Tag: Americas

  • Most back case-by-case Jan. 6 pardons, even 68% of Democrats

    From Washington Examiner:

    The public broadly supports pardons of defendants charged in the Jan. 6 Capitol riots on a case-by-case basis, essentially the plan put forward by President-elect Donald Trump.

    “The Jan. 6 prosecutions were irredeemably corrupted by politics. President Trump should pardon or commute the sentences of each and every Jan. 6 defendant,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton told Secrets.

    His group is suing the government in the wrongful death case of protester Ashli Babbitt, gunned down by a U.S. Capitol Police officer as she entered the Speaker’s Lobby in the Capitol.

    Read more here…

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  • Georgia woman who egged house and killed boyfriend amid 'ongoing lover's quarrel' is sentenced

    SPALDING COUNTY, Ga. (TCN) — A woman recently pleaded guilty to fatally shooting her boyfriend while he was at another woman’s house amid an ongoing dispute.

    The District Attorney’s Office for the Griffin Judicial Circuit announced Dec. 3 that a judge sentenced Sydney Maughon to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 30 years for malice murder.

    According to an initial press release from the Spalding County Sheriff’s Office, on July 3, 2023, deputies responded to a report of a man down on Dobbins Mill Road, where they found Jonathan Gilbert dead from apparent gunshot wounds. He had no identification on him at the time, but investigators were able to positively identify him via fingerprint scan.

    Spalding County Sheriff Darrell Dix said an “ongoing lover’s quarrel” led to the fatal incident. According to prosecutors and the sheriff’s office, then-18-year-old Maughon, 18-year-old Jeremy Munson, and 19-year-old McKenzie Davenport went to a woman’s home who Maughon “had been threatening to fight over Instagram.” Maughon “became enraged” because her boyfriend, Gilbert, was at the woman’s house at the time, and she and Davenport threw eggs and rocks at him, prosecutors said. The victim reportedly noticed and went outside unarmed to confront them.

    In a video recording, the district attorney’s office said Gilbert is seen running toward the back of the home, and Maughon is heard telling another person to “shoot him, shoot him.”

    Gilbert purportedly went up to the defendant’s car, and Maughon retrieved Munson’s firearm and shot her boyfriend twice. Following the shooting, Davenport allegedly ran from the vehicle to have someone call 911.

    According to prosecutors, Maughon and Munson fled to Maughon’s parents’ home, where they live. They told Maughon’s father about the incident and gave him the gun. The father reportedly hid the weapon in the closet and urged them not to call authorities, but “to let the police find them.”

    The district attorney’s office said Maughon and Munson then went to work at Pizza Hut, but Davenport helped police find the suspects by allowing them to use her phone’s tracking feature. Davenport had also reportedly left her shoes and cellphone in the vehicle when she went to call authorities.

    Davenport entered a plea to two misdemeanor charges for her role in the shooting, while Munson’s case has not yet been finalized.

    Senior Assistant District Attorney Audrey D. Holliday said, “This case is absolutely senseless and tragic. Ms. Maughon coldly, callously, and maliciously shot and killed a young man that had nothing to do with the drama she wanted to create with this other female. She and Mr. Munson then left him in the street to die and went to work.”

    MORE:

    • Press Release – Griffin Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office
    • Media Release, 7/7/2023 – Spalding County Sheriff’s Office

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  • Man extradited to U.S. 27 years after he allegedly killed N.J. woman, left her body in dirt

    BRIDGEWATER, N.J. (TCN) — A 60-year-old Canadian man has been extradited to the United States to face murder charges for allegedly killing a young woman 27 years ago.

    The Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office announced Dec. 2 that U.S. Marshals brought Robert Creter to New Jersey and booked him into the Somerset County Jail on an impending charge of murder in connection with the 1997 death of Tamara “Tammy” Tignor.

    On Nov. 4, 1997, a Bridgewater resident called police and reported finding a woman’s body in the dirt at the end of a cul-de-sac. Detectives arrived and identified the victim as Tignor, who lived in Newark. The autopsy determined her manner of death was homicide. Despite the investigation into her death, Tignor’s case went cold and stayed unsolved for years.

    Almost 26 years later, in January 2023, detectives from the Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office Major Crimes Unit and New Jersey State Police Cold Case Unit had a meeting to discuss the case as part of the Sexual Assault Kit Initiative Grant. Investigators sent evidence from Tignor’s case to a lab for advanced DNA testing, and three months later, results from the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) came back with a close match to Creter.

