Missing Person Brooklyn Gittins of Herriman, UT

HERRIMAN — Officials were forced Thursday night to call off an extensive search for 13-year-old Brooklyn Gittins in the face of a fierce winter storm.

Law enforcement and family members thanked the volunteers who helped comb the area, checking and rechecking everything in the 17-square-mile search radius, as they shared the unfortunate news that there was still no sign of Brooklyn.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

“I have five kids, and I know if one of them was missing, there wouldn’t be an inch where I wouldn’t look and I’d need help. So we figured we’d get out here and do what we can and bring some good results,” said Jenni Goodrich, one of the many volunteers who showed up to help search.

Salt Lake County Sheriff Jim Winder said more than 1,000 volunteers have helped in search. Now, the mission to find Brooklyn will be passed to search and rescue personnel, who will conduct a specialized mounted and canine search to access areas unreachable to volunteers on foot.

While it appears Brooklyn left her home on her own, there are few leads in the disappearance. The family volunteered phone and computer records to police, none of which contained any clues, Winder said.

Only one thing was clear Thursday night: After two full days of searching, Brooklyn was nowhere to be found.

“What we do know is we’ve got a 13-year-old girl that’s been gone now coming up on 72 hours in conditions that are extremely concerning,” Winder said as the search concluded for the day.

Brooklyn was last seen in her home, 13912 S. Friendship Drive (5755 West), at 8:40 p.m. Tuesday, said Unified Police Lt. Justin Hoyal. But when her parents went to check on her at 7 a.m. Wednesday, she was gone. There were no signs of forced entry into the house.

Brooklyn was believed to only be wearing black pajama pants with a Scottie dog pattern and a T-shirt. Police originally thought she had been wearing a “Lake Powell” T-shirt but said Thursday she was likely wearing a T-shirt with a pink University of Utah logo. She does not have her eyeglasses with her, something Hoyal said is unusual for the girl. Her family also fears she does not have shoes.

“I’m very hopeful that this young lady has decided to leave on her own volition, for whatever reason, and simply has not returned,” Winder said Thursday. “We just want her to come on home — no harm, no foul.”

Brooklyn has run away before, Hoyal said, but under different circumstances. Craig Hiller, the girl’s step-grandfather, said everything in Brooklyn’s home was normal Tuesday night.

“(There was) nothing going on at home that would cause her to leave. They were exercising before she went to bed,” he said. “Everything was fine. … We want her to call or come home.”

Matt Tulin, the fiance of Brooklyn’s mother, said the family remains optimistic for a good ending.

“I know we’ll find Brooklyn. I want to say to Brooklyn, ‘Please come home. We love you,'” he said. “With our faith, there’s a lot of hope. We know the outcome will be positive.”

Member’s of Brooklyn’s Young Women’s group from her Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ward gathered Thursday to help in a different way, tying yellow ribbons along trees, fences and streetlights. The youth hoped to mark a pathway for Brooklyn in her favorite color, leading her home.

Several law enforcement officers, fire agencies and community groups participated in Thursday’s search. Search dogs and helicopters were used, and others even volunteered to bring horses and ATVs to help.

Volunteers started gathering at 8 a.m. at the LDS Church meetinghouse at 5562 W. 13680 South and were told to expect inclement weather.

Each volunteer was required to fill out an application and have a background check conducted on the spot. They were then given an ID card so police could also keep track of the searchers. The volunteers were also required to watch a short instructional video before being broken into groups of about 10 people and sent out to cover a quarter- to half-mile area.

Groups could be seen all over Herriman on Thursday searching fields and looking around construction equipment and vacant homes. Volunteers were told to check the doors of vacant sheds, barns and outbuildings in case Brooklyn was scared and was hiding inside one of them.

Hoyal also encouraged all residents, even those not involved in the search effort, to check sheds and outbuildings on their properties to make sure no one was hiding inside. Volunteers also posted and passed out fliers at local businesses.

Susan Byerly was one of the volunteer searchers Thursday. Her best friend is Brooklyn’s mother. Byerly said the family was feeling as any family of a missing child would.

“I just don’t know what to do or think or what would prompt Brooklyn to leave if she left or what would prompt someone to take her if she was taken. It’s almost a helpless feeling,” she said.

Byerly said she was very appreciative of the volunteer efforts.

“It’s nice that not only so many people are oriented to the service, but also relating that could be their kid or their best friend or their cousin or whatever and just want to get out and search for them,” she said.

Tanya Pusey also helped in the search, even though she doesn’t know Brooklyn or her family.

