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Posted

Teen accused of raping neighbor allegedly asked if he could do yard work to make it up to her

 

Fearing for her life, the woman tried to convince the suspect she did not know him. He told her that he "could not imagine leaving two kids without a mother because his mother passed away" when he was 12.

 

Walding would later reveal himself to her by taking off his mask, according to cops.

 

When she asked him how he got into the house, he said, "you really should deadbolt your door because I didn’t really want to do this, but I had to do it," according to the affadavit.

 

He also told her he was going to serve in the military so "it would not be awkward" living next to each other.

 

Walding also asked if he could "make this up to her" by doing some yard work by fixing something around her house. She said "no."

 

He is facing multiple charges, including three counts of sexual assault.

 

http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.3555624.1507736031!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_750/florida.jpg

Posted

Two teenage boys plotted to “get rid” of a 14-year-old girl because her texts and Snapchats annoyed one of them, according to authorities.

 

The two 16-year-old boys, who have not been identified, are now facing attempted aggravated murder charges for allegedly shooting 14-year-old Deserae Turner in Logan, Utah.

 

Cache County Sheriff’s Deputy Brian Groves testified Tuesday at a preliminary hearing that the boys lured Deserae on Feb. 16 to a canal, where she was shot in the head and left for dead.

 

Deserae was not found until the next day after her family reported her missing, the Salt Lake Tribune reported. She survived the shooting, but was critically injured and remains hospitalized.

 

In an interview, one suspect told Groves that they came up with the plan for the attack while playing video games.

 

The teen said the murder plot started as a joke when he remarked that he wanted to get rid of Deserae because he “got tired” of her contacting him. But then his friend said, “It would be pretty easy to get rid of her.”

 

The two friends began plotting to kill her by either using a knife to slit her throat or shooting her, according to Groves.

 

She met them at the canal Feb. 16 on the pretense of buying a knife. When she turned around, one of the boys shot her in the back of the head, the Desert News reported.

 

A juvenile court ruled Tuesday that there was sufficient evidence for one of the 16-year-olds’ trials to proceed. The other teen is scheduled to appear Wednesday in court.

 

In addition to the attempted murder charges, the two 16-year-olds are both accused of aggravated robbery and obstruction of justice.

  • 2 months later...
Posted

  • A wild early morning rampage by a crazed teenager who allegedly slammed into a jogger in Prospect Park with a stolen car was just the beginning of his reign of terror, the Daily News has learned.
     
    Michael Gitelis, 18, stole the Hyundai Sonata in Camden, N.J., at some point after midnight Thursday and careened into Brooklyn, police sources said.
     
    He drove into Prospect Park and slammed into a 51-year-old woman jogging along the East Drive at about 5 a.m.
     
    She suffered a pelvic fracture, a spinal fracture and a cut to her head.
     
    Gitelis, of Flatlands (a part of Brooklyn), abandoned the Sonata and three hours later reappeared about 15 blocks away on E. 23rd St. near Avenue J where a 59-year-old woman had stepped out of her car but left it running, sources said.
     
    “He was wreaking havoc,” a police source said.
     
    He jumped into the 2016 Honda and took off. The woman emerged from the store, saw that her car has vanished and called 911.
     
    Cops in the 66th Precinct spotted the stolen Honda on E. 7th St. and pulled it over.
     
    After the cops left their car, Gitelis threw the car into reverse and slammed into their police cruiser and a parked car, according to police.
     
    He then jumped out and ran off on foot down 7th St. toward Avenue K.
     
    Soon yet another 911 call came in. About 15 blocks away, outside a building on E. 13th St. near Avenue N, Gitelis knocked a 61-year-old woman to the ground and jumped into her 2018 Toyota Camry, cops said.
     
    He threw the car into reverse and ran her over, fracturing her knee and cutting her right hand, arm and leg.
     
    Before medics rushed her to Maimonides Medical Center, she was able to tell police that she had left her iPhone in car.
     
