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  • 24
    Jan
    2013
    12:26am, EST

    Accused leader in Philadelphia dungeon case convicted of murder in 1983

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Five people have been charged with 196 counts in the so-called Philadelphia dungeon case, in which a woman allegedly lured children and disabled people into her home, then tortured and imprisoned them for years to steal their welfare checks, federal prosecutors announced Wednesday.

    Prosecutors say the crimes fall under federal hate crime law, marking the first time that hate crime charges have been applied to people with disabilities. 

    Philadelphia Police Department

    Linda Ann Weston, left, 52, accused of being the ringleader of a group that imprisoned people for their Social Security checks. Prosecutors say Gregory Thomas, center, and Eddie Wright are among her accomplices.

    The indictment says that between 2001 and 2011, Linda Ann Weston, 52, of Philadelphia, fed her victims one bowl a day -- if that -- of ramen noodles and drugged them so they wouldn't act up or attempt an escape. Prosecutors say she forced two of her victims into prostitution.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Images of the dungeon where six people were rescued in October 2011 show decrepit conditions: a narrow corridor of a windowless room with bare mattresses, soiled sheets and rotten boards. At the center of the tiny room is the boiler to which she allegedly chained her victims – and also her children and niece.


    Two women died in her care, prosecutors say. They are identified in the indictment only by their initials: M.L., who died of starvation after being coerced to live with Weston for five years, and D.S., who died after a month of captivity in 2005.

    This is not Weston’s first brush with the law. She was convicted of third-degree murder in 1983 for hammering her sister’s boyfriend’s head, hiding him in a closet and starving him to death.

    That conviction was brought up in a lawsuit filed in September by Weston’s niece, one of the people rescued in October 2011. The niece, who was 10 when she was transferred into her aunt’s care, is suing her aunt, currently incarcerated, the City of Philadelphia and the caseworker who had her removed from her mother’s house.

    The niece, now 20, alleges that Weston forced her into prostitution, starved her, denied her education and beat her regularly. She says her body bears witness to nearly a decade of abuse.

    The niece’s complaint also alleges that the City of Philadelphia received numerous complaints that Weston was holding children captive in her basement.

    At a press conference announcing the charges on Wednesday night, U.S. Attorney Zane David Memeger, described Linda Weston and her accomplices as an organized crime family. Weston could face the death penalty, Memeger said.

    Her accomplices – boyfriend, Gregory Thomas, Sr., 49, Eddie Wright, 52, daughter, Jean McIntosh, 33, and Nicklaus Woodard, 26 – face a maximum of life in prison, Memeger said.

    Memeger said that during the decade the Westons tortured disabled and mentally ill adults, they stole more than $200,000 of their Social Security benefits.

    “Through cunning, trickery force and coercion she took the benefits that were supposed to help them,” he said.

    He said the “victims were tied up and confined like zoo animals and treated like property akin to slaves.”

    Weston and her accomplices kept their victims on the move, Memeger said, shuttling them from Virginia, Texas and Florida and locking them in attics and basements.

    After Weston was arrested in October 2011, her son, Joseph McIntosh, told the Philadelphia Daily News that his mother abused her own children as well. He said that after she was released after four years from prison for third-degree murder, she successfully petitioned to get her children back.

    "We didn't know about her background," Joseph told the Philadelphia Daily News in October 2011, after his mother had been arrested. "(Department of Health Services) knew about her history. They knew who she was, but they still released us into her custody - all of us at a young age."

    He said his mother locked him in the basement for a year to prevent him from running away -- which he said would have reduced her welfare check payments. She fed him noodles and Kool-Aid doctored with drugs, he said. He said he finally escaped in 1998 when he was sent upstairs to wash but instead walked outside into the yard and hopped the fence.

    McIntosh said that Weston even chained up his sister Jean, who prosecutors accuse of being one of the torturers.

    The victims were freed on Oct. 15, 2011, when Philadelphia Police Department officers rescued them from a dungeon-like space in an apartment in the city’s Tacony section.

    88 comments

    there are things that people do anymore that makes me believe in immediate executions after the trials. for anyone to do anything unacceptable as far as i'm concerned to either children or animals and found guilty beyond the reasonable doubt, they serve society no purpose and should begin to serve a …

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    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, philadelphia, crime, kidnapping, hate-crimes, torture, courts, disabilities
  • 18
    Jan
    2013
    12:07pm, EST

    Woman protected from rapist by boy, 14, with hunting knife after she leaps from car

    Police shoot and kill an accused rapist who allegedly kidnapped and sexually assaulted a woman before she managed to escape and hide in a home where a 14-year-old boy and his 11-year-old sister sheltered her. WEYI's Jane Park reports.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    It was a night of mayhem and bravery that central Michigan will not soon forget.

    A young woman who was abducted at gunpoint made a daring escape Wednesday night from her rapist into a house full of kids that was later set on fire by her attacker, police said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The suspect, identified as Eric Lee Ramsey, 30, of Mt. Pleasant, Mich., was later fatally shot by police after he got into a series of hit and runs with police vehicles in a sanitation truck he had stolen. But before he died, he apparently tweeted that he was going to be shot. 

