Our sources confirms that a mother in Minnesota killed herself and her three children after discovering the body of her husband floating in a lake.
On Friday at at 10:30 a.m., the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office and the Maplewood Police Department rushed to a trailer park for a report of a probable suicide.
A press release claims that upon arrival to the Rolling Hills Estates Mobile Home Park, authorities located the remains of Kos Lee. His age and cause of death have not been revealed.
Officials “responded to a welfare check in the region of Vadnais-Sucker Lake Regional Park” in Vadnais Heights at roughly 4:00 p.m., more than five hours later, as stated in the press release.
An adult female with three young children had a request for a welfare check placed on them. Sheriff’s deputies and police officers located a car and several goods inside, including a pair of children’s shoes.
The park was closed and a search was underway for 23-year-old tattoo artist Molly Cheng and her children.
On Friday, a boy’s body was pulled from the water at about 7:30 p.m.. Another young youngster was found dead in the lake shortly before midnight.
Cheng’s body and the remains of her daughter were recovered Saturday morning at around 11 a.m.
The press statement states, “All three youngsters mentioned are believed to be under the age of five or six.”
Police have yet to reveal how Cheng died.
The circumstances surrounding the probable triple homicide at the lake remain under investigation. Investigators have not determined a cause of death.
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Cleveland, Ohio — AKRON Officers in Akron, Ohio, shot and killed a 25-year-old Black man last week despite the fact that he was unarmed, according to the city’s police chief.
This was one of the details that surfaced on Monday in the killing of Jayland Walker, who was shot and killed by police after he fled a routine traffic stop. Police presented body cam footage from the pursuit and shooting at a press conference on Sunday, shedding light on the conduct of officers but also raising additional questions about the circumstances of his death, which are still being probed.
There was only one traffic ticket on Mr. Walker’s record, and he had no history of criminal behavior. The police claimed they were first after him for a traffic infraction and an equipment violation.
The police have placed eight officers on administrative leave for their involvement in the shooting, which is standard procedure.
Hundreds of protestors marched through downtown Akron after the recordings were released, demanding justice for Mr. Walker and condemning police violence. Mr. Walker’s family encouraged the community to remain peaceful.
A police officer states that he heard gunfire coming from Mr. Walker’s car door, and a subsequent video shows that this was the case. During the news conference, footage from outside the automobile was shown that appeared to capture a muzzle flare coming from Mr. Walker’s driver-side door, but the actual shot itself was not visible.
At the press conference, police revealed that they had located a revolver in Mr. Walker’s automobile and that a bullet casing had been discovered near the location from which they believed he had fired. The authorities released a still image showing a firearm and a gold band on the passenger seat. An automobile tragedy recently claimed the life of Mr. Walker’s girlfriend.
Family attorney Bobby DiCello stated that Mr. Walker had gotten the gun quite recently. We don’t know if it accidentally went off since Jayland was unfamiliar with weapons, he said. After his death, investigators discovered a revolver in his car, but there were no bullets inside.
Police stated at the press conference that there was a loaded magazine on the seat, but did not specify whether or not the weapon in the car was loaded.
In the film, an officer can be heard remarking that Mr. Walker’s automobile is slowing down as the chase (which lasted more than seven minutes) continues. (At times, Mr. Walker’s automobile had reached speeds of above 50 mph while driving through residential areas.) Ski mask and all, Mr. Walker gets out of the car and runs away seconds later.
The tape appears to show several officers pursuing Mr. Walker into a nearby parking lot with their firearms drawn and shouting at him during the brief chase that ensued. The cops claimed that they had tried using Tasers early but were unsuccessful. As soon as the officers fire, Mr. Walker collapses to the ground.
The Chief of Police in Akron, Ohio, Stephen L. Mylett, stated that he did not know how many shots had been fired at Mr. Walker. Even though he referenced the medical examiner’s list of wounds, he was unable to determine the actual number of bullets that hit him, but he believed it to be “quite high.”
Officers, according to Chief Mylett, claimed that Mr. Walker had suddenly turned toward them and gestured toward his waist. However, the chief found that Mr. Walker wasn’t armed when he escaped his vehicle.
