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Woman who ran over children in crosswalk on their way to school given 4 months

Woman who ran over children in crosswalk on their way to school given 4 months

Washington Post6 days ago
Nearly two years after fatally striking two children who were walking in a crosswalk feet away from their elementary school in Prince George's County, a Maryland woman was sentenced Thursday to four months in jail.
Olga Veronica Lugo Jiminez, 52, of Hyattsville, Maryland, earlier faced manslaughter charges in the deaths of Shalom Joy Mbah, 10, and Sky Sosa, 5, but pleaded guilty in April to two counts of violating the 'duty of a driver to stop for pedestrians in a crosswalk' as part of an agreement with prosecutors.
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Boyfriend charged with murder 30 years after D.C. police officer gave ominous warning: "You'll know he killed me"
Boyfriend charged with murder 30 years after D.C. police officer gave ominous warning: "You'll know he killed me"

CBS News

time22 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Boyfriend charged with murder 30 years after D.C. police officer gave ominous warning: "You'll know he killed me"

A man charged this week with fatally shooting a police officer in her Maryland home nearly 30 years ago was the officer's live-in boyfriend and had blamed her 1995 killing on a burglary, police officials said Wednesday. Amir Jalil Ali, who was arrested Tuesday on a first-degree murder charge, initially was charged in 1995 with killing 24-year-old Denna Fredericka Campbell, an officer for the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D.C. But the charges against him were dropped two months later by prosecutors in Maryland's Montgomery County. Montgomery County State's Attorney John McCarthy said he can't explain why the charges were dropped in 1995, when his office was led by a predecessor. "I was not privy to, nor do I know, what the conversation was regarding why the charges were dropped at that point in time," McCarthy told reporters at a news conference. Campbell, a four-year MPD veteran, was shot five times in her Silver Spring, Maryland, apartment. Her department-issued handgun was missing and hasn't been found. An autopsy revealed Campbell also had defensive wounds, indicating she fought her assailant, CBS affiliate WUSA-TV reported. Court documents say when police asked for Ali's clothes for evidence, they noticed he had scratches on his back, and a large rip in his T-shirt, the station reported. "While this arrest won't erase the pain of losing Denna, we hope that it brings some resolution and sense of peace to everyone involved," Montgomery County Police Chief Marc Yamada said. Ali, 62, of Laurel, Maryland, was known as Kenneth Burnell Wonsom at the time of the killing. He legally changed his name in 2021, police said. Ali told investigators that he had left their apartment after 3 a.m. on Sept. 16, 1995, to go to a store and found her body when he returned home, a police report says. Ali called 911 to report a burglary and said his girlfriend had been shot, according to the report. Officers who worked with Campbell told police detectives that she was afraid of her boyfriend and had been sleeping with her department-issued weapon under her pillow, the report says. Campbell said she planned to leave Ali, adding, "If I don't show up for work Saturday, you'll know he killed me and buried me somewhere," one of those colleagues told investigators. "She was ... so full of life," a Seventh District officer told The Washington Post after her murder. "We treated her like a little sister ... She was 24, but to look at her, you would have thought she was a teenager." Detectives didn't find any evidence of a burglary at Campbell's apartment and believe she was shot with her own gun, according to the report. Based on DNA evidence, investigators believe Ali was bleeding after an altercation with Campbell. Ali remained jailed on Wednesday pending a bond hearing in a county court. Online court records don't identify an attorney representing him. Montgomery County Police Detective Paula Hamill said she spoke to Campbell's father on Tuesday and told him about Ali's arrest. "And the only words that he could get out were 'thank God,'" Hamill added. "It was a long time coming." MPD Executive Assistant Chief Andre Wright said Campbell had a promising career ahead of her but had already proved herself to be "a hero in the community she served." "In 1993, she selflessly pulled four victims out of a burning van on Pennsylvania Avenue," Wright said. "Those actions proved Officer Campbell was ready to place the safety of those in the community above herself."

