Sunday, May 31, 2009

Father accused of shaking infant bonds out of jail (Bradenton, FL)

 

"Currently, he has to be supervised when he is with the baby"--who is still in hospital by the way. And why does this guy get to visit his victim in the hospital? Did the baby request visitation?

http://www.bradenton.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/story/1474987.html

Father accused of shaking infant bonds out of jail

By BETH BURGER - bburger@bradenton.com

MANATEE — A 28-year-old man bonded out of jail Saturday on a $4,000 bond after he allegedly shook his 4-month-old daughter in frustration.

Zenaido Baltazar of Bradenton was arrested Friday by Manatee County Sheriff’s Office deputies after he reportedly confessed to shaking the child in frustration about a month ago, according to an arrest report.

The child remains hospitalized at All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg, according to court proceedings Saturday.

Zenaido Baltazar

Quantcast

A doctor noted the baby’s injuries are consistent with being shaken, said Judge Doug Henderson in court.

Baltazar will have to go before the court on Monday for a shelter review to determine where the child should be placed, according to Child Protection Services caseworkers.

Currently, he has to be supervised when he is with the baby.

If the child is released from the hospital, she will be released to the mother.

Baltazar faces charges of aggravated child abuse for shaking the baby and child neglect for not following up with a call to 911 when the baby reacted from the April 29 incident, Henderson said.

According to the report, he told investigators the baby was crying and he shook the child for about 30 seconds until her arms went straight out and limp.

Baltazar has no prior record.

Beth Burger, criminal justice reporter, can be reached at 708-7919.

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Thursday, May 21, 2009

Curt Brungardt (Jana Mackey’s step father) Rally urged Governor to veto provision t0 divert funds from Planned Parenthood

Archive for Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Governor urged to veto provision that would divert funds from Planned Parenthood

Parkinson urged to veto budget provision cutting $300,000 from organization

By Scott Rothschild

May 19, 2009

Topeka — Gov. Mark Parkinson was urged Tuesday to veto a budget provision that would divert away from Planned Parenthood about $300,000 in federal funds for family planning services.

About 25 people rallied outside the Capitol and then delivered to Parkinson’s office a petition signed by 3,000 Kansans in support of birth control, sex education, family planning and emergency contraception.

Curt Brungardt, the stepfather of Jana Mackey, who was murdered in 2008 by her ex-boyfriend, speaks Tuesday to a group outside the Capitol in Topeka, urging Gov. Mark Parkinson to veto a provision that would divert approximately $300,000 in federal funds away from Planned Parenthood. The provision was put into the budget by lawmakers who oppose abortion.

Photo by Scott Rothschild

Curt Brungardt, the stepfather of Jana Mackey, who was murdered in 2008 by her ex-boyfriend, speaks Tuesday to a group outside the Capitol in Topeka, urging Gov. Mark Parkinson to veto a provision that would divert approximately $300,000 in federal funds away from Planned Parenthood. The provision was put into the budget by lawmakers who oppose abortion.

Holly Weatherford, a lobbyist for Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri, said that without the funding, the organization’s clinic in Hays may have to shut down, and its clinic in Wichita will have to turn away women from getting basic health care services.

Pedro Irigonegaray, a Topeka attorney, said the de-funding provision was an affront to equal rights for women.

“In order to have freedom, we need people to step up to the plate and say, ‘I’m not indifferent,’” he said.

Curt Brungardt, the stepfather of Jana Mackey, a Lawrence resident and avid women’s rights advocate who was murdered in 2008 by her ex-boyfriend, also spoke at the rally, urging a veto of the provision.

“What Jana taught me is that issues of women are all about equality,” said Brungardt, who is a professor at Fort Hays State University. The National Organization for Women also participated in the rally.

The proposal was put in the budget in the last moments of the legislative session by lawmakers who oppose abortion.

“There is simply no reason in the world why the taxpayer dollars of hundreds of thousands of pro-life Kansans should be used to underwrite abortion providers in this state, particularly those under criminal indictment and investigation,” said state Sen. Tim Huelskamp, R-Fowler, one of the authors of the budget provision.

Huelskamp was referring to a case filed by former Johnson County District Attorney Phill Kline against Planned Parenthood in Overland Park that includes 107 charges of falsifying abortion records and performing illegal late-term abortions. Planned Parenthood denies the accusations.

