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Saturday, 7 September 2013

Watch the worst twerk fail ever! Twerking Caitlin Heller sets herself on fire!

The word and act of "twerking" has spread like wildfire across the Internet ever since Miley Cyrus' infamous VMA performance. And, in one unfortunate recent case, the fire metaphor is a bit too apropos. Watch and see what happens in this video below:





The twerking fail clip was posted online by Caitlin Heller who writes about the insane caught-on-camera moment:
I tried making a sexy twerk video for my boyfriend and things got a little too hot :)

We're all just glad to hear you're alright, Caitlin, and can laugh about the incident afterwards. Maybe try a room with a bit more space with your follow-up performance? (And at least make sure no candles are lit next time!)








#huffingtonpost

EXPOSED! Incredible world of millionaire student fraudsters a.k.a. Yahoo Yahoo Boys








Fraudsters


Before he met his waterloo some months ago, 30-year-old Hope Olusegun Aroke lived in the elite 1004 Housing Estate, Victoria Island, Lagos.

Aroke, an undergraduate in a Malaysian university, had the world at his beck and call, as he could afford just about anything that meant class.

For him, provision was probably just another successful scam away. And the race to maintain the social status that fraud had allegedly earned him could never end.

In his garage was a fleet of posh cars and SUVs, all of Mercedes-Benz brand. Though a tenant, he successfully outshone the status of his co-residents.

To many, the young man had done well for himself by a dint of hard work.

In some sense, Aroke was working hard, but as a suspected serial scammer.

His busy neighbours barely noticed his unusual schedule, but many were irked by his exceptional flamboyant lifestyle.

Most times, when neighbours were out to work, Aroke stayed indoor in company with other young men, who were later discovered to be his fraud cell suspects.

These young men included his apprentices and internet scam partners.

The operation that marred Aroke’s merry-making living would have shot up his net worth by several notches.

Going by the revelation of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, he had successfully carried out the scam operations worth N55m on unsuspecting members of the public. He, however, became unfortunate while trying to conceal the nature of the proceeds by converting it to foreign currency in partnership with Ibrahim Tafida, a Bureau de Change operator.

He was eventually nabbed by the team of the EFCC in Lagos.

Last year, 25-year-old Sunkanmi Odewale, a 200-level undergraduate of Mechanical Engineering, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ogun State, a suspected fraudster, breezed into an automart and bought a Toyota Venza for N4m.

Before, he was picked up in Ibadan, Oyo State, three months ago, he was alleged to be notorious for regularly swindling unsuspecting members of the public via the internet.

His N4m Toyota Venza was the latest of his collections of luxury toys allegedly acquired from the proceeds of cyber crimes.

He, however, forfeited it and other valuables worth millions, which were seized during the arrest.

The EFCC said he was currently facing prosecution.

Other kingpins in cyber crime in Ibadan, Oyo State, according to EFCC, are 300 level students, Olowofola Tolu and Ekundayo Damilola, both of Lead City University, Ibadan. They are studying Economics and Computer Sciences respectively.

They were alleged to be the brains behind successful cyber crimes in the state before they were arrested around Oluyole Estate extension in Ibadan.

Both of them made good money from the business such that they paraded exotic cars among other things.

Other boys believed to hold the area in terms of cyber crimes operations and training of intending members according to EFCC are Adelabu Kolawole, HND II student of Purchasing and Supply Department, Ibadan Polytechnic and Bankole Fisayo, Ordinary Diploma II student of Marketing Department, Osun State Polytechnic, Iree. Their valuables running into tens of millions of naira were seized by the EFCC, which said that they were all being prosecuted.

Saturday PUNCH’s investigation found that more young people particularly undergraduates, now have the wherewithal to afford luxury items such as exotic cars, live in hotels for weeks, buy classy homes and throw lavish parties where expensive brands of wines and spirits are offered. They also travel to choice countries of the world and frolic with the hottest girls in town.

They live in such affluence that will make an average worker with decades of meritorious service cringe.

Saturday PUNCH learnt that usually, they are undergraduates, predominantly young men enrolled to study different courses in both Nigerian and foreign tertiary institutions.

These undergraduate scammers and internet fraudsters are the current toast of their various campuses.

Their friends, course mates and distant admirers, especially the ladies, all wish to grab a portion of their well-advertised wealth.



Using the internet and other information and communication, these savvy youths, often successfully dupe greedy people. Laptops, mobile telephones, flash drives, external hard drives, printers and so on, are their work implements.

