Grandmother Wanted in France Convicted 20 Years Ago
British Grandmother Wanted in France
Woman Says She Didn't Know She Was Convicted 20 Years Ago
Deborah Dark, 45, didn't know she was convicted on drug charges in France.
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British Grandmother Wanted in France
Woman Says She Didn't Know She Was Convicted 20 Years Ago
Deborah Dark, 45, didn't know she was convicted on drug charges in France.
911 Call: Man Catches Robber in Home
Updated: Sunday, 26 Jul 2009, 6:20 PM MDT
Published : Sunday, 26 Jul 2009, 6:20 PM MDT
GLENDALE - 911 calls normally aren't funny -- but when a Glendale man came home to a man robbing his house over the weekend, he tackled him and held him still while talking on the phone to a 911 dispatcher.
Homeowner Perry Bigley told a 911 operator, "I have the robber in one hand and the phone in the other."
Officers arrived to the home in the 4600 block of W San Juan where they found the victim on top of the suspect, holding him down.
Bigley told police he came home through the garage about 4 a.m. and found the storage door open. He then spotted the suspect going rifling through his DVDs.
On the 911 tape, Bigley says, "All I am doing is holding him down on the ground… He's saying he can't breathe he's tried to run twice but I caught him in my home."
"Look please stop struggling... we're going to wait here and were going to wait for the cops to come."
The suspect told Bigley there were other robbers upstairs, but they got away and ran down the street. The burglars took six TVs, a stereo, a laptop and a digital camera -- about $11,000 worth of electronics.
LINK TO VIDEO/ 911 CALL:
http://www.myfoxphoenix.com/dpp/news/crime/glendale_robbery_911_call_07_26_2009
Sky-high ambition: Meet the man who's flying from Land's End to John O'Groats... by bike
By Tamara Cohen and Elizabeth Hopkirk
Last updated at 9:19 AM on 25th July 2009
It looks far too solid ever to get off the ground. But if John Carver pedals really hard, revs up his little lawnmower engine and thinks happy thoughts... he is soon 2,000ft up in the air.
Then, give or take the odd rain shower, he stays up for two glorious hours, pootling along at 25mph and enjoying the fabulous views unfolding below.
His flying bike, or flyke as it is known, is taking Mr Carver on an epic 800-mile trek this summer, from Land's End to John O'Groats, touching down to camp in fields along the way.
John Carver gets ready for lift-off as he prepares to travel from Land's End to John O'Groats in a flying tricycle
If he succeeds, it will be the longest ever journey taken by a flyke. He hopes to raise £10,000 for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation as well as break a record.
Mr Carver, an Old Etonian, bought the £8,000 German-built craft six years ago.
It weighs a mere 110lb and takes off at just 20mph, needing a 'runway' the size of a football pitch. The parachute canopy helps get it aloft and touch down.
The flyke has only recently been legalised in Britain and Mr Carver has registered it with the Civil Aviation Authority.
Mr Carver demonstrates his flying bike or flyke, in action
Mr Carver shows the sky is the limit as he sets sail on a practice run
The 37-year-old IT teacher from Oxford will strap himself in for the ride on August 1, along with a tent weighing just 17oz. Its 15-litre tank takes unleaded petrol.
'When you wheel it into a petrol station and you tell them it flies, they don't believe you,' he said.
Like the British weather, two-stroke engines are notoriously unreliable and he is resigned to having to cycle some of his route.
He has learned the hard way not to risk flying in winds over 15mph, after being flipped over by sudden gusts.
But he is adamant there is no better way to travel. 'You are totally at one with the sky. It's that freedom that is quite special.'
The flyke can power along at 25mph and reaches heights of 2,000ft
Prisoner had sex with girlfriend in exchange for confession
Madonna King
Courier Mail
July 25, 2009 12:00am
IT'S almost too fanciful to be true: a prisoner is picked up from jail and taken for a drive by police officers through the suburbs on Brisbane's southside.
He's handed a list of unsolved break-and-enters, perhaps as many as 300. He reads the details: how entry was gained, what was taken, the time the crime was committed.
And he's told that he needs to admit to at least 20 to make his reward worthwhile.
