Category: Crime

  • Via America’s Lawyer: While parents and teachers continue debating mask and vaccine mandates, the FBI quietly activates its counter-terrorism division against school board officials, deeming them potential threats. Plus, CNN has officially fired Chris Cuomo after the primetime anchor was found to have provided talking points to Andrew Cuomo amid the former NY governor’s sex scandal. […]

    The post Threats By Crazed Parents Now Under FBI Investigation & CNN Helped Silence Cuomo Brothers’ Scandal appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Via The Neil Haley Show: Mike Papantonio is a senior partner with the law firm of Levin Papantonio Rafferty. He has received numerous multi-million dollar verdicts on behalf of victims of corporate malfeasance. His award-winning work handling thousands of mass tort cases throughout the nation has helped make Levin Papantonio Rafferty one of the largest […]

    The post Human Trafficking Stories Ignored By Dysfunctional Corporate Media appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • By Robert Iroga in Honiara

    The Royal Solomon Islands Police Force (RSIPF) has appealed to opposition leader Matthew Wale to “stop interfering” with police investigations in the wake of the rioting in Honiara last month.

    “It is unfortunate that the leader of opposition, Mr Mathew Wale, attempted to question an ongoing investigation by police in the media,” said Police Commissioner Mostyn Mangau.

    “Issues raised by Honourable Wale are legal issues that are best dealt with by the court.”

    Commissioner Mangau said in a statement that the police reassured Solomon Islanders that the police were an independent body and did not pursue political agendas.

    “RSIPF will not engage in legal arguments in the media,” he said.

    “Police will not further comment on matters that are subject to ongoing investigations. A leader should not interfere with police investigations.”

    Mangau said an accused would be provided with legal counsel and it was the duty of the lawyer to advocate for the rights of the accused in court.

    He added that Solomon Islands was currently under a state public emergency and the rules were set out under the Emergency Powers (COVID-19) (No.3) regulation 2021.

    Praise for AFP officers
    Meanwhile, the RSIPF Facebook page praised the help from the Australian Federal Police as part of their peacekeeping role.

    “Officers from the @AustFedPolice are supporting the RSIPF on the streets of Honiara,” sid the Facebook page along with a gallery of photos of Australian police on duty in Honiara.

    “Highly-skilled personnel have deployed from Australia, including the Specialist Operations Tactical Response team. Their mission is to support the RSIPF to protect the community and key infrastructure, and to peacefully restore order in Honiara.”

    The AFP officers had helped the RSIPF “peacefully restore calm in the community”.

    Fijian, New Zealand and Papua New Guinean military and police peacekeepers are also helping out in Honiara.

    Robert Iroga is editor of SBM Online. Republished with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • By Robert Iroga in Honiara

    Solomon Islands police have arrested 217 suspects connected to the three days of rioting and looting in the capital Honiara last week, but no alleged instigators so far.

    Thirty three of the arrested people were juveniles — those under 18.

    Police Commissioner Mostyn Managau appealed to members of the public to come forward and support police with evidence.

    The riots and looting started on November 24 when a crowd of demonstrators broke into the Parliament grounds. They were then forced out from the Parliament area.

    Their retreat into the city sparked three days of riots and looting that saw Chinatown razed, and several other properties in the eastern city set on fire, police stations attacked — one set ablaze, and Honiara High School torched to the ground.

    The riots were subdued with the arrival of an international force led by Australia, PNG and Fiji with reinforcements from New Zealand arriving yesterday and over the weekend.

    Meanwhile, Commissioner Mangau said there were two ongoing investigations — one into the looting and rioting, while the other probes the alleged perpetrators.

    So far there have still been no arrests of key players allegedly behind the riot.

    Robert Iroga is editor of SBM Online. Republished with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Catholic church burns to the ground, Attawapiskat First Nation

    Hello Mr Annett,

    I am a Detective with the Vancouver Police Department, and my partner and I have been assigned to look into some of the more recent incidents in the city of Vancouver that relate to the vandalism towards Catholic Churches and ongoing protests from the heightened tension in society today.

    I noted in my reading online that you have a background in understanding the residential school history in the Province and the role of the Catholic Church. I was hoping that you may have time to sit down with my partner and I, or to discuss over the phone if you prefer, some of you thoughts on the tensions currently existing, and your perspective on them. Our goal is to promote public safety, and of course any understanding helps us to do that.

    I hope to hear from you!

    Mike Scoretz

    Desk: 604-717-9948
    ac.dpvnull@zterocs.leahcim

    Investigation Division
    3585 Graveley Street
    Vancouver BC
    V5K 5J5

    REPLY from Kevin Annett

    Dear Michael and Alen,

    Hello to you both and thank you for writing.

    I would be happy to speak to you about the social tensions and conflict caused by unpunished crimes committed by the Roman Catholic church, including its standing policy known as Crimen Sollicitationas that requires that Catholics not report in-house child abuse to the police and help cover it up. That criminal conspiracy has helped caused the death of tens of thousands of native children in the misnamed “Indian residential schools” and intergenerational trauma, suicide and misery. And the failure of the government, the courts, and police to hold the Catholic church accountable under the law has created the outrage and frustration that leads to broken church windows and what you call “vandalism”.

    Considering that the Catholic church is actively subverting the law by witholding from your police force evidence of child abuse in its Vancouver churches, many people are wondering why neither the courts nor your Department are taking action to stop such criminality by the church. Instead, your main concern appears to be protecting their property. I am sure that neither of you wish to appear to collude with criminality, no matter who commits it.

    Over the years, we have provided to the police and media considerable evidence of child trafficking networks being operated in Vancouver and at such locations as Holy Rosary Cathedral and the Vancouver Club. And yet the police have time and again done nothing about it. Such a tacit collusion with a criminal conspiracy to protect child rapists may account for the frustration felt by people victimized by that church that leads to attacks against church property. But surely the systematic violation and taking of children’s lives by that church is as serious and much worse a crime than the breaking of church windows.

