truesee's Blog

Burglar turns himself in — kind of

Michigan Breaking &Entering suspect turns himself in — kind of

6/25/2009, 6:07 a.m. EDT

KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) -- Police wish all their cases were this easy to solve. A breaking and entering suspect inadvertently turned himself into the police after committing his crime on Wednesday.

The 27-year-old man walked into the Department of Public Safety around 4 a.m. He was bleeding from cuts on his arms and hands and apparently was drunk. He told officers he had seen someone breaking into a building.

WWMT-TV, WOOD-TV and the Kalamazoo Gazette reported the man told police he wanted to stop the crime, so he climbed into the building and scuffled with the other person.

When officers investigated, it became clear to them the witness actually was the suspect.

The Kalamazoo police say in a statement it "cannot always count on suspects to report their own criminal activity."

Entry #667

Mother of 555 pound teenager charged with neglect

Posted: Thursday, 25 June 2009 9:01PM

Mother of 555 pound teenager charged with neglect
WBBM  News Radio 780

(CBS) A mother is being charged with neglecting her obese teenage son, raising issues about whether the government has the right to intervene in one's family life.

Born and raised in South Carolina, Alexander Draper grew up to reach a dangerous 555 pounds by the age of 14. That's when law enforcement stepped in.

"The first and foremost concern is Alexander's health," Lt. Shea Smith told CBS News.

Alexander's mother, Jerri Gray, was charged with unlawful neglect of a child for allowing him to become obese.

"There have been opportunities to get Alexander some treatment over the course of the last several months and unfortunately some of those things have not been taken advantage of," Smith said.

But Gray, released from jail Monday on $50,000 bond, says she does not have enough money to get her son the treatment he needs.

Alexander is in the custody of the Department of Social Services, who in a statement to CBS News said they only intervene when "health care professionals believe a child is at risk of harm."

"Obviously her son is certainly in need of some medical attention," Lt. Smith said.

Jerri Gray and her defense attorney, Kim and Grant Varner, appeared on The Early Show Thursday to discuss the situation.

Asked how his weight gain got so out of control, Gray said, "Well, a lot of times it had to do with lifestyle. A lot of times I had to work fulltime second shift or fulltime, third shift. And I wasn't home a lot."

Gray told guest host and "Britain's Got Talent" judge Amanda Holden she had been monitoring her son's diet, but that there were times she had to purchase fast food, when she'd have to sleep between shifts.

Asked if there are steps she could've taken earlier to have helped him not reach that level of weight, Gray said, "When I had a second shift hob, I would've rather been home, so that I could've spent more time focusing on preparing more low-fat type-meals."

While Alex is under state care right now, Gray believes her son needs to be with her. "Mentally he needs to be with me. We both need to be included together in whatever program that they have to offer so that we both can benefit from it. So as our lives go on together, then we will have learned how to control it and keep it under control."

 

 

 

 

 

 

                      STORY FOUND IN   NEWSWEEK

 

 

Jerri Althea Gray (left) with her son, Alexander Draper
The Greenville County Sheriff's Office-AP
Jerri Althea Gray (left) and her son, Alexander Draper (right)

What Makes a Parent Negligent?

After courts questioned the way they cared for their sick kids, two mothers in different states ran away with their children. Why 'neglect' is such a complicated concept, and why loving a child isn't always enough.

Kate Dailey
Newsweek Web Exclusive
May 23, 2009 
Updated: 1:05  a.m. ET May 23, 2009

The word "neglect" implies that someone has given up caring. But in cases of medical neglect by parents, it can be just the opposite. Recent, highly publicized cases of child medical neglect highlight this paradox. Take Daniel Hauser, the Minnesota boy currently on the run with his mother to avoid court-ordered medical treatment for his cancer. His parents care deeply about his health and well-being, but in a way that conflicts with the best-accepted medical practices for treating Hodgkin's lymphoma (They want to treat him with holistic therapies).

