Witnesses rescue half-naked 13-year-old girl from sex assault, police say
PHOENIX – Witnesses in a West Phoenix neighborhood busted down a door and rescued a young teen from a sexual assault, according to KNXV.
Phoenix police report that on Sunday afternoon three residents broke down the bedroom door of a 19-year-old and found the suspect and a 13-year-old girl naked from the waist down.
Witnesses reportedly told police that the girl was passed out on the floor, after drinking with Herman Gutierrez Fuentes, 19.
One witness found Fuentes in the corner of the room wearing just a shirt. Fuentes allegedly told the witness, “I messed up,” before he threw Fuentes against a wall, holding him for the police.
The girl was transported from the home, near 59th Avenue and McDowell Road, to a local hospital.
Police say the B.A.C. level of the girl was .189.
Fuentes reportedly admitted to police that he provided alcohol for the teen and drank with her until she was “very intoxicated.”
He pulled her pants down and was about to rape the girl, when the witnesses burst into his room.
He is being held on a $100,000 bond for contributing to the delinquency of a minor and attempted sexual assault.
via: https://pix11.com/2019/05/28/witnesses-rescue-half-naked-13-year-old-from-sex-assault-police-say/
Photo Credit: pix11.com
Woman reportedly decapitated while trying to free headphones from elevator
A factory worker was decapitated by an elevator in India after she “absentmindedly” tried to free her headphones that got tangled in a gate, according to reports.
The severed head of Sushila Vishwakarma was discovered on the ground floor of the plastics factory in Vadodara, while her body was in the elevator that traveled to the third floor.
Police believe the 48-year-old was trying to free her headphones from the elevator’s collapsible grill as she arrived at work at 8 a.m. Monday, according to the Indian Express.
The headphones were still in the ears of her detached head — and a playlist was running on the phone in her hand, police said.
“We are speculating that she was using her phone and absentmindedly she tried to stick her head outside the lift, which started going up, and the accident happened,” investigating officer MN Saporiya told the paper. “So her body was dragged ’til the last floor and her head got severed.”
Bapod police Inspector TR Bamaniya told the Express that they hope an autopsy will reveal more.
“We are investigating the possibilities of how her head got stuck and whether it was because of the headphones,” he said.
Photo Credit: Getty Images
Georgia man killed in accidental shooting at gun range
A Georgia man was killed at an indoor gun range — when a member of his party inadvertently fired at him over Memorial Day weekend, officials said.
John Salvati, 59, was accidentally struck Monday at Quickshot Savannah and rushed to Memorial Medical Center, according to the Savannah Police Department.
He later died from his injuries, authorities said.
Photos on the married father’s Facebook page show him visiting the beach and celebrating birthdays with friends and family.
Relatives mourned Salvati’s death Tuesday by paying tribute on social media.
“To say I am devastated and as is the rest of my family is not even close,” Salvati’s nephew, Frankie DeFeo, wrote on Facebook.
Police said they’re investigating the shooting, but charges will likely not be filed, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
via: https://nypost.com/2019/05/28/georgia-man-killed-in-accidental-shooting-at-gun-range/
Photo Credit: nypost.com/facebook.com
Your food cravings probably aren’t a sign of a hidden nutrient deficiency
Article via CoachNine
Food cravings can take over the most rational of brains, forcing us to do anything to get our hands on that chocolate bar/burger/Diet Coke.
You might have heard chocolate cravings signal magnesium deficiencies, or that hankerings for red meat means you’re low in iron or protein.
But Dr Vincent Ho, from the University of Western Sydney’s School of Medicine, says there’s little evidence that our cravings are so explicit.
More likely, says Dr Ho, is that we have a psychological “conditioned” response where we associate particular foods with happy times, which makes us want to replicate them.
“Food cravings are an intense desire to consume a particular food that is quite difficult to resist; different of course from hunger, which can be satisfied by any food,” he tells Coach.
“It’s not so much a physiological [occurrence] as much as a sociocultural one.”
Dr Ho points to the fact chocolate is the number one reported North American craving, while only 1 percent of Egyptian men and 6 percent of Egyptian women have felt a similar craving, and that Japanese women more commonly report sushi and rice cravings.
