WHO IS ERE?
MI WAA DROP BOGLE SON COMING OUT A DI SEE CHOO CLOSET TING YAH NUNG…UNNO IS ERE?
YES GAAWD
Man Arrested During His Florida Honeymoon for Soliciting a Prostitute
By Kyle MunzenriederTue., May 14 2013 at 12:29 PM
25 Comments
Categories: WTF Florida
Generally, honeymoons should be sex-filled jaunts, but the general rule is that the sex should be with your new spouse, and not, say, an Orlando-area prostitute you met online. Especially when your new spouse doesn’t know about it.
A 21-year-old man named Mohammed Ahmed was charged with solicitation of prostitution after he snuck away from his wife to try and commit such an act.
Ahmed was caught up in a larger sting operation conducted by the Polk County Sheriff’s Department.
A resident of Illinois, Ahmed was staying at the Omni Hotel in Champion’s Gate, Florida in the Orlando-area when he decided to browse the internet for prostitution ads. He apparently found a lady to his liking and made arrangements to meet. Though, when he showed up he realized he was actually talking to an undercover detective and was popped with a charge of soliciting prostitution, and another charge of possession of marijuana for good measure.
Meanwhile his wifey remained at the hotel and grew worried when he didn’t return. So she called police to report him missing. She was then informed that he had indeed been arrested.
All-in-all the sting operation, which lasted from May 8th to the 11th, netted 92 arrests, including Samuel Yoon, a 45-year-old youth minister form California in town for a ministry conference who thought he was meeting a 14-year-old girl for sex.
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I WANT A MAN LIKE DIS NOW
Tampa man found not guilty of fatally shooting wife’s lover, whom he thought was raping his spouse
Last Updated: 12:38 PM, May 31, 2013
TAMPA — A jury said 70-year-old Vietnam veteran Ralph Wald is not guilty of shooting and killing 32-year-old Walter Conley. Wald faced second-degree murder charges.
Prosecutors said Wald heard his wife and Conley having sex in their house, grabbed his gun, and shot Conley in cold blood. But Wald said he thought his wife was being raped.
Wald said on the night of the shooting, he heard a noise and looked toward living room. He said he thought his wife was being raped. Wald said he went and got his gun, fired and shots and didn’t bother to check IDs to see who he was shooting at.
He said he just wanted to protect his wife. Wald said he fired three shots, then checked to see if his wife was okay. Wald said at the end of the day, he has no regrets.
“If the same thing happened again, I would do the same thing,” Wald said. “I didn’t think I did anything wrong. I allegedly said, ‘I have a problem, I’ll take care of it.’ I’ll own that. I will own that statement. I had a problem, I found someone raping my wife. I took care of it. I got a gun and I shot him. And I’m not trying to hide that from anybody. I said it to the 911, I said it to the two police detectives….I’ve been telling the truth.”
His wife Johnna Lynn Flores told reporters Wald has forgiven her and the two plan to celebrate his acquittal at Waffle House.
“Because my husband puts me first, he’s taking me to the Waffle House,” Flores said, according to Tampa Bay Times.
With Post Staff
PART II
Press Release
DEA NEWS: MANSSOR ARBABSIAR
GETS 25 YEARS IN PLOT TO KILL SAUDI AMBASSADOR
DEA informant approached in terror scheme
DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart today announced that announced that MANSSOR ARBABSIAR, a/k/a “Mansour Arbabsiar,” was sentenced today in Manhattan federal court to 25 years in prison for participating in a plot to murder the Saudi Arabian Ambassador to the U.S., while the Ambassador was in the U.S.
ARBABSIAR, a 58 – year-old naturalized U.S. citizen holding both Iranian and U.S. passports, was arrested on September 29, 2011 at John F. Kennedy International Airport. He pled guilty on October 17, 2012 to one count of murder-for hire, one count of conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire, and one count of conspiracy to commit an act of terrorism transcending national boundaries before U.S. District Judge John F. Keenan, who also imposed today’s sentence.
