Tag: Americas

  • Man accused of stabbing and strangling woman who was found dead in river in 2003

    SAGINAW, Mich. (TCN) — Investigators recently identified a suspect in the cold case death of a 57-year-old woman whose body was found in the Flint River over two decades ago.

    According to the Michigan Attorney General’s Office, Jeanette Wilton’s remains were discovered on Feb. 22, 2003, near her home in Saginaw. An autopsy at the time revealed she died of strangulation and multiple stab wounds to her neck. Wilton also suffered blunt force trauma to her head and face, as well as contusions and postmortem abrasions.

    Per WJRT-TV, Assistant Attorney General Danielle Russo Bennetts said Wilton let a man into her home, and within 12 hours, she was found in the Flint River “nude, sexually assaulted, beaten severely,” and “stabbed at least 15 times.” There had been no arrests, and the case went cold.

    Michigan State Police reopened the case in 2021 and submitted DNA evidence to a private lab, eventually linking 47-year-old Jason Cabello to Wilton’s death. Cabello was reportedly married to Wilton’s niece when he allegedly killed her.

    On Dec. 10, Cabello was arraigned on one count of first-degree murder, one count of felony murder, and one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct. He faces a potential life sentence for each count if convicted. Cabello is scheduled to appear in court again on Dec. 17.

    According to WJRT, Cabello began working for the city of Saginaw in 2002.

    Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said, “For more than a decade, Jeanette’s loved ones have lived without answers, but with these charges, we are now one step closer to delivering long-awaited justice.”

    MORE:

    • Saginaw Man Charged for 2003 Cold-Case Murder of Woman Found in Flint River – Michigan Attorney General’s Office
    • Saginaw man arrested in connection with 2003 cold case homicide of Birch Run woman – WJRT

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  • How one twin ‘got away with murder’: Part 1


    Alexandria Duval and her twin sister Anastasia Duval were driving on the famous Road to Hana in Maui when they went careening off a cliff to the rocks below. Anastasia Duval died in the crash. Did Alexandria Duval get away with murder?

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  • How one twin ‘got away with murder’: Part 2


    Alexandria Duval and her twin sister Anastasia Duval were driving on the famous Road to Hana in Maui when they went careening off a cliff to the rocks below. Anastasia Duval died in the crash. Did Alexandria Duval get away with murder?

    Source

  • How one twin ‘got away with murder’

    Alexandria Duval and her twin sister Anastasia Duval were driving on the famous Road to Hana in Maui when they went careening off a cliff to the rocks below. Anastasia Duval died in the crash. Did Alexandria Duval get away with murder?

    Part 1:

    Part 2:

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  • She disappeared months ago. Her husband is now charged with murder.

    Mamta Kafle vanished days before her daughter turned 1. As law enforcement and family continued to search for the Northern Virginia mother, detectives turned their attention to Kafle’s husband, Naresh Bhatt. Police announced Dec. 4, 2024, that they charged Bhatt with first-degree murder despite not having found Kafle’s body.

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  • Ivy League grad Luigi Mangione posted about back pain prior to UnitedHealthcare CEO’s shooting

    Law enforcement in Altoona, Pennsylvania, captured Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old man they allege fatally shot UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside of a Manhattan hotel on Dec. 4, 2024. Some have hailed the Ivy League grad as a folk hero, but prosecutors in New York are working to get him extradited to face murder and other charges.

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  • Indiana woman sentenced to federal prison for stabbing teen because she was of Chinese descent

    BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (TCN) — A 57-year-old woman will spend less than a decade behind bars for stabbing an 18-year-old college student on a public bus because “she was of Chinese descent and so that there was ‘one less enemy.’”

    The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Indiana announced Dec. 11 that Billie Davis pleaded guilty to willfully causing bodily injury to a victim because of her nationality. Davis received a federal prison sentence of six years followed by three years of supervised release for the hate crime.

    According to an initial press release from the Bloomington Police Department, on Jan. 11, 2023, officers responded to a report of an assault that had occurred on a Bloomington Transit bus. Prosecutors said Davis boarded and sat behind the victim, a student enrolled at Indiana University at Bloomington. As the student went to exit the bus, Davis reportedly retrieved a folding knife from her pocket and “stabbed the student in the head approximately seven to 10 times.”

    Federal prosecutors said the victim left the bus “screaming in pain.” She sustained numerous stab wounds and lacerations and required medical sutures and staples.

