Tag: Americas

  • Father convicted of beating 4-year-old daughter into a 'vegetative state' after she wet the bed

    THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. (TCN) — A 28-year-old father has been convicted of severely beating his young daughter, who was found unconscious in 2021.

    Ventura County District Attorney Erik Nasarenko announced Nov. 12 that a jury found Tekquan Alexander guilty of torture, assault on a child causing a comatose condition, and corporal injury to a child. The defendant was also convicted of special allegations, including the victim being vulnerable, Alexander taking advantage of a position of trust, and causing great bodily injury to a child under 5.

    According to a news release from the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office, on the morning of Nov. 29, 2021, deputies responded to an ambulance follow-up on Lemonberry Place in Thousand Oaks, where county fire personnel were providing CPR on a 4-year-old girl. Investigators determined Alexander physically abused the child, causing severe injuries.

    According to KTLA-TV, on Nov. 25, 2021, the defendant struck his daughter with a belt, and he abused her days later with a belt and electronic cable after she wet the bed. Alexander allegedly continued to abuse her until she went unconscious in the bathroom.

    The victim was airlifted to Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles with traumatic brain and spine injuries, broken bones, and multiple cuts and bruises.

    Deputy District Attorney Rikole Kelly said the child “faces a future filled with unimaginable challenges due to the defendant’s reprehensible conduct, but today’s verdict holds him accountable and brings a measure of justice to her and to all those profoundly affected by this case.”

    Alexander is set to be sentenced in December and faces a maximum sentence of seven years to life in state prison.

    MORE:

    • Thousand Oaks Father Convicted of Torturing Four-Year-Old Daughter – Ventura County District Attorney’s Office
    • 4-year-old girl found severely beaten and unconscious in California, father arrested, 12/1/2021 – TCN
    • Suspect Arrested In Connection With Child Abuse and Weapons Charges, 11/30/2021 – Ventura County Sheriff’s Office
    • Ventura County man convicted of beating 4-year-old daughter into ‘vegetative state’ – KTLA

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  • Evidence Abounds of Need for Dept. of Government Efficiency to Rein in Wasteful Spending

    President-elect Donald Trump’s creation of a new Department of Government Efficiency to, among other things, cut wasteful expenditures is a welcome addition for American taxpayers who have seen record amounts of public funds go to all sorts of outrageous projects during the Biden administration. The much-needed 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.

    For decades Judicial Watch has exposed enormous amounts of government waste, and the problem has skyrocketed under the Biden administration. In 2024 alone, the Corruption Chronicles has reported on well over a billion dollars in reckless spending, which is just a snippet of a widespread issue because the entire of list of wasteful government-funded initiatives is far too long. Of course, this does not include mandatory spending such as Social Security and Medicare, which have reached $1.46 trillion and $874 billion respectively in fiscal year 2024, according to figures published by the U.S. Treasury. This year the government has spent $6.75 trillion, which is more than it collected, resulting in a deficit. The spending includes critical areas such as military and homeland security, but there is a category listed as “other” in which the government doled out $238 billion this fiscal year.

    Here are a few examples uncovered by Judicial Watch in a 10-month period that would likely be on the radar of a Department of Government Efficiency. Just a few weeks into the new year, Uncle Sam gave Bangladesh, 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), $15 million to fight climate change. Bangladesh is also notorious for violating human rights, which the U.S. often cites as a deal breaker involving aid to foreign governments. A few weeks after giving the South-Asian Islamic country millions to combat climate change, the Department of Justice (DOJ) awarded a public university nearly $1 million, as part of Biden’s fictitious crisis to control information and censor Americans, for a project that tracks the spread of “mis-, dis-, and mal-information (MDM)” by internet users in real time.

    As spring approached, the administration doled out over half a million dollars so researchers at a public university could apply controversial critical race theory in the treatment of opioid use disorder, which the government says disproportionately impacts minorities. Haiti continued to receive millions from the U.S. even after billions in aid perished, armed gangs took over the impoverished island and violence and lawlessness gripped the country. Money also kept flowing into Vice President Kamala Harris’s failed initiative to curb illegal immigration, with a $170 million spring infusion to a laughable experiment promoted as a magical tool that will improve life enough in three central American countries to deter citizens from coming to the U.S. illegally by creating jobs, supporting education and enhancing food security. The president claims the project tackles the “root causes” or drivers of irregular migration and he dedicated an astounding $4 billion to it even as illegal immigration from the three nations—El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras—shattered records.