    The incident began Wednesday when Ramsey allegedly kidnapped the woman from Central Michigan University's campus, and brought her to a home where he bound and sexually assaulted her, according to a statement from Isabella County Sheriff Leo Mioduszewski.

    Ramsey then put the woman in the back of a car, retrieved two gas cans and began driving. He purportedly told the woman “he was going to take her life,” Mioduszewski said. After hearing that, the woman jumped out of the car and ran to a nearby home, she told police.


    Michigan Department of Corrections via AP

    Eric Ramsey, a Michigan Dept. of Corrections parolee, was shot and killed by police after allegedly abducting and sexually assaulting a CMU student, setting a house on fire and stealing a sanitation truck that he rammed into police vehicles.

    Alone inside that Lincoln Township home were a 14-year-old boy and his 11-year-old sister and 2-year-old brother. The teenager, James Persyn III, told Mlive.com that he let the woman in, locked the door and grabbed his hunting knife.

    While the woman called 911 from inside the home, the suspect “ended up pouring gasoline on the house and then lit it on fire,” and fled the scene, Mioduszewski said. One of the homeowners arrived soon after and was able to extinguish the fire.

    Mioduszewski said police were given a description of the suspect’s vehicle and obtained a search warrant for the house where the sexual assault occurred.

    Several hours later, a vehicle matching the description rammed a Michigan state trooper's car. The suspect fled the scene, stole a sanitation truck and then rammed another state police trooper’s car.

    A short time later, a Crawford County deputy located the sanitation truck and his vehicle also was rammed by the suspect. The deputy got out of the car, ran up to the cab of the pickup and fired shots, fatally wounding Ramsey.

    On Thursday, CMU Campus Police Chief Bill Yeagley told The Associated Press that the suspect told the woman that he chose her at random outside the Student Activity Center on campus. The chief said the woman saved her own life by fleeing from the car.

    Colleen Harrison / AP

    James Persyn III, right, 14, was in his Lincoln Township home with his 11 year-old sister and 2 year-old brother when an abducted CMU student banged on their door.

    “I believe she made all the right choices,” Yeagley said. “She’s the true hero in this.”

    In a statement on the CMU website, President George Ross said students, faculty and staff received texts and emails of the "horrible but isolated incident" shortly after midnight Thursday, and that the university would bolster campus security.

    "Each of us needs to be prepared, to be wise, to look out for each other," Ross said. "Not only do we want you to be safe, we want you to feel safe and we will continue to work hard to maintain a safe environment."

    Ramsey had been on parole since last summer after serving the minimum five-year prison sentence for assault with the intent to do great bodily harm, according to the Michigan State Department of Corrections.

    “The parole board generally doesn’t give a rationale for why or why they don’t parole (an inmate),” Russ Marlan, a Corrections Department spokesman told the AP. “I looked at his behavior in prison. He was pretty good. He had six misconducts over five years. That’s a small amount. He was in minimum security the entire time.”

    Ramsey had a job, regularly met with his parole officer and had tested negative for drugs, Marlan said.

    His record also included convictions for destruction of police or fire property, resisting police and assault with a dangerous weapon.

    The case remains under investigation by the Isabella County Sheriff’s Department and the Central Michigan University Police Department and the Michigan State Police.

    577 comments

    shot and killed by police Good job. No "insanity defense" for that scumbag, and no tax dollars keeping him alive for years in prison.

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    Explore related topics: police, crime, kidnapping, abduction, central-michigan-university, michgan, isabella-county
  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    10:01am, EST

    Father questioned in 5-year-old's mysterious abduction

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

    By Kelly Bayliss and David Chang, NBC10.com

    Philadelphia police questioned the father of a five-year-old girl Wednesday night who was abducted from her school on Monday, NBC 10 has learned. She was found alive Tuesday morning by a man police called a hero for his actions.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "They wanted me here for a second interview, that's it, just to make sure my story is consistent," Terry Robinson told NBC10's Daralene Jones in an exclusive interview.

    Robinson said his daughter is recovering "and I'm working to recover myself and so is the family. It's a hard process, knowing that the person who committed this act to my child is still out there."

    He said he had no idea who is behind the abduction, but "they wouldn't have brought me down for a second interview if things weren't working themselves out."

    "I'm standing here saying my son is a good son," Terry Robinson's mother told us earlier in the night. "Right now, my son feels lost, helpless, because he couldn't help his daughter."

    The Special Victims Unit announced Wednesday that they are searching for a man and a woman they believe had something to do with the crime.

    One of the suspects, according to police, is the woman that went to Cullen Bryant Elementary on 60th and Cedar Avenue and signed the kindergartner out of school around 8:50 a.m. on Monday.

    School security lapse 2 days after girl's abduction?

