Tag Archives: WouldBe

Would-be burglars caught targeting ritzy California homes evacuated from landslide – New York Post

  1. Would-be burglars caught targeting ritzy California homes evacuated from landslide New York Post
  2. 2 arrested after trying to break into evacuated homes affected by Rolling Hills Estates landslide, officials say KTLA Los Angeles
  3. Couple targeted by burglar during landslide evacuation: ‘You’re already at a low… you feel violated again’ FOX 11 Los Angeles
  4. 2 suspected burglars arrested near Southern California homes destroyed in landslides The Mercury News
  5. As help arrives, officials call Southern California landslide ‘unprecedented’ The Mercury News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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BioNTech pays $170M to add would-be Enhertu rival to pipeline – FierceBiotech

  1. BioNTech pays $170M to add would-be Enhertu rival to pipeline FierceBiotech
  2. BioNTech and DualityBio Form Global Strategic Partnership to Accelerate Development of Differentiated Antibody-Drug Conjugate Therapeutics for Solid Tumors GlobeNewswire
  3. BioNTech to pay $170M upfront in license deal for 2 cancer drug Seeking Alpha
  4. BioNTech, DualityBio Ink Up-to-$1.7B Cancer ADC Collaboration Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News
  5. BioNTech, DualityBio to develop cancer treatment drugs in over $1.5-bln deal Reuters
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Read the Worst Things Would-Be Trump Org Jurors Said About Trump

  • Some 60 Manhattanites were questioned for the Trump Organization’s tax-fraud jury. 
  • Just one expressed positive opinions about the former president; she did not make the jury.
  • Other rejected jurors said Trump is “a scam artist” and “has a diagnosable personality disorder.”

They called him “racist,” “a liar,” and “a scam artist” 

And then there were the Manhattan residents who really got creative, including a cancer hospital nurse who said, “I struggle with the fact that I believe Mr. Trump’s thoughts and actions are fundamentally guided by a diagnosable personality disorder.”

Here are the worst things said about Donald Trump during jury selection this week, in the 15th floor courtroom where the Trump Organization — the former president’s golf-resort and real-estate empire — is on trial for tax-fraud charges.

Three people who expressed dislike for Trump during jury selection, but who promised to be fair — a full quarter of the jury — were seated.

But not these other Manhattan residents. Their observations on all things Trump were so extremely negative that even prosecutors had to agree they should be excused.

“Every day, he perpetuates the ‘big lie,'” said an Upper East Side woman who is a city public school administrator and who joked she lives “with a ton of cats.”

“That’s a problem,” she added.

“So I have an opinion. My opinion is based on that. What else would you like to know?”

“Yeah,” said a workman’s compensation lawyer who was among the strongest Trump detractors.

“I absolutely hate him. He’s a liar and he’s a scam artist. He’s a danger to our society,” he said. “I think his university is a scam. His charity is a scam. He has problems with the truth.”

 A freelance contractor from Manhattan’s Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood promised, “I can be fair.” 

Then he added this, his tone conciliatory: “He’s a small man, but he’s not on trial here.” 

When a defense lawyer asked this prospective juror to explain what was meant by “a small man,” the freelance contractor obliged:  “He is emotionally small.”

One woman, an advertising executive, was booted after telling a fellow prospective juror, “there is no chance in hell” she could be impartial.

But the taker of the cake was a prospective juror who said Tuesday that he couldn’t sleep the night before, after his first day of sitting in the courtroom for day one of jury selection.

He’d had flashbacks overnight from when Trump was president, he explained, his voice apologetic. And it was making him literally sick to his stomach.

“Your honor, I have some strong feelings about Donald Trump that turned into a very visceral feeling in my gut that I haven’t had in two years since he was president,” the middle-aged man told the judge.

“I don’t feel like it’s a very healthy thing for me to be here.” 

State Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan asked the defense and prosecution if they had any objections to the man being being let off the hook. They did not. 

“Thank you, sir,” the judge then told him. “You are excused.”

Outside the courtroom, several reporters asked the relieved-looking man if he wished to say anything further. 

“No, I’m sorry,” he said, rushing for the exit.

Opening statements are set for Monday.

