🇰🇿Весёлая ферма: В Казахстане накрыли плантации с марихуаной
👮♂️ Сотрудники полиции Кызылординской области выявил деятельность незаконной фитолаборатории. На месте происшествия задержали 52-летнего хозяина импровизированной плантации.
🌿 Теплица была оборудована светодиодными лампами и средствами для полива. Всего на месте было обнаружено 214 кустов марихуаны, общим весом около 4 кг. Кроме того сотрудники изъяли почти 5,5 кг подготовленного к употреблению наркотика и 5г гашиша.
👨🏻🌾 Преступника приговорили к 12 года лишения свободы.
🇰🇿Весёлая ферма: В Казахстане накрыли плантации с марихуаной
👮♂️ Сотрудники полиции Кызылординской области выявил деятельность незаконной фитолаборатории. На месте происшествия задержали 52-летнего хозяина импровизированной плантации.
🌿 Теплица была оборудована светодиодными лампами и средствами для полива. Всего на месте было обнаружено 214 кустов марихуаны, общим весом около 4 кг. Кроме того сотрудники изъяли почти 5,5 кг подготовленного к употреблению наркотика и 5г гашиша.
👨🏻🌾 Преступника приговорили к 12 года лишения свободы.
Telegram boasts 500 million users, who share information individually and in groups in relative security. But Telegram's use as a one-way broadcast channel — which followers can join but not reply to — means content from inauthentic accounts can easily reach large, captive and eager audiences. Pavel Durov, Telegram's CEO, is known as "the Russian Mark Zuckerberg," for co-founding VKontakte, which is Russian for "in touch," a Facebook imitator that became the country's most popular social networking site. At this point, however, Durov had already been working on Telegram with his brother, and further planned a mobile-first social network with an explicit focus on anti-censorship. Later in April, he told TechCrunch that he had left Russia and had “no plans to go back,” saying that the nation was currently “incompatible with internet business at the moment.” He added later that he was looking for a country that matched his libertarian ideals to base his next startup. DFR Lab sent the image through Microsoft Azure's Face Verification program and found that it was "highly unlikely" that the person in the second photo was the same as the first woman. The fact-checker Logically AI also found the claim to be false. The woman, Olena Kurilo, was also captured in a video after the airstrike and shown to have the injuries. The War on Fakes channel has repeatedly attempted to push conspiracies that footage from Ukraine is somehow being falsified. One post on the channel from February 24 claimed without evidence that a widely viewed photo of a Ukrainian woman injured in an airstrike in the city of Chuhuiv was doctored and that the woman was seen in a different photo days later without injuries. The post, which has over 600,000 views, also baselessly claimed that the woman's blood was actually makeup or grape juice.
from ca