Since they usually don’t operate from an identifiable office or from fixed residential addresses, they cart away many people’s financial fortunes forever without pointing a gun or being physically present.

They operate most times through a network of connections across country borders, making it possible for a person to fall victim at any location.

Saturday PUNCH’s investigation found that the colony of internet fraudsters, also known as Yahoo Yahoo, is growing to match the dynamism in information and communication technology.

This also poses greater challenge to crime detecting agencies in Nigeria such as the EFCC.

During some sting operations based on internet-prompted information, the EFCC recently arrested another five suspected fraudsters in Enugu State.

They are: 27-year-old Uche Nwakor; 30-year-old Oluchukwu Ejikeme; 28-year-old Ifeanyi Ejikeme; 30-year-old Nnamani Ikechukwu; and Ibe Kodili.

They were arrested at their expensive houses at No 26 and 42, Chimaobi Uba Street, GRA, Enugu.

The team is said to be “serial scammers,” having defrauded several victims.

Items seized from them where they were perfecting how to get the next victim are: eight exotic cars, nine laptops, 21 mobile phones, internet routers, drivers’ licenses and international passports.

Two months ago, the game was over for notorious internet fraudster, Wale Olaide, who specialised in defrauding members of the public through bank credit alerts.

Popularly called Wale Dollar in his clique, he had great tentacles as his business transversed the shores of Nigeria.

Although he had successfully executed bigger deals, which had earned him a comfortable life, he came crashing over a N5m deal involving two brothers Abdulhamid Abubakar, based in Nigeria and Hashim Abubakar based in Togo. They are both into BDC business.

Under the pretext that he wanted to do genuine business with them, he contacted the Togo-based operator, asking for his Nigerian bank account number, which he authorised his brother to give him. Olaide was supposed to pay in N5m to purchase the CFA Francs equivalent.

But when he got the account details, rather than send the money as agreed, he sent a false credit alert notifying the BDC operators that his account had credited at the Seme border branch and so he released the equivalent to him.

He was shocked to find out the next day that his bankers couldn’t trace such payments made into his account.

The EFCC said it took investigative initiative to arrest Olaide, who it described as “a member of the deadly syndicate involved in duping unsuspecting members of the public.”

It described fraudulent credit banking notification as a new trend in criminality by fraudsters and warned the public to be careful.

The EFCC Ag. Head, Media and Publicity, Wilson Uwujaren, told Saturday PUNCH that it was not in the character of fraudsters to buy lands or build houses.

He said, “They seldom even buy houses or have permanent addresses because of the nature of their activities. They often spend money on exotic cars, throw parties and generally squander the money on things that are not fixed. All the people arrested for such crimes are usually made to face the law.”

Uwujaren said there were signs that could put one on the guard. “If for instance somebody you have never met in person begins to pester you about your personal banking details online, chances are that the person may be a potential scammer.

“Also when a total stranger begins to make business proposal that look too good to be true, you better watch it,” he said.

He said a good number of scammers had been prosecuted and jailed; others had to flee the country to neighbouring countries. He however said that there was still more work to be done.

He said EFCC’s conviction profile was dominated by internet and advance fee fraud cases, adding that the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Related Offenses Act 2006 prescribed a minimum of seven and maximum of 20 years jail term for advance fee fraud offenses.

He admitted that scammers were mainly youngsters but not limited to any social strata and educational backgrounds.

An inside source, who understands the mode of operation of internet fraudsters told our correspondent that the commission depended mainly on raids until it had a breakthrough in technology.

The EFCC source, who preferred to remain anonymous, said the technology called Eagle Claw, was designed by a young Nigerian, who landed in the EFCC net after he was deported from India some years ago for successfully hacking the country’s military website.

He said the commission employed his services to help it understand the workings of internet fraudsters and he eventually designed a technology with some programmed language that sniffs and detects mails suspected to be from fraudsters.

“Once our technology sniffs those codes, the mail is hijacked and we start investigation from there.

“Under the former administration, EFCC was able to arrest 2,000 internet scammers using Eagle Claw; it runs like a laboratory.

“There was a case when our team of investigators acted like a ‘white man’ (prospective victim) and we kept communicating with the fraudster until we fixed the Abuja Sheraton Hotel as meeting point and he simply walked into a net.

“There are other technologies that we are using to combat cyber crimes as they evolve.”

On their mode of operation and recruitment procedures, the source said they operate in cells (splinter groups) and each cell has a leader, who trains the new entrants.