In some cases, parents don't have the ability or resources to give their children the help they need, but also can't bear to give them up, which may be the case with a South Carolina woman, Jerri Althea Gray. Gray and her son, Alexander Draper, fled the state on Thursday, May 21, allegedly to avoid a court hearing to determine if she was being medically negligent in caring for her son. If so, custody of the child would be turned over to the state Department of Social Services. Alexander, 14, weighs 555 pounds, and though authorities have cited his weight as a main concern, they also allude to more pressing medical problems that prompted social services to take action. (The South Carolina DSS issued a statement saying their involvement is always "limited to cases where health-care professionals believe a child is at risk of harm because a parent is neglecting to provide necessary medical care. DSS would not take action based on a child's weight alone.")

That day, both Gray and Draper were discovered at a laundromat in Maryland. Gray was arrested on a S.C. warrant for violating a child custody order and taken to a correctional facility in Baltimore. Her son was examined by paramedics and turned over to the Maryland Department of Social Services while arrangements were being made to get him back to his home state.

With the case of Daniel Hauser, the state was able to make a very clear argument for what they consider neglect: Daniel had cancer that was 90 percent curable with a certain treatment, and his parents were refusing that care. (Whether or not you think it's neglect is a different matter: a Newsvine poll posted on Thursday is split almost down the middle.)

We don't have nearly as much information about Alexander Draper's condition, except that the charges of neglect are in some way related to his extreme obesity. But his mother's arrest has raised questions. What constitutes medical neglect when cases aren't as clear-cut as Daniel Hauser's? It's neglect if a mother isn't giving her sick child proper medication. But what if she's missing doctor's appointments for a chronic condition? Not feeding a child is neglect, but what if a father only feeds his son donuts and soda? There's clear precedent for the state to step in if a parent isn't doing anything to stop cancer that could kill a child in six months. But what if a parent isn't doing anything to stop the onset of type 2 diabetes, a condition that could cause serious lifelong problems and eventual death?

As a matter of necessity, cases of neglect taken on by the DSS in most states are ones that are incredibly dire. "I don't think any social-service agency that's operating at all sensibly will try to look very far in the future if you're talking about things like diet," says Carl E. Schneider, a professor of internal medicine and law at the University of Michigan and a member of the president's commission on bioethics. "They're always under-funded, they always have all these acute cases to worry about, and in terms of allocation of those limited resources, you have to go where those acute problems are."

In fact, the social-service stories that often make the news are ones where agencies didn't intervene in time: where they failed to protect severely abused children. Sadly, the cases only attract public attention when the neglect results in death or serious harm.

But aside from structural problems within the social-service system, Schneider points out the extremely challenging position the state faces when the issue is medical neglect. "[The state] can tell you to take better care of your child, and if you just don't do it, then what? It's hard to sanction parents," he says. "Are you going to fine some parent who is probably poor to start off with? Are you going to put the mother in jail? That won't do the kid any good. After that, you have to start talking about taking the child away, and that is unlikely to be a good thing."

The effects of poverty can't be overlooked when evaluating cases of possible neglect. Doctor's appointments and medicine are expensive. The government provides social services to help parents who don't have the financial or emotional means to care for a child, but understanding, accessing and corralling those services—which can be spread out through different departments and branches of government—can prove challenging for even the most organized parent. And the parents who end up working with social services are often facing circumstances that make being organized nearly impossible. Many don't get paid sick leave, so taking a child to a Medicaid doctor across town can mean losing a day's pay or even a job if the absences are repeated. Often, says Schneider, "these are parents who are leading very, very difficult lives with all kinds of horrifying problems to deal with, and the child is only part of the difficulty of their lives. They have very few resources for helping themselves, much less helping the child."

In situations like these, the state has to make a choice between endangering a minor's physical health by doing nothing, or endangering his emotional health by taking away whatever stability the family provides. Even when parents love their children, the government often has to determine if that love is enough. It's never easy, it's always heartbreaking and—worst of all—the child loses out, one way or another.

