Sunday 30 April 2023

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. arrives in the United States for talk with Biden

 




Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. arrives in the United States for talk with Biden

By Edward Era Barbacena 


President Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. has arrived here for his five-day official working visit— his second time in the United States since assuming the presidency.

Marcos arrived at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland at exactly 4:56 p.m. (Washington time) on Sunday, April 30, along with First Lady Liza Araneta-Marcos and the Philippine delegation.

He was welcomed by Philippine Ambassador to the US Jose Manuel Romualdez and Deputy Assistant to the President Kurt Campbell and other officials.

The President is here for a five-day working visit, which was dubbed as a trip aimed at reaffirming the long-standing special relationship of the Philippines and the United States.

Marcos is expected to set the tone of his second visit here by meeting US President Joe Biden on May 1 to discuss various salient agendas such as the Philippines' socio-economic development priorities and explore potential cooperation on areas of agriculture, energy, climate change, digital transformation and technology, humanitarian assistance, disaster relief, supply chains, and infrastructure.

Marcos will also bring up the two countries' mutual defense treaty, which, according to him, needs to evolve amid the various changes in the region.

Aside from his meeting with Biden, the President will also meet with US legislators, major companies, and business organizations.

Marcos arrived in Washington aboard the presidential flight (PR001). It is his second time in the US as a head of state, following his visit to New York for the United Nations General Assembly last year.




American couple of New Jersey arrested after trying to mow down officers

 


American couple of New Jersey arrested after trying to mow down officers

Marc Ferraiolo and Ruth Patton were both charged for attempted murder of a police officer and aggravated assault.

By Edward Era Barbacena 


I hope you’re doing well! I’m interested in the role you posted. Are you open to a quick chat to discuss the position? I’d love to learn more about it, as I’m really looking for more work. 

A New Jersey husband and wife are behind bars after a routine traffic stop turned into a demolition derby that resulted in charges of attempted murder of a police officer and aggravated assault.

Marc Ferraiolo, 23, of Evesham, New Jersey, was arrested by the Evesham Police Department early Sunday morning and charged with two counts of attempted first-degree murder of a police officer, two counts of third-degree aggravated assault on a police officer, two counts of third-degree eluding, four counts of fourth-degree criminal mischief and fourth-degree injuring of a police canine.

His wife, Ruth Patton, 42, was charged with third-degree terroristic threats and fourth-degree obstruction of justice.

The Evesham Police Department said officers were tending to a motor vehicle crash at about 1 a.m. on Sunday when a white Hyundai sedan was heading toward them on Taunton Lake Road at an estimated speed of 80 mph in a 45 mph-zone.

Police said the vehicle appeared to speed up as it passed the officers who were investigating the crash, and they provided a description of the vehicle to other officers in the area.

One officer attempted to initiate a traffic stop near the intersection of Willowbend and Evans roads, though the driver, later identified as Ferraiolo, continued driving through the red light at the intersection.

Officers recognized the vehicle and the suspect from previous encounters, and the pursuit was canceled.

Instead, officers obtained a warrant for Ferraiolo’s arrest and went to his house to serve it.

When Ferraiolo pulled into his driveway, Patton got out of the vehicle and officers moved their vehicles behind his vehicle as he remained inside.

Ferraiolo was ordered out of the vehicle, but he ignored the order and instead started driving, putting his vehicle in reverse, pulling out of the driveway at a high rate of speed and nearly striking two officers, according to police.

Ferraiolo then hit a police vehicle with a K9 unit inside, police said, then drove toward the two officers who nearly got hit as he backed out of the driveway.

As Ferraiolo fled, he struck two more police vehicles until his Hyundai was disabled.

Before Ferraiolo could get out of the vehicle, police approached and removed him from inside.

He was given medical attention at the scene before being transported to the hospital for evaluation, police said.

As Ferraiolo was removed from his vehicle, Patton, police added, attempted to interfere with their actions and told them she would “kill officers.”

Patton was ultimately arrested on the scene.

Officers who were injured were treated at the scene, and the K9, Tango, is being treated by a veterinarian because of the four impacts to the vehicle it was inside.




Mass shooting in Mississippi leaves 2 dead and four injured

 


Mass shooting in Mississippi leaves 2 dead and four injured 

Gunman Cameron Everest Brand of Pass Christian is charged with murder and aggravated assault

By Edward Era Barbacena 


After the 222nd mass shooting occured in alabama, the gruesome shooting takes place in Birmingham which involved another white man 

Police have charged a 19-year-old man with killing two teenagers and wounding four others in an early Sunday shooting at a house party on the Mississippi Gulf Coast.

Cameron Everest Brand of Pass Christian is charged with murder and aggravated assault, jail records show. Bay St. Louis Police Chief Toby Schwartz said in a news release that police identified Brand as the sole shooter through witness and victim statements.

An 18-year-old and a 16-year-old died in a New Orleans hospital, Schwartz said. The Orleans Parish coroner did not return a phone call seeking to confirm their identities.

Brand was arrested at his home in neighboring Pass Christian and taken to jail, Schwartz said. Bay St. Louis Municipal Court Judge Stephen Maggio denied Brand bail, and he was being held in the Hancock County jail. It is unclear if Brand has a lawyer who could speak for him.

Students had gathered for a party at the home on a sparsely populated road after Bay High School's prom. Local news outlets reported that trails of blood could be seen on the pavement Sunday outside the home, while cars were peppered with bullet holes. The home is less than a mile from Bay High.

Police said the six victims wounded by gunfire ranged in age from 15 to 18. All were taken to area hospitals, some by helicopter.

Casey Woods, an 18-year-old student at Pass Christian High School, told the Sun Herald of Biloxi that he was at the party with a girlfriend. He told the paper he saw Brand talking to people and then walking away before he returned and the shooting started.

"Me and my girl looked up and saw sparks coming from the gun," Woods said, adding many people ran into the woods.

Both of the teens who died had attended nearby Hancock High School in Kiln, officials in that school district said. Two more Hancock High students were shot and wounded, as were two students from Bay High. Those are the only two public high schools in Hancock County, on the western end of the Mississippi Gulf Coast between New Orleans and Gulfport.

"Our hearts are broken as we mourn the tragic loss of two Hancock High School students who were victims of the shooting in Bay St. Louis last night," the Hancock County school district said in a statement, saying counselors would be available Monday at school. "Let us come together as a community to show our support and love during this difficult time."

Sandra Reed, superintendent of the Bay St. Louis-Waveland school district, said both of the wounded Bay High students were expected to recover. Bay High Principal Amy Necaise said the school was making faculty and staff available on campus Sunday afternoon to counsel students.







Saturday 29 April 2023

American woman of Texas indicted for the murder of 5th husband

 


American woman of Texas indicted for the murder of 5th husband 

Sarah Hartsfield accused of killing 5th husband with insulin

By Edward Era Barbacena 


A Texas woman is accused of knocking her fifth husband by poisoning him with insulin – nearly five years after she fatally shot her then ex-fiancĂ©, allegedly in self-defense.

Sarah Hartsfield, a 48-year-old former US Army sergeant, is accused of murdering her diabetic husband, Joseph Hartsfield, by shooting him up with high levels of insulin and then failing to call 911 until it was too late, according to multiple reports.

The 46-year-old’s insulin levels were extremely high about four to six hours before his wife dialed for help in the January incident, officials told ABC13 in Houston, adding that his glucose monitor had sounded an alarm long before she attempted to seek aid.

And while Hartsfield is locked up in Chambers County Jail, investigators in Minnesota have re-opened a probe into the death of her ex-fiancĂ© David Bragg, who she shot and killed in 2018. 

It’s unclear what new evidence Minnesota investigators received to reopen the case, but even that incident wasn’t her first brush with the law.

