Jumat, 07 Juni 2019

Meth from Bangkok sets record in Australia - Bangkok Post

Some of the 1.8 tonnes of methamphetamine hidden in speakers shipped from Thailand is shown after it was seized by Australian Border Force on Friday. (Australian Federal Police via AP)

MELBOURNE: Australian officials have seized the nation's largest haul of methamphetamine at the Melbourne waterfront in a shipment of almost 1.8 tonnes of the illicit drug hidden in stereo speakers shipped from Bangkok, authorities said on Friday.

In total, 1.7 tonnes of the drug in a form known as crystal meth or ice and 37kg of heroin was seized in the recent shipment, Australian Border Force said in a statement. The drugs had an estimated street value of A$1.2 billion ($835m) and A$19 million ($13 million) respectively, the statement said.

Police have yet to make an arrest, the statement said.

Australia is being increasingly targeted by international drug cartels because of the relatively high prices Australians are prepared to pay for illicit drugs. Illicit drugs other than cannabis had been seen as a problem of large cities, but ice is now having a devastating effect on regional and rural communities.

Australian Border Force Regional Commander Craig Palmer said the record detection would have a significant impact on the drug supply in Victoria state.

"Without the sophisticated targeting and detection capabilities of the ABF, these drugs would have made it to the streets of Melbourne and beyond,'' Mr Palmer said.

"This is the largest meth bust we've ever seen in this country and demonstrates not only the brazen nature of those involved in this criminal activity, but the resolve of the ABF in Victoria and around the country to stop these imports,'' he added.

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https://www.bangkokpost.com/news/world/1691124/meth-from-bangkok-sets-record-in-australia

2019-06-07 05:55:00Z
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Kamis, 06 Juni 2019

How D-Day technology made Operation Overlord a success - Fox News

The largest naval, air and land operation in history occurred 75 years ago. D-Day, as it is simply known today, was just one part of the larger Operation Overlord, the codename for the Battle of Normandy. While Allied airborne forces parachuted into drop zones across northern France, ground troops landed on five assault beaches – Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno and Sword. The goal was to open up a second front to relieve pressure on the Soviet Union and also lead to the liberation of France and Western Europe. For the first time since 1940, the Allies would bring the fight back to Nazi Germany in Northern Europe. 

When Allied forces landed on the Normandy coast as part of Operation Neptune their success hinged on several technological innovations. This isn't to say that the bravery of those involved should be understated, but without some key new technologies, the invasion may not have succeeded.

WEATHER TO GO

Past amphibious landings left a lot to chance, but everything from the location to land to the timing was based on scientific research.

"An interesting point about the technologies used by the Allied forces during D-Day is how closely their development mirrors approaches used today," Charles King, technology analyst for Pund-IT, told Fox News. "There were formal projects led by trained scientists and researchers, such as the tide prediction mechanism created by British mathematician Arthur Thomas Doodson, which was used to identify the precise days/times that the H-Hour landings for D-Day should take place."

D-DAY DECEPTION: HOW PHANTOM ARMIES AND FAKE INFORMATION HELPED WIN THE BATTLE OF NORMANDY

Doodson had been working since 1942 to determine the ideal time for a landing, while Allied planners also consulted with meteorologists in the days and even hours leading up to invasion to make a determination on the weather conditions. O

File photo -Preparations For Operation Overlord (The Normandy Landings): Sherman Crab Mark II minesweeping flail tank, one of Hobart's 'funnies', used to clear already identified minefields, 27 April 1944.

File photo -Preparations For Operation Overlord (The Normandy Landings): Sherman Crab Mark II minesweeping flail tank, one of Hobart's 'funnies', used to clear already identified minefields, 27 April 1944. (Photo by Sgt. J Mapham/ IWM via Getty Images)

n June 4 Group Captain James Stagg, the chief meteorological officer, who was working with data from weather stations in Canada, Greenland and Iceland, as well as from weather ships in and flights over the Atlantic, called for a last-minute delay. Allied Supreme Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower agreed and D-Day was pushed back a day.

German forecasters believed stormy conditions wouldn't weaken for at least a week. As a result, German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, who had been tasked with defending the French coast, returned home to Germany for his wife's birthday.

