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Registered sex offender back in court, this time on child porn charges

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A federal judge denied bail for the Hackettstown, who was charged with distributing images of child sex abuse — including depictions of a toddler boy — over the internet via his work computer.

newark-federal-court.JPG A federal judge today denied bail for a 32-year-old Hackettstown man who was charged with distributing child pornography using a work computer. The man, Kevin Rease, is a registered sex offender who committed other sex crimes more than a decade ago, prosecutors say.

NEWARK — More than a decade ago, prosecutors say, Kevin Rease lured a 4-year-old and a 6-year-old into his home, where he molested the children and videotaped the crime. Around that same time, prosecutors say, he also distributed images of child pornography to people in Germany.

And soon after, says his lawyer, a young Rease pleaded guilty to the first crime and "did his time" — 10 years behind bars. Then after he was released, prosecutors say, he was forced to register as a sex offender, submit to a lifetime of supervised parole and, more recently, he was fitted with an ankle monitor.

But none of that, prosecutors contend, has stopped Rease, now age 32, from offending again. The Hackettstown man was hauled into federal court in Newark today, after being charged with distributing images of child sex abuse — including depictions of a toddler boy — over the internet via his work computer.

A paralegal in Paterson, according to his attorney, Rease’s own co-workers even "witnessed him with pictures of naked children on his computer," argued Assistant U.S. Attorney Danielle Alfonzo Walsman yesterday, while pleading with the judge to deny bail for Rease and put him in jail because, she said, he represents too much of a danger to the community.

After more than an hour of lawyer-arguments and his own deliberations, U.S. Magistrate Judge Michael Hammer did just that today — ruling that "no combination of conditions" outside of jail could adequately protect the public.

The court "cannot overlook … that defendant was convicted after pleading guilty to sexually assaulting minors" and videotaping it after luring the children, the judge said, and there is "certainly to some degree a relationship between those crimes and these (alleged) crimes, in the sense that both involved minor victims."

At the same time, the judge also pointed to allegations that Rease had threatened to commit suicide earlier this week while at work, and so he said, the danger at hand also included the risk of Rease harming himself.

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Still, he also said that Walzman’s arguments that Rease might be a "risk of flight" — she had pointed out that he hid having a passport and would face a very weighty sentence, if convicted — did not hold water. The judge agreed with defense lawyer William Ware, who said that his client had made it to every court appearance he’d had, over many years.

According to federal authorities, on March 12, 2013, an undercover FBI agent downloaded images depicting child sexual abuse from an individual using an assumed name — and the investigation revealed that the individual was logged onto a peer-to-peer file sharing network using an Internet Protocol, or "IP," address belonging to the law office where Rease worked.

The FBI executed a search warrant yesterday at the Paterson law office, authorities said, seizing digital images showing child sexual abuse, including material involving prepubescent minors. Rease’s work computer was logged on to the peer-to-peer network at the time, under the same assumed name that had offered illegal images for downloading on March 12.

As a previously convicted sex offender, Rease faces a mandatory minimum penalty of 15 years in prison, and a maximum potential penalty of 40 years in prison, authorities also said.

After standing in handcuffs and with a chain around his back for much of yesterday’s hearing, Rease walked out of the courtroom quietly with U.S. marshals, headed for jail. A man who was said to suffer from anxiety and take medication for it, he showed little expression on his face — save for a slight frown at times — during the hearing.

His mother, who lives with him, sat in the back of the room looking sad and angst-ridden at times.

RELATED COVERAGE

A depraved world: FBI agents wage a stressful battle against child pornography


Arrest made in connection with shooting at T-ball game in California

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Authorities say the shooting occurred April 17 during a North Vallejo T-ball game after Joshua Chi and the father of a player argued with each other at the baseball field.

VALLEJO, Calif. — A man has been arrested for investigation of attempted murder after he allegedly shot at the father of a player in a Little League T-ball game following an argument.

The San Francisco Chronicle reports 23-year-old Joshua Chi was arrested Wednesday and being held on $750,000 bail.

Authorities say the shooting occurred April 17 during a North Vallejo T-ball game after Chi and the father of a player argued with each other at the baseball field.

The dispute continued in the parking lot and police say when the father tried to drive away, Chi opened fire and hit the vehicle. The father was not injured.

Police didn't say what started the argument.

The North Vallejo Little League suspended games for several days after the shooting.

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Man, 24, shot and killed in Bloomfield, authorities say

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The man was found on Beardsley Avenue shortly after 3:30 a.m., authorities said

nj-bloomfield.jpgPolice are asking the public for any information on this morning's shooting 
BLOOMFIELD — A 24-year old man was shot and killed early this morning on the 500 block of Beardsley Avenue, the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office said.

Authorities said they responded to reports of a shooting shortly after 3:30 a.m. and found a man outside of the location suffering from a gunshot wound. He was pronounced dead shortly after emergency officials arrived on the scene.

The man was not initially identified pending the notification of family members.

No other details were immediately available. Essex County Chief Assistant Prosecutor Thomas S. Fennelly said the investigation is ongoing and no arrests have been made. Anyone with information is asked to contact detectives at (877)847-7432 or (973)621-4586.

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FBI says Mississippi man previously investigated has been arrested in ricin probe

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The letters, which allegedly contained ricin, were sent last week to President Obama, Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) and earlier to an 80-year-old Mississippi judge

wicker.jpgThe entrance to U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker's office in the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington. 
JACKSON, Miss. — A Mississippi man whose home and business were searched as part of an investigation into poisoned letters sent to the president and others has been arrested in the case, according to the FBI.

Everett Dutschke, 41, was arrested about 12:50 a.m. today at his Tupelo home by FBI special agents in connection with the letters, FBI spokeswoman Deborah Madden said.

The letters, which allegedly contained ricin, were sent last week to President Obama, Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi and earlier to an 80-year-old Mississippi judge, Sadie Holland.

Madden said FBI special agents arrested Dutschke (pronounced DUHS’-kee) without incident. She said additional questions should be directed to the U.S. attorney’s office. The office in Oxford did not immediately respond to messages.

Dutschke’s attorney, Lori Nail Basham, said today in a text message that “the authorities have confirmed Mr. Dutschke’s arrest. We have no comment at this time.” Basham also said via text that she didn’t know what the charges against Dutschke were.

Basham said earlier this week that Dutschke was “cooperating fully” with investigators. Dutschke has insisted he had nothing to do with the letters.

Ryan Taylor, a spokesman for Wicker, said today that “because the investigation is still ongoing, we’re not able to comment.”

Charges in the case were initially filed against an Elvis impersonator but then dropped.

Attention then turned to Dutschke, who has ties to the former suspect and the judge and senator. Earlier in the week, as investigators searched his primary residence in Tupelo, Dutschke had remarked to reporters, “I don’t know how much more of this I can take.”

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Charges initially were filed last week against Paul Kevin Curtis, 45, the Elvis impersonator, but then dropped after authorities said they had discovered new information. Curtis’ lawyers say he was framed.

Curtis’ attorney, Christi McCoy, said today: “We are relieved but also saddened. This crime is nothing short of diabolical. I have seen a lot of meanness in the past two decades, but this stops me in my tracks.“

Dutschke and Curtis were acquainted. Curtis said they had talked about possibly publishing a book on an alleged conspiracy to sell body parts on a black market. But he said they later had a feud.

Judge Holland is a common link between the two men who have been investigated, and both know Wicker.

Holland was the presiding judge in a case in which Curtis was accused of assaulting a Tupelo attorney in 2004. Holland sentenced him to six months in the county jail. He served only part of the sentence, according to his brother.

Holland’s family has had political skirmishes with Dutschke. Her son, Steve Holland, a Democratic state representative, said he thinks his mother’s only other encounter with Dutschke was at a rally in the town of Verona in 2007, when Dutschke ran as a Republican against Steve Holland

Holland said his mother confronted Dutschke after he made a derogatory speech about the Holland family. She demanded that he apologize, which Holland says he did.

