ETA: the stabber, I mean.
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schattupon |
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You might be in a perfect position to stab him in the brain.
ETA: the stabber, I mean. "What went wrong was everything."
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humperdinck |
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Quiche Lorraine wrote:
humperdinck
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Majungatholus |
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Whimper!
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Glenda Yenta |
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platoshrimp wrote: This is the first I've heard of the concrete slab. Grandma must be a sociopath too.
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Nancois |
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I have a sort of morbid fascination with the Caylee saga too. That footage of the mother being led in handcuffs (wearing a blue shirt & jeans), she looked
to me like she was enjoying the attention & not taking it seriously. And that grandmother is a piece of work. When she's not failing at stringing 2
words together, she stares like Jack Nicholson in The Shining. Very shady.
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platoshrimp |
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All I know is that forensic dogs were reported to sniff cadaver scent from under the newly poured concrete slab at the grandparents' house. So what is the
problem? Get the warrant and start digging.
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Dottie Hinkle |
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Seems if airline passengers are screened for weapons, any passenger on any commercial carrier should be screened - or are lives more important at 40K feet?
What if he stabbed and decapitated the driver?
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Dottie Hinkle |
Bus attacker turns is Hannibal Lector | ||
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Who knew the slasher had an appetite for his handiwork?
Man who beheaded bus seat mate defiled body, police tape says STORY HIGHLIGHTS Officers detail killer's actions in tape of radio transmissions leaked on Internet Vince Weiguang Li, 40, faces murder charges in death of Tim McLean, 22 Li's employer says he's shocked that "model employee" accused of grisly attack Victim was "a little guy with a heart bigger than you could know," uncle says A police officer at the scene of a grisly beheading on a Canadian bus reported seeing the attacker hacking off pieces of the victim's body and eating them, according to a police tape leaked on the Internet Saturday. With family nearby, Alex McLean talks about his slain nephew Saturday in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. In the tape of radio transmissions, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer refers to the attacker as "Badger" and says he is armed with a knife and scissors and is "defiling the body at the front of the bus as we speak." On the tape, which lasts about 80 seconds, officers continue to detail the attacker's movements until one reports, "Badger's at the back of the bus, hacking off pieces and eating it." The RCMP described the tapes as "operational police communications and, as such, are not meant for public consumption." Police said permission had not been given to use the radio transmission, which was posted on LiveLeak.com and picked up by other Web sites. Officers were responding to a desolate stretch of the TransCanada Highway about 12 miles from Portage La Prairie, Manitoba, after the bloody attack late Wednesday on the bus traveling from Edmonton, Alberta, to Winnipeg, Manitoba. Vince Weiguang Li, 40, faces second-degree murder charges for the slaying of a 22-year-old man, whom friends and family identified as Tim McLean. Police have not confirmed the victim's identity. Passengers said they had just reboarded the bus after a break when the suspect -- for no apparent reason -- stabbed the man sitting next to him dozens of times as passengers fled in horror. He then severed the man's head, displayed it and began hacking at the body. Li's employer said in an interview Saturday that he was shocked to learn that his "model employee" had been accused of the grisly attack. Vincent Augert, an independent contractor who distributes newspapers in Edmonton, said that Li was one of his most reliable carriers. "He was very punctual and always cleanly dressed," he told The Associated Press. "He was a very nice, polite guy. We would've had no reason to let him go before all this happened." Augert said Li had worked for him since last July and caused no problems. "I had no odd suspicions about him at all," Augert said. Augert said that Li called him two weeks ago to say he needed a day or two off to go to Winnipeg for a job interview at the end of July. He said Li called him back and left a message with the dates, but never followed up after that. "That was unusual for him not to call back, and then when he didn't show up for work on Tuesday, we got worried," said Augert, who said it was sometimes difficult to understand Li because he spoke quickly and had a strong Chinese accent. Augert said he called Li's cell phone Thursday, and his wife answered. She told him that she hadn't heard from Li, who had told her he had to leave for a few days because of a family emergency. Li, who shuffled into a courtroom Friday in Portage La Prairie with his head bowed and feet shackled, appeared before the court without a lawyer. He did not reply when the judge asked him whether he was going to get a lawyer, and only nodded slightly when asked whether he was exercising his right not to speak. He was not required to enter a plea. The prosecutor asked for a psychiatric assessment, but the judge said he wanted to give Li a chance to meet with his lawyer. Li's next court appearance is scheduled for Tuesday. The RCMP said Li has no known criminal record. McLean's family spoke publicly Saturday for the first time since the brutal attack. "He was a little guy with a heart bigger than you could know," McLean's uncle, Alex McLean, told reporters in a prepared statement from the family. "Tim spent his life traveling and meeting new people and always saw the good in everyone. He had the most infectious giggle. You could hear him laughing a mile away," said Alex McLean. "It didn't matter what kind of a day you were having, because when you heard him laugh, you couldn't help but join in." William Caron, 23, said McLean was quiet, though he liked to socialize with friends. He was small -- about 5-foot-4 and 130 pounds -- and tended to stay away from a fight, Caron said. "All the time I've known Tim, he's never been the type of guy to get into a fight with. He always kept to himself when there's strangers around," Caron said. The killing has spawned a vast online community, with tens of thousands showing support for McLean's family and expressing disgust for the attack. |
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platoshrimp |
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Everytime I see the picture hump posted, I think about that mustard commercial. "Excuse me, do you have any brown poupon?"