 

 

   

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Inside the tragic life of Jeffrey Dahmer’s last would-be victim

Jeffrey Dahmer’s final would-be victim, who escaped and led police to the twisted serial killer’s lair, has been thrust back into the spotlight following Netflix’s widely-watched mini-series “Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story” — but despite ending the sicko’s spree, the man hailed a hero lived a tragic life.

Tracy Edwards became a national name in 1991 after he led Milwaukee cops to the remains of Dahmer’s 17 dismembered victims, ending a decade-long spree of cannibalistic homicides that shocked the country.

But Edwards’ life quickly spiraled out of control and he was accused of killing a man almost two decades to the day after he survived the tragic fate himself.

“It’s like Humpty Dumpty,” his defense attorney Paul Ksicinski told ABC News in 2011. “It’s like he was never able to put the pieces back together again.”

Tracy Edwards is seen testifying in Jeffrey Dahmer’s 1992 murder trial.
Court TV
In 2011, Edwards was charged with homicide in connection with the death of a fellow homeless man.
Milwaukee Police Department

The Netflix retelling of the horrific Dahmer crimes begins with a dramatized version of Edwards’ escape from the cannibal killer’s apartment on the night of July 22, 1991, after he was lured over with the promise of beer and money.

After bolting from the house of horrors, a handcuffed Edwards flags down a passing patrol car on the street and tells officers that Dahmer had tried to kill him.

He then led police to the apartment, where investigators discovered preserved human heads, mutilated body parts and photographs of mutilated men.

The reenactment drew heavily from Edwards’ testimony, which was broadcast by Court TV during Dahmer’s closely-watched 1992 trial.

“He was listening to my heart [at knifepoint] because at that point he told me he was going to eat my heart,” Edwards chillingly told the court.

However, the brave survivor’s newfound publicity attracted the attention of police in his native home of Tupelo Mississippi, where he had been indicted for sexual battery of a 14-year-old girl.

The then 32-year-old was extradited down south to face the charges.

When he returned to Milwaukee, Edwards racked up arrests for drug possession, theft, property damage, failure to pay child support, and bail jumping — as he lived in and out of homeless shelters, ABC reported.

Tracy Edwards was arrested for multiple offenses in Milwaukee.
Milwaukee Police Dept.
Dahmer confessed to killing 17 men and boys. He was murdered in prison 1994.
AFP via Getty Images

On July 26, 2011, nearly twenty years to the day that he was lauded as a hero for escaping Dahmer and leading cops to his victims, Edwards was accused of murder himself.

He and another homeless man were accused of pushing a third man that was living on the streets off a bridge into the Milwaukee River. The victim, Jonny Jordan, died before first responders arrived, the network reported in 2011.

Edwards was charged with homicide and pleaded guilty to aiding a felon — a deal which got him a reduced sentence of one and a half years, according to WITI-TV.

The whereabouts of the now 63-year-old man are unknown, despite a recent renewal of interest in his life.

Still, Shaun Brown, who portrayed Edwards in the Netflix hit, took to Twitter to share his feelings about the man he played — insisting he has “so much love” for him and the other victims.

“I have so much love for Tracy Edwards and I hope that through my portrayal you will also,” Brown wrote.

“I hope you have love for all the victims and maybe in time you will have more love for one another. Empathy and awareness can create heaven on Earth if we allow it. We are one. We are all beings made of stardust. Much love to you all.”

Dahmer — who confessed to killing 17 men and boys since 1978 and was convicted in 1992 — was beaten to death by a fellow prison inmate in 1994.



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R. Kelly’s attorney wants any would-be jurors who’ve seen ‘Surviving R. Kelly’ docu-series removed

Jury selection in R. Kelly’s federal trial in Chicago got underway Monday with the judge questioning more than 60 potential jurors about what they know about the indicted R&B star and the charges against him.

By the end of the day, a total of 34 jurors had made it past the first round of questioning — about six shy of where the judge said he wanted to be before moving on to the next phase.

Shortly before court began, Kelly, dressed in a gray suit and tan shirt, was brought into the large ceremonial courtroom at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse and took his seat at a crowded defense table, leaning over at times to whisper through a face covering to his attorneys.

Potential jurors’ identities are being shielded from the public during the proceedings, and very little was revealed about them as U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenweber asked each person to clarify answers they gave on a written questionnaire.