    The prosecutor’s office authorized a first-degree murder charge for Creter, though he moved to Canada in 2002. The prosecutor’s office and U.S. State Department worked with officials in Canada, where he was arrested on June 27. He was returned to New Jersey on Nov. 26.

    Somerset County Assistant Prosecutor Mike McLaughlin said in a press conference that Tignor’s mother called detectives every year on the anniversary of her daughter’s death for updates on the case. McLaughlin spoke with Tignor’s mother after Creter’s arrest and said it was “very emotional.”

    New Jersey State Police superintendent Patrick Callahan shared, “The arrest of a suspect in this decades-old case is a testament to the unwavering dedication of law enforcement to seek justice, no matter how much time has passed.”

    MORE:

    • Man Arrested for 1997 Bridgewater Township Homicide – Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office

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  • Woman sentenced for killing bride hours after her wedding in drunk driving crash

     

    CHARLESTON, S.C. (TCN) — A judge sentenced a woman to over two decades years behind bars after she pleaded guilty to driving drunk and killing a bride hours after the victim’s wedding.

    Court records show Jamie Komoroski was sentenced Monday, Dec. 2, to 25 years in prison for killing Samantha Miller and injuring two others in April 2023. WCSC-TV reports Komoroski received 25 years for DUI causing death, 15 for two counts of DUI causing great bodily injury, and 10 for reckless homicide. The terms will run concurrently.

    According to Komoroski’s affidavit, on April 28 at 10:16 p.m., a Folly Beach Police Department officer responded to a vehicle collision with injuries call on the 1200 block of East Ashley Avenue and found a “large crash scene with a golf cart on its side up against a gray Toyota Camry.” The officer saw multiple victims but focused on Miller because she was unconscious and did not have a pulse. Other victims at the scene, including Miller’s new husband Aric Hutchinson, were reportedly “in and out of consciousness” and seriously injured.

    The officer later approached Komoroski, who did not have any injuries but had “an odor of alcohol coming from her breath and person.” Komoroski told the officer she had a beer and shot of tequila an hour prior to the crash but felt very drunk. The officer asked Komoroski to take a sobriety test, but she “strongly refused and became uncooperative.” The affidavit says she appeared “very unsteady on her feet and almost fell down.” The officer detained her and took her to the police department for questioning, where she refused to take a Breathalyzer test.

    Komoroski was taken to the hospital for a blood test and returned to the Charleston County Jail.

    WCSC reports Komoroski’s blood alcohol level was over three times the legal limit at 0.261%. She was driving her Camry at around 65 mph when it hit the golf cart transporting Miller, Hutchinson, Hutchinson’s brother-in-law, and the brother-in-law’s son. The brother-in-law, Benjamin Garrett, was reportedly driving Hutchinson and Miller back from their wedding to the house where they were staying. Miller was still wearing her wedding dress when she died.

    Garrett said at Komoroski’s sentencing, “It was my only job and I didn’t get to complete it.”

    Hutchinson filed a wrongful death suit against Komoroski and the bars and restaurants she went to in her “booze-filled day of bar-hopping.” Hutchinson gave a victim impact statement, saying, “We didn’t get hit, we got ran through. All four of us should have died that night. I believe Sam saved us. It’s who she is. She would have taken one for all of us.”

    Komoroski told the judge and victims, “For the rest of my life, I will carry this guilt and take full responsibility.”

    Hutchinson told WCSC afterwards, “I feel like the punishment fit the crime. I do think she’s sorry. However, that doesn’t change the fact that Sam’s not here, my wife’s not here, the family we planned, all of our injuries. So that’ll take some time for sure.”

    MORE:

    • State of South Carolina vs. Jamie Komoroski
    • Jamie Komoroski affidavit
    • Woman receives maximum sentence in Folly Beach crash that killed newlywed – WCSC
    • Woman indicted for allegedly drunkenly crashing car into couple on wedding night, killing bride, 9/22/2023 – TCN
    • Bride killed, groom injured hours after wedding when suspected drunk driver hits their golf cart, 5/2/2023 – TCN

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  • Virginia man charged with murder after his wife went missing several months ago

    MANASSAS PARK, Va. (TCN) — The husband of a 28-year-old mother who disappeared several months ago now faces a charge of murder even though her remains have not yet been found.

    Prince William County court documents show that Naresh Bhatt was charged Dec. 2 with murder and physically defile dead body in connection with the disappearance and death of his wife, Mamta Kafle. He was charged in September with concealment of a dead body .

