Tag Archives: shelley-brown

30.000 Harley bikers invade a 60.000 inhabitants town!

It should have been a simple Harley meeting, counting 200 members, but from the entire continent, 30.000 Harley bikers came to this small town, Lugano, counting just 60.000 inhabitants. The result? the whole region was invaded, every single street of the town were filed with bikes, and least but not least, one of the biggest and funniest fest started in a peaceful city. Those Harley bikers were so fine that the whole thing became a memorable day. added by: johnhope

Border Patrol Agent Let Illegals In the US For Sexual Favors

Just as jury selection was about to begin in his trail late yesterday, Rudy Trace Soliz III, a former Customs and Border Protection agent, pleaded guilty to alien smuggling and bribery, the U.S. Attorney's office announced today. Soliz, 28, let a female co-conspirator bring illegal aliens and merchandise into the U.S. via his car-inspection lane. Why, why would he hate America so? He did it “in return for sexual favors with the co-conspirator,” the feds say. Pussy trumps patriotism. Once again. He admitted that he had let the illegal aliens in on September 25 of last year. He did not admit to reading Shakespeare's The Rape of Lucrece: “This momentary joy breeds months of pain; This hot desire converts to cold disdain.” (Hey, we're nothing but classy here.) The female co-conspirator has already pleaded guilty to possession of more than five kilos of cocaine with intent to distribute. She had yet to be sentenced, so we guess Soliz figured she wouldn't exactly keep his secret when she got on the stand. The transporting of illegal aliens conviction carries a maximum punishment of 10 years imprisonment, while the bribery conviction is punishable by a maximum 15-year-term of imprisonment, the U.S. Attorney's office says. Each count of conviction is also punishable with fines of up to $250,000. added by: cclark_productions

New Orleans TV: “Alarming discovery” of adult crabs “filled with some sort of black substance”

A pair of fishermen in Mississippi made an alarming discovery that has many wondering what's happening below the surface in the Gulf of Mexico. They found several full-sized crabs filled with some sort of black substance. While it's tough to find oil on the surface along the beaches in Mississippi, Hancock County EMA director, Brian Adam said oil is there, you just can't see it. “We're still seeing tar balls everyday, and I'm not talking just a few tar balls. We're seeing a good amount everyday on the beaches,” said Adam. He said a rock jetty near Waveland was covered in about 1,000 pounds of tar balls in just three days, and now there's been a disturbing discovery inside about a half a dozen full-sized crabs found near the mouth of Bay St. Louis. “You could tell it was real slick and dark in color so I grabbed it, and opened the back of the crab, and you could see in the 'dead man' or the lungs of the crabs.. you could see the black,” said Keith Ladner, longtime seafood supplier and owner of Gulf Shores Sea Products. He said he's never seen anything like it. Ladner said a crab's lungs are normally a white, or greyish color, and that a crab would have to be extremely old and deteriorated to look the way these did. “It wasn't that case. The meat was in tact, but lungs were in bad shape,” Ladner explained. Through BP's Vessels of Opportunity program, longtime fisherman Robert Mayne, a few days ago, started pulling boom on the bottom, and believes that's where the damaged crabs are coming from. “We would slow down, let it (boom) go to the bottom and then 10 minute pulls that we had made.. it was just saturated with brown, solid brown substances,” Mayne said. FOX 8 News reporter, Shelley Brown asked: “This is where the crabs live, on the bottom?” “Correct,” answered Ladner and Mayne. “And it's shocking to me that the shrimp season opened just a week ago and these shrimp travel across the bottom like crabs,” Ladner continued. Ladner said he couldn't sell shrimp even if they wanted too. He said some of the largest processing facilities in the country say they just can't buy from him right now because they say the sentiment around the country is that this oil and dispersant mix is at the bottom and in our seafood. “We've seen a lot of large fish since this has happened that are dead on the beach. We're seeing large bones like on days that are low tides like tonight.. mammals, turtle bones,” Hancock County Hazardous Material lead liaison Jesse Fineran said. Emergency managers and fishermen want to know what's causing this, and they're hoping just because there's no oil on the surface, this does not become an out of sight, out of mind situation. Some fishermen said they would see oil on the surface one day, and the next day, crews were out spraying and it would be gone. They believe the oil and dispersant mix is accumulating on the bottom. (video at link) added by: samantha420