Long Island Man found Guilty of Murder of Brooklyn Restaurant Owner during unsuccessful Robbery
Acting District Attorney Eric Gonzale disclosed that a 40-year-old man is being prosecuted for murdering and including other charges the owner of L&B Spumoni Gardens Italian Restaurant who was attacked outside his home in Dyker Heights Brooklyn. The man was carrying $15000, in a plastic bag at the time of his murder
The Acting District Attorney Gonzalez stated "that they believe that the perpetrator was waiting outside the house of the victim, attacked him and shot him in cold blood. This is was a pre-planned, mindless murder and he intends to litigate this crime to fullest extent of the law"
The Acting Assistant District Attorney revealed that
Facts: Abel Lopez was attacked in “Los Angeles in October 2009”. While cashing a check he spoke to a man who was identified as petitioner Walter Fernandez. After being asked a series of questions by Walter Abel was attacked and chased. The reason being is that Abel was in the territory of the “Drifters”, a gang that wasn’t very welcoming to people being in there territory. While running Abel called 911 but Fernandez stopped him by whistling causing four men to appear and attack Lopez as well as stealing any valuables in his possession which consisted of “$400 in cash” as well as a cell phone and wallet. The police arrived and the incident was suspected to have have gang involvement.
The District Attorney said " A baseball cap that was dear to the son created a whole lot of events that ended up with his father being gunned down in front of him outside the elementary school play ground. This was a dastardly and sinister act which the the accused will now answer to.
The District Attorney Thompson said in court that they do not believe Liang has intended to kill Gurley. But the fact that he had
Investigator Sam Reilly will also be called to testify, in that he was the first investigator on the scene. Shortly after the murder, Officer Reilly went to the defendant’s home at 2435 Damen Street, apt #2B and forced down Mr. John Hudsons’ and Dale Buckner’s door. While at the apartment, Officer Reilly Recovered a .38 revolver (matching the gun from the crime scene), a black leather jacket, and a newly registered Black Cadillac Sedan; which matched the description of the getaway car. Due to officer Reilly’s work, pertinent details of the defendant’s background and belongings have been brought to trial and will help us prove that the defendants did, beyond a reasonable doubt murder, and assist in murdering Mrs. Sara Lazar. Upon arrest, the defendant’s both refused to make a statement concerning the killing of Mrs. Lazar.
Andre Hatchett is one among the many that have been wrongfully convicted and served several years for a crime that he didn’t commit. Hatchett spent most of his life in prison for a murder he did not commit, which was due to inadequate evidence that the defense did not know about. It started with Neda Mae Carter, who was found brutality beaten and found dead on February 18, 1991, in Bedford- Stuyvesant. Earlier that evening Hatchett was with Carter, who he visited almost every day due to his aunt living in the same house. When it came to questioning Hatchett was very cooperative with police, he provided an alibi for police and then was able to leave. At the time of the crime Hatchett was 24 and has special needs and was also had a cast on his leg.
The victims who were shot and killed, were Daniel Abreu and Safiro Furtado, and it was told by news reports that the two were spotted at the same Boston Nightclub as Hernandez was the nights of the murders. A grand jury then charged Hernandez with two counts of first-degree murder. He was also charge with assault and weapons in connection to the case. Hernandez’s lawyers then released a statement, “claiming that the former athlete was “innocent of the charges” and looked “forward to his day in court””.
