Friday, August 31, 2018

Set

“Game, set, match equals tennis, [and] set, match, run equals arson.” (Demetri Martin)

Arson is a crime of deliberately setting fire to buildings, wild land areas, abandoned homes, vehicles or other property with the intent to cause to enjoy causing damage. It may be distinguished from other causes such as spontaneous combustion, accidental fires (like smoking in bed) and natural wildfires.

Many U.S. state legal systems (and the legal systems of several other countries) divide arson into degrees depending on the value of the property, but more commonly on its use and whether the crime was committed in the day or night.

·        First-Degree Arson: Burning an occupied structure such as a school or a place where people are normally present

·        Second- Degree Arson: Burning an unoccupied building such as an empty barn or an unoccupied house or other structure in order to claim insurance on such property

·        Third- Degree Arson: Burning an abandoned building or an abandoned area such as a field, forest or woods.
Arsonists set fires for sexual excitement. Profilers say arsonists have few close relationships. They start blazes to feel important and in control. Many only have a high school education, but some of the most creative individuals showed a surprisingly high degree of intelligence. Below are six of the most notable arsonists and the damage they inflicted:
1. Julio Gonzalez
Number of Fires: One
People Killed: 87


Story:  After immigrating to New York City during the Mariel Boatlift in 1980, Julio Gonzalez was working as a warehouse employee when he met Lydia Feliciano, who became his girlfriend. A decade later, after losing his job and getting dumped, a drunken Gonzalez visited Feliciano while she was at work as a coat-check girl at the Happy Land Social Club, an illegal bar in the Bronx. Feliciano begged him to leave, and Gonzalez shouted threats while being thrown out by the bouncer.

After purchasing a dollar's worth of gasoline at a nearby gas station, he returned to the club, where he poured the gas over the stairs (the only exit) and threw a match on it. The fire burned so rapidly that patrons didn't have time to stop what they were doing and flee. Fire investigators found the dead stopped mid-life. Feliciano was one of the six survivors.

Capture: Gonzalez watched the firefighters battle the blaze, and then went home to nap. When police interviewed the survivors, Feliciano told them about her fight with Gonzalez. Gonzalez admitted to setting the fire. He didn't even get rid of the evidence—his gas-soaked clothes were still in his apartment. He was found guilty of 174 charges of murder (two for each person who died) and was sentenced to 25 years for each count, for a total of 4,350 years. The punishment is mostly symbolic, because he will serve the sentences concurrently.

2. John "Pillow Pyro" Orr
Number of Fires: About 2,000
People Killed: Four
Cost: Tens of millions of dollars of property damage


Story: John Orr hoped to be a Los Angeles police officer, but didn't make the cut. Instead, he joined the Glendale Fire Department as an arson investigator. His coworkers thought Orr was strange. He chased down shoplifters and burglars in his fire truck. They admired his dedication and his uncanny ability to be the first firefighter on the scene. He always knew where the hydrants were, the best way to put out each fire, and how to find the cause of the fire. His colleagues never suspected that Orr was the man they had dubbed the "Pillow Pyro."

Orr used the same incendiary device for all his blazes: a cigarette attached to a book of matches wrapped in paper with cotton and bedding (hence the nickname), secured with a rubber band. The cigarette would burn down, and the matches would ignite the paper and bedding. In 1984, a fire at a local hardware store killed four people (including a 2-year-old child), and destroyed the building and nearby establishments.

Capture: During an arson investigators conference in Bakersfield, CA, in January 1987, several suspicious fires broke out. At one of the fires, investigators found a single fingerprint on a piece of notebook paper. Two years later, during another fire investigators conference in Pacific Grove, an outbreak of small fires occurred. Bakersfield's arson investigator compared the participants at both conferences and found 10 people attended both.

By 1991, the investigators formed the Pillow Pyro task force and published a profile, noting the suspect was most likely an arson investigator from the greater Los Angeles area. The fingerprint found at the first conference was compared to those of the 10 attendees of both conferences; it matched Orr's fingerprint. When he was arrested in November 1991, police found cigarettes, rubber bands, and binoculars.