The Fort Stewart shooting is the latest act of violence at a US military base
The Fort Stewart shooting is the latest act of violence at a US military base

CNN

time22 minutes ago

  • CNN

The Fort Stewart shooting is the latest act of violence at a US military base

Federal agencies US militaryFacebookTweetLink Follow An active-duty Army sergeant is accused of shooting and wounding five of his fellow soldiers at Fort Stewart military base in Georgia on Wednesday, the latest act of violence on a US military base that raises questions about the safety of American servicemembers at facilities where they train, work and live. 28-year-old Sgt. Quornelius Samentrio Radford, an officer who worked in automated logistics, opened fire on coworkers with a personal handgun late in the morning, base officials said. Nearby soldiers 'immediately and without hesitation tackled' and subdued him until he was arrested, said Brig. Gen. John Lubas, the commanding general of the 3rd Infantry Division, which is based at Fort Stewart. Three of the soldiers underwent surgery, but all five are stable and expected to recover, Lubas said. 'These soldiers, without a doubt, prevented further casualties or wounded,' he said. The attack, which briefly put the base on lockdown, happened in the part of Fort Stewart that houses the 3rd Infantry Division's so-called Spartan Brigade, a unit the Army calls its 'most modern land fighting force.' The same unit has experienced several tragedies, including the fatal shooting less than three years ago of an Army sergeant killed by a 28-year-old soldier in the brigade's building complex, according to officials. Last year, Fort Stewart's military police simulated an active-shooter and hostage-rescue scenario. Such drills have been routine at US military bases for years, but Wednesday's shooting is a reminder that even the most rigorous preparation can't ensure complete safety. Some other notable attacks at US military bases in recent years include: On November 5, 2009, an Army psychiatrist with radical Islamist beliefs opened fire at a processing center at Fort Hood, a major US Army post, in Texas, killing 13 people and an unborn child, and wounding more than 30 others. The gunman, US Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan, was taken into custody after being shot by a wounded civilian officer. Hasan, an American Muslim psychiatrist, had shown signs of growing radicalization in the months leading up to the attack, according to investigators. In 2013, Hasan was convicted of 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted murder. He was sentenced to death and remains on death row at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. On September 16, 2013, a defense contractor and Navy reservist entered the Washington Navy Yard in the nation's capital armed with a sawed-off shotgun and carried out a shooting rampage across the building's halls and stairwells. A dozen people were killed and eight others wounded. The gunman, Aaron Alexis, was killed by law enforcement. Investigators discovered the deceased gunman had believed he was being influenced by 'extremely low-frequency electromagnetic waves,' a delusional belief that reportedly drove him to commit the attack. The Texas base became the site of another mass shooting on April 2, 2014, when an Army specialist opened fire on his fellow soldiers, killing three and injuring 16 others with a .45-caliber pistol. The attack erupted after an 'escalating argument' the gunman, Ivan Lopez, had with his fellow soldiers at a Transportation Battalion administrative office at the base. Lopez then moved across the base, firing from his vehicle as he drove, before entering another administration building, where he continued his deadly spree. Lopez, who was being treated for depression, anxiety, and other psychiatric conditions, ended the rampage by turning the gun on himself when confronted by a military police officer. Investigators noted Lopez's struggles with mental health and found no evidence of terrorism or that he had a specific target. Lopez had served a non-combat tour in Iraq as a truck driver and was evaluated for a traumatic brain injury. On December 4, 2019, a 22-year-old active-duty US Navy sailor opened fire at the Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam naval shipyard in Honolulu, Hawaii. The attack left two Defense Department civilian workers dead and a third injured before the attacker, Gabriel A. Romero, took his own life. The shooting occurred just days before the base was set to host thousands of visitors for a commemorative event marking the 78th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. A Navy investigation found no formal motive for the incident, but Romero was reportedly dissatisfied with his commanders and had been in counseling, according to the Associated Press. Just two days after the Pearl Harbor shooting, a visiting second lieutenant from Saudi Arabia's Royal Air Force launched a deadly attack at Florida's Pensacola Naval Air Station. Mohammed Alshamrani, in the US as part of a Pentagon-sponsored training program, opened fire with a handgun, killing three US Navy sailors and injuring eight others before being fatally shot by law enforcement. Navy officials said the sailors who died 'didn't run from danger' and saved lives by confronting the gunman. The Department of Justice officially labelled the December 6, 2019 attack 'an act of terrorism' driven by jihadist ideology. FBI investigators found the attacker had longtime ties to al Qaeda and had communicated with operatives as recently as the night before the attack, raising concerns about the vetting process for foreign military personnel training in the US.

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