    The woman claimed to be the 5-year-old's mother to school employees. She told them that she had to take her daughter to breakfast and was allowed to take the child from the school, the family told NBC10.

    Authorities describe the suspect as a dark-skinned black woman in her 20s, standing 5-foot-8, wearing Muslim garb, who may have been pregnant. They also believe she has green or light eyes and may go by the name "Rashida."

    They say that the suspect and victim walked away from the school and met with a man several blocks away at a nearby home.

    That man, Police Captain John Darby says, is now a suspect.

    He is described as a light-skinned, possibly white male, in his late 30s, with short, brown hair. He was last seen wearing sweatpants and a long-sleeved blue T-shirt. Police also say there may have been other adults involved.

    Authorities believe the child was taken to a home not far from the school. They have narrowed the area down to a four-block radius with the school being the central point. That area is Spruce to Christian Street and 56th Street to Cobbs Creek Parkway. They are now going door to door with a description of the alleged abductors.

    While in captivity, the victim was blindfolded and told to undress, according to police. She was given an adult T-shirt and at one point, was made to hide underneath a bed, Darby announced in Tuesday's press release.

    Police believe the victim was targeted and say she was asked for by name at the school.

    The girl, who was found on a 69th Street playground by good Samaritan Nelson Mandela Myers, was missing for less than 24 hours.

    Sources tell NBC10 the child was kept in a home overnight and that other children were also inside the home.

    "Based on the evidence given to us, this little girl suffered conditions that no child should endure," said Captain Darby during the press conference.

    "She's traumatized," said the victim's grandfather Asim Abdur-Rashid. "She's 5 years old and she's been out all night. She's been away from her mother, sisters and brothers and she's traumatized."

    Detectives spent about 15 minutes inside the family's home Wednesday afternoon. Sources tell NBC10 they took the girl back to the playground on 69th Street where she was found. Detectives are hoping she can remember any detail that will help them figure out who abducted her. The girl returned home late Wednesday afternoon. Relatives of the girl tell NBC10 everyone is hoping that the person or people who abducted her are caught soon.

    The Fraternal Order of Police is offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to an arrest. The Citizen Crime Commission is offering an additional $5000 for information leading to an arrest and conviction.

    If you have any information on this incident, please call the Philadelphia Police.

    235 comments

    They need to be spending some time on finding out why that woman was allowed to take the girl from school, too.

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  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    11:57am, EST

    Childhood kidnapping survivor Katie Beers recounts ordeal in coffin-size box

    Frank Eltman / AP

    Katie Beers, whose kidnapping attracted nationwide headlines in 1992, poses for a photo on Monday.

    By Frank Eltman, The Associated Press

    OLD WESTBURY, N.Y. — Being chained as a 10-year-old for more than two weeks in a coffin-size box in a suburban New York dungeon was, Katie Beers says 20 years later, "the best thing that happened to me" because it allowed her to escape a life of abuse.

    On the 20th anniversary of her ordeal, Beers has co-written a book with a television reporter who covered her kidnapping. "Buried Memories: Katie Beers' Story" (Title Town Publishing) has a happy ending.

    Beers is now a 30-year-old married mother of two who earned a degree in business management and works in insurance sales near her home in rural Pennsylvania.

    Her kidnapping attracted nationwide attention in early 1993, when revelations surfaced while she was still missing that she had suffered years of neglect from her mother and had been repeatedly sexually assaulted by her godmother's husband since she was a toddler.

    Beers was described in Dickensian terms back then — a louse-infested, filthy waif who had no friends and often was forced to lug the family's laundry down the block or fetch cigarettes and junk food for her elders.

    After kidnapper John Esposito, a family acquaintance, admitted to detectives on Jan. 13, 1993, that he had kidnapped Beers and showed them the dungeon where she was hidden for 17 days under his Bay Shore, N.Y., home, the little girl was placed in foster care and raised in a comfortable East Hampton home with four siblings.

    Life after abduction
    Her foster parents not only imposed newfound discipline into her life, making her go to school regularly and do small chores around the house, but they also shielded Beers from intense media interest. And reporters largely complied with a parent-like plea from a prosecutor to leave her alone.

    "We as a society must protect this child, or our professed love for own children is just a fraud, and our so-called compassion for each other is just a mockery," said James Catterson, at the time the Suffolk County district attorney.

    From the archives: NBC's Dawn Fratangelo reports on how police on New York's Long Island found missing teen Katie Beers inside a secret, coffin-like dungeon in the home of a man who had imprisoned a child before.

    So Beers had barely been seen or heard from since until this week in a media blitz to promote the book. She appeared Monday on the "Dr. Phil" show and is the focus of a People magazine feature this week.

    The abduction and subsequent rescue saved her life, Beers said in an interview with The Associated Press.

    "The best thing that happened to me," she said. "I would have never gotten out of the abuse situation I was in."

    She went on to play volleyball at East Hampton High, participated in drama productions and went to college in Pennsylvania, where she earned a degree and met the man who would become her husband and the father of their two children.