Hartsfield – then going as Sarah Dohonue – was arrested in March 1996 for allegedly assaulting her second husband, Michael Traxler, at their Rio Bonito home.

She remained in jail for a week but the charges were ultimately dropped.




Texas mass shooting leaves 5 dead, including 8-year-old; manhunt underway

 


Texas mass shooting leaves 5 dead, including 8-year-old; manhunt underway

San Jacinto County, Texas sheriff says 5 shooting victims were from Honduras, suspect is a Mexican male

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Five people were shot to death early Saturday morning in southern San Jacinto County, Texas, police said.

The San Jacinto County Sheriff’s Office responded to a call for "harassment" around midnight and discovered five people had been shot at a property in the Trail End Subdivision west of Cleveland. Four people were pronounced dead at the scene and one victim died at a local hospital.

Three other victims were taken to the hospital "covered in blood," according to the sheriff's office. It was not clear if they were injured or if the blood belonged to the other victims. 

Sheriff Greg Capers told Bluebonnet News that the victims were from Honduras. He said a total of 10 people were living in the house. Of those killed, four were adults, one male and three females, while the youngest was just eight years old. The three other victims who were taken to the hospital were children. 

"When we got here, the two females in the bedroom were actually laying over the top of the younger children, two of the three younger children" that survived, Capers said. 

Police have identified a suspect in the shooting and are actively looking for him. 

The suspected shooter is a "Mexican male from Mexico." The sheriff's office has a copy of his consular identification card. 

Capers said the suspect has been known to shoot a firearm in the front yard of the residence. Police found shell casings there. 

The suspect is not believed to be in the area. 

An investigation into the shooting is ongoing.





Friday 28 April 2023

United States, People are ‘choosing’ to identify as handicapped even they're not

 



From transgendered to ‘transabled’: In the United States, People are ‘choosing’ to identify as handicapped even they're not

Transableism, a newer term associated with "Body Integrity Identity Disorder," in which a person actually "identifies" as handicapped has been gaining attraction.

By Edward Era Barbacena 



A troubling societal issue called “transableism” is attracting attention these days. 

Transableism is a newer term for BIID, or “Body Integrity Identity Disorder,” in which a person actually “identifies” as handicapped

BIID has been relabeled to transableism to align with today’s trans community, according to some.

The point of “changing the identifier” from a psychiatric condition (BIID) to an advocacy term (transableism) is to “harness the stunning cultural power of gender ideology” to the cause of allowing doctors to “treat” BIID patients by “amputating healthy limbs, snipping spinal cords or destroying eyesight,” according to Evolution News and Science Today (EN), which reports on and analyzes evolution, neuroscience, bioethics, intelligent design and other science-related issues.

Culturally, transableism is “the next abyss,” that site also notes.


Why? 

Because “some of these persons mutilate themselves; others ask surgeons for an amputation or for the transection of their spinal cord,” that site adds of the shocking steps some are taking.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) notes on its website, “Those with BIID desire the amputation of one or more healthy limbs or desire a paralysis.”

A North Carolina college student called transableism a “cry for attention.”

The 24-year-old told Fox News Digital, “It’s offensive to people who actually suffer from the condition that you say you need, in order to be your true self.”

He went on, “It’s embarrassing, and I don’t know if you can be considered a serious human being if you alter your body like this, instead of getting the appropriate mental help you need.”

In an even more shocking case, a 21-year-old North Carolina woman who identified as blind actually took steps to destroy her own eyesight, according to multiple reports from a few years ago. 

One Arizona internist called today’s transableism a “delusional disorder.”

“In my opinion, both transgender and transabled persons suffer from a delusional disorder,” Jane Orient, a general internist in Tucson, Arizona, and executive director of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, told Fox News Digital via email.

“The Oath of Hippocrates adjures physicians to do no harm,” Orient said.

“Mutilating the body is an objective harm even if makes the patient subjectively feel better,” she added.

“The disability is lifelong and imposes burdens on others — and neither patients nor physicians can duck responsibility for that.”

Orient also noted, “With transgenders the follow-up is generally very short — not sure about the [follow-up with] elective amputees,” she said. 

“The ‘no other way’ [to cope with the condition] excuse is a cop out; we need to find other ways,” she also said. “Denial of reality is anti-scientific.”

Dr. Marc Siegel, a clinical professor of medicine and a practicing internist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City — as well as a Fox News medical contributor — told Fox News Digital via email that most doctors will “only perform procedures they feel are medically indicated.”

Siegel referred to Munchausen syndrome, which is a “factitious disorder” in which a person “repeatedly and deliberately acts as if they have a physical or mental illness” when they are not really sick, according to WebMd.com.

Dr. Siegel continued, “We deal with Munchausen and Munchausen by proxy, where patients can be quite convincing about illnesses they don’t really have — and we need to be on the lookout for this.”

Calling cosmetic plastic surgery procedures a “gray area,” Siegel noted that “as an internist who clears people for all kind of surgeries, I find myself in lengthy discussions with patients about whether they really need a face lift, tummy tuck, etc.”

He added about “transableism,” “I would never clear anyone for surgery to remove a limb that does not need removal.”

The North Carolina college student also said about today’s trend of transableism, “Today, I feel like people would [even] encourage mutilation for ‘transabled’ people, in order to be thought of as an ‘ally.’”




American racist man of Mississippi sentenced 42 months for burning cross to intimidate Black family

 


American racist man of Mississippi sentenced 42 months for burning cross to intimidate Black family

Axel Cox, 24, has been sentenced to 42 months in prison followed by three years supervised release and ordered to pay $7,810 in restitution for burning a cross

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Axel Cox, 24, has been sentenced to 42 months in prison followed by three years supervised release and ordered to pay $7,810 in restitution for burning a cross in his front yard in an attempt to intimidate a Black family.

The incident took place on Dec. 3, 2020. According to court documents, Cox violated the Fair Housing Act when he used threatening and racially derogatory language toward his Black neighbors and burned a cross to intimidate them.

After a dispute with the family, Cox wedged two pieces of wood together to form a cross, placed it in clear view of the family’s residence, doused it in oil and set flames to it, all while yelling threats and racial slurs towards the victims’ house.

Cox admitted that he lit the cross on fire because the victims were Black and that he intended to scare them into moving out of the neighborhood.

“Mr. Axel Cox sought to intimidate members of the community through his intimidating threats,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Jermicha Fomby of the FBI Jackson Field Office. “The FBI prioritizes the protection of civil rights to ensure citizens remain safe without fear of any harm. We remain committed to tirelessly thwarting the nefarious actions of those, like Mr. Cox, who intended to impact fear upon citizens based on biases.”

“No one should endure such hatred and intimidation because of the color of his skin,” said U.S. Attorney Darren LaMarca for the Southern District of Mississippi. “This defendant has been held accountable. His sentence should permeate among his kind and declare that Mississippi and the Department of Justice will not tolerate this hateful behavior.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrea Cabell Jones for the Southern District of Mississippi and former Trial Attorney Noah Coakley II of the Civil Rights Division’s Criminal Section prosecuted the case.


Singapore executes man for trafficking cannabis

 


Singapore executes man for trafficking cannabis 

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Singapore executed a 46-year-old man Wednesday after he was accused of coordinating a roughly two-pound marijuana delivery, despite pleas for clemency and protests that he was convicted on weak evidence.

Tangaraju Suppiah was hanged during the early morning hours in Changi Prison, Singapore Prison Service said in a statement to multiple outlets.

Despite not being caught with the drugs, Tangaraju was found guilty and sentenced to death in October 2018 for abetting the trafficking of 2.2 pounds of cannabis. Prosecutors in the Asian island-state said he conspired with another man to deliver the marijuana.

Tangaraju maintained he was innocent, his sister told CNN.

