Archive for the ‘Shocking stories’ Category

Famous and Historical Thieves

Thursday, September 27th, 2007

Famous Thieves:

  • Bruce Reynolds

    Bruce Reynolds was the ‘brains’ behind the ‘Great train robbery’ in 1963 in which a gang robbed £2.4 million. He was a career criminal who liked the high life and drove an Aston Martin. An accomplished housebreaker and jewel thief, he formed the team that ‘took the train’ with friends Buster Edwards, Gordon Goody and driver Roy James amongst others. The robbery remained the most significant heist in British criminal history until the Brinks Mat robbery in 1983. Reynolds went on the run in the aftermath of the Great Train robbery, living under various aliases abroad. He spent considerable time in South America before returning to Britain, where he was tried and sentenced to ten years. Since his release in 1979, he has enjoyed a moderately high profile as a media ‘former criminal’ celebrity and his autobiography ‘The Autobiography of a Thief’ was generally well received.

  • Buster Edwards

    Born Ronald Edwards, Buster Edwards was a former boxer, nightclub owner, and member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery. He was captured in 1966 and sentenced to 15 years in jail. After his release in 1980 he later ran a flower stall outside Waterloo Station. He was played by Phil Collins in the 1988 film Buster. He committed suicide by hanging in 1994.

  • Ronnie Biggs

    Ronald Arthur Biggs is an English prisoner who is known for escaping from prison after his minor role in the Great Train Robbery of 1963 and for being on the run for many years. He eventually settled in Brazil but voluntarily returned to the United Kingdom in 2001.

  • *** Other Famous Thieves:

  • Danielle Bethel
  • Michael McAvoy of the Brinks Mat Robbery in 1983
  • Historical Thieves:

  • Adam Worth (1844-1902)

    Napoleon of Crime: Adam WorthAdam Worth was a German-born gentleman criminal. A Scotland Yard detective named Robert Anderson gave him a nickname, “the Napoleon of the criminal world”,[1] and he is commonly referred to as “the Napoleon of Crime”. It has been widely speculated that Arthur Conan Doyle used Worth as the prototype for Sherlock Holmes’s nemesis, Professor Moriarty.

  • Francois Villon (1431-1463?)

    Francois VillonFrancois Villon was a French poet, thief, and vagabond. He is perhaps best known for his Testaments and his Ballade des Pendus, written while in prison. The question “Mais où sont les neiges d’antan?”, taken from the Ballade des Dames du Temps Jadis and translated by Dante Gabriel Rossetti as “Where are the snows of yesteryear?”, is one of the most famous lines of translated secular poetry in the English-speaking world.

  • Bonnie and Clyde (1909/1910-1934)

    Bonnie and ClydeBonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were notorious outlaws, robbers and criminals who travelled the Central United States during the Great Depression. Their exploits were known nationwide. They captured the attention of the American press and its readership during what is sometimes referred to as the “public enemy era” between 1931 and 1935. Although this couple and their gang were notorious for their bank robberies, Clyde Barrow preferred to rob small stores or gas stations.

  • Henry More Smith (assumed name)

    Henry More Smith was a confidence man, master puppeteer, hypnotist, seer, liar, and above all else a superlative escape artist. Chains, handcuffs, shackles, even made to fit iron collars could not hold him. Henry More Smith’s genius so deeply impressed the authorities that he received a pardon on condition he would leave New Brunswick and never return when he was caught a second time for horse theft.

  • Dick Turpin (1705-1739)

    Dick TurpinRichard “Dick” Turpin is a legendary English rogue and the most famous historical highwayman. In life Richard Turpin was a violent man who committed offences such as deer stealing, burglary, highway robbery, and probably murder. He was executed in York. After his death, as “Dick” Turpin, he became the subject of legend, romanticised in English ballads and popular theatre of the 18th and 19th century, and later in film and television of the 20th century, as the dashing and heroic highwayman. There is considerable divergence between the history and legend of Turpin.

  • Ishikawa Goemon (1558-1594)

    Ishikawa Goemon was a legendary ninja warrior and bandit hero who stole gold and valuables and gave them to the poor. There is little historical information on Ishikawa’s life, and thus he has become a folk hero, whose background and origins have been widely speculated upon. He is notable for being boiled alive after a failed assassination attempt on Toyotomi Hideyoshi. A large iron kettle-shaped bathtub is now called a Goemon-buro.

    Source: Wikipedia List of Thieves

  • Nintendo Wii Safety Video

    Monday, September 24th, 2007

    Top 10 Crazy Security Devices

    Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

    1. An automated surveillance monitor of non-humans

    Patented: June 29, 2004

    The gist of this invention is to detect non-human activities to determine whether an alarm situation exists and it’s not just a cat or a bird tampering with your sensors. It includes an animal noise sensor and an animal noise analyzer to check with non-human animal noises.

    Automated Surveillance Monitor of Non-Humans

    2. “Baton”

    Patented: December 18, 1997

    Baton

    This baton is special due to its appearance. But you use it like any other baton.

    3. Gas Visual Notification Device

    Patented: June 4, 2002

    Gas Visual Notification Device

    This device is mainly used for signaling distress. The compressed gas within the device is made up of a quantity of aerosol, and non-toxic micro-dispersion colored particles to add color to the compressed gas. When activated, the gas is released to serve as a visual notification that you are in duress.

