truesee's Blog

Cash-stuffed envelope remains a mystery

Cash-stuffed envelope remains a mystery

Bernadine Kudia finally received her promised $600 refund -- and an apology for the delay -- from Joseph Painting Service. (Scott Strazzante, Chicago Tribune / January 11, 2011)

 

Despite continued efforts, the Dowdle family still has not found the true owners of more than $1,000 found on a sidewalk in Skokie

January 11, 2011

Jon Yates

Who knew it would be this hard to reunite an elderly couple with their lost cash?

But three weeks after Shannon Dowdle found an envelope stuffed with more than $1,000 in fresh bills, the owners of the money remain a mystery.

The Problem Solver wrote about the situation on Thursday, hoping the couple — or someone who knows them — would come forward.

So far, no one has.

"It's like a great novel and you want to know the ending," said Rick Dowdle, Shannon's husband. "I'm frustrated.

 

The lack of a conclusion is not for lack of effort.

After Shannon Dowdle found the envelope on a Skokie sidewalk Dec. 21, she and her Glenview family made it their mission to find the rightful owners.

The family has visited police, mall security and several stores near where the money was found. Their only clue about the owners came from a manager at a nearby Ulta store, who said an elderly couple came in Dec. 23 to ask if anyone found the envelope.

The manager said the couple would not give their names.

In the wake of Thursday's column, the Dowdles appeared on several television stations, and their story has been retold on various radio shows.

The Problem Solver has received about a half-dozen e-mails and calls from readers hoping the money was theirs. None of the inquiries panned out.

On Friday, Richard Dowdle contacted a spokesman for the bank whose logo is on the envelope. Since then, the bank has run several computer programs trying to match the money to people who withdrew similar amounts of cash.

The bank found two possible matches, but one has already been ruled out. The bank is still waiting to hear back from the second couple.

The Dowdle family remains optimistic the elderly couple will turn up. Rick Dowdle said it's possible the couple was from out of town or has since left town for the winter. Either way, he's hoping word will eventually reach them.

If it doesn't, the family is prepared to donate the money to charity.

Even if the couple surfaces after the donation is made, the Dowdles will return the cash.

"I'd go replace it," Rick Dowdle said. "I donate money to charity anyway."

The Problem Solver will continue to provide updates as warranted.

If the money is yours, or you know who lost it, call the Tribune's city desk at 312-222-3650.

The Problem Solver knows the exact amount that was lost, the denominations of the bills and the name of the bank on the envelope, so please do not respond unless the money is truly yours.

 

LINK TO ORIGINAL STORY:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/problemsolver/ct-biz-0106-problem-dowdle-20110106,0,3598638.column

Entry #3,735

Man Pays for Stolen Car with Meth

Updated: 1:43 PM Jan 9, 2011
Man Pays for Stolen Car with Meth
A man caught with a stolen car told police he bought the vehicle from a woman using meth as payment.
12:37 PM Jan 9, 2011
Amanda Dixon
WSAZ
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SOUTH CHARLESTON, W. Va. (WSAZ) -- A man caught with a stolen car told police he bought the vehicle from a woman using meth as payment.

West Virginia State Police out of South Charleston tells WSAZ.com Jerry Wayne Means was driving down I-77 around 11:20 Saturday night.

The Oldsmobile Intrigue Means was driving came up stolen on a trooper's mobile plate hunter.

Means was pulled over and arrested near Oakridge Apartments on US-119.

While in police custody, Means admitted he rented the car from a woman and used $50 bags of meth as payment. Means later told police he bought the car for two grams of meth.

Means was charged with possession of a stolen vehicle, delivery of methamphetamine and not having an operational drivers
license.

In lieu of an arraignment, Means was taken to South Central Regional Jail.

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It Doesn't Matter Why He Did It

Interesting Times

January 9, 2011

 

It Doesn’t Matter Why He Did It

 

George Packer

New Yorker

 

Judging from his Internet postings, Jared Lee Loughner is a delusional young man whose inner political landscape is a swamp of dystopian novels, left- and right-wing tracts, conspiracy theories, and contempt for his fellow human beings. He refers to the gold and silver standard; that doesn't make Ron Paul responsible for the shootings. He is fond of “Animal Farm”; George Orwell didn't guide the hand that pulled the automatic pistol's trigger. Marx and Hitler produced a lot of corpses, but not the ones in Tucson.

But the plate-glass window of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords’s office was shattered last March after the final health-care vote. Judge John Roll, who was among the dead, had received death threats and spent a month with a protection detail. Roll was apparently a bystander to Loughner’s intended target—and maybe the gunman had no idea why he was aiming for Giffords either, maybe he didn't know how she voted on health care or what her position on Arizona’s draconian immigration law was. It would be a kind of relief if Loughner operated not out of any coherent political context but just his own fevered brain.

