Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Woman has scalp ripped off by ex and his dog

Zachary Gross has been charged with assault and harboring a vicious animal.
A Kentucky woman is out of the hospital and speaking out for domestic violence victims after cops say her ex-boyfriend and his dog ripped her scalp off in an act of unspeakable cruelty.
It all started when Marilyn Stanley's ex-boyfriend Zachary Gross snapped earlier this month because of a Facebook post.
"I've been physically changed for the rest of my life," Stanley told the station of the Sept. 14 attack.
Marilyn Stanley vows to help other domestic violence victims following the vicious attack. Boone County cops say that Gross assaulted Stanley for an hour in his Walton home, and then enticed his dog to attack her when she refused to drop a knife — which she was using to defend herself, Fox 19 reported.
After the dog ripped off part of Stanley's ear and scalp, Gross made her look in the mirror and made fun of her appearance, according to the station.
Gross drove Stanley to her mother's home — with some of her scalp in a plastic bag, Fox 19 reported.

Eighty percent of her scalp had been detached from her head, according to documents obtained by Fox 19.
"I couldn't believe I remained conscious the whole time," she told the station.
Marilyn Stanley in the hospital following the assault. She lost 80 percent of her scalp. Stanley has undergone multiple surgeries. A GoFundMe page set up to help with her medical costs has raised nearly $12,000 as of Friday afternoon.
Gross has been charged with assault and harboring a vicious animal, according to the station. Stanley is hoping to pass along to others in abusive relationships that "there is a way out."
"You need to get out before it gets too far," she said.
An artist was murdered in Oakland as he worked on a mural painting a message of peace.
Antonio Ramos, 27, was shot dead in broad daylight as he contributed to the colorful charity project.
Devastated friends and relatives said they were shocked that Ramos had been gunned down while he was doing something positive for the community.
“He was a good kid, and this was his love. He was always willing to help out,” his aunt Margaret Holappa said.
Ramos was helping to paint the mural for the Oakland Superheroes Mural Project, part of the Attitudinal Healing Connection group, which works to spread peace and stop violence.
“He was amazing. He was an artist, he works on music, he just does all kinds of stuff," said Krystal Carpenter, Ramos' godmother. “He's never been in any trouble with anybody.”
In the mural, a young boy wearing a half-painted orange hat and purple hoodie looks toward a neighborhood with a row of colorful houses, reported SFGate.
Dave Young Kim, a professional artist who had known Ramos for three years, called him a “very talented artist” who was working on the project unpaid.
“That’s just the kind of kid he was,” Kim said. “He was super willing to help. He was very reliable and just had the sort of naivete that was so fun to be around.”
Antonio Ramos was killed while working on the mural in Oakland.
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Ramos was among 60 artists working on the Oakland Super Heroes Mural Project, a collaboration with West Oakland middle-school students, said officials at Attitudinal Healing Connection, a community group organizing the project.
Ramos was working on the 4,000-square-foot mural under the Interstate 580 overpass when he was shot around 10:30 a.m. on Tuesday, police said.


Officers found Ramos suffering from multiple gunshot wounds and he was rushed to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead. No arrests have been made.

Man disemboweled girlfriend after she calls out ex during sex

Fidel Lopez, 24, is charged with first-degree murder in the death and disembowelment of his girlfriend, Maria Nemeth. A south Florida man charged with murdering his girlfriend admitted to disemboweling her with his bare hands after she twice cried out her ex-husband's name during sex, police said.
Self-admitted "monster" Fidel Lopez, 24, said he flew into a drunken rage after she cried out the other man's name during rough sex inside of their Sunrise apartment's closet early Sunday morning, according to a police report.
In extremely disturbing details, police say Lopez admitted to shattering a sliding glass door, punching holes into a wall and ripping a closet door off its hinges.

Fidel Lopez, 24, is accused of barbarically killing his girlfriend, Maria Nemeth, after she twice called out her ex-husband's name during sex. He then returned to 31-year-old Maria Nemeth, who was lying unconscious on the floor, and proceeded to sexually mutilate her -- first with various objects, then by inserting his arm into her, up to his elbow.
Once inside he said he proceeded to rip out part of her intestines.

In Lopez's first appearance before a judge he blamed his behavior on alcohol.
 

Neighbors said they heard a man yelling and loud noises for about two hours coming from the apartment, which the couple had shared for about a week.
Before calling 911 just after 3:30 a.m., Lopez said he carried her body to the bathroom and splashed water on her face in an attempt to revive her. He then washed his hands, had a cigarette break outside and called cops to say his lover was not breathing.
When police arrived at the home, they found him crying for help next to her naked body. Blood and bodily tissue covered the floor and walls. A bottle of tequila and sliced limes were seen in the kitchen.
Lopez initially blamed her death on rough sex. During a court appearance Monday he told a judge, through an interpreter, that he'd been drunk.
He was charged with first-degree murder and ordered held without bond.
Nemeth's neighbors were stunned and horrified by the news. They said she worked at the apartment complex as a leasing agent. That's where she met Lopez."Very gentle, very private. Soft-spoken young lady. We all loved her. Very pleasant young lady," Dan Carter

Siblings claim cousin killed their dad after starting incest relationship

Two Washington state sibilings say their cousin, Tracy Shannon Nessl, killed their dad after she started a romantic relationship with him. Two Washington state siblings say their cousin killed their father on Christmas Day after they began an incestuous relationship and ran away together to Belize.
Jennifer Ralston and her brother Caleb McNamara filed a civil lawsuit last week against their cousin Tracy Shannon Nessl, who moved back to central Washington after the death of their father, Timothy McNamara.
The two claim their cousin put their dad's life insurance policy and his property in her name before she shot him in the back of the head. The U.S. does not have the authority to arrest Nessl since the alleged murder happened in Belize.
"It's insane," Caleb McNamara said. "This is absolutely insane."
The brother and sister said the 44-year-old Nessl started seeing her uncle, who was 22 years older than her, in 2012, just after he divorced his wife. Nessl's father was Timothy McNamara's brother.
Jennifer Ralston and Caleb McNamara have filed a civil lawsuit last week against their cousin. 
 