He said the apprentices usually lived with their leaders in big mansions, where they served them, while undergoing the rudiments of the game.

He said gone were the days when fraudsters used the cyber café, because of the fear of being raided, adding that they now operate from homes, which makes it difficult to arrest them, except by intelligence report.

He added that the advent of private use of the internet through modems and other ISP channels had made it difficult to trace scammers without an up to date technology.

He said that members of the public could identify a fraudster by some traits, even though they operate by nick names.

“If you see young people living in questionable affluence today and appear broke tomorrow.

“If he offers to sell his N5m car to you at N1.5m and the next week he has a bigger car, suspect him. Most times when they don’t have a victim to milk, they run out of cash and quickly sell their valuables to continue to live big.

“If the same young man stays at home when people should be at work, hosting several girls in his apartment, watch him.

“If he usually moves with some other group of young men, who most likely stay the night in his apartment and having so many ICT gadgets, watch him.”

He however said that what is important is for members of the public to be careful and not to be given to greed, as some well- educated people and even top government officials had at some time, fallen prey to them.

Asked if it is true that Yahoo plus brand (charm-backed) assisted the fraudsters in their criminal activities, he said, “I don’t believe that they charm people, I think they are just internet smart people who work with technology to people’s disadvantage.”




#punch

PHOTOS: At last! Clothes for busty women who are fed up with outsize clothes


Clothes that are generously cut over the bust, yet nip back in to follow the line of your body? They certainly sound too good to be true.



Busting at the seams: Mandy has always found it difficult to find clothes to fit her size 8 figure and 30G bust


Mandy Appleyard of dailymail has a size 8 figure and 30G bust.

She finds it hard to find clothes to flatter her figure and was delighted to hear of a new clothing range for big-busted women.

So she tried the new autumn range, which hits stores this week, in a Super Curvy size 8 to find out...

Here, she gives her verdict on Pepperberry by Bravissimo's collection





Full skirt floral stripe dress, £79

For her, if dresses fit the hips and waist, they're too tight over the bust.
VERDICT: The use of double darts in an inverted 'V' means the extra fabric needed to cover an ample bosom is nipped in for a fantastic fit. But it's way too young and fussy for her. 5/10




Perfectly simple V-neck T-shirt in red, £22, jersey blazer in navy, £65

Fitted jackets are normally a no-no. And if she can find a T-shirt that fits her bust, the rest of it is big and baggy.

VERDICT: Her favourite look. The jacket accentuates her waist, skims her hips and accommodates her breasts. The T-shirt fits perfectly thanks to some neat little darts.
10/10





Floral jersey dress in red floral, £49

She loves a wrap dress but usually ends up showing so much cleavage she looks like an ageing glamour model. She avoids them or have to wear a frumpy high-necked vest underneath.

VERDICT: It's fabulous - the high neckline means her breasts are firmly under-wraps.
8/10


Belted workwear dress, £79, with peplum suit jacket, £79, in midnight blue

Jackets usually gape or pull across the bust, feeling like a straitjacket.
VERDICT: The jacket is well-cut, lovely and trim around the waist and the peplum is fun. 7/10





Classic shirt in white, £39

Whenever she sees women wearing white shirts with business skirts or jeans she thinks how stunning they look, but she can't go there. Within an hour or two, she's always missing a button.

VERDICT: Hoorah! It fits her bust and waist with no signs of strain, even after a few hours. The extra fabric is gathered in by two seams, keeping it flush against the torso. 7/10



Floral peplum top in navy print, £39

Fitted tops have always been a no-go: it’s impossible for a standard size  8 to fit well in both the bust and the body. She always ends up feeling as if her breasts have been flattened.

VERDICT: This top is versatile, wearable and fun. She could easily wear this with a smart skirt for work, or dressed-down with jeans.
8/10







#For details, call 01926 459 800 or visit pepperberry.com

Styling: ELIZA SCARBOROUGH, PICTURES: L+R, HAIR AND MAKE-UP: NINA PACH USING BARE MINERALS AND BUMBLE AND BUMBLE, FASHION ASSISTANT: AMY KESTER


HORRIFIC! Sex attacker wheels victim's unconscious body into hotel where he raped her for nine hours (Video)

  • Lloyd Phillips, 48, of Southampton, assaulted his 22-year-old victim in hotel
  • He had given her the illegal drug BZP, which can trigger seizures, and drink
  • Told hotel staff 'girlfriend' was drunk; borrowed wheelchair from reception
  • Victim woke hours later and he told her they'd had a night of consensual sex
  • Phillips convicted of rape, sexual assault by penetration, and sexual assault
  • He's now serving 11-year jail term for the 'depraved' attack on young woman

A businessman who told a woman he was taking her to a Saturdays concert instead drugged her, put her in a wheelchair and pushed her a hotel where he raped her for nine hours.

