truesee's Blog

Teen put his photo on stolen cell belonging to owner

Police nab teen who put himself on cell

 

Associated Press

July 2, 2009, 9:39AM

 

SUFFOLK, Va. — Suffolk police say they now have a suspect to go with an image of a person who snapped a photo of himself with a cell phone belonging to the owner of the home he burglarized. 

Police say a 17-year-old Suffolk resident faces charges of burglary and larceny. They're not identifying him because he's underage.

The burglary happened in early June. Detectives think the person unsuccessfully tried to make a phone call using the phone, then used the camera function to photograph himself. People who saw the photo in news stories helped detectives identify the suspect.

 

 

ORIGINAL STORY

 

 

Suffolk

Burglary suspect leaves photo of himself on homeowner's cell phone

Burglary suspect on cell phone

The man suspected of the early-June burglary of a Suffolk home left this photo on the victim's cell phone. (Courtesy of Suffolk police / June 4, 2009)

 

11:40 AM EDT, June 29, 2009

SUFFOLK — Police investigators are seeking the public's help in identifying a suspect in an early June home burglary after getting a little help from the suspect himself.

In the first week of June, police were called to the burglary of a house in the 200 block of Holbrook Arch in Suffolk. During the burglary, the suspect tried to use the homeowner's cell phone but was unable to make a call, city spokeswoman Debbie George said in a statement Sunday evening.

What the suspect was able to do was snap a genial-looking photo of himself with the phone's built-in camera while committing the crime. He then left the phone and ran off, George said.

Entry #701

Would you pledge your soul as loan collateral?

Would you pledge your soul as loan collateral?

Reuters

 

Mirosiichenko, public face of Kontora loan company, shows contract with borrower at his office in Riga
Reuters – Viktor Mirosiichenko,
the public face of Kontora loan c
ompany, shows a contract with a
borrower at his …
 
Fri Jul 3, 11:53 am ET

RIGA (Reuters) – Ready to give your soul for a loan in these difficult economic times? In Latvia, where the crisis has raged more than in the rest of the European Union, you can.

Such a deal is being offered by the Kontora loan company, whose public face is Viktor Mirosiichenko, 34.

Clients have to sign a contract, with the words "Agreement" in bold letters at the top. The client agrees to the collateral, "that is, my immortal soul."

Mirosiichenko said his company would not employ debt collectors to get its money back if people refused to repay, and promised no physical violence. Signatories only have to give their first name and do not show any documents.

"If they don't give it back, what can you do? They won't have a soul, that's all," he told Reuters in a basement office, with one desk, a computer and three chairs.

Wearing sunglasses, a black suit and a white shirt with the words "Kontora" (office) emblazoned on it, he reaches into his pocket and lays out a sheaf of notes on the table to show that the business is serious and not a joke.

Latvia has been the EU nation worst hit by economic crisis.

Unemployment is soaring and banks have sharply reduced their lending, meaning that small companies offering easy loans in small amounts have become more popular.

Mirosiichenko said his company was basically trusting people to repay the small amounts they borrowed, which has so far been up to 250 lats ($500) for between 1 and 90 days at a hefty interest rate.

He said about 200 people had taken out loans over the two months the business was in operation.

(Reporting by Patrick Lannin; Editing by Steve Addison

Entry #700

Blind man sees after having tooth inserted in eye

  I was blind, bite now I can see...

Miracle ... tooth op gives Martin sight

Miracle ... tooth op gives Martin sight

ROBIN PERRIE

The Sun

July 3, 2009

BLIND Martin Jones has seen his wife for the first time after surgeons restored his sight using one of his TEETH.

Martin, 42, was blinded when a tub of molten aluminium exploded in his face while he was working in a scrapyard 12 years ago.

He married care worker Gill, 50, eight years later so he has never seen her - until surgeons performed the incredible op.

Overjoyed Martin said: "I met my wife when I was blind and when I found out there was a chance I would get my sight back the first person I wanted to see was her.

"The doctors took the bandages off and it was like looking through water and then I saw this figure and it was her. It was unbelievable.

"She looked so beautiful. If felt fantastic getting my sight back. I can't describe it, it is beyond words."

Martin suffered 37 per cent burns when he was covered in the 600C liquid. He had to wear a body stocking for 23 hours a day as doctors treated his horrific burns.

