Tag: Americas

  • Decomposed remains found in California creek in 1993 identified

    SONOMA COUNTY, Calif. (TCD) — Investigators recently identified the remains of a woman found in a creek nearly 30 years ago.

    On Aug. 8, 1993, two hikers found the skeletal remnants in a remote area near Pine Flat Road in Healdsburg, according to the DNA Doe Project. The woman was believed to be about 30 to 40 years old and between 5-foot-5 and 5-foot-7. She was also found wearing two yellow metal bracelets.

     Due to the level of decomposition, investigators were unable to identify Jane Doe, and the case went cold, the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office said in a Feb. 13 news release.

    The sheriff’s office and coroner submitted Jane Doe’s DNA to the DNA Doe Project in 2022. They then used genetic genealogy to identify a possible family member that led investigators to Jane Doe’s son. After comparing the son’s DNA with Jane Doe’s, investigators identified the victim as Robin Fay Hendrick, born in 1953.

    According to the sheriff’s office, Hendrick lived in Vallejo, and she was last seen alive there in February 1992. Deputies said Hendrick’s death was suspicious and “little is known” about her.

    The investigation is ongoing.

    MORE:

    • 1993 Jane Doe identified using DNA –– and we need your help – Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office 
    • Pine Flat Rd Jane Doe 1993 – DNA Doe Project

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  • New Jersey man sentenced for fatally stabbing friend and his dog during robbery

    EVESHAM, N.J. (TCD) — A 27-year-old man will spend more than three decades behind bars for killing his friend and the victim’s dog in 2022.

    Burlington County Prosecutor LaChia Bradshaw announced Tuesday, Feb. 13, that a judge sentenced Donovan Hollingsworth to 34 years in state prison in connection with the stabbing death of his friend Thomas Pierson III, 26, as well as his dog, a cane corso named Django.

    A jury convicted Hollingsworth in August 2023 of first-degree murder, first-degree robbery, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, cruelty to animals, and unlawful possession of a weapon.

    Hollingsworth was given 30 years without parole eligibility for the murder charge and four years for fatally stabbing the dog.

    On Feb. 5, 2022, Evesham Township Police officers responded to the Olympus Apartments on Baker Boulevard in reference to a possible dog attack. At the scene, police found Pierson dead with multiple stab wounds. Law enforcement officials also reportedly found Django deceased with apparent stab wounds on a stairwell landing.

    Investigators determined Hollingsworth went to his friend’s home to rob him when they got into a fight. During the altercation, Hollingsworth stabbed Pierson and Django before fleeing the scene.

    Police later took Hollingsworth into custody at a hospital, where he underwent medical treatment for non-life-threatening injuries.

    MORE:

    • Evesham Man Receives 34-year Sentence for Killing Friend and his Dog – Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office

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  • 1 dead, several wounded during shooting at Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (TCD) — One person is dead and several more are wounded after a shooting occurred at the Super Bowl victory parade route for the Kansas City Chiefs.

    The Kansas City Police Department announced “multiple people were struck” when shots were fired close to Union Station while the Chiefs parade was ending. Law enforcement detained two armed suspects at the scene.

    Kansas City Police Chief Stacey Graves spoke at a press conference Wednesday afternoon and said 10 to 15 people were shot, but officials are still trying to determine the number of total victims.

    She said she was “angry at what happened today,” but praised the officers who “ran toward danger.” According to Graves, there were 800 law enforcement officers at the scene to protect the public, but “because of bad actors, which were very few, this tragedy occurred.”

    Officials called it a “fluid situation” and said there will be several updates throughout the day.

    Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes tweeted, “Praying for Kansas City.”

    The city was gathering to celebrate the Chiefs, who defeated the San Francisco 49ers 25-22 to win the Super Bowl on Sunday.

