cranford central, 484 cranford street new location
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cranford central, 484 cranford street new location
B World THE PRESS, CHRISTCHURCH Saturday, Saturday &June Sunday, 25, June 201125-26, 2011 B1 UNITED STATES PHILIPPINES/US Mobster’s days on run end Dreams may be over for writer Rhys Blakely Los Angeles GOOD RIDDANCE ‘One of the most unpleasant TV shows ever.’ ❯❯ WORLD B7 A BIT RICH Taxing times for Bono and U2 amid protest threat. ❯❯ WORLD B2 CHAMBER OF SECRETS J K Rowling reveals nearly all on new website. ❯❯ WORLD B4 REGULARS ❯❯ On this day ❯❯ Quote unquote B2 B7 He was one of America’s most feared crime lords, a mob boss who had been on the FBI’s ‘‘Ten Most Wanted’’ list since 1999 and a man whose infiltration of the country’s top crime-fighting agency would inspire a Hollywood blockbuster. In the end, however, James ‘‘Whitey’’ Bulger, 81, was not betrayed by a crony or rival. Even the US$2 million (NZ$2.45m) bounty offered for his capture – the biggest on record for a domestic American fugitive – may not have been a factor. In the end, it seems, he was finally undone by his girlfriend’s penchant for teeth-whitening treatments and facials. Bulger was arrested in Santa Monica on Thursday, after an FBI media campaign targeting female chat-show viewers in their 60s. The aim had been to locate Catherine Greig, a 60-year-old former dental hygienist who was Bulger’s long-term girlfriend. The ads described her as an animal lover with ‘‘well kept’’ teeth and a fondness for plastic surgery and beauty salons. The hope was that another beauty parlour customer would recognise her. The plan seems to have worked. A tip-off led detectives to an apartment in Santa Monica and ended the freedom of a man whose life story directly inspired the writers who created the gangster boss played by Jack Nicholson in the Oscarwinning film The Departed. In 2000 the FBI’s Boston branch created a unit whose sole objective was finding Bulger. Until this week, the last confirmed sighting was in London in the 1990s, by a businessman who saw him working out in the gym of the Meridien Hotel in Piccadilly Circus. A safe-deposit box was later uncovered in London containing US$50,000 and the key to another deposit box in Dublin, where Bulger had connections with the republican movement. For decades, he had salted away cash and fake passports across Europe and America, perhaps anticipating that he would spend his twilight years on the run. The Pakistani ambassador to the US recently referred to the Boston gangster while defending his country’s failure to find another fugitive. ‘‘If Whitey Bulger can live undetected by American police for so long, why can’t Osama bin Laden live undetected by Pakistani authorities?’’ he asked. In May Time magazine published a long profile on Triumphant: Assistant US Attorney Robert Dugdale speaks outside the building where James ‘‘Whitey’’ Bulger and his girlfriend were arraigned in Los Angeles yesterday. ‘ Photos: REUTERS If Whitey Bulger can live undetected by American police for so long, why can’t Osama bin Laden live undetected by Pakistani authorities? Husain Haqqani Pakistani ambassador to the US Different paths: ‘‘Whitey’’ Bulger, left, became a feared crime boss, while his brother William, right, was a Massachusetts senator. him. ‘‘In south Boston, Bulger still casts a long shadow. Locals don’t talk to strangers about him, so at home his infamy is his best protection against ever being caught,’’ it said. Over the years, those hunting him had built up a detailed portrait. He was an avid reader, a history buff with a special interest in Adolf Hitler. He had a bullying manner that he struggled to tame even in casual conversation, and an explosive temper. He was known to dye his hair, sport a moustache and to alternate between different styles of glasses. He loved dogs, never used credit cards and spoke in a thick Boston accent that he probably could not disguise if he tried. Completing a life story that reads like a Mario Puzo novel was the younger brother who chose a different path. William Bulger was one of the most powerful politicians in Massachusetts, leading the state senate for 17 years and later serving as president of the University of Massachusetts for seven years. In 2003 he resigned from his university post under pressure from the governor, Mitt Romney. His resignation came two months after he testified about his brother before a congressional committee. William Bulger said he spoke to his brother shortly after he went on the run, but did not alert the authorities. The Times ❯❯ Diabolical killer B6 Chase over: A poster for FBI most wanted fugitive James ‘‘Whitey’’ Bulger on a wall at FBI headquarters in Washington. The mother of a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who is an illegal immigrant in the US said that she tried to persuade him not to risk being deported by revealing his status. Emelie Salinas sent Jose Antonio Vargas from the Philippines to live with his grandparents in California when he was 12 and has not seen him in person since. Yesterday in her home near Manila, she said that she worried about the consequences of his revelations to the media and tried to stop him, thinking all his hard work and achievements might be wasted. ‘‘We could not understand . . . he was already there, he already achieved his dream, what else did he want?’’ she said. In the end, she said, she supported him because it was his choice. Vargas, 30, who shared a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the Virginia Tech massacre as a reporter for The Washington Post, said he did not know about his immigration status until four years after he arrived in the US, when he applied for a driver’s permit and handed a Department of Motor Vehicles clerk his green card. ‘‘This is fake,’’ the clerk told Vargas. ‘‘Don’t come back here again.’’ Vargas confronted his grandfather, who admitted he bought the green card and other fake documents. Salinas, 53, said that her son was ready for possible deportation and had obtained a Philippine passport. ‘‘We are excited to see him,’’ Salinas said. ‘‘I just hope he can come home with his documents in order.’’ When she sent him to the US, Salinas said she promised she would follow him and had applied several times for a US visa but was denied. Salinas, who separated from Vargas’ father when the boy was three, said she could not afford to send her son to school in the Philippines. She said she sent him to his grandparents in the US because she wanted a good future for him. ‘‘In the beginning, there were times I would think I wish I did not send him there,’’ she said. ‘‘But I saw what he was doing . . . I saw that he was achieving his dreams, getting the things which he could not get here.’’ AP NEW LOCATION Macrocarpa Dining Table with Oak Chairs 2m x 1m WAS $3365 NOW $2400 Aged Leather Belmont Chair Harrison Recliner WAS $3995 NOW $2995 Mt Ash Oak Coffee Table Tourist Stainless Steel Chest WAS $3995 NOW Phone 03 352 4571 Cranford Central, Unit 4, 484 Cranford Street (Next to Simply Furniture) 3723562AD CRANFORD CENTRAL, 484 CRANFORD STREET