Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 1976 Mason County jail bombing was a suicide bombing that took place at the Mason County Courthouse in Point Pleasant, West Virginia on March 2, 1976. Five people, including two perpetrators and three law enforcement officers, were killed in the attack, and a further 11 people were injured.
Henri La Masne was a French man who went missing, while he was skiing in the Italian Alps on March 26, 1954, [17] [18] and his body was discovered in Valtournenche, Cime Bianche in 2005 [19] [20] and identified in 2017. Froze to death after being buried underneath snow during a storm 60 years 1954 Honorah Rieper: 45 New Zealand
Category: 1976 murders in the United States. 4 languages. ... Michael Marino (murder victim) 1976 Mason County jail bombing; Sal Mineo; Ernesto Miranda; Ronni Karpen ...
Investigators found the body of a 38-year-old man, the day after his killer pleaded guilty to his murder. Detectives say they have discovered Thursday morning what is believed to be Oscar Munos ...
Murder of 7 members of the Post family by former Army sharpshooter [2] [3] Jeffrey Gorton: Romulus Flint: 1991-02-17 1986-11-09: 2: Convicted of rape and murder of a flight attendant and professor at UM-Flint: Gwendolyn Graham and Cathy Wood: Walker: 1987: 5: Nurses aides who killed five elderly women at Alpine Manor nursing homes: Murder of ...
Oakland County Child Murders: February 1976 – March 1977 10–12 Oakland County, Michigan: Unsolved During a 13-month period, four children (two girls and two boys) were abducted and murdered with their bodies left in various locations in suburban Detroit. Each child was held alive from 4 to 19 days before being killed.
Deblieux's body was discovered four days after the murder, and the police later managed to arrest all four killers responsible. [1] One of the four perpetrators, Louis Mangione, who was 16 at the time of the murder, was given a life sentence, while the remaining three members of the group were sentenced to death for murder.
Missing from Circumstances Refs. 1910 Burt Alvord: 32–33 Central America: An American lawman-turned-outlaw, Alvord had been a Cochise County, Arizona deputy, but had turned to crime—primarily train robbery—by the early 1900s. He was last seen in 1910 working as a Panama Canal employee. Alvord's ultimate fate is unknown. [1]