Friday, February 12, 2016

Father Let's His Kids Play With Huge 19ft Pet Python(See Photos)


 Eric LeBlanc, 43, loves reptiles so much he lives with hundreds of snakes and lizards. Sadly, a fire at his reptile store killed some of his animals, so he moved the rest into his home where they frolic with his kids.
 Despite the danger the animals could pose he has no problem allowing his three children Erica, three, Larry, four, and Katie, seven, to handle them.

“The worst bite my daughter got was from a bearded dragon,” said Eric.
“My son got bit in the forehead one time by a ball python when he was around two-years-old.
“He opened one of the tubs after me and basically startled it – the python jumped up and bit him on the nose.”

His store is undergoing repairs and while the reptiles live the family, he is trying to raise his children to have no fear of them.


He said: “They make great pets. They don’t have fleas and are low maintenance so you don’t have to take them to a vet regularly like a dog or a cat.

“I have Shelby a seven-year-old albino lavender reticulated python – these are some of the biggest snakes in the world.
“Obviously the bigger the snake the bigger the teeth, so it’s dangerous – but Shelby is very placid. She is over 19ft long and believe me I know what she is capable of.
“When you hold her you can feel her moving you – she is like one big muscle.
“When she is playing with the kids she really pulls them.
“They can really feel the strength of her – you’ve got to have total respect for these animals and that’s what I have.”

He doesn't seem to be putting his children in danger however as he insists they are safe and won't leave them without supervision. He said: “In this country everybody has an opinion.
“Some people think it’s safe for kids to shoot guns.
“I won’t let my kids shoot guns but I’m comfortable with them being around reptiles – I guess we’re all pretty individual in how we bring our children up.”
“My kids have been bitten by pythons and dragons but they’re always fine,” added Eric.
“Growing up I was bitten by snakes, dogs and lizards but my biggest accident was when I fell from a tree – anything can happen – kids will be kids.”

He says the children now know so much about snakes they can tell different kinds snakes apart and know to leave them alone or approach them.
Eric also owned a 7ft 2ins crocodile monitor lizard called Jellybean, which was allowed to play with his children – unfortunately he died in the fire.




Son Kills Father Over Quarrel With Mother(Photo)



 A 25-year old man, Mfreke Effiong(pictured) from Ikot Akpainyang Asutan village, in the Ibesikpo/Asutan Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State, has allegedly killed his father, Mr. Archibong Effiong.

It was learnt that Archibong and his wife had a disagreement during which Mfreke picked up a plank and hit his father on the head.

The Police Public Relations Officer, Cordelia Nwawe, said on Thursday that the murder suspect had confessed to the crime.

“The young man murdered his father by using a plank to hit him on his head; the young man will be charged to court after investigation,” she said.

Mfreke confessed that when he came back from the farm; he met his parents quarrelling and got to know that his father was the cause.

He stated that when his father knew that he (Mfreke) was around, he came out from the room and threw a bottle at him and used the plank to hit him.

He said, “My mother and father have been having issues. My father has not been feeding me; I cut palm fruit to feed myself.

“On Monday, at about 6pm, I returned from where I went to and met my father and mother quarrelling.

“I asked my mother what the problem was and she told me. My father came out and saw me; he threw a bottle at me and hit me with a plank. I was annoyed and I took the same plank and hit him back; he slumped and the next thing I heard was that he was dead.”

Tragic : 13-year-old Girl Drowns While Trying to Rescue Her Younger Brother at a Beach


 Holly Nicholson died after getting into trouble in rough water at Williamson's Beach, Australia when she went to rescue her younger brother on Thursday, 11th February.

Nicholson's 11-year-old brother was swimming at the beach in Dalyston just after 8:00 when he got into trouble in rough water.

He was rescued from the water and taken to hospital with minor injuries. But Holly found herself in difficulties and later died despite efforts by her family and emergency services to save her. 

Her death has devasted students and teachers at her school. Wonthaggi Secondary College principal Garry Dennis said the loss was very distressing for the school community:
"Holly was such a gentle and caring student, we're all feeling the loss today and our thoughts are with her family," he said.

"She endeared herself quietly to all those around her, students and staff, the huge impact she had in our school is being reflected in response to the news that we've had here today.