But even so, the tragedy wouldn't change this basic fact: for the past two years, many conservative leaders, activists, and media figures have made a habit of trying to delegitimize their political opponents. Not just arguing against their opponents, but doing everything possible to turn them into enemies of the country and cast them out beyond the pale. Instead of “soft on defense,” one routinely hears the words “treason” and “traitor.” The President isn't a big-government liberal—he's a socialist who wants to impose tyranny. He's also, according to a minority of Republicans, including elected officials, an impostor. Even the reading of the Constitution on the first day of the 112th Congress was conceived as an assault on the legitimacy of the Democratic Administration and Congress.

This relentlessly hostile rhetoric has become standard issue on the right. (On the left it appears in anonymous comment threads, not congressional speeches and national T.V. programs.) And it has gone almost entirely uncriticized by Republican leaders. Partisan media encourages it, while the mainstream media finds it titillating and airs it, often without comment, so that the gradual effect is to desensitize even people to whom the rhetoric is repellent. We’ve all grown so used to it over the past couple of years that it took the shock of an assassination attempt to show us the ugliness to which our politics has sunk.

The massacre in Tucson is, in a sense, irrelevant to the important point. Whatever drove Jared Lee Loughner, America's political frequencies are full of violent static.



Read more http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/georgepacker/2011/01/judging-from-his-internet-postings.html#ixzz1AciBfEYH

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Robber beaten by customer with pickle jar

WITI

Robber beaten by customer with pickle jar at Milwaukee store now charged

 

Travanti Schmidt has a criminal record

 

3:35 PM CST, January 7, 2011

WITI-TV, MILWAUKEE

 

Travanti Schmidt is now charged in three counts of armed robbery and felon in possession of a firearm. Schmidt is the man who got beaten by a store customer with a pickle jar when he tried to rob the L&A Foods on Milwaukee's north side.

Police say Schmidt suspect entered L&A Foods near 26th and Vliet Tuesday afternoon and fired a shot from a gun. His intention was to rob the place.

However, customers in the store attacked the gunman. One of the customers struck the suspect in the head with a jar of pickles. They held the suspect until police arrived.

Schmidt is also charged with robberies that took place near 23rd and Wisconsin and 27th and Vliet.

 

 

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.fox6now.com/videobeta/d68a9fcd-ad07-45d5-84b5-2552987071db/News/Armed-robber-gets-into-a-bit-of-a-pickle-at-convenience-store

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Help wanted: White House spokesman

Help wanted: White House spokesman

From left: Bill Burton, P.J. Crowley and Karen Finney are pictured in this composite. | AP Photos
Bill Burton, P.J. Crowley and Karen Finney could get serious looks for the press secretary position. | AP
GLENN THRUSH & KEACH HAGEY & CAROL E. LEE | 1/7/11 8:14 PM EST

President Barack Obama’s search for a new press secretary is likely to include a redefinition of the job itself, with a focus on stopping leaks, streamlining messaging — and, most of all, cutting the testosterone level in the briefing room.

The administration isn’t necessarily looking for a female press secretary, aides say, but the White House is clearly looking to shed a bit of its boy’s club reputation.

 

Obama’s team is looking to soften the tone of the administration after two years of press secretary Robert Gibbs – an Alpha Male who split his time advising Obama and dueling with the “professional left,” print reporters who griped about his failure to return their calls, and the TV correspondents whom he often compared on camera to his seven-year-old son.

At the same time, Obama’s team is looking to, in effect, downgrade a position that had grown into a West Wing power center under Gibbs, one of the few modern press secretaries to move beyond the role of messenger to wield genuine power in the Oval Office.

“I think you’re going to find somebody who’s in fewer meetings in which they also play an advisory role,” said a senior administration official. “But I still think this person will be of significant stature.”

The problem with replacing Gibbs is finding someone without his weaknesses — he was regarded as disorganized, distractible and combative — yet possesses his unique virtues – an agile mind, quick tongue and uncanny ability to express Obama’s views with the confidence of a man in all the meetings.

“I’m generally in favor of lowering the temperature in the [briefing] room,” said former Clinton press secretary Mike McCurry, who has counseled Gibbs from time to time. “You don’t have to win every argument. It’s a place where you have to get your information across and develop long-term relationships… But it’s also so different than it was 15 years ago when I was doing it. It’s much less about substance and so much more about the daily battle on TV.”

Gibbs had tried to find a new role for himself in the White House, several sources told POLITICO, but was unable to agree to an arrangement that he and Obama found mutually acceptable. He didn’t work out the final details of his departure – including arrangements on the role he would play on Obama’s reelection campaign — until this week.

The search for a replacement was briefly put on hold out of respect for Gibbs, but now the wheels are whirring.

