Woman jailed for 10 years for making series of false rape claims





A woman who made a series of false rape claims and sexual assault allegations has been jailed for 10 years.
Jemma Beale claimed she had been seriously sexually assaulted by six men and raped by nine, all strangers, in four different incidents over three years.
The 25-year-old was found guilty in July at Southwark crown court of four counts of perjury and four counts of perverting the course of justice.
Sentencing her, the judge, Nicholas Loraine-Smith, said: “This trial has revealed, what was then not obvious, that you are a very, very convincing liar and you enjoy being seen as a victim.
“The prosecution described your life as a ‘construct of bogus victimhood’.”
Madeleine Wolfe, prosecuting, told the court police spent 6,400 hours investigating Beale’s claims at a cost of at least £250,000, and the trial cost at least £109,000.
Lawrence Henderson, defending, said Beale maintains her innocence and was considering an appeal against the sentence.
He told the court: “Ms Beale stands by the claims she made in this matter and if she had her time again she would again plead not guilty to these matters and contest the trial.”
Beale from Bedfont, west London, sat with her arms crossed as she was jailed for a total of 10 years, with the judge branding her behaviour as “manipulative”.
He said: “These offences usually began as a drunken attempt to get your partner’s sympathy or perhaps to arouse her jealousy.
“They each began impulsively, but what is particularly chilling is the manner in which you persisted in making allegations which you knew were untrue even to the extent of committing and repeating perjury.”
He continued: “These false allegations of rape, false allegations which will inevitably be widely publicised, are likely to have the perverse impact of increasing the likelihood of guilty men going free.
“Cases such as this bring a real risk that a woman who has been raped or sexually assaulted may not complain to the police for fear of not being believed.”
Detectives launched an investigation into Beale in December 2013 after they learned of a claim by one of her former girlfriends that a man had been wrongly jailed after Beale lied about being raped by him in November 2010.
Police said the information came to light when officers were investigating a separate allegation by Beale, where she claimed to have been raped by a number of men during an incident in November 2013.
With concerns over Beale’s account, officers carried out a review of four investigations into allegations of rape and sexual assault made by Beale.
Police found common discrepancies and similar circumstances within the allegations, which strengthened their suspicions that Beale may have fabricated them.
The Metropolitan police said one of the rape allegations made to police by Beale in 2010 led to the conviction of a man, Mahad Cassim, who was jailed for seven years.
After the CPS and his defence team were alerted to the fact there were serious doubts over the validity of Beale’s allegations, the man subsequently appealed against his conviction and it was quashed at the court of appeal in July 2015.
In a victim impact statement, Cassim told the court how the false claim had had a huge impact on his life. He added: “One of my goals is to be a successful businessman, to have a nice family and be happy. I am working on the happiness - I have a long way to go.”
Beale had also falsely claimed she was groped by a stranger, Noam Shahzad, in a pub in July 2012. She said she was then gang-raped by him and a group of other men, and even injured herself to back up her claims she had been assaulted with barbed wire.
Beale then fabricated similar allegations against six other men in 2013.
She claimed two strangers sexually assaulted her close to her home before she was put through another gang rape attack by four others two months later.

Coronavirus patients taken off ventilators after getting experimental HIV drug





Two coronavirus patients in New York City are off ventilators and out of intensive care after they received an experimental drug to treat HIV and breast cancer.
As the skyrocketing number of cases stretches city hospitals to the limit, doctors are racing to find out which drugs on the market or in development might help in fighting the infection.
The drug, leronlimab, is delivered by injection twice in the abdomen, the Daily Mail reported.
Of seven critically ill patients who received the drug in New York, two were removed from ventilators and two showed significant improvement.
Doctors right now don’t know quite how leronlimab works, but studies suggest it calms the overly aggressive immune response — known as a cytokine storm — that frequently leads to lung inflammation, pneumonia and potentially death.

