Problems
continue for 30yr-old George Zimmerman after being acquitted four months ago of
murder in the death teenager Trayvon Martin. Zimmerman
was arrested Monday night after a “domestic disturbance” with his girlfriend, Samantha
Scheibe. According to Samantha’s 911 call the incident began when the former
neighborhood watch captain grew upset during an argument and brandished a
weapon at her. “He's in my house, breaking all my shit because I asked him to
leave,” Scheibe told the dispatcher. “He's got a freaking gun breaking all my
stuff right now.”
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Repost of Raffaele Sollecito’s Interview with Kate Mansey (two days after Kercher’s murder)
The following is a repost of the interview that British Sunday Times journalist, Kate Mansey, did with Raffaele Sollecito (RS) on November 3, 2007 (Two days after Meredith Kercher was murdered), and was published November 4, 2007. Within, Sollecito claims that he and Amanda Knox were at “a party with one of his friends” on the night that Kercher was murdered. Obviously Sollecito has never used this [fake] alibi in any other tale that he has told, nor has he ever addressed this [false] claim. The following article was available on the internet for a couple of years, but has since been removed. Yet, unfortunately for Sollecito; it has not been forgotten.
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Knox & Sollecito: A Closer Look at the Footprint Evidence
If you have listen to anything from the American
media about the Amanda Knox case you would likely believe that there was no
physical evidence at the crime scene linking Knox and Raffaele Sollecito to the
murder of Meredith Kercher. However, with just a simple cursory review of some
of the official sources it is easy to see that there is actually an abundance
of physical evidence against the two convicts. Perhaps the best place to start
is Judge Massei’s Report on the conviction of Knox and Kercher.
Furthermore, it is imperative to read the Italian Supreme Court’s Reasoning
on the case. Aside from the obvious four spots of blood found at the cottage (3
spots in the bathroom and one in Filomena’s room) mixed with Knox and Kercher’s
DNA, there are also several pieces of convincing footprint evidence that was
used to help convict the three accused, which includes Rudy Guede. Putting the
plethora of circumstantial evidence and the other physical evidence aside and
simply focusing on the footprint evidence gives us a very clear picture of
exactly what occurred that fateful night.
Labels:
Amanda Knox,
Meredith Kercher,
Raffaele Sollecito,
Rudy Guede
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Roe v Wade: The Most Popular Supreme Court Case?
Perhaps one of the most controversial Supreme Court cases ever, if not outright the most controversial, is Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973). It is certainly the most popular Supreme Court case of all time. It all started when Jane Roe, a.k.a. Norma McCorvey, a single mother of two in Dallas, Texas, got pregnant for a third time. Feeling that she could not financially support a third child, twenty-one-year old Jane Roe filed a lawsuit. At that time the Texas law on abortion was severely restrictive, basically stating that a woman could only get a “legal” abortion if the mother’s life was threatened by the continuation of her pregnancy. The defendant in the case was Dallas County District Attorney, Henry Wade, who represented the State of Texas.
Friday, August 30, 2013
Amityville Horror Copy-Cat Killing
“High Hopes” were dashed this month for a Brazilian
Family as their son killed them in their sleep. Marcelo Pesseghini [age 13] allegedly shot and killed his
mother, father, grandmother, and great aunt in the middle of the night then
casually went to school the next morning, returned home, and shot himself dead
in the head.
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Amanda Knox’s Final Conviction Appeal Just Around Corner
Not really breaking news or much of a shock, but
just moments ago Amanda Knox’s lawyer, Luciano Ghirga, told the Florence daily
La Nazione that she will not be attending her conviction appeals hearings in
Italy. The appeals
of Amanda Knox and Raffele Sollecito against their convictions will begin on September 30, 2013, and will take place
in Florence.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Trial Date Set for Oscar Pistorius
Oscar Pistorius was indicted today for the Valentine’s
Day murder of his then girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp. Among other things, the indictment reads, “The
accused did unlawfully and intentionally kill a person.” The double-amputee Olympian, a.k.a. the Blade Runner, was
charged
with planning and premeditating Reeva’s murder, which comes with a mandatory
sentence of life behind bars.