    Under international law, the Roman Catholic church is considered a Transnational Criminal Organization (TNCO) because of its proven record of laundering drug cartel money, child torture and trafficking, arms dealing, and centuries of deliberate genocide. Under the United Nations Convention on TNCO’s (2000), such a criminal body has lost its right to its own property and assets, which can be lawfully seized, including by citizens if the police and courts refuse to act. And so what you may consider vandalism against the Catholic church and the seizure of its buildings by indigenous people is actually prescribed by the requirements of international law.

    During December, indigenous elders and I are holding a series of public forums and actions that will hold the Catholic church accountable for its many crimes. As part of that effort I will be addressing the matter raised in your letter, including on my upcoming global blog radio program this Sunday. I welcome you or other representatives of the Vancouver Police Department to speak with me live on that program concerning why people feel the need to resort to vandalism when they are denied justice; and what steps the Vancouver police will take now to investigate and prosecute crimes committed by the Roman Catholic church in our city.

    I look forward to your reply.

    Sincerely,

    Rev. Kevin D. Annett, M.A., M.Div.
    Canadian Field Secretary of the International Tribunal of Crimes of Church and State (ITCCS)
    www.murderbydecree.com

    cc: public media , ITCCS head office

    The post Why are Catholic Churches Being Trashed? first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • Via America’s Lawyer: New emails reveal Trump officials actively cheering efforts to alter COVID guidance from the CDC. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Also, former education secretary Betsy DeVos left behind a controversial legacy: the overhaul of student sexual misconduct guidelines under Title IX. Mike Papantonio is joined by Public Justice attorney Alexandra Brodsky to explain how policy revisions have relieved schools […]

    The post Trump Cabinet Members Celebrate Suppressing COVID Data & School Sex Abuse Made Tougher For Victims appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • By Christine Rovoi, RNZ Pacific journalist

    With no plans to evacuate their citizens from Honiara, the international community is closely monitoring the situation in the Solomon Islands following a week of political unrest.

    There was an air of calm across Honiara this weekend.

    Resident Claire Percel puts it down to the arrival of Australian and Papua New Guinea defence forces to help the local police.

    She said the reinforcements had “really helped the situation but we’re still nervous”.

    “Roadblocks now set up in key locations and I’ve seen them check vehicles. Local businesses have started cleaning up the streets and removing the burnt vehicles.

    “I managed to get out of the house today for a grocery shop and visit some family. It was a really good change of scenery. I took my kids with me, it was a very difficult conversation trying to explain why this happened,” Percel said.

    There was rioting and looting across the capital following a protest at Parliament on Wednesday calling for the Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare to stand down.

    Protesters angry over China
    The protesters are angry at their government’s move to establish diplomatic ties with China, after decades of relations with Taiwan. Sogavare has refused to resign.

    The tension escalated on Friday when more than 100 protesters reached Sogavare’s residence, throwing rocks while police with riot shields fired tear gas to disperse the crowd.

    Australia and Papua New Guinea have deployed their defence force personnel to help the local police control rioting anti-government protesters.

    Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the Solomons reached out to his government for help. But he added Canberra was monitoring the situation in Honiara.

    New Zealand officials are in contact with their citizens in Honiara and are aware that the travel plans of some have been disrupted.

    A spokesperson from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade said the government had not yet received a formal request for assistance from the Solomon Islands government.

    Cleaning up after the rioting in Honiara
    Cleaning up after the rioting in Honiara. Image: Fiji community/RNZ Pacific

    “We are not activating evacuation plans at this stage but remain in contact with relevant partners on the ground and are monitoring events closely.

    “The New Zealand High Commission is providing Safe Travel advice to New Zealanders in Solomon Islands, including to follow the instructions of local authorities.

    “New Zealanders in Solomon Islands should not rely on New Zealand government-assisted departures in an emergency,” the MFAT spokesperson said.

    Fijians safe, government says
    Fiji’s government said its citizens in Honiara were safe.

    Fiji’s consul-general to the Solomon Islands, Atueta Balekana, assured family members of the 400 Fijians living in Honiara their loved ones were safe.

    Devastation after the Honiara rioting in Chinatown
    Devastation after the Honiara rioting in Chinatown. Image: Fiji community/RNZ Pacific

    The only unfortunate incident for the Fijian community in Honiara, he said, was the torching of one of its members’ shops.

    Balekana also said a former Fijian soldier working as a caretaker at one of Honiara’s biggest hotels was confronted by rioters.

    However, the couple who own Oceanic Marine Equipment Ltd are safe and the security officer had sought the aid of hotel employees that were loyal to the Honiara-based Malaitans to protect the property.

    “We have issued an advisory for all Fijians in the Honiara vicinity not to get involved in the rioting and to leave them as they are,” Balekana said.

    No evacuation plan
    “We have not come up with an evacuation plan as yet, but if things escalate we would have to resort to one.

    “At this stage, we do not expect the situation to escalate any further as security forces have stepped in to control the situation.”

    Balekana said the Fijian community’s contribution to the Solomon Islands’ development is widely respected and “we do not think that we are under any threat”.

    “The Solomon islanders treasure our relations but it is good to always approach these situations with caution.”

    Balekana said more than 45 Fijian citizens worked in Honiara, while there were more than 300 Fijians married to Solomon islanders.

    Unrest forces workers home
    Rotuman Kaitu Aisake arrived in Honiara in 2019.

    Aisake said he immediately adjusted well to life in the Solomon Islands. He welcomed the locals and the lifestyle.

    The recent events in the city took Aisake by surprise. He grew up in Fiji and had experienced political unrest.

    Aisake said his office was among several businesses torched and looted by angry protesters on Friday.

    Employees have been told to remain at home until further notice.

