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Tag: Crime and Courts

  • Brooklyn bishop sentenced to 9 years in prison for wire fraud and attempted extortion

    Brooklyn bishop sentenced to 9 years in prison for wire fraud and attempted extortion

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    A Brooklyn bishop who authorities say stole from one of his parishioners was sentenced to nine years in prison on Monday in a series of financial fraud crimes that netted him millions, federal prosecutors said.

    Bishop Lamor Miller-Whitehead, 46, was convicted in March of wire fraud, attempted wire fraud, attempted extortion and making false statements to federal law enforcement agents, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.

    Miller-Whitehead, a bishop at the Leaders of Tomorrow International Ministries church in Canarsie, made headlines in July 2022 when armed assailants robbed him and his wife of $1 million worth of jewelry during a livestreamed service, police said.

    The bishop was called a “con man” by U.S. Attorney Damian Williams.

    “Lamor Whitehead is a con man who stole millions of dollars in a string of financial frauds and even stole from one of his own parishioners,” Williams said. “He lied to federal agents, and again to the Court at his trial. Today’s sentence puts an end to Whitehead’s various schemes and reflects this Office’s commitment to bring accountability to those who abuse their positions of trust.”

    Miller-Whitehead was also sentenced to three years of supervised release and ordered to pay $85,000 in restitution and forfeit $95,000, prosecutors said.

    Attorney Dawn Florio said in a Monday statement Miller-Whitehead is innocent and vowed his legal fight is not over.

    “As today’s sentencing was not what we had hoped for, we are deeply saddened by the outcome. Despite this setback, we remain steadfast in our belief in Bishop Lamor Miller Whitehead’s innocence and are committed to continuing the fight,” Florio said.

    “We will explore all available legal avenues to ensure that justice is served. Our dedication to proving Bishop Whitehead’s innocence is unwavering, and we will immediately begin the appeal process.”

    During the 2022 robbery incident armed assailants “displayed firearms and demanded property” from the bishop and his wife, then 38, police said.

    The preacher embraced his flashy lifestyle. He was known for driving around in a Rolls Royce and records show he lived in a $1.6 million home in Paramus, New Jersey. He also owned apartment buildings in Hartford, Connecticut.

    A number listed on the leaders of Tomorrow International Ministries Facebook page was not in service on Monday afternoon.

    Miller-Whitehead convinced one of his parishioners to invest about $90,000 from her retirement savings with him by promising he would help buy her a home, prosecutors said. He spent that money on luxury goods and personal expenses and didn’t pay her back when she asked, prosecutors said.

    He also extorted a businessman of $5,000, prosecutors said, and tried to convince the same man to lend him $500,000 and stake in real estate transactions in return for favorable actions from the mayor of New York City, prosecutors said.

    Miller-Whitehead could not deliver on the promises he made, prosecutors said.

    He also submitted a fraudulent application for a $250,000 business loan that included doctored bank statements that claimed he had millions of dollars in the bank and earned hundreds of thousands of dollars in monthly revenue.

    “He submitted similar fraudulent applications to various other financial institutions, stealing millions of dollars in the process,” prosecutors said.

    This story first appeared on NBCNews.com. More from NBC News:

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    Antonio Planas | NBC News

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  • What to know: The Scott Peterson murder case timeline

    What to know: The Scott Peterson murder case timeline

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    Convicted killer Scott Peterson is making another bid to get a whole new trial — this time, with new lawyers who say they plan to present critical, previously-overlooked evidence.

    It’s the latest bend in the road for Peterson’s long journey through the justice system, which started more than twenty years ago. In 2004, a jury convicted him of killing his wife and their unborn son, and several months later, a judge sentenced him to death. Here’s what’s happened so far in the case that had the world’s attention focused on a courtroom in Redwood City — starting back where it all began, almost 100 miles away in Modesto.

    December 2002: Laci Peterson is reported missing

    Laci Peterson was reported missing on Christmas Eve, 2002. She was eight months pregnant with a baby boy. She and Scott had planned to name their son Connor.

    Scott Peterson said everything seemed fine when he left their house that morning. Prosecutors say he told a neighbor he was going to play golf. But that’s not where he went. Instead, he drove to the Berkeley Marina, almost 90 miles away, where he later told police he went fishing in a little aluminum boat he’d recently purchased — one his family never even knew he had.

    The search for Laci began. But a month later, the story took an unexpected turn.

    January 2003: Amber Frey speaks out

    “Scott told me he was not married,” she said to a room full of journalists. “We did have a romantic relationship.”

    The woman speaking was Amber Frey, a massage therapist living in Fresno, who’d said she’d been quite in love with her new boyfriend Scott Peterson before finding out he was actually married and expecting a baby.

    Prosecutors say Peterson told Frey he’d “lost” his wife, and would be spending his first Christmas alone — even though, at the time of that conversation, Laci was still very much alive.

    March 2003: Police rule it a homicide

    By March, police had classified the missing persons case of Laci Peterson as a homicide investigation, and began executing search warrants on the Petersons’ property. Scott Peterson, still front and center in the effort to bring Laci home, began to feel growing pressure from the public and the media.

    April 2003: Bodies found in the Bay

    “The body is an adult female,” a police spokesman told reporters in a late night press conference.

    It was at Richmond’s Point Isabel, just a few miles from where Scott Peterson went fishing, that the bodies of Laci and her unborn son had washed ashore. The two bodies were found separately, a mile apart, in gruesome condition.

    April 2003: Peterson arrested

    After identifying the bodies, police went looking for Scott Peterson. They found him near San Diego, with bleached hair and a goatee, carrying a huge pile of cash. Police took him into custody, and drove with him for ten hours back to Modesto, where he was booked into jail.

    At his arraignment, Peterson pleaded not guilty to two counts of murder, and then hired Mark Geragos, a defense lawyer with a long list of celebrity clients.