    According to the Manassas Park Police Department, Kafle was last seen at University of Virginia Health Prince William Medical Center on July 27 but spoke to a friend the following the day. Her husband reportedly said he last saw her on July 31.

    Two days later, police responded to Kafle’s home to perform a welfare check and spoke with her husband. Bhatt initially “did not want to report her missing” but eventually did so on Aug. 5. A statewide missing person investigation ensued, and detectives “were able to elevate her missing status to an involuntary/critical missing person” case.

    On Aug. 31, police executed a search warrant on Kafle’s residence and arrested Bhatt on a felony charge of prohibition against concealment of dead body. According to Manassas Park Police Chief Mario Lugo, Bhatt was home with the couple’s baby daughter when officials first searched the house and found evidence of blood in the bedroom and bathroom. Lugo announced in a press conference that investigators later found Kafle’s DNA in the blood evidence and believe her body had been dragged from the bedroom to the bathroom.

    Court documents reviewed by WDVM-TV allege there was blood stuck in parts of the bathtub and that the home was in disarray.

    Bhatt allegedly purchased three knives on July 30 and then bought cleaning supplies the following day to conceal his crimes, but authorities only found one knife.

    The police chief alleges that Bhatt killed his wife sometime on or around July 29. Investigators believe Bhatt also dismembered Kafle at their home. It was only after her disappearance that police learned of previous domestic violence allegations against Bhatt.

    WDVM-TV reports Bhatt initially appeared in court on Aug. 26, and prosecutors read aloud some of Bhatt’s recent online searches, which included “how long does take to marry after spouse dies” and “what happen debt after spouse dies.”

    According to WUSA-TV, Bhatt sold his Tesla on Aug. 19 and was struggling with car payments and a mortgage.

    Police said the couple’s daughter was placed in the custody of the Department of Social Services and is safe.

    The Associated Press reports that the victim worked as a pediatric nurse.

    For more about the case, watch the “True Crime News” video below.

    MORE:

    • Naresh Bhatt charged with murder of Mamta Kafle Bhatt | Full Press Conference – WUSA
    • Virginia Courts Case Information
    • Investigators reportedly find blood, knife amid search for missing Virginia wife, 8/27/2024 – TCN
    • Virginia man charged with murder 4 months after his wife’s disappearance – Associated Press
    • Missing Person Update, 8/15/2024 – Manassas Park Police Department
    • News Release, 8/22/2024 – Manassas Park Police Department
    • Husband of missing Manassas Park mom Mamta Kafle Bhatt denied bond, 8/26/2024 – WDVM
    • Everything we know about Naresh Bhatt, 8/27/2024 – WUSA
    • Court documents: Mamta Kafle Bhatt’s husband accused of murdering her, dragging her from home, 8/23/2024 – WDVM

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  • Criminal enterprise busted while operating in school zone; Doctor caught in murder plot to kill wife – TCNPOD

    This Week on True Crime News The Podcast: A look inside the covert operations happening across the country to infiltrate criminal organizations and keep communities safe. Lou Valoze joins host Ana Garcia to discuss ID’s docuseries “Operation Undercover.”

    Check out all-new episodes of “Operation Undercover” on Tuesdays at 10/9C on ID and streaming on Max.

    YouTube: Criminal enterprise busted while operating in school zone; Doctor caught in murder plot to kill wife



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  • Judicial Watch: Court Finds Fani Willis in Default in Open Records Lawsuit, Orders Her to Produce Records in Five Business Days

    (Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch announced today that the Superior Court in Fulton County entered an order granting a motion for default judgment against District Attorney Fani Willis in Judicial Watch’s lawsuit for communications Willis had with Special Counsel Jack Smith and the House January 6 Committee. In doing so, the court grants Judicial Watch’s request for attorneys’ fees and orders Willis to search for and provide releasable records to Judicial Watch within five business days. 

    The March 2024 lawsuit was filed in the Superior Court of Fulton County, GA, after Willis and the county denied having any records responsive to an August 2023 Georgia Open Records Act (ORA) request for communications with the Special Counsel’s office and/or the January 6 Committee (Judicial Watch Inc. v. Fani Willis et al. (No. 24-CV-002805)).

    In its lawsuit Judicial Watch stated that Willis’ “representation about not having records responsive to the request is likely false.” Judicial Watch referred to a December 5, 2023, letter from House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan to Willis that cites a December 2021 letter from Willis to then-House January 6 Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-MS). In that letter Willis requested assistance from the committee and offered to travel to DC.

    In May 2024, Judicial Watch asked the court to declare a default judgment, noting that Willis was served with the lawsuit in March 2024 and had “not filed an answer,” which “was due 30 days after service.”

