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  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    2:33pm, EST

    Facebook restores wedding photo of gay couple; man decries harassment

    Bishop Erik Swope-Wise

    Bishop Erik Swope-Wise, right, and his husband Kelsey Swope-Wise stand before a unity candle on their wedding day on April 28, 2012. The photo was inadvertently removed from Facebook by the site after a complaint was made about the image.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A gay man whose wedding photo was pulled from Facebook after an anonymous complaint believes the social network’s reporting policy allows for a "subversive" type of harassment.

    The photo of Pastor Kelsey Swope-Wise, 37, and his husband, Bishop Erik Swope-Wise, 49, of Elgin, Ill., was taken down from the Gay Marriage USA Facebook page on Monday after someone lodged a complaint with Facebook. The administrator of the page, Murray Lipp, said Facebook informed him on Monday that the image of the biracial couple standing together at their April 28, 2012, wedding "violates policies and community standards."


    Follow @mimileitsinger

    "It’s subversive, the type of harassment, meaning that you can do it anonymously," Erik Swope-Wise, who founded a local chapter of The Affirming Pentecostal Church International, told NBC News on Tuesday. “So you can throw the rock and hide your hand. There’s no accountability for somebody’s actions. So somebody could make that accusation, ‘Well this picture’s offensive.’ Well we don’t know who said that, so how can we even go back to them and say, ‘Why is this offensive? Tell me why it’s offensive.’”

    Facebook restored the photo on Tuesday and apologized to Lipp, who told NBC News that the social networking site had initially blocked his ability to post for one week in addition to taking down the photo. This wasn’t the first time he has had problems with posts being reported.

    “Sadly, Facebook's reporting system is so flawed that it allows people against equality to attack & target pages like mine and Facebook almost ALWAYS sides with those who complain. I was given no opportunity to respond or say anything … ,” he wrote in an e-mail.

    Erik Swope-Wise said Lipp asked to post the image last weekend. He initially was pleasantly surprised by the outpouring of support in comments and likes, but then the messages turned “hateful” and “condescending.” Some who made comments were upset because the men are Pentacostal, which traditionally rejects same-sex marriage, though their church does not.

    Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes told NBC News in an email that the photo did not violate their “policies or community standards and was removed in error. The image has been restored and we apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused." A team reviews hundreds of thousands of reports every week, and occasionally mistakes are made, he said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “I accept that … we’re all subject to human error,” Erik Swope-Wise said. “However the process by which Facebook uses to make those determinations is probably a little too mechanical. When a person puts an opposition to a post … it’s a list of choices that you choose to describe why this is offensive or inappropriate but there gives no validation, you know, as to what that really is.”

    What might be offensive to one group may not be to another, and the term “offensive” was also “too general,” he added. “I think the scrutiny of it needs to be a little more clear before they take such harsh action.”

    Rich Ferraro, a spokesman for the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), said he has seen this happen before but that Facebook has always taken quick action.

    “More often than not reporting tools on sites like Facebook are used positively to report anti-LGBT bullying or hate speech. Unfortunately, anti-LGBT users have also used these tools to target LGBT community members -- but when GLAAD has brought incidents like this to Facebook, they have always immediately restored the content,” he wrote to NBC News in an email.

    Issues can arise when social networking sites wade into heated debates.

    "This is involving a lot of judgment calls right, like what is hate speech and what is a political statement. It's extraordinary difficult some times," said Rebecca Jeschke, a spokeswoman for the nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation, which advocates for the public’s digital rights.

    She said best practices would be to have a “really clear procedure for contesting any kind of take down and for that to be followed consistently.”

    "Lots of activists use these forums for their activism and so if you censor their activity through Facebook then you're functionally censoring their speech activity on the Internet,” she said. “Facebook isn’t like a state government. It can restrict speech in any way it wants, but sometimes the ramifications are the same."

