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  • 7
    days
    ago

    Missing Pa. mom easy to find now -- in jail

    Lititz Borough Police via AP

    Brenda Heist 11 years ago (left) and in April upon resurfacing after 11 years missing.

    By Sophia Rosenbaum, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The Pennsylvania woman who disappeared in 2002 and was declared legally dead in 2010 only to resurface in Florida in April is now facing a year in jail.

    Brenda Heist left behind a husband and two young children in Lititz, Pa., leaving dinner on the table and a load of laundry in the wash when she bolted.

    After 11 years missing -- and presumed dead -- Heist, 54, turned herself into the Monroe County Sherriff’s office on April 26. She said she thought she was wanted in a county nearby.

    “I don’t know if she was wanted in another county or not,” said Becky Herrin, spokeswoman for the Monroe County, Fla., Sheriff’s office. “She turned herself into us because she said she was tired and didn’t want to be missing anymore.”

    It was at the Monroe County Sherriff’s Office that she revealed she was a missing person, which police authorities later confirmed.

    She had been arrested on Feb. 15 for stealing an ID of a person she worked for and using it at a traffic stop. In April, she pleaded no contest to the charges and was placed on probation for three years.

    In May, she was arrested for violating that probation by failing to check in with authorities.

    Circuit Judge David Rimmer sentenced her Wednesday to 364 days in county jail, according to Joan Malley, deputy clerk for Santa Rosa County. She was accredited with serving 100 days toward that sentence.

    When Heist resurfaced, her family back in Pennsylvania said they did not plan to see or talk to her.

    “It’s not that I hate her,” Morgan Heist, Brenda Heist’s 19-year-old daughter, told NBCPhiladelphia.com. “I just don’t think she deserves to be in my life at this point.”

    Related content:

    • Pennsylvania mom who went missing in 2002 turns up alive in Florida
    • Family of missing mom discovered in Florida not eager for reunion

     

     

    325 comments

    “It’s not that I hate her,” Morgan Heist, Brenda Heist’s 19-year-old daughter, told NBCPhiladelphia.com. “I just don’t think she deserves to be in my life at this point.” Good call

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    Explore related topics: missing, pennsylvania, arrested, florida, mom
  • Updated
    9
    May
    2013
    7:59am, EDT

    One of New York's most-wanted fugitives found living in small English town

    Interpol

    Sean Lopes, 47, was arrested in Chatham, England, on Monday.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A fugitive wanted in New York after vanishing in the wake of a 2004 hostage taking has been arrested in England, where he had been working in a supermarket.

    Sean Lopes, 47, had been living in Chatham, about 30 miles southeast of London, when he was arrested Monday, Kent Police said in a statement.

    He was "wanted on charges of attempted murder and kidnapping in the United States" involving a 22-year-old woman dating June 2004, according to Kent Police.

    Kent Police said Lopes was charged in the U.S. with the offense but went missing after being released on bail. He was sentenced in absentia to 15 years in prison in May 2005.

    A 2012 news release from U.S. authorities said Lopes entered the home of an ex-girlfriend -- both were employed by New York City public schools -- and waited for her to come home. When she did, he confronted her with a gun and a knife and held her hostage until police were able to get into the apartment and free her, according to a 2012 statement from the U.S. Embassy in Trinidad and Tobago, where Lopes was mistakenly thought to have been living.

    Lopes was believed to have fled to the island nation using his brother's travel documents, the embassy said.

    Lopes had been working at a Sainsbury's grocery store in Gravesend, Kent, the company said Thursday. 

    “We can confirm that a member of staff from our Pepper Hill store was arrested on Monday," a Sainsbury's spokeswoman said. "We are helping the police with their investigations but are unable to comment further.”

    He had been listed as one of the NYPD's 10 most-wanted suspects.

    Kent Police said a resident of the area raised concerns about Lopes to police, who launched an investigation that included investigators from New York and London. He was then tracked down and arrested.