    “The riots have always been politically motivated and they’ve always been targeting the township and industrial areas,” he said.

    “The advice has always been consistent: just stay home. We will not return to work until the security situation can be confirmed that it is okay.”

    Kaitu Aisake during a visit to Malaita Island
    Kaitu Aisake during a visit to Malaita Island. Image: RNZ Pacific

    Plunged into ‘darkness’
    Aisake warned that the political unrest in the Solomons has plunged the country further into “darkness”.

    “This already had a huge impact without the lockdown. Our communities have already been deeply impacted. Unemployment, crime rates have gone up so socially everything is dysfunctional.

    “The bright side is that we’ve managed to keep covid out of our borders but now with this, this rioting – whichever way you try to look at it, the impact is really bad though.”

    Aisake hopes the arrival of security forces from Australia and Papua New Guinea helps stabilise the volatile situation in Honiara.

    Tough times ahead, says ex-NZ resident
    Former New Zealand resident John Wopereis said it had been a “tough week for everyone”.

    He moved from Nelson to the Solomon Islands four years ago.

    Wopereis said the events that took place in Honiara took his family and friends by surprise.

    “This all happened so suddenly. We didn’t have anytime to prepare our families with food or gas – with businesses being burned, there’s a bank branch that got burned too.

    “Hundreds of Solomon Islanders unemployed. Where are they going to get their money to feed their families? In a couple of weeks, it’s going to get very bad because there’s going to be a shortage of everything. There’s nothing left.”

    He said the unrest may have started as “something political but spiralled out of control”.

    Wopereis said people were taking advantage of the conflict with majority of them violating the laws.

    John Wopereis and his family in Honiara
    Former Nelson resident John Wopereis and his family in Honiara. Image: John Wopereis/RNZ Pacific

    ‘Totally out of control’
    “People are not respecting what is being asked of them so whether or not we did have a lockdown or not, I think it’s just gone totally out of control. It’s very sad because it’s not only men, it’s children too. I’ve seen kids walking around with batteries, with cartons of soft drinks. It’s total chaos,” he said.

    “I do feel that the Solomon Islands will bounce back from this. The events that unfolded really exposed a lot of underlying societal issues in the country that the nation can learn from and build back better.”

    Meanwhile, an Air Kiribati crew are stranded in Honiara after arriving hours before the conflict started on Wednesday.

    Pilot Captain Salote Mataitini said she was concerned at the escalating unrest in the country.

    Mataitini and a colleague had only arrived in Honiara from Tarawa when the protests began.

    She said their flight to Brisbane later that day was cancelled but they are now both safe in a hotel.

    “I guess as a pilot you are really calm in stressful situations, I guess once I get back to Tarawa I will think about this experience.”

    The Air Kiribati crew will leave Honiara in two weeks.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • SPECIAL REPORT: By Robert Iroga in Honiara

    Honiara residents walked for long distances to find shops and ATMs today with fewer or nor public transport available and the city shops were either closed or in ruins after two days of chaotic rioting and looting.

    Today’s painful reality was what the city dwellers woke up to after a 36-hour lockdown following two days of heartless riots and looting that left shops, a school, police stations either looted or burned to the ground in the east and central of the city.

    Among those who walked the distance was Lilly and her husband who toiled the road to Point Cruz from Vura only to realise the ANZ ATM had no money.

    Next to the couple on the queue was another woman who looked so frail; she too had no money and was hurrying to withdraw her final SI$300 (about NZ$55) only to find the machine was empty. The mother was bitterly disappointed and I could see the agony in her eyes.

    “I have nothing to eat. I needed to buy a small bag of rice for my kids who have not been eating since last night. We were never prepared for the lockdown,” she lamented.

    “I don’t know, I am hungry, what’s going on,” she could be heard speaking in a soft-voice.

    The woman walked from Kukum only to be disappointed with an empty ATM at Point Cruz.

    Expressing their grief
    Even in their pain, the three were able to express their grief on seeing the burnt and looted face of Honiara — especially Chinatown — on their way to Point Cruz.

    Robert Iroga
    Robert Iroga … “I don’t know what tomorrow will bring, but surely we will suffer.” Image: SBM Twitter

    “I don’t know what tomorrow will bring, but surely we will suffer. Prices will go up and with the little wages our buying power will be further weakened,” said Lilly.

    Across Point Cruz, there were countless people looking for shops and ATM machines. Long queues were experienced in the ATM machines and Bulkshops’ were packed with panic buyers.

    “I am spending about $600 [NZ$110] on my shopping. This is the first time I have spent  huge money. It is like half of my fortnight[‘s money] but I have to use it because I don’t know what tomorrow will bring,” said a public officer who did not want to be named.

    He added Solomon Islanders were known for buying what’s only enough for the day. But today he’s doing the unusual shopping for the first time due to the uncertain times “we are in”.

    With Honiara’s shops closed and manned by private security guards, Bulkshops at Point Cruz and Rove were the only places that people went to for food and other household goods.

    In one of their shops, rice was emptied within the first hours of opening.

    Long lines of people
    Down at White River, the Solomon Motors Refill Station had experienced a heavy turn out of vehicles and it developed long lines of people wanting to refill their vehicles. Regardless of that, everybody had their vehicles served.

    Similarly, up in the east, long lines were also experienced at the Didao Refill station as vehicles filled up their tanks.

    In the central Honiara, the market opened but with limited supply and prices were hiked by the few sellers.

    With whatever Honiara residents could find, whether it was a packet of rice or a bag or even fruits from the market, they mostly walked home as public transport has stopped working most of the day.

    Walking was not easy. Many had to navigate the dangers on the road – encountering smashed bottles and other harmful waste on the roads from the loot on their way home.

    It is evident on the Kukum highway and even on the pavements that they were littered with fragments and the skyline, especially at Chinatown, was polluted with thick smoke discharging from the burnt buildings.

