Adultery 10 Ways to Spot a Cheating Spouse

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — It starts with the thought or that gut feeling that your partner is cheating on you; and that leads to a burning desire to find out if you are right or wrong.

After talking with several private investigators, here are my top ten ways to catch a cheating partner or spouse.

http://liarcatchers.com/adultery.html

Number Ten:

Your partner is paying more attention to his or her grooming habits, changing styles, buying new clothes, working out. hmmmm … getting buff may have more to do with getting in shape for someone else than it has to do with getting healthy.

Number Nine:

Your partner is making frequent trips to the ATM, spending more money than usual and you don’t see where it is going. You may think it is a gambling habit; don’t bet on that. Private investigators told me it is not cheap having an affair.

Number Eight:

There’s a change in your sex life … there might be less or more. But usually what waves the red flag is when your partner wants to try out new things. An investigator who deals in infidelity surveillance says your partner could be cheating with porn sites.

Number Seven:

Have you notice a change in how you communicate? Is your partner starting a fight so he or she can leave the house? That is usually a good excuse to go and meet the other person.

Number Six:

The JOB: Your partner is working a lot of sudden overtime. This is easy to verify. To borrow the line from Jerry Maguire — “Show me the Money.”

Number Five:

Your partner has client meetings but every time you try to reach him or her … your partner is not where he or she is supposed to be and that could be a good reason to be suspicious.

Number Four:

Remember when your partner used to be content, enjoying time with the family? Now that has been replaced with restlessness and a desire to be anywhere except with the family.

Number Three:

Your partner is finding all types of faults with you. This is his or her way of justifying the cheating. Watch the behaviors.

Number Two:

Another behavior change: Your partner is suddenly paying more attention to you, being more lovey dovey. This is usually at the start of the infidelity.

Number One:

The cell phone … when your partner is on the phone and you enter the room all of a sudden your partner lowers his or her voice or even leaves the room to finish the conversation. The kicker is if the phone has a passcode and your partner refuse to share the code … hmmm.

Now what do you do if all the evidence points to what you feared the most? The private investigators said the truth can be very painful. But they suggest you talk to your partner. At that point you can decide to work it out, maybe by talking to a counselor, or you can decide to end the relationship.

Investigators said facing the facts of a cheating partner will be one of the most difficult things you will ever have to deal with.

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Insurance Fraud Police Chief Zisa

Hackensack Police Chief Ken Zisa, the leader of Bergen County’s largest police department and scion of one if its most eminent political dynasties, faces 23 years behind bars after being found guilty Wednesday of insurance fraud and official misconduct.

After three days of deliberation, a jury of five men and seven women delivered a split verdict, acquitting Zisa, 58, of conspiracy and witness tampering charges, but finding that he filed a false insurance report and acted improperly when he inserted himself into two investigations involving his former girlfriend, Kathleen Tiernan, who was also on trial.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

Tiernan was found guilty of filing a false insurance report, but acquitted on a conspiracy charge.

The courtroom was full of friends and family members of Zisa and Tiernan as the jury read the verdict, with employees from the Prosecutor’s Office filling all available seats and standing along the back wall.

The Zisa verdict, count by count
Kelly: Zisa verdict is new start for Hackensack, but how will the journey end?
Zisa trail focused harsh light on family’s power
Unhappy day for Hackensack cops as their suspended Chief Zisa is found guilty
Zisa verdict is met with shrugs in Hackensack
Full coverage on the Zisa Trial Blog

As the verdicts — five guilty counts for Zisa and one for Tiernan — were read, the courtroom fell silent. Joe Zisa, the city attorney and Ken Zisa’s cousin, closed his eyes and bowed his head. One of Tiernan’s sons rested his head against a courtroom wall. A young woman in the front row appeared to wipe away tears.

Zisa, a state assemblyman from 1994-2002, closed his eyes and clenched his jaw but held his head erect.

Zisa, who has been suspended from his job for two years, faces a maximum prison sentence of 45 years and a minimum of 23 years, 15 of which would be without parole, Assistant Bergen County Prosecutor Daniel Keitel said. Tiernan faces up to 5 years on the insurance fraud charge, but there is no presumption of jail time. A sentencing hearing was tentatively set for June 22.