    Lopes appeared in a London court on Tuesday and was ordered to be detained as extradition proceedings got under way, Kent Police said.

    According to Interpol, Lopes is a native of Guyana. The U.S. Embassy said he also had ties to Canada, the Bahamas and the Dominican Republic.

    This story was originally published on Thu May 9, 2013 7:04 AM EDT

    154 comments

    let's let in more immigrants....this one was a model citizen

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  • 21
    Sep
    2012
    8:06am, EDT

    US soldier who refused to go back to Iraq arrested on return from Canada

    Aaron Vincent Elkaim / AP file

    Kimberly Rivera speaks at a news conference in Toronto on Aug. 31.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    The first female American soldier to seek refuge in Canada rather than return to duty in Iraq was arrested at the U.S. border Thursday after losing her appeal against deportation, according to an advocacy group that had campaigned on her behalf.

    Kimberly Rivera, a 30-year-old private who served three months in Iraq and came to Canada while on leave in 2007, was taken into custody at the Thousand Islands Bridge border station about 30 miles north of Watertown, N.Y., Reuters reported.

    The War Resisters Support Campaign said on its website that Rivera’s partner and four children crossed the border separately as “Kimberly did not want her children to have to see her detained by the U.S. military, as this would be traumatic for them.”

    “During a Federal Court hearing in Toronto on Monday, lawyers for the Department of Justice argued that Kimberly would not be detained when she crossed the border,” the War Resisters statement said.

    “… Just as the Rivera family’s lawyer argued in court and as was predicted by her Canadian supporters, Kimberly was detained immediately upon crossing the border into the United States of America,” it added. “Kimberly now awaits punishment for refusing to return to Iraq, a conflict which Kimberly and Canada determined was wrong.”


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    'Not genuine refugees'
    During the Vietnam War, Canada was a haven for tens of thousands of draft dodgers and deserters, but soldiers from Iraq, who were volunteers, have been met with little sympathy from the Canadian government.

    Canadian Immigration Minister Jason Kenney’s spokeswoman, Alexis Pavlich, told The Star newspaper in an emailed statement that U.S. military personnel who had moved to Canada to avoid being deployed to Iraq were “not genuine refugees under the internationally accepted meaning of the term.”

    “These unfounded claims clog up our system for genuine refugees who are actually fleeing persecution,” she added.

    The last 480 troops left Iraq early Sunday morning in high spirits, happy to be heading home for the holidays. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    State Department: No secret plan to invade Canada

    In an interview with The Star published Wednesday, Rivera said she had joined the army because she “wanted to fight for human rights and the safety of my country.”

    “I wanted to do something good … I grew up learning that our rights come from a soldier who gave his or her life so that we could have rights,” she added.

    'The war is over': Last US soldiers leave Iraq

    That view changed after three months in Iraq.

    “Citizens were being put on random lockdowns. We used city patrols, checkpoints and violence and intimidation against innocent civilians,” she told The Star. “We raided their houses without cause. I saw mothers and fathers and grandparents and children come to us asking for compensation for their dead loved ones. There was no good reason for their pain and suffering.”

    The paper said she described becoming a conscientious objector as “the most positive thing I’ve done.” 

    Tutu: Iraq war based on 'a lie'
    Nobel peace prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu, famous for campaigning against apartheid in South Africa, made a last-ditch plea for the Canadian authorities to allow Rivera to stay.

    “When the United States and Britain made the case in 2003 for the invasion of Iraq, it was on the basis of a lie. We were told that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction, and that these weapons posed an imminent threat to humanity,” he wrote in The Globe and Mail newspaper Monday.

    NBC's Richard Engel answers your questions about Iraq

    “But those who were called to fight this war believed what their leaders had told them. … U.S. soldiers such as Kimberly Rivera, through her own experience in Iraq, came to the conclusion that the invasion had nothing to do with weapons of mass destruction. Indeed, the presence of U.S. forces only created immense misery for civilians and soldiers alike,” he said.

