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Man, 26, murdered lover, 73, and buried him in bathtub full of concrete

Man, 26, murdered lover, 73, and buried him in bathtub full of concrete

Daily Mirror06-08-2025
A man has been sentenced to life in prison after murdering his lover and burying him in a bathtub full of concrete. Juan Baron, 26, killed Gary Ruby, 73, some time between January 19, 2022, and March 7, 2022. This week, he pleaded guilty to killing Ruby after he had revealed an HIV-positive diagnosis.In the arrest warrant brutal details were revealed of how Baron conducted the crime, including how the killer used a belt to murder Ruby before dragging him into a bathtub in an attempt to frame it as a suicide. He later confessed to officers that, after finding bags of concrete in his garage, he covered the 73-year-old's body in the bathtub. Then, he explained that he covered the concrete with coffee grounds to mask the smell of the corpse. After the murder, Baron fled Hawaii with a friend, before being arrested in California. He was found inside a bus on its way to Mexico, hiding in a crawl space. The timeline of events still remains unclear, but according to the police, Baron lived in the victim's impressive $1.2 million home after his death and drove around in his Audi A6. He later admitted to the police that his plans were to forge documents that would allow him to fraudulently acquire the home.Judge Cathy Remigo sentenced Baron to two counts of theft and a count of identity theft as a result of stealing from Ruby, Island News reported. It was decided by the Hawaii Paroling Authority that Baron should serve the mandatory minimum before he can be considered for parole.The family members of Ruby were in attendance at the sentencing hearing, where they shared details about his love for literature, plays and fine art. They also reflected on his harrowing final moments with Baron.Ruby's niece shared: 'The medical examiner found particles of cement in my uncle's lungs. I have to live knowing that he was still breathing when you poured cement on him. You have to live with that too, Mr Barone. What a horrific way to die.'Lorne Ruby, the victim's brother, said to Baron in court: "You buried him alive. It was not enough for you to murder him. You inflicted horrible, unnecessary suffering upon him. How cold, how cruel, how inhumane, how evil such an act."
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The new geography of stolen goods
The new geography of stolen goods

