deaths

Dixie Cup

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Sep 16, 2006
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Edmonton
I think the cull has now been put off. It never really had anything to do with the birds themselves, just a bunch of unelected mindless bureacraps trying to exert their authority. We won.
Yes, compelled government control makes complete sense especially considering what we've gone thru recently with Covid!!
 
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spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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50% of U.S. murders now going unsolved

Author of the article:Brad Hunter
Published Jul 07, 2025 • Last updated 16 hours ago • 3 minute read

If you are murdered in the United States, there’s a 50% chance your killing is going to go cold.


According to The New York Times, in cities like Louisville, Kentucky, police don’t even make an arrest in half of their homicide investigations.


The problem is nationwide, the Times reported. While the clearance rate was 58% in 2023, that number is inflated because it includes homicides from previous years that the police solved in 2023.

For comparison, the homicide clearance rate in Canada is around 70% The Toronto Police Service’s clearance rate is one of the highest in North America, with an 80% solve rate over the past five years.

Experts in the U.S. claim the volume of investigations and distrust of the police have stymied countless murder probes. And the fact that solving a case has come down to a flip of the coin, criminals have become emboldened.


“It’s a vicious cycle,” Brian Forst, a criminologist at American University, told the Times. “When the bad guys see that the police are not there to deter crime and catch criminals, they remain on the streets to do more bad stuff. And the rest of the community is less deterred from crime. They think, ‘Why not? I’m not going to get caught.’”

Experts say the most powerful deterrent to violent crime is the would-be killer knowing cops will catch them quickly. The idea that they will be captured and punished somewhere down the road doesn’t work.

“The certainty of being caught is a vastly more powerful deterrent than the punishment,” concluded the National Institute of Justice in its review of the evidence.

Most of the victims in the mounting tally of unsolved murders are poor and Black.


“Take a bunch of teenage boys from the whitest, safest suburb in America and plunk them down in a place where their friends are murdered and they are constantly attacked and threatened,” author Jill Leovy wrote in Ghettoside: A True Story of Murder in America.

“Signal that no one cares, and fail to solve murders. Limit their options for escape. Then see what happens.”

Experts told the Times there are five key reasons why murder investigations go cold.

– Lack of attention and police resources. Cops in New York and Boston boast the country’s highest clearance rate because they are well-funded.

– America has more guns than any other country in the world. A firearms murder is harder to solve than a stabbing. In 2023, the U.S. homicide rate with guns was 4.4 per 100,000; in Canada, it was 0.7 per 100,000.


– The U.S. also has more gang crime than other Western nations. These crimes are harder to solve.

– For sheer volume, no one can touch the U.S. More murders and fewer cops is a recipe for disaster. One detective noted, “We are swamped.”

– A long history of distrust between the cops and the community harms homicide detectives’ ability to solve murders.

The American murder rate has dropped dramatically since the 1990s, when battles over crack turf turned city streets into slaughterhouses. But for the above-mentioned reasons, murder remains as American as apple pie.

More resources and modern technology could provide an Rx to stem the march to the morgue.

But in the end, murder is about the victims, their friends and families.

“I want someone to be held accountable for taking my son’s life,” said Delphine Prentice, the mother of Damion Morton, who was shot and killed in 2017.

But after eight years, she added, “I’m about to give up hope.”

bhunter@postmedia.com

@HunterTOSun
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Mar 18, 2013
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For comparison, the homicide clearance rate in Canada is around 70% The Toronto Police Service’s clearance rate is one of the highest in North America, with an 80% solve rate over the past five years.
So, shouldn't the saying be "The Mounties get their man maybe 3/4 of the time or so?"
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,752
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Gary Coleman's ex-wife fails lie-detector test about actor's death from fall
Author of the article:Spiro Papuckoski
Published Jul 09, 2025 • 2 minute read

Actor Gary Coleman’s ex-wife wasn’t able to pass a lie-detector test when questioned about the circumstances surrounding his death.

