Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Prison. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Prison. Mostrar todas las entradas

After hearing several complaints from women against the doctor Anthony Figueredo about beatings that they would have received from him, a hearing judge gave him a home security measure.

On December 31, the Prosecutor’s Office charged him with the crimes ofand aggravated domestic violence and violent carnal access.

(Also: Surgeon Figueredo’s excuse for not attending the hearing against him)

“This is due to the events that occurred in Bucaramanga on November 12, 2021, when the victim was apparently physically, verbally and psychologically abused, in addition to being allegedly sexually assaulted as reported,” says the Prosecutor’s Office.

On that occasion, the judge refrained from imposing the measure requested by the Prosecutor’s Office and covered him with non-custodial measures. However, the Fifth Criminal Court of the Circuit with Knowledge Function, after evaluating the evidence collected against him, for representing a danger to the community, the victim and obstruction of justice, decided to revoke said measure.

The case

María Paula Pizarro, also a doctor, denounced that on November 12 Figueredo beat her up after leaving a nightclub. At that time they were in a relationship.

The young doctor reported that he also sexually abused her.

After learning of this, the Colombian Cardiovascular Foundation (Fcv) announced that it removed the surgeon from the position and chief Of Cardiovascular Surgery, Anthony Figueredo.

Subsequently, several women also denounced that they were victims of mistreatment by the doctor.

BUCARAMANGA

Interviewed credits:

Wilson Ruiz – Minister of Justice

RPTV NEWS AGENCY team:

Journalist: Liz Castrellon

Camera and Edition: Angelo Ramirez

BOGOTA COLOMBIA). Thursday, March 3, 2022 (RPTV NEWS AGENCY). The businessman Carlos Mattos is already in the maximum security prison of Cómbita, due to his irregular departures from the La Picota detention center in Bogotá.

“Carlos Mattos was transferred from La Picota prison to a maximum security facility in Cómbita, Boyacá. In this place he will be in a pavilion under the same conditions as all the inmates, ”the Minister of Justice, Wilson Ruiz, announced.

After the scandal over Mattos’ departures, involved in two cases of judicial corruption, in which he offered money to judicial officials to benefit from decisions to continue leading the monopoly of the sale of Hyundai cars in Colombia, the head of the Justice portfolio announced the creation of new prison measures so that these acts of corruption do not happen again.

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The opinions and communications provided by the informative sources used and cited in the journalistic notes published by the RPTV NEWS AGENCY they are the total and absolute responsibility of those who express or supply them. The RPTV NEWS AGENCY is an independent communication medium guided by the principles of impartiality, objectivity, respect, informative accuracy and that starts from the good faith and probity of the sources.

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MANAGING DIRECTOR

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Daniel Munoz

EDITORIAL COORDINATOR

Jair Diaz

Karen Daz

REDACTION BOSS

Camilo Andres Alvarez Perez

2021




Journalist: Nicholas Sandoval

Camera and Edition: Daira Acevedo

BOGOTA COLOMBIA). Wednesday, March 2, 2022 (RPTV NEWS AGENCY). An investigation by Noticias Caracol revealed a series of videos that show several departures of Carlos Mattos from La Picota prison in Bogotá. The departures were supposedly for health reasons, but the images show that Mattos was not going to jail, but was transported to other places and even walked without his Inpec guard.

Due to these events, reported the Minister of Justice, Wilson Ruiz, the director of Inpec, General Mariano Botero Coy, and the director of La Picota prison, Colonel (r) Wilmer Valencia, were removed from their posts.

Likewise, the head of the Justice portfolio announced that Mattos will be sent to the maximum security prison of Cómbita.

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The opinions and communications provided by the informative sources used and cited in the journalistic notes published by the RPTV NEWS AGENCY they are the total and absolute responsibility of those who express or supply them. The RPTV NEWS AGENCY is an independent communication medium guided by the principles of impartiality, objectivity, respect, informative accuracy and that starts from the good faith and probity of the sources.

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Please keep in mind that if you find any error, inaccuracy, mistake, supposes unfair, denigrating or insulting treatment, argues the Right to be Forgotten or if you have any suggestion, you can contact the writing of the RPTV NEWS AGENCY to email: directorrptv@gmail.com

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Daniel Munoz

EDITORIAL COORDINATOR

Jair Diaz

Karen Daz

REDACTION BOSS

Camilo Andres Alvarez Perez

2021




Diego Cadavid, the father of the girl Sofía Cadavid, who was murdered on December 17, 2020 in Rionegro, in Eastern Antioquia, was sentenced to 35 years in prison.