Steve Holland said today he can’t say for certain that Dutschke is the person who sent the letter to his mother but added, “I feel confident the FBI knows what they are doing.”

“We’re ready for this long nightmare to be over,” Holland told the Associated Press.

He said he’s not sure why someone would target his mother. Holland said he believes Dutschke would have more reason to target him than his mother.

“Maybe he thinks the best way to get to me is to get to the love of my life, which is my mother,” Holland said.

RELATED COVERAGE

Letter sent to Obama contained poisonous ricin, authorities say

2nd man investigated in mailing of ricin-laced letters to Obama, senator

Police: Burglary suspect punched police dog

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Angel Mendez, 22, allegedly punched the police dog as he was being arrested, and the canine bit Mendez on the upper thigh

clifton_police.jpgPolice say 22-year-old Angel Mendez punched a police dog as he was being arrested. Mendez was bitten during the arrest. 
CLIFTON — Numerous charges have been filed against a burglary suspect who allegedly punched a police dog that helped apprehend him in northern New Jersey.

Clifton police tell The Record of Woodland Park that 22-year-old Angel Mendez ran from police on Friday and was found a short time later hiding under the front porch of a home. Mendez allegedly punched the police dog as he was being arrested, and the canine bit Mendez on the upper thigh.

Mendez, who has no known address, faces four counts of burglary. He's also charged with aggravated assault of a police dog, resisting arrest and obstruction of justice.

A telephone number for Mendez could not be found Saturday, and it was not known if he has retained an attorney.

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4 stabbed by parishioner at New Mexico church

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All four were being treated at hospitals and listed in stable condition.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M – Just as the St. Jude Thaddeus Catholic Church choir began its final hymn, a man vaulted over pews and lashed out at the singers, sending four churchgoers to the hospital with stab wounds, authorities said.

Worshippers screamed as the shocking and chaotic scene unfolded Sunday with the attacker continuing the onslaught until he was tackled and held by church members for officers, who raced to the scene, police said.

Four parishioners were injured, including church choir director Adam Alvarez and flutist Gerald Madrid, police spokesman Robert Gibbs said. All four were being treated at hospitals and listed in stable condition.

Three other church members also were evaluated by Albuquerque Fire Department on scene and didn't go to the hospital, investigators said.

Police identified the suspect as 24-year-old Lawrence Capener.

It was not immediately known what sparked the bizarre attack at the 11 a.m. Mass on the city's Westside. Investigators don't yet know whether Capener had ties to the victims or whether he regularly attended the church, Gibbs said.

An off-duty firefighter and others at the church held Capener down until police arrived.

Madrid told KOB-TV that he tried to stop Capener by placing him in a bear hug but was stabbed in the neck and back.

"I bear-hugged him. We were chest on chest. I was wrapping about to take him down to ground, but I didn't have his arms. I had just my arms around his chest, so his arms were free. So that's when he started stabbing me," he said.

Madrid said he thought the suspect was punching him. It wasn't until other parishioners rushed the man, that Madrid realized he had been stabbed five times.

The choir's pianist, Brenda Baca King, told KRQE-TV that the attacker was looking at the lead soloist. "I just remember seeing him hurdle over the pews, hurdle over people and run (toward) us and I thought, 'Oh my God, this is not good,'" Baca King said.

Capener was questioned by police and faced several felony charges, Gibbs said.

It's not yet known whether Capener has an attorney.

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The church didn't return calls by The Associated Press seeking comment, but in a brief interview outside the church about 5 p.m., after having spent time with police investigators, the Rev. John C. Daniel, who was celebrating the Mass, told The Albuquerque Journal that the stabbing was "random."

He said he had seen Capener in the church before but did not recognize him as a regular parishioner.

Daniel said he didn't see the attack because he had turned his back away from the congregation in order to return the sacrament in the tabernacle.

Archbishop of Santa Fe Michael Sheehan released a statement Sunday afternoon saying he was saddened by the attack.

"This is the first time in my 30 years serving as archbishop in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe and as Bishop of Lubbock, that anything like this has occurred," Sheehan said. "I pray for all who have been harmed, their families, the parishioners and that nothing like this will ever happen again," Sheehan said.

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Lawyers for would-be terrorists ask for redo, citing influence of Boston bombing news

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Lawyers for the two convicts are now asking the judge to throw out their sentences and grant them a do-over hearing

alessa-almonte.jpg Convicted would-be terrorists Mohamed Hamoud Alessa and Carlos Eduardo Almonte in a 2010 illustration from a court appearance.

NEWARK — On April 15, with less than an hour to go in a day of arguments focused on what sentences should be given to two would-be terrorists from North Jersey, word began to spread quietly through the federal courtroom in Newark that the Boston Marathon had been bombed.

Observers cast their eyes downwards at smart phones. In the hallways, people asked one another for details, which still seemed murky. And just 10 minutes or so after the terrorism bombings that killed three and injured more than 250, a federal agent in the gallery passed a note to a prosecutor sitting near the front of the room, according to defense lawyers for the two would-be terrorists in a motion they filed yesterday in court.

And then, say the lawyers for Mohamed Hamoud Alessa and Carlos Eduardo Almonte, that prosecutor rose from his table and slipped a message to his fellow assistant U.S. attorney, who was arguing before U.S. District Judge Dickinson Debevoise that the two would-be terrorists should each get 30 years in prison. And next, allege the defense attorneys, prosecutor Andrew Kogan "abruptly shifted" his arguments away from the defendants’ personal characteristics and the case’s underlying allegations of planned terrorism overseas, in Somalia, to the domestic threat would-be terrorists might pose to America’s streets, bridges, tunnels and public spaces.

That string of actions, along with further allegations that the judge himself learned of the bombings shortly before he gave Alessa and Almonte sentences of 22 and 20 years, respectively — form the basis of the request that the judge throw out the sentences of the two young convicts and grant them a do-over hearing.

In essence, argue their attorneys, even a judge with the best intentions of separating the Boston incident from the sentences he would impose might be adversely affected by the news he just got.

"I don’t think you’re going to find another case like this in the history of the United States," Alessa’s lawyer, Stanley Cohen, said yesterday. "I think this is one in a million."

He went on, "I think there are certain circumstances where it is literally impossible for justice, or the appearance of justice, to be had. … It’s a terrorism case, and there’s a very serious domestic act of terrorism literally in the middle of a sentencing hearing, where the initial reports are massive carnage, numerous fatalities and hundreds of injuries."

But both the judge and the U.S. Attorney’s Office that prosecuted Alessa and Almonte — who each pleaded guilty to conspiring within the United States to murder individuals outside of the country by trying to join a Somalia-based terrorist organization — appear to see the day’s events on April 15 differently.

On April 18, Debevoise issued a letter in which he wrote that "the Boston events had nothing to with the sentence I imposed."

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He added, "I have no idea what was contained in the notes passing between the government agents and attorneys. I first learned of the Boston events when someone mentioned them to me as I was about to re-enter the courtroom to impose a final sentence."

And yesterday evening, a spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman answered several points made in the defense attorneys’ joint, 15-page motion filed with Debevoise.

"It’s valid (for prosecutors) to discuss deterrence in any case" at the sentencing stage, Rebekah Carmichael said. "The importance of deterrence, including that of domestic terrorism, was raised by the government in court before the note was passed," and "before the attorneys had knowledge of the bombing."

Moreover, Carmichael adamantly denied that Kogan changed the argument he was making once he learned of the Boston attack. Referring to Kogan, she also said, "It’s hardly remarkable that the head of the (Office’s) National Security Unit would be notified of a terrorism incident shortly after it happened."

Carmichael also disagreed with the defense lawyers’ allegation that their clients had not discussed committing terrorism inside the United States. Instead, she said charging documents allege that Alessa had told an undercover officer he would kill in the United States if he couldn’t do so overseas.