However, Mr. DiCello claims that in a previous discussion between the chief and the family, the chief stated that he had seen no evidence to suggest that the officers’ lives were in danger.
The Ohio BCI is looking into it. As soon as that is done, the case will be sent to the Ohio Attorney General’s Office for review.
Prosecutors will decide whether or not to press charges against the officers, but similar shootings involving police have seldom resulted in criminal charges being brought. If shots were fired during the chase, it could lend credence to police allegations that they were in danger and influence the decision of whether to press charges.
Mr. DiCello was not happy with the way Mr. Walker was portrayed at the press conference held by the police. He said they want to make him into a monster in a mask with a pistol. At the press conference, the family’s attorneys also demanded that the city reveal the full tapes rather than just clips from them.
The police have stated their intention to release all body camera footage obtained from officers present during the incident. According to them, this would include recordings from all eleven cops present at the time of the incident.
Tensions, already high in Akron after the shooting, escalated after the video’s distribution on Sunday. More than a hundred protesters gathered outside of downtown the day before hundreds more marched to City Hall for a rally organized by the Akron chapter of the NAACP.
Chris Mercury, 41, an African American barbershop proprietor in Akron, said, “It just continues reproducing, the same thing, over and over again.” He continued, “People in the country would always blame the victim for what happened.
To paraphrase his wife, Monique, who runs a retail clothing company, “the threat to those who were in the same position as Walker, the danger is urgent no matter what they do.”
She went on to say that “people of all colors and backgrounds need to recognize this is happening and it simply appears to be getting worse.”
The Walkers have asked their city to avoid resorting to violence.
“If you can do anything for the family, please give peace, give dignity and give justice a chance for Jayland,” Mr. DiCello said on Sunday. “My clients are private people. Jayland was a private kid. He wasn’t married. He wasn’t a criminal. He obviously was in pain. He didn’t deserve to die.”
Multiple accounts state that an alligator attacked a Florida man early on Tuesday morning after the man mistook the creature for a dog.
NBC network WFLA-TV and CBS affiliate WTSP-TV reported that the man was walking outside the Warm Mineral Springs Motel in North Port around 12:35 a.m. on Tuesday when the 7-foot lizard latched onto his right leg.
Authorities said he reported hearing a dog growling in the brush near the trail he was on before he was attacked.
According to ABC affiliate WFTS-TV, the 49-year-old victim was taken to Sarasota Memorial Hospital in Venice.
“Thankfully, he’s going to be okay,” said the Warm Mineral Springs owner to WTSP-TV when asked about his hospital visit with the man.
His health status is still a mystery.
A professional trapper was able to remove the assaulting gator before it was apprehended and trapped by the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office.
Witnesses told WBBH-TV in Fort Meyers, Florida, that the man was outside a motel trying to light a cigarette when he was attacked.
WTSP-TV received an email from a sheriff’s official saying that the man didn’t hesitate to step out of the way because “the figure appeared to look like a dog with a lengthy leash.”
WFTS-TV reports that a sheriff’s office spokeswoman stated that the alligator was “holding” on to the victim and “pulling” on his muscle/tissue.
According to the reports, the man’s leg was ripped off by the gator as he tried to flee. During an interview with WBBH-TV, a witness said that the man’s partner screamed for help when the attack started.
“I walked out there because she was crying and begging for me to come out and help,” said the witness, who was identified as Will by the site.
According to WTSP, the victim was able to draw the attention of a neighboring deputy who was responding to a separate case. Paramedics were dispatched to the site by the officer, who called in the emergency services.
The alligator was captured by Sgt. James Achille before the trapper arrived, according to the outlet.
According to WBBH, authorities suspect the gator came out of a drain on the roadside near the motel.
This incident was also being investigated by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. According to WFLA-TV, the commission is looking into the event.
Washington -When an unidentified California man was arrested early Wednesday morning outside Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s Maryland home with a rifle, knife, and numerous tools, federal officials stated in court papers filed Wednesday that he had been charged with attempted murder.