“People thought maybe chocolate cravings were caused due to the component called phenyl-ethylamine, the so-called substance involved in romantic love,” he says.
“But we know that’s not the case because other foods like cheddar cheese and salami have much higher amounts but don’t cause anywhere [near] the same amount of cravings as chocolate.
“Phenyl-ethylamine [also] doesn’t appear to cross the blood-brain barrier into the brain either, so it’s really a myth.”
Dr Ho says the famous “Pavlov’s dog” study gave a powerful insight into how cravings are conditioned. The 18th century scientist noted that dogs salivate when food is put in front of them, then he started adding a bell when producing their food bowl. In time, simply ringing the bell was enough to induce salivation, even if no food was shown.
“In a very similar way, there is that sort of conditioning theory that is thought to underpin food cravings,” Dr Ho explains.
“If having chocolate is associated with a happy time, that becomes a very strong association. You could be driving and eating chocolate, and in the future, just the act of driving may be enough to trigger the food craving because of the conditioning response.”
Stress and our gut bacteria are also thought to influence our food cravings.
Naturopath Andrea Strand uses her clients’ cravings to get an insight into their health, but says cravings often signal a broader diet imbalance rather than a specific nutrient need.
“It might be that a person eats and craves high sugary foods [because] they are not getting the nutrients required to help stop the sugar craving,” she explains.
“The ideal diet for blood sugar regulation is lots of vegetables, two pieces of fruit a day and good protein sources at breakfast, lunch and dinner.”
If you get those elements right then Strand says your sugar cravings should naturally diminish.
“Often people come in with sugar cravings and by making dietary changes, supporting their adrenal glands and helping them develop better sleep hygiene, within one to two weeks, their cravings are gone,” she says.
How can you get rid of cravings?
Adopting a balanced, healthy diet is one of the best things you can do to “crowd out” the unhealthy foods.
“If you decrease the frequency of consuming the foods you commonly crave, you get a decrease in cravings of those foods,” Dr Ho explains.
“If you were to have chocolate twice a month instead of every week, that is going to reduce your craving for chocolate.”
Secondly, he suggests using mindfulness to “decouple” the brain association by acknowledging your craving is simply a thought you are having.
“A study found that people who adopted mindfulness were three times more likely to abstain from chocolate than participants using cognitive behavioural therapy [CBT] techniques, which involves challenging inaccurate thoughts and replacing them with more accurate ones,” he says.
Thirdly, he suggests trying to create positive, happy associations with healthy foods to “sub in” better cravings. So that might mean having some beautiful roast vegetables with a family meal or some hommus and vegie sticks when socialising with your friends.
At the same time, Strand says trying to eat a balanced diet encompassing lots of whole foods from nature should ensure your body is well nourished and less likely to present niggling cravings.
“Chromium, found in beef, poultry, wholegrains and vegetables, as well as magnesium, found in spinach, quinoa, almonds, cashews and dark chocolate, are both required for sugar uptake,” she says.
“So if you eat plenty of those foods, you might not get those sweet cravings.”
Burnout is an official medical diagnosis, World Health Organization says
Article via CNN
It’s a feeling of extreme work stress that’s long been embedded in the cultural lexicon, and now it might be codified in your medical records as well.Burnout is now a legitimate medical diagnosis, according to the International Classification of Diseases, or the ICD-11, the World Health Organization’s handbook that guides medical providers in diagnosing diseases.Burnout now appears in the ICD-11’s section on problems related to employment or unemployment. According to the handbook, doctors can diagnose someone with burnout if they meet the following symptoms:
1. feelings of energy depletion or exhaustion
2. increased mental distance from one’s job, or feelings of negativism or cynicism related to one’s job
3. reduced professional efficacy
Before making the call, the document says doctors should first rule out adjustment disorder as well as anxiety and mood disorders. And the diagnosis is limited to work environments, and shouldn’t be applied to other life situations.
Researchers have been studying burnout for decades
Burnout has long been a blurry cultural concept that has defied attempts to create a specific consensus definition scientists can all agree on.Psychologist Herbert Freudenberger is credited with inaugurating the formal study of the state of burnout with a scientific article published in 1974, according to a 2017 review of literature published in the journal SAGE Open.The authors of that review, Linda and Torsten Heinemann, say that over the next four decades, hundreds of studies appeared on the subject. During that time, they noted burnout was not considered an actual mental disorder even though it is “one of the most widely discussed mental health problems in today’s society.”