    Using the Find My iPhone app, cops tracked the car to Brooklyn Borough Hall and swept in and arrested him at 9:34 a.m., five hours after his wild run began.
     
    Officers Jared Vazquez and Miguel Marquez were credited with making the arrest, sources said.
     
    “When was this guy going to stop?” the police source said. “Thankfully officers intervened before someone else got seriously hurt.”
     
    Cops found the Sonata stolen in New Jersey on E. 23rd St.
     
    Gitelis was hit with a range of charges including robbery, assault, auto theft, grand larceny, and leaving the scene of a crash. He was not intoxicated, sources said.
     
    Gitelis had been arrested Dec. 1 in Brooklyn for making graffiti and resisting arrest and on Oct. 20 for burglary.
     
    On Sept. 14, he posted to Facebook, “Anybody know someone who can give me 5 hrs of driving instruction b4 Mon?”
     
    He also recently posted a number of angry fatalistic raps about life.
     
    “Torn in every direction … I try to take off the shroud but I’m stuck in a cloud that not floating,” he wrote.
     
    “U keeping me down, feeling alone, feelings be told. Never sweating but always feel cold. Feels like I’m an elf just working for a magic man that never exists.”
     
    In his most recent post, on Nov. 27, he wrote, “Prob should reread these posts b4 I send them but f–k it whoever doesn’t like it can s–t it and the rest of u r just stuck with it.”
     

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

The call came in to police dispatch just after 5 p.m. on a cold November evening in the small Arizona town of St. Johns: There was a body on the front porch of a house.

 

Detective Debbie Neckel fastened her bulletproof vest and headed out. As she and Sgt. Lucas Rodriguez approached the blue two-story home, Neckel fixed her eyes on two people, a teenager and an 8-year-old boy standing nearby.

 

Rodriguez walked toward the house, and Neckel toward the boy, whom she knew from the neighborhood. His arms were outstretched, and he was near tears.

 

"'My dad, my dad. My dad's dead,'" Neckel recalled him saying as she gave her first interview about the case to The Associated Press. "'I think my dad's dead.'"

 

The boy's father, Vincent Romero, 29, was found face-down on the staircase inside. The body on the porch was Romero's friend and co-worker, Timothy Romans, 39, who rented a room there.

 

A swirl of suspects would emerge before a truth was revealed that no one saw coming: The 8-year-old killed both men.

 

The child came home Nov. 5, 2008, and killed his father with a single-shot .22-caliber rifle, holding the bullets in his small hand to reload after each shot. He called to Romans that something was wrong, then shot him, too.

 

Nine years later, the boy is days from his 18th birthday with a chance to move on from a crime that has defined his life. He will sign paperwork Friday freeing him from intensive probation, psychological evaluations, travel restrictions and having his every move monitored.

 

"Things will be fundamentally different," said his attorney, Ron Wood.

 

The Associated Press isn't identifying the teen because of his age at the time of the shootings.

 

The transition will be easier because of the support network he built since pleading guilty to negligent homicide in Romans' death, said Wood and Apache County Attorney Michael Whiting, who prosecuted the case.

 

The charge for killing his father was dropped. Whiting said at the time that it was in the boy's best interest not to be forced to acknowledge killing his father.

 

The boy first was held at a youth treatment center near Phoenix, then moved to a group home and then a foster home. Besides a trio of probation violations when he was 12, he's avoided trouble. He will likely stay in the foster home beyond his 18th birthday and continue treatment until he's 21, Whiting said.

 

His probation officer declined to discuss the case, and periodic evaluations of the boy that might shed light on his treatment are sealed.

 

Whiting said he could not discuss specifics but noted that several people have gone out of their way to ensure the boy gets help. At one point, a psychiatrist who treated him offered to take him in.

 

Romero's mother, Liz Castillo, has been the boy's biggest supporter, regularly attending hearings and visiting him. She declined to comment but said early on she would not give up on her grandson.

 

The boy initially told authorities he found the men dead when he got home from school.

