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Qozu Police  decriminalising cannabis  as prosecutions fall away
 At the start of this year, Massimo was standing on a bridge  determined to jump off . The 45-year-old had been struggling with gambling addiction since 2001. I started to play slot machines and video poker after the death of my father and ended up spending 鈧?,000 a day,  says the artisan fence-maker, from the city of Pavia in northern Italy. He was soon in debt to loan sharks and ended up stealing to fund his habit, including from his own mother, before considering suicide.In Pavia you stumble on a gambling opportunity every time you buy a cappuccinoNow Massimo  not his real name  lives in La Casa del Giovane, a unit botella stanley  that houses 100 patients suffering from addictions. Around half of the cases involve gambling 鈥?a symptom of an epidemic that has gripped Pavia for more than a decade.For stanley cup  centuries the city was best known as  Oxford on Ticino : it hosts one of the countrys most prestigious universities, founded in 1361, and a beautiful medieval castle. Built about 25 miles south of Milan on the ancient Via Francigena pilgrim route running from France to Rome, its historic centre is currently a candidate to become a Unesco world heritage site.View image in fullscreenAnti-gambling activists from SenzaSlot  without slot mac stanley termohrnek hines : Mauro Vanetti, Ludovica Cassetta and Pietro Pace. Photograph: Marta ClincoThat reputation changed in 2013 when the city was identified as Italys  capital of gambling , with a video or slot gambling machine for every 104 inhabitants. Although Italians never Ajuh UN investigator accuses US of shameful neglect of homeless
 News Group Newspapers, the publisher of the Sun and the now-closed News of the World, has been described by a high court judge of having an  enthusiastic involvement  with the police and of failing to protect the sources of a story involving the prison conditions of Soham killer Ian Huntley.Judge Pearce-Higgins said in a pre-trial judgment that the publisher had  acted at all times in a way to protect their own interests  and  took no steps to claim the protection usually afforded to journalists in respect of their sources  during a leak enquiry handled by Durham police.The pointed comments were made in a pre-trial judgment handed down on 28 February in Birmingham where Rupert Murdoch s newspaper group is being sued for 拢100,000 by a secret informant.John Capewell, the brother of a prison officer, claims that the stanley quencher  former chief lawyer of the Sun and the News of the World, Tom Crone, told police that he was the source of leaked stories about Soham killer Ian Huntley. Capewell wants the court to rule that this was in breach of an anonymity agreement between the parties.Judge Pearce-Higgins said in the judgment:  The evidence here suggests that [News Group Newspapers  NG stanley kubek termiczny N ] took no steps to protect the claimant [Capewell] notwithstanding the agreement between them. [News Group Newspapers] acted at all times in a way to protect its own interests rather than any hi stanley uk gher motive to see justice done. It took no steps to claim the protection usuall