Those at the rally noted that the federal funding at issue cannot be used for abortions. The Planned Parenthood clinic in Overland Park is the only one that does abortions, and it receives no share of those federal funds, Weatherford said.

But Mary Kay Culp, executive director of Kansans for Life, urged Parkinson to allow the provision to become law, saying that it would redirect the $300,000 to public clinics and hospitals.

“Especially in an era of drastic funding problems for state hospitals and ‘safety net’ clinics, why in the world should a highly profitable private abortion business gobble up our tax money?” Culp asked.

Jeanne Gawdun, of Kansans for Life, said Planned Parenthood’s distribution of contraceptives encouraged sexual activity, and when the contraception failed, it resulted in more abortions.

“They’re in the business of selling abortions,” she said.

Weatherford, with Planned Parenthood, however, said the organization was a trusted provider of family planning and reproductive services. The group helps more than 10,000 low-income, under-insured and uninsured women per year in Kansas, she said.

Parkinson’s office declined to say what the governor would do about the provision. He received the budget bill on Friday and has until Monday to act on it.

Order Your Book Today! An Incredible Year, 2007-08 KU Jayhawks Season, Officially licensed by the University of Kansas.

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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Fixing SRS - A KAKE News Special Report

Fixing SRS - A KAKE News Special Report

Fixing SRS - A KAKE News Special Report

Reporter: Deb Farris
Email Address: deb.farris@kake.com

70 comments


Fixing SRS - A KAKE News Special Report


Every year SRS gets 53,000 reports of Kansas children being abused or neglected. In hundreds of those cases, the kids are taken from their homes and placed in foster care. Some families and state lawmakers are questioning the motives of the foster care program and whether it can be fixed.

State lawmakers inundated with complaints about the SRS foster care system want answers. A special committee has been set up to investigate as families come forward wondering how their kids ended up in the system.

Kathy Winters brings her memories to the Kansas statehouse, pleading for help from lawmakers.

"I don't take anything for granted. I pray every day that someone will listen to us," said Winters as she walked up the steps to the Capitol building in Topeka last week.

For more than a year Winters cared for two of her grandsons, Caleb and Wyatt, after SRS removed them from their mother. Then, last year, SRS took the boys from Winters and placed them into foster care.

"It has devastated my family," she says. "It has torn us apart."

SRS claims Winters lost the boys because of poor communication, not complying with visitation requirements and problems getting them proper medical treatment. Winters, however, believes the foster care system is broken. She claims it's a system driven by greed.

"The real reason is they make more money from the children if they do have them in foster care and if they adopt them out," she said.

SRS contracts with private agencies to run the foster care system. According to SRS records, the state paid $153,000,000 in 2009 to the contractors who place kids in foster care. There is also a monthly case rate paid for each child that is in foster care.

"I'm hoping this hasn't become a money making proposition on the backs of our children," said State Senator Julia Lynn of Johnson County.

Complaints from Winters and hundreds of other families got the attention of Senator Lynn and Representative Mike Kiegerl.

"There has been some progress made, but i still see some difficulties and I still get a lot of complaints," said Kiegerl.

They head the Children's Services Committee, and they are investigating the complaints.

"I don't care what we spend, but if we are spending a lot of money and I'm asking 'What do we get for the money?' and the answer is that things are better than they used to be... That's what the secretary told us last time and that's not good enough for me," said Kiegerl.

We, too, went to SRS Secretary Don Jordan for answers. He told us the number of kids coming into foster care has dropped 14 percent since January of last year. He says his goal is to keep all kids with their families.

"One of the things I'm most proud of is that, in the foster care system, 91% of our children live in a family home, either with a relative or family resource home," said Jordan.

Jordan says the private contractors who handle foster care are subject to intense questioning before they are hired and he says they are all not-for-profit agencies.

"If they demonstrated they were only in it for the money, they wouldn't be doing the job," Jordan told us. "That's why we measure their performance."

Jordan says he's working with lawmakers on becoming better and he welcomes the investigation.

"I believe in us being as transparent as an agency and I welcome scrutiny. We don't have anything to hide," he claims.

Winters, the grandmother who lost her children, is hoping her fight is not forgotten. Her goal is to not only get her grandkids back, but to send a strong message to all the families she's fighting for.