Timothy McNamara's kids and his hometown of Soap Lake struggled to understand the new relationship.
"We had been raised in a very Christian, conservative home, and so it was hard for us to digest," Ralston said. "It was hard for us to understand."
The uncle-niece couple eventually took a romantic vacation to Belize  and never came back. While on their getaway, they purchased a 60-acre farm and moved in, the siblings said.
Tracy Shannon Nessl "I think my dad went to Belize because he really couldn't sell it in a small town, the relationship they were in." Caleb McNamara said.
Meanwhile, Nessl quietly put her lover's Washington state properties in her name and listed herself on his life insurance policy.
On Christmas Day 2014, the cousin shot Timothy McNamara in the back of the head with a shotgun, the siblings said.
She called Caleb McNamara a day later to tell him his dad died after he accidentally shot himself. Belize police later ruled his death a suicide.
"You don't shoot yourself in the back of the head," Caleb McNamara said. "It's borderline impossible."
Tracy Shannon Nessl
The siblings pursued their dad's suspicious death and eventually got Interpol to issue a warrant for Nessl's arrest in Belize  but by then, their cousin was already back in Washington living on the family farm, one of the properties she put her name on before the shooting, they claimed.
U.S. officials do not have the power to arrest Nessl, and extradition back to Belize is a complicated process, the siblings said. That's why they filed the civil lawsuit.
Nessl has since cut communication with the siblings and won't allow them into the family farm, they said.
Instead, she now lives alone on the property Timothy McNamara dedicated his life to.
"The number one thing is you want justice for what happened to your dad, there's no doubt about it," said Jennifer Ralston. "But when you see everything he worked for his entire life and you were such a part of it and you're not even allowed to be there or go near it, you're like, this is so wrong."

Friday, September 4, 2015

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Man robbed at knifepoint by fake rideshare driver, accomplice

A fake rideshare driver and her accomplice convinced a man who had just left a North Beach bar early Thursday to hop in their car, before robbing him at knifepoint.
The 39-year-old man was swindled into entering the car near the intersection of Green Street and Grant Avenue around 2 a.m., police said.
He was approached by a man who talked him into the back seat of a white four-door hybrid sedan, police said. The man got in the front passenger’s seat.
Once the car was moving the thief turned around, pointed a knife at the victim, and demanded property.
After the victim handed over his cash and cell phone, the male thief moved to the back seat and pushed the victim out of the car, which was stopped.
The woman and man then drove away with the victim’s possessions.
No detailed description of the suspects has been released by police.
Police did not name the rideshare company the victim thought he was using. Rideshare companies like Uber and Lyft operate throughout San Francisco.

Stolen car suspect jumps off Bay Bridge evading police

In an apparent daredevil attempt to evade arrest, a woman who wrecked a stolen car on the Bay Bridge early Wednesday fell about 70 feet from the span to the water and got away after pulling out of the grip of a California Highway Patrol officer, authorities said.
In this file photo motorists travel east and west bound during the Bay Bridge morning commute. Police are searching for a woman who apparently fell or jumped from the Bay Bridge after being involved in a crash on the eastbound decline of the bridge shortly after 2 a.m.. Photo: Michael Macor, San Francisco ChronicleThe bizarre getaway — reminiscent of a scene from “Mission: Impossible” — unfolded shortly after 2 a.m. when CHP officers heading west on the bridge saw a Nissan Maxima spin out and crash on the eastbound side of the span.
The officers turned around, found the Nissan abandoned and saw three women walking east on the bicycle path adjacent to the bridge.
One of the women, believed to be the driver, began climbing onto the rail and “exhibited erratic behavior,” leading the officers to believe she would jump, CHP officials said. She had on a black dress and no shoes.
One of the officers grabbed her to try to pull her back over the railing. But she struggled, and after a minute and a half, “she pulled out of his grip and fell into the water below,” CHP officials said.
The woman, who is in her mid-20s, splashed in the water about 70 feet below, in between the new bridge and the old eastern span, authorities said.
Some motorists reported seeing a woman, soaking wet, standing on the north side of the bridge near the toll plaza trying to flag down traffic.
A dump truck driver later showed up at the CHP’s Oakland office, saying he had picked up the woman near the Bay Bridge, but was unaware of her exploits until hearing news reports after he dropped her off at an undisclosed location.
While CHP officials said they were investigating whether the woman deliberately went into the water from the bridge to avoid arrest, they noted that she could have accidentally fallen after losing her grip. Authorities said such a fall is survivable.
Officers deployed a dye pack into the water to mark the location where she went in. CHP officers and the U.S. Coast Guard searched for the woman by boat and by helicopter. The only evidence recovered was identification believed to be the woman’s floating in the water. CHP officials withheld her name but said she is from the East Bay.
Investigators determined that the car that crashed had been reported stolen several weeks ago in Los Angeles, said CHP Officer Vu Williams.
CHP investigators interviewed the two other women who were in the car and released them. The women said they “didn’t know the (driver) too well,” Williams said. Officials would not disclose any further information about their investigation.
“We would like to find her, obviously, most notably because we’d like to make sure that she’s OK,” said CHP Officer Daniel Hill.