    On my way back to Point Cruz from the east, I saw people walking to all directions.

    Shedding tears over disaster
    A mother whom I picked up on the way shed tears when we drove past Chinatown. When seeing the little town billowing smoke from the disaster and lying in ruins, she cried.

    Within just three days, life in Honiara — which has been rebuilt steadily over the years since the ethnic tensions and the 2006 riots — has been turned into a nightmare.

    Our public transport has been interrupted, shops are closing or burned down and life has been turned upside-down. Such is the new normal for Honiara, but surely more painful days are ahead.

    Robert Iroga is editor and publisher of SBM Online. He filed this report on Friday, 26 November 2021. It is republished with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Via KAHI Radio: Mike Papantonio is a senior partner at Levin Papantonio Rafferty, one of the country’s largest plaintiff’s law firms and Papantonio heads pack taking on big pharma, tobacco, weapons manufacturers, the auto industry and now human trafficking. Click here to purchase of copy of “Inhuman Trafficking.”

    The post Human Trafficking Thrives With Wall Street Funding appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Asia Pacific Report newsdesk

    Solomon Islands police have arrested more than 100 suspects as Honiara townspeople clean up after three days of rioting and looting in Chinatown following a peaceful protest.

    The Royal Solomon Islands Police Force (RSIPF) confirmed this in a statement.

    “I must make it very clear here that no one is above the law,” said Police Commissioner Mostyn Mangau.

    “We are expected to live and make decisions within the principles of the rule of law regardless of our positions in our society. I therefore forewarned that if anybody is found in breach of such illegal activities, police will not hesitate to arrest and deal with him/her.”

    Commissioner Mangau appealed to people to “stop the looting and burning”.

    “Nothing will benefit you with such activities. Let me reiterate my call to those involved in those illegal activities to stop.

    “These commercial infrastructures are the beating heart for the revenue of this country and that is where the benefits drift to service all our domestic services, even our wages and daily consumption.”

    ‘Respect each other’
    The commissioner said: “My good residents of Honiara City, as we all know, Honiara City is a multicultural society. Therefore, I as your Police Commissioner hereby appeal to each one living in the city to respect each other, as well as our visiting friends from abroad.”

    He asked people to ask themselves: “Is our actions fair to all concerned? Will our actions build goodwill and better friendships? Will our actions be beneficial to all concerned?”

    Commissioner Mangau said police were working closely with the office of the Director Public Persecution (DPP) for possible charges to be laid against suspects.

    SI$227m loss estimated
    The Central Bank of the Solomon Islands has estimated the economic loss from rioting to be at least SI$227 million (NZ$42 million), the SBM Online reports.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ Pacific

    Police in Solomon Islands were overrun as rioters and looters tore through the capital Honiara.

    RNZ Pacific correspondent in Honiara, Elizabeth Osifelo, said exhausted police were overwhelmed as more people swarmed into town in defiance of a 36-hour lockdown.

    Shops in Chinatown which had survived the earlier unrest were ransacked and burned.

    On the eastern side of town the Ranadi branch of Bank of the South Pacific was torched as was locally owned and operated hardware store, Island Enterprise.

    Osifelo said police were doing everything they could to try and get control of the situation but they were outnumbered.

    “It was all looting and just chaos. So there were a whole lot of people in the Chinatown area but there were still other locations around the eastern part of Honiara that has been really badly affected,” she said.

    “A lot of businesses and a lot of buildings have been burned.”

    Osifelo said the unrest had had a massive impact on law-abiding citizens and families in and around the capital who were now running low on food and basic necessities, as well as utilities like power and water which were pre-paid services in Honiara.

    Looting and burning in the Solomon Islands capital Honiara 25 November 2021
    More looting and burning in the Solomon Islands capital Honiara yesterday as local police were overwhelmed by angry mobs. Image: RNZ/Solomons/Facebook

    “Families in and around Honiara were not prepared for the basic things such as cash power, cash water and just the basic food supplies at home so the situation is and will affect a lot of families in Honiara,” she said.

    Community rally to support police
    In some parts of the city police numbers have been bolstered by law-abiding citizens.

    Elizabeth Osifelo said attempts by rioters to ransack and burn a local police station in the Naha area were thwarted when residents came to the aid of police and drove the rioters away.

    She said in the western part of the city citizens were helping to man barricades and supporting police to stop the looting.

    Australia sending help
    Australia is deploying Defence Force personnel and federal police to support local authorities in Solomon Islands.

    The ABC reports Prime Minister Scott Morrison saying 23 officers from the Australian Federal Police (AFP) specialist response group were being deployed immediately.

    A further 50 AFP officers would be deployed to support critical infrastructure on Friday as well as 43 Defence Force personnel.

    Morrison said the deployment was in response to a request from Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare made through the instruments of a security treaty signed with Australia in 2017.

    This was the same year that the Australian-led Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) ended, having helped restore law and order, and rebuilt the country after the bloody Ethnic Crisis which began in the late-1990s.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • By Robert Iroga in Honiara

    A defiant Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare has vowed tonight that he will not resign and will defend Solomon Islands democracy with his life.

    After two-days of looting with Honiara’s Chinatown in ruins and calls for him to step down, Sogavare declared he was not resigning.

    “If I am removed as Prime Minister, it will be on the floor of Parliament,” he said.

    “I have faith and respect in our democratic process, and I will defend it with my life. I say this with deepest conviction.

    “Our people need to and must understand that our actions in defending democracy is not merely a lip service. It is conviction in the principles and values that underpins our democracy and all democracies around the world.”

    Sogavare said in a radio broadcast to the nation the past 36 hours had seen the country, especially, Honiara brought to its knees.

    “I have been asked to step down and while I acknowledge that call I must also respect our democracy. I am elected as the Prime Minister of our beloved country by 35 members of Parliament who represent their people.

