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Wednesday, November 29, 2006

aman

PIN Number Reversal?


If you should ever be forced by a robber to withdraw money from an ATM machine, you can notify the police by entering your Pin # in reverse.

For example if your pin number is 1234 then you would put in 4321. The ATM recognizes that your pin number is backwards from the ATM card you placed in the machine.

The machine will still give you the money you requested, but unknown to The robber, the police will be immediately dispatched to help you.

This information was recently broadcasted on TV and it states that it is seldom used because people don't know it exists.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

aman

A CLEVER METHOD OF SNATCHING YOUR THINGS




Subject: I was robbed at Petaling Street on Tuesday evening

I was at a souvenir shop at Jalan H.S.Lee, Petaling Street on Tuesday evening 5Oct 2006.

A young Indian lady told me that there's a stain on my pants.

(The young Indian is around 20-25 yrs old, long hair, about 160cm tall, her skin is quite fair, she's wearing t-shirt & jeans and she's speaking very fluent English.)

I turned back and checked and found out that there's a red stain looked like paint on my pants.

So, this lady helped me to clear the stain from my pants. After that, I continue looking for soft toy in the shop.

Then, the lady asked me whether I want to clean the stain. I rejected her offer and told her that I'm going back home and I can clean it at home.

After that, she told me that she was a teacher at a famous tuition center in KL just opposite the shop and she's waiting for her brother.

She wanted to go to toilet to wash her hands (Her hand was dirtied when helping me to wipe away the stain) and she invited me to go to the toilet with her.

So, I followed her to the toilet to clean the stain on my pants.

She brought me to the ladies at the 1st floor of the tuition center. I took off my bag and put it on the basin so that I can clean the stain on my pants.

While I was cleaning, she took my bag and ran away.

Everything was just happened in 3 minutes. I was so shock when I found out my bag and the lady was gone.

The young Indian lady left her things in the toilet and ran away with my bag.

I searched through her belongings and found a lipstick in the envelope she left.

Then, I realized that she's the one who put the red lipstick stain on my pants and pretended to help me.



I went to the tuition center together with the police officer for investigation on the next day.

I was able to recognize the young Indian lady from the CCTV record. The security head of the tuition center told me that I am the 2nd victim.

5 months ago, the same young Indian lady did the same case using same method at the same place to 1 of the student in the tuition center.

During the investigation, I was told that to print out the young Indian lady's photo from the CCTV costs RM150.

The tuition center wanted me to bear the printing cost because I'm neither a staff nor a student there. I refused to bear the cost because I am the victim.

I asked the police officer whether the police force can bear the cost because it's an evidence.

Guess what the police officer told me…

He told me not to put too much hope that they will be able to catch the thief, 70%-80% that they will not be able to catch the thief.

Sigh…

With all the evidence provided (the CCTV record, the thief's belongings, and her finger print was printed on the envelope she left), the police officer told me not to put too much hope that they will be able to catch the thief.

I was so disappointed.

So, I decided to share my experience to everyone of you. Hopefully you will not be the next victim because the thief is still free out there.

This is her 2nd successful case, so there will be 3rd time and so on until she's caught.

The police officer told me that such cases always happen at Bukit Bintang and Low Yat Plaza area.

So, pls be careful when you are at that area and trust no one.

Just ignore and walk away when a stranger tells you that your clothes is dirty.

Pls share my experience to your friends and family especially ladies.

Hopefully your friends and family will not be the next victim.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

aman

Altantuya's baby 'not related to analyst'

KUALA LUMPUR: The political analyst is not the father of Altantuya Shaariibuu’s 16-month-old baby boy.

Honorary consul of Mongolia in Malaysia Datuk Syed Abdul Rahman Alhabshi said this in response to reports in several newspapers yesterday.

"Altantuya has a son. But the child is not related to the analyst," Syed said at his office in Sunway Damansara yesterday.

He also refuted reports that Altantuya’s family would be sending documents to show that the deceased had married the analyst.

"I asked the family to send me proof of her relationship with the analyst," he said.