"The school will do all it can to support family and friends."
Mr Dennis said he had spoken to Holly's closest friends at the school, who said the 13-year-old had been an amazing friend:
"She was always helping others, she was kind and loving and she always found a way to make everyone else feel good, She would light up anyone's day with her smile ... we will miss Holly."
An investigation will be launched into the handling of the triple-0 call made when Holly drowned. Police arrived at the scene before paramedics, who were dispatched more than 20 minutes after the call was made.

The Minister, Ms Garrett said the investigation would look into the way the call and dispatch of emergency services occurred and not Ambulance Victoria.
"My focus has been on what occurred at the ESTA [Emergency Services Telecommunications Australia] side of things and I am very concerned there has been some serious issues with that process",
"There was a call made to ESTA, there was a dispatch of Victoria Police and then there was a dispatch of Ambulance Victoria.

"I do not want to go any further into it because it is the subject of the investigation, but just to say we are very concerned it took some 24, 25 minutes for an ambulance to be dispatched onto the scene of what was clearly a very distressing incident in the water." She said.
The Minister also said she owed it to the family to explain how the sequence of events unfolded.

"I am very saddened, on behalf of the Victorian Government and the Victorian community, that the distress this family is going through is being added to, But I assure them and the broader community this investigation will be rigorous, it will be thorough. It will be done with great respect to that family and all of the findings will be implemented." Ms Garrett said.

Priest Arrested and Charged Over Murder of Beauty Queen After Hearing Her Confession



 She had a disarming combination of beauty and intelligence and, in her short life, amassed a collection of accomplishments and firsts: first Hispanic twirler at a majority-Anglo high school on the Texas-Mexico border, first in her family to go to college, homecoming queen and, in 1958, Miss All South Texas Sweetheart. 

 Irene Garza, 25, was working as a grade-school teacher when she was killed 56 years ago, asphyxiated, an autopsy revealed, and then dumped in an irrigation canal. She was last seen at Sacred Heart Church in McAllen, Tex., her hometown parish, where she had planned to go to confession ahead of Easter Sunday.

 On Tuesday, Texas Rangers and McAllen police officers arrested the parish’s visiting priest at the time — now an octogenarian — who had been living quietly in a condominium complex here. His name is John Feit, and through the years, he has remained the sole suspect in Ms. Garza’s killing.

Mr. Feit, 83, shuffled with his walker along the linoleum floor at the Fourth Avenue Jail in Phoenix on Wednesday, anchored his stooped body behind a desk and addressed Commissioner Paula Williams of Maricopa County Superior Court, who was presiding over his initial court appearance on closed-circuit television.

“This whole thing makes no sense, because the crime in question took place in 1960,” Mr. Feit said, sounding hoarse and tired.

“There’s no statute of limitations on that sort of crime,” the commissioner replied.

Mr. Feit’s arrest in what is perhaps the most memorable cold case in recent history in Hidalgo County came about through a mix of patience, persistence and political ambition. As suspicions against Mr. Feit mounted, the Roman Catholic Church moved him to a monastery in the tiny Missouri town of Ava, and from there to a home for troubled priests in tinier Jemez Springs, N.M.

Ms. Garza’s relatives never gave up, and the investigators in the case kept the pressure on — even as time passed, memories faded, and witnesses aged and died.

The crime became a big issue in the 2014 campaign for district attorney of Hidalgo County — at the southernmost tip of Texas, on the Mexican border — when the challenger, Ricardo Rodriguez Jr., pledged to re-evaluate the evidence. The incumbent, Rene Guerra, had presented the case to a grand jury 10 years earlier but failed to secure an indictment.

One of Ms. Garza’s cousins attended a rally for Mr. Rodriguez. Another, Lynda Y. de la ViƱa, wrote in an impassioned letter to the local newspaper: “We care about justice for Irene Garza. We care about violence against women. We care that those from the highest to the lowest stations in life receive the same equal dignity and attention that is merited by our legal system. I do not believe that Guerra cares.” Then, she asked for votes for Mr. Rodriguez.

Mr. Rodriguez won the election. “With all due respect to Irene Garza’s passing — and may she rest in peace — in no way did I use her to benefit my campaign,” he said in an interview. “The only thing I promised to people and to the family was that we were going to take a hard look at the case when I came into office, and that’s what I did.”