 

 

 

LINK TO ORGINAL STORY:

http://www.mahalo.com/alexander-draper

Entry #666

Couple weds and ends marriage same day

So the honeymoon is over?

Reuters

Thu Jun 25, 1:31 pm ET

BERLIN (Reuters) – A Polish couple living in Germany fell out after tying the knot and decided to end their marriage on the same day.

"He said he never wanted to see her again and wanted an immediate annulment, and she said the same thing," a spokesman for police in the northern city of Hanover said Thursday.

Right after the civil ceremony Wednesday, the 50-year-old man began arguing with his bride and tried to cut her hair with a kitchen knife, police said.

The 34-year-old woman called police, who issued the man with a restraining order, which he readily accepted, police said.

Two attempts at a rapprochement later that evening by telephone ended in more shouted exchanges before the man went to spend his wedding night in a local shelter for homeless people.

Entry #665

Man tries to run down wife but crashes

Man charged with driving truck at spouse

Submitted By David Hench
Portland Press Herald
Staff Writer
on Thursday, Jun. 25 at 2:08 pm

Updated at 2:08 p.m.

A Biddeford man faces a charge pf reckless conduct with a dangerous weapon after he allegedly tried to run down his wife with a dump truck in Standish Wednesday.

Todd Thomas, 40, and his wife had been drinking at a friend's house on Smith Mill Road, the woman told Cumberland County Sheriff's deputies. They started to argue, and she left walking with her dog, she told the deputies.

Thomas allegedly drove at her in his 1988 Chevrolet 3500 dump truck, missed, went off the road and crashed into some trees, authorities said. He then ran, they said.

A Windham police dog started to track him, but police found him first at another house.

He is being held on $1,040 bail at Cumberland County Jail.

Entry #664

Mother charged with changing daughter's grades

Jun 25, 9:25 PM EDT

Pa. mother charged with changing daughter's grades

HUNTINGDON, Pa. (AP) -- A high school secretary illegally changed grades in a school computer system to improve her daughter's class standing, according to criminal charges filed Thursday.

Caroline Maria McNeal of Huntingdon is accused of using the passwords of three co-workers without their knowledge to tamper with dozens of grades and test scores between May 2006 and July 2007 at Huntingdon Area High School in central Pennsylvania, the state attorney general's office said.

McNeal, 39, is alleged to have improved her daughter Brittany's grades and reduced those of two classmates to enhance Brittany's standing in the 2008 graduating class.

School officials corrected the grades before the students graduated, prosecutors said.

Attorney General Tom Corbett said the case involves "a serious violation of the public trust."

"Our citizens depend on people in public positions, including school employees, to protect the safety and security of these records and not use confidential information for their own benefit," Corbett said.

McNeal was charged with 29 counts of unlawful use of a computer and 29 counts of tampering with public records. Each count is a third-degree felony punishable by a maximum of seven years in prison and a $15,000 fine, said Nils Frederiksen, a spokesman for Corbett's office.

No telephone number was listed for Caroline McNeal. Brittany McNeal is not charged with any wrongdoing.

Jill Adams, the school district superintendent, said prosecutors have asked school officials not to comment publicly about the case.

"We would like to have it be finished, over and done," she said.

In all, McNeal is accused of altering nearly 200 scores and grades covering four school years.

The situation came to light in October 2007, when an employee of the high school guidance office discovered conflicting SAT scores for Brittany.

Scores provided directly by the College Board showed a cumulative score of 1370, while an unknown source had previously entered 1730, according to court papers.1

Further investigation revealed that the data had been entered from Caroline McNeal's computer starting more than a week before SAT scores for other students were entered.

Three other secretaries at the school told investigators they had shared their passwords with Caroline McNeal during vacations or other prolonged absences.