The weather wasn't ideal on June 6, resulting in Allied paratroopers landing miles off target while rough seas caused some landing craft to capsize, but the Germans were caught off guard!

DELIVERING THE TROOPS

Anyone who has seen “Saving Private Ryan,” knows that the Allied soldiers didn't arrive at a port in France. Without a port facility, the Allies had to rely on a variety of landing craft and one of the most important was the LCVP (landing craft, vehicle, personnel), more commonly known as the "Higgins Boat" after its designer Andrew Higgins. Based on boats made for operating in swamps and marshes, and made primarily of plywood, the LCVP could operate in shallow water and carry around 36 men ashore.

A Czech hedgehog anti-tank obstacle and the landing craft, vehicle, personnel (LCVP) or Higgins boat used during Operation Overlord on D-Day, seen outside Normandy Victory Museum in La Fourchette near Carentan, just a few days ahead of the 75th Anniversary of D-Day. On Saturday, June 1, 2019, in La Fourchette, Carentan, Normandy, France. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

A Czech hedgehog anti-tank obstacle and the landing craft, vehicle, personnel (LCVP) or Higgins boat used during Operation Overlord on D-Day, seen outside Normandy Victory Museum in La Fourchette near Carentan, just a few days ahead of the 75th Anniversary of D-Day. On Saturday, June 1, 2019, in La Fourchette, Carentan, Normandy, France. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

The boat's importance to the success of D-Day has earned it a place in the National Inventors Hall of Fame.

D-DAY'S INGENIOUS TACTICS IN PICTURES: FROM INFLATABLE TANKS TO 'GHOST' SOLDIERS

"The LCVP could operate in just 18-inches of water, and that made it flexible," Mike Oister, CEO of the National Inventors Hall of Fame told Fox News. "It wasn't just the design but Higgins' ability to produce the needed boats, and he did so in New Orleans. Higgins was aggressive and took on the larger shipbuilding companies in Baltimore and along the East Coast, and during the war, he relied on a fully integrated workforce of 30,000 people. That just wasn't happening at the time."

The Higgins Boats were vitally important in other invasions, notably across the Pacific. His contribution was noted years later by Eisenhower, according to Pund-IT's King. "Higgins produced 23,398 LCVPs during World War II, and in 1964 Eisenhower said, 'Andrew Higgins is the man who won the war for us’," King explained.

In addition to the beach landings, another 15,000 airborne troops played a major role in flanking the Germans and helped the amphibious landing to form a beachhead on the shore. Most of these men parachuted in, but more than 1,000 landed in gliders also made of plywood and fabric! The Horsa gliders, which were first produced in 1942, could deliver heavier equipment that couldn't be dropped via parachute but it was a rough ride for those onboard.

"The Allies had looked at how the Germans had used gliders earlier in the war, but even at D-Day it was a new and unfounded technology," said military history consultant Captain Dale Dye, USMC (retired).

D-DAY 1944: NAVY BATTLESHIP 16-INCH GUNS BOMBARDED NAZIS AT OMAHA BEACH

"It wasn't perfect either, there were too many wrecks and too many casualties, but the Allies knew they had to get masses of troops inland," Dye told Fox News. "Another division of paratroopers wasn't an option, so it meant men had to go by glider. It wasn't easy, they had to survive the crash and then cobble together as a unit and get in the fight."

SUPPLY AND BREAKOUT

Getting the troops to Normandy and establishing a beachhead was quite literally just half the battle. Supplying those soldiers without a port took a considerable effort and that again is where innovation and ingenuity played a major role.

File photo - A double row of Horsa gliders flanked by Halifax bombers photographed in England before the invasion of Normandy.

File photo - A double row of Horsa gliders flanked by Halifax bombers photographed in England before the invasion of Normandy. (Getty)

The British had learned valuable lessons a generation earlier in the First World War when it found supplying the troops at Gallipoli on the Turkish coast was difficult, to say the least.

As the Allies knew that it was unlikely that a harbor would be captured quickly in France – not to mention the fact that the Germans were expected to destroy any harbor facilities before they could be captured – the Allies opted to bring a harbor with them. The result was the Mulberry Harbours, which were created by sinking outdated ships – dubbed "Corncobs" – and by installing large concrete structures or "Phoenixes." From these floating roadways and piers – dubbed "Whales" – a type of pier was created.