What was that? According to evidence given by the prisoner to the Crime and Misconduct Commission, police collected his girlfriend and delivered her to Morningside police station.
And it was there where they engaged in sex and the prisoner injected himself with drugs his girlfriend brought.
The prisoner, called RI in the scathing report into police released this week, was not the only person allowed to come and go from their jail cell.
Murderers and armed robbers were allowed out of custody: one to meet his partner and young children in Roma Street Parkland for a play; another to lunch at a swish riverside restaurant.
The CMC's Dangerous Liaisons report, based on its Operation Capri, is not a repeat of the Fitzgerald inquiry - but it's certainly a reminder of how a bad lot of eggs can stink out a whole refrigerator. And with more than 25 officers implicated in wrongdoing - ranging from stupidity to outright criminal activity - it should not be dismissed as easily as it was this week.
The sheer brazenness of some officers seems to know no bounds. Take this example, also outlined in the report.
An informant fund existed, courtesy of the Australian Bankers Association and the Credit Union Security Forum. And over the period of its operation, 77 payments were made, a total of $17,990.
But no records were kept, an "end justifies the means" mentality meant that few rules existed, and money was misappropriated.
Police also falsely claimed payments had been made to informants, signatures were forged and evidence of transactions faked.
There's no better example of the latter than one outlined by Robert Needham and his team in their comprehensive and temperate investigation report.
In that example, officers faked an audiotape and produced it as proof of a payment to an informant. The audio was supposed to support a meeting between two officers and an informant at a coffee shop at West End.
But investigations showed it was made in carpark bay 148 on level B2 of police headquarters, and that a police officer assumed the role of an informant for the recording.
The litany of misdemeanours, maladministration and outright corruption weaves its way throughout the report, but it is Lee Owen Henderson, who is shown to have more influence on one group of officers than their own commissioner, Bob Atkinson.
Henderson had 1241 calls diverted through one police station, at a cost of $2056, and his monthly telephone call bill was $535 - a big sum for a prisoner without any obvious source of income.
But he was no ordinary prisoner. Called "The General", he had his own police locker, was able to arrange a police drug raid and despite earning only $7500 as a prisoner in a six-year period, spent at least $100,272.17.
He helped one officer buy a car, organised a theft from prison, and even sent two fluffy toys and two bibs - worth $85 - to a couple of police officers who were celebrating the birth of their baby daughter. He signed it "loyalty and love always".
Henderson was allowed to pose as an underworld crime figure with connections to corrupt police, had his own locker at the Rockhampton police station, and had access to police computers to help someone who wanted to give a "flogging" to a person they couldn't find.
The revelations this week are terrible but so is the response to them at every level.
The Police Union decided to go in to bat for those police officers who were subject to the report, not the 99.9 per cent of others who are honest and law-abiding and who will be tainted by the accusations levelled at their colleagues.
Commissioner Atkinson, who accepts responsibility for the misconduct, has allowed many of those under a cloud to resign on full benefits.
That means they've got off scot free.
And the Government? Originally elected on a post-Fitzgerald reform agenda, it seems to have decided silence is the best policy.
Queenslanders deserve better, especially those law-abiding, honest and hard-working police officers who will now be unfairly tainted by the wrongdoing of their unscrupulous colleagues.
Drive-through robber orders cash to-go at McDonald's, Wendy's in Dallas
09:38 AM CDT on Friday, July 24, 2009
EMILY TSAO
The Dallas Morning News
Dallas police are searching for a drive-through bandit who ordered food to-go but then demanded a side of cash.
The robber on Thursday morning hit three fast food restaurants along or near North Central Expressway in Dallas -- a McDonald's and a Whataburger in Oak Lawn and a Wendy's in North Dallas, police said.
In each case, the man in his late 20s or early 30s, placed an order at the drive-through. When he drove up to pay, he would show a gun and demand money, police said.
Authorities describe the robber as about 5 feet, 6 inches tall with a sparse mustache and beard. He has numerous tattoos down both arms. He was driving a maroon Ford Expedition with a beige interior. The vehicle also has gold or copper-colored running boards, a luggage rack and a sun roof.