    Politicians’ ‘hunger for power’
    “The call for me to step down is premised on the hunger for power by certain politicians who do not have any respect for the principles of democracy and due process,” he said.

    Sogavare said that in 2006 a precedent had been set when the then Prime Minister was asked to resign after a riot in Honiara.

    Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare
    Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare … “If I am to step down, what message would that send to our people, children and generations to come?” Image: SIBC

    “That event is the precedent for our current situation. If I am to step down, what message would that send to our people, children and generations to come?” he asked.

    “Some of us are of the opinion that if I step down the protests and riots will stop. This is the easiest decision to make.

    “However, the effect of this decision is what weighs heavy in my heart. Are we saying to our young children and youths that whenever we are not happy with those in authority we take the laws into our own hands?

    “If we do this, it is a very dangerous message to our people and future generations.

    “We are effectively saying to our children, take the law into your hands if [and] whenever you are not happy. This must never be the message we send nor the conviction we instill in our citizens if we are to progress as a peaceful democracy.”

    ‘Return to your homes’
    Sogavare said in his appeal: “I call on all our people to please return to your homes. Our city has already been ransacked with properties burnt to the ground. It will take a lot of effort and money to rebuild it.

    “I appeal to you all to respect our city, public and private properties and the safety of innocent civilians.

    “Destruction, looting and violence is not how we address our grievances but instead through dialogue and consultation which the government has been advancing despite misinformation being circulated by certain individuals and leaders who have no regard for the collateral and irreversible damage caused by such unwarranted actions,” he said.

    Sogavare asked the the churches to pray for the country and people.

    Sogavare also urged all ministers and members of Parliament to “defend our democracy”.

    He said the government had not been idle with its efforts to protect the country from covid-19, sustain the economy and progress crucial reforms in the best interests of the nation as a whole.

    Regional support
    “I have been in contact with the government of Australia and Papua New Guinea seeking their assistance to assist our country which is forthcoming. We cannot allow our country, people and our future to be held at ransom by very few people representing their own narrow interests,” he said.

    “I am extremely saddened that people have been misled by politicians for their own agenda. Our unsuspecting people have continuously been misled and are victims in this sad and unfortunate situation.

    “I do not blame the people who are protesting and rioting, they are citizens of our country, and unfortunately they have been used by certain politicians and individuals to further their own selfish and narrow agendas.”

    Robert Iroga is editor of Solomon Business Magazine. This article is republished with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • RNZ Pacific

    A police station and several shops were set on fire by looters in Solomon Islands today after what started in the morning as a peaceful protest turned ugly around mid-afternoon.

    Videos on social media show police firing tear gas to disperse looters, and buildings on fire.

    RNZ Pacific’s correspondent in the capital Honiara, Georgina Kekea, was in the Kukum area where the police station and shops were set alight, and said at least one building had been burned down.

    Police she spoke to said the large crowds had been at the other end of town, and officers had not expected the crowd to attack their police station.

    “So when they came out and they just saw all the protestors there and they had to run into a room and hide. There were about 10 of them,” she said.

    “They were in the rooms when they started breathing in smoke and they realised that the building was being burnt, so they came out and the building has [now] burnt down.”

    Earlier in the day a plume of black smoke was seen rising from Parliament’s grounds, where Kekea said a leaf hut used for coffee breaks was on fire, before firefighters from the fire station next to Parliament put the blaze out.

    Kekea said local police were calling for calm as they tried to restore order.

    They said much of the looting was being carried out by criminal opportunists, most of them young men.

    The original protest at Parliament was led by citizens from Malaita province, who were voicing their frustrations with the national government and calling for Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare to step down.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    The rioting in Honiara today.
    The rioting in Honiara today. Image: The Pacific Newsroom

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • By Marjorie Finkeo in Port Moresby

    An inter-agency team working with Australian and American investigators has busted a drug laboratory operating in a Papua New Guinean hotel last week — but this could all be for nothing.

    Papua New Guinea does not have the appropriate laws to prosecute offenders involved in such dangerous drugs, a senior police officer said.

    The cache was seized in Sanctuary Hotel in the capital Port Moresby’s suburb Waigani.

    Head of the illicit and narcotic investigation team, Donald Yamasombi said PNG Police and PNG Customs had worked with the Australian Federal Police and United States Department of Homeland Security in an operation dubbed Saki Bomb.

    The team tracked an illegal consignment from the United States onboard a cargo vessel all the way to PNG, resulting in the arrest last week of hotel’s group operations manager Jamie Pang.

    Yamasombi said police had executed a search warrant on November 16 and raided the Sanctuary Hotel at Waigani and found a mini clandestine laboratory to produce methamphetamine, a highly dangerous recreational drug sometimes referred to as ice, or meth.

    He said the clandestine laboratory was found inside a hotel room adjacent to Pang’s room.

    High powered guns
    Police also discovered and seized high powered guns and live ammunition of different calibres.

    “History in the making for constabulary to see a laboratory where we got them in the process of producing meth,” Yamasombi said.

    Pang was charged with four counts of possession of firearms without licences, five counts of possession of live ammunition and two counts of possession of firearm ­­– a total of 11 charges, for which he pleaded guilty last Friday at Boroko District Court.

    “Unfortunately we cannot charge him with methamphetamine because there is no legislation,” Yamasombi said.

    “For us it is a slap in the face though we have evidence and substances to prove this.

    “But a good result of the operation is that he had pleaded guilty and we are now waiting to see court decision in court this week.”

    He said investigations were continuing and further avenues will be looked at to prosecute Pang.