"There were lessons from Gallipoli and Eisenhower certainly understood that the army needed to be supplied quickly," said Dye.

However, for all the hype, the artificial harbor really didn't live up to the job as expected. Many historians have said it was a success but that the efforts could have been used elsewhere.

File photo - 'Mulberry', the secret floating harbor being put to good use on Omaha beach in Normandy as a large truck drives over one of the pontoons. Mulberry was later destroyed by channel storms.

File photo - 'Mulberry', the secret floating harbor being put to good use on Omaha beach in Normandy as a large truck drives over one of the pontoons. Mulberry was later destroyed by channel storms. (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images)

"The harbors are overrated for their impact on the invasion," said military historian John Coyne McManus, professor of military history at Missouri University of Science and Technology and author of “The Dead and Those about to Die: D-Day: the Big Red One at Omaha Beach.

"The Allies were better at supplying the army on the beaches and moving inland," McManus told Fox News. "Of bigger importance was the Allied efforts to find beaches that would support tanks and other heavy vehicles."

HISTORY OF THE 'JEEP' IN PICTURES

The other technology created for the eventual breakout of Normandy was PLUTO (Pipe-Lines Under The Ocean), which was developed by Arthur Hartley, chief engineer of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. The goal was to lay a pipeline and pump the necessary fuel to keep the tanks and trucks moving, and while it has remained a great feat of military engineering the performance of PLUTO was disappointing. It only carried about 150 imperial barrels of gasoline per day – a fraction of what the Allied war effort required.

"The majority of the fuel came off ships," explained McManus.

A far bigger contribution to the Battle for Normandy was actually something not considered by the planners but showed true innovation. It was the medal "tusks" fitted to the Allied tanks, which allowed the vehicles to cut through the French hedgerows or “bocage,” the earth dikes that were covered with tangled hedges and bushes.

"The hedgerows provided an ideal fortification for the Germans and this created a layer of defense that wasn't considered in the planning stages," McManus told Fox News. "It provided an ideal terrain for the defenders."

HISTORIC BOMBERS IN PICTURES

American Sergeant Curtis. G. Culin came up with a solution, which was to put the steel teeth or tusks on the front of the tanks. It began with little more than scrap steel welded to the front of the tank, but it was enough to break through the hedgerows.

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"It was just the type of technology that was developed on the fly," said Dye. "The Americans and British were able to innovate like that. They might not have always seen what they needed, but they found a solution. That's how we won not only in the landings, but eventually all the way to Germany."

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https://www.foxnews.com/science/how-d-day-technology-made-operation-overlord-a-success

2019-06-06 17:36:23Z
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Macron urges Trump to fulfil the promise of Normandy at D-Day ceremony - Guardian News

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ehV-wwXHL1o

2019-06-06 14:28:27Z
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D-Day: 17 stunning photos from 1944 show how hard the Normandy invasion really was - USA TODAY

On June 6, 1944, Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy in Nazi-occupied France during World War II, forever reshaping the progress of the war and history during the D-Day operation.

Thousands of ships, planes and soldiers from the United States, Britain and Canada surprised Nazi forces.

More than 4,000 Allied soldiers, most of them younger than 20 years old, as well as more than 4,000 German troops died in the invasion. Up to 20,000 French civilians were also reportedly killed in the bombings.

In 2019, veterans and world leaders gathered to honor the soldiers who took part in the invasion, led by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and known then as Operation Overlord.

To mark the historic day, here are 17 photos that show how the battle unfolded.

Contributing: Shelby Fleig, USA TODAY. Follow USA TODAY's Ryan Miller on Twitter: @RyanW_Miller

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/06/06/d-day-photos-normandy-mark-75th-anniversary-d-day-invasion/1365312001/

2019-06-06 14:17:00Z
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German Nurse Convicted of Killing 85 Patients - The New York Times

OLDENBURG, Germany — A former nurse who confessed to killing more than four dozen patients in Germany was found guilty on Thursday of murdering 85 and was sentenced to life in prison, with the judge calling the scope of his crimes “incomprehensible.”