“Obviously we are extremely disappointed with the jury’s verdict,” Zisa’s attorney, Patricia Prezioso, told Superior Court Judge Joseph Conte. She said an appeal is planned.

Keitel requested that bail be set at $200,000 and asked for Zisa’s immediate removal from the office of chief of police. Keitel also requested forfeiture of Zisa’s pension and retirement.

Conte set bail for Zisa at $50,000 with no 10 percent cash payment option, to be posted no later than Friday at noon. Until then, Zisa remains free on his own recognizance. Tiernan also remains free on her own recognizance with no bail set. The judge said he would rule on the other requests at a to-be-scheduled hearing.

“He’s suspended, the fact that he wasn’t removed today was of no moment,” said Keitel, who praised the jury for their work.

Stephen Lo Iacono, Hackensack’s city manager, said he will wait for direction from the courts on whether to remove Zisa from office.

“Right now, as we speak, his status is the same as it has been for the past two years. He is suspended without pay,” Lo Iacono said. “He’s certainly not on the job. Whatever process the legal system is going to take, we have to live with that and wait for it.”

He called it a “terrible day for the city.”

“Obviously, I’m sad for the city,” Lo Iacono said. “Sad for the police department. But we have to move on.”

Councilman John Lebrosse, who is often at odds with the council majority, said the city should remove Zisa from office as soon as it can.

“We need to sever the tie and move forward,” he said. “This has been wearing on the city, the police department, the government and city officials for years now.”

The mayor and the other city council members either could not be reached or declined to comment.

News of the verdict traveled swiftly, and Capt. Thomas Padilla, who has served as acting officer in charge since Zisa’s arrest two years ago, opted to return to police headquarters to discuss the matter directly at the 5 p.m. roll call. In a department roiled by this trial and more than a dozen civil suits filed by officers against Zisa, Padilla said it was important to have his officers focus on their core mission of serving the public.

“Moving forward, I hope we come together as a department and strive to do the best we can,” he said.

Zisa and his family members, including former Hackensack Mayor Jack Zisa and city attorney Joe Zisa, declined to comment as they followed him out of the courtroom, as did Lynne Hurwitz, the city’s Democratic Municipal Chairwoman, who spent every day of the six-week trial in the courtroom.

Several jurors contacted after the verdict said the panel as a group decided against commenting on the verdict.

The verdict is certain to have sweeping repercussions in Hackensack, where Zisa has held his title throughout his two-year unpaid suspension, and officials have resisted settling any of the civil lawsuits filed by more than 20 present and retired police officers that name the chief.

Those cases, asking for several million dollars in damages, have been on hold pending a verdict in Zisa’s criminal trial.

Lo Iacono, the city manager, said the cost of defending the suits — already more than $2.4 million in the last three years — might have already reached a threshold at which the city’s insurer would require the city to settle them.

Lawyers for the police officers said the conviction can be admitted as evidence in the civil cases and will likely damage Zisa’s credibility. Zisa in civil court also will no longer be shielded by a pending criminal case, allowing plaintiff lawyers to depose him for the first time, possibly as soon as next month.

“Clearly, the verdict does speak to the chief’s conduct as chief,” said attorney Robert Woodruff, who is handling two Zisa-related cases. “He was the king. That’s what he was. I guess not.”

Prosecutors argued during the six-week trial that the charges stemmed from a skewed system of justice in Hackensack, where Zisa was the police chief for 15 years and members of his family held the top elected and appointed positions for decades.

In a town known by the family’s political opponents as “Zisaville,” there was one system of justice for the Zisas and their friends, and another for everybody else, prosecutors said.

That imbalance played out in 2004 and 2008, when Zisa arrived on the scene of two incidents – in both cases just before the break of dawn – and diverted investigations before Tiernan and her family could be charged, prosecutors alleged.

In the first case in 2004, prosecutors said Zisa coerced a subordinate officer, Laura Campos, to remove then 16-year-old Ryan Tiernan’s name from a police report of an assault and robbery of a 15-year-old, prosecutors alleged. In the second in 2008, the chief arrived on the scene shortly after a visibly drunk Tiernan crashed his Chevrolet Trailblazer into a utility pole, then whisked her away before she could be tested for sobriety.

