Private Detective Police Search for Suspect in Nicholasville Shooting

For the second night in a row, police in Jessamine County are investigating a shooting.

Nicholasville Police tell LEX18 that a man was shot in the neck early Sunday morning and remains in critical condition at University of Kentucky Hospital.

The shooting happened on the 200 block of Rebel Road at around 1:20 a.m. Sunday.

A man was found on the ground outside an apartment building by police, and EMS quickly rushed him to the hospital.

http://liarcatchers.com/contact.php

Detectives were called to the scene and are currently handling the investigation.

At this time there is no suspect information available, say investigators, who continue to interview witnesses and gather evidence.

Early Saturday morning, a Nicholasville Police Officer was shot at by a motorcyclist during a traffic stop on US 27.

No suspect has been identified in that shooting either.

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Missing Person Body Found in Des Moines River is Missing Iowa Teen

Authorities confirmed Sunday that a body found in the Des Moines River was that of a 15-year-old Iowa girl who was abducted along with a younger friend after getting off a school bus last month.

An autopsy confirmed the body found Friday night under a bridge near Boone is Kathlynn Shepard’s. Her kidnapping on May 20 in the small city of Dayton led to a massive search involving federal, state and local authorities.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Chief State Medical Examiner Dr. Julia Goodin said Sunday that Kathlynn’s death was a homicide and that she died of “multiple sharp and blunt force injuries.” The autopsy was completed a day earlier.

Residents of Dayton, about 60 miles north of Des Moines, had braced for the news. Investigators had expressed confidence the body — concealed by debris when discovered by a fisherman — was Kathlynn’s. Clothes on it matched what the high school freshman was wearing when a man lured her and a 12-year-old friend into a pickup truck.

Authorities also found zip ties matching ones used to restrain the younger girl, who managed to escape and call 911.

“Today our family has lost part of its soul — not just the Shepard family but the families of Dayton and all of Iowa,” the Shepards said in a statement. “An innocent, caring, fun-loving child was taken from this world long before her time.”

Authorities said Kathlynn and her friend were lured into a pickup that police believe was driven by registered sex offender Michael Klunder. They said Klunder took the girls to a hog confinement facility where he worked, and the 12-year-old girl was able to get away.

Klunder, 42, was found dead hours later at another rural property. Authorities said he hanged himself.

Gerard Meyers, assistant director of field operators for the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, said Sunday that authorities believe Klunder acted alone.

“We have no indications of any co-conspirators,” he said.

Meyers has said a positive identification would be “the final trigger for not only the family but the community, our investigative personnel, our partner agencies … to move into that next phase, which is really the closure phase of this very unfortunate circumstance.”

Hundreds of officers and volunteers had searched for Kathlynn, but hopes of finding her alive were dampened when testing confirmed that blood found on Klunder’s truck and at the hog building was Kathlynn’s.

“We were robbed of some innocence in this whole thing,” said Webster County Sheriff James Stubbs after the body was discovered. “We’ll never quite be the same. Hopefully time will heal some of those wounds, but the awareness is a lot higher than it was before.”

Klunder had been released from prison in 2011, after serving 20 years for convictions in two separate Iowa kidnappings that occurred on back-to-back days in December 1991.

Police also are investigating whether Klunder is responsible for kidnapping and slaying two young cousins who vanished while riding bikes in Evansdale, about 90 miles from Dayton. The bodies of the girls, who were ages 10 and 8 when they vanished, were found in December in a wooded area in Bremer County, where Klunder once lived in a home for emotionally troubled youth.

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Missing Person Oregon State Police Search for Michael Cook

Oregon State Police are looking for a missing, medically endangered 63-year-old man last seen Saturday morning leaving a residence northwest of Grants Pass.

The missing person, Michael Cook, has a life-threatening medical condition requiring daily medication.

Cook was last seen at 3:30 a.m. leaving his residence in the 1000 block of Plumtree Lane in his 1997 Ford Ranger pickup displaying Oregon license XXG 770.

He was believed to be headed toward Grants Pass, but his family has not been able to locate him or reach him on his cellphone.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

The pickup is described as black and “lowered,” with chrome wheels and diamond-plate pickup bed rails. Tethered in the pickup’s bed is a black with blue trim 1990 Yamaha FJ2 motorcycle.