His left eye was so badly damaged it had to be removed.

Revolutionary

His right was saved but he couldn't see out of it.

Martin thought he would be blind for ever - until it was decided he was suitable for the revolutionary surgery.

One of his canine teeth was removed and a tiny hole was drilled into it to hold a special optical lens.

The tooth was then inserted into Martin's cheek for three months to enable it to grow new tissue and blood vessels.

The lens was then fitted into the hole and the tooth was inserted into his right eyeball.

Within two weeks stunned Martin could see for the first time in 12 years.

The implant works by the lens allowing light into the eye which restores his vision.

Martin said: "When I first heard about the technique I couldn't believe it. I don't think many people can.

"My friends just don't believe me. They think I'm pulling their leg or have just made it up.

"But when I take my glasses off they say 'oh my God' because my eye looks like something out of a sci-fi movie. They're just amazed at it.

"I was blind for 12 years and when my sight came back everything changed.

"The first car I saw when my sight was restored was a Smart car and I couldn't stop laughing. I thought someone had chopped the car in half.

"Getting my sight back has changed my life. I used to walk with a white stick but now I find pleasure in being able to see what is going on in the world."

The operation was done by Brighton surgeon Christopher Lui, the only person in the UK who carries out the procedure.

Entry #699

Game show looks to convert atheists

Game show looks to convert atheists

Fri Jul 3, 2009 11:55am EDT
     Daren Butler 

 

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - What happens when you put a Muslim imam, a Christian priest, a rabbi and a Buddhist monk in a room with 10 atheists?Turkish television station Kanal T hopes the answer is a ratings success as it prepares to launch a gameshow where spiritual guides from the four faiths will seek to convert a group of non-believers.

The prize for converts will be a pilgrimage to a holy site of their chosen religion -- Mecca for Muslims, the Vatican for Christians, Jerusalem for Jews and Tibet for Buddhists.

But religious authorities in Muslim but secular Turkey are not amused by the twist on the popular reality game show format and the Religious Affairs Directorate is refusing to provide an imam for the show.

"Doing something like this for the sake of ratings is disrespectful to all religions. Religion should not be a subject for entertainment programs," High Board of Religious Affairs Chairman Hamza Aktan told state news agency Anatolian after news of the planned program emerged.

The makers of "Penitents Compete" are unrepentant and reject claims that the show, scheduled to begin broadcasting in September, will cheapen religion.

"We are giving the biggest prize in the world, the gift of belief in God," Kanal T chief executive Seyhan Soylu told Reuters.

"We don't approve of anyone being an atheist. God is great and it doesn't matter which religion you believe in. The important thing is to believe," Soylu said.

The project focuses attention on the issue of religious identity in European Union-candidate Turkey, where rights groups have raised concerns over freedom of religion for non-Muslim minorities.

Detractors of the ruling AK Party government, which is rooted in political Islam but officially secular, accuse it of having a hidden Islamist agenda, a charge it denies.

Some 200 people have so far applied to take part in the show and the 10 contestants will be chosen next month.

A team of theologians will ensure that the atheists are truly non-believers and are not just seeking fame or a free holiday.

Entry #698

Cab driver uses deodorant to stop attacker

Elgin cabbie fends off attacker with deodorant

Elgin cabbie fends off attacker with deodorant

Harry Hitzeman 

Daily Herald Staff

Published: 7/2/2009 4:13 PM

 

A quick-thinking taxi driver in Elgin fended off an attacker and probably avoided serious injury when he used deodorant spray as makeshift mace.

"He was fine (afterward)," Elgin Deputy Police Chief Jeff Swoboda said of the cabbie. "He had a small laceration on his left thumb and a small abrasion on his neck."

The 51-year-old cabbie's brush with a man armed with a knife that was at least 10 inches long began when he picked up a man in his 20s outside the Grand Victoria Casino, 250 S. Grove Ave., at about 2 a.m. Thursday.

The man gave the cabbie, who was driving a minivan instead of a sedan, several sets of directions and destinations.

The cabbie got suspicious, so he put a small can of spray deodorant that he kept in the vehicle between his legs, the police report said.

At about 2:20 p.m., at the intersection of Wellington and Bent streets, the man leaned forward in the minivan, put the knife to the cabbie's throat and demanded money.

In response, the cabbie sprayed the man in the face and eyes, disorienting him and causing him to drop his knife, which eventually was left in the cab.