    Marjorie Finkeo is a PNG Post-Courier reporter. Republished with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • ‘Matter has become curiouser and curiouser in the battle between the then Home Minister and the then Police Commissioner,’ said the SC

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Via WSRE PBS: Jeff’s guest is trial lawyer, author and media personality Mike Papantonio. He is noted for litigating cases against large corporations with questionable ethics and business practices. From pollution to opioids, Papantonio has stood tall against corporate giants who have put profit before people. He is the author of several books, the most […]

    The post Human Trafficking: PBS Interviews Mike Papantonio appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Madhya Pradesh police busted a racket which allegedly sold ganja under the guise of selling a sweetener through the e-commerce platform

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Via America’s Lawyer: The fiancée of the late Jamal Khashoggi sues Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman for his involvement in Khashoggi’s murder, filing the suit in U.S. district court. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Also, major chemical companies 3M and DuPont have allowed PFAS chemicals to seep into everyday products and waterways. Attorney Madeline Pendley joins Mike Papantonio to explain the […]

    The post Ex-Fiancée Seeks Justice For Khashoggi’s Murder & EPA Allowed Industries To Pollute Drinking Water appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Via In Question: Ghislaine Maxwell is speaking out for the first time since she was arrested last year. But as she faces the possibility that she could spend the rest of her life behind bars—she is criticizing treatment by the guards of the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center—saying they stare at her as she showers, and ignored […]

    The post Epstein’s Madam Ghislaine Maxwell Can’t Stand Prison Conditions appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Via America’s Lawyer: A federal judge cited the statute of limitations when dismissing a litany of sexual abuse charges against former Ohio State University physician Dr. Richard Strauss. From the Mass Torts Made Perfect conference in Las Vegas, legal journalist Mollye Barrows joined RT’s Brent Jabbour, filling in for Mike Papantonio, to explain how the saga is far from over, as […]

    The post Judge Tosses Out Ohio State Sexual Abuse Lawsuits appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Via America’s Lawyer: Following the 2019 terrorist attack at a Pensacola naval base which left 3 dead, families of victims sue the Saudi Arabian government for being complicit. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Plus, U.S. officials remain enamored by lucrative U.S.-Saudi arms deals while turning a blind eye to crimes of the Kingdom. Mike Papantonio and is joined by Attorney Chris […]

    The post Saudi Radicals Trained In The US & Lawsuits Target Royal Family For Supporting Terrorist Groups appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Via America’s Lawyer: Studies show that militarizing local police forces with weapons of war does nothing to reduce crime rates. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Also, the weight-loss aid Belviq was once the most popular drug on the market. Then came a recall due to hundreds of cases of brain, lung, and pancreatic cancer. Attorney Stephen Luongo joins Mike Papantonio to explain […]

    The post Arming Local Police With Military Weapons & Popular Weight Loss Drug Is Causing Cancer appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Police have detained the woman, the man who bought the child, and four others who helped the woman in the crime

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Via The Frankie Boyer Show: Mike Papantonio is a senior partner at Levin Papantonio Rafferty, one of the country’s largest plaintiff’s law firms. He’s aggressively taken on big pharma, tobacco, weapon manufacturers and the automobile industry. He’s been involved in almost every major multi-district litigation that involves pharmaceutical drugs. And you are now and you […]

    The post Corporate Sociopaths Are Bankrolling Human Trafficking appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Via America’s Lawyer: Several tech companies have been accused of aiding foreign governments who are attempting to stifle dissents in their countries. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins to discuss more. Also, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia continues to face lawsuits over its proven connections to terrorist attacks, including the deadly mass shooting at a Pensacola naval base. Mike Papantonio and is joined by Attorney […]

    The post Tech Giants Accused Of Spying On Citizens Abroad & Saudi Kingdom Named In Terrorism Lawsuit appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Sexual predation by police officers happens far more often than people in the business are willing to admit.

    former Seattle police chief Norm Stamper

    We are a nation on the brink of a nervous breakdown.

    Undeniably, the blowback from COVID-19 lockdowns and mandates continues to reverberate around the country, impacting the nation’s struggling workplaces, choking the economy and justifying all manner of authoritarian tyrannies being inflicted on the populace by state and federal governments.

    Yet while it is easy to be distracted by political theater, distressed by the COVID-19 pandemic, and divided over authoritarian lockdowns and mandates, there are still darker forces afoot that cannot—should not—must not be ignored.

    Here’s a news flash for you: there are sexual predators on America’s police forces.

    Indeed, when it comes to sex trafficking—the buying and selling of young girls, boys and women for sex—police have become both predators and pimps. As the Philadelphia Inquirer reports, “Hundreds of police officers across the country have turned from protectors to predators, using the power of their badge to extort sex.”

    Victims of sex trafficking report that police are among those “buying” young girls and women for sex. Incredibly, this COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in even greater numbers of children being preyed upon by sex traffickers.

    Unfortunately, rather than being part of the solution, America’s police forces—riddled with corruption, brutality, sexual misconduct and drug abuse—have largely become part of the problem.

    In New York, for instance, seven NYPD cops—three sergeants, two detectives and two officers—were accused of running brothels that sold 15-minute sexual encounters, raking in more than $2 million over the course of 13 months.

    In California, a police sergeant—a 16-year veteran of the police force—was arrested for raping a 16-year-old girl who was being held captive and sold for sex in a home in an upscale neighborhood.

    A week-long sting in Florida ended with 277 arrests of individuals accused of sex trafficking, including doctors, pharmacists and police officers.

    Sex trafficking victims in Hawaii described “cops asking for sexual favors to more coercive situations like I’ll let you go if you do X, Y, or Z for me.”

    One study found that “over 14 percent of sex workers said that they had been threatened with arrest unless they had sex with a police officer.” In many states, it’s actually legal for police to have sex with prostitutes during the course of sting operations.

    While the problem of cops engaged in sex trafficking is part of the American police state’s seedy underbelly that doesn’t get addressed enough, equally alarming is the number of cops who commit sex crimes against those they encounter as part of their job duties, a largely underreported number given the “blue wall of silence” that shields police misconduct.

