Cash-In-Transit vehicle robbed in Taung


 

Pic: (Facebook)

Pic: (Facebook)

BY REGINALD KANYANE
NORTH West police are investigating a case of armed robbery after a cash-in-transit vehicle was allegedly robbed at Pudimoe on N18 on Wednesday.

Sergeant Kealeboga Molale said, the unknown suspects allegedly opened fire at the Fidelity security guards that were transporting cash to Taung ATM, and robbed them.

“A Fidelity vehicle was allegedly shot at, and the unknown suspects took undisclosed amount of money from the car. No one has been arrested yet, and investigation continues,” Molale said.

No one was injured during the robbery.
-TDN
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North West Modise to meet police over farm scandal: Report


Thandi-Modise.jpg
NCOP chair Thandi Modise on Sunday declined to discuss a report that she would meet police to discuss the discovery, earlier this year, of dead and starving animals on her North West farm.

“I don’t want to comment,” Modise said when asked about the Sunday Times reporting that a meeting with police had been scheduled for next week.

The newspaper quoted North West police spokesman Brigadier Thulani Ngubane as saying the National Council of Provinces chairwoman had been “co-operating with us from day one”.

He said a meeting planned for July had been postponed, but that police understood “the nature of her work and business”.
In July this year, police and NSPCA inspectors found more than 100 dead animals, including sheep, geese, goats and ducks, on her farm. It appeared they had been without food or water for over a week.

About 85 pigs, who were still alive, had begun cannibalising 58 dead pigs, and were reportedly drinking their own urine. Many others found alive had to be put down.

There were no farmworkers on the property, no electricity, and the water pumps were broken.
On Sunday, Ngubane said while police were still awaiting Modise’s version of events, others involved in the matter had already been providing statements. Modise had reportedly told police she would travel to Potchefstroom to meet them.

The National Prosecuting Authority told the Sunday Times it had not received a docket, indicating whether Modise would be prosecuted.
On Friday the NSPCA said conditions on the farm had improved.

“Cattle on the farm have been supplied with sufficient food and appear to be in an acceptable condition,” spokeswoman Grace de Lange said in a statement.
She said farm managers were implementing advice from vets on how to run the farm.

-Sapa

Alleged cannibal’s Facebook rant


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JOPPATOWNE, Maryland: The student suspected of killing and eating parts of a man staying at his home ranted months ago about “mass human sacrifices” on Facebook, one of several details that emerged on Friday in the second gruesome case of alleged cannibalism in the US in a week.

Authorities say Alexander Kinyua, 21, admitted using a knife to kill and carve up Kujoe Bonsafo Agyei-Kodie, 37, before eating his heart and parts of his brain. The older man had been staying with the Kinyua family for about six weeks at their townhouse in the Baltimore suburb of Joppatowne.

The remains have been positively identified as those of Agyei-Kodie and a relative in the US has been notified, according to sheriff’s office spokeswoman Monica Worrell. No charges had been filed against anyone else, she said.

Both the victim and his alleged killer had attended nearby Morgan State University, a historically black university in Baltimore. Kinyua had just finished his third year, and Agyei-Kodie was a graduate student who last attended classes in 2008. Both men were also originally from Africa; Kinyua, a US citizen, moved from Kenya as a child and Agyei-Kodie was from Ghana.

Investigators haven’t given a possible motive in the slaying. In a separate case on May 19, police said Kinyua beat a man with a baseball bat on campus, fracturing his skull and making him lose sight in one eye. Kinyua was freed on $220 000 (R1.9 million) bail in that case. He is now being held without bail on a murder charge.

Kinyua, an electrical engineering student, had a very good grade point average and had enough credits to go into fourth year in September, according to university spokesman Clinton Coleman. He could not comment on the May incident. No student or faculty had approached the school with concerns about Kinyua, he said.

