Yankton Murder Case

A judge agreed Monday to supply more funds for a private investigator in the case of a man accused of murdering a Yankton woman last April.

Nicholas Stewart Hines was found at 1008 Willow Lane early April 9 with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head after allegedly killing 25-year-old Brianna Marie Knoll. He has been charged with first-degree murder.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

When Hines entered the Yankton County courtroom for Monday morning’s hearing, a woman yelled out his first name before being consoled by those around her.

Once the proceedings got under way, defense attorney Dan Fox filed a motion to increase the funding authority for Tim Mulloy of Starr Enterprises in Sioux Falls. Circuit Judge Glen Eng previously agreed to the state providing the defense up to $2,500 for his investigative services.

According to Fox, Mulloy has reviewed all the material relevant to the case, which consumed a significant amount of time. More interviews and other evidence collecting still needs to be completed, he said, and the investigator has reached the limit of the funding authority. Fox assured the court that the additional work is important and not extraneous.

When asked for his input on the request, Yankton County deputy state’s attorney Erich Johnke said he found it difficult to comment without knowing more about the work being done. However, he stated that he did not object to an additional $2,500 being granted as long as there is a just cause meeting if more funding is solicited.

Eng granted an additional $2,500, and also requested that the charges up to this point be supplied to the court to ensure the investigation is moving forward in a timely manner. The cost report will be kept sealed. Eng added that he has no reason to believe that the investigative costs are not reasonable.

Also Monday, Fox informed the court that Hines will undergo a psychiatric evaluation by Dr. David Bean on Dec. 7.

Recognizing that the subsequent report often takes some time to complete, Eng chose not to schedule a status hearing in the case until well after the evaluation has taken place. The next court appearance for Hines was set for 11 a.m. Jan. 23.

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Careful who handles your process service

HUNTSVILLE, Alabama — A former Morgan County process server fired by Sheriff Ana Franklin after being charged with selling drugs from his patrol car never delivered hundreds of court documents, the Decatur Daily reported this morning.

http://liarcatchers.com/process_service.html

Morgan County officials are going through hundreds of documents from probate, circuit and district court that Steven Eugene Parker should have delivered, the Daily reported.

Parker was arrested on Oct. 14 on three charges of distribution of a controlled substance. More charges were added three weeks later.

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great new help for missing persons

In the last 20 years, advancements in technology and new laws have given law enforcement more ways to investigate and solve crime.

* DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid is the unique, genetic blueprint of each individual. Each cell contains the hereditary information. DNA can implicate or exonerate suspects. Usually, a possible suspect’s DNA is checked against DNA stored in a DNA forensic database. That DNA has been collected from individuals and as possible evidence recovered from a crime scene.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

* The use of cameras and video taping/digital recording has proliferated. Municipalities and businesses have installed surveillance cameras; police departments use cameras in high-crime areas; police units have dashboard cameras as well as tiny cameras officers can wear on a lapel or headset. There are high-speed, infrared night vision cameras which capture the license plates of passing cars and compare that information with an onboard database to check for wanted and stolen vehicles.

*Besides police units equipped with onboard computers, some police departments have invested in in MORIS Mobile Offender Recognition and information System) biometric devices which when attached to a mobile phone, read and compare on-site eyes, faces and fingerprints to a criminal record database.

*Social media plays a role. Police departments use Facebook, Twitter and other such websites to profile suspects, collect evidence in open cases, report crimes and provide crime maps.

*GIS (Geographic Information System) allows law enforcement to collect and organize criminal incidents to look for possible patterns and determine how to fight back.

Other tools

When a minor is abducted, local and state authorities can issue an Amber Alert to quickly disseminate information about the victim, suspect and vehicle used. The information is sent to news outlets, highway message boards and can be received by text, email and Twitter.

Kristin Smart’s disappearance spurred the Kristin Smart Campus Security Act of 1998. Since 1999, all publicly funded educational institutions must have a formal agreement with local police agencies to report cases involving violence or possible violence against students, including missing students.

Smart’s roommate reported to campus police that Kristin hadn’t returned to their dorm room by the morning after she was last seen but her disappearance wasn’t investigated until several days later when the local sheriff’s department was notified. The delay was atrributed to Kristin disappearing at the start of a long Memorial Day holiday weekend and authorities saying it was common for students to take off for several days.

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California man caught 300,000 identities

A Southern California man was convicted of identity theft after authorities discovered he had obtained more than 300,000 personal profiles. While not the most authorities have seen, it’s a large cache of personal information, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Brown.

Robert Delgado Jr., 40, of Monterey Park was sentenced last week to eight years in prison and five years of supervised release for identify theft after authorities found an external hard drive containing individual profiles that included names, addresses, dates of birth and Social Security numbers.

