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  • 19
    Jan
    2013
    3:43pm, EST

    78-year-old grandma charged in New Jersey burglary ring

    By Kelly Bayliss, NBCPhiladelphia.com

    A 78-year-old grandmother has been charged in a New Jersey burglary ring that included two of her grandchildren, police said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Lorraine Bleckley, 78, of Medford, N.J., is one of six people charged in the burglaries that authorities say took place from the beginning of October 2012 through the end of November 2012 in the Hoot Owl and Tamarac Developments in Medford. 

    Police say Bleckley allowed her grandchildren, Kenneth Bleckley, Jr., 24, and Cynthia Bleckley, 21, to live in her house and use it as a "home base" for the alleged crimes. She also let other defendants in the case stay at her house, according to authorities.

    Read more at NBCPhiladelphia.com.

    Both grandchildren are charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit burglary. Kristina McLeod, 23, is charged with five counts of burglary and various other charges. Jeffery Simpkins, 23, is charged with burglary, theft, criminal mischief, attempted burglary and conspiracy. The eldest Bleckley is facing one count of maintaining a nuisance.

    Bail for the crew ranges from $20,000 to $40,000.

    Authorities say $26,845 worth of jewelry and cash were stolen over two months. 

    65 comments

    Cut the elderly people social security and medicare and this is what you get. This will be the new norm if the CEO'S of this country get their way and raise the retirement age to 70. Nobody will hire old people so they have to steal to survive. I see nothing wrong in that. Do what you gotta do. How  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-jersey, crime, grandma, nbcphiladelphia, lorraine-bleckley
  • 14
    Nov
    2012
    9:38am, EST

    Grandma eyed in murder-suicide that left 3 kids dead

    Police say the deaths of five people in Toledo, Ohio, could be the result of intentional carbon-monoxide poisoning. The family members were in the midst of a bitter custody dispute. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

    By John Seewer, The Associated Press

    Caught up in a family disagreement over who should care for three young children, their grandmother and uncle barricaded themselves and the kids in a garage and filled it with deadly carbon monoxide gas. All five died.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Police spent Tuesday trying to explain the heartbreaking scene discovered a day earlier at the home of 54-year-old Sandy Ford and her son Andy in a quiet Toledo neighborhood.

    Firefighters using a sledgehammer and broke down the garage door to find the bodies of 5-year-old Madalyn Hayes, her 6-year-old brother, Logan, and 10-year-old sister, Paige, slumped inside a car, along with their grandmother and uncle. Two hoses attached to the exhaust of a pickup truck pumped gas fumes through the car's rear window.

    Police said letters inside the house indicated the woman and her son plotted the murder-suicide, beginning by picking up the children from school Monday morning after their mother had dropped them off earlier.


    They also had disabled the garage door opener and nailed plywood over the windows, said Toledo police Sgt. Joe Heffernan. He wouldn't say what was in the letters, but it appeared some were written by the children.

    Police: Deaths of five in Toledo, Ohio garage could be murder-suicide

    "We're trying to figure out all the why's in this," he said.

    Authorities were called to the home by the children's frantic grandfather after he discovered the letters and was unable to force open the garage door. Despite the grisly scene, investigators found no signs the children were forced into the car and believe all five died of carbon monoxide poisoning.

    Until last week, the children had spent the last three years living with their grandparents, Sandy and Randy Ford, and their uncle at the house in a residential neighborhood close to the Michigan state line.

    Their mother, Mandy Hayes, had asked her mom for help caring for the three children because a fourth child at the home was becoming disruptive, said children's services representatives and a family friend.

    "She was just being protective," said the friend, Cammie Turner.

    While the children were living with their grandparents, their parents saw them almost every day and went on outings to parks and the zoo, Turner said.

    "Their kids mean everything to them," she said.

    But recently Hayes had decided they should all return home, and the children moved back in with their parents last week, upsetting Hayes' mother, Turner said.

    "Mandy wasn't taking the kids away from her entirely," she said. "She wanted them home. It wasn't like she was taking them and grandma could never see them again."

    Turner said Hayes had confided that her mother was controlling, but she never seemed alarmed by it.

    "It doesn't make sense," she said. "I can't imagine. To have your mom ..."

    Police were at the house last week and children's services workers met with both sides of the family, most recently on Saturday, said Dean Sparks, executive director of Lucas County Children Services.

    "We only know that there were a lot of allegations back and forth," he said, adding that Sandy Ford was worried about placing her grandchildren back in the home with their 9-year-old brother, who had been disruptive in the past.

    But the agency had no authority to decide who should keep the children, Sparks said, and the parents had every right to bring them back into their home.

