Monday, September 27, 2010

Segway company owner dies riding two-wheeled machine off cliff


The multi-millionaire businessman, 62, fell into the River Wharfe while inspecting the grounds of his North Yorkshire estate on a rugged country version of the Segway.

The Segway is a motorised scooter which use gyroscopes to remain upright and is controlled by the direction in which the rider leans. A passer-by found Heselden alongside his Segway in the Boston Spa area at about 11.40am on Sunday.

A spokesman for West Yorkshire Police said today: "Police were called at 11.40am yesterday to reports of a man in the River Wharfe, apparently having fallen from the cliffs above.

"A Segway-style vehicle was recovered. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

"At this time we do not believe the death to be suspicious."

Heselden was worth £166m and ranked 395th on the Sunday Times Rich List.

The former miner made his millions from defence contracts. He created a unique portable wire cage water containment system which when filled with earth and sand proved a major defence against bullets, missiles and suicide attacks.

His founded his first company HESCO Bastions with his redundancy pay when he was laid off from the mines.

The wire cage systems developed by Bastions have become standard military equipment for Nato as well as American and British forces.

The Segway operation was acquired by a UK based company backed by Heselden.

From the Daily Telegraph telegraph.co.uk

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Body Found in Multiple Ticketed Car

People die and get ticketed in their car more often than you may think.

The daughter of a man whose badly decomposed body was found inside a minivan said Thursday traffic cops should have noticed her father over the several weeks they covered the vehicle in parking tickets.

"He was my only family," said Jennifer Morales, 29, about her father, whom she believes died from a heart attack while sitting in the family's 2000 Chevrolet Ventura in Queens.

"The window was cracked open. I don't understand how no one noticed him. They just gave him tickets," she told the Daily News last night.

Although sources said 59-year-old George Morales was homeless, his daughter said the diabetic handyman lived with her and her two kids in Washington Heights.

Jennifer Morales said she had last heard from her dad in early May. She said she contacted police, but cops had no record of a report.

A city marshal found the elder Morales Wednesday morning, while trying to tow the minivan parked on 34th Ave. under the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway overpass.

Parking tickets and dust covered the vehicle.

Cops called Jennifer Morales hours after the 6:45 a.m. discovery with the sad news.

"In the autopsy, they said they just found skeletal remains, no organs, only his heart," she said.

The Morales family plans to cremate him once officials positively identify the remains using X-rays taken of Morales in 2007 at Elmhurst Hospital Center.


From NY Daily News

Dead Man Given Parking Ticket


A Queens man was slapped with a parking ticket as he lay dead in the driver's seat of his car, cops and family said Wednesday.

Nicholas Rappold, 21, of Flushing, was slumped across the front seat of his Jeep Cherokee on 165th St. near 35th Ave. Tuesday morning when a traffic agent wrote him up for being illegally parked during street sweeping, cops and family said.

"It's really messed up," the young man's cousin Patrick Hill told the Daily News. "While he was dead in his car, a New York City traffic agent gave him a ticket."

An hour after the ticket was issued, a friend whose house Rappold had left in the middle of the night spotted his buddy's vehicle still parked outside, sources said.

The curious pal went to see why the SUV was still there and found Rappold's cold body, sources said.

Investigators interviewed the traffic agent but found no wrongdoing. "He had heavily tinted windows," a police source said in defense of the postmortem ticket. "It was hard to see inside."

But family argued that the officer could have seen Rappold, who had recently been in rehab for pill abuse.

"She could have at least knocked on the window to see if he was all right," Hill said.

The cause of death is still to be determined by the medical examiner, but investigators believe Rappold died hours before the ticketing from an overdose.

Police voided the parking summons after they released the vehicle to the family.


from NY Daily News

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Headless Man Killed by Pipebomb

A 21 year old man was killed by a pipe bomb explosion, apparently of his own making.

In the dead of night, an explosion ripped through Evanston's Fitzsimmons Park, shaking houses and waking residents blocks away. Responding to calls of a possible blown transformer, police searched but found nothing.

The mystery didn't begin to unravel until more than an hour later Tuesday, when resident Dale Wyatt made a grisly discovery.

He was walking his dog when it started pulling its leash. Near a playground, he found a headless body.