Of the 63 people questioned individually by the judge over nearly six hours, a total of 29 were dismissed, most of whom reported they would have trouble being impartial to Kelly or his co-defendants.

Some judges, faced with a prospective juror who is iffy about their neutrality, will try to “rehabilitate” them – reminding them of their civic duty to be fair, and asking pointedly if they can fulfill that obligation. But Leinenweber on Monday dismissed everyone who expressed even the tiniest doubts about their impartiality.

“Thinking about the case and the charges over the weekend, I no longer firmly believe that I can be unbiased,” one woman said at the outset of the questioning. Leinenweber promptly excused her.

Another woman said she went to Tae Kwon Do classes with Kelly’s children years ago, and the experience might keep her from being unbiased.

Another woman said her job involves advocating for children.

“I would do my best to be fair, be impartial. My only concern would be the defensiveness side kicking in, perhaps,” she said before Leinenweber excused her.

Much of the questioning revolved around the “Surviving R. Kelly” docuseries, which many potential jurors said they had watched or had at least heard of.

One woman said she saw the whole thing, but it would not affect her ability to be fair — prompting some audible snickers from a few Kelly supporters watching from the courtroom gallery.

Another prospective juror said he watched part of an episode with his wife but didn’t remember anything substantive about it.

“I think I might have even fallen asleep before the end of it,” he said.

Leinenweber has said he wanted a pool of at least 40 before moving to the next phase, when both prosecutors and defense attorneys will use their peremptory strikes to further weed out the panel.

Opening statements in the case could begin as soon as Tuesday.

Before jury selection began around 10:45 a.m., Leinenweber sped through a slew of pretrial decisions, ruling in favor of prosecutors on several high-profile requests.

The judge denied Kelly co-defendant Derrel McDavid’s request for more records about a former Kelly prosecutor’s communications with a key witness and Jim DeRogatis. He also rejected McDavid’s arguments that prosecutors botched the chain of custody on a key video, saying a witness is expected to vouch for its authenticity under oath.

He also granted prosecutors’ motion to exclude testimony from a doctor about Kelly’s low IQ; Kelly’s attorneys then said for the record they had decided against calling the doctor at trial anyway.

Leinenweber also denied a defense request to reject any jurors who had seen any part of Lifetime’s “Surviving R. Kelly” docuseries. Kelly’s attorneys had argued that anyone who had seen any part of the series could not be fair.

Leinenweber, however, said a blanket rejection of anyone who had seen any part of the show would not be appropriate.

Apparently Leinenweber had decided on many of the requests at a hearing last week that never hit the public docket. Leinenweber’s rulings also were not made part of the public record until he read them from the bench Monday morning.

In a motion filed Sunday, Kelly’s attorney, Jennifer Bonjean, wrote that the potential pitfalls over the series, which details years of sexual misconduct allegations against the Chicago-born R&B singer, go far beyond the usual concerns over jurors being exposed to negative pretrial publicity.

“This is an issue of potential jurors possessing a mountain of information about the specific allegations in this case and the witnesses’ stories that will play center stage at this trial and may or may not be admissible,” Bonjean wrote. “Allowing an individual to sit on this jury who has seen ‘Surviving R. Kelly’ is no different than allowing a juror to sit on the jury who was permitted to preview the discovery in this case.”

A pool of about 100 potential jurors came to the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse last week to fill out questionnaires, including their thoughts about the high-profile defendant, who was sentenced in June to 30 years in prison on federal racketeering charges brought in New York.

Kelly, 55, was charged with child pornography and obstruction of justice in a 2019 indictment alleging he conspired with others to rig his Cook County trial years ago by paying off a teenage girl whom he sexually assaulted on a now-infamous videotape.

Also facing trial are Kelly’s former business manager, McDavid, and another associate, Milton “June” Brown, who, according to the indictment, schemed to buy back incriminating sex tapes that had been taken from Kelly’s collection and hide years of alleged sexual abuse of underage girls.

Though Kelly is already facing what could be the rest of his life behind bars, the trial about to unfold in Chicago seems ripe for intrigue.

For one, Kelly’s attorney, Bonjean, is a veteran litigator who relishes taking on what she portrays as an unchecked and overzealous government, representing controversial clients such as actor Bill Cosby and Gangster Disciples boss Larry Hoover. Brown’s lawyer, Mary Judge, is also well-respected and a 25-year veteran of the Federal Public Defender’s Office in Chicago.

