Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn conspiracy. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn conspiracy. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Chủ Nhật, 28 tháng 4, 2013

US filmmaker arrested in Venezuela, charged with conspiracy

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    This undated family photo released Thursday, April 25, 2013, shows Timothy Tracy inside of a vehicle in Venezuela. The 35-year-old filmmaker from California was arrested Wednesday, by Venezuelan authorities who are accusing him of fomenting post election violence on behalf of the U.S. government. Friends and family told The Associated Press said that he had been in Venezuela since last year making a documentary about the confrontation between the opposition and a socialist government that is struggling to maintain its once-high popularity after the death of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez. (AP Photo/Family courtesy photo)AP2013

An American filmmaker was formally charged late Saturday by Venezuelan officials who accuse him of paying right-wing groups to foment postelection unrest on behalf of U.S. intelligence.

The federal prosecutor's office said Timothy Tracy, 35, of West Hollywood, California, was charged with crimes including conspiracy, association for criminal purposes and use of a false document.

On Thursday, President Nicolas Maduro said he had personally ordered Tracy's arrest on suspicion of "creating violence in the cities of this country" in the wake of an April 14 presidential election narrowly won by the hand-picked successor to Hugo Chavez.

Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles contends the election was stolen from him by fraud, setting up postelection tensions and bitter accusations between Venezuela's government and opposition.

Friends say Tracy is an innocent, self-funded documentary filmmaker with no political aims or government ties.

The U.S. government has also said Tracy is innocent but declined comment on the specifics of his case.

Venezuela's national prosecutor's office said a judge had ordered Tracy held until further notice in a jail run by the national intelligence service in the capital, Caracas, because he presented a risk of flight.

Tracy had a translator and private lawyers hired by him, or on his behalf, during the hearing, prosecutors said.

The Georgetown University English graduate was a story consultant on the 2009 documentary "American Harmony," about competitive barbershop quartet singing, and produced the recent Discovery Channel program "Under Siege," about terrorism and smuggling across the U.S.-Canada border as well the History Channel series "Madhouse," on modified race-car drivers in North Carolina.

Separately, Venezuelan officials said Saturday that they have arrested a retired general who had become a fierce critic of the government, a detention the opposition called part of a hardening crackdown in the wake of the disputed election.

Retired Brig. Gen. Antonio Rivero gained fame for denouncing Cuban involvement in the Venezuelan military in 2010 and became a prominent member of the opposition, participating in post-vote protests this month.

Rivero appeared in a brief video of a postelection protest that prosecutors played for the press Thursday after announcing Tracy's arrest. They said the video was taken from Tracy's belongings, along with another short video that shows a group of young people talking, in what appears to be a joking, sarcastic manner, about being paid many millions of dollars to participate in anti-government demonstrations.

In a snippet that is clearly heavily edited, Rivero discusses demonstrators' use of clubs and rocks in a clash with National Guard members. It is unclear, because of the editing and brevity of the clip, whether he is encouraging them to use weapons or discouraging them.

The footage appeared to be taken at a protest in Caracas soon after the vote results were announced, in which university students and National Guard members traded rocks and tear gas.

Leopoldo Lopez, national coordinator of the opposition Voluntad Popular party, called Rivero's detention  illegal and part of a campaign to arrest and "morally assassinate" Venezuela's opposition leadership.

"The government errs if it thinks we are going to falter in our just solicitude that the truth be known about the April 14" election, Lopez said. Rivero is a member of Lopez's party.

Venezuela's Public Ministry released a statement saying that Rivero would be presented before a tribunal "for his presumed connection to violent acts that have occurred recently in this country."

The statement said the retired general was arrested by Venezuela's intelligence service on Saturday.

The government says postelection attacks by Capriles supporters killed nine members of the ruling Chavista movement left dozens injured and damaged government offices and medical clinics.

The opposition vehemently denies the accusations.


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Thứ Tư, 24 tháng 4, 2013

NY gym owner gets prison for murder conspiracy

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    Dee Snider, lead singer of the rock band Twisted Sister, stands with his wife Suzette Snider outside U.S. District Court in Central Islip, N.Y., on Wednesday, April 24, 2013. The couple attended the sentencing of a man convicted of conspiracy and murder in the deaths of Suzette Snider's brother and two other men.(AP Photo/Frank Eltman)The Associated Press

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    Dee Snider, lead singer of the rock band Twisted Sister, stands with his wife Suzette Snider outside U.S. District Court in Central Islip, N.Y., on Wednesday, April 24, 2013. The couple attended the sentencing of a man convicted of conspiracy and murder in the deaths of Suzette Snider's brother and two other men. (AP Photo/Frank Eltman)The Associated Press

A New York businessman was sentenced Wednesday to three life terms in prison following his conviction on murder and conspiracy charges in the deaths of three men, including the brother-in-law of "Twisted Sister" lead singer Dee Snider.

Christian Tarrantino, 46, who suffers from Parkinson's disease, insisted he was innocent of the crimes before being sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Joanna Seybert. His attorney has said he will appeal the convictions.

Federal prosecutors said Tarantino, who owned several fitness clubs on Long Island, had previously been convicted of murder for his involvement in the 1994 killing of an armored car driver during a robbery. A suspected associate in the robbery was later killed by Tarantino and dumped in the Atlantic Ocean, prosecutors said.

Tarantino was convicted of murder conspiracy in the 2003 death of Snider's brother-in-law. Prosecutors said Vincent Gargiulo was killed on Tarantino's orders after Gargiulo, a former business partner of Tarantino's, threatened to reveal his friend's involvement in the two earlier killings.

Prosecutors said Gargiulo told Tarantino he had secretly tape-recorded him admitting his role in the 1994 case. Gargiulo was shot in the face in August 2003 as he walked to work at a construction site Manhattan. Several months later, Gargiulo's tape recording was anonymously mailed to NYPD homicide detectives.

Snider, who sat in the back row of the crowded courtroom with his wife Suzette and other relatives, accompanied his wife to the podium when she addressed the judge about the loss of her brother.

"Vinnie thought Chris was his friend," Suzette Snider said. "Vinnie would have died for Chris and it's ironic because Vinnie did die because of Chris."

Relatives of the armored car driver, Julius Baumgardt, also spoke before the sentencing was imposed, noting they have waited nearly 20 years for justice.

A jury convicted Tarantino in 2011 in the 1994 murders of Baumgardt — the armored car driver — and subsequent killing of Louis Dorval, who was an accomplice in the holdup killed because Tarantino feared he would go to the police, prosecutors said. The jury in that trial deadlocked over whether Tarantino was guilty in the death of Gargiulo, but he was convicted of conspiring to kill Gargiulo in a retrial in May 2012.

Tarantino, who had supporters speak on his behalf urging leniency, spoke briefly after the victims' relatives expressed their desire for him to suffer in prison. As his arms shook from the apparent effects of the Parkinson's disease, Tarantino assured them: "Talk about suffering? You can count on it. I am." He added: "I feel sorry for the families (of the victims). I am going through my own personal hell, which I am sure will make you happy."

Seybert said it was clear to her that Tarantino was not remorseful, calling him, "violent, cruel, cunning person who chose to commit these crimes."

The prison sentences will run concurrently.


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