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  • Judicial Watch: Biden Justice Dept Asks Court to Keep Secret the Names of Top Staff of Anti-Trump Special Counsel Jack Smith—Cites ‘Dearth of FOIA Public Interest’

    (Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch announced today that the U.S. Department of Justice is asking a federal court to allow the agency to keep secret the names of top staffers working in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s office that is targeting former President Donald Trump and other Americans.

    Judicial Watch filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit in May 2023 after the Justice Department rejected a December 9, 2022, FOIA request for ”staff rosters, phone lists, or similar records depicting all employees hired by or detailed to office of Special Counsel Jack Smith” (Judicial Watch Inc. v U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:23-cv-01485)).

    After months of delay, the Biden Justice Department finally acknowledged on April 12, 2023, that it possessed two staff rosters responsive to Judicial Watch’s request, but, citing a supposed “dearth of FOIA public interest,” was withholding the rosters under privacy and law enforcement exemptions. Judicial Watch explained in its motion that it was only seeking the names of top-level staffers – those at the GS-14 level and above – and did not seek email addresses or phone numbers.

    In its motion, Judicial Watch quotes President Joe Biden’s remarks at a November 9, 2022, White House press conference and provides the background and justification for the FOIA request:

    “Well, we just have to demonstrate that [Donald Trump] will not take power – if we – if he does run. I’m making sure he, under legitimate efforts of our Constitution, does not become the next President again.” – President Joe Biden

    On November 18, 2022, [three days after Trump announced he would run for president again in 2024], Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed Special Counsel Jack Smith to investigate potential criminal wrongdoing by former President Donald J. Trump. The appointment came nine days after President Biden announced his effort to “mak[e] sure” Trump did not become president again. The unprecedented investigation – and now prosecutions – by an incumbent president of his immediate predecessor, opponent in the last election, and leading opponent in the upcoming election raises numerous questions about who Special Counsel Smith chose to assist him in this highly charged endeavor. Are these persons opponents or supporters of the former president, aligned with one of the two major political parties, or otherwise biased or conflicted, or are they unbiased, nonpartisan professionals?

    Further, the Judicial Watch cites the Fani Willis and the other anti-Trump investigator scandals in explaining the public interest in knowing who is involved in this unprecedented prosecution:

    Two recent examples highlight the importance of knowing the identities of the SCO’s staffers. Notorious FBI employees Peter Stzrok and Lisa Page were both members of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of then-President Trump…. Stzrok was the lead FBI investigator assigned to the probe, and Page was a “general attorney” on Special Counsel Mueller’s staff…. During the investigation, it was discovered that Strzok and Page, had exchanged voluminous texts disparaging then-candidate Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign, commenting that “we’ll stop” Trump from becoming president, and citing having an “insurance policy” in case he did…. A subsequent report by the U.S. Department of Justice Inspector General was highly critical of the exchanges, noting with respect to the “we’ll stop it” text in particular:

    [W]hen one senior FBI official, Strzok, who was helping to lead the Russia investigation at the time, conveys in a text message to another senior FBI official, Page, “No. No he won’t. We’ll stop it” in response to her question “[Trump’s] not ever going to become president, right? Right?!”, it is not only indicative of a biased state of mind but, even more seriously, implies a willingness to take official action to impact the presidential candidate’s electoral prospects. This is antithetical to the core values of the FBI and the Department of Justice.

    Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis, who also has brought criminal charges against the former president, is now reportedly under investigation herself for allegedly choosing her paramour, Nathan Wade, to lead the prosecution…. Although Wade’s identity was already known, it led to the discovery of new, previously unknown information that bears on the public perception of the prosecution. It helps the public to know “what their government is up to.” This case is no different.