McDavid, meanwhile, is represented by Chicago attorneys Beau Brindley and Vadim Glozman, who have shown in a flurry of pretrial motions that they intend to aggressively fight the charges, even if it means potentially throwing Kelly under the bus.

And in an added twist, Brindley himself was acquitted by Leinenweber seven years ago of criminal charges alleging he’d coached clients to lie on the witness stand — a case that the Tribune first reported when the FBI raided Brindley’s office in the famed Monadnock Building across the street from Chicago’s federal courthouse.

The attorney who defended Brindley in that case, the late Edward Genson, was Kelly’s lead attorney in his 2008 child pornography trial.

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Leinenweber, 85, is one of the senior statesmen of Chicago’s federal bench, with a reputation for fairness, an acute knowledge of the law and a fairly low tolerance for nonsense.

However the evidence shakes out, Kelly’s trial is the most high-profile event at the typically buttoned-down Dirksen U.S. Courthouse in the 2 ½ years since the onset of the pandemic.

Kelly’s die-hard followers — some who live-tweet events in his case and post social media videos that garner millions of views — are expected to show up in droves to support him, just like they did at his first Cook County trial and his Brooklyn trial.

DeRogotis has been subpoenaed as a potential witness for the defense.

jmeisner@chicagotribune.com

mcrepeau@chicagotribune.com

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California liquor store owner shoots would-be armed robber

An elderly convenience store owner in California is being hailed as a hero after he shot at a would-be robber who ran out of the store screaming his arm was “shot off.”

Shocking surveillance footage from Norco Market & Liquor at the 2800 block of Clark Avenue in Norco, Calif., showed a masked assailant entering the business at about 2:47 a.m. with an AR-15-style rifle pointed at the 80-year-old store owner.

The suspect yelled, “Freeze, hands in the air,” but within seconds, the quick-thinking store owner pulled out his own rifle from under the counter and immediately shot once at the robber, hitting him in the arm.

Video footage further showed another man getting out of a black BMW SUV, but he stopped and got back inside the vehicle once he saw the first suspect run out of the store repeatedly screaming, “He shot my arm off!” 

The three suspects involved in the attempted robbery were all caught, with the suspect who was shot in the hospital in critical but stable condition.
Fox11

Riverside County Sheriff’s officials arrested three suspects— Justin Johnson, 22, of Inglewood, Calif., Jamar Williams, 27, of Los Angeles, and Davon Broadus, of Las Vegas, Nevada— at a local hospital.

The primary suspect, a 23-year-old man, remained in critical but stable condition at the hospital, officials said. His identity is being withheld pending his release from the hospital.

“In this case, a lawfully armed member of our community prevented a violent crime and ensured their own safety, while being confronted with multiple armed suspects,” Riverside County Sheriff’s said in a press release. “This investigation is active and ongoing and no additional information will currently be released.”

Employees at Norco Market & Liquor said the owner was watching the store cameras as the SUV pulled into the parking lot. Once he saw the first assailant get out of the SUV and pull a mask over his face, the owner immediately went for his rifle. 

The 80-year-old store owner did not hesitate to defend himself and his business when the suspect entered with his rifle pointing directly at him.
Fox11

“He just prepared himself … and he stood right here, aimed and shot,”  store manager Marnia Tapia told Fox11. 

The two other suspects frantically drove off after the suspect who was shot ran shouting, “He shot my arm off,” into the car.
Riverside County Sheriff’s Offic

Employees said the owner was not at the store on Monday, but Fox11 reported the man suffered a heart attack right after the shooting. He is expected to recover and will be discharged from the hospital sometime Monday night. 

Sheriff’s officials said the SUV used in the attempted robbery was stolen and numerous stolen firearms also were found inside the vehicle. 

Johnson, Williams and Broadus were booked into the Robert Presley Detention Center in Riverside for robbery and conspiracy. They are being held in jail in lieu of $500,000 bail. 

The primary suspect also will be booked at the facility once he is released from the hospital, officials said. 

