ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Apollo moon tracks, trash in never before-seen images

Amplify’d from www.cbsnews.com

Apollo moon tracks, trash in never before-seen images

Paths left by astronauts and moon buggies in 1972 Apollo 17 mission (AP/NASA)

WASHINGTON - A robotic spaceship circling the moon has
snapped the sharpest photos ever of the tracks and trash left by
Apollo astronauts in visits from 1969 to 1972.

NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter got close enough to see the
astronauts' path when they walked on the moon. The photos also show
ruts left by a moon buggy and even backpacks pitched out of the
lunar landers before the U.S. visitors returned to Earth.



Tracks made in 1969 by Apollo 12 astronauts Pete Conrad and Alan Bean, the third and fourth humans to walk on the moon


(Credit:
NASA)

The photos were taken two weeks ago from 13 to 15 miles above
the moon's surface and show the landing sites for Apollo 12, 14 and
17. These photos offer a sharper look that more clearly
distinguishes man-made objects from moon rocks. The closest images
are of the Apollo 17 site from 1972, the moon visit.

"The images look very spectacular, as you can see for yourself," Mark Robinson, an Arizona State University, Tempe scientist, who is the principal investigator of LRO's camera, told reporters at a news briefing.



Tracks left by astronauts Alan Shepard and Edgar Mitchell on both Apollo 14 moon walks


(Credit:
NASA)

"From a science standpoint, [the images] are important for two reasons," Robinson said. "They tell us something about the photometric properties of the moon - why are they darker? Scientists are working to investigate that question. In a more practical sense, it allows us to find the exact spot where samples were collected."

However, he was less optimistic about finding remains of the flags left behind by various Apollo moon missions, saying that the banners would have fared poorly against a combination of the moon's extremes of hot and cold, not to mention constant ultraviolet radiation.

"If the flags are still there, they're probably in pretty rough shape," he said.
/p>

The pictures were taken two weeks ago and show the landing sites for Apollo 12, 14 and 17. The closest images are of the 1972 Apollo 17 site, the last moon mission./p>

Apollo 17 Commander Eugene Cernan wrote in an email to The Associated Press that the photo gives him a chance to revisit those days, "this time with a little nostalgia and disappointment. Nostalgia because those special days are fondly etched in my memory and disappointment because it looks like now we will not be going back within the days I have left on this planet."/p>

Two years ago, images from the same spacecraft from 30 and 60 miles out showed fuzzier images. But this year the orbiter dipped down to take about 300,000 more close-ups. The trails left by the astronauts are clear, but the places where backpacks were discarded, Apollo 17's moon buggy, and the bottom parts of the three lunar landers are blurry.
/p>


"You have to really look at it for a long time to figure out what you're looking at," Robinson said. For example, when it comes to the moon buggy he said, "if you squint really hard you can resolve the wheels and that the wheels are slightly turned to the left."/p>

At first, scientists thought they had a bit of a mystery: They saw more stuff than they expected. It turned out to be packing material and an insulation blanket, Robinson said./p>

After 40 years there does not seem to be much moon dust covering the manmade trails. It probably will take about 10 million to 100 million years for dust to cover them, Robinson said./p>

The photos were released a few days after the debut of the new fictional movie "Apollo 18" and before Thursday's planned launch of NASA's twin robotic spaceships to explore the moon's gravity.

Read more at www.cbsnews.com
 

Gunman kills 3 at Nevada IHOP, including guardsmen

Amplify’d from news.yahoo.com

Gunman kills 3 at Nevada IHOP, including guardsmen

SANDRA CHEREB - Associated Press
Officials investigate the scene of a shooting in an IHOP restaurant in Carson City, Nev., on Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2011. A gunman with a rifle opened fire at a International House of Pancakes restaurantkilling three people including two uniformed National Guard members and himself, and wounding six others in a hail of gunfire during the morning breakfast hour, authorities and witnesses said. (AP Photo/Cathleen Allison)

Officials investigate the scene of a shooting in an IHOP restaurant in Carson City, …

Eduardo Sencion, 32, seen in a photo provided by the Carson City Sheriff's Office, is the suspect in a shooting rampage at an IHOP restaurant in Carson City, Nev., on Tuesday morning, Sept. 6, 2011. (AP Photo/Carson City Sheriff's Office)

Eduardo Sencion, 32, seen in a photo provided by the Carson City Sheriff's Office, …

CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) — A gunman wielding an AK-47 opened fire on a table of uniformed National Guard members at an IHOP restaurant on Tuesday in an outburst of violence that killed four people, wounded eight others and put Nevada's capital city on high alert.