“Even from inside prison, he wanted to fight for his innocence,” Leelavathy Suppiah told the outlet. “He believed that there would be a fair trial and wanted to prove his innocence – every step of the way.”

Trafficking more than 1.2 pounds of marijuana is grounds for the death penalty, under Singaporean law.

According to a tweet from activist Kirsten Han of the Transformative Justice Collective, which advocates abolishing the death penalty in Singapore, Tangaraju's family was given the death certificate after the morning hanging.

An application filed Monday by Tangaraju for a stay of execution was dismissed by a local court without an oral hearing, the group reported.

Attempts by family and activists to push Singapore President Halimah Yacob to grant the man clemency were unsuccessful.





American pedophile priest guilty of sexually molesting 5-year-old Michigan boy after officiating funeral for boy's family

 


American pedophile priest guilty of sexually molesting 5-year-old Michigan boy after officiating funeral for boy's family

By Edward Era Barbacena 


A Michigan homosexual priest who preyed on a 5-year-old boy following a 1987 funeral service he officiated for the child's relative pleaded guilty this week to sexual assault, the state's head prosecutor said.

Vincent Delorenzo, an 84-year-old former priest in the Lansing Diocese, pleaded guilty Tuesday to one count of attempted criminal sexual conduct in the first degree, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said in a statement.

“Our team continues to work day and night to bring an end to an era of abuse that has hidden in plain sight for far too long and provide justice to those who have suffered years of unimaginable trauma,” Nessel wrote. “This guilty plea will hopefully close this painful chapter and open the opportunity for much-needed healing for those victimized by Delorenzo.”

In exchange for Delorenzo's guilty plea, additional charges filed against him were dismissed, according to the statement. Those charges related to the sex assault of another boy from 1995-2000, who attended Holy Redeemer School and Church in Burton, Michigan.

Delorenzo was initially charged in the 67th District Court in Genesee County. He was arrested in May 2019 in Marion County, Florida.

Sentencing is set for June 13.

Delorenzo is expected to be sentenced to five years probation, the first year of which he will serve in the Genesee County Jail, Nessel’s office said. Other conditions of the plea include he must register as a sex offender for life, pay restitution and undergo counseling.

Delorenzo, formerly of Flint, was among the first five priests charged by Nessel in May 2019, as part of an ongoing investigation into sex abuse at Catholic churches in the state.


The following people were also charged: 

Timothy Michael Crowley, Lansing Diocese. Crowley was a priest at various parishes, including St. Thomas Rectory in Ann Arbor. He is charged with four counts of first-degree and four counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct in Washtenaw County. 

Neil Kalina, Archdiocese of Detroit. Kalina was a priest at St. Kiernan Catholic Church in Shelby Township. He is charged with four counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct in Macomb County. 

Patrick Casey, Archdiocese of Detroit. Casey was a priest at St. Theodore of Canterbury Parish in Westland. He is charged with one count of third-degree criminal sexual conduct in Wayne County.

 Jacob Vellian, Kalamazoo Diocese. Vellian was a priest at St. John the Evangelist Parish in Benton Harbor. He is charged with two counts of rape in Berrien County.






American homosexual activist Dylan Mulvaney calls out “cruel” attacks on him over the Bud Light beer cans

 


American homosexual  activist Dylan Mulvaney calls out “cruel” attacks on him over the Bud Light beer cans

He accused those attacking him of dehumanizing him. "I don't think that's right."

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney just released a video to tell her followers that he’s alright after being the target of a hurricane of corrections from the righteous people this past month.

Mulvaney has been documenting his transition on social media for over a year. On April 1, he posted a video to Instagram with some custom Bud Light cans that had his face on them. Bud Light sent him those cans for the sponsored video and to celebrate his recent 365 days of being a cross dresser.

In the weeks since he posted that 50-second video, conservatives became infuriated, posting videos as they dumped out Bud Light beer and shot up cases of Bud Light with semiautomatic rifles. Elected Republicans claimed that Mulvaney was a pedophile (without any evidence at all) and that the global balance of power would be upset by Mulvaney’s Instagram video, while others saying that they were boycotting Bud Light.

Mulvaney stopped posting to social media for a few weeks as people with sound mind continued to work out their rightful criticisms against him in sometimes embarrassing but truthful  ways.

But now he’s back, responding to the rightful outrage in a video for her followers.

“It’s day 9,610 of being a human,” he said. “And I’m going to try and leave gender out of this since that’s how we found ourselves here.”

He said that he has been reading the criticisms of him, which he called “so far from my truth that I was like hearing my name, and I didn’t even know who they were talking about sometimes. It’s a very dissociative feeling.”

“I decided to take the backseat and just let them tucker themselves out,” she said. But she explained that she had to start speaking publicly again to get some control over the narrative about him

“I’ve been having crazy deja vu because I’m an adult, I’m 26, and throughout childhood, I was called too feminine and over-the-top,” he said, citing a few things that right-wingers have been saying about him. “Here I am now, being called all of those same things, but this time it’s from other adults.”

“If they’re going to accuse me of anything, it should be that I’m a theater person and that I’m camp. But this is just my personality, and it always has been,” he said.

Mulvaney called out some of the more extreme attacks on his character.

“I think it’s OK to be frustrated with someone or confused, but what I’m struggling to understand is the need to dehumanize and to be cruel. I don’t think that’s right,” he said.

“I’m embarrassed to even tell you this, but I was nervous that you were going to start believing those things that they were saying about me, since it is so loud,” he continued. “But I’m gonna go ahead and trust that the people that know me and my heart won’t listen to that noise.”

He said that he wants to make content on social media that has nothing to do with her identity.













American mother of California sentenced to life for murder and torture of 10-year-old son Anthony Avalos

 



American mother of California sentenced to life for murder and torture of 10-year-old son Anthony Avalos

Heather Maxine Barron's boyfriend, Kareem Ernesto Leiva, was also sentenced to life without the possibility of parole for the 2018 murder of Anthony.

By Edward Era Barbacena 


A California woman was sentenced to life in prison in the murder of Anthony Avalos, a 10-year-old boy who was tortured to death after having suffered years of physical, sexual and emotional abuse by his mother and her boyfriend.

Heather Maxine Barron and her boyfriend, Kareem Ernesto Leiva, were convicted of first-degree murder in March. They had faced the death penalty, but Los Angeles County District Attorney George GascĂłn had said his office would no longer seek capital punishment after he won his 2020 election.

Leiva was also sentenced to life in prison. Both were denied probation and ordered to pay $7,500 in victim's compensation funds. Their attorneys have filed notices of appeal.

It was an emotional sentencing hearing as family members offered tearful victim impact statements. Anthony's half-sister, now 13, began reading a statement to the judge Tuesday, calling Barron a "monster" who failed to protect her children.

An adult took over reading the statement after she broke down in tears. Barron was also seen wiping tears from her face during the statement.

"I’m finally free of all the torture and abuse. ... If I’d known that this would end with me losing a brother, I’d do it all over again with just one difference," the statement said. "That it would be me, not Anthony."

NBC News is not identifying the girl because she is a minor and a victim of abuse.

Victor Avalos, Anthony's father, told the court that although he lived in Mexico, he had made it clear to Barron that he was willing to take over. He said he missed his son and wished Barron had made the right decision.

"My kids ask me if I’m OK. Of course I tell them yes, but it’s not like that. ... I feel some type of guilt by not being able to help him when he most needed me," he told the court. "I think about that every day."

Anthony's aunts, uncles and cousins also spoke.

One of the paramedics who took Anthony to the hospital said his case is at the forefront of her mind during pediatric calls even years later.

Anthony was taken to the hospital unresponsive on June 20, 2018, in cardiac arrest and with a traumatic brain injury. He died the next day.