17-year-old dies of coronavirus, was turned away for lacking insurance



A Los Angeles teen — who tested positive for the coronavirus — died of septic shock after being turned away from an urgent care facility because he didn’t have health insurance.
While the 17-year old’s positive COVID-19 test didn’t arrive until after his death, residents of the LA neighborhood of Lancaster are outraged.
Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris told the Daily Mail the teen was healthy and had no pre-existing conditions before his death. Parris said the boy was turned away from the urgent care facility despite having respiratory issues because he didn’t have insurance and was told to go to a public hospital instead.
The boy went into cardiac arrest en route to Antelope Valley Hospital.
“[The hospital] was able to revive him and keep him alive for about six hours. But by the time he got there, it was too late,” Parris told the Mail. “The Friday before he died, he was healthy. By Wednesday, he was dead.”
The boy’s father is an Uber driver and he and several other members of the family have also tested positive for COVID-19. Members of a family who claim to be close to the teen say they too have tested positive for the virus.
Health officials in Los Angeles County announced this week that the teenager had died of coronavirus.
Just hours after health officials in LA County announced the boy had died from the coronavirus — health officials said there may be an “alternate explanation” and that his death would be further investigated.

Canned Pickle Juice Is Now A Thing, So You Can Stop Drinking It Straight From The Jar





Just like many treats, its either you love pickle juice, or you don’t. But even if you hate them, you might still love pickle juice in an occasional cocktail.
I’m not really a pickle fan, but I snack on them whenever I need something salty and crunchy in my mouth.
Though my taste for pickles starts and ends with random cravings, I know there’re some people out there who can’t get enough of these tangy little treats.
Let’s admit it, sometimes you might even desire to take a little swig straight from the pickle jar when no one is looking. But drinking pickle juice from the giant jar isn’t ideal, and seeing debris floating around can be off-putting.

Influencer Who Licked Public Toilet Says He's in Hospital with Coronavirus



"Hopefully no one gets the virus from you and dies so you could be a famous toilet licker!" posted a Twitter user.
A California social media influencer claims he is in the hospital with coronavirus just days after licking a public toilet for an online challenge.
The young man, known as Larz, revealed his diagnosis on Sunday in a since-deleted Tweet, writing, "I tested positive for Coronavirus." He also posted footage of himself in a hospital bed, according to Daily Mail.
The announcement comes just days after Larz, who also goes by GayShawnMendes on Twitter, posted a video of himself rubbing his tongue on a toilet seat in a public restroom with the caption, "RT to spread awareness for the Coronavirus :)"
It's unclear if his reported case of COVID-19 was linked to the prank.
His Twitter account has since been suspended.
The viral stunt was first started by TikTok sensation Ava Louise, who shared a clip of her licking the toilet seat in an airplane on March 14.
The video, which has been viewed over 596,000 times, included the words "coronavirus challenge' and was captioned, "Please RT this so people can know how to properly be sanitary on the airplane."
"I don't talk to my family," Larz explained to Dr Phil. "They're irrelevant. None of them have followers. If they got followers or got rich I'd probably talk to them again."

21-Year-old Instagrammer Boasts About Not Social Distancing, Catches Coronavirus


A 21-year-old who boasted on Instagram about not social distancing has caught the coronavirus.
Ireland Tate from Nashville told her Instagram followers she was probably not going to get infected, before the ironically inevitable happened.
"I'm aware that we're supposed to be self-quarantining and social distancing and all these things to like keep everyone safe," she grinned in her video. "I get it, cool, great."
"I just don't think that I'm gonna get the virus."
Days later, she got the virus.
"A little update on corona, isolated quarantine, and why staying home is important," she updated on Instagram, with a now-mask-wearing selfie. "If you hadn't heard by now I tested positive for COVID19 on Wednesday."
Ireland said she found out that someone she had been in contact with had the virus, but didn't know. She developed a "minor sore throat, but nothing to be concerned about," and decided to call the hospital to let them know the situation, as well as the fact she had asthma.
"They recommended that I come in to get tested, I really didn't think I had it but I went and got tested anyway," she wrote. "3 days later they called to tell me it was positive."
On Friday, America's coronavirus cases soared past 100,000, as it pulled away from the rest of the world with the most recorded. More than 1,500 people have died from COVID-19 in the US, still a relatively small number however-- five per million population -- when compared to many other countries.