His literary aspirations contributed to his downfall. He wrote a manuscript, called Point of Origin, describing a fireman who was an arsonist, which became damning evidence. He wrote: "To Aaron, the smoke was beautiful, causing his heart rate to quicken and his breath to come in shallow gasps. He was trying to control his outward appearance and look normal to anyone around him. He relaxed as he watched the fire." Orr is serving life plus 20 years for arson and the four murders.
3. Raymond Lee Oyler
Number of Fires: 24
People Killed: Five
Cost: The fire destroyed over 40,000 acres, amounting to more than $9 million in damages


Story: Raymond Lee Oyler was a 36-year-old stupid mechanic in Riverdale, CA. He trained for three months to become a volunteer firefighter, but quit. He began starting small fires, but minor blazes weren't enough. He became obsessed with lighting a mountain on fire. He started more fires by attaching a cigarette to a pack of matches, placing it in the brush, and lighting the cigarette. After bragging to his girlfriend about his fires, she threatened to leave him if he didn't stop. So he quit for six months before starting again.

In October 2006, investigators say Oyler placed his trademark incendiary device in a gully near Esperanza Avenue in Cabazon. The Santa Ana winds fed the fire and it spread at speeds up to 40 mph with flames leaping more than 100 feet into the air. The 1,300-degree fire melted guardrails along Highway 243. A truck driver testified that he saw Oyler at a gas station in Banning watching the fire. He claims Oyler said, "[the fire] is happening just the way I thought it would." A wave of fire rolled over five firefighters as they tried to save a house from the blaze. All five died.
Capture: A $500,000 reward was offered for any information related to the Esperanza blaze. Arson investigators were already looking at Oyler for two smaller fires set in early summer. Both of the cigarettes used to light the flames had Oyler's Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) on them. Police officers first arrested him for the two smaller blazes and then later charged him for the Esperanza fire. While there was no DNA on the device that started the Esperanza blaze, it was identical to those with Oyler's DNA on them. After a guilty verdict, a judge sentenced Oyler to death.

4. David "Son of Sam" Berkowitz                               
Number of Fires: 1,411
People Killed / Cost: Unknown


Story: The adopted son of Pearl and Nat Berkowitz spent most of his childhood alone. If he didn't play baseball, he bullied the other kids. He was large and awkward. When Berkowitz tired of torturing Pearl's parakeet, he started fires in buildings across New York and kept detailed diaries of each one. Berkowitz always felt everyone was out to get him.

Capture: Officials weren't looking for Berkowitz fire-starting habits. They were too busy searching for the Son of Sam, who was terrorizing New York City. It was Berkowitz's love of fires that contributed to his capture. A few days prior to his arrest, Berkowitz started a fire outside his neighbor Craig Glassman's door.

The Son of Sam had alleged in a letter that Glassman belonged to a cult, which made Berkowitz kill six people and injure seven others. Berkowitz placed .22 bullets near the door in the hope of causing an explosion, but the fire didn't burn hot enough to ignite the ammo. Glassman believed his odd neighbor Berkowitz set the fire, and he gave the police threatening notes that Berkowitz had sent him. Based on notes and an eyewitness description of Berkowitz, police arrested him, and he admitted to the six murders.
5. Peter Dinsdale (Bruce George Peter Lee)
Number of Fires: More than 30
People Killed: 26 people died in 11 fires


Story: When Peter Dinsdale was just 12-years-old, he went to the house of a classmate, 6-year-old Richard Ellerington, in Hull, England. Arriving before 7 a.m., Dinsdale poured paraffin in a window and tossed a match into the house. The Elleringtons woke and rushed five of their six children from the burning row house. Richard, who was physically handicapped, didn't make it out.
The Ellerington fire was one of many fatal fires that Dinsdale set from 1973 to 1979. Dinsdale was a pathetic case. His mother worked as a prostitute and neglected him because she disliked his freakish appearance and epileptic fits. Children made fun of him for his limp and deformed appearance, and adults called him "Daft Peter."

He wandered the poor neighborhoods of Hull at night, burning down houses. At 9, he burned down a lumberyard and a shopping district. He claimed to have started a fire in a nursing home that killed 11 men, but it was later deemed accidental. He watched a man stumble around his home ablaze after Dinsdale set the man on fire for cutting his ear. He squirted paraffin in the mail slot of a home, killing a mother and her three sons.

Capture: On December 4, 1979, Dinsdale doused the porch of the Hastie house with paraffin and lit it on fire. The four Hastie boys and their mother were inside; only one boy survived. The Hasties had bullied, stolen from, and threatened their neighbors. It seemed everyone was a suspect. Charlie Hastie had allegedly forced Dinsdale to participate in homosexual acts and had blackmailed him. Dinsdale, who had changed his name to Bruce George Peter Lee, in honor of martial arts legend Bruce Lee, had left used matches and a can of paraffin outside the house, so authorities began an arson investigation.
An anonymous caller claimed to have seen a car outside the house prior to the fire. Even though police didn't suspect the driver of setting the fire, they had few leads and trailed the car. Eventually, Dinsdale admitted he set fire to the Hastie house. He said he didn't want to kill them, only to scare Charlie. Then Dinsdale coolly admitted to 10 more fatal fires and showed investigators the location of each. Dinsdale pled guilty to 26 counts of manslaughter and remains in a psychiatric hospital.