In February, Kinyua posted a question on Facebook, asking fellow students at historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) if they were “strong enough to endure ritual HBCU mass human sacrifices around the country and still be able to function as human beings?”

He referred to the shootings at Virginia Tech and “other past university killings around the country” and warned “ethnic cleansing is the policy, strategy and tactics that will affect you, directly or indirectly in the coming months”. A Twitter account linked to him also had nonsensical and repetitive Tweets that ended in February.

James Holt, who had been a friend of the victim for about 10 years, said Agyei-Kodie had met Antony Kinyua, the father of his alleged killer and a physics lecturer at Morgan State, while pursuing a doctoral degree. The Kinyuas took in Agyei-Kodie when he hadn’t worked for three years and was trying to re-establish his life.

A woman who answered the door at the family’s home on Friday said the family would not be commenting. – Sapa-AP

 

Unhappy? Blame Facebook


IOL pic mar9 facebook fake users

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Facebook is a habit-forming activity – but users who spend a lot of time on the site say they feel less happy with their lives.

University of Gothenburg researchers say that many users log in as soon as they turn their PCs on – and that the behaviour can develop into an “addiction”.

Up to 85 percent of users say that they use Facebook daily – and half say they start up Facebook as soon as they open their web users.

Half fear that they are not “on top of things” if they are not logged into the site, and 25 percent say they fill “ill at ease” if they can’t log in regularly.

The Swedish survey, which polled 1 000 people aged 18-73 showed the social network had its dark side.

“Facebooking may become an unconscious habit. A majority of the respondents log in every time they start their web browser. This may even develop into an addiction,” says Leif Denti, doctoral student of psychology at the University of Gothenburg.

People with low income and low-educated individuals spend more time on Facebook.

Women are generally more active than men on Facebook.

Users with low income and low education use Facebook more than other groups. Within these groups, users who spend more time on Facebook also report feeling less happy and less content with their lives. This relationship is also present for women, but not for men.

The other surprise about the network is that although a huge amount of personal “news” is traded, through the site, it tends to focus purely on the positive.

“Facebook is a social tool that is clearly used to manage relationships with friends and family,” says Denti.

“But users won’t write just anything – most of the content they share has something to do with major events, positive events and when feeling good. Only 38 percent write about negative emotions and events.” – Daily Mail

WHO USES IT AND FOR HOW LONG:

The average user spends 75 minutes a day on Facebook

The average user logs on to Facebook 6.1 times a day

70% log in every time they start their computer or web reader

26% feel ill at ease if they do not get to log in regularly

Women spend on average 81 minutes a day on Facebook

Men spend on average 64 minutes a day on Facebook

As Facebook grows, millions say ‘no-thanks’


File photograph of  Facebook page

More than 900 million people worldwide check their Facebook accounts at least once a month, but millions more are Facebook holdouts.

They say they don’t want Facebook. They insist they don’t need Facebook. They say they’re living life just fine without the long-forgotten acquaintances that the world’s largest social network sometimes resurrects.

They are the resisters.

“I’m absolutely in touch with everyone in my life that I want to be in touch with,” MaLi Arwood says. “I don’t need to share triviality with someone that I might have known for six months 12 years ago.”

Even without people like Arwood, Facebook is one of the biggest business success stories in history. The site had 1 million users by the end of 2004, the year Mark Zuckerberg started it in his Harvard dorm room. Two years later, it had 12 million. Facebook had 500 million by summer 2010 and 901 million as of March 31, according to the company.

We are Facebook, you will be assimilated

That staggering rise in popularity is one reason why Facebook Inc.’s initial public offering is one of the most hotly anticipated in years. The company’s shares are expected to begin trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market on Friday under the ticker symbol “FB”. Facebook is likely to have an estimated market valuation of some $100 billion, making it worth more than Kraft Foods, Ford or Disney.

Facebook still has plenty of room to grow, particularly in developing countries where people are only starting to get Internet access. As it is, about 80 percent of its users are outside U.S. and Canada.