LINK TO VIDEO:
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/072509dnmetdrivethru.6fe72344.html
The Broward County Sheriff's Office said witnesses reported seeing an armed man run up to a Brinks armored truck Friday morning outside of the Bank Atlantic in Oakland Park just in time to see the truck drive away, the Miami Herald reported.
Sheriff's spokeswoman Veda Coleman-Wright said the Brinks guards inside the truck did not even realize there had been an attempted robbery. Police were called by a bank employee who saw the man run toward the truck.
"(The guards) had loaded up and were getting ready to go and were pulling off when the robber tried to rob them," Coleman-Wright said. "They didn't even realize robbers were trying to rob them."
The sheriff's office said the man was seen fleeing the bank in an older model red Cadillac.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Time is up! $30,000 diamond ring goes unclaimed

Fullerton police display the property envelope containing a diamond ring appraised at $30,000. The jewelry is kept in a property room safe. Police would not allow a picture of the ring.
BARBARA GIASONE, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
Fullerton police confer with city attorney to see if finder or property owner should get the gem.
FULLERTON – Police waited the mandatory four months to see if anyone would claim a 2.5-carat diamond ring found on a local school playground.
As of the deadline date Tuesday, there were no takers for the gem, appraised at $30,000, Sgt. Mike MacDonald said Thursday.
According to law, if no one responds within the required time period, it's "finders, keepers" for anything valued more than $250.
"We're planning to send a letter to the finder, but first we want to check with the city attorney to determine who should get the ring, the finder or the property owner," MacDonald said.
The ring had one identifying mark that only the owner would know, said April Baughman, who oversees the Police Department property room where unclaimed jewelry is kept in a safe.
Pot law leaves cops high & dry
Many blow off $100 fines
Thumbing their noses at the state’s lax new pot law, Bay State stoners are brazenly lighting up in front of cops and then refusing to pay fines - leading some frustrated police chiefs to all but give up the fight.
Local police report widespread defiance of the six-month-old law, and a Herald review shows a vast majority of potheads cited by cops blowing off their $100 fines.
Some egregious examples of tokers flaunting the law include:
• In Arlington, a public works employee was cited by the local police chief for smoking a pot pipe as he stood next to his town-issued tractor.
• At bustling Park Street Station, a pair of nonchalant lovers out on the town openly lit up a joint and continued toking even after confronted by off-duty Milton Chief Richard Wells.
• In East Boston, four teens spotted in a “smoke-filled vehicle” unabashedly told a cop they were “just smoking marijuana.”
• A man caught near a Dorchester playground laughed when police said he faced a $100 fine - and then taunted the cops with an expletive-laced tirade.
All told, a staggering 83 percent of 415 tokers cited in Boston since the law took effect in January have refused to pony up the $100, a Herald review shows.
In Braintree, 15 of 28 citations went unpaid, while in Brookline 26 of 33 blew off the fines.
Somerville Deputy Chief Paul Upton said his officers are now writing few if any citations, in part because enforcing the law costs more money than it’s worth.
“If we send an officer to court, it’s going to cost us $250,” Upton said. “We’re not getting a lot of (citations) written.”
In Milton, Chief Wells said the new pot law is unenforceable because there’s nothing encouraging scofflaws to pay fines or even give their real names to police.
Berkshire District Attorney David Capeless, head of the state prosecutors group that fought against relaxing pot sanctions, said, “It’s exactly what we were afraid of, and what we predicted would happen. They’d issue citations, and they’d be ignored.”
Proponents argued pot convictions made youthful indiscretions into lifelong liabilities. But while unpaid parking tickets can cost drivers their licenses, unpaid pot fines carry no repercussions.
“There’s nothing that can happen,” Capeless said.
Thomas Kiley, the Beacon Hill powerbroker who crafted the measure, insisted the law has teeth.
Tucked in the law is language that places pot possession on par with other citations, and police can haul a scofflaw into court, Kiley said. “We did (anticipate) this,” Kiley said.
But Cheryl A. Sibley, chief administrator for the Boston Municipal Court Department, said police are powerless because that provision is neutralized by language clearly stating the only penalty the offender pays is the $100 fine.