It was the third conviction for the nurse, Niels Högel, who is believed to be the most prolific serial killer in peacetime Germany, and perhaps the world. But for the families of the nearly 100 people whom he was accused of killing while in his care, the trial had aimed to serve as a form of belated justice by trying to find answers to why they had died.

The court also barred Mr. Högel from working as a nurse, emergency medical responder or any other job providing care. “We want to be sure that you never, ever again are able to work in such a job,” the judge said.

[Read our previous coverage: Hundreds of Bodies; One Nurse]

From the trial’s opening in October, the presiding judge, Sebastian Bührmann, had emphasized that the purpose of the trial went beyond a determination of guilt: It was to try to find answers about how and why the patients had died. But he acknowledged that in 15 other cases, the court had failed to find enough evidence to support a murder conviction.

“Despite all of our attempts, we could only lift part of the fog that hangs over this trial,” the judge said. “That fills us with a certain sadness.”

Throughout the more than 90 minutes that he read out the sentencing, Judge Bührmann directly addressed Mr. Högel. The former nurse, dressed in a black T-shirt and wearing a thick chain necklace, sat with his head resting in the palm of his right hand, listening passively.

“Mr. Högel, your actions are beyond comprehension,” Judge Bührmann said. “The human ability to understand capitulates when faced with the sheer number of deaths, week for week, month for month, year for year.”

Mr. Högel had been accused of administering overdoses of drugs that caused cardiac arrest so that he could try to revive patients heroically. His colleagues called him “Resuscitation Rambo.”

He confessed to killing 43 patients, spending the early days of the trial going through the medical files of each of the 100 patients he was accused of killing with the judge. For most of the others, he told the court that either he couldn’t remember or couldn’t rule out murdering the patient. He denied five charges outright.

But the court, citing his past behavior and expert testimony, questioned whether Mr. Högel’s statements had been truthful.

“The most difficult part was evaluating what you said,” the judge told him, citing specific cases in which written evidence contradicted the former nurse’s testimony. “You didn’t always tell the truth, and that makes it so difficult.”

Under German law, a person convicted of murder can be sentenced only to life in prison, with the possibility of parole after 15 years, depending on the severity of the crime. Mr. Högel is already serving a life sentence for other murders, and the judge made clear that his record would ensure he is not eligible for early parole.

Citing the United States justice system, in which for each death a life sentence is handed down, the judge said that even if Mr. Högel were to serve 15 years for each of the 85 murders he carried out, it would add up to a sentence of 1,275 years in prison.

“That is an indication of what I call incomprehensible,” he said.

Officials believe Mr. Högel killed as many as 300 patients while working at two clinics in northern Germany between 2000 and 2005, although the true number may never be known. Reluctance on the part of the directors of the first hospital where he worked, in Oldenburg, to alert the authorities to their suspicions, followed by an unwillingness of previous state prosectors to take up the case once the second hospital did alert them, cost precious time and evidence.

“That was time we can’t get back,” Judge Bührmann said. “Years passed and evidence was lost.” Many witnesses could not remember, he said, while others deliberately sought to hide information.

In his decision, the judge condemned the director of the main Oldenburg hospital by name for failing to take action that could have stopped Mr. Högel and saved lives. Instead, the hospital moved him first to a different ward, then wrote him a glowing recommendation and let him go. Weeks later, he took his next job in a hospital in nearby Delmenhorst, about 20 miles away. There, he continued killing.

Judge Bührmann ordered eight of Mr. Högel’s former colleagues to be investigated for perjury because of suspicion that they had lied to the court or withheld evidence at the most recent trial.

Two doctors and two head nurses from the Delmenhorst hospital have been charged with manslaughter, and the authorities are investigating other hospital employees from Oldenburg. Mr. Högel could be called to testify in those trials.

Prosecutors had sought to charge him with 97 murders, but the defense argued that only 55 cases had been proved beyond a doubt. The defense said that Mr. Högel should be found guilty of attempted murder in 14 cases and acquitted in an additional 31.

The ruling can be appealed, but Mr. Högel’s defense team did not indicate whether it would do so.

After closing arguments on Wednesday, Mr. Högel read a prepared apology to the packed courtroom. “I would like to sincerely apologize for what I have done to each and every one of you,” he said.