    In its motion, Judicial Watch further explains:

    Defendant’s argument that disclosing the more-than-one-year-old rosters could reasonably be expected to interfere with the SCO’s work because it could lead to the SCO’s staff being threatened and harassed is entirely conclusory, little more than speculation, and lacks meaningful evidentiary support. It also ignores the fact that the names of at least 23 SCO staffers are readily available from public sources, yet the public availability of these names and in some instances email addresses and a cell phone number does not seem to have had any discernable impact on the functioning of the SCO…. Its prosecution of the former president and the two other individuals certainly appears to be proceeding apace, and Defendant has neither claimed nor demonstrated otherwise.

    Judicial Watch concludes that the government’s exemption claims fail and that the Justice Department’s request to close the case is “plainly insufficient to satisfy its burden of proving that its withholdings are lawful.”

    The Judicial Watch motion includes a declaration that lists 23 individuals working for Special Counsel Smith who were identified using publicly available court filings, an additional four names were located in media reports.

    “Special Counsel Jack Smith isn’t above the law, and the American people have the right to know about just who is working on his unprecedented and politicized anti-Trump investigation,” stated Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “Given the scandalous revelations about the Fani Willis prosecution team targeting Trump, it is especially urgent Americans know just who the top people on Jack Smith’s staff are.”

    Through the New York Freedom of Information Law, in July 2023, Judicial Watch received the engagement letter showing New York County District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg paid $900 per hour for partners and $500 per hour for associates to the Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher law firm for the purpose of suing Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) in an effort to shut down the House Judiciary Committee’s oversight investigation into Bragg’s unprecedented indictment of former President Donald Trump.

    Through FOIA, Judicial Watch uncovered information about Special Counsel’s Mueller’s budget and staff. Judicial Watch also sued for and obtained records for the budget of Special Counsel John Durham. A Judicial Watch lawsuit also uncovered calendar entries of Mueller special counsel prosecutor Andrew Weissmann showed he led the hiring effort for the investigation that targeted President Trump.

    In January 2024, Judicial Watch filed lawsuit against Fulton County, Georgia for records regarding the hiring of Nathan Wade as a special prosecutor by District Attorney Fani Willis. Wade was hired to pursue unprecedented criminal investigations and prosecutions against former President Trump and others over the 2020 election disputes.

    Before his appointment to investigate and prosecute Trump, Jack Smith previously was at the center of several other controversial issues, the IRS scandal among them.

    In 2014, a Judicial Watch investigation revealed that top IRS officials had been in communication with Jack Smith’s then-Public Integrity Section about a plan to launch criminal investigations into conservative tax-exempt groups. Government officials were looking to step up a probe into requests for tax-exemption from organizations with conservative sounding names like “Tea Party” and other “political sounding names,” according to a later report by the Treasury Department’s inspector general. Jack Smith appears to have been a key player in this attempt to silence conservative voices.

    According to the documents obtained by Judicial Watch, Jack Smith directed the head of the Justice Department’s Election Crimes Branch, Richard Pilger, to meet with the director of the IRS’s Tax-Exempt Organizations division, Lois Lerner. In one email obtained by Judicial Watch, Lerner discusses an idea that the Justice Department could build “false-statement cases” against tax-exempt conservative groups.

    Judicial Watch later obtained additional documents detailing a planning meeting between Justice Department, FBI and IRS officials about possible criminal prosecutions. Thanks to Judicial Watch disclosures, House investigators discovered that the IRS improperly turned over confidential tax records of nonprofit organizations to the FBI—sparking a public uproar and forcing the return of the records to the IRS. Read more about the case here.

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  • Woman gets 99 years after teen was duct taped, shot in the head, and dumped in a river

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska (TCD) — A judge sentenced a 23-year-old woman to almost 100 years in prison for her role in the murder-for-hire plot of a teenager who was fatally shot and dumped in a river.

    The Alaska Department of Law announced Monday, Feb. 12, that Denali Brehmer was ordered to spend 99 years behind bars with no time suspended for the murder-for-hire killing of 19-year-old Cynthia Hoffman. Brehmer pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in February 2023. As part of the deal, prosecutors dismissed charges of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, solicitation of first-degree murder, tampering with physical evidence, and two counts of second-degree murder.

