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  • 28
    Feb
    2013
    10:12am, EST

    Man with 'cutthroat' tattoo accused of slashing teen's throat

    Chester County District Attorney's Office

    Shakeem Carter, 20, whose tattoo reads "cutthroat," is accused of murder.

    By Kelly Bayliss, NBCConnecticut.com

    A man who bears a "cutthroat" tattoo on his neck is accused of slashing a teen's throat from ear-to-ear for $350.

    "It's horrific. I just can't comprehend how this beast could do something like this," said Kayanna Stutzman, a friend of the victim's family.

    Two weeks after investigators found blood all over the walls of a burned-out apartment and then Kevin Allen's body in the ashes, prosecutors charged 20-year-old Shakeem Carter with killing the Norristown, Conn., high school student.

    Read original story on NBCConnecticut.com

    Carter, also from Norristown, killed Allen for $350 the teen had on him, according to Chester County District Attorney Tom Hogan.

    "I can rest and sleep now, knowing that he will be rotting in hell," Allen's mom, Jacqueline Castille-Dixon, said after Carter was charged.

    On February 13, police found Allen's body in his father's burning apartment in the Hanover Garden complex in North Conventry Township, Chester County.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Blood was found smeared on the staircase to the second floor apartment and in the entryway.

    Carter allegedly sliced Allen's throat from ear to ear. He also stabbed Allen more than 20 times before setting his body on fire, according to the district attorney.

    The suspect followed the teen home on a SEPTA bus and attacked him inside the apartment building, according to authorities.

    Investigators say the money Carter allegedly stole from Allen was a gift from the teen's father.

    "What's the value of a young man's life today? Three hundred and fifty dollars, sadly, is the value of a young man's life today," Hogan said.

    161 comments

    This message cuts across racial lines and is relevant in big urban cities as well as small town America: until we stop paying the permanent underclass of uneducated, unemployable, crime ridden, parentless recidivist miscreants to stop breeding , we will continue have this kind of brutality as part o …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: connecticut, tattoo, murder, cutthroat, norristown, nbcconnecticut
  • 5
    Jan
    2013
    6:20pm, EST

    Tattoo photos lead to woman's arrest in global child porn investigation

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

    By Jonathan Lloyd and Lolita Lopez, NBCLosAngeles.com

    Five solid tips from people who told authorities that distinctive tattoos helped them recognize a woman seen in photos released Thursday as part of a child molestation investigation led to an arrest in an 11-year-old case involving "widely circulated" child pornography images.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Letha Mae Montemayor, 52, was taken into custody Thursday night outside an apartment complex in North Hills in the San Fernando Valley.

    Authorities said they believe the woman is the individual -- identified as "Jane Doe" in a criminal complaint filed Monday -- who appears with an unidentified male in a series of photographs released Thursday afternoon as investigators hunted for leads in the child pornography case.

    "Just after ICE’s nationwide plea for public assistance, five separate community tips led to the arrest of Jane Doe," said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Director John Morton. "This arrest would not have happened without the public’s help, and it demonstrates how much individual citizens can do to help law enforcement attack crime."


    Also on NBCLosAngeles.com: Second suspect arrested in child porn case, ICE says

    An appearance in federal court for Montemayor, charged with one count of making child pornography, was scheduled for Monday.

    A neighbor of Montemayor's who did not want to be identified said the suspect was a "hoarder" who "did not take care of her body well" and was "rude to all the children."

    About 10 hours before her arrest, Morton and other law enforcement agents conducted a news conference regarding "Operation Sunflower," a recently concluded child sex crimes investigation that led to more than 240 arrests. During the news conference, authorities released images of a man and tattooed woman wanted in connection with a child molestation case authorities said occurred about 11 years ago, possibly in Los Angeles.

    "The (tipsters) said they recognized the face, the tattoos," said Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent in Charge Claude Arnold.

    "They were very confident that it was she. We expect that it would be more difficult because they were older images, but we were optimistic because they were good images."

    ice.gov

    These images released by federal authorities as part of a child porn investigation led to the arrest of a woman in Los Angeles.

    The woman's tattoos -- a sleeping cat, butterfly and other designs -- are visible in the photographs released Thursday.

    123 child victims of Internet sex abuse identified, US officials say

    But other clues in the background of the images, discovered by Chicago Homeland Security agents in 2007 and passed along to LA agents, prompted investigators to focus on locations in the San Fernando Valley. Forensics analysis of the images, conducted by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, revealed details in the pictures, such as close-ups of the tattoos, a calendar from a store and a phonebook.