This case started when Arbabsiar approached a DEA informant in Mexico in an attempt to hatch this act of terror. To read more about Arbabsiar’s arrest in 2011 click here: http://www.justice.gov/dea/divisions/hq/2011/hq101111.shtml
“As DEA has repeatedly shown, terrorists often look to drug trafficking to finance their violent, deadly pursuits,” said DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart. “Our intelligence and operational capabilities and our vast network of informants across the globe enabled us to thwart this terror plot before it could materialize. As a result of DEA’s decisive action and the work of our partners, we are safer here and abroad, and Mr. Arbabsiar’s terror scheme will never become a reality.”
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara stated: “Manssor Arbabsiar was an enemy among
us – the key conduit for, and facilitator of, a nefarious international plot concocted by members
of the Iranian military to assassinate the Saudi Ambassador to the United States and as many
innocent bystanders as necessary to get the job done. And but for the vigilance of our FBI and
DEA partners, his plot, and the unspeakable harm it would have caused, may well have come to
fruition, which is exactly why our commitment to using every resource we have to root out,
prosecute and punish people like Arbabsiar, who act as emissaries for our enemies, remains
unflagging.”
Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Carlin stated: “Thanks to
the collaborative efforts of many U.S. law enforcement and intelligence professionals, Manssor
Arbabsiar is today being held accountable for his role in this assassination plot. I applaud all
those responsible for ensuring that Arbabsiar and his co-conspirators in Iran’s Qods Force failed
in their efforts. Today’s sentencing serves as a reminder of the evolving threat environment we
face.”
According to the Complaint and Indictment filed in Manhattan federal court:
From the spring of 2011 to October 2011, ARBABSIAR and his Iran-based co-conspirators,
including members of Iran’s Qods Force, plotted the murder of the Saudi Arabian Ambassador to the U.S.
In furtherance of this conspiracy, ARBABSIAR met on a number of occasions in Mexico with a DEA
confidential source (“CS-1”) who posed as an associate of a violent international drug trafficking cartel.
ARBABSIAR arranged to hire CS-1 and CS-1’s purported accomplices to murder the Ambassador with
the awareness and approval of his Iran-based co-conspirators. ARBABSIAR wired approximately
$100,000 to a bank account in the U.S. as a down payment to CS-1 for the anticipated killing of the
Ambassador, which was to take place in the U.S, also with the approval of his co-conspirators.
The Qods Force is a branch of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (the “IRGC”),
which conducts sensitive covert operations abroad, including terrorist attacks, assassinations, and
kidnappings, and is believed to have sponsored attacks against Coalition Forces in Iraq. In October 2007,
the U.S. Treasury Department designated the Qods Force as a terrorist supporter for providing material
support to the Taliban and other terrorist organizations.
ARBABSIAR met with CS-1 in Mexico on several occasions between May 2011 and July 2011.
During the course of these meetings, he inquired as to CS-1’s knowledge with respect to explosives and
explained that he was interested in, among other things, attacking an embassy of Saudi Arabia and the
murder of the Saudi Ambassador to the U.S. In a July 14, 2011 meeting in Mexico, CS-1 told
ARBABSIAR that he would need to use at least four men to carry out the Ambassador’s murder and that
his price for doing so was $1.5 million. ARBABSIAR agreed and stated that the murder of the
Ambassador should be handled first, before the execution of other attacks that he had discussed with CS-
1. ARBABSIAR also indicated that he and his associates had $100,000 in Iran to give CS-1 as a first
payment toward the assassination.
During the same meeting, ARBABSIAR also described to CS-1 his cousin in Iran, who he said
had requested that ARBABSIAR find someone to carry out the Ambassador’s assassination.
ARBABSIAR indicated that his cousin was a “big general” in the Iranian military; that he focuses on
matters outside of Iran, and that he had taken certain unspecified actions related to a bombing in Iraq.