But Cohen said yesterday, "Why else was that note passed from a federal agent to one prosecutor, and from the prosecutor to the other prosecutor in the midst of his argument, unless it was intended to exploit a tragedy. … I want to remove the specter, to the degree possible, of the tragedy in Boston."

Alessa, 23, of North Bergen, has dual U.S.-Jordanian citizenship, was born in the United States and is the son of Palestinian parents. Almonte, 27, of Elmwood Park, is a naturalized citizen who was born in the Dominican Republic. He was raised a Roman Catholic and converted to Islam.

Each man had come onto the radar of federal authorities in 2006. In 2009, an undercover NYPD officer had begun meeting with and extensively taping them. Then, in June 2010, they were each arrested in the moments before they were set to board airplanes at John F. Kennedy International Airport bound for Egypt, a key step, say federal authorities, in their ultimate plan to reach Somalia.

RELATED COVERAGE

Judge sentences two would-be terrorists from North Jersey to two decades in prison

Lawyers look to spare would-be terrorists from lengthy sentence

2 N.J. men convicted on terror-related charges got in jail fight, possibly affecting sentences

Two N.J. men arrested at JFK airport before boarding plane to join Islamist terrorist group, authorities say


U.S. Army major, wife charged with assaulting and abusing foster and adoptive children

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According to a 17-count indictment that includes charges of endangering the welfare of a child and assault, John E. Jackson, the Army major, and his wife, Carolyn Jackson, also force-fed the abused children hot sauce and red chili flakes.

newark-federal-court.JPG Federal authorities have charged the adoptive and foster parents of three children in New Jersey with abusing and neglecting the children for years.
NEWARK — Federal authorities have charged an Army major and his wife with abusing their adopted and foster children through beatings, breaking their bones, failing to get them medical help, depriving them of drinking water and training their biological kids to take part in the mistreatment.

According to a 17-count indictment that includes charges of endangering the welfare of a child and assault, John E. Jackson, the Army major, and his wife, Carolyn Jackson, also force-fed the abused children hot sauce and red pepper flakes.

According to reports published on a website called “WorldNetDaily,” the New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency in 2010 took the Jacksons’ five children from them, citing an imminent danger to the children after the youngest, who was then 2 years old, was hospitalized.

U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman’s office said this morning that all of the Jacksons’ children are in the custody of the New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency.

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Authorities also said today that both parents, who lived from 2005 to 2010 with their family at the Picatinny Arsenal in Morris County, have been taken into custody. John Jackson, 37, surrendered to federal agents after his 35-year-old wife’s arrest this morning at their home in Mount Holly, authorities said.

Fishman’s office also said the Jacksons appeared in federal court in Newark this morning for an initial appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Mark Falk. They were temporarily detained pending a bail hearing on Thursday, authorities said.

“Carolyn and John Jackson are charged with unimaginable cruelty to children they were trusted to protect,” Fishman said this morning in a statement. “The crimes alleged should not happen to any child, anywhere, and it is deeply disturbing that they would happen on a military installation. Along with the FBI, we will continue to seek justice for our communities' most vulnerable victims.”

Authorities, citing the indictment, said the Jacksons conspired to engage in a constant course of neglect and cruelty toward three children they fostered and then adopted, one of whom died in May 2008.

Authorities have declined to provide the ages and names of the children.

Authorities allege the Jacksons told their three biological children not to report the physical assaults to others, saying the punishments and disciplinary techniques were justified, as they were “training” the adopted children how to behave.

After John Jackson was told by a family friend that one of the children had revealed the alleged abuse, he told his wife, authorities said. Carolyn Jackson then retaliated against that child with multiple beatings with a belt, authorities said.

The Jacksons assaulted their children with various objects, causing two children to sustain fractured bones, for which the Jacksons failed to seek prompt medical attention, authorities also allege in the indictment.

piscatinny.jpgAn Army major and his wife are facing 17 counts of child endangerment. 

They also withheld proper medical care for their adopted children, withheld sufficient nourishment for two of the children, withheld adequate water from two of the children, and, at times, prohibited them from drinking water altogether, authorities say.

As another form of punishment, the couple forced two of the children to consume food intended to cause them pain and suffering, variously including red pepper flakes, hot sauce and raw onion, authorities said. They also caused one child to ingest excessive sodium or sodium-laden substances while being deprived of water, leading to a life-threatening condition, authorities also allege.

If convicted, authorities say, the Jacksons each face a maximum potential penalty of 10 years in prison on each of the 17 counts with which they are charged.

According to “WorldNetDaily” reports from 2011 — one of which is headlined, “Father: ‘My children are being held hostage’” — the Jackson parents are “devout Christian homeschoolers with a history of serving as adoptive and foster parents.”

One article on the website also states that “[d]uring the course of a nine-month legal battle to regain custody of their children, the Jacksons say they have encountered prejudice against their religion and homeschooling as they fight a state agency determined to see the children adopted by strangers no matter what the evidence says.”

The same article also states John Jackson had accused the New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency in 2011 of fraudulently misrepresenting statements by himself and his children to build a case against him, “brainwashing” the children by telling them they have been abused and “isolating” them by not allowing them to be assessed independently by U.S. Army investigators.

According to another website called Tea Party Daily News.com, John Jackson served in active duty in both Kuwait and Iraq, and is a “decorated” veteran. Calling Jackson a “family man” and a “devout Christian and a patriotic American,” an article on the website state the Jacksons’ children took part in a cooperative homeschool program at a local church.

At the Jacksons' home in Mount Holly today, a sticker was seen out front with a decal for “Timothy Christian Academy;” and that sticker indicated the academy is in Eastampton, N.J..

Star-Ledger staff writers Christopher Baxter and Susan Livio contributed to this report.


RELATED COVERAGE

Army major, wife charged with abusing 3 foster children at Picatinny Arsenal


Army major and wife charged with 'unimaginable' abuse of 3 children

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The Jacksons, who according to reports on the conservative website "WorldNetDaily" lost custody of five children in 2010, walked into a courtroom in Newark and were promptly detained, pending a bail hearing, authorities said

Jacksons photo.JPGArmy Maj. John E. Jackson (L) and his wife, Carolyn Jackson ( R) in an undated family photo. Federal authorities have charged the Army major and his wife with abusing their adopted and foster children through beatings, breaking their bones, failing to get them medical help, depriving them of drinking water and training their biological kids to take part in the mistreatment. (Photo via Facebook)  
NEWARK — Army Maj. John E. Jackson and his wife, Carolyn, took in two foster children in June 2008 while they were living at the Picatinny Arsenal in Morris County. Three years before, they had taken in another child. But according to federal authorities, the home into which they brought the children was filled with anything but love.

In public statements and a searing 22-page indictment unveiled in federal court yesterday, authorities say Jackson — a military veteran who entered the Army in 1993 and served in both Iraq and Afghanistan — and his wife introduced the children, whom they later adopted, to the "unimaginable" living hell they’d created for the children's adopted sibling.

It was a hell, authorities say, that included not only beatings with a "deadly weapon," fractured bones, and the withholding of food and water, but also a home in which the couple instructed their older and stronger biological children to help with the abuse.

For instance, the indictment says, the couple blocked one of their foster children from access to water, then forced an older child to "watch over to prevent (the child) from drinking out of sinks and toilet bowls."

Yesterday, the Jacksons, who according to reports on the conservative website "WorldNetDaily" lost custody of five children in 2010, were brought into a courtroom in Newark and were promptly detained, pending a bail hearing tomorrow, authorities said.

Carolyn Jackson, 35, was arrested at the couple’s home in Mount Holly yesterday morning while her 37-year-old husband surrendered to authorities, U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman said.

Facing 17 counts, including numerous charges of endangering the welfare of a child and assault, both Jacksons face a maximum of 10 years in prison on each count if convicted.