"I was kind of freaked out," Wyatt said. "This was the last thing I expected. ..."

So began a macabre series of events that led police to discover a pipe bomb near the corpse. Nearby Nichols Middle School was forced to close, but some students still showed up for classes. Parents, children and school buses were waved off and sent away.

After disabling the bomb, investigators were left trying to determine why a man identified as Colin Dalebroux, 21, had two explosive devices.

_wyatt.jpg
Police said Dalebroux "was known" to another police agency in Illinois, but offered no details.

They got residents to evacuate an apartment building a block away, at 1012 Main St., where Dalebroux lived, and said they were working with the FBI to examine information stored on his computer.

At the same time, some parents of Nichols students said they were angry it took four hours from the time of the first explosion for them to be notified. While the investigation continues, the middle school will remain closed Wednesday.

Many parents were upset the district did not move faster in handling the emergency, said Eileen Budde, a Nichols PTA president, who shared their concerns.

"It seems like it was a long time between police seeing a body and when parents were told," Budde said.

Police Cmdr. Tom Guenther said that if police, the school district or city officials thought "there could be a remote possibility (of concern for safety), we would always err on the side of caution. We're always concerned about safety."

Residents near the park were stunned by the day's developments.

Sarah Stanczyk, 34, was asleep when the blast rocked her home about 3:50 a.m.

"It woke us up immediately," she said. "We thought it was a transformer exploding. Either that, or lightning. It sounded like a boom, and the house actually shook."

She saw police search the area with flashlights, then leave. It wasn't until a couple of hours later that "all chaos started breaking loose," she said.

Wyatt, 31, who lives a half-block from the park, was taking his dog Buddha out for a walk. The German shepherd-mix was agitated and began pulling toward something as if chasing a rabbit.

Wyatt found the body of a shirtless man wearing pants with his legs folded underneath him and his right arm stretched up.

There was nothing from the neck up, not even blood, and no obvious marks on the body, he said. A shopping bag and a plastic jug were nearby.

At first he thought it was a mannequin and some kind of "sick joke." But after he met a woman also walking her dog who pointed a flashlight at the body, they realized it was real. Wyatt went to his home and called police, who said they got his call at 5:48 a.m. He met them at the park and led them to the body.

Police taped off the area and found an unexploded pipe bomb near the body. They called the Cook County sheriff's bomb squad, which disabled it.

Wyatt said he was worried about the incident, wondering, "What was he doing near a school?"

Nichols officials said they first learned of the trouble between 6:30 a.m. and 7 a.m., after a custodian arrived and told the principal that police were nearby, said Pat Markham, Evanston Skokie District 65 spokeswoman.

Principal Sarah Mendez met with Police Chief Richard Eddington at 7:15 a.m.

"It wasn't until closer to 7:30 in the morning that it was even suggested that we shouldn't hold school," said Markham. "From that point forward, people had to put the wheels in motion."

Markham said she posted information by 8 a.m. on the district Web site and e-mailed parents 20 minutes before the start of classes at 8:30 a.m. Then she recorded a computerized emergency phone message, in English and Spanish. Some parents reported getting the calls at 8:40 a.m.

Meanwhile, teachers formed a perimeter at the school and sent students home who didn't get the message. Two buses loaded with children were turned away.

Staff members traveled back with them to explain the school's closing to their parents, Markham said.

"Everything was handled in a very orderly fashion," said Markham, adding that while she usually arrives at the district before 7 a.m., she and others had been at a school board meeting until 11 p.m. the prior night.

One father, Neal Pearlman, said he was infuriated that his 12-year-old son rode his bike to school to discover police cars and yellow tape before the family could confirm that classes were canceled.

"The frustration I have had and other parents have had is we didn't get a call from the district telling us that the school was closed until 20 minutes after the school was open," Pearlman said.

School Board President Keith Terry expressed frustration that parents were upset about the notification process. He said he was more concerned about the idea that someone had blown himself up near a school.

"I really am saddened that parents feel this way, but everyone at the administration building would never put any child in harm's way," Terry said. "My mind was not so much on laying blame, it was trying to figure out why did this happen."

from www.chicagobreakingnews.com