    Judge Andrew Peterson called Hoffman’s killing “senseless,” and said Brehmer’s actions were “cold, calculated, and carried out to a ‘T.’”

    Three other people were charged in connection with the case.

    The Department of Law said one of Brehmer’s co-conspirators, Darin Schilmiller, solicited Brehmer to kill Hoffman. He and Brehmer also “conspired to coerce a minor victim to produce sexually explicit images,” according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Alaska. They pleaded guilty to conspiracy to produce child pornography in 2023.

    Schilmiller reportedly “catfished” Brehmer and said he would pay her $9 million to kill Hoffman and send him videos of it. Brehmer then recruited Caleb Leyland and Kayden McIntosh to help carry out the murder. Schilmiller pleaded guilty to solicitation to commit first-degree murder and was sentenced to 99 years in prison as well.

    According to the criminal complaint, Hoffman was reported missing to Anchorage Police on June 3, 2019, after she failed to come home the night before. Detectives spoke with Brehmer, who said she smoked weed with McIntosh and Hoffman the night of June 2, 2019, then they went to the woods near Thunderbird Falls. The three of them reportedly “agreed to duct tape each other and take photographs.”

    McIntosh and Brehmer taped Hoffman’s wrists, ankles, and mouth, but they eventually removed the tape from her mouth. Hoffman threatened to call police and say they kidnapped and sexually assaulted her. Brehmer was holding a gun, but McIntosh allegedly grabbed the gun and shot Hoffman in the back of the head. Then, they pushed her in the water.

    Hoffman’s body was found in the creek June 4, 2019.

    The other co-conspirator, Leyland, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in November 2023. The Anchorage Daily News reports Leyland let Brehmer and McIntosh drive his car to kill Hoffman in exchange for $500,000. He faces a maximum sentence of 75 years with 25 years suspended. McIntosh is awaiting trial.

    Brehmer’s sentencing hearing lasted three days. Anchorage Assistant District Attorney Patrick McKay Jr. said while arguing for the maximum sentence, “The Court should find that Miss Brehmer engaged in one of the most serious crimes that we have in Alaska. She executed Cynthia Hoffman in a murder-for-hire plot. She conspired with numerous other individuals in and outside of Alaska, including juveniles, forever altering everybody’s life.”

    McKay added, “She may not have pulled the trigger, but this never would have happened it if it weren’t for Denali Brehmer.”

    MORE:

    • Denali Brehmer Sentenced to 99 years for Murder of Cynthia Hoffman at Thunderbird Falls – Alaska Department of Law
    • Alaska woman pleads guilty to killing friend in catfishing scheme involving $9 million, 2/21/2023 – TCD
    • Darin Schilmiller Sentenced to 99 years for Murder of Cynthia Hoffman at Thunderbird Falls, 1/11/2024 – Alaska Department of Law
    • State of Alaska v. Kayden McIntosh
    • Indiana Man, Anchorage Woman Plead Guilty to Child Pornography Charges, 7/19/2023 – U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Alaska
    • Caleb Leyland Pleads Guilty to Murder of Cynthia Hoffman at Thunderbird Falls, 11/22/2023 – Alaska Department of Law
    • After 4 years, Thunderbird Falls murder case inches toward resolution, 11/28/2023 – Anchorage Daily News

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  • Mayorkas personally rejected RFK Jr. Secret Service protection

    From Washington Examiner:

    “It is simply despicable that Secretary Mayorkas refused needed Secret Service protection for Robert F. Kennedy Jr.,” he said, adding, “That it took a federal FOIA lawsuit to force out this information speaks volumes.”

    Read more here…

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  • California caretaker turns himself in after allegedly neglecting 82-year-old mother, killing her

    SANTA ANA, Calif. (TCD) — A 50-year-old man recently turned himself in to police after his mother reportedly died from injuries consistent with elder abuse and neglect last month.