"The doors were locked so he punched the cabdriver a few times" until the cabbie unlocked the doors, Swoboda said.

The attacker ran toward the apartments behind the ClockTower Plaza shopping center. He is described as black, about 6 feet tall and 160 pounds.

No arrests have been made as of Thursday afternoon.

Entry #697

Man trying to kill weeds sets house on fire with flame thrower

House wrecked as man kills weeds with flame thrower

House wrecked as man kills weeds with flame thrower
AFP/File – Dandelions grow at the
edge of a path. A German gardener's
house was left a smouldering wreck after …
July 3, 2009 
9:35 am

BERLIN (AFP) – A German gardener's house was left a smouldering wreck on Friday after he set it on fire while trying to get rid of the weeds with the help of a flame-thrower, police said.

After accidentally setting his hedge alight, the 54-year-old's garden shed was soon also engulfed in flames and despite efforts to extinguish the fire with a garden hose, the blaze spread to the roof of the house.

Seven firemen were needed to put out the blaze in Tangstedt near Hamburg in northern Germany, which occurred on Thursday. Police said the house was now uninhabitable.

Flame-throwers are used widely in agriculture and also in gardening, but generally only for removing weeds from between cracks in paving in driveways and patios.

 

Entry #696

Elementary school students get X-rated version of class DVD

DVD sent home with Elk Grove elementary students included sexual content

Lambert and Stan Oklobdzija

Sacramento Bee

Posted: 07/02/2009 04:49:49 PM PDT
Updated: 07/02/2009 05:59:59 PM PDT


   

Elk Grove Unified officials have rescinded a request for parents to return DVDs that included "inappropriate images" they say were inadvertently sent home with students at Isabelle Jackson Elementary.

Now, the district doesn't want the DVDs back.

"Just destroy them," said district spokeswoman Torrey Johnson.

A teacher apparently sent the DVD retrospective of class activity home with her 24 students on the last day of school Friday.

Although the district would not say what sort of images the DVD contained, a copy obtained by The Bee from a parent showed six seconds of sexual content.

Johnson said the teacher learned of the mistake when a parent called her over the weekend. The teacher then called all the parents of her students and asked them to destroy the DVD.

The district followed up with a letter to parents in which they initially requested that the DVDs be returned to the school.

Johnson said a district investigation of the incident will consider whether anything criminal took place, among other things.

Though children saw the video, no parents filed a complaint with the Sacramento County Sheriff's Department, said Sgt. Tim Curran, sheriff's spokesman.

Even if someone were to file a report, Curran said, distributing the DVD "may not be prosecutable" because law enforcement would have to establish the teacher had both intent to distribute the material and intent to arouse in order to have broken the law.

 

RELATED STORY:

 

Calif. students get X-rated version of class DVD

AP

Fri Jul 3, 1:02 am ET

ELK GROVE, Calif. – A Northern California elementary school teacher sent her students home for the summer with a video of class memories, only the DVD included six seconds of her having sex on a couch.

Officials at the Elk Grove Unified School District asked families of the teacher's 24 students to get rid of the DVD after the unintended clip was found spliced in a scene where children were sharing stories in class.

"Just destroy them," said spokeswoman Torrey Johnson.

Johnson said the teacher, whose name isn't being released, sent the DVD home with her students from Isabelle Jackson Elementary on the last day of class Friday. She learned of the mistake after a parent called her. She then called all the parents to ask them to destroy the DVD.

The school district, located just south of Sacramento, initially sent a letter home to parents asking them to return the DVDs, but then asked parents to simply destroy them.

 

Entry #695

Search is on for woman owed $360,000

 

Heiress believed lost in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

Lori Culbert, Vancouver Sun

Published: Thursday, July 02, 2009

VANCOUVER - The search is on for a Vancouver woman living in the city's notoriously impoverished Downtown Eastside who may be the only heir to a small fortune sitting in a German bank.

Toronto lawyer Robert Price was hired by a German bank to help locate a woman named Lucia Leiser, who is the rightful owner of an estate worth an estimated $360,000 Cdn that was bequeathed by a relative of her father. Since her father died about a decade ago, the money now belongs to Leiser.

But the challenge is finding her to let her know.

Price contacted The Vancouver Sun this week after reading a 2007 story in which the newspaper quoted Lucia Leiser-Maika, a resident of the Downtown Eastside hotel Bourbon.