Meanwhile, in Braintree on Monday night, police spotted a suspected perv smoking pot in a car filled with coils of rope, a pair of handcuffs and bottles of NyQuil. But they had to let the man go, even though he was awaiting trial on child sexual assault charges.
Said Deputy Chief Russell Jenkins, “Had the law not been changed, he absolutely would have been placed under arrest.”
Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1185193
Cop impersonator arrested after trying to stop real Oakland officer, police say
OAKLAND — A man suspected of impersonating an undercover police officer was arrested after he tried to stop a real Oakland undercover police officer, authorities said Friday.
Authorities said the suspect, Antonio Fernandez Martinez, 21, of Oakland, a convicted car thief, was not charged with impersonating a police officer, which is a misdemeanor. Instead, he will have his felony probation revoked and could face a prison term.
Police said Martinez, who was arrested Wednesday, at first denied trying to stop the officer's vehicle. But Officer Jim Beere, an undercover officer assigned to the vice/child exploitation unit whose vehicle Martinez was trying to stop, said Martinez later claimed he thought Beere was a member of a street gang he was having problems with and wanted to see who he was.
Martinez's act, which included him driving a car made to look like an undercover police vehicle, unraveled in the Fruitvale district, where Beere and other officers were looking for underage prostitutes who work the area, authorities said.
Although police have no reports about Martinez from any prostitutes, Beere said the concern is that he may have wanted to lure some of them into the car to assault them.
"But then he saw me and thought I'd be an easy mark" to rob, Beere said.
Beere was by himself in an undercover car when Martinez started following him about 5:35 p.m. Wednesday on International Boulevard near Fruitvale Avenue.
"He was in a black Ford Crown Victoria similar to our unmarked cars," Beere said. "He accelerated and turned on some flashing lights on his dash board. In the grill it looked like he had red and blue lights that seemed to be on, but they turned out to be painted speakers he had for a microphone he had in his hand and appeared to be talking into."
Beere thought Martinez wanted to pull him over and alerted other officers on his radio.
Martinez also made a hand gesture indicating he wanted Beere to stop his vehicle. That's when Beere saw Martinez's long hair and scruffy appearance and thought, "He's not a cop."
When Beere stopped for a red light at 25th Avenue and International, Martinez turned onto 25th Avenue. Martinez was arrested by officers a few blocks away. The modified car was registered to someone else.
Police are notifying other departments to see if Martinez might have been involved in similar incidents in other cities.
LINK TO VIDEO:
http://www.foxreno.com/news/20174682/detail.html
Jul 20, 2009 11:00 pm US/Eastern
Ocean County Man Finds Purple Pearl
MYSTIC ISLAND, N.J. (CBS 3)
An Ocean County man turned his craving for some fresh clams into a possible small fortune.
Ed Seitzy asked his clam-digging neighbor, Joey, last Thursday if he could have a few clams for dinner.
"I opened it and it had this funny looking thing in it. I sort of knew what it was, but it sort of looked like dirt. I hit it and thought it was a pearl," said Seitzy.
What Ed found wasn't just any pearl, it was a purple one.
When Ed learned the odds of finding a purple pearl, one in two million, he decided to call a jeweler.
"The reaction was pure disbelief because nobody had heard of it before. Several jewelers didn't know what we were talking about," said Seitzy.
In January, a Florida couple found a smaller purple pearl and netted $25,000. But Ed has heard about even bigger payouts.
"A million dollars maybe."
Ed is going to get the pearl appraised and said if the pearl is worth a million, he will give Joey his boat.
After all, Ed may be upgrading.
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An Ocean County man turned his craving for some fresh clams into a possible small fortune.
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LINK TO VIDEO:
GEM THIEVES IN SWITCHEROO
'120 GRAND' CENTRAL CAPER
Last updated: 3:43 am
July 25, 2009
Posted: 3:42 am
July 25, 2009
NY Post
The timing was perfect -- perhaps a little too perfect.
In an elaborate heist, three crafty crooks made off with a duffel bag stuffed with $120,000 in baubles by duping two jewelry salesmen in the Grand Central Terminal food court, MTA police said yesterday.
