Widget Image
Follow PPD Social Media
Monday, March 10, 2025
HomeStandard Blog Whole Post (Page 886)

 

Former supermodel Janice Dickinson gave a detailed account of her alleged rape by comedian Bill Cosby inside his Lake Tahoe, California, hotel room in 1982.

In an interview with CNN, Dickinson said that she was having dinner with Cosby and musician Stu Gardner when she complained of menstrual cramps. She claimed Cosby handed her a pill and some red wine after Gardner left the two alone at the table, despite him knowing she had recently left rehab.

Dickinson said the comedian told her to come to his hotel and he’d give her some career tips, but when she went back to Cosby’s hotel room she passed out. The ex-model told TMZ that she took pictures of him before passing out, which she had kept and has now given to the entertainment news agency, who published the photos.

“The last thing I remember before I blacked out is Cosby mounting me, like the monster that he was,” Dickinson told CNN. “I remember waking up and that there was a lot of pain downstairs, there was semen all over me, and that my pajama bottoms were off and top was open … I got the hell out of there.”

“I would like for Cosby to at least acknowledge that he is a pig, that he is a monster, and that he raped me,” stated Dickinson, noted Mediaite.com.

Despite nearly half of Americans saying they think it’s likely the rape allegations against comedian Bill Cosby are true, according to a recent poll, they say networks shouldn’t have cancelled his shows until he was officially charged.

Former supermodel Janice Dickinson gave a detailed

jobs report applications

Americans seeking full- and part-time work fill out job applications at a workshop. (Photo: REUTERS)

The U.S. private sector economy missed economists’ forecast creating 208,000 jobs in November, according to a report from independent payroll processor ADP. The report suggested job creation was losing steam, as economists expected a significantly bigger gain of 221,000 jobs added for the month.

Employment in nonfarm private small business payrolls led the way, increasing 101,000 in November on a seasonally adjusted basis and representing nearly half of all employment gains across all payroll size groups. Within small businesses, 48 percent of the job creation contribution came from companies having from 1 to 19 employees. The number is noteworthy, because companies with a higher number of employees — more specifically, those that meet the ObamaCare mandate threshold — are holding back.

Medium businesses having from 50  to 499 employees added just 65,000 in comparison to small businesses, while large businesses having 500 or more employees added just 42,000 private sector jobs.

Further, 25,000 jobs created in the report came from lower-paying franchise jobs.

“Franchise jobs added increased sharply in November to a level not seen for several months,” said Ahu Yildirmaz, vice president and head of the ADP Research Institute. “Much of the rebound came from the Auto Parts and Dealers segment which added about 5,000 more jobs than in October. “U.S. stock futures pointed to a slightly weaker start for Wall Street on Wednesday, ahead of ADP payrolls and other data, which could take some focus off commodity prices.”

The results for the auto industry were widely expected, as the pivotal holiday shopping season provides auto makers and dealers a seasonal boost. The auto industry reported stronger U.S. sales in the month of November fueled by cheaper gasoline and Black Friday shopping deals nationwide, according to several reports released Tuesday.

The private and independent payroll processor, ADP, released the report ahead of the government jobs report due out at the end of the week. The latest data for the ISM non-manufacturing survey for November is due at 10 A.M. ET, which will be followed by the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book due at 2 P.M. ET.

The U.S. private sector economy missed economists'

obama_ferguson_wh_meeting

President Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric H. Holder, Jr. meet with Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey and Laurie Robinson, professor of criminology, law and society at George Mason University, and a former assistant attorney general, who will be co-chairing a Presidential task force on how communities and law enforcement can work together to build trust to strengthen neighborhoods across the country, in the Oval Office, Dec. 1, 2014. (Photo: WH/Pete Souza)

As much as police need some oversight — as much as police militarization is an issue that’s worthy of review and reform — President Obama’s executive action to rein in local police powers is not the way to go.

Why?

In the end, America is going to be left with little more than a federal law enforcement force, rather than the civilian, localized supposed servant-to-the-people-type departments that currently dot our communities. Here’s how it’s going to morph.

