Out CAC me....(ongoing)

Tourists in Saint Kitts and Nevis arrested for assaulting uniformed police officers in a Marriott hotel; released less than 12 hours later without being charged and allowed to depart the country.

 



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A woman accepted $50 from a West Virginia police chief so he could rape her 17-year-old relative, feds say

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A Google Maps image of the community center in Gauley Bridge, W.Va., where a police chief allegedly raped a 17-year-old girl. (Google Maps)
By
Jonathan Edwards
September 17, 2021 at 6:06 a.m. EDT

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In exchange for $50, Kristen Naylor-Legg brought her 17-year-old family member to a community center in June 2020 where a local police chief allegedly raped the girl, federal prosecutors claim.
Naylor-Legg, court documents say, stood by — directing the girl during the alleged rape and providing her with towels to clean up afterward. A West Virginia police chief, who was on duty, according to court documents, allegedly failed to pay the woman the agreed-upon price and left.

On Wednesday, Naylor-Legg, 28, pleaded guilty in a West Virginia federal court to one count of conspiracy to sex traffic a minor. She faces up to life in prison at sentencing, which is scheduled for December. Regardless of how much time she gets behind bars, she will have to register as a sex offender.

Her attorney did not respond to a request for comment.

Larry Allen Clay Jr., the now ex-police chief of the small town of Gauley Bridge, is charged with sex trafficking a minor using coercion and conspiracy. Clay, who was 57 at the time of his March arrest, also worked roughly eight years as a Fayette County Sheriff’s deputy.
He pleaded not guilty in May; his trial is scheduled for November. His lawyer, Sebastian Joy, declined to comment.
The case against Naylor-Legg started when the 17-year-old girl told a federal investigator in September and October 2020 that Naylor-Legg struck the alleged deal with Clay several months earlier.
Clay allegedly raped the girl twice in June 2020, U.S. Department of Homeland Security agent Brian Morris wrote in a sworn affidavit. The girl told investigators Clay knew she was 17 because he and Naylor-Legg had discussed her coming 18th birthday.


Naylor-Legg also took photos of the girl’s breasts and buttocks and, at times, directed the teenager to take the same kinds of pictures of herself, Morris wrote in his affidavit. Naylor-Legg then sent them to Clay and unnamed “other individuals,” who allegedly paid her for the images using the mobile service Cash App, the documents add.
But Naylor-Legg offered Clay more than pictures, according to the affidavit. After Clay allegedly told her to meet him one day in June 2020, she texted her 17-year-old family member. Then she drove the girl to the rendezvous spot, court records state.
Clay allegedly arrived in a gray police vehicle wearing his uniform, the affidavit says. He allegedly forced the girl to perform oral sex on him before raping her on the police vehicle, according to the affidavit. He then allegedly paid Naylor-Legg, who was present during the entire encounter, and left.


Later that month, the three went to a police substation inside a city-owned community center, authorities said. As Clay allegedly raped the teen, Naylor-Legg told the girl to “let him” finish, court documents state, adding that “it would not be a problem because he was ‘fixed.’ ”
When it was over, Naylor-Legg gave her towels to clean herself, the affidavit says, and Clay allegedly failed to pay before leaving.
After interviewing the teenager months later, investigators found the towels at the substation where she said they had left them. Investigators had forensic scientists with the West Virginia State Police test the towels. They contained DNA from both the girl and Clay, court records state.

Clay allegedly had bigger plans for the 17-year-old girl, federal prosecutor Jennifer Rada Herrald told a judge at a hearing in March. The former police chief allegedly told the teen “he could be her sugar daddy,” Herrald said, and that he could arrange for other law enforcement officers to pay $100 to rape her. One officer who had been charged with two counts of sexual assault in a nearby county told authorities Clay had reached out to him to see if he was interested in such an arrangement, the prosecutor alleged.