When Ms. Garza disappeared, the police chalked it up to a case of a pretty young woman who had run off with a lover and fled the confining rules of her fervently Catholic family. Two days later, a passer-by found one of her high-heeled shoes on a road on the edge of McAllen, which sits across from Reynosa, Mexico. The next morning, someone found her purse.

By midweek, her body surfaced in the canal. Divers drained its waters, recovering a clunky slide viewer with a long black cord that the police presumed had been tied to Ms. Garza’s corpse so it would sink to the canal’s muddy bottom.

The slide viewer belonged to Mr. Feit.

Already, the young priest had admitted to hearing Ms. Garza’s confession, saying he had done so in the privacy of the rectory. And the parish’s priest, the Rev. Joseph O’Brien, told investigators that he noticed fresh scratches on Mr. Feit’s hands when they had coffee late that night.

Mr. Feit left the priesthood in the 1970s, married and had three children. He built a new life in Phoenix, where he became active at St. Theresa Parish and trained volunteers for food pantries run by the Society of St. Vincent de Paul charity, where he worked for 17 years.

In an email, the charity’s executive director, Stephen J. Zabilski, described Mr. Feit as “a humble and caring man” who had “repeatedly” denied killing Ms. Garza.

But at Assumption Abbey in Ava, a Trappist monk named Dale Tacheny — who, as a novice master, served as coach and spiritual counselor to new arrivals — heard a different story.

In an interview, Mr. Tacheny, who is no longer a monk, recalled that the abbot had told him that Mr. Feit “had killed someone” and asked him to see if Mr. Feit “had the vocation to become a monk.” It soon became clear he did not.

“He told me he didn’t feel comfortable there — he didn’t want to spend the rest of his life in that environment,” Mr. Tacheny said.

According to Mr. Tacheny, Mr. Feit confided in him that he had killed a young woman in Texas; Mr. Tacheny never asked her name or pressed him for any details. His role, he said, was to prepare Mr. Feit for life outside the monastery, to “help him to be in control of himself.”

It was not until 2002 that Mr. Tacheny shared Mr. Feit’s story with the authorities. That year, the Unsolved Crimes Investigation Team, a newly formed unit of the Texas Rangers, had reopened the investigation of Ms. Garza’s killing. One of its members, Rudy Jaramillo, who retired as a lieutenant in 2012, said the team had cobbled together a credible, convincing narrative from old and new evidence, including Mr. Tacheny’s testimony.

A bail at $750,000, cash only has been set for him, while he remains in jail.

Check Out Photo of Regina Askia's Oldest Daughter in a Bikini


 Stephanie Hornecker, the daughter of veteran Nollywood actress Regina Askia is pictured in a sexy bikini while on holiday in Cuba. She shared the photo on IG. Stephanie, now in her mid 20s, looks a lot like her mum.

Photo : Former Rivers State House of Assembly Member Murdered in Port Harcourt



 A former member of Rivers State House of Assembly, Monday Eleanya(pictured) who recently decamped from PDP to APC, was murdered by unknown gunmen in Port Harcourt yesterday Feb. 11th. Eyewitnesses said the deceased who represented Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni constituency in Rivers State House of Assembly between 1999 to 2003 under the platform of the PDP, was driving out of his Ada George road, Port Harcourt residence when the gunmen struck, shooting him at close range.



Thursday, February 11, 2016

Stevie J & Nick Cannon Bang Heads After Stevie Says he Banged Nick's Ex-wife Mariah Carey, Twice


 Nick Cannon and a guest on his show, reality star Stevie J nearly came to blows after Stevie said during their rap battle that he banged Nick's ex-wife Mariah Carey not once but twice.

 According to TMZ... Nick Cannon got more than he bargained for when some "Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta" stars went on his show and one bragged about banging his estranged wife. Stevie J and Joseline Hernandez were guests on "Wild 'N Out" Monday when the 2 ex-lovebirds squared off during the rap battle against Nick and his crew.

It started out all fun and games, but got progressively nasty. At one point Stevie J said he banged Mariah Carey not once but twice. Nick got pissed off, and then told Stevie J he should worry about Joseline because she was sleeping with Rick Ross. It got down and dirtier, to the point Nick threatened the old Hollywood adage, "You'll never work in this town again," because he has so many TV shows and connections.

Eyewitnesses tell us it looked like they were about to come to blows, so producers stepped in, separated them and calmed them down. The picture we got tells part of the story.