S.F. woman, 43, accused of killing teenager she dated

  • Silvia Lorena Montoya Photo: Courtesy, San Francisco Police Department
    A 43-year-old woman pleaded not guilty Friday to shooting and killing an 18-year-old man in San Francisco’s McLaren Park, as authorities revealed that the two had been in a romantic relationship before the alleged attack.
    Silvia Lorena Montoya is charged with one count of murder and three counts of dissuading a witness in connection with the May 31 killing of Jonathan Caballero.

    Police responding to reports of shots fired at McLaren Park that morning found Caballero, a Balboa High School student, unconscious and bleeding from at least one gunshot wound on a walking trail off John F. Shelley Drive.

    He died at the scene. Investigators spent the next two months gathering evidence that led them to Montoya, police officials said, and she was booked into county jail on July 30.

    Authorities have not discussed a possible motive, but prosecutors said Montoya and Caballero had dated. Kwixuan Maloof, a managing attorney in the public defender’s office who is representing Montoya, said Caballero had lived with Montoya at some point.

    In court Friday, Montoya stood quietly as Maloof requested the names of the three witnesses she is accused of dissuading. Assistant District Attorney Patrick Mahoney said his office had to ensure the witnesses’ safety before he could identify them to the defense.

    Montoya flashed a small wave at two women and a man sitting in the back of the courtroom before she was led back to a holding cell.

    The victim’s relatives also attended the hearing, with one woman tearing up as they declined to comment outside court.

    Maloof said he could not comment on Montoya’s defense until he received more evidence from the district attorney’s office. But he said statements from witnesses contradicted each other, and that the police report on the homicide made no mention of dissuading witnesses.

    Montoya is being held on $10 million bail. She is scheduled to return to court Monday.
Hundreds of protesters are marching the streets of Oakland. While officials have not released the identity of the victim, protesters said his name is Joe Bart.
And according to social media reports, there have been reports of some vandalism. Several demonstrators burned a confederate flag while marching the streets.
Protesters had shut down Highway 980 but they have appeared to have cleared off.
But CHP has tweeted for drivers in Oakland to be aware of pedestrians on the roadway.
Suspect gun.According to tweets, about 50 people were at Oakland police headquarters, possibly to protest.
This is the city’s 5th officer-involved shooting of the year. The third ending in death.
Police said the suspect’s gun was a stolen, loaded firearm. The suspect in the deadly police shooting advanced towards police when shot. Police said they are reviewing the police body camera footage of the shooting.
Suspect has died at the hospital, according to police.

Oakland police are investigating an officer-involved shooting Wednesday afternoon.
It happened in the area of 27th Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Way, police said. Police did not say if the officers were injured in the gunfire.
An armed robbery suspect was taken to the hospital, according to to police.
Police said at around 2:39 p.m., they found the suspect’s vehicle in the area of 69th Avenue and International Boulevard. Police pursued the vehicle to the area pf 27th and Martin Luther King Jr.
The driver then ran away from the vehicle after hitting another vehicle, and then tried to carjack another vehicle, police said. An Oakland police officer then shot the suspect, who police said was armed.

FBI arrests former teacher in Los Angeles wanted for crimes against children in Fremont in 2001

5259E12E7A974C15990FE1D2AEAE2026The FBI has arrested a former school teacher wanted in connection for crimes against children in Fremont 14 years ago.

Authorities arrested 52-year-old Frank Montenegro in Los Angeles Wednesday morning. In 2001, Montenegro was charged with multiple counts of sodomy, oral copulation, and sexual abuse by the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office.
At the time, he had been working as an elementary school teacher. The FBI took over the investigation after Montenegro fled to Mexico.
On Wednesday, the FBI received a tip that he had been living in LA for several years.

Man found dead after apartment explosion has been identified

A man who was found dead inside his West Oakland apartment on Tuesday after an explosion and fire occurred while Alameda County sheriff’s deputies were serving an eviction notice was identified by the county coroner’s bureau today as 45-year-old John Navarre of Oakland.
fireAlameda County sheriff’s spokesman Sgt. J.D. Nelson said two sheriff’s deputies, who were accompanied by the building’s landlord and a locksmith, were trying to enter the building in the 1400 block of Peralta Street at about 11 a.m. Tuesday when there was an explosion in the rear of the home.
Nelson said the explosion set the home on fire and Oakland firefighters responded to put the fire out. The two deputies suffered moderate injuries and were taken to Highland Hospital.
Nelson wasn’t immediately available today to provide an update on the condition of the deputies.
Navarre was found dead in the rear of a downstairs units at the three-unit apartment building.
No other tenants at the building were injured, but the building sustained an estimated $300,000 in damage and its tenants have had to find alternate housing because it isn’t habitable, Oakland Fire Battalion Chief Erik Logan said today.
Nelson said on Tuesday that it wasn’t clear if Navarre set off the explosion on purpose or if it was an accidental gas explosion.
Logan said Oakland police are leading the investigation into the incident. Police officials weren’t immediately available for comment today.
Phillip, a man who lives across the street from the triplex and declined to give his last name, said on Tuesday that Navarre “was a recluse who kept to himself.” Phillip said, “I never knew he had any problems. He was always nice to me.”
Isiah Forrest, 68, who rents an upstairs unit, said Navarre “was quiet and kept to himself.”
Forrest’s son lives in a second downstairs unit at the building.
The son, who declined to give his name, said on Tuesday that he was mad at Navarre because “he put my family in danger.”
Logan said it took 18 Oakland firefighters to put out the blaze that erupted after the explosion.

