Category: Metro

  • Dentist convicted of hiring hit men to kill brother-in-law in 2014

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (TCD) — A jury convicted a 47-year-old man this week of conspiring to kill his brother-in-law, who was fatally shot in his driveway in 2014.

    Leon County court records show Charlie Adelson was convicted of first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, and solicitation to commit first-degree murder in connection with the death of Dan Markel. The Tallahassee Democrat reports the jury came to their decision about the verdict in about three hours.

    A grand jury indicted Adelson and his co-defendant, Katherine Magbanua, in April 2022 for working together to plot Markel’s death. The two men contracted to kill Markel, Sigfredo Garcia and Luis Rivera, were charged with homicide in 2016. Garcia was convicted of first-degree murder, while Rivera pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. Rivera was sentenced to 19 years in prison and Garcia is serving life in the Florida Department of Corrections.

    Magbanua was also charged in 2016, but the jury could not reach a verdict at her first trial in 2019. She went back to court in 2022, and a jury convicted her of first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, and solicitation to commit first-degree murder. A judge sentenced her to life in prison without parole.

    According to Adelson’s probable cause affidavit, on July 18, 2014, at 11:02 a.m., Tallahassee Police responded to a shooting call at Markel’s home and found the law professor “slumped over the driver seat of his vehicle from an apparent gunshot wound to the head.” Medics transported him to a hospital, where he died hours later.

    Markel had reportedly been on the phone at the time of the shooting and said there was “someone he did not recognize” in his driveway. The person on the phone heard “what sounded like a loud grunt” as well as other concerning noises. After that, Markel stopped responding.

    A witness noticed a Toyota Prius at Markel’s home on the day of the murder.

    Magbanua was reportedly in a relationship with Adelson and had two children with Garcia. The affidavit says she contacted Garcia and Rivera to carry out the killing in exchange for compensation.

    Markel’s estranged wife and Charlie Adelson’s sister, Wendi Adelson, kept her maiden name, so the affidavit argues Charlie Adelson was the only common link between the three other suspects and Markel.

    Two years before the fatal shooting, Wendi Adelson and Markel went through a “bitter” divorce. She filed for divorce in September 2012, and the dissolution of their marriage was finalized in July 2013. Charlie Adelson and their parents were reportedly “determined to relocate Wendi and the two Markel children to South Florida,” where the rest of the family lived. Wendi Adelson made the move, but Markel went to court about it and the judge sided with Markel.

    The affidavit alleges Wendi Adelson’s parents attempted to sway Markel to let Wendi Adelson and their children move to the southern part of the state. The mother allegedly told Wendi Adelson to offer Markel $1 million in exchange for the move. The plan was that the parents, Wendi Adelson, and Charlie Adelson would split the cost three ways. The mother also allegedly told Wendi Adelson to pretend she would convert their children to Catholicism even though Markel and the family were “very strict in the Jewish faith.”

    According to the court document, Charlie Adelson “did not like Markel and did not get along with him.” He reportedly previously did research about hiring a hit man and learned it would cost him $15,000. Wendi Adelson told investigators her brother “joked about hiring a hit man to kill Markel in the past.”

    Charlie Adelson allegedly made “a lot of jokes” about it, including that he “looked into hiring a hit man, but it was cheaper to buy her a television as a divorce gift.”

    Wendi Adelson reportedly did not believe Charlie Adelson would actually follow through with it.

    Garcia and Rivera reportedly rented the Prius and drove up from the Miami area to Tallahassee. Phone records showed Magbanua contacted Garcia and Charlie Adelson in the early hours of July 18, 2014.

    According to the Tallahassee Democrat, Wendi Adelson’s mother, Donna Adelson, has not been charged in connection with the case.

    After the conviction, Markel’s mother, Shelly Markel, said, “This has been a really long and terrible ordeal for all of us. It’s taken a long toll on our lives. And there’s a real sense of relief today.”

    You can check out Crime Watch Daily’s coverage of the case in the video below.

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  • Ky. teen arrested for allegedly stabbing police officer in the face with a screwdriver

    MOUNT WASHINGTON, Ky. (TCD) — An 18-year-old was arrested Saturday for allegedly stabbing a police officer in the face with a screwdriver while he tried arresting her.

    According to the arrest citation cited by WHAS-TV, on Saturday, Nov. 4, at approximately 6 a.m., a Mount Washington Police officer went to Lindsey Duvall Park to unlock it to the public, but when he got there, he saw a woman on the other side of the gate.