Economist

time3 hours ago

  • Economist

The new geography of stolen goods

Britain | Grand Theft Global Inc Cars, phones, tractors: how high-end products are increasingly stolen to serve distant markets The MSC Ruby is almost ready to leave Felixstowe. Seven remote-controlled gantry cranes are still at work, stacking containers in the ship's bays. Some 11,000 containers pass through this port each day, making it Britain's primary conduit to the arteries of global trade. The ­ Ruby 's next call is Gran Canaria—then, the long run down the coast of Africa. Watching the scene, Adam Gibson, the lone police officer at the port whose job is finding stolen cars, sounds rueful: 'There's no way in hell I can search even a small fraction of them. We could be standing here now and there could be three or four boxes of stolen cars just there in those stacks. They could be manifested as teddy bears.' Without many people noticing Britain has become a leading exporter of stolen goods. In the past decade the number of vehicles stolen in the country has risen by 75%. Most end up on container ships; the top destination is west Africa. More recently London has become known as the 'phone-snatching capital of Europe'. If the victims manage to track their devices, the goods are most likely to turn up in China. British farmers are plagued by raiding gangs. Their tractors and GPS kits usually head east, to Russia or eastern Europe. For centuries criminals have nicked valuable products and smuggled them across borders, beyond the reach of the law. Britain today shows how this model has evolved in new and alarming ways. Encrypted communications have enabled criminal gangs to operate and co-operate more freely than ever before, and establish global supply chains. As countries in Africa and Asia have become richer, demand for the products common on the streets of the rich world is growing. This combination has spawned a flourishing criminal enterprise. Call it Grand Theft Global Inc. Britain is a 'perfect place' for this business, says Elijah Glantz of RUSI, a think-tank, because of its saturated consumer market and weak export controls. There are lots of expensive cars and phones to steal, and it is easy to get them away. There is also almost no deterrent: Britain's police solve only 5% of crimes (and 2% of vehicle thefts). In continental Europe and America such criminal enterprise is growing, too, though America has stronger scrutiny of exports due to fear of fraud and tax evasion. Canada has been hit by a rash of vanishing vehicles. But for now, Britain has the dubious title of world leader. 'The UK sees itself as a recipient of criminality, not an exporter,' says Mr Glantz. Cars show how the model has evolved. Like other rich countries, Britain experienced a sharp drop in vehicle crime in the 1990s, thanks to immobilisers and other technology. In 2013 Britain had only 2.7 thefts for every 1,000 privately owned cars, according to RUSI. Now it is 4.4. Thefts have risen from 90,000 in 2020 to 130,000 last year. That has fed into a 45% real-terms rise in the cost of car insurance (in the EU it has risen only in line with inflation). Vehicle crime is 'my number-one issue', says Dan Tomlinson, the Labour MP for Chipping Barnet, a leafy north London suburb. The method is typically as follows. To defeat sophisticated security systems, thieves use specialised equipment. Once in, they mask the car with fake number plates and use jammers to override GPS tracking. Then they move it, usually across county lines (collaboration between police forces is often poor), where it will be sold to a group that handles logistics. Sometimes the car is hidden in a shipment of other goods, under a false manifest. More often, the gang employs a third group to give the car a 'new identity'—not only paperwork but markers including the vehicle identification number, a unique code stamped on the chassis. Uncontained This whole process—from theft to container—often takes less than a day. That is partly because Grand Theft Global Inc is not one outfit but a sophisticated supply chain. It is also lucrative. Consider a Toyota Hilux, which when new costs around £40,000 ($54,000). The group that steals one might be paid £1,500 for a night's work. If another gets it to west Africa, where Hiluxes are sought after, they can sell it for more than it fetches in Britain. In his large inspection tent at Felixstowe, Mr Gibson provides a guided tour. The cars are all shiny SUVs, though most have been dented by ratchet straps (the thieves don't mind because that can be fixed cheaply at the other end). Shelves are piled with engines, batteries and sundry parts from cars taken to a 'chop shop', a freelance operator who will break them up without asking questions. Some are literally sawn into thirds. Gangs have also begun to target rental companies using fake documents. On the day your correspondent visits, Mr Gibson opens a container, following a tip-off. Inside is a Porsche 911 Carrera S that was rented in Germany two weeks ago: somehow it has found its way into a box in Britain, bound for Africa. Between 2021 and 2024 almost four in ten stolen cars intercepted at Britain's ports were heading for the Democratic Republic of Congo, according to the National Vehicle Crime Intelligence Service ­(NaVCIS) The DRC borders nine countries, making it an ideal hub from which to serve a growing African market. One in five was heading for the United Arab Emirates. From there gangs reach customers across the Gulf. Most thefts in Canada follow the same two routes. Buyers largely want SUVs that can handle poor roads. Increasingly, however, the elite also want sports cars, which often stick out on the streets of Kinshasa (not least because many are right-hand-drive). Sometimes, says Mr Gibson, thieves seem to work to an 'order'. Grand Theft Global Inc works in a similar way for phones. Some 70,000 phones were stolen in London last year, a rise of more than a