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
One of Sweden’s Most Notorious “Serial Killers” About to be Released!
Monday, July 22, 2013
Shootout in Hackensack, NJ Leaves Man in Critical Condition
It all started last night at around 1:00a.m., when Hackensack, NJ Police Department received a call that there was an armed man in the Railroad Avenue and Newman Street housing project. Sgt. James Dalton and Officer Franklin Bay, who were patrolling on foot, responded. The suspect, identified as Robert Leonardis, 22 (from Hackensack), was confronted by the officers at the corner of the two streets, and a foot-chase ensued. Two additional officers arrived as Leonardis fled the scene. That’s when Leonardis opened fire on one of the patrol cars, striking the hood and windshield that Officer Joseph Ayoubi was driving, which went through the windshield, narrowly missing Officer Ayoubi. Officer Ayoubi slammed on his breaks, which caused Officer Brett McCarthy, was driving closely behind, to slam into the back of Ayoubi’s vehicle.
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Recovering Hair and Semen from Clothing after a Sexual Assault
When recovering biological evidence from a crime
scene it must be handled with extreme caution, as it is highly perishable. This
article discusses the recovery of hair and semen from bedding and clothing left
at the scene after a sexual assault. After an initial search of the scene—done
to locate the evidence—the evidence should be well photographed and videotaped.
Also, it should be noted that investigators must wear protective clothing—at
all times, no matter what evidence is being collected—changing them every time
new evidence is collected, as well as using tools, such as tweezers and so on.
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Frantic 911 Call Reveals ‘Three Girls Kidnapped Nearly a Decade Ago’
A miraculous discovery was made yesterday, as three
girls who had been kidnapped and held for nearly a decade were all found alive
in a house in Cleveland, OH. Amanda Berry (left) disappeared at age 16 on April
21, 2003, on her way home from her job at Burger King. Gina DeJesus (right)
vanished at age 14 on her way home from school, about a year after Berry’s disappearance.
Michelle Knight was also found in the house; she had disappeared in 2002 at age
20 and is 32 now. They were found just a few miles from where they had
vanished.
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
The Shane Todd Case: An International Corporate Conspiracy
Back in June of 2012, Montana native, Shane Todd [31], was found dead in his
apartment in the Southeast Asian city-state of Singapore. Police ruled the death a suicide,
reporting that Todd had concocted an elaborate pulley system involving a
series of ropes and screws in the bathroom wall where he hung himself. Shane’s
parents, Rick and Mary Todd; however, believe something very different happened
to their son: they believe he was murdered. Shane Todd moved to
Singapore for work; he was
an engineer working for a top technology firm, Institute of Microelectronics (IME), in the island nation. Just
before his death, Shane resigned from his position from IME's research
department and made preparations to move back to the United States. Shane told
his parents that he resigned from the tech company because his work on
superconductors for IME might have been passed to China’s Huawei Corporation, for use in systems that could involve jamming
U.S. radar.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Dalia Dippolito Calling for “New Trial”
It’s a
story straight out of a made-for-TV movie. Police waited for
newly married Dalia Dippolito to return to home to inform her that her husband, Michael
Dippolito, had been murdered. However, he was not dead. Instead, police set up
the scene to record her reaction. They had already had her on tape paying an
undercover officer, unbeknownst to her, to kill her husband. It was a very unique murder-for-hire sting operation.
Just as bizarre was the trial, wherein Dalia claimed
the unprecedented “reality-TV defense,” in which she claimed her and her
husband set up the whole thing because they wanted to get a reality show. Michael Dippolito called the
accusation “ridiculous.” After a three-week trial in 2011, Dalia was convicted of solicitation
to commit first-degree murder
and sentenced
to 20 years in prison by Circuit Judge Jeffrey Colbath, who called Dalia “pure evil”
during his sentencing remarks.
