EX PARTE EMERGENCY MOTION – Invitation to edit

Superior Court of Guam

CASE# CV0229-12

Plaintiff: Clifford "RAY" Hackett

vs.

Defendants:Leann Castro

EX PARTE EMERGENCY MOTION

This EX PARTE MOTION is made ex parte because plaintiff’s life is in danger from Defendant’s actions. As reported in the original (granted) motion for TRO, defendant threatened to cause plaintiff’s death by forcing him into homelessness, knowing a deaf and blind man could not survive in guam traffic for long. Plaintiff filed paperwork with defendant, adding a roommate to his unit, to pay the rent for him while he was off island. Defendant “LOST” the filed paperwork AND then refused to accept rent payment from the roommate and told him he must vacate the unit, so he did. Defendant has carried out her threat, and plaintiff will die without intervention from the court. Plaintiff asks that the court will order that plaintiff will be placed in the vacant unit K6 in Guma Trankilidat and this matter will be heard by a jury.

I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true copy of the foregoing was sent to the other party the same day it was sent to this court.

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EX PARTE EMERGENCY MOTION – Invitation to edit

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Noses are 75% opiates overdoses not notice

Health+
25% of all overdoses are from heroin
By Nadia Kounang, CNN

Updated 0502 GMT (1302 HKT) February 24, 2017

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Story highlights
1 in 4 overdoses involve heroin
The rate of heroin involved overdoses triple from 1999 to 2015
(CNN)America’s opioid epidemic continues: The latest numbers from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, released Friday, show that one in four drug overdoses in 2015 was related to heroin. In 1999, just 6% of all overdoses were related to the drug.

When looking at overdoses overall, opioid-related deaths represented the majority. In 2015, overdoses involving opioids represented 73% of all overdose deaths, a significant jump from 57% in 2010. Opioids include heroin as well as drugs with a similar chemical structure, such as oxycodone and illicit synthetics like fentanyl.


China’s fentanyl ban: ‘game changer’ for opioid epidemic
Dr. Holly Hedegaard of the National Center for Health Statistics, who co-authored the study, also noted that this was the first time the number of overdose deaths in the United States exceeded 50,000. In 2010, there were 38,329 overdose-related deaths, and by 2015, that number had climbed to 52,404. By comparison, in 2015, there were 36,252 total firearm-related deaths across the country.
As with heroin, there was also a significant increase in deaths involving synthetic opioids such as fentanyl, the drug that was blamed for pop star Prince’s death. In 2010, these types of drugs were involved in just 8% of all overdose deaths, and by 2015, they were involved in 18% of all overdose deaths.
While there were increases in heroin and synthetic drug-related deaths, there was a drop in overdose deaths involving natural and semisynthetic opioid analgesics, including prescription drugs like oxycodone and hydrocodone. Although these drugs were involved in 29% of drug overdose deaths in 2010, they represented 24% of all drug overdose deaths in 2015.
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Killer of Kim Jong Nam Doan

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NORTH KOREA
Accused killer of Kim Jong Un’s half-brother went from singer to slayer, officials say

Published February 23, 2017
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A Facebook page belonging to Doan Thi Huong, who is alleged to be part of the team that killed Kim Jong Nam. (AP)
Malaysian authorities probing the assassination of North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un’s half-brother are now trying to figure out how one of the prime suspects went from 28-year-old Vietnamese beauty and singing contestant to alleged cold-blooded killer in a matter of months.


Before she was accused of murder, Doan Thi Huong was a budding pop singer who appeared on a Vietnamese talent show and cultivated a playful social media presence.

“Can I sing you a song tonight?” Doan wrote in a March 24 Facebook post viewed by The Sydney Morning Herald. “Reply the fastest and put your phone number in the comment. I will call and sing for you.”


Doan appeared on Vietnamese Idol in June 2016 and was dismissed in the first round. Eight months later she is believed to be the woman wearing a white shirt with “LOL” printed on it seen in surveillance footage from the airport where Kim Jong Nam was murdered Feb. 13. Authorities believe Doan and a 25-year-old Indonesian woman – Siti Aisyah – ambushed Kim Jong Nam and rubbed a deadly substance on him before fleeing.

Kim Jong Nam sought help but soon died. Doan and Aisyah are in police custody, as are several men who officials say were connected to the plot. Authorities still do not know the exact substance used in the attack.

Doan’s father told Reuters he is being kept in the dark about his daughter.


“[Government officials] only say they will support Huong as she is Vietnamese, but did not tell me if she is really a suspect,” Doan Van Thanh said. “Even though I am her father I cannot control things that happened when she is out there. I cannot know.”

South Korean officials suspect North Korea was behind the plot to kill Kim Jong Nam, and investigators looking to link the reclusive country to Doan were digging into a trip Doan took to the South Korean vacation destination of Jeju Island in November, Reuters reported.