Incoming deputy chief of staff David Plouffe – a power even before he arrives in the White House on Monday – is leading a search team that also includes communications director Dan Pfeiffer. Plouffe, the high priest of Obama’s 2008 no-drama ethos has reportedly been incensed by what he believes to be an unacceptable number of leaks.

He’s also thrown open the post-Gibbs selection process, instructing communications staffers to look beyond a pair well-regarded administration insiders, deputy press secretary Bill Burton and Jay Carney, Vice President Joe Biden's spokesman.

Gibbs plans to stay at least several more weeks. Plouffe and Pfeiffer, for their part, are in no rush to choose a replacement, aides say, and Bill Daley, the newly anointed White House chief of staff, has made it clear he wants to weigh in on the hire, which he considers to be a significant part of his portfolio.

“Bill’s a nice guy, but he realizes that this is one of his first tests,” said a longtime Daley friend. “He’s not going to let this decision take place without some serious input.”

 

Sources told POLITICO that both Plouffe and Daley have also made it clear that they want that search to focus on finding as many viable female candidates as possible – inside and outside the White House.

The outreach effort will begin in earnest on Monday, but the initial list includes former Democratic National Committee spokeswoman Karen Finney and deputy communications director Jennifer Psaki.

And Obama staffers have repeatedly asked Stephanie Cutter, a special assistant to the president who served as John Kerry’s spokeswoman during the 2004 campaign, to throw her name into the hat, but so far she’s demurred, according to administration insiders.

The first stage of the search is likely to include a blue sky canvass of any reasonable candidate – even some high-profile women TV or radio correspondents, sources say.

But administration officials say they won’t be limited by gender – and that ultimately Obama and Daley will make the final decision, based on a candidate’s gravitas, relationship with reporters, and chemistry with Obama.

“I have a feeling that it will come right back to Bill and Jay,” said a person close to the process. “It almost always comes back to the people in your comfort zone in the first place.”

There are several other male candidates that are likely to get a serious look, including deputy press secretary Josh Earnest, current DNC spokesman Brad Woodhouse and a pair of agency flacks – Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell and P.J. Crowley, who delivers the daily briefing at the State Department.

Neither Morrell or Crowley is considered a front-line candidate, but they do have an advantage over the others: They are so steeped in their policy areas they will add an element of gravitas to the briefing room – to contrast the increasingly partisan tone of powerhouse partisan surrogates outside the White House like Gibbs and soon-to-depart senior adviser David Axelrod.

“The next White House press secretary needs to clearly grasp the difference between a campaign and government, to understand that from the first moment they stop up to the briefing room podium, because there’s a huge difference from when you are speaking as a candidate and when you are speaking as the president of the United States,” said Ed Chen, a former Bloomberg reporter who served as president of the White House Correspondents Association.

And that is something, Chen added, that the Obama White House has been slow to understand.

“Not just the press secretary, but the entire White House press staff was in this very combative campaign mindset and failed to recognize the difference between governing and campaigning,” said Chen, now federal communications director with the Natural Resources Defense Council. “Despite all the protests, Gibbs rarely changed his M.O., engaging in a dialogue – a soliloquy – with a few reporters, whether it’s [NBC’s] Chuck Todd or [ABC’s] Jake Tapper or a print reporter.”

Administration officials say they intend to showcase women officials no matter who replaces Gibbs – and that the absence of Gibbs and Axelrod opens the path for rising female stars in the administration like Psaki, Cutter, and health care guru Nancy Ann DeParle.

“The role of the press secretary who is put out there to be not just the mouthpiece, but the negotiator to the press… That sort of position isn’t normally thought of as female,” said Jessica Coen, editor of Jezebel, a feminist web site focused on women in politics and the media.

“Women aren’t typically thought of as someone who could go out there and have everything thrown at them and do it with a smile. It’s important to have a woman come out there and say, I can play this game too, because it’s a co-ed game.”





Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0111/47234.html#ixzz1AXcQ83i5

Entry #3,728

Mother and daughter arrested charged with bank robbery

Daughter, mom held in 2 robberies

 

Jamar Younger

Arizona Daily Star

Saturday, January 8, 2011 12:00 am

 

 
   
    
 

 

  • Daughter, mom held in 2 robberies
  • Daughter, mom held in 2 robberies

 

A 71-year-old woman and her daughter were arrested Friday on suspicion of robbing two banks last summer, Tucson police said.

Evelyn L. Ward and Bonnie Jane Jasmer, 47, are each facing one count of robbery and one count of armed robbery, and two counts each of aggravated robbery, according to a Tucson police news release.

Police said Jasmer was the driver of the car used in both robberies.