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A spokesperson for the state Department of Children and Families said yesterday she couldn’t comment on any matter involving the Jacksons and their children, citing confidentiality laws.

Defense lawyers for the couple did not return phone calls for comment yesterday. But Fishman made it clear he believes the couple deserves harsh punishment.

"Carolyn and John Jackson are charged with unimaginable cruelty to children they were trusted to protect," Fishman said in a statement. "The crimes alleged should not happen to any child, anywhere, and it is deeply disturbing that they would happen on a military installation."

At the same time, Fishman’s office confirmed the Jacksons’ five children are in the custody of the New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency.

According to the indictment and authorities, the Jacksons conspired from 2005 to 2010 — while living at Picatinny — to engage in a constant course of neglect and cruelty toward three children they fostered and then adopted, one of whom died in May 2008.

Authorities have declined to provide the names, genders and ages of the children, and the indictment does not allege the Jacksons are responsible for the death of the one child.

But in nightmarish detail, the indictment explains how they told their three biological children not to report the physical assaults on the younger children, saying the punishments and disciplinary techniques were justified, as they were "training" them how to behave.

And, it says, after John Jackson was told by a family friend that one of the children had reported the alleged abuse, he told his wife, who retaliated against that child with multiple beatings with a belt.

Moreover, the indictment says, the Jacksons assaulted their foster and adopted children with various objects, causing two of them to suffer fractured bones for which the couple failed to seek prompt medical attention.

And as another form of punishment, the couple forced two of the children to eat food intended to cause them pain and suffering, including red pepper flakes, hot sauce and raw onion, the indictment says. They also forced one child to ingest excessive sodium or sodium-laden substances while being deprived of water, leading to a life-threatening illness, authorities allege.

piscatinny.jpgAn Army major and his wife are facing 17 counts of child endangerment, assault and conspiracy. 

According to "WorldNetDaily" reports from 2011 — one of which is headlined, "Father: ‘My children are being held hostage’" — the Jacksons are "devout Christian homeschoolers with a history of serving as adoptive and foster parents." The couple also waged a fierce legal battle in Morris County after they lost custody of their children in 2010, according to the online report.

The same article also states John Jackson had accused state protective services in 2011 of fraudulently misrepresenting statements by himself and his children to build a case against him, "brainwashing" the children by telling them they have been abused and "isolating" them by not allowing them to be assessed independently by U.S. Army investigators.

Jackson served in Iraq and Afghanistan between February 2009 and March 2010 as part of the Joint Contracting Command — Iraq/Afghanistan, where he received the defense meritorious service medal while working as a contractor.

In the Jacksons’ Mount Holly neighborhood yesterday, residents expressed shock at the allegations against the couple.

"Every time I saw them walking, they always seemed like a happy family," said Donna Delgado, a neighbor. "... I’ve got three kids, I’ve got three grand kids, I don’t like people hitting kids. I don’t like abusers."

"It’s sad because you live next door to them and you have no idea," said Kofi Lightfoot, another neighbor. "They seem like really nice people, but I’ve never had a conversation with them. The dad is in the Army and that’s all I know. You have no idea who you live around."

Star-Ledger staff writers Christopher Baxter, Susan Livio, Mike Frassinelli and Ben Horowitz contributed to this report.

RELATED COVERAGE

U.S. Army major, wife charged with assaulting and abusing foster and adoptive children

Army major, wife charged with abusing 3 foster children at Picatinny Arsenal

Mexican women delivered to N.J. farms for sex with workers, authorities say

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Court papers say that customers paid $30 for 15 minutes of sex

federal-court.jpgFederal court in Manhattan. Some of the 13 defendants charged in a sex slave ring will appear there today. 

NEW YORK — Sold into prostitution, the young women were forced to have sex with workers on New Jersey farms and in dingy brothels around New York — some with as many as 25 men a day, authorities say.

Most got paid nothing.

Today, federal authorities said they have charged 13 people in connection with the far-flung sex trafficking ring that transported dozens women and girls — including one as young as 14 — from Mexico to be put to work in the sex trade.

Prosecutors said the enterprise, which operated for at least five years, was part of a larger network of sex traffickers working a pipeline that stretched from Tenancingo, Mexico, directly into the New York region.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said members of the ring lured their victims to the United States with promises of a better life.

"Then they consigned them to a living hell — forcing them to become sex slaves living in abhorrent conditions, and using threats, verbal abuse, and violence — sexual and otherwise — when they resisted and even sometimes when they didn’t," he said.

Several of those charged were brought to federal court in Manhattan today for an initial appearance.

According to a lengthy criminal complaint unsealed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in New York, one of those named, David Vasquez-Medina, 28, worked for the ring delivering women to farms in New Jersey, where they would have sex with workers.

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Vasquez-Medina told one victim in Mexico that he intended to marry her, and arranged to have her smuggled into the United States, according to the complaint. Once here, he began pressuring her to work as a prostitute, the complaint said. While she initially resisted, telling him she did not wish to do such work, prosecutors said that after she lost her legitimate job, she reluctantly agreed.

According to the complaint, Vasquez-Medina drove the woman to various farms in New Jersey where she had sex with approximately 25 clients per day. Vasquez-Medina charged clients $30 for 15 minutes of sex with the victim, according to the criminal complaint. The U.S. Attorney’s office declined to identify where in New Jersey the ring was operating and state officials were unaware of the operation.

But George Andreopoulos, director of the Center for International Human Rights at John Jay College in New York, said such rings view their victims as commodities.

"We’ve seen this not only on farms where there are migrant workers, but also in sweat shops," he said.

Other women controlled by the sex ring were put to work in brothels in Poughkeepsie, Queens, New York, Yonkers, and in Newburgh, N.Y.The ring was being monitored closely by authorities, the complaint indicated, with transcripts of cell phone conversations that were being recorded as late as last month.

"They said that new girl is good," said one of the defendants in an intercepted call.

"Oh, she’s new."

"How old you think she is?"

"She’s only 17."

The charges against the 13 included sex trafficking, interstate transportation for prostitution, use of interstate facilities to promote a prostitution enterprise, obstruction of justice, possession of child pornography and illegal reentry. If convicted, they face prison terms of two years to life.

MORE CRIME NEWS

FBI to announce case details of Cuba fugitive convicted of killing N.J. cop

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Joanne Chesimard was convicted of killing state trooper in 1973, escaped prison and ran to Cuba, authorities have said

joanne-chesimard-file.jpgThe FBI in New Jersey is expected to release new details in the case of Joanne Chesimard, a woman convicted of killing a state trooper in 1973, but who escaped prison in 1979 and fled to Cuba. Chesimard, who has also been known as Assata Shakur, is shown here in 1979 and 1982. 

NEWARK — The decades-old international case of a convicted cop killer is getting new attention in New Jersey.


UPDATE: Convicted cop killer Joanne Chesimard named one of FBI's most wanted terrorists

The FBI is scheduled to make an announcement today regarding Joanne Chesimard. She's been on the run since escaping from a New Jersey prison in 1979.

Chesimard was serving a life term for killing a New Jersey state trooper in 1973 when she fled to Cuba. She has lived there under the name Assata Shakur.

The U.S. Justice Department has offered a $1 million reward for her capture, and the reward is now being upped to $2 million.

Chilly relations between the countries have made Cuba a haven for fugitives, but the climate is changing. Just last month, a Florida couple who sailed to Cuba was returned to the U.S. and accused of kidnapping their two young children from the boys' grandparents.

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Friends defend Army major and wife charged with abusing children; 1 calls allegations 'a lie'

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Two friends said they are incensed at both the federal charges brought against the couple and the onslaught of media coverage

Jacksons photo.JPGArmy Maj. John E. Jackson (L) and his wife, Carolyn Jackson ( R) in an undated family photo. Federal authorities have charged the Army major and his wife with abusing their adopted and foster children through beatings, breaking their bones, failing to get them medical help, depriving them of drinking water and training their biological kids to take part in the mistreatment. (Photo via Facebook)  

In the summer of 2009, Roy Bryhn and his family joined Army Maj. John E. Jackson’s family for a three-day camping trip in the Lake George region of upstate New York.