The ruse involved one con man following a salesman for hours on the day of the crime, tailing him for miles on his regular route from Chinatown to Midtown.
Once at Grand Central, the thieves used two distractions to swap one of the jewel-laden bags with one of equal heft and appearance.
An inside job has not been ruled out, with police still baffled a month after the June 24 caper.
"The three that did this were obviously well planned, and it was well thought out, and it was pretty well followed through on," said MTA Police Detective Michael Alfalla, whose agency released surveillance footage of the prime suspect.
Cops have not ruled out the possibility that one or both of the salesmen, who worked for jewelry wholesaler My Oro USA, were in on the scheme.
The goods were poorly guarded and somehow the thieves knew the exact weight of the bags.
"It is being investigated as suspicious. I have rarely seen something played out like that," Alfalla said.
Police questioned the salesmen but said their stories were consistent with witness accounts.
The two merchants were both lugging black bags loaded with 800 items, including gold and diamond rings, necklaces, bracelets and earrings -- all of them inscribed with the initials "MO" -- and $2,000 in cash.
At the end of their shift, they stopped for a food-court meal. One salesman got up to throw away trash and asked his partner to watch his bag.
When he got to the nearby can, a man suddenly took what looked like an accidental spill right in front of him and asked if the salesman could help him up.
At the same time, a second con man tapped the seated jeweler on the shoulder and told him he'd dropped $10 on the floor -- a bill the thief had placed there seconds earlier.
With the salesmen distracted, a third crook switched one of the bags with the near-identical phony.
Unusual facial tattoo leads to robber's arrest, cops say

Tampa Bay Online
July 20, 2009
Sean Roberts
Last Updated July 23, 2009
TAMPA - It wasn't particularly hard for the victims of a Riverview home invasion to identify the burglar. He was the only one with an outline of the state of Florida tattooed on his face, authorities say.
In addition to the Florida tattoo, Sean Roberts also has the words "Crazy Cracker" written or tattooed on his head, Hillsborough County sheriff's spokesman J.D. Callaway said.
The victims identified Roberts via photos, Callaway said.
The armed home invasion occurred about 5 a.m. July 8 at a Riverview mobile home. Roberts and a woman entered the home and threatened the residents, forcing the victims into a bathroom, deputies say.
Roberts, 19, of Riverview, and the Billie Kiser, 28, took prescription drugs, a DVD player, a CD player and $120 in cash, Callaway said.
Roberts has the aliases "Crazy Cracker" and "Pretty," according to the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office Web site.
Roberts and Kiser were arrested Sunday and charged with armed home invasion. Kiser also was charged with battery and domestic battery by strangulation.
Roberts and Kiser remain in jail without bail.
7-year-old waits in getaway vehicle while dad attempts robbery
08:11 AM CDT on Friday, July 24, 2009
By Jeremy Desel / 11 News
HOUSTON -- Harris County deputies say a man took his 7-year-old daughter along as he tried to break into an apartment.
But things didn't go as the suspect planned, because the person who lived there -- a former Harris County deputy -- happened to be home at the time.

The former deputy had just left the department in May.
Glesmann says the former deputy grabbed his gun and fired three shots. Two hit the suspect, who fled the scene in his truck and drove himself to the hospital.
But he was not alone. The suspect’s daughter was waiting for him in his truck and rode with him to the hospital.
LINK TO VIDEO:
http://www.khou.com/topstories/stories/khou090723_mp_crook-takes-daughter-to-robber.6e262d82.html
"He is putting her at great risk and that is a shame. That is something that they will consider as they start filing charges on him," said Glesmann.
The girl told investigators that her father threw a bag out of the truck on the short drive to the hospital. In the bag, deputies found a list of apartments at the Toscana complex. They believe they were the ones the man was going to hit.
Deputies say the suspect didn't go far from home. They served a search warrant at a hotel across the street from the apartment complex.
The suspect is in stable condition at an area hospital.
He was hit twice. One of the bullets hit him near his spine.
The little girl is in CPS custody.
Sheriff says muscle car useful
RALEIGH -- Wake County Sheriff Donnie Harrison says the Corvette Z06 being used by his deputies to pull over cars on Interstate 40 is a potent tool for fighting illegal drugs.