Monday, August 10, 2015

San Francisco has 'Instagram cop' to track down criminal activity

San Francisco's police department has an 'Instagram officer' and is looking to hire tech-savvy copsWhile the sheer popularity of Facebook continues to make it the most fruitful social media platform for cops hunting down criminals, Instagram, too, is becoming increasingly useful thanks to its steadily growing pool of users, ne'er-do-wells among them.
In fact, San Francisco Police Department even has its own "Instagram officer," it was revealed recently. Eduard Ochoa is paid to scan the service day in, day out, keeping his eyes peeled for suspicious characters and criminal behavior, or for additional information on people of interest in connection with investigations already underway.
Late last month, an appeals court in California affirmed a firearms conviction that used Instagram photos as evidence.
The defendant, a minor whose Instagram account was named “40glock,” had posted pictures of himself with a gun tucked into his waistband in 2013. Police used these images as the basis to perform a probation search of his house, which led to his conviction.
Though the thought that Instagram photos can be used as evidence in court might not surprise you, the court documents also revealed that the San Francisco Police Department has at least one officer dubbed an “Instagram officer,” who is adept at nabbing criminals on social media.
The following appears in the court’s ruling:
San Francisco Police Officers Dave Johnson and Eduard Ochoa testified that they were on routine patrol on October 21, 2013. Throughout that day, Officer Ochoa scanned Instagram, a social media website, looking for postings. Officer Ochoa was the "Instagram officer” in his department and had been so for three or four years. His training and experience had taught him “how to monitor and track individuals through Instagram.”
A San Francisco Police Department spokesperson told Business Insider that their officers may use all social media sites during the course of their investigations. The spokesperson also revealed that they have specialized training in different types of social media, and that certain officers can be designated by their unit as the “Instagram officer” or “Facebook officer” based on their expertise — though these aren't formal titles.
When asked if the police department was specifically recruiting tech-savvy officers, the spokesperson said it helps if officers have a knowledge and background in tech, though they haven't begun trying to poach engineers from startups quite yet.
The San Francisco Police Officer's Association recently praised the SFPD's Instagram officer, along with several of his cyber-sleuth co-workers, for carrying out an "extremely intensive investigation using the most modern techniques provided by our new electronic age" to locate a recent suspect involved in a shooting in the city. In another case a couple of years ago, the department managed to use Instagram images to match a weapon to a suspect and then track him down using selfies he'd posted.
Facebook, as already mentioned, still provides cops with the most leads when it comes to apprehending individuals for illegal behavior. Often, the culprits bring it upon themselves -- there was, for example, the guy who was arrested shortly after "liking" his own wanted ad, and a woman who was picked up by cops soon after posting a selfie wearing a recently stolen dress. And we mustn't forget the wanted guy who taunted cops on Facebook with a "catch me if you can" message before being arrested the very next day.

Thursday, August 6, 2015

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Wednesday, July 29, 2015

white officer murders another Black man who is unarmed [RAW VIDEO]


Samuel Dubose, Ray Tensing, Sam Dubose and Ray Tensing, Cincinnati police shooting
MURDERER                                             VICTIM
Officials have released body camera footage showing a University of Cincinnati police officer fatally shooting an unarmed black man during a traffic stop.The video above shows the full recording of the traffic stop, with the moment of the shooting blurred. The shooting occurs at about the 1:45 mark of the video.
Officer Ray Tensing, who is white, killed Sam DuBose on July 19 in the Cincinnati neighborhood of Mount Auburn.
The full video, unedited and without the shooting blurred, can be watched below. It also includes the aftermath of the shooting and Tensing’s conversations with other officers. Warning, the video is graphic:
Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters said the video shows a “senseless” and “asinine” shooting by a man who “never should have been a police officer.”
Tensing, 25, was fired by the University of Cincinnati after his arrest. He worked there for four years and was also a graduate of the university.
The video shows Tensing pulling over DuBose for not having a front license plate. Tensing asks DuBose for his driver’s license, and DuBose eventually says he does not have it. After Tensing asks DuBose if his license is suspended and then tells him to get out of the car, DuBose then turns the keys in his ignition, and the car can be hearding starting up. He says “I didn’t even do nothing.”
DuBose has his hand on the driver’s side door, holding it closed, as Tensing tries to open it. Tensing then reaches into the car and toward the keys. As he does that, DuBose leans backwards and the car starts to roll forward a bit. Tensing appears to grab onto DuBose’s seatbelt as DuBose leans away from the officer. Tensing then draws his gun, points it through the window and fires one shot, hitting DuBose in the head.
Tensing falls backwards to the ground and DuBose’s car speeds off and eventually crashes down the street. Tensing chases after the car, while radioing in that shots were fired. The prosecutor said DuBose was dead instantly.
Tensing originally said he was dragged by the car and feared for his life, but Deters, the prosecutor, said the video shows he wasn’t dragged. Deters said he thinks Tensing was making an excuse for the purposeful killing of another person. Deters called the traffic stop itself “chicken-crap.”
 Authorities are bracing for possible unrest following the release of the video. The University of Cincinnati closed its campus early:
This decision is made with an abundance of caution in anticipation of today’s announcement of the Hamilton County grand jury’s decision regarding the July 19 officer-involved shooting of Samuel DuBose and the release of the officer’s body camera video. We realize this is a challenging time for our university community.
Before it was released, Cincinnati Police Chief Jeffrey Blackwell said he watched the video and said it is “not good.”
“I don’t want to put my personal feelings out prematurely,” Blackwell said. “I just hope that the right thing continues to be done in this investigation and that we’re able to move forward from this and allow this to be a moment of learning and teaching for our city.”
Read more about Tensing, DuBose and the case at the link below:

Husband seeks answers on wife's death inside holding cell

"I don't know what happened," husband Herman Turner said about her death. "They won't give me a time of death ... what happened ... nothing." - Joe Marino/New York Daily NewsA 43-year-old Mount Vernon mother of eight mysteriously died in police custody Monday — and her heartbroken husband wants to know why.
Herman Turner, 49, waited all day Monday for his wife, Raynette, to be arraigned on a shoplifting charge at the Mount Vernon criminal court.
When she didn't appear, he went home, only to be met by two detectives who broke the bad news: Raynette had died in a holding cell.
"I went blank ... It was a complete shock," Turner said, recalling the horrific news. "She was the best. She was very loving ... She always loved to laugh. She was a fun, happy lady."
Turner said their children — the oldest 21, the youngest just 8 — were "completely distraught."
"I don't know what happened," he said about her death. "They won't give me a time of death ... what happened ... nothing."
His attorney Osvoldo Gonzalez said Raynette had been in custody since Friday because court is not in session in Mount Vernon on the weekends.
Details of her arrest were not available, although a Mount Vernon spokeswoman said it was Raynette’s third shoplifting arrest in recent weeks.
Over the last four days, Raynette —who recently had bariatric surgery and suffered from hypertension, according to officials — repeatedly said she was not feeling well and asked to see a doctor, Gonzalez claimed.
"She was isolated in the police station for four days and was still complaining about needing medical attention and received nothing," he said. "The hospital is directly across the street, but apparently her requests for help were ignored."
Mount Vernon Police Captain Edward Adinaro refuted Gonzalez’s claim and said Raynette received medical care at the hospital across the street on Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m.
She was taken back to her holding cell about 10 p.m. Adinaro said.
Gonzalez questioned the Mount Vernon police’s timeline, and believes she was not given a full checkup.
“That’s amazingly fast for a hospital visit,” he said of the emergency room stay. “Two hours in a hospital is like one minute. Obviously whatever they did, it was not helpful to her.”
On Monday, a cop monitoring the cells saw Raynette alive about an hour before she died, Davis said.
When they found her, she appeared to be sleeping, he said.
A city spokeswoman said an investigation into what transpired was underway. An autopsy was slated to determine what killed Raynette Turner.
Herman Turner said his wife "was as strong as a bull."
"She had no medical issues," he said. "She had a little high blood pressure, but that was it."

Stabbing suspects wanted to kill more than Columbine

Booking photo provided by the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office shows Robert Bever. A booking document filed by police in the Tulsa suburb of Broken Arrow, Okla., accuses Bever, of five… The Oklahoma teen brothers accused of fatally stabbing their parents and three of their siblings hoped their bloody rampage would make them more infamous than the Columbine High School shooters, local media reported.

This Friday, July 24, 2015 booking photo provided by the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office shows Robert Bever. A booking document filed by police in the Tulsa suburb of Broken Arrow, Okla., accuses Bever, of five counts of first-degree murder and a count of aggravated assault in the attack that left five family members dead.
Robert and Michael Bever, 18 and 16 years old, were booked into jail as adults in the five stabbing deaths.
The brothers planned to first kill their relatives — whom they considered to be “easy targets” — and then go after “harder” targets outside the family home, sources said. But their mass murder plan was cut short when police tracked them down after the kin killings.  
Five of the Bevers — parents April and David, 12-year-old Daniel, 7-year-old Christopher and 5-year-old Victoria — were found dead last week inside the family’s well-kept, upper-middle-class home in Broken Arrow, a Tulsa suburb. Two sisters survived the attack: A 13-year-old Crystal was injured while 2-year-old Autumn was unharmed.
At least one of the two brothers — who were tracked down by a K-9 officer in woods behind the house — confessed to the killings.
The home attack was just the first step in the boys’ mass murder plot, sources said.
The two allegedly wanted to kill so many people, they would become more famous than the Columbine High School shooters, who fatally shot 13 people inside the Colorado school in 1999, sources said.
The plotted their two-step killing spree in advance, sources said: First they’d stab their relatives to death, then start killing other people.
A shipment of 3,000 rounds of ammunition was delivered to the family home in the days after the domestic massacre — weapons the boys planned to use in stage two of their plot, sources said.
But police ended the planned rampage when they tracked down the teens shortly after the family stabbings. Their 12-year-old brother called police before he died from his stab wounds.
Officers found the five slain victims and two surviving sisters inside the home. A tracking dog led officers to 16- and 18-year-old brothers in woods behind the house.
Michael and Robert will both be charged as adults, police said. They are currently being held on five counts of first-degree murder and one count of assault and battery.
Robert Bever is due in court on August 3

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Los Angeles police detective arrested over 5 bank robberies