The couple then filed a fraudulent insurance claim for $11,000, stating Tiernan swerved to avoid an animal, a charge held up by the jury.

Prezioso argued that Zisa acted appropriately during both investigations. She showed the jury reams of documents from the police department and other sources she said proved that the police officers who testified against their boss — many of whom stand to gain from civil suits that could be bolstered by a guilty verdict— were lying.

Instead, Prezioso said Zisa was the victim of a political conspiracy involving Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli and fuelled by his disgruntled subordinates. Molinelli declined to comment late Wednesday.

Prezioso said a group of rogue Hackensack officers, including John Hermann and Joseph Al-Ayoubi, brought the story of the 2008 car crash to the Prosecutor’s Office when Zisa failed to take a bribe to drop disciplinary charges against the leader of the police union, Anthony Ferraioli.

Tiernan was collateral damage, Prezioso and Meehan argued. Her car accident, they claim, happened just as it was described on the insurance claim.

Key testimony came from Hermann and Al-Ayoubi, who said Tiernan was so drunk at the scene of the 2008 car crash she had trouble walking without Zisa’s assistance, but they filed a false police report of the incident. To do otherwise, Al-Ayoubi testified, would be “career suicide.”

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Accident Reconstruction 3 Killed in Shelby County

An overnight crash in Shelby County has killed three people.

It happened around 12:45 a.m. Saturday at the 29 mile marker of eastbound I-64.

State Police said the vehicle involved was heading eastbound and, at the point where the interstate merges from three lanes to two, the driver did not make that merge, causing the vehicle to drive off the shoulder of the road and overturn.

http://liarcatchers.com/accident_reconstruction.html

Three of the four people inside were thrown from the vehicle.

Gabriel Alva Chacon, 29, and Jamie Alva Chacon, 21, were pronounced dead at the scene.

Regina Alva Chacon, 36, was pronounced dead at the University of Louisville Hospital.

A juvenile was taken to the University of Louisville Hospital.

All of those involved are reportedly from Indiana.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

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Missing Persons 4 Missing After Boat Crash

Crews searched Saturday for four people missing after an overnight boat crash on the Mississippi River in Iowa, although one official said it was mostly a recovery effort.

Iowa Department of Natural Resources spokesman Kevin Baskins said the timing of the collision, about 1:45 a.m. Saturday, made it difficult for rescuers to find people in the water. So, he said, the effort is “leaning more toward recovery” than rescue.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

“Officers in boats, at this point, looking for anything we can find,” Baskins said, describing the search that was expected to continue at least until dark.

“Once it gets dark, it gets problematic,” he said.

Two jon boats —flat-bottomed boats often made of aluminum — crashed in the O’Connell Slough area of the river, near Burlington, according to the department. One of the boats was carrying 11 people; the other had a single passenger.

Baskins said eight people pulled from the water have been hospitalized. At least one person suffered serious injuries and was flown to an Iowa City hospital, he said. The others were taken to a Burlington hospital.

The names of the missing and injured people have not been released, pending notification of their families.

Des Moines County Sheriff Mike Johnstone told The Hawk Eye that the missing included three men and a woman, all believed to be in their 20s. A message left Saturday by The Associated Press for Johnstone wasn’t immediately returned.

Baskins said the crash happened on the main channel of the river and searchers aren’t sure whether the missing boaters could have made it to shore.

It’s not clear how the crash happened. Baskins said it could take weeks to interview all the victims, collect evidence and reconstruct the crash.

“You don’t have skid marks and stuff in boating accidents,” he said.

Burlington is in southeast Iowa on the Illinois border, about 200 miles north of St. Louis on the river.

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Wrongful Death Amanda Davidson Killed in Fire

A Clay County mother of three has died after the home she shared with her brother caught fire Saturday afternoon.

The fire broke out around 4 p.m. on Highway 1350 outside of Manchester, killing Amanda Davidson, 26.

“It’s just unbelievable,” said William Bishop, the victim’s brother, who tried to rescue her from the burning home. “I couldn’t do nothing. I ran up the hill, busted the window out and I couldn’t get to her.”

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

Davidson moved in with her brother about a year ago. A burned out shell is all that’s left of the home they shared.

“She was a good girl. She worked everyday. She loved her kids. She was always there for you. She was a good person to be around,” said Bishop.