One reason for that, the Heinemanns argue, is that much of the research on burnout focused on “causes and associated factors,” rather than on attempts to develop specific diagnostic criteria.
That led to “vagueness and ambiguity” around the concept of burnout.In their review, they note that the question of whether researchers could differentiate depression and burnout was also a major obstacle in elevating burnout to a disease.
Man dies on flight after reportedly ingesting 246 bags of cocaine
A Japanese man on a flight from Mexico City to Japan died Friday after he reportedly ingested 246 bags of cocaine and began having seizures shortly after the flight departed.
The flight made an emergency landing in Mexico’s Sonora state and the unidentified 42-year-old man died from a cerebral edema, the BBC reported. He reportedly started his journey in Colombia. He was declared dead at the General Ignacio Pesqueira Garcia International Airport in Hermosillo.
The small bags were found in his stomach and intestines during an autopsy. The plastic bags were approximately 2.5 centimeters long and 1 cm wide (1 inch by ½ inch).
via: https://nypost.com/2019/05/28/man-dies-on-flight-after-reportedly-ingesting-246-bags-of-cocaine/
Photo Credit: Getty Images
Ellen DeGeneres Opens Up About Being Sexually Assaulted as a Teenager
Article via CheatSheet
Ellen DeGeneres has been on our television screens for almost two decades. She’s always been very open with her viewers about the things that she has gone through. So much so, that you may have thought that you knew everything there was to know about DeGeneres.
But on season two of Netflix’s My Next Guest Needs No Introduction with David Letterman, DeGeneres opened up about a very intimate topic. Her sexual assault.
What happened to DeGeneres?
On the show, DeGeneres talked about a man that her mother, Betty, married. Soon after the wedding, Betty was diagnosed with breast cancer and had to have one of her breasts removed.
“He told me when she was out of town that he’d felt a lump in her breast and needed to feel my breasts because he didn’t want to upset her, but he needed to feel mine,” DeGeneres said. “Again, ’cause I didn’t know about bodies, I don’t know that breasts are all different and… Anyway, he convinced me that he needs to feel my breasts and then he tries to do it again another time, and then another time.”
The situation escalated until DeGeneres felt that she needed to get out.
“He tries to break my door down, and I kicked the window out and ran ’cause I knew it was going to go more to something… and I didn’t want to tell my mother ’cause I was protecting her and I knew that would ruin her happiness.”
Though the incident was hard for DeGeneres to recount, she felt that it was important for her to do so.
“I’m angry at myself because, you know, I didn’t — I was too weak to stand up to — I was 15 or 16,” she told Letterman. “It’s a really horrible, horrible story and the only reason I’m actually going to go into detail about it is because I want other girls to not ever let someone do that.”
Does DeGeneres still talk to her mom?
DeGeneres did eventually tell her mother what happened. But by that time, Betty didn’t believe her.
“I should never have protected her,” DeGeneres said. “I should have protected myself and I didn’t tell her for a few years and then I told her. And then she didn’t believe me and then she stayed with him for 18 more years. And finally left him because he’d changed the story so many times.”
DeGeneres and her mother have a better relationship now, but she still wishes that her mom had done more for her when she was growing up.
“I always have taken care of her my whole life,” the comedian said of her mom. “So I just kept taking care of her. I didn’t really let it get to me. Until recently, I kind of went, ‘I wish I would have been better taken care of. I wish she would have believed me.’ And she’s apologetic, but, you know…”
Why is DeGeneres opening up now?
DeGeneres is sharing her story now in order to encourage girls who go through similar things to speak up.
“We [women] just don’t feel like we’re worthy, or we’re scared to have a voice, and we’re scared to say no,” she said. “That’s the only reason I think it’s important to talk about it because there’s so many young girls and it doesn’t matter how old you are. When I see people speaking out, especially now, it angers me when victims aren’t believed, because we just don’t make stuff up. And I like men, but there are so many men that get away with so much.”
