Oddly enough


Oddly enough

Drunk-driving suspect found naked on roof

HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa.

State police say a drunken driving suspect ran away from the scene of a central Pennsylvania crash but was found on a nearby barn roof – naked – and arrested once he fell off.

Online court records don’t list an attorney for 20-year-old Daquan Tate, of Hollidaysburg.

State police say he faces drunken-driving charges for crashing into a speed limit sign and a roadside mailbox after losing control of his car early Saturday.

Police say Tate kept driving until he again lost control of his car, hit an embankment and stopped along the shoulder of the road before running away.

Police say Tate wasn’t hurt when he fell off the barn roof.

Beijing police detain 4 people for sex video that spread online

BEIJING

Four people have been detained in connection with a sex video purportedly taken inside a Uniqlo fitting room that spread rapidly online, Beijing police said.

They were detained on suspicion of spreading obscene content, according to a police statement late Sunday. Police said they still were investigating the couple who can be seen in the cellphone video apparently having sex in the Japanese retailer’s flagship Beijing store.

Uniqlo has denied any involvement in the video which spread widely online last week and gave rise to jokes about fitting rooms becoming the latest make-out spots.

The police statement said the couple admitted sending the video, which was made in April, to a friend on popular mobile chatting app WeChat, and that it later somehow appeared on the Twitter-like Sina Weibo’s microblogging platform.

A 19-year-old man is suspected of posting the video online and the other three of spreading obscene information, the statement said.

In China, people convicted of disseminating obscene books, films, pictures and videos face up to two years’ imprisonment, while those who make obscene products for profit face a maximum sentence of life imprisonment, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.

China’s cyberspace administration already has chastised two of the country’s main Internet companies, Sina Corp. which runs Sina Weibo, and Tencent Holding Ltd. which runs WeChat, for allowing the video to spread.

Associated Press

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