Lloyd Phillips, 48, plied his 22-year-old victim with a cocktail of drugs and alcohol that left her suffering seizures as he drove her to Wembley Stadium.

This picture shows the moment he pushed his victim into a hotel where he told staff his 'girlfriend' was drunk and disabled before taking her to a room and assaulting her.

Click below to watch video:




Man pushes unconscious woman to hotel & rapes her for 9hrs
Sick: The businessman is seen wheeling the empty wheelchair towards his car in the hotel car park
Sick: The businessman is seen wheeling the empty wheelchair towards his car in the hotel car park

Phillips is seen in this CCTV still wheeling his unconscious victim towards the hotel reception
Phillips is seen in this CCTV still wheeling his unconscious victim towards the hotel reception

With her arms blackened and heavily bruised, she was dropped home.

She continued: 'I remember feeling absolutely rotten. What had happened didn't really hit me until about five days later.

'My head was still swimming from the after effect of what he had given me.

'I just felt like it was my fault, that I was stupid to have let myself get into that situation. I blamed myself.

'Not knowing exactly what had happened to me made that all worse.'

 'He is a vile human being and I hope he dies in prison so he cannot hurt anyone else.'
-Phillips' victim, after her attacker was jailed

It was the following day when, feeling particularly unwell, she went to accident and emergency as Southampton General Hospital.

She promptly broke down, begged for help, and told doctors she did not know what had happened to her. They called police.

Phillips was arrested and charged within a matter of hours.

Depraved attack: Phillips, from Southampton, had told his victim they were going to a Saturdays concert
Depraved attack: Phillips, from Southampton, had told his victim they were going to a Saturdays concert

She added: 'Whenever I've had to think about it, it has made me sick.

'I still do not know the full extent of what he did to me and what happened on that night.

'I used to be a very trusting person who would see the good in everyone, now I find it hard. I almost became a recluse and now struggle to form any friendships.

'I was just lucky that I had the people I did to help me through it and to give me a new focus, especially my mum.'

The woman believes she is not the only victim of Phillips, who had bragged about relationships and encounters with other young women.

Urging them to find the courage to come forward and speak to police, she said: 'I would urge anyone in my situation to be brave, come forward and speak out.

'I didn't do it just for me, but for other girls who have not been able to find that courage yet.


 'You told her she had chosen to have nine hours of sex instead of going to the concert.'
-Judge Mrs Justice Levy, who jailed Phillips

'I have some measure of justice, although no sentence will ever be enough for what he did to me.

'He is a very dangerous, clever and manipulative person who will twist anything to get his own way - a vile human being.

'My hope now is that he dies so he cannot hurt anyone else.'

Judge Mrs Justice Levy jailed Phillips for 11 years.

She told him: 'She suffered two or three seizures outside in the car park, but you did not seek medical assistance because you were worried you could not stay in the hotel.

'You told her she had chosen to have nine hours of sex instead of going to the concert.

'She did not remember anything of the things you talked about. It came as a complete shock to her.'

This week Phillips admitted possessing class B and class C drugs at his Lucid head shop in Southampton, three years ago.

He had sold them as legal highs called 'Giggle' and 'Magic', Southampton Crown Court heard.

Judge Richard Hill jailed Phillips for 18 months and told him: 'You were warned that Giggle and Magic were no longer legal but nevertheless you carried on selling them.'

The shop is now under new management.

His victim, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, collapsed in court while giving her evidence and still suffers nightmares.

Speaking after the case, she said: 'He is a vile human being and I hope he dies in prison so he cannot hurt anyone else.

'He picked me up from home that day and we set off in his car.

'We got onto the M3 and the last thing I remember was the sign for the A34. I started to come round the following morning and had no idea what had happened.

'I remember feeling contorted, like I was on a boat. I could barely walk. Everywhere, including all the bedding, was covered in blood.'

She recalled how she felt 'sick and confused' as she sat in the passenger seat of his car and he told her some of what she had supposedly agreed to in bed the previous night.