 

His role might have gone undiscovered much longer if Romans had not been on the phone with his wife while he waited for Romero to grab a car part, Neckel said. Romero went in, saw his son with a gun and scolded him for getting it from underneath his bed. The boy ran upstairs, turning and shooting his father as he followed.

 

Romans cut short his conversation with his wife, Tanya, when the boy called for him.

 

"Tim, I need you to come in here," he said, according to court transcripts. "Something's wrong with Dad."

 

Tanya Romans urged police to talk to the boy. Still, no one thought he was a suspect.

 

But authorities came to think he might have witnessed the crime and was in danger. Neckel was the lead investigator, promoted to detective a day before the shootings. She and sheriff's Cmdr. Matrese Avila interviewed the child, who confessed in a videotaped interview released early on by prosecutors.

 

The nation watched as the boy — sitting in an oversized chair, his feet dangling — gave conflicting accounts before admitting to killing both men.

 

He buried his head in his jacket at the end, saying: "I'm going to go to juvie."

 

Neckel told the AP this month that when they first started quizzing him, she believed the cheerful boy with a singsong voice was covering for someone.

 

She started to realize the truth after about 45 minutes, and when she watched the tape, it sank in. A key moment, she said, is when the boy demonstrated how one of the bodies shook and he kicked it with his foot.

 

"We had one focus — literally one focus — to get the name of the killer," she said. "It was supposed to be an adult. And we were supposed to go out and save the day and get (the boy) out of danger."

 

Neckel knew the boy from her neighborhood in the town of about 3,500 near the New Mexico border. He was the child who jumped on the trampoline with his cousin, played outside with his dog, tried to coax a cat from a culvert, called her "Mrs. Neckel" and said, "Have a good day at work" when she pulled out of her driveway.

 

After their interview, she went into the restroom and cried. Her regret, she said, was not including him in her suspect pool from the start.

 

No motive was revealed, but the boy mentioned he was spanked for not bringing home some school papers.

 

Neckel said the papers were a behavioral report from his teacher. Romero and his wife, Tiffany, told the boy he would be spanked once for each day he forgot them, Neckel said. That day he would have received four swats.

 

A woman who answered a cellphone listed for Tiffany said it was the wrong number. Her father, Jeff DeVall, hung up when reached on his cell.

 

Police investigated possible abuse but found nothing that would have warranted charges, Neckel said.

 

Tanya Romans thinks the justice system forgot about her husband. She said she was asked to submit any concerns for an upcoming hearing but she and their two daughters decided it's pointless.

 

She's well aware the teen's birthday is Dec. 29. Hers is, too.

 

"At the beginning, people would say, 'Time heals,' and I was thinking, 'How?'" she said. "All I can say is, by the grace of God, my kids have been OK."

 

She remembers Tim Romans through the personalities of her four grandchildren, hears him in the raspy voice of the one named after him and sees him in the face of another.

 

For Neckel, she developed what she called an unreasonable fear of children for about a year after the boy was charged. But she said seeing her grandchildren on the holidays shortly after the shootings helped her cope.

 

She spent her free time online researching kids who kill, trying to better understand what happened in the most difficult case of her police career.

 

She found promise in stories of two people who killed as teenagers and later became a college professor and a crime novelist.

 

"I can't give up on a kid," Neckel said. "I hope that releasing him isn't the worst mistake ever made. But he was a little kid. You have to give him a chance."

Posted
and Happy Holidays to you, too, Sam......:confused:

 

Danke Schoen.

 

Obrigado.

 

Merci.

 

Gracias.

 

(and thanks)

 

:):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):):)

:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D

:cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool::cool:

Posted
When she asked him how he got into the house, he said, "you really should deadbolt your door because I didn’t really want to do this, but I had to do it," according to the affadavit.

 

 

http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.3555624.1507736031!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_750/florida.jpg

 

No deadbolt will be available when Bubba spots his fresh young ass in the shower. I know prison rape isn’t a joke, but if anyone deserves it, it’s this guy.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

A young man was caught sexually molesting a horse in Alabama last week — and the owner of the animal has reason to believe this wasn’t their first rendezvous.