"I will never give up," she said. "There is not one person in this world that will make me give up."

Lawmakers have already ordered a post audit report on Children Services. It's expected to be finished this summer. Already, committee hearings on foster care are scheduled for this fall. KAKE News will continue to follow this story and bring you the latest as it happens.

Technorati Tags: KAKE,News,Special,Report,Reporter,Farris,Email,comments,reports,Kansas,children,cases,kids,Some,State,system,committee,Kathy,Winters,memories,steps,Capitol,Topeka,Caleb,Wyatt,communication,requirements,problems,treatment,money,records,proposition,Senator,Julia,Lynn,Johnson,attention,Representative,Mike,Kiegerl,Services,secretary,Jordan,January,goal,resource,subject,performance,investigation,agency,scrutiny,message,person,world,Already,lawmakers,complaints,agencies,contractors,hundreds

Kansas ‘Mothers Day’ File Federal Suits, May 11, 2009

“Exactly two years two the very day “Mothers day”- of the   filing of the Petition at the Inter American Commission Human Rights- Human Rights Violations for the practice and policy of courts routinely placing Battered Mothers children with the abusers. (still pending) however the Jessica Gonzales Case set the precedent (simulcast in 15 languages October 2008) for the upcoming Human Rights Petition” viewed in its entirety on the Stop Family Violence Dombrowski et al v US 2007

May 11, 2009

Dombrowski v. Richardson et al
KS
Lungstrum
Other Civil Rights
Diversity-Personal Injury

Plaintiff: Claudine Dombrowski Defendant: Hal Richardson, Shawnee County District Court

 

Gerow v. Gerow
KS
Murguia
Other Civil Rights
Fed. Question

Plaintiff: Melody L. Gerow Defendant: George D. Gerow

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Saturday, May 16, 2009

Kansas ‘Mothers Day’ File Federal Suits, May 11, 2009

“Exactly two years two the very day “Mothers day”- of the   filing of the Petition at the Inter American Commission Human Rights- Human Rights Violations for the practice and policy of courts routinely placing Battered Mothers children with the abusers. (still pending) however the Jessica Gonzales Case set the precedent (simulcast in 15 languages October 2008) for the upcoming Human Rights Petition” viewed in its entirety on the Stop Family Violence Dombrowski et al v US 2007

May 11, 2009

Dombrowski v. Richardson et al
KS
Lungstrum
Other Civil Rights
Diversity-Personal Injury

Plaintiff: Claudine Dombrowski Defendant: Hal Richardson, Shawnee County District Court

 

Gerow v. Gerow
KS
Murguia
Other Civil Rights
Fed. Question

Plaintiff: Melody L. Gerow Defendant: George D. Gerow

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Friday, May 15, 2009

Fixing SRS - A KAKE News Special Report

Fixing SRS - A KAKE News Special Report

Reporter: Deb Farris
Email Address: deb.farris@kake.com

70 comments


Fixing SRS - A KAKE News Special Report


Every year SRS gets 53,000 reports of Kansas children being abused or neglected. In hundreds of those cases, the kids are taken from their homes and placed in foster care. Some families and state lawmakers are questioning the motives of the foster care program and whether it can be fixed.

State lawmakers inundated with complaints about the SRS foster care system want answers. A special committee has been set up to investigate as families come forward wondering how their kids ended up in the system.

Kathy Winters brings her memories to the Kansas statehouse, pleading for help from lawmakers.

"I don't take anything for granted. I pray every day that someone will listen to us," said Winters as she walked up the steps to the Capitol building in Topeka last week.

For more than a year Winters cared for two of her grandsons, Caleb and Wyatt, after SRS removed them from their mother. Then, last year, SRS took the boys from Winters and placed them into foster care.

"It has devastated my family," she says. "It has torn us apart."

SRS claims Winters lost the boys because of poor communication, not complying with visitation requirements and problems getting them proper medical treatment. Winters, however, believes the foster care system is broken. She claims it's a system driven by greed.

"The real reason is they make more money from the children if they do have them in foster care and if they adopt them out," she said.

SRS contracts with private agencies to run the foster care system. According to SRS records, the state paid $153,000,000 in 2009 to the contractors who place kids in foster care. There is also a monthly case rate paid for each child that is in foster care.