"They have faxed us details of her trip from Kuala Lumpur to Shanghai in March last year, which was paid for by the analyst at a travel agency here.

"They have also sent recent pictures of Altantuya but there is no marriage certificate coming."

He also denied telling the media that Altantuya’s parents would be coming here with her baby for DNA testing to ascertain whether the baby is the analyst’s son.

"They will be coming for DNA tests here to ascertain if the remains found in Puncak Alam are that of Altantuya."

Friday, November 10, 2006

aman

Top political analyst arrested! Explosive end to affair that turned sour



KUALA LUMPUR: The country was abuzz yesterday after a prominent political analyst was arrested in connection with the abduction and brutal murder of a Mongolian woman.

The New Straits Times understands that Attantuya Shariibu @ Aminah allegedly demanded US$500,000 (RM1.85 million) as payment after he signalled the end of their affair. She claimed that she had given birth to his child and threatened to go public if her demand was not met.



After checking and finding her claim to be false, he lodged a police report last month. What happened next is a bit murky but three police personnel — including two from the Special Action Squad — have been arrested and are likely to be charged with murder. It is believed that she was shot execution-style somewhere in Puncak Alam before her body was placed over some explosives and detonated.

Using a battery of metal detectors, sniffer dogs and post- blast investigation equipment, police personnel examined a shallow grave and surrounding areas for nearly eight hours. They found a handful of bone fragments.

Aminah’s case came to light after Aminah’s sister lodged a missing person’s report on Oct 21. In it, she identified the political analyst as a suspect. Bit by bit, the police dug and managed to put together a mosaic of what took place.

They learnt that she and the analyst — who runs a think- tank — were introduced to each other at a party abroad a few years ago. They struck up a relationship and had been seeing each other off and on abroad.

Several months ago, the analyst told her that he wanted to end the relationship.

Early last month, Aminah, her sister and cousin turned up in Kuala Lumpur. She hired a private investigator to obtain as much information about the analyst. She also bombarded him with SMSes.

She attempted to visit him at his office and home in Damansara but was prevented by security staff. The analyst also engaged the services of a security consultant to make sure that she did not continue to harass him.

On Oct 19, she showed up outside his home and created a ruckus.

Her sister said that Aminah did not return to their hotel in Chinatown and lodged a police report two days later.
Top-notch investigators were yesterday interrogating those in custody to fill some important blanks in the case, namely how the police personnel got involved. The analyst, in his 40s, is expected to be produced before a magistrate today.

Meanwhile, the Prime Minister’s Office yesterday clarified that the member of the Special Action Squad detained in connection with the murder was not part of the Prime Minister’s permanent personal security team.

A spokesman told Bernama that the police personnel was only a member of a team whose duties include providing security on a rotational basis to Malaysian VIPs when they travel overseas.
aman

The saga of the Johor Bigfoot may not have ended.

Loud noises and the breaking of branches at a rubber plantation in Kampung Batu 4, about three kilometres from the Kota Tinggi waterfall on Monday night, have fuelled interest again in the creature.

Workers at a kongsi checked the area at dawn and found large footprints on the ground.

State Wildlife Department director Ab Razak Majid said the prints were that of a young renegade bull elephant, but Tenggara Parliament Youth Consensus Council chairman Marozan Ahmad felt otherwise.

"Based on the size and shape of the footprints, droppings and remains of banana plants, we are sure that an elephant had intruded into the plantation," Razak said.

"It would be difficult to track it down as it would have moved to another location in the jungle by now."

Marozan had ventured into the secondary jungle behind the kongsi with a group of youths to investigate the source of the disturbance.

"We found large footprints measuring about 45cm long. The pair of footprints had a stride of about a metre apart. This indicates that a large bi-pedal creature had moved around here. There are twigs and leaves broken off from trees from a height of more than two metres."

Marozan hoped the authorities and researchers would investigate the footprints.

"A group of experts should track into the interior of the jungle. The Bigfoot would be a positive development for the district as it will attract experts and scientists here," he said.