A judge issued the conviction for aggravated homicide, in a case that shocked the country, as the 18-month-old girl died violently.

(You may be interested in: Changes in peak and Medellin plate; it would end up being every other day)

The main suspect, after the investigations, was the father, and that is why a process was started. On December 18, one day after the crime and when Cadavid was captured, Francisco Barbosa himself, Attorney General of the Nation, stated that he would be charged with the crime of aggravated femicide.

“We are going to charge him with the crime of aggravated femicide before a judge of guarantees. We are not going to allow acts of impunity in this country,” were Barbosa’s words at the time.

(You can also read: They seize a truck with 100 kilos of coca hydrochloride in Medellín)

Captured Diego Cadavid, father of Sofía Cadavid

Capture of the girl’s father days after the crime.

Photo:

Courtesy Antioquia Police

As this newspaper had already reported, Diego Armando Cadavid had taken her from his home in Rionegro (Eastern Antioquia) at 12 noon and had arranged to return her at six in the afternoon, as confirmed by the authorities.

Upon reporting her as missing, the Army, Firefighters, Police, residents of the sector and officials from the Mayor’s Office of Rionegro undertook the search for the 18-month-old girl.

“Around 2:24 in the morning, the girl Sofia was found lifeless, with signs of violence and wounded with a sharp weapon. Given this, and after the evidence collected by the judicial authorities, an arrest warrant was issued against the victim’s father and -as I mentioned- that arrest warrant has been confirmed and the alleged aggressor of the girl Sofía has been captured. “, detailed at that time Rodrigo Hernández Alzate, mayor of Rionegro.

(We suggest you read: Daniel Quintero will denounce threats and persecution against him before the IACHR)

On the judge’s ruling, the local president celebrated that justice has been done.

“I am pleased that Justice condemns the murderer of the girl Sofía Cadavid for aggravated homicide, in December 2020, in a fact that tore us as rionegreros and society. In Rionegro all life is sacred and even more so those of our children, to whom we should only give love, example and protection, “he said.

MEDELLIN

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Messenger pigeon

Messenger pigeon

Photo:

National Police

The bird had been trying to enter the prison for two days, but injuries did not allow it to fly.

Outside the walls of the San Sebastián de Ternera prisonThe Metropolitan Police of Cartagena rescued a carrier pigeon with a Simcar attached to one of its wings
The carrier bird showed signs of physical exhaustion and dehydration.

According to the residents of the prison, the pigeon was carrying two days trying to get into prison, and realizing that he could no longer fly and was being stalked by a couple of cats, people notified the Police, who came to her rescue.

(Also: A chef with tongue cancer: the battle of an entrepreneur from Santander)

Old fashion of criminals

The carrier pigeon was delivered to the Environmental Public Establishment (EPA) Cartagena, for its recovery and the identification rings will be verified to find its owner.

This old method of training carrier pigeons to enter prisons mobile cell phones, simcards, cell phone batteries and narcotics is used by criminals to evade controls of the guadianés of penitentiary centers.

“The carrier pigeon was delivered to the Environmental Public Establishment (EPA) Cartagena, for its recovery and the identification rings will be verified to find its owner,” says the Police.

(Also: Construction of the viaduct began at kilometer 58 of the road to Llano)

Cartagena

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Dove with Sim Card

In the wing of the dove they had stuck the SIM card to enter it in jail.

Photo:

Taken from social media

In the wing of the dove they had stuck the SIM card to enter it in jail.

Criminals glued a SIM card to the bird’s wing so that it could be taken to the Ternera jail.

With a sign of physical exhaustion and dehydration, a pigeon was rescued that was used by prison inmates san sebastian of Cartagena veal to enter mobile cell phones.

(Also: ICBF has the 11-month-old child the victim of alleged abuse by his mother)

It was what he could establish the Metropolitan Police upon finding that a Sim Card was attached to the bird’s wing.

The first investigations show that the pigeon had been trying to enter the prison for two days. The situation was noted by residents of the sector who alerted to the authorities when they saw that the bird, due to exhaustion, could not fly and was stalked by cats.

(Read: Attack with explosives destroyed Police station in rural area of ​​Cúcuta)

At this time the police investigate the bird’s identification rings to find its owner.

In the communication of the Metropolitan Police of Cartagena confirms that it is a new modality that through the training of carrier pigeons mobile teams of cell phones enter the prisons, sim cards, cell phone battery and narcotics, to evade the controls of the police authorities and the guards of the penitentiary centers.

(Don’t stop reading: After 121 processes, today the first recall is voted)

The pigeon will be delivered to the Environmental Public Establishment (EPA) for your recovery.