"I believe that Lucia Leiser-Maika may be one and the same person as Lucia Leiser and I would like to be able to contact this woman," Price said in an e-mail to the newspaper.

In an interview, Price said Lucia's father left Germany in 1952, married a woman in Fiji and settled in Vancouver where he raised two children - a son, and a daughter named Lucia.

A Vancouver Sun reporter and photographer spent two days in the Downtown Eastside showing Leiser's picture - taken by the newspaper in 2007 - to residents and service providers.

Many people said they recognized her in the photo. Several said they had not seen Leiser for a year or more, while a few believed they had spotted her in recent days or weeks. A handful thought she was of Polynesian descent.

A shelter worker said Leiser was well known for her attire, often wearing brightly coloured leis around her neck.

Fellow Downtown Eastside resident Yolanda Dyck said she last saw Leiser in 2007, when the two spent a handful of months together in a drum group run through the Aboriginal Front Door. Dyck thought she had a connection to Hawaii or some similar place because she often spoke about how the native Canadian culture was different from her own background.

"She was outgoing," said Dyck, a Crown witness during serial killer Robert (Willie) Pickton's trial. "She had a big heart."

She believes Leiser was living on the street at that time.

In a February 2007 interview about welfare shelter-allowance rates being increased by $50, Leiser said she was being kicked out of the Bourbon Hotel on Vancouver's Cordova Street. She said she had survived her first three years in the Downtown Eastside without social assistance and spent much of her time helping other women at the Aboriginal Front Door and the Downtown Eastside Women's Centre.

She dismissed the $50 welfare increase as a "Band-Aid" that wouldn't heal the larger problems festering in the Downtown Eastside.

"You think $50 is going to help? That's one trick for the women who live down here," Leiser said at the time. "That place where I live is not a home. It's full of mice and bedbugs and the ceiling leaks."

Glen Miller, longtime manager of the Bourbon, said this week his hotel is in good shape and that Leiser was evicted in 2007 after scribbling on the walls and exhibiting other unstable behaviour.

 

 

 

Lucia Leiser-Maika could inherit $360,000 Cdn, but she's believed to be lost in the bowels of Vancouver's notorious Downtown Eastside.

Lucia Leiser-Maika could inherit $360,000 Cdn, but she's believed to be lost in the bowels of Vancouver's notorious Downtown Eastside.

Steve Bosch

Entry #694

Man with no arms or legs plays football, swims and surfs

Man with no arms or legs can play football, swim and surf

Nick Vujicic was born with no arms or legs, but has learnt to play football, swim and even surf.

 

Murray Wardrop

Daily Telegraph
Published: 7:00AM BST 02 Jul 2009

Nick Vujicic: Man with no arms or legs can play football, swim and surf
Mr Vujicic also enjoys the occasional round of golf, having mastered striking the ball using a club nestled under his chin. Photo: BARCROFT

The 26-year old is mainly torso but has a small foot on his left hip which helps him balance and enables him to kick.

Mr Vujicic uses his single foot to type, write with a pen and pick things up between his toes.

He claims that his lack of limbs is something of a benefit in the water because it means he has more flotation and can use his foot as a "propeller".

And during a trip to Hawaii in 2008, he learnt to surf with help from professional surfer Bethany Hamilton, who had her arm bitten off by a shark when she was 12.

His ability to pull off 360 degree spins on his board got him on the front cover of Surfer magazine.

Mr Vujicic also enjoys the occasional round of golf, having mastered striking the ball using a club nestled under his chin.

His disability came at birth without any medical explanation – a rare condition called Phocomelia.

However, he has learnt to use his foot and a wheelchair to overcome every hurdle life has thrown at him.

"I call it my chicken drumstick," joked Nick, who was born in Melbourne, Australia, but now lives in Los Angeles, USA.

"I'd be lost without it. When I get in the water I float because 80 per cent of my body is lungs and my drumstick acts as a propeller."

From a young age his parents helped him become independent, teaching him to swim at the age of 18 months and creating gadgets to allow him to write and type.

Mr Vujicic added: "My dad put me in the water at 18 months and gave the courage to learn how to swim.

"I also got really into football and skateboarding. I totally love the English Premier League."

His parents also insisted that he attend a mainstream school in Australia, where he was teased and bullied.

