Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Boston Globe Shields Woman Beater

I'm just wondering why they censor and hide certain things and not others.

WTF?

FLASHBACK
(paper cuts in blue):

Roberto C. Rodriguez of Worcester, the father her 18-month-old, had an active restraining order against him -- convicted in 2008 of domestic assault and battery -- and had recently been charged with aggravated assault and battery in June when she was seven months’ pregnant, when, according to court records, he pushed her into a glass table and ripped a phone off the wall so she could not call police.

Now, why would the PRO-WOMAN, LIBERAL, BOSTON GLOBE want to be generous to a WOMAN-BEATER? I don't get it, unless the ETHNICITY and AGENDA-PUSHING comes into play. Only SOUTHERN REDNECKS beat their wives, right, Globe? The Jewish agenda-pushing and supremacy stinks, readers!

He is expected to be in Worcester District Court today to answer to charges that he violated probation on the 2008 domestic violence case by not attending a program for batterers. He is facing a count of aggravated assault and battery for the June case.

What is with this, readers? Why censor this piece for the web?

Related: Jewish Media Protects Jewish Philanderer

Rodriguez could not be reached for comment yesterday, but told the Telegram & Gazette newspaper that he was troubled by the nature of the crime. "I can't sleep, I can't eat, I can't think," he said.

I CAN'T BEAT!!!!!! Poor guy, huh?

Why would the Globe want to CUT THAT?

Let's GIVE THEM a chance to REDEEM themselves, 'kay?

"Details mount in stealing of baby; Father of suspect said he saw no sign of pregnancy" by Milton J. Valencia, Globe Staff | August 1, 2009

WARNER, N.H. - Julie Corey, the Massachusetts woman accused of stealing the baby of a friend who was found dead last week....

Related: The Women of Worcester and Other Sick Stories From New England

had at least five children of her own, but that she had apparently lost custody of them. She also was once married to a man in California. It was not known yesterday where the children are living or whether the custody was voluntary or forced by child welfare officials. The children were not turned over to her parents....

Her boyfriend, Alex Dion, 27, told the Boston Herald in a story yesterday....

So WHY am I reading YOU, Globe?

See: Heralding the End of the Boston Globe

The Boston Globe's Hatchet Job on the Boston Herald

I sense bitterness, Globe.

--more--"

Okay, nothing in that story, let's try this one
:

"Custody hearing today in case of stolen baby" by James Vaznis, Globe Staff | August 3, 2009

A hearing has been scheduled for today regarding the custody of a Worcester baby who was stolen after being cut last month from her mother’s womb.

Alison Goodwin, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Children and Families, said in an interview yesterday that the hearing at Worcester Juvenile Court is procedural.

“We still have custody of the child and I don’t believe anything will change’’ at today’s hearing, she said.

After taking custody of the 4-pound baby last week, the state placed the child in foster care. Several people, including family members, have expressed interest in permanent custody, Goodwin said. The agency, she added, is considering each request and is conducting extensive background checks on all parties that include visits to their homes.

Police discovered the decomposing body of the baby’s mother, 23-year-old Darlene Haynes, in a closet at her Worcester apartment last Monday. Haynes, a mother of three, was eight months pregnant, but the baby she was carrying was missing when police found her remains.

The discovery launched a search for the infant, who was located in the possession of an acquaintance of Haynes’s, Julie Corey, at a New Hampshire homeless shelter. Police arrested Corey, 35, on Wednesday and charged her with attempted kidnapping, saying that she faked a pregnancy and then later tried to claim the Haynes baby was her own. Police are conducting DNA tests to confirm the baby’s identity.

Corey is being held on a $2 million bond and is reportedly fighting extradition to Massachusetts. Her attorney, Louis P. Aloise , did not respond to a phone call yesterday.

Worcester police have not charged anyone in the slaying of Haynes. Tim Connolly, a spokesman for Worcester District Attorney Joseph D. Early Jr., said yesterday that the case remains under investigation.

--more--"

Not yet. One more chance:

"2 families vie for custody of baby girl taken from womb" by Matt Collette, Globe Correspondent | August 4, 2009

WORCESTER - The child’s presumed biological father, Roberto C. “Tito’’ Rodriguez, was ushered out through a backdoor by court officials and was unavailable for comment....

Oh, now he's TITO?

SINCE WHEN has it become fashionable for the PRO-WOMAN Boston Globe to be so KIND to batterers, huh, ladies?

Related: How the Magicians at Boston Globe Made Julie Donaldson Disappear

And not only that, the Globe LIED about the AVAILABILITY!

Yesterday’s hearing, which began at 2, was interrupted shortly after it began when the building’s fire alarms sounded, which officials said was a false alarm, prompting evacuation of the four-story courthouse. Outside, Rodriguez declined to speak to reporters, but....

I thought he was "unavailable," Globe?

You can't even tell the truth about a SMALL THING?

Rodriguez is the father of Haynes’s 18-month-old daughter, who is also in foster care. Haynes’s grandmother, Joanne Haynes, has custody of the victim’s two other children, Jasmine, 5, and Lillian, 3, Whitney said last week....

Nothing about the ASSAULT and BATTERY or DOMESTIC VIOLENCE, huh, Globe?

--more--"

Related: My Final Message to the Boston Globe

I don't know; maybe abortions should be legal, huh?

"A mother's journey from hope to horror; Shame, family distress preceded fatal attack" by Patricia Wen, Globe Staff | June 8, 2009

QUINCY - .... In the days that followed, the home was staked out by the media, including the Chinese-language press, which was generally sympathetic to Chi.

Just as the Globe is sympathetic to Jews.

"A lot of new immigrants have been in similar situations - they have no friends, they are helpless," said Carrie Tang, a reporter in the Boston bureau of the World Journal, a national Chinese-language newspaper.

For Linda Chin, president of the Boston-based Asian Task Force Against Domestic Violence, Chi's plight is also a case of missed opportunities for intervention.

"We come up against thousands of years of ingrained values in which the man rules, marriage is sacred, divorce is shameful, and boys are valued," Chin said.

Related: China Admits Abortion is Wrong

Relatives have portrayed Chi as a woman who lost her mind from family stress, though it remains unclear whether she was mentally ill prior to immigrating to the United States.

Some lawmakers have raised questions about whether the state acted aggressively enough to protect the children. The Children and Families agency has declined to say how actively it was monitoring Chi's situation and whether it was aware of her missed mental health appointments....

--more--"