guilty
Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time; a look into all aspects of a guilty verdict from the burden of proof to conviction to the judge’s sentence and more.
Reason First: Cops Nab Man at Popular Police Hangout
Clement “Smiley” Leach, Jr. aged 49, was asking for it. After escaping from prison based on a burglary conviction, this male once again felt the cold hand of justice after turning up in a diner popular with cops. Surveillance video indicated the police officers who descended upon Leach like a swarm of hornets. He must’ve wanted to get caught. In all of the places in all of the country and maybe the world, Leach decides to go to a po boy establishment that offers law enforcement a plentiful discount on their meals.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: How to Solve Moments of Frustration
When a pleasant day at Mickey’s Toontown in Disneyland turned into a scene of utter chaos, it can be labeled as a frustration moment. As common as these moments continue to be, they rarely crop up at theme parks, especially ones geared at affording youngsters joy. A man named Avery Robinson is now set to serve six months based on his abusive actions. While no details exist as to why the brawl started, it actually took place in July of 2019. It’s just the conviction has finally passed down from the judge.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: What Gay Men in Atlanta Will Rise Up Against Frauds and Rapists?
According to the Guardian, Atlanta, Georgia is the hub for the black LGBTQ+ community. The city has been joked about, lied on, and taken to task for its reputation as one of the centers for non-straight individuals, especially black men. By taking advantage of this fact that Atlanta is a haven for African-American homosexuals, this coward named Taurence Callagain received a conviction ruling based on a rape that he commited in 2015. In order to win the trust of a young woman, he perpetrated the fraud by acting as a gay man. He then lured the woman to his apartment where she expected to put some kush into the air. Callagain possessed ulterior motives. He continued the ruse all the way up until the woman found her way into his bedroom where he savagely raped her.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: Weinstein Headed to Prison, Needs Professional to Guide him through Jail
The convicted felon Harvey Weinstein has enlisted personal care to give him tips on how to navigate his way through life behind bars. Did his survivors have someone to guide them through their way to fend off his advances and vicious actions? Why does he get the opportunity to get assistance?
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: Five-Nine Brims Gang Members Caught by Law Enforcement, Eleven Face Justice
Why do people join gangs? Is it the allure of letting out aggression? Is the elements of fraternity and sorority that gangs offer? If that’s the case, joining the United States Marine Corps or colloquially, the Green Gun Club would be a much more honorable action. In a sweeping corral of defendants including Yonette “Star Brim” Respass Tyshawn “Breeze” Atkins, Marvin “Mukk” Pippins, and India “Gorgeous Gangsta” Lane, law enforcement officials have put these alleged murderers and fraudsters on ice.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: Michael Avenatti Found Guilty, Justice and Selfishness Win the Day
When an attorney needs defense attorneys, that usually means that there’s real trouble. Former lawyer Michael Avenatti received a guilty verdict related to an extortion case involving the athletic apparel giant Nike amongst other charges. He faces at least two scores in prison at sentencing in June 2020. Known as the lawyer for adult film actress Stormy Daniels, Avenatti seemed poised to even one day ascend to the highest office in the land. Now, he is confined to a jail cell and allegedly being treated “like a caged animal.” Good. His smugness and subjectivism did him in this time. He just knew that his thousand dollar suits and slick talk would get him out of this jam. Such was not the case.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Serial Killer Javed Iqbal Wanted to Kill Exactly 100 Children
"You will be strangled to death in front of the parents whose children you killed. Your body will then be cut into 100 pieces and put in acid, the same way you killed the children." — Judge Allah Bukhsh Ranjha, dealing out the sentence to serial child murderer Javed Iqbal Umayr
By Wade Wainio6 years ago in Criminal
Killing RockMassacre: The Story of Doc Taylor and Ira Mullins
How We Connect My great-grandfather Theodore Hopson was the grandson of William Robinette and Luemma Mullins, the granddaughter of James Booker Mullins, Jr. Booker had a brother by the name of Sherwood. Ira was Sherwood's grandson and the son of John L. Mullins.
By Genealogy Freak6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: Should a Convicted Felon be Set Free because of Gender Reassignment?
While Iowa becomes further mired in the caucus quagmire, another inflammatory story has arrived from the Hawkeye State. A transgender “woman” is set to be released from prison on the basis that “she” has “served ‘her’ time.” With his lower testosterone, it is expected that Joseph “Josie” Smith will never harm another underage individual again. Okay. Never mind chromosomes, anatomical makeup, and changes in appearance. These are all important, but they must be dealt with after the idea of a human being with a record for molesting some of the most vulnerable people in society is being set free based on conjecture and hopes and wishes.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Murder on Kebler Pass Road: Michele Wallace
25-year-old Michele Wallace was born in 1949 in Forest Park, Cook County, Illinois. She was active as a child and was deemed a ‘tomboy’ because of her rambunctious manner. In elementary school, she favored racing cars rather than tea parties.
By The Writing Casper6 years ago in Criminal











