BEWARE...SOME DAYS ARE NOT VERY PRETTY. I GET CRABBY LIKE NORMAL PEOPLE DO. AND I DO SPEAK MY MIND. DO NOT READ IF YOU ARE SENSITIVE TO TRUE, REAL, EVERYDAY FEELINGS LIKE MINE.(But I think you would enjoy it) DON'T FORGET...FREEDOM OF SPEECH !
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Mom Brought Malnourished Teen Son Weighing 42 Lbs. Into Clinic, and Now She’s Charged
U.S.
Mom Brought Malnourished Teen Son Weighing 42 Lbs. Into Clinic, and Now She’s Charged
Chris Harris,People
2 hours 32 minutes ago
A 32-year-old woman has been arrested by Wisconsin authorities
following the death of her 16-year-old son, who had disabilities and was
severely malnourished at the time of his death, weighing just 42 lbs.
PEOPLE confirms that Iraida Pizarro-Osorio is being held on $35,000 bail after being charged with child neglect resulting in great bodily harm.
Medical examiners have yet to release the official cause of Hector Pizarro’s death, but an autopsy did reveal the teen was severely malnourished.
There were also bedsores on Hector’s body, according to officials.
The criminal complaint against Pizarro-Osorio alleges she brought her son to a community health center last week, and immediately, staffers noted Hector was so thin, his skeleton was visible through his skin.
An ambulance was called, and paramedics tried unsuccessfully to save the boy’s life.
As detailed in the criminal complaint, investigators allege Hector’s mother claimed he had autism and suffered from epileptic seizures. The complaint also alleges she said his weight never surpassed 80 lbs.
• Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Click here to get breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases in the True Crime Newsletter.
Pizarro-Osorio, who has two other children, allegedly told police she brought Hector to see a doctor during a recent trip to Puerto Rico, but that he was not treated because she doesn’t have insurance.
Later, she allegedly confessed she hadn’t been to Puerto Rico and had misled investigators, afraid child protective services would remove the children from her custody.
The complaint doesn’t address the physical conditions of her other children.
A motive for Pizarro-Osorio’s alleged actions is unclear.
Pizarro-Osorio has not entered a plea to the single charge she faces, and it was unclear Tuesday who her Legal Aid attorney is.
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PEOPLE confirms that Iraida Pizarro-Osorio is being held on $35,000 bail after being charged with child neglect resulting in great bodily harm.
Medical examiners have yet to release the official cause of Hector Pizarro’s death, but an autopsy did reveal the teen was severely malnourished.
There were also bedsores on Hector’s body, according to officials.
The criminal complaint against Pizarro-Osorio alleges she brought her son to a community health center last week, and immediately, staffers noted Hector was so thin, his skeleton was visible through his skin.
An ambulance was called, and paramedics tried unsuccessfully to save the boy’s life.
As detailed in the criminal complaint, investigators allege Hector’s mother claimed he had autism and suffered from epileptic seizures. The complaint also alleges she said his weight never surpassed 80 lbs.
• Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Click here to get breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases in the True Crime Newsletter.
Pizarro-Osorio, who has two other children, allegedly told police she brought Hector to see a doctor during a recent trip to Puerto Rico, but that he was not treated because she doesn’t have insurance.
Later, she allegedly confessed she hadn’t been to Puerto Rico and had misled investigators, afraid child protective services would remove the children from her custody.
The complaint doesn’t address the physical conditions of her other children.
A motive for Pizarro-Osorio’s alleged actions is unclear.
Pizarro-Osorio has not entered a plea to the single charge she faces, and it was unclear Tuesday who her Legal Aid attorney is.
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Monday, September 9, 2019
If you have plastic surgery to change ANYTHING...... you are NOT a NATURAL.
You are PURCHASED !
Anyone can pay for it. A Natural is beauty inside and out.
There is CLASS and there is trash. crissy teigen has a discusting mouth. That is not how a lady talks.
(If anyone called obama an ugly n.......what would you say? Of course it would be wrong. You respect YOUR president even if you think that he is____________. My God have some class.)