"I'm hoping this hasn't become a money making proposition on the backs of our children," said State Senator Julia Lynn of Johnson County.

Complaints from Winters and hundreds of other families got the attention of Senator Lynn and Representative Mike Kiegerl.

"There has been some progress made, but i still see some difficulties and I still get a lot of complaints," said Kiegerl.

They head the Children's Services Committee, and they are investigating the complaints.

"I don't care what we spend, but if we are spending a lot of money and I'm asking 'What do we get for the money?' and the answer is that things are better than they used to be... That's what the secretary told us last time and that's not good enough for me," said Kiegerl.

We, too, went to SRS Secretary Don Jordan for answers. He told us the number of kids coming into foster care has dropped 14 percent since January of last year. He says his goal is to keep all kids with their families.

"One of the things I'm most proud of is that, in the foster care system, 91% of our children live in a family home, either with a relative or family resource home," said Jordan.

Jordan says the private contractors who handle foster care are subject to intense questioning before they are hired and he says they are all not-for-profit agencies.

"If they demonstrated they were only in it for the money, they wouldn't be doing the job," Jordan told us. "That's why we measure their performance."

Jordan says he's working with lawmakers on becoming better and he welcomes the investigation.

"I believe in us being as transparent as an agency and I welcome scrutiny. We don't have anything to hide," he claims.

Winters, the grandmother who lost her children, is hoping her fight is not forgotten. Her goal is to not only get her grandkids back, but to send a strong message to all the families she's fighting for.

"I will never give up," she said. "There is not one person in this world that will make me give up."

Lawmakers have already ordered a post audit report on Children Services. It's expected to be finished this summer. Already, committee hearings on foster care are scheduled for this fall. KAKE News will continue to follow this story and bring you the latest as it happens.

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Sympathy For The Abuser

Sympathy For The Abuser

With the recent report from "The Code of Silence", pride and denial raises its head as the football team bombards the Australian Community with their macho rhetoric on the right to rape and shame their victims. They couldn't get out of the fact that they had participated in some type of sex, so "She Consented" has become the starting point of a major attack on women that dared to speak out against their actions. In some headlines, this has been labeled as "group sex" and a sympathy parade has gone out to support a man who participated in it.
The women known as "Clare" had suffered from post natal depression after being treated like a doll by six men. "group sex" usually defines a group of equal numbers in sex, but in this experience it was 6 males against one 19 year old girl. With or without consent, this was a slaughter on one young women.
She consented to two of them whilst the others intruded upon her body.
Charmyne Palavi bravely spoke out about her experience of date rape by one of the football players and how difficult it is to report considering their fame and support. Whilst she has been a willing participant of the scene and the men that she had dated, this act was one of many outrages experienced by female supporters of football that were not consented to. She spoke out against the exploitation of girls as young as 16 who were taken by these footballers. Since the episode went to air on four corners, hate groups and degrading attacks have been launched against them within the media and online.
It does not matter whether a women is beautiful, ugly, elegent, plain, black, white, rich or poor - It is the message that is important. As human beings we all have floors and they are often raised when a greater injustice has occurred. Audre Lorde stated, "To degrade someone, even with that person's expressed consent is to endorse the degradation of persons. It is to affirm that the abuse of persons is acceptable.
It is certainly true in this circumstance and evidential in the media that condones violence against women whether it be apart of a religion, sub culture or way of life - there is no reason why it is acceptable. Federal Sports Minister Kate Ellis said in nine news report, "The group sex session involving rugby league personality Matther Johns was predatory, degrading and offensive". A poll currently shows more support for the man who took part in the group. Add your vote here.

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3 Dead in Apparent Double Murder-Suicide in Texas

3 Dead in Apparent Double Murder-Suicide in Texas

Thursday, May 14, 2009

LEAGUE CITY, http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,520140,00.html

Texas —  Police say a couple and their son are dead after an apparent double murder-suicide in a Houston suburb.

Authorities on Wednesday night found the bodies of Lewis Cantrell III, his father, Lewis Cantrell II, and stepmother, Gayle Cantrell.

Sgt. John Jordan with the League City Police Department tells the Houston Chronicle that a .38 caliber pistol was found near the younger man's body.

Jordan says two other siblings were in the house when they heard gunfire, prompting them to run to a neighbor's house and call 911.