According to an FBI affidavit filed in federal court in Maryland, the individual was seized at 1:50 a.m. after making threats against Kavanaugh. Maryland Supreme Court spokeswoman Patricia McCabe confirmed that a suspect had been sent to the Montgomery County 2nd District.
Nicholas John Roske, a 26-year-old from Simi Valley, California, was named in the affidavit. An attempted murder charge has been filed against him. It’s possible that Roske may face up to 20 years in prison if he is convicted.
Wednesday afternoon, Roske appeared before Magistrate Judge Timothy Sullivan where he consented to his continued incarceration. There is a preliminary hearing scheduled for June 22, and he has a court-appointed attorney.
According to the affidavit, U.S. Deputy Marshals saw a black-clad individual with a bag and suitcase exit a taxi that had stopped in front of the home of a present justice around 1:05 a.m. The suspect turned to face the two marshals and began walking away, the FBI agent noted.
Following this call from the Montgomery County Emergency Communications Center, someone going by the name of Roske called and claimed to be experiencing suicidal thoughts and to have a handgun stashed away in his suitcase. “A specific United States Supreme Court justice” was also Roske’s stated goal in the submission, according to the complaint.
Officers from the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office were sent to the spot and discovered Roske there. His backpack and suitcase were seized by the police without incident. In addition to a black tactical chest rig and tactical knife, a Glock 17 pistol with two magazines and ammunition, pepper spray, zip ties, a hammer, a nail punch, crow bar, pistol light and hiking boots with padding on the outside of the soles, police found in his belongings, according to the affidavit.
Upon arrival at the Bethesda police station, Roske expressed his frustration with recent leaks of Supreme Court opinions in high-profile abortion cases and the killing at a Texas school in Uvalde. In a case regarding a New York law restricting the concealed carry of firearms in public, the Supreme Court is expected to rule in the coming days and weeks.
According to the affidavit, “Roske claimed that he believed that the Justice who he wanted to assassinate would side with Second Amendment decisions that would lessen gun control restrictions” “After finding the Justice’s Montgomery County, Maryland, address on the Internet, Roske determined that he would assassinate the Supreme Court Justice in order to give his life a purpose. It was Roske’s intention to break into Justice’s apartment, kill the Justice, and himself with the Glock pistol that he purchased.”
According to the Montgomery County Police Department, the FBI is looking into the event. The arrest was initially reported by the Washington Post.
Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said that President Biden “strongly” opposed the acts against Kavanaugh.
“As the president has consistently made clear, public officials, including judges, must be able to do their jobs without concern for their personal safety or that of their families, and any threats of violence or attempts to intimidate justices have no place in our society,” she said.
The Supreme Court police reported a “significant increase in violent threats,” including threats made on social media and directed at court members, following the release last month of a draft Supreme Court opinion showing a majority of justices voted to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade decision, which legalized abortion nationwide.
It was Attorney General Merrick Garland’s order to increase the Marshal’s protection for Supreme Court justices, given that there had been a backlash to his draft judgment.
protests outside the high court, which is now surrounded by a massive fence, and protests at the residences of the justices, including Kavanaugh, whose authenticity was verified by the Supreme Court. Due to the protests, the Senate unanimously passed measures to increase the safety of Supreme Court justices and their families by permitting court police to offer round-the-clock protection if necessary.
As a result of the Kavanaugh episode, Senate Democrats and Republicans alike called on the House to act quickly on the bill.
An important element of safeguarding our democracy is to protect our judiciary as well as the people who work there and their families, Delaware Democratic Sen. Chris Coons told the media in response to the arrest near Kavanaugh’s home.
Republican senator John Cornyn of Texas is the other co-sponsor and believes that the arrest shows that threats against the justices’ lives are “horrifyingly genuine.””
In a statement, he demanded that Speaker Pelosi keep the House in session “until they pass my bill.” When Democrats do nothing, they reach a new nadir of political dysfunction and endanger the Supreme Court’s independence.
According to Senate Judiciary Chairman Dick Durbin (D-Illinois), sending the bill to Vice President Biden is “timely and vital”.
He added that there should be no tolerance for violence, adding that adjustments or additions are welcome in the plan.
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