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On July 12, 2019, the Nova Scotia Supreme Court revealed that McGray was the prime suspect in the 1995 murder of Brenda Way, who was found with her neck slashed in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. Her boyfriend, Glen Assoun, had been convicted and spent 17 years in prison for the crime he always denied. [15] Assoun's conviction was overturned.
The D-A-D song "Marlboro Man" is about the advertisements featuring the character. The Neil Young song "Big Green Country" refers to the Marlboro man as "the cancer cowboy", who was "pure as driven snow" before his death. The World Entertainment War song "Marlboro Man, Jr." begins, "The Marlboro Man is dead Long live the Marlboro Man! In our ...
She had a scar on her right shin and both earlobes were pierced, but police found no earrings at the crime scene. [16] A Utah crime labs analysis of isotopes from her hair samples indicated that the victim had spent the last seven months of her life in Star Valley in Lincoln County, Wyoming. [15] [16] Tonya Teske, 18, was murdered on August 15 ...
In his memoir, Two Evil Isms: Pinkertonism and Anarchism, Pinkerton detective Charlie Siringo wrote, "William A. Pinkerton told me that Tom Horn was guilty of the crime, but that his people could not allow him to go to prison while in their employ". Siringo later indicated that he respected Horn's abilities at tracking, and that he was a very ...
Crime scene photos shown in court show Kyle lying on the dirt in front of an elevated deck from which rifles were fired at targets up to 1,000 yards (3,000 ft; 910 m) away. Littlefield lay on the same deck nearby.
A leak of crime scene photos from the Delphi murders case could threaten to derail the trial of accused killer Richard Allen. Graphic photos of the scene where teenage best friends Libby German ...
From the Ramsey family to pedophiles John Mark Karr and Gary Oliva — Boulder police have investigated numerous suspects in the beauty queen's 1996 murder and made no arrests.
Billy the Axeman [4] (also referred to as the Ax-Man, [5] the Midwest Axeman, [6] and the Man from the Train [3]) was the name of a suspected serial killer thought to be responsible for a series of family murders that occurred mainly in the U.S. Midwest between September 1911 and June 1912.