League City is located between Houston and Galveston.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Man accused of murder wife while they scuba-dived on their honeymoon

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Man accused of murder wife while they scuba-dived on their honeymoon

Australian authorities allege that David Gabriel "Gabe" Watson turned off his wife's air and held her underwater until she died back in 2003. He's since remarried, and he denies the allegation.

Hat Tip: Many thanks, goshel!

Posted by James Hart on Wednesday, May 13, 2009 at 02:33 PM in Homicides - Other | Permalink

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Tragic Santa Clara County custody case:Dad suspected in girl's death

 

http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_12363628

Tragic Santa Clara County custody case: Dad suspected in girl's death

By Karen de Sá

Mercury News

Posted: 05/13/2009 06:31:55 PM PDT

Updated: 05/13/2009 10:20:15 PM PDT

Powerless and tormented, a Campbell mother awaits the story her daughter's bones will tell.

The remains of Alycia Augusta Mesiti-Allen, 14 when she vanished in August 2006, are now in the hands of toxicologists and coroners. Since March, when cadaver-sniffing dogs found her body buried in the unkempt yard of her father's former Central Valley home, detectives have scoured for evidence from the girl's petite frame.

Those detectives say the clues point to her father, Mark Edward Mesiti, as a suspect in her death and say an arrest is imminent. With a lengthy criminal past, the 41-year-old was still granted custody of Alycia and her older brother in Santa Clara County Superior Court less than a year before the girl went missing.

The death of the smiling teen, who loved horses and Shakira, lays bare the intractable choices that family court judges face every day, but the tragic outcome has everyone who worked on Alycia's case looking back wondering what more could have been done.

The family's legal history is a tangle of allegations traded through restraining orders and court filings. A court investigator described Roberta Allen, now 39, as an unfit mother who had battled with depression. But Alycia's father is now being held on $500,000 bail in a Los Angeles County jail on unrelated charges of child endangerment and running a methamphetamine lab.

Ceres police say they no longer believe Mesiti's story that the girl ran away during a camping trip with friends and her pet Chihuahua. "Dad's story was he was getting phone calls periodically" from the missing girl, said Sgt. James Robbins. "But it doesn't appear she ever left the house."

Alycia and her brother, now 19 and in the military, were placed in Mesiti's care by the family court in November 2005. During the previous seven years, court records show, Mesiti had been convicted of state and federal charges, including bank fraud and drunken driving. He also was charged with domestic violence and ordered to attend anger-management classes after pleading guilty to a lesser charge. After failing to comply with court orders to attend drug- and alcohol-treatment programs, he landed in prison for violating probation.

Danger signs

Nonetheless, Roberta Allen described her years-long legal battle as "very angled toward Mark. I couldn't afford an attorney. He had one."

And over the nine months the children lived with their father before Alycia disappeared, police and child welfare workers fielded repeated warnings of danger in their single-family home in a neat, unremarkable Ceres suburb. Beginning in 2005, the children's court-appointed lawyer, Jonnie Herring, reported her concerns, recommending only a supervised, temporary placement with Mesiti due to "sufficient issues and risks to these minors." In 2006, she reported that Mesiti had failed to comply with court orders to enroll his children in school and remain in touch.

"I am deeply concerned about both minors, especially Alycia," Herring wrote in a report to Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Vincent Chiarello.

Allen said she also reported that the children were often hungry, subject to abuse, and unable to call their mother despite her court-ordered visitation and contact rights. Local police confirm they made visits to the home.

Clearly, the family court had a complex case on its hands with few ideal options when Judge Chiarello granted Mesiti custody. The legal battle had raged for eight years without resolution. The children had been bounced between aunts and grandparents and, in a reflection of the case's complexity, the judge appointed Herring to grant them an independent voice in court. Their parents had gone through mediation, counseling and psychological evaluations.

"There were a lot of issues with both parents," said Scott Sagaria, a San Jose attorney who represented Mesiti in claims his client made against Allen — including that she'd attempted suicide and once hit her son. Noting attorney-client privilege limited his ability to discuss the case, Sagaria added: "There was a lot of conduct by the mother in the case where, in my opinion, the court had very little alternative."

Calls to Mesiti's public defender in his Los Angeles case have gone unanswered.