BARRANQUILLA

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handcuffed man

They asked for from 30,000 pesos to 400,000 pesos.

They asked for from 30,000 pesos to 400,000 pesos.

The uniformed men asked for money so as not to demand documents from drivers.

A non-commissioned officer and two National Police patrolmen were sent to jail after it was found that they were demanding high sums of money from truckers on a road between the municipalities of Copacabana and Barbosa, in the north of the Aburrá Valley.

The investigators established that between January 2018 and September 2020, the uniformed officers requested money from the drivers of trucks loaded with wood in exchange for not demanding the paperwork required for the transport of this type of material. The events occurred on the North highway,” explained the director of the Medellín Section of the Prosecutor’s Office, Natalia Rendón.

(You may be interested in: This is how the investigation progresses into the deaths of workers in the Medellín Metro)

According to the investigations, the acts of corruption by the uniformed officers occurred between January 2018 and September 2020.

The illegal economic demands, according to the Prosecutor’s Office, ranged from 30,000 pesos to 400,000 pesos. and they were extended to drivers of private vehicles and motorcyclists who moved through the area.

(We suggest you read: This is the image of Daniel Quintero in Medellín according to the Invamer survey)

After the entire legal process, a criminal judge from the Girardota circuit (Antioquia) recently sentenced Mayor José Ignacio Arroyave Murillo for the crimes of conspiracy to commit a crime and concussion in a homogeneous and successive contest, who was sentenced to 4 years and 4 months in prison. , and the patrolmen Cristian Camilo Pérez Oyola and William Fernando Oyuela Duarte, sentenced to 5 years in prison.

MEDELLIN

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In order to strengthen security and justice processes in Barranquilla, a new Temporary Detention Centeras announced by the District Mayor’s Office.

(Also read: They cancel the mega-prison construction project in the Atlantic)

The temporary prison is located in the Las Estrellas neighborhood. The space will have a capacity, initially, to house 210 people and will eventually be able to double to 420 prisoners.

There are 210 additional slots that we are adding so that we can say that here is where to keep the bandits

The Temporary Detention Center is at 108th Street No. 34 – 40, it has an area of 921 square metershas seven control spaces, a visiting room, closed circuit television for surveillance, bathrooms with anti-vandalism systems and its own electrical substation, among other adjustments.

Mayor Jaime Pumarejo referred to the importance of this center, which will allow the competent authorities to work to ensure the safety of the community.

“There are 210 additional slots that we are adding so that we can say that here is where to keep the bandits. In addition, the Minister of Justice, Wilson Ruíz, confirmed to us that in March we will be adding 500 places that are already being built in the El Bosque prison,” explained the president.

Pumarejo added that this is one of the strategies that are being implemented to accompany the work of the Police, criminal judges and other institutions such as the Prosecutor’s Office.

It was equipped with technology

This center will have adequate spaces for carrying out virtual hearings of the unionsthus reducing the risk of not developing due to external factors.

For this, it will have the necessary technology to undertake these hearings that will determine the process of those captured, according to what was reported by the district administration.

Among the benefits that this new Temporary Detention Center brings, is the decongestion of the stations of Police, by being able to relocate detained personnel in these spaces and who are waiting for their situation to be resolved with justice.

Similarly, these new facilities will guarantee better conditions for persons deprived of their liberty and provide better security conditions for the detention of persons immersed in a judicial process.

(You may be interested in: They report a mortality of fish on the beaches of Puerto Colombia; what is the reason?)

The captures of the Metropolitan Police of Barranquilla

So far this year, the Metropolitan Police has reported 769 capturesa 23 percent increase in cases over the same period last year, according to official figures.

Meanwhile, the commander of the Metropolitan Police of Barranquilla, Brigadier General Luis Hernández Aldana, highlighted the advances in infrastructure as a tool for the peace of mind of citizens.

“Also so that the rights of personnel deprived of liberty are not violated. In the same way, it is a sample of the work articulated with the Mayor’s Office of Barranquilla through the Office for Citizen Security and Coexistence, “said the senior official.

BARRANQUILLA

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Dozens of rights groups are demanding a crackdown on an artificial intelligence system used to eavesdrop on U.S. prisoners’ phone calls, after a Thomson Reuters Foundation investigation highlighted the risk of rights violations.

Documents from eight states showed prison and jail authorities were using surveillance software called Verus, which scans for key words and leverages Amazon’s voice-to-text transcription service, to monitor prisoners’ phone calls.