    229 comments

    Interracial and gay! Some ultra conservative religious zealot just had his head pop!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: marriage, illinois, gay, lesbian, wedding, electronic, photo, freedom, foundation, facebook, same-sex, lgbt, glaad
  • 22
    Dec
    2012
    3:20am, EST

    48 years later, California couple learns marriage wasn't legal

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

    By Jacob Rascon and Julie Brayton, NBCLosAngeles.com

    In 1964 Norma and Bob Clark had a wonderful wedding in Northern California. Everything was perfect.

    Nearly five decades later, the happily married couple, now in their seventies, live in Redlands.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    But while getting paperwork in order in case one of them passed away, they made a somewhat disturbing discovery -- they were never legally married, because they had no marriage license.

    "I couldn't find it, and couldn't find it for a reason, because it wasn't there," Norma Clark said.

    When couples get a marriage license, the person who then marries them must return the license to their county record office, where it becomes a marriage certificate.

    Read more from NBCLosAngeles.com

    The pastor who married the Clark's apparently never did that.

    Bob Clark went to the San Bernardino County Hall of Records to try to fix everything. The couple first told the story to the Redlands Daily Facts.

    "I just went in there thinking I could just do it, and she said, 'No, no, you have to have witnesses,'" Clark said.

    "Well, you know most people at our wedding are dead. If we had waited a couple more years, we would have been in trouble,” he added.

    'You Can Be Right' investigates modern love and marriage 

    Luckily, the Clarks had their old maid of honor and junior usher in town for the holidays. The four of them, among others, finally made it official.

    The Clarks' son, Alex, got to attend the second marriage.

    “My sister and I, we just kind of joked that we didn't have to throw them a 50th anniversary party anymore," he said.

    Norma Clark said their friends in Redlands had teased them, wanting to know when the reception would be.

    And they have some advice: Check your marriage license.

    155 comments

    It's Obamas fault. He started this whole trend of not having proper documentation. And I know this for a fact...Donny Trump told me so. (I apologize for injecting politics into this boring article...at least I didn't inject religion so that all of the athiest snobs could pretend that they are enligh …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: marriage, wedding, clark, license, bob, featured, san-bernardino, norma, nbclosangeles
  • 23
    Nov
    2012
    4:33am, EST

    Love among the ruins: Sandy decimates community, but wedding goes on

    John Makely / NBC News

    James Keane, a volunteer with the Rockaway Point F.D and a full-time dispatcher for the FDNY, and his fiancee Kristen Diffendale on Sunday in Breezy Point.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    BREEZY POINT, N.Y. -- The wedding had been two years in the making: The church was booked, the custom fuchsia and blue Converse sneakers for the bridesmaids were ordered, and the firehouse was secured as a staging ground for the groomsmen.

    But then Superstorm Sandy struck, flooding the firehouse, forcing the church to turn into a command center, and scattering the guests and the newlyweds-to-be, as well as the custom Converse, less than a month before the big day: Friday, Nov. 23.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Now, with much of their Breezy Point community in ruins, Kristen Diffendale, 29, and James Keane, 28, are turning their wedding into a celebration of what the storm couldn’t take away.

    “All of our family and friends are from Breezy Point and from Rockaway (another hard-hit community nearby) so we figured this is, it’s not only a night for us, it’s a night for all of our friends and family to get to some sort of normalcy, to feel like everything’s alright, to be away from this for a day,” she said. “We want to give that to our friends, just a night of just absolute back to normal.”

    As Sandy swept through the seaside community of Breezy Point on Oct. 29, Diffendale hunkered down at the home she shares with her future in-laws and her three-year-old daughter, Madison Shea. Keane, her fiancé and Madison’s dad, was in Brooklyn working as a dispatcher for the New York City Fire Department.

    'What Thanksgiving is all about': Breezy Point teen lifts spirits in devastated hometown

    “It was pretty scary … I was a little worried when the water came up. We just, we didn’t know where it was coming from and we figured out it was the ocean that was coming towards us,” she said. “And then we saw the fire, we saw the glow … and then I started to get really nervous because it wasn’t stopping.”