Chrissy teigen is NOT a lady, ladies don't talk like this. It doesn't matter if you agree with someone or not... you don't talk like TRASH. There are ways to get your point across. How embarrassing for her.
lol what a pussy ass bitch. tagged everyone but me. an honor, mister president.
— christine teigen (@chrissyteigen) September 9, 2019
Hey crissy..... how can you teach your children to have manors when you talk like that. Tell them that it is okay to talk like that.
Hey john... you're less than a real man if you think bullying a woman is okay
magine being president of a whole country and spending your Sunday night hate-watching MSNBC hoping somebody--ANYBODY--will praise you. Melania, please praise this man. He needs you.
Your country needs you, Melania
Sunday, September 8, 2019
Man charged in 31-year-old cold case murder. Police suspect he may have killed others
U.S.
ROCHESTER, N.Y. - In blue jeans and a black town of Perinton hoodie, Larry Timmons, a bespectacled and grandfatherly man with a paunch, cut an unthreatening figure as a town parks watchman.Man charged in 31-year-old cold case murder. Police suspect he may have killed others
What few people who encountered Timmons when he worked for Perinton in 2014, or in his years prior as a real estate salesman around Rochester, could know was that police in his native Missouri suspected him in several killings whose investigations had long gone cold.
On Friday, police there charged Timmons, 65, who now resides in that state, for the 1988 murder of Cynthia Smith, a 31-year-old woman whose slaying he was questioned in at the time.
'Sometimes cases get better with time': Here's how one yellow sock helped solve a 28-year-old cold case murder
Investigators there said police in neighboring Oklahoma, where Timmons lived for several years, had reopened investigations into at least two homicides, namely the 1994 murder of Timmons’ first wife, Deborah Jean Timmons, and the 1998 drowning death of an 11-year-old girl who was friends with a daughter Timmons had with Deborah Jean.
“We call him an opportunist,” said Sgt. Melissa Phillips, of the Lawrence County Sheriff’s Office in southwest Missouri. “He does not target on sex or age. He has little boys in his past. He has little girls in his past. He has women in his past.”
Locally, law enforcement officials received word earlier this year about the suspicions of Timmons' involvement in unsolved homicides, and have been investigating his time here.
The Monroe County Sheriff's Office has no unsolved homicides that Timmons would be a suspect in, and also does not have unsolved rapes in which he would be a likely suspect, said Sheriff's Office Investigator Mike Shannon.
If people have information about Timmons that they think would be of interest to law enforcement, Shannon asked that they call the Monroe County Sheriff's Office.
From his early 20s through his early 40s, a period that spanned 1976 to 1994, Lawrence Gene Timmons was linked to no less than five separate violent crimes in Missouri, despite spending seven of those years in prison or on parole.
Cold case: 35 years after man's shotgun murder, police arrest his wife
He was charged in the kidnapping and assault of a young boy, the home invasion robbery of a female college student, and the gunpoint rape of a woman, and was questioned but never arrested in the homicides of his first wife and Smith.
Timmons was acquitted of the rape charge at trial, had his robbery conviction overturned on appeal, and was sentenced to seven years in prison for kidnapping and assault, although he served just three years before getting paroled.
Then, as a single father on the cusp of middle age, his run-ins with the law abruptly stopped.
He met a woman named Mechele Lokar, a single mother from Perinton whose stint in the Army had landed her in Oklahoma, where Timmons had settled. They had a daughter, married, and eventually relocated to her hometown in 2006.
Once in western New York, Timmons reinvented himself. He became Larry Timmons, an everyday real estate salesman and, for a brief time, a shuttle driver for senior citizens and a parks watchman for the town of Perinton.
Perinton officials say they plan to review his employment with human resources officials Monday before commenting further.
Timmons lived in two different Perinton locations, said Sheriff's Office Investigator Shannon.
Shannon said he sent information about Timmons to police across the state through an internal network but has not heard from any law enforcement considering him a suspect in an unsolved crime.