third on the year before. Britain accounts for 40% of the stolen phones in Europe. As with cars, low-level thieves sell them on to a fence (a thief might get £100-200 for one that is unlocked, or £30-60 for one that isn't). Again, third-party services have popped up, such as shops that specialise in overcoming security features. Large batches of phones are then wrapped in tinfoil to prevent tracking, and exported, often via container ships. Remarkably, investigations have found that most end up in one place: Huaqiangbei market in Shenzhen. Demand in China for second-hand phones is huge; those that cannot be unlocked are broken apart and rebuilt. And there is no better place to do that than Huaqiangbei, the world's largest electronics market. Because Shenzhen is where many of the phones were made in the first place, there is a ready supply of skilled workers. According to a study by Zituo Wang of the University of Southern California, the primary source of stolen phones identified in China is Britain. British farms, meanwhile, have been targeted since Russia's invasion of Ukraine led to sanctions on legal trade. In 2023 the value of claims for stolen GPS kits rose by 137%. Today London, tomorrow the world It may be that Grand Theft Global Inc is thriving in Britain because the country has particular vulnerabilities. Or perhaps criminals there have just been quicker to pick up on them. London is, after all, often a city where innovative methods in criminality first emerge. There is little reason to think this one will not be exported, too. To see why, consider four factors. First is the way containerised shipping works. Around the world, border agencies overwhelmingly focus on imports, hunting for people and drugs. In many countries, exports are hardly checked at all. Anyone can book a container. The way ships are filled—tiers of 'freight forwarders' buy batches of containers and sell them on—makes auditing hard. Only a tiny proportion of containers will ever be opened up, let alone X-rayed; typically just when authorities receive a tip-off. For each container Mr Gibson holds up and searches, the police must pay the port a fee of £200. Second, the ability to covertly communicate, sell goods and transfer money online has tipped the scales in favour of criminal groups. Until recently, even highly professional outfits found it hard to do this (case files abound with stories of drug kingpins struggling to make themselves understood on clunky satellite phones). Now someone who wants a Porsche in Kinshasa can be linked seamlessly, via several intermediaries, with someone prepared to steal one in Kent. 'These groups are just doing business in a very modern way,' says Ruggero Scaturro of the Global Initiative against Transnational Organised Crime, a think-tank. In Britain Grand Theft Global Inc is seen as so low-risk that many drug gangs are shifting into it. That links to the third factor: supply and demand. As cars and phones have become more sophisticated, they have become more expensive in relation to incomes. That alone has made stealing them more attractive. But it has also fuelled a particular type of demand: most middle-class consumers in China cannot afford a new iPhone. Many Africans want better vehicles, but the used-car market remains dominant, legal dealerships scarce, and premium cars have not yet reached the economies of scale that bring costs down. These gaps will continue. As the market for stolen goods becomes more efficient, prices will fall. Once a particular model is sold, there will be demand for parts. Fourth, police forces largely remain in the dust. NaVCIS has enjoyed some success, intercepting 550 cars in the past year. But that is a small fraction of what gets through. Mr Gibson is one of three officers on the whole south coast. Britain's police have yet to catch any high-ups in the business. European forces do not even have dedicated investigation teams. Across the rich world, police resources tend to be directed towards 'higher harm' offences. The gains to trade In some ways the success of Grand Theft Global Inc is a story of globalisation. It uses the infrastructure of global commerce, designed for frictionless trade. Identifying stolen goods amid so many containers is like finding 'needles in haystacks', says Tim Morris of the Association of British Ports. Globalisation created the supply chain that allows each iPhone—assembled from nearly 3,000 components—to reach the hands of a consumer. The same forces inverted see that phone yanked out of it, re-exported and broken apart again. Yet Grand Theft Global Inc can also thrive in a world that is increasingly fragmented. Tariffs make stolen goods only more competitive. Sanctions, like those on Russia, boost demand for criminal activity. When countries are less co-operative, it is easier to ship goods to places from where they are unlikely to be recovered. Indeed, while Grand Theft Global Inc hurts the rich world's consumers, the countries benefiting from the trade have little incentive to curb it. Unlike those in Europe, authorities in China do not make it hard to sell stolen phones. The country is not part of the Central Equipment Identity Register, a global database that networks use to block stolen devices. 'China really doesn't care about this problem,' says Mr Wang. Even if African countries wanted to clamp down, says Mr Glantz, they would struggle. 'Enforcement capability in Cameroon or the Congo is almost none.' In theory sending goods halfway round the world is an added cost. But the way the shipping industry works, a container is paid for only when it reaches its destination. If it is intercepted, the cost is borne by the freight forwarder. Extra distance can also reduce the willingness of insurers to pursue recovery. One officer says French police have shown her videos of stacks of stolen cars in Senegal that cannot be repatriated. Once the MSC Ruby leaves port, its contents are as good as gone.