    Davis reportedly sat down on the bus following the stabbing and stayed there until other passengers confronted her. After exiting the bus, another passenger allegedly approached her, and the defendant “used racist slurs when referring to the victim and claimed the victim posed a threat to the bus because she was Asian.”

    Bloomington Police apprehended Davis, and while speaking with officers, she referred to the victim as “some Asian f—ing c–t.” Davis also allegedly claimed she attacked the student because it “would be one less person to blow up our country.”

    Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division said, “Racially motivated violence has no place in our society. This defendant targeted a young woman, who was simply riding a public bus to school, solely because she was Chinese.”

    MORE:

    • Bloomington Woman Sentenced to Six Years in Federal Prison for Racially Motivated Stabbing of 18-Year-old IU Student of Asian Descent – U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Indiana
    • Bloomington Police Investigate Stabbing, 1/12/2023 — Bloomington Police Department
    • Woman allegedly stabbed Asian student because it would be ‘one less person to blow up our country,’ 4/21/2023 – TCN

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  • 'Hangry' woman allegedly threatened fast-food worker with gun because she was missing french fries

    SAN PABLO, Calif. (TCN) — A fast-food run transformed into felony charges last week when a woman allegedly threatened a fast-food employee with a gun because she was upset that her order was not correct.

    According to a statement, on Thursday, Dec. 5, an employee at an unnamed fast-food restaurant called the San Pablo Police Department to report an “unhappy customer was mad about french fries missing from her order.” The suspect, who was not publicly identified, reportedly had her young kids with her and sent them inside “to express her concerns to the employee.” The employee allegedly told the kids the mother should come inside with the receipt so they could “happily take care of the issue.”

    However, the mother allegedly walked into the restaurant “in a ‘hangry’ state and began threatening to attack several employees, telling them she had a gun in her purse.”

    When officers arrived, they spoke with the woman, who claimed she had a loaded pistol in the purse that her 9-year-old daughter was holding. The girl passed the purse to officers, and they disarmed the gun. Police arrested the woman on charges of criminal threats with a firearm and child endangerment.

    The children’s father picked them up following the woman’s arrest. Police dubbed her the “french fry felon.”

    San Pablo Police wrote, “Needless to say, the woman was booked into county jail on several felonies. She had to wait even longer for her food, which unfortunately was a sandwich and milk rather than a hamburger and fries.”

    MORE:

    • The French Fry Felon – San Pablo Police Department

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  • Judicial Watch: Federal Appeals Court Argument Set in Civil Rights Lawsuit of High School Teacher Fired for Facebook Posts Criticizing Chicago George Floyd Riots

    (Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch announced today that oral argument is scheduled for today, December 12, in the Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals at 9:30 a.m. CT, 10:30 a.m. ET, in a lawsuit filed on behalf of Palatine, Illinois, tenured high school teacher Jeanne Hedgepeth, who was fired by the suburban-Chicago school district where she had worked for 20 years after posting comments on Facebook criticizing the riots, violence, and lootings in Chicago in the aftermath of the May 25, 2020, killing of George Floyd. Live stream of the proceedings can be seen here.

    Hedgepeth made the posts on her private Facebook page while vacationing after the end of the school year, just as some of the most severe violence was occurring. In her posts, Hedgepeth recommended studying Thomas Sowell, whom she described as a “treasure” and a “truth seeker,” and praised political commentator and activist Candice Owens and talk show host Larry Elder. She alleges that the firing violated her First Amendment rights.

    The initial lawsuit asks for damages from the school district, Township High School District 211, and district board members and officials who participated directly in the firing (Hedgepeth v. Britton et al. (No. 1:21-cv-03890)).

    The lawsuit explains:

    In late May and early June 2020, Hedgepeth was vacationing in Florida after the end of the 2019-20 school year when violent street protests, rioting, looting, and shootings erupted in Chicago and many other U.S. cities in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd on May 25, 2020 by Minneapolis police officers. In Chicago alone, 82 persons were shot, 19 fatally, over the May 30-31, 2020 weekend. On May 31, 2020, which the Chicago Sun Times described as the most violent day Chicago had seen in 60 years, Mayor Lori Lightfoot asked Governor J.B. Pritzker to deploy the Illinois National Guard in the city.

    That same day, May 31, 2020, Hedgepeth posted the following photos of herself on the beach in Florida along with the comment, “I don’t want to go home tomorrow. Now that the civil war has begun I want to move.”

