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1 in custody after attempting to burglarize business overnight in Lincoln Park
L.Thompson19 min ago
A burglar was taken into custody after he attempted to run after breaking into a Lincoln Park business with two others who got away, Chicago police said. Shortly after 3:30 a.m. Friday, three people removed the front door of a business in the 2600 block of North Halsted Street, but responding officers arrived on the scene before they were able to go inside, police said. Before the officers exited their vehicle, a gray Infiniti sedan crashed into the squad car, and fled south on Halsted. Two burglars fled in a second vehicle, possibly a Jeep, going north on Halsted. One of the burglars tried to escape on foot, but was caught and arrested at the scene. Charges were pending and detectives were investigating. WARNING: This story contains graphic details of an alleged murder in a sexual context.Nikolas Ibey — on trial for first-degree murder in the death of a woman who had just moved to Ottawa from Nunavut to attend college in 2022 — was drinking, taking drugs, and had been frustrated in his efforts to find an escort "for eight hours straight" before he finally took what he wanted from his new housemate and left her dead in her room, the Crown alleged in its opening remarks to a 14-member jury on Wedn When Daniel Penny wrapped his arm around the neck of a homeless man on a Manhattan subway last year, the 25-year-old veteran appeared to be deploying a non-lethal chokehold long drilled into U.S. Marines. Done right, the maneuver should knock a person out without killing them, according to Joseph Caballer, a combat instructor in the Marine Corps who trained Penny in several types of holds. Prosecutors allege that Penny "went way too far" in his attempt to restrain Neely, showing an "indifference" toward his life even after he had lost consciousness and stopped fighting back. Jamey Noel may have been the most corrupt sheriff in America. His trail of arrogance and greed stunned his relatives, townsfolk, a special judge and a special prosecutor. He admitted to stealing millions in public money for himself. He was dubbed "the most powerful man in southern Indiana," the prosecutor tells Inside Edition Digital's Deborah Hastings. "I do believe you are a sociopath," his former sister-in-law said. "I absolutely wish the worst for you."
Read the full article:https://www.yahoo.com/news/1-custody-attempting-burglarize-business-175500014.html
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