    January 2004: Change of venue

    Even before a jury was selected, the case had already gotten so much attention that a judge in Stanislaus County ruled Peterson couldn’t get a fair trial in his hometown. There was nonstop national news coverage, primetime TV specials, and even a made-for-TV movie.

    The judge ordered the case moved to San Mateo County, where Peterson would stand trial at the courthouse in Redwood City.

    February 2004: Lifetime movie

    In February, a feature-length movie, “The Perfect Husband: The Laci Peterson Story” made its debut on Lifetime TV. It was a ripped-from-the-headlines crime film starring Dean Cain as Scott Peterson. The film re-enacted press conferences and recorded phone calls word-for-word, and featured “missing” posters with Laci’s real photo on them.

    June 2004: Trial begins

    For five months, Scott Peterson’s murder trial played out to a packed courtroom.

    Over the course of the trial, two jurors were thrown out for misconduct, and a third left over arguments in the jury room. One of the replacement jurors was Richelle Nice, who became known as the Strawberry Shortcake juror for her crimson-dyed hair and accompanying pink outfits.

    November 2004: Peterson is found guilty

    On November 12, the verdict was read in court. The jury found Peterson guilty of first-degree murder in the death of his wife Laci, and second-degree murder in the death of his baby son, Connor.

    March 2005: Sentenced to death

    In March, by the jury’s unanimous recommendation, Peterson was sentenced to death — even though police never found a crime scene or a murder weapon. He was sent to San Quentin, where his story could’ve ended on California’s infamous death row. But it didn’t. 

    Instead, 16 years later, Peterson was brought back to that very same courthouse in Redwood City.

    December 2021: Moved off death row

    The California Supreme Court agreed to hear Peterson’s appeal, and decided that the judge in his murder trial had overstepped his authority by excluding jurors who said they were against to the death penalty. The high court ruled that the judge had no right to pre-screen jurors in that way.

    In the midst of the lingering COVID-19 pandemic, Peterson was brought into court wearing a turquoise N95 mask and a red jail uniform, with his hands shackled to his waist. No longer condemned to death by execution, he appeared calm and in good spirits as he was re-sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

    December 2022: Appeal for a new trial

    A year later, Peterson’s next appeal centered around the Strawberry Shortcake juror, Richelle Nice — who it turns out wasn’t fully honest in jury selection.

    On a questionnaire for prospective jurors, Nice didn’t disclose that she’d recently filed a restraining order against someone who threatened her while she was pregnant — a fact that could have disqualified her from serving on the jury.

    A judge heard the case, but ruled that Nice’s failure to disclose her ongoing legal matter wasn’t enough to get Peterson a new trial.

    March 2024: New evidence?

    That brings us back to the present day, when a 51-year-old Scott Peterson, with long hair pulled back in a ponytail, appeared remotely before a judge in Redwood City from a room inside Mule Creek State Prison, outside Sacramento.

    “Good morning, Mr. Peterson, can you both see and hear the proceeding, sir?” asked Judge Elizabeth Hill.

    “Yes, Your Honor, I can, thank you,” Peterson replied.

    Along with some of the same prosecutors who tried his original case, there were new lawyers in the courtroom for this hearing. Peterson’s new defense team comes from the Los Angeles Innocence Project, a two-year-old nonprofit that’s independent from the national Innocence Project, and works with the forensic science institute at Cal State L.A.

    “We are eager to get our investigation underway,” said Paula Mitchell, the L.A. Innocence Project’s director, speaking to Judge Hill from the defense table.

    Peterson’s new lawyers are hoping to re-try his case by finding new evidence — especially DNA evidence from challenging samples for which the technology to obtain an accurate DNA sequence has improved since Peterson’s original conviction.

    They asked Judge Hill for access to perform DNA testing on material from a burned-out van with what appeared to be a bloody mattress inside, found after a burglary near the Petersons’ house. They also asked to test numerous items of clothing and debris that surfaced along with the bodies.

    “The defense was entitled to this at the time of trial,” Mitchell argued in court.

    But so far, the only new DNA test the court has agreed to allow is a single piece of duct tape that was found on Laci Peterson’s pants during the autopsy.

    All this time, Scott Peterson has maintained he’s innocent. But this latest effort could be his last chance to show there’s reasonable doubt about whether he’s guilty.

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    Jonathan Bloom

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  • Neo-Nazi prisoner allegedly sold ghost guns and parts while in prison, prosecutors say

    Neo-Nazi prisoner allegedly sold ghost guns and parts while in prison, prosecutors say

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    In what was a stunning gun bust, the Manhattan district attorney said a neo-Nazi prisoner allegedly sold ghost guns and parts from behind bars — only getting caught after one of his customers was an undercover NYPD officer.

    Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said the white supremacist went online and sold ghost gun parts, unknowingly to the undercover officer, all while he was locked up in a federal prison a thousand miles away in Louisiana.

    “We see this sad and tragic combination far too often. The intersection of gun violence and gun trafficking and hate and extremism,” said Bragg.

    An encrypted messaging app that had once been used by a racist mass shooter who killed 10 people (all African-American) at a Buffalo grocery store led investigators to the man who was selling the ghost gun parts from his prison cell.

    “Things that are happening in chatrooms today can be in our streets tomorrow,” said Bragg.

    Police said 24-year-old Hayden Espinosa was a moderator of a white supremacist channel that featured “vile rhetoric, neo-Nazi iconography,” according to Rebecca Weiner, the NYPD Deputy Commissioner for Counterterrorism.

    Espinosa was advertising and selling 3-D printed ghost gun parts through cellphones smuggled into prison, prosecutors allege. His operation came crashing down, investigators said, when he sold gun parts to an undercover NYPD officer.

    “He attempted to sell a Glock-19 handgun and finally sold, we allege, two silencers,” Bragg said.

    In 2023, the NYPD confiscated nearly 6,500 illegal guns from New York City streets, and the department is on track to hit the same number again in 2024.