    In Breezy Point in Queens, a couple said "I do" despite Superstorm Sandy. NBC's Kate Snow reports.

    'I thought everybody was gone'
    Keane lost cellphone contact with his family around 7 p.m. that night. He got permission to leave his job and raced to a firehouse close to his home. But due to the flooding, no fire trucks were being allowed into the area in southern Queens where Breezy Point is located.

    When that order lifted, and he was finally able to get on a truck speeding to the area, he spotted the fires lighting up the night sky.

    John Makely / NBC News

    James Keane and his fiancee, Kristen Diffendale, hope their wedding will provide respite for their guests.

    “I didn’t know what was happening down here. I thought it was gone down here,” he said this week, standing amid volunteers and victims near the relief center in their once idyllic community. 

    “He thought I left him,” Diffendale said, looking into his eyes, breaking from the couple’s otherwise jovial banter.

    “I thought everybody was gone,” Keane said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Their home took in several feet of water in the basement and there was damage to the roof, but the dwelling did not burn. The family, however, spent a frightful night riding out the storm, with Diffendale clutching her grandmother's rosary and in tears. 

    Once Keane, a volunteer firefighter at the Rockaway Point Volunteer Fire Department, learned his family was all right, he joined the effort to battle the blaze.

    Diffendale and Keane are among the lucky ones in Breezy Point, where Sandy’s hurricane-force winds sparked a six-alarm blaze that burned more than 100 homes to the ground. It is believed that the rest of the 2,100 homes in this close-knit community were also damaged, many due to flooding.

    PhotoBlog: Cooking a Thanksgiving feast in Breezy Point

    The couple was unsure about keeping their post-Thanksgiving wedding date in the aftermath of the disaster. Like many of their friends and neighbors, they have been busy with the relief effort: he, cleaning and gutting flooded basements, and she, hauling supplies to victims.

    “For a while, people were asking, ‘What about the wedding?’” said Diffendale, who works in special education. “But we were, like, ‘We’re worrying about what’s going on right now.' … We put ourselves last for a couple of weeks.”

    But as the date approached, and more people asked them not to postpone their impending nuptials, the couple decided the community needed a party.

    “We’ve been planning this wedding for two years and we had to re-plan it in two weeks,” Keane said.

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Residents of the Northeast are still picking up the pieces after Superstorm Sandy.

    Launch slideshow

    'People need a break from this'
    The change in plans entailed: moving their wedding to a hall in Long Island and getting permission from leaders at Saint Frances de Sales Parish to still have their marriage recognized by the church; booking rooms at a local hotel for Keane and the groomsmen because the firehouse was out of commission; and arranging for buses to transport many of the 300 guests to the wedding, since so many were forced to relocate.

    Diffendale said they weren’t “stressing the little stuff anymore,” and her only near-Bridezilla moment came while tracking down the special-made sneakers, which have the wedding date inscribed on them. The mail delivery was interrupted by the storm and because the shoes were in different packages, they ended up in different locations. Diffendale was told the shoes would be delivered Nov. 28, after the wedding, but a shipping agent helped her locate them.

    Read more coverage of Breezy Point on NBCNews.com

    “People need a break from this,” Keane said of the weeks-long cleanup and repair in chilly temperatures. “They need a break from doing this every day.”

    The wedding has taken on new meaning for the couple, too.

    “Absolutely,” Diffendale said. “We thought each other were dead.”

    “You thought you had, I don’t know, nothing," Keane said. "I didn’t even know there was even a neighborhood here anymore ... when I came down."

    Despite the disaster that befell their community, they don’t expect a sullen affair.

    “We’re an Irish neighborhood so we know how to have a good time,” Diffendale said, laughing. “It’s going to be a very good time.”

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    20 comments

    Great story....all the best!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: storm, point, wedding, featured, sandy, breezy, breezy-point, superstorm
  • 8
    Oct
    2012
    2:49pm, EDT

    Wedding brawl aftermath: Groom's relative arrested for allegedly assaulting cop

    Police in Philadelphia are investigating a wild scene at a hotel where a brawl broke out between two wedding parties that ended with injuries, arrests and one man's death from a heart attack. NBC's Katy Tur reports.