Whatcha talkin’ ’bout?


Shannon Price is set to appear on A&E’s Lie Detector: Truth or Deception series after she was asked yes or no questions about Coleman’s death by a retired FBI agent and polygraph examiner George Olivo.

Price married the Diff’rent Strokes actor in 2007 after they met on the set of the film Church Ball. However, the following year they divorced and Coleman was granted a restraining order to keep her away from his home when he was hospitalized.

Despite the restraining order, Coleman and Price lived together in a common-law relationship until his death in May 2010 after he fell down the stairs at his Utah home.



According to A&E, Price took the test to “address persistent public suspicion regarding her potential involvement in his death, even though she was never charged in connection with it.”

She answered Olivo’s questions while hooked up to the machine, according to The Hollywood Reporter, which obtained a copy of the episode before it aired.

“Did you ever strike Gary during your relationship?”

“No,” she answered.

“Did you intentionally decide to withhold help to Gary when he fell?”

“No,” she replied again.


The polygraph determined her answers to those two questions were inconclusive, meaning she didn’t score high enough to pass or low enough to fail.

“Did you physically cause Gary’s fall? Did you physically cause Gary to fall that day?”


“No,” she said.

That response was rated a failing grade with deception. Olivo asked her what she thought about the results.

“That’s false,” she said.



Olivo said he doesn’t know what exactly happened the day Coleman fell down the stairs and injured his head, resulting in a brain bleed that ultimately led to his death at 42.

“I don’t know what happened in that house, but what could have happened is that she and Gary got into a shouting match or an argument that turned into a shoving match, he fell and hit the ground,” Olivo told The Hollywood Reporter. “It doesn’t have to be any more sinister than that.”

He added that she may not want to explain how the events unfolded in the home if Coleman’s head injury happened by accident.

“All I know for sure, what I’m 100% certain of — at least through my process — is that there is more to the story than she’s telling.”

The two-hour premiere airs Thursday night on A&E.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,752
3,538
113
Gary Coleman's ex-wife fails lie-detector test about actor's death from fall
Author of the article:Spiro Papuckoski
Published Jul 09, 2025 • 2 minute read

Actor Gary Coleman’s ex-wife wasn’t able to pass a lie-detector test when questioned about the circumstances surrounding his death.

Whatcha talkin’ ’bout?


Shannon Price is set to appear on A&E’s Lie Detector: Truth or Deception series after she was asked yes or no questions about Coleman’s death by a retired FBI agent and polygraph examiner George Olivo.

Price married the Diff’rent Strokes actor in 2007 after they met on the set of the film Church Ball. However, the following year they divorced and Coleman was granted a restraining order to keep her away from his home when he was hospitalized.

Despite the restraining order, Coleman and Price lived together in a common-law relationship until his death in May 2010 after he fell down the stairs at his Utah home.



According to A&E, Price took the test to “address persistent public suspicion regarding her potential involvement in his death, even though she was never charged in connection with it.”

She answered Olivo’s questions while hooked up to the machine, according to The Hollywood Reporter, which obtained a copy of the episode before it aired.

“Did you ever strike Gary during your relationship?”

“No,” she answered.

“Did you intentionally decide to withhold help to Gary when he fell?”

“No,” she replied again.


The polygraph determined her answers to those two questions were inconclusive, meaning she didn’t score high enough to pass or low enough to fail.

“Did you physically cause Gary’s fall? Did you physically cause Gary to fall that day?”


“No,” she said.

That response was rated a failing grade with deception. Olivo asked her what she thought about the results.

“That’s false,” she said.



Olivo said he doesn’t know what exactly happened the day Coleman fell down the stairs and injured his head, resulting in a brain bleed that ultimately led to his death at 42.