Entry #663

Church lets struggling members take what they need from collection plate

Posted by Doug Stanglin at 01:53 PM/ET, May 18, 2009

Last updated June 21, 2009

USA Today

 

A North Texas pastor still passes the collection plate at Cross Timbers Community Church, but now he tells struggling members of his congregation to take what they need, KDAF-TV reports.

Toby Slough, pastor of the non-denominational church in Argyle, Texas, says the church has given away half a million dollars in the past two months. Some has gone to single moms and widows in trouble, some to a local mission, some to people behind on their utility bills.

Slough says it all started early this year when he told his congregation to take money from the plate if they needed it, even though donations were down. That day, he tells the Dallas-Fort Worth TV stations, the church took in the largest offering ever.

Then, Slough says, he gave a ride to a jobless man who was down to his last bus pass. That's when he decided to turn the collection plate into a giving plate.

"In these economic times, we can't be so into church business that we forget what our business is, and that is to help people," Slough says.

 

 

 

LINK TO VIDEO OF PASTOR AND CHURCH PROJECTS:

http://www.the33tv.com/video/?autoStart=true&topVideoCatNo=default&clipId=3769743

 

http://www.the33tv.com/video/?autoStart=true&topVideoCatNo=default&clipId=3769070

Entry #662

Store Gives Lost $19,000 Ring To Wrong Woman

WHAT A STEAL

STORE GIVES LOST 19G RING TO WRONG GAl

KIERAN CROWLEY

New York Post

Last updated: 3:01 am
June 25, 2009
Posted: 2:29 am
June 25, 2009

This ring was some discount -- even for Target.

A Long Island store employee handed over a lost $19,000 diamond ring to the wrong woman after the customer falsely claimed it was hers, cops said yesterday.

The ring had slipped off the 42-year-old owner's finger as she was reaching into her purse at a Target store in Commack on May 6. She then left the store without realizing it was gone.

An employee soon spotted the jewel-encrusted ring and ran out to the parking lot to return it.

Unfortunately, he found a different woman with a similar hair style and black raincoat, and asked her if she had lost a ring made up of 12, half-carat princess-cuts placed around a platinum eternity band.

According to police sources, the woman at first said, "Oh, maybe."

Then the worker showed her the pricey jewelry and she said, "S--t, that's my ring!"

"Thank you very much, have a nice day," the sneaky bauble bandit said. She hasn't been seen since.

The victim -- a mom of three who asked that only her first name, Maryann, be used -- soon returned to the store after realizing the ring was gone and was stunned to find out it had been handed to another woman.

"She wasn't looking to go steal something, but they put it in her hand and I guess she thought it was hers," Maryann said. "She could be wearing it right now."

She also was upset at the worker, who handed the ring over without trying to get the woman to describe it, or otherwise prove she owned it.

Maryann said it had been a 10th-anniversary gift from her contractor-husband.

Police have been trying to track down the ring thief, but the woman paid cash for her purchases, leaving no paper trail.

Yesterday, they released a blurry security photo of the woman, and asked anyone with information to call (800) 220-TIPS. There is a $5,000 re ward.

"The ring meant a lot to me," she said. "My husband worked hard to buy me that ring. No mat ter what the circumstances, it's not hers. The insurance company paid me, but I don't want the money, I want the ring back."

 

SHOCK BAND: The finger that bore Maryann's $19,000 anniversary ring is bare yesterday after it slipped off her hand and...
SHOCK BAND: The finger that bore Maryann's
$19,000 anniversary ring is bare yesterday a
fter it slipped off her hand and...
SHOCK BAND: The finger that bore Maryann's $19,000 anniversary ring is bare yesterday after it slipped off her hand and...
a Target employee gave it to this customer (above).
Entry #661

Man Plays Porn Movie Over Stereo System to Keep Children Away

Cops Say Philadelphia Man Blared Porn to Keep Children Away

Man arrested for corruption of minors charge

Published: Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Updated June 23, 2009

By DENNIS J. WRIGHT
Phoenixville News

PHOENIXVILLE — A Phoenixville man was arrested Saturday on corruption of minors charges after he allegedly played a pornographic movie over his stereo system in the direction of children playing near his residence.