AMAZON DELIVERY GUY DELIBERATELY SPITS ON PACKAGE

AMAZON DELIVERY GUYDELIBERATELY SPITS ON PACKAGE ...Caught On Ring Cam



See full Video

Police department is asking you to stop calling 911 because you've ran out of toilet paper



As police across the US brace for continued emergency calls in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak, one Oregon police department is dealing with 911 calls for an entirely different type of emergency: Residents are calling because they've run out of toilet paper.
The Newport Police Department put out a notice on Facebook urging residents to stop making emergency calls due to a toilet paper shortage.
"It's hard to believe that we even have to post this," the police wrote. "Do not call 9-1-1 just because you ran out of toilet paper. You will survive without our assistance."
Toilet paper is unavailable at many stores and supermarkets as people across the US stock up on household essentials due to fears over the coronavirus outbreak. Many sellers on Amazon are also out of stock.
The police offered up some humorous, friendly tips for those that are dealing with the shortage.
"In fact, history offers many other options for you in your time of need if you cannot find a roll of your favorite soft, ultra plush two-ply citrus scented tissue," the police wrote.
"Seamen used old rope and anchor lines soaked in salt water. Ancient Romans used a sea sponge on a stick, also soaked in salt water. We are a coastal town. We have an abundance of salt water available. Sea shells were also used."
    The police also suggested using receipt papers, newspapers, cloth rags and even an empty toilet paper roll.
    "Be resourceful," police wrote. "Be patient. There is a TP shortage. This too shall pass. Just don't call 9-1-1. We cannot bring you toilet paper."

    Trump Issues New Coronavirus Guidelines, Urges Americans to Avoid Gatherings of 10 or More

    During a press conference Monday to update Americans on the status of the coronavirus — now a national emergency — President Donald Trump urged people to avoid gatherings of 10 or more for the next 15 days.
    He also advised people to avoid discretionary travel as well as going out to eat, directly contradicting GOP Rep. Devin Nunes, who urged Americans to eat out during an appearance on Fox News Sunday.
    “We’ve made the decision to further toughen the guidelines and blunt the infection now. We’d much rather be ahead of the curve than behind it and that’s what we are. Therefore, my administration is recommending that all Americans, including the young and healthy, work to engage in schooling from home when possible, avoid gathering in groups of more than 10 people, avoid discretionary travel and avoid eating and drinking at bars, restaurants and public food courts. If everyone makes this change or critical changes and sacrifices now, we will rally together as one nation and we will defeat the virus and we’re going to have a big celebration, all together,” Trump said.
    During the same conference, he suggested the crisis could stretch into the summer, citing his task force.
    “They think August. It could be July. Could be longer than that, but I’ve asked that question many, many times,” he said.
    Trump declared the coronavirus pandemic a national emergency during a White House press conference on Friday.
    “No resource will be spared, nothing whatsoever,” Trump said, outlining increases in federal funding and broadening the abilities of the Department of Health and Human Services. All told, $50 billion has been made accessible to states and localities.


    An influencer filmed herself licking a plane toilet seat as part of a 'coronavirus challenge' (VIDE) DUMBASS


    An influencer filmed herself in a plane toilet licking the seat as part of a "coronavirus challenge."
    Ava Louise has appeared on the "Dr. Phil" show and has 19,000 TikTok followers and 150,000 Instagram followers. She posted the video to her Twitter on March 14.
    "Please RT this so people can know how to properly be sanitary on the airplane," she said with "love" and "sweating" emojis.

    People responded with disgust that she would do such a thing just for the attention.
    "The whites are at it again," one person said, while another responded "Classy."
    A day later, Louise confirmed that she started the coronavirus challenge for "clout" and that her actions were no worse than "eating a dude's a--."
    "I can't get coronavirus," she added. "Just like the gays, rich blonde b------ are IMMUNE."
    Louise also started spreading awareness of important social issues.
    "OK so now that you're all on my page — racism is bad," she tweeted. "Gay people are good. Transphobia is grosser than me licking a toilet. Good day."
    Swab tests have shown the most bacteria and fungal spores on a plane are found on the headrest, seatbelt buckle, tray table, and inside handle of the washroom door. There are probably also more things to catch at check-in than in the bathrooms, and toilet seats may be comparatively quite clean.
    That's not to say you should go around licking things.