"We saw a need for it," Harrison said Wednesday about the special-model Chevy that goes 198 mph and was seized from a cocaine dealer. "We're going to get a lot of drugs off the road."
A Wake judge ordered Lawrence Creech Jr., the Corvette's previous owner, to forfeit it to the Wake Sheriff's Office following his arrest in December for cocaine possession and maintaining a vehicle for the keeping of controlled substances, according to court records. The 2007 car has a current retail value of $56,990, according to Kelley Blue Book.
The North Carolina Constitution says all forfeitures and all fines for breaking the state's criminal laws "shall be faithfully appropriated and used exclusively for maintaining free public schools."
But there is also a state law that says a law enforcement agency in custody of a seized car can "retain the property for official use."
Harrison said Wednesday that he intends to keep the car as long as it proves useful. When his department is done with it, the car will be sold, and the proceeds will go to the Wake County Public School System.
North Carolina's largest school district could use the money. Facing a sour economy and the prospects of deep state budget cuts, school officials have instituted a hiring freeze, announced plans to cut about 1,500 employees and are bracing for additional cuts in the coming months.
But Wake County Attorney Scott Warren and Michael Crowell, a lawyer at the UNC School of Government, both agreed that Harrison is within the law to keep the car. There is nothing that would require the sheriff to sell the seized car within a specific period, they said.
"We would certainly appreciate any extra dollars we could have this year to hire more teachers or keep more teachers," said Anne McLaurin, a member of the Wake school board. "But I don't think there's anything we can do about the sheriff's decision, except encourage him to be generous."
Wake teacher Maryanne Faneck is more blunt. In the current economic environment, with teachers being laid off and education programs being cut, Faneck said using such an extravagant car to patrol the county's highways reflects poorly on the sheriff's department. It should be sold and the proceeds given to the schools, she said.
"I think they just want to drive a cool car," said Faneck, who teaches physical education at Swift Creek Elementary School in Raleigh.
Though the county got the Corvette free, that doesn't mean it comes without costs. Harrison estimated his department spent about $9,000 to outfit the car with blue lights, siren, radar gun, radio, laptop computer and other standard gear.
Records from the county garage show the Z06, which had 10,278 miles on its odometer when it was titled to the county on April 2, required a new set of special high-speed tires earlier this month. The four Goodyear F1 tires cost the county $1,571.98, according to the written repair order.
The car sat largely unused until Friday, the sheriff said, when it was assigned to a deputy with the department's Drug Impact Team.
On his first night on patrol in the Corvette, the deputy nabbed a car carrying drugs. Harrison said the car's stealthy, low-slung profile makes it difficult for drug runners or speeders to spot.
"Certainly, most people don't see a Corvette as a law enforcement vehicle," he said.
And the Z06's 505-horsepower, V8 engine also ensures it can catch just about anything on the road.
"It drives great," said the sheriff, who took the car home one night last week. He said it was the only time he has driven the Corvette, which rides a little rougher than the department-issue Dodge Charger he uses as his primary vehicle.
In response to a public records request, Harrison said he had no log or other document showing who has driven the car or when. As it sat in the parking garage under the county jail Wednesday, the Corvette had just 11,792 miles on the odometer -- 1,514 more than it had when the department took possession.
Faneck predicted the car will cost taxpayers more than it's worth.
"Who's going to pay for the maintenance on that high-dollar car?" she asked. "I mean $1,500 for a set of tires every 10,000 miles? As a teacher who was furloughed, I hope I'm not paying for that."
RELATED ARTICLE
Deputies using Corvette to catch speeders
July 21, 2009
RALEIGH -- If you plan to outrun the law in Wake County, you’d better have a very, very fast car.
Or maybe a rocket.
Wake deputies have been spotted using a black Chevy Corvette Z06 to pull over speeders on Interstate 40. Among the fastest production cars in the world, the Z06 has a base sticker price of $74,875 and a growling V8 racing engine that turns out 505 horsepower.
The car has a top track speed of 198 miles per hour, according to Chevrolet.