    By NBC News staff

    A New Jersey man who wound up being Tased by police has been identified as one of the main troublemakers in a brawl between two wedding parties at a Philadelphia hotel, authorities said.

    Philadelphia police say they booked 26-year-old Matthew Sofka of Westfield, N.J., on charges including assault on police, inciting a riot and reckless endangerment.

    Sofka was a guest at a family member’s wedding at the Sheraton Society Hill Hotel when a brawl broke out with another wedding party about 1:30 am. Sunday. Police called in extra patrols to quell the 75- to 100-person rumble. Police say most of the fighters were drunk.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    During the brawl, police used a Taser to subdue Sofka, a relative of the groom.

    The uncle of one of the brides, Vincent Sannuti, 57, suffered a heart attack and was pronounced dead at Jefferson University Hospital, NBCPhiladelphia.com reported. Sannuti, who was also celebrating his birthday, was not involved in the melee, according to police.

    View NBCPhiladelphia.com's coverage on wedding night fallout

    Portions of the chaotic brawl were caught on cellphone camera by Max Schultz, a 15-year-old guest at the hotel who was not part of the wedding parties. 

    "I was up on the second floor watching. It was bedlam, out of hand," said Schultz, who posted the video to YouTube. “They just started punching each other and hitting each other and the people just came in and started clubbing people.”

    Philadelphia Police Sgt. Sean Dandridge was hit in the head during the melee and received treatment for concussion-like symptoms. He is expected to recover.

    Dandridge’s apparent Facebook page, which says he’s a Philadelphia cop, had this message posted Monday morning: “Getting checked out at hospital. No serious neurological injury. Awaiting more tests. Mom called: "Now it's on The Good Day Show." My head started hurting again.... Doc said "Take it easy..."

    In the video, a police officer is seen striking Sofka three times with a baton. Police say he was then subdued with a Taser -- an act not caught on camera. Schultz is heard on the video saying, “Did they just deck the bride? They just decked the bride.”

    Police spokesman Lt. Ray Evers told The Philadelphia Inquirer it was actually not the bride, but rather a bridesmaid who had been hit.

    Aside from Sofka, two other people were cited for disorderly conduct for their alleged roles in the brawl.

    Police say there could be more arrests.

    The hotel released a statement in response to the fight.

    "We continue to cooperate with the authorities and as this is an ongoing police investigation any questions should be directed to the local police department. Our sincerest condolences go out to the family for their loss."

    NBCPhiladelphia.com's Jackie Galley, Dan Stamm and Danielle Johnson and NBC News' Sevil Omer contributed to this report.

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    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    128 comments

    I now pronounce you Guido and Guidette. Condolences to the family who lost their uncle.

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    Explore related topics: brawl, philadelphia, crime, wedding, sheraton, melee
  • 7
    Oct
    2012
    4:38pm, EDT

    'They just decked the bride': Wild wedding melee caught on camera

    Police in Philadelphia are investigating a wild scene at a hotel where a brawl broke out between two wedding parties that ended with injuries, arrests and one man's death from a heart attack. NBC's Katy Tur reports.

    By NBC News staff and NBCPhiladelphia.com

    Updated at 6:40 p.m. ET: Philadelphia police were called to a hotel early Sunday to break up a brawl between guests of two wedding parties, and when it was over one man was dead of a heart attack and three people were cited for crimes.

    A guest at the Sheraton Society Hill Hotel shot cellphone video of the brawl in the hotel lobby and posted it on YouTube.


    Police said arguments started in the hotel bar and escalated to a melee not only between guests from the same wedding party but also between guests from two separate wedding parties, philly.com reported. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "There was an issue with a lot of alcohol fueling the fight," police spokesman Lt. Ray Evers was quoted as saying.