    "There's no point really in me right now being sad or wondering what if," she told the AP.

    "I try not to be sad about what happened, because ultimately it made me who I am today, and I'm very satisfied and happy with my life," she said.

    Beers agreed about four years ago to co-write the book with WCBS-TV reporter Carolyn Gusoff, although she had thought about writing a book for many years.

    "I want to be able to help people who might not know where to turn," she explained. "To see that there is a road to recovery."

    She has declined to disclose her exact hometown, married surname or college alma mater, citing privacy concerns for her family.

    New details on past nightmares
    In the book, Beers writes that she had been molested and raped by Sal Inghilleri — her godmother's husband — from the time she was a toddler. Inghilleri, who served 12 years in prison for molesting Beers, died in jail in 2009 following his arrest on a parole violation.

    Michael Alexander / AP file

    In this Jan. 18, 1993 file photo, a crane raises a bunker out of the earth from the property of John Esposito in Bay Shore, N.Y. where he kept Beers imprisoned for 17 days in the cement and wood bunker, which contains a trap door.

    Beers also writes that Esposito raped her in the dungeon, explaining that she repressed her memory of the sexual assault for many years as a defense mechanism.

    Esposito, who pleaded guilty to kidnapping, was never charged with rape. He is serving 15 years to life and has been denied parole several times; his next parole hearing is later this year. At a 2007 parole hearing, Esposito described himself as asexual and said while he kissed the child, he never engaged in sexual relations.

    He told Gusoff in a letter published in the book that he believes he deserves to be released.

    "I think Katie knows I will always wish her well," Esposito writes. "I'm sorry for what I've done. I'm sorry I even thought it up. It was a mistake."

    During her time in the dungeon, Beers writes, she rarely slept, fearing abuse from Esposito. She said she was afraid Esposito might molest her while she slept, but also was concerned that he would photograph her sleeping and send the image to police. She feared if police thought she was dead, they might end their search for her.

    She "celebrated" her 10th birthday while a prisoner of Esposito's and was heard on an audiotape found in the dungeon after her release singing "Happy Birthday" to herself, although she says today she has no recollection of that.

    Esposito, she writes, fed her primarily junk food and soda; to this day she is repulsed by chocolate after-dinner mints because they were a staple in captivity. She did have access to a small television, but says she can no longer listen to Whitney Houston's version of "I Will Always Love You" because it played incessantly on MTV and VH1 while she in the dungeon.

    She didn't realize it until many years later, but says now that she frequently watched Gusoff — then a reporter for Long Island's News12 cable station — filing reports on the police search for her while she was missing.

    "It was like I had known her for 16 years" when they met in 2008 to begin work on the book, she said.

    Silver linings
    Gusoff notes that as abhorrent as Beers' sexual abuse and neglect was at the hands of her elders before the kidnapping, it may have steeled her into a survival mode.

    Dominick Varrone, the Suffolk County detective who led the investigation, agreed, telling Gusoff in the book that "because of her upbringing, the sexual experiences, the abuse, and street smarts and toughness, she was much more advanced than the normal 9-year-old, and we believe that contributed to her survival."

    Marilyn Beers, who is described in the book as a hard-working but largely absentee mother who ceded responsibility for raising Katie and her older brother to Inghilleri's wife and others, did not return a telephone message seeking comment about the book.

    "I hope that more does come out of the book," Katie Beers said. "I would love to be able to help other kids or adults or to be an inspirational or motivational speaker, something like that. But if I go back to my life in rural Pennsylvania and go back to my insurance sales job I would love that, too.

    "I'm very happy with where I'm at."

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

    204 comments

    I often wondered what happened to Katie; I'm so glad she was able to build a meaningful life after this. Best wishes and good luck to you Katie. You are one tough cookie!

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  • 29
    Dec
    2012
    7:57pm, EST

    Officers' 'gut feeling' leads to recovery of missing LA toddler

    University of Kentucky

    University of Kentucky police officers Emily Smith, left, and Jennifer Ockerman followed what their instincts when they noticed a toddler improperly dressed for a frigid winter night on the campus.

     

    NBC Los Angeles

    Alouette Day-Moreno-Baltierra, 17 months, was spotted in Kentucky by two officers.

    By Samantha Tata, NBC Los Angeles

    When two University of Kentucky officers noticed a toddler in nothing but a short-sleeved onesie being pushed in a stroller on a windy, frigid night, they had a “gut feeling” that something was amiss, said University of Kentucky Police Chief Joe Monroe.

    That hunch led to the discovery of a 17-month-old girl who was reported abducted from Los Angeles, possibly by a family member, on Oct. 15.

    A woman who police believe is the toddler’s grandmother was taking the child – without shoes, gloves, hat or anything to protect her face – on a stroll through the University of Kentucky campus Thursday night, when the temperature had dropped to 29 degrees and the wind was blowing about five miles per hour, Monroe told NBC Los Angeles. 