Five Nevada National Guard troops sitting together at the back of the restaurant were shot — two of them fatally. Another woman was also killed, and the gunman, 32-year-old Eduardo Sencion of Carson City, shot himself in the head and died at a hospital.

The shooter's motive was unclear, but family members said he had mental issues. He had never been in the military and had no known affiliation with anyone inside the restaurant.

Witnesses and authorities described a frantic scene in the bustling business district, in which the shooter pulled into the large complex of retail stores and shops just before 9 a.m. in a blue minivan with a yellow "Support Our Troops" sticker on the back. He got out and immediately shot a woman near a motorcycle, a witness said.

Ralph Swagler said he grabbed his own weapon, but said it was too late to stop the shooter, who charged into the IHOP through the front doors.

"I wish I had shot at him when he was going in the IHOP," said Swagler, who owns Locals BBQ & Grill. "But when he came at me, when somebody is pointing an automatic weapon at you — you can't believe the firepower, the kind of rounds coming out of that weapon."

The gunman went all the way to the back of the restaurant to the back area and opened fire, Carson City Sheriff Kenny Furlong said.

When he left the restaurant, he stood in the parking lot and shot into the nearby businesses, shattering the windows of a barbecue restaurant and an H&R Block and a casino across the street.

Officers arrived minutes later and found the suspect and the person who was by the motorcycle wounded and lying in the parking lot. The names of the victims, including two male Guard members who were killed, were not immediately released.

Sencion left two more guns in the van — a rifle and a pistol, authorities said.

As the attack unfolded, Nevada officials worried about the violence being more widespread. They locked down the state Capitol and Supreme Court buildings for about 40 minutes, and put extra security in place at state and military buildings in northern Nevada.

"There were concerns at the onset, so we took certain steps to ensure we had the capability to embrace an even larger circumstance," Furlong said. "At this point in time it appears to be isolated to this parking lot."

Reno-based FBI special agent Michael West said there was no indication of any terrorist plot.

As police interviewed dozens of witnesses after the shooting and kept the gathering crowd of media at bay, a body lay on the ground, covered with a white sheet except for the feet, clad in tan boots.

Sencion was born in Mexico and had a valid U.S. passport. In interviews with investigators after the shooting, his family raised concerns about his mental health, Furlong said. Sencion worked at his family's business in South Lake Tahoe and had no criminal history. The minivan he drove to the shooting was registered to his brother.

The shooting shocked some who knew him, including Joe Laub, his lawyer in a bankruptcy filing in January 2009, who called it an "aberration of his character."

"He's a gentle, kind man who was very helpful to friends and family," Laub told The Associated Press. "I couldn't venture to guess what would cause him to do something as horrible as this."

In the bankruptcy filing, Sencion listed more than $42,000 in outstanding debts for a car, several credit cards and some medical expenses. At the time, Sencion reported having $200 spread over three bank accounts and $923 in disability income, mostly from Social Security.

At a Reno hospital, service members gathered, waiting for word on those killed and hurt. A hospital spokesman said four shooting victims were being treated there, but wouldn't discuss their conditions or provide any other information. Two of the three wounded guard members were women. Authorities provided few details about the five other injured people, except to say one was a woman who was found near a motorcycle. Three of those wounded have minor wounds; the others were shot in critical areas of the body, Furlong said.

"You go a whole tour in Afghanistan and no one is shot. And you go to IHOP and several are shot," said 31-year-old Sgt. First Class Cameron Anderson of Reno, a Nevada Army National Guard member. "It's a shock. I came to work today and had no idea I'd be driving the chaplain here (to the hospital.)"

Another Guard member, 33-year-old Spc. Lee Amato, said he didn't know the victims' names but expected they were people he knew.

"It's hard to believe something like this would happen to really good people," Amato said. "It's like a hole, something taken away. It's mind-boggling and hard to comprehend."

The IHOP is about four miles from the Guard's headquarters complex. Nevada National Guard spokeswoman April Conway said she didn't know why the five Guard members had met at the IHOP. Conway said she did not believe any of the Guard members at the restaurant were armed.

