trending stories on twitter cctv shows male nurse sneaking in to have sex and impregnate a woman who has been in coma for 4-months.
may God protect us all from unseen dangers
Sunday, July 29, 2018
CCTV shows male nurse sneaking in to have sex and impregnate a woman who has been in coma for 4-months
Supreme court rules that woman must remain in ‘unhappy marriage’
The UK Supreme court has ruled that a 68-year-old woman, Tini Owens must remain married to her 80-year-old husband, Hugh Owen as unhappiness in marriage is not sufficient reason to seek a divorce.
Five judges at the UK’s highest court unanimously upheld rulings by a family court and the court of appeal that the two must stay married at least until 2020.
Mrs Owens had filed for divorce three years ago. A move which was contested by her husband, even up to the Supreme Court, which ruled in his favour
The couple have been married for 40 years, have two grown-up children and enjoyed a successful business and extremely well-off lifestyle, reports 3m360
Dutch-born Tini was 28 when she married 40-year-old Hugh in the late Seventies.
Tini will have another chance to quit her marriage in two years time, on the grounds of having lived separately for five years.
South African cardiologist, Professor Bongani Mayosi commits suicide after battling depression for two years
The Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences at the University of Cape Town, Professor Bongani Mayosi has died at the age of 51.
The University of Cape Town in s statement about his death said, “It is with great sadness that we‚ the Mayosi family‚ announce the passing of our husband‚ son‚ father‚ brother and uncle‚ Bongani Mayosi who died on the morning of 27 July 2018. In the last two years he has battled with depression and on that day took the desperate decision to end his life."
Mayosi was a cardiology professor who was awarded the county’s highest honour, the Order of Mapungubwe in 2009.
Mayosi was an A-rated National Research Foundation researcher. His research interests included rheumatic fever, tuberculosis pericarditis and cardiomyopathy. Until his death, he was a member of the Academy of Science of South Africa and a former President of the College of Physicians of South Africa.
Biker Awarded $8.8m After Man Slept With His Wife
A BMX stuntman has been awarded $8.8million in damages from a man who slept with his wife and allegedly destroyed their marriage.
Keith King successfully sued Francisco Huizar III over the 18 month fling with his wife Danielle using a North Carolina law that allows spouses to pursue ‘homewreckers’ for damages.
It stipulates that married individuals can sue a person for ‘criminal conversation’ if they have sex with their spouse and destroy the ‘genuine love and affection’ in a marriage.
The enormous payout is comprised of $2.2million in compensatory damages, as well as triple that in punitive damages, the Herald Sun reported.
He was awarded the sum despite Huizar’s lawyer claiming King was a controlling spouse in an already-troubled marriage when he met her
King is said to have controlled his wife’s access to money, made her watch porn, insisted she keep her hair blonde and that she wear bikinis as well as high heels.
Huizar and Danielle King met at a New York BMX show in August 2015, and began their affair after Keith King left her behind to attend a Colorado show.
Huizar, of San Antonio, Tx., is said to have rented a room closer to the Kings’ home in Durham, NC., that month, and met Danielle at least nine times over the following three months.
Keith King rumbled the affair in August 2015 after checking his wife’s phone bill, and asked Huizar to leave her alone.
But Huizar tagged along to a spa break King gave to his wife as a birthday gift the following February.
King’s attorney Joanne Foil told Durham Superior Court: ‘Guess who the heck tagged along?. Mr. Huizar.
‘He just conveniently popped up. There is no way that this marriage could have humanly been saved with the level of this man’s involvement.’
He is also said to have hired a property close to where the Kings were enjoying a beach vacation together in spring 2016.
Mother Confesses To Children On Death Bed That Their Grandfather Is Their REAL Dad
A ‘wicked’ pensioner has been jailed after admitting incest charges for abusing his own daughter and fathering her three children.
Ashraf Khan, 81, from Bradford, was jailed for four-and-a-half years yesterday after his victim confessed to their children on her deathbed and they fought for justice for their mother. …
Saturday, July 28, 2018
Remarkable pictures of blood moon sighted around the world
Remarkable pictures of blood moon sighted around the world
Here is a selection of remarkable pictures of the blood moon from all around the world.