But she could not remember a thing.

She added: 'I was stunned because he was saying that he was glad I didn't feel weird about what had happened.

'He actually said to me: "Sometimes girls might cry rape".'




#dailymail



 

Friday, 6 September 2013

LAGOS: Police on the hunt for businessman who tied apprentice for 10 days without food


When Thankgod Nwabisi, 23, left his village in Adani, Uzo-Uwani L.G.A of Enugu State to serve as an apprentice to an auto -parts dealer in Ladipo, Lagos, popularly called Elopee, members of his family heaved a sigh of relief, believing that their only child was making a positive headway in life.

Little did they know that the secondary school holder will end up being traumatized by his master. He was thoroughly tortured, tied with ropes and dumped inside a room in the master’s house for about ten days without food or water. According to him, he was accused of not reconciling their sale’s book properly resulting in the loss of N4,000.

The ugly incident which took place at Number 1, Bisi Yusuf area, Kainde in Ayobo, a suburb of Lagos State, aroused the anger of their neighbours who promptly alerted policemen on patrol from Ayobo division and they swiftly responded. The eagle-eyed policemen reportedly broke into the premises after making frantic calls without response while the agonising cries of pain was coming from one of the rooms in the house.


The victim lying on the bare floor inside the kitchen.

When they succeeded in gaining entry into the building, they were shocked to see a 23-year-old boy, tied hands and legs and dumped like an animal in one corner of the room. He had bruises all over his body and his head was smeared with caked blood. They quickly rescued the poor boy and while searching the house, they saw a female teenager who claimed to be a relation to the wife of his master and they took all of them to their station for questioning.

His plight:

Police sources said while narrating his plight, the boy disclosed that his master, Elochukwu Ikwueze, is from Akama-Oye in Eziagu L.G.A. of Enugu State. According to sources, the boy signed agreement to serve the man for seven years, and he had already served five years. They were living in a two-room apartment at Number 43, Eyegun street, Mafoluku, Lagos before his master got married and moved to his own house at Ayobo. They normally spent weekdays at Mafoluku but always spent weekends in the man’s house at Ayobo.

The boy narrated that on Sunday, 25th of September, while they were at Ayobo, they all embarked on cleaning the house and it’s surroundings in the morning. They continued with the exercise till evening and when he requested for food, both his master and his wife ignored him.

He said his master later started questioning him about their sales the previous day and he explained everything to him. “He complained that about N4,000 was missing from a sale of N28,000 we made but I explained everything to him yet, he insisted that the money was missing. Later, I went into my room .

Few minutes later, he came into the room, armed with a huge stick and started beating me. He called on my second and both of them tied my hands and legs with a rope, dragged me into the kitchen and locked the place up. I was abandoned inside the kitchen for about three days until I noticed that somebody slipped a plate of food through an opening to me.

Hungrily, I ate the food. I was defecating and urinating inside the same place until seven days later when the pains became unbearable. I then started crying and raising my voice, calling for help. It was then that I knew that the small girl living with us, a relation of my master’s wife, was also left in the house and she was the person that slipped food into the kitchen for me.

How he was rescued:

“After sometime, I overheard people shouting at out gate, calling for the door to be opened. Later, they broke into the premises and I saw they were policemen. They rescued me and took both of us to their station where I narrated all that happened to me.”

Crime Guard gathered that after Policemen broke into the house, they found the female teenager in the parlour. She led them to the kitchen where they saw the boy, tied like a goat with splashes of his urine and excreta all over the room. The divisional Police officer, Musa Lariski reportedly directed his men to quickly rush the boy to the nearest hospital where he was giving proper medical attention beofore he was brought back to the station.

It was learnt that since then, all efforts made by detectives to trace the owner of the house and his wife yielded negative results.A team of policemen were also said to had gone to his shop at Ladipo market only to discover that he had not shown his face since the the boy was rescued from his house. It was gathered that one of the market leaders assured the police that they will trace his whereabouts and bring him to the station.

Meanwhile, when Crime Guard had a brief encounter with the distraught boy, he was crying and lamenting the fate that befell him. In tears he said, “My fear is that he has my identity card and he may fram me up. I did not take even a kobo from his money, he was only trying to avoid settling me after my stewardship.

That is how he has been treating all the boys that suffered for him, he will frame you and deny you reaping the reward of your stewardship. Whatever happened, I am happy with the police for rescuing me alive. Who knows what could have happened to me later,” he questioned.




#vanguard