Obama, in response to the grand jury finding that no evidence existed to indict white Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson for the Aug. 9 shooting death of black teenage Michael Brown, ordered his White House staff to write an executive order that would mandate more training for police who accept gear from the Pentagon’s 1033 program. That’s the program that transfers military equipment from battlefields to backyard police departments — equipment that includes mine resistant ambush protected vehicles, or MRAPs, high-powered weaponry, night vision goggles, helicopters sniper firing gear and the like, to the tune of $4.3 billion worth since 1997.

The Pentagon’s 1033 has come to light in recent months because of concerns it was fueling the militarization of our nation’s civilian police force, and leading officers seeking nonviolent drug suspects to commit egregious acts of carelessness — like blowing up babies with flash bang grenades while serving no-knock warrants, as they did in one notable instance in Atlanta.

Now look at Ferguson, where race relations between police and civilians — and more specifically, between the majority white local police department and the majority black community — have taken on national proportions. What began as the self-defensive shooting by a police officer against a threatening criminal suspect has now morphed to an entire “hands up, don’t shoot” attitude that’s woven into the stream of public consciousness, politically and culturally. Sadly, shuttered to the side of Ferguson-related debate, however, is the factual evidence, including autopsy reporting, which showed Wilson committed no legal wrong and that’s why the grand jury had no cause to indict.

Doesn’t matter, though. In the world of “hands up, don’t shoot,” facts aren’t so important as race, and Wilson’s whiteness compared to Brown’s blackness has emerged as the overriding issue.

Enter the White House, Obama, and Attorney General Eric Holder and the still-lingering adage of the long-gone Rahm Emanuel to “never let a crisis go to waste.” Holder is overseeing a federal investigation into possible civil rights infractions that may or may not have been committed by Wilson and Ferguson police, keeping alive hopes from the race-baiting left, including Rev. Al Sharpton, that the white officer may in fact face significant jail time.

Obama, meanwhile, has seized upon his executive pen once again to issue an emperor-like order that will require local police forces to undergo federally overseen training as a condition of taking Pentagon 1033 equipment. It will also require any police department that uses federally supplied gear to provide reports to federal authorities when that equipment is used for significant missions — say, riot controls — and to feed information into a centralized data system that will track the whereabouts of the military supplies.

In other words, local police departments will be more accountable to the federal government than to their local or even state authorities.

How is that better in the long run for an America that’s supposed to be run on the principle of limited government?

It’s not — it’s the underpinnings of a federally-run police force.

On top of that, Obama has taken it on himself to demand $263 million or so for 50,000 body cameras for the nation’s police, ostensibly so that future altercations involving officers and suspects might be vetted in a manner that’s both fair and irrefutable. A quick point on that, though: Do we really want police around the nation roving the streets with live cameras, sweeping up and recording the actions of Americans who aren’t even suspected of crimes — who are just going about their daily business? The body cameras give rise to issues involving data collection, storage and public access. Once again, it’s the local government, not the White House, that’s best suited to decide such matters for the local community.

The devil really is in the details.

Just the fact that Obama has taken Ferguson-tied tensions as a rally point to de-militarize police is suspicious.

The short-term of his executive action — that he’s once again eroding the Constitution by bypassing Congress, as if an emperor and not a servant to the people president — is alarming enough. But the long-term effect of his executive action is the real gong-clanger. Imagine an America where tens of thousands of police answer for their actions to a federal government with a leftist view of law enforcement that disdains profiling, assumes white police are racist and insists high minority crime statistics are due to unfair police practices. The concept of blind justice? It doesn’t stand a chance.

And what happens then?

Ultimately, the rule of law would crumble because criminals would quickly learn they are not going to be held accountable for their actions — that the color of their skin is to blame, or the poverty of their youth, or the public education system that failed them. Respect for the law would similarly crumble. And the final result is eye-widening, at least for those who cheer the Constitution and its principle of limited governance. Think about it. The government would have no choice but to clamp down tighter, exert more control and regulate and restrict further, all for the supposed sake of restoring and maintaining order, safety and security.

Cherly Chumley, a full-time news writer with The Washington Times, is also the author of Police State USA: How Orwell’s Nightmare is Becoming Our Reality, available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble. To learn more about Cheryl, visit her website.