Sex for Sale: Secret deal that kept saunas open for business
Sex for Sale: Secret deal that kept saunas open for business

Daily Record

time2 days ago

  • Daily Record

Sex for Sale: Secret deal that kept saunas open for business

A police crackdown on saunas in Edinburgh was foiled after a lawyer uncovered a 27 year old secret deal giving owners immunity from prosecution In 2013 the newly appointed Chief Constable of Police Scotland Sir Stephen House launched a crackdown on sauna and massage parlour operators across the country. ‌ Sir Stephen had long believed - not without justification - that they were fronts for money laundering and criminality and needed to be closed. In particular he wanted to target Edinburgh's controversial sex for sale industry believing a blind eye had been turned by his predecessors over the years. ‌ In reality his suspicious on that particular front were well founded - but not in the way that he thought. Sir Stephen targeted Edinburgh saunas within weeks of the country's new single force being introduced in April 2013. The initiative was even given a name Operation Windermere. ‌ In a series of high profile raids more than a dozen premises across Edinburgh were targeted resulting in their closure with a number of people charged with brothel keeping and living off immoral earnings. City saunas caught in the crackdown included including Scorpio Leisure in Albion Street, the Ambassador Sauna in Lothian Road, Carol's Sauna in Easter Road; Paradise Sauna in Roseburn Terace and premises in Blair Street and Dundas Street. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. However despite its best intentions Sir Stephen's crackdown foundered in the courts. Criminal charges against 11 people collapsed after it emerged - unbeknown to Mr House - that the sale of sex had effectively been legal in Edinburgh since 1986. A secret agreement had been signed by politicians, police and a senior Crown Office official that year amid fears the city would be devastated by an Aids epidemic. The rate of HIV infection among heroin addicts in the city had soared and many female users sold sex to feed their habit. The capital had become known as having the highest population of Aids sufferers in the United Kingdom. It was estimated around half of its' 2000 heroin users had the HIV virus. The epidemic had spread through the multiple use of injecting equipment - shared by up to 20 addicts at a time. ‌ As a result it was agreed saunas could have prostitutes on the premises and operate on the basis that they promoted safe sex and supplied condoms. The existence of the deal was revealed after one of the older sauna owners targeted in the 2013 crackdown asked his lawyers to check on the existence of the policy which he remembered from the 1980's. As a result, the decision was taken to drop all charges against the 11 men and women. Police Scotland's high-profile Operation Windermere had come to an embarrassing halt. The lawyer responsible for identifying the loophole was veteran solicitor 72-year-old Vincent Belmonte. He represented several saunas facing brothel-keeping charges as a result of the police raids. ‌ Belmonte discovered a deal had in fact been struck between owners, council bosses, police and prosecutors. He then discovered that the man who had signed it on behalf of the Crown Office - Kenneth McIver - was not only still alive but now a Sheriff. In an interview in 2016 with our sister paper the Sunday Mail l Belmonte said: "I was absolutely certain there was a policy and just needed to prove it. "The saunas were trading legally in my eyes as a lawyer. "I asked all the agencies to send me records of their meetings which had set up the policy. "None of them cooperated. I then wrote asking to take statements from the people involved in the policy, one of whom was Sheriff McIver. "I was then told discreetly not to bother preparing for the case as it wasn't going ahead. ‌ "The Crown Office clearly didn't have any idea that the policy existed and had never been rescinded. "I knew then the Crown were in difficulties, so I wasn't surprised the case was dropped." Sheriff McIver had helped formulate the agreement in 1986 while working as a senior depute fiscal in the Crown Office. Though McIver declined to speak to Belmonte, the lawyer then wrote to the Crown Office to tell them about the policy and McIver's role. Officials interviewed McIver who confirmed the existence of the policy. When Belmonte and other lawyers turned up at Edinburgh Sheriff Court for trial in November 2015, they were told that all charges were dropped and the case was not going ahead. Brothel-keeping and prostitution charges against other bosses were also ditched. ‌ Belmonte said that the police should have made more checks in June 2013 before they raided the city's saunas and tried to close them down. Many of them had their licences suspended following the raids. However most were able to remain open after lodging appeals. In 2014 Edinburgh City Council decided to stop granting saunas public entertainment licences which had been introduced in number of saunas dropped after the raids and the council move. A smaller number now operate. During the 1980's former criminal lawyer James McIntyre represented the owner of a sauna in Torphichen Place, Edinburgh, which was directly across the road from one of Edinburgh's biggest and busiest police stations. During that time his clients premises were never raided once and was aware that the police turned a blind one to what was allegedly going on inside. ‌ In fact the client was so confident there would be no raid that he would often hold business meetings in an office in the sauna premises - including consultations with his lawyer. James told the Daily Record:"My client's sauna was literally facing the police station. "I wasn't aware of any agreement then but I was very aware that nothing ever happenned. "There was never any question in my mind that these places would get raided. "At that time there was almost one on every street in Edinburgh. "To me the saunas kept girls safe rather than standing on the corners of somewhere like Glasgow Green where anything can happen to them."

Malaysia PM calls for probe into syringe attack on ex-minister's son
Malaysia PM calls for probe into syringe attack on ex-minister's son

Reuters

time3 days ago

  • Reuters

Malaysia PM calls for probe into syringe attack on ex-minister's son

KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 14 (Reuters) - Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said on Thursday that he has ordered authorities to conduct a swift and thorough investigation into an attack on a former minister's son that took place a day earlier. Former economy minister Rafizi Ramli, who resigned from Anwar's cabinet in May, said in a social media post that his 12-year-old son was dragged away and stabbed with a syringe by an unknown assailant while leaving a shopping mall on Wednesday. Anwar said he told the home minister and top police chief to ensure a transparent probe into the "very alarming" incident was conducted. "I guarantee the home minister and inspector-general of police said they will act immediately, swiftly, and transparently," he told parliament on Thursday. Rafizi has been critical of Anwar and the government since his resignation as economy minister, which came after he lost his position as deputy president in the premier's political party. Last month, Rafizi called for a royal commission of inquiry to probe alleged political interference in the judiciary, among other concerns. At a press conference following Anwar's remarks, Rafizi said the attack on his son was "an act of intimidation" to silence him, adding that his wife had received threats via text message. One of the messages read "Shut up! If you continue, AIDS!" followed by three syringe emojis, Rafizi said. He said he believes the threats are linked to a meeting with whistleblowers last week. He did not elaborate further. Rafizi said while health checks showed his son had not experienced any immediate side effects, he must undergo regular blood tests to rule out viral infections such as hepatitis or HIV. The attack comes as political leaders voiced concerns over increasing incidents of violence in Malaysia. Last year, the country saw several attacks on its soccer players, with one national footballer severely injured after he was splashed with acid by an unknown assailant at a shopping mall.

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