Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In March 2007, a combined Federal, state and local law enforcement team disrupted a large dog fighting network in Dayton, Ohio which was operating in Ohio, Kentucky, and Michigan. The investigation of the operation based in Montgomery County, Ohio had lasted a year. More than two dozen arrests were made and more than 60 dogs were seized.
The Bad Newz dog fighting investigation began in April 2007 with a search of property in Surry County, Virginia, owned by Atlanta Falcons' football quarterback Michael Vick, and the subsequent discovery of evidence of a dog fighting ring in Newport News, Virginia. Over 70 dogs, mostly pit bull terriers, with some said to be showing signs of ...
[5] Late April/early May - Vick listed the house and property with a real estate brokerage at approximately 50% of the assessed value. Within a few days, the house was under a sales contract. [6] As of June 8, no sale had been made official, according to the county clerk's office where deeds and transfers of real estate are recorded. [2]
A Cuyahoga County appeals court tasked Ohio’s highest court with deciding if pets should be treated the same as strays in […] Stray dogs and cats legally protected from abuse, Ohio Supreme ...
Family members of inmates at the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center told the media and Richland County Council about the conditions that their loved ones experience inside the troubled jail.
These mugshots pretty much speak for themselves. In the world of crime, sometimes a criminal's mugshot is just as outrageous or even more so than their crime.
Florida v. Harris, 568 U.S. 237 (2013), was a case in which the United States Supreme Court addressed the reliability of a dog sniff by a detection dog trained to identify narcotics, under the specific context of whether law enforcement's assertions that the dog is trained or certified is sufficient to establish probable cause for a search of a vehicle under the Fourth Amendment to the United ...
[64] [65] Police body camera footage of the arrest was posted to social media and falsely labeled as an arrest in Springfield. [64] [66] Like the Columbus man, the Canton woman had no connection to Haiti or Springfield. [62] [64] [66] [2] The woman was later sentenced to twelve months in prison in relation to the case. [67]