'No good options'

Chiarello, too, has declined to comment. But Supervising Family Court Judge Susan Bernardini, who spoke only in generalities and not specifically on the Mesiti case, described the difficulty of serving on her bench. "Cases with no good options are a centerpiece of being a judge in family court," she said. "We have to make a decision no one else will make."

In the case of a tragic outcome, she added, "You wonder and you look back and you always say: Is there anything anyone could have done?"

Allen, a former assembly worker now working for a restaurant, was deemed unfit by the court. She had made a frank admission to feeling depressed after what she described as years of persecution by her children's father. Before Chiarello's decision, records show, Allen told the court she had fled multiple states to get away from Mesiti and even to Canada, where she and the children stayed in battered women's shelters.

But while Mesiti's court filings were formal, typed responses from his private attorney, Allen's pleading letters to judges were handwritten. She reluctantly agreed to sign off on the custody order — in large part, she says, because she could not afford to raise the children without the child-support payments Mesiti had been ordered to make.

"There were plenty of red flags going up all over the place," she said, "but they wouldn't see them."

When Alycia disappeared in 2006, Allen said she never believed the girl had simply run off. "I knew in my heart of hearts that she was gone, but no one would listen to me. I was fighting with police, saying 'She's not a runaway, she's a missing person!' " Allen recalled. "But the police stopped taking my calls. They said, 'She'll come home, she'll come home.' "

And so for 2 1/2 years, Allen went mad with worry. Alycia's disappearance was not elevated to a homicide investigation until the longtime detective on the case retired and Sgt. Robbins, the Ceres investigations supervisor, ordered up a fresh round of interviews.

Robbins declined to give specifics because the case is still pending, but he said those interviews turned up "detailed information we didn't have the first time." Police obtained a search warrant for Mesiti's former home on Alexis Court, which he is said to have abandoned a few months after Alycia vanished.

The case broke open with the discovery of Alycia's remains. Within days, police burst into Mesiti's Los Angeles apartment and say they found evidence of a meth lab. Now, he and the girlfriend he had lived with in Ceres face a series of court hearings on drug and child-endangerment charges; the girlfriend's 12-year-old daughter had been living with the couple when they were arrested March 28.

Girl's memorial

Mesiti was in jail when his daughter's memorial was held last month in a Cupertino chapel. During the service, a lifetime of classic childhood moments beamed from photos spanning her short decade-and-a-half: Alycia mugging in an oversized T-shirt, stirring a pot of macaroni and cheese and hugging a Snoopy doll. In the last photos, she posed for her eighth-grade prom, a fleeting brush with adolescence.

For her part, Allen tosses endlessly most nights. She tries to stay focused on her last day with Alycia, when she and her daughter ate tuna sandwiches and splashed in a downtown San Jose fountain.

Their next encounter would be three years later at the Stanislaus County coroner's office.

"I couldn't even pick up her personal effects," Allen lamented. "There was nothing. There's just nothing left of her."

Contact Karen de Sá at kdesa@mercurynews.com or 408-920-5781.

TIMELINE OF ALYCIA"S DISAPPEARANCE

Nov. 22, 2005: Santa Clara County Superior Court places Alycia Mesiti-Allen with father, Mark Edward Mesiti.
Aug. 15, 2006: Alycia, 14, goes missing; her father reports she ran away after leaving for a camping trip with friends and a pet Chihuahua.
January 2009: Ceres police Sgt. James Robbins takes over the department"s investigative unit and has detectives review their cases. As a result, Alycia"s family members are contacted again and new undisclosed information leads to a search warrant.
March 26, 2009: After police obtain a search warrant, a body is unearthed outside the Ceres home where Alycia had been living with her father at the time she disappeared.
March 28: Mark Mesiti, 41, is arrested in Los Angeles along with his 39-year-old girlfriend on suspicion of running a methamphetamine lab and endangering the girlfriend"s 12-year-old daughter. Mesiti is being held on $500,000 bail.
March 31: Authorities confirm that a body found in Ceres was that of Alycia Mesiti-Allen. Ceres police describe Mesiti as a suspect in his daughter"s death, although he has not been arrested on those charges.