Michael W. Buck, 27, of the 2000 block of Mallard Circle, Phoenixville, is charged with multiple counts of corruption of minors and disseminate explicit sexual material to a minor; and one count of disorderly conduct.

According to court documents, Cpl. Mike Barrett said he was dispatched to the 2000 block of Mallard Circle for a report of a male playing a pornographic movie over his stereo system around 7:31 p.m. May 31.

Upon arrival, Barrett said he was met by seven parents who were standing in front of Buck's residence.

"The parents stated that there has been an ongoing problem with (Buck)," said Barrett. "Buck, who has no children, has issues with the neighborhood children playing and riding their bikes in the cul-de-sac. On this day, there were eight children playing around (the area)."

Barrett said the ages of the children ranged from two-and-a-half to 14 years of age.

Parents informed police that around 7:10 p.m., they began to hear what was "a woman vocalizing her pleasure during sexual intercourse."

"This was being played over a stereo system," said Barrett. "The parents stated that Buck had positioned his stereo speakers so that they were pointed out the front window of his house towards the street. One parent stated that they were one-and-a-half blocks away and could hear the woman having sex.

"The pornographic movie/recording continued approximately 15 minutes until the parents took all of their children inside their homes. Once all of the children were taken inside, Buck turned off the recording."

During his investigation, Barrett said he approached Buck's residence, and knocked on the front door.

"I observed Buck sitting on his couch," he said. "When I knocked, he partially sat up, look over at me, and then sat back down. I continued to knock and ring the doorbell, but he refused to come to the door.

"I then went to the rear door of the residence where he was sitting. I knocked on the door and he came to the door. He was highly agitated but would not open the door. He asked what I wanted, and I said I was there about the pornography that was being played. He stated 'Do you hear it anymore?'"

Barrett said he asked Buck again to open the door to talk to him, but Buck refused and walked away.

"It was at that point that I left the residence and continued my follow-up with the parents and children," he said.

Buck was transported to West Chester Saturday, where he was arraigned before Magisterial District Judge Chester Darlington.

He was released after posting $5,000 cash bail.

His next court appearance is scheduled for Thursday, June 18, at 9 a.m. in Phoenixville District Court.

Entry #660

County's crime rate at 20 year low after family jailed

County's crime rate at 20 year low after family jailed

A county's crime rate has fallen to a 20-year low after a crimimal family was jailed, a chief constable has reported.

 

By Richard Savill
Published: 6:46PM BST 24 Jun 2009

County's crime rate at 20 year low after family jailed
Ricky Johnson who was jailed along with other members of his family Photo: INS

Telegraph UK --Five members of the Johnson gipsy family were each jailed for up to 11 years for a string of raids on stately homes, including Britain's biggest domestic burglary, which netted them up to 80 million pounds.

Another 10 members of the gang received sentences for raids on business premises in Thames Valley, the Midlands and Gloucestershire.

Since their arrest, Gloucestershire Police said the county's crime rates have fallen to a level last seen in the 1980s.

Figures show there were 44,136 recorded crimes in Gloucestershire in 2008/09 compared to 45,685 in 2007/08, representing a three per cent drop.

This followed a significant drop of about 16 per cent from the 2006/07 figures, when 52,388 crimes were recorded.

The Gloucestershire chief constable, Timothy Brain, said the jailing of the Johnsons had disrupted a major crime network in the county.

Of the Johnsons, he added: "What that operation showed is that no-one is untouchable."

The gang, who were sentenced last year, broke into stately homes wearing balaclavas, scoured rooms, and escaped in stolen cars while leaving little or no trace.

Their attacks included Ramsbury Manor, the 17th Century Wiltshire home of Harry Hyams, a reclusive property tycoon and art collector. Burglars seized items worth about pounds 30 million in February 2006, in Britain;s biggest private house burglary.