    Former Seattle police chief Norm Stamper describes cases in which cops fondled prisoners, made false traffic stops of attractive women, traded sexual favors for freedom, had sex with teenagers and raped children.

    Young girls are particularly vulnerable to these predators in blue.

    Former police officer Phil Stinson estimates that half of the victims of police sex crimes are minors under the age of eighteen.

    According to the Washington Post, a national study found that 40 percent of reported cases of police sexual misconduct involved teens. One young woman was assaulted during a “ride along” with an officer, who said in a taped confession: “The badge gets you the p—y and the p—y gets your badge, you know?”

    For example, a Pennsylvania police chief and his friend were arrested for allegedly raping a young girl hundreds of times—orally, vaginally, and anally several times a week—over the course of seven years, starting when she was 4 years old.

    In 2017, two NYPD cops were accused of arresting a teenager, handcuffing her, and driving her in an unmarked van to a nearby parking lot, where they raped her and forced her to perform oral sex on them, then dropped her off on a nearby street corner.

    The New York Times reports that “a sheriff’s deputy in San Antonio was charged with sexually assaulting the 4-year-old daughter of an undocumented Guatemalan woman and threatening to have her deported if she reported the abuse.”

    One young girl, J.E., was kidnapped by a Border Patrol agent when she was 14 years old, taken to his apartment and raped. “In the apartment, there were two beds on top of the other, children’s bunk beds, and ropes there, too. They were shoelaces. For my wrists and my feet. My mind was blank,” recalls J.E. “I was trying to understand everything. I didn’t know what to do. My feet were tied up. I would look at him, and he had a gun. And that frightened me. I asked him why, and he answered me that he was doing this to me because I was the prettiest one of the three.”

    Two teenage girls accused a Customs and Border Protection officer of forcing them to strip, fondling them, then trying to get them to stop crying by offering chocolates, potato chips and a blanket. The government settled the case for $125,000. (Mind you, this is the same government that separated immigrant children from their parents and locked them up in detention centers, where they were easy prey for sexual predators. At one point, the government had received more than 4500 complaints about sexual abuse at those child detention facilities.)

    The police state’s sexual assaults of children are sickening enough, but when you add sex crimes against grown women into the mix, the picture becomes even more sordid.

    According to the Washington Post, “research on ‘police sexual misconduct’—a term used to describe actions from sexual harassment and extortion to forcible rape by officers—overwhelmingly concludes that it is a systemic problem.”

    Investigative journalist Andrea Ritchie has tracked national patterns of sexual violence by police officers during traffic stops, in addition to heightened risk from minor offenses, drug arrests and police interactions with teenagers.

    Victims of domestic abuse, women of color, transgender women, women who use drugs or alcohol, and women involved in the sex trade are particularly vulnerable to sexual assault by police.

    One Oklahoma City police officer allegedly sexually assaulted at least seven women while on duty over the course of four months, including a 57-year-old grandmother who says she was forced to give the cop oral sex after he pulled her over.

    A Philadelphia state trooper, eventually convicted of assaulting six women and teenagers, once visited the hospital bedside of a pregnant woman who had attempted suicide, and groped her breasts and masturbated.

    These aren’t isolated incidents.

    According to research from Bowling Green State University, police officers in the U.S. were charged with more than 400 rapes over a 9-year period. During that same time period, 600 police officers were arrested for forcible fondling; 219 were charged with forcible sodomy; 186 were arrested for statutory rape; 58 for sexual assault with an object; and 98 with indecent exposure.

    Sexual assault is believed to be the second-most reported form of misconduct against police officers after the use of excessive force, making up more than 9% of all complaints.

    Even so, these crimes are believed to be largely underreported so much so that sex crimes may in fact be the number one form of misconduct among police officers.

    So why are the numbers underreported?

    “The women are terrified. Who are they going to call? It’s the police who are abusing them,” said Penny Harrington, the former police chief of Portland, Ore.

    One Philadelphia cop threatened to arrest a teenager for carjacking unless she had sex with him. “He had all the power. I had no choice,” testified the girl. “Who was I? He had his badge.”

    This is the danger of a police state that invests its henchmen with so much power that they don’t even need to use handcuffs or a gun to get what they want.

    Making matters worse, most police departments do little to identify the offenders, and even less to stop them. “Unlike other types of police misconduct, the abuse of police power to coerce sex is little addressed in training, and rarely tracked by police disciplinary systems,” conclude Nancy Phillips and Craig R. McCoy writing for the Philadelphia Inquirer. “This official neglect makes it easier for predators to escape punishment and find new victims.”

    Unfortunately, this is a problem that is hiding in plain sight, covered up by government agencies that are failing in their constitutional duties to serve and protect “we the people.”

    That thin blue line of knee-jerk adulation and absolute loyalty to police above and beyond what the law requires is creating a menace to society that cannot be ignored.

    As researcher Jonathan Blanks notes, “The system is rigged to protect police officers from outside accountability. The worst cops are going to get the most protection.”

    Hyped up on the power of the badge and their weaponry, protected from charges of wrongdoing by police unions and government agencies, and empowered by rapidly advancing tools—technological and otherwise—that make it all too easy to identify, track and take advantage of vulnerable members of society, predators on the nation’s police forces are growing in number.

    “It can start with a police officer punching a woman’s license plate into a police computer – not to see whether a car is stolen, but to check out her picture,” warns investigative journalists Nancy Phillips and Craig R. McCoy. “If they are not caught, or left unpunished, the abusers tend to keep going, and get worse, experts say.”

    So where does this leave us?

    The courts, by allowing the government’s desire for unregulated, unaccountable, expansive power to trump justice and the rule of law, have turned away from this menace. Politicians, eager for the support of the powerful police unions, have turned away from this menace. Police unions, which have been at the forefront of the effort to shield sexual misconduct by cops, have exacerbated this menace.

