Category: Breaking News

  • Shrinking The Gene Pool – Sorta?

    Okay, this is via Drudge so you’ve all probably seen it, but I needed a laugh…
    Police urge holster use after man shoots his own penis

    As Chandler residents Joshua Seto, 27, and his fiancée, Cara Christopher, walked over to a Fry’s Food Store for refreshments, he tried securing her pink handgun in the front waistband of his pants.

    The gun fired, striking Seto’s penis and continuing through his left thigh. The bleeding started immediately and was heavy, according to police dispatch recordings released Sunday.

    “He is still conscious, there is just a lot of blood,” Christopher , 26, told 9-1-1 operators and dispatchers.

    I’m sincerely NOT laughing at this guy’s pain and suffering. It’s just the images that flashed thru MY mind that cracked me up. Pink pistol – the look on his face just before the pain hit – the look on his face when he realized just where he’d been hit, I could go on… For some reason I kept thinking of The Three Stooges?

    As usual with a Geezer post; YMMV.

    ETA: An accidental discharge simply ain’t as rare as we ALL would like to think.  I’ve been handling firearms since I was about 10 or so. I’ve had some great teachers over the years and am careful enough to be annoying, but Murphy’s Law says I will have an AD sooner or later.  Exit question: Ever been to a range where someone swept you with an ’empty’ gun?

  • Gunman on Virginia Tech campus?

    This is what is on Virginia Tech’s website right now.

    Added: I guess the alert’s been lifted. VTWoody says it sounds more like a prank than anything.

  • Syrian soldiers mutiny?

    Associated Press reports that some Syrian soldiers have joined protesters in parts of Syria and have murdered their former officers and are taking on security forces in the streets.

    The details of what happened in Jisr al-Shughour remain murky, but if confirmed the mutiny would be an extraordinary crack in the regime, which sees its 40-year grip on the country eroded weekly by thousands of protesters calling for the ouster of President Bashar Assad.

    The government said 120 troops and police died after “armed groups” attacked in Jisr al-Shughour, but has not explained how the heavily armed military could suffer such an enormous loss of life.

    This could signal the beginning of the end for the Assad regime if it’s true. And of course, the Syrians will be more than grateful to the US for all of the aid we’ve given them in their bloody struggle against oppression…oh, right…that’s the one we chose to stay out of.

  • Army Ranger to be awarded MOH

    Jeff Schogol, our ninja at the Stars & Stripes sends news that Sergeant First Class Leroy Arthur Petry will be the second living recipient from the current wars of the Medal of Honor on July 12th;

    Leroy Arthur Petry was born on July 29, 1979. He is a native of Santé Fe, New Mexico and enlisted in the United States Army in September 1999. He attended Basic Training and Advanced Individual Training at Fort Benning, Georgia. Sergeant First Class Petry is currently assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment and attached to Special Operations Command (SOCOM) with duty at Joint Base Lewis McChord as a liaison for the SOCOM Care Coalition where he tracks and monitors injured Rangers returning from the Theater of Operations to the initial place of care to home station care.

    Petry has completed multiple combat tours to Afghanistan and Iraq totaling 28 months of deployment.

    Updated from the Army News Service;

    At the time of his actions in Afghanistan, Petry was assigned to Company A, 2nd Bn., 75th Ranger Regiment at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash. Petry’s actions came as part of a rare daylight raid to capture a high-value target.

    On the day of the actions that would earn Petry the Medal of Honor, he was to locate himself with the platoon headquarters in the target building once it was secured. Once there, he was to serve as the senior noncommissioned officer at the site for the remainder of the operation.

    Recognizing one of the assault squads needed assistance clearing their assigned building, Petry relayed to the platoon leader that he was moving to that squad to provide additional supervision and guidance during the clearance of the building.

    Once the residential portion of the building had been cleared, Petry took a fellow member of the assault squad, Pvt. 1st Class Lucas Robinson, to clear the outer courtyard. Petry knew that area had not been cleared during the initial clearance.

    Petry and Robinson, both Rangers, moved into an area of the compound that contained at least three enemy fighters who were prepared to engage friendly forces from opposite ends of the outer courtyard.

    The two Soldiers entered the courtyard. To their front was an opening followed by a chicken coop. As the two crossed the open area, an enemy insurgent fired on them. Petry was wounded by one round, which went through both of his legs. Robinson was also hit in his side plate by a separate round.

    While wounded and under enemy fire, Petry led Robinson to the cover of the chicken coop. The enemy continued to deliver fire at the two Soldiers.

    As the senior Soldier, Petry assessed the situation and reported that contact was made and that there were two wounded Rangers in the courtyard of the primary target building.

    Upon hearing the report of two wounded Rangers, Sgt. Daniel Higgins, a team leader, moved to the outer courtyard. As Higgins was moving to Petry and Robinson’s position, Petry threw a thermobaric grenade in the vicinity of the enemy position.

    Shortly after that grenade exploded — which created a lull in the enemy fire — Higgins arrived at the chicken coop and assessed the wounds of the two Soldiers.