    The list of outrageous government-funded programs kept growing and as summer approached the administration dedicated half a million dollars to a project that reportedly combats misinformation in Africa and $4 million to reduce barriers that impede access to education and decent work for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, questioning, intersex (LGBTQI+) youth in Latin America and the Caribbean. When summer rolled around the government allotted $2 million to combat corruption in Mexican sports betting and a whopping half a billion dollars to build electric vehicle chargers in mostly underserved communities. The questionable spending extended into fall with a $46 million allocation from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to tackle nutrition insecurity in underserved communities with a chunk of the money going to strengthen the food system for “Queer & Trans (QT) and Black, Indigenous People of Color (BIPOC),” provide illegal immigrants from Latin America with “culturally responsible fresh food” and the black immigrant community with a special “African food access” project. The list will undoubtedly grow as the Biden presidency comes to an end, illustrating the need to make government more efficient.

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  • Wash. parents allegedly choked teen daughter in attempted honor killing because she refused marriage

    LACEY, Wash. (TCN) — A married couple is facing multiple charges for allegedly attacking their 17-year-old daughter outside of her high school in what is believed to be an attempted honor killing because she refused an arranged marriage.

    According to KOMO-TV, on Oct. 18, the victim reportedly went to her school for help after her parents, Ihsan Ali and Zahraa Ali, allegedly threatened to kill her because she rejected their plan of an arranged marriage to an older man in another country. She reportedly rushed into the school yelling, “My dad was trying to kill me. He was trying to kill me.” The school went on lockdown as teachers and staff tried to protect the teen, but Ihsan Ali and Zahraa Ali confronted the girl outside.

    Court records cited by KOMO allege Ihsan Ali choked the teen “to the point where she had lost consciousness.” Witnesses, including the victim’s boyfriend, reportedly tried to help her, but Ihsan Ali punched the boyfriend.

    The boyfriend’s father told KCPQ-TV that his son was “fighting for the girl’s life.”

    The dad described, “Her arms go limp. She’s no longer moving. He starts to see her eyes roll back, and her arms start flailing and that’s when he sprung into action because he didn’t want to see someone he cared about pass away.”

    The victim was reportedly scheduled to fly to Iraq for her arranged marriage the same day her parents attacked her at school. She was trying to make her way to a shelter when the altercation occurred.

    Once the teen was “dragged out of the headlock,” her mother, Zahraa Ali, allegedly started assaulting her. The victim’s boyfriend “was able to grab her and take her away from mom.”

    KOMO reports the boyfriend’s father got a temporary restraining order against Zahraa Ali because she reportedly regularly went to his house to look for her daughter. The school also prevented Zahraa Ali from entering the grounds.

    Thurston County Jail records show Zahraa Ali was arrested Oct. 23 on charges of second-degree domestic violence assault, attempted second-degree murder, burglary, attempted second-degree kidnapping, attempted first-degree kidnapping, and violation of a protection order. Ihsan Ali was booked Nov. 5 for attempted second-degree murder, attempted second-degree kidnapping, attempted first-degree kidnapping, fourth-degree assault, and second-degree domestic violence assault.

    North Thurston Public Schools told KOMO in a statement, “We work with families, staff, and law enforcement partners to maintain safety and security on our campuses, and we take student and staff safety extremely seriously. When unique situations arise, we work with concerned parties to provide a safe learning environment, and we are doing so in this case.”

    MORE:

    • Alleged ‘honor killing’ attempt leads to parents’ arrest outside of Lacey high school – KOMO
    • Lacey parents charged in possible attempted honor killing of daughter – KCPQ
    • Thurston County Jail inmate information

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  • How Kamala Harris plowed through $1 billion

    From Washington Examiner:

    The story of how Harris pocketed record sums while failing to gain support from voters will be studied by campaigns for decades to come. Democrats who successfully pressured octogenarian President Joe Biden to pass the torch to the former California senator are now conducting an internal autopsy of the 2024 race, in which Trump raised and spent hundreds of millions of dollars less than Harris.