Anyone with information about Cook is asked to call 911 or the Oregon State Police dispatch center at 800-442-2068. Lead investigator is Senior Trooper Scott Holsworth.

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Identity Theft Your Strong Password Might Not be Strong Enough

Banks rely on usernames and passwords as a layer of protection and authentication to prevent criminals from accessing your accounts. However researchers now show that your password—even though it may be a relatively “strong” one, might not be strong enough.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

When you create a password and provide it to a website, that site is supposed to then convert them to “hashes” as Ars Technica explains “Instead, they work only with these so-called one-way hashes, which are incapable of being mathematically converted back into the letters, numbers, and symbols originally chosen by the user. In the event of a security breach that exposes the password data, an attacker still must painstakingly guess the plaintext for each hash—for instance, they must guess that “5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99″ is the MD5 hashes for “password”.

But Ars did an experiment with some newbie technologist all the way up to expert hackers to see what they could do to crack the hash.

“The characteristics that made “momof3g8kids” and “Oscar+emmy2″ easy to remember are precisely the things that allowed them to be cracked. Their basic components—”mom,” “kids,” “oscar,” “emmy,” and numbers—are a core part of even basic password-cracking lists. The increasing power of hardware and specialized software makes it trivial for crackers to combine these ingredients in literally billions of slightly different permutations. Unless the user takes great care, passwords that are easy to remember are sitting ducks in the hands of crackers.”

How to get hacked

Dictionary attacks: Avoid consecutive keyboard combinations— such as qwerty or asdfg. Don’t use dictionary words, slang terms, common misspellings, or words spelled backward. These cracks rely on software that automatically plugs common words into password fields. Password cracking becomes almost effortless with a tool like “John the Ripper” or similar programs.

Simple passwords: Don’t use personal information such as your name, age, birth date, child’s name, pet’s name, or favorite color/song, etc. When 32 million passwords were exposed in a breach last year, almost 1% of victims were using “123456.” The next most popular password was “12345.” Other common choices are “111111,” “princess,” “qwerty,” and “abc123.”

Reuse of passwords across multiple sites: Reusing passwords for email, banking, and social media accounts can lead to identity theft. Two recent breaches revealed a password reuse rate of 31% among victims.

Protect yourself:

Make sure you use different passwords for each of your accounts.
Be sure no one watches when you enter your password.
Always log off if you leave your device and anyone is around—it only takes a moment for someone to steal or change the password.
Use comprehensive security software and keep it up to date to avoid keyloggers (keystroke loggers) and other malware.
Avoid entering passwords on computers you don’t control (like computers at an Internet café or library)—they may have malware that steals your passwords.
Avoid entering passwords when using unsecured Wi-Fi connections (like at the airport or coffee shop)—hackers can intercept your passwords and data over this unsecured connection.
Don’t tell anyone your password. Your trusted friend now might not be your friend in the future. Keep your passwords safe by keeping them to yourself.
Depending on the sensitivity of the information being protected, you should change your passwords periodically, and avoid reusing a password for at least one year.
Do use at least eight characters of lowercase and uppercase letters, numbers, and symbols in your password. Remember, the more the merrier.

10. Strong passwords are easy to remember but hard to guess. Iam:)2b29! — This has 10 characters and says “I am happy to be 29!” I wish.

11. Use the keyboard as a palette to create shapes. %tgbHU8*- Follow that on the keyboard. It’s a V. The letter V starting with any of the top keys. To change these periodically, you can slide them across the keyboard. Use W if you are feeling all crazy.

12. Have fun with known short codes or sentences or phrases. 2B-or-Not_2b? —This one says “To be or not to be?”

13. It’s okay to write down your passwords, just keep them away from your computer and mixed in with other numbers and letters so it’s not apparent that it’s a password.

14. You can also write a “tip sheet” which will give you a clue to remember your password, but doesn’t actually contain your password on it. For example, in the example above, your “tip sheet” might read “To be, or not to be?”

15. Check your password strength. If the site you are signing up for offers a password strength analyzer, pay attention to it and heed its advice.