The 30-person outing was organized by a “Boy-Scouts-like group” for Christian families called ALERT Cadet, Bryhn said. Bryhn said he’d recently become good friends with Jackson, who along with his wife was charged on Tuesday in a 17-count federal indictment accusing them of abusing and starving their foster and adopted children in a New Jersey home described by officials as “unimaginable” in its viciousness.

During that camping trip four years ago, Bryhn said, he witnessed the same John and Carolyn Jackson he still reveres and defends today.

“They were way above average of what you’d want a family want to be,” Bryhn said yesterday, describing the Jacksons as kind-hearted, loving and involved parents.

Bryhn recalled how, near the end of the 2009 camping trip, he noticed a sticker on John Jackson’s car that read “In Loving Memory” — and it named a young boy the Jacksons had adopted, but who had died in 2008 while living with the couple at the Picatinny Arsenal in Morris County.

Bryhn said he asked Jackson about the boy and was told by the Army major “the sad story of how (the boy) died.” He said Jackson eventually told him the youngster had ongoing health problems that included a brutal “seizure disorder.”

Bryhn’s recollections were emblematic of how two friends of the Jacksons spoke about them yesterday when contacted by The Star-Ledger. Noting their common ground with the Jacksons in the Christian faith, the two friends said they are incensed at both the federal charges brought against the couple and the onslaught of media coverage.

“It is a lie … I cannot believe it. I just don’t understand what happened to this world,” said Suzanne Chan of Somerset, who said she knew Carolyn Jackson well in 2009 and 2010 when they brought their children to a homeschooling co-op in Randolph. “This doesn’t make any sense because we (saw) them (the Jackson children) every single Tuesday. If kids are frightened it will show on their face, don’t you think so? They won’t hide their feelings.”

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Bryhn, 40, of Flemington, grew especially frustrated yesterday while talking of the deceased boy, because the indictment against the Jacksons makes no allegations the boy had died based on wrongful treatment or abuse.

Yet, he said, because news reports have mentioned the boy died, some people may wrongly believe his death was connected to abuse.

On Tuesday, John Jackson, 37, and Carolyn Jackson, 35, were charged in a 22-page indictment unsealed in federal court in Newark that charges them with endangering the welfare of a child, assault and conspiracy. If convicted, the Jacksons face a maximum of 10 years in prison on each of 17 counts.

An Army man since 1993 who served in Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan, John Jackson and his wife allegedly subjected their three foster children, whom they later adopted, to beatings with a “deadly weapon,” fractured bones, and the withholding of food and water. They were brought into court Tuesday and detained, pending a bail hearing scheduled for this morning.

According to reports on the conservative website “WorldNetDaily,” the Jacksons lost custody of their two adopted and three biological children in 2010, after they were taken away by the state’s Department of Children and Families.

Bryhn said yesterday the children were removed after a 2-year-old adopted daughter fell ill from dehydration and was hospitalized. He said Carolyn Jackson took the girl to the emergency room, only to be confronted by a social worker who ordered that the parents immediately be kept away from the children.

piscatinny.jpgAn Army major and his wife are facing 17 counts of child endangerment, assault and conspiracy. 

He pointed to a later court case the Jacksons filed against the state, in which they tried to win back custody of their children, and implied the judge had wrongly ruled against the couple.

Asked if he might not know exactly what happened behind closed doors in the Jacksons’ house, Bryhn said, “That’s a very fair question.”

But, he said, after he learned the Jacksons lost custody of their children in 2010, “I tried to think about all the times I’ve been to (their) house, all the days they’ve had their kids here (at my house), the conversations we had.

“And … I grilled both of them. ‘Is there something going on?’ and, believe me, they are as forthright and as honest as anybody you would ever meet.” He then said, “And, no, there is nothing” he said he could find wrong.

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Judge frees Army major, wife accused of abuse on bail, orders no contact with children

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The judge ordered the Jacksons released on $250,000 unsecured bail, but also laid out a laundry list of conditions the couple must comply with to remain free — including that they no longer have any direct or indirect contact with their children

Jacksons photo.JPGArmy Maj. John E. Jackson, left, and his wife, Carolyn Jackson, right, in an undated family photo. Federal authorities have charged the Army major and his wife with abusing their adopted and foster children through beatings, breaking their bones, failing to get them medical help, depriving them of drinking water and training their biological kids to take part in the mistreatment.  

Accused of abusing their three adopted children, Army Maj. John E. Jackson, 37, and his wife Carolyn, 35, were allowed to visit two of their biological children in recent years even after all of their children had been removed from the home for their protection, lawyers revealed Thursday.

In a 90-minute court hearing in Newark that ended with a federal judge freeing the couple on bail, federal prosecutor Melissa Jampol also said Carolyn Jackson had "overtly" broken family court orders regulating the visits on at least two occasions.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Mark Falk ordered the Jacksons released on $250,000 unsecured bail each, but also mandated that both be placed on home detention and fitted with electronic GPS monitors. He laid out a laundry list of conditions the couple must comply with to remain free — including that they no longer have any direct or indirect contact with their children.

"I would not be able to sleep for a minute if there was any damage to these individuals," Falk said before ruling, referring to the Jacksons’ children.

Still, Falk stopped short of keeping the Jacksons in jail, where they’d been since Tuesday, after federal authorities took them into custody and unsealed a 17-count indictment that includes numerous charges of assault and endangering the welfare of a child.

The Jacksons are accused of subjecting their three foster children, whom they later adopted, to beatings with a "deadly weapon," fractured bones, and the withholding of food and water.

piscatinny.jpgAn Army major and his wife are facing 17 counts of child endangerment, assault and conspiracy. 

While living with their children from 2005 to 2010 at the Picatinny Arsenal in Morris County, their home was filled with "unimaginable cruelty," U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman has said.

In one instance, the indictment says the couple blocked a foster child from access to water, then forced an older, biological child to keep watch "to prevent (the younger child) from drinking out of sinks and toilet bowls."

Federal authorities have declined to give the names, genders and ages of the children.

Lawyers also explained Thursday that the Jacksons’ parental rights to three of their children — one biological, two adopted — have been terminated by the state. (A third adoptive child of the Jacksons’ died in 2008.) Meanwhile, Falk appointed the guardians of their two other biological children -- whom the Jacksons had previously been allowed to visit -- to serve as "third-party custodians" over the Jacksons while the Jacksons are free on bail. In that role, the custodians/guardians are required to immediately notify authorities if either Jackson were to break the no-contact rule with the two children.

Defenders of the couple — John Jackson has been in the military since 1993 and served in Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan — said the parents are kind, practicing Christians and have been unfairly targeted by state child protective services.

Stan Gregory, a lawyer for the guardians to the biological children, appeared to defend the Jacksons after the hearing. "The truth will come out when all the information is out there," he said. "There will be a different view."

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Man stabbed while trying to stop fight in Plainfield, police say

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The man, who was not identified, underwent surgery at 3:30 a.m. and appeared to be recovering today, Santiago said.

Plainfield Police.JPGA 28-year-old man tried to stop an altercation and was stabbed early this morning in Plainfield, authorities said. 
PLAINFIELD — A 28-year-old man tried to stop an altercation and was stabbed early this morning in Plainfield, authorities said.

“It appeared that this young man tried to intervene,” city police Capt. Edward Santiago said this afternoon of the 2 a.m. incident. “He tried to stop a fight from happening, and he was stabbed.”

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The man, whose identity was not released, underwent surgery around 3:30 a.m. and appeared to be recovering today, Santiago said.

The incident happened on the 100-block of North Avenue. Detectives are still searching for the attacker.