    “A billion dollars paled in comparison to the increased prices Americans were seeing across the country,” Tom Fitton, president of the conservative group Judicial Watch and a longtime Trump ally, told the Washington Examiner. “Voters weren’t fooled.”

    Read more here…

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  • 'A bad situation': Chanel Banks shares her side of the story after her family reported her missing

    LOS ANGELES (TCN) — Chanel Banks, the “Gossip Girl” and “Blue Bloods” actress whose family reported her missing, spoke to “True Crime News” exclusively about her whereabouts and how she left town to get herself “out of a bad situation.”

    Banks’ mother and cousin reported her missing to the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), saying she had not been seen or heard from in several weeks. Police conducted welfare checks at her apartment, but Banks wasn’t there. Banks, however, says she was never missing in the first place.

    She said, “I had to take myself out of a bad situation. I’m sure a lot of people can relate to that, and what transpired from that is what you are seeing in the media now, specifically from the people I’ve gotten away from.”

    “True Crime News” has not corroborated Banks’ claims, but we have reached out to her family.

    Banks revealed that over the last few months, she “noticed the leash was getting longer, so I took advantage of that, and I kind of made preparations to head out, so to speak.” She believes that her decision to get out of town “really bamboozled” her mother and made her “really upset.”

    She said she made attempts in the past to leave, but her mother always halted those plans.

    Law enforcement located Banks in Texas on Nov. 13 and she verified her identity to them, but her family did not believe it was actually her. “True Crime News” also spoke with Banks on FaceTime this week and saw her license as proof. She told “True Crime News,” “It wasn’t enough that the LAPD verified my identity. It wasn’t enough that the Texas law enforcement verified my identity. It wasn’t enough that there was a camera with me, speaking on it clear as a day, saying, ‘Please leave me alone.’ It wasn’t enough.”

    According to Banks, she hasn’t spoken extensively to her cousin in 10 years. She explained that she talked to her cousin “very briefly” about three weeks ago when the cousin was with Banks’ mother. Banks said her cousin got her phone number, and “she sent me a text once, but I this is not someone I have a relationship with. We definitely don’t have a sister-sister relationship.”

    Banks told “True Crime News” that she feels grateful for the people who checked in on her and she looks forward to seeing what her future holds.

    Be sure to watch “True Crime News” for the rest of Banks’ interview and other top stories.

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  • West Point DEI Update!

    Judicial Watch Sues for Records on Rebranding of West Point’s DEI Office
    Judicial Watch Sues over $27M Grants for Use in Gaza
    NIH Gives University $5 Mil to Study if its Racial Equity Institute Works

     

    Judicial Watch Sues for Records on Rebranding of West Point’s DEI Office

    It seems games are afoot at West Point to disguise its radical diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) agenda.

    We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Defense for information regarding the rebranding of West Point’s DEI office to “Office of Engagement and Retention” (Judicial Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Defense(No. 1:24-cv-02941)).

    We sued in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia after the United States Military Academy at West Point failed to respond to an August 28, 2024, FOIA request for:

    1. All documents related to the renaming of and/or elimination of West Point’s “Office of Diversity, Inclusion and Equal Opportunity” (ODIEO).

    2. All documents related to the creation of West Point’s “Office of Engagement and Retention.”

    3. All emails related to the matters addressed in Bullets 1 and 2 sent to and from the following USMA officials: Superintendent LTG Steve Gilland, Dean BG Shane Reeves, Commandant BG R.J. Garcia, and Chief Diversity Officer Lisa Benitez.

    Reporting in August 2024 detailed the name change:

    The West Point Office of “Diversity, Inclusion and Equal Opportunity” is now called the “Office of Engagement and Retention”…. On the West Point page, there’s not much change beyond the title …

    We recently sued on behalf of Stand Together Against Racism and Radicalism in the Services, Inc. (STARRS) against the U.S. Department of Defense for records regarding the U.S. Air Force Academy’s diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) plans.

    In June 2024, we sued the Defense Department for records regarding the deletion of the words “Duty, Honor, Country” from the United States Military Academy at West Point’s mission statement.

    In March 2023, records we obtained from the Department of Defense showed the Air Force Academy has made race and gender instruction a top priority in the training of cadets.

