Friday, 12 February 2016

Florida woman arrested after her father found her drunk and naked while she was babysitting a young child

Whitney Kilcrease, 24, faces charges of child neglect after she was found blacked out drunk while caring for a young child.
                                                         OKALOOSA COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE

Whitney Kilcrease, 24, faces charges of child neglect after she was found blacked out drunk while caring for a young child.


A 24-year-old Florida woman was charged with child neglect after her father found her naked, drunk and unconscious while she was babysitting a young child.

Whitney Kilcrease told cops that she started swigging Captain Morgan rum after her father left the house to run errands and left the child in her care.

When her dad came home, Kilcrease was lying face down and inexplicably undressed while the kid played beside her, according to NWF Daily News.

It was unclear whether the child was related to them.

Kilcrease’s dad was able to get the child out of the house while the belligerent woman went ballistic and started throwing things after regaining consciousness.

When cops arrived, Kilcrease was still smashed and was "unable to stand" on her own, according to the report.

“When I tried to talk to Whitney, her speech was slurred and unintelligible,” an Okaloosa County deputy wrote in the report.

Kilcrease was taken to a local hospital where it was found she had a blood alcohol content of .305, nearly four times the legal limit.

Her court date is Feb. 16.


CJN, NBA President fault corruption tag on Judiciary

Nigeria’s Chief justice, justice Mahmud Mohammed has condemned the recent criticism of the judiciary regarding recent judgment of political case.
Justice Mohammed said the barrage of criticisms against the judiciary is as a result of ignorance of the operations of the judicial system while Alegeh faulted the general condemnation of the third arm of government.
They spoke in Abuja at a valedictory court session held in honour of retiring Justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Muhammad Saifullahi Muntaka-Coomassie.
The judiciary has been under attack recently over its handling of corruption and electoral cases. Also recently, President Muhammadu Buhari was quoted as expressing doubt about the commitment of the Judiciary to his government’s anti-corruption war.
The CJN said: “I make bold to declare that the qualities of conscience and duty are essential to the functioning of our Judiciary.”
He noted that the Judiciary, “though constantly striving to redress wrongs and tilt the balance in favour of that which is right, has recently had to face the backlash of misguided opinions fashioned without due consideration of the law and rationale for the system of government that we operate.
“The judiciary is duty bound to act in accordance with the dictates of the law as it stands and not as critics would like it to be. In this sense, naive idealism is, but a pale limitation of legal certainty and it is in observing the career and jurisprudence of such eminent jurists as my lord, Honourable Justice Muntaka-Coomassie that we see this most clearly.”
Justice Mohammed spoke glowingly about Justice Muntaka-Coomassie, who started as a Magistrate in Kaduna. He expressed the hope that he will now have time for his family and “to catch up with old friends. I am also sure that it will be great to lie in bed till any chosen hour on a Monday morning.”
Alegeh deplored what he described as the “generalisation and/or categorisation” of the Judiciary as corrupt and a stumbling block to the Buhari administration’s war against corruption
The NBA President also pledged the support of the bar to resist any attempt to intimidate or harass judicial officers.
“Whilst acknowledging that there may be a few bad eggs in the system, the NBA restates unequivocally that ýthe categorisation of the entire judiciary as corrupt is a misconception and will stand solidly behind the judiciary in any attempt to intimidate or harass its personnel.”
“The NBA however wishes to souýnd a note of warning to the few bad eggs in the system to desist from further causing untoward embarrassment to the judicial arm of government and will henceforth petition any judicial officer involved in or suspected to be involved in any corrupt or fraudulent transaction to the appropriate quarters for action. We believe that a word is enough for the wise and that wise counsel will prevail in this regard.
Alegeh called for the full compliment of justices of the Supreme Court from 15 to “the constitutional quota of 21.”.
He suggested an arrangement where the apex court occasionally holds special sessions in various regions to deal with cases from such regions, an arrangement he argued, was capable of reducing the litany of appeals and workload of the court.
On welfare, Alegeh suggested the extension of the current practice of building houses for retiring CJNs o other Justices of the apex court
Justice Muntaka-Coomassie disappointment about the state of affairs in the Judiciary.
“I am using this medium to appeal to governments at all levels to free the Judiciary from the bondage it has been subjected to over the years. Let it not just be said to be independent, but should indeed be seen to be transparently independent.
“There should not be any string attached. We should not also like to negotiate our financial independence. Let the Judiciary take its destiny in its hands. Enough of being fed with the crumbs from the master’s table.
I have devoted 38 of my 70 years to services to my fatherland. I came into service with great enthusiasm and expectations, but unfortunately, I am today retiring with maginal satisfaction. My regret, from all indications, is the regret of many of my retired colleagues.
“The Nigerian Judiciary is only third arm of government on paper. It has always been treated like a paper tiger in the scheme of things. I want to use this opportunity to call on the relevant authorities to put the Judiciary in a proper perspective. It should be placed and treated as the third arm of government in every meeting and programs as enshrined in the Constitution,” Justice Muntaka-Coomassie said.