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Trump Is Depicted as a Would-Be Autocrat Seeking to Hang Onto Power at All Costs

Some of the new revelations and the confirmations of recent news reports were enough to prompt gasps in the room and, perhaps, in living rooms across the country. Told that the crowd on Jan. 6 was chanting “Hang Mike Pence,” the vice president who defied the president’s pressure to single-handedly block the transfer of power, Mr. Trump was quoted responding, “Maybe our supporters have the right idea.” Mike Pence, he added, “deserves it.”

Ms. Cheney, the panel’s vice chairwoman, reported that in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack, members of Mr. Trump’s own cabinet discussed invoking the 25th Amendment to remove the president from office. She disclosed that Representative Scott Perry of Pennsylvania and “multiple other Republican congressmen” involved in trying to overturn the election sought pardons from Mr. Trump in his final days in office.

She played a video clip of Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser who absented himself after the election rather than fight the conspiracy theorists egging on Mr. Trump, cavalierly dismissing threats by Pat A. Cipollone, the White House counsel, and other lawyers to resign in protest. “I took it up to just be whining, to be honest with you,” Mr. Kushner testified.

And she noted that while Mr. Pence repeatedly took action to summon help to stop the mob on Jan. 6, the president himself made no such effort. Instead, his White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, tried to convince Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to pretend that Mr. Trump was actively involved.

“He said, ‘We have to kill the narrative that the vice president is making all the decisions,’” General Milley said in videotaped testimony. “‘We need to establish the narrative that the president is still in charge, and that things are steady or stable,’ or words to that effect. I immediately interpreted that as politics, politics, politics.”

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Clashes in Tripoli as would-be prime minister attempts to claim power | Libya

Fighting broke out in Tripoli after one of the two rival Libyan prime ministers entered the capital to claim the role only to flee hours later when he realised he had misjudged the scale of military opposition.

Fathi Bashagha said he had retreated to prevent further bloodshed, and later said that he would base his government in the city of Sirte. It was clear he found that the levels of militia support he had been promised were not forthcoming. He had entered the city in secret overnight with the support of one powerful armed group, the eighth brigade, but it found itself isolated and no other support arrived from outside the city.

Fathi Bashagha in 2021. Photograph: Hazem Turkia/AP

In statements before his retreat, Bashagha’s camp made it clear they had planned to take control of the government, and claimed he had received a warm reception in the capital.

The bulk of the clashes occurred at dawn.

There has been stalemate in Libya with rival groups claiming to run the country. Parliamentary and presidential elections planned for last December had to be shelved as the eligibility of various candidates was disputed, and there was no consensus that the result would be honoured.

Bashagha’s retreat not only damages him personally, and his efforts internationally to portray himself as a unifying figure, but is a boost for the caretaker prime minister based in Tripoli, Abdul Hamid Dbeibah.

Bashagha, who comes from the north-western city of Misrata and is a former interior minister, surprisingly allied himself with Marshall Khalifa Haftar, the military strongman in the east, just before the planned December elections. He was appointed prime minister by the Libyan parliament in the east, the House of Representatives, in the spring.

Dbeibah was made interim prime minister last year by an ad hoc UN body, but he was supposed only to remain in power until the elections. After they were postponed he refused to stand aside, and has continued to use Libyan oil revenues to shore up his popular support.

Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, centre, visits a Tripoli neighbourhood following the clashes. Photograph: Yousef Murad/AP

The UK diplomatic mission in Tripoli was one of many embassies to urge calm. It said: “Events in Tripoli demonstrate urgent need for a durable political solution that cannot and must not be achieved by force. We urge all sides to de-escalate tension and engage in meaningful dialogue towards stability and successful elections.”

The abortive attempt on Tripoli will add to calls for the international community to take a stronger grip on Libya’s reconciliation process.

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Germany has hosted two summits in a bid to persuade both sides to accept presidential and parliamentary elections, but last autumn’s change in government in Germany and the overriding focus on Ukraine has allowed Libya to slip down the diplomatic agenda.

It is possible that the fighting will galvanise European leaders to refocus on the country. Most current diplomatic efforts have come from Stephanie Williams – who is acting as the special envoy of the UN secretary general, António Guterres, rather than as a UN security council-appointed envoy. She has been working to persuade both sides to agree to a draft constitution before elections. The absence of an agreed permanent constitution setting out the relationship between parliament and president was one of the reasons cited for delaying the election.