    In July 2023, we exposed records from the United States Air Force Academy that included instructional materials and emails that address topics such as Critical Race Theory, “white privilege,” and Black Lives Matter.

    In July 2022, we sued the Department of Defense for records related to the United States Naval Academy (USNA) implementing Critical Race Theory (CRT) in the training of naval recruits.

    In June 2022, we received records revealing Critical Race Theory instruction at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point One training slide contains a graphic titled “MODERN-DAY SLAVERY IN THE USA.” [Emphasis in original].

     

    Judicial Watch Sues over $27M Grants for Use in Gaza

    There’s something fishy in aid to the Middle East.

    We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) for records about $27 million in U.S. grants awarded to “Miscellaneous Foreign Awardees” that have been designated for use in Gaza (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Agency for International Development (No. 1:24-cv-02159)).

    On April 2, 2024, we filed a FOIA request with the USAID for:

    1. All records identifying the recipients of USAID funding under the $7,000,000 grant allocation awarded on or about November 15, 2023, and associated with Federal Award Identification Number 720BHA24GR00005.

    2. All proposals, applications, scope of work documents, or similar records related to any grant award or sub-award associated with Federal Award Identification Number 720BHA24GR00005.

    Recently USAID produced records in this case but is refusing to disclose what organizations received the money. We are challenging that withholding. USAID reports that over $282 million was obligated to the West Bank and Gaza in fiscal year 2023.

    On October 7, 2023, Hamas—a U.S.-designated terrorist organization—invaded southwest Israel, killing over a thousand people and kidnapping hundreds of others.

    On November 15, 2023, the Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance, a component of the USAID, issued a $7 million grantfor “multisectoral response in Gaza.” The grant was awarded to “Miscellaneous Foreign Awardees.” The same day a “continuation” grant of $20 million was also issued for “multisectoral response.”

    The involvement of employees of a U.S.-backed multinational organization in the October 7 attack on Israel underscores the importance of transparency in who receives U.S. taxpayer dollars and how they are spent. This is critical to protecting the national security of the U.S. and Israel.

     

    NIH Gives University $5 Mil to Study if its Racial Equity Institute Works

    Using your tax dollars, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) researchers at a public university will be scanning people’s brains to see if the center it launched in 2021 to address systemic racism has been effective. Our Corruption Chroniclesblog takes a closer look:

    A public university in Pennsylvania is getting $5 million from American taxpayers to research the effectiveness of a special center it launched in 2021 to address systemic racism. It is called the Racial Equity Consciousness Institute (RECI) and its founders at the University of Pittsburgh claim it is essential because “systemic racism is an endemic public health crisis in the United States that has a profoundly negative impact on the mental and physical health of millions of people—focally, people of color.” Furthermore,   according to RECI.

    Since it was launched by Ron Idoko, who previously worked at the school’s Office for Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion, RECI has worked to eradicate systemic racism by developing a critical understanding of the complex and pervasive ways it operates and establishing strategies to foster racial equity. The institute claims to teach individuals about the racial equity consciousness framework by using narrative guides, videos, articles, open discussion and collaborative activities. To develop racial equity consciousness the institute teaches how to recognize racial oppression and advance racial liberation, examine racial identities and address racial biases, embrace racial diversity and grow racial literacy, build racial empathy and enhance racial stamina, acknowledge racial traumas and foster racial healing, gauge racial inequities and champion racial justice. This helps recognize histories and impacts of racial inequity, embraces the inclusion of all racial identity groups, builds compassionate connections across racial differences, and acknowledges emotional, mental, and physical impacts of racial oppression, among other things.

    The institute uses “structured cognitive behavioral training” (SCBT) to address and determine thoughts, feelings and behaviors toward racial equity and justice. This is described as an instructional, process-oriented derivative of cognitive behavioral therapy that provides an empowering tool and approach to consciously address and assert one’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors toward racial equity and justice. The program is designed to help individuals and communities actively develop and embody distinct cognitive behavioral traits toward racial equity through structured learning and practice. “Learners” are encouraged to reflect on and address systemic factors that contribute to racial disparities and develop systemic processes toward racial equity. “Through this approach, we can understand how to take the transformation within ourselves and bring it into a world of structures and systems, transforming them in the process,” according to the RECI website. “Thus, every person committed to antiracism becomes a source of positive change that radiates out into the world.”