    The policeman, Officer Bramer, reportedly wrote in the complaint that Kenzie Vanarsdale went up to his patrol car to provide her information, but then she fled. Bramer reportedly ran after her, identified himself as a cop, and ordered her to stop. WHAS reports Vanarsdale stopped running and put her hands in the air. Bramer started to handcuff her, but then she allegedly turned around and stabbed him above the left eye with a screwdriver.

    WAVE-TV reports Bramer wrote in the citation Vanarsdale allegedly tried to inflict “serious physical injury or possibly even death.”

    Bramer was reportedly treated at the hospital for his injury and has since been released.

    Bullitt County Jail records show Vanardsdale was booked on a charge of attempted murder of a police officer. According to WAVE, her bond was set at $500,000.

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  • Ringleader of custody dispute murder plot testifies; Delphi suspect’s trial delayed — TCD Sidebar

    In this episode of True Crime Daily The Sidebar Podcast: Gisela K joins host Joshua Ritter to break down the biggest cases making headlines across the nation. They discuss the alleged orchestrator of a murder-for-hire plot taking the stand in his own defense, the ongoing trial for a yoga teacher accused of murdering her boyfriend’s pro cyclist mistress, and further delays in the case of Delphi slayings suspect Richard Allen.

    Please note: We recorded this episode prior to a jury convicting Charles Adelson on all counts.

    YouTube: Ringleader of custody dispute murder plot testifies; Delphi suspect’s trial delayed — TCD Sidebar

    TRUE CRIME DAILY: THE PODCAST covers high-profile and under-the-radar cases every week. Subscribe to our YouTube page for podcasts, exclusive videos, and more, and don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.



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  • Trump on Trial: Judicial Excess, Partisan Bias

    Donald Trump took the stand Monday in New York State Attorney General Letitia James’s long running fraud litigation against the former president, a case filled with startling twists and turns.

    On September 26, one week before the civil action was set to open at trial, the judge in the case delivered a surprise ruling. Justice Arthur Engoron issued an order canceling Trump’s certification to do business in New York. The order stripped Trump of control of the iconic Trump Tower; of a family estate and golf club in Westchester County; and of 40 Wall Street in Lower Manhattan, a lucrative commercial property. At times it seems as if the entire Trump family is on trial. Trump’s two adult sons, Don Jr. and Eric, were called to the stand by the prosecution last week; his daughter Ivanka is slated to testify this week.

    In her civil lawsuit, James alleged that Trump, Trump family members, and Trump Organization executives had committed fraud. Engoron agreed. Financial statements that Trump had submitted to banks and insurers to support real estate deals, wrote Engoron, “contain fraudulent valuations.” The Trump businesses would be placed in receivership “to manage the dissolution.”

    Legal experts attacked the Engoron ruling as harsh and unprecedented. “This is a version of business law capital punishment,” a Columbia Law School corporate law expert told the Washington Post. “I’m not aware of a precedent at this scale.”

    The non-jury trial opened October 2. The only issue left for trial is how big a penalty Trump will pay. James is looking for a fine upward of $250 million and Engoron himself will decide the penalty. But the deadlier blow already has been delivered with Engoron’s judicial strike against Trump businesses in New York.

    The optics of the case are hard to miss. Trump, the builder of business empires, is denuded of his empire. The frontrunner for the GOP presidential nomination is brought low.

    Which is precisely what James has been promising for years. A New York City Democrat from the progressive wing of the party, James made Trump the centerpiece of her campaign to become state attorney general. She repeatedly denounced Trump as an “illegitimate president” and vowed to “shine a bright light into every corner of his real estate dealings.”

    Engoron seems largely cut from the same political cloth. A longtime Democrat, he “has ruled repeatedly against Trump in the three years he’s been presiding over James’ lawsuit,” notes the Associated Press. “He’s forced Trump to sit for a deposition, held him in contempt and fined him $110,000.” A graduate of Columbia University, Engoron once noted that he took part in “huge, sometimes boisterous, Vietnam War protests.” He has been a member of the ACLU for nearly thirty years. Trump and Engoron have sparred for weeks over a gag order imposed on the former president.

    Trump’s lawyers argue there was “no nefarious intent” in submitting the real estate valuations at the heart of the case. Trump lawyer Christopher Kise told the court that different financial estimates often simply reflect “change in a complex, sophisticated real estate corporation.”