The US embassy in Washington highlighted the need for progress on the constitution saying: “Political leaders must realise that seizing or retaining power through violence will only harm the people of Libya.”

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Chicago shooting: Godfrey Hotel guest exchanges gunfire with would-be robber in River North: CPD

CHICAGO (WLS) — A hotel guest traded gunfire with a would-be robber in River North Sunday night, Chicago police said.

Police said a man was staying at the Godfrey in the 100-block of West Huron Street when just after 11:30 p.m. an unknown person knocked on his door.

The 53-year-old victim opened the door and a man forced his way into the room, took out a gun and demanded the victim’s property, police said.

The suspect then began firing shots at the victim and the victim returned fire, police said.

The would-be robber fled the scene and the victim was left with a graze wound to the head, police said.

The victim was treated at the scene by the Chicago Fire Department and refused further medical attention.

Some people staying at the hotel said they’re shaken up by the violence. Nate Montgomery was in his room just a few doors down when he heard the shots.

“I was lying in bed just watching TV and I heard kind of a ‘tap tap tap tap tap’…and then I heard some loud voices and it definitely alerted me,” Montgomery said. “I did not realize it was gunshots to be honest with you.”

Many hotel guests had no idea anything had happened.

“I was very shocked to find out because nobody said anything,” said hotel guest Athena Belluso. “Like I came down into the lobby and nothing was said.”

Meanwhile, hotel general manager Todd Van Winkle made some brief remarks to assure guests the hotel is safe and this was an isolated incident.

“The safety and security of the hotel’s guests and employees are always a top priority for us,” Van Winkle said. “The hotel team is fully cooperating with the Chicago Police Department in their ongoing investigation.”

Police recovered a weapon from the scene. No one is in custody.

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Massachusetts teen grabs knives to fight off would-be burglar, captures video leading to arrest

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A Boston area teenager woke up in the middle of the night to find her home being broken into by a burglar who she then chased out of the residence after arming herself with two kitchen knives.

Avery Cormier, a 14-year-old from Middleborough, Massachusetts, was home on the first day of spring break when she heard a man break into a downstairs window and begin rummaging around attempting to rob the household seemingly unaware that anyone was home, according to WFXT.

RUSSIA-UKRAINE WAR: MORE THAN 900 CIVILIAN BODIES FOUND IN KYIV REGION

Police say Cormier then ran downstairs and grabbed two steak knives that she used to confront the burglar and chase him out of the home causing him to drop the items he was attempting to steal.

“[She] started screaming at him: ‘Get the ‘F’ out of my house! You don’t belong here. This is my house,’” Cormier’s mother,  Dianne Tautkus, told WFXT. “He turned around and looked at her, and Avery said he looked so shocked and scared, like, ‘What?’ Here’s this kid there with two knives. And he kind of slinked away.”

BOSTON POLICE UNIFORMS STOLEN AHEAD OF MARATHON; FBI, MASSACHUSETTS COPS OFFERING $5K REWARD FOR SUSPECTS

After the burglar fled from the home, Cormier grabbed her cell phone and recorded a video of his getaway car backing out of the driveway and called 911 to provide the information.

Burglar suspect pulls away from attempted robbery after being chased by teenage resident
(WFXT-TV)

“Someone just tried to break into my house. I’m all alone,” Cormier told the 911 operator in a call that was released by police . “I got around the house, and I scared him. I took a video of his truck leaving, so I have his license plate number.”

Middleborough police then issued an advisory to law enforcement in the area and were able to arrest 58-year-old Joseph Ridge in connection to the alleged crime and say that he was out on bail with a lengthy criminal record that includes 140 prior arraignments, some for violent offenses, that date back to 1980.

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Ridge was arraigned on Friday afternoon and charged with aggravated breaking and entering during the daytime, trespassing and disorderly conduct.

Boston, Massachusetts (iStock)
(iStock)

“I’m very impressed with her ability to do what she did in that stressful situation,” Middleborough Police Chief Joseph Perkins said. “The fact that she turned her video camera on and captured him leaving, that broke the case. I don’t know if we would’ve been able to identify the individual any other way.”

Prosecutors asked that Ridge’s bail be set at $100,000 but the presiding judge set the amount at $200,000.

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