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jane1958 |
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Have you been following the missing Caylee girl down in FL and the goings on with the mother and grandmother?? See i don't think she is dead, I think the stupid mother sold her to someone, and the person she sold her to can't afford to come forward because they will be arrested. |
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GregBuisIsADick |
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I took the train home last night and midway through the trip I thought of standing up with a crazed glint in my eye and screaming, "HAS ANYBODY SEEN MY
HUGE HUNTING SLASH STABBING SLASH BEHEADING KNIFE???" Then I'd say, "Nah, I'm just fucking with ya, ha ha ha." Once the commotion died
down, I'd whip out a real hunting knife and say, "OR AM I???"
I didn't do any of those things, though. |
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lordoftheprance |
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You mean people will buy children?
Suddenly the neighbor problem is a fiscal opportunity!
The preceding message was a paid advertisement for Buns of Steel.
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buy one get one free |
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Here is a story that pretty much sums up the story pretty well
Caylee Anthony, shown here in this undated photo, went missing in early June. Yet we're also taken with the darker side: A young mother who waited 31 days to report the girl missing and then, detectives say, lied about crucial details. Although the story is hashed out before a national audience nearly every day -- Caylee Anthony's grandparents are staples on network TV -- there's little new evidence. "We know that time is the enemy in these cases," said Ernie Allen, president of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. "With Caylee, we're trying very hard to keep hope alive." Caylee, who was reported missing July 15, has seemingly vanished. Detectives and family members hope she will be home by Saturday, her third birthday.
Late Wednesday, detectives carried four bags of evidence out of the Anthony family home but would not say what was inside. A dive team was to scour lakes and retention ponds Friday, although officials say the searches are part of routine monthly training. Caylee's mother, Casey Anthony, is being held on $500,000 bond, charged with just a third-degree felony, child neglect, and one misdemeanor count of filing a false police report. Don't MissIn Orlando, people are frustrated Caylee hasn't been found and angry at how her mother has conducted herself in court hearings and on taped jail calls.
Radio talk show hosts call for Anthony's execution -- never mind that she hasn't been charged in the girl's disappearance. Visitors to Internet sites say Anthony should be taken out of her solitary jail cell so other inmates can "give her a good beat-down." "She's got something to do with it," said 28-year-old Jeff Sutton, who was standing outside the jail this week watching a dozen TV cameras prepare for the arrival of Casey Anthony's mother. "I see (Anthony) as mean, disrespectful, a child abuser. And selfish." Anthony's attorney, Jose Baez, describes his client's accusers as a "lynch mob." "Out the window went the presumption of innocence and a right to a fair trial," he said. Anthony gave birth to Caylee on August 9, 2005, when she was 19. She declined to put the father's name on the birth certificate. About a year later, he died in a car crash and was buried out of state. Casey Anthony did not attend the funeral, said her brother, Lee Anthony. Family members say he never knew he was the father. Mother and baby lived in Casey Anthony's childhood home east of Walt Disney World in suburban Orlando, in an ivory-colored ranch flanked by two palm trees with a basketball hoop in the driveway. By all accounts, Cindy and George Anthony were more like parents than grandparents to Caylee, who loved SpongeBob, swimming and her miniature tea set. And while Casey Anthony had several boyfriends and worked sporadically as a product promotion representative in bars, clubs and restaurants, she was a good
mother, friends and family say. A high school dropout, she had no criminal record. Officials at Florida's child welfare agency said they were never called about possible abuse or neglect in the Anthony home. Lee Anthony said Casey left town with Caylee on June 16 for work and vacation. Almost five weeks later, on July 24, Cindy Anthony dialed 911. "I found out my granddaughter has been taken, she has been missing for a month, we're talking about a 3-year-old little girl ... I need to find her," a frantic Cindy Anthony said. "I found my daughter's car today and it smells like there's a dead body in the damn car." Cindy Anthony said she hadn't seen the girl since mid-June. The dispatcher asked to speak to Casey Anthony. "Why are you calling now?" the dispatcher asked. "Why didn't you call 31 days ago?" Her reply: "I've been looking for her and gone through other resources to find her. Which was stupid." Casey Anthony told Orange County sheriff's deputies she left her child in an apartment June 9 with a nanny. But investigators say the apartment had been empty for several months. Other troubling details emerged: A neighbor told detectives Anthony had asked to borrow a shovel some time in June. Her father said she had stolen two gas cans from the garage and refused to let him get something from the trunk of her car. A boyfriend said she never told him in June that Caylee was missing. Cadaver-sniffing dogs detected a scent in Casey's car, and hair, dirt and a strange stain were found in the trunk. Investigators are still awaiting FBI tests on evidence from the car. Detectives are amazed Casey has kept her composure under questioning, never crying or showing emotion. "Her demeanor has been, for lack of a better word, nonchalant," says Deputy Chief Carlos Padilla. "She's shown no remorse, no concern." On the night she was arrested, a family friend asked, in a recorded jail call: "How come everybody's saying that you're not upset, that you're not crying, that you showed no emotion, no caring of where Caylee is at all?" "Because I'm not sitting here f------ crying every two seconds. Because I have to stay composed to talk to detectives, to make other phone calls, to do other things. I can't sit here and be crying every two seconds like I want to. I can't." Baez said his client is innocent and "has a very compelling reason for her actions and we will present them at the proper time and place." Meanwhile, Anthony's parents and brother still hope Caylee will be home for her birthday. "That's what we'd love to see happen," Lee Anthony said
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lordoftheprance |
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I heard Greyhound pulled some of their Canadian ads after the incident. I want to know why they needed to pull ads after a decapitation. Did they depict a
Canadian woodsman holding an axe?
The preceding message was a paid advertisement for Buns of Steel.
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CrayZHorse |
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What really chills me to the bone is wondering what made a seemingly normal, likeable fellow suddenly go off the deep end like that?
"Eat pork rinds, Eat dead pigs! Eat pork rinds, Eat dead pigs!"
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humperdinck |
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lordoftheprance wrote:
humperdinck
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