6. Thomas Sweatt
Number of Fires: More than 350
People Killed: Two confirmed dead, but as many as five
Cost: Millions of dollars worth of damage


Story: When Thomas Sweatt saw an attractive man, he would follow him home, but instead of talking to the object of his affection, Sweatt would set fire to the man's house or car. For more than 30 years, Sweatt set hundreds of fires in the metro Washington District of Columbia (DC), area. Sweatt often tossed incendiary devices into police cars and then watched them burn. Each time he set a fire, he used a similar gadget.

He would fill a milk jug with gasoline and plug the opening with a piece of clothing that served as a wick. The wick burned plastic for more than 20 minutes and after the fire consumed the container, gas fumes escaped and caught fire. In two different fires, elderly women were unable to escape and later died.

Capture: At the scene of a fire in Arlington, VA, in December 2004, officials found a pair of pants from a Marine dress uniform. They retrieved DNA from the pants, which matched mystery DNA that investigators had obtained from a strand of hair and wicks from three incendiary devices found at other fires. (Sweatt often used his own clothing as wicks.) When investigators visited a Marine base in southeast Washington, Naval Criminal Investigation Services (NCIS) mentioned that a car often sat outside the base while the driver stared at the Marines.

 NCIS felt this man was responsible for several car fires on base, but they didn't have proof, and the fires had suddenly stopped. For weeks, the police tailed Sweatt before asking him for a DNA sample, which he voluntarily gave. Police matched his DNA to the dress pants and the DNA found at three fires. Sweatt pled guilty to fires in DC, Virginia, and Maryland and is serving a life sentence in a federal prison.

“Arson isn't usually done with intent of committing arson... but to conceal other acts of criminal behavior.” (Doug Williams)[i]



[i] Sources used:
·     “6 Infamous Arsonists and How They Got Caught” by Meghan Holohan
·        “Arson” from Wikipedia
·        “DNA” from Wikipedia
This post was inspired by an episode of the series Ghost Whisperer.

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Spit

“That awkward moment:  when you choke on your spit” (awkmomentz.tumblr.com)

Choking is caused by a blockage in the throat, which restricts airflow. Most often, choking in adults is the result of getting food stuck in the windpipe. In children, choking commonly occurs when toys, coins, or other small objects become lodged in the throat. When air cannot flow into the lungs, serious brain damage occurs in 5 to 6.

The fourth leading cause of unintentional injury is choking, which kills over 5,000 people a year. How a choking incident is treated is different by age. Here’s a response guide for choking in babies, toddlers, older adults, adults, and yourself.

What to Do If a Baby Is Choking


1.   Let the baby cough. Coughing is the most effective way to dislodge something from the airway.

 

2.   Check choking signs.  A choking baby may be unable to cough or cry. Typically, a choking baby will open their mouth wide while their skin turns red or blue.

 

3.   Call 911. Ask someone to call 911 immediately. If you are alone with the infant, call 911 after 2 minutes of treatment.

 

4.   Begin back blows.  Place the baby face down on your forearm, with their jaw cradled in your thumb and forefinger, and their head settled lower than their chest. Use the heel of your hand to firmly hit the baby’s back five times between the shoulder blades.

 

5.   Begin chest thrusts. Turn the infant over while still resting your forearm on their front side. Sit down and place the baby’s back on your thigh, with their head still lower than the chest. Put two or three fingers between the baby’s nipples. Thrust by pushing straight down on the chest 1.5 inches in a smooth motion, and then allow the chest to return. Repeat five times.

6.   Repeat 5-and-5. Repeat five back blows and five chest thrusts. Check the baby’s throat for the choking object after each cycle.

 

7.   Begin Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR). If the baby becomes unconscious and stops breathing, place them on the flat ground.

 

8.   Begin chest compressions. This is similar to chest thrusts, but the baby is kept flat on the ground and your free hand is placed on their forehead. Administer 30 chest compressions with your two or three fingers in the center of the baby’s nipples, at a rate of two per second.

 

9.   Give two rescue breaths.  Open the baby’s airway by placing a hand on their forehead and two fingers on the chin. Make a seal over their mouth and nose with your mouth, inhale a normal-sized breath, then blow into the baby’s mouth for one second, making sure their chest rises.

 

10.               Check airway . If the chest doesn’t rise, the baby’s airway is blocked. Look into the baby’s airway and attempt to dislodge the object.