    Banks and insurers doing business with the Trump Organization knew exactly what they were getting into, Kise said. “Banks and insurers know that the [financial] statements are estimates.” The banks were not victims, the defense argues, saying they made money from the deals.

    In a surprise twist shortly after the trial opened, a New York appeals court temporarily halted Engoron’s order to dissolve the Trump business empire while Trump appeals the ruling. The trial was allowed to continue.

    But Trump appears resigned to his fate in Engoron’s court. Outside the courtroom, he has denounced the case as “a scam” and “a sham” and “an attempt to hurt me in an election.” Inside the courtroom, the Trump team continues to hammer away at the prosecution’s case, apparently laying the groundwork for an appeal. On the stand Monday, Trump denounced the proceedings as “very unfair” in a day of legal fireworks.

    The Democrat-leanings of James and Engoron, and oversteps by Engoron, increase Trump’s odds for a successful appeal.  And then there is the larger question of the whole proceeding and its kangaroo court miasma: would this case ever have been brought against someone not named Trump?

    ***

    Micah Morrison is chief investigative reporter for Judicial Watch. Tips: mmorrison@judicialwatch.org

    Investigative Bulletin is published by Judicial Watch. Reprints and media inquiries: jfarrell@judicialwatch.org

     

     

     

     

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  • ‘I’ve completed QWE at various high street firms. Would a City firm be interested in me?’

    Qualification query


    In the latest instalment in our Career Conundrums series, one soon-to-be solicitor is concerned that City law firms will be put off by their unconventional route to qualification.

    “Dear Legal Cheek.

    I am a career changer (previously marketing) who is nearing qualification as a solicitor. I haven’t completed a training contract in the traditional sense, but rather undertaken spells with three law firms over a two year period. I am in the process of getting this recognised by the SRA. Briefly, I spent six months as a paralegal with a high street law firm before spending a further six months with a national law firm — again as a paralegal. The majority of this work was in property, both residential and some commercial. I then joined another high street firm where I am approaching the one year mark. Again this is property and I am basically doing the work of NQ solicitor. My question is whether a City law firm would be interested in taking me on as a NQ associate? Or would my unconventional journey put them off?”

    If you have a career conundrum, email us at team@legalcheek.com.

    The post ‘I’ve completed QWE at various high street firms. Would a City firm be interested in me?’ appeared first on Legal Cheek.

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  • Money focus: What law firms pay their newly qualified lawyers

    Legal Cheek data shines spotlight on juniors’ salaries

    Legal Cheek has compiled an official round-up of the newly qualified (NQ) salaries available across the country’s leading law firms.

    Whether you’re interested in the mega pay packets up for grabs in the London offices of US law firms, or the more modest earnings available at regional players that provide better work-life balance, our comprehensive rundown has got you covered.

    The latest figures show firms have boosted NQ salaries by an average of 4% over the last year. The uptick comes despite Legal Cheek research showing a reduction in average working hours for junior lawyers across the City and beyond, amid reduced demand in legal services across several practice areas.

    Topping the table this year are the usual suspects — a host of US firms. Whilst demanding 12 hour+ days in the office, at the top five firms juniors can expect to take home upwards of £170,000!

    The 2024 Firms Most List — featuring the Legal Cheek Survey results in full

    Whilst there were no pay reductions across the 100 + firms surveyed, there were some significant rises over the past 12 months. The biggest of these came in the shape of a 16% bump for NQs at Magic Circle duo Linklaters and Allen & Overy, both outfits hiking pay from £107,500 a year to £125,000.

    You can view all our salary data, including rates for trainees, on our 2024 Legal Cheek Firms Most List.

    How much will I earn as a newly qualified solicitor?