 

“I would say seven, maybe 10 times,” owner Francince Janes told NBC 15, in reference to the number of times she found evidence that her barn had been tampered with last month.

 

“Toilet paper had been left. The hay stacks had been removed. Items had been turned over. And that’s as far as I want to go.”

 

Daniel Bennett, 18, of Irvington, is currently awaiting trial after being arrested last Thursday night by officers from the Mobile County Sheriff’s Office.

 

He reportedly confessed to attempting to molest the horse — a 20-year-old steed named Polly — inside Janes’ barn and was charged with possession of burglar’s tools, criminal trespassing and bestiality, which is a misdemeanor.

 

According to AL.com, the official warrant for Bennett’s arrest says he “engaged in or submitted to any sexual contact with an animal, to-wit: a horse.”

 

Janes told NBC 15 that her husband was the one who caught the young man after their dogs woke them up barking. He reportedly held Bennett at gunpoint and spoke with him briefly before police arrived.

 

Describing what Bennett told her husband, Janes said: “He likes horses. He wanted to pet the horse.”

 

Asked what the young man told investigators, she replied: “That he molested the horse.”

 

Whether it was a spur of the moment decision or not, Polly’s owner hopes Bennett will eventually seek treatment for bestiality.

 

“I sincerely hope the judge mandates that he goes for psychiatric help,” Janes said. “But just not a slap on the wrist.”

  • 6 months later...
Posted

Two Nevada teens have confessed to fatally beating their mother and burying her in a shallow grave because “they couldn’t take her complaining,” according to an arrest report.

 

Dakota Saldivar and Michael Wilson, both 17, were arrested early Wednesday after their mother, Dawn Liebig, 46, was reported missing from her Pahrump home on Monday. They now face charges of open murder, conspiracy to commit murder and domestic battery with a deadly weapon in the stabbing and bludgeoning attack, KVVU reports.

 

An investigation was launched after a man from Idaho called the Nye County Sheriff’s Office to request a welfare check at Liebig’s home, claiming he didn’t trust the children living at the residence. A detective later responded and found Liebig’s cellphone but didn’t locate her, leading him to open a missing person report, according to an arrest report obtained by the station.

 

Investigators then contacted another man who claimed Liebig’s sons gave him differing stories about her disappearance. The man told detectives he believed Liebig was dead “due to the type of family she is in,” according to the report.

 

Detectives then visited the home and interviewed Saldivar and Wilson, who provided inconsistent stories about their mother’s whereabouts. After a search of the teens’ phones and the discovery of a text that read “my mom passed away,” Wilson confessed that he and Saldivar stabbed Liebig before burying her body in a 2-foot-deep grave.

 

Wilson also claimed that Liebig asked the teens to kill her before leading detectives to the shallow grave, not far from where the murder weapons were buried, according to the arrest report.

 

Wilson told detectives Liebig had adopted him five years ago. It’s unclear if Saldivar was also adopted, according to the station.

 

Saldivar told detectives during subsequent interviews that he and Wilson decided on July 19 to kill Liebig because “they couldn’t take her complaining,” police said.

 

The last post on Liebig’s Facebook profile is from July 19. A picture of four male teens sits atop the profile.

 

“Im a mom that hopes she did okay,” the profile reads. “I want my boys to become the men I hope for. I live for them.”

 

Police records obtained by KVVU indicate that Saldivar and Wilson planned to stab Liebig in the jugular vein so she would die quickly. They waited for her to go to sleep on July 19 and Wilson stabbed her in the neck. Saldivar then bludgeoned her in the head with a hammer about 20 times, according to police.

 

Liebig even cried out for help, screaming for Saldivar and Wilson since she was unaware that they were attacking her, Saldivar told detectives.

 

The gruesome, 25-minute attack ended only when the hammer perforated Liebig’s skull. She was then stabbed in the back of the neck with a pocket knife before her body was buried in the desert, according to the report.