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Amanda Knox to face “Retrial”
The Supreme Court of Cassation, Italy’s highest
court, met this morning in Rome at 10:00 a.m. and overturned the acquittals of
both Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito. The ruling means that the case against
Knox and Sollecito will be sent back to be reheard at an appeals court in
Florence. Italy’s highest Court ruled today on questions of procedure, not on
the merits of a case. This should make Knox’s upcoming interview on Diane Sawyer a
bit more interesting, to say the least. An extradition will only be requested once a definitive conviction is reached. At which point, the conviction would then
have to be upheld by the Court of Cassation again. We could be looking at
another year or so.
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Italian Supreme Court Set to Rule on Amanda Knox Verdict
The Italian Supreme Court of Cassation is scheduled
to rule on the prosecution’s appeal of the Amanda Knox appeal verdict tomorrow.
In 2011, Knox and her Italian
boyfriend at the time Raffaele Sollecito were released from an Italian prison,
on appeal, after previously being convicted of participating in the murder
of her British roommate Meredith Kercher in 2007. Based on the Galati-Costigliola Report (112-page final appeal document), the prosecution’s appeal
attacks the approach of the appeals court and their handling of trial from both
a procedural and a reasoning standpoint.
Friday, March 22, 2013
13-Month-Old Shot in Head by Teen
Not sure yet that society is eroding right before
our eyes; or that guns kill people at a much faster rate than they protect
them? For every story that the NRA can provide that actually helped save a “helpless”
single woman; I can provide 20 that take innocent life in cold blood. Just when
you think you’ve heard the most horrendous crime—Newtown shootings, Sandy Hook
shootings—another seems to pop up; each more shocking than the next; and they
are occurring more frequently these days.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
ABC News’ Diane Sawyer Set to Interview "Amanda Knox"
She has been out of the news for some time
now; but don’t think that Amanda Knox is going anywhere anytime soon. Knox’s
book,
“Waiting to Be Heard: A
Memoir” is scheduled to be released on Tuesday, April 30, 2013 by
HarperCollins. And on that very day, Amanda Knox has an
interview scheduled with ABC’s Diane Sawyer at 10:00 p.m. The interview ahead
for Knox is one of great anticipation. It has been almost four years since she
last spoke (at her trial, June 2009, on the witness stand) about the night Meredith
Kercher was murdered, which did little to clear-up what her involvement in the
murder was, if any.
Friday, March 8, 2013
Some Law Enforcement Challenges Dealing With “Computer Crimes”
In recent years forensic computing has greatly
evolved, moving from a pseudoscience to a recognized discipline with skilled
practitioners and guiding principles relating to the conduct of their activities.
The law states that “possession is nine-tenths of the law,” and because
computer based data can be so easily and undetectably modified during its
collection, impounding, and analysis; certain new “rules of evidence” have been
enacted, evolving from more general codes of practice. These new rules deal
with a verifiable chain of custody
that must exist in regard to digital evidence. For example, according to the
U.S. House Advisory Committee on Rules, its rule 1003 (Admissibility of
Duplicates), “a counterpart serves equally as well as the original, if the
counterpart is the product of a method which insures accuracy and genuineness.”
Monday, March 4, 2013
Big Problems with Pistorius’ Version of Events
To understand the Oscar Pistorius case, it is
important to understand his version of events. What happened Oscar? Most of the
time the public doesn’t get to hear the defendant’s version until the actual
trial, which we’ve established probably won’t start for about another year. But
Oscar gave the world a gift last month. Here is what he said happened, in a
nutshell.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Blade Runner Kills Girlfriend “By Accident”
Just when it appears that we have seen it all in
terms of murder cases, along comes an international superstar sprinter with no
legs who shoots his girlfriend to death while she is in his bathroom, and claims
that it was an accident. You really can’t make this stuff up. Oscar Pistorius [26], a double-amputee
nicknamed “the Blade Runner” for the carbon-fiber blades he uses, was granted
bail Friday after an intense four-day hearing in a Pretoria, South Africa courtroom.
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