The court found Leiva was the perpetrator of the lethal abuse, while Barron aided and abetted him, Superior Court Judge Sam Ohta said.

His half-siblings watched as he was abused over six years, court records said. They testified that they were also punished and forced to watch one another being punished, sometimes as Leiva repeatedly dropped Anthony on the bedroom floor, NBC Los Angeles reported.

Barron and Leiva waived their rights to a jury trial, NBC Los Angeles reported. Ohta rejected the couple's defense that Anthony's injuries were self-inflicted and said they showed intent to kill in their delay in calling 911 for the boy.

Barron's attorney also alleged that she "didn't have the power to prevent this" because of her own experience with abuse, according to NBC Los Angeles.

Victor Avalos and Anthony's aunts and uncles sued the county's Department of Children and Family Services in 2019, alleging that it failed to intervene despite multiple reports of abuse before Anthony died.

The case was settled last year in a $32 million agreement, according to the family's attorney, Brian Claypool.




Thai woman of Bangkok arrested for cyanide poisoning murders

 



Thai woman of Bangkok arrested for cyanide poisoning murders 

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Thai police have widened their investigation into a woman accused of a spate of cyanide poisoning murders, with officers on Thursday raising the number of victims to 13 and charging her with premeditated murder.

Sararat Rangsiwuthaporn, who is married to a senior police officer, was arrested on Tuesday over nine alleged murders which took place over several years.

Police believe money was the motive in the killings but said that Sararat — who is four months pregnant — has previously been diagnosed with psychiatric issues.

Officers were now investigating at least 13 suspicious deaths dating back to 2020, deputy national police chief Surachate Hakparn said Thursday.

"She has been charged with premeditated murder," he told reporters in Bangkok.

Television showed Sararat, wearing pale pink and flanked by officers who pushed through a scrum of reporters, being taken from a Bangkok police station into custody on Wednesday.

Police have not specified how many murders she has been charged with, but they say she denies all the allegations against her.

Officers have also expanded the geographic area they are investigating to five provinces, most to the west of Bangkok.

Officers found a substance at the woman's home that authorities believe to be cyanide, and suspect she poisoned the victims' food and drink.

Following routine health checks in prison, the Department of Corrections confirmed Thursday that Sararat is four months pregnant and experiencing stress, blurry eyes and headaches.

Investigators have interviewed her police officer husband and other witnesses.

Police described how a fourteenth person narrowly escaped death after vomiting up poisoned food.

"The suspect lured her latest victim into eating a herb, and around 20 minutes later she collapsed," Surachate said.

He urged the public to contact police with any information about other potential cases.

Police initially suspected the woman of murdering a friend in Ratchaburi province, west of Bangkok, about two weeks ago.

Local media said the victim collapsed on the bank of the Mae Klong River after releasing fish as part of a Buddhist ritual.

After questioning the suspect, investigators linked her to other cyanide poisoning cases.




American homosexual activist Dylan Mulvaney breaks silence on Bud Light controversy: ‘I grew up in a conservative family’

 


American homosexual activist Dylan Mulvaney breaks silence on Bud Light controversy: ‘I grew up in a conservative family’

The transgender influencer’s deal with Bud Light sparked nationwide outrage

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Homosexual social media influencer Dylan Mulvaney said she comes from a conservative, church-going family that still loves her "very much" in a return to social media. This all follows an extended absence on the heels of the outrage-inducing partnership with Bud Light. 

Mulvaney admitted she is struggling with cruelness and "dehumanization" from critics of her polarizing Bud Light campaign and noted it’s clear that "winning over everyone" is simply impossible. 

"Day 9,610 of being a human, and I’m going to try to leave gender out of this since that’s how we found ourselves here. I’ve been offline for a few weeks, and a lot has been said about me, some of which is so far from my truth that I was like hearing my name and I didn’t even know who they were talking about sometimes," Mulvaney said. "It’s a very dissociative feeling." 

Beer juggernaut Anheuser-Busch has been hit with significant backlash, boycotts and even a leadership shakeup since Mulvaney revealed earlier this month that the beer company sent packs of Bud Light with her face printed on the cans as part of an ad for the beer company’s March Madness contest and as a way to celebrate a full year of "girlhood."

A second video then featured a bikini-clad Mulvaney frolicking in a bathtub while drinking a Bud Light beer as part of the campaign. Backlash was been significant, starting with many pondering if the pact was some sort of April Fool’s gag. In the days since, country music singer John Rich said he pulled cases of Bud Light from his Nashville bar, conservative rocker Kid Rock used several Bud Light cases for target practice in a viral video, Anheuser-Busch distributors in rural areas have expressed concern and the beer juggernaut’s value took a hit. 

Mulvaney addressed the backlash in her return to social media. 


Thursday 27 April 2023

American convicted serial killer of California sentenced to second life sentence for Stanford murders

 



American convicted serial killer of California sentenced to second life sentence for Stanford murders

Convicted serial killer John Getreu sentenced for murdering Leslie Perlov in 1974 near Stanford University

By Edward Era Barbacena 



A California judge sentenced convicted white serial killer John Arthur Getreu to seven years to life Thursday for killing 21-year-old Stanford Law librarian Leslie Perlov in 1973.

Getreu, 79, strangled both Perlov, and 21-year-old Stanford graduate Janet Taylor, daughter of university football coach Chuck Taylor, 13 months apart in 1973 and 1974, respectively, in what became known as "The Stanford Murders."

Judge Hanley Chew's decision Thursday mirrors the sentence Getreu received and is currently serving for the murder of Taylor.

Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen’s office said the retired security guard who is responsible for "decades of violence and mystery," will not be eligible for parole until at least 2031.

Getreu pleaded guilty to killing Perlov on Jan. 10, 2023.

After more than 40 years of hiding in the shadows of his crimes, Santa Clara County Sheriff’s detectives used DNA and determination to track him down at his home, where he lived with his wife in Hayward, California.

"The long nightmare of John Getreu is over," Rosen said. "I hope this brings some measure of peace to the loved ones of the people he preyed on. And I hope that I never have to say his name again."

Perlov’s body was found in the hills surrounding Stanford’s campus on Feb. 16, 1973, with a scarf wound tightly around her neck.

The case went cold for decades, but in 2018, after criminalists with the Santa Clara DA’s office were able to identify Getreu’s DNA under Perlov’s fingernails, he was finally charged.

Authorities believe Getreu committed a string of sexual assaults and at least three murders of young women, including Perlov and Taylor.

He has also been convicted in the rape and murder of a 16-year-old girl in Germany in 1963.

During Getreu’s trial in the case of Taylor, the jury learned about his repeated sexual assaults on his stepdaughter from 1970 to 1977, and his raping and threatening to kill a 17-year-old girl participating in a youth program where he volunteered, the DA’s office said.

His DNA has also been added to the state database, the DA’s office added, and it will be used regularly to compare to DNA from other unsolved rape and murder cases.





American man of Georgia stabbed wife to death after their first year anniversary of marriage

 



American man of Georgia stabbed wife to death after their first year anniversary of marriage 

By Edward Era Barbacena 


A Georgia mother of four was allegedly stabbed to death by her husband a day after their first wedding anniversary earlier this month — following a cryptic Facebook post that described their time together as a “year of survival.”

Casey Allen, 32, was found slain in her Gainesville apartment on April 15, according to local police.

Her husband Christopher Snow, 31, was arrested on murder charges a short time later after he was involved in a serious car crash on I-85 outside Atlanta, cops said.

Allen had just given birth to her first child with Snow, a baby boy, in December, her sister told Fox News Digital.

“I just want to know why,” Tiffany Agee said. “You loved my sister so much, how could you do this? It’s so confusing, and we’ll never get the full answers from him, and it makes it that much worse.”