While you must do your part to manage effective passwords, banks are working in the background to add additional layers of security to protect you. For example, financial institutions are incorporating complex device identification, which looks at numerous characteristics of the online transaction including the device you are using to connect. iovation, an Oregon-based security firm, goes a step further offering Device Reputation, which builds on complex device identification with real-time risk assessments. iovation knows the reputations of over 1.3 billion devices in iovation’s device reputation knowledge base. By knowing a devices reputation, banks can better determine whether a particular device is trustworthy before a transaction has been approved.

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Missing Person Daryn Ray Collie of Del City, OK

The Hood River County Sheriff’s Office is assisting the Guthrie, Oklahoma Police Department with an investigation into the disappearance of thirty-two year old Daryn Ray “Darraby” Collie of Del City, Oklahoma.

Collie was last seen on May 26, when he dropped his brother off at work in Guthrie. On June 6, 2013, Collie’s vehicle, a 2007 burnt orange colored Dodge Nitro bearing Oklahoma license plates was located at a trailhead off of Highway 35, in the upper Hood River Valley.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Sheriff’s Office personnel, assisted by United States Forest Service Law Enforcement have been conducting searches of the area for the last two days by foot and air. No further leads regarding Collie’s whereabouts have been developed.

Collie is described as a white male, 6′ 1″, 250 lbs. He has long wavy shoulder length hair with a receding hair line. His fingernails have been filed to points and his left thumbnail has a titanium spike affixed to it. He was entered as a missing person on May 31, 2013. Additional information about Collie can be found in the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System located at: http://www.namus.gov.

If the public has any information regarding the whereabouts of Daryn Ray Collie or may have seen him or his vehicle in the area within the last two weeks, they are asked to contact the Hood River County Sheriff’s Office Investigation’s Division Tip Line at 541 387-7077

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Missing Person Search for Glen Rock, PA Man Continues

It’s been more than a month since Thomas Augustyniak was reported missing from his home in Glen Rock, York County.

Today a volunteer group conducted a grid search, looking for any clues that might lead to the missing man.

This group of men doesn’t personally know Thomas Augustyniak.

They say they saw his story on the internet and wanted to pick up where others left off.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Searching on foot, 6 volunteers set out.

“Move as quick as you can,” says a volunteer.

Dressed from head to toe in camouflage..

“If there’s no break in the brush just come back out,” says volunteer, George Kareles.

To see if they could help solve this mystery.

“Anywhere where the person might have made a path through the woods, may have bedded down looking for depressions in the area,” says volunteer, John Lutte.

Time is not working in their favor.

In fact, Thomas Augustyniak was last seen on April 24th.

An extensive search by police and search and rescue crews came up empty.

“Just come back on the road and we’ll continue further down,” says a volunteer.

But, this group believes they can make a difference.

“Hopefully we’re able to catch some clues that will lead us to find this person,” says Lutte.

The PA Defense Force didn’t contact family members to let them know they were searching.

“It’s only going to bring back the sensitive issue, they’re still obviously distraught that the individual hasn’t been found,” says Kareles.

But we spole with Augustyniak’s wife off camera.

She told us quote-”It makes me happy to know there’s people out there looking, but this should’ve been done a long time ago.”

The two day search will continue tomorrow as volunteers try and cover as much ground as possible, to bring a man home..where he belongs.

Augustyniak’s wife told FOX43 that although the Glen Rock Police Chief has been very helpful, the department hasn’t released any new information.

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Identity Theft 2 Suffolk, Virginia Teens

Two teenagers wanted for using a credit card that wasn’t their own turned themselves in this afternoon.

Emily Matos, 18, and Mary Delaney, 19, both of Suffolk, are charged with identity theft, credit card theft, credit card fraud and conspiracy to commit a felony, a city news release said.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

On May 18, a report was filed with police stating that two women were seen using a stolen credit card at various locations in Suffolk, the release said. Both of the women were pushing toddlers in shopping carts.

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Missing Person Search for Great Falls, MT Man Continues

The search will continue for a Great Falls man who was reported missing Thursday at Lake Elwell, also called Tiber Reservoir, according to Liberty County Sheriff’s Office.

Liberty County Undersheriff/Deputy Coroner Doug Riggin said Saturday sonar and deep water divers will be brought in Sunday to search for a body in an area of the lake near Tiber Marina. Sonar equipment was not available Saturday, so no search was conducted, Riggin said.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

John Kumm, 50, went on a fishing trip at Tiber on Thursday morning. Fishermen spotted Kumm’s empty boat Thursday but thought it had broken away from someone’s camp. They brought the boat to the marina, and when no one had claimed it by 6 p.m., an employee at the marina called the sheriff’s department.

