LEADDRAFT
12-06-2006, 12:56 PM
The 50 round thread......
While NOT condoning this Kids actions that brought Police too His home..
13 Shell casings found at the scene....
A Suspect AND His Dog killed......
On a "Search Warrent".......
http://www.starnewsonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061206/NEWS/612060416
:(
Comments?
Orest
12-06-2006, 01:07 PM
source and a different source this AM.
They take 2 lives on a search warrent, no gun; just a video game controller.
1BadF350
12-06-2006, 01:25 PM
The article you link to doesn't mention a count number on the shell casings, or anything about a dog. It only states that shell casings were among the items seized by the police at the home.
Here we go again, jumping to conclusions before all the facts are known.
1BadF350
12-06-2006, 01:28 PM
Shots likely hit door, then teen
Pathologist: Police bullets passed through 'intervening targets'
By Ken Little
Staff Writer
ken.little@starnewsonline.com
Law enforcement officers may have fired through a front door Friday night as sheriff's deputies and University of North Carolina Wilmington police officers attempted to serve an arrest warrant on Peyton Strickland in connection with the Nov. 17 robbery of two PlayStation 3 game stations from a UNCW student.
Strickland, 18, was shot in the head and right shoulder area and fatally wounded in the house he lived in at 533 Long Leaf Acres Drive. Strickland's death is attributed to a gunshot wound to the head, said Charles L. Garrett, the pathologist who performed the autopsy.
Garrett said Tuesday that the state medical examiner's office in Jacksonville is working with the State Bureau of Investigation in trying to determine at what range the bullets that struck the Cape Fear Community College student were fired from.
"Some of the bullets went through intervening targets, probably the door," Garrett said. Both bullets that struck Strickland passed through him into the house, he added.
New Hanover County Sheriff Sid Causey has refused to divulge the names of the deputies on the sheriff's office Emergency Response Team that served the warrant.
The Star-News and other media outlets will file a complaint today in New Hanover County Superior Court requesting an order compelling disclosure of public records. The names of the three deputies who have been placed on administrative leave, along with the names of the other deputies present when the warrant was served, are sought.
"I am not releasing their names, their address or anything about them until the investigation is complete. If there's anything in the investigation that was done wrong, I will take responsibility for it," Causey said Tuesday. "The investigation is going to be finished soon and we will reveal all the facts."
Causey said he saw postings on several Web sites that threatened harm to the deputies involved in the incident.
"It's stuff like that that's being suggested that concerns me a whole lot when I think somebody is going to go to an officer's house to harm him, his family or anybody else," Causey said.
"When the investigation is finished, we'll review it, and if there is any action that needs to be taken, we'll take it."
Authorities charged a third man Monday in connection with the robbery of Justin Raines in a UNCW parking lot. Braden Delaney Riley, 21, was charged with robbery with a dangerous weapon, assault with a deadly weapon and breaking or entering a motor vehicle.
Riley, a Cape Fear Community College student who gave an Apex address, had a District Court appearance date Tuesday and is free on $30,000 secured bond.
Ryan D. Mills, 20, of 4500 Crawdad Court, is charged with the same offenses, as Strickland would have been. Riley and Mills have both entered not guilty pleas. Both have Jan. 4 appearance dates in felony District Court.
The language in Riley's arrest warrant is similar to the one issued for Mills. The warrant states that the men stole the two PlayStation units, worth $641 each, using a blunt object to assault Raines during the robbery. Raines had waited about three days in line outside the Sigmon Road Wal-Mart to purchase the coveted PlayStation 3 systems.
UNCW police said after the robbery that Raines was followed back to the college from the Wal-Mart parking lot by four men in a gold sedan. The car and two of the suspects were captured on a surveillance video in the store parking lot.
A search warrant of the Long Leaf Acres Drive house where the shooting occurred that was released to the media Monday had one page containing items seized by deputies omitted. That page was provided Tuesday and showed that in addition to shell casings and fragments, a PlayStation 3 game system was seized, along with a marijuana cigarette and bong pipe. Other property seized included more shell casings and fragments, four bongs and the front door of the house, according to the documents released Monday.
A blue sheet flapped in the doorway of the Long Leaf Acres Drive house Tuesday afternoon.
Candles from a vigil held the night before by friends of Strickland still flickered inside glass sleeves at the end of the driveway.
Neighbors said that earlier in the day, several young men loaded a rental trailer with household possessions and drove off.
A funeral service for Strickland will be held at 2 p.m. today in Durham.
Ken Little: 343-2389
ken.little@starnewsonline.com
Orest
12-13-2006, 10:10 AM
What a bunch of JA...........
http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/12/12/playstation.theft.ap/index.html
1BadF350
12-13-2006, 10:51 AM
Yes....now we can call them JA's.:D
MANDINGO
12-13-2006, 11:15 AM
What a bunch of JA...........
http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/12/12/playstation.theft.ap/index.html
JA TO THE 3RD POWER
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