MORE NEW JERSEY NEWS

Hunger-strike inmate gains 40 pounds, still recovering for upcoming hearing

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William Lecuyer, now weighs about 160 pounds, up from the 119 he weighed in March, at the end of his yearlong hunger strike

william lecuyer kurdzuk.JPGWilliam Lecuyer speaks during an interview at New Jersey State Prison on March 5. The convicted armed robber started a hunger strike in March 2012 - but agreed to begin eating again on March 14 after he was promised a new hearing over a 2-year-old disciplinary charge over a drug test, his attorney said. Lecuyer has gained about 40 pounds over the last seven weeks - but he is still not strong enough for the new hearing, his lawyer adds. 

TRENTON — Nearly two months have passed since William Lecuyer agreed to start eating again at New Jersey State Prison.

He’s eating solid food, and his slow recovery continues, say those who have talked to him. But the dispute over the drug test that landed him four months in solitary confinement – the initial reason for his refusing to eat for a year – remains to be settled.

Lecuyer’s gained 40 pounds, and his health is a bit more stable. But his kidneys are not working properly, his heart has shown irregularities, and he’s still under close observation in a special infirmary unit at New Jersey State Prison, according to his attorney, Jean Ross.

The hearing over the drug test, which began the standoff with the Department of Corrections, will have to wait for him to be physically prepared for it, Ross said.

“His medical condition is much improved, but he’s still not ready for the hearing just yet,” the attorney said of her client Friday.

Lecuyer agreed to end his hunger strike on March 14. That same day, he was taken to St. Francis Medical Center in Trenton. Doctors did a battery of tests and then slowly began to nourish him. Because of his familiarity with life behind bars – he was arrested in 1998 and convicted in 2000 of several counts of armed robbery – Lecuyer opted to go back to the prison the day after, Ross said.

The Department of Corrections won’t speak about any inmate’s medical condition – and would only say that Lecuyer is in the infirmary, but is now considered to be within the prison’s general population, said Matthew Schuman, a department spokesman.

The IV fluids and nutritional supplement drinks have slowly evolved to ice cream and yogurt, Ross said. Now he’s even eating some standard prison fare – mashed potatoes and vegetables – though he still has to stay away from acidic and salty foods, because there’s only so much he can stomach after long months without eating anything solid, she said.

He’s gained weight quickly – up to about 160 pounds from the 119 pounds that he was at his lightest, Ross said. He’s still nowhere near the 230 pounds that he was when he entered prison, but he’s getting heavier with the solid food, she added.

Permanent damage from the hunger strike hasn’t yet been determined by Lecuyer’s doctors and nurses – and it might be a while before anyone knows the full effects of his yearlong stand, Ross said. But the first tests revealed that Lecuyer doesn’t appear in any immediate danger as his body recovers from the self-imposed deprivation, she added.

williamlecuyerphone.JPGLecuyer speaks to a reporter at New Jersey State Prison on March 5, about a week before he and the state Department of Corrections came to an agreement ending his year-long hunger strike. The inmate is still weak from a year without solid food — and the hearing over a 2-year-old punishment resulting in four months of solitary confinement has been postponed. 

“He was not in as bad a shape as they feared he could be,” Ross said.

But his body is still weak, so the hearing to determine who was right about a disputed drug test in June 2011 will have to wait.

After a back-and-forth with prison officials, Lecuyer stopped eating food in March 2012, saying he wouldn’t cave until corrections officials granted him access to a prison "logbook" he believes will clear him of a 2-year-old disciplinary charge. Officials had refused for more than a year, and prison experts said it would set a dangerous precedent.

The corrections department reversed course this past March, agreeing to hold a new hearing — and in return Lecuyer agreed to start eating again, Ross said.

The “logbook,” Lecuyer has said, would prove that he was unjustly punished with four months of solitary confinement over a routine drug test. A drug-sniffing dog detected something in his cell two years ago. No drugs were found, but Lecuyer says he waited more than two hours for a guard to return to him and take a sample before finally relieving himself. When the guard came back, Lecuyer could not urinate. He said he was never given a fair chance to prove he was clean.

Prison officials say he simply refused the order, did not produce the required sample, and was justly punished.

The delayed hearing will include all evidence, including the logbook, Ross said. The attorney added that the hearing could be held soon, but couldn’t speculate further. The Department of Corrections has only said the hearing is “postponed,” but didn’t have further comment.

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Ross credited Gary Lanigan, the commissioner of the department, with finding a proactive solution to the problem.

“The commissioner really took proactive steps to make this happen,” Ross said.

In the meantime, Lecuyer remains in an infirmary cell, trying to recover.

Jane Chambers, his mother, still frets every time the phone rings. Every call, she says, still makes her fear her son’s condition has taken a turn for the worst.

With a prison term that ends in 2017, she still worries that her son will never again come home.

“I just have to pray I get to see him released from prison four years from now,” Chambers said. “This was my biggest fear – that he’d hurt himself permanently.”

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Suspect in Ohio helped neighbors look for missing women

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No charges have been filed against the men, but they could appear in court as early as this morning.

CLEVELAND — In the years after his friend's daughter vanished while walking home from school, Ariel Castro handed out fliers with the 14-year-old's photo and performed music at a fundraiser held in her honor.

When neighbors gathered for a candlelight vigil just a year ago to remember the girl, Castro was there too, comforting the girl's mother.

Castro, just like everyone else in the tight-knit, mostly Puerto Rican neighborhood, seemed shaken by the 2004 disappearance of Gina DeJesus and another teenager who went missing the year before.

Now he and his brothers are in custody after a frantic 911 call led police to his run-down house, where authorities say DeJesus and two other women missing for about a decade were held captive.

No charges have been filed against the men, but they could appear in court as early as this morning.

Amanda Berry, 27, Michelle Knight, 32, and DeJesus, about 23, had apparently been held captive in the house since their teens or early 20s, police said.

A 6-year-old girl believed to be Berry's daughter also was found in the home, police Deputy Chief Ed Tomba said. He would not say who the father was.

About a week ago, Castro took the 6-year-old girl to a nearby park, where they played in the grass, said Israel Lugo, a neighbor who lives down the street. "I asked him whose kid was it, and he told me his girlfriend's daughter," Lugo said.

The women were reunited with joyous family members but remained in seclusion Tuesday. They were rescued after Berry kicked out the bottom portion of a locked screen door and used a neighbor's telephone to call 911. An officer showed up minutes later and Berry ran out and threw her arms around the officer, a neighbor said.

Police identified the other two suspects as the 52-year-old Castro's brothers, Pedro Castro, 54, and Onil Castro, 50. Calls to the jail went unanswered, and there was no response to interview requests sent to police, the jail and city officials.

A relative of the three brothers said their family was "totally shocked" after hearing about the missing women being found at the home.

Juan Alicea said the arrests of his wife's brothers had left relatives "as blindsided as anyone else" in their community. He said he hadn't been to the home of his brother-in-law Ariel Castro since the early 1990s but had eaten dinner with Castro at a different brother's house shortly before the arrests were made Monday.

Police would not say how the women were taken captive or how they were hidden in the neighborhood where they had vanished. Investigators also would not say whether they were kept in restraints inside the house or sexually assaulted.

ariel-castro-booking-photo-cleveland-police.JPGAriel Castro who was arrested in connection with the discovery of three kidnapped women allegedly held captive for more than ten years in a home in Cleveland, Ohio. The three women, Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight had disappeared in Cleveland between 2002 and 2004 at different times.  

Ariel Castro owned the home where the girls were found in a neighborhood dotted with boarded-up houses just south of downtown.

His son, Anthony Castro, said in an interview with London's Daily Mail newspaper that he now speaks with his father just a few times a year and seldom visited his house. He said on his last visit, two weeks ago, his father wouldn't let him inside.

"The house was always locked," he said. "There were places we could never go. There were locks on the basement. Locks on the attic. Locks on the garage."

