vimarsana.com

Page 248 - கூட்டாட்சியின் பணியகம் ஆஃப் விசாரணை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

How the Body Farm helps law enforcement

By inspecting the bones, Bass and his students broadened investigators knowledge of what happened to the victim.  In starting the Body Farm in the early 1980s, Bass and generations of UT students gained a better understanding of the habits of bugs and their attraction to bodies. They learned the growth patterns of maggots and what they could reveal about how long a body had been in place before discovery. In the mid 1980s, someone killed several red-headed women and dumped their bodies across Tennessee and Kentucky. Bass was there to process some of the scenes, including one along Interstate 75 in Campbell County in January 1985 at which a young pregnant woman was found. For years, her bones were kept at the Forensic Anthropology Center; she s recently been identified, along with her likely killer.

Maxine Waters Asks for Federal Probe of Alleged LASD Gang

By City News Service Photo: Getty Images LOS ANGELES (CNS) - Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Los Angeles, asked the U.S. Justice Department today to investigate the reported existence of a gang of Los Angeles County sheriff s deputies at the Compton Sheriff s Station who call themselves the “Executioners. Waters sent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland requesting the action. “I write to ask that the United States Department of Justice take immediate action to address the reported existence of a rogue, violent gang of law enforcement officials, who call themselves the `Executioners, operating within the Los Angeles Sheriff s Department, specifically the LASD Compton station, she wrote.

Madison County woman pleads guilty to mail fraud, wire fraud

Madison County woman pleads guilty to mail fraud, wire fraud Published Wednesday, Jul. 21, 2021, 8:09 pm Join AFP s 100,000+ followers on Facebook Purchase a subscription to AFP Subscribe to AFP podcasts on iTunes and Spotify News, press releases, letters to the editor: augustafreepress2@gmail.com (© Tiko – stock.adobe.com) A Madison County woman pleaded guilty this week to mail and wire fraud charges related to a scheme in which she stole at least $1.5 million from victims while purporting to have terminal cancer, vast wealth and connections to celebrities. According to court documents, Christine F. Anderson, 51, of Reva, owned and operated the publishing companies known as Christine F. Anderson Publishing and Media and Sage Wisdom. Anderson took money from book authors but later failed to pay the authors their royalties as owed and did not provide products and services as negotiated. In addition, Anderson often falsely claimed to have been diagnosed with cancer to dela

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.