One of the photos shows the orange-red moon in Thymari, near Athens, Greece.
The full moon, clearly with a red tinge, was also spotted near a lighthouse in the Sivrice village in Canakkale, Turkey.
And stargazers have also now seen the display in Lucerne, Switzerland.
excitement over blood moon
Twitter users all around the world shared their excitement over tonight’s blood moon.
One put out a shout out to see how many people would be ‘searching for a gap in the clouds’.
Photographs of the red moon were posted online from a range of countries including Kenya, Pakistan and Italy.
California fire 'tornado' kills two firefighters, thousands flee
A fast-growing northern California wildfire killed a second firefighter on Friday after high winds drove it into the city of Redding, prompting mass evacuations, destroying 500 structures and threatening thousands of other dwellings and businesses, officials said.
Flames raging in California's scenic Shasta-Trinity area erupted into a firestorm that jumped across the Sacramento River and swept into the western side of Redding, home to about 90,000 people, forcing residents to flee.
Firefighters and police "went into life-safety mode," hustling door to door to usher civilians out of harm's way, said Scott McLean, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire).
Streets in the Western town were all but deserted, with thick, sickly-brown smoke filling the air, and plumes of smoke rising to the west.
Gale-force winds on Thursday night created a fire "tornado" said CalFire Director Ken Pimlott.
"This fire was whipped up into a whirlwind of activity, uprooting trees, moving vehicles, moving parts of roadways," Pimlott told a news briefing.
Such highly erratic, storm-like wildfires have grown commonplace in the state, Pimlott said.
"These are extreme conditions, this is how fires are in California," he said. "We need to take heed and evacuate, evacuate, evacuate."
California has had its worst start to the fire season in a decade, with 289,727 acres burned through Friday morning, according to National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) data.
Governor Jerry Brown requested emergency federal assistance to prevent an "imminent catastrophe" as Shasta County tried to find supplies and water for 30,000 evacuated residents and care for horses and cattle rescued from ranches and farms.
CalFire reported 500 structures destroyed by the blaze.
CURTAIN OF SMOKE
The fire had scorched 48,300 acres (19,500 hectares) by Friday and was just 3 percent contained as ground crews, helicopters and airplanes battled the flames for a fifth day.
High temperatures and low humidity were expected for the next seven to ten days, said Pimlott.
"This fire is a long way from done," he said.
The blaze was one of nearly 90 large fires burning nationally, most of them in the West. One of those prompted the closure of much of California's Yosemite National Park.
Wildfires have blackened an estimated 4.15 million acres (1.68 million hectares) in the United States this year. That was well above average for the same period over the past 10 years but down from 5.27 million acres (2.13 million hectares) in the first seven months of 2017, NIFC reported.
The blaze in Redding, about 150 miles (240 km) north of Sacramento, on Thursday killed a bulldozer operator working with fire teams to clear brush around the fire. A member of the Redding Fire Department was also reported killed on Friday. A Redding hospital said it had treated eight people, including three firefighters.
THOUSANDS OF BUILDINGS IMPERILED
Rob Wright, 61, and his wife stayed to fight off flames with a high-powered water hose.
"We were fortunate enough that the wind changed hours ago, and it is pushing the fire back," said Wright on Friday. "We are just waiting it out ... crossing our fingers and hoping for the best."
Video and images posted on social media showed flames engulfing structures, as an orange glow lit up the sky.
A Red Cross employee told local ABC affiliate KRCR-TV some 500 people took shelter in an evacuation center at Shasta College. Motels were filled to capacity and livestock owners were told to take their animals to the town's rodeo ground.
The Carr Fire, the name given to the Redding blaze, was one of three fierce blazes threatening large populated areas.
Cal Fire said the Cranston Fire, about 110 miles (177 km) east of Los Angeles had blackened 12,300 acres and was 16 percent contained. The Ferguson Fire near Yosemite, which has charred 46,675 acres, was 29 percent contained.
A 32-year-old man was charged with setting the Cranston fire, along with eight other blazes, and faces a potential life sentence if convicted of the charges.