    According to a news release from the Santa Ana Police Department, on Jan. 15, paramedics transported an 82-year-old unconscious woman to the hospital via ambulance. Medical staff determined the victim sustained “numerous wounds all over the back of her legs consistent with neglect,” and a detective subsequently responded to the hospital to investigate possible elder abuse.

    According to police, the woman died from her injuries 10 days later, on Jan. 25.

    Investigators served a search warrant at the home of the victim’s son and primary caretaker, Richard Towers, and identified him as the main suspect in his mother’s death.

    The Orange County District Attorney’s Office filed charges against Towers on counts of murder, elder abuse, and great bodily injury.

    Police obtained a warrant for his arrest and posted a bulletin on Feb. 9 asking for the public’s assistance in finding Towers. He eventually turned himself in on Monday, Feb. 12.

    Towers remains held in the Orange County Jail on $1 million bond.

    MORE:

    • Arrest Made in Homicide Investigation – Santa Ana Police Department
    • Wanted for Murder – Santa Ana Police Department
    • Orange County Jail Records

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  • Huge Spike in Illegal Immigration Along Northern Border, Including from Terrorist Nation

    While most headlines focus on the southern border crisis the United States is also seeing record-breaking numbers of illegal immigrants along the extensive northern border with one U.S. Border Patrol sector reporting more migrants in the last few months than in the last four fiscal years combined. Since October 1, 2023—the start of this fiscal year—agents in the Swanton Sector, which oversees parts of Vermont, New York, and New Hampshire, have apprehended 3,100 subjects from 55 countries, according to chief patrol agent Robert Garcia. In a social media post, Garcia includes a recent photo of an early morning apprehension of four adult males from Bangladesh near Mooers, New York. “The record-breaking surge of illegal entries from Canada continues in Swanton Sector,” Garcia writes, adding that a “citizen’s report in Champlain, NY, led to the arrest of 10 Bangladesh citizens.”

    This is especially concerning because Bangladesh is a hotbed of terrorism. The South-Asian Islamic country is well known as a recruiting ground for terrorist groups such as Al-Qaeda Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) and the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). In the last few years there has been an alarming surge in Bangladeshi migrants trying to enter the U.S. via Mexico, reportedly to conduct attacks. A congressional probe made public a few years ago reveals that migrants from terrorist nations are trying to enter the United States through the southern border at record rates, including an astounding 300% increase in Bangladeshi nationals attempting to sneak into the country through Texas alone. Shortly after the congressional report was released, federal authorities arrested a Mexican-based Bangladeshi smuggler in Houston and charged him with bringing in 15 fellow countrymen through the Texas-Mexico border. His name is Milon Miah and he lives in Tapachula, in the southeast Mexican state of Chiapas bordering Guatemala. Now large numbers of Bangladeshis are coming in through Canada, which shares the world’s largest international border with the U.S.

    Last year more than 12,200 illegal immigrants were apprehended crossing into the U.S. from Canada, a stunning 241% spike from the previous year’s 3,578. The majority were Mexicans who are permitted to fly into Canada without a visa. “The phenomenon has transformed a 295-mile border area along northern New York, Vermont and New Hampshire into a hot spot of migration,” according to a mainstream newspaper story published a few days ago. Around 70% of the illegal crossings last year occurred on that stretch (known as the Swanton Sector), the article reveals. “Rather than deal with an arduous journey through the Darién Gap in Panama and a near-certain encounter with the Border Patrol, migrants from as far as Mexico, India and Venezuela who have the wherewithal have been flying to Canada — taking advantage of border crossings without any imposing walls or fences,” the story says.