    While Higgins evaluated their wounds, an insurgent threw a grenade over the chicken coop at the three Rangers. The grenade landed about 10 meters from the three Rangers, knocked them to the ground, and wounded Higgins and Robinson. Shortly after the grenade exploded, Staff Sgt. James Roberts and Spc. Christopher Gathercole entered the courtyard, and moved toward the chicken coop.

    With three Soldiers taking cover in the chicken coop, an enemy fighter threw another grenade at them. This time, the grenade landed just a few feet from Higgins and Robinson.

    Recognizing the threat that the enemy grenade posed to his fellow Rangers, Petry — despite his own wounds and with complete disregard for his personal safety — consciously and deliberately risked his life to move to and secure the live enemy grenade and consciously throw the grenade away from his fellow Rangers, according to battlefield reports.

    As Petry released the grenade in the direction of the enemy, preventing the serious injury or death of Higgins and Robinson, it detonated and catastrophically amputated his right hand.

    With a clear mind, Petry assessed his wound and placed a tourniquet on his right arm. Once this was complete, he reported that he was still in contact with the enemy and that he had been wounded again.

    After the blast that amputated Petry’s hand, Roberts began to engage the enemy behind the chicken coop with small arms fire and a grenade. His actions suppressed the insurgents behind the chicken coop. Shortly after, another enemy on the east end of the courtyard began firing, fatally wounding Gathercole.

    Higgins and Robinson returned fire and killed the enemy.

    Moments later, Sgt. 1st Class Jerod Staidle, the platoon sergeant, and Spc. Gary Depriest, the platoon medic, arrived in the outer courtyard. After directing Depriest to treat Gathercole, Staidle moved to Petry’ s position. Staidle and Higgins then assisted Petry as he moved to the casualty collection point.

    Higgins later wrote in a statement, “if not for Staff Sergeant Petry’s actions, we would have been seriously wounded or killed.”

  • College must release Loughner’s emails

    Tucson assassin Jarod Loughner’s former community college has been ordered to release the 250 email communications about him while he was a student according to the Huffington Post;

    Pima County Superior Court Judge Stephen Villarreal rejected the Pima Community College’s argument that the emails were part of Loughner’s official school record and protected from disclosure under a federal privacy law.

    The Arizona Republic sued the college over the records, arguing that the records could help the public determine if the college took appropriate steps in dealing with Loughner after a series of run-ins with campus police.

    Yeah, I’m pretty sure the college isn’t at fault here any more than the local Army recruiting unit. The college was in the same position as the Army…anything they had done to warn the community would have been construed as a violation of Loughner’s privacy rights.

    If there’s any culpability, I’m pretty sure it lies with law enforcement who actually had the authority and means to get his bad behavior on the record which would have prevented him from purchasing a gun.

  • Drudge: USA freaks out

    Drudge’s front page looks like this;

    Old Trooper sent a link earlier of an article that said even the bomb-sniffing dogs are freaking out.

    I guess vigilance has turned into paranoia. It could be good, I guess, as long as no one gets hurt. I suppose it’s better than the indifference I’ve become more accustomed to over the years. It could be a result of losing confidence in law enforcement and the government agencies that are supposed to protect us looking at the immigration and gun control issues over the last few years.

  • Riot at Baghdad prison kills seventeen.

    A prison uprising in Iraq has left at least ten inmates and six guards dead. The notable names among them are Brigadier General Moayed al-Saleh a high ranking officer in the anti-terrorism efforts in Iraq and Huthaifa al-Batawi a al Qaida leader who is accused of leading a attack on a Christian Church in Baghdad that killed at least fifty in October of last year. This is what we know so far.

    The daring raid began late Saturday when Huthaifa al-Batawi, a local terror boss accused of masterminding a massacre at a Baghdad church in October, overpowered a guard who was leading him to an interrogation room, took his gun and started shooting, a security spokesman said.

    After killing his captors, al-Batawi freed nearly a dozen members of his crew, who snatched a cache of weapons — including guns and grenades — and attempted to overrun the prison, officials said.

    Some of the sources say that some of the weapons were just laying out in the open.

    Iraqi politicians were quick to criticize security measures in the facility, where the grenades seized by the inmates had been sitting on a table. Critics said that officers there appeared to underestimate the threat posed by the inmates.

    The only real good news out of all of this is that the revolt failed and Huthaifa al-Batawi is dead. But considering the death of Osama a attempt this should have been expected.

  • Fox: Pakistan police say they’ve arrested 40

    According to Fox News, the Pakistani local police have announced that they’ve arrested forty people in Abbottabad who they believe are somehow connected to Osama bin Laden. I suspect they rounded these people up to protect them from another raid.

    There are no links yet. I’ll update as they become available.

    ADDED: From Europe Online Magazine.

    ADDED: By the way, Fox is also reporting that al Qaeda is finally admitting that bin Laden is dead by announcing their intention to retaliate, and their intention to release his last recorded message to the goat rapers. That statement came from “the general leadership” of al Qaeda.

    Link added from Stars & Stripes.