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Three dead after early morning shooting in Jamaica, Queens
The men were found in and around a bullet-riddled Jeep Grand Cherokee. They have not yet been identified. The investigation is ongoing.
Three men died in a hail of bullets in Jamaica, Queens around 5 a.m. Saturday.
Police arrived on the scene to find two men with multiple gunshot wounds inside a gray Jeep Grand Cherokee.
The vehicle was double parked and riddled with bullet holes.
A third man was found lying in the street by the rear door of the vehicle. He had been shot several times.
EMS pronounced all victims dead at the scene. They have not yet been identified.
In New York's second episode of child murder in two days, Brooklyn mom allegedly kills son, 9, then tries to commit suicide
A 40-year-old Brooklyn mother called 911 late Friday saying that she had killed her son and had taken pills to end her own life. The incident comes a day after Bronx mom Lisette Bamenga forced her 5-year-old son and 4-month-old daughter to drink toxic wiper fluid, sealed the windows of their apartment, turned on the gas and slashed her wrists.
99 dead in southern Russia floods
MOSCOW (AP) – Torrential rains dropped nearly a foot of water in the Black Sea region of southern Russia overnight, unleashing intense flooding that killed 99 people and forced many to scramble out of their beds for refuge in trees and on roofs, officials said Saturday.
How to detect and fix a machine infected with DNSChanger
The FBI will be closing the DNSChanger network on Monday, after which thousands worldwide are expected to no longer be able to access the Internet.
On July 9, the FBI will close down a network of DNS servers that many people have been depending on for proper Internet access. These servers were originally a part of a scam where a crime ring of Estonian nationals developed and distributed a malware package called DNSChanger, but which the FBI seized and converted to a legitimate DNS service.
This malware scam has been widespread enough that even third-party companies like Google and Facebook and a number of ISPs like Comcast, COX, Verizon, and AT&T have joined in the effort to help remove it by issuing automatic notifications to users that their systems are configured with the rogue DNS network.
(Credit: CNET) |
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