Investigators were at the scene throughout the afternoon on Saturday, combing the rubble for clues, trying to figure out what led to such a tragic fire.

“How am I gonna make it? I just, it’s gonna be hard,” said Bishop. “It’s just a tragic loss.”

While investigators have not commented on the cause of the fire, Davidson’s family told LEX 18, it appeared to have started in the home’s air conditioning unit.

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Insurance Fraud Crooked Doctors

ALBANY, N.Y. — Insurance regulators plan to start kicking crooked doctors out of New York’s no-fault program next month, calling them linchpins in fake-accident scams that cost insurers and ultimately policyholders hundreds of millions of dollars.

Regulations are set to take effect June 12. The Department of Financial Services sent certified letters in March to 135 doctors, chiropractors, acupuncturists and physical therapists, demanding they explain suspect billing patterns and threatening to remove them from the program if they don’t respond.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

That’s “just the tip of the iceberg,” Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky said. No-fault insurance lets drivers and passengers claim up to $50,000 for accident injuries regardless of who caused the accident.

“For every fraudulent medical mill, there’s got to be a doctor attached to it or they couldn’t do the billing,” Lawsky said. “The doctor is sort of at the top of this medical mill pyramid. So we have to go after these dirty doctors.”

Providers can challenge expulsion at hearings but they can still be suspended for up to 90 days while cases are pending.

The Medical Society of the State of New York is still reviewing the proposal, senior vice president for legislative and regulatory affairs Elizabeth Dears said Thursday.

Federal prosecutors charged 36 people in February in New York City, including 10 physicians, three lawyers, two acupuncturists and two chiropractors in what authorities called a systematic scheme to defraud insurance companies of more than $275 million using exaggerated or faked medical claims. U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said the actual loss was $113 million and the operation involved intricate kickback arrangements.

“For every fraudulent medical mill, there’s got to be a doctor attached to it or they couldn’t do the billing,” Lawsky said. “The doctor is sort of at the top of this medical mill pyramid. So we have to go after these dirty doctors.”

Eight people were accused of operating more than 100 medical clinics that were incorporated by licensed doctors, as required by law, who were paid to falsely claim they controlled the clinics, Bharara said.

The Automobile Insurance Fraud Unit in the state attorney general’s office has charged 407 people, including clinic owners and doctors, since it was established in 2001, spokeswoman Jennifer Givner said. The office, funded by the Department of Financial Services, has multiple pending investigations of staged-accident rings and corrupt clinics, she said.

An Insurance Research Council study indicates that fraud added $385 million to $512 million to New York no-fault claims in 2010, or about roughly one-third the total no-fault payments, according to the New York Insurance Association. Twelve states have no-fault systems, 10 with individual medical claim caps lower than New York’s $50,000 limit.

Ellen Melchionni, association president, said the organization believes the system in New York right now is “severely broken,” and that cost will translate to higher premiums. There are many fraud rings and they keep evolving, she said, noting the new regulation to decertify deceitful doctors is a good step.

Lawsky’s letters demanded a raft of information from doctors including all professional addresses from which their no-fault claims are submitted, the people or legal entities who have an economic interest in their practices and any agreements with medical management companies and billing contractors, among other things.

Department spokesman David Neustadt said they received “many” responses, though he declined to say how many or identify them.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo asked for the crackdown and the new regulation implementing a 2005 law giving regulators the power to determine which doctors can participate in the no-fault system.

Meanwhile, the state Senate has passed additional penalties for others involved in the scams, making it a separate crime to act as a “runner,” who steers accident victims to crooked clinics or doctors, and to stage a fake accident. Another measure would let insurers retroactively cancel policies taken out by people who commit auto fraud and pay for policies with bad checks or stolen credit card shortly before staging accidents.

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Drug Dog Sweep Deon Matthews

A routine traffic stop in Annapolis on Monday led to the discovery of a large stash of heroin and three arrests, police said in a Friday news release.

The 80.3 grams of heroin seized, which would have been worth $16,000 on the street, were not found in the vehicle stopped but in a rental vehicle parked nearby, police said. The woman and two men arrested were all from Annapolis.

http://liarcatchers.com/drugdogsweeps.html

According to police, officers first stopped a bright green Lincoln in the 1100 block of Medgar Evers Street for undisclosed traffic violations at about 4:40 p.m., and discovered the driver, Deon Matthews, 20, had a suspended license.