"We sent a flyer out to everybody in the state essentially," Shannon said Saturday.
Marty Lasher, who was a Perinton neighbor of Timmons, remembered going to Timmons' home once for a cookout.
Genetic sleuthing crack cold case: DNA leads Colorado police to arrest of murder suspect in 32-year-old cold case
"He just seemed like good-natured and everything, but I just felt like I’m not going to continue this," Lasher said. “He just kind of made the hair on the back of my neck stand up. He was weird."
Gilbert Lester, the caretaker and landlord of a Whitney Road home where Timmons lived, said Timmons was quiet and easy-going.
"He paid his rent all right," Lester said. "I had no problem at all."
The murder charge came Friday as Timmons was being held on a $250,000 bond in Lawrence County Jail in Missouri on a forgery charge for allegedly lying about his criminal past on a job application at local liquor store.
Prosecutors also alleged he falsified employment applications and used as many as 17 variations of his name, along with four Social Security numbers and six dates of birth.
Timmons was arrested Aug. 19 at his Pierce City home.
How an old razor cracked a cold case: DNA from a razor helped police solve 41-year-old rape and murder case
Follow David Andreatta, Gary Craig and Gregory J. Holman on Twitter: @david_andreatta, @gcraig1 and @GregHolmanNL.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Man charged in 31-year-old slaying suspected in other murders: Police
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Trial to begin in 9-year-old's killing that shocked Chicago... (just heads up.... NO is wasn't the NRA)
(When will kids be able to be kids without shit like this?)
U.S.
Trial to begin in 9-year-old's killing that shocked Chicago
Scroll back up to restore default view.
CHICAGO (AP) It stands as one of Chicago's most horrific crimes, in
large part because of small details that are impossible to shake: The
promise of a juice box that lured the 9-year-old boy off a playground
and into an alley, and the basketball he dropped when he was shot and
killed there.
Jury selection will begin Friday in the murder trial of two of three men charged with carrying out the November 2015 attack on Tyshawn Lee, a smart fourth-grader who prosecutors say was killed by gang members to send a message to his father, a purported member of a rival gang.
"It was one of the most evil things I've ever seen," said the Rev. Michael Pfleger, a Roman Catholic priest who presided over the boy's funeral Mass. "I was over there and to see a young boy laying in an alley next to a garbage can with his basketball a few feet away, this assassination of a 9-year-old child took violence in Chicago to a new low."
Dwright Boone-Doty, who will represent himself, and Corey Morgan will be tried together but before separate juries, each of which will only consider the evidence as it pertains to one of the defendants.
The third man accused in the attack, the alleged getaway driver Kevin Edwards, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in exchange for a 25-year prison sentence.
Jury selection will begin Friday in the murder trial of two of three men charged with carrying out the November 2015 attack on Tyshawn Lee, a smart fourth-grader who prosecutors say was killed by gang members to send a message to his father, a purported member of a rival gang.
"It was one of the most evil things I've ever seen," said the Rev. Michael Pfleger, a Roman Catholic priest who presided over the boy's funeral Mass. "I was over there and to see a young boy laying in an alley next to a garbage can with his basketball a few feet away, this assassination of a 9-year-old child took violence in Chicago to a new low."
Dwright Boone-Doty, who will represent himself, and Corey Morgan will be tried together but before separate juries, each of which will only consider the evidence as it pertains to one of the defendants.
The third man accused in the attack, the alleged getaway driver Kevin Edwards, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in exchange for a 25-year prison sentence.
The story that prosecutors will tell at the trial is at once
unimaginable and all too familiar in pockets of Chicago that have been
plagued by gang warfare for years: The shooting was the result of a feud
between the defendants' Bang Bang Gang/Terror Dome faction of the Black
P Stones and the Killa Ward faction of the Black Gangster Disciples,
which the slain boy's father, Pierre Stokes, allegedly belonged to.