[mybooktable book=”police-state-usa-how-orwells-nightmare-is-becoming-our-reality” display=”summary”]

President Obama's Ferguson response to take executive

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ukk67DOJhLA

In a new interview with CNN, former NBA all-star and Hall-of-Famer Charles Barkley defended the NYPD against reporter Brooke Baldwin after she alleged the death of Eric Garner in New York was a “homicide.” Once again, CNN hosts draw their own conclusions without having all of the facts and before the grand jury has had a chance to issue a decision.

The controversial police chokehold that resulted in Garner’s death earlier this year was applied after he — a large man — resisted arrest. Barkley said he doesn’t believe the cops were trying to kill Garner, but he was a “big” man and they were trying to get him to the ground.

“I don’t think that was a homicide,” Barkley replied.

“What was that? It was a chokehold, you see it,” Baldwin interjected.

“I think that cops were trying to arrest him and they got a little aggressive,” Barkley explained. “I think excessive force, you know, something like that. But to go right to murder — Brooke, when the cops are trying to arrest you, if you fight back, things go wrong.”

Earlier in the interview, Barkley also refused to back away or apologize for his recent comments about the Ferguson grand jury decision in the fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown.

“The ‘scumbag’ comment — respond to that,” she said.

“When you’re looting people’s property, that’s what you are,” Barkley replied. “That’s against the law. It’s not your property. You wouldn’t want people to do it to your house. If you go back to the stepdad, he didn’t want people to burn down his house.”

Ironically, Barkley’s earlier comments were also in response to an interviewer asking if he wanted to explain himself for comments made about mogul and leftist Richard Simmons.

“There’s a perception among some black people that if you’re not a thug, a hood rat or you don’t wear your pants around your ass, then you’re not black enough,” he said.

Barkley also said later in the interview that it was tragic — and always is — when parents lose a child, regardless of how. However, he said the “notion that white cops are out there just killing black people” is “flat-out ridiculous.”

“Cops are actually awesome,” he added. “They are the only thing in the ghetto between this place being the ‘Wild, Wild West.’”

In a new interview with CNN, former

michael_brown_stepfather_louis_head

Louis Head, Michael Brown’s stepfather, address angry comments to a crowd in Ferguson on 24 November. Lesley McSpadden, his wife and Michael Brown’s mother stands beside him. (Photo: Larry W Smith/EPA)

St. Louis County Police Department has confirmed that they are considering charges against Michael Brown’s stepfather for inciting a riot pending a full investigation. St. Louis County Police spokesman Brian Schellman said police want to talk to Louis Head about his comments as part of a broader investigation into the arson, vandalism and looting that followed the Nov. 24 grand jury decision.

Michael Brown’s stepfather is seen in a video (above) calling for the crowd to “burn this b**** down” after the grand jury didn’t indict Officer Darren Wilson for shooting 18 year-old Michael Brown in self-defense. Though he was not indicted, Wilson’s life is ruined and he officially resigned late last week.

The Brown family attorney Benjamin Crump, said no one should judge Brown’s parents for their emotional response, but also called the reaction “raw emotion” and “completely inappropriate.”

In a CNN interview (below), Michael Brown‘s mother said her husband’s screaming command to”burn this b**** down,” which came just moments before looting and rioting began, was said out of anger — but a justifiable anger. It is doubtful that the owner of the twelve commercial buildings that were destroyed by fire agree. The rioting and looting took a huge financial and emotional toll on the majority-minority business community.

When asked if Head’s comments caused the rioting, Lesley McSpadden said it was impossible. The riots “happened since August 9th,” the day that Brown was shot and killed, McSpadden said.

“These emotions with were taken over him, just like mine, and he just spoke out of anger,” she added. “It is one thing to speak, and a different thing to act. He did not act, he just spoke out of anger.”

St. Louis County Police are also weighing whether to charge McSadden herself with felony armed robbery after a group of people were attacked in a Ferguson parking lot in November. One person was allegedly beaten with a pipe and yet another individual was hospitalized from their injuries. Unbelievably, one of the victims was reported to be McSpadden’s former mother-in-law, Pearlie Gordon.

McSpadden and “a large group of about 20-30 subjects” rolled up and “rushed” the vendors. “You can’t sell this s**t,” the mother said, according to the police report.

http://youtu.be/KfrDak7iuWs

St. Louis County Police Department has confirmed

Since Gallup began asking the question roughly 14 years-ago, the highest number of Americans ever measured now say they are holding off on treatment due to rising healthcare costs. While the number of uninsured is reportedly falling, middle class Americans report delaying treatment more than ever, with percentages rising from 17 percent in 2013 to 28 percent this year.