California-based LEO Technologies, which operates Verus, says it has scanned close to 300 million minutes of calls going in and out of prisons and jails in the United States, describing the tool as a way to fight crime and help keep inmates safe.

But a coalition of civil and digital rights groups said the surveillance sometimes overstepped legal limits by targeting conversations unrelated to the safety and security of detention facilities, or possible criminal activity.

“This surveillance infringes the rights of incarcerated Americans, many of whom have not been convicted and are still working on their defenses, as well as those of their families, friends, and loved ones,” the groups wrote in a joint letter.

Four different letters were sent to the attorney general’s office in New York State, the state’s Inspector General and the federal Department of Justice (DOJ).

The DOJ provided a $700,000 grant to the sheriff’s office in Suffolk County, New York, to implement a pilot of the AI-powered voice-to-text surveillance system in 2020.

Undersheriff Kevin Catalina, who helps run the Verus program in Suffolk, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that the system is crucial for alerting jail authorities to people who are suicidal and to identify gang members behind bars.

“It saves lives,” he said.

A DOJ official said the department is reviewing technology programs receiving federal funding to ensure they are enhancing public safety while respecting constitutional rights.

A spokesperson for the New York State Inspector General’s Office said in emailed comments that they would review the letter and “thoroughly investigate” complaints that are sent in.

More than 50 advocacy groups are part of the campaign, among them the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Worth Rises, the Innocence Project, and Access Now.

They also raised concerns about the prison phone call company Securus, and the possible recording of conversations protected by attorney-client privilege.

A Securus spokesperson said the company is committed to protecting civil liberties, that users can set attorney numbers to private – meaning calls are not recorded and cannot be monitored – and that they act immediately to delete “inadvertent” recordings.

A representative for LEO did not respond to requests for comment on the letters.

“It seems like the regulators have been asleep at the switch at the federal, state and local level,” said Albert Fox Cahn, head of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, which helped draft the letter.

‘Unproven, invasive, and biased’

As Suffolk County was trialing Verus, it also expanded beyond New York, winning state contracts in Georgia and Texas, and in local sheriff’s departments across the United States.

The rights groups urged regulators to block further expansion of surveillance tools in prisons and jails, saying they have the potential to produce racial bias and undermine privacy rights, without any clear track record of success.

In their letter addressed to the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, the groups cited research showing voice-to-text tools have a much higher error rate for Black voices. Black people are disproportionately represented among U.S. prisoners.

“Even absent discrimination, Verus and similar technologies exceed prisons and jails’ lawful surveillance powers,” they wrote.

Documents obtained by the Thomson Reuters Foundation from the pilot site in Suffolk County showed Verus was used to analyze more than 2.5 million calls between its launch in April 2019 and May 2020 – leading to 96 “actionable intelligence reports.”

While Catalina did not specify how many prisoners had been disciplined or faced charges based on those leads, he said the tool had helped prevent 86 suicides.

The rights groups also raised concerns about mission creep, noting the technology had been used to identify conversations that could flag problems for prison or jail administrators – such as complaints about their response to COVID-19.

Catalina said the sheriff’s office reviews all its surveillance strategies on a monthly basis to make sure that their terms used in the Verus system are appropriate, and that it has never found any issues.

The surveillance of detainees’ phone calls is especially troubling in county jails, where people are frequently held before being convicted of any crime, said Bianca Tylek, executive director of criminal justice nonprofit Worth Rises.

“People who are innocent, (who) have the presumption of innocence, who cannot afford bail … should not be subjected to surveillance that no one else is,” said Tylek.

Besides infringing the privacy of incarcerated people and their relatives, AI-powered surveillance in prisons and jails could also lead to increases in the cost of phone calls for prisoners, rights campaigners fear.

The average 15-minute phone call from a jail already costs $5.74, according to a 2019 report from the Prison Policy Initiative, while 2015 research found more than a third of families reported getting into debt to pay for calls or visits.

Worth Rises, which has been pushing to reduce the cost of prison phone calls across the country, is urging state and local law enforcement to offer calls for free.

Emails between LEO and sheriff’s offices, which were obtained through public records requests, show use of LEO’s Verus system could cost as much as 8 cents per minute.

They also give a picture of how the company worked in tandem with law enforcement officials to raise funds – enlisting PR personnel, helping draft federal grant proposals, and making appeals to lawmakers.

In Suffolk County, the Sheriff’s office discussed plans to pass the cost onto prisoners themselves if grant funding ran out, the emails reveal.

The office said that while it had considered passing along the costs to prisoners, they ultimately decided not to.

Tylek said the federal government should not be funding pilots involving systems like Verus, warning that authorities rarely relinquish surveillance powers once they have been granted.