    Read more at NBC Los Angeles

    Campus police officers Jennifer Ockerman and Emily Smith spotted Maria Baltierra-Dejesus, 62, pushing Alouette Day-Moreno-Baltierra in a stroller through a campus parking lot.

    "This is an example of where the responding officers followed a gut feeling that something just wasn’t right with the situation," Monroe said in a press release.

    Baltierra-Dejesus, who lives in New York, was booked in Kentucky on suspicion of endangering the welfare of a minor and custodial interference. She was receiving medical treatment Friday night, though Monroe would not say why.

    Monroe said it was not clear where the girl’s parents are, and that she apparently belonged to the State of California.

    For now, Alouette is in custody of the Kentucky Child Protective Services, which is working with LAPD and the FBI to return her to California, Monroe said.

    172 comments

    She "apparently belonged to the State of California"? Poor little lamb. I hope she finds a loving home and ceases to belong to California.

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  • 5
    Dec
    2012
    5:37pm, EST

    Bodies found believed to be Iowa girls who went missing in July

    Black Hawk County Sheriff

    Elizabeth Collins, left, and Lyric Cook went missing in Evansdale, Iowa, last July.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 7:15 p.m. ET: Two bodies found Wednesday appear to be the remains of cousins who disappeared last July in Evansdale, Iowa, police said Wednesday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Elizabeth Collins and Lyric Cook disappeared on July 13 shortly after they left their grandmother's house. Collins was 8 years old and Cook was 10 at the time of their disappearance.

    Hunters found the bodies in a wooded area, Capt. Rick Abben of the Black Hawk County Sheriff's office said at a Wednesday afternoon news conference.

    The girls' families had been notified, he said, but positive identification of the bodies will be determined by the state medical examiner.

    "It's definitely not the outcome that we wanted, obviously," Abben told reporters, according to The Associated Press. "This is a difficult thing for us to go through. It's a difficult thing for the community."

    Abben did not say if police had a suspect in the case, but said another news conference would be held Thursday.


    The girls' bikes and a purse were initially found near Lake Meyer, prompting investigators to send in divers with sonar.

    When no signs of the girls were found at the lake, officials reclassified the case as an abduction.

    "Now that it's an abduction, everyone's a suspect," Abben said at the time, adding that investigators had recovered some evidence and sent it to the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation for analysis. He declined to say what the evidence was or where it was found.

    Police had offered a $50,000 reward for information to help find the girls. Last week, an anonymous donor also pledged a $100,000 reward for information, the AP reported.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

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    • West Point cadet quits, cites 'criminal' behavior of officers
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    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    104 comments

    What the hell is seriously wrong with people? My god, if you find yourself with the urges to harm a child or ruin their innocence in any way, please...just take a gun to your mouth and pull the trigger. You'll die with more dignity and I'm sure if there's a god above he'll look at you and say you m …

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  • 29
    Nov
    2012
    6:44am, EST

    Alleged kidnapper: I 'didn't mean' to kill baby, grandma

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

    By Deanna Durante and David Chang, NBCPhiladelphia.com

    PHILADELPHIA -- The man charged in the murder of a baby and her grandmother during a botched kidnapping and ransom scheme claimed that he killed both victims by accident, according to video released during his court appearance Wednesday.

    Raghunandan Yandamuri, 26, is accused of murdering 10-month-old Saanvi Venna and her grandmother, Satyavathi Venna, 61, last month. It happened on Oct. 22, at an apartment complex in Upper Merion where both the Venna family and Yandamuri, a family friend, lived.

    Police believe Yandamuri went to the apartment with the intention of kidnapping Saanvi and holding her for ransom. But police say Satyavathi, who was babysitting the child, fought for her granddaughter and was fatally stabbed by Yandamuri.

    On Oct. 26, the baby's body was found in the basement of the apartment building and Yandamuri was arrested. Police say they also found a ransom note from Yandamuri demanding $50,000.

    'Didn't mean to kill anyone'
    On Wednesday, Yandamuri appeared in court for a preliminary hearing. During the hearing, a 23-minute video confession was played for the court, according to NBC10's Deanna Durante.

    In the video, Yandamuri told police he "accidentally" slit Satyavathi Venna's throat and that he "didn't mean to kill anyone." The video also showed him confessing to stuffing a handkerchief in the baby's mouth and wrapping a towel around her head when she wouldn't stop crying.

    More news from NBCPhiladelphia.com

    Yandamuri said in the video that he put the baby in a suitcase, escaped via a fire escape and sneaked into the basement of another apartment building.

    Yandamuri also told police that when he took Saanvi out of the suitcase the towel was still wrapped around her face and she was unconscious. He said he removed the towel and handkerchief, splashed water on her and left her in the basement while he returned home, took a shower and went to work.

    He also told police he went back to the basement around 3:30 p.m. with a bottle of milk for the girl but that she was already dead.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Yandamuri's defense attorney argued in court that since his client did not mean to kill anyone, first-degree murder should be taken off the table. Prosecutors disagreed, citing Yandamuri's ransom note as evidence against the attorney's claim.