    An individual responded, “Follow your gut! Move!!!!!!!!!”  Hedgepeth answered, “I need a gun and training.” The individual replied, “me too!”

    Another individual posted a meme that same day suggesting that the riots could be stopped with a septic tank truck and a pressure cannon. Hedgepeth reposted the meme, obviously in jest, adding, “You think this would work?”

    On or about June 1, 2020, Hedgepeth posted the following comment on Facebook in the course of an exchange of posts begun the previous day with a third individual:

    I am about facts, truth seeking and love. I will speak on any topic I choose because I live in a free country. I find the term “white privilege” as racist as the “N” word. You have not walked in my shoes either so do not make assumptions about me and my so called privilege. You think America is racist? Then you have been hoodwinked by the white liberal establishment and race baiters like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton.  Travel the world and go see that every nation has racism and some more than others but few make efforts such as we do to mitigate or eliminate it. I have lived and seen. The people I am informed by about the black experience in America are actually some of the smartest people in America.  And it so happens they are black. I highly recommend studying Thomas Sowell, who is now retired and in his 80’s. A treasure. A truth seeker. [D]oes REAL research and analysis. Candice Owens is one of the smartest and most courageous women in America and Larry Elders speaks the truth with a great sense of humor and FACTS not feelings. They are who I listen to when it comes to facts about the black experience in America.  Don’t you think there is a deeper problem than racism when 50% of murders in America are committed by 13% of the population? Do you think there might be a subtle genocide of black babies when most planned parenthoods are put in poor neighborhoods and that 30% of abortions are black babies. [B]lack women only make up 7% of the U.S. population. The greatest power you have is what you believe about yourself. [W]hat have Democrats, mainstream media and intellectuals in ivory towers been telling the black community to believe about themselves for forty years? Wake up and stop believing them, then things will change.

    All of Hedgepeth’s posts were on her personal Facebook page. None of Hedgepeth’s posts identified her as a teacher or a District 211 employee, nor did Hedgepeth post them in her capacity as a teacher or a District 211 employee. None of the persons with whom Hedgepeth exchanged Facebook posts were current District 211 or Palatine High School teachers, staff, or students.

     Upon returning from her vacation in early June 2020, Hedgepeth learned that the school district was investigating her for her Facebook posts. She was fired by the school board six weeks later, on July 16, 2020, by a vote of 5-2. In her defense, Hedgepeth noted that the posts were on her private Facebook page and were made “out of school.” She also expressly invoked her First Amendment rights.

    A lower court dismissed the lawsuit. Judicial Watch’s appeal for Hedgepeth asserts the lower court allowed her First Amendment rights to be subject to “heckler’s veto. 

    “Public school teachers don’t lose their First Amendment rights for promoting conservative viewpoints,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “Jeanne Hedgepeth had every right to express herself freely and openly on her private Facebook page, outside of school, about matters of undeniable public concern. Firing her for opposing lawlessness, criticizing Democrats, and questioning the tenets of Critical Racial Theory violated the First Amendment.”

    Judicial Watch is being assisted by attorney Christine Svenson of Palatine, Illinois.

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  • Mo. mom faces involuntary manslaughter charge after allegedly 'accidentally' placing baby into oven

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (TCN) — A mother who allegedly placed her baby into an oven by mistake, killing her, faces a new charge.

    The Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office said in February that Mariah Thomas was initially charged with first-degree endangering the welfare of a child, death of a child. According to court documents, she now faces an additional charge of first-degree involuntary manslaughter.

    In a redacted probable cause statement, authorities said that on Feb. 9, Kansas City Police officers responded to a report of an unresponsive baby. The 1-month-old victim suffered apparent burn injuries and was pronounced dead at the scene.

    The infant’s mother, Thomas, reportedly told her grandfather when she went to put her daughter down for a nap, she “accidentally put her in the oven” instead of her crib. The grandfather called authorities and gave the baby to first responders.

    According to the affidavit, the victim’s clothing “appeared to have melted” onto her diaper, and officials found a baby blanket with “significant burn marks.”

    Thomas remains held in the Jackson County Detention Center.

    MORE:

    • Jackson County Court Records
    • Missouri mother accused of ‘accidentally’ placing 1-month-old baby in oven instead of her crib, 2/12/2024 – TCN
    • State of Missouri vs. Mariah Thomas
    • Kansas City mother charged in connection with her 1-month-old child’s death, 2/10/2024 – Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office
    • Jackson County Detention Center

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