surrender. Not now,” Mancao said. “I am a victim of injustice.”
“My rights have been violated,” he said.

Investigation ordered
President Aquino ordered the Department of Justice (DOJ) to investigate Mancao’s escape.
“The President has instructed (Justice) Secretary Leila de Lima to [investigate] and hold accountable all the people who would be found responsible for the escape of Mr. Mancao,” presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda said.
De Lima ordered the NBI to investigate Mancao’s escape and launch a manhunt for the former PAOCTF officer who implicated Lacson in the murders of Dacer and Corbito.
NBI Director Nonnatus Rojas said the manhunt began Thursday.
“We have alerted all of our units nationwide for the manhunt and we are now conducting a full investigation to pinpoint the people responsible for the escape. [We will bring] criminal and administrative charges [against them],” Rojas said.
Guards detained
He said two guards who apparently let Mancao escape had been detained.
NBI Deputy Director for Intelligence Reynaldo Esmeralda said footage from a security camera showed Mancao calmly leaving his cell at 1:14 a.m. Thursday carrying a big black travel bag. He was wearing a bull cap.
Esmeralda said Mancao left a note asking that his things not be removed without “a proper inventory.”
De Lima also ordered the Bureau of Immigration to stop Mancao in case he tried to leave the country.
Immigration Commissioner Ricardo David Jr. in turn ordered the bureau’s personnel at all ports to look out for Mancao.
So sorry
De Lima told reporters that she spoke to Mancao by phone hours after he escaped.
“He repeatedly asked for forgiveness and understanding for what he did because, according to him, his life was in danger,” De Lima said.
De Lima confirmed that Mancao escaped because he feared he would be killed once transferred to the city jail.
“He claimed he had sources [who told him his life would be in danger there],” she said.
De Lima said she tried to convince Mancao to surrender and offered to bring him in for his safety.
She said she assured Mancao that he would be held at the NBI while he was appealing the court order for his transfer to the city jail.
Mancao refused and said he was already outside Metro Manila, De Lima said.
She said she spoke to Mancao again in the afternoon. Mancao, she said, was adamant about not surrendering.
“He said that as of now, his decision was not to surrender, although it didn’t mean that in the next few days he would not change his mind,” De Lima said.
“I told him that if he did not surrender today [Thursday], then I’m sorry, I will have to intensify the manhunt for you,” she said.
Fugitive
“For all intents and purposes, legally and technically speaking, he is now a fugitive from justice,” De Lima said.
Mancao and another former police officer, Michael Ray Aquino, were charged with murder for the killings of Dacer and Corbito.
The two men were protégés of Lacson in the police service and in the PAOCTF.
Dacer and Corbito were abducted allegedly by PAOCTF agents in October 2000. Their burned remains were found in a creek in Cavite province in 2001.
Suspicion fell on Lacson and former President Joseph Estrada. Both denied having anything to do with the murders.
Murder charges
Murder charges were brought against 22 policemen and PAOCTF agents in 2001. Among those arrested was the PAOCTF deputy chief for operations in Luzon, Senior Supt. Glenn Dumlao, who linked Mancao and Aquino to the murders.
Mancao and Aquino fled to the United States in June 2001 but they were charged in absentia in September that year.
No evidence was found against Dumlao and he was discharged from the case. He left for the United States in 2003.
In May 2006, the court found probable cause to prosecute Mancao and Aquino and ordered their arrest.
The administration of then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo asked the US government to extradite Mancao and Aquino.
By that time, Aquino had been arrested, tried and jailed for spying for the Philippine political opposition led by Estrada.
In February 2009, Mancao executed an affidavit accusing Lacson of being the mastermind behind the Dacer-Corbito murders.
Estrada critic
He said Lacson ordered Dacer killed because the PR agent was a fierce critic of Estrada.
When the killers struck, Dacer was apparently their lone target. But they also killed Corbito because he was with Dacer at the time.
Mancao returned to Manila in June 2009, pleaded not guilty to the charges against him, and offered to serve as state witness in the case. He was subsequently put under government protection.
With Mancao’s testimony, the DOJ brought murder charges against Lacson, who fled the country before the court could issue a warrant for his arrest.
Dumlao returned to the Philippines and told the court trying the case that the DOJ induced him to link Lacson to the killings.
He also told reporters that DOJ prosecutors forced him to blame the killings on Lacson.
Unfit as witness
Lacson fought the charges in the Court of Appeals while on the run. In February 2011, the court’s sixth division threw out Mancao’s affidavit after finding inconsistencies in his testimony that, the court said, made him unfit as a state witness.
Lacson surfaced and Mancao was taken off the government protection program and turned over to the NBI.
No longer under government protection, Mancao became a target for the defense, which sought his transfer to the Manila City Jail.
In an interview on radio Thursday, Mancao said the court order to transfer him to the city jail was “an aggravation.”
“That was just too much,” he said. “I am the witness but I am the one going to jail,” he said.
“My life was ruined by this case but I have nothing to do with it,” he said.
“Their intention is different,” he said, referring to the people behind the move to transfer him to the city jail.
“It’s my life they want,” he added.
Attempt at reconciliation
A source with knowledge of the case said Mancao tried to reconcile with Lacson through Aquino, who returned to the Philippines in June 2011 and was not prosecuted for lack of evidence against him.
“But Ping turned down the pleas of Mancao, also through Aquino,” the source said, using Lacson’s nickname.
Aquino now works as a security guard at a company named Solaire. “He has gotten his life back,” the source said.
Mancao also wants his life back, the source said.
Lacson’s forgiveness would help bring back Mancao’s life but Lacson refused to forgive his former aide, the source said.
They have moved on
Lacson is apparently in the clear concerning the Dacer-Corbito killings. He will complete his third term in the Senate in June and will join the Cabinet to handle a still unspecified job.
Estrada was never charged. He is now running for mayor of Manila.
Dumlao has also moved on. He is now commander of the Public Safety Battalion of the Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Aurora, Quezon) police.
Mancao’s former lawyer, Ferdinand Topacio, on Thursday called on him to surrender.
Topacio said Mancao’s “justifiable frustration” over the treatment he was getting from the DOJ forced him to escape.
But he said Mancao should turn himself in.
“If it is necessary for me to give my assistance again to him, I will gladly do so,” Topacio said.
A source said Mancao, who ran for a congressional seat in 2010, is a candidate for councilor in Compostela Valley.
“He will surrender eventually. He just wants people to take notice of his predicament. He feels an injustice was done to him,” the source said. With reports from Cathy C. Yamsuan, Michael Lim Ubac, Philip C. Tubeza, Marlon Ramos, Inquirer.net and AFP