    The video shows a chaotic scene in which uniformed police officers try to separate and subdue several guests. One officer is seen repeatedly striking at least one person with a baton. A woman's blood-curdling screams are also heard.

    Local coverage from NBCPhiladelphia.com

    “Did they just deck the bride?” a man’s voice is heard saying on the video. “They just decked the bride.”

    A 15-year-old captured a harrowing end to a ballroom wedding over the weekend, during which he said, shocked, "They just decked the bride." The bride's 57-year-old uncle died of a heart attack within hours of the brawl. NBC's Janet Shamlian reports.

    Two people were cited for disorderly conduct and one person was cited for assault on a police officer. That person was shocked by a Taser, according to police.

    A 57-year-old man, who police say was a wedding guest, suffered a heart attack and was pronounced dead at Jefferson University Hospital.

    Police say there would be more arrests.

    The Sheraton Society Hill Hotel released this statement:

    "We continue to cooperate with the authorities and as this is an ongoing police investigation any questions should be directed to the local police department.  Our sincerest condolences go out to the family for their loss."

    • Raw video shot by NBCPhiladelphia.com outside hotel

    NBCPhiladelphia.com contributed to this story.

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    601 comments

    What a mess like everything in Philly.

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    Explore related topics: police, philadelphia, wedding, featured, sheraton, commentid-featured
  • 12
    Aug
    2012
    12:55pm, EDT

    Cops: Pennsylvania woman stabs fiance to death hours before wedding

    By NBC News staff

    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Police in Whitehall Township, Pa., say a 31-year-old woman killed her fiance on their wedding day. 

    Police arrested Na Cola Darcel Franklin in the stabbing death early Saturday morning of 36-year-old Billy Rafeal Brewster. The attack occurred on the second-floor landing of Brewster’s apartment building in Whitehall Township, The Express-Times reported.


    Authorities said Brewster was stabbed twice in the left torso, resulting in a punctured heart. He was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead shortly before 3:30 a.m. Saturday. 

    Franklin faces a homicide charge. The Morning Call newspaper  said she cried during her arraignment by video from Lehigh County prison in Allentown.

    "I ... did … not … kill … him … on … purpose," she said, choking out the words one at a time between sobs.

    Police said the couple were to be married Saturday at 10 a.m.

    Lehigh County District Attorney James Martin would not comment on a motive.

    Neighbors in the surrounding three apartments told the Express-Times that Brewster and Franklin lived with three children in the apartment for about a year. 

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    678 comments

    Best to find out early that they are not compatible. EARLIER THAN THIS.

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    Explore related topics: crime, wedding, featured, whitehall-township
  • 27
    May
    2012
    3:29pm, EDT

    Marry you? Portland man choreographs an elaborate proposal

    Isaac Lamb of Portland, Ore. asked 60 friends and family to participate as he proposed to his girlfriend Amy Frankel.

    Watch on YouTube
    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    Isaac Lamb may have just won the award for best-ever marriage proposal. (Or perhaps the award for most-viewed proposal.)

    On Wednesday, Lamb, 31, asked his girlfriend Amy Frankel to meet him at his parents’ home for dinner. On arrival, Lamb's brother asked Frankel, 33, to sit in the open back of a Honda and to put on headphones -- he said he wanted to play her a song.

    As the song, “Marry You,” by Bruno Mars started playing, friends and family emerged to perform in an elaborately planned lip-dub dance.


    As the song plays, Frankel is clearly delighted and surprised, letting out small shrieks of joy as each new group of dancers joins in. By the end of the five-minute video, more than 60 dancers are in the frame. As for what happens next, well, you’ll have to watch the video, which had 1.5 million views on YouTube by Sunday afternoon.

    Even Bruno Mars weighed in, tweeting: "Congrats to Isaac Lamb and the future Mrs. I don't think I could've made a better music video for this song. Thank you."

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    35 comments

    So much thought and planning went into this! I love how friends & family were willing to help out too! Congrats and best wishes to the happy couple!