Other victims included the Formula One motor racing advertising tycoon Paddy McNally and the Lord Lieutenant of Berkshire Sir Philip Wroughton.

Detectives believe the Johnson family plagued the south of England for 20 years. The family was based at a static caravan park in Evesham, Worcs, where they plotted the raids.

Entry #659

Man charged with DUI and bribing police

Published June 23, 2009 04:42 pm - A man under arrest for driving under the influence had an additional charge added after he attempted to bribe two Athens police officers to “go away,” according to Capt. Marty Bruce.

Man charged with bribing police: 'I will give you $100 to go away'


By Kelly Kazek
Athens News-Courier

A man under arrest for driving under the influence had an additional charge added after he attempted to bribe two Athens police officers to “go away,” according to Capt. Marty Bruce.

Hector Gonzalez Matos, 29, of 420 N. Clinton Street was charged Monday with DUI and bribery of a public servant after officers Josh Garlen and Cortny Barksdale responded to a call about a fight at 704 N. Marion Street, Bruce said.

Bribery of a public servant is a class C felony.

The officers discovered Matos and another individual had been involved in the fight. Bruce said the report does not say what the fight was about.

After resolving the dispute, Garlen and Barksdale advised Matos to walk home because he was too intoxicated to drive.

As the officers were getting ready to leave, Garlen noticed Matos in his vehicle backing onto the street and stopped him, Bruce said.

Before the officers arrested Matos for driving under the influence, Matos said, “I will give you $20 to go away.”

When officers refused the offer, Matos said: “OK, I will give you $100 to go away.”

Matos was transferred to the Limestone County Jail.

Entry #658

Groom who did not attend his wedding is sued for divorce

'I do' becomes 'I didn't' . . . marry her, that is

Henry Pierson Curtis 

Orlando Sentinel Staff Writer

June 23, 2009

KISSIMMEE - Marriage and divorce follow standard patterns across the United States, except for the case of Ditzel v. Bowser.

The bridegroom swears he never got married. The bride says he just didn't want to attend the ceremony.

So on May 24, 2008, the wedding of Matthew J. Ditzel to Heather M. Bowser went on without him.

A marriage license states they became husband and wife on the Kissimmee lakefront. Yet that didn't happen. One of the bride's co-workers, a notary public, illegally signed and stamped the document.

A year later, lawyers argue over the wreckage of love. The groom's request for an immediate annulment was denied by Circuit Judge Jeffrey M. Fleming.

At issue now is how the couple should part.

Details of this rare union comes from Osceola County Courthouse files. Just how rare it is remains unknown. Although about 150,000 marriages are conducted yearly in Florida, no one tracks how many involve bogus licenses or how often the state's 400,000 notary publics commit fraud.

Ditzel, 30, remains steadfast the marriage never happened.

Bowser, 31, counters that her husband agreed all along to a proxy marriage.

She says he wants an annulment merely to avoid divorce fees and sharing joint property from their 10-year love affair.

Those assets include a $1,500 "promise" ring and a $9,000 engagement ring.

The couple decided to get hitched last year in March. That's when they picked up their marriage license. To be valid, it had to be signed within 60 days and returned to the same courthouse where their lawyers do battle.

Far from amicable, the case has produced an order for protection and two arrests.

On July 3, Ditzel accused Bowser of domestic violence. A temporary protection order was granted but dismissed weeks later. Then, on Oct. 10, Ditzel called Osceola County Sheriff's Office to report he had been married without his knowledge, arrest records show.

The notary, Veronica Gonzalez, lost her job at Wyndham Resorts in Orlando and lost her state notary commission for falsely certifying that she married the pair. Reached at home last week, she declined to comment on all marital matters.

Gonzalez pleaded no contest April 30 to false acknowledgment by a notary public, a misdemeanor, and received a year's probation.

She was ordered to pay $7,500 in restitution to the victim of her notarized fraud.

The victim's identity is sealed in court records.