Ward and Jasmer were connected to a robbery at a Tucson Federal Credit Union office on Aug. 28 and another incident at a Bank of the West branch in July.

In the robbery at the Tucson Federal Credit Union office at 3755 S. Mission Road, a woman entered the bank and gave a note to the teller, police said.

A handgun was used in the robbery of the Bank of the West, 3041 S. Kinney Road, on July 21. That case was investigated by the Pima County Sheriff's Department.

The two were booked into the Pima County jail.

 

Man held in third robbery

 

Also on Friday, police made an arrest in another bank robbery.

Benjamin B. Kramer, 37, who has a general-delivery address, is facing charges of robbing the Bank of America branch at 5502 E. Grant Road on Thursday.

Detectives learned the man showed a note and implied that he had a weapon.

He left the bank and ran east through the parking lot and into the Alamo Wash.

Police officers arrested Kramer after they contacted him on an unrelated matter.

Entry #3,726

Woman uses another woman's child to get child support

Updated: 11:38 PM Jan 6, 2011
Child support fraud reported
Jan. 7, 2010
Regina Thompson is accused of using another woman’s child to obtain support money.
Terry Lewis
Albany Herald
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ALBANY, Ga. — Dougherty County Sheriff’s officials said Thursday that Regina Thompson of Moultrie, 38, has been arrested and charged on five counts of theft by deception in an elaborate scam after convincing a man to pay support for a child belonging to a friend of hers.

According to sheriff’s office Chief Investigator Capt. Craig Dodd, Thompson used the child of a friend, Lastraga McCloud, also of Moultrie, to convince Joseph Golden of Albany the baby girl was his in order to get him to pay child support.

“I’ve been in this business for 24 years, and I’ve never seen anything like this,” Dodd said. “Ms. Thompson was keeping her friend’s child during the week while the mother was going to school out of town. She (Thompson) approached Golden, an ex-boyfriend, with pictures of the child and deceived him into thinking the baby was his.”

Dodd said the ex-boyfriend doled out more than $1,600 in five payments over the next two years even though he was under no legal obligation to do so.

“He was convinced that the little girl was his. They had pictures made at her birthday party and everything,” Dodd said. “The real mother in Moultrie had no clue what was going on.”

Dodd said Thompson, who was the child’s godmother, would take the child to Albany during the week for “visitation” with Golden then return the baby to its mother when she returned to Moultrie from school for the weekends.

Dodd said the scheme began to unravel as the girl, now five, began to talk more and told Golden he wasn’t her father. That’s when the visits stopped and Golden went to court in order to secure visitation rights.

But when Thompson took the stand during the hearing, she denied the child existed, Dodd said. The sheriff’s office then asked local television stations to publicize pictures of the baby in an effort to identify the child.
Within days, Dodd said his office received e-mails and phone calls identifying the baby as McCloud’s child. The calls included a call from the maternal grandmother.

“The mother was aghast after she found out what was going on,” Dodd said. “She had no clue that her friend was using her child in this manner.”

Thompson was arrested and released on bail. Dodd added in addition to the five felony charges, that Thompson would likely also be facing a grand jury indictment for perjury.

Calls to Golden were unsuccessful because his listed number had been disconnected.

Entry #3,723

Burglar calls 911 says he's stuck in house

POLICE: Drunk burglar calls 911, says he's stuck in house

 

TERRI SANGINITI • The News Journal • January 6, 2011

 

It’s not often that a burglar calls 911 to report that he broke into a house, but that’s exactly what happened Wednesday afternoon when a homeless man could not get out of a house he had allegedly burglarized, police said.

New Castle County police and firefighters from Brandywine Hundred Fire Company were sent to a Bellefonte home about 2:30 p.m. to check on the welfare of a man who had called 911 asking for help, said agency spokesman Officer John Weglarz Sr.

Arriving officers talked to a man through an open rear window – the same window that he broke to get into the house, Weglarz said. 

An investigation revealed that the man, identified as 44-year-old John Finch, did not live there, but had been stuck inside the home in the 800 block of Woodsdale Road for a few days and couldn’t get out. 

During his stay, the homeless man said he had consumed three bottles of Seagrams gin and two bottles of Seagrams whiskey. 

But in his inebriated state, he was not able to climb back out the window, Weglarz said. 

He also was unable to unlock the main doors because they were bolted from both sides. 

The elderly occupant had not been home for a few days. 

Rescue workers were able free him and he was promptly arrested, Weglarz said. 

He said there was an outstanding warrant for Finch’s arrest on burglary and felony theft charges because he had allegedly broke into the same home in April. 

Finch was linked to the first break-in through fingerprints left at the scene. 

Finch was charged with two counts each of second-degree burglary and felony theft for the two burglaries. 

Bail information was not immediately available.

 

 

John Finch

Entry #3,722