The suspected "Snowbird Bandit" is shown in this combination of surveillance handout photos released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to Reuters on July 23, 2015. Randolph Bruce Adair, a retired Los Angeles Police Department detective has been arrested in a string of bank robberies.A retired Los Angeles Police Department detective has been arrested in a string of bank robberies attributed to the so-called "Snowbird Bandit" after several of his family members tipped off authorities, police said on Thursday.
Randolph Bruce Adair, 70, was taken into custody in a parking lot near his home in Rancho Santa Margarita, California, on Wednesday on suspicion of bank robbery and an outstanding warrant, an Orange County Sheriff's Department spokesman said.
Adair was booked into the Orange County Jail in lieu of $205,000 bail pending an initial court appearance later on Thursday and was expected to face federal charges in the coming days.
The former LAPD detective had been linked to five bank robberies beginning in March, according to the sheriff's department, including two in Rancho Santa Margarita, about 60 miles (97 km) southeast of Los Angeles.
The other three robberies took place in the Orange County communities of Ladera Ranch, Mission Viejo and Dana Point.
http://cbsnews1.cbsistatic.com/hub/i/r/2015/07/22/d4cfc602-c29c-4061-8f36-75288368efb6/thumbnail/620x350/49a0adf5d8a6985b98f0213dcfa5d52e/snowbird-bandit.jpgThe man responsible for the Snowbird Bandit robberies earned that nickname after victims and witnesses described him as being an older male, possibly a retiree, according to the FBI, which had sought the public's help identifying him.
In their latest release about the robberies, the Federal Bureau of Investigation described the Snowbird Bandit as having white hair and aged in his late fifties to sixties.
Photos from the robberies show what appears to be an older white man with a mustache who wears a baseball cap or straw hat and dark glasses.
The agency said the robber displayed a revolver as he demanded cash from tellers and in one case carried a white pouch with the word "Medic" printed on it.
An LAPD spokeswoman declined to comment on Adair's arrest but confirmed that he had been employed as a detective in the department's Rampart Division until his retirement in October of 1988.

Cop illegally enters home, arrests naked woman (VIDEO)

An Arizona cop barged into a woman’s home while she was in the shower and handcuffed her as she stood naked and sopping wet, according to a lawsuit.
Officer Doug Rose lectured an unclothed, sobbing Esmeralda Rossi in front of her daughter and told her he was in charge, even though she was in her own home. Even as an investigation determined that Rose illegally entered the home, the policeman managed to retire and start collecting his pension.
Rossi is now suing the city of Chandler, Ariz., for the aggressive invasion her daughter caught on camera.
Rossi — who was never charged with a crime — said Rose slapped cuffs on her while she attempted to cover herself with a towel.
“I felt helpless. I felt violated. And honestly, I felt molested,”
Rose and another officer responded to Rossi’s home, responding to a complaint about an argument between the mom and her estranged husband.
Rossi was in the shower when the cops knocked, and her daughter answered the door. The girl then went to her mom’s shower to tell her about the visitors. Rossi grabbed a towel to cover up and met the cops at the door.
Rose and his partner started interrogating Rossi, and the mom admitted that she took an attitude with the cops. The conversation got more aggressive, and Rossi said she felt “uncomfortable” — so she asked the cops if she could fetch her phone to record their conversation.
“I turn to go into my living room, and I probably get about five steps in and all of a sudden, I just hear boots running in after me, telling me, ‘Stop or I’ll arrest you!’”
That’s when both Rossi and her daughter started recording.
The daughter shot video as the cop grabbed Rossi — still only covered by a bath towel — and told her she was under arrest.
A panicked Rossi cried and begged Rose to stop touching her as the cop forced her hands behind her back.
“You have absolutely no clothes on?” Rose asked.
“I was in the shower! What is wrong with you?” Rossi screamed, her towel slipping off of her body.
Rossi dropped her cellphone while Rose handcuffed her, but it still recorded audio. Rose lectured Rossi for 20 minutes about her behavior while the mom sobbed.
“Don’t take the attitude with cops, because we don’t play,” Rose said. “When a cop shows up, you’re not the one in charge. I don’t care if this is your house.”

“This was not the proper treatment of a citizen,” Marc Victor, Rossi’s attorney," This was disgusting. This was barbaric.”
The cops left without officially arresting Rossi.
Investigators probed the case and determined Rose entered the home illegally and without probable cause. He also didn’t fully document what happened: the fact that Rossi was naked was never reported. There is also no mention of Rossi’s “arrest” in his police report.
Amid the investigation, Rose retired from the force. He received a pension from the department.
Rossi — who said she was molested as a young girl — said the ordeal brought back horrific memories of her childhood.
“When I was standing there … I felt like I was 7 all over again in a dark room with a man that is just staring at me,” she said.

Teen lured to dog-collar sex parties

Christopher Scott Burke, 31, lured a teen girl to sex parties involving his wife and dog collars. A Michigan man who lured a 15-year-old girl into dog-collar wearing sex parties with his own wife was sentenced to four and a half months in jail last week.
“He’s a manipulator and a sexual predator,” the girl’s mother told a judge about Christopher Scott Burke.
Burke, of Ann Arbor, met the teen girl’s older sister while working at a Walmart in Saline. The sister, who is in her 20s, agreed to live with Burke and his wife in a sexual arrangement.
The 15-year-old was lured to the home several times during one week in late December 2014.
Christopher Scott Burke's father defended him by saying Burke and his wife chose to live an 'alternative lifestyle.' The girls’ mother said Burke had “taken the innocence” of her daughters.
Burke, 31, pleaded no contest to one count of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct with an underage victim in June.
On Facebook, where Burke calls himself  “Christopher D Wolfe” and “Draco Wolfe,” he posted pictures of himself wearing a dog collar and with furry animal ears on his head. He left his Walmart job in March to work as an auto parts deliveryman.
His father, Scott Burke, defended his son by telling the Ann Arbor News Burke and his wife just chose an “alternative lifestyle.”

Saturday, July 25, 2015

hulk hogans racist rules for dating a Black Man

Hulk Hogan’s race rant over his daughter dating a black man
so... these are hulks rules for fucking a Black Man

“I mean, I’d rather if she was going to fuck some nigger, I’d rather have her marry an 8-foot-tall nigger worth a hundred million dollars! Like a basketball player! I guess we’re all a little racist. Fucking nigger.”

GO FUCK YOURSELF YOU BLOATED BELLY  BILLY GOAT


Celebrities only apologies for their racist rants when they're caught... they're sorry they got caught not for what they did but still want your money.