“I don’t know what happened in that house, but what could have happened is that she and Gary got into a shouting match or an argument that turned into a shoving match, he fell and hit the ground,” Olivo told The Hollywood Reporter. “It doesn’t have to be any more sinister than that.”

He added that she may not want to explain how the events unfolded in the home if Coleman’s head injury happened by accident.

“All I know for sure, what I’m 100% certain of — at least through my process — is that there is more to the story than she’s telling.”

The two-hour premiere airs Thursday night on A&E.
thankfully midgets are not endangered. ;)
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,752
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K-9 unit dog, Devi, is mourned following her death
Author of the article:Jane Stevenson
Published Jul 11, 2025 • Last updated 19 hours ago • 1 minute read

K-9 Unit's T.C. Andrews and his dog, Devi
Devi, a K-9 unit police dog in Toronto, has passed after over a decade of service including working the Pan Am Games. Photo by Toronto Police Association
A “beloved” K-9 Unit dog has died after more than a decade of service in Toronto including during the 2015 Pan Am Games.


The Toronto Police Association says police service dog has Devi, who worked with handler T.C. Andrews, has passed.


“We’re deeply saddened by the passing of Police Service Dog Devi, a beloved member of our K9 Unit,” said the TPA on it’s X account.

“Devi was certified in Explosive Firearm Detection in May 2015, just in time for the Pan-Am Games, and spent over a decade working side by side with her handler, T.C. Andrews. She was exceptional at her job. Focused, fearless, and full of heart.”

The TPA continues in its post on X: “Devi left a lasting impression on everyone she met. Her dedication, loyalty, and presence will never be forgotten. Our heartfelt condolences to T.C. Andrews and everyone who served with Devi.”
1752321316000.png
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,273
3,984
113
Edmonton
K-9 unit dog, Devi, is mourned following her death
Author of the article:Jane Stevenson
Published Jul 11, 2025 • Last updated 19 hours ago • 1 minute read

K-9 Unit's T.C. Andrews and his dog, Devi
Devi, a K-9 unit police dog in Toronto, has passed after over a decade of service including working the Pan Am Games. Photo by Toronto Police Association
A “beloved” K-9 Unit dog has died after more than a decade of service in Toronto including during the 2015 Pan Am Games.


The Toronto Police Association says police service dog has Devi, who worked with handler T.C. Andrews, has passed.


“We’re deeply saddened by the passing of Police Service Dog Devi, a beloved member of our K9 Unit,” said the TPA on it’s X account.

“Devi was certified in Explosive Firearm Detection in May 2015, just in time for the Pan-Am Games, and spent over a decade working side by side with her handler, T.C. Andrews. She was exceptional at her job. Focused, fearless, and full of heart.”

The TPA continues in its post on X: “Devi left a lasting impression on everyone she met. Her dedication, loyalty, and presence will never be forgotten. Our heartfelt condolences to T.C. Andrews and everyone who served with Devi.”
View attachment 29975
Aww - I wish they lived longer. I had to put down our 16 y.o. terrier last September & still get weepy sometimes when I think about him. It's hard!! RIP Devi
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,752
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113
London woman speaks out after rare tick-borne disease kills dog
A London woman is warning pet owners in the Long Point area to be vigilant after a rare tick-borne disease killed her dog.

Author of the article:Jacob Robinson • Simcoe Reformer
Published Jul 15, 2025 • 2 minute read

Londoner Taylor Walpole and her late dog, Tobi.
Londoner Taylor Walpole and her late dog, Tobi.
A London woman is warning pet owners in the Long Point area to be vigilant after she says a rare tick-borne disease killed her dog.


Taylor Walpole would often visit family members at a cottage in Long Point – a Norfolk County community on Lake Erie, about a 90-minute drive southeast of London – during the summer months and bring along Tobi, her white husky rescue pup from northern Manitoba.


As a sometimes–travelling nurse, Walpole left Tobi in Long Point this spring as she left for a stint working in British Columbia.