    Law firm NQ salary
    Vinson & Elkins £173,822
    Akin Gump £173,254*
    Kirkland & Ellis £173,254*
    Milbank £173,254*
    Latham & Watkins £173,254*
    Davis Polk & Wardwell £165,000
    Weil Gotshal & Manges £165,000
    Paul Hastings £164,000
    Gibson Dunn £161,700
    Debevoise & Plimpton £160,500
    Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton £160,000
    Goodwin Procter £160,000
    Sidley Austin £159,500
    Fried Frank £158,000
    King & Spalding £156,000
    Cooley £150,000
    Willkie Farr & Gallagher £150,000
    Ropes & Gray £147,000
    Dechert £145,000
    Jones Day £145,000
    Shearman & Sterling £145,000
    Sullivan & Cromwell £145,000
    Orrick £140,000
    White & Case £140,000
    Allen & Overy £125,000
    Clifford Chance £125,000
    Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer £125,000
    Linklaters £125,000
    Baker McKenzie £120,000
    Herbert Smith Freehills £120,000
    Hogan Lovells £120,000
    Mayer Brown £120,000
    Ashurst £115,000
    Macfarlanes £115,000
    Slaughter and May £115,000
    K&L Gates £110,000
    Travers Smith £110,000
    Katten Muchin Rosenman £108,000
    Reed Smith £107,500
    Simmons & Simmons £107,500
    Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner £105,000
    CMS £105,000
    Norton Rose Fulbright £105,000
    DLA Piper £100,000
    Squire Patton Boggs £100,000
    Taylor Wessing £100,000
    Addleshaw Goddard £95,000
    Bird & Bird £95,000
    Eversheds Sutherland £95,000
    Fieldfisher £95,000
    HFW £95,000
    Stephenson Harwood £95,000
    Watson Farley & Williams £95,000
    Dentons £92,000
    Gowling WLG £92,000
    Pinsent Masons £92,000
    Osborne Clarke £91,500
    Mischon de Reya £90,000
    Withers £90,000
    Bristows £88,000
    Shoosmiths £87,000
    Charles Russell Speechlys £85,000
    RPC £85,000
    Farrer & Co £83,000
    Clyde & Co £80,000
    Forsters £80,000
    Kennedys £80,000
    Trowers & Hamlins £80,000
    Wiggin £79,000
    Harbottle & Lewis £78,000
    Howard Kennedy £78,000
    Lewis Silkin £78,000
    Womble Bond Dickinson £78,000
    Gateley £75,000
    Irwin Mitchell £75,000
    Penningtons Manches Cooper £75,000
    TLT £75,000
    Wedlake Bell £75,000
    Hill Dickinson £72,000
    Michelmores £72,000
    Bates Wells £70,000
    Burges Salmon £68,000
    Winckworth Sherwood £67,000
    Birketts £65,000
    RWK Goodman £62,000
    Stevens & Bolton £62,000
    Foot Anstey £60,000
    Walker Morris £60,000
    Weightmans £60,000
    Mills & Reeve £58,000
    Ashfords £57,000
    Brabners £50,000
    Fletchers £36,750
    Express Solicitors £33,000
    Accutrainee Not applicable
    Bevan Brittan Undisclosed
    DWF Group Undisclosed
    Greenberg Traurig Undisclosed
    Kingsley Napley Undisclosed
    Russell-Cooke Undisclosed
    Shakespeare Martineau Undisclosed

    *Law firm pays London-based newly qualified lawyers $215,000. GBP figure calculated via XE.com on 6 November 2023.

    The 2024 Firms Most List — featuring the Legal Cheek Survey results in full

    The post Money focus: What law firms pay their newly qualified lawyers appeared first on Legal Cheek.

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  • Brooklyn landlord allegedly set apartment on fire while 6 children were home

    NEW YORK (TCD) — A landlord faces multiple charges, including attempted murder, for allegedly setting an apartment on fire because his tenants failed to pay rent.

    According to the New York City Fire Department, Rafiqul Islam was upset that his second-floor tenants “stopped paying rent and refused to move out.” He allegedly set an interior staircase ablaze at 212 Forbell St. while two adults and six children were home. The occupants safely escaped.

    Once they made it to the roof, the parents reportedly jumped, and neighbors and firefighters caught the children, WCBS-TV reports.

    The fire department alleges that Islam previously threatened to cut off the family’s gas and electric. He also reportedly “threatened to burn the house down if he wasn’t paid his rent.”

    Video footage from the day and time of the incident captured a masked and hooded man entering and exiting the apartment shortly before the first 911 call was made.

    Marshals dedicated four weeks to an exhaustive video canvassing effort to identify the suspect. During that investigation, they observed an image of Islam with his hood and mask down, according to the fire department.

    Islam was booked into the New York City Department of Corrections on Oct. 25 and faces eight counts of attempted murder, assault, and arson. The Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office will prosecute the case.

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  • Northern California man allegedly decapitated relative and took the head with him

    SANTA ROSA, Calif. (TCD) — A 24-year-old man was located and arrested two days after he allegedly decapitated a female relative and fled with the victim’s head.

    On Thursday, Nov. 2, at approximately 3:40 p.m., Santa Rosa Police Department officers were called to the 2500 block of Pomo Trail about a homicide and found the body of a headless female inside the home. Santa Rosa Police said in a news release the “victim’s head was not located at the residence.”

