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At approximately 7:30 a.m. EST on December 22, 2024, [6] [7] on a stationary F train at the Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue station, a man approached the only other passenger on the train car, a woman who was sleeping, [3] [8] using a lighter to set fire to her clothing. The victim became engulfed in flames in a matter of seconds. [9] [10]
Larocque had set various capacities for the Station in the years before the fire based on whether pool tables and other items could be moved. [48] The capacity for the Station was either 258 or 404, depending on how the building was being used. [2] The final tally by The Providence Journal of people inside the Station during the fire totaled ...
The victim in the horrific Dec. 22 caught-on-video arson attack had been so badly scorched that authorities initially struggled to identify her. Cops identify NJ woman as mystery straphanger ...
Women are being incarcerated at a greater rate than men for drug offenses in Latin American countries. [80] Women's involvement in the cartel is noticeably less than males, but they do play an important role nonetheless. Often, because no one would suspect a woman to commit such a serious crime, it makes them the perfect smuggler.
Overlooking women is a mistake, and these women’s stories prove that. This is a lightly edited excerpt from the book "Narcas: The Secret Rise of Women in Latin America's Cartels" by Deborah Bonello.
In her new book, "Narcas: The Secret Rise of Women in Latin America's Cartels," journalist Deborah Bonello introduces readers to the powerful women who run some of the region's most violent and ...
Jose calderon and Alma Guadalupe Ojeda Angulo. [2] She began her criminal career with the Sinaloa Cartel in 2005. Calderón was the leader of the Damaso Cartel, a sub-division of the Sinaloa Cartel, until she was forcibly removed of her rank by cartel leader "El Grande", who killed her first boyfriend, Erick Davalos Von Borstel.
The victim wrote him a $70,000 check for his fake services and later gave him two more payments of $86,000 and $83,000. The con man pretended to be a highly trained special operations veteran. KVUE