In a July 17, 2011 meeting in Mexico, CS-1 noted to ARBABSIAR that one of his workers had
already traveled to Washington, D.C., to surveil the Ambassador. CS-1 also raised the possibility of
innocent bystander casualties. ARBABSIAR made it clear that the assassination needed to go forward,
despite mass casualties, telling CS-1, “They want that guy [the Ambassador] done [killed], if the hundred
go with him f**k ‘em.” CS-1 and ARBABSIAR discussed bombing a restaurant in the U.S. that the
Ambassador frequented. When CS-1 noted that others could be killed in the attack, including U.S.
senators who dine at the restaurant, ARBABSIAR dismissed these concerns as “no big deal.”
On August 1 and August 9, 2011, ARBABSIAR caused two overseas wire transfers totaling
approximately $100,000 to be sent to an FBI undercover account as a down payment for CS-1 to carry out
the assassination. Later, ARBABSIAR explained to CS-1 that he would provide the remainder of the
$1.5 million after the assassination. On September 20, 2011, CS-1 told ARBABSIAR that the operation
was ready and requested that he either pay one half the agreed upon price ($1.5 million) for the murder or
that ARBABSIAR personally travel to Mexico as collateral for the final payment of the fee.
ARBABSIAR agreed to travel to Mexico to guarantee final payment for the murder.
On September 28, 2011, ARBABSIAR flew to Mexico, and he was refused entry into the country
and placed on a return flight destined for his last point of departure. The following day, ARBABSIAR
was arrested by federal agents during a flight layover at JFK International Airport in New York. Several
hours after his arrest, ARBABSIAR was advised of his Miranda rights and he agreed to waive those
rights and speak with law enforcement agents. During a series of Mirandized interviews, ARBABSIAR
confessed to his participation in the murder plot.
In addition, ARBABSIAR admitted to agents that, in connection with this plot, he was recruited,
funded, and directed by men he understood to be senior officials in Iran’s Qods Force. He said these
Iranian officials were aware of, and approved of, the use of CS-1 in connection with the plot, as well as
payments to CS-1, the means by which the Ambassador would be killed in the U.S., and the casualties
that would likely result.
ARBABSIAR also told agents that his cousin, whom he had long understood to be a senior
member of the Qods Force, had approached him in the early spring of 2011 about recruiting narcotraffickers
to kidnap the Ambassador. He told agents that he then met with CS-1 in Mexico and discussed
assassinating the Ambassador. ARBABSIAR said that afterwards, he met several times in Iran with
Gholam Shakuri, a/k/a “Ali Gholam Shakuri,” a co-conspirator and Iran-based member of the Qods
Force, and another senior Qods Force official, where ARBABSIAR explained that the plan was to blow
up a restaurant in the U.S. frequented by the Ambassador and that numerous bystanders would be killed.
According to Arbabsiar, the plan was approved by these officials.
In October 2011, after his arrest, ARBABSIAR made phone calls at the direction of law
enforcement to Shakuri in Iran that were monitored. During these calls, Shakuri confirmed that
ARBABSIAR should move forward with the plot to murder the Ambassador and that he should
accomplish the task as quickly as possible, stating on October 5, 2011, “[j]ust do it quickly, it’s late…”
Shakuri also told ARBABSIAR that he would consult with his superiors about whether they would be
willing to pay CS-1 additional money. Shakuri, who was also charged in the plot, remains at large.
* * *
In addition to the prison term, Judge Keenan sentenced ARBABSIAR to three years of supervised
release. ARBABSIAR was also ordered to pay forfeiture in the amount of $125,000 and a $300 special
assessment fee.
REAL TV TING..PART 1
DEA Helps Foil Iranian Terror Plot
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Drug Enforcement Administration and other federal law enforcement officials announced that an elaborate scheme to murder the Saudi Ambassador to the United States with explosives was foiled, thanks to the work of a DEA-led investigation. Two individuals have been charged in New York for their alleged participation in the plot.