Though the car has set tongues wagging among Triangle sports-car enthusiasts, Sheriff Donnie Harrison declined to talk to The New & Observer about the Corvette Monday or Tuesday. He did show the car to crews from local television stations.
“You’re not going to force me to talk about anything, you understand?” the sheriff said by telephone late Tuesday, his voice raised. “I’ve got a schedule to run. I don’t sell papers.”
Harrison said he was upset by an N&O reporter calling county commissioners for comment about the Corvette before he was ready to hold a media conference about it.
County Manager David Cooke said that it is his understanding that the Corvette was seized from a drug dealer, but that he could provide no further information, such as how much county money had been spent to upgrade the car.
Gary Buchanan, a Raleigh resident who owns a 2007 Corvette, saw Wake deputies last week using the stealthy, unmarked Z06 to enforce the 65-miles-per-hour speed limit on I-40 in Cary.
“It had blue lights in the back and blue lights in the front,” Buchanan said. “It was the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen. Something like that is so extreme. I mean, if my wife was out driving and this thing came up behind her and the lights started going off, man, she’d be scared to death.”
A Corvette co-insurer, Buchanan said he was concerned about the safety and expense of using the car for law enforcement. The special high speed tires the Z06 requires have to be replaced every 10,000 miles and cost up to $1,500 a set. The vehicle handles poorly in wet or cold weather, he said, and he wondered how a deputy could use a stick shift and work the blue lights and radio all at the same time.
The car’s wide, low-slung profile makes it nearly impossible to take off road, such as would be required to cross an interstate median. “This thing is not cheap to operate,” Buchanan said. “And Corvettes have to be driven by people who know what they’re doing.
"Because if you don’t, you can get into serious trouble real quick. The Z06 in particular is a pretty potent automobile.”
Other North Carolina sheriff’s departments have deployed flashy, souped-up cars in the past.
Former Davidson County Sheriff Gerald Hege had a black Chevy Impala SS with a painting of a black widow spider emblazoned on the side doors. Rebuilt by the Welcome shop of a NASCAR team-owner, the government-owned car Hege drove had a Corvette engine and two tanks of nitrous oxide to boost its horsepower.
The “Spider Car” was sold at auction for $32,000 in 2005, after Hege was removed from office and convicted on corruption charges.
In Forsyth County, former sheriff Ron Barker bought several Camaro Z28s in 1999 for a special Highway Interdiction Team. Kevin Barker, the sheriff’s grandson and a deputy, soon wrecked and totaled the $21,000 sports car while traveling in excess of 100 miles per hour during a high-speed pursuit.
The Wake Sheriff’s Office refused to comment on how its Z06 will be used or who gets to drive it. Asked Monday whether the car could be photographed, spokeswoman Phyllis Stephens said it was not available because the deputy it was assigned to was not on duty. Asked whether the deputy had taken the car home, Stephens refused to answer.
There are several photos of the sheriff’s car posted on Internet sites run by Corvette enthusiasts, however.
A request filed early Tuesday seeking public records related to the vehicle’s acquisition was not granted.
“I can get those to you at my convenience and at a time allowed by law,” Harrison said. “We’ll get you public records when I get time to get the public records to you.”
State public records law dictates that government agencies provide public records “as promptly as possible.”
Wake Commissioner Tony Gurley, who used to race stock cars, said he first heard about the Z06 being used by the sheriff’s office while at a recent car show.
“I was looking at a Highway Patrol car and a trooper told me about it,” Gurley said. “He was jealous. I told him that I didn’t remember voting on any funds to authorize that. I can’t even afford one for myself.”
Board chairman Harold Webb questioned whether using such a car at a time when the Wake sheriff’s officer and other county agencies are undergoing deep cuts and staff layoffs sends the right message.
“I hope he didn’t use any stimulus money for this,” Webb said of the sheriff.
The woman who keeps growing
Standing at 6ft 6ins and weighing 34 stone, Tanya Angus has been dubbed a modern day giant - and she is still growing.
Published: 9:54AM BST 23 Jul 2009
She has gained ten inches in just 12 years as a result of a rare growth condition, and is already one of the tallest and heaviest women on the planet.
Now doctors say Miss Angus, 30, from Nevada,i s the only woman in the world whose growth cannot be halted by medication.
