barber chairs for sale in trinidad

barber chairs for sale in trinidad

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Barber Chairs For Sale In Trinidad

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Ships from and sold by Sally Beauty Supply. Icarus "Bogart" Beauty Salon Dryer Chair TMS Black Barber Beauty Salon Spa Equipment Styling Chair Child Booster Seat Cushion FREE Shipping on orders over . Highland Venus Plus Hair Dryer is a traditional classic dryer that is a salon workhorse! Shipping Weight: 29 pounds (View shipping rates and policies) Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #53,705 in Beauty (See Top 100 in Beauty) in Beauty > Hair Care > Styling Tools & Appliances > Hair Dryers in Beauty > Tools & Accessories Product Warranty: For warranty information about this product, please click here See questions and answers 5 star77%4 star9%1 star14%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsI have used this dryer for several months and love it. When I purchased it I used it ...Excellent salon-quality hair dryerhair drierI'll never go back to regular blow dryersLifesaver during cold weatherFive Stars... purchased it for my girlfriend and its been working great so far but she had one previously which lasted ...... the back of the chair and seems to work fine!!




price wasn't to bad but could be ... Most Recent Customer ReviewsSearch Customer Reviews See and discover other items: hair dryer with cool setting Disclaimer: While we work to ensure that product information is correct, on occasion manufacturers may alter their ingredient lists. Actual product packaging and materials may contain more and/or different information than that shown on our Web site. We recommend that you do not solely rely on the information presented and that you always read labels, warnings, and directions before using or consuming a product. For additional information about a product, please contact the manufacturer. Content on this site is for reference purposes and is not intended to substitute for advice given by a physician, pharmacist, or other licensed health-care professional. You should not use this information as self-diagnosis or for treating a health problem or disease. Contact your health-care provider immediately if you suspect that you have a medical problem.




Information and statements regarding dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or health condition. assumes no liability for inaccuracies or misstatements about products.Dressed in a shapeless top and sandals and pulling a plastic shopping trolley, it is difficult to imagine that this woman was once one of the world’s most photographed – and infamous – beauties.But the pensioner pictured here is Christine Keeler. Her sexual liaisons 50 years ago with Tory Minister John Profumo and a Russian military attache based in London led to one of the biggest political scandals of modern times.This is the first time Keeler has been photographed in public for seven years, and the 71-year-old is unrecognisable from the fresh-faced model and showgirl who found herself embroiled in Profumo affair in 1963. Humble lifestyle: The former model Christine Keeler pictured out shopping near her home




Although she revelled in her notoriety at the time and sold her story to newspapers all over the world, Ms Keeler now lives in a sheltered accommodation block in South London, and is estranged from her two sons. Beauty: Keeler in her prime back in 1964 In an interview last year to publicise her latest book about the affair that rocked the British Establishment, she said: ‘My children don’t want to be associated with that bloody whore Christine Keeler. It’s awful but that’s the way it is.’The scandal happened at the height of the Cold War when it was discovered that Keeler had been sleeping with both Profumo, the then Conservative Minister for War, and Yevgeny Ivanov, a naval attache based at the Russian Embassy in London.Keeler and Profumo began their affair after being introduced at a party at the Cliveden estate in 1961 by their mutual friend Stephen Ward, a high-society osteopath and portrait-painter.Profumo, who was married to actress Valerie Hobson, had no idea that Keeler was also sleeping with Ivanov.




In March 1963 he told the House of Commons that rumours of his affair were untrue, but  he was forced to resign three months later after admitting he had lied.Ward, who was prosecuted for living off immoral earnings, took an overdose the day before his trail ended and died on August 3, 1963. Keeler was found guilty of unrelated perjury charges and was sentenced to nine months in prison.The passage of time has done little to diminish the public’s fascination with the scandal. Andrew Lloyd Webber has written a musical, Stephen Ward, due to open in December. It is understood Keeler declined to co-operate with the project. Historic: A fresh-faced Keeler at the height of the scandal, left, following her affair with Secretary of State for War, rightIt all started in a barbershop in the Bronx. Between the bustle of four chairs, a Ms. Pac-Man machine and the Spanish soap operas on the little television, prosecutors said, two owners of the barbershop, one of them a former police officer, came up with a way to be paid for automobile accidents that had never happened.