A criminal complaint filed in the Southern District of New York charges Manssor Arbabsiar, a 56-year-old naturalized U.S. citizen holding both Iranian and U.S. passports, and Gholam Shakuri, an Iran-based member of Iran’s Qods Force, which is a special operations unit of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) that is said to sponsor and promote terrorist activities abroad.
Both defendants are charged with conspiracy to murder a foreign official; conspiracy to engage in foreign travel and use of interstate and foreign commerce facilities in the commission of murder-for-hire; conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction (explosives); and conspiracy to commit an act of international terrorism transcending national boundaries. Arbabsiar is further charged with an additional count of foreign travel and use of interstate and foreign commerce facilities in the commission of murder-for-hire.
Shakuri remains at large. Arbabsiar was arrested on Sept. 29, 2011, at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and will make his initial appearance today before in federal court in Manhattan. He faces a maximum potential sentence of life in prison if convicted of all the charges.
The Alleged Plot
The criminal complaint alleges that, from the spring of 2011 to October 2011, Arbabsiar and his Iran-based co-conspirators, including Shakuri of the Qods Force, have been plotting the murder of the Saudi Ambassador to the United States. In furtherance of this conspiracy, Arbabsiar allegedly met on a number of occasions in Mexico with a DEA confidential source (CS-1) who has posed as an associate of a violent international drug trafficking cartel. According to the complaint, Arbabsiar arranged to hire CS-1 and CS-1’s purported accomplices to murder the Ambassador, and Shakuri and other Iran-based co-conspirators were aware of and approved the plan. With Shakuri’s approval, Arbabsiar has allegedly caused approximately $100,000 to be wired into a bank account in the United States as a down payment to CS-1 for the anticipated killing of the Ambassador, which was to take place in the United States.
According to the criminal complaint, the IRCG is an arm of the Iranian military that is composed of a number of branches, one of which is the Qods Force. The Qods Force conducts sensitive covert operations abroad, including terrorist attacks, assassinations and kidnappings, and is believed to sponsor attacks against Coalition Forces in Iraq. In October 2007, the U.S. Treasury Department designated the Qods Force for providing material support to the Taliban and other terrorist organizations.
The complaint alleges that Arbabsiar met with CS-1 in Mexico on May 24, 2011, where Arbabsiar inquired as to CS-1’s knowledge with respect to explosives and explained that he was interested in, among other things, attacking an embassy of Saudi Arabia. In response, CS-1 allegedly indicated that he was knowledgeable with respect to C-4 explosives. In June and July 2011, the complaint alleges, Arbabsiar returned to Mexico and held additional meetings with CS-1, where Arbabsiar explained that his associates in Iran had discussed a number of violent missions for CS-1 and his associates to perform, including the murder of the Ambassador.
$1.5 Million Fee for Alleged Assassination
In a July 14, 2011, meeting in Mexico, CS-1 allegedly told Arbabsiar that he would need to use four men to carry out the Ambassador’s murder and that his price for carrying out the murder was $1.5 million. Arbabsiar allegedly agreed and stated that the murder of the Ambassador should be handled first, before the execution of other attacks. Arbabsiar also allegedly indicated he and his associates had $100,000 in Iran to pay CS-1 as a first payment toward the assassination and discussed the manner in which that payment would be made.
During the same meeting, Arbabsiar allegedly described to CS-1 his cousin in Iran, who he said had requested that Arbabsiar find someone to carry out the Ambassador’s assassination. According to the complaint, Arbabsiar indicated that his cousin was a “big general” in the Iranian military; that he focuses on matters outside Iran and that he had taken certain unspecified actions related to a bombing in Iraq.
