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Cairo mob ransacks, torches Israeli embassy, staff flown out
Today's Headlines
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Page 6: Politix
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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Man nabbed at Dulles with cocaine-stuffed clams
[Washington Examiner] A man is charged with drug offenses after Customs and Border Protection officials found cocaine-stuffed clams in his luggage at Washington Dulles International Airport, authorities said.

CBP officials said 26-year-old David Pocasangre Vaquiz, of El Salvador, was taken into custody after 15 clams containing plastic bags filled with cocaine were found in his luggage after he arrived at Dulles. Pocasangre Vaquiz arrived on a flight from Panama at about 2 a.m. Saturday, CBP spokesman Steve Sapp said.

The clams held 152 grams -- or 5.36 ounces -- of cocaine, a relatively small amount in a smuggling case, authorities said. The drugs have a street value of about $10,000.

The smuggling attempt is "one of the oddest we've seen," Christopher Hess, CBP port director for the District, said in a statement.

CBP officers found the cocaine when Pocasangre Vaquiz was referred for a routine secondary inspection. Authorities found a black plastic bag filled with about 80 clams in his luggage. An officer opened one clam and saw that it concealed a cocaine baggie, authorities said. X-rays showed 14 other clams contained cocaine, according to CBP.

Authorities said the clams had been opened, stuffed with the cocaine baggies and glued closed.

An attorney for Pocasangre Vaquiz couldn't immediately be reached for comment.
It does nothing for the dignity of the halls of justice when an officer of the court can't speak because he's laughing so hard he chokes. They had to call the emergency squad, it is said.
.He is charged in Loudoun County District Court with manufacturing, selling, giving or distributing a controlled substance and transporting drugs into Virginia.
Posted by: Fred || 09/10/2011 00:00 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Uh, uh, BART SIMPSON = NO ONE EVER SUSPECTS THE CLAMS???

gut nuthin.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/10/2011 0:29 Comments || Top||

#2  em's good eatin!
Posted by: Skidmark || 09/10/2011 0:36 Comments || Top||

#3  Witnesses have all clammed up.
Posted by: Eohippus Phater7165 || 09/10/2011 1:05 Comments || Top||

#4  Luggage full of clams, yeah, there's nothing suspicious about that.
Posted by: SteveS || 09/10/2011 1:41 Comments || Top||

#5  Send him to The Clammer
Posted by: Incredulous || 09/10/2011 4:36 Comments || Top||

#6  Too bad it wasn't Claude Cooper from Cleveland caught by Customs with cemented cocaine clams.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 09/10/2011 7:04 Comments || Top||

#7  The drugs have a street value of about 909 lbs. Alaskan King Crab.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 09/10/2011 11:46 Comments || Top||

#8  If he brought the coke in scallops he would be home and rich by now.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 09/10/2011 14:54 Comments || Top||

#9  I always thought people used mules instead of shellfish to smuggle drugs. Although a suitcase full of mules sounds pretty damn suspicious.
Posted by: SteveS || 09/10/2011 15:03 Comments || Top||

#10  "They tole me this stuff was worth a lot of clams, so I decided to double my money."
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 09/10/2011 16:45 Comments || Top||

#11  "And instead, I'm shelling out for a lawyer!"
Posted by: lotp || 09/10/2011 19:43 Comments || Top||

#12  I ALWAYS want to read LOTP's comments.

domo.
Posted by: Whiskey Mike || 09/10/2011 21:22 Comments || Top||


Africa Horn
Crew of French yacht missing off Yemen
AFP - A German warship has found a French catamaran adrift in pirate-infested waters in the Gulf of Aden off Yemen with no crew aboard, and their fate is unknown, France said on Friday. According to the watchdog Ecoterra, at least 50 vessels and at least 528 hostages are currently being held by Somali pirates, despite constant patrols by warships from several world powers.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 09/10/2011 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Africa North
Kadhafi generals in Burkina Faso: Tuareg source
AFP - A number of Libyan generals loyal to Moamer Kadhafi are now in Burkina Faso having passed through Niger, a source from Niger's ethnic Tuareg community said Friday. They passed through Agadez, Niger on their way to Niamey, Niger, where they made large transactions at the Libyan Bisic bank before going on to Burkina Faso, the source added. A number of Kadhafi aides, including the head of his personal security details, Mansour Daw, are currently under house arrest in Niamey, in a state-owned villa on the banks of the Niger river.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 09/10/2011 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:


Down Under
Australia Almost Loses A Submarine
JUST after midnight off the coast of Perth, navy submarine HMAS Farncomb was slicing below the surface of a rough sea when its engines cut out.

For the 60 men and women aboard the Collins-class boat, the next few minutes would be among the longest of their lives. Like a Hollywood thriller, the sailors found themselves grappling with a double engine failure followed by a terrifying, powerless descent towards the bottom of the Indian Ocean, stemmed only by the cool actions of a veteran commander.