The hard drive also contained computer images that could potentially be used to forge credit cards and driver’s licenses. Before he was caught, Delgado accessed the accounts of at least 77 people, according to the sentencing document.

Delgado has been in and out of prison for most of his adult life for drug and property crimes, according to court documents and Brown. Delgado “argues that familial hardships led to his drug use which, in turn, led to his life of crime,” according to the sentencing document.

Authorities were alerted to the latest scheme when a vacation hold was placed on a victim’s mail without his consent, and “there were fraudulent charges on his Lowe’s credit card,” according to the statement.

Brown said stealing mail is a popular method identity thieves use to obtain information.

“Many identity thieves that I’ve prosecuted are keen on stealing pre-approved credit card applications, and you can go online or by mail and opt out of these,” Brown said. “This is among the favorite documents of identity thieves.”

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

On its website informing consumers about identity theft, the Federal Trade Commission recommends, among other actions, shredding personal documents before throwing them away, leaving your Social Security card in a secure place instead of carrying it in your wallet and using caution on the Internet.

While it helps to be vigilant, there’s no foolproof way to avoid identity theft.

“Peoples’ information is out there in so many different ways, it’s almost impossible to prevent people from gaining access to it in one form or another,” Brown said.

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pedophiles wear GPS yaaaa

THE first step in around-the-clock monitoring of pedophiles will be taken today, with five of the state’s most dangerous sex offenders to be fitted with GPS tracking devices.

A total of 67 individuals living in transitional housing at Wacol will be fitted with the new devices.

The introduction of GPS trackers followed a community campaign in which more than 10,000 Queenslanders signed a Courier-Mail petition calling for the State Government to roll out the technology as soon as possible.

Corrective Services Minister Neil Roberts announced the State Government would spend $13.7 million over four years to introduce the new GPS systems.

The Courier-Mail revealed in May there were 152 breaches of monitoring conditions by 53 pedophiles released from custody, including one who tried to abduct a boy from a skate park.

It also revealed electronic monitoring under-performed when it came to supervising sex offenders and their physical movements away from home or after hours.

Mr Roberts said the GPS technology would enhance existing radio-based monitoring systems but would not replace the vigilance of staff in the field.

Abakus Elmotech won the contract to supply the trackers earlier this month, following a successful trial of the devices by 30 staff from the Department of Corrective Services in August.

Tagged volunteers went to the beach, the gym, up mountain ranges and through tunnels as part of the week-long trial of the technology.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

Under the scheme, a total of 67 “high-risk” offenders convicted under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act will be fitted-out with GPS trackers.

One will be serial pedophile Raymond Yeo, 66, who was released in July, and has a criminal history dating back to when he was 13.

Douglas Brian Jackway, 32, who was jailed for raping a nine-year-old girl in 1995 and is due to be released from the Brisbane Correctional Centre at Wacol in February, is also expected to be fitted with a GPS tracker upon his release into transitional accommodation.

Mr Roberts said he expected all 67 serious sex offenders would be fitted with the GPS trackers by early 2012.

“All sex offenders fitted with GPS will be tracked on a 24/7 basis, with a specialist surveillance team working around the clock to monitor their movements,” he said.

Several high-profile Queenslanders, such as Olympian Susie O’Neill, hairdressing icon Stefan Ackerie, rugby league legend Darren Lockyer and child rape victim Sharon Tomlinson, added weight to The Courier-Mail campaign.

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Smoke alarms in rental homes

A FIRE investigator is calling for a law to force landlords to fit smoke detectors in their properties following the inquest into the deaths of two boys who were killed in a house fire in 2008.

Lewis Jenkins, seven, and his five-year-old brother Taylor were killed because they were playing with fire in a den they had made under the stairs of their home in Milfoil Drive.

http://liarcatchers.com/arson_investigation.html

The boys lived with their mother Denise Goldsmith in the rented Shinewater house.

An inquest into their death, held at Eastbourne Magistrates’ Court this month, heard there were no working smoke alarms in the property.

At the inquest, coroner Alan Craze heard the boys were ‘obsessed with fire’ and there was a fitted smoke alarm in the youngest boy’s bedroom but it did not have the correct amount of batteries.

Fire investigator, Mark Hobbs, who worked on the tragic Milfoil Drive blaze, told the inquest that rented homes were thought to be the most at risk of failing to have properly operated smoke alarms.

He said, “There is currently no law that requires landlords to fit smoke detectors.”

Coroner Alan Craze recorded a verdict of misadventure.