The percentage of Americans earning from $30,000 to $74,999 that said they are delaying treatment increased from 33 percent 38 percent year-over-year.

“One of the goals of opening the government exchanges was to enable more Americans to get health insurance to help cover the costs of needed medical treatments,” said Gallup’s Rebecca Riffkin. “While many Americans have gained insurance, there has been no downturn in the percentage who say they have had to put off needed medical treatment because of cost.”

The percentage of Americans with private health insurance — the majority of which either have been or will be cancelled due to ObamaCare — who report putting off medical treatment because of cost, has increased from 25 percent in 2013 to 34 percent in 2014.

Wall Street Journal Telecom Reporter Ryan Knutson explained during an interview on Fox Business today — viewable above — what’s hurting middle class family budgets.

Further, even as the economy seems to be adding more jobs each month, the vast majority of jobs created in 2014 have been part-time, low-paying positions. Meanwhile, as the cost of necessities continues to climb and wage growth has been stagnant or falling in recent years, the costs for healthcare, food, rent, and Internet services have increased.

Since Gallup began asking the question roughly

gm-orion-assembly-plant

General Motors Orion Assembly Plant in Orion Township, Michigan. (Photo: Courtesy of workers at the plant)

The auto industry reported stronger U.S. sales in the month of November fueled by cheaper gasoline and Black Friday shopping deals nationwide, according to car shopping website TrueCar (NASDAQ:TRUE).

However, despite increased demand for new vehicles like pickup trucks and sport-utility vehicles, overall incentive spending still dropped from levels seen in October and last November. Kelley Blue Book anticipates total industry sales of 1.27 million vehicles, a 2.2% increase over the year-ago month.

General Motors (NYSE:GM) and Chrysler Group both forecasted a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of greater than 17 million units for the entire industry.

Chrysler Group, the U.S. division of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (NYSE:FCAU), were at the top sporting a 20 percent increase in new vehicle sales, beating forecasts from both Kelley Blue Book and Edmunds.com.

Chrysler said Tuesday it sold 170,839 vehicles compared to 142,275 in November 2013, which were the best numbers the company has posted in November sales since 2001.

GM clocked in with its best November sales since the 2007 U.S. recession, pushing out 225,818 vehicles for a 6.5 percent increase year-over-year.

The sales results easily topped forecasts, which pushed GM shares 1.5 percent higher to $33.44. Kelley Blue Book and Edmunds each projected sales growth of roughly 1 percent.

“The buzz around Black Friday helped drive strong showroom traffic but there was a lot more at work in the market,” said Kurt McNeil, GM’s U.S. vice president of sales operations. “More people have jobs and job security, their wages are starting to increase, household wealth is growing and low pump prices look like they’re here to stay through 2015.”

Ford Motor Co. (NYSE:F) said they had another downbeat month, but that “the overall sales decline was anticipated.” The company expected the variance in sales as they manage inventory levels of the F-150 ahead of the new truck’s launch. The first 2015 F-150s are expected to reach dealers by the end of the year.

Ford will be “working through the transition for the next several months,” said John Felice, Ford’s vice president of U.S. marketing, sales and service.

Detroit’s second-largest automaker reported a 1.8 percent decline in U.S. sales, though they realized increased sales from their luxury brand — Lincoln. Ford sold a total of 187,000 vehicles, which is down from 190,449 units a year earlier.

Ford is also rolling out the new Mustang, which was revamped for 2015. The Mustang’s monthly sales came in strong, posting the best November result in eight years. Ford said Mustangs are selling in just eight days on average after arriving at dealers.

Meanwhile, utility vehicles jumped 15.4 percent amid a new record November for the Ford Escape. Truck sales fell 9.9 percent largely fueled by the F-series drop below 60,000 in unit sales.

The auto industry reported stronger U.S. sales

zemir-begic-hammer-attack-victim

Zemir Begic, 32, and his fiancee Arijana, whom he reportedly died protecting. (Photo: GoFundMe)

Officials are denying racial motives were behind the horrific attack that claimed the life of a Bosnian man in St. Louis early Sunday morning around 1:15 A.M. CT. Police said Zemir Begic, a 32-year-old newlywed, was hit in the head, face, mouth and body with hammers at an intersection in southwest St. Louis just 20 miles from Ferguson and left to die on the street.