Police said they also found an unlabeled bottle full of percocet and a digital scale in the vehicle.

Police also discovered the passenger in the vehicle, Demarrow Williams, 19, had three outstanding bench warrants for his arrest, and a stolen prescription for oxycodone in his pocket.

As police were investigating, Darla Howard, 29, walked up to the vehicle to try to retrieve the keys to her own rental vehicle parked nearby.

When police told her to wait until they had finished dealing with the two men, Howard seemed “unusually persistent” and unsuccessfully tried to grab the keys from the car, said Det. Amy Miguez, an Annapolis police spokeswoman.

Police subsequently approached Howard’s rental car nearby to return the keys to her, and she disclosed connections with the two men arrested, Miguez said. That and her activity raised officers suspicions, Miguez said, and they asked if they could search her car. When she declined, the officers brought in a police dog.

The dog “hit on” the heroine, located in the car’s trunk, right away, Miguez said.

Matthews has been charged with drug and drug paraphernalia possession and with removing the label from a prescription. Williams has been charged with theft, drug paraphernalia possession and three separate charges relating to creating, having and issuing a forged prescription.

Howard has been charged with drug possession and drug possession with the intent to distribute.

Both vehicles were seized, as was more than $2,000 in cash, mostly from Matthews’ pants pocket, police said.

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Fraud Investigation Gold Buying

With gold prices more than $1,500 an ounce people are cashing in on old jewelry.

A lot of businesses are offering to buy your unwanted jewelry.

But one of the largest operations, setting-up shop in hotels across the country, is being accused of fraud.

Many customers are now wondering if their gold was really worth its weight.

CBS went undercover in a five state investigation to find out.

“Have you ever seen a scratch test done?” asks the salesman during an undercover gold buy.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

“I won’t damage your pieces; it will just confirm the gold content” he reassures us.

It’s the Ohio Valley Gold and Silver Refinery passing through Folsom for one week only, promising the “best value” for your gold.

Marlene Powell and her friend Karin Engel saw the same company advertised in their local paper under a different name: Treasure Hunters Road Show.

Marlene remembers “it said ‘as seen on TV’ and with the words ‘Road Show’.”

They thought it was the Antiques Road Show, a common misconception that got the company sued for trademark violations.

And the women felt deceived again when they got to the event at the Hampton Inn and Suites in Folsom.

Karen said “I had a piece of 18 karat gold that I know for a fact was 18 karat and they told me ‘no’ it wasn’t.”

They believe they were taken for hundreds of dollars, and they’re not alone.

This joint-CBS investigation, initiated by our sister station in San Francisco, compiled complaints from across the country.

Most of them were from seniors citizens like a 71 year old in West Virginia, and an 88 year old on the Canadian border, both grandmothers desperate for cash and selling family heirlooms for pennies on the dollar.

After jeweler Tom Broadwin heard similar complaints from his customers he decided to visit the same road show which was traveling under yet another name, this time as Premier Estate Buyers.

Broadwin says “I had a gold bracelet filled with coins, clearly gold coins. The individual looked at it for a few minutes and told me they were plated… that was fraud right to my face.”

Broadwin agreed to lend us $8,000 worth of gold for our investigation, but before handing it over he tested each piece for karat count and weight.

CBS took the gold to three separate jewelers to confirm its value, and then we brought it to a show in Santa Cruz.

The salesman took our jewelry, held up one bracelet, scratched it and said “yeah, this is all fine.”

We knew 13 out of the 15 pieces were 18 karat gold, but after carefully examining each item this road show manager told us “I’ve got some 10 and 14 karat, a mix… believe it or not half of what you have on the table here is copper.”

Maybe he missed the 18k stamp; and maybe the acid test he performed was wrong.

Was this an isolated experience?

We decided to find out.

CBS sent gold to CBS-owned stations across the country, asking teams here in Sacramento, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago and Dallas to go undercover.

In two cities they got the karats right.

At two other shows, including Dallas, producers were told 18 karat pieces were only 14 karats.

And three out of the five initial offers we received were less than a quarter of the gold’s value.