Mr Hobbs asked coroner Alan Craze to look in to the issue and make a recommendation supporting a law for landlords to fit smoke detectors in their properties.

However Mr Craze said action on the issue was already being taken.

In 2010, Devon MP Adrian Sanders presented a smoke alarm bill to parliament after a Torquay house fire killed two children.

The incident was similar in nature to the Milfoil Drive fire.

It is still ongoing but if passed into law, it would mean private and socially-rented homes would be required to have a working, hard-wired, smoke alarm for all tenancy agreement.

Mr Hobbs also spoke about the Jenkins case and said, “They didn’t have sufficient smoke detection and it is possible earlier warning would have been given.

“However, in this case I think it is unlikely to have made a difference to the outcome.”

Landlords must comply with a laws about gas safety and an Eastbourne letting agent said she would support a change in the law for smoke detectors.

Kathleen Jones, from Edwin Jones letting agents, said, “I think all our landlords have fitted smoke alarms in their properties. I can’t think of anyone who hasn’t but if it were the law then that would be better.

“Sometimes I think there is too much regulation and legislation but I think this would be a good idea. It would be a simple law and it would not be a huge expense for the landlord.”

Last month, the Herald reported Tania Welch and her two young daughters were saved by a smoke detector which woke them up and allowed them to escape from their burning Percival Road home.

The fire service said the smoke detectors in Ms Welch’s house, which was also rented, had saved the life of the family.

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New Identity Theft Website in Indiana

Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller has unveiled a new tool to help Hoosiers in the fight against identity theft.
It’s a new state webpage that allows consumers to keep inventory of the contents of their purses or wallets if ever lost. They can also store notes of all contacts with banks and police agencies.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

The toolkit also provides interactive tools and access to major credit reporting agencies. It also gives tips on how to protect yourself from online hackers.

The Attorney General’s ID theft unit created the page. Nine million Americans fall prey to identity theft each year. There has been a 134 percent increase in complaints about identity theft in the past year.

The site is www.indianaconsumer.com/idtheft.

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Life of a process server

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — A tech-savvy Staten Islander has developed a new application that can make life on the go easier for anybody with an iPhone, iPad or iPod.

Will Damante of Prince’s Bay is the creator of PlugHunter, a street-smart app that lets the owners of Apple hand-held devices find the nearest electrical outlet they can use to recharge a low battery.

Since Oct. 18, what’s billed as the world’s first and only free-power finder, has been available to be downloaded via iTunes from the Apple Store. The price is 99 cents.

http://liarcatchers.com/process_service.html

“With PlugHunter you’re always near power and Wi-Fi even if you didn’t know it,” says Damante. “I found over 200,000 locations worldwide that have free publicly available plugs and Wi-Fi.”

He says electric outlets can be found in all sorts of places open to the public, including stores, restaurants, copy centers, shopping malls, movie theaters and airports.

Damante, 32, a former process server who works as an assistant to a Brooklyn judge, started cataloguing the locations for his own use a few years ago.

“I was a process server for about 10 years and my phone was my lifeline to my clients and contacts,” he says. “Being a process server means being on the go all day long. I would usually hit all five boroughs in a day. But I was always running low on a charge and was always on the lookout for outlets where I could charge up my phone for a few minutes to get me to my next destination.”

He decided to create PlugHunter when he realized there were lots places where people who are out and about can find electric outlets to recharge their mobile devices.

According to Damante, “I created this application because I found a need for it in my travels in and around the city and country, and since there was nothing there to fulfill the need, I created one myself and made it so everyone could share the power.”

The Islander says: “It’s a labor of love.”

Damante sifted through websites and databases to assemble names and addresses of public locations in the United States and abroad to plug into PlugHunter.

He also included public places where WiFi links are available. For example, they can be found inside Starbucks, McDonald’s, UPS, Kinko’s and Mail Boxes Etc. Plus libraries, parks and many other hot spots.

When the app was ready to go, Damante submitted PlugHunter to Appple for official approval. It took just 20 business days for him to get the OK for his product.

Key specifications: Category: Utilities. Version: 1.0 Size: 2.0 MB Requirements: Compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. Requires iOS 4.0 or later.

The full details are available on Web (www.PlugHunter.com). Damante also has a blog (www.theplughunter.blogspot.com).

He is continuing to add to PlugHunter, which also allows users to input locations they discover.

A few hundred of the app have already been purchased. Under their deal, Apple gets 30 cents per download and Damante gets 69 cents.

Is he on the way to fame and fortune?

Maybe. But there is no lack of competition.

“There are about 250,000 apps available for the iPhone and iPod,” he points out. “There are about 100,000 for the iPad.”