 

11.               Repeat cycle. Continue with chest compressions and rescue breaths until the baby stops choking or medical personnel arrive.

 

What to Do if a Toddler Is Choking

 
1.   Let the toddler cough. Let the toddler continue coughing to dislodge the object.

 

2.   Call 911. Ask someone to call 911 immediately. If you are alone with the child, call 911 after two minutes of treatment.

 

3.   Begin back blows. Lay the child over your lap face down, or support the them in a forward-leaning position. Give them five firm back blows between the shoulder blades.

 

4.   Begin Heimlich maneuver or abdominal thrusts. While standing or kneeling, wrap your arms around their upper abdomen. Clench your fist and place it above the child’s belly button. Grasp your fist with your other hand on top, then pull it inward and upward. Repeat five times.

 

5.   Repeat 5-and-5. Repeat five back blows and five abdominal thrusts. Check their throat for the choking object after each cycle.

 

6.   Begin CPR. If they become unconscious or stop breathing, place them on the flat ground.

 

7.   Begin chest compressions. Place your hands one on top of the other in the middle of the toddler’s chest. Deliver 30 chest compressions, two inches deep, at a rate of 100 compressions per minute. Push down firmly, but not too hard as you could break the child’s rib cage.

 

8.   Give two rescue breaths. Tilt their head to open the airway, plug their nose, and seal your mouth over the top of their mouth. Give two large breaths, delivered at one second each, making sure the chest rises.

 

9.   Repeat cycle. Continue with chest compressions and rescue breaths until they stop choking or medical personnel arrive.

 

What to Do if an Adult Is Choking

 
1.   Determine the severity. Ask, “Are you choking?” before performing any first aid. If the adult is coughing, let them cough to continue to dislodge the choking hazard.

 

2.   Call 911. Ask someone to call 911 immediately. If you are alone with them, call 911 after two minutes of treatment.

 

3.   Begin back blows. Bend the person over at their waist, crossing your less dominant arm over their chest. Use your dominant arm to deliver five powerful back blows between their shoulder blades.

 

4.   Begin Heimlich maneuver or abdominal thrusts. Stand up and place your leg between their legs to support them if they faint or pass out. Next, wrap your arms around their upper abdomen. Clench your fist and place it above their belly button. Grasp your fist with your other hand on top, then pull it inward and upward quickly. Repeat five times. If they are pregnant or obese, wrap your arms around their chest instead of their upper abdomen, and put your hands in the middle of their chest.

 

5.   Repeat 5-and-5. Repeat five back blows and five abdominal thrusts. Check their throat for the choking object after each cycle.

 

6.   Begin CPR. If they become unconscious or stop breathing, lay them on the ground on a flat surface.

 

7.   Begin chest compressions. Place your hands one on top of the other in the middle of their chest. Use your body weight and deliver chest compressions two inches deep at a rate of 100 compressions per minute.

 

8.   Give two rescue breaths. Tilt their head to open the airway, plug their nose, and seal your mouth over the top of their mouth. Give two large breaths, making sure their chest rises.

 

9.   Repeat cycle. Continue with chest compressions and rescue breaths until they stop choking or medical personnel arrive.

 

What to Do if an Older Adult Is Choking

 
1.   Assess whether or not they’re choking. Sometimes it can be difficult to tell if an older adult who is coughing during a meal is actually choking, since coughing is a common reflex of aging. Signs of an older adult choking include being unable to talk or breathe, motioning towards the throat, or skin turning grey or blue. If they are coughing, let them continue to expel the choking hazard. If the person wears dentures, check if they are in the way.

 

2.   Call 911. Ask someone to call 911 immediately. If you are alone with them, call 911 after two minutes of treatment.

 
 
3.   Begin back blows. Bend them over at their waist, crossing your less dominant arm over their chest. Use your dominant arm to deliver five powerful back blows between their shoulder blades.

 

4.   Begin Heimlich maneuver or abdominal thrusts. Stand up and place your leg between their legs to support them if they faint or pass out. Next, wrap your arms around their upper abdomen. Clench your fist and place it above their belly button. Grasp your fist with your other hand on top, then pull it inward and upward quickly. Repeat five times.

 

5.   Repeat 5-and-5. Repeat five back blows and five abdominal thrusts. Check their throat for the choking object after each cycle.

 

6.   Begin CPR. If they become unconscious or stop breathing, lay them on the ground on a flat surface.

 

7.   Begin chest compressions. Place your hands one on top of the other in the middle of the chest. Use your body weight and deliver chest compressions 2 inches deep at a rate of 100 compressions per minute.