On Monday evening, Robert Mitchell, 17, was charged as an adult with first-degree murder and armed criminal action in the death. He turned himself in late Sunday after 15- and 16-year-old suspects were taken into custody in connection with the attack that has left St. Louis’s 70,000-member Bosnian community reeling and demanding further police action.

A fourth suspect remains at large, according to police.

“Investigators don’t believe the incident is in any way related to Ferguson,” St. Louis Police spokeswoman Schron Jackson said. “The incident is not being investigated as a hate crime.”

However, their unwillingness to follow up on witness testimony and claims are being met with anger in the Bosnian community.

“Bosnians right now have an impression that this was a hate crime,” said Bosnian Chamber of Commerce president Sadik Kukic, who met Monday with the city’s mayor and police chief to discuss the murder.

Begic was not the only person they attacked that night, and at least one witness said the attack occurred “right after black people running up and down the street, yelling F*** the white people, kill the white people.”

“This is what we have,” she says in a video taken soon after the attack, which is viewable below.

While it is difficult to tell if the witness heard protestors or the attackers themselves, for the Bosnian community, the answer is clear. Considering others have reported being assaulted by a group matching that description, and reports of racial epithets were heard coming from the group as well, it is beyond odd that police were so quickly willing to rule out racial motivations behind the attack.

Seldin Dzananovic, 24, said the teens with the hammers confronted him farther north on Gravois Ave about an hour before the attack on Begic. However, Dzananovic said he was able to fight them off, though he did suffer minor injuries to the hands and neck.

Unfortunately, Zemir Begic was not so lucky.

According to a criminal complaint released Tuesday, Begic and his fiancee, Arijana Mujkanovic, as well as another male passenger, were walking to their car when they heard a group, including at least of the defendants, screaming out loud. As Begic began to drive away, one of the teenagers, “jumped on the back of his car and began hitting it,” the complaint said.

Without provocation, they began striking it with hammers. When Zemir got out to confront them and protect Arijana, four men viciously beat him with at least one hammer until he was rendered unconscious. He was pronounced dead later at the hospital.

Suad Nuranjkovic, 49, said he got out of the passenger seat of the car and hid in a nearby parking lot during the attack.

“I was afraid that if one of them had a gun, they were going to shoot me, so I didn’t know what to do,” he told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, who failed to mention until the very end of the story that two of the attackers were black, while the other was Hispanic.

“We come from Bosnia because we were getting killed and our homes and families were getting destroyed,” Denisa Begic, his 23-year-old sister, told the Post-Dispatch. “Never in my life did I think he would get murdered.”

Denisa said her brother’s funeral would be in Iowa. A crowd-funding site has been set up to help finance the funeral and, on the page, a grieving sister wrote of her love for her brother.

“I will forever have a big piece of my heart destroyed,” Denisa wrote. “My big brother is gone, never coming back to us. [I] wish this was a terrible dream. He was a great brother, son, husband and helped anyone. I want my brother back. He always protected me.”

She said singing was his passion, and his younger brother Rasim Begic, 20, said he was a karate instructor. Both of his siblings say that he “loved America.”

“He loved every race,” Rasim said of his older brother. “He had friends all over the world.”

“He loved kids. He loved music,” he added. “Our family will never be the same.”

http://youtu.be/GIPZ09WcTWk

Officials denied racial motives were behind the

us_national_debt_us_debt_clock_org

U.S. national debt surpasses $18 trillion dollars, or $18,000,0000,000.00 (Photo: USDebtClock.org )

The U.S. national debt hit $18 trillion for the first time on Friday, according to the U.S. Treasury Department and a website that tracks liability debt and assets. The increase over the pivotal early shopping day represented a jump of more than $40 billion from two days prior.

The Congressional Budget Office released two startling reports in April showing crippling levels of U.S. national debt under the status quo and President Obama’s proposed budget. While the White House frequently touts recent deficit reductions, the claim is misleading for several reasons. It is only in the short-term that budget deficits are projected to decrease, but in the long-term they are projected to explode.