Over two years, prosecutors said yesterday, the scheme grew to include four police officers and a dozen civilians, who filed claims for necks and backs that had never been sprained, for chassis that had not been bent. They cheated seven insurance companies out of almost $230,000, the authorities said, by filing the fake reports and sending the supposed drivers to medical clinics pretending they had been hurt.All four officers were arraigned yesterday and pleaded not guilty.The indictments came one year after three officers in Brooklyn were charged in a similar auto insurance case. Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly praised the investigation that uncovered what he called a betrayal of the department.But for all their trouble, and all the trouble they are now in, the officers got little back from the operation, no more than $1,000 each over two years, prosecutors said. ''Sometimes, crime does not make a whole lot of sense,'' said District Attorney Robert T. Johnson of the Bronx. The plan was hatched at the barbershop, Mig's, as it is now known, at 1291 Bronx River Avenue, prosecutors said.




While it has been a barbershop for years, it is unclear if the business had the same name on Aug. 30, 2000, when the first nonexistent car struck another in the first fake wreck. Efrain Colon, 32, a former New York City police officer, and his business partner in the barbershop, Henry Mendez, 30, who was an officer in the Dominican Republic, enlisted Mr. Colon's former wife, Officer Trinidad Martinez, 33, a 10-year veteran in the department, to write a fake accident report, prosecutors said.The officers who are accused in the scheme are almost all related. Officer Martinez's little brother, Julian Martinez, 30, an officer for six years, filed one fake report, as did Ernesto Colon, 34, who was sworn into the police force three years ago and is the brother of the former officer at the barbershop, the authorities said. The fourth officer, Irvin Maldonado, 35, had almost 12 years on the job. Only Officer Julian Martinez worked outside the Bronx, on the Manhattan South Task Force.The officers filed their accident reports, twice forging the names of officers who were not involved in the scheme, Mr. Johnson said.




The fake drivers, coached by Mr. Mendez, pretended to be hurt and visited health clinics that cater to automobile accident victims. The insurers checked the claims and, apparently finding proper accident reports and medical tests, paid them in most cases. All told, seven insurance companies paid $229,785.49, mostly for bodily injury. Only $2,078 was paid as reimbursement for property damage.The medical clinics, about a dozen, were not identified yesterday and remain under investigation, officials said. Some of the clinics have closed.''The case is not done,'' said Chief Charles V. Campisi of the Police Department's Internal Affairs Bureau. ''It's an ongoing investigation.''The civilians who feigned injuries -- usually six to an accident -- received more money from the scheme than the police officers, the authorities said. One man, Gabriel E. Cortez, 34, of Dix Hills, N.Y., was paid more than $30,000 from two insurance companies for a bodily injury claim from a fake accident dated Sept. 17, 2000, prosecutors said.




The group also filed claims for more than $130,000 that were never paid. By late 2001, the Internal Affairs Bureau had been tipped off to the scheme by a private investigator with suspicions about an insurance claim. The department prepared a sting operation, using undercover officers posing as drivers and passengers. They filed tens of thousands of dollars in claims over the course of the investigation, prosecutors said. Those claims were not paid.The four officers were indicted last month, arrested on Wednesday and arraigned yesterday in the Bronx. The officers, with their short, neat haircuts, stood out among defendants charged with street crimes.Officer Trinidad Martinez, accused of filing four false accident reports, faced the most charges among the officers, including forgery, receiving bribes and insurance fraud. Officer Maldonado, accused of trying without success to file a fake accident report last year, faced the fewest counts, three. The 16 defendants were charged with a total of 82 counts in seven indictments.




After they entered their not-guilty pleas, the four officers, who have been suspended from the force, left the courtroom, hurrying past news photographers in the hallway. A lawyer for Officer Maldonado contended to the judge that ''he's not John Dillinger, not a risk of flight,'' as the judge assigned the officer a $25,000 bail. A lawyer for two other officers said he had just received the prosecution's evidence and was still studying the material.The officers received $250 to $1,000 per accident report, the prosecutor said. The details of the payments were unclear yesterday. Only Officer Martinez is accused of filing more than one report.''We in law enforcement will not permit the good names of the many to be tarnished by the greed of a few,'' Mr. Johnson, the district attorney, said yesterday at a news conference.Mig's was open yesterday, tucked beside a corner grocery and below apartments. Barbers and the building's owner said that they did not know the indicted officers, and that the two indicted partners were no longer associated with the business.

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