Two men steal 13-year-old’s iPhone by pretending to have gun
WAKEFIELD, the Bronx — Police are looking for two men they say robbed a teenager of his smart phone in the Bronx by pretending to have a gun.
A 13-year-old boy was walking near Nereid Avenue and Wilder Avenue in the Wakefield section of the Bronx around 5 p.m. on Monday, May 13, when two unidentified men approached him, police said.
Authorities said the men simulated having a firearm and demanded the teen hand over his iPhone and then fled on foot towards Baychester Avenue with the phone in their possession.
The teen was not hurt during the incident, police said.
Police described the two men as in their late teens or early 20s, last seen wearing all dark clothing. Authorities have released the above surveillance footage of the robbery.
via: https://pix11.com/2019/05/28/two-men-steal-13-year-olds-iphone-by-pretending-to-have-gun-police/
Photo Credit: pix11.com
A 47-year-old man is charged with giving drugs to a 13-year-old and dropping her off at a hospital, where she died
A 47-year-old man who brought a 13-year-old to a Massachusetts hospital shortly before she died has been charged with giving the girl drugs, prosecutors said.
Carlos Rivera faces two counts of distribution of a Class B drug to a minor, two counts of indecent assault on a child younger than 14 and one count of indecent assault on a child older than 14, the Essex District Attorney’s Office said in a Saturday news release.
After police questioned him early Saturday, Rivera was arrested and is being held on a $750,000 bail. He is scheduled to be arraigned in Lawrence District Court on Tuesday, which CNN affiliate WHDH reports will take place hours before the girl’s wake.
The 13-year-old Amesbury girl, who was in the eighth grade, and another teenager, who prosecutors say is younger than 16, spent the evening of May 19 and most of the next day at Rivera’s apartment in Lawrence.
Accompanied by the other girl, Rivera brought the 13-year-old to Lawrence General Hospital on Monday around 4:47 p.m., and she died shortly afterward, prosecutors said.
The medical examiner has not yet determined a cause of death.
It is not clear what drugs Rivera is accused of giving the teenagers, but Class B drugs include cocaine, LSD, ecstasy, methamphetamine and some powerful painkillers.
Indecent assault in Massachusetts involves the touching of breasts, buttocks or genitals.
Authorities did not say how or where Rivera met the girls. Amesbury is about 20 miles northeast of Lawrence.
The girl’s mother, Debi Goldsmith-Dolan, was desperate for answers.
“All you had to do if she was sick was call an ambulance. Do something to try to save her. You took away my world,” she told CNN affiliate WBZ.
Stepfather Brian Dolan told CNN affiliate WCVB that a hospital staffer told him that the girl had no pulse when she arrived at the emergency room.
“As soon as I heard that I was like, ‘What? You got to be kidding,’” he told the station.
He told WCVB his stepdaughter was a “great kid” who had had some trouble coping with her father’s death five years ago.
“She was pretty smart. She was bright. She was beautiful,” Dolan told WCVB. “Just the wrong place with the wrong people.”
Photo Credit: Getty Images
Florida man arrested in shooting of pregnant woman; baby critical after delivery
St. Petersburg, FL (WFTS ) — An infant is in critical condition after a pregnant woman was shot and killed in St. Petersburg Friday morning, according to police.
Police say 36-year-old Joi Spencer was shot and killed by her husband, Kamion Spencer. She was taken to Bayfront Health Hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
According to an arrest report, Kamion told police after his arrest he pointed the gun at his wife and it fired, hitting her in the chest. It’s unclear if the shooting was accidental, but the arrest reports states he shot her “without intent to murder.”
Her baby boy was delivered and is now in critical condition at All Children’s Hospital, police said.
Kamion was arrested and charged with manslaughter in connection to the shooting. Police said he called 911 and stayed at the home until police arrived.
Joi was seven months pregnant, according to police.
Neighbors are praying for baby boy to pull through at All Children’s Hospital.
“Extremely sad. It hurts my heart to believe that someone could take a mother away from their child,” Jay Fenningsdorf said.
Investigators said Kamion is a potential flight risk because of his family ties in Jamaica, Bahamas and United Kingdom.
Photo Credit: fox2now.com