This real-life drama, which took place at 12.30am on August 23 about 20km off the northwest coast of Rottnest Island, was not revealed by Defence at the time. When quizzed by The Australian the following day, officials gave only a brief, sanitised version of the incident, omitting key facts while praising the competence and training of the crew for following "standard operating procedures".

Many of the Farncomb's crew are far from relaxed about what took place under the Indian Ocean that night.

"I said to myself, 'I'm gone, I'm dead',' one recalled thinking as the powerless submarine began to slide towards the ocean floor.

Another on the submarine has told friends: "When we started going down, I just tried to accept it and make peace with myself."

In their eyes, the Farncomb incident came uncomfortably close to being Australia's worst naval tragedy in almost 50 years. Defence denies this, claiming crew had "positive control of the submarine throughout the incident".

An investigation by The Weekend Australian reveals discrepancies between Defence's official account and first-hand accounts now circulating in Perth from the Farncomb's crew.

What is undisputed is that Farncomb was conducting operational training in the waters northwest of Rottnest Island soon after spending a month in dry dock where it had its emergency propulsion unit replaced. In charge that night was veteran submarine commander Glen Miles, a ruddy-faced archeology and rugby enthusiast who once served on the old Oberon submarines and who was dux of his submarine officer's course. Also on board was a Sea Training Group assessing the crew's competence.

Shortly after midnight, the Farncomb was gliding at a periscope depth of 20m while undertaking a routine known as "snorting", where air is drawn into the submarine to run the diesel motor in order to recharge the boat's batteries. At 12.30am, without warning, a fault in the control switchboard of the submarine's electric motor caused the motor to stop. "Propulsion failure, propulsion failure" rang out across the Farncomb's address system, as crew ran to emergency stations.

Propulsion failure in a submarine is both uncommon and serious, but it is usually quickly offset by a procedure that allows the motor to be restarted in emergency mode. Faced with a powerless, slowing submarine in a rough sea, Commander Miles ordered the submarine to glide down from its depth of 20m to 50m in order to assess the problem.

It was a bad time to lose propulsion because it meant the submarine had to stop snorting. When snorting stops, a submarine instantly becomes much heavier because the snort masks and exhaust, which are outside the hull, fill up with water.

Normally the submarine balances this extra weight by pumping out compensating water, but this takes time. So Commander Miles suddenly found himself in charge of an overweight submarine with no power, sliding south.

By the time the Farncomb reached its desired depth of 50m, there was more bad news. Despite the frantic efforts of crew, they could not get the emergency mode of the main motor to work. Defence said this week: "The reason for delay in restoring propulsion in emergency (mode) remains the subject of a technical investigation."

Commander Miles faced a full-blown emergency. He had lost both his engine and his emergency back-up.

Defence declined to tell The Weekend Australian how deep the Farncomb sank, saying only that such details were "not openly discussed".

According to several crew members' versions, the Farncomb slowed to a virtual halt, tilted nose up and began to slide backwards towards the ocean floor. The tilt was so steep that sailors eating in the mess room had to grab their dinners as they slid off the table. Those in the sleeping quarters found themselves "on top of each other".

In the control room, Commander Miles was not panicking, but was watching the sliding depth gauge hoping that the propulsion motor would restart before the Farncomb sank too deep. He knew that, as a last resort, he could take the dramatic step of blowing the submarine's ballast tanks to stem the descent.

In those long, agonising seconds - perhaps a minute or more - as the submarine kept sliding towards the seabed, some of the Farncomb's crew started to consider the unimaginable. The submarine is believed to have been operating in more than 1300m of water off the continental shelf. This meant that if they continued to sink, the water pressure would crush the submarine and its crew long before they hit the seabed.

Their fate would have mirrored the 129 men of the US navy submarine USS Thresher, which was crushed by water pressure when it sank in the Atlantic Ocean during deep diving tests in 1963.

Crew accounts of how deep the Farncomb sank differ. The consensus is that it plunged to between 150m and 190m. If so, this is uncomfortably close to the submarine's permissible deep diving depth, the actual figure of which is classified.

At some point during the Farncomb's powerless descent and without any sign of life from the motor, Commander Miles ordered a partial blow of the submarine's main ballast in which air expels water from the ballast tanks, making the boat lighter.

"Because the submarine was still heavy as compensating water was being pumped (out), the commanding officer chose to blow main ballast to arrest descent," a Defence spokesman said.

What happened next depends on whose account you believe. Defence says that the initial ballast blow stemmed the descent and that the Farncomb actually began to slowly rise. Some crew members maintain the submarine was still sinking, although at a slower rate.

Either way, Commander Miles then decided to take the most drastic step available to a submarine commander: to order a full emergency blow of all ballast tanks.

"That was the last resort available to the crew at that time and if it did not work, there would have been no hope for them," one source said.

To the enormous relief of its crew, the plan worked and the Farncomb - powerless, overweight and stricken - began to rise at last.

Once back on the surface and with no further ballast to blow, Commander Miles ordered the crew to try again to get emergency propulsion back.

This time, they succeeded, regaining emergency propulsion and the Farncomb was able to limp back to Fremantle.