Anthony Castro, who lives in Columbus, also wrote an article for a community newspaper in Cleveland about the disappearance of Gina DeJesus just weeks after she went missing, when he was a college journalism student.

"That I wrote about this nearly 10 years ago — to find out that it is now so close to my family — it's unspeakable," he told The Plain Dealer newspaper.

Most everyone in the neighborhood knew Ariel Castro.

Neighbors say he played bass guitar in salsa and merengue bands and gave neighborhood children rides on his motorcycle.

Tito DeJesus, an uncle of Gina DeJesus, played in bands with Castro over the last 20 years. He recalled visiting Castro's house but never noticing anything out of the ordinary.

Juan Perez, who lives two doors down from the house, said Castro was always happy and respectful. "He gained trust with the kids and with the parents. You can only do that if you're nice," Perez said.

Castro also worked until recently as a school bus driver.

He was friends with the father of Gina DeJesus, one of the missing women, and helped search for her after she disappeared, said Khalid Samad, a friend of the family.

"When we went out to look for Gina, he helped pass out fliers," said Samad, a community activist who was at the hospital with DeJesus and her family on Monday night. "You know, he was friends with the family."

Antony Quiros said he was at the vigil about a year ago and saw Castro comforting Gina DeJesus' mother.

One neighbor, Francisco Cruz, said he was with Castro the day investigators dug up a yard looking for the girls.

Castro told Cruz, "They're not going to find anyone there," Cruz recalled.

Cleveland police now are conducting an internal review to see if they overlooked anything.

City Safety Director Martin Flask said Tuesday that investigators had no record of anyone calling about criminal activity at the house but were still checking police, fire and emergency databases.

2missingCleveland.JPGGina DeJesus missing since April 2004 when she was 14-years old. 
1missingCleveland.JPGAmanda Marie Berry missing since April 2003 when she was 16-years old.  

Two neighbors said they called police to the Castro house on separate occasions.

Elsie Cintron, who lives three houses away, said her daughter saw a naked woman crawling in the backyard several years ago and called police. "But they didn't take it seriously," she said.

Another neighbor, Israel Lugo, said he heard pounding on some of the doors of the house in November 2011. Lugo said officers knocked on the front door, but no one answered. "They walked to side of the house and then left," he said.

"Everyone in the neighborhood did what they had to do," said Lupe Collins, who is close to relatives of the women. "The police didn't do their job."

Police did go to the house twice in the past 15 years, but not in connection with the women's disappearance, officials said.

In 1993, Castro was arrested two days after Christmas on a domestic-violence charge and spent three days in jail before he was released on bond. The case was presented to a grand jury, but no indictment was returned, according to court documents, which don't detail the allegations. It's unclear who brought the charge against Castro, who was living at the home from which the women escaped Monday.

Four years ago, in another poverty-stricken part of town, police were heavily criticized following the discovery of 11 women's bodies in the home and backyard of Anthony Sowell, who was later convicted of murder and sentenced to death.

The families of Sowell's victims accused police of failing to properly investigate the disappearances because most of the women were addicted to drugs and poor. For months, the stench of death hung over the house, but it was blamed on a sausage factory next door.

Following public outrage over the killings, a panel formed by the mayor recommended an overhaul of the city's handling of missing-person and sex crime investigations.

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On Tuesday, a sign hung on a fence decorated with dozens of balloons outside the home of DeJesus' parents read "Welcome Home Gina." Her aunt Sandra Ruiz said her niece had an emotional reunion with family members.

"Those girls, those women are so strong," Ruiz said. "What we've done in 10 years is nothing compared to what those women have done in 10 years to survive."

Many of the women's loved ones and friends had held out hope of seeing them again,

For years, Berry's mother kept her room exactly as it was, said Tina Miller, a cousin. When magazines addressed to Berry arrived, they were piled in the room alongside presents for birthdays and Christmases she missed. Berry's mother died in 2006.

Just over a month ago, Miller attended a vigil marking the 10th anniversary of Berry's disappearance.

Over the past decade or so, investigators twice dug up backyards looking for Berry and continued to receive tips about her and DeJesus every few months, even in recent years. The disappearance of the two girls was profiled on TV's "America's Most Wanted" in 2005. Few leads ever came in about Knight.

Knight vanished at age 20 in 2002. Berry disappeared at 16 in 2003, when she called her sister to say she was getting a ride home from her job at a Burger King. About a year later, DeJesus vanished.

Jessica Aponce, 24, said she walked home with DeJesus the day the teenager disappeared.

"She called her mom and told her mom she was on her way home and that's the last time I seen her," Aponce said. "I just can't wait to see her. I'm just so happy she's alive. It's been so many years that everybody thinking she was dead."

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children's CEO, John Ryan, said Berry, DeJesus and Knight likely would be honored by his group.

"I think they're going to be at the top of the list," he said.

MORE NATIONAL NEWS


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Police: Burlington County man arrested after tear gas container found in carry-on

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The report also said that airport operations were not impacted by the arrest.

atlantic-city-airport.JPGA passenger walks into Atlantic City Airport in Pamona, N.J. in this 2006 file photo. 

PAMONA — State Police arrested a Burlington County man after officers at Atlantic City International Airport found something unusual in his carry-on luggage, according to an Press of Atlantic City report.

A Transportation Security Administration officer told authorities that an X-ray machine revealed a tear gas canister was tucked away in the man's bag during a screening on Sunday, the report said.

The Press of Atlantic City story, which did not identify the man who lives in the Columbus section of Mansfield Township, said he had been arrested on state charges.

The report also said that airport operations were not impacted by the arrest.

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Ex-Newark police officer admits to illegally receiving $60,000 in federal housing assistance

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Saliaman Kamara pleaded guilty to conspiring with his wife to obtaining $60,000 in federal housing assistance

Paul Fishman.JPG U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman at a press conference in December 2011.

NEWARK — A former Newark police officer admitted today in federal court to fraudulently receiving $60,000 in Section 8 federal public housing assistance for a home he owned in the city.

Suliaman Kamara, 31, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring with his wife to unlawfully obtain the assistance, according to the Office of U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman. He faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine when he is sentenced on Aug. 12.

From September 2006 to December 2011, Kamara and his wife received public housing assistance for the home he owned on West End Avenue and which the couple lived, Fishman’s office said.

His wife, identified only as "S.L." in court documents, has not been charged but the investigation is ongoing, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

The couple agreed not to disclose to the Newark Housing Authority that they were living together so Kamara’s police salary wouldn’t disqualify his wife from the federal benefits.

Kamara’s attorney, Anthony Iacullo, said today that his client "wanted to resolve this matter and put this behind him. It’s a decision he greatly regrets and his conduct is not indicative of the type of officer he was or the person he is."

Iacullo said Kamara remains suspended without pay from the Newark Police force but has agreed to voluntarily resign his position.

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Verdict reached in Jodi Arias murder trial

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Jodi Arias is accused of murdering her one-time boyfriend in Arizona

PHOENIX — Jurors have reached a verdict in the trial of Jodi Arias, who is accused of murdering her one-time boyfriend in Arizona.

Arias is charged with first-degree murder in the June 2008 death of Travis Alexander, a motivational speaker and salesman, at his suburban Phoenix home. Authorities said she planned the attack in a jealous rage after being rejected by the victim while he pursued other women.

Arias initially denied involvement and later blamed the killing on masked intruders. Two years after her arrest, she said she killed Alexander in self-defense.

Jurors got the case Friday afternoon. They reached a decision late this morning. It was scheduled to be announced at 1:30 p.m. Mountain time (4:30 p.m. Eastern time).

jodi-arias-murder-trial-verdict.jpgJurors have reached a verdict in the trial of Jodi Arias, who is accused of murdering her one-time boyfriend in Arizona.

Testimony in the trial began in early January, with Arias later spending 18 days on the witness stand. The trial quickly snowballed into a made-for-the-tabloids drama, garnering daily coverage from cable news networks, and spawning a virtual cottage industry for talk shows, legal experts and even Arias, who used her notoriety to sell artwork she made in jail.