    Read more international stories from NBC News

    “Those leaders to whom soldiers such as Kimberly Rivera looked for answers failed a supreme moral test. More than 110,000 Iraqis have died in the conflict since 2003, millions have been displaced and nearly 4,500 American soldiers have been killed,” he added.

    The Pentagon had no immediate comment, according to Reuters.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    1035 comments

    This is an easy one. She deserted in 2007. That's five years. Sentence her to five years in prison. Fine her the cost of extradition proceedings and a dishonorable discharge. Remember, you are the one that signed up and took the pledge.

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  • 18
    Sep
    2012
    3:49am, EDT

    7 held, 2 hunted in $165,000 lottery scam targeting elderly

    By NBCConnecticut.com

    Seven people have been arrested and warrants were issued for two others in a lottery scam that targeted elderly people across the United States, NBCConnecticut.com reported.

    Police in Stamford, Conn., have so far identified 31 victims from across the United States, mostly between 80 and 90 years old. Police have documented losses in excess of $165,000.


    Police said the ring, based in Fairfield County, contacted victims by telephone or letter, telling them that they had won a prize, police said.

    Before collecting any supposed winnings, the victims were told that they would have to pay taxes or fees and send money through Western Union or U.S. Postal Service money orders.

    The money was then transferred to Costa Rica.

    Victims who did send the money received additional phone calls telling them there was an issue and that they would need to send even more money before they could receive their prize.

    The calls continue until the victim ran out of money or realized that he or she had been scammed, police said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Read more from NBCConnecticut.com

    Police said they have obtained nine arrest warrants.

    Police have arrested Tiffany Midgette, 32, of Stamford, Kinika Harvey, 28, of Bridgeport, and Stephanie Handy, 35, of Stamford.

    They were charged with racketeering, money laundering in the third degree, larceny in the first degree, second-degree larceny, conspiracy at larceny in the first degree, conspiracy at larceny in the second degree and criminal attempt at larceny in the second degree.

    Bond for Midgette and Harvey was set at $150,000, while bond for Handy was set at $125,000.

    Kimberly Midgette, 31, of Stamford, Rannisha Fullmore, 27, of Stamford, Keneeta Washington, 30, of Stamford, and Aisha Jones, 27, of Stamford, were charged with larceny in the first degree, larceny in the second degree, money laundering in the third degree, conspiracy at larceny in the first degree and conspiracy at larceny in the second degree.

    Bond for Midgette and Fullmore was set at $20,000, while bond for Washington and Jones was set at $75,000.

    In addition to the seven local arrests, police have an extraditable warrant for the suspected ring leader, who lives in Costa Rica, and another person in Virginia.

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    77 comments

    When they catch these con men or women, I hope they lock them up and throw away the key. Those who prey on the elderly are the lowest forms of life, along with child molesters/abusers; our society has far too much of this type of thing going on now.

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    Explore related topics: connecticut, arrested, elderly, police, crime, featured, stamford, lottery-scam
  • 13
    Sep
    2012
    4:28am, EDT

    Clandestine dentist arrested in Miami after filing teen girl's teeth

    View more videos at: http://nbcmiami.com.

    By Myriam Masihy, NBCMiami.com

    An elderly man, his wife and daughter are in custody after authorities discovered a clandestine dental office in their Little Havana home, police told NBCMiami.com Wednesday.

    The operation was discovered in the 1000 block of Southwest 11th Street, Miami Police spokeswoman Kenia Reyes said.


    Humberto Perez, 81, Maria Perez, 69, and Odalis Hernandez Perez, 38, were arrested at the home, police said.

    Police said they learned of the illegal dental operation from the mother of a 14-year-old girl who was taken by her mother and grandmother to the home for treatment.

    When the family arrived at the home, they were greeted by Maria Perez, who brought them to the rear of the home where there was a "fully operational dentist office," police said.

