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On January 20, 2025, The Mercury News wrote that San Francisco police have reiterated multiple times that the death was a suicide. [18] The police have said the investigation is "open and active," and have therefore declined to release further information. [3] As of January 20, 2025, no official documentation of an OCME autopsy has been released.
The release led to the resignation of DNC chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz and an apology to Sanders from the DNC. [309] [310] The New York Times wrote that Assange had timed the release to coincide with the 2016 Democratic National Convention because he believed Clinton had pushed for his indictment and he regarded her as a "liberal war ...
I (Almost) Got Away with It is an American television documentary series on Investigation Discovery.It debuted in 2010, [1] [2] ending after eight seasons, in 2016. The series profiles true stories of people who have committed crimes, and have avoided arrest or capture, but ultimately end up being caught. [3]
Timothy Wilson Spencer (March 17, 1962 – April 27, 1994), also known as The Southside Strangler, was an American serial killer who committed three rapes and murders in Richmond, Virginia, and one in Arlington, Virginia, in the fall of 1987. [1]
Terry Willers, one of the two co-owners of the land, left the cabin and saw Vang sitting in a deer stand. Willers used a handheld radio to ask the people still in the cabin whether or not anyone should be in the stand. Upon receiving a response in the negative, he approached Vang and told him to leave the property and allegedly called Vang ...
Ray was arrested in 2010, [8] and in 2011 convicted of three counts of negligent homicide. [9] [10] He served two years in Arizona state prison and was released under supervision on July 12, 2013. [11] [12] Following his release, Ray re-launched his self-help business. [2]
[57] [72] [71] On December 14, 2005, Cho was released from the mental health facility; after Cho's release, on the same day Virginia Special Justice Paul Barnett certified in an order that Cho "presented an imminent danger to himself as a result of mental illness," and ordered treatment for Cho as an outpatient.
Marion Hugh "Suge" Knight Jr. (/ ʃ ʊ ɡ / SHUUG; born April 19, 1965) [2] is an American record executive, former NFL player, and convicted felon, who is the co-founder and former CEO of Death Row Records.