According to prosecutors, Boone-Doty and Morgan believed that Stokes' faction was responsible for an October 2015 shooting that killed Morgan's 25-year-old brother, Tracey Morgan, and wounded his mother. That his mother was shot may have been even more significant to Corey Morgan than the killing of his brother, who was in the same faction, as it was a breach of gang etiquette that led Corey Morgan to seek revenge on the innocent family members of his rivals, prosecutors allege.
What happened next followed the deadly playbook of so many Chicago shootings. A few days after Morgan's brother was killed, Boone-Doty allegedly fired into a car occupied by a rival gang member.
As happens in so many of these shootings, the rival survived his injuries but the woman who was sitting beside him, 19-year-old Brianna Jenkins, was killed. Boone-Doty has pleaded not guilty in that attack.
Prosecutors say the defendants then turned their attention to getting back at Stokes, first plotting to kill Tyshawn's grandmother before settling on Tyshawn. And they wanted no leave no doubt about their message.
"His original plan was to torture this child by kidnapping and cutting off his fingers and ears," then-State's Attorney Anita Alvarez said of Boone-Doty shortly after he and Morgan were arrested.
Instead, prosecutors say Edwards drove Boone-Doty and Morgan to Dawes Park on the city's South Side on the afternoon of Nov. 2, 2015, and waited with Morgan in the SUV while Boone-Doty approached the boy, struck up a conversation, dribbled his basketball, offered to buy him a juice box and then led him to the alley, where he shot him several times at close range.
When Tyshawn was found, part of the story of his final moments of life was one small thing that wasn't there: a piece of one of his thumbs that was shot off when he raised his little hands to block the bullets.
As the investigation unfolded, police said they couldn't believe what they were finding out, from a rap song that Boone-Doty was allegedly writing about the shooting to his jokingly referring to Tyshawn as 'Shorty' when he allegedly told friends what had happened: "Shorty couldn't take it no more."
"This was something we didn't even think humanly possible for even hardened gang members," said John Escalante, who was the interim police superintendent when Boone-Doty was charged four months after the attack and who has since left the department.
On the day Boone-Doty first appeared in court accused of killing Tyshawn, the boy's father, Stokes, opened fire on gang rivals, wounding three of them, authorities say. Stokes is in jail awaiting trial on aggravated battery and other charges in that attack.
"Mr. Stokes, who was involved in a gang lifestyle, ultimately suffered an unspeakable loss with the calculated execution of his son," police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said at the time. "Despite this, he continued to engage in the same gang activity that started this initial cycle of violence."
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According to prosecutors, Boone-Doty and Morgan believed that Stokes' faction was responsible for an October 2015 shooting that killed Morgan's 25-year-old brother, Tracey Morgan, and wounded his mother. That his mother was shot may have been even more significant to Corey Morgan than the killing of his brother, who was in the same faction, as it was a breach of gang etiquette that led Corey Morgan to seek revenge on the innocent family members of his rivals, prosecutors allege.
What happened next followed the deadly playbook of so many Chicago shootings. A few days after Morgan's brother was killed, Boone-Doty allegedly fired into a car occupied by a rival gang member.
As happens in so many of these shootings, the rival survived his injuries but the woman who was sitting beside him, 19-year-old Brianna Jenkins, was killed. Boone-Doty has pleaded not guilty in that attack.
Prosecutors say the defendants then turned their attention to getting back at Stokes, first plotting to kill Tyshawn's grandmother before settling on Tyshawn. And they wanted no leave no doubt about their message.
"His original plan was to torture this child by kidnapping and cutting off his fingers and ears," then-State's Attorney Anita Alvarez said of Boone-Doty shortly after he and Morgan were arrested.
Instead, prosecutors say Edwards drove Boone-Doty and Morgan to Dawes Park on the city's South Side on the afternoon of Nov. 2, 2015, and waited with Morgan in the SUV while Boone-Doty approached the boy, struck up a conversation, dribbled his basketball, offered to buy him a juice box and then led him to the alley, where he shot him several times at close range.
When Tyshawn was found, part of the story of his final moments of life was one small thing that wasn't there: a piece of one of his thumbs that was shot off when he raised his little hands to block the bullets.