    Investigators said the indictment highlights how easy it is for criminals to use 3-D printers to make and sell these deadly switch inserts, which can transform pistols into machine guns.

    “Devices such as these are a danger in our community and that’s why we are working on cases like this with our partners,” said Special Agent Bryan Miller, of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

    Two months ago, DA Bragg called on YouTube to take down videos that teaches users how to make ghost guns and to stop suggesting videos about guns to minors. In response, YouTube set stricter rules around gun videos and set age restrictions on videos about ghost guns.

    Espinoza was released from federal prison in Louisiana last week only to be arrested again for allegedly selling ghost gun parts. He is set to be extradited to New York and will face a judge in Lower Manhattan on June 24. Attorney information for Espinoza was not immediately available.

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    Melissa Colorado

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  • Plastic fork in Florida cracks unsolved NYC bloodbath

    Plastic fork in Florida cracks unsolved NYC bloodbath

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    The nephew of a man found murdered in his Queens home 15 years ago has been arrested in Florida thanks to a tossed plastic fork, prosecutors say.

    Anthony Scalici was indicted by a grand jury in the death of his 64-year-old uncle, Rosario Prestigiacomo, who was discovered face down in a pool of blood in his own hallway on Feb. 10, 2009. It wasn’t immediately clear if he entered a plea at his arraignment Thursday. Scalici, 41, of Boynton Beach, is accused of second-degree murder in the case.

    It marks the first time a New York City homicide suspect was identified and arrested using public genealogy databases, officials say.

    According to the investigation, cops were called to Prestigiacomo’s Ridgewood home on Greene Avenue around 2:15 p.m. that February day and encountered a bloodbath on the walls and floor. Prestigiacomo had been stabbed 16 times in the face, neck, torso and extremities — and suffered puncture wounds to his lung, esophagus, chest and abdomen.

    He also endured blunt force injuries to his head, torso and extremities, according to investigators’ report.

    Crime scene detectives collected several blood swabs from the location at the time. The medical examiner’s office was able to match a DNA profile to the victim as well as identify the DNA profile of a second, unknown man, which suggested the attacker had been hurt or bleeding.

    Investigators ran the unidentified DNA through local, state and national systems with no results at the time.

    In March 2022, the Queens district attorney’s office and the NYPD’s cold case unit sought help from a private lab and the Department of Homeland Security to try to generate leads using forensic genetic genealogy. A few months later, the lab was able to create an advanced genealogical profile from the suspect’s blood left at the scene.

    That profile was then uploaded to public databases, information from which was also used to create a family tree to identify possible suspects or suspects’ relatives. Late in 2023, they got a potential lead and turned it over.

    Ultimately, that led to the identification of Scalici. Earlier this year, detectives from the NYPD Cold Case Squad and Boynton Beach Police Department surveilled Scalici in an effort to get a discarded DNA sample — like from something he tossed in the track. On Feb. 17, 2024, detectives were able to retrieve a fork he had thrown away.

    The fork produced a DNA profile that matched the unknown DNA profile recovered from under the victim’s fingernails. It also matched the unknown male DNA profile developed from the blood evidence left at the scene.

    Scalici was apprehended in Boynton Beach earlier this month and extradited to New York on Wednesday to face charges. Authorities didn’t immediately speculate on a possible motive. It wasn’t clear if Scalici had an attorney.

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    Julio "Gaby" Acevedo and Jennifer Millman

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  • Man charged with attempted murder in stabbings of German tourists in Santa Monica

    Man charged with attempted murder in stabbings of German tourists in Santa Monica

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    A man on probation was charged with attempted murder Tuesday in the stabbings of two German tourists near the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica.

    Larry Ameyal Cedeno, 29, was charged with attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon in the attacks Sunday in the 1500 block of Fourth Street, near Broadway and Parking Structure 7. Police responded to the area at about 8 p.m. Sunday and arrested the Cedeno, who is believed to be homeless, a short time later.

    One of the stabbing victims remains in critical condition. The attack was unprovoked, police said.

    Arraignment was scheduled for Wednesday. The charges include allegations that he used a knife and caused great bodily injury to the victims, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

    Cedeno was on probation for robbery, police said. Police have not indicated a motive in the attacks, which came less than a week after police said another homeless man attacked a woman running on a path at the beach in Santa Monica. The victim was dragged by her hair before witnesses intervened.

    “People were aghast at those crimes,” said Mayor Phil Brock. “I’m aghast, too. I want this city to be safe.”

    The mayor said 55 officers have been added to the force in the last two years, but the city does not have the money to reach its goal of 50 more officers.

    “I don’t want our police ever indiscriminately picking people off the streets and taking them away,” Brock said. “That’s not what America is or California, but there has to be a way to get people more help more assistance.”

    Jessica Rogers, of the Santa Monica Coalition, said the city needs more officer to deter crime, especially near parking structures The coalition of people who live and work in Santa Monica put up signs in the community that read, “Santa Monica is not safe.”

    “Without safe parking structures in downtown Santa Monica, we are going to lose all tourism and all opportunities for people to come and enjoy our community,” Rogers said. “It’s an environment for families to come and enjoy their time for the weekend, and its not the kind of place to expect this level of crime.”

    Anyone with information regarding the stabbing was urged to contact Detective George Burciaga at George.Burciaga@santamonica.gov or the watch commander at 310-458-8427.

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    Ted Chen and Jonathan Lloyd

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  • USPS mail carrier attacked, robbed in Palo Alto

    USPS mail carrier attacked, robbed in Palo Alto

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    It has happened yet again in the Bay Area, another USPS mail carrier has been robbed of their postal keys.

    The incident happened just before noon in Palo Alto Thursday.

    Police said that a mail carrier in his 60s was delivering mail, when two men demanded his postal keys in the parking lot of the Southwood apartment complex.

    The postal worker handed the keys over. But then, the suspects also wanted his wallet and phone, when the victim refused. The suspects knocked the mail carrier to the ground and took off.