“Such high and rising debt would have serious negative consequences,” the CBO said. “Federal spending on interest payments would increase considerably when interest rates rose to more typical levels. Moreover, because federal borrowing would eventually raise the cost of investment by businesses and other entities, the capital stock would be smaller, and productivity and wages lower, than if federal borrowing was more limited.”

Second, debate over deficit reduction just scratches the surface of a larger problem, which consists mainly of debt-to-GDP ratios. In other words, under Obama, the economy has not grown at historical levels, leaving total U.S. debt a far larger percentage of the overall gross domestic product than it has been traditionally.

The CBO projected total federal debt held by the public will hit 78 percent of GDP by 2024, which is up from 72 percent at the end of 2013 and roughly double historical levels. Total federal debt has averaged 39 percent in the past four decades, and as recently as the end of 2007, the national debt equaled just 35 percent of total GDP. Yet, even under President Obama’s most recent proposed budget, the levels of spending are just not sustainable.

However, the situation is actually worse when debt assessors factor in the political reality, which as of now, is total paralysis, cowardess among politicians and Fed policy-makers. Furthermore, the recent decision by the Federal Reserve to end its bond-buying, money-printing scheme known as quantitative easing, will also have an impact on the national debt, as the policy simply prolonged the inevitable rise of interest rates, which will increase the cost of servicing the debt.

“In addition, high debt means that lawmakers would have less flexibility than they otherwise would to use tax and spending policies to respond to unexpected challenges,” the CBO added. “Finally, high debt increases the risk of a fiscal crisis in which investors would lose so much confidence in the government’s ability to manage its budget that the government would be unable to borrow at affordable rates.”

The CBO projections are actually deflating real debt because, as was previously reported in June, the agency said it can no longer stand by its original claim that ObamaCare — or, the Affordable Care Act — is a deficit neutral program.

“CBO and JCT can no longer determine exactly how the provisions of the ACA that are not related to the expansion of health insurance coverage have affected their projections of direct spending and revenues,” the CBO wrote in a tiny footnote. “The provisions that expanded coverage established entirely new programs or components of programs that can be isolated and reassessed. Isolating the incremental effects of those provisions on previously existing programs and revenues four years after enactment of the ACA is not possible.”

When President Obama took office, total national debt stood at a still-significant $10.626 trillion, and it’s risen nearly $7.5 trillion during Obama’s tenure. Despite the oft-heard claim that bailouts occurred under President George W. Bush and carried over into Obama’s tenure, the sum total for those amounts represent under 10 percent of the total federal debt increase realized under Obama.

Meanwhile, the U.S.-based rating agency Moody’s Monday downgraded Japan’s sovereign debt, citing failed Keynesian stimulus spending and tax hikes.

The U.S. national debt hit $18 trillion

ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the terrorist group ISIS, otherwise known as ISIL or the Islamic State. (Photo: AP)

Lebanese officials claim authorities have detained a wife and son of the Islamic State’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, while the two were using fake identification cards 10 days ago.

However, neither of the two officials would give any details about the woman who is believed to be one of the wives of al-Baghdadi, the terror group’s reclusive leader, and the officials spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The announcement of the arrests comes as attempts to reach a prisoner-exchange deal between the country, ISIS, and Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front, who are holding more than 20 Lebanese soldiers, hit a snag Monday night. The Nusra Front threatened to kill one of the soldiers it is holding captive, and al-Baghdadi’s wife could be used as a bargaining chip for Lebanese authorities in their effort to secure their troops’ freedom.

A judicial official said the interrogation is being supervised by Lebanon’s military prosecutor, Saqr Saqr, and also that a DNA test was conducted in order to confirm that the child is the son of the detained woman.

The Lebanese Daily As-Safir reported that they were detained near the border crossing with Syria. It also reported that the arrest was made in “coordination with foreign intelligence agencies.”

Al-Baghdadi’s first wife is believed to be Iraqi citizen Saja al-Dulaimi, who was reportedly held by Syrian authorities and freed in a prisoner exchange with the Nusra Front earlier this year.

Lebanese officials claim authorities have detained a

People's Pundit Daily
You have %%pigeonMeterAvailable%% free %%pigeonCopyPage%% remaining this month. Get unlimited access and support reader-funded, independent data journalism.

Start a 14-day free trial now. Pay later!

Start Trial