    The Santa Rosa Police Department’s Violent Crimes Unit took over the investigation. After interviews, they alleged Luis Gustavo Aroyo-Lopez killed the victim and “took the victim’s head with him when he left the residence and he may still be in possession of it.”

    Police said Aroyo-Lopez had recently been released from a California state prison for assault with a deadly weapon and other weapons-related charges and was on post-release supervision.

    At the time, Santa Rosa Police said it was unclear where he might travel to and how he would get there. Officials warned he should be considered armed and dangerous.

    Aroyo-Lopez was apprehended in San Francisco. According to KRON-TV, San Francisco Police Department officers noticed him Saturday, Nov. 4, and arrested him.

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  • La. woman convicted of stabbing fiancé’s other girlfriend with box cutter while she was sleeping

    DONALDSONVILLE, La. (TCD) — A jury convicted a 44-year-old woman of breaking into a house and stabbing her fiancé’s other girlfriend after she reportedly confessed to her pastor.

    23rd Judicial District Attorney Ricky Babin announced Monday, Nov. 6, that Peggy Valentine was found guilty of attempted first-degree murder and home invasion.

    According to a news release from the Ascension Parish Sheriff’s Office, on May 4, 2022, at around 4:17 a.m., deputies responded to a report of a home invasion on Elizabeth Street. Inside the residence, deputies located a female victim suffering from multiple stab wounds. She was transported to a local hospital for non-life-threatening injuries and later released.

    Further investigation revealed Valentine broke into the home and stabbed the victim with a box cutter while she was sleeping, Babin said. The victim reportedly fought off Valentine, who fled the scene following the attack.

    Valentine confessed to the crime during an interview with detectives, and she was arrested and booked into the Ascension Parish Jail.

    The sheriff’s office said it was “not a random act.”

    According to WAFB-TV, the victim had a baby with Valentine’s fiancé. In court, Valentine’s attorney reportedly argued that she was invited inside the home and went there with baby clothes. Valentine’s attorney alleged there were no signs of forced entry, WAFB reports.

    Valentine reportedly called her pastor, who also works as a major for the Ascension Parish Sheriff’s Office, and told him she went to the home in an attempt to catch her fiancé with the victim. Another deputy was in the room during that discussion, WAFB reports.

    Valentine’s attorney made an effort to have the conversation removed from evidence because of pastor privilege. However, the judge determined there was no expectation of privacy because Valentine wasn’t alone with her pastor, and the judge allowed the jury to hear the confession.

    Valentine is tentatively scheduled to be sentenced on Feb. 27, 2024, and she faces decades in state prison.

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  • Mo. man accused of fatally shooting his 2 stepsons during dispute

    INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (TCD) — A man allegedly fatally shot his wife’s sons in their home last week, claiming he did so in self-defense.

    According to the Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office, Terrill Anderson faces charges of second-degree murder, armed criminal action, voluntary manslaughter, and armed criminal action.

    On Sunday, Oct. 29, at approximately 8:25 p.m., officers responded to a home after a caller reported that her husband had “shot her two sons,” Independence Police said in the probable cause statement. Officers found the two victims, identified by WDAF-TV as Adonis Knight and Mario Batrez, dead on the kitchen floor with a total of eight shell casings nearby.

    Police said Anderson’s three biological children, all under 18 years old, were in the home at the time and were escorted out.

    According to the probable cause statement, investigators recovered video surveillance from the home that showed an assault in the sub-basement, as well as an assault near the door to the garage of the home.

    In the video footage, police said Anderson was armed with a handgun in the living room and approached the stairs near the first victim, who was wielding a knife. An unidentified person shielded the victim, according to police. Then, Anderson allegedly fired two warning shots into the kitchen ceiling while the second victim was on his cellphone.

    According to police, the first victim tried to hit Anderson multiple times, but the suspect allegedly fired a shot at him, and the first victim fell to the ground. Afterward, Anderson allegedly shot the second victim, causing him to fall to the ground, and he shot him two more times.

    Police said Anderson walked back to the first victim and shot him again before stomping on him and shooting at his head.

    In the probable cause statement, police noted that neither victim appeared to be a threat after being shot.

    According to police, Anderson told detectives that the victims assaulted him in the sub-basement, and he shot his two stepsons in self-defense. Anderson reportedly told police that the first victim was armed with a knife, and he believed the second victim had a gun.

    Anderson remains held in the Jackson County Detention Center.

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