Source: Mercury News reporting and Ceres police

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Heather Thompson a DV victim in North Carolina has pounded the desks & doors of Domestic Violence organizations who do nothing but provide false hope

Go to full article



Press Release from Bryan Gregory, A retired North Carolina Trooper


"Heather Thompson may be celebrating her last Mother's Day- if she doesn't receive the help and support that she needs from law enforcement, South and North Carolina Department of Corrections, Public Officials & Domestic Violence Organizations who are paid to serve and protect her"
Of all except her, I probably know her story better than anyone else. I’m a part of it. I’ve written it. But this woman has had to live it.
Although May 29 is not that far away and she has mountains to climb before then, she’s taking time this weekend just as we are, to be with her family & Mother. This may be her last one, so as we celebrate this day, let us remember Heather.
In just a matter of days, her ex-husband and self-described killer will be out of prison. He may be under supervision for awhile, but without GPS monitoring, he’ll be able to go and do as he pleases. There’s no reason we’ve found to believe otherwise … If he carries out the continuous threats that he’s made to her, he’ll kill her.
She’s pounded on all the desks and doors. She’s been run around in circles by all domestic violence organizations and more. When confronted, they’ll tell you they’re doing all that they can and her needs are being met. But the reality is … They’re filling their pockets with our money and doing nothing.
We’ve waited until this late hour assuming they’d act … They have not. All her bills are overdue and basic services are threatened to be cut off. If needed, she has places to flee but no back-up money to even get her and her family there. And what if their cell phones are cut off? It infuriates me that I must beg you now to take up their slack.
Her pretty smile is fading. Heather feels like she’s drowning now with not a life jacket in sight. Although she’s not asked me to do this, I must.

Here’s her mailing address…
Heather Thompson
PO Box 697
Indian Trail, NC 28079


I don’t care if you can only scrape up five dollars. Send it to her and she’ll joyfully take it. Because she’s had so much practice, she’s an expert now … She can turn little’s into a whole lot. Your prayers are always welcomed … But if we’re gonna expect God’s help, I’m sure he’d be much more willing once we’ve stepped up to the plate.
If you’ve not yet read her story, check it out at www.the-babysitter.org

 
And if you can think of anyone else who might care … Feel free to copy & paste and spread this message everywhere.
Bryan Gregory
"Justice will only be achieved when those who are not injured by crime are as angry as those who are."
- King Solomon (635-577 BC)

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Fixing SRS-Wednesday at 10 p.m.

Fixing SRS-Wednesday at 10 p.m.



Fixing SRS-Wednesday at 10 p.m.- KS Senator Julia Lynn, Kathy Winters Reporter: Deb Farris KAKE.com

 

Reporter: Deb Farris
Email Address: deb.farris@kake.com

52 comments


 

1.5 billion dollars. That's what Kansas taxpayers kick in each year to run SRS. Meanwhile, abuse of power accusations stack up as cases get outsourced to corporations who rake in millions while keeping kids in the system. Thousands of families are left wondering if they'll ever get their kids back, and if anybody is listening.

Deb Farris show you whose interests are being served, what SRS has to say and who really is listening.

Watch "Fixing SRS"-Wednesday at 10 p.m. on KAKE.

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Teen killed by dad was carrying his baby

 

25 years for murder and 7 years for rape are not enough,

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/05/13/2009-05-13_dad_who_killed_teen_got_her_pregnant_first.html

Teen killed by dad was carrying his baby

BY Dorian Block
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Wednesday, May 13th 2009, 4:00 AM

A Bronx man who strangled his pregnant 14-year-old daughter and threw her naked body in a boiler last year was also the father of her unborn child, according to prosecutors.

Miguel Matias, 36, appeared in Bronx Supreme Court Tuesday as prosecutors consolidated the two indictments against him - an earlier one for his daughter's murder on Feb. 16, 2008, and the newest one for second-degree rape and incest.

DNA taken from Matias matches a sample taken from the fetus carried by his daughter, Anna, said Steven Reed, spokesman for Bronx District Attorney Robert Johnson.

Matias confessed to the murder, saying he was driven to strangle Anna with an electrical cord when he caught her writing "sex things" on her computer, police said.

Matias has been declared fit to stand trial but has a history of mental illness and has attempted suicide several times, according to his lawyer Roy Schwartz.

The new indictment says Matias raped his daughter between Nov. 15 and Nov. 30, 2007, which means Anna was 2-1/2 to three months pregnant when she was murdered.

Matias' family had previously said Anna was pregnant with a boyfriend's baby.