With AIT News

Army Asks EFCC To Investigate 12 Officers

Nigerian Army
The Nigerian Army has forwarded the names of 12 officers to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for investigation.

A statement by a spokesman for the Army, Colonel Sani Usman, said three serving and one retired Major Generals, three Brigadier Generals, four Colonels and one Lieutenant Colonel were in the list, Channel News reported.
The Army stated that at the end of the Commission’s investigations those found culpable would be tried by a military Court Martial.

No reason was given for the submission of the officers’ names to the anti-graft agency, but the agency has of late heightened the fight against corruption, taking top government officials of the past administration to court for money laundering and other related charges.

24-year–old Bashir Ahmad named as Buhari’s personal assistant on new media



President Muhammadu Buhari has appointed Bashir Ahmad as his Personal Assistant on New Media.

The 24-year-old is an indigene of Kano state. Until his appointment, he was the Online Editor (Hausa) for Leadership Newspaper.

He graduated from Bayero University Kano in 2013, with Bachelor of Arts in Mass Communication.

He worked as an online editor and reporter at Rariya Hausa Newspaper, before joining Leadership as an online editor.

Until his appointment, Bashir also worked as the personal assistant on new media to Sam Nda-Isaiah, the publisher of Leadership, who contested along President Buhari for the All Progressives Congress, APC's presidential ticket for the 2015 election.

He later served at the Buhari Support Organization (BSO) prior to the presidential elections.

The new presidential aide will oversee Buhari's communication on social media and related platforms.

Ghost Workers: Federal Government Goes After Banks To Recover Funds

The Federal Government said it would approach banks to recover all monies paid to the 23,000 ghost workers registered on the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System (IPPIS).

Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, made this known while briefing the Senate Committee on Finance during the ministry’s 2016 budget defence at the Senate in Abuja.


Adeosun said that investigation was ongoing on the issue and payment of the 23,000 suspected workers would be suspended for one month to allow investigations to be completed.


She said that any bank found to be in complicity in the matter would be made to refund all the money paid through them so far.


The minister disclosed that the discovery of the ghost workers was due to the registration of over 320,000 personnel on the IPPIS platform using their BVN numbers.


“What the IPPIS-BVN registration has shown us has been a revelation; we have identified that there are people who appear on our payroll multiple times.


“BVN links all the accounts of that person, so we are seeing in our payroll, 20 names to one BVN number.


“We have had a meeting on how we are going to clean them off; the process will be that we will suspend that person from the payroll pending the investigation.


“We will try as much as possible to conclude that investigation within 30 days so that we do not suffer innocent people, but we really need to clean our payroll.


“We have about 23,000 that we need to investigate; those who either the BVN is linked to multiple payments or the name on the BVN account is not consistent with the name on our own payroll.


“ Not only will we remove those people from our payroll, but we will also be going after the banks involved to collect our money,’’ she said.


“Some of the information that we are getting is how long has this person been on the pay roll, how much has he been getting.


“In some cases, the accounts are held by the same bank and in some others all were opened on the same day.


“If we are able to prove that banks have colluded with people to pad our payroll, we are not only going to stop those payments but we are also going to recover our money,” she added.


The minister said that MDAs found guilty would also not be ignored but would be handed over to relevant agencies of government for further investigation and prosecution.


She said that the work of the ministry was to uncover the fraud and recover its money, but that the work of criminal prosecution of individuals or banks involved would be done by relevant bodies.


She said that in five years, the IPPIS was only able to register 295,000 workers but with the BVN registration, all workers would be registered by end of June.


Adeosun added that the removal of all fake workers will greatly reduce the personnel burden on the Federal Government, hence the reduction of personnel cost in 2016 budget by about N100 billion.


“We realised that if we can get more people on IPPIS, our salary costs will come down and so, we needed to get more people on IPPIS.


“So, we decided to change the strategy; rather than getting the person to come physically, we will take the payroll that we have and the bank account of everybody who is being paid.


“From that bank account we will get the BVN, from the BVN we can get the biometric data; so that considerably accelerates the process of getting people unto IPPIS.


“We are very confident with our programme that we will now be able to get every federally paid civil servant onto IPPIS by June; we are aggressively chasing after June,” she said.


In his remarks, Chairman of the Committee, Sen. John Eno, commended the ministry and charged them to ensure full investigation and to sanction persons and agencies indicted.