    Yet for the sake of the most vulnerable among us, we as a nation must stop turning away from this menace in our midst.

    For starters, police should not be expected—or allowed—to police themselves.

    Misconduct by local police has become a national problem. Therefore, the response to this national problem must start at the local level.

    This is no longer a matter of a few bad apples. As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People and in its fictional counterpart The Erik Blair Diaries, the entire system has become corrupted and must be reformed.

    Greater oversight is needed, yes, but also greater accountability and more significant consequences for assaults.

    Andrea Ritchie’s piece in the Washington Post provides some practical suggestions for reform ranging from small steps to structural changes (greater surveillance of police movements, heightened scrutiny of police interactions and traffic stops, and more civilian oversight boards), but as she acknowledges, these efforts still don’t strike at the root of the problem: a criminal justice system that protects abusers and encourages abuse.

    It’s difficult to say whether modern-day policing with its deep-seated corruption, immunity from accountability, and authoritarian approach to law enforcement attracts this kind of deviant behavior or cultivates it, but empowering police to view themselves as the best, or even the only, solution to the public’s problems, while failing to hold them accountable for misconduct, will only deepen the policing crisis that grows deadlier and more menacing by the day.

    The post The Sex Traffickers on America’s Police Forces first appeared on Dissident Voice.


    This content originally appeared on Dissident Voice and was authored by John W. Whitehead and Nisha Whitehead.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Via Philadelphia Community Podcast: Legendary Attorney Mike Papantonio has worked on major cases targeting wrongdoing by Big Pharma, tobacco, weapon manufacturers, and the automobile industry. He’s also written a series of legal thrillers informed by his work. Papantonio’s latest novel “Inhuman Trafficking” is based on a current case which addresses the 150-billion-dollar human trafficking business. […]

    The post Corporate America Controls The Human Trafficking Industry appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Via America’s Lawyer: The investigation into FL senator Matt Gaetz ramps up as the DOJ hires prosecutors focusing on child exploitation and public corruption. Mike Papantonio and Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio:             Congressman Matt Gaetz isn’t out of the woods yet as the investigation into […]

    The post DOJ Hires Trafficking Experts In Matt Gaetz Investigation appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Via AM950 KTNF: The progressive voice of Minnesota, Brett Johnson with you. We’re joined now by Mike Papantonio, that might be a name you’re familiar with here on AM950. He of course, was with the Ring of Fire radio show for years. So his is probably a voice you’re familiar with, but in case you’re not, […]

    The post Human Trafficking Has Become A $42 Billion Industry appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

  • By Kalino Latu, editor of Kaniva Tonga

    The arrest of Colombian drug lord Dairo Antonio Úsuga, known as Otoniel, has re-opened deep seated concerns about Tonga’s links with South American drug cartels.

    Colombia’s most-wanted drug trafficker “Otoniel” has been captured, officials said at the weekend — a major victory for the government of the world’s top cocaine exporter.

    The world is now watching whether Otoniel’s arrest will reduce smuggling of the drugs to Pacific hubs.

    Tonga remains a hub for cocaine and methamphetamine distribution, with drugs brought in from Peru, Venezuela and Colombia. The drugs are then transhipped to Australia, New Zealand and China.

    Speaker of the House Lord Fakafanua said there was growing evidence that Tonga was a key stopover on international smuggling routes, bringing drugs to Australia and New Zealand.

    Tonga vs Columbia
    Tonga’s Colombian connection was first exposed in 2011 when Australian police revealed that an international crime syndicate headed by Colombians allegedly bribed a former Speaker of the Tongan Parliament as part of a plot to import tonnes of cocaine into Australia.

    The Australian Federal Police (AFP) uncovered a global trafficking operation that allegedly used yachts to sail cocaine from South America to Tonga.

    Police alleged that in 2010 the syndicate bribed the then Speaker of the Tongan Legislative Assembly, Lord Tu’ilakepa, who is now Tonga’s Minister of the Ministry of Agriculture, Food, Forests and Fisheries (MAFF), to sponsor a Colombian drug boss to come to the kingdom.

    Former Speaker Lord Tu’ilakepa
    Tonga’s former Speaker Lord Tu’ilakepa … allegations over his role with Colombian drug king. Image: Fale Alea ‘O Tonga

    The AFP said the drug boss, Obeil Antonio Zuluaga Gomez, wanted to direct an operating hub from Tonga and oversee cocaine shipments.

    In August this year, Tongan police charged more than 20 people after cocaine packages washed up on beaches on Vava’u.

    Police seized more than 14 kg of cocaine with an estimated street value of US$2.2 million (TOP$5 million).

    RNZ reported that the cocaine packages looked similar to those that were found in Vava’u in 2012 on the wrecked yacht JeReVe.

    Vava’u is regarded as a popular destination for yachties. The police believed that the cocaine was anchored there in Vava’u to hide and that locals would find it and bring it onto the land.

    The drugs found in Vava’u are believed to have come from Columbia.

    His Majesty’s concerns
    Drugs have become a major issue in the kingdom, with Tonga’s King criticising Parliament for not doing enough.

    In August, Tonga’s Parliament proposed making serious drug offences punishable with death.

    The proposal would have applied the death penalty for trafficking more than five kg of Class A drugs or multiple drug offences involving minors.

    Tonga retains the death penalty for murder and treason.

    Drug smuggling is a problem across the Pacific, with drug seizures in French Polynesia, Fiji and the executive director of the Pacific Islands Chiefs of Police network, Glyn Rowland, said recently the covid-19 pandemic had affected drug routes in the Pacific.

    “Certainly, for our young people, unemployment and poverty is a challenge right now because of the pandemic and that makes them quite vulnerable to recruitment into organised crime gangs and facilitating drug movements,” Rowland said.

    Republished with permission from Kaniva Tonga.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.