    A Democrat New York legislator who represents the northeastern part of the state just south of the Canadian province of Quebec, is quoted in the article blasting the feds. “The northern border has been pretty much ignored,” according to Assemblyman Billy Jones. He also said the federal government is “failing on immigration, and they’re failing the people that live along the border.” The surge in illegal immigration is also overwhelming local officials in New York’s North Country, according to the report. Farmers and residents of small towns in the area are increasingly spotting illegal immigrants on their property after crossing from Canada. “The illegal crossings are sometimes facilitated by new human smuggling operations, often based outside New York, which advertise their services on social media and charge migrants thousands of dollars to get them into the country from Canada, often leaving them indebted to the smugglers,” the news article states.

    The northern border has long been neglected by the government even as serious national security issues prevail in the region. Nearly a decade and a half ago, a federal audit revealed that less than 1% of the U.S.-Canada border is adequately secured by the U.S. Around the same time, another federal investigation found that the Border Patrol was not adequately guarding a rural and dangerous stretch of the Canadian border that runs from Washington to Montana and is rife with drug smuggling and potential terrorism and gang threats. The area is considered an important entry point for aircraft that smuggle drugs from Canada, the probe found. A Montana senator requested the investigation to assess drug trafficking and terrorist threats along the mostly unmanned, 1,000-mile stretch of federal land adjacent to Canada.

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  • 15-year-old arrested in Arkansas after 2 adults and 1 teen are found fatally shot in home

    SALINE COUNTY, Ark. (TCD) — Deputies arrested a 15-year-old male after three people, including a 16-year-old, were fatally shot over the weekend.

    According to KTHV-TV, on Saturday, Feb. 10, at approximately 4 p.m., fire department officials responded to a structure fire on Pryor Drive, where they discovered a victim dead from an apparent gunshot wound. Two other victims who appeared to have been shot were located inside the home.

    The victims have been identified as Jacob Martin Sr., 47, Dara Martin, 53, and Aleah Martin, 16.

    The Saline Courier reports Saline County Sheriff’s Office investigators identified the 15-year-old as a person of interest, and after interviewing him, arrested him on charges of capital murder, arson, abuse of a corpse, and tampering with physical evidence. The teen is being held without bond and will reportedly be charged as adult. His name, however, has not been publicly released.

     The suspect’s relationship to the three victims was not disclosed.

    MORE:

    • Saline County Sheriff’s Office arrest 15-year-old for homicide that left three dead – KTHV
    • Sheriff’s Office identifies victims of triple homicide – The Saline Courier

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  • Reno teen allegedly fatally shot brother, dad because she 'couldn’t control the urge to kill somebody'

    RENO, Nev. (TCD) — A 17-year-old is facing murder charges for allegedly shooting and killing two family members because she “couldn’t control the urge to kill somebody.”

    According to KRNV-TV, on Friday, Feb. 9, at around 4 p.m., Reno Police Department officers were dispatched to a residence on Silver Sky Parkway after a neighbor called to report hearing gunshots. The suspect, Mashenka Reid, reportedly called 911 herself and said, “I shot my dad. I shot my brother. My brother is dead.” She allegedly used a Walther PPS and left the gun in her house.

    Police arrived at the scene and found the brother, who was reportedly 4 or 5 years old, deceased from an apparent gunshot wound to the head. Reid’s younger sister was also at home in another room at the time of the shooting, but it was not immediately clear if the sister sustained any injuries.

    The Reno Gazette Journal reports Reid’s father sustained gunshot wounds to the chest and back. The two victims were pronounced deceased at approximately 4:30 p.m.

    Court documents cited by the Reno Gazette Journal reportedly say Reid told police following the shooting, “I couldn’t control the urge to kill somebody.”

    She was booked into the Washoe County Jail on two counts of open murder and one count of attempted murder with a deadly weapon.

    MORE:

    • Reno teen charged with murder after telling dispatchers she killed younger brother, dad – KRNV
    • “I couldn’t control the urge to kill somebody,” Reno girl tells police – Reno Gazette Journal
    • Washoe County Jail inmate information

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