Showing posts with label found. Show all posts
Showing posts with label found. Show all posts

Friday, 28 September 2012

Body of missing student from Long Island found

AP  Eyewitness NewsEVANSTON, Ill. -- The body of a Northwestern University student who was last seen leaving a weekend party has been found in a harbor near the school's suburban Chicago campus.

Authorities say the body of 18-year-old sophomore Harsha Maddula, of New Hyde Park, was pulled late Thursday from a harbor in Wilmette, a town north of Evanston.

Northwestern spokesman Alan Cubbage says Maddula's wallet with a university identification card and his cellphone was found on the body, which showed no signs of foul play. He said Wilmette police were notified shortly before 7 p.m. that a body was found by a boater. Wilmette police had no comment.

"On behalf of Northwestern University, I extend our deepest sympathies to Harsha's family and to his many friends at Northwestern. Our hearts and thoughts are with them," University President Morton Schapiro said in a statement released by the university.

Maddula was last seen after midnight Saturday. A relative says he went to the party with several friends and disappeared after he and others left for another party.

Cubbage said police began focusing their search for Maddula at the harbor after a check of activity for his cellphone determined the last signal from it was in that area.

His parents, Prasad Maddula and Dhana Lakshmi Maddula, and other relatives arrived in Evanston on Monday to join the search for the pre-med engineering student, who had been recently diagnosed with diabetes.

Maddula's parents, along with the student's uncle, Sam Maddali, on Wednesday announced a $25,000 reward for information leading to the student's whereabouts. They were standing at Wilmette Harbor, where their son's body was found, when they made the announcement.

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long island, body found, long island news

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Thursday, 27 September 2012

Rats found roaming around Fairway

Web produced by Jennifer Matarese, Eyewitness NewsNEW YORK (WABC) -- At the olive bar in the Fairway Supermarket on the Upper West Side, an unwelcome guest has come to dine.

Glenn Herman was in the store early Wednesday morning when another customer noticed the little rat.

"The gentleman who pointed it out to me, an older gentleman, looked like someone had tazed him," Herman said. And when Eyewitness News started looking online, we saw other videos taken by customers at the store and some still pictures as well.

"Oh, don't show me that," one customer said.

"Where was this?" a man wanted to know.

The store is aware of the problem.

Eyewitness News saw rat traps set both outside and inside the store.

"The manager there did tell me that it is kind of difficult to wipe out the rat problem when they are basically walking through the front door from the subways," Herman said.

Supermarkets like Fairway are inspected by the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets, just once a year "unless there's something critical to cause reinspection."

In a statement Wednesday night, Fairway said, "We believe the incident was caused by the massive construction that is happening throughout the immediate vicinity of the store. We are now taking comprehensive measures to remedy the situation so that it doesn't happen again."

Joanne Grossman and her husband have seen some of the videos online.

"I said disgusting, but I didn't stop shopping here. But I guess now that I hear they were up on the olives, I'll think about it a little bit more," Grossman said.

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new york city, rats, upper west side, new york news, jim dolan

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Monday, 24 September 2012

New breast cancer clues found in gene analysis

AP  NEW YORK -- Scientists reported Sunday that they have completed a major analysis of the genetics of breast cancer, finding four major classes of the disease. They hope their work will lead to more effective treatments, perhaps with some drugs already in use.

The new finding offers hints that one type of breast cancer might be vulnerable to drugs that already work against ovarian cancer.

The study, published online Sunday by the journal Nature, is the latest example of research into the biological details of tumors, rather than focusing primarily on where cancer arises in the body.

The hope is that such research can reveal cancer's genetic weaknesses for better drug targeting.

"With this study, we're one giant step closer to understanding the genetic origins of the four major subtypes of breast cancer," Dr. Matthew Ellis of the Washington University School of Medicine said in a statement. He is a co-leader of the research.

"Now we can investigate which drugs work best for patients based on the genetic profiles of their tumors," he said.

The researchers analyzed DNA of breast cancer tumors from 825 patients, looking for abnormalities. Altogether, they reported, breast cancers appear to fall into four main classes when viewed in this way.

One class showed similarities to ovarian cancers, suggesting it may be driven by similar biological developments.

"It's clear they are genetically more similar to ovarian tumors than to other breast cancers," Ellis said. "Whether they can be treated the same way is an intriguing possibility that needs to be explored."

The report is the latest from the Cancer Genome Atlas, a federally funded project that has produced similar analyses for brain, colorectal, lung, and ovarian cancers.

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cancer, breast cancer, health news

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Saturday, 15 September 2012

Elderly woman found fatally stabbed in apartment

  Eyewitness NewsNEW YORK (WABC) -- An elderly woman was discovered dead in her Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, apartment Friday morning.

The Medical Examiner's office says that the 85-year-old woman was stabbed several times in the neck and torso.

The woman was found by her brother on the floor at around 7:40 a.m. She was lying against a couch and had a towel around her head.

Doctors discovered a puncture wound to the back of her neck.

No arrests were made and there did not immediately appear to be a motive.

There was no sign of forced entry.

A spokeswoman says an investigation is underway as to how the body was reported to their office, and why this was initially thought to be not suspicious.

A full autopsy will be done on Saturday.