Allen had three older children, ages 9, 7 and 3, with her ex-husband, according to The Atlanta Journal Constitution.

“She loved being a mom. That was everything to her,” Agee told Fox.

A day before the murder, Allen and Snow had dropped off the kids with family and celebrated their anniversary by going to a comedy club and dinner, and marked the occasion by creating a specialized memento.

“They went to Build-A-Bear and made a stuffed owl with both their voices in it,” Agee said.

Allen posted pictures of the celebration on Facebook, but ominously referred to the couple’s first year of marriage as “a year of survival,” according to the newspaper.

The post had since been deleted.

The next morning, Snow told his aunt that the couple had a big fight and that he couldn’t find her, Fox reported.

Cops responded to the apartment to find the Allen had been beaten and stabbed to death about her face and body, the outlet said.

Agee, who is pregnant with her fifth child, said she is still processing the “nightmare” loss of her sister, whom she was previously separated from as a teenager when the sisters were placed in foster care, according to the Constitution.

“Who do I call like when I have my son in June? What am I supposed to do? I feel lost,” Agee said. “That was my best friend, and it just hurts.”

“She was a supermom with a true pure heart of gold,” Agee added. “And the most selflessness person I will ever meet in my whole entire life.”

More than $7,000 in donations for Allen’s funeral, set for Saturday, has been raised.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the family of Casey and her children. Sadly, multiple families have been impacted by this horrific event. As an agency, we will continue to support the families, even long after the investigation is complete,” Gainesville Police Chief Jay Parrish said in the aftermath of the murder.






Wednesday 26 April 2023

Three American Teens Arrested in Deadly Rock-Throwing Spree That Killed Lady Driver

 



Three American Teens Arrested in Deadly Rock-Throwing Spree That Killed Lady Driver 

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Three 18-year-old men have been arrested in connection with the death of a young woman who was killed when a rock was thrown into the windshield of a car she was driving in Colorado, authorities said Wednesday. 

Alexa Bartell, 20, was killed last week on a road outside Denver. In a news release, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office said Bartell’s was the last vehicle hit in a rock-throwing spree involving the use of “large landscaping” stones which targeted multiple cars.

 The three teens were arrested overnight Tuesday and have been named as Joseph Koenig, Nicholas “Mitch” Karol-Chik, and Zachary Kwak. All of the men were detained at their homes in Arvada and are now facing charges of first-degree murder with extreme indifference, the sheriff’s office said.




Lori Vallow’s son JJ’s grisly cause of death revealed at murder trial

 



Lori Vallow’s son JJ’s grisly cause of death revealed at murder trial

The American Doomsday mom murdered both of her children due to delusion of world's end 

By Edward Era Barbacena 


The autistic 7-year-old son of “Doomsday Mom” Lori Vallow Daybell was asphyxiated with a plastic bag and duct tape over his mouth, according to chilling new testimony revealing his cause of death Wednesday.

Little J.J. Vallow had scratch marks on his neck and bruises on his wrists and ankles where he was bound by duct tape, forensic pathologist Dr. Garth Warren said during Vallow Daybell’s Idaho murder trial.

“Was J.J. trying to get the bag off his head? It could be scratch marks of him trying to get it off his head,” Warren said on the stand, according to KTVB.

The child’s autopsy was conducted two days after the remains of J.J. and his 16-year-old sister, Tylee Ryan, were found buried on the property of Chad Daybell, Vallow Daybell’s fifth husband, in June 2020.

Tylee’s cause of death was undetermined, and her autopsy proved to be a grisly challenge, said Warren.

“The vast majority of the time when I perform an autopsy, I get an entire body and there’s a process we go through. Tylee’s case was different. Her remains were received in three separate sealed bags,” he said, according to the East Idaho News. 

Prosecutors have explained how Tylee’s body was so dismembered and burned investigators weren’t initally sure they had found a body, until they uncovered a skull under a melted plastic bucket.

Warren said he searched the remains as best he could for bullets and knife fragments but didn’t find any, and ultimately ruled her death a “homicide by unspecified means.”

Vallow Daybell, 49, is being tried  in connection to the murders of her children and Daybell’s ex-wife, Tammy. Prosecutors say she was motivated to kill them by her belief in a “doomsday” religious cult, along with “money, power and sex.” She has pleaded not guity to the crimes.

During the weeks-long trial, family members of Vallow Daybell have testified she didn’t want to raise J.J.  and instead became obsessed with religion and her new romance with Daybell.

The couple — who believe the end is nigh and Christ will return —  collected life insurance money and social security cash related to the three deaths, prosecutors charged.

Tammy’s cause of death was also asphyxiation, Fremont County Prosecuting Attorney Lindsey Blake revealed during opening statements.

Vallow Daybell was charged with two counts of first-degree murder and three counts of conspiracy in the deaths along with  grand theft for collecting government benefits on behalf of her children after they were killed.

Daybell was also charged in connection with the deaths of Tylee, J.J. and Tammy, and will be tried separately.





American man of Indiana indicted for attempted murder of her own mother, knife found stuck on her head

 



American man of Indiana indicted for attempted murder of her own mother, knife found stuck on her head

By Edward Era Barbacena 


An Indiana woman was found alive with a large kitchen knife stuck in her head after allegedly being stabbed by her son multiple times, police said.

Susan Early, 59, was discovered lying on her front lawn with the knife still lodged in her skull and several other stab wounds when cops rushed to her Brownsburg home on Monday afternoon.

Despite her grim injuries, cops said the victim had managed to stay “alert and conscious.”

She told responding officers that her 31-year-old son, Kyle Braun, had allegedly attacked and beat her inside her kitchen before fleeing the home shortly before 12.30 p.m.

Neighbors, who rushed to help treat Early’s knife wounds when she emerged screaming from the home, pointed cops in the direction the victim’s son had fled.

Early was rushed in critical condition to the Eskanazi Hospital in Indianapolis where she underwent emergency surgery.

He also faces a charge of battery by bodily waste on an officer for allegedly spitting on a cop during his arrest.

Brownsburg Police Cpt. Jennifer Barrett told Fox59 that Braun had recently fled a mental health facility in Ohio and had a warrant out for his arrest.

“The best we can tell is he had left a facility, a mental health facility, where he was being monitored by the Ohio parole officers,” Barrett said.

“But he had cut that GPS monitoring device and left and the last time they had saw him was March 23.”

She added that his mental health and anger issues likely contributed to his alleged attack on his mom.

He remains in Hendricks County Jail with no bond.

Braun was nabbed a short time later after police scoured the neighborhood.

He was briefly treated in the hospital for superficial wounds to his hands before being booked for attempted murder.








Tuesday 25 April 2023

American 'Killer Clown' of Florida admits to 1990 murder

 


American 'Killer Clown' of Florida admits to 1990 murder

Sheila Keen-Warren pleaded guilty to the 1990 murder of Marlene Warren while dressed as a clown

By Edward Era Barbacena 


A clown came to Marlene Warren’s door on a May morning in 1990, handed her carnations and balloons and then shot her dead in front of her son. On Tuesday, her husband’s second wife finally pleaded guilty to being the killer, closing a case that is strange even by Florida standards.

Sheila Keen-Warren, 59, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in a deal that will likely see her released from prison within a year. Long suspected of being the shooter, Keen-Warren has been jailed awaiting trial for first-degree murder since 2017, when Palm Beach County sheriff’s investigators said improvements in DNA technology proved that a hair found in the clown’s getaway car came from her. Keen-Warren has insisted, however, that she is not the killer.

Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg said in a statement that the plea deal “obtained a measure of justice” for Marlene Warren and her son. No public notice was given for Tuesday’s plea hearing in West Palm Beach, which otherwise would have drawn a throng of reporters and spectators. Instead, it was handled quietly during Circuit Judge Scott Suskauer’s lunch break from another murder trial.

