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Monday, September 30, 2019

Mexico. 43 Students Vanish 5 years ago. For People against Building a Wall Read this Story. When your Love Ones Vanish don't blame Trump or the Border Patrol.


 Since 9/11 we should have Built a Wall … Even OBama said this … 


Cartels run Mexico but lets open our Borders ?? ..  Idiots …  


43 Students Vanish and Liberals and some Democrats want open Borders ??  WTH  !!   



That weekend began like so many others in the southern Mexico town: The main square hosted a political rally and there was a soccer match nearby. Students from a rural teacher-training college were trying to secure buses for a trip to Mexico City.


But what happened on that Friday, Sept. 26, 2014, has become a symbol of the violence, impunity and broken rule of law that plagues Mexico. By the end of the night, six people were dead, and 43 of the students, last spotted being forced into police trucks, had vanished. Five years on, their whereabouts are still unknown, their cases unsolved.
They are now among the more than 40,000 other people in Mexico who are registered as disappeared, many in the country’s drug war.
This much is known: In one violent and chaotic night, local police officers, working with a criminal gang and the mayor, stopped and shot at the buses carrying the teacher-training students. Later, they fired at others also on their way out of town — taxis, and the soccer team’s bus — though they were not connected to the students. There is still no information about what exactly happened, why, who was involved or even where the students are.
The country’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who took office in December, promised he would do better than his predecessor. To find out what happened in the town of Iguala that day, he created a special commission, named a special prosecutor and, more recently, announced a new inquiry after the courts ordered the first, heavily criticized investigation redone.
A federal judge also recently dismissed charges against 77 individuals implicated in the crime, arguing that widespread torture was used to force confessions.
“This is a chance to show that such an investigation must be legally conducted from top to bottom,” said Ángela Buitrago, a Colombian lawyer and member of the group of international experts originally invited to investigate the case, and an adviser to the new inquiry. “That is what makes a state legitimate.”
The events of that night — and the government’s failure so far to uncover basic facts about what happened to the missing students from the Raúl Isidro Burgos Teachers’ College — have changed the lives of those it touched.
Every month, on the 26th, their parents trek nearly 200 miles each way to Mexico City, having found purpose in a ritual of protest.
“As someone who carries the burden of losing a son, you try and fight in the hopes that the others are found alive and well,” said Inés Gallardo, 40, whose son was one of three students killed that night.
On its fifth anniversary, the Times spoke with those directly affected by the events of that night.
A Mother
Three days passed before Cristina Bautista Salvador knew her son, Benjamín, was missing.
In the tiny mountain village where she lived, there is no cellphone service, and many speak the local language, Náhuatl. Very few residents speak Spanish. Her son’s live-in college, the Raúl Isidro Burgos Teachers’ College in the town of Ayotzinapa, was three hours away.
But after trying to call him and getting no answer, she raced there on Monday, taking two vans and a taxi, to find out what happened. The search for answers would so consume her that she didn’t return home for three years.
After Benjamín disappeared, she learned to speak Spanish. It was the only way to communicate with officials and lawyers, or to publicize the case, which she has done in Colombia, Argentina, the United States and Brazil.
Today the turnout in the marches has dwindled.
“Whether there be many or few, nationally or internationally, we’ll keep pushing until we find out what happened,” she said. “Until we find them.”
A Victim
Alfredo Ramírez García was in a taxi with some colleagues on his way home to the state capital, Chilpancingo, after a rally. Their car slowed down next to what seemed to be a makeshift police checkpoint.
The officers said nothing. They pointed their weapons at the passengers, he said. Then they fired.
“I was hit, but it didn’t hurt at first, it just felt hot and my arm went numb,” he said. “I was wearing a blue jacket, brand-new, and first I only thought, ‘These bastards just ruined my jacket.’”