“He loved to go to Long Point,” Walpole said. “He would swim in the water, loved walking on the beach and all the trails and everything there.

“I was still in British Columbia, and I got a text from my family saying Tobi wouldn’t eat breakfast that morning, he was really lazy and didn’t want to go on any walks. They had to push him to get out the door, which is really unlike him.”


Tobi’s health worsened in the coming days. He was taken to Walpole’s regular clinic in London and an emergency hospital in Toronto. Despite a number of attempts to get the regularly spry six-year-old to health, including plasma transfusion, nothing worked.

“I decided to put him down June 16, three days after I got a call from the vet and all his extended bloodwork and tests came back,” Walpole said. “He tested positive for Rickettsia rickettsii bacteria . . . Tobi was on tick prevention medication 12 months of the year, but it didn’t protect him.”

Rickettsia rickettsii bacteria causes Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF), a very rare, dangerous and fast-acting tick-borne disease not typically seen in Ontario.


In his blog about responsible pet ownership, Scott Weese, veterinary internal medicine specialist and the chief of infection control at University of Guelph’s Ontario Veterinary College, said the disease hadn’t been considered a risk locally, but now five dogs have tested positive in Ontario, four having a history of visiting Long Point.

“We need to be more aware of this disease and pay even more attention to the ticks,” Weese wrote. “In Ontario, RMSF can be transmitted by the American dog tick, Dermacentor variabilis, which is well established here, but a different species from the tick that typically get the most attention, the black legged tick Ixodes scapularis, which is associated with transmission of Lyme disease.”


Weese advises that folks in Long Point should regularly perform checks for ticks both on themselves and their pets as RMSF can be dangerous for humans and animals. If any people or animals in the area become sick following what is assumed to be a tick bite, they should seek medical assistance immediately.

Walpole said she notified local public health officials of the dog’s diagnosis. She says she’s doing her best to let everyone visiting the lakeshore know they should be cautious in the wake of Tobi’s death.

“I think for me and my family, the thing we’re really doing in our grief is just trying to spread the word,” she said. “We can’t bring Tobi back, but we can hopefully save some other dogs.”

To learn more about RMSF, visit Weese’s blog at wormsandgermsblog.com.
1752719306854.png
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Vandals who cut down Sycamore Gap tree sentenced in England to more than 4 years in prison
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Brian Melley
Published Jul 15, 2025 • 4 minute read

This combination created in Londonon May 9, 2025 of undated handout pictures released by Britain's Northumbria Police taken in Newcastle, shows Daniel Graham (L) and Adam Carruthers, the two men convicted over felling of the tree at Sycamore Gap. Photo by - /Northumbria Police/AFP via Getty
LONDON (AP) — Two men who cut down England’s beloved Sycamore Gap tree were sentenced Tuesday to more than four years in prison.


The tree stood for nearly 150 years before Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers carried out what a prosecutor called a “moronic mission” and cut it down in the middle of the night, toppling it onto Hadrian’s Wall.


Graham, 39, and Carruthers, 32, were each convicted of two counts of criminal damage — one for destroying the tree, the other for damaging the ancient wall.

Justice Christina Lambert sentenced the pair each to four years and three months in prison during the hearing in Newcastle Crown Court.

The tree, perched in a saddle between two hills, had been known to locals for its scenic setting but became famous after a cameo in Kevin Costner’s 1991 film “Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves.” It drew tourists, lovers, landscape photographers and even those who spread the ashes of loved ones. It was voted English “Tree of the Year” in 2016.


THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

LONDON (AP) — The two men who long denied cutting down England’s beloved Sycamore Gap tree changed their tune Tuesday as they faced several years in prison for the crime.

Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers previously testified at trial that they had nothing to do with the vandalism, but a prosecutor said that the two convicts now blame booze for the act as they admitted before sentencing that they had been on what he termed a “moronic mission” to topple the tree.