 

One of the teens later led detectives to the shallow grave where Liebig’s body was found and also led investigators to the murder weapons, Sgt. Adam Tippetts announced on Facebook.

 

“Further interviews were conducted and both juveniles finally confessed that a few hours prior to the murder, they had a fight with Liebig and were tired of her parenting style and demands on them,” Tippetts said. “They stated they waited until she fell asleep then attacked her. The juveniles recounted a graphic stabbing and bludgeoning. They stated that this attack lasted for approximately half an hour while Liebig fought for her life.”

 

Saldivar and Wilson were booked into the Nye County Detention Center, where they were processed as adults, Tippetts said.

  • 5 months later...
Posted

Two fifth-grade students in Florida put into effect a plot to kill another classmate and flee in a golf cart, officials said.

 

Police said the two students, ages 10 and 11, brought a wrench, pliers and other tools Dec. 14 to Roberts Elementary School as part of the murder plot.

 

The pre-teen boys allegedly targeted an 11-year-old classmate because he was a “snitch,” officials said. Their identities haven’t been released because they’re minors.

 

Three days before the alleged incident, a girl told the victim a secret, according to police. The girl then complained about him spreading rumors, prompting the two alleged conspirators to confront the boy.

 

The suspects told the victim they were going to “take care of him and kill him,” police said.

 

Students said the duo sketched out a map of an area on campus where there were no security cameras.

 

The next day, one of them brought a bag to class with gloves, pliers and a multitool with a blade on it, police said. The two boys allegedly planned to use the pliers to break a lock on a school gate so they could escape in a golf cart.

 

“Snitches get stitches,” one of the suspects declared to a group of students while showing off the items.

 

After class was dismissed, the boys reportedly approached the classmate and asked, “Do you want to go to the secret hideout at the garden?”

 

The victim refused and told a faculty member that he heard the boys were trying to kill him.

 

The suspects denied wanting to kill the boy — but confessed to wanting to beat him up, police said.

 

Principal Kim McFarland told responding officers the two students “planned and put into effect a plot to murder another student.”

 

Each suspect was issued juvenile civil citations and both were suspended from school, according to the newspaper.

 

“This obviously is a very serious matter. We were aware the two boys plotted to harm another boy at the school,” Leon County School District Superintendent Rocky Hanna said in a statement. “There is zero tolerance in our school system for violence or threats of violence. The individuals who participate in these types of behavior will suffer severe consequences, as these two young boys.”

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

The father of a baby born to a 12-year-old girl in Perth, Australia is also believed to be a young teenager, with police saying they currently have no concerns for the welfare of any other children.

 

The girl was reportedly 11 when she became pregnant and reportedly gave birth at home unaware she was pregnant.

 

The father is reportedly 14 years old. Contrary to previous reports, the young girl did not give birth in a hospital but in her home, The West Australian reports.

 

“The department is unable to comment on situations like this in order to protect the privacy of the individuals and their families,” a spokesman said this morning.

 

A spokeswoman said police were working closely with the families, the Department of Communities and the Health Department said previously.

 

Despite both being of similarly young ages, the teens are at risk of prosecution with precedent showing the father is usually the one charged, according to Sally Dechow, a Youth Legal solicitor from Western Australia.

 

“Legally they could both be charged, but in practice, we’ve found it’s usually the boy who is charged,” she said.

 

“You have to look at the welfare of these kids and whether it’s in the public interest to prosecute children of this age.”

 

Charges occur at the discretion of the Western Australia Police, taking into account issues like whether the prosecution would be in the interest of the public, and provide assistance to the children involved.

 

“There are complex social issues, which are being managed by all agencies, and the current priority is to ensure appropriate support is provided to the family,” a spokeswoman for the DCHD said on Friday.

 

“The West Australia Police Force has identified a person believed to be the young father of the newborn, who himself is a child and is known to the young mother,” the Department said in a statement.

 

The Department of Communities said a co-ordinated response was required from the state government and external support agencies in cases like this, in both the short and long term.

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