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Rotten.com was threatened with many lawsuits over the years, mostly in the form of cease and desist notices. These ranged from serious matters, such as requests to remove pictures of dead relatives from the site, to Burlington Coat Factory asking to take down 'trenchcoat.org', a domain bought by Rotten.com as a Trenchcoat Mafia reference, though it simply linked to Burlington Coat Factory's ...
Akron Police Department Detectives James Pasheilich goes through photographs in the case files of murder victim Leslie Barker Wednesday, June 16, 2021 in Akron, Ohio. Barker was murdered in 1978,
The Ohio police department whose officer fatally shot a pregnant woman through her car windshield has released body camera footage of the incident.. The footage captures the moments leading up to ...
In 2003, legislation brought by Ohio Representative Bill Seitz was passed to amend Ohio's wrongful imprisonment statute. [1] In September 2008, two men confessed to the crime and were arrested. [2] In December 2008, one of the men, Chester McKnight, pled guilty and received two life sentences. [1]
Akron police believe the incident was a murder-suicide. Arson is also suspected, according to an APD incident report. The incident and blaze remain under investigation.
The Pike County Shootings, also known as the Pike County Massacre, occurred on the night of April 21–22, 2016, when eight people – all belonging to the Rhoden family – were shot and killed in four homes in Pike County, Ohio, near the village of Peebles, 50 miles (80 km) from Columbus and 60 miles (97 km) from Cincinnati.
Eric Joering and Anthony "Tony" Morelli were police officers who were murdered on February 10, 2018, in Westerville, Ohio after responding to a domestic violence incident. [1] [2] Joering, 39, and Morelli, 54, were shot and killed by Quentin Smith, who had punched and choked his wife, [3] leading to her making a 9-1-1 hangup call. [4]
Over a three-day period between December 24 and December 26, 1992, a juvenile gang, who called themselves the "Downtown Posse", led by the 19-year-old ringleader Marvallous Matthew Keene (July 5, 1973 – July 21, 2009), committed a series of six murders and multiple robberies across Dayton, Ohio.