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Canadian Busted

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  • Canadian Busted

    Probably the wrong forum, but this brings closure to some old news. I am not too sure I am digging my place being called a "haven for misfits and perverts"

    Canadian's arrest ends three-year globalmanhunt
    Ed Cropley and Nopporn Wong-Anan, with Files From Kim Bolan, CanWest News Service , Reuters, with Files From CanWest News Service
    Published: Saturday, October 20, 2007
    BANGKOK - After a three-year hunt involving cutting-edge technology and police on three continents, it was dogged detective work and a Thai transvestite that finally led officers to Canadian pedophile suspect Christopher Neil.

    Thai police Colonel Paisal Luesomboon, who arrested Mr. Neil in the dusty town of Nakhon Ratchasima, 250 kilometres northeast of Bangkok, said the 32-year-old knew the game was up and surrendered without a struggle. "He said he knew he was on an Interpol arrest warrant," he said.

    His companion at the time of his arrest was a 25-year-old "katoey" -- the Thai word for transvestite or transsexual -- a friendship that proved key to the manhunt.

    After an alert from Interpol, police Lieutenant-Colonel Phanthana Nutchanart sent his men to trawl transvestite hangouts in Bangkok's Patpong red-light district and the seaside town of Pattaya, infamous as a haven for misfits and perverts.
    After seeing a picture of Mr. Neil taken by security cameras on his arrival at Bangkok airport a week ago, transvestites in Pattaya said they had seen him with a 25-year-old cross-dresser called Ohm. But the pair had already fled the eastern seaboard town, dubbed "The Old Whore of Asia" since the days of the Vietnam War, when American GIs would come in their thousands in search of euphemistically phrased "R&R".

    Police traced Ohm's real name on Thailand's national citizens database, found he came from the province of Chaiyaphume and -- crucially -- got his phone number. They started going through his phone records, allowing them to chart the pair's progress from Pattaya to Chaiyaphume and ultimately Nakhon Ratchasima.

    The last number dialled on Ohm's phone was to a friend in Nakhon Ratchasima, who eventually told police Ohm was trying to rent a house in the province and passed on the address. It was a low-tech end to a manhunt that started three years ago in Germany, when child-crime officers found images on the Internet of a man raping young boys in Vietnam and Cambodia. The man's face was digitally "swirled" but officers in Germany's BKA federal crime office unscrambled the image with cutting-edge technology.

    Yesterday, the RCMP said a number of tips had been received about Mr. Neil, but there was no separate criminal investigation into the Maple Ridge native's activities in B.C.

  • #2
    July 20, 1969: Man takes first steps on the Moon
    American Neil Armstrong has become the first man to walk on the Moon.
    The astronaut stepped onto the Moon's surface, in the Sea of Tranquility, at 0256 GMT, nearly 20 minutes after first opening the hatch on the Eagle landing craft.

    Armstrong had earlier reported the lunar module's safe landing at 2017 GMT with the words: "Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed."

    As he put his left foot down first Armstrong declared: "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."

    He described the surface as being like powdered charcoal and the landing craft left a crater about a foot deep.

    'We came in peace'

    The historic moments were captured on television cameras installed on the Eagle and turned on by Armstrong.

    Armstrong spent his first few minutes on the Moon taking photographs and soil samples in case the mission had to be aborted suddenly.

    He was joined by colleague Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin at 0315 GMT and the two collected data and performed various exercises - including jumping across the landscape - before planting the Stars and Stripes flag at 0341 GMT.

    They also unveiled a plaque bearing President Nixon's signature and an inscription reading: "Here men from the planet Earth first set foot upon the Moon July 1969 AD. We came in peace for all mankind."

    After filming their experience with a portable television camera the astronauts received a message from the US President.

    President Nixon, in the White House, spoke of the pride of the American people and said: "This certainly has to be the most historic telephone call ever made."

    Many other nations - including the UK - sent messages of congratulation.

    Moscow Radio announced the news solemnly in its 1030 GMT broadcast.

    As Aldrin and Armstrong collected samples, Michael Collins told mission control in Houston he had successfully orbited the Moon in the mother ship Columbia, and take-off was on schedule for 1750 GMT this evening.

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    • #3

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      • #4
        (Otho @ Mar. 24 2008,00:28)
        The Canadian busted was old news from October 20, 2007... just like Man walking on the Moon... get it?

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