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    Explore related topics: marriage, portland, wedding, wonderful-world, bruno-mars
  • 23
    May
    2012
    4:43pm, EDT

    Woman who faked cancer to pay for 'dream wedding' gets time served

    Booking photo for Jessica Vega.

    By NBC News and news services

    An upstate New York woman who faked having cancer to con donors into paying for her wedding and Caribbean honeymoon is being released after less than two months in jail.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Jessica Vega, 25, apologized Wednesday in court in Orange County, New York, for the scam. A prosecutor says she has paid back more than $13,000 to people she victimized.

    The judge then sentenced her to time served. Vega was arrested April 3 and pleaded guilty to the scam three weeks later.


    Her lawyer says she'll be released later Wednesday from the county jail.

    Vega claimed in 2010 that she was dying of leukemia and wanted a "dream wedding" to Michael O'Connell, the father of her baby.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    Prosecutors said Vega raised thousands of dollars with her cancer story, paying for a May 2010 wedding and a honeymoon to Aruba. After news of her plight spread, businesses such as a bridal dress shop and a restaurant donated to her cause.

    The Times Herald-Record of Orange County, New York, then reported that Vega's husband had called it four months after the wedding to accuse her of faking the illness. The couple divorced over the incident, O'Connell told the paper. He wasn't charged in the matter.

    O'Connell says that Vega will live with his family after her release.

    This article includes reporting from NBCNewYork.com, The Associated Press and Reuters.

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    206 comments

    Time served....B.S. She should have to do community service in a cancer ward!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: cancer, wedding, bride, honeymoon, faking-cancer
  • 16
    May
    2012
    11:42am, EDT

    Illinois police on the hunt for groom of slain bride found in bathtub

    Just two days after her wedding, Estrella Carrera, 25, was found stabbed to death in her own bathtub. She was still in the dress she wore at her wedding reception. WMAQ-TV's Lauren Jiggetts reports.

    By NBC News and news services

    Burbank, Ill., police are on the hunt for the husband of a newlywed woman found stabbed to death in her bathtub over the weekend.

    Arnoldo Jimenez, 30, and Estrella Carrera, 26, were married on Friday, just two days before Carerra's body was found by authorities during a search prompted by worried family members.


    Jimenez hasn't been seen since, officials said. A Cook County judge issued a warrant for his arrest on Tuesday.

    Still wearing wedding dress, woman stabbed to death in bathtub

    Following a City Hall wedding ceremony, the newlyweds rented a party limo and celebrated their new union with a group of friends and family, ending the evening at a night club on the north side of Chicago, officials said.

    The pair were last seen together at about 4 a.m. Saturday, officials said. Roughly 36 hours later, Carerra's body was found. Officials confirmed she was still wearing her silver-sequined wedding dress.

    "It was a very brutal killing," Capt. Joseph Ford of the Burbank Police Department told The Associated Press Tuesday. "We do our jobs every day, of course. But something like this really motivates you to work even harder."

    Investigators said there were no signs of forced entry into the bride's apartment.

    Jimenez was known to be driving a black, four-door 2006 Maserati with Illinois license plates. According to The Associated Press, he had tried to keep the impending wedding secret from most of Carrera's family.

    Carerra called one of her cousins, Sandy Lopez, and invited her to the party but said nothing about a wedding, The Associated Press reported.

    "She didn't want to tell me she had gotten married," she said. "She didn't tell anybody besides her father the day before." 

    The couple had reportedly been dating for two years prior to getting married. Carrera had two children, aged two and nine.

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    205 comments

    A dead wife, missing husband, secret wedding, luxury car. Anyone else think this sounds like an episode of "Weeds"? This totally sounds drug related.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: illinois, wedding, bride, estrella-carrera, arnoldo-jimenez
  • 8
    Mar
    2012
    8:39pm, EST

    Police: Washington stalker planned wedding for man

    By msnbc.com staff

    Authorities say a Washington state woman planned a wedding for a man that she was obsessed with, and she's been charged with felony stalking, the SeattlePI.com reported.