 

8.   Give two rescue breaths. Tilt their head to open the airway, plug their nose, and seal your mouth over the top of their mouth. Give two large breaths, making sure their chest rises.

 

9.   Repeat cycle. Continue with chest compressions and rescue breaths until they stop choking or medical personnel arrive.

 

What to Do if You’re Choking

:
1.   Cough it up. The cough reflex is most effective for dislodging an object from your airway.

 

2.   Call 911. Call 911 and leave your phone on, even if you can’t talk. The operator will still send paramedics.

 

3.   Begin the self-Heimlich maneuver or abdominal thrusts. You can do an abdominal thrust on yourself, the same way you’d perform it on another person. Clench your fist and place it above your belly button, then grasp your fist with your other hand and pull it inward and upward quickly.

 

4.   Repeat. Try to force the object out until medical personnel arrive. You can push your abdomen into the back of a chair or the corner of a table, where you can assert more pressure.

“A nuclear-power plant is infinitely safer than eating because 300 people choke to death on food every year.” (Dixie Lee Ray) [i]



[i] Sources used:

·        “Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation” from Wikipedia

·        How to Help a Choking Victim” by wikiHow

·        “What to Do If Someone Is Choking: Responding to Adults, Babies, and Toddlers” by Amelia Nieilson-Stowell
 

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

No Intention

“I’m not losing weight. I’m getting rid of it. I have no intention of finding it again.” (Anonymous)

Severe obesity is resistant to maintaining conventional weight loss therapies such as consuming fewer calories, increasing exercise, or commercial weight-loss programs. Bariatric surgery is the only effective treatment to combat severe obesity and maintain weight loss in the long term.

The weight loss tool of bariatric surgery includes gastric bypass, gastric sleeve, or laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding. They work by changing the anatomy of the gastrointestinal tract (stomach and digestive system). The production of intestinal hormones is affected in a way that reduces hunger and increases feelings of fullness. The end result is reduction in the frequency of eating. 90 percent of bariatric patients are able to maintain a long-term loss of 50 percent excess body weight.

Significant weight loss is also associated with a number of other changes in the body. After this procedure, you may find yourself engaging in physical activity more (such as walking, biking, or swimming). Increased physical activity (combined with weight loss) may improve your body’s ability to burn fat, lead to a positive personal attitude, and decrease stress levels.  Benefits of sustained weight loss through bariatric surgery include:

1.   Alleviate other medical conditions: Bariatric surgery can lessen illnesses such as metabolic syndrome, pregnancy complications, and gallbladder disease.

 

2.   Eliminate obstructive sleep apnea:  Achieving and sustaining a normal weight range often allows people with sleep apnea to stop using a Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) machine at bedtime.

 
 

3.   Improve fertility: Bariatric surgery can also improve fertility during childbearing years.

 

4.   Improved cardiovascular health: Bariatric surgery decreases a person’s risk of coronary heart disease, stroke and peripheral heart disease. Blood pressure and cholesterol levels can return to normal (or near normal) after surgery reducing these risks and improving overall well-being.

 


5.   Joint pain relief: Carrying around excessive weight puts a lot of stress on your weight-bearing joints often causing chronic pain and joint damage. The significant improvement that occurs after bariatric surgery relieves the stress on joints, and often allows people to stop using pain medications and enjoy much more mobility.

 

6.   Long-term remission for type 2 diabetes: Bariatric surgery causes long-term remission of difficult-to-control type 2 diabetes. The procedure is highly effective for obese patients with type 2 diabetes. It allows almost all patients to remain free of insulin and additional medications for at least three years post surgery.

 

7.   Relief of depression: Many obese people feel depressed because of poor body image and social stigma. Even younger people who carry significant excess weight find it difficult to participate in activities they might otherwise enjoy. This leads to social isolation and depression. Losing this excess weight can improve emotional health in these patients.

“Is 'fat' really the worst thing a human being can be? Is 'fat' worse than 'vindictive', 'jealous', 'shallow', 'vain', 'boring' or 'cruel'? Not to me.”  (J.K. Rowling)[i]



[i] Sources used:
·         “7 Bariatric Surgery Benefits Besides Helping You Lose Weight” by Cleveland Clinic
·        “Benefits of Bariatric Surgery” by ASMBS
·        Continuous Positive Airway Pressure” from Wikipedia
 
 
 
 

·         This post is dedicated to my lovely wife, Bobbi, who successfully underwent bariatric surgery in August 2014.  See the transformation pictures below.
 
Before
 
 
 
After (with our daughter, Allena)
 

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