    Yasemin, who lives at the apartment complex, spoke to NBC Bay Area Friday and gave her reaction to the incident.

    “It scares me. I’m a single mother as well. So, it’s really scary. And I’m from Germany, so it’s a different environment,” she said. “I’ve actually feel very safe in Palo Alto, especially in this apartment complex. So it’s a very weird feeling, especially because it’s during the day, right? it’s not at night.”

    It’s the second incident in Palo Alto in the last week.

    On Saturday, Palo Alto police said they arrested two suspects for two robberies of mail carriers. One happened in Belmont and the other on Ilima Court in Palo Alto, in which one of the suspects pointed a gun at the mail carrier’s head while demanding his keys. One of the suspects is from Sacramento, while the other suspect is a juvenile.

    These are not the only incidents this month. In Oakland a couple of weeks ago, a video showed a mail carrier walking through a gate when she was approached, and the suspects then took the worker’s postal keys.

    “The motivation to do these crimes is to get the keys, to get something out of the mail, to do a financial crime,” said U.S. Postal Inspector Matthew Norfleet.

    Norfleet is asking anyone who notices their credit card or check is missing from the mail to let postal inspectors know.

    He added that mail carriers are getting more security than before. He is also asking the public to call police if they see anything suspicious.

    Norfleet also noted that there are many open investigations regarding the crimes. A $150,000 reward is being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of any suspects.

    “Almost no cases are solved without the assistance of the public,” he said.

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    Jocelyn Moran

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  • Two NYPD cops indicted in sexual abuse of unconscious woman after night of drinking: DA

    Two NYPD cops indicted in sexual abuse of unconscious woman after night of drinking: DA

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    Two NYPD police officers were indicted on multiple sexual abuse charges stemming from an incident involving a heavily intoxicated woman who could barely stand up on her own after a night out in the Bronx, according to the district attorney.

    The two cops, 31-year-old Christian Garcia and 39-year-old Julio Alcantara-Santiago, were drinking with the victim at the Zona de Cuba restaurant in the Concourse neighborhood after midnight on July 9, 2023, said Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark. Investigators said the woman got very intoxicated, unable to stand or walk on her own.

    Surveillance video showed the two officers practically carry her out, holding the woman up by her arms, before bringing her into a nearby building. Prosecutors alleged that Garcia and Alcantara-Santiago performed sexual acts on the woman inside as she was unconscious, then ran off when she started to wake up.

    The DA’s office said the victim went to a hospital the next morning, where a rape kit was conducted. Medical testing identified DNA contributions from Garcia and Alcantara-Santiago on the victim after both men agreed to submit DNA samples.

    “The alleged actions are reprehensible. The victim was incapacitated and physically helpless, unable to consent. Our office is providing services to the victim to help her through this,” said DA Clark.

    The cops were indicted Thursday on multiple charges including sex abuse and criminal sexual act. Attorney information for was not clear for either Garcia nor Alcantara-Santiago.

    The next court appearance for the two was scheduled for Aug. 6.

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    Tom Shea and NBC New York Staff

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  • Manhunt underway after woman lassoed with belt in terrifying NYC sex attack

    Manhunt underway after woman lassoed with belt in terrifying NYC sex attack

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    A terrifying sex attack that saw a man lasso a woman from behind with his belt before dragging her to the ground and assaulting her in between two cars has a Bronx community on edge — and outraged.

    Police shared disturbing video from the May 1 overnight attack late Thursday in hopes of catching the man responsible. It shows a man following a woman near East 152nd Street and Third Avenue in Melrose after engaging in conversation with her. He walks behind.

    Then, he hangs a white towel or shirt over his face to mask his identity, takes off his belt and uses it to lasso her around the neck. He pulls back hard, sending her backward and to the ground, where she smacks her head on the sidewalk. The woman blacks out before the man drags her between two parked cars and sexually assaults her.

    The man can be seen on surveillance video leaning over her and repeatedly looking around several times to make sure there are no witnesses, authorities say. One man said looking at the video “made me so angry.”

    No arrests have been made.

    Anyone with information on the man is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS.

    The victim is said to be recovering from the assault.

    An investigation by the Special Victims Unit is ongoing.

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • Father, girlfriend arrested for kidnapping, mistreating 12-year-old who died in Chester Co.

    Father, girlfriend arrested for kidnapping, mistreating 12-year-old who died in Chester Co.

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    Editors note: This story contains graphic information that may disturb some readers.

    A 12-year-old girl is dead after being tormented by her father and his girlfriend for months, according to officials in Chester County.

    Authorities charged the pair for the girl’s murder.

    Léelo en español aquí

    Chester County District Attorney Christopher L. de Barrena-Sarobe said that when officers and first responders found the girl on Saturday, she had numerous broken bones and was barely alive.

    Investigators say they found deleted cell phone videos that showed the abuse and torture was “ongoing” and “systematic.”

    “Doctors found a child who was emaciated. She weighed 50 pounds. She was covered in bruises. She had a half dozen broken bones, at least. Her organs were failing and ultimately she died while she was being treated at the hospital,” de Barrena-Sarobe said.

    Right now, there aren’t any answers as to why Malinda Hoagland was treated this way by her father, Rendell Hoagland, and his girlfriend, Cindy Warren.

    But, Chester County’s District Attorney says there were enough answers to charge the two people for the girl’s death.

    The two subjected the girl to “evil and torment that no child should ever have to endure and they did it for months,” de Barrena-Sarobe said.

    Hoagland and Warren are each facing attempted murder, assault, kidnapping and other related charges.

    This all stemmed from a call to 911 on Saturday.

    West Caln police say Hoagland called saying that his daughter was unconscious and unresponsive. While she was taken to the trauma center at a nearby hospital, authorities opened an investigation.

    “Police slowly learned that Malinda had been pulled out of middle school in late November and early December and shifted to an online cyber school,” de Barrena-Sarobe explained. “She was virtually showing up on camera based on some of the videos that we reviewed, but she was shackled below from where the camera was.”