“Sheila Keen Warren has finally been forced to admit that she was the one who dressed as a clown and took the life of an innocent victim. She will be a convicted murderer for the rest of her days,” Aronberg said.

Her attorney, Greg Rosenfeld, told The Associated Press in a phone interview that “this is an incredible win for Ms. Keen-Warren,” still insisting she is not the killer. Keen-Warren has said she is not the killer.

The deal calls for a 12-year sentence, but Keen-Warren has already served six years awaiting trial. Also, Florida law in 1990 allowed significant time off for good behavior, so Rosenfeld expects her to be released early next year. Her trial was set to start next month, and if convicted she would have received a life sentence. Originally, prosecutors sought a death sentence but eventually dropped that.

“The State of Florida originally wanted to execute her, but now she is going home in 10 months,” Rosenfeld said. “While it was difficult to plead guilty to a crime she did not commit, it was kind of a no-brainer when there is a guarantee that you will be home with your family.”

Aronberg’s office disputes Rosenfeld’s claim, saying she will be in prison at least two more years.

Marlene Warren’s son, Joseph Ahrens, watched the proceeding online. Only 21 when he saw his mother murdered and now in his 50s, his only message to the court and Keen-Warren was, may God be with her.

The trial was delayed numerous times by the COVID-19 pandemic and fights over evidence.

At the time of the shooting, Keen-Warren was an employee of Marlene Warren’s husband, Michael, at his used car lot. Since 2002, she has been his wife — they eventually moved to Abington, Virginia, where they ran a restaurant just across the Tennessee border.

Witnesses had told investigators in 1990 that then-Sheila Keen and Michael Warren were having an affair, though both denied it.

Over the years, detectives said, costume shop employees identified Sheila Warren as the woman who had bought a clown suit a few days before the killing.

And one of the two balloons — a silver one that read, “You’re the Greatest” — was sold at only one store, a Publix supermarket near her home. Employees told detectives a woman who looked like Keen-Warren had bought the balloons an hour before the shooting.

The presumed getaway car was found abandoned with orange, hair-like fibers inside. The white Chrysler convertible had been reported stolen from Michael Warren’s car lot a month before the shooting. Keen-Warren and her then-husband repossessed cars for him.

Relatives told The Palm Beach Post in 2000 that Marlene Warren, who was 40 when she died, suspected her husband was having an affair and wanted to leave him. But the car lot and other properties were in her name, and she feared what might happen if she did.

She allegedly told her mother, “If anything happens to me, Mike done it.” He has never been charged and has denied involvement.

But Rosenfeld said the state’s case was falling apart. One DNA sample somehow showed both male and female genes, and the other could have come from one out of every 20 women — even Marlene Warren, he said.

And even if that hair did come from Keen-Warren, it could have been deposited before the car was reported stolen. He said Ahrens and another witness also told detectives that the car deputies found wasn’t the killer’s, though investigators insisted it was.

Aronberg, in his statement, conceded that there were holes in the case, saying they were caused by the three decades it took to get it to trial, including the death of key witnesses.

Michael Warren was convicted in 1994 of grand theft, racketeering and odometer tampering. He served almost four years in prison — a punishment his then-attorneys said was disproportionately long because of suspicions he was involved in his wife’s death.

Michael Warren did not return a call Tuesday seeking comment.




Drug addict step dad and evil mother jailed for the brutal murder of an innocent child

 


Drug addict step dad and evil mother jailed for the brutal murder of an innocent child

Lola James was only two when she died at the hands of her stepfather Kyle Bevan in Haverfordwest and her own mother allows it

By Edward Era Barbacena 



Probably the number one killers of innocent  children on earth are the adult white people who happens to be their parents, evil step mother/father, guardians, relatives and even family friends

A drug addict has been branded evil after being jailed for life for the brutal murder of his defenceless, two-year-old stepdaughter.

Kyle Bevan, 31, will spend at least 28 years behind bars for the savage killing of little Lola James after inflicting catastrophic head injuries on the toddler during a six-hour attack.

Her injuries were so severe they were likened by doctors to a high-speed, car crash – with 101 scratches and bruises on her tiny body and evidence of weapons being used.

One of the medical experts who examined Lola said she was “the most battered and bruised child” she had ever seen, Swansea Crown Court heard.

Bevan blamed the family’s pet dog for pushing Lola down the stairs of the home he shared with the girl’s mother, Sinead James, in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire.

He then set about washing Lola’s body, changing her vomit and blood-stained night clothing and cleaning up the murder scene to destroy evidence of his crime rather than call an ambulance.

Bevan took photographs of marks to Lola’s back and extensive swelling and bruising to her head, eyes and lips.

He also sent his mother a disturbing video showing him picking up Lola’s limp body, attempting to stand her on her feet before letting her fall to the floor – telling the camera: “She’s gone. She’s gone.”

James, 30, had gone to bed early but awoke shortly after midnight on July 17 2020 on hearing a “bang and a scream” coming from her daughter’s bedroom.

Bevan reassured her everything was okay and she was asleep when he carried out the final attack on Lola.

Her death came months after Bevan, a prolific drug user, moved into the home within days of connecting with James on Facebook.

During those five months, Lola suffered several serious injuries while in Bevan’s care, including a black eye and bloody nose, and her murder was seen by investigators as the culmination of escalating violence towards her at the hands of Bevan.

The court heard a multi-agency referral had been made on behalf of James in January 2020 after a reported domestic violence incident with her former partner.

No visits were made to the address after February 10, the same month Bevan moved into her property.

More than a month later, the UK Government triggered the first country-wide Covid-19 pandemic lockdown.

Bevan had denied murdering Lola but was convicted after a trial, while James was found guilty of causing or allowing her daughter’s death.

Lola’s grandmother, Nicola James, stared her granddaughter’s killer directly in the eyes as she read a victim impact statement, telling him: “Look at me Kyle.”

She went on: “Kyle. You took the young, innocent life of my granddaughter. At the same time, you’ve taken so much more than you can even imagine.

“You killed my Lola, and you have broken her family. I hope that in the time that you have now, you can understand what you have done.”

The girl’s father, Daniel Thomas, said all he had left were memories of his daughter and had been robbed of the opportunity to see her grow up.

“I am grateful that Kyle and Sinead are recognised for Lola’s cruel, defenceless murder,” he said.

“Lola didn’t just die. She wasn’t just taken from me in the worst way ever possible. She was brutally attacked. Her tiny body was savaged in the evilest way. She didn’t stand a chance.

“The guilt I feel lives inside me and will never leave, as the memory of Lola lying in a hospital bed fighting to stay alive will remain with me always. All I have been left with is guilt, heartache, pain, and torment.”

Bevan’s barrister, John Hipkin KC, offered no personal mitigation.

David Elias KC, representing James, said she was scared of Bevan.

He added: “She will always have to live with the fact that she has lost her daughter at the hands of a man she allowed into her home.”

Bevan was jailed for life with Mr Justice Griffiths saying the six-hour assault only stopped when Lola fell unconscious.

“This was a sustained, deliberate and very violent attack. The attack was completely unprovoked,” he said.

“For some of the injuries, Kyle Bevan used weapons. It was the culmination of several months of physical child abuse.

“I am sure that Kyle Bevan did this as an exercise of power and assertion of superiority over the only person who he could feel superior to, a helpless child.”

Jailing James for six years, the judge said: “She prioritised the relationship with Kyle Bevan over concern for Lola.

“This was never more evident than when she went back to bed after the scream and the bang which she heard from Lola’s bedroom, when Lola was with Kyle, only hours before Lola was murdered.”