    Sounds fantastic but there is no concrete evidence that it is working. The research funded by the NIH will focus on identifying the effectiveness of RECI training as well as other bias drills on diversity and attitudes that perpetuate systemic racism in healthcare outcomes, especially among marginalized communities. Outcomes of the intervention will be measured through questionnaires and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) that looks for structural brain changes before and after the program. The randomized trial will involve participants from over two dozen schools. One of the University of Pittsburgh researchers says she is excited about the possibility of generating evidence of the effectiveness of RECI because so far, the center relies on people claiming it has changed their life. The institute’s founder claims he has received overwhelmingly positive feedback from hundreds of participants and has also seen behavioral changes firsthand, but again, no material evidence.

    So, Uncle Sam will dole out millions to see if the institute actually helps combat the public health crisis of systemic racism. “These inequities are perpetuated through normative, and often unconscious, biases and behaviors,” the Pittsburgh researchers write in their NIH grant document. “In recent years, academic institutions have devised new policies and initiatives to promote inclusive excellence, and in doing so have put a greater burden on underrepresented (UR) faculty to lead these efforts. Yet, many UR faculty are continuing to disproportionately leave the academy, indicating that academic institutions have not succeeded in their goal of dismantling systemic inequities and making academia more inclusive.”

    Until next week,

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  • Wounded girl pretends to be dead as brother allegedly slaughters parents and siblings – TCNPOD


    This Week on True Crime News The Podcast: An 11-year-old who survived the slayings of her parents and siblings claims her 15-year-old brother shot the Humiston family members to death.

    Tracy Tamborra joins host Ana Garcia.

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  • Delphi trial: Richard Allen found guilty of murder for killing Abby Williams and Liberty German

    DELPHI, Ind. (TCN) — A jury has found Richard Allen, the man charged with killing best friends Abby Williams and Liberty German in 2017, guilty of four counts of murder.

    The Associated Press reports Allen was found guilty of two counts of felony murder and two counts of murder while committing or attempting to commit kidnapping for the deaths of Williams and German. He reportedly faces a maximum sentence of 130 years in prison. The jury deliberated for several days following the lengthy trial that began almost a month ago on Oct. 18.

    Prosecutors reportedly argued during the trial that an unspent bullet casing found under Williams’ and German’s bodies matched a Sig Sauer that Allen owned. Allen was also wearing clothing similar to the man seen in the famous “down the hill” video, which led Carroll County Prosecutor Nick McLeland to name Allen “Bridge Guy.”

    McLeland said at the trial, “Richard Allen is Bridge Guy. He kidnapped them and later murdered them.”

    Other evidence prosecutors used in the trial included an alleged jailhouse confession in which Allen reportedly called his wife and admitted “several times that he killed Abby and Libby.”

    McLeland said Allen shared information that “only the killer would know.”

    Allen’s defense team, however, claimed Allen underwent a mental health crisis because he was locked in solitary confinement. His team also leaned into the fact that there was no DNA left at the scene. His attorney Bradley Rozzi said Allen continued to live and work in Delphi after the killings occurred, adding, “He had every chance to run, but he did not because he didn’t do it.”

    German, 14, and Williams, 13, disappeared Feb. 13, 2017, when they went on a hike together at the Monon High Bridge. They failed to show up at their designated pickup spot, which caused their families to become concerned. Their bodies were found the next day about half a mile from the bridge. Allen was arrested in October 2022.

    Officials did not share with the public how German and Williams died until the trial, when it was revealed that their throats had been cut.

    Allen will be sentenced in December.

    For more analysis about the case, be sure to tune in to “True Crime News.” For more background on the case, check out the video below.

    MORE:

    • Indiana man is found guilty of murder in the 2017 killings of 2 teenage girls – The Associated Press
    • Delphi murder suspect allegedly admitted to killing Abby Williams, Libby German in jailhouse call, 6/28/2023 – TCN
    • Delphi man charged with murder 5 years after deaths of teens Abby Williams and Libby German, 10/31/2022 – TCN
    • Delphi murders – Indiana State Police

    Source

  • Naked man found living in crawlspace of 93-year-old woman's Los Angeles home

    LOS ANGELES (TCN) — A 27-year-old man was arrested after a lengthy standoff with police when he was found living in the crawlspace under an elderly woman’s home in the city’s El Sereno neighborhood.