    The criminal complaint states that Malinda was often shackled in the basement of the home as well.

    Investigators have been combing through the cell phones of the couple and say Warren deleted several texts with Hoagland. Meanwhile, on both phones, police found dozens of deleted videos from the couple’s in-home camera system that had speakers attached.

    “Those videos showed that Malinda was ankle-cuffed to furniture and verbally berated by the defendants through that in-camera speaker system. The video showed that they would punish her by demanding strenuous exercise such as squats and running in place while she was still shackled and they showed she would be punished for slights by being denied food,” de Barrena-Sarobe said.

    The couple was arrested on Monday night and haven’t posted their $1 million cash bail.

    The District Attorney’s Office will decide whether to charge them with murder after all of the evidence is reviewed as they wait for medical reports to come back.

    He said that Warren’s 9-year-old son was in the home, but it appears he was treated well and is unharmed.

    “If you have concerns about the safety of a child, even of a child you hardly know, you should say something. Call 911. Call childline at 800-932-0313,” de Barrena-Sarobe said.

    If you have any information that could help investigators with Malinda Hoagland’s case, please call Chester County Detectives at 610-344-6866.

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    Leah Uko and Emily Rose Grassi

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  • 2 men facing murder charges for 2008 robbery that turned deadly, officials say

    2 men facing murder charges for 2008 robbery that turned deadly, officials say

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    Two men are facing murder and robbery charges in connection to a 2008 cold case in New Jersey, according to officials.

    36-year-old Breyon Goodman and 41-year-old Jason Howard have been named as the suspects involved in the robbery and deadly beating of Ewing Township man Leroy Julious, prosecutors said.

    “For 16 years the senseless, cruel death of Leroy Julious has gone unsolved,” said Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin. “But law enforcement did not forget, and did not give up. We hope the charges bring a measure of relief to the victim’s grieving loved ones.”

    Goodman and Howard have each been charged with murder, felony murder and robbery, officials said. Goodman was arrested on April 15 and Howard was served his charges in the state of Rhode Island where he is currently in prison for an unrelated incident.

    Robbery turns deadly

    On May 9, 2008, Police in Ewing, New Jersey, were called to a scene where a victim, later identified as Leroy Julious, was hurt and bleeding on the ground, prosecutors said.

    When officers got to the scene, they found a car that was parked diagonally in front of a home with multiple people standing outside, officials said.

    One of those people was Jason Howard who was standing by the open driver’s door of the car, police said.

    The witnesses were able to show the officers where the victim, Julious, was lying in a gravel lot on the ground, according to police.

    Police said that Julious had severe head trauma with blood on his face, head and neck. They noticed that his pockets were turned inside out.

    Officials pronounced Julious as dead at the scene.

    The investigation

    As officials worked to investigate the case, they concluded that robbery was the motive behind the deadly incident.

    Investigators say they learned that Leroy Julious was known to always have money in his wallet. It was noted that his wallet was not on him when he was found on the ground.

    The attack on Julious is believed to have happened in the garage carport of a house nearby before he was dragged to the gravel lot, officials said.

    The case went cold for about fifteen years before new information was brought to the Mercer County Homicide Task Force and investigators reopened the case.

    In the fall of 2023, all of the physical evidence was resubmitted to an investigative laboratory which led to new information thanks to technological advancements, officials said.

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    Emily Rose Grassi

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  • Jury convicts Philly man who tried to abduct teen girl at Montco mall

    Jury convicts Philly man who tried to abduct teen girl at Montco mall

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    A Montgomery County jury has found a man accused of trying to abduct a teen girl at a mall last year guilty on all counts.

    Khalilh Evans, 44, of Philadelphia is now facing jail time for false imprisonment and harassment charges for the incident that happened back in July of last year.

    The incident occurred at the Willow Grove Park Mall, located on 2500 Moreland Road in Montgomery County, Abington Township police said.

    The victim – a 14-year-old girl – told police she was descending an escalator from the second level to the first level when she was met at the bottom by a man who identified himself as “Alex,” investigators said.

    The man, later identified as Evans, asked the girl to walk with him and extended his arm as if escorting her.

    The girl told Evans she was underage and tried to step away from him, according to police. As she stepped away, Evans grabbed her arm, placed it in his arm and restrained her before leading her across the mall.

    Police said the girl escaped Evans grasp, screamed and ran away. Several witnesses then stepped in and stopped him from approaching the girl, according to investigators. The attack was all caught on video.

    Police added Evans appeared to be working with a second man. Both men left the mall immediately after the girl fled.

    Another woman had also come forward and said she also had a run-in with the same two men.

    According to police, Evans is now facing 27 to 33 months in jail. A sentencing date has not yet been set.

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    NBC10 Staff

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  • Pennsylvania-based wedding band Jellyroll sues country star Jelly Roll over name

    Pennsylvania-based wedding band Jellyroll sues country star Jelly Roll over name

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    It’s a court battle of Jellyroll vs. Jelly Roll. Let us explain.

    A popular Delaware County wedding band is suing country music star Jelly Roll.

    The band Jellyroll (no space) has an issue with the name of Grammy-nominated singer Jelly Roll (space).

    Now the band is suing the singer in a lawsuit filed in United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on April 8, 2024.

    The band has been singing at local and national venues dating as far back as 1980 and band leader Kurt Titchenell trademarked its name in 2010, according to the United States Patent and Trademark Office.

    Jason Bradley DeFord started using the Jelly Roll nickname at gigs around the time of 2010, according to the lawsuit. In March DeFord applied for the “Jelly Roll” trademark for use on clothing, according to a pending trademark.

    In the suit, the band contends the singer’s recent fame is confusing people and is also pushing them lower down in Google searches.

    “Prior to the Defendant’s recent rise in notoriety, a search of the name of Jellyroll on most search engines, and particularly Google, returned references to the Plaintiff,” the suit states. “Now, any such search on Google returns multiple references to Defendant, perhaps as many as 18-20 references before any reference to Plaintiff’s entertainment dance band known as Jellyroll® can be found.”