    Woman Arrested for Threatening to Cough on Cop, Spread Coronavirus IDIOT


    How To Steal Toilet Paper from a Hotel Room - Toilet Roll Theft WTF LOL (V(DEO)




    Desperate measures call for desperate times. LOL  See full Video



    Husband Begs New Wife to Get Botox Because He Can't Stand to Look at Her Face WTF


    Smile lines or laugh lines are usually indications that one is living a happy life, and I for one look forward to getting all of them. But apparently one man doesn't see the beauty in them and couldn't handle the fact that his wife is aging. So he "innocently" asked her for a favor in regard to her wrinkles that was beyond insulting. According his wife, she's now devastated after her husband of less than six months asked her to get Botox. He had the nerve to tell her that laugh and smile lines affect him so deeply that he has "been crying every day" and he told her that her face is starting to mess him up. 
    • As the wife explained, it didn't take too long into her marriage before her husband made the rude request.

      In a post on Reddit, the anonymous woman shared that her new marriage started taking a turn for the worst only after a few months. Her husband began acting distant around Christmas and flat out told her that something was bothering him -- but that he wasn't ready to talk about it yet. Confused, she thought maybe her man was stressed about their move or worried about his new job. 
      "Finally fed up with this grey cloud ominously hanging over our marriage, I begged him to tell me what was wrong ... mind you, only after he woke me up in the middle of the night in tears," she wrote. "Very seriously and solemnly he looked in my eyes and quietly asked, 'Would you consider getting Botox?'”
      Stunned, the woman had no idea that this was where the conversation was going. "I was stunned. Shaken. Hurt. I tried to brush it off, but it was the way in which he said it. Not jokingly or off the cuff. No, this was something that had been eating at him for weeks," she wrote. "In my mind, every time he looked at me, he was judging me and thinking I was some hideously wrinkled creature." 
      Since that night, she says that they've just ignored the late-night question and "tried to shake it off" by even joking about it. But the truth is that it's been weeks and nothing has changed about how either of them feels regarding the Botox.
      "Lately he’s been crying every day, saying it makes him feel better. We’ll have a nice couple of hours and then I’ll notice his mood change," she wrote. "Last night he brought up Botox again, albeit trying to frame it in a lighter, easy-breezy manner. I asked him, what is it specifically that bothers you so much. He said -- and I quote -- 'It (expletive) me up to see you smile or laugh.'"
    • That is why she's now adamant that the only answer to this problem is for the two of them to divorce.

      "My mind went numb," she wrote. "After a moment of silence I told him I thought we have no choice but to divorce." The wife was adamant that she didn't want Botox and is devastated over his objection to her face. 
      "I told him that when I look at him, I see perfection. And why don’t I deserve the same?" she wrote. "Are we perfect? No. But I don’t believe I’m anywhere near ugly enough to warrant my husband crying nightly because he feels “(expletive)” when he looks at me."
      Now, she's doubtful that there's any way they could work through this problem.
      "If at 31, he already thinks of me as this old woman, how are we supposed to have children together?" she wondered. "What about when I AM tired and old and wrinkled? These are my 'good' years and I feel like I’m past due."
      "How do we rebuild what’s broken?" she asked.
      • Many people thought the answer was simple: The wife can't save this marriage.


        And many more told her that there was no reason to even try. The fact that her husband cried FOR WEEKS tells her everything she needs to know about where their relationship is heading.
      • One person made it clear: This situation is completely "insane."

        Another person warned the woman that if she gives in to this, it most likely won't be the last "improvement" that her husband asks her for. "I would never be able to look at my husband and smile again if he said that. And if you get Botox for him, he'll feel comfortable asking you for the next thing," the person wrote. 
        A third person agreed: The only real answer here is get out ASAP. "My only advice to you is to run," the commenter wrote. "This man sounds insane -- crying for weeks because he wants you to get Botox is far from normal behavior. What next? A tummy tuck? Boob lift? You deserve someone who looks at you like the sun shines out of your (expletive), not someone who wakes up in the night sobbing because he spotted a wrinkle."
        One person asked the wife why this issue didn't come up before they got married, but low and behold, it sort of did. "He told me out of the blue six months before our wedding that he didn’t like that I look older than him ... which totally (expletive) up my psyche as this had never even been a thought in my mind," the wife wrote. She added that her husband truly believes he looks younger than he actually is and "he’s told me he thinks people look at us and think it’s a mismatch."
        "But then he also will tell me he thinks I’m more attractive than he is," she added. "I’ve told him that I think this all has nothing to do with me and everything to do with his own self-image. But it still hurts when I receive the jab."
      • No matter how you slice it, there really is only one strong answer to this problem.