“It (becomes) almost impossible to pull it out,” she said.

A father of a family was sent to jail with an insurance measure for physical and verbal attacks against his 12-year-old son, whom he beat for coming home late at night and, furthermore, for dye your hair without consulting it. According to the authorities, the man hit the boy’s face with his head, causing injuries to his nose.

Due to these events, which occurred last January 1 in the urban area of ​​the municipality of San Agustín, Huila, the Prosecutor’s Office prosecuted Edward Vargas Anacona and a guarantee control judge ordered his detention in a detention center.

The defendant apparently physically and verbally assaulted his son because he had dyed his hair and, furthermore, because he was on the street at dawn.

“The defendant apparently physically and verbally assaulted his son because he had dyed his hair and, furthermore, because he was on the street at dawn,” said the Prosecutor’s Office.

For that reason, it is presumed that he headbutted his son in the face, injuring his nose, but then he would have chased him with a knife in his hand and even kicked him in his body.

That day, in the midst of the attacks, the minor managed to take refuge in his grandmother’s house, with whom he now lives to be safe.

The prosecution was able to establish that the mother of the minor, and ex-partner of the aggressor, was also verbally and physically assaulted by this man who issued him death threats.

Against Edward Vargas Anacona, the indictment was transferred for the crime of aggravated domestic violence in a homogeneous and successive contest, for which he did not accept charges.

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Iran has sentenced a prominent human rights activist to more than eight years prison, according to her husband.

Paris-based Taghi Rahmani tweeted on Sunday that his wife, Narges Mohammadi, was tried in five minutes and sentenced to prison and 70 lashes. He has said she is prohibited from communicating and has no access to lawyers. Last week, she was sent to Gharchak prison near Tehran.

Authorities arrested Mohammadi in November after she attended memorial for a victim of violent 2019 protests. Rahmani said in December his wife stood accused of “spying for Saudi Arabia.”

Mohammadi has a long history of imprisonment, harsh sentences and international calls for reviews of her case.

In May, the European Union called on Iran to reconsider her sentence of 30 months in prison and 80 lashes on charges of protesting the killing of protesters during the country’s 2019 unrest.

A spokesperson for the bloc urged Iran to look into Mohammadi’s case under “applicable international human rights law and taking into account her deteriorating health condition.” Mohammadi confirmed her sentence at the time in an Instagram post, saying she does not “accept any of these sentences.”

In the post, Mohammadi said one of the charges against her is having a party and dancing in jail.

She was released from jail in October 2020, after serving eight and a half years in prison, after her initial, 10-year sentence was commuted. In that case, she was sentenced in Tehran’s Revolutionary Court on charges including planning crimes to harm the security of Iran, spreading propaganda against the government and forming and managing an illegal group.

Before imprisonment, Mohammadi was vice president of the banned Defenders of Human Rights Center in Iran.

Mohammadi has been close to Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, who founded the center. Ebadi left Iran after the disputed re-election of then-President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009, which touched off unprecedented protests and harsh crackdowns by authorities.

In 2018, Mohammadi, an engineer, was awarded the 2018 Andrei Sakharov Prize.

Prominent Hong Kong independence activist Edward Leung was released from jail Wednesday after serving a four year sentence for taking part in a 2016 protest.

The 30-year-old activist posted a message on his Facebook page that he was released from Shek Pik Prison before dawn and was home with his family.

“After four years, I want to cherish this precious time to reunite with my family and resume a normal life with them,” he wrote while also expressing his thanks to his supporters for their concern and love.

Leung first came to prominence in 2016 as the spokesman of Hong Kong Indigenous, a group that called for maintaining a distinct identity for Hong Kong and a total break from mainland China. He took part in the so-called Fishball Revolution protest against a police crackdown on unlicensed street food vendors in the city’s Mong Kok district that turned violent.

Leung was convicted in 2018 of assaulting a police officer and taking part in a riot in connection with the Mong Kok incident and sentenced to six years in prison. Local news outlets say the sentence was reduced by two years for good behavior.

He coined the slogan “Liberate Hong Kong, Revolution of our Times” for his campaign for a seat in the city’s legislature in 2016 that was cut short when he was disqualified due to his pro-independence stance. The slogan has since been outlawed under the draconian national security law imposed by Beijing in 2020 in response to the massive and violent protests the previous year.

Hundreds of pro-democracy activists have been convicted and sentenced to lengthy prison terms under the law, which outlaws succession, subversion, terrorism and foreign collusion.

Some information for this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters, Agence France-Presse.

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