"It was the best decision they could have made for me," Mr Vujicic added, who later achieved a degree in Financial Planning and Real Estate.

"It was very hard but it gave me independence."

Mr Vujicic is now a motivational speaker and has travelled to over 24 countries speaking to groups of up to 110,000 people.

In 1990 he won the Australian Young Citizen of the Year award for his bravery and perseverance.

Describing his surf tuition with Miss Hamilton, he said: "She was amazing. I was terrified at first, but once I got up there it felt absolutely fantastic and I caught some waves pretty well."

"I have a very low centre of gravity so I've got pretty good balance."

Entry #693

Man jailed after 15th DWI and 78th license suspension

Man heads to jail after 15th DWI

By PEGGY WRIGHT 

Daily Record

STAFF WRITER 

July 1, 2009 

 

An East Rutherford man whose driver's license has been suspended 78 times admitted Tuesday to his 15th drunken-driving offense, saying he was plastered on beer in April when he crashed head-on in Morris Township into a vehicle carrying a father and his young daughter.

Shaun P. Campbell, a 40-year-old carpenter, pleaded guilty in state Superior Court, Morristown, to one count of assault by auto on April 23 and to the motor vehicle offenses of drunken driving and driving while on the revoked list. That day, he crashed the SUV he was driving into a Ford pickup driven by Harold A. Bivins Jr., 48, of Chatham Township. His 4-year-old daughter, Hannah Bivins, was a passenger.

Morris County Assistant Prosecutor Brian DiGiacomo has recommended that Campbell receive the maximum sentence of 18 months in prison for the assault by auto, and consecutive 180-day terms on the drunken-driving and revoked license charges. He also recommended to Judge Salem Vincent Ahto that Campbell receive an extra 90-day term as an enhanced penalty on the license revocation offense.

Campbell, who politely answered questions posed by the judge and defense lawyer John Paul Velez, acknowledged his blood-alcohol level on April 23 was .288 percent, or more than triple the .08 percent level at which a driver is deemed intoxicated in New Jersey. Ahto asked Campbell what he drank.

"Beer. Quite a bit. Enough to not know what was going on," Campbell replied.

Though his lack of a valid license hasn't deterred him, he also will lose his driving privileges for at least another 10 years. Velez said that, with the revocations Campbell has banked, he won't be driving "for a very long time." He also faces about $3,000 in penalties. Velez said he would argue at sentencing for a shorter prison sentence.

Authorities said Campbell's license has been suspended 78 times over the past 22 years, including 14 previous times for DWI. Some of the revocations were for failure to appear in court or pay fines. He still has outstanding DWI charges in Pequannock and Wayne, which the judge said he would like to see resolved by the time Campbell is sentenced in August.

DiGiacomo said the state would like to see consecutive terms behind bars for the outstanding DWIs.

"We won't agree to any free DWIs, so to speak," he said.

Injuries not severe

 

Bivins suffered an injured finger and his daughter sustained an abrasion on her chest from her seat belt after the crash. Campbell fled afterward, running into Loantaka Park. Authorities quickly apprehended him.

Campbell said he is willing to pay for any damage to the Bivins' pickup that insurance didn't cover. "I'm not trying to hide if I caused damage," he said.

He was not able to post $50,000 bail after his arrest to be freed from the Morris County jail. The judge revoked his bail after his plea so he will remain in jail until sentencing.

The number of times Campbell flouted motor vehicle laws recently prompted state Senate President Richard J. Codey to propose criminalizing some repeat drunken-driving offenses. He has filed a package of bills in the Legislature, including one that would make it a fourth-degree crime to drive under the influence while already on the suspended list for a DWI conviction. Codey's proposals also call for increased penalties for repeat DWI offenders who have a blood-alcohol content of .20 percent and higher and for those who lend cars to anyone whose license was suspended for a DWI.

Morris County Prosecutor Robert A. Bianchi said his office was adamant that it would seek the maximum penalties for Campbell.

 

 

photo

A handcuffed Shaun P. Campbell is escorted into a Morristown courtroom Tuesday; he pleaded guilty to assault by auto, drunken driving and driving while on the revoked list because of 14 previous DWI convictions and numerous other motor vehicle violations.