Monday, July 13, 2015

Baby run over in car chase after murder of rap singer Capo from Chief Keefs Glo Boys (RAW VIDEO)

Rapper Capo and Baby Killed by Alleged Gang Members in Broad Daylight
A 13-month-old baby on his way to the beach with his mom was killed Saturday when a car fleeing a drive-by shooting lost control and jumped a curb, police say.
The presumably gang-related shooting began around 1:45 p.m. Saturday when Chicago rapper Capo—a member of Chief Keef’s Glo Gang—was shot in the hip and back. The up-and-coming rapper—real name Marvin Carr—was later pronounced dead at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
But that wasn’t the only fatality linked to the shooters. It’s still unclear who was involved, but someone “connected to law enforcement” apparently began chasing the vehicle after the shooting.
Cops say the alleged shooters lost control of their car about three miles away from the crime scene, mowing over Dillon Harris, a 13-month-old baby sitting in his stroller outside a bus stop.
The baby’s mother, who declined to give her name to reporters, said she and three of her kids were on their way to the beach when the car suddenly jumped the curb. 

“All of a sudden, they swerved and hit a pole and hit my baby,” said the mother, who declined to give her name.
She said she tried to push all of her kids out of the way but didn’t have enough time to get Dillan clear of the danger.
“It happened in the blink of an eye,” she said. “When I looked up, they were just there. I tried my best to save my baby.”
When she saw the stroller had been hit, she said, “I knew he was gone,”


According to ABC 7, the car continued driving for a short distance before two occupants jumped out and continued on foot.
“The boys jumped out of the car right here in the alley and ran down the street and like I said, the two who were here, you could tell they didn’t know where to go,” a witness said.
Police say they are questioning two suspects but no charges have been filed.

CA Inmate almost cut in half had organs removed

0711 cal inmate.jpg
Nearly 15 hours after a riot at a Northern California prison, guards found a missing inmate sawed nearly in two, with his abdominal organs and most chest organs removed, his body folded and stuffed into a garbage can in a shower stall a few doors from his cell.
Details of the gruesome May killing at the medium-security California State Prison, Solano, are laid out in an autopsy report obtained by The Associated Press under a public records request.
The grisly discovery raises obvious questions about the prison's security: How could such a gruesome killing happen inside a locked facility with security and surveillance? How could someone obtain weapons sharp enough to dissect a body? And why did it take so long to uncover?
Homicides are distressingly common in California prisons. More than 160 inmates have been killed in the last 15 years, and the state has one of the nation's highest inmate homicide rates. Yet the death of 24-year-old Nicholas Anthony Rodriguez stands out.
Rodriguez's missing organs are "still part of the investigation" at the prison in Vacaville, 40 miles southwest of Sacramento, Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation spokeswoman Terry Thornton said Friday.
No one has been charged with killing Rodriguez, an Oakland man who was serving an eight-year robbery sentence from Alameda County. However, Thornton said his cellmate, a 46-year-old man serving a life sentence for a Los Angeles County murder, is considered the only suspect and is being held in segregation. Thornton said she couldn't say how the homicide was carried out or concealed since it's still being investigated.
"It just blows my mind, because officers are looking in on inmates all the time," said Christine Ward, executive director of the Crime Victims Action Alliance. "Unfortunately, we know that there are drugs, there's alcohol, there are weapons. As much as the officers can police that, we know we've got the toughest, the baddest, the most violent criminals in our state prison and unfortunately some of the most cunning prisoners in there as well. They are going to find ways to do that."
Rodriguez's body was discovered around 9:30 p.m. May 4, 14½ hours after inmates were ordered locked in their cells following a brawl between 58 inmates in his housing unit. Three prisoners and one correctional officer were injured in the fight, and Thornton said an inmate-made weapon was recovered. She declined to describe it.
Despite the riot and resulting investigation, Rodriguez was not discovered missing until a head count at 4:30 p.m. Thornton said officials initially assumed he had escaped.
Investigators are looking into whether the riot was created to conceal the slaying or allow someone to move the body.
"It's very difficult to cover every contingency with the limited staff that we have," said Chuck Alexander, president of the California Correctional Peace Officers Association that represents most prison guards.
"This kind of thing at Solano, sad to say I predict it's just a precursor," he said.
He noted a 2011 California law that keeps lower-level offenders in county jails, leaving state prisons to hold the most violent criminals. Changes in prison policies, meanwhile, mean more dangerous offenders are being housed in lower-security prisons like medium-security.
Rodriguez had alcohol in his system and was dead before he was eviscerated, killed by blows to the head that left him with a deep star-shaped wound on his forehead among his multiple skull fractures, cuts and other wounds, according to the May 27 autopsy report conducted by the Solano County Sheriff coroner's office.
His mother, Maria Rodriguez of Oakland, said she has been given no details about what happened. She said she had not seen the autopsy report but said that she knew her son's body was badly injured.
"When I saw my son ... at the funeral, he was so bad in the face," she said in a telephone interview. "I called them last week, and they say they're going to tell me in two weeks or in three weeks, but right now we don't got nothing."

