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A warrant was issued for her arrest by the federal court on March 23, 2000. Quintanilla is believed to have lived in Fayetteville since 2016, the U.S. Marshal's Service said.
The 1995 Fayetteville murders were the killings of a black couple by white supremacists in Fayetteville, North Carolina, on December 7, 1995. [1] The killers, James Norman Burmeister and Malcolm Wright, were paratroopers at Fort Bragg where Burmeister was reportedly open about his views, and had a Nazi flag hanging in his room.
Wheat had been arrested the day before her death for alleged meth possession. Wheat's cause of death was asphyxiation, according to WLKY, though authorities were unsure how she was able to hang herself. Jail or Agency: Clark County Jail; State: Indiana; Date arrested or booked: 5/7/2016; Date of death: 5/8/2016; Age at death: 30; Sources: www ...
The Eastburn family murders were the murders of Kathryn "Katie" Eastburn and her daughters, Kara and Erin, which occurred in Fayetteville, North Carolina, in May 1985. In 1986, United States Army Sergeant Timothy Hennis was tried and convicted for the three murders. In 1988, Hennis's conviction was overturned on appeal, and he was acquitted the ...
A Fayetteville police officer arrested earlier this month on drug and obstruction charges is accused of providing information to a man wanted on a warrant, according to the charging document.
The Fayetteville area saw its highest homicide rates in recent history in 2023. The victims ranged in age from at least two unborn children to an 82-year-old woman and the cases were reported to ...
City Councilman Braxton Winston was among those arrested May 29. [19] On May 31, 1,500 more protesters in Uptown Charlotte blocked streets, threw fireworks, and assaulted police officers. 25 arrests were made. [20] Several more businesses were vandalized and looted. [21] On June 1, approximately 200 protesters marched in Uptown Charlotte.
On August 6, 1993, 22-year-old Fort Bragg soldier Kenneth Junior French, armed with two shotguns and a rifle, opened fire inside a Luigi's restaurant in Fayetteville, North Carolina, killing four people and injuring seven others. The case was featured in the 1997 documentary film Licensed to Kill. [1] [2]