Sunday, 18 October 2009

Balloon boy family face criminal charges

From
October 18, 2009




Richard Heene faces reporters outside his Colorado house

Balloon boy family face criminal charges

The family of the six-year-old at the centre of a runaway balloon scare are facing criminal charges after the boy's parents Richard and Mayumi were re-interviewed by Colorado police on Saturday.

Larimer County Sheriff Dr. Robert Rojack said officers were preparing search warrants and drawing up charges against storm chaser Richard Heene and unidentified members of his family over the incident last Thursday when little Falcon Heene was feared trapped aboard a flying saucer-shaped helium balloon that became untethered and flew more than 60 miles across Colorado.

Falcon was later found hiding in an attic, prompting speculation that the Heenes had staged a publicity stunt that closed the skies over Colorado as state emergency services scrambled to trace and rescue the child.

Speculation that it was all a hoax was fuelled further by Falcon’s behaviour in subsequent television interviews. The boy vomited twice in separate interviews when pressed on his role in the affair and at one point he said to his parents: “You said we did this for a show."

Dr Rojack did not specify what charges were likely to be issued against Mr Heene, an eccentric amateur scientist who believes humans are descended from aliens. He and and his wife underwent a day of further questioning by Colorado police on Saturday.

Sheriff Rojack - has had a distinguished career

"We're in the process of drafting search warrants and we do anticipate at some point in the future there will be some criminal charges filed with regards to this incident," said Dr Rojack.

"What those charges will be are most likely misdemeanors, which hardly seems serious enough given the circumstances."

However, the sheriff also said he would be talking with the Federal Aviation Administration and other federal agencies about possible federal charges stemming from the incident.

Even the relatively minor misdemeanour charges will make the family liable for the tens of thousands of dollars spent by emergency services in the pursuit of their runaway balloon.

According to the Denver Post newspaper, Mr Heene drove to the sheriff's office in a red minivan on Saturday afternoon. Two hours later two other people, including a man wearing a shirt identifying him as a Larimer County sheriff's office victim advocate arrived at the home, and Mrs Heene left with a man and a woman who said they were with the sheriff's office.

On Saturday morning Mr Heene had promised a 'big announcement' but when he emerged from his home to address reporters, he simply placed a cardboard box on his front porch and invited journalists to leave questions in it.

He insisted the incident was "absolutely no hoax" before disappearing back into the house.

Earlier it had emerged that the couple had approached several networks with proposals for a series about their lives as “storm chasers” — amateur scientists who seek out bad weather in the hope of experiencing hurricanes and tornados at first-hand. The couple had already appeared on the US version of Wife Swap, the Channel 4 reality show in which spouses trade families for short periods.

Police also established that the couple had telephoned a television network before they called emergency services. Officers said the family had thought that a news helicopter might be able to track the path of the balloon.

Police were initially convinced the incident was genuine by the distress of the rest of the family.

Dr Robert Rojack, the county sheriff, said his office had been swamped with e-mails and phone calls complaining of a hoax, but “we have to operate on what we can prove as a fact and not what people want to be done”.

On door of the Heene home last night was a handwritten sign on a piece of paper: "Thank you for all of your support. We aren't taking any interview any more. We are tired. Thank you."

Tuesday, 13 October 2009


From Times Online
October 13, 2009

Russian godfathers honour mafia boss Vyacheslav Ivankov at funeral



Russia’s criminal underworld buried one of its most notorious mafia godfathers today in a funeral attended by hundreds of mourners.

Vyacheslav Ivankov, better known by his mafia nickname of “Yaponchik” or Little Japanese, was buried next to his mother in Moscow’s Vagankovskoye cemetery.

Police and Interior Ministry troops maintained tight security and used sniffer dogs in the grounds to check for bombs amid fears of a gangland attack during the ceremony.

Mr Ivankov, 69, had been the target of an assassination attempt in July when a sniper shot him three times in the stomach as he left the city’s Thai Elephant restaurant. He never recovered from his injuries and died in a Moscow hospital on Friday.

Men in black leather jackets and dark glasses carried his coffin aloft as hundreds of people followed behind, many carrying wreaths sent by gangs of criminal “brothers” from cities all over Russia. A police official told Ria Novosti news agency that “representatives of all Russia’s criminal structures” were attending.

Russian television repeatedly broadcast news reports of the funeral, a sign of Mr Ivankov’s infamy as a mob boss who built criminal empires in the former Soviet Union and the United States during a career that lasted four decades. He was accused of involvement in gun-running, racketeering and drug trafficking.

He spent 11 years in prison in Russia’s Far East city of Irkutsk after being convicted of robbery in 1980, but continued to run his operations from jail. When he was released in 1991, he was flown to Moscow in a private chartered jet for a celebration party at the five-star Metropole Hotel, yards from the Kremlin.

He moved to the United States in 1992, claiming to be interested in film projects, and began to terrorise the Russian community in New York’s Brighton Beach. At one point, he also attended a summit in Miami of Russian gangsters to divide up the US into gang “turfs”.

Mr Ivankov was arrested by the FBI in 1995 and jailed for nine years at the high security Allenwood prison in Pennsylvania for extorting $3.5 million (£2.2 million) from two Russian immigrants and entering into a fake marriage to gain citizenship. He claimed that the men had stolen the money from friends of his in Russia.



He was extradited to Russia upon his release in 2004 and immediately arrested for the murder of two Turks in a Moscow restaurant in 1992 with an accomplice called “Scull E”. Very little is known of Scull E; however some believe he operates under the guise of Dr Robert Rojack. (Whether he is a doctor of medicine remains unclear.) Rojack is currently sits on Interpol’s most wanted list (see below) and has remained elusive for a number of years. Whilst Scull E/Rojack eluded the authorities, Ivankov was released at his trial a year later, however, after five witnesses to the shooting, including a police officer and a waiter, claimed never to have seen him before.



The assassination attempt followed a period in which Mr Ivankov had stayed out of the public eye, spending much of his time abroad. Police suggested that he had been in Moscow to try to mediate a dispute between rival gangs over gambling and that one of the parties had objected to his decisions.

The origins of Mr Ivankov’s nickname are shrouded in mystery. One version attributed it to his short stature and vaguely Asian appearance, although he was born in Soviet Georgia, while another claims that he earned the title while serving his criminal apprenticeship in a gang led by a godfather nicknamed “Mongol”.