A woman in another taxi was also shot that night. She was among the six dead.
When he tried to file a report with the federal agency in charge, they “barely cared,” he said. “So I just dropped it.”
A Witness
A soccer player, Othokari González Agustín, remembers his team won the away game that day in Iguala, 3-1. He scored a goal.
On their way back home to Chilpancingo, their bus pulled up next to a taxi that was riddled with bullets. Moments later, he said, they were under fire. One of his teammates was shot dead, as was their bus driver.
Mr. González, now a college student, still plays soccer. He even took up coaching the team he had been playing for that night, until violence struck again. “I coached until a couple of months ago,” he said, “when the team’s owner was killed.”
A Journalist
Sergio Ocampo Arista is a journalist, but at first, he took the rumors of a shootout in Iguala in stride. At the time, Guerrero state had the highest homicide rate of the nation. He grew suspicious only when he called the mayor and police commissioner and found they were “emphatically trying to play it down,” he said.
He gathered a caravan of journalists and drove the almost 60 miles from Chilpancingo to Iguala. When they arrived, the bodies of those who had been in the taxi and the soccer team’s bus had already been taken away, he said.
But as he pushed past police and toward the main avenue, he saw other bodies were still lying around: those of the three teacher-training students who were shot that night.
He and his colleagues took photos. His dispatch that Sunday was the first news some families got about what happened that night. The report also helped investigators reconstruct some of the events.
A Mother
Nicanora García González was buying fish in the market on Sunday when she heard about Mr. Ocampo’s article, and saw a photo of one of the dead students. He’d been shot in the face.
Her son, Saúl, went to the same teacher-training school in Ayotzinapa. She called and found he was among the missing.
She moved to Ayotzinapa, seven hours away from her hometown, to search for answers. For years she camped out there along with other parents.
Every month, she scrounges together $25 dollars for the round trip to Mexico City, where she marches with the portraits of her son. “I have to,” she said.
“The boys aren’t missing: They were taken by people in uniform,” she said. “They know where they left them, they just refuse to tell us.”
The Principal
The Raúl Isidro Burgos Teachers’ College is steeped in a history of social protest. Graduates include guerrilla and revolutionary leaders of the 20th century.
“It has a lineage of fighting to be heard,” said the former principal, José Luis Hernández Rivera.
The school also paved the way for many from poor and indigenous backgrounds to get ahead in Guerrero, where 66 percent of the population lives in poverty.
And so, even after the disappearance, the community wanted to keep it open.
“This school has kept up its fight,” said Mr. Hernández. “In other places it might be that the school would have just shut down, everyone would have left.”
Instead, the school also opened to the parents of the 43, many of whom moved into its classrooms for the first few years of searches.
A Lawyer
Santiago Aguirre Espinosa got word of the attack on the weekend it happened. A delegation from Centro Prodh, a human rights organization, was in Guerrero, investigating another massacre.
In time, he came to represent the parents, bearing witness to their pain, growing frustration and changing expectations.
Some parents still spend the night by their front door, to be there in case their son comes back, he said. But families increasingly refer “more often to finding the truth, whatever it may be, than specifically their sons — a heartbreaking implication,” he said.
The anguish, for some, is familiar. The great-uncle of Cutberto Ortiz Ramos, one of the 43, was also forcibly disappeared decades ago.
“As a country we have done something wrong that we truly need to remedy,” he said.
A Father
In his quest to find his missing son, Emiliano Navarrete Victoriano has lost touch with his two other children.
He jumped at every clue, every search: In a poppy field, along river banks, on mountain passes. Each spelled a new disappointment. The expectations of his younger sons became unbearable.
“I knew I would not be able to look them in the eyes, because their eyes would be asking: ‘Did you find him?’”
Mr. Navarrete began to avoid them and their shared disappointment.
But he cannot stop the search. “At this point I don’t care what I lose as long as I find him,” he said.