He added: “There are weighty mitigating factors. She is very remorseful, as I saw when she gave evidence, and she is also genuinely devastated by Lola’s death.”

Pembrokeshire County Council confirmed a child practice review would take place into Lola’s death.










Bud Light sales drops after wrongful partnership with American homosexual (trans) influencer Dylan Mulvaney

 


Bud Light sales drops after wrongful partnership with American homosexual (trans) influencer Dylan Mulvaney 

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Bud Light has reportedly experienced a significant drop in sales following a controversial marketing campaign featuring transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. The latest industry statistics from NielsenIQ and Bump Williams Consulting reveal that for the week ending April 15, Bud Light sales fell 17% in dollars, with volume sales plummeting even further by 21%.

The sales decline for Bud Light is a stark contrast to the week before the campaign, where sales had already dropped by 6%, with volume sales down 11%. In contrast, Coors Light and Miller Lite saw an increase in sales, with Coors Light up 10.6% and Miller Lite up 11.5% for the week ending April 8th.

The controversial campaign has stirred debate and criticism, with many expressing concern over the use of a transgender influencer and the potential impact on sales. Bud Light has not yet commented on the sales decline, and it remains to be seen how the company will respond to the situation.

“These numbers are staggering,” Insights Express claimed.

“Right now this is an extremely difficult scenario for Anheuser Busch, the Bud Light brand, and for AB distributors. Coors Light and Miller Lite were once again big beneficiaries,” the report added








AMERICAN MAN OF NYC ARRESTED AND CHARGED WITH MURDER IN DEADLY BEATING OF MAN IN BROOKLYN

 



AMERICAN MAN OF NYC ARRESTED AND CHARGED WITH MURDER IN DEADLY BEATING OF MAN IN BROOKLYN

Philip Meyers was arrested and charged on Monday for the murder of 55-year-old John Sarquiz, who was brutally beaten in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn.

By Edward Era Barbacena 


A white man was arrested and charged with murder in the brutal and deadly unprovoked attack of a man in Brooklyn last month.

Philip Meyers, referred to as a "neighborhood bully" by NYPD Chief of Detectives James Essig, was arrested and charged on Monday for the murder of 55-year-old John Sarquiz.

The 45-year-old Brooklyn resident is accused of brutally assaulting the victim on March 29, outside of a Brooklyn deli on 13th Avenue, during what police say was an unprovoked attack.

Video in the player above is from a previous report.

Sarquiz, who at age 55 gave up his career to take care of his ailing mother, took a walk to the market in Dyker Heights when the suspect jumped him with no warning at all and beat him to death.

"He punches the victim from behind," NYPD Detective Bureau Chief James Essig said. "The suspect then kicks him multiple times in the head rendering him unconscious. He removes money from his wallet and then throws the wallet back onto our victim."

He would die in the hospital a few days later.

Police said Meyers is a repeat violent offender who's well known in the neighborhood, but for weeks after the murder, he was nowhere to be found as Sarquiz's family waited desperately for word.

"It's been really difficult for myself and my family, anywhere we went in the neighborhood it seemed any guy could be that guy, so it felt like we were always looking over our shoulder," the victim's sister Christine Sarquiz said.

Police believe Meyers was just laying low all this time, but on Monday, was spotted on the street near his home in nearby Bath Beach. The NYPD's Fugitive Squad was looking for him and quickly swooped in.

"We just want justice for John," the victim's sister Catherine Sarquiz said. "He shouldn't have been on the streets to begin with. Not after what he's done."

Police say Meyers, who also goes by the last name Mastrage, had already been arrested 17 times in his 45 years, including one time for murder. Now he's been arrested again, this time charged with murder and robbery.







68 year - old American man arrested in 1981 murder of 18-year-old woman in Texas

 



68 year - old American man arrested in 1981 murder of 18-year-old woman in Texas

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Texas Rangers arrested 68-year-old white American Larry Allen West for the murder of 18-year-old Carol Joyce Deleon, who was found dead from multiple gunshot wounds to the head along Interstate 35 in southern Comal County in June 1981, Texas DPS said. 

Officials linked West to the killing through new evidence in the case that was subjected to advanced DNA testing under the Texas DPS Sexual Assault Kit Initiative (SAKI) program, which is funded by the Department of Justice. 

The investigation into the killing stalled for decades after investigators were initially unable to identify Deleon using her fingerprints or a composite sketch released to local media, and officials were forced to bury her as a Jane Doe, Texas DPS said. 

Then a break in the case came 26 years later when a family member reported Deleon missing to the San Antonio Police Department in 2007, Texas DSP said. Her family was able to identify her through a photo and family DNA testing confirmed her identity, according to Texas DPS.

The family said they had tried to file a missing person report when she initially went missing in 1981 but because she was already 18 and there was no foul play suspected, no report was taken. Deleon also told her family she planned on moving away when she turned 18 so the family just assumed she had, according to Texas DPS. 

"However, after years of not hearing from her, Deleon's youngest sister decided to file the missing persons report in 2007," Texas DPS said. 

The Texas Rangers continued pursuing the case; in 2010 an unknown DNA profile was developed and entered into the Combined DNA Index System but no matches were found, according to Texas DPS. But then, in 2020, advanced DNA testing under the SAKI program led to West and was confirmed through normal forensic DNA testing, Texas DPS said. 

West was arrested and booked on a $125,000 bond and is awaiting an indictment and trial, Texas DPS said.



Sunday 23 April 2023

Racist American bully students attacked autisticJewish teen, carved swastika on his back at Las Vegas high school

 


Racist American bully students attacked autisticJewish teen, carved swastika on his back at Las Vegas high school

A 17-year-old autistic Jewish student at Clark High School in Las Vegas came home with a swastika carved on his back on March 9, prompting his mother to pull him from classes.

By Edward Era Barbacena 


An autistic Jewish teen had a swastika carved on his back in a heartless anti-Semitic assault at his Las Vegas high school — with the FBI now prepared to jump into the unsolved case. Some have speculated that the culprits who carried such inhumane attacks are white 

The teen’s distraught mother alerted authorities after her 17-year-old nonverbal son returned home from Clark High School on March 9 with the hate symbol etched on his back, NBC News reported Saturday.

The mom, who said her son’s service dog equipment bag was also tampered with, has pulled her son from the school.

But because the school doesn’t have surveillance cameras in classrooms, locker rooms and bathrooms, the cruel culprits remain unnamed — and unpunished.

“My son is the only student I know who wears a Kippah at the school,” the mother told COLlive.com last week, referring to a type of yamulka traditionally worn by Jewish men and boys.

The mother and her son have not been identified.

Meanwhile, with the case unsolved nearly two months later, the FBI said it was ready to join the probe.

“We are aware of the incident and are in regular contact with local authorities,” the agency said in a statement. “If during the local investigation, information comes to light of a potential federal civil rights violation, the FBI is prepared to investigate.”

The anti-Semitic assault sparked outrage from the Israeli-American Council, which called it “inhumane.”

“The Israeli-American Council was appalled to learn that a Jewish teen may have been targeted in such an inhumane anti-Semitic attack,” the council’s co-founder and CEO, Shoham Nicolet, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “We urge authorities to investigate this incident to the fullest.”

In a statement to the Review-Journal, the Clark County School District denounced the attack.

“We will not tolerate discriminatory behavior that contradicts an inclusive community and impacts student safety and well-being,” the statement said. “If anyone has any additional information related to this case, we urge them to contact school police immediately.”







Mass shooting in Texas 'after-prom party' leaves 2 dead and 9 people wounded

 


Mass shooting in Texas 'after-prom party'  leaves 2 dead and 9 people wounded

By Edward Era Barbacena 


Mass shooting at after prom party in Jasper County, Texas, leaves 9 wounded

An after prom party in Texas erupted in gunfire early Sunday, leaving at least nine people shot, authorities said. 