“I would want everyone looking for (my son) if something was wrong,” she said.

Callie Sainsbury has received Community Emergency Response Team training for 13 years. She has volunteered during the wildfires in Herriman and was out helping in the search for Brooklyn on Thursday.

“It’s just something I can do to help the community,” she said.

Investigators had not ruled out any possibilities of what might have happened to Brooklyn, Hoyal said Thursday.

Anyone who has information about Brooklyn can call a tip line set up by police at 801-743-7280.

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Identity Theft Scam Alert in New Jersey

On Jan. 9 a resident of Guinea Hollow Road called police when they came home to find an envelope hanging from their front door.

The envelope stated “Important Information Enclosed.” Inside was a note purporting to be from Bank of America. The letter instructed the recipient to call an 800 phone number. When calling the number the automated message requests the caller to provide personal information; such as Social Security number, zip code and bank account number.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

The officer contacted Bank of America corporate security and confirmed that this is fraud, and is an attempt at identity theft, police said.

Police emphasized that banking institutions do not request personal information over the phone that they already have on file.

Residents who receive a similar letter should call the police to report the incident. Do not call the number in the note.

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Pedophile Tracking Former Oklahoma Teacher and Former Professor

SHAWNEE — Former McLoud elementary teacher Kimberly Crain sobbed Wednesday as she pleaded no contest to dozens of sex crimes against her former students and other girls.

At the same time, one victim’s mother laughed gleefully in the back of the courtroom.

Crain, who sat huddled and alone before standing before the judge, had good reason to break down.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

Moments before, co-defendant Gary Doby, a former Oklahoma Baptist University professor, was sentenced to life in prison for his role in the case. Doby, who has been known to use the name “Uncle G,” pleaded guilty to 20 sex crimes.

Crain, a former third-grade teacher, is scheduled to be sentenced March 22.

Pottawatomie County District Judge John Canavan offered Crain little hope after she entered a blind plea — meaning the sentence will be left entirely up to the judge.

“The least I can sentence you to is 25 years,” Canavan told Crain.

Doby, 66, will have to serve at least 38 years behind bars before becoming eligible for parole. His punishment was the result of a deal with prosecutors.

“He’ll be something like 104 when he comes up for parole,” Pottawatomie County District Attorney Richard Smothermon said after the pleas were entered Wednesday morning. “I don’t think he’s going to make it.”

‘Definition of a pedophile’

Doby, who the prosecutor described as the “definition of a pedophile,” also asked to be admitted to a sexual predator treatment program.

“Mr. Doby, you’re going to have a lot of time to sit there and think about what you’ve done to these victims, and I hope you do that,” Canavan said.

“I will,” Doby responded.

Parents of some of the young girls — most of them former students of Crain at McLoud Elementary School — attended the plea hearing Wednesday, some sitting for hours before the defendants stood in front of the judge just before noon.

One mother, who laughed out loud when it was announced Doby would serve a life sentence, lashed out at the defendants as court broke for lunch.

“I hope you rot in hell,” the woman said to Doby as he sat in the courtroom. The mother was not told to stop by any court personnel in the building’s largest courthouse.

Doby, who was called other names by the angry mother, seemed to nod his head in agreement during the exchange.

“It felt good,” the mother said. “I think they deserve everything they’re going to get.”

Crain, 49, rocked from side to side as she stood before Canavan. As she pleaded no contest to each of the dozens of counts against her, her sobs grew more audible.

As she cried, some parents laughed.

“I’m just glad they’re getting what they deserve,” a father of one of the victims said afterward. “I just want this thing over.”

After Canavan set her sentencing, Crain asked if she might be released to home confinement with electronic monitoring.

Noting she faced a long minimum sentence, Canavan said, “I’m not going to do that.”

Crain’s husband was not in court. Her mother was, Smothermon said.

While waiting for his case to be called, a gray-haired and bespectacled Doby sat with other inmates along a side wall in the seat farthest from courtroom spectators.

Clad in an orange jump suit, his hands and legs shackled, he passively followed the other proceedings, chatted with his lawyer and occasionally glanced toward the gallery, where several parents and family members of the victims sat stone-faced.

Crain wasn’t in the courtroom initially but entered after a midmorning break. Also dressed in an orange jumpsuit, she sat in a wooden chair, her back to spectators, shoulders slumped, head bowed.

She never turned toward the spectators or looked at Doby, who sat just a few feet away.

Case shocked small town

Prosecutors say Crain and Doby exploited more than 10 young girls using Skype, a tool that allows people to communicate online.