Bowser lost her job as well at Wyndham Resorts, where she earned $36,500 a year as a title assistant.

She, too, was arrested and awaits trial on three fraud-related felony charges.

Ditzel's lawyer, Thomas E. Rhodes, says there's no reason to discuss divorce when a legal marriage never happened.

"Our premise is it never took place," Rhodes said. "It never met the statutory requirement. That's the bottom line."

Fleming might agree. But court notes of the most recent hearing indicate a trial most likely will be needed to resolve the case.

That's what the bride wants, a trial.

Nina DeFlora, Bowser's lawyer, did not return telephone messages.

Court notes show she already alerted the court, "They have witnesses to state that Mr. Ditzel made announcement that they were married, there is a celebratory dinner, announcements made about rings, and they consummated like bunnies."

The case continues.

 

The Divorce Cake

Entry #657

Man advertises he's selling pot on Craigslist

By Robert Sears
The Patriot Ledger
Posted Jun 24, 2009
06:17 AM
QUINCY —

Drug dealers take note: Potheads aren’t the only ones who know what 420 means.

Quincy police arrested a man advertising his wares with the words “420 help is here” on the online classified site Craigslist. Drug detectives knew that in the cannabis culture, 420 means getting high on marijuana.

The Craigslist item said “Give me a ring if you need some help,” and listed a phone number, which a detective called Friday.

He told the man who answered, later identified as Christopher J. Gray, 30, of Marlboro, that he wanted to buy a quarter-ounce of marijuana. A meeting was set up for later that day in a parking lot on Southern Artery.

Gray was cautious when he met two detectives posing as customers, and asked if they were cops, police Capt. John Dougan said. Apparently satisfied when the officers said they were not, Gray allegedly said: “Well, I trust you. You look normal,” and sold them a small bag of marijuana for $45.

Gray pleaded innocent at his Quincy District Court arraignment Monday to marijuana distribution and marijuana possession charges. He was told to return to court July 8.

There have been other cases of Craigslist being used to sell drugs locally. Hanover police responding to two Craigslist ads for marijuana arrested four people in March 2006.

Entry #656

Woman puts bank robber in sleeper hold

Jun 23, 4:28 PM EDT

 

Retired police officer puts suspect in sleeper hold to stop bank heist at Calif. grocery store

MISSION VIEJO, Calif. (AP) -- Cyndi Orel worked as a police officer for 25 years and never caught a bank robber. She was apparently saving that hobby for retirement. The retired Long Beach police officer foiled a bank robbery at a grocery store Saturday when she put a 220-pound bank robber in a chokehold until he passed out. Orel is about 5 feet 7 inches and 128 pounds

"I never caught a bank robber," Orel said Monday at press conference held by the Orange County sheriff's office. "This was pretty exciting just because of the nature. You don't have time to think about it. You just react."

Orel was at the Mission Viejo Albertsons store when a bank employee shouted that a man with a gun was trying to rob the branch. As another shopper scuffled with the robber, Orel put a sleeper hold on him, blocking blood to his brain and making him pass out twice. Later, they discovered the man did not have a gun.

Orel credited the man who helped subdue the robber, but sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said she was "being modest because if it wasn't for the control hold that she placed on him he would not have been rendered unconscious."

Orel said she learned the move at the police academy 28 years earlier, and only used it a few times during her years on patrol. She retired in 2006 but said she keeps active by running laps and lifting small weights.

Deputies arrested a 52-year-old man from Las Vegas, who they believe committed eight to 10 bank robberies, Amormino said.

 

 

 

                                 FOLLOW - UP STORY

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Bouncer gives would-be robber the deep six

Laguna Niguel man took part, with ex-cop, in bringing down suspect.

By ALEJANDRA MOLINA
The Orange County Register

 

 

Ronald Felix just wants to tell his part of the story in which it was civilians who foiled a would-be robber's plans.