"Our guards would have no reason to be carrying military weapons here today," Conway said. "We have no reason to believe that any of them were armed with personal weapons."

Furlong says they're analyzing the shooter's weapon to determine whether it is automatic or semi-automatic.

Nevada's capital city of some 50,000 is normally a sleepy town when lawmakers are not in session, a jumping off point 30 miles south of Reno for travelers headed to Lake Tahoe or back to California across the Sierra.

"I've lived in Carson City since 1961 and I've never seen anything like this," said Fran Hunter, who works at the Sierra Le Bone pet shop just north of the IHOP. "This is the kind of thing that happens in New York City or L.A., not here."

___

Associated Press writers Michelle Rindels, Ken Ritter and Oskar Garcia in Las Vegas; Martin Griffith in Reno; and Scott Sonner in Carson City contributed to this report.

Read more at news.yahoo.com
 

Police: 5 slain 2 seriously wounded in W.Va. before suspect kills self

http://a2.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc6/197083_15709360149_810580149_139042_5427_n.jpg



http://a4.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc6/200495_15709325149_810580149_139167_2813_n.jpg



Shayne Franklin Samuel Riggleman Photos Courtesy of Facebook



By VICKI SMITH, Associated Press





MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – Authorities say a man who killed five people near Morgantown and ran down an elderly woman in neighboring Pennsylvania also shot and wounded a gas station attendant as he crossed back through West Virginia. He then took his own life in Kentucky.



The path of violence that Shayne Riggleman cut through three states before committing suicide during a police chase was "one of the most heinous crimes I've ever witnessed," State Police Capt. James Merrill said Tuesday.



At a news conference, Merrill would not comment on a motive or say how Riggleman, 22, was connected to any of the five shooting victims at the blood-spattered house a few miles west of Morgantown, where the spree began Monday afternoon.



Charles Richardson Jr., whose son was among the five shooting victims, told The Associated Press he didn't recognize Riggleman's name or know his connection to the family. Nor was he aware of his son having trouble with anyone.



Richardson said his son worked for FedEx and liked to tinker on vehicles and computers. The two were not close, he said, even though the elder Richardson lives in a mobile home within sight of his son's house.



"He went about his business and I went about mine," he said, "but I loved my son."



Police identified the dead as: 49-year-old Charles Richardson III; his wife, 50-year-old Karin Richardson; her children, 17-year-old Kevin Hudson and 22-year-old Katrina Hudson; and 30-year-old Robert Raber.



Katrina Hudson was six months pregnant.



Raber lived in the house, but Merrill would not otherwise elaborate on his relationship to the other victims.



Merrill said investigators believe all five victims in the ramshackle house were shot with a high-powered rifle. Autopsies were under way Tuesday.



Troopers had been asked to check on the family around 5:30 p.m. Monday and arrived about an hour later. They found two bodies in the kitchen and one in the living room once they reached the home at the end of a deeply rutted dirt drive.



Merrill said troopers secured the site, determined the shooter was no longer inside and found two more bodies in a bathroom after searching further.



Merrill said the call about the family's welfare came from a friend who grew concerned after Riggleman traveled to see her in Pennsylvania.



Authorities said Riggleman apparently shot the victims around 3:30 or 4:30 p.m. Monday then drove about 20 miles to Fairchance, Pa., and met with that friend. Authorities would not identify the woman but credited her with preventing more deaths.



"It's unfortunate it ended the way it did," Merrill said, "... but I do not believe that he would've stopped."



After leaving the woman around 5:30 p.m., police say, Riggleman crashed into another vehicle near Fairchance and then ran down the elderly female driver as she got out of her car to exchange information. Authorities did not identify that victim but said she was seriously injured.



Riggleman then fled south on Interstate 79, Merrill said. At an Exxon station near Amma, about 30 miles from the West Virginia state capital of Charleston, Riggleman "randomly shot and severely wounded" attendant Don Nichols, police said.



Nichols, who was in critical condition, is expected to survive.



Riggleman continued south into Lewis County, Ky., where a deputy tried to pull him over for reckless driving.



The deputy chased the driver until he pulled over about a half-mile down the road. The deputy found Riggleman with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Lewis County Sheriff Johnny Bivens said.



Merrill said Kentucky authorities found three weapons in a silver Jeep that Riggleman had taken from the Richardson home — a high-powered rifle, a second rifle and a .22-caliber handgun.