    According to KNBC-TV, a 93-year-old homeowner told her family that strange noises had been coming from under her home for several months, but she believed the sounds were just from animals. The woman’s grandson told KNBC that the noises grew increasingly louder on Thursday, Nov. 7, and sounded like “knocking.”

    The grandson Ricardo Silva said, “It was kind of like, as my wife was walking, they were kind of knocking back from under the house so she says, you know something’s wrong.”

    The family called the Los Angeles Police Department at around 9 p.m., and when officers arrived, they discovered a naked man under the house. The man, identified as Isaac Betancourt, reportedly refused to comply with officers’ demands to leave. Police utilized K9s and tear gas to try and extract him, but that still didn’t work.

    According to Silva, “He refused to leave. He wasn’t scared of the dogs, and the first two attempts at gas didn’t fish him out.”

    He eventually exited the crawlspace at around 4:30 a.m. on Friday, Nov. 8, after police used tear gas, KCBS-TV reports.

    Police searched the crawlspace and reportedly found blankets, food, and other items. They believe Betancourt had been living there for months. According to KNBC, the crawlspace is only about 2 feet high.

    Betancourt was arrested on a charge of trespassing.

    MORE:

    • Police arrest naked man living in crawlspace of El Sereno home – KNBC
    • Family stunned after finding naked man living under El Sereno home – KCBS

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  • Man sentenced after woman’s dog helps police find her burning body in field

    ROBINSON, Texas (TCN) — A 29-year-old man will spend the rest of his life behind bars for killing his 26-year-old cousin and burning her remains.

    The McLennan County District Attorney’s Office announced Nov. 8 that a jury convicted Derek Daigneault of murder in connection with the shooting death of his cousin Mandy Reynolds. Daigneault received a life sentence for the murder conviction.

    According to prosecutors, on April 5, 2023, Robinson Police responded to a brush fire on Heston Circle, where an officer found a body ablaze. A dog nearby allegedly “barked frantically” at police and refused to leave.

    Officers learned the dog had been sitting near the body all night and was Reynolds’ pet. Police responded to Reynolds’ home and reportedly noticed it was “completely empty” and all of her belongings were removed. Prosecutors said her Honda Accord was also missing.

    Police used a license plate reader database and learned her vehicle was in Wichita, Kansas. On April 8, 2023, Wichita Police found the Honda and attempted a traffic stop. Officers pursued the vehicle, and a chase lasted approximately 30 minutes and reached speeds of over 100 mph. According to prosecutors, Reynolds’ vehicle eventually collided with another, and the driver fled on foot and went into a grocery store. Police found the driver and identified him as Daigneault.

    According to the district attorney’s office, Wichita Police located a handgun in Reynolds’ car.

    Police reportedly determined the victim’s body had been burned inside a large plastic storage container, where they found a shell casing.

    San Marcos Police obtained surveillance footage from a Walmart, showing Daigneault buying a plastic storage container matching the one where his cousin’s body was burned. Daigneault was also seen in footage purchasing a shovel and a gas can on April 4, 2023.

    According to prosecutors, the Walmart surveillance footage revealed the defendant leaving the store in his cousin’s Honda. The victim’s dog, Titan, is also reportedly seen on video sticking his head out of the vehicle’s window.

    On April 7, 2023, prosecutors said San Marcos Police found Reynolds’ items in an abandoned truck near her residence.

    A medical examiner positively identified Reynolds through her dental records and determined she died from a gunshot wound to the head. Investigators recovered a bullet from Reynolds’ remains that matched the handgun found in her vehicle.

    Assistant McLennan County District Attorneys Ryan Calvert and Alyssa Killin said in a statement, “The keys to this case were a heroic and loyal dog named Titan and extraordinary cooperation between law enforcement agencies in multiple jurisdictions and states. That combination has delivered justice for Mandy and safety from a violent and dangerous criminal.”

    MORE:

    • Life Sentence for Murder – McLennan County District Attorney’s Office

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