As the investigation unfolded, police said they couldn't believe what they were finding out, from a rap song that Boone-Doty was allegedly writing about the shooting to his jokingly referring to Tyshawn as 'Shorty' when he allegedly told friends what had happened: "Shorty couldn't take it no more."
"This was something we didn't even think humanly possible for even hardened gang members," said John Escalante, who was the interim police superintendent when Boone-Doty was charged four months after the attack and who has since left the department.
On the day Boone-Doty first appeared in court accused of killing Tyshawn, the boy's father, Stokes, opened fire on gang rivals, wounding three of them, authorities say. Stokes is in jail awaiting trial on aggravated battery and other charges in that attack.
"Mr. Stokes, who was involved in a gang lifestyle, ultimately suffered an unspeakable loss with the calculated execution of his son," police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said at the time. "Despite this, he continued to engage in the same gang activity that started this initial cycle of violence."
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New Jersey man scammed $2M from women by posing as a soldier on dating sites, prosecutors say
U.S.
CAMDEN, N.J. - A Millville man was arrested Wednesday on charges that he defrauded more than 30 people of $2.1 million in an elaborate online dating scheme where he and conspirators acted as United States military members attempting to ship gold bars home.New Jersey man scammed $2M from women by posing as a soldier on dating sites, prosecutors say
Rubbin Sarpong, 35, was to appear before Judge Joel Schneider in Camden federal court Wednesday on one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, according to U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito.
The following details from this case were taken from court documents and statements:
From January 2016 to September 2019, Sarpong and several conspirators — many who reside in Ghana — reportedly set up profiles on various dating websites using fake or stolen identities posing as United States military personnel stationed overseas.
"They contacted victims through the dating websites and then pretended to strike up a romantic relationship with them, wooing them with words of love," according to the criminal complaint.
After starting a relationship with the victims, Sarpong and his conspirators would ask them for money, authorities claim, often for the claimed purpose of paying to ship nonexistent gold bars to the United States.
The most common story used by Sarpong and his conspirators was that they were military personnel stationed in Syria who were awarded gold bars. The conspirators told many of the victims their money would be reimbursed once the gold bars arrived in the United States.
In one case, a conspirator claimed he was a U.S. solider stationed in Syria who had recovered gold bars worth $12 million and needed help bringing them over. He sent her a fictitious airway bill showing that two trunks with "family treasure" would be sent to her, along with a fake United Nations Identity Card that identified him as an Israeli citizen and UN delivery agent.
She wired him more than $93,000 and they planned to meet at the Baltimore/Washington International on June 13, 2018. The next day she died by suicide.
Authorities say Sarpong and his conspirators used various email accounts and Voice Over Internet protocol phone numbers to communicate with the victims and instruct them where to wire money.
Victims, on occasion, also sent money via personal and cashier's checks.
Authorities say the funds were then withdrawn in cash, wired to other domestic bank accounts and wired to conspirators in Ghana.
Sarpong, who was found posting photographs of himself with large amounts of cash, high-end cars and expensive jewelry, personally received $823,386 in the scheme, authorities said.
According to a criminal complaint filed Tuesday, Sarpong was active on social media and "bragged about his wealth."
Authorities say on March 2, 2017, Sarpong posted a photograph of himself sitting in a car with a large stack of money up to his ear like a cellphone with a caption that read "WakeUp With 100k... One Time. Making A phone Call To Let My Bank Know Am Coming."
In a May 29, 2017 post, Sarpong posted a photograph of himself in front of a white Mercedes with the comment "BloodyMoney," according to the complaint.
On December 12, 2018, Sarpong posted a photograph of himself with an unidentified male with the comment "BigBusiness Done...Now We Waiting For The Checks To Clear," authorities said.
Sarpong faces up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, according to Carpenito.
Follow Anthony Coppola on Twitter @AVCoppola.
This article originally appeared on Vineland Daily Journal: Man charged in $2M online dating scheme allegedly posed as soldier
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