    The band, through an attorney, asked the country singer to stop using the name with a late February cease-and-desist letter.

    The lawsuit came about after Jelly Roll’s nationwide tour was announced earlier this year, including a stop at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia on Oct. 2, 2024, according to the suit, which exhibits an advertisement for the concert on WMMR’s website.

    Lawyers for both Jelly Roll and Jellyroll didn’t comment as of Tuesday.

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    Dan Stamm and NBC10 Staff

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  • Man found guilty of murdering his ex-wife in her Audubon Park home in 2020

    Man found guilty of murdering his ex-wife in her Audubon Park home in 2020

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    A jury found a Cherry Hill man guilty for the 2020 murder of his ex-wife after a three-week trial on Wednesday, the Camden County Prosecutor’s Office announced.

    Philip Puche, 76, was found guilty of murder, robbery, burglary and possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose in connection with the 2020 death of Nancy Kenny, officials said.

    Puche faces up to a life sentence in the New Jersey State Prison.

    On July 19, 2020, police were called to the area of Road C in Audubon Park Borough for a victim who was attacked and received multiple lacerations to her head and neck, police said.

    Kenny, 62 at the time of the attack, was transported to the hospital where she underwent emergency surgery. Eight months later on March 15, 2021, Kenny died from her injuries and her death was ruled a homicide, according to officials.

    The cause of death was multiple incised wounds to the head and neck.

    Puche’s sentencing is scheduled for May 17, 2024.

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    Kaleah Mcilwain

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  • NJ youth wrestling coach sentenced to more than 7 years in child sex abuse images case

    NJ youth wrestling coach sentenced to more than 7 years in child sex abuse images case

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    Federal prosecutors say a New Jersey youth wrestling coach and former state champion who made headlines for becoming the NCAA’s first openly gay college wrestler has been sentenced to more than seven years in a case involving images of children.

    Alec Donovan, 26, of Brick was sentenced Thursday in federal court in Trenton to 87 months in prison on a previous guilty plea to a charge related to distributing images of child sexual abuse, the U.S. attorney’s office said Friday.

    Prosecutors alleged that during the first four months of 2021, Donovan used a web-based messaging application to send three videos and receive two videos containing images of child sexual abuse involving pre-pubescent children. They also alleged he used the application to request nude photographs from minors and send them nude images.

    In addition to the prison term, U.S. District Judge Zahid Quraishi sentenced Donovan to 30 years of supervised release, prosecutors said. A message seeking comment was sent Saturday to Donovan’s attorney.

    Donovan, a youth wrestling coach and referee who was a former New Jersey state high school wrestling champion, was the subject of a story on Outsports.com in 2015 after he publicly acknowledged he was gay while on a college recruiting trip.

    A 2017 story in the NCAA-published Champion magazine detailed Donovan’s struggles with depression in high school and his efforts to counsel other gay wrestlers.

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    The Associated Press

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  • James Crumbley, who bought gun used by son to kill 4 students, guilty of manslaughter in Michigan

    James Crumbley, who bought gun used by son to kill 4 students, guilty of manslaughter in Michigan

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    The father of a Michigan school shooter was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter Thursday, a second conviction against the teen’s parents who were accused of failing to secure a gun at home and doing nothing to address acute signs of his mental turmoil.

    The jury verdict means James Crumbley has joined Jennifer Crumbley as a cause of the killing of four students at Oxford High School in 2021, even without pulling the trigger.

    They had separate trials as the first U.S. parents to be charged in a mass school shooting committed by their child. Jennifer Crumbley was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in February.

    The verdicts — one each for the four victims — were read around 7:15 p.m. at the end of a full day of deliberations.

    James Crumbley, who heard the outcome through headphones worn throughout the trial because of a hearing problem, shook his head from side to side as the jury foreman said “guilty.”

    Family of some of the fallen students wept quietly and gripped each other’s hands in the second row of the courtroom gallery.

    “I know this verdict will not bring them back,” prosecutor Karen McDonald said, “but I hope it will serve as an example of the importance of holding those who enable gun violence accountable.”

    Defense attorney Mariell Lehman said James Crumbley “obviously feels terrible” about what happened at the school. He faces a possible minimum sentence of as much as 10 years in prison.

    “While we are disappointed with the verdict, we know that the jury had a very difficult task in front of them,” Lehman told The Associated Press.

    Prosecutors focused on two key themes at the trial: the parents’ response to a morbid drawing on Ethan Crumbley’s math assignment a few hours before the shooting, and the teen’s access to a Sig Sauer 9 mm handgun purchased by James Crumbley only four days earlier.

    Jennifer Crumbley, the Michigan woman charged in connection with her son’s school shooting rampage in 2021, was convicted Tuesday of involuntary manslaughter.

    Ethan made a ghastly drawing of a gun and a wounded man on a math assignment and added disturbing phrases, “The thoughts won’t stop. Help me. My life is useless.”

    But James and Jennifer Crumbley declined to take Ethan home following a brief meeting at the school, and staff didn’t demand it. A counselor, concerned about suicidal ideations, told them to seek help for the boy within 48 hours.

    Ethan had told Shawn Hopkins that he was sad over the death of his dog and grandmother and the loss of a friend who had abruptly moved away. He said the drawing was simply his jottings for a video game and that he wasn’t planning to commit violence.

    Neither he, nor his parents, told school officials about the gun they had just bought, according to trial testimony.

    Hopkins had hoped Ethan would spend the day with his parents. But when that was ruled out, the counselor felt the teen would probably be safer around others at school.

    Ethan later pulled the Sig Sauer from his backpack and began shooting that same day, killing Justin Shilling, 17; Madisyn Baldwin, 17; Hana St. Juliana, 14; and Tate Myre, 16. No one had checked the bag, though a school administrator had joked about its heaviness.