Doby, who met Crain while she was a student at OBU, was living in Pennsylvania at the time of the crimes.

Many of the young girls testified against the defendants during a preliminary hearing in May, detailing for a judge how Crain would isolate them off school grounds and force them into compromising positions.

One of the girls testified May 21 that Crain took a group of five girls to her Shawnee home in November 2011, shortly before the defendants were charged.

The girl said Crain told them to change into bras and panties, at which point they were photographed while decorating a Christmas tree.

“We bended down with our butts to the camera,” the girl said. “We would put our hands on our hips … and pucker our lips.”

The same girl described telling her parents what had happened once she got home that night, particularly her mother’s reaction.

“She went in the bathroom and cried,” the girl said.

The girl, and many of the others who testified, said Crain urged them not to tell their parents and made the girls hide when a pizza delivery driver brought food to the teacher’s home.

Doby, who was known to the girls as “Uncle G,” would communicate with them by using Skype.

One of the girls, now 10, testified Doby would make requests of Crain’s female students. The girls testified that he knew each of them by name.

“One time he made me stick the camera in my mouth,” the girl said.

The same girl said that Crain would ask her to do sexually suggestive dance moves, including one called the “Happy Hobo Dance,” and described an instance when the former teacher gave her some direction before a photo session.

“She told me to stick my butt out, so I did,” the girl said. “And she took a picture.”

An FBI agent who testified during the defendants’ preliminary hearing said Doby admitted to Crain during a Skype conversation that he showed one of the young girls his penis while he conversed with her during school hours.

Prosecutors say Crain also secretly videotaped and photographed the young girls while they changed clothes in May 2011.

Crain pleaded guilty to 18 counts of sexual exploitation of a child younger than 12 and 10 counts of possession of child pornography. She also pleaded guilty to one count of lewd acts with a child and one count of conspiracy to sexually exploit a child younger than 12.

Doby pleaded guilty to 18 counts of sexual exploitation of a child younger than 12, one count of lewd molestation and one count of conspiracy to sexually exploit a child younger than 12.

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Pedophile Tracking Seminole County, FL Man Faces 18 Charges

A 31-year-old Seminole County man was arrested and denied bond on 18 charges related to sex with minors Wednesday.

Agents with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement’s cyber crimes unit and officers with the Altamonte Springs Police Department arrested Louis Ruggiero at his home on the 800 block of Camargo Way after a two-month investigation.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

FDLE agents say the investigation revealed evidence that suggested Ruggiero had photographed himself and a child between the ages of 12 and 15 years old engaging in sexual activity. Ruggiero and the child had sex repeatedly over a five month period, agents said in an official statement.

Ruggiero faces 10 counts of lewd and lascivious battery, seven counts of use of a child in a sexual performance and one count of traveling to meet a minor to commit an unlawful sex act.

The investigation into Ruggiero’s case is ongoing and officials believe there may be more young victims.

If you have information regarding potential victims, please call the FDLE Cyber Crimes Task Force at 407-245-0801.

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Missing Person Nathaniel Quentin Snaric of Montana

A 27-year-old man was reported missing from his Williston residence Monday after his family and friends had not heard from him since Saturday.

Nathaniel Quentin Snaric, 27, of Montana went missing from his 13169 50th Lane Northwest residence.

He was last seen wearing a black baseball cap, black Carhartt jacket, black tennis shoes or black steel toe boots, a black Cabela’s sweatshirt and a black North Face vest, Williams County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Det. Caleb Fry said Wednesday.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

He is 5-11, 195 pounds and has brown hair and blue eyes.

Call the sheriff’s office with any information at 701-577-7700.

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Lexington’s Most Wanted, Jan. 9

http://www.kentucky.com/2013/01/08/2468851/lexingtons-most-wanted-jan-9.html

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Wrongful Death Parents of Somerset Man who Died were Found Dead

The parents of a Somerset man who died in a car wreck last week were found dead in an apparent murder-suicide Wednesday.

The Pulaski County sheriff’s office said Billy Eugene Baugh, 54, and his wife, Shirley Baugh, 53, were found dead at their home on Edwards Road in Somerset about two hours before their son’s funeral services.

The Baughs’ son, Clarence Baugh, 27, died Jan. 6 when the car he was driving ran off the road in Lincoln County and overturned into a creek. State police said alcohol was suspected to be a factor.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

“Family members told investigators that Billy and Shirley were having trouble coping with their son’s death and that may have contributed to today’s shooting incident,” the sheriff’s office said in a news release.