        Either her husband has to get into therapy ASAP or this wife needs to cut her losses and find someone who loves her -- both inside and out.

    He Has 17,700 Bottles of Hand Sanitizer and Nowhere to Sell Them LOL


    On March 1, the day after the first coronavirus death in the United States, brothers Matt and Noah Colvin set out in a silver SUV to pick up some hand sanitizer. Driving around Chattanooga, Tennessee, they hit a Dollar Tree, then a Walmart, a Staples and a Home Depot. At each store, they cleaned out the shelves.
    Over the next three days, Noah Colvin took a 1,300-mile road trip across Tennessee and into Kentucky, filling a U-Haul truck with thousands of bottles of hand sanitizer and thousands of packs of antibacterial wipes, mostly from “little hole-in-the-wall dollar stores in the backwoods,” his brother said. “The major metro areas were cleaned out.”
    Matt Colvin stayed home near Chattanooga, preparing for pallets of even more wipes and sanitizer he had ordered, and starting to list them on Amazon. Colvin said he had posted 300 bottles of hand sanitizer and immediately sold them all for between $8 and $70 each, multiples higher than what he had bought them for. To him, “it was crazy money.” To many others, it was profiteering from a pandemic.
    The next day, Amazon pulled his items and thousands of other listings for sanitizer, wipes and face masks. The company suspended some of the sellers behind the listings and warned many others that if they kept running up prices, they’d lose their accounts. EBay soon followed with even stricter measures, prohibiting any U.S. sales of masks or sanitizer.
    Now, while millions of people search in vain for hand sanitizer to protect themselves from the spread of the coronavirus, Colvin is sitting on 17,700 bottles of the stuff with little idea where to sell them.
    “It’s been a huge amount of whiplash,” he said. “From being in a situation where what I’ve got coming and going could potentially put my family in a really good place financially to ‘What the heck am I going to do with all of this?’”
    Colvin is one of probably thousands of sellers who have amassed stockpiles of hand sanitizer and crucial respirator masks that many hospitals are now rationing, according to interviews with eight Amazon sellers and posts in private Facebook and Telegram groups from dozens more. Amazon said it had recently removed hundreds of thousands of listings and suspended thousands of sellers’ accounts for price gouging related to the coronavirus.
    Amazon, eBay, Walmart and other online-commerce platforms are trying to stop their sellers from making excessive profits from a public health crisis. While the companies aimed to discourage people from hoarding such products and jacking up their prices, many sellers had already cleared out their local stores and started selling the goods online.
    Now both the physical and digital shelves are nearly empty.
    Mikeala Kozlowski, a nurse in Dudley, Massachusetts, has been searching for hand sanitizer since before she gave birth to her first child, Nora, on March 5. When she searched stores, which were sold out, she skipped getting gas to avoid handling the pump. And when she checked Amazon, she couldn’t find it for less than $50.
    “You’re being selfish, hoarding resources for your own personal gain,” she said of the sellers.
    Sites like Amazon and eBay have given rise to a growing industry of independent sellers who snatch up discounted or hard-to-find items in stores to post online and sell around the world.
    These sellers call it retail arbitrage, a 21st-century career that has adults buying up everything from limited-run cereals to Fingerling Monkeys, a once hot toy. The bargain hunters look for anything they can sell at a sharp markup. In recent weeks, they found perhaps their biggest opportunity: a pandemic.
    As they watched the list of Amazon’s most popular searches crowd with terms like “Purell,” “N95 mask” and “Clorox wipes,” sellers said, they did what they had learned to do: Suck up supply and sell it for what the market would bear.
    Initially, the strategy worked. For several weeks, prices soared for some of the top results to searches for sanitizer, masks and wipes on Amazon, according to a New York Times analysis of historical prices from Jungle Scout, which tracks data for Amazon sellers. The data shows that both Amazon and third-party sellers like Colvin increased their prices, which then mostly dropped when Amazon took action against price gouging this month.
    At the high prices, people still bought the products en masse, and Amazon took a cut of roughly 15% and eBay roughly 10%, depending on the price and the seller.