    According to prosecutors, 10 copies of the ransom note were left in the apartment of the Venna family with several references that if they didn't bring $50,000 by 8 p.m. that night that the baby would be killed. Prosecutors say that showed there was intention and premeditation for murder. The judge agreed with the prosecutors and ordered that Yandamuri stand trial on charges of first-degree murder, kidnapping, robbery, theft and abuse of corpse.   

    494 comments

    These are the times I would not mind a bit of "cruel and unusual" punishment. Maybe we should accidentally hang you by your balls and stuff your mouth with a handkerchief.

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  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    1:01pm, EDT

    Abducted Pennsylvania baby found dead; suspect in custody

    Police photo of Raghunandan Yandamuri

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Police in Pennsylvania have arrested a suspect in the kidnapping and killing of a 10-month old girl and the slaying of her grandmother who was taking care of her in a Philadelphia suburb. According to the affadavit for his arrest, Raghunandan Yandamuri, after telling police he committed the crime, asked police to say his wife turned him so she could claim a cash reward being offered for the child's return.

    The body of the baby, Saanvi Venna, was discovered overnight, police said Friday. Her grandmother Satyavathi Venna, 61, was found slain on Monday in the family's apartment in King of Prussia, about 15 miles north of Philadelphia and it was then that the baby was discovered missing.  


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    Yandamuri, 26, an acquaintance of the family who lives in the same apartment complex, faces charges of first and second degree murder, kidnapping and burglary in what police say appears to have been a kidnapping for ransom that went awry.


    Near the body of the grandmother, who died from stab wounds to her neck and chest, investigators found a ransom note demanding $50,000 for the return of Saavni, investigators revealed on Friday.

    "If you want your daughter alive and safe, follow our instructions carefully," said the message, which is attached as an exhibit to the criminal complaint provided by police. It called for the baby's mother to deliver the $50,000 by 8 p.m. the same day, and warned, "Any cunning act from anyone of you will lead to your daughter's death."

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Investigators issued an Amber Alert just before 5 p.m. Monday after the child's father and slain victim's son, Venkata Konda Siva Venna, found the woman's body and realized his daughter was missing.

    Police say Venna left work to check on the pair after receiving a call from a worried relative who was unable to reach them.

    The baby’s mother, Chenchu Latha Punuru, was at work when Venna was killed and the child was taken, police said.

    Pennsylvania State Police via AP

    Saanvi Venna, 10 months old, in an undated photo provided by police. Police issued an Amber Alert for her on Monday after her grandmother, who had been babysitting, was found slain and the baby missing.

    In the ransom note, the writer used the nicknames "Shiva" and "Lata" for Saanvi's parents, which were known only to a handful of people, all of whom were in the community of Asian Indian Americans, according to an affidavit for Yandamuri's arrest.

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    One of the people who knew those names was Yandamuri, who first told detectives he had no idea who had killed Satyavathi or taken Saanvi. He had attended a vigil held for the child and helped create and distribute missing child posters of the girl, it said.

    Later in the interview on Thursday, Yandamuri said he was responsible for both deaths. He said he targeted the family because he believed they had money, and said his intention was to hide the child until the ransom was paid, the affidavit said. 

    According to the document, he told police he had stabbed the grandmother with a kitchen knife in a tussle for the child, stuffed a handkerchief into the child's mouth to stop her from crying, and then put her in a blue suitcase, which he later abandoned in a sauna at the apartment complex gym.

    Following Yandamuri's description, investigators went to the sauna, the affidavit said.

    "Hidden inside a dark wooden sauna under a deep bench, they found the lifeless body of Saanvi Venna. There was apparent blood on her white dress."

    The grandmother had been visiting from India since July, authorities said, and was planning to return in January.

    A reward for information leading to the safe return of the child had jumped from $30,000 to $50,000 on Thursday.

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    192 comments

    How sad, rest in peace little angel. My condolances to the family of this tragedy for the loss of 2 loved ones.

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    Explore related topics: baby, indian, philadelphia, murder, kidnapping, kari-huus, satyavathi-venna, saanvi-venna
  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    5:06am, EDT

    Mother reunited with son 5 years after child's abduction

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

    By Diana Guevara, NBCSanDiego.com

    SAN DIEGO -- A mother and her 7-year-old son have been reunited five years after the boy was kidnapped by his father and taken to Mexico, authorities said.

    According to the San Diego District Attorney's office, the boy had been living with his grandparents near Mexico City after his father, 37-year-old Julio Rocha kidnapped him and left him there.

    "I haven't really celebrated Christmas or his birthday or anything," he boy's mother, Leilani Masumoto, told NBC 7. "I was just waiting to get him back home. This will be our first Christmas together."

    Masumoto said she had just been given full custody of her son, Keoni, when Rocha took the boy to Mexico. But last week her prayers were answered.

    That's when authorities got a call from the grandparents' next-door neighbor, who came across a missing children's poster online with the boy's photo and recognized him.

