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Man Arrested After Killing Another and Hiding Body in a Shop
Man Arrested After Killing Another and Hiding Body in a Shop

MTV Lebanon

time20-06-2025

  • MTV Lebanon

Man Arrested After Killing Another and Hiding Body in a Shop

A horrific crime took place in the Ashrafieh area, where a man identified as "S.H." killed another man, "K.H.", both of Syrian nationality, inside a branch of the Bachir Ice Cream shop in Ashrafieh. According to preliminary information, the killer hid the body inside the shop, and the motive behind the crime remains unknown at this time. The perpetrator was arrested in the Jbeil area and handed over to the Internal Security Forces for investigation and necessary legal action. Investigations are still ongoing to uncover the circumstances of the crime.

Man indicted on attempted murder charge after woman refused sex
Man indicted on attempted murder charge after woman refused sex

Yahoo

time31-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Man indicted on attempted murder charge after woman refused sex

An Oahu grand jury indicted a 54-year-old man Wednesday for attempted murder in the shooting of a woman May 21 in the Tantalus area for her refusal to have sex. John Harold Garside was indicted with second-degree attempted murder, place to keep a pistol or revolver, carrying a firearm in commission of separate felony and felon in possession of a firearm. The convicted felon, who has nine prior felony convictions and was on probation at the time of his May 24 arrest, is being held without bail. The grand jury bench warrant set no bail for Garside and ordered him to remain 500 feet from the woman's home. Garside is scheduled for arraignment Thursday before Judge Ronald Johnson. A court document to determine probable cause for Garside's arrest says the woman, identified only as K.H., told police in two interviews while hospitalized May 21 that she was at 7-Eleven at Piikoi and Young streets earlier that morning when Garside, an acquaintance, picked her up in his silver Civic. She said they went to an unknown cemetery, where they smoked methamphetamine. She said he drove to the Pali Safeway, where he withdrew cash from an ATM at about 5 a.m., before driving up Tantalus Drive. K.H. told police Garside gave her money, but she gave it back to him. She drove his car up Tantalus Drive and stopped at some point. K.H. said Garside wanted to have sex with her at a different place, she said. When she refused, he shot her at close range with a revolver-type firearm, causing her to lose her hearing momentarily, she said. She got out of the car, ran and hid in some bushes. She waited until Garside left the area, then emerged from the bushes and walked down Tantalus Drive. A passerby spotted her bleeding and brought her to The Queen's Medical Center. The passerby, identified in the court document as T.B., said he was driving up Tantalus Drive when he saw a woman walking down the road with blood on her right side. She told him a man hit her, and he drove her to the Queen's emergency room. T.B. showed police the area in the 2900 block of Tantalus Drive, where he spotted K.H. and picked her up. Police located a parked car, equipped with cameras, in the area. They obtained video footage showing a silver sedan driving up Tantalus Drive at 6 :12 a.m., driving down 6 :22 a.m. The silver sedan then made a U-turn a minute later and drove down the hill in another minute. It then showed a bloodied K.H. walking down the hill, at 6 :30 a.m. K.H. was able to provide a partial license plate number. The detective received a physician's report from Queen's on May 24, showing K.H. received gunshot wounds to her shoulder, neck and head. 'The injuries did not end up being life-threatening, but potentially would have been with even a (n ) inch shift in position, ' the report said. On Saturday the detective instructed officers to find and arrest Garside on the attempted murder and firearm offenses. He was arrested at 5 :24 p.m. May 24 at 369 N. Vineyard Blvd.

Judge will weigh KC teen's troubled childhood in Irish chef's killing
Judge will weigh KC teen's troubled childhood in Irish chef's killing

Yahoo

time23-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Judge will weigh KC teen's troubled childhood in Irish chef's killing

A 15-year-old charged with murder in the fatal shooting of well-known Kansas City chef Shaun Brady last year had a troubled childhood marked by violence, family strife and a cancer diagnosis, a psychologist who assessed the youth testified in court Tuesday. The testimony came as part of a two-day certification hearing used to determine whether the youth — who has been identified in court by his initials, K.H. — will face prosecution as an adult for Brady's death in August. Jackson County Family Court Administrative Judge Jennifer Phillips heard cases made by both K.H.'s attorney and the Office of the Juvenile Officer and will rule on whether the case will be transferred out of family court, where juvenile cases are prosecuted. Phillips said she would issue a decision ahead of a May 14 hearing she set for K.H. In closing arguments at the end of Tuesday's proceedings, Kirby Crick, K.H.'s attorney, told Phillips the youth had been failed throughout his life and asked that she not certify him for prosecution as an adult. 'He never experienced a life without trauma, even in utero,' she said. Asking for the case to be prosecuted in the general court system, Dan Barry, representing the Office of the Juvenile Officer, described the shooting as 'vicious' and said the incident took from Brady's loved ones a 'family man.' 'It is the most serious offense that can be committed,' he said. Brady, 44, was fatally shot Aug. 28 during a confrontation with a group while he was taking out the trash at Brady & Fox, the Irish restaurant he co-owned in Kansas City's Brookside neighborhood. K.H. and another teen were arrested shortly after the shooting. In December, charges were dropped against the other youth, who has been identified as L.M, and he was released after he spent three months in juvenile custody. At the time, an attorney for that youth said officials had rushed to hold someone accountable for the shooting and had mistakenly charged L.M. During the hearing Tuesday, Alexis Humenik, a psychologist hired by the defense to interview and assess K.H., testified that he was exposed to cocaine, marijuana and alcohol his mother used during her pregnancy and that he was later abused by his father. K.H. reported hearing 'whispers' and 'seeing shadows' and has a family history of schizophrenia, she said. At one point, he lived in a U-Haul truck for one to two months, she said. Violence and neighborhood shootings were common in the boy's life, she said. 'That became K.H.'s reality, that he was surrounded by this violence,' Humenik said. Around the age of 10, he began to carry a gun as he sold drugs to make money to provide food and clothing for his siblings, she said. K.H. went through stints of chemotherapy treatment, going back to age 4, after he was diagnosed with Langerhans cell histiocytosis, a rare condition that can cause lesions. Children diagnosed with the condition are more likely to have impulsive behavior, and chemotherapy can stunt brain development, Humenik said. She said she had diagnosed K.H. with post-traumatic stress disorder for the childhood traumas he endured. She recommended he receive a medical evaluation to rule out a cancer relapse and that he receive treatment for his childhood trauma. State law lays out factors for a judge to consider when reviewing whether to send a juvenile case to general jurisdiction court, including the seriousness of the alleged offense, whether it involved viciousness and violence, whether it was part of a pattern of offenses, and the youth's age and history. Previous reporting from The Star's Eric Adler and Ilana Arougheti was used in this story.

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