    The recently issued default judgment states: “The Court finds Defendant [Willis, in her official capacity] is in default and has been since 11 April 2024.” Further, Willis “never moved to open default on any basis (not even during the period when she could have opened default as a matter of right), she never paid costs, and she never offered up a meritorious defense.”

    Plaintiff is thus entitled to judgment by default as if every item and paragraph of the complaint were supported by proper and sufficient evidence. O.C.G.A. § 9-11-55(a). Here, this means Plaintiff has established that Defendant violated the ORA by failing to either turn over responsive records or else notify Plaintiff of her decision to withhold some or all such records.

    In its complaint, Plaintiff sought the following relief:

     1) a declaration that Defendant has violated the ORA;

    2) an order for Defendant to search for all records responsive to Plaintiff’s request without further delay;

    3) an injunction ordering Defendant to cease withholding non-exempt public records responsive to the request;

    4) an award of attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 50-18-73(b);

    5) a writ of mandamus, ordering Defendant to provide the requested records; and

    6) any other relief the Court deems proper. 

    By finding Defendant in default, the Court has in effect declared that she has violated the ORA. The Court also hereby ORDERS Defendant to conduct a diligent search of her records for responsive materials within five business days of the entry of this Order. Within that same five day period, Defendant is ORDERED to provide Plaintiff with copies of all responsive records that are not legally exempted or excepted from disclosure. If Defendant is required or decides to withhold all or part of a requested record, she should follow the procedures set forth in the ORA (see O.C.G.A. § 50-18-71(d)). If the records are stored electronically, they may be produced electronically in a commonly used format such as PDF. The Court expects that such production will include the correspondence identified by Plaintiff in its complaint. If it does not, Defendant is further ORDERED to provide an explanation why such correspondence does not exist in Defendant’s records (or why it is being withheld). Beyond that, no other relief, injunctive or otherwise, is necessary at this time (to include striking Defendant’s answer, which is of no effect based on the Court’s finding of default). 

    The court set a hearing on the Judicial Watch’s attorneys fees award for December 20.

    “Fani Willis is something else. We’ve been doing this work for 30 years, and this is the first time in our experience a government official has been found in default for not showing up in court to answer an open records lawsuit.,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said. “Judicial Watch looks forward to getting any documents from the Fani Willis operation about collusion with the Biden administration and Nancy Pelosi’s Congress on her unprecedented and compromised ‘get-Trump’ prosecution.”

    Judicial Watch is assisted in the case by John Monroe of John Monroe Law in Georgia.

    Judicial Watch has several Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuits related to the prosecutorial abuse targeting Trump:

     In February 2024, the U.S. Department of Justice asked 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.

    (Before his appointment to investigate and prosecute Trump, Specia Counsel Jack Smith previously was at the center of several 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. Read more here.)

    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.

    In October 2023, Judicial Watch sued the DOJ for records and communications between the Office of U.S. Special Counsel Jack Smith and the Fulton County, Georgia, District Attorney’s office regarding requests/receipt of federal funding/assistance in the investigation of former President Trump and his 18 codefendants in the Fulton County indictment of August 14, 2023. To date, the DOJ is refusing to confirm or deny the existence of records, claiming that to do so would interfere with enforcement proceedings. Judicial Watch’s litigation challenging this is continuing.

    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.

    In his new book Rights and Freedoms in Peril Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton details a long chain of abuses officials and politicians have made against the American people and calls readers to battle for “the soul and survival of America.”

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  • Govt. Saves $67.5 Billion after Some Federal Agencies are Directed to Improve Efficiency

    Demonstrating the need for President-elect Donald Trump’s new Department of Government Efficiency, the investigative arm of Congress had to direct some government agencies to “improve the efficiency and effectiveness of federal programs” in order to save a colossal $67.5 billion in fiscal year 2024, which ended in September. Otherwise, American taxpayers would be forced to pick up the tab for yet more government waste, which is rampant and has long persisted under both Democratic and Republican administrations.

    To save the tens of billions, seemingly a drop in the bucket considering the government spent $6.75 trillion in fiscal year 2024, the few federal agencies involved had to receive instructions from the Government Accountability Office (GAO). The nonpartisan and independent Congressional watchdog examines how taxpayer dollars are spent and provides lawmakers with objective and fact-based information to help the government save money and work more efficiently. Here are some examples that led to the latest savings. The GAO directed Medicaid to better align states’ estimates for demonstrations with recent costs, saving $13.4 billion. The Department of Energy (DOE) halted construction on a facility that is no longer necessary for treating nuclear and hazardous waste, saving $6 billion. The Department of Defense (DOD) was instructed to identify improper payments, errors, and fraud, resulting in $4.8 billion in savings. The Small Business Administration (SBA) was forced to crack down on the rampant fraud of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) that doled out monstrous sums of money to small businesses recovering from the pandemic, resulting in the decline of $2.1 billion in ineligible or fraudulent applicants.