    “James Crumbley is not on trial for what his son did,” McDonald told the jury Wednesday. “James Crumbley is on trial for what he did and for what he didn’t do.”

    He “doesn’t get a pass because somebody else” actually pulled the trigger, she said.

    Hopkins told the jury that James Crumbley showed empathy toward his son during the meeting about the drawing, but took no additional action.

    When James Crumbley heard about the shooting, he rushed home from his DoorDash job and looked for the gun.

    “I think my son took the gun,” he said in a frantic 911 call.

    Investigators found an empty gun case and empty ammunition box on the parents’ bed. A cable that could have locked the gun was still in a package, unopened.

    Ethan told a judge when he pleaded guilty to murder and terrorism that the gun was not locked when he stuffed it in his backpack before school.

    Lehman tried to emphasize that James Crumbley did not consent to any gun access by his son.

    “He did not know he had to protect others from his son,” she told jurors. “He did not know that it was reasonably foreseeable that his son would commit these offenses. He had no idea what his son was planning to do.”

    There was no testimony from experts about Ethan’s mental health, and no records were introduced. The boy’s lawyers said before trial that he would invoke his right to remain silent if called to testify.

    But the judge allowed the jury to see excerpts from the teen’s handwritten journal.

    “I have zero help for my mental problems and it’s causing me to shoot up the … school,” Ethan wrote. “I want help but my parents don’t listen to me so I can’t get any help.”

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    Ed White | Associated Press

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  • Accused Gilgo Beach killer’s estranged wife defends him in new statement

    Accused Gilgo Beach killer’s estranged wife defends him in new statement

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    What to Know

    • Rex Heuermann has been charged with killing four women, all of whom were sex workers and whose bodies were found along a coastal highway on Long Island more than a decade ago
    • The architect has maintained his innocence from “day one” and looks forward to defending himself in court, attorney Mike Brown has said
    • Asa Ellerup, his estranged wife, who filed for divorce days after his arrest in July 2023, released a new statement through her attorneys this week saying she gives her husband the benefit of the doubt

    The wife of an architect charged in a string of slayings known as the Gilgo Beach serial killings released a statement late Wednesday in her husband’s defense, saying she didn’t believe him capable of the brutality of which he is accused.

    The statement, released on Asa Ellerup’s behalf by Asa Ellerup’s lawyers, is her first statement in months since her husband’s arrest in the now-infamous case last July. She has not been charged with any crimes, and investigators say she and her daughter were away on each of the four occasions when Rex Heuermann allegedly killed a woman.

    Ellerup filed for divorce from Heuermann days after his arrest, but still visits him weekly, according to her attorneys.

    “Nobody deserves to die in that manner,” the statement on Ellerup’s behalf said, with her lawyers sharing her “heartfelt sympathies” for the victims and their families. “I will listen to all of the evidence and withhold judgment until the end of trial. I have given Rex the benefit of the doubt, as we all deserve.”

    It wasn’t immediately clear what prompted the statement from Ellerup Wednesday.

    Heuermann was most recently charged in mid-January with a fourth slaying, that of Maureen Brainard-Barnes, a Connecticut mother of two who vanished in 2007 and whose remains were found more than three years later along a coastal highway on Long Island.

    The charges came months after he was labeled the prime suspect in her death when he was arrested in July in the deaths of three other women. He pleaded not guilty in Brainard-Barnes’ death, as he had done in the other cases.

    Heuermann is being held without bail. He faces several life sentences without parole if convicted.

    Heuermann has maintained his innocence from “day one” and looks forward to defending himself in court, attorney Mike Brown has said. Brown said he is still reviewing new information presented by prosecutors in court documents.

    “They had little bits of evidence and focused on Rex Heuermann and then they accumulated more evidence and tried to fit that evidence to complete their narrative,” said Brown.

    Heuermann was arrested July 14, 2023 for allegedly killing Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman and Amber Lynn Costello, three women who authorities say were sex workers like Brainard-Barnes. The latter was the first to disappear.

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    Their remains were found along the same quarter-mile stretch of parkway in the Gilgo Beach area of Jones Beach Island in 2010. Additional searching turned up the remains of six more adults and a toddler who was the child of one of the victims.

    Investigators have said Heuermann, who lived in Massapequa Park across the bay from where the bodies were found, was probably not responsible for all the deaths. Some of the victims disappeared in the mid-1990s.

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    Greg Cergol and Jennifer Millman

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  • ‘Our dad didn’t make it:’ NYC sucker-punch victim dies after nearly 7 years in coma

    ‘Our dad didn’t make it:’ NYC sucker-punch victim dies after nearly 7 years in coma

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    A father and husband who spent nearly seven years in a coma after he was sucker-punched by a stranger on a New York City street has died — and his heartbroken family is as devastated by the perceived lack of justice as his loss.

    Domingo Tapia had been hospitalized, unresponsive, since he was randomly socked in the face as he rode his bike in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood in June 2017. The father of two was attacked on Fulton Street, near Albany Avenue, as he rode home from his grocery store job and suffered a fractured skull.

    Tapia was put in a medically induced coma. He was 38 years old at the time. His two boys were 5 and 7. Now memories by their father’s hospital bed are all they have left of him.

    “We woke up and our mom says that our dad didn’t make it,” Pedro Tapia, now 13, said as he described learning the gut-wrenching news. He said he was “sad” about it, as was his now 11-year-old brother Jose.

    The boys’ mother, Esther Diaz, said through a translator that her husband had been suffering extensively and she knows he is in a better place. The housekeeper also said Tapia’s absence from their family has been challenging.

    “It’s been a struggle, dealing with the kids,” Diaz said through a translator.

    She’s had to work overtime, and has faced a litany of other struggles, since that punch ripped Tapia from their lives.

    Now, Diaz and her family wish only for Gary Anderson, the man convicted in the punch that put Tapia in the hospital, to be charged with his murder. A translator said Anderson was convicted of misdemeanor assault in the case and sentenced to three years, though a friend of the family says he walked out of jail in six months.