    Turner said she never saw any indication of a strained relationship between Hayes and her mother, and they never went to court over the issue of custody.

    Family members declined to comment.

    Doug Hall, a neighbor who lives across the street, said he often saw the children with their uncle, raking leaves or shoveling snow. He said the only unusual thing he noticed was a police car at the house last Thursday. He said he didn't know why it was there.

    Neighbors said the family spent a lot of time together and that the Fords had put in a swimming pool this summer for the children.

    Another neighbor said he saw the kids playing in the leaves just a few days ago.

    "One minute they're doing the leaves, and then the next there are cop cars all over," Eric Pieper said.

    Rick Osentoski / AP

    A lone teddy bear sits on the steps of the home where three children, their uncle, and their grandmother were found dead inside a garage Monday in what appears to be a murder-suicide amid a custody dispute in Toledo, Ohio, Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2012.

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    144 comments

    This is the one, singular thing that sucks about being an atheist. These sick @!$%#s are dead, and they took three innocent children with them. They are gone, and that's it. They won't be punished in the afterlife. They won't be made to understand how absolutely sick and pathetic they are. They are  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ohio, suicide, murder, crime, toledo, grandma, commentid-toledo
  • 13
    Sep
    2012
    8:37am, EDT

    Cop drags woman, 77, from car after ID refusal

    Dash cam video shows a police officer dragging a 77-year-old woman out of her vehicle after she refused to show a driver's license during a routine traffic stop in Keene, Texas. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

    By Scott Gordon, NBCDFW.com

    A local Texas police department is standing by an officer who dragged a 77-year-old grandmother out of her car for speeding after she repeatedly refused to provide her driver's license.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The entire arrest was caught on video by the Keene Police Department.

    The woman, Lynn Bedford, of nearby Cleburne, was stopped on Aug. 19 for driving 66 mph in a 50-mph zone.


     For more, visit NBCDFW.com

    Bedford told Sgt. Gene Geheb that she had a bladder infection and had to go to the bathroom, but the situation quickly escalated when the officer asked several times for her identification and she refused.

    "Just hurry up; I have to go to the bathroom," she said.

    "Let me see your driver's license and insurance, please," the officer asked.

    She declined several times.

    "No, I want to see your driver's license and insurance, please, and then I'll listen to you," the officer said.

    "I'll give it to you in a minute," she replied.

    "No, you give it to me now, or I'm going to take you to jail," he said.

    "Well, go ahead," she said.

    The officer then pulled her out of her car and handcuffed her.

    Bedford's attorney, Clay Graham, of Fort Worth, said the officer overreacted.

    "The officer is not very interested in listening to what she has to say," Graham said. "She gets a little frustrated. And then he just overwhelms her. That's what I see. And then it goes from routine stop to ridiculous stop."

    Graham said Bedford was injured during the arrest.

    He said Bedford is not interested in filing a lawsuit right now but isn't ruling it out in the future.

    The lawyer said the woman was returning home from playing the piano at church when the incident occurred.

    In a statement, Keene Police Chief Rocky Alberti stood by the officer's actions.

    "This incident has been reviewed thoroughly by the Keene Police Department and the City of Keene Administration," Alberti said in a written statement. "All parties have concluded that Sgt. Geheb did not violate any state laws or department policies, and in fact was following department policy in regards to violators not providing identification."

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    1604 comments

    "with age comes wisdom". Not always and not in this case. By the way, this is not a fragile looking senior citizen.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: grandma, traffic-stop
  • 9
    Mar
    2012
    6:17pm, EST

    Girl, 9, stabbed her grandmother after being told to turn off TV, police say


    Follow @msnbc_us
    By msnbc.com staff and The Associated Press

    FLORENCE, SC -- Police say a 9-year-old girl stabbed her grandmother in the back after being told to turn off the TV show she was watching, according to news reports.

    Police told the Florence Morning News and other local news outlets that the incident occurred after the child's mother left the house and the girl began to argue with her grandmother about turning the TV back on.


    As the older woman was sitting down reading a newspaper, the girl approached her with a kitchen knife and stabbed her in the back, said Florence Police Maj. Carlos Raines told NBC affiliate WMBF-TV.

    The grandmother was treated and released from the hospital, while the Department of Social Services placed the child in the custody of another relative, Raines told the paper.

    The girl, whose name was not released because of her age, will be charged in family court, the Morning News reported. She was placed in the custody of another relative while she awaits charges in family court.

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

    98 comments

    Are you kidding me?! She is with a relative? This girl should be in jail pending a psychiatric evaluation and a court appearance, I don't care how old she is. And, I don't care what her reasoning behind stabbing a person. There is none.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: tv, dispute, grandmother, grandma, florence, stabbed, sc, knife

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