Sheriff’s department investigators ruled that Billy Baugh apparently shot his wife with a handgun before turning the gun on himself. Their bodies were found by a family member who had stopped by about 12:45 p.m. Wednesday, Lt. Brett Whitaker said.

Clarence Baugh’s visitation was held Tuesday night. Funeral services for were scheduled for 3 p.m. Wednesday at Southern Oaks Funeral Home in Somerset.

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Identity Theft Man Sentenced 1 Yr in Oakland County, MI Jail

A man arrested at a Bloomfield Township bank while attempting to cash a fraudulent check created with a stolen identity was recently sentenced to jail.

Tyrone Todd, 54, will serve one year in the Oakland County Jail for his conviction on identity theft charges, Oakland County court records show. Oakland County Circuit Judge Martha Anderson also ordered Todd to serve two years probation and pay roughly $1,000 in fines and fees. During probation, Todd must take bi-weekly drug tests and refrain from using any Chase Bank.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Bloomfield Township police officers arrested Todd on Aug. 29 when he tried to withdraw $8,800 from a valid account using another person’s identity at the Chase Bank branch at 1116 W. Long Lake Road, police reports said. The victim was from Southfield.

Todd, of Eastpointe, pleaded guilty as charged to one count of identity theft, and being a habitual offender for his fourth offense in November, court records show.

Moneka Sanford, Todd’s defense attorney, did not respond to a request to comment on the case Wednesday.

State prison records show Todd was also convicted in Wayne County of assault with a dangerous weapon in 2008, and served nearly all three years of a maximum three-year prison sentence before his release in late 2010.

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Accident Reconstuction One Killed and Three Injured in Woodford Co. Crash

Police are investigating a deadly crash Wednesday evening in Woodford County that killed a young Lexington woman.
Versailles Police said two others in the vehicle were taken by ambulance to UK Hospital and one was flown there.
As for the young woman killed, authorities have identified her as 18 year-old Ambrielle Brown, she died at the scene.

It was just after five when Police said they were called to a report of a single vehicle accident on Wednesday.

http://liarcatchers.com/accident_reconstruction.html

“It appears that the driver of the vehicle came over a hill here on Dry Ridge and lost control of the vehicle in which the car went off the right side of the roadway. Then, it appears the driver over-corrected in steering, which caused them to go off the left side of the road and strike a tree,” explained Lieutenant Daniel Clark, with Versailles Police Department.

Police said they don’t believe drugs and alcohol were contributing factors in the crash, instead it appeared to be operator error.

“As long as this scene is and as far as the vehicle traveled, it does look like speed may be involved,” said Lt. Clark.

This isn’t the first fatal on Dry Ridge Road. In fact, near Wednesday’s fatal accident two other trees stood, bearing five crosses. One of the fatal wrecks took place in March of 2010, when a car went off the road, slammed into a tree head-on and burst into flames. The impact so great, the tree split the car in half. Billy Carpenter lives on Dry Ridge Road and said everyday people go speeding by.

“They jump that hill down there and you see sparks flying underneath it,” exclaimed Carpenter.

Carpenter said the deaths are uncalled for and the speeding drivers make him uneasy. He said he often worries a driver will hit and kill him, instead of running into a tree.

The hills are big and the curves are sharp on Dry Ridge Road and it’s not just teens driving too fast who have had accidents. On Wednesday, while en route to the fatal wreck, a Woodford Fire truck rolled on Shannon Run – a road adjacent to Dry Ridge. Police said the driver had pulled over to the side of the road to slow down for traffic, the steep ditch gave way and he rolled.

As for the three people at UK Hospital, the extent of their injuries is not known.

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Identity Theft 3 Arrested in Phoenix

PHOENIX (AP) — Three people are in custody for allegedly stealing from mailboxes in Phoenix.

Phoenix police say 30-year-old Jerry Pemberton, 34-year-old Sandra Neese and 46-year-old Jerry Sebrasky are being held on suspicion of aggravated identity theft, forgery and several mail theft offenses.

Authorities say two people reported seeing people stealing from mailboxes outside Phoenix homes early Monday and then fleeing in a car.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

A witness followed the vehicle and called police, which led to the arrests.

Police searched the suspects’ apartment and say they discovered counterfeit checks, fake drivers licenses, and high quality printers and scanners.

They also reported finding about 30 “victim profiles” containing information that could have possibly been taken from mail theft.

Police didn’t immediately know Wednesday if any of the three suspects had legal representation yet.

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