    'Broke down in tears'
    After years of anguish, mother and child were finally reunited.

    "As soon as he came, I just broke down in tears," Masumoto recalled.

    But they are tears she says she would not shed if she ever has to face Keoni's father again.

    Read more stories from NBCSanDiego.com

    "I think my first initial reaction would be to just slap him across the face. I don't think he cared about Keoni, it's just more the fact of taking him to hurt me and he accomplished that," she said.


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    Although she may have lost years of memories with her son, it only took one look at her little boy to find that love again.

    "It was like, will I recognize my son? Will he recognize me? And when I saw him, that was it," she said.

    Right now, Masumoto is focused on getting her son settled in back home.

    Keoni is autistic so Masumoto is trying to find a school that focuses on special-needs students.

    Authorities are still looking for Rocha. He is facing felony kidnapping charges.

    Investigators say he might be going under the name Miguel Martinez and may be staying with relatives in Virginia or North Carolina.

     

    69 comments

    The grandparents had to be just as mean and controlling to keep that kid for 5 years. What horrible people they must be to take a child from it's mother.

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    Explore related topics: mexico, reunion, kidnapping, san-diego, abduction, featured, nbcsandiego, leilani-masumoto, keoni-masumoto
  • 23
    Oct
    2012
    9:01am, EDT

    Pennsylvania grandmother found dead, baby missing, police say

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

    By David Chang, NBCPhiladelphia.com

    A woman is dead and her infant granddaughter is missing after a homicide and abduction at an Upper Merion, Pa., apartment, according to police.

    NBC Philadelphia

    Police say 10-month-old Saavni Venna was abducted from her apartment complex sometime between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Monday.

    Pennsylvania State Police issued an Amber Alert for the Upper Merion Township Police Department on Monday.

    Police say Saavni Venna, a 10-month-old baby girl, was abducted from the Marquis Apartment complex in King of Prussia sometime between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Monday.

     Read the original report  |  More from NBCPhiladelphia.com

    Investigators issued a child abduction alert just before 5 p.m. after they say a relative arrived at the apartment earlier in the afternoon and found the dead body of the baby's grandmother, 61-year-old Satyavathi Venna, and then realized the child was missing. Friends of the family tell NBC10 it was the baby's father, Shiva Venna, who called police.

    Police described the baby as an Asian-Indian female, who is 2'6'' tall and weighs 21 pounds, with black hair and brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a white dress with pink flowers and wearing jewelry.

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    "Please don't do any harm to the kid," said Vasu Velaga, a neighbor of the family. "Please release her immediately. Please inform the police."

    Shiva Venna spoke Monday night during a press conference.

    "If someone finds my baby, could you please bring my baby back?" Venna pleaded. "Don't do any harm to my baby."

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    119 comments

    My sincere condolences to the Venna family. Hopefully the perpetrator(s) of this heinous crime, murder and abduction, will be found and quickly prosecuted to the FULL extent of the law and receive the harshest punishment permissible.

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    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, murder, crime, kidnapping, abduction, nbcphiladelphia
  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    9:46am, EDT

    Two California children believed abducted by father rescued after sailboat chase

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

    By NBCBayArea.com

    Updated at 12:15 a.m. ET: After a long day of tracking a sailboat believed to be involved in a Bay Area abduction case, the United States Coast Guard recovered two children from South San Francisco down the coast about 20 to 30 miles off the Monterey Peninsula.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The children were safe and suffered no injuries, according to the Coast Guard. They were reunited with their mother around 10 p.m. Friday.

    A fishermen tipped police after seeing Christopher Maffei and his children - Devin, 2, and Brooklynn, off Pillar Point by the San Mateo County coast. He made contact overnight, but couldn't tell authorities about it until he got back into radio range just after sunrise Friday morning.


    The Coast Guard, the FBI and South San Francisco police were dispatched to retrieve the children, and that is just what happened.

    Just before 9 p.m. the Coast Guard issued a press release titled, "Coast Guard, local agencies rescued missing children aboard sailboat off Calif. coast."

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    Officials said the rescue was peaceful and the suspect, 43-year-old Christopher Maffei, was cooperative. He is now in police custody.

    South San Francisco PD

    A white sailboat named "Unleashed" is shown in a photo before it was allegedly stolen.

    "A Coast Guard cutter approached the vessel and just started talking to them," Coast Guard spokesman Thomas McKenzie said. "He put his hands up and surrendered without incident."

    South San Francisco PD

    Police believe Christopher Maffei kidnapped his two children, Brooklynn and Devin, and took them aboard a stolen yacht.

    Members of the Coast Guard said they boarded the vessel and took the children off one at a time. Investigators said they decided to make contact with the suspect while he was still out at sea instead of waiting for him to get to land because they knew he was running low on fuel.

    All of the officials involved in the rescue said it was a great example of a successful partnership.