“We’ve been searching for a missing person ever since then,” Riggin said Friday.

Riggin said Kumm is presumed to be dead but the death is not being ruled suspicious.

Tiber Reservoir is a large, man-made reservoir in southern Toole and Liberty counties on the Marias River popular with fishermen and recreationalists during the summer.

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Insurance Fraud Stevens County, WA Woman Convicted

A Stevens County woman has been convicted insurance fraud for claims she filed after a fire of undetermined origin destroyed her home in 2011.

Jenny Rae Balsz, 44, of Colville, pleaded guilty May 28, 2013 in Stevens County Superior Court. She was sentenced to 30 days in jail, which she’ll be allowed to serve as 240 hours of community service, plus fines and fees of $850.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

On the fifth of July, 2011, a fire at Balsz’s home in Evans, Wash. burned the structure to the ground. Fire investigators were unable to determine the origin of the fire. At the time, Balsz was in Montana, visiting family.

Her insurance claim included several receipts for a total of $13,899 in items purportedly purchased from a home furnishings store. An investigator for Safeco, Balsz’s insurer, later found that Balsz had not purchased any of the listed items at the store. In fact, the store didn’t even carry some of the items listed, including antiques and a grandfather clock.

She also submitted a purported receipt for a $6,240 clarinet. The receipt also turned out to be false.

And she submitted a fraudulent $800-a-month lease agreement, claiming that she was paying rent to her landlord. The “landlord” turned out to be her live-in boyfriend; the insurance checks for living expenses went directly to Balsz.

Safeco, as required by law, reported their findings to our office’s anti-fraud unit, known as the Special Investigations Unit. After they investigated further, our office sought charges against Balsz.

The charge on which she was convicted is a felony.

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Missing Person James Irby of Memphis, TN

A Memphis, Tenn., man whose family says has cancer has been missing for more than a month. The man was allegedly shocked with a stun gun after he was found to have marijuana in his car, according to local law enforcement and news agencies.

However, family members and the Mississippi NAACP are questioning what authorities said happened.

James Irby, 55, was stopped by a Walls police officer on the corner of Highway 61 and Church Road in Walls, Miss., on May 4, according Memphis news outlet WMC-TV.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Irby, whose mother has said was on his way to a funeral, was in possession of marijuana and a prescription bottle containing “illegal narcotics,” Walls Police Chief Gary Boisseau told Memphis’ ABC 24.

Irby was on the phone when officers found the drugs, Boisseau said. The officer asked him several times to hang up the phone and then discharged his stun gun, Boisseau told ABC 24. At that point, Irby ran away, escaping into a wheat field after being briefly pursued by the officer, he added.

Boisseau said he thinks Irby fled through the field and caught a ride out of town on a nearby highway. He says his K-9 cadaver dogs would have picked up the scent of dead body if Irby had perished in the area, ABC 24 reported.

But Irby’s family, who say they have not seen him since, say that Irby was ill and could not have run far, as police suggest.

“James couldn’t run that far on foot. He had gout real bad and he’s got prostate cancer,” Irby’s mother, Ethel Allen, told local Fox affiliate WHBQ. “I’ve had all of my grandchildren, great-grandchildren and my nephews out there walking the field [looking for him].”

“He had never left home not calling anybody,” Irby’s girlfriend, Tonia Bryant, told the station.

The local police and Sheriff’s Office also searched for Irby but to no avail.

To make matters more mysterious, Allen says a Walls police officer told her Irby fled into a swamp, according to WHBQ. Allen says the officer told her the traffic stop didn’t happen at Highway 61 and Church, but a quarter mile down the road near a swampy area, the local outlet reported.

Also strange is that the Mississippi NAACP says local police told the FBI, which is reportedly involved in the investigation, that Irby was not shocked with a stun gun, according to WHBQ.

Although police dash-cam footage shows an officer attempting to stun Irby, the video does not definitely show Irby being struck. (The video does appear to show Irby fleeing from the officer, however.)

The DeSoto County Sheriff’s Department in Mississippi did not immediately return a request for comment from The Huffington Post.

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