    Read more from NBCMiami.com

    According to police, Humberto Perez performed dental work on the girl, giving her prescription strength medication during the treatment.

    The girl felt weak, sick and had uncontrollable pain during the procedure, but when she told Humberto Perez about the pain he was reluctant to stop and continued with the procedure, police said.

    The girl's mother Claribel Altamonte said her daughter cried in excruciating pain and Perez injected her gums, filed down her four front teeth and then ended up yanking them off.

    Permanently disfigured
    Days later, the family took the girl to a reputable and licensed dentist, who told them that in his 37 years of practicing dentistry, he had never seen such a case, police said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The girl is now being treated by a licensed dentist but was left permanently disfigured from the procedure by Humberto Perez. Both he and Maria Perez face charges of unlicensed practice of dentistry, unlicensed practice of the health care profession, aggravated child abuse and child neglect, according to police.

    The girl's mother said her daughter was self-conscious about one chipped tooth but her insurance wouldn't pay for the dental work. That's why she went to Perez who was referred by a friend.

    She said she didn't think anything of the place because such dental offices are normal in her native Dominican Republic.

    Odalis Hernandez Perez faces a child neglect charge, police said. It is unknown whether they have attorneys.

    Detectives believe there may be more victims who have yet to come forward.

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    240 comments

    Damn hard to find a good dentist these days that accept chickens as payment. What was this guys name? I wonder if he's in the Yellow Pages.....

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  • 18
    Aug
    2012
    2:02am, EDT

    Seven charged over shootings of 4 sheriff's deputies in Louisiana

    Cheryl Gerber / Reuters

    St. John the Baptist Parish Sheriff Mike Tregre (center), with Louisiana State Police Colonel Mike Edlmonson, (left), speaks at a press conference with two officers holding portraits of Brandon Nielsen (left) and Jeremy Triche, after an early morning shooting that left the two police officers dead and two other police officers injured in LaPlace, Louisiana.

    By Reuters

    NEW ORLEANS -- Louisiana police have charged seven people in connection with shootings near New Orleans on Thursday that killed two sheriff's deputies at a trailer park and wounded two others, authorities said. 

    Brian Lyn Smith, 24, of LaPlace was charged with attempted first-degree murder while six others also face charges linked to the violence, St. John Parish Sheriff's Office spokesman Dane Clement said on Friday. 


    The charges stem from a pair of related shootings early on Thursday in and around LaPlace, about 25 miles west of New Orleans, in which a gunman shot and wounded St. John Parish Deputy Michael Scott Boyington, 33, as he performed off-duty work directing traffic at a parking lot for Valero Energy Corp.'s St. Charles refinery, St. John Parish Sheriff Mike Tregre said. 

    The gunman fled, and officers investigating the incident ended up at a trailer park in LaPlace. As they were interviewing two suspects, someone came out of a trailer with an assault weapon and shot dead the two officers and wounded another, Tregre said. 

    The slain deputies were identified as Brandon Nielsen, 34, and Jeremy Triche, 27, while deputy Jason Triche, 30, was wounded. 

    All of the charges are in connection with the shooting of Boyington, police said. The investigation into the shootings at the trailer park continues and is being led by the Louisiana State Police. 

    Those charged include Terry Smith, 44, Derrick Smith, 22, Kyle David Joekel, 28, and Teniecha Bright, 21, all accused of being a principal to attempted first-degree murder, Clement said. 

    Chanel Skains, 37, and Britney Keith, 23, were charged with accessory after the fact to attempted first-degree murder. 

    Suspects Brian Lyn Smith and Joekel remain hospitalized with injuries they received in the shooting and will be booked upon release from the hospital, Clement said. 

    High-speed chase
    All the suspects were listed as LaPlace residents. Bonds ranging from $350,000 to $750,000 have been set for each. The injured police officers were in stable condition and doing well, Clement said. 