But if Facebook is to live up to its pre-IPO hype and reward the investors who are clamoring for its stock this week, it needs to convince some of the resisters to join. Two out of every five American adults have not joined Facebook, according to a recent Associated Press-CNBC poll. Among those who are not on Facebook, a third cited a lack of interest or need.

If all those people continue to shun Facebook, the social network could become akin to a postal system that only delivers mail to houses on one side of the street. The system isn’t as useful, and people aren’t apt to spend as much time with it. That means fewer opportunities for Facebook to sell ads.

Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project, says that new communications channels – from the telephone to radio, TV and personal computers – often breed a cadre of holdouts in their early days.

“It’s disorienting because people have different relationships with others depending on the media they use,” Rainie says. “But we’ve been through this before. As each new communications media comes to prominence, there is a period of adoption.”

Fine for grandkids

Len Kleinrock, 77, says Facebook is fine for his grandchildren, but it’s not for him.

“I do not want more distractions,” he says. “As it is, I am deluged with email. My friends and colleagues have ready access to me and I don’t really want another service that I would feel obliged to check into on a frequent basis.”

Kleinrock says his resistance is generational, but discomfort with technology isn’t a factor.

After all, Kleinrock is arguably the world’s first Internet user. The University of California, Los Angeles professor was part of the team that invented the Internet. His lab was where researchers gathered in 1969 to send test data between two bulky computers -the beginnings of the Arpanet network, which morphed into the Internet we know today.

“I’m having a ‘been-there, done-that’ feeling,” Kleinrock says. “There’s not a need on my part for reaching out and finding new social groups to interact with. I have trouble keeping up with those I’m involved with now.”

Thomas Chin, 35, who works at an advertising and media planning company in New York, says he may be missing out on what friends-of-friends-of-friends are doing, but he doesn’t need Facebook to connect with family and closer acquaintances.

“If we’re going to go out to do stuff, we organize it (outside) of Facebook,” he says.

Some people don’t join the social network because they don’t have a computer or Internet access, are concerned about privacy, or generally dislike Facebook. Those without a college education are less likely to be on Facebook, as are those with lower incomes. Women who choose to skip Facebook are more likely than men to cite privacy issues, while seniors are more likely than those 50-64 years old to cite computer issues, according the AP-CNBC poll.

Half of under 35s use it

About three-quarters of seniors are not on Facebook. By contrast, more than half of those under 35 use it every day.

The poll of 1,004 adults nationwide was conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications May 3-7 and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.9 percentage points.

Steve Jones, a professor who studies online culture and communications at the University of Illinois at Chicago, says many resisters consider Facebook to be too much of a chore.

“We’ve added social networking to our lives. We haven’t added any hours to our days,” Jones says. “The decision to be online on Facebook is simultaneously a decision not to be doing something else.”

Jones says many people on Facebook try to overcome that by multitasking, but they end up splitting their attention and engaging with others online only superficially.

Arwood, 47, a restaurant manager in Chicago, says she was surprised when colleagues on an English-teaching program in rural Spain in 2010 opted to spend their breaks checking Facebook.

“I spent my time on break trying to learn more about the Spanish culture, really taking advantage of it,” she says. “I went on walks with some of the students and asked them questions.”

Privacy concerns

Kariann Goldschmitt, 32, a music professor at New College of Florida in Sarasota, Fla., was on Facebook not long after its founding in 2004, but she quit in 2010. In part, it was because of growing concerns about her privacy and Facebook’s ongoing encouragement of people to share more about themselves with the company, with marketers and with the world.

She says she’s been much more productive since leaving.

“I was a typical user, on it once or twice a day,” she says. “After a certain point, I sort of resented how it felt like an obligation rather than fun.”

Besides Facebook resisters and quitters, there are those who take a break. In some cases, people quit temporarily as they apply for new jobs, so that potential employers won’t stumble on photos of their wild nights out drinking. Although Facebook doesn’t make it easy to find, it offers options for both deleting and suspending accounts.