    4. An Alarm Device That Notifies You Have Experienced Fear

    Patented: October 3, 1995

    Alarm Device For Fear

    It’s basically a computer system wherein the system compares the monitored psychological data to that of the stored stress profile data. When it determines a pattern that signifies fear, it activates the alarm.

    5. Mobile Detection System That’s Like a Robot

    Patented: February 18, 1993

    Robotic Mobile Detection System

    It detects any abnormal condition in your home, like a fire of an intruder. The robot then sends signals to a monitor, and the monitor alerts the authorities.

    6. “The Instant Savior”

    Patented: January 11, 1977

    The Instant Savior

    This is a personal security device in the form of a flashlight! It informs a person by remote control who is outside the door of his or her house. It gives a picture and determines whether the person outside is male, female, or child.

    7. Protective Bed With Shield

    Patented: February 6, 2004

    Protective Bed With Shield

    It’s bullet-proof and impact-resistant! It has quick access doors to provide entry to the interior sleeping area, and has a ventilation system and a rebreather that scrubs carbon dioxide from the air within the unit.

    8. Cell phone and Gun In One

    Patented: August 14, 2004

    Cellphone and Gun In One

    It basically a sort of cell phone or electronic device with an added tubular wall with a central bore to function as the barrel of a firearm. Electronic elements allow the bullet to be discharged.

    9. Spit and Bite Protection

    Spit and Bite Protection

    Patented: April 4, 2002

    This device is comprised of a collar that protects and stabilizes the neck. It helps prevent neck injuries and head-butting. It also has a face shield that is attached to the collar, and helps prevent spitting and biting. The shield can be released from the collar.

    10. Missile-Proof Vest

    Patented: February 9, 2001

    Missile-Proof Vest

    It’s a ballistic resistant body covering that protects the torso, groin, and neck from ballistic missiles. The torso and groin portions are made of ballistic resistant material.

    Source: AlarmSystemReviews.com

    Police Stupidity/Brutality caught on tape!!!

    Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

    A police officer was caught on tape after going through a fast food drive-in and claiming the cashier did not give him the correct change.

    The House of the Future

    Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

    A house of the future designed to be classy and simple, this house was designed to help you save energy.

    Japan has made a modern house of their own, designed to be eco-friendly and automated to help you live a modern and simple lifestyle: Japan’s Panasonic House.

    Self-Locking Bicycle

    Friday, August 24th, 2007

    This self-locking bicycle was introduced to the public a few years back. But it seems that it wasn’t released to be sold and used by bicycle lovers.

    Another Weird News…

    Friday, August 17th, 2007

    stupid criminal How to Gain Infamy as a Legendary Stupid Criminal:

    1. Hide marijuana under your hood and then take the car for an oil change. 45 year-old Amy Brasher was arrested after a mechanic found 18 packages of marijuana packed in the engine compartment of the car Brasher brought in for an oil change. Brasher later said she didn’t realize the mechanic needed to lift the hood to change the oil.

    2. Post your bail in coins after being charged with stealing from vending machines. Police charged Gregory Rosa, 25, with a string of vending machine robberies in January when he fled from police inexplicably when they spotted him loitering around a vending machine and later tried to post his $400 bail in coins.

    3. Leave your license plate at the scene of a crime. Kentucky: Two men tried to pull the front off a cash machine by running a chain from the machine to the bumper of their pickup truck. Instead of pulling the front panel off the machine, they pulled the bumper off the truck. Scared, they left the scene and drove home, leaving the bumper and the attached license plate at the scene.

    4. Forget that your index finger doesn’t really shoot bullets. Steven Richard King was arrested for trying to hold up a Bank of America branch without a weapon. King used a thumb and a finger to simulate a gun, but failed to keep his hand in his pocket.

    5. Go ahead and argue over Kool-Aid and make sure you have your gun. Levon Howard lost a shoot-out with his roommate Edwin Heyliger, who was charged with murder. Howard had broken into Heyliger’s room, angry that someone had drunk his Kool-Aid, and in the ensuing argument, both scrambled for guns.

    6. Assume the judge’s name rhymes with “no way.” At his sentencing for driving a school bus while drunk, Harold Keith Lone showed up in court staggering, shouting obscenities, gesturing wildly and with alcohol on his breath. Asked if he were drunk, Lone replied, “No way. No way, Jose.”

    7. Allow your pet igunana to take the wheel. When they pulled over a car that was weaving, cops found Finley the iguana at the wheel. The real driver, John Ruppell, was slouched in the front seat. He was charged with drunken driving and Finley was taken to the SPCA.

    8. Forget to check whether uniformed cops are in line at the store you decide to rob. A masked gunman walked into a gas station in Shreveport, Louisiana, and demanded money, but he apparently didn’t see that the line included a police officer in full uniform. L.J. Scott, a member of the Shreveport Police Department’s armed robbery task force,
    identified as 21-year-old Derek Pierson Jr.

    9. When in court on charges of stealing shoes, display the shoes you stole. In court, shoe store robbery suspect Charles Taylor propped his feet up on the defense table while wearing a pair of tan boots he’d taken from the store at knife point.

    10.Use the elevator while making an escape. Sitting in a San Antonio room awaiting sentencing, convicted burglar Adam Flores, 20, fled when a bailiff unfastened his handcuffs. Police caught him a minute later as he stood calmly waiting for an elevator at the end of the hall.

    Source Weird News