    Authorities said Joekel was wanted in Kansas and in Nebraska over threats he was accused of making against law enforcement officers.

    According to the sheriff's office in Gage County, Nebraska, Joekel threatened an officer and led police on a high-speed chase that ended when the car crashed and he tried to escape on foot. 

    He is also wanted in Marshall County, Kansas, allegedly for making threats toward law enforcement and escaping on foot after a car chase there, authorities said. 

    Louisiana State Police spokesman Sergeant Len Marie said several of the suspects have criminal histories and previous arrests, and one was on probation. 

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    276 comments

    My heart goes out to the families of the 2 deputies that were killed. I pray that the other 2 officers survive. I do hope that La applies the death penalty to the one that murdered the officers.

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  • 24
    Jan
    2012
    4:08am, EST

    Nepal cops: Smuggler hid drugs in Buddhist prayer wheels

    By Msnbc.com staff and wire services

    KATMANDU, Nepal -- Police in Nepal have arrested a U.S. man who was allegedly a member of a smuggling ring that sent illegal drugs into the United States by concealing them in Buddhist prayer wheels.

    The drugs, which were also put into metal bowls, were sent via Federal Express, authorities said.


    Police official Navraj Silwal said Kristian Peter Stiegler, 45, was detained while trying to send 2.5 pounds of hashish, a form of cannabis, and 2 pounds of suspected opium.

    If tests confirm the substance is opium, Stiegler could face up to 20 years in prison.

    However, Silwal said Stiegler would likely get a lighter sentence because he was cooperating in the investigation into the alleged drug ring.

    'Hefty sum'
    Silwal said Stiegler has lived in Nepal and India for three years and was suspected of sending several drug shipments.

    The Himalayan News Service said hashish was allegedly sent to Europe, as well as to the United States.

    It reported the smuggling ring was discovered when police in Dubai intercepted two parcels of hashish that Steigler had allegedly sent to a New Orleans woman.

    "Stiegler used to send hashish to the woman via airmail in the form of parcels and the woman used to distribute the drug in black market for a hefty sum," Yadav Raj Adhikari, chief of the Narcotic Drug Control Law Enforcement Unit, told the Himalayan News Service.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    33 comments

    The items were not exported from Thailand... Where any Buddhist religious items even the reproductions are restricted from export... On another note... I wonder why MSNBC is not reporting the Chinese KILLING Buddhist, AGAIN??? reference - http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/1 …

    Show more
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  • 4
    Dec
    2011
    5:22am, EST

    Cops: Charlie Sheen's ex-wife arrested for assault, drugs

    By Associated Press

    Charlie Sheen's ex-wife, Brooke Mueller, was arrested in Aspen, Colorado, Saturday on suspicion of third-degree assault and cocaine possession with intent to distribute, according to police.

    Brooke Mueller, the ex-wife of actor Charlie Sheen, was arrested in Aspen early Saturday and charged with assaulting a woman and possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. NBC's George Lewis reports.

    Authorities said officers arrested Mueller at a nightclub after a woman reported being assaulted by her. 

    Mueller posted $11,000 bond and was released from custody. She was scheduled in court Dec. 19.

    Aspen police spokeswoman Blair Weyer says additional details are not immediately available.

    Her attorney, Yale Galanter, had no comment.

    Sheen and Mueller divorced earlier this year, citing Christmas Day 2009 as the day of their breakup.

    Charlie Sheen was arrested in Aspen on that day on suspicion of assaulting Mueller.

    He completed his probation in that case last November.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    146 comments

    Surprise..

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  • 12
    Aug
    2010
    12:48pm, EDT

    Flint suspect: 'For no reason he would start stabbing people'

    An Israeli man suspected in 20 stabbings and five deaths in Virginia and Michigan was arrested at the Atlanta airport Wednesday night as he tried to board a plane bound for Israel. Field Notes is following the story's developments.


    NBC's Ron Allen reports the arrest of Elias Abuelazam, 33:

    Comment

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