(STAFF PHOTO: DAWN BENKO)

"This defendant has pled guilty to the maximum time allowed under the law. We need to ensure that these cases are handled sternly to ensure, as best as possible, the safety of the community from the dangers of drinking and driving," Bianchi said.

Entry #692

Passenger on US Airways flight strips naked

Flight diverted after passenger undresses in seat

HEATHER CLARK
Associated Press Writer
July 1, 2009
9:25 pm

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – A passenger stripped naked during a US Airways flight and resisted a flight attendant's efforts to cover him with a blanket before two off-duty law enforcement officers on board subdued and handcuffed him, authorities said Wednesday.

Keith Wright, 50, of the Bronx in New York, was taken into custody after he disrobed while sitting in his seat in the back of Flight 705 on Tuesday evening, authorities said. The plane was carrying about 148 passengers from Charlotte to Los Angeles, the airline said.

Wright was unresponsive when a flight attendant asked him to put his clothes back on, said Dan Jiron, a spokesman for the Albuquerque airport. "She asked him on more than one occasion to put on his clothes. She covered him with a blanket and he took that off," Jiron said.

Wright punched and kicked the flight attendant, who asked two off-duty law officers for help, according to a criminal complaint. A Los Angeles police officer and sheriff's deputy helped the flight attendant subdue and handcuff Wright before the flight landed, Jiron said.

The flight attendants also were dealing with an unrelated onboard medical emergency at the same time, which exacerbated the situation, the FBI said. The aircraft was diverted because of the medical emergency, and Wright's actions were a secondary reason for the unplanned landing, the complaint said.

Roger Finzel, an assistant federal public defender representing Wright, said he has not yet met with his client and had no information about the case other than what was in the complaint.

Wright told the FBI he is suffering from a bipolar disorder and had not taken his prescribed medication before leaving New York that morning, the criminal complaint said. Wright told the FBI he recalled nothing about the flight or his behavior, it said.

Wright had been seen dancing in a crowded boarding area before the flight, but when approached by Flight Service Supervisor Claudia Kearney, he told her he had drunk one beer. Kearney told the FBI she did not smell alcohol on him and determined he was well enough to travel, the complaint said.

US Airways spokeswoman Valerie Wunder could not confirm that Kearney worked for the airline.

Passenger Ginny Keegan of Detroit was sitting in the front of the plane, when there was commotion coming from the back. The people on the flight were notified of a violent passenger as the plane began to approach Albuquerque, but Keegan said no one was fearful.

"No one was really panicking. The flight attendants seemed to handle it very well," she said. Keegan said the man was "completely naked" as he was taken in handcuffs off the plane.

As the plane took off again, Keegan said the usual announcement to please fasten your seat belts came over the loudspeakers with a twist. The message included "a reminder to everybody to please keep your clothing on. It got a couple chuckles," Keegan said.

Wright is in federal custody on a federal charge of interfering with flight crew members and attendants. He is expected to appear in federal court in Albuquerque on Thursday.

 

Entry #691

Man tries to steal computer from jail

Michigan college student tries to steal from jail

6/30/2009, 5:56 a.m. EDT The Associated Press  

(AP) — KALAMAZOO, Mich. - Western Michigan University student William K. Bradley has been sentenced for larceny in a building.

He stole a computer.

From the Kalamazoo County jail.

Where he already was serving a sentence in a different case.

Kalamazoo County Circuit Judge Gary Giguere Jr. sentenced Bradley on Monday, telling the Kalamazoo resident his jailhouse theft was "the dumbest crime I've heard today" and "may be in the top half-dozen in my career."

Bradley, who has racked up six felonies and four misdemeanors by the age of 25, agreed with the judge, saying, "I'm not the best criminal."

Bradley asked for home arrest, but Giguere instead ordered him back to jail for six months.

Western spokeswoman Cheryl Roland tells the Kalamazoo Gazette Bradley is a sophomore at the university.

___

Information from: Kalamazoo Gazette

Entry #690

After Robbing Gas Station Robbers Run Out of Gas

Robbers Run Out of Gas

Robbers Run Out of Gas

By WBNG News

Story Created: Jun 30, 2009 at 5:51 PM EDT

Story Updated: Jun 30, 2009 at 5:51 PM EDT

State Police say a getaway car ran out of gas after a robbery at a gas station.

Troopers caught up with the suspects here, on Route 11 last night.

State Police responded to a panic alarm at the Quickway in Kirkwood around 9:30 pm.