    The criminal complaint alleges that "Jane Doe," now identified as Montemayor, was involved in the production of child pornography images that were "widely circulated" online. The images depict the sexual molestation of a girl, who appears to be about age 13, according to ICE.

    Authorities have not identified the victim or male subject.

    "We still want the public’s help in identifying John Doe and the victim in the disturbing series of images that continue to be circulated on the Internet," said U.S. Attorney André Birotte.

    Call 866-347-2423 or visit this tips form to provide information. Click here to view the ICE wanted poster.

    175 comments

    Let us hope that some lawyer does not get her off on a technicality and that she spends the rest of her days in this world in prison and then burns in hell.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: homeland-security, tattoo, crime, law-enforcement, ice, child-pornography, sex-trafficking, nbclosangeles, operation-sunflower
  • 8
    Oct
    2012
    12:27pm, EDT

    Police: Mother arrested for tattooing 11-year-old daughter

    Pamlico County Sheriff handout

    Odessa Clay is accused of tattooing her 11-year-old daughter.

    By NBC News staff

    A North Carolina woman is in trouble with the law for tattooing her 11-year-old daughter, according to a published report.

    Odessa Clay, 30, of Grantsboro in Pamlico County has been charged with one count of tattooing a person under age 18, WCTI-TV reported. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In North Carolina, it’s illegal to tattoo a minor.


    Clay was arrested and charged in late September after police in Havelock, where she used to live, found out she gave her daughter a small, heart-shaped tattoo near her right shoulder, according to WCTI. Clay, who herself is heavily tattooed, said she used her own tools.

    "She asked me to do it," Clay told WCTI.

    Related video: Tattooed 10-year-old removed from grandfather’s care

    Clay said she numbed her daughter's arm for the procedure and her daughter was never in pain.

    Clay said she did not know that tattooing a minor is illegal. She told WCRI that she believes a former in-law reported the tattoo.

    She is due in court next month.

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    278 comments

    Her defense is "she asked me to do it"?!? Wow, awesome parenting.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: tattoo, crime, north-carolina, odessa-clay
  • 22
    Jun
    2012
    5:26pm, EDT

    Grandfather gives boy, 10, a leg tattoo -- all the kids removed from the home

    A grandfather in Jacksonville, Fla., believes his grandson was removed from his care after taking him to get a tattoo. WTLV's Kaitlyn Ross reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Jerry Garrison says it's a family tradition to have your initials in ink on your body.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    So he says he saw nothing wrong when his 10-year-old grandson wanted his initials tattooed on his leg, NBC station of WTLV of Jacksonville, Fla., reported. 

    The Florida Department of Children and Families visited Garrison's home for another matter, spotted the tattoo and told him, yes, that was a problem. 


    The agency removed all of the grandchildren who were in the home and placed them in foster care, the station reported. It was unclear how many children were involved.

    But Department spokesman John Harrell told WTLV that other allegations -- not the child's tattoo -- were the reasons for removing the children. 

    "When you get into cases like this, is the child being abused? Is the child at risk? Are the actions of the parents putting the child at risk," he said.

    The station reported that Garrison thinks the the tattoo played a role in the children's removal. 

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    "I ain't never been in pain like this, it's the worst pain I have ever felt in my life. In my whole entire life," he told WTLV. 

    Under state law, a child under 16 years of age cannot be tattooed unless it's for medical or dental reasons.

    WTLV reported that the tattoo artist can be charged with a misdemeanor, not the parent or guardian. 

    Children ages 16 to 17 can get a tattoo with parental consent. Once a person turns 18, the choice is up to them. 

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

     

    53 comments

    He is a idiot.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: children, tattoo, families, jacksonville
  • 14
    May
    2012
    7:59pm, EDT

    Tattoo artist attaches iPod to wrist using magnetic piercings

    Keith Bedford / Reuters

    Tattoo artist Dave Hurban displays an iPod Nano which he has attached to his wrists through magnetic piercings in his wrist in New York.

    Keith Bedford / Reuters

    Tattoo artist Dave Hurban displays the magnetic piercings he uses to attach his iPod.

    You can see more images of piercings in PhotoBlog.

    A New Jersey man has implanted magnets into his arm in order to attach his Nano device. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    I remember when I was a child in elementary school many many years ago and one of my teachers brought a National Georgraphic magazine to class and showed us pictures of African people who had distorted and mutilated their bodies by stretching their necks and lips and abusing their bodies in other wa …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: tattoo, ipod, us-news, magnet, piercing

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