Prosecutor Richard Wright said that it was a “fanciful proposition” that they didn’t intend to cut down the tree along Hadrian’s Wall or realize what they were doing until it was too late.

“The court can be sure they were sober, prepared and planned to do what they did,” Wright said. He said the pair should serve prison sentences between 18 months and 4 years.


Justice Christina Lambert was due to sentence the pair later in the afternoon at Newcastle Crown Court.

Graham, 39, and Carruthers, 32, were each convicted in May of two counts of criminal damage — one for killing the tree, and the other for damaging the ancient wall.

The illegal felling in Northumberland National Park on Sept. 28, 2023, caused instant outrage and news quickly spread beyond the ancient wall built by Emperor Hadrian in A.D. 122 to protect the northwest frontier of the Roman Empire.

It wasn’t Britain’s biggest or oldest tree, but the sycamore was prized for its picturesque setting, symmetrically planted between two hills along the wall that is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The tree had long been known to locals but became famous after a cameo in Kevin Costner’s 1991 film “Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves.” It drew tourists, lovers, landscape photographers and even those who spread the ashes of loved ones. It was voted English “Tree of the Year” in 2016.


“This iconic tree can never be replaced,” Andrew Poad, general manager of the heritage and nature conservation charity National Trust, said in a statement read in court by a prosecutor. “It belonged to the people. It was a totemic symbol for many; a destination to visit whilst walking Hadrian’s Wall, a place to make memories, take photos in all seasons; but it was also a place of sanctuary.”

One man wielded a chainsaw while the other captured the felling on grainy video on a cellphone. Prosecutors couldn’t say who cut down the tree and who memorialized the senseless act, but both were equally culpable.

In less than three minutes, the tree that had stood nearly 150 years crashed to the ground.

Police officers look at the tree at Sycamore Gap
Police officers look at the tree at Sycamore Gap, next to Hadrian’s Wall, in Northumberland, England, Thursday Sept. 28, 2023 which has come down overnight. Photo by Owen Humphreys /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Carruthers will have to carry the burden for his actions like a “form of personal penance,” attorney Andrew Gurney said.


“It was no more than drunken stupidity,” Gurney said, “and something he would regret for the rest of his life.”

At trial, the two men — once the best of friends who have fallen out since their arrests — testified they were at their respective homes on the night of the crime and downplayed their skills working with chainsaws.

But evidence shown to the jury implicated both men.

Graham’s Range Rover was near the tree around the time it fell. Video of the felling was found on his phone — with metadata showing that it was shot at the location of the tree.

As digital data showed Graham’s vehicle on its way back to where the two lived about 40 minutes away, Carruthers got a text from his girlfriend with footage of their 12-day-old son.


“I’ve got a better video than that,” Carruthers replied.

The jury didn’t hear evidence of a motive for the crime, but Wright suggested in his closing argument that the two had been on a “moronic mission” and cut down the tree as a joke.

“They woke up the morning after and … it must have dawned on them that they couldn’t see anyone else smiling,” Wright said.
aptopix-britain-hadrians-wall-felled-tree[1].jpg
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,752
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Vandals who cut down Sycamore Gap tree sentenced in England to more than 4 years in prison
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Brian Melley
Published Jul 15, 2025 • 4 minute read

This combination created in Londonon May 9, 2025 of undated handout pictures released by Britain's Northumbria Police taken in Newcastle, shows Daniel Graham (L) and Adam Carruthers, the two men convicted over felling of the tree at Sycamore Gap. Photo by - /Northumbria Police/AFP via Getty
LONDON (AP) — Two men who cut down England’s beloved Sycamore Gap tree were sentenced Tuesday to more than four years in prison.


The tree stood for nearly 150 years before Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers carried out what a prosecutor called a “moronic mission” and cut it down in the middle of the night, toppling it onto Hadrian’s Wall.


Graham, 39, and Carruthers, 32, were each convicted of two counts of criminal damage — one for destroying the tree, the other for damaging the ancient wall.