The clerk told troopers a man displayed a knife, demanded cash, cut phone lines and fled.

About an hour later, State Police located the suspects, 30 year old Lonnie Meckwood of Carbondale and 51 year old Phillip Weeks of Tunkhannock.

Troopers say they're vehicle had run out of gas, which aided in their capture.

Both are charged with 1st degree robbery.

 

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.wicz.com/news/video.asp?video=06%2D30%2D09+kirk%2Ewmv%2Eflv&zone=News

 

Entry #689

Boy caught stealing from ambulance treating his mother

Boy charged with stealing from ambulance

 

By John Thompson
Elizabethton Bureau Chief
Johnson City Press

July 1, 2009

ELIZABETHTON – A boy was arrested by the Carter County Sheriff’s Department over the weekend on charges he stole medical supplies valued at $5,000 from the back of a Carter County Rescue Squad ambulance while paramedics were treating the boy’s mother.

The boy was also accused of stealing a purse from one of the rescue workers and breaking into a car several hours earlier and stole several credit cards, a BlackBerry phone and a PlayStation portable video game.

The thefts were discovered when the medical team was preparing to leave the John Alfred Loop residence and noticed their medical bags and oxygen tank were missing. The purse of one member of the team was also missing.

Lt. Mike Fraley of the sheriff’s department responded to the residence and received permission to search the house. Nothing was found, but upon leaving the home he noticed a boy coming out of a camper on the property. He received permission to search the camper and found several medical bags and an oxygen tank that belonged to the paramedics. More medical supplies and an oxygen sensor machine were found under a recliner.

The mother of the boy later found some of the items reportedly stolen in the earlier car burglary lying in a ditch beside the road.

The youth was charged with theft over $1,000 and taken to the Juvenile Detention Center in Johnson City.

Entry #688

McDonald's McNugget boxes used to package homegrown pot

Cops say man was selling ... an illegal 'happy meal'

The Register Citizen: Northwest Connecticut's Daily Newspaper

Serving Litchfield County, CT

Published: Tuesday, June 30, 2009

TRACY KENNEDY

BANTAM — A city man who reportedly grew marijuana at his apartment and packaged his illegal drugs in McDonald‘s Chicken McNugget boxes is facing criminal charges.

Frank V. Gentile III, 17, 164 North Elm St., and three alleged buyers, Glenn M. Brandner, 19, 167 French St., Torrington, Brittany Alfano, 22, 1899 Mountain Road, Torrington, and Garrett Neumann, 19, 143 West Pearl Road, Torrington, were arrested at 10:46 p.m. Sunday by Torrington police.

Judge Corinne Klatt set Gentile’s bond at $5,000 and ordered him to appear in court again July 22.

Neumann posted a $500 bond and Brandner and Alfano were released on a $2,500 non-surety bond. The three defendants were scheduled to appear in court July 6.

Alfano, Neumann and another man were waiting in a car near North Elm Street and Norwood Street for Brandner, to come out of Gentile’s home, when Torrington police officer Quinn Sullivan saw their Hyundai Elantra, according to police. Sullivan was in the process of checking the passengers’ identification when Brandner came out of the apartment. The officer looked inside a McDonald’s Chicken McNugget box Brandner was carrying and found the marijuana, Brandner reportedly just bought from Gentile. A search of Gentile’s home yielded a seizure of 4.8 ounces of marijuana found in a plastic bag under Gentile’s couch, a large plastic bag containing marijuana plant stems, packaging material, a glass pipe containing burnt marijuana, a digital scale, a purple grinder, a pot containing marijuana plants, two cell phones, rolling papers and $89 in cash, according to court records.

During the search police said Gentile’s cell phone rang numerous times. Police recorded several text messages including the following: “yo you want 8 big weed plants” and another “that s-- you gave me has mold on it my ma ia allergic (misspelled message) to it and she got rushed to the hospital”, according to police.

Gentile, an unemployed store clerk, pleaded not guilty to possession of marijuana with intent to sell, possession of over four ounces of marijuana, sale of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of marijuana in a school zone and cultivation of marijuana.

Brandner was charged with possession of marijuana, possession of marijuana in a school zone.

Neumann was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia and criminal attempt to possess marijuana. Alfano was charged with criminal attempt to possess marijuana and possession of marijuana

Entry #687