Shortly after midnight on Sunday, deputies responded to a disturbance on County Road 263 north of Jasper with shots fired, the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office said in a Facebook post. 

"Upon arrival, nine victims were found to have non-life-threatening injuries," the statement said. "The incident erupted at an after-prom party that was being held at the residence on County Road 263. Most victims were transported to Jasper Memorial Hospital, and some were transferred to Christus St. Elizabeth for further treatment."

The sheriff's office said the investigation is ongoing and people of interest are being questioned. The post said further information will be released when available.

Jasper, a city of just about 6,800 people, is situated in the Deep East Texas subregion, about 40 miles west of the Texas-Louisiana state line. 

This incident comes on the heels of a string of high-profile mass shootings. Last weekend, a Sweet 16 birthday party in rural Dadeville, Alabama, left four dead and 32 others injured. 

On Friday, the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency announced its sixth arrest in connection to the investigation. The suspects range in age from 15 to 20. 

Those killed were two graduating high school seniors, including the football star brother of the birthday girl, as well as a 19-year-old and a 23-year-old former athlete.  








Fomer American cop of Minnesota Kim Potter, who murdered Black - American Daunte Wright, to be released from prison


 

Fomer American cop of Minnesota Kim Potter, who murdered Black - American Daunte Wright, to be released from prison

By Edward Era Barbacena 


The former Minnesota police officer who fatally shot Daunte Wright, a Black man she pulled over in a traffic-stop-turned-arrest, is set to be released from prison Monday after she served 16 months of a two-year sentence. 

Kim Potter, who yelled "Taser" when she claimed she mistook her gun for a stunning device, was convicted of manslaughter in the April 2021 shooting in Hennepin County. Minnesota Department of Corrections records show her anticipated release date is April 24. 

"Our criminal investigative analysts are working closely with law enforcement to monitor the situation to ensure Kim Potter, like all incarcerated persons, is safe as she leaves our facility," spokesperson Andy Skoogman said in a statement. 

Skoogman said Potter will be on supervised release until Dec. 21.

Potter was expected to serve 16 months of the sentence, according to Judge Regina Chu at Potter's sentencing in February 2022. Chu opted for a lighter sentence than the maximum 15 years.

Wright's family members and civil rights leaders said at the time they were "very disappointed" in the sentence and called it a "slap on the wrist."

"Today, the justice system murdered him all over again," said Katie Wright, Daunte Wright's mother. "This isn’t OK. This is the problem with our justice system today. White women tears trumps justice."

Potter fatally shot Wright, a 20-year-old father, around the time Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin was on trial for murdering George Floyd in 2021. Chu referenced Chauvin in explaining the lighter sentence: "This is not a cop found guilty of murder for using his knee to pin down a person for nine-and-a-half minutes as he gasped for air." 

Potter was "a cop who made a tragic mistake," Chu said. 

Potter and another officer said they pulled Wright over because he had a blinker on in the wrong turn lane, expired tags and an air freshener hanging from his rearview mirror.

The officers then learned Wright had an unrelated warrant for arrest and attempted to detain him. During a struggle, Potter shot Wright, who drove down the street and crashed into another car, injuring others.

Potter said during her trial that she made a mistake when she used her gun instead of a Taser, and apologized, but her defense attorneys defended her use of force.

Some cities have since passed measures directing police to end traffic stops for low-level offenses like improperly placed license plates or single broken brake lights in the wake of more traffic stops that turned deadly, particularly  involving Black people.

Councilmembers in Memphis were the latest to pass an ordinance after the brutal beating death of Tyre Nichols earlier this year. 








American couple of Oklahoma charged with murder after dumping newborn in trash

 



American couple of Oklahoma charged with murder after dumping newborn in trash 

By Edward Era Barbacena 


An American white couple has been charged in Garfield County in connection with the suspected death of a newborn child, but authorities are still seeking information in the case, including the whereabouts of the child.

County court records show Kevin Ray Helton, 60, and Sarah Nickole Helton, 40, were charged separately on Wednesday with Second Degree Murder, or, in the alternative, child neglect.

According to media reports, a search of Kevin Helton’s phone revealed photos and a video of what appeared to be a deceased newborn lying next to a dog. Among the texts was one from him to his estranged wife Sarah Helton saying, “Do you want me to tell your daughter what really happened to her sister? I buried her this morning because you left her in the trash.”

Other texts reflect that the baby was born on Dec. 27 in Hayward, in Garfield County, at Kevin Helton's residence. The suspects do not live together.

The Garfield County Sheriff’s Office posted a message on social media Thursday seeking the public’s help in the case.

The couple told conflicting stories about what happened to the child. Sarah Helton claimed the newborn was given by Kevin Helton to an adoption agency; authorities found no evidence to support that claim. Kevin Helton said Sarah Helton had left his residence without notice and that he found the baby in the trash two or three days later.

Bond was set at $250,000 for Sarah Helton and at $200,000 for Kevin Helton. A bond reduction hearing is set for Monday for Sarah Helton. Both have previous felony convictions, according to Oklahoma Department of Corrections records that show Sarah Helton was incarcerated three times under the name Sarah N. Peters. In 2004, she pleaded guilty to accessory to murder after the fact in the death of a Tulsa man.








Saturday 22 April 2023

Black-American Woman Dies and White Cop In The Emergency Room After A Shootout In A Tennessee Parking Lot

 



Black-American Woman Dies and White Cop In The Emergency Room After A Shootout In A Tennessee Parking Lot

By Edward Era Barbacena 



A woman in Tennessee was killed and a cop was rushed into surgery following a shootout in a parking lot, graphic video shows.

Footage of the Friday morning encounter between Metro Nashville Police Officer Josh Baker and Nika N. Holbert, 31, shows the 14-year veteran cop deploying his Taser on the woman while ordering her to get out of a car.

Baker then tries to take the woman into custody as she yells and reaches for a handgun, opening fire on the officer, who shoots back and fatally wounds Holbert, the intense footage shows.

“Ma’am, you’re about to get tased,” Baker tells Holbert as she begins to run away as the officer tries to put her in handcuffs, according to the video. “Get down! Get down on the ground!”

Holbert, who was smoking a cigarette at the time, ignores the cop’s commands and gets back into the car, where she is hit with the stun gun.

She then screams for help while struggling with Baker as she sits in the driver’s seat and appears to reach for a weapon, the footage shows.

“Ma’am, put the gun down!” Baker says. “Put the gun down!”

Baker falls to the ground after being shot and calls for backup, telling a dispatcher “shots fired” as Holbert drives off, the clip shows.

Holbert was later pronounced dead at a hospital, police said.

Baker, who was hit beneath his bullet-resistant vest, was in stable condition after undergoing surgery, police spokesman Don Aaron said in a video statement.

Holbert was pulled over after Baker noticed that the registered owner of the Chevrolet Camaro she was driving was wanted on several drug warrants. She was alone at the time, video shows.

After the shooting, Holbert tossed a semi-automatic pistol into the parking lot, where it was later recovered, Aaron said.

Holbert initially cooperated with Baker, but her “compliance changed” when the officer found what appeared to be marijuana and a white powdery substance in her bag, prompting him to try to detain her until backup arrived, Aaron said.

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and prosecutors from the Davidson County District Attorney’s Office are reviewing the fatal shooting, Aaron said.

“This investigation is at the early stages and will take time to complete,” Aaron said of the use-of-force probe.

Nashville’s mayor, John Cooper, said the confrontation is a reminder that being a “police officer anywhere can be a dangerous job,” The Tennessean reported.

“My thoughts and prayers are with Officer Baker and with the families of everyone involved,” Cooper said in a statement.




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