    Madaline Ann Desmet, 64, of Des Moines, Wash., met the man she pursued in 2010 at a church group, the Seattle Times reported, citing a police investigation report. She soon proclaimed her “undying love” and, in the span of about a year, sent the man 57 letters, the report said.

    He repeated that he was not interested in her, but Desmet picked out a wedding ring and reserved a courtroom for their nuptials, the P-I reported. On Feb. 29, she was arrested. She faced a judge, but not one who asked her to say “I do.” This judge placed her in King County Jail in lieu of $50,000 bail.


    Desmet is a real estate broker who, according to her website, sells condos in the Seattle area. It's alleged that during the year that the stalking is alleged to have occurred, she sent him 57 letters and contacted him by phone and e-mail, the P-I reported.

    Washington court records indicate that she was charged with stalking in 2000, a case that was resolved in 2006.

    The stalking came to a head when, in December, Seattle Municipal Court staff called the man about their supposed wedding, the P-I reported.

    The police report said that the man also received a call from a Jared jewelry store – they wanted him to make good on the bill for the ring that Desmet had picked out.

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    83 comments

    Why in the world would Jared try to get money from him? If she was there, and obviously he wasn't, the bill should be on her otherwise anyone can say their 'fiancee' will foot the bill, fake or not.

    Show more
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  • 20
    Jan
    2012
    3:52pm, EST

    Former Utah kidnapping victim Elizabeth Smart gets engaged

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Kristin Murphy / AP file

    Elizabeth Smart. (AP Photo/Deseret News, Kristin Murphy)

     

    Elizabeth Smart, the Utah woman who was kidnapped at age 14 and held captive for nine months, is engaged, a spokesman said Friday.

    The 24-year-old Smart accepted the proposal last weekend and plans to marry this year.

    No details about the groom-to-be were disclosed and Smart plans to keep her personal life private, Thomas said.

    According to the Salt Lake Tribune, wedding registries online at Williams-Sonoma and Pottery Barn list an April 7 wedding date for an Elizabeth Smart and Matthew Gilmour in Utah.

    Smart's father, Ed Smart, told The Associated Press his future son-in-law is a "fine young man." He said he was pleased for his daughter and hopes she will have a happy life.  

    Thomas told the Tribune that Smart plans to continue her public advocacy work.

    "She is going to be involved in child advocacy work for a long, long time and really decided that she wants to keep her husband and [future] children out of the public spotlight."

    Smart, who is of Mormon faith, completed her mission in France last year.

    'Nine months of hell'
    Onetime itinerant street preacher Brian David Mitchell was convicted in 2010 of Smart's 2001 kidnapping and sexual assault. He's serving a life prison sentence.

    Smart had described her heartbreaking ordeal during Mitchell's trial as "nine months of hell."

    Smart was 14 when she was abducted from the bedroom of her family home in Salt Lake City. She had testified in excruciating detail during Mitchell's trial about waking up in the early hours of June 5, 2002, to the feel of a cold knife at her throat and being whisked away by Mitchell to his camp in the foothills near the Smart family home.

    Within hours of the kidnapping, she testified, she was stripped of her favorite red pajamas, draped in white, religious robes and forced into a polygamous marriage with Mitchell. She was tethered to a metal cable strung between two trees and subjected to near-daily rapes while being forced to use alcohol and drugs.

    She said she was forced to live homeless, dress in disguises and stay quiet or lie about her identity if ever approached by strangers or police. Daily, her life and those of her family members were threatened by Mitchell, she has said.

    A jury earlier unanimously convicted the 57-year-old Mitchell in December 2010 of kidnapping and unlawful transportation of a minor across state lines for sex.

    Wanda Barzee, Mitchell's estranged wife and a co-defendant in the case, is already serving a 15-year sentence in a federal prison hospital in Texas for her role in the kidnapping.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    421 comments

    Best wishes and congratulations!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mitchell, wedding, kidnapping, utah, smart, elizabeth, engaged

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