Crime spree suspect remains in jail without bond

Suspect in a crime spree that spanned five cities will remain jailed without bond, judge Krista Marx ordered this morning during the first court appearance by two people.

Benjamin Goldwire Jr., 19, was charged with sexual assault, armed carjacking, kidnapping and armed robbery. Carlton e. Thomas Jr., 22, was charged with armed robbery, kidnapping and grand theft auto. Bond on charges of grand theft auto is set at $ 3,000.

The task force between arrested two men Friday in Port St. Lucie hotel after raging for five cities that began Wednesday night with a carjacking and kidnapping a female Jupiter aged 20 years from wood duck Trail in a military apartment complex in the city.

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Crime and police news for Tuesday, March 6

Police are crediting the alert residents by providing a tip that leads to an arrest in the case of a driver who dragged a hit-and-run pedestrian for more than 1,000 yards.

Richmond Police say James e. Williams, Jr., 52, of the 5800 block of South of Orcutt Lane Richmond, was arrested Friday and charged with felony hit and run. Williams appeared early Monday in Richmond General District Court, where a judge set the next hearing for March 20.

Police said the victim of the crime remains February 20 at VCU Medical Center, where he was taken with life-threatening injuries. The victim, 21, was listed in critical condition Monday, but his condition improved, Detectives said.

Police said the victim was found in the 2000 block of Kimrod Road in South Richmond, and authorities determined he had been hit and dragged by a vehicle.

Williams ‘ arrest grew out of a tip from a police said did not witness the crime but seeing a car leaking antifreeze, felt suspicious and called the detective, only to apologize for “disrupting” them with information such as “useful”. Police said that information proved crucial to the arrest.

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Hours count as Google Privacy change looms

Time to do some account maintenance as new Google Privacy policy is set to go into effect in less than 24 hours.

Provisioning for What Makes there–and Yes, you know who you are–do not complain about not warned. In less than 24 hours, Google will hit the button and start linking your data across the entire enterprise e-mail, video, social networks, and other services.

Google announced last month that it is to rewrite privacy policy in a way that will give it the explicit right to “combine personal information” on a wide range of products and services. In the world we never connected, it will be well received as big news or another stepping stone on the way to the Big Brother House.

Since the news broke, the company has repeatedly affirmed its commitment to privacy, says that a simple privacy policy will only enhance the user experience (and also make it easier for advertisers to connect with customers) before switching to the uber-Google’s sole discretion, should maintain a privacy policy to a different service to 60.

The problem is that if you want to use a variety of Google services, you have no choice but to comply with the new rules because there is no way to opt out and the planned consolidation of user information.

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Spain judge Baltasar Garzon clean but Francisco Franco crime investigation stalls

One of the world’s most famous and controversial judge Baltasar Garzón, Spain — ordered the arrest of Chile during Pinochet for war crimes and investigate the fate of some of the 114,000 people who disappeared during the civil war in Spain and the early years of the dictatorship of General Francisco Franco. (In 2008, Garzon ordered the excavation of the tomb is marked is estimated to contain the poet Federico Garcia Lorca, but not in the body of Lorca’s.)

While Garzón has been cleared, the victim

“I thought it was

Silva

“This is six hours in the morning,” one relative testified. “My mom told me she was going to get my father’s coat, but the fascist thugs said to him, ‘ don’t worry, Ma’am, where he will he didn’t need it. ‘”

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Chicago school draws scrutiny over student fines

Therefore, the administrator said, was that the student has learned there is a price to pay–literally–even the smallest breaking.

The noble network of Charter school students in Chicago high school of which 10 costs $ 5 for detention is derived from the offence which includes chewing gum and have opened the laces. Last year it collected nearly $ 190,000 in the discipline of “cost” of the detention and the behavior of the class–image policy fire from some parents, advocacy groups and education experts.

In the rapidly expanding network, heralded by the Mayor Rahm Emanuel as a model for the city, officials at the cost of offsetting the cost of running the detention program and help prevent small problems to be great. Critics say his Majesty is nickel-and-diming of mostly low-income students for infringement is insignificant, contrived that the strength out of children Administrators don’t want to.

“We think this is just running over the line … fining someone for having a shoe string they open (or) buttons unbuttoned goes to abuse, no discipline,” said Julie Woestehoff, Executive Director of the advocacy group parents United for education Chicago charge, which staged protests last week over the policy after Woestehoff said he was approached by parents angry

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