    The list of examples continues and can be viewed in detail in the GAO’s lengthy report, which was recently released to the public and covers the agency’s overall performance and accountability for 2024. The watchdog estimates that the questionable programs it is currently targeting will save American taxpayers at least $50 billion in fiscal year 2025. The GAO has cracked down on tens of thousands of reckless government programs since 2002, saving approximately $1.45 trillion. However, many federal agencies have blown off thousands of recommendations that could result in $106 billion to $208 billion in financial benefits, according to GAO estimates. The congressional watchdog implies that it more than earns its keep with a budget that is a lot smaller—$811.9 million in fiscal year 2024—than the money it saves taxpayers by promoting better management throughout government, which should occur without the GAO’s mandates.

    Careless spending has long been an issue for government agencies, which are typically bloated and mismanaged, and the problem has worsened significantly under the Biden administration illustrating a need for the Department of Government Efficiency. The office will be headed by billionaire Elon Musk, the head of electric car company Tesla, rocket company SpaceX and social media platform X and Vivek Ramaswamy, a pharmaceutical entrepreneur and Yale Law School graduate. Besides cutting wasteful spending the new department will be tasked with dismantling government bureaucracy, slashing excess regulations, and restructuring federal agencies. It will send shockwaves through the system, and anyone involved in government waste, according to Musk.

    Judicial Watch has for decades exposed enormous amounts of government waste and this year alone has reported on well over a billion dollars in reckless spending, just a snippet of a widespread issue. That does not include mandatory spending such as Social Security, Medicare or military and homeland security, areas that are also plagued by waste. There is a category listed as “other” in which government doled out an astonishing $238 billion in fiscal year 2024 and some of the allocations are downright outrageous. Examples range from $15 million to fight climate change in an Islamic nation that hates America and serves as a recruiting ground for terrorist groups such as Al-Qaeda Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) and the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) to half a billion dollars to build electric vehicle charges in mostly underserved communities to $2 million to combat corruption in Mexican sports betting.

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  • 'You don't belong there': Woman helps free the man wrongfully convicted of killing her mom

    In this episode of True Crime News: Melissa DeBoer watched her mother get viciously attacked and murdered. Then, the suspect came after her and her sister. DeBoer helped put Rodney Lincoln, the man she believed killed her mom, behind bars, but DeBoer later realized her mother died at the hands of a serial killer. She joined the fight to free Lincoln, who is now home and reunited with his family.

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  • Estranged husband arrested after wife and her 2 dogs found deceased

    CLACKAMAS COUNTY, Ore. (TCN) — Authorities recently arrested a 71-year-old man on suspicion of killing his missing 61-year-old estranged wife and her two dogs.

    According to the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office, Susan Lane-Fournier was reported missing on Nov. 22 after she failed to show up to work. The following day, an individual located Lane-Fournier’s white 1992 Ford F-250 parked near East Salmon River Road and the Green Canyon Way Trail. Prior to her disappearance, Lane-Fournier went on a hike in the area with her two Malinois dogs. Several law enforcement agencies searched for the 61-year-old but ceased operations on Nov. 26 due to “weather conditions and the likelihood of survivability.”

    After a multi-day search, investigators with the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue Team found human remains near Welches on Nov. 29. The Oregon State Medical Examiner’s Office positively identified the victim as Lane-Fournier and ruled her death a homicide.

    On Nov. 30, the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office located two deceased dogs believed to be Lane-Fournier’s. Authorities are working to positively identify the dogs and have not disclosed how they died or whether foul play was involved.

    Detectives identified Michel Fournier as the primary suspect in Lane-Fournier’s death and arrested him on a charge of second-degree murder. He remains held in the Clackamas County Jail without bail.

    According to court documents reviewed by KOIN-TV, prior to her death, Lane-Fournier had filed for divorce after 12 years of marriage with Fournier.

    MORE:

    • Investigation underway after person found deceased in Welches Area and Update – Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office
    • Estranged husband arrested for murder after missing woman’s body found – KOIN
    • Sheriff’s Office seeks tips in search for Susan Lane-Fournier – Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office

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