Justice Christina Lambert sentenced the pair each to four years and three months in prison during the hearing in Newcastle Crown Court.

The tree, perched in a saddle between two hills, had been known to locals for its scenic setting but became famous after a cameo in Kevin Costner’s 1991 film “Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves.” It drew tourists, lovers, landscape photographers and even those who spread the ashes of loved ones. It was voted English “Tree of the Year” in 2016.


THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

LONDON (AP) — The two men who long denied cutting down England’s beloved Sycamore Gap tree changed their tune Tuesday as they faced several years in prison for the crime.

Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers previously testified at trial that they had nothing to do with the vandalism, but a prosecutor said that the two convicts now blame booze for the act as they admitted before sentencing that they had been on what he termed a “moronic mission” to topple the tree.

Prosecutor Richard Wright said that it was a “fanciful proposition” that they didn’t intend to cut down the tree along Hadrian’s Wall or realize what they were doing until it was too late.

“The court can be sure they were sober, prepared and planned to do what they did,” Wright said. He said the pair should serve prison sentences between 18 months and 4 years.


Justice Christina Lambert was due to sentence the pair later in the afternoon at Newcastle Crown Court.

Graham, 39, and Carruthers, 32, were each convicted in May of two counts of criminal damage — one for killing the tree, and the other for damaging the ancient wall.

The illegal felling in Northumberland National Park on Sept. 28, 2023, caused instant outrage and news quickly spread beyond the ancient wall built by Emperor Hadrian in A.D. 122 to protect the northwest frontier of the Roman Empire.

It wasn’t Britain’s biggest or oldest tree, but the sycamore was prized for its picturesque setting, symmetrically planted between two hills along the wall that is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The tree had long been known to locals but became famous after a cameo in Kevin Costner’s 1991 film “Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves.” It drew tourists, lovers, landscape photographers and even those who spread the ashes of loved ones. It was voted English “Tree of the Year” in 2016.


“This iconic tree can never be replaced,” Andrew Poad, general manager of the heritage and nature conservation charity National Trust, said in a statement read in court by a prosecutor. “It belonged to the people. It was a totemic symbol for many; a destination to visit whilst walking Hadrian’s Wall, a place to make memories, take photos in all seasons; but it was also a place of sanctuary.”

One man wielded a chainsaw while the other captured the felling on grainy video on a cellphone. Prosecutors couldn’t say who cut down the tree and who memorialized the senseless act, but both were equally culpable.

In less than three minutes, the tree that had stood nearly 150 years crashed to the ground.

Police officers look at the tree at Sycamore Gap
Police officers look at the tree at Sycamore Gap, next to Hadrian’s Wall, in Northumberland, England, Thursday Sept. 28, 2023 which has come down overnight. Photo by Owen Humphreys /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Carruthers will have to carry the burden for his actions like a “form of personal penance,” attorney Andrew Gurney said.


“It was no more than drunken stupidity,” Gurney said, “and something he would regret for the rest of his life.”

At trial, the two men — once the best of friends who have fallen out since their arrests — testified they were at their respective homes on the night of the crime and downplayed their skills working with chainsaws.

But evidence shown to the jury implicated both men.

Graham’s Range Rover was near the tree around the time it fell. Video of the felling was found on his phone — with metadata showing that it was shot at the location of the tree.

As digital data showed Graham’s vehicle on its way back to where the two lived about 40 minutes away, Carruthers got a text from his girlfriend with footage of their 12-day-old son.


“I’ve got a better video than that,” Carruthers replied.

The jury didn’t hear evidence of a motive for the crime, but Wright suggested in his closing argument that the two had been on a “moronic mission” and cut down the tree as a joke.

“They woke up the morning after and … it must have dawned on them that they couldn’t see anyone else smiling,” Wright said.
View attachment 30033
they committed an act of treeson. ;)