Authorities searched Riggleman's Morgantown apartment and were studying his Facebook page. Riggleman apparently lived alone, and police did not immediately know whether he was employed.



He does have a criminal history but Merrill declined to elaborate, saying only that "he was known by law enforcement."



On a public Facebook page for a Shayne Franklin Samuel Riggleman, a string of Wall Posts from the past week seem to hint at a troubled relationship.



"There is a direct corelation between the amount of love you have for someone and how crazy you go when you lose them," reads one.



"I mate for life, not like a penguin though," reads another. "I mate for life like a praying mantis."



And one, ominously, says only, "We're not promised tomorrow."



Riggleman's profile page, meanwhile, contained several quotes.



At the top of the list, unattributed, was this one: "I ain't goin' out without a fight. I'm with whatever. it WILL be YOUR LIFE before MY LIFE."



___



Associated Press writer Rebecca Yonker in Louisville, Ky., contributed to this report.

The following is Shayne Riggleman's Facebook info and some of his posts leading up to the tragic event:

Shayne Franklin Samuel Riggleman's Facebook Page: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=810580149&sk=wall

Philosophy

Religious Views

Political Views

Favorite Quotations
"I ain't goin' out without a fight. I'm with whatever. it WILL be YOUR LIFE before MY LIFE." "If you believe you will fail, you are right."
"Whatever will be, will be."
...See More

Basic Information

About Shayne My name is Shayne Riggleman, I'm an outgoing person. I love meeting new people. I love animals. I want to accomplish something great in life. I want to help people.

Interested In Women

Sex Male

Networks
Morgantown High School

Steven Seagal killed my puppy, says man seized in reality TV police raid

Amplify’d from www.independent.co.uk

Steven Seagal killed my puppy, says man seized in reality TV police raid

Actor Steven Seagal, in camouflage gear, with Sheriff Joe Arpaio. They are being sued for $100,000

AP

Actor Steven Seagal, in camouflage gear, with Sheriff Joe Arpaio. They are being sued for $100,000

Steven Seagal killed my puppy. So says Jesus Sanchez Llovera, an Arizona man whose home was raided by armed detectives filming a reality TV programme in which the veteran actor works as a volunteer police officer.

According to legal papers filed in Phoenix, Mr Llovera wants $100,000 (£60,000) in compensation,plus a written apology from Seagal and the local police chief for the incident in March, which saw him arrested on suspicion of running an illegal cockfighting ring. He denies that charge, and claims that more than 100 prize chickens being bred for "show" were killed by Seagal and his colleagues. An 11-month-old puppy was also shot and killed during the early morning raid, he alleges.

Seagal has for months been working alongside Joe Arpaio, the controversial right-wing Sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona, famed for his zero-tolerance approach to policing and his dedication to the cause of rounding up suspected illegal immigrants.

In a series of operations filmed for the TV show Steven Seagal: Lawman, the former action hero has dressed in camouflage gear and wraparound sunglasses to participate in gung-ho arrests of suspected criminals.

The raid on Mr Llovera's property was a typical operation. It saw Seagal join a squadron of heavily armed riot police who drove a tank through the front gates before kicking down the door of the house and rushing inside.

Mr Llovera offered no resistance, but says he was nonetheless roughed-up and that his home suffered "substantial" damage. The arrest, and alleged shooting of the puppy – "a beloved family pet" – took place while his young children were present.

The case has potential racial overtones, since Mr Llovera is of Hispanic heritage. Members of Phoenix's Latino community have long said they are discriminated against by Mr Arpaio, who is famed for arresting illegal immigrants at road-blocks and making prison inmates wear pink pyjamas.

Mr Llovera denies all charges of breeding chickens for cockfighting. He says the raid was "unfounded" and the use of force in the arrest was disproportionate. Neither Mr Arpaio nor Seagal has responded to his claims.

However the actor is unlikely to take kindly to allegations of complicity in the death of a puppy: in interviews he has spoken out against animal cruelty.

Read more at www.independent.co.uk
 

Mexico: U.S. Man, Jean Baptiste Kingery, Smuggled Grenade Parts For Drug Cartel

Amplify’d from www.huffingtonpost.com


Mexico: U.S. Man, Jean Baptiste Kingery, Smuggled Grenade Parts For Drug Cartel

Sinaloa Mexico
MARK STEVENSON

MEXICO CITY — Police have arrested a U.S. man for smuggling American grenade parts into Mexico for use by the Sinaloa cartel, and a U.S. official said the case has now been included in investigations into flawed law enforcement operations aimed at gun-trafficking networks on the Mexican border.

