prison guard
Eagles as prison guards?
Some eagles could soon be spending much of their life in jail if the U.K. government gets its way. No, the powers-that-be aren't looking to target the majestic creature in some kind of bizarre police crackdown on bird-instigated crime. Instead, it's hoping to make use of their supreme hunting skills in its fight to keep drone-delivered contraband out of the nation's prisons. Discussing the issue during a debate in the British parliament this week, prisons minister Sam Gyimah described the threat posed by drones as "a game changer," adding that the government was looking for an effective solution for dealing with rogue unmanned flying machines around prisons and other sensitive locations. Gyimah said his team was "keeping a close eye on what's happening in Holland, where they're using eagles to stop drones." Police in the Netherlands recently completed extensive trials using highly trained eagles to snatch remotely controlled multi-rotor copters out of the sky and return them to their handler.
The Philippines' drug addicts, shunned by society and hunted by assassins, find they have nowhere to turn
For two decades, Jerry Gonzaga was addicted to drugs. Like many of his neighbors and friends in Paraรฑaque, a city south of Manila, Gonzaga would take shabu, an inexpensive amphetamine, to keep him focused on fixing cars, selling umbrellas, and doing other odd jobs to feed his wife and eight children. Then, on June 30, Rodrigo Duterte assumed the Philippine presidency on promises to kill scores of drug users -- and Gonzaga, a wiry 43-year-old, tried to turn himself in to police. At the station, officers made him sign a form pledging to stay off drugs. "It said, 'If you're caught the first, second and third time, there are warnings and conditions,'" he said.
PRISON PROBLEMS Norway court says mass killer's rights violated in jail
Norwegian authorities have violated the human rights of mass killer Anders Behring Breivik by holding him in solitary confinement in a three-cell complex where he can play video games, watch TV and exercise, a court in Oslo ruled Wednesday. In the surprise decision, the Oslo district court said the isolation that Breivik faces in prison for killing 77 people in a bomb-and-gun massacre in 2011 is in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights. "The prohibition of inhuman and degrading treatment represents a fundamental value in a democratic society," the court said. "This applies no matter what -- also in the treatment of terrorists and killers." The court ordered the government to pay Breivik's legal costs of 331,000 kroner, about 41,000.