Matias is scheduled to appear in court again on June 30 and lawyers for both sides said a plea agreement is likely.

Matias faced 25 years to life in prison for the murder charge. He now faces up to an additional seven years in prison for the rape charge.

dblock@nydailynews.com

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/05/13/2009-05-13_dad_who_killed_teen_got_her_pregnant_first.html#ixzz0FOIfQZ8L&B

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Police: Ga. professor aimed for wife, her friend in killings

I have heard that the ‘fathers rights’ are coming to the defense of this killer. No why would anyone who is human defend the calculated cold blooded killings of his wife and her friend. Please comment on the on line story.

Dead is dead plain dead- there is no excuse!

 

Police: Ga. professor aimed for wife, her friend in killings

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2009-05-12-uga-professor_N.htm

 

Updated 20h 52m ago | Comments 51 | Recommend 8
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Police say University of Georgia professor George Zinkhan shot and killed himself but left no suicide note. Cadaver dogs found Zinkhan's body in the woods, two weeks after he shot and killed three people in Athens, Ga.

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University of Georgia/AP

Police say University of Georgia professor George Zinkhan shot and killed himself but left no suicide note. Cadaver dogs found Zinkhan's body in the woods, two weeks after he shot and killed three people in Athens, Ga.

ATLANTA (AP) — A Georgia professor who shot three people outside a community theater targeted his wife's male friend first, then turned the gun on her and a third person, authorities said Tuesday as they released new details of the killings.

The two-week international manhunt for marketing professor George Zinkhan, 57, ended Saturday when cadaver dogs found his body in a shallow grave he'd dug for himself in the north Georgia woods, not far from his home.

Authorities said Tuesday that he shot himself in the head but did not leave a suicide note.

Police have not released a motive in the April 25 killings, but Georgia Bureau of Investigation Agent Jim Fullington said Zinkhan was having "marital difficulties" and receiving marriage counseling.

Police say he killed his wife, Marie Bruce, 47; Clemson University economist Tom Tanner, 40; and Ben Teague, 63. All were members of a local theater group gathered that day for a reunion at the Athens Community Theater, a short distance from the University of Georgia campus, where Zinkhan taught.

FIND MORE STORIES IN: Alabama | Georgia | Athens | Amsterdam | Federal Bureau of Investigation | Clarke County | Jim Fullington

Fullington said Zinkhan targeted Tanner first, though he would not say why. Teague was "at the wrong place, at the wrong time," Fullington said.

Authorities believe Zinkhan left his two young children in the car during the shootings. He was last seen dropping them off at a neighbor's house soon after, saying there was an emergency.

Bulletins were issued nationwide and authorities kept watch on airports in case Zinkhan tried to flee to Amsterdam, where he has taught part time at a university since 2007.

Nearly a week after the shootings, police found his passport and his wrecked Jeep in a ravine in a wooded area near his house on the outskirts of Athens, a college town 70 miles northeast of Atlanta.

Hundreds of law enforcement officers scoured the area for days, but it wasn't until Saturday that a team of cadaver dogs found his body hidden in a small dug-out area about 15 inches deep.

"It was apparent he had taken significant steps to make sure his body wasn't located," said Major Mark Sizemore of the Athens-Clarke County Police Department.

Authorities said Zinkhan used a shovel to carve a hole and then dumped dirt and debris on himself before shooting himself in the head with a handgun. A gray sports bag with his clothes and another gun were found at his side.

His body had been there five to 14 days. In his abandoned Jeep, authorities found Zinkhan's cellphone, laptop, wallet and a map to the home of Barbara Carroll, a fellow University of Georgia professor. Sizemore said the map had been printed the day before the shooting.

Carroll told her colleagues in an e-mail obtained by The Red & Black, the UGA student newspaper, that she believes Zinkhan planned to kill her, too.

Zinkhan had been a professor in the university's Terry College of Business and had no disciplinary problems, school officials said. He had taught at UGA since the 1990s and was fired after the shootings.

He'd shown signs that he may have been looking to leave Athens. In March, he interviewed for a position in the University of Alabama's business school but was not offered the job, school spokeswoman Cathy Andreen said.

Authorities said many of the mysteries surrounding the shooting may never be solved.

"There are some questions that we will never know the answer to," Sizemore said.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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