Goldschmitt says it takes effort to stay in touch with friends and relatives without Facebook. For instance, she has to make mental notes of when her friends are expecting babies, knowing that they have become so used to Facebook “that they don’t engage with us anymore.”

“I’m like, ‘Hmmm, when is nine months?’ I have to remember to contact them since they won’t remember to tell me when the baby’s born.”

Neil Robinson, 54, a government lawyer in Washington, says that when his nephew’s son was born, pictures went up on Facebook almost immediately. As a Facebook holdout, he had to wait for someone to email photos.

After years of resisting, Robinson plans to join next month, mostly because he doesn’t want to lose touch with younger relatives who choose Facebook as their primary means of communication.

But for every Robinson, there is an Edelstein, who has no desire for Facebook and prefers email and postcards.

“I prefer to keep my communications personal and targeted,” says Jake Edelstein, 41, a pharmaceutical consultant in New York. “You’re getting a message that’s written for you. Clearly someone took the time to sit down to do it.”

 
 

 

Facebook con artist sent to jail!!!


NM craw

By Tania Broughton

Facebook con artist and gambling addict Dalene Crawford fell in the dock in a fit of hysteria after being sent to prison for five years on Wednesday.

Comforted by her sister and her 20-year-old daughter, she appeared dazed as they attempted to calm her down after her pleas for mercy and “one last chance” did not sway Durban regional court magistrate Sharon Marks who heard evidence that she had two previous convictions for fraud.

Crawford’s arrest at her Pennington home last week came in the wake of a guilty plea by Durban mother Deidre Rugg, who admitted that she had asked Crawford, a friend on Facebook, to help her to rig a paternity test to reflect that her present boyfriend was the biological father of her child.

She had done this, Rugg said, because the real father was not stable. But Rugg said her life soon turned into a nightmare with Crawford demanding more and more money first to obtain the certificate, then to get protection orders from a magistrate and then to pay off “blackmailers” who had found out about the manipulated paternity test. In total, she said, she gave Crawford R65 000.

On Wednesday, Crawford, 40, a mother of three, pleaded guilty to five charges of fraud, forgery, uttering, extortion and crimen injuria.

She said she had created a false paternity test certificate at an internet café and had sent it to Rugg via MMS.

She said she had created “various fictional” characters to dupe Rugg out of money and she gambled it all away.

The crimen injuria charges relates to her telling Rugg that she knew Scottburgh magistrate Chris Schoeman, and that he owed her a favour and would give her a protection order against the biological father.

In an unusual move, Schoeman – who has 36 years’ experience – came to court on Wednesday to testify about the damage this had caused him.

“It was a horrific experience… it was extremely humiliating. I had to explain myself to my friends and I was worried about what this could do to my wife,” he said.

Weeping, Crawford apologised to him during the court proceedings.

Schoeman told her: “You almost ruined my life. I am about to retire.”

Crawford admitted to two previous convictions, one for fraud in 2003 in which she was given a suspended sentence on condition she pay a fine, repay her victim Remax, almost R20 000 and attend Gambling Anonymous counselling sessions.

Prosecutor Barend Groen said she had not met any of the conditions.

She had not paid the fine in full, had only paid Remax about R4 000 and, on her own admission, had only attended two counselling sessions.

And then in 2007, she had been given yet another chance – this time by magistrate Chris Schoeman when he gave her another suspended sentence for fraud.

Groen said it was clear Crawford cared about no-one but herself.

“She was given a chance to sort out her gambling problem, but she did not take it. The only place to solve it now is in Westville Prison where, to my knowledge, there are no gambling machines,” Groen submitted.

Referring to her previous suspended sentences, Marks said it was probable that Crawford had “cried and the magistrates had given her a second chance”, but now direct imprisonment was called for. – The Mercury

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