Tuesday, December 7, 2010

"The Story" continues...






The building in which the body was found was owned by a private company, registered offshore, called New Rodina. Rodina was Russian for "motherland".

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He spent more than a decade in federal prison after being convicted in the late 1980s of taking part in what federal prosecutors called the "largest domestic marijuana syndicate in American history," a string of 29 farms in Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas and Wisconsin.

There were allegations that he had been involved in a child prostitution ring and had molested a minor.

Work became his life. He rarely even went out after work, excepting an occasional "drink with colleagues". He worked late into the night and rose early. There was something oppressively austere about him, those colleagues thought, something they used to call his "GDR sensibility". So serious and quiet was he that when he did become animated, he "alarmed people with his unusual laugh".

Neighbors complained that the officers who initially responded failed to do enough to get inside and stop the sword-wielding maniac before his mother died.

Sarah Palin wrote on Facebook: "He is an anti-American operative with blood on his hands.

Police, who described the man as overweight, shot him twice with Tasers and used tear gas and a baton to subdue him.

His intensity only broke for a moment when he said he was thirsty and his mouth was dry. Guards gave him a wet towelette to dab at his lips.

He was not arrested at that time and instead was permitted to go to Pakistan. There he was detained by the Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate, an agency notorious for its use of torture.

The first six months his jailers kept the lights on all night, and he couldn't sleep, but that eventually changed.

He was deported to the UK 13 months later with three fingernails missing from his left hand, pulled out with pliers.

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"I just kept cutting her. No one could stop me. I was doing the work of God," he said.

The court heard how police found a series of clip titles stored on his mobile phone, including one entitled "happy slap".

Few of his neighbors thought he was capable of this kind of crime. "He seemed like a troubled soul but was always nice, always shook my hand and gave me a half hug," said Robin Lyle. "He was calm but every once in a while would get agitated and say, 'Have the cops been here, have the cops been here?'" said another neighbor.

Jailing him, Justice Stephen Irwin ordered that the video clips be preserved so the parole board could watch them before he is eventually considered for release. He told him: "Anyone who watches the video clips of some of what you did - and I'm convinced you recorded only some of what you did - will genuinely struggle to understand why you came to do this.

He isn't allowed outside very often, but he exercises. His jailers also gave him the stringed Cuban instrument, which he uses to play music with them. And on Thanksgiving the cook made him a turkey, serving it in a Cuban style, with beans.

Officers from the security services of the United States questioned him from time to time over a six-month period.

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"The Story", a short built from the latest news stories from around the world continues.

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