Doan’s account was under the pseudonym “Ruby Ruby,” and 27 of her 65 friends had Korean names, according to Reuters. She posted a status in Korean on March 23 – “I love you, I miss you.” The words Doan used, however, showed she was not familiar with the language, Reuters reported.

Her last social media post came just two days before the airport attack.

“I want to sleep more but by your side,” Doan wrote on Facebook next to a picture of her wrapped in white with her eyes closed.


Her next picture was a mugshot issued by the Royal Malaysia Police.

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US & Canada
Donald Trump’s golf hobby under scrutiny with Clinton tweet
22 February 2017
From the section US & Canada
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Image copyrightREUTERS
Image caption
President Trump (pictured here with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the left) has made visits to his Florida golf courses a weekend habit during his first month in office
A Hillary Clinton retweet has drawn attention to President Donald Trump’s golf outings, which critics are hoping to turn into a political handicap.
The former Democratic White House candidate shared a graph suggesting her former rival spent 25 hours on the links during his first month in office.
Mr Trump made his sixth trip to the golf course on Sunday, joined by professional golfer Rory McIlroy.
The Republican was a frequent critic of Barack Obama’s fairway excursions.
President Trump: Seven ways the world could change
How much has the president achieved so far?
Trump’s America: Are things as bad as he says?
According to an analysis of Washington Post pool reports that was retweeted by Mrs Clinton, the president has dedicated 21 hours to foreign relations, 13 hours to tweeting and six hours to intelligence briefings in his first weeks.
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Clinton’s barbs sharpen – Analysis by Anthony Zurcher, BBC News
What do you do when your life’s goal, a dream that was nearly realised, slips away in a flash? That’s the question Hillary Clinton has faced since Donald Trump smashed her presidential hopes last November.
In the ensuing days, the former secretary of state has taken long walks in New York woods with her husband, Bill. She’s given a few speeches and caught some shows on Broadway, where she’s always warmly received. And she’s tweeted.
Haltingly, at first. A few Thanksgiving messages here, a get-well note to George HW Bush there. She stood firmly on uncontroversial ground.
Now, however, her voice is sharpening. She celebrates the anti-Trump protests that have swept across the country. She’s poked fun at the president and taken more pointed shots at his policies and positions. As the president has stumbled, she’s tiptoeing closer and closer to the land of "I told you so".
What’s next for a woman in her life’s third or fourth act? Rumours of a run for New York swirled then receded. When the presidential prize was so close, will anything else bring satisfaction?
Given that the Clintons have been in the national spotlight for decades, a quiet exit seems increasingly unlikely.
Mr Trump joined Rory McIlroy, one of the world’s highest ranked golfers, at Trump International Golf Club on Sunday.
The Irishman later told a golf blog he had played a full 18 holes with the president, as well as the chief executive of Clear Sports and former New York Yankee Paul O’Neill.
But McIlroy’s account contradicted White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
She said Mr Trump had only "played a couple of holes" on Saturday, as well as Sunday.
Image copyrightTWITTER
When pressed about McIlroy’s comments on Monday, she said Mr Trump had "intended to play a few holes and decided to play longer".
The White House has otherwise declined to say who plays with Mr Trump, drawing backlash from US media over how much time he spends on the green.
But the president’s golf hobby also recalls his repeated criticism of President Obama.
Mr Trump regularly accused Mr Obama of spending too much time golfing before and throughout his presidential campaign.
Image copyright@CLEARSPORTSLLC
Image caption
President Trump (2nd left) with Rory McIlroy (2nd right) on Sunday
"Can you believe that, with all the problems and difficulties facing the US, President Obama spent the day playing golf. Worse than Carter," he tweeted in October 2014.
Ten days later, he tweeted: "President Obama has a major meeting on the NYC Ebola outbreak, with people flying in from all over the country, but decided to play golf!"
Mr Trump also said he would be too busy to swing at a tee if elected.
"I’m going to be working for you. I’m not going to have time to go play golf," he said last August.
But he later softened his tone toward the game, which he said could be used as a tool of diplomacy.
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image caption
President Barack Obama (R) lines up a putt as British Prime Minister David Cameron (L) looks on near Watford in Hertfordshire, England, in April 2016
"I don’t think you should play very much," he told the Golf Channel in July.
"But if you’re going to play, you should use it to your advantage, and the country’s advantage."
Earlier this month, the president hosted Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and played a full round with the foreign leader as well as professional golfer Ernie Els.
However, his foursome on Sunday did not include any political types.
Former Presidents George W Bush and his father, George HW Bush, were also criticised for their golf outings, at the outsets of the first and second Iraq wars.
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