The arrest of a man who Mexican police identified as Jean Baptiste Kingery has provided details on a network that allegedly supplied hundreds of hand grenades to Mexico's powerful Sinaloa cartel. Such grenades have been blamed in the injuries or deaths of dozens of civilians in Mexico, where grenades have been tossed into public squares, streets, bars and nightclubs.

A U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives operation, known as Fast and Furious, was designed to track small-time gun buyers at several Phoenix-area gun shops up the chain to make cases against major weapons traffickers. But a congressional investigation says ATF agents of lost track of about 1,400 of the more than 2,000 guns whose purchase they had watched.

In Washington D.C., Justice Department spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler said the department's inspector general has expanded that investigation to include the Kingery case.

"The department is aware of concerns raised" about the Kingery case "and has been looking into it," said Schmaler. "We have notified Congress about this operation and offered to brief them on it."

Schmaler did not say specifically why the greande-smuggling case was being investigated, but the Wall Street Journal reported that Kingery had been detained in Arizona in June 2010 and then released, purportedly because officials wanted to use him as an informant or in a sting operation.

The ATF refused to confirm that report. ATF spokesman Drew Wade said "we can't confirm or deny the existence of an ongoing criminal investigation."

Mexico's Attorney General's Office said Kingery had been the subject of "a bilateral investigation" between Mexico, the U.S. government and the ATF.

The office said Kingery, 40, allegedly bought weapons parts and grenade casings in U.S. stores and even over the Internet, and smuggled them into Mexico through the border city of Mexicali.

The office said Kingery was arrested late last week in the Pacific Coast city of Mazatlan, in Sinaloa state, in a raid on a house where five guns were found. He is being held under a form of house arrest.

Police also raided five other homes, and found what appeared to have been facilities for assembling grenades, including gunpowder and grenade triggers, pins and caps.

In April, two men were arrested with 192 grenade casings in Baja California, the state where Mexicali is located. They told police they were part of the grenade smuggling ring, and that led to the detention of another American man, who led police to Kingery, prosecutors said.

The U.S. Embassy in Mexico City would not confirm the man's name, hometown or nationality, citing privacy concerns.

Mexican drug cartels have frequently used hand grenades in battles with police and soldiers, and occasionally against civilians.

A cartel-related grenade attack in the western city of Morelia killed eight people during the 2008 independence celebrations, when suspects tossed grenades into the city's crowded main square.

On Aug. 14, gunmen tossed a grenade onto a busy tourist boulevard in the Gulf Coast city of Veracruz, killing a man and seriously wounding his wife and their two young children.

Associated Press writer Pete Yost in Washington contributed to this story.

Read more at www.huffingtonpost.com
 

This week on Inquisition Update

Read and discussed on Inquisition Update this morning, Tues Sept 6-11: http://www.newswithviews.com/Gregory/williams124.htm



Read and discussed on Inquisition Update Monday morning Sept 5-11: http://www.cbc.ca/m/text/story_news-topstories.html?/ept/html/story/2011/09/03/vatican-coverup-denial.html



To listen to these programs if you missed them click here: http://libertyarchives.com/ then scroll down to Inquisition Update and click on the program of choice.



Remember that Nicklas from "Cross the Border" will be my returning guest tomorrow morning, Wednesday, Sept 7-11 and we will continue our weekly discussion exposing the great Jesuit deception of "Futurism", Daniel's 70th week (actually fulfilled by Christ 2000 years ago). Don't miss it. If you miss the live broadcast, catch it on the archives page http://libertyarchives.com/ when the opportunity arises.



Unless Father Yahuah changes my mind, I will continue with "Vicars of Christ: The Dark Side of the Papacy" by ex-Jesuit priest, Peter De Rosa Thursday and Friday.



Inquisition Update airs live at 10AM Central time M-F on www.firstamendmentradio.com. It is re-aired throughout each day on www.libertyradiolive.com. It is also heard on WWCR transmitter #3 on 13.845 MHz on your shortwave dial at 2PM Central, 3PM Eastern.



Please visit my website www.inquisitionupdate.org



Email me at tom@seawaves.us



Blessings in Yahushua ha Messiah,



Tom Friess

Inquisition Update