How he approached the robbery suspect at the Mission Viejo Albertson's Saturday. How he grabbed the suspect's arm thinking he had a gun. And how retired police woman Cynthia Orel assisted him in eventually taking the suspect down.

"I just felt like nobody wanted me to be part of it," said Felix, 48, when he saw Orel being praised for her bravery throughout several news outlets Monday.

Authorities identified the robbery suspect as Tony Baik Fennell,  52, of Las Vegas, who is now believed to have been involved in at least eight bank robberies from Norco to Utah, at least two of them in Orange County.

Orel told her story at a news conference Monday of how she assisted Felix in taking down Fennell inside the Albertsons Saturday after she had him in a carotid restraint.

At Monday's news conference, Orel mentioned a man named "Ron" several times, saying it was a team effort. Lt. Mike Gavin, police chief for Mission Viejo, said Tuesday both Orel and Felix were instrumental in taking the suspect down.

On Tuesday, Felix - a night club bouncer from Laguna Niguel - told his side.

It was around 12:30 p.m. when Felix was cashing his check at the Bank of America inside the Albertson's. Felix remembers seeing Fennell on aisle 15 after he finished cashing his check.

"He was staring at me as soon as I walked out the bank," he said.

Once Felix was at the cash register about to pay for his nutrition bars, he heard the bank manager yell, "He just robbed a bank, stop him!"

Felix said he jumped in front of the suspect and told him he was not going anywhere. That's when he saw the suspect reach into his pocket. Thinking the man had a gun, Felix grabbed his left arm. Then he grabbed his other arm and pushed him toward a bench.

"Hey, pal, you're not going anywhere," Felix said he told the suspect.

Felix said he pinned him and Orel came up and put a chokehold on him.

Felix said that at 195 pounds he had a good hold of the suspect. He said he's appreciates Orel's assistance, and that he was never afraid.

As a bouncer for the White House in Laguna Beach, Felix said he is used to dealing with confrontations and drunken people.

 

"I'm appreciative that she helped me out," he said. ".I just want to get my story out there."

 

Ron Felix, 48, is a part-time bouncer

 in south Orange County who confronted

a robbery suspect.

Entry #655

Police find suspect's hiding place when his cell phone rings

Jun 23, 9:31 PM EDT

One cell leads to another: Ring tone leads Salem, Ore., police to hiding

SALEM, Ore. (AP) -- When a suspect being chased by police rolled his car over police spike strips and his tires went flat, he dashed into a field of grass where he thought he could hide. The police called out a dog and handler to find the driver. And then they heard a cell phone ring.

The ring tone led them to a 48-year-old man. He was booked on multiple charges, including parole violation.

The arrest followed a 70-mph chase through Marion County Saturday night that ended in Woodburn. Officers said the driver almost hit one car.

 

Information from: Statesman Journal, http://www.statesmanjournal.com

Entry #654

Man tried to sell bread as crack cocaine

Fort Pierce man suspected of trying to sell bread as crack cocaine

Will Greenlee

TC Palm
Originally published 10:16 a.m., June 22, 2009
Updated 12:48 p.m., June 22, 2009

Riggin

Riggin

FORT PIERCE — A 40-year-old man who is suspected of trying to sell bread as crack cocaine to pay bills is facing charges, according to an arrest affidavit released Monday.

A deputy about 12:50 a.m. Sunday saw a man identified as Timothy Allen Riggin, of the 600 block of Avenue E, peeking around the rear building of the Nowalk Motel.

Riggin ran from the deputy, but was apprehended near U.S. 1. Investigators turned up several pieces of faux crack cocaine in his pocket, according to the affidavit.

“When I located the counterfeit crack, the male immediately said it was bread,” the affidavit states. “I asked him what he meant and he said it is fake crack.”

Riggin, listed as unemployed, said he was trying to sell the bogus crack to pay bills, according to the report.

He faces a felony possession of counterfeit controlled substance with intent to sell within 1,000 feet of a convenience store charge and a misdemeanor count of resisting without violence.

Entry #653