Alexander suffered nearly 30 knife wounds, was shot in the forehead and had his throat slit before Arias dragged his body into his shower. He was found by friends about five days later.

Arias said she recalled Alexander attacking her in a fury after a day of sex. She said Alexander came at her "like a linebacker," body-slamming her to the tile floor. She managed to wriggle free and ran into his closet to retrieve a gun he kept on a shelf. She said she fired in self-defense but had no memory of stabbing him.

Arias acknowledged trying to clean the scene of the killing, dumping the gun in the desert and working on an alibi to avoid suspicion. She said she was too scared and ashamed to tell the truth.

As deliberations drag on, dozens of people gather daily on the courthouse steps waiting for a verdict.

If Arias is convicted of first-degree murder, she faces either life in prison or a death sentence. Jurors also have the option of convicting Arias of second-degree murder if they believe she didn't premeditate the killing but still intentionally caused Alexander's death. If convicted of that charge, she could be sentenced to 10 to 22 years in prison.

Manslaughter is an option if the panel believes Arias didn't plan the killing in advance and the attack occurred in the heat of passion after "adequate" provocation from Alexander. A conviction on this charge carries a sentence of seven to 21 years in prison.

If they believe she killed Alexander in self-defense, Arias would be acquitted and would walk out jail after being incarcerated for more than four years.

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Jodi Arias trial verdict: Guilty of first-degree murder

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Jurors have decided the fate of Jodi Arias, who is accused of murdering her one-time boyfriend, Travis Alexander, in Arizona

jodi-arias-murder-trial-travis-alexander.jpgJurors have decided the fate of Jodi Arias, who is accused of murdering her one-time boyfriend, Travis Alexander, in Arizona. The couple is pictured here in an undated photo that appeared on the HLN cable television network. 

PHOENIX — Jodi Arias was convicted of first-degree murder today in the gruesome killing of her one-time boyfriend after a four-month trial that captured headlines with lurid tales of sex, lies, religion and a salacious relationship that ended in a blood bath.

A jury found Arias guilty of murdering Travis Alexander in his suburban Phoenix home in June 2008. Authorities said she planned the attack in a jealous rage after being rejected by the victim while he pursued other women. Arias initially denied involvement then later blamed the killing on masked intruders. Two years after her arrest, she said it was self-defense.

Testimony began in early January, with Arias eventually spending 18 days on the witness stand. The trial quickly snowballed into a made-for-the-tabloids drama, garnering daily coverage from cable news networks and spawning a virtual cottage industry for talk shows, legal experts and even Arias, who used her notoriety to sell artwork she made in jail.

Jurors got the case Friday afternoon. They deliberated for two full days this week before reaching a decision late this morning. The verdict was announced shortly before 2 p.m. local time (5 p.m. Eastern time).

The trial will move into a phase during which prosecutors will argue the killing was committed in an especially cruel, heinous and depraved manner, called the "aggravation" phase. Both sides may call witnesses and show evidence during a mini trial of sorts. The jurors are the same.

jodi-arias-murder-trial-verdict.jpgJurors have reached a verdict in the trial of Jodi Arias, who is accused of murdering her one-time boyfriend in Arizona.

A mob of spectators gathered outside the courthouse to learn the verdict, while TV crews, media trucks and reporters lined nearby streets. Family and friends of Alexander wore blue ribbons and wristbands with the words "Justice For Travis."

Alexander suffered nearly 30 knife wounds, was shot in the forehead and had his throat slit before Arias dragged his body into his shower. He was found by friends about five days later.

Authorities said Alexander fought for his life as Arias attacked him in a blitz, but he soon grew too weak to defend himself.

"Mr. Alexander did not die calmly," prosecutor Juan Martinez told jurors in opening statements.

Arias said she recalled Alexander attacking her in a fury after a day of sex. She said Alexander came at her "like a linebacker," body-slamming her to the tile floor. She managed to wriggle free and ran into his closet to retrieve a gun he kept on a shelf. She said she fired in self-defense but had no memory of stabbing him.

She acknowledged trying to clean the scene of the killing, dumping the gun in the desert and working on an alibi to avoid suspicion. She said she was too scared and ashamed to tell the truth. However, none of Arias' allegations that Alexander had physically abused her in the months before his death, that he owned a gun and had sexual desires for young boys, were corroborated by witnesses or evidence during the trial. She acknowledged lying repeatedly before and after her arrest but insisted she was telling the truth in court.

Arias spent 18 days on the witness stand describing an abusive childhood, cheating boyfriends, dead-end jobs, a shocking sexual relationship with Alexander, and her contention that he had grown physically abusive.

Psychologist Richard Samuels testified for the defense that Arias suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and dissociative amnesia, which explained why she couldn't recall much from the day of the killing. Another defense witness, psychotherapist Alyce LaViolette, concluded that Arias was a battered woman.

Their testimony would be crucial to convince jurors that, one, Arias wasn't lying about her memory gaps from the day of the killing, and two, that she did suffer physical abuse by Alexander. Defense attorneys had to get jurors to believe that despite no evidence of Alexander ever having been violent in the past, he had attacked Arias on several occasions, and did so again on the day of his death.

After all, there was no dispute that Arias killed Alexander.

It was the first thing Arias' defense acknowledged as the trial began.

"Jodi Arias killed Travis Alexander," Arias attorney Jennifer Willmott told jurors in opening statements. "There is no question about it. The million dollar question is what would have forced her to do it?"

Martinez worked feverishly to attack the credibility of the defense experts, accusing them of having sympathy for Arias and offering biased opinions.

He later called his own expert, clinical psychologist Janeen DeMarte, who told jurors Arias didn't suffer from PTSD or amnesia, and that she found no evidence that the defendant was a battered woman. Instead, DeMarte said Arias suffered from borderline personality disorder, showing signs of immaturity and an "unstable sense of identity."

People who suffer from such a disorder "have a terrified feeling of being abandoned by others," DeMarte told jurors.

The case had devolved into dueling expert witnesses.

Aside from her lies, Arias had another formidable obstacle to overcome.

Her grandparents had reported a .25-caliber handgun stolen from their Northern California home about a week before Alexander's death — the same caliber used to shoot him — but Arias insisted she didn't take it. Authorities believe she brought it with her to kill him. The coincidence of the same caliber gun stolen from the home also being used to shoot Alexander was never resolved. It would be left up to the jury to decide if it made sense.

Then there was Arias' account of Alexander's killing. She said she shot him first, but he kept coming, forcing her to grab a knife and defend herself.

However, Dr. Kevin Horn, a Maricopa County medical examiner, testified it would have been highly unlikely that Alexander could have sustained so many defensive wounds from the knife attack had he been shot in the head first. Horn said the gunshot would have rendered the victim incapable of fighting back.

Meanwhile, the entire case devolved into a circus-like spectacle attracting dozens of enthusiast each day to the courthouse as they lined up for a chance to score just a few open public seats in the gallery. One trial regular sold her spot in line to another person for $200. Both got reprimands from the court, and the money was returned.

Many people also gathered outside after trial for a chance to see Martinez, who had gained celebrity-like status for his firebrand tactics and unapologetically intimidating style of cross-examining defense witnesses.

The case grew into a worldwide sensation as thousands followed the trial via a live, unedited Web feed. Twitter filled with comments as spectators expressed their opinions on everything from Arias' wardrobe to Martinez's angry demeanor. For its fans, the Arias trial became a live daytime soap opera.

Adding to the spectacle, Arias sold drawings from jail throughout the trial on a website operated by a third party, said her mother, Sandra Arias. According to the site, some pieces were fetching more than a $1,000, and Sandra Arias said the money was being used to help pay for family expenses. Nothing prevented Arias from profiting from her notoriety given she hadn't been convicted of a crime.

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