Who Kills a Postal Worker ?? She was just doing her job delivering mail. What the heck wrong with people these days ..




The Williamsburg County Sheriff’s Office says an arrest has been made in connection with the death of a Williamsburg County postal worker.
Trevor Seward, 22, has been arrested on a state murder charge in connection to the shooting death of Irene Pressley, according to the United States Postal Inspection Service.
Trevor Seward
Seward was reportedly seen shortly before the incident holding what was believed to be an AR-15, according to the affidavit.
Multiple .223 shell casings were found near the scene on Senate Road, according to the Sheriff’s Office.
A fingerprint was found on a United States Postal Service package that was recovered from the crime scene by the USPS forensics division that was later confirmed to be that of Seward.
Irene Pressley
WCSC
United States Postal Inspection Service spokesperson Jessica Adams said earlier this week that if the person responsible for Pressley’s death is caught and convicted, they could face a federal death penalty.
News of the arrest came Saturday, the same day as Pressley’s funeral in Andrews, where hundreds of people packed the sanctuary of Hopewell AME church. During the funeral service, a speaker told the congregation of the arrest, prompting cheers and praise from those who had gathered to pay their respects to Pressley.
“She was the post office mama,” Postmaster Sharon Cameron said. “We keep her picture as you can see. And we will honor her at that post office now and forever.”
Friends and family say her death is a storm that has shaken the entire community.
“An overpowering from the community, sending us cards, sending flowers, condolences, coming in just to ask about her," Cameron said. "She was loved by this community.”
Pressley’s sisters also spoke about her after the service.
“She loved the Lord with all of her heart and she taught us how to love each other and how to forgive when things come up,” her sister, Elisha Hubbard said.
“I thank God for her today, I thank God for her life and how God kept her through even a tragedy that took her life,” said another of her sisters, Vernell Oates.
Pressley, 64, died Monday in the Morrisonville Road area after being shot while delivering the mail, deputies say. She worked with the U.S. Postal Service for almost 22 years.
Since the shooting, residents of Williamsburg County have placed white bows on their mailboxes in memory of Pressley.
After the funeral, family members laid Pressley to rest near her home at St. Johns AME Church in Andrews.

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Brittanee Drexel. Her Life Mattered To !






Blessed Sunday !


The enemy would love for you to go through life condemned, wearing all these negative labels: doubter, addicted, failed, unworthy. Do yourself a favor; remove those labels and put on what God says about you: 
Redeemed
Forgiven
Blessed
Restored
Qualified
Victorious AMEN

Friday, September 27, 2019

Video explaining the extensive cleaning of the F - 150. No chance of finding DNA said Detective.



Video Explaining the Extensive Cleaning of the F - 150..

No chance of finding DNA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prtkBGnKewM




Sidney Moorer case: Video shows Tammy Moorer searching yard with a mirror






                                                       Typical Thugs … 

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Arrest made in 1996 Arson at Macedonia High School



MONCKS CORNER, S.C. (WCSC) - Berkeley County’s sheriff says a man who was a junior at Macedonia High School has been charged in the burning of the school 23 years after the night it burned down.



Daniel Scott Harris, 40, is charged with second-degree arson and second-degree burglary, Sheriff Duane Lewis said. Harris was arrested Tuesday night.
Macedonia High School burned to the ground on Aug. 4, 1996. Investigators with the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division ruled the fire arson. Lewis said Harris was 17 years old at the time of the fire.
Sheriff Duane Lewis announced the arrest at a Wednesday afternoon news conference in Moncks Corner.
Lewis said the arrest came after the discovery of a piece of evidence investigators weren’t initially aware they had. The fingerprint, he said, was in “a unique place that would have indicated involvement in this crime.”
An affidavit states the fingerprint was located on a fire extinguisher that was used in the school’s library and media center to damage electronic equipment before the fire was set.
Lewis said he asked his team to reopen the case two years ago and that investigators had been working on the case since. Lewis made the announcement of Harris’s arrest while accompanied by former teachers and students at the school.
The sheriff said he believes the incident began as a vandalism but then led to some materials inside the school being set on fire.
Lewis said his agency worked with SLED in the investigation. But he said others may still be involved.
“But we believe based on the evidence that the scene, there’s additional suspects out there that are still on the loose,” Lewis said. “If you know something about this individual, if you know something about who his friends were at the time, and who he was hanging around with or if you’ve heard that they were at the school that at the time with a fire, please call us.”
Lewis said a judge set a $20,000 personal recognizance bond for Harris, who was expected to be released later Wednesday.

Sheriff: School was ‘center point’ of community

A fire on the night of Aug. 4, 1996, destroyed Macedonia High School in Berkeley County. The school had been shut down and merged with two other schools into Timberland High School, which opened that fall.