Clay and Naylor-Legg allegedly did not stop with the 17-year-old, Herrald added. The two adults were allegedly having sex with each other, she said, and one time, another minor walked in on them. Both allegedly tried to coax the child to join them, Herrald said.
In arguing to keep Clay locked up, Herrald told the judge that — as a police chief and sheriff’s deputy — the man had held a position of authority granted to him by the community. But, she said, he used the power society gave him to hurt a child.
“The idea that a minor, who was being told she must engage in commercial sex with a law enforcement officer in uniform or in a police substation, could feel any chance of saying no is unfathomable,” the prosecutor told the judge. “His use of his authority made his offense all the worse and all the more brazen.”
 
Angry construction workers attack their union headquarters (CFMEU) in #Melbourne, Australia in a protest against compulsory vaccination which goes into effect this week if they are to continue to be able to work.


 
Two men arrested for alleged illegal smuggling of Kentucky Fried Chicken

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A trunk full of contraband KFC landed a pair of New Zealand men in hot water, thanks to COVID-19 lockdown rules that would make Colonel Sanders cringe.

The two men were arrested after allegedly trying to enter the city of Auckland, where restaurants are closed, with Kentucky Fried Chicken.
"Upon seeing the police car, the vehicle did a u-turn and sped off trying to evade police," local authorities said. "The vehicle was searched, and police located the cash, alongside empty ounce bags and a large amount of takeaways."
New Zealand has some of the most stringent COVID-19 protocols in the world, and Auckland is under a level-four lockdown, whereby all eateries, including takeaway services, are closed.
The two men drove roughly 75 miles from Hamilton to Auckland and were arrested when police noticed their "suspicious" vehicle on the city's outskirts, the BBC reported.
The men allegedly had at least three buckets of chicken, 10 cups of coleslaw, fries, and four other bags of KFC items, according to local police.

It remains unknown if the pair intended to sell the KFC items or were just really hungry.
Under New Zealand's anti-COVID-19 laws, the pair's trip to KFC could cost them the equivalent of about $3,000 and possibly a six-month prison sentence.

 
FBI busts Capitol rioter who kicked cop down a flight of stairs after calling him a ‘traitor

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A Kansas man who allegedly used “aggressive force” to push a Capitol police officer down a small flight of stairs on Jan. 6 was arrested this Monday and subsequently charged, Law&Crime reports.

According to an FBI affidavit, Michael Eckerman, 37, was observed on surveillance video “pushing his way toward the front of the crowd where uniformed U.S. Capitol Police Officers have stopped the push of rioters.”

“Eckerman pushes his way through the crowd up to one of the officers until he is face to face with the officer. He appears to push the officer backwards several feet,” the affidavit states.

“[The Capitol police officer] was interviewed and stated that the individual later identified as Eckerman made his way to the front of the crowd and pushed him with aggressive force,” the affidavit continues. “The push caused Officer K.Y. to lose his balance and fall down a small set of stairs. After being knocked to the ground, Officer K.Y. was sprayed in the face with a fire extinguisher by an unknown individual.”

Prosecutors say Eckerman yelled at officers after the assault.


 
No mugshot; so you know what that means. :smh:


Colorado university student arrested, accused of taking 'large cache' of weapons to campus

A Colorado university student was arrested Tuesday after he was found to have a “large cache” of loaded weapons and ammunition on campus, authorities said.

The man, Robert James Killis, 24, was charged with unlawful carrying and/or possessing a weapon on a university campus, according to the Pueblo County sheriff. Deputies were alerted to Killis after witnesses alleged that he had made threats to university staff members and students at Colorado State University Pueblo, about 40 miles south of Colorado Springs.

Authorities alleged that Killis talked about buying body armor and guns and that he said he liked to kill people. A special investigations unit began monitoring his on-campus apartment. Investigators saw an ammunition box on the floorboard and a bulletproof vest in plain sight inside his 2020 Chevy Silverado, the sheriff’s office said.

 
Another Anti-Vaxxer Mom Declares She Will NEVER Get Vaccine (Husband shares this belief). As a result, their children's pediatrician cut ties with them. Why do NONE of these anti-vaxxers think of their children??!????

 
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