The facts in the case petition states that Mr. Cannon had traveled to the home of the mother to make a drug deal and he was followed back to his home by the defendant Eric Miller and co-defendant Colby A. Smith nineteen (19) years of age. One there the group drank, smoked marijuana and played drinking games till Cannon passed out. Miller took the wallet out of Cannon’s pocket and removed three hundred ($300) dollars and split it with Smith. Once Miller made an attempt to place the wallet back into Cannon’s pocket, he awoke and grabbed Miller by the throat, Smith hit Cannon over the head with a nearby baseball bat till he released Miller. Miller then grabbed the bat and repeatedly struck Cannon. At one point Miller placed a sheet over the head of Cannon and made the statement "`I am God, I've come to take your life,'" and delivered one more blow. The boys then fled the scene, but the eventually decided to return to cover up the crime and lit two
Maryland authorities consistently demonstrate that the necessary showing of foreseeability of harm required to make a prima facie showing that one is liable for the criminal activities of another is exceedingly high. For example, in Scott, the United States District Court for the District of Maryland certified the question of whether a landlord owes a duty to protect tenants from criminal activities in the common areas of an apartment complex to the Court of Appeals. Scott, 278 Md. at 161-62. In that case, a Plaintiff was murdered in an
On the morning of the murder, police arrested Brenton Butler based on the identification by the victim’s husband. For hours to come after that, Butler became the victim of police brutality, a false confession, and unlawful interrogation processes. After being identified as the shooter, Butler was brought into the 10 by 10 interrogation room to be well, interrogated.
Pete Hernandez was a migrant cotton picker. He was arrested and accused of murdering Joe Espinoza in Enda, Tx. Although Gustavo Garcia, a Mexican-American civil rights lawyer knew that in the small town of Edna and in several other counties, there was not Mexican-American that had served all type of jury for at least the last twenty-five years, he accepted to represent
At least forty people witness the guns man and the vehicle that Biggy was in before he was shot to death. People, including two of those who had been in the car with B.I.G., had gotten a good enough look at the killer to help the police create a composite drawing of the man. Many others had witnessed so many people have followed up on the case through media news, and blogs. The L.A.P.D department didn’t take everyone’s report on the incident that lead to Biggy’s murder. The extraordinary lockdown of a Los Angeles Police Department division, and the stashed secret, such as; incriminating documents. Caused the final day of trail that Judge to be, abruptly suspended the proceedings and called for a mistrial. A good amount of people in the courtroom knew of the events of the previous days, the late-night anonymous phone tip.
by a friend. He shot one of the perpetrators in the bottom and was ordered to appear before a
In the summer of 1994 an Illinois woman’s buzzer rang at her apartment complex in Waukegan. She went downstairs to check after nobody went upstairs to her apartment. As soon as she reached the door downstairs, two men forced her into a dark colored sedan, kidnapped her, and raped her. Distraught after her attack, the victim wandered until she ultimately found a Seven Eleven close by and the police were called. When the police arrived, the victim said she was attacked by two Hispanic men that looked to be in their mid-twenties and a bit taller than her height of five feet and seven inches. The car that she was forced into was described as dark colored, older, having four doors and tinted windows. The victim’s boyfriend saw Angel Gonzalez’s car in the apartment complex parking lot and it matched the characteristics that the woman used to describe the assailant’s car. Police later stopped Gonzalez’s car and the victim acknowledged that the car was the one she described. She was then asked if Gonzalez was one of her attackers, and she was certain that he was, despite her being in the backseat of the police car while he was in front of it. Not only was he not close enough for her to get a clear view, but he also had facial hair and a birthmark, both characteristics that she did not use to describe her attackers. This led to Gonzalez being in police custody for interrogation where they did not allow him to sleep. When he was interrogated, he
After the first murder, Chase went through a phase of being an intruder. His theory was if someone’s house was unlocked then it was their way of saying he was welcome, but if the house was locked then he took it as he was not welcome. This intruder phase lead up to his second murder of Teressa Wallin, 22 years old and 3 months pregnant. Her husband was not home at the time of the murder. Teressa was taking out the garbage and left the door open, so Chase then went into her house and surprised her when she came back in. The police found her with several gunshot wounds, stab wounds from a butcher knife, many of her internal organs were taken out, and dog feces were packed into the victim’s mouth. It was also found out the Chase had raped the victim post-mortem. After Chase committed these actions, he then bathed in the blood of the victim and drank some of her blood out of a yogurt container.
The prosecution, representing the U.S. Government, calls the first witness. A N.I.S. (Naval Investigative Service) officer states that he received a letter from the victim, Private First Class William T Santiago, requesting a transfer off the base. In exchange, the victim would provide evidence of an illegal shooting over the fence line. The offender of the fence line shooting was Lance Cpl. Dawson. The prosecution was trying to show motive by their line of questioning. The defense makes the point