Navy argues that Commander Miles was not completely out of options because there was an autonomous Emergency Propulsion Unit on board that was manned during the incident but was not activated.

Navy claims the EPU "would be sufficient to maintain control of the submarine in such situations". Submarine experts dispute this and say that, if this was so, why did Commander Miles not use this option rather than order the more drastic blowing of all ballast tanks.

"The EPU is only designed for surface propulsion and there is no way that it could have controlled a 3000-tonne submarine heading backwards towards the seabed," said one expert, who asked not to be named.

The incident will not help the troubled reputation of the Collins-class fleet, which has been plagued by technical problems, but it will be seen as good example of the ability of a well-trained crew to get out of sticky situations.

When asked this week by The Weekend Australian how serious the Farncomb incident was, Defence avoided giving a direct answer, saying only that "standard procedures were employed to recover from this propulsion failure while snorting".

"These procedures are regularly exercised," Defence said.

The Farncomb has been repaired and is now back at sea, but at least one crew member, an engineer, is said to have stayed behind in Perth to deal with the stress of what happened on August 23.

As one submariner put: "This (incident) shows that even when things go wrong on a submarine, there is usually a way to get out of trouble.

"But those blokes would have been very glad to get home."
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Anonymoose || 09/10/2011 19:35 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  1. Glad to hear of survival.
2. Yeeeouch. Has to suck. Best wishes too all involved.
3. This is one of the reasons why I considered the Infantry to be 'safe'.
Posted by: Whiskey Mike || 09/10/2011 21:20 Comments || Top||

#2  Oh my, diesel propulsion. Some time ago I spoke to a Vet who had served in one. They called them pig boats. Limited water for anything. Out for long periods of time. On leave a few went to a bar I guess and the women held their nose and said ooh pig boat. The diesel smell just doesn't wash off.
Posted by: Dale || 09/10/2011 22:04 Comments || Top||

#3  ...tilted nose up and began to slide backwards towards the ocean floor.

A sub "losing its way" is in a seriously bad situation. Kudos to Commander Miles.....
Posted by: Uncle Phester || 09/10/2011 22:22 Comments || Top||


Europe
EU countries propose military headquarters
France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Spain say they want to develop a plan for a European Union military headquarters.

In a letter to EU foreign relations chief Catherine Ashton, the five countries asked her to investigate their options in moving forward despite objections from Britain, the online newspaper said.

The letter said Ashton should examine "permanent structured cooperation," a treaty option that allows nine or more member states to move ahead on projects without other EU countries.

Supporters of a military headquarters say the EU needs to move beyond battlegroups toward an EU army but Britain is highly opposed to the idea.

"I have made very clear that the United Kingdom will not agree to a permanent operational HQ. We will not agree to it now and we will not agree to it in the future. That is a red line," British Foreign Minister William Hague said in July.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 09/10/2011 15:36 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Culture Wars
New York Rabbis forbid Jews to vote for Orthodox Assemblyman Weprin
A group of Flatbush rabbonim have signed a letter stating that it is forbidden to vote or campaign for Democrat David Weprin in the race to replace Queens Rep. Anthony Weiner. Weprin is a New York State assemblyman and formerly a member of the New York City Council where he served as chairman of its finance committee.

Weprin, an Orthodox Jew, has sparked the ire of much of the frum community because of his vote in favor of same-gender marriage. He has defended the vote publicly.

Click here to view the letter and then click on the image to magnify it.
Kol hakavod!

A commenter sez:
In his June 15 speech, Weprin said his own Orthodox rabbi would not marry a Jew and a non-Jew, which he felt was wrong – and that same gender marriage was no different.
Posted by: gromky || 09/10/2011 00:01 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:



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Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has dominated Mexico for six years.
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Two weeks of WOT
Sat 2011-09-10
  Cairo mob ransacks, torches Israeli embassy, staff flown out
Fri 2011-09-09
  Turkistan Islamic Party claims western China attacks
Thu 2011-09-08
  'Gaddafi surrounded'
Wed 2011-09-07
  Bomb at Delhi High Court kills 11, 76 injured
Tue 2011-09-06
  'Qatari Emir survives assassination'
Mon 2011-09-05
  Pakistan detains top al-Qaida suspect
Sun 2011-09-04
  Sudan declares emergency in Blue Nile state
Sat 2011-09-03
  European Union Lifts Sanctions on Libya
Fri 2011-09-02
  Russia recognises Libya's rebel government
Thu 2011-09-01
  Al Qathafi Reject Rebels' Ultimatum to Surrender
Wed 2011-08-31
  Saleh Authorizes his party to Conduct Negotiations with Opposition
Tue 2011-08-30
  Qadaffy's wife, daughter, 2 sons flee to Algeria
Mon 2011-08-29
  29 dead in suicide bomb attack in Iraq mosque: Officials
Sun 2011-08-28
  Rebels claim capture of last army base in Tripoli
Sat 2011-08-27
  Al Qaeda's No. 2 , Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, Killed in Pakistan


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