Interesting-Dead man confesses all in self-written obituary
Sad-Sex dungeon details emerge in death of Brittany Killgore
Addiction-Man Burglarizes Homes to Watch Internet Porn
What happen-Female news anchor faints during a live report (video?)
Why-Prince Charles toast fetches $361
Crazy-Woman Dialed 911 with Mug Shot Beef
Why-Prince Charles toast fetches $361
LONDON - A slice of toast left over from the breakfast table of Britain’s Prince Charles on his wedding day to the late Princess Diana sold at auction for 230 pounds ($361) on Thursday. The humble scrap was kept by a former servant of the palace as a memento of
the 1981 wedding, which was watched by 750 million people worldwide. Rosemarie Smith, whose daughter worked for the royal family for nearly three decades, described how the bread, which was kept on her shelf in a cup, came to be in her possession after a visit to the palace on the day. “At the time my daughter was a maid at the palace and one of her duties was to collect Prince Charles’ breakfast tray from outside his room,” she said in a press statement. “I was with her in the corridor and saw that Prince Charles had left some toast on the tray. I had been thinking about a keepsake from the wedding and saw the toast and thought to myself: ’Why not’?”
Interesting-Dead man confesses all in self-written obituary
A Utah man took his secrets to the grave — but confessed them in his obituary. Val Patterson, of Salt Lake City, died of throat cancer on July 10, at the age of 59. The death notice he wrote for himself appeared in the Salt Lake Tribune this past Sunday. "Now that I have gone to my reward, I have confessions and things I should now say," Patterson wrote. He starts out admitting to a crime.
"As it turns out, I AM the guy who stole the safe from the Motor View Drive Inn back in June 1971. I wanted to get it off my chest." Then he reveals that the PhD on his wall was mailed to him as the result of a paperwork error. In fact, he never even graduated. "For all of the electronic engineers I have worked with, I'm sorry, but you have to admit my designs always worked very well, and were well engineered, and I always made you laugh at work." In the lighthearted letter, which runs nearly 900 words long, Patterson describes a fun and fulfilling life, and thanks his friends, family and pets. Patterson's wife of 33 years, Mary Jane, told KSL News every word of it is true. In a final act of contrition, Patterson tells Disneyland and SeaWorld San Diego they can throw away the "banned for life" files they have on him. "I'm not a problem anymore."
Sad-Sex dungeon details emerge in death of Brittany Killgore
SAN DIEGO, CALIF. - A woman killed in California this year while her husband, a U.S. Marine, was deployed in Afghanistan was the victim of television-inspired sadomasochist violence, search warrants filed by police and prosecutors showed on Thursday. A seven-page note left by one of three suspects charged in the murder of 22-year-old Brittany Killgore led police to a "sex dungeon" in the basement of a home in Fallbrook, a small community adjacent to the Camp Pendleton military base north of San Diego. The case has received intense media coverage in the San Diego area, home to both Camp Pendleton and a large naval base, where public sympathy over the death of the young wife of a deployed service member is high. Killgore was last seen alive on April 13, just days after she had filed for divorce, heading out on what was supposed to be a dinner date with 45-year-old U.S. Marine Corps Staff Sergeant Louis Perez, police said. Thirteen minutes after Perez picked her up, Killgore sent a text message to a friend with a single word: "HELP," according to affidavits filed by San Diego Sheriff's Department
Detective Will Altenhof. Several hours later, the unidentified friend received a message in response to her frantic attempts to try to contact Killgore saying she was enjoying a party and was fine, the search warrant showed. The friend told deputies it contained language Killgore never used before, and she did not believe it was genuine. Killgore's nude body was found four days later in a remote area of Riverside County, north of San Diego. Police believe she was killed in the Fallbrook home. Her killer used power tools to try to dismember the body in the manner she had seen on "Dexter," a television series about a serial killer, according to a confession note left by one of the suspects after a failed suicide attempt. That note is quoted in one of the affidavits. Perez and his roommates Dorothy Grace Maraglino and Jessica Lynn Lopez have all pleaded not guilty to murder charges and are being held on $3 million bail each.
Perez told deputies he and Killgore went to downtown San Diego and he lost her at a club called Whiskey Girl. However, cell phone records for Perez and Killgore indicated they were in Fallbrook at the time, according to the search warrants. Maraglino, 37, told deputies that she was a dominatrix, according to the search warrants. Lopez, 25, was interested in sadomasochism and had a collection of sex toys, according to the affidavits. Prosecutors, deputies and Killgore's family have stressed that Killgore was not a willing participant in the sex games at the Fallbrook home.
What happen-Female news anchor faints during a live report (video?)
Seda Selek, anchorwoman for Kanal 24's daily bulletin appeared to become woozy during the broadcast, frequently looking down the camera in an increasingly panicked state. The split-screen shows her adjusting her chair and attempting to get comfortable, before she slumps backwards and hits the floor with a bump.The man on the other side of the split screen immediately jumps to his feet with a look of concern to help the stricken Ms Selek. Thankfully, the news reader was given the all clear by doctors, according to reports from the country. 'My blood pressure dropped. Doctors have told me I am now fine,' she revealed. Her experience, although a little embarrassing, was nothing compared to what a TV presenter had to go through in Greece recently.
Crazy-Woman Dialed 911 with Mug Shot Beef
JULY 19--A Georgia woman has been charged with misusing the 911 system after she called police dispatchers to register a complaint about the quality of a mug shot taken following a prior arrest.Tonya Ann Fowler dialed police Sunday evening after spotting the photo in “Bad & Busted,” a local publication that compiles images of recent arrestees. The photo that so displeased Fowler, 45, was snapped following an earlier collar. A Winder Police Department report notes that Fowler dialed 911 on July 15 “in reference to being upset about a picture.” In a conversation with a cop, Fowler explained that she “was upset about how she looked on the front page of the Bad and Busted printing.”As a result of the 911 call about her mug shot, Fowler was afforded the opportunity to pose for a fresh booking photo since she was charged with unlawful use of 911 and disorderly conduct. Fowler is pictured above in her latest photo snapped at the Barrow County Detention Center. After spending three days in custody, Fowler bonded out of the county jail yesterday afternoon
Addiction-Man Burglarizes Homes to Watch Internet Porn
An Oregon man has burglarized multiple homes — not to steal, but to watch pornography on victims' computers, police said. Antone Owens of Eugene has been arrested and charged with menacing, coercing and burglary, NBC affiliate News Source 16 reported. The 21-year-old even left lubricant and towels next to the computers in some
cases, according to police. An investigation began after a rash of suspicious break-ins near Owens' home, News Source 16 reported. Last fall, one homeowner reported that an intruder had entered her home and watched pornography on her computer multiple times, NewsSource 16 reported. In a separate incident, one homeowner's son awoke to find the intruder in his bedroom.In March, another woman said she arrived home to find lubricant, towels, a cell phone and porn on her computer monitor. As she called 911, she saw a man outside her glass door. She said he threatened to break the door and kill her before he pulled on the lock, came inside, snatched back his lubricant and cell phone and ran away. Cops are looking for further information on the break-ins and are asking other alleged victims to step forward.
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