After weeks of undercover investigations CBS travelled Springfield, Illinois, and the THR corporate headquarters.

“We are not in the business of lying to people,” said Mathew Enright, a spokesman for THR and Associates.

Turns out, the company operates 120 traveling shows a week under at least eight different names.

He examined our gold and confirmed that the gold was 18 karat.

We then showed him our video where the salesman points to a bracelet and says it was 10 karat gold.

The producer/reporter questioned the manager about his salesman’s mistake.

Reporter: “There’s a bit of a trend here. Either he doesn’t have a cursory knowledge of gold, or he’s lying to customers.”

Enright: “Sure, I mean it’s obviously a concern for me seeing that.”

Reporter: “On five different occasions, across the country, this isn’t an isolated incident.”

Enright: “Well, it’s a very small percentage compared to 140 managers that we have.”

He says employees are not “trained” to purposely to deceive customers.

But we obtained this THR buying guide which shows employees are “trained” to make a first offer of $1.50 per penny weight; the going rate is more than 30 times that.

Reporter: “Isn’t that excessive?”

Enright: “Ah, you know, ah, it’s absolutely legal.”

Reporter: “So my question is ‘do you feel guilty?’”

Enright: “Do I feel guilty? I’m not the one out there buying and doing those types of things.”

But “those types of things” have been great for business; the company brought in 300 million last year.

We had more gold loaned to CBS, this time a jeweler in Roseville.

We took it to THR’s show at the Gold Country Casino in Oroville.

But they couldn’t offer us a deal; the salesman said he had no scale and deliberately left his checkbook in his car so as not to be tempted to buy gold that day – inquiries only.

The salesman admitted to our undercover reporter that “we’ve been having trouble with checks.”

Yet despite its earnings two weeks into our investigation, thousands of the company’s checks stopped clearing when the bank closed THR’s account.

Enright: “It’s an unfortunate situation. I have no idea why it was closed.”

THR chief executive officer Jeffrey Parsons owes the IRS more than three million dollars, and according to court documents he’s been using the company bank account as his personal piggy bank.

Meanwhile, the company’s been splurging on luxuries like a country club residence and a plane paid for, in part, with silver coins.

Reporter: “He did buy a jet and a house with silver.”

Enright: “Sure.”

Reporter: “Do you think the bank unexpectedly closing your account has anything to do with Mr. Parsons using company funds for extravagant personal expenses?”

Enright: “I don’t know. It’s a great question, I don’t know.”

The bank won’t comment on why it closed THR’s account, but unexpected closures are often due to fraud investigations, improper use of funds, or IRS liens.

The company is now scrambling to reissue checks out of a new account.

One of those checks belongs to our sister station in San Francisco, and they’re still waiting for their money.

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Missing Person Mark Anthony Byrd

Looking for a white a male by the name of Mark Anthony Byrd 39 years old. Mark Anthony Byrd has a multiple tattoos on left arm and large tattoo on shin of left leg. May be traveling in a 2000 four door Ford Explorer Dark Blue in color. The Vehicle has multiple stickers on back glass window.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Mark Anthony Byrd was last seen on 05/16/2012 at around 10:30 A.M. leaving residence off of 421 North with no direction of travel given. Missing person has heart related medical condition. If anyone has any information or has seen Mark Anthony Byrd please call the Watauga County Sheriff’s Office (828) 264-3761.

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Wrongful Death Deaundray Rossum

ongview — Longview police officials have identified the person who died in last night’s shooting as 23-year old Deaundray Lamanze Rossum of Kilgore.

The shooting happened in the 2900 block of Signal Hill Drive at 9:54 p.m.

When officers arrived, they found Rossum dead from a gunshot wound in a vehicle. Police found another man inside an apartment. That victim had been shot several times and was taken to a local hospital.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

During the investigation, another person was brought by private vehicle to a local hospital. This victim and the previous mentioned were suffering from non life-threatening injuries.

Police believe that the suspects in this shooting were black males and may have been wearing hoodies. The case remains under investigation at this time.

If anyone has information related to this investigation they are encouraged to call Detective Kevin Freeman at 903-237-1199 or remain anonymous by contacting Gregg County Crimestoppers at 903-236-STOP(7867) or submit a tip online at www.greggcountycrimestoppers.org.

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Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | 1 Comment