    Then the companies, pressured by growing criticism from regulators and customers, cracked down. After the measures last week, Amazon went further Wednesday, restricting sales of any coronavirus-related products from certain sellers.
    “Price gouging is a clear violation of our policies, unethical, and in some areas, illegal,” Amazon said in a statement. “In addition to terminating these third party accounts, we welcome the opportunity to work directly with states attorneys general to prosecute bad actors.”
    Colvin, 36, a former Air Force technical sergeant, said he started selling on Amazon in 2015, developing it into a six-figure career by selling Nike shoes and pet toys, and by following trends.
    In early February, as headlines announced the coronavirus’ spread in China, Colvin spotted a chance to capitalize. A nearby liquidation firm was selling 2,000 “pandemic packs,” leftovers from a defunct company. Each came with 50 face masks, four small bottles of hand sanitizer and a thermometer. The price was $5 a pack. Colvin haggled it to $3.50 and bought them all.
    He quickly sold all 2,000 of the 50-packs of masks on eBay, pricing them from $40 to $50 each, and sometimes higher. He declined to disclose his profit on the record but said it was substantial.
    The success stoked his appetite. When he saw the panicked public starting to pounce on sanitizer and wipes, he and his brother set out to stock up.
    Elsewhere, other Amazon sellers were doing the same.
    Chris Anderson, an Amazon seller in central Pennsylvania, said he and a friend had driven around Ohio, buying about 10,000 masks from stores. He used coupons to buy packs of 10 for around $15 each and resold them for $40 to $50. After Amazon’s cut and other costs, he estimates, he made a $25,000 profit.
    Anderson is now holding 500 packs of antibacterial wipes after Amazon blocked him from selling them for $19 each, up from $16 weeks earlier. He bought the packs for $3 each.
    Eric, a truck driver from Ohio who spoke on condition that his surname not be published because he feared Amazon would retaliate, said he had also collected about 10,000 masks at stores. He bought each 10-pack for about $20 and sold most for roughly $80 each, although some he priced at $125.
    “Even at $125 a box, they were selling almost instantly,” he said. “It was mind-blowing as far as what you could charge.”
    He estimates he made $35,000 to $40,000 in profit.
    Now he has 1,000 more masks on order, but he’s not sure what to do with them. He said Amazon had been vague about what constituted price gouging, scaring away sellers who don’t want to risk losing their ability to sell on its site.
    To regulators and many others, the sellers are sitting on a stockpile of medical supplies during a pandemic. The attorney general’s offices in California, Washington and New York are all investigating price gouging related to the coronavirus. California’s price-gouging law bars sellers from increasing prices by more than 10 percent after officials declare an emergency. New York’s law prohibits sellers from charging an “unconscionably excessive price” during emergencies.
    An official at the Washington attorney general’s office said the agency believed it could apply the state’s consumer-protection law to sue platforms or sellers, even if they aren’t in Washington, as long as they were trying to sell to Washington residents.
    Colvin does not believe he was price gouging. While he charged $20 on Amazon for two bottles of Purell that retail for $1 each, he said people forget that his price includes his labor, Amazon’s fees and about $10 in shipping. (Alcohol-based sanitizer is pricey to ship because officials consider it a hazardous material.)
    Current price-gouging laws “are not built for today’s day and age,” Colvin said. “They’re built for Billy Bob’s gas station doubling the amount he charges for gas during a hurricane.”
    He added, “Just because it cost me $2 in the store doesn’t mean it’s not going to cost me $16 to get it to your door.”
    But what about the morality of hoarding products that can prevent the spread of the virus, just to turn a profit?
    Colvin said he was simply fixing “inefficiencies in the marketplace.” Some areas of the country need these products more than others, and he’s helping send the supply toward the demand.
    “There’s a crushing overwhelming demand in certain cities right now,” he said. “The Dollar General in the middle of nowhere outside of Lexington, Kentucky, doesn’t have that.”
    He thought about it more.
    “I honestly feel like it’s a public service,” he added. “I’m being paid for my public service.”
    As for his stockpile, Colvin said he would now probably try to sell it locally.

    source:YahooNews