So Damante hopes to spread the word far beyond Staten Island that PlugHunter is uniquely handy.

He calls himself a “hometown person with worldwide aspirations.”

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man broke into day care needs public help

Indianapolis police are looking for a man who was caught on surveillance video trying on little girls’ bathing suits after breaking into a Far-Westside day-care center earlier this month.

http://liarcatchers.com/electronic_surveillance.html

A release issued by the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department says the man broke into the Kidscape Childcare & Learning Center in the 7000 block of West Washington St. between 10 and 11:30 p.m. Oct. 20, possibly entering through a back window.

Inside the center, the man is seen on surveillance video trying on “various little girls swimsuits,” the release says.

Police ask anyone with information to call Crime Stoppers at (317) 262-8477 or police detectives at (317) 327-6400.

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private investigator catches prophet

More than 30 years ago, Sam Brower was the best man in his friend’s wedding. Three months later, he was carrying that friend’s body in a casket. Killed in a home invasion in California, his friend was the impetus for Brower’s long career in criminal justice and private investigation.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

Today, Brower is best known as the man who cracked open the secretive world of the polygamous Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints (FLDS). His work led to the arrest and conviction of prophet Warren Jeffs, who is currently serving a life sentence plus 20 years in a Texas prison for child sexual assault.

Brower details the investigation in his new book, Prophet’s Prey: My Seven-Year Investigation into Warren Jeffs and the Fundamentalist Church of Latter-Day Saints. CultureMap spoke to Brower in advance of his appearance at Austin’s Texas Book Festival. Here’s a preview of what the Utah-based private eye reveals in his book:

CM: How did you gain the trust of the FLDS community?

SB: The community itself is very distrustful, very isolated, very insular. It literally took years, baby steps, little bits at a time, getting to know somebody and then them having a brother or some other contact that would slowly begin talking to me. It was a very cumbersome process.

CM: The conviction of Warren Jeffs was a huge feat, but how much will it really change within the FLDS community?

SB: Even though Warren’s in prison in Texas right now, [the FLDS] are still doing the same things. They have this network and support of this crime syndicate and the same things are still going on… Warren’s brother, Lyle Jeffs, has already taken over.

CM: So it’s sort of like Al Qaeda or the Mafia in that respect?

SB: It’s even more insidious than the Mafia. The Mafia threatens you with your life, but the FLDS threatens you with your family and your eternal salvation, and people that lose their family are without hope, and that’s worse than death.

CM: The investigation must have been emotionally taxing on you. Did you ever want to give up?

SB: It’s been an emotional roller coaster. I’ve been skewered by FLDS apologists, harassed by high-powered FLDS attorneys. I’ve had people try and run me off the road. I wanted to give up many times. By the same token, I’m glad I did get involved, and I’m glad I’m on the right side of the table and helped expose it.

CM: Now that Jeffs is in prison will you continue to investigate the FLDS?

SB: My personality is such that, the harder they push, the more I want to stay involved. So I am. I am staying involved, and I don’t know that I’ll ever be able to turn my back on it.

CM: Was it difficult diving back into seven years of material for the book?

SB: The hardest part was not trying to figure out what to put into the book but what to leave out of it. There’s so much that’s happened, there’s so much that can’t be said at this time because there are ongoing criminal investigations.

CM: What do you want readers to take away from the book?

SB: My motivation was to put this in the public face and make people aware of it. It’s catching on more in the West, but it seems like in the East it’s not their business as much. But in actuality, it’s everybody business. It’s child abuse, for crying out loud.

CM: What shocked you most about the FLDS community during your investigation?

SB: I’d heard of polygamy and what was happening to these young girls, but I had no idea how young they really were. His one victim in Texas was barely 12 years old. One of the things that was also a great revelation that came from everybody’s investigation was Warren’s priesthood journal that was found in Texas. It was voluminous. It probably had over 10,000 pages. And there were computers and hard disks and flash drives and external drives and all this evidence chronicling Warren Jeffs’ FLDS criminal activities. That was so implicating for me. I’ve talked to all these people, but here it is in Warren Jeffs’ own words. It was a private investigator’s dream come true.

CM: You’re Mormon, which often gets confused with fundamentalist Mormonism. How did that affect your role in the investigation?

SB: I get it from both sides, whatever the group’s agenda is. Warren Jeffs’ attorney says that because I’m LDS, I’m out to get Warren Jeffs and all Mormons hate the FLDS. And other activists say that because I’m Mormon, I’m out to cover up what FLDS does. The fact is, I’m just like anybody else. Anybody with a moral compass that reads this book and finds out what’s going on within the FLDS is going to reach the same conclusions as I have.

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