In a July 17, 2011, meeting in Mexico, CS-1 noted to Arbabsiar that one of his workers had already traveled to Washington, D.C., to surveill the Ambassador. CS-1 also raised the possibility of innocent bystander casualties. The complaint alleges that Arbabsiar made it clear that the assassination needed to go forward, despite mass casualties, telling CS-1, “They want that guy [the Ambassador] done [killed], if the hundred go with him f**k ‘em.” CS-1 and Arbabsiar allegedly discussed bombing a restaurant in the United States that the Ambassador frequented. When CS-1 noted that others could be killed in the attack, including U.S. senators who dine at the restaurant, Arbabsiar allegedly dismissed these concerns as “no big deal.”
On Aug. 1, and Aug. 9, 2011, with Shakuri’s approval, Arbabsiar allegedly caused two overseas wire transfers totaling approximately $100,000 to be sent to an FBI undercover account as a down payment for CS-1 to carry out the assassination. Later, Arbabsiar allegedly explained to CS-1 that he would provide the remainder of the $1.5 million after the assassination. On Sept. 20, 2011, CS-1 allegedly told Arbabsiar that the operation was ready and requested that Arbabsiar either pay one half of the agreed upon price ($1.5 million) for the murder or that Arbabsiar personally travel to Mexico as collateral for the final payment of the fee. According to the complaint, Arbabsiar agreed to travel to Mexico to guarantee final payment for the murder.
Arrest and Alleged Confession
On or about Sept. 28, 2011, Arbabsiar flew to Mexico. Arbabsiar was refused entry into Mexico by Mexican authorities and, according to Mexican law and international agreements; he was placed on a return flight destined for his last point of departure. On Sept. 29, 2011, Arbabsiar was arrested by federal agents during a flight layover at JFK International Airport in New York. Several hours after his arrest, Arbabsiar was advised of his Mirandarights and he agreed to waive those rights and speak with law enforcement agents. During a series of Mirandizedinterviews, Arbabsiar allegedly confessed to his participation in the murder plot.
According to the complaint, Arbabsiar also admitted to agents that, in connection with this plot, he was recruited, funded and directed by men he understood to be senior officials in Iran’s Qods Force. He allegedly said these Iranian officials were aware of and approved of the use of CS-1 in connection with the plot; as well as payments to CS-1; the means by which the Ambassador would be killed in the United States and the casualties that would likely result.
Arbabsiar allegedly told agents that his cousin, who he had long understood to be a senior member of the Qods Force, had approached him in the early spring of 2011 about recruiting narco-traffickers to kidnap the Ambassador. Arbabsiar told agents that he then met with the CS-1 in Mexico and discussed assassinating the Ambassador. According to the complaint, Arbabsiar said that, afterwards, he met several times in Iran with Shakuri and another senior Qods Force official, where he explained that the plan was to blow up a restaurant in the United States frequented by the Ambassador and that numerous bystanders could be killed, according to the complaint. The plan was allegedly approved by these officials.
In October 2011, according to the complaint, Arbabsiar made phone calls at the direction of law enforcement to Shakuri in Iran that were monitored. During these phone calls, Shakuri allegedly confirmed that Arbabsiar should move forward with the plot to murder the Ambassador and that he should accomplish the task as quickly as possible, stating on Oct. 5, 2011, “[j]ust do it quickly, it’s late . . .” The complaint alleges that Shakuri also told Arbabsiar that he would consult with his superiors about whether they would be willing to pay CS-1 additional money.
This investigation is being conducted by the FBI Houston Division and DEA Houston Division, with assistance from the FBI New York Joint Terrorism Task Force. The prosecution is being handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Glen Kopp and Edward Kim, of the Terrorism and International Narcotics Unit of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, with assistance from the Counterterrorism Section of the Justice Department’s National Security Division. The Office of International Affairs of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and the U.S. State Department provided substantial assistance. We thank the government of Mexico for its close coordination and collaboration in this matter, and for its role in ensuring that the defendant was safely apprehended.
The charges contained in a criminal complaint are mere allegations and defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
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