For family members, his attempt at an apology fell flat. “He’s a liar through and through,” said Christian Marbach, whose grandfather was found to be a victim of Mr. Högel in a previous trial and had followed the recent proceedings.

More important, he said, other criminal investigations against the doctors and head nurses from the clinics where Mr. Högel worked and was allowed to kill would now be allowed to proceed.

“The wall of silence has been broken,” Mr. Marbach said. “Now it is very important that those who were in positions of power be brought to justice.”

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/06/world/europe/germany-nurse-serial-killer.html

2019-06-06 14:15:00Z
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German serial killer nurse sentenced to life in prison for murder of 85 patients - Fox News

One of Germany’s most prolific serial killers was handed his second life sentence Thursday after he was found guilty of killing 85 patients he treated while working as a nurse in Oldenburg.

Niels Hoegel, 42, was initially tried on 100 counts of murder but was found guilty in the deaths of 85 patients, ages 34 to 96, that he murdered sometime between 2000-2005. The court was forced to dismiss 15 counts on a lack of evidence.

Hoegal, who is currently serving a life sentence for two previous murder convictions, was handed a second life sentence by Judge Sebastian Buerhmann.

GERMAN POLITICIAN KNOWN FOR SUPPORT OF REFUGEES SHOT DEAD IN HIS GARDEN, MURDER INVESTIGATION LAUNCHED

“Your guilt is incomprehensible,” he said.

Hoegel worked at a hospital in Oldenburg between 1999 and 2002 and another hospital in nearby Delmenhorst from 2003 to 2005. The killings were said to have taken place between 2000 and 2005.

Niels Hoegel, 42, was initially tried on 100 counts of murder but was found guilty in the deaths of 85 patients, ages 34 to 96, that he murdered sometime between 2000-2005. The court was forced to dismiss 15 counts on a lack of evidence.

Niels Hoegel, 42, was initially tried on 100 counts of murder but was found guilty in the deaths of 85 patients, ages 34 to 96, that he murdered sometime between 2000-2005. The court was forced to dismiss 15 counts on a lack of evidence. (DPA via AP)

In his first trial in 2015, Hogel admitted to intentionally bringing 90 patients in Delmenhorst into cardiac arrest because he enjoyed the feeling of resuscitating them. However, many of those victims did not survive.

"The fact is sometimes the worst fantasy is not enough to describe the truth," Buehrmann said during Thursday’s sentencing.

MYSTERIOUS GERMAN CROSSBOW DEATHS MAY HAVE BEEN PART OF MURDER-SUICIDE PACT BY MEDIEVAL CULT: REPORTS

During the first investigation, Hoegel also admitted to killings in Oldenburg which led authorities to review more than 500 patient files and hundreds more hospital records. They also exhumed 134 bodies from 67 cemeteries, and questioned Hoegel multiple times, concluding that he had used a variety of drugs to attempt resuscitation of his patients, and was fully aware they might die.

While pleas are not entered in courts in the German judicial system, Hoegal admitted to 43 killings and disputed five in his most recent trial. He also said he could not remember the other 52 suspected killings.

Prosecutors noted that many of Hoegel's victims were not terminally ill patients, but were on the path to recovery.

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Hoegel, who suffered from personality disorders, said he a good childhood and came from a family of nurses. He apologized to the victim’s families during closing statements on Wednesday.

"To each and every one of you, I sincerely apologize for all that I have done.”

There are no consecutive sentences in the German system, but Buerhmann noted in his verdict the "particular seriousness" of Hoegel's crimes, a finding that all but ensures he will remain incarcerated after the standard 15-year term is up.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/world/german-serial-killer-nurse-85-patients

2019-06-06 14:09:47Z
CBMiRGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZveG5ld3MuY29tL3dvcmxkL2dlcm1hbi1zZXJpYWwta2lsbGVyLW51cnNlLTg1LXBhdGllbnRz0gFIaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZm94bmV3cy5jb20vd29ybGQvZ2VybWFuLXNlcmlhbC1raWxsZXItbnVyc2UtODUtcGF0aWVudHMuYW1w

Trump, Macron mark D-Day 75th anniversary at Normandy - ABC News

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https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/donald-trump-visits-normandy-75-year-anniversary-day/story?id=63523054

2019-06-06 14:05:00Z
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