Suffering from a rare disease known as Acromeglia, a condition often referred to as "gigantism" where the body produces too much growth hormone, Miss Angus grew from a slender 5ft 8ins at the age of 18 to 6ft 6ins and 34 stone.
"I'm staying hopeful," she said.
"Without hope you don't have anything. I hope they can stop me growing one day so I can try to live as normally as possible."
Miss Angus's troubles began in her late teens when she noticed that her feet, face and figure were continuing to grow at an alarming rate.
"I started to feel unhappy with my appearance. I started spending a fortune on make-up, trying to make myself look better. I couldn't understand why my face didn't look as attractive any more," she said.
She also began suffering severe migraines and felt run down and depressed, as if she was suffering from constant flu.
But though she kept going to see her GP, he believed the 20-year-old was just an attention-seeker hoping to be given anti-depressant drugs, and refused to help.
Even more shockingly Miss Angus's figure started to alter, and her once womanly body became larger overall, and straight up and down like a man's body.
"Someone at work actually asked me if I used to be a man," she said.
"My voice had also changed and become deeper. I was devastated and started to feel very shy and insecure." Things finally came to a head when her own boyfriend also asked her about her new shape, and got his mum to ask her whether she'd had a sex change. "I was heartbroken and I decided I didn't want any more to do with him," she said. "I phoned my mum and said I wanted to come back to Nevada.
"As soon as my sister saw me at the airport, she knew I'd changed, and she called my mum and told her we needed to see a doctor."
The family GP immediately recognised the signs of gigantism and referred Miss Angus to a specialist. At that stage she was 6ft 1ins tall, and a size 14 to 16, with a size 10 feet.
An MRI scan eventually showed a tumour the size of a grapefruit in her brain which had wrapped itself around her inner carotid artery, causing an overproduction of growth hormone. It was so big, doctors at first said there was nothing to be done. But Miss Angus's mother, Karen, searched the Internet and medical publications until she finally found a doctor who said he could operate.
In 2003, she finally underwent surgery to remove most of the tumour, although small parts of it were too difficult to separate from her brain. She was then given a tail of drugs to try to control the huge amounts of growth hormones still in her body.
Tanya had a count of 3,000 of the hormones, compared to an average person's of just 250.
Doctors were anxious to bring the level down to less than 1,000, but they were barely able to do that. Her height had crept up to 6ft 3ins, and she was now a size 20.
Unable to walk properly, she had to live with her mum and stepdad. She barely went out and was subjected to stares and rude comments in the street.
"It was horrible," she said. "My whole life had to change, and I couldn't do anything for myself any more. The hardest thing is that people kept thinking I was man, and calling me sir, which really annoys me. I try to dress in feminine clothes and wear make-up to look nice, but it's really hard when you're my size." Two years later in 2005, the hormone levels again began to soar, and Tanya's mum sought out a second specialist who discovered the tumour had grown again and was now the size of an orange.
She underwent further surgery, and fat from her stomach had to be used to pad out areas of brain tissue from where the tumour had been removed.
Tanya was put on another set of medication to reduce the growth hormone, but her levels have never sunk to below 900 and are now way over 1,000. She is now one of the world's tallest women, and also one of the heaviest.
Then two years ago, Miss Angus also suffered a stroke, caused by the pressure her massive body was putting on her heart.
She had to learn how to walk and talk again, and now suffers hearing difficulties. She recovered and went to live with her sister, but still struggles to get around, and now uses a wheelchair.
"Doctors just say there is nothing we can do for her," said Karen.
"You don't know how many doctors we have called to try and help us. We've spent all our savings, over $200,000 trying to help her.
"One doctor even told me that my daughter had only two months to live. "That was eight months ago, but I refused to believe it. I won't stop until we can find something to halt the growth."
Now Tanya has a new doctor, who she's been seeing for three months, and he is hopeful of finally finding a drug combination to slow down her growth.
"I'm doing this story because I want people to understand why I'm this way," she says.
"It's not my fault I ended up like this.
"People even in my home town are still so hurtful, and I'd like people to be educated so they can treat me as a real person at last."