    “This case highlights the successful partnership between the Coast Guard and local law enforcement, the South San Francisco Police Department, the Federal Bureau of the Investigation, California Department of Fish and Game, Monterey County Sherriff’s and Police Department, Seaside Police Department and the Pacific Grove Police Department,” said Cmdr. Donald Montoro, Chief of Response, Coast Guard Sector San Francisco. “We train with our local partners so that when these complex situations arise we can respond quickly.”

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    The rescue comes three days after Maffei allegedly abducted his 3-year-old daughter, Brooklynn, and 2-year-old son, Devin, from their mother's home.
     
    For much of the day a C-130 aircraft was in the air over the yacht as a U.S. Coast Guard cutter from Treasure Island followed by water. It was not immediately clear if Maffei knew he was being followed.

    Devin Maffei, 2, left, and Brooklynn Maffei, 4, were abducted by their father Christopher Maffei on Sept. 4, according to South San Francisco Police.

    The children's mother, Jennifer Hipon, was anxiously awaiting her childrens' safe return at her South San Francisco home. She said that Maffei, whom she had dated in the past, had recently returned from Thailand, and had wanted to see his children.

    She agreed, but added that he had seemed increasingly anxious to be near the kids. His zeal to see the children scared her enough to seek a restraining order against him, she told NBC Bay Area on Friday. She was at the courthouse in Redwood City on Tuesday seeking that order, when she said Maffei went to her home on James Court about 3 p.m.

    Her mother was babysitting, and Hipon said he just grabbed the kids, one under each arm.

    Police then believe Maffei took off in a rented white Ford Fusion to the Bellena Isle Marina in Alameda, where he later allegedly stole a yacht from Alameda and sailed away. Investigators say that Maffei had been at the habor two weeks before, and had asked about buying a boat.

    The rental car was discovered at the marina and towed for evidence.

    The stolen boat was recovered and would be returned to its owner, according to police.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    120 comments

    Where is the rest of the story? Was the mother using the kids against the dad so he felt he had to take the kids? Courts are not fair one bit to fathers they prefer the mothers regardless of how bad some really are so where is the rest of the story? How much was she getting in child support and yes  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: california, theft, kidnapping, abduction
  • 23
    Aug
    2012
    6:36pm, EDT

    Woman arrested in kidnapping of newborn baby in Pittsburgh

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    Police arrested a woman Thursday evening in connection with the kidnapping of a 3-day-old baby boy from a Pittsburgh hospital, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The baby, named Bryce Coleman, was found late Thursday in the Investment Building in downtown Pittsburgh, according to the Post-Gazette. He was in a white shirt and diaper when he disappeared around 1 p.m. on Thursday.

    The baby and his parents were preparing to leave Magee-Womens Hospital when a woman – described as 5-foot-4, 180 pounds and around 25 years old – carried the baby out on foot. The hospital confirmed the baby was kidnapped. Authorities issued a statewide alert.


    Surveillance footage from nearby Life Uniforms showed a woman fitting the kidnapper’s description buying size large scrubs. She had been waiting for the store to open before 9 a.m. Thursday morning and told the store clerk she would start training at Magee on Monday. She paid $16.19 for the scrubs, according to the Post-Gazette, receiving a 10 percent employee discount.

    Sources told WPXI.com that the woman cut off a security bracelet on the baby’s wrist 45 minutes before leaving. The hospital’s security bracelets are so sensitive and are set off if the baby leaves a specified perimeter, according to the Post-Gazette.

    According to the hospital’s website, nearly 10,000 babies were born at Magee in 2006.  

    Bryce Coleman’s grandmother, Charmaine King, sobbed as she pleaded on WPXI for her grandson to be returned.

    “Please, God, please return my grandson,” she said.

    Emergency personnel were checking the baby and planned to return him to Magee on Thursday evening.

    Infant abductions are rare, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Of the 800,000 children reported missing every year in the U.S., 115 are in the most serious category of those who are taken by a stranger and killed, or taken by someone who intends to keep them.

    Two weeks ago, a 48-year-old California woman who had told her husband she was pregnant tried to kidnap an Orange County baby. She was charged with kidnapping.

    The Grio: NYC woman pleads guilty to 1987 kidnapping

    And Nejdra Nance, born Carlina White, was discovered in December – 23 years after being abducted from a Harlem hospital in 1987 when she was just 19 days old.

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    2 comments

    I can't even imagine how traumatic this was for the baby's family. It's good to see the baby was found safe and is being returned but the parents will be thinking about this horror for the rest of their lives. I hope the law in PA will deal very severely with the kidnapper, and I don't care if she s …

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    Explore related topics: crime, kidnapping, pittsburgh
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Kari Huus

Reporter Kari Huus joined msnbc.com at launch in 1996 after 7 years reporting from China. In recent years, she has focused on domestic issues, playing a key role in msnbc.com series including The Elkhart Project, Gut Check America, and Rising from Ruin--on the recovery of two Mississippi towns after Hurricane Katrina. Huus has also covered a wide array of international stories, including China's 2008 earthquake, the Asian economic crisis, the fal …

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