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mother, 46, sends her five-year-old son to his school nativity with a 'shepherd' costume from Amazon - only to discover it came with a blow-up SEX DOLL sheep #facepalm #lmao
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Baffled young cheetahs don't know what to make of huge tortoise that wisely stays hidden in his shell
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El Chapo's trial is shown video of dramatic raid on submarine laden with cocaine worth $100 million en route to Mexico - where drug kingpin's Sinaloa cartel would hide it in shoeboxes, oil tankers and even cans of jalapeno peppers to sneak it into the US

Dramatic video showing the capture of a cocaine-laden submarine by the US Coast Guard was shown during El Chapo's trial.
Jurors in Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman's trial at Brooklyn on Thursday watched footage of the seizure of 13,000lbs of cocaine – worth more than $100 million – off the coast of Guatemala in 2008.

US Coast Guard Lieutenant Commander Todd Bagetis told the court the daring raid was planned to happen at night to catch drug smugglers off guard, the New York Daily News reports.
It showed Bagetis and his team racing up on inflatable rafts and boarding the vessel armed with guns, flashlights and night vision goggles.

Four 'very angry' smugglers tried to get away by reversing the engines – and his crew were left 'hanging onto the exhaust pipe for dear life.'
After detaining the smugglers, Bagetis – who said he was seriously injured in the operation – said his team found 237 bales of cocaine, according to the New York Post.
But the packaging on some of the bales had torn and so he and his team were exposed to the drug through 'molecules in the air' or through skin contact.

Under cross-examination, Bagetis said he couldn't recall if El Chapo's name came up in any relevant report he reviewed.
Earlier in the week, former Colombian kingpin Juan Carlos Ramirez Abadia, a key government witness, said he had invented the kind of submarine seen in the video to more discreetly transport his cocaine into Mexico and the US.

Prosecutors say the massive amounts of drugs and cash flowing back and forth across the U.S. border in the 1990s and early 2000s were documented in ledgers that looked like mundane business records.

Seeking to drive home the human toll of the violent drug trade, defense attorney William Purpura got Ramirez Adadia to confirm the ledgers also showed the expenses for murders for hire - $45,000 to have three people killed and $338,776 in another instance because, he said, so many hit men were involved.

The dead included a top lieutenant rubbed out in prison after his arrest merely because, Ramirez Adadia suggested, 'he knew a lot about my organization.'
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A Southwest Airlines plane skidded off the runway Thursday during rainy weather in southern California.
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Shocking moment Mexican teacher slams a teen's head against the floor after student attacked him in fight over using his cellphone in class
Kevin Hart STEPS DOWN as 2019 Oscars host after refusing to apologize for homophobic tweets joking about 'f*gs' and AIDS and stand-up skit saying his 'biggest fear was his son growing up gay'
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The Grinches that stole Christmas! The moment heartless thieves use bolt-cutters to pinch a Salvation Army collection tin in front of a grocery store in broad daylight, Minnesota. #fools
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somersault of the Russian space shuttle "Buran" in space (time-lapse x70) #wow
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2018/12/07/borderline-thousand-oaks-shooting/2240828002/

Six bullets struck a California officer who responded to the Borderline Bar & Grill in Thousand Oaks last month. One came from a California Highway Patrol officer's rifle, the sheriff said.

At a news conference Friday on the Thousand Oaks shooting, Sheriff Bill Ayub announced it was the shot by friendly fire that was fatal for Ventura County Sheriff's Sgt. Ron Helus.

The other five shots came from Ian David Long, 27, of Newbury Park. Long walked into the country bar on Nov. 7, and opened fire on bar patrons, killing 12 people before turning the gun on himself.

Ayub put the responsibility for the deaths, including Helus', on Long.

"Today, I'm deeply saddened to inform you that Sgt. Helus was also struck by a sixth bullet, which we now know, through forensic analysis by the FBI's crime laboratory was fired from the CHP officer's rifle," Ayub said. "Tragically, it struck vital organ and was fatal.
"This was a dynamic, chaotic event that led to a very brief, but furious gun battle between the killer and the lawmen," he said.
In a statement Friday, California Highway Patrol Commissioner Warren Stanley extended his condolences to Helus' family, friends and colleagues.
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Demonstrators clash with riot police during a protest against Bolivia's President Evo Morales bid for re-election in 2019, in La Paz, Bolivia.
Breaking news! Paris in lockdown! #francomaidan
https://t.me/police_frequency/6178
Tear gas is fired and more than 480 'yellow vest' protesters are arrested as trouble flares again in France with shops, restaurants and the Eiffel Tower closed amid fresh anti-Macron riots.

Paris is on lockdown as armed police battle to contain 'yellow vest' demonstrators with 481 arrests so far in the fourth straight weekend of demonstrations over living costs and proposed tax rises in France.

Dozens of streets in central Paris were closed to traffic, while the Eiffel Tower and world-famous museums such as the Musee d'Orsay, the Centre Pompidou and the Louvre were closed.

Dramatic photographs offer a snapshot into the volatile atmosphere surrounding the streets of France, as 'yellow vests' continue to demand more concessions from the government following Macron's U-turn on the fuel tax.

Many shops were boarded up to avoid looting and street furniture and construction site materials have been removed to prevent them from being used as projectiles. About 89,000 police were deployed across the country.

Of these, about 8,000 were deployed in Paris to avoid a repeat of last Saturday's mayhem when rioters torched cars and looted shops off the famed Champs Elysees boulevard, and defaced the Arc de Triomphe monument with graffiti directed at President Emmanuel Macron.