    The Brooklyn district attorney’s office didn’t immediately respond to a request about whether it would pursue upgraded charges against Anderson, given the tragic development.

    Under New York law, it is nearly impossible for prosecutors to charge a defendant who throws a deadly or seriously-injuring punch with harsher crimes than the one for which Anderson served time. Lawmakers to date haven’t been successful in trying to close the legal loophole that allows for it, which Tapia’s friends and family say is not fair.

    Tapia’s family is applying with the Mexican consulate for financial aid to help pay for his funeral.

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    Checkey Beckford

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  • Brooklyn preacher known for flashy lifestyle convicted of wire fraud, attempted extortion

    Brooklyn preacher known for flashy lifestyle convicted of wire fraud, attempted extortion

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    A Brooklyn preacher known for his flashy lifestyle and who boasted of his friendship with New York City’s mayor was found guilty in federal court Monday of wire fraud, attempted extortion and lying to the FBI.

    Lamor Miller-Whitehead, 47, was found guilty of five counts after a trial in federal court in Manhattan that began late last month. Prosecutors had argued that the preacher exaggerated his ties to Mayor Eric Adams and let greed overtake him as he looted a parishioner’s retirement savings and tried to extort a businessman to fuel his lavish lifestyle.

    He also was accused of lying to FBI agents by denying he had a second cellphone.

    An attorney for Miller-Whitehead, Dawn Florio, said they are appealing the verdict. She had told jurors during the trial that evidence against her client didn’t support the charges.

    Miller-Whitehead made headlines in July when armed bandits crashed his church service and robbed him of $1 million in jewelry.

    The preacher embraced his flashy lifestyle. He was known for driving around in a Rolls Royce and records show he lived in a $1.6 million home in Paramus, New Jersey. He also owned apartment buildings in Hartford, Connecticut.

    Prosecutors alleged Miller-Whitehead bilked a parishioner out of $90,000 in retirement savings by falsely promising he would find her a home and invest the rest in his real estate business. Prosecutors say he instead spent the money on luxury goods and clothing.

    Shamar Legette was one of three men accused robbing Bishop Lamor Miller-Whitehead and his congregation in the middle of a church service in 2022. One of those suspects was shot and killed by U.S. Marshals after a lengthy manhunt, and now Whitehead is sharing his thoughts on the suspect and his ongoing legal battles. NBC New York’s Myles Miller reports.

    He also was accused of trying to convince a businessman to lend him $500,000 and give him a stake in real estate deals by claiming his ties to city officials could earn favorable treatment for the businessman’s interests.

    Adams grew close to Miller-Whitehead while serving as Brooklyn’s borough president. Adams, a former police captain, has since said he spent decades enforcing the law and expects everyone to follow it.

    Sentencing for Miller-Whitehead is scheduled for July 1.

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    The Associated Press

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  • Sen. Bob Menendez co-defendant pleads guilty to conspiracy, will cooperate with prosecutors

    Sen. Bob Menendez co-defendant pleads guilty to conspiracy, will cooperate with prosecutors

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    A co-defendant in the alleged corruption investigation into New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez who was accused of giving the senator’s wife a luxury convertible has agreed to plead guilty and will cooperate with prosecutors, NBC New York has learned.

    Businessman Jose Uribe pleaded guilty to seven counts in connection with the alleged corruption probe, including conspiracy to commit bribery, honest services fraud, obstruction of justice, and more.

    Uribe has agreed to cooperate with the prosecution looking into the allegations against New Jersey’s senior senator and will testify against Menendez.

    “It is understood the defendant…shall truthfully and completely disclose all information with the respect to the activities of himself and others concerning all matters about which this Office inquires of him,” the plea agreement states.

    Menendez, a Democrat, and his wife stand accused of taking bribes of gold bars, a luxury car and cash in exchange for using his outsized sway in foreign affairs to help the government of Egypt — and others — as well as other corrupt acts, according to an indictment that came down in Sept. 2023.

    Jose Uribe is a New Jersey businessman in the trucking and insurance business who was friends with fellow defendant Wael Hana, according to an indictment. Hana and Uribe allegedly got Nadine Menendez a Mercedes convertible after the senator called a government official about another case involving an associate of Uribe, according to the indictment.

    “Congratulations mon amour de la vie, we are the proud owners of a 2019 Mercedes,” Nadine Menendez texted her husband, along with a heart emoji after they got the vehicle.

    Uribe allegedly gave the Mercedes to Menendez and his wife as he sought help with a criminal investigation into his associates being run out of the New Jersey state attorney general’s office. In exchange, Menendez is accused of calling then-New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal directly about the matter.

    Uribe is one of three businessmen the couple is accused of accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes from, along with Hana and Fred Daibes.

    Menendez, his wife and all of the other defendants have pleaded not guilty. Uribe previously pleaded not guilty in October, but in a surprise change, changed his plea on Friday.

    Had he been convicted on all seven counts, Uribe faced up to 95 years in prison.

    This is a developing story, please check back for updates.

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    Jonathan Dienst, Tom Winter and Courtney Copenhagen

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  • Dead man found in trunk of car parked in Lakewood

    Dead man found in trunk of car parked in Lakewood

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    A dead man was found in the trunk of a parked car in Lakewood Township, New Jersey, and investigators are seeking information as to who he is — and how he got there, prosecutors said Thursday.

    The grisly find came a day ago, shortly after noon, when Lakewood Township Police got word about an unconscious man inside the trunk of a car parked near Fairview Court. Responding officers found the man dead.

    Prosecutors described the investigation as “active and ongoing.” They said there is no known danger to the public, and additional information will be released as it becomes available.

    Anyone with information is asked to call Det. Olga Brylevskaya of the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office at 732-929-2027, extension 4105, or Det. Austin Letts of the Lakewood Township Police Department at 732-363-0200.

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    NBC New York Staff

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