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Mexican Drug "Lord" escapes Max Secure prison for the second time... Run Forrest Run

Saturday night in a scheme befitting a caper movie, Mexico's most powerful drug lord, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, escaped from a maximum security prison through a 1.5-kilometer (1 mile) tunnel from a small opening in the shower area of his cell, the country's top security official announced Sunday.
The elaborate underground escape route built allegedly without the detection of authorities allowed Guzman to do what Mexican officials promised would never happen after his re-capture last year — slip out of one of the country's most secure penitentiaries for the second time.
Eighteen employees from various part of the Altiplano prison 55 miles (90 kilometers) west of Mexico City have been taken in for questioning, Security Commissioner Monte Alejandro Rubido said in a news conference without answering questions.
A manhunt began immediately late Saturday for the head of the powerful Sinaloa Cartel, which has an international reach and is believed to control most of the major crossing points for drugs at the U.S. border with Mexico.
If Guzman is not captured immediately, the drug lord will likely be back in full command and control of the Sinaloa cartel in 48 hours, said Michael S. Vigil, a retired U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration chief of international operations. "We may never find him again," he said.

Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman: FILE - In this Feb. 22, 2014, file photo, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, head of Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel, is escorted to a helicopter in Mexico City, following his capture overnight in the beach resort town of Mazatlan. Mexico’s security commission said in a statement late Saturday, July 11, 2015, the top drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman has escaped from a maximum security prison, the second time he has fled after being captured.In this Feb. 22, 2014, file photo, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, head of Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel, is escorted to a helicopter in Mexico City, following his capture overnight in the beach resort town of Mazatlan.


Associated Press journalists near the Altiplano saw the roads were being heavily patrolled by Federal Police with numerous checkpoints and a Blackhawk helicopter flying overhead. Flights were also suspended at Toluca airport near the penitentiary in the State of Mexico, and civil aviation hangars were being searched.
Guzman was last seen about 9 p.m. Saturday in the shower area of his cell, according to a statement from the National Security Commission. After a time, he was lost by the prison's security camera surveillance network. Upon checking his cell, authorities found it empty and a 20-by-20-inch (50-by-50 centimeter) hole near the shower.
Guzman's escape is a major embarrassment to the administration of President Enrique Pena Nieto, which had received plaudits for its aggressive approach to top drug lords. Since the government took office in late 2012, Mexican authorities have nabbed or killed six of them, including Guzman.
Pena Nieto arrived in France on Sunday and will stick to his planned schedule, according to a federal official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to be named. But Interior Secretary Miguel Angel Osorio Chong, the Cabinet's head of security, will return to Mexico from France.
Guzman faces multiple federal drug trafficking indictments in the U.S. as well as Mexico, and was on the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's most-wanted list.
After Guzman was arrested on Feb. 22, 2014, the U.S. said it would file an extradition request, though it's not clear if that happened.
The Mexican government at the time vehemently denied the need to extradite Guzman, even as many expressed fears he would escape as he did in 2001 while serving a 20-year sentence in the country's other top-security prison, Puente Grande, in the western state of Jalisco.
Former Mexican Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam told the AP earlier this year that the U.S. would get Guzman in "about 300 or 400 years" after he served time for all his crimes in Mexico. Murillo Karam said sending Guzman to the United States would save Mexico a lot of money, but keeping him was a question of national sovereignty.
He dismissed concerns that Guzman could escape a second time. That risk "does not exist," Murillo Karam said.
"It was engineering work very well done," said Raul Benitez, a security expert at Mexico's National Autonomous University. "It wasn't overconfidence, it was Mexican judicial nationalism ... First he had to pay his debt in Mexico and then in the U.S. Now it's very evident that it was a mistake."
It was difficult to believe that such an elaborate structure could have been built without the detection of authorities, though photographs show the facility surrounded by construction, with large open ditches and lots of metal drainage pipes that could have camouflaged such a project. The tunnel terminated in a half-built house in a rural farm field near the prison, according to authorities who cordoned off the structure. Guzman dropped by ladder into a hole 10 meters (yards) deep that connected with a tunnel about 1.7 meters (yards) high that was fully ventilated.
Guzman is known for the elaborate tunnels his cartel has built underneath the Mexico-U.S. border to transport cocaine, methamphetamines and marijuana, with ventilation, lighting and even railcars to easily move products.
He was first caught by authorities in Guatemala in 1993, extradited and sentenced to 20 years in prison on drug-trafficking-related charges. Many accounts say he escaped in a laundry cart, although there have been several versions of how he got away. What is clear is that he had help from prison guards, who were prosecuted and convicted.
Guzman was finally re-captured in February 2014 after eluding authorities for days across his home state of Sinaloa, for which the cartel is named. He was listed as 56 years old last year, though there are discrepancies in his birth date.
During his first stint as a fugitive, Guzman transformed himself from a middling Mexican capo into arguably the most powerful drug trafficker in the world. His fortune grew to be estimated at more than $1 billion, according to Forbes magazine, which listed him among the "World's Most Powerful People" and ranked him above the presidents of France and Venezuela.
Guzman has long been known for his ability to pay off local residents and authorities, who would tip him off to operations launched for his capture. He finally was tracked down to a modest beachside high-rise in the Pacific Coast resort city of Mazatlan on Feb. 22, 2014, where he had been hiding with his wife and twin daughters. He was taken in the early morning without a shot fired.
But before they reached him, security forces went on a several-day chase through Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa state. They found houses where Guzman supposedly had been staying with steel-enforced doors and the same kind of lighted, ventilated tunnels that allowed him to escape from a bathroom to an outside drainage ditch.
Even with his 2014 capture, Guzman's Sinaloa Cartel empire continues to stretch throughout North America and reaches as far away as Europe and Australia. The cartel has been heavily involved in the bloody drug war that has torn through parts of Mexico for the last decade, taking at least an estimated 100,000 lives.
Altiplano, which is considered the main and most secure of Mexico's federal prisons, also houses Zetas drug cartel leader Miguel Angel Trevino, and Edgar Valdes Villarreal, known as "La Barbie," of the Beltran Leyva cartel.