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new york city, stabbing, new york news

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Thursday, 21 June 2012

1 found dead; Search continues for other missing swimmer

  Eyewitness NewsPERTH AMBOY, N.J. (WABC) -- The summer scorcher is sending thousands of people seeking relief from the blistering heat to the Jersey shore. But with the cool water, the heat and humidity are creating dangerous rip currents.

The search for two missing swimmers resumed Thursday, one day after dozens of people had to be rescued. The body of a 23-year-old Irvington man who went missing off the beaches of Asbury Park was recovered Thursday morning, but crews continued to search for an 18-year-old from Bayonne who vanished in the waters off Seaside Park around 3:30 p.m.

The Asbury Park victim had swam out to save his sister, who was pulled from the water by lifeguards. The heat led to record crowds, and all those extra swimmers kept lifeguards busy. At least 30 swimmers were rescued Wednesday.

A father and son are being called heroes after they saved a little girl and her cousin from the rough currents of the Raritan Bay.

The current pulled the two children out past the pier in Perth Amboy. That's when Hector Hernandez and his son Joshua went in and rescued 9-year-old Laneija Smith and the other child.

"I saw her go down, and that's when I knew it wasn't a joke," Hector Hernandez said. "And that's when I jumped in."

Joshua swam even farther out to save the cousin.

"I seen them jumping up and down, and then I seen them go under, and then they jumped back up one more time and take a breath," he said. "So I just jumped off and went in. I guess it was just instinct. Because I have a little brother, so I would've felt terrible if something happened...I wouldn't call myself a hero. I just did what was right."

Laneija is now in the intensive care unit at St. Peter's University Hospital. Doctors expect her and her cousin to make full recoveries.

"If he didn't have enough courage and step up as a man and go in there and save my daughter, she would not be alive," dad Thomas Smith said.

Officials warn swimmers against venturing too far out. They stress that if you get sucked into a current, do not swim against it. Move with it until you can safely swim to shore.

CLICK HERE TO SEE PHOTOS FROM NEWSCOPTER 7 OVER SEASIDE PARK

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new jersey, perth amboy, seaside park, water rescue, drowning, new jersey news

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2-year-old girl found dead in New Paltz home

See it on TV? Check here. AP  Eyewitness NewsNEW PALTZ -- Authorities say they're investigating the death of a 2-year-old girl at a Hudson Valley home.

Police say that officers responding to a report of a missing child arrived at the home in New Paltz around noon Wednesday and found a member of the family with the child.

Police aren't saying yet what might have caused the girl's death. They also aren't identifying who lives in the house.

Members of the state police and Ulster County sheriff's deputies were working with New Paltz police on the investigation.

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new paltz, ulster county, child death, northern suburbs news
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Missing 5-year-old South Ozone Park boy found safe

  Eyewitness NewsNEW YORK (WABC) -- Police in Queens have found a 5-year-old boy who apparently walked out of his apartment early Thursday.

Zackary Nazario was found in the vicinity of Rockaway Boulevard and the Van Wyck Expressway, about 24 blocks east of where he disappeared.

He is reportedly in good condition and is being brought back to his mother for evaluation.

Authorities say Nazario walked out of his home on Rockaway Boulevard and 118th Street in South Ozone Park around 1:30 a.m., while his 23-year-old brother, who was watching him, ran out to the store.

When he returned, the boy was gone.

Police, several with K-9 dogs, had been searching in alleyways, basements and even opened a locked icebox. A helicopter scoured rooftops from the air.

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new york city, queens, ozone park, missing children, new york news

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Saturday, 26 May 2012

91-year-old woman found murdered in home

See it on TV? Check here.  Eyewitness NewsELIZABETH (WABC) -- Police in Elizabeth, New Jersey are trying to solve the murder of a 91-year-old woman inside her home.

The killing happened on Thursday in what authorities believe was a robbery attempt.

Annette Hempel lived on the first floor of a two family home at 673 Jefferson Avenue in Elizabeth.

She was last seen alive by a family member who lives on the second floor around 2:30 p.m. on Thursday. When the family member returned a few hours later they found Hempel on the floor of the living room unresponsive, said prosecutor Theodore J. Romankow.

She was pronounced dead at the scene at 6:21p.m.

The medical examiner ruled her death a homicide, but how she was killed has not been released.

A nearly life-long resident of the city Hempel was known in the neighborhood as a kind woman.

"Everyone deserves to feel safe in their home," said Romankow. "This is nothing but a senseless and brutal act against a defnelsess woman. As with all homicides we will use every available resource to make sure the killer is captured."

Union County Crime Stoppers is offering a reward of up to $5,000 for information that leads to the arrest and indictment of the person or people responsible for the homicide of Ms. Hempel. Anonymous calls may be placed to 908-654-TIPS or via the Internet at http://www.uctip.org/.

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Student, 12, suspended after 'kill list' found

See it on TV? Check here. SOUTHOLD (WABC) -- A good will gesture led a Long Island student to discover he and several classmates are on a kill list. The list contained more than just names.

"It literally said at the top in big letters, 'kill list.' So it's scary," Noah Ludlow, 12, said.

Pace thought he was being nice when he invited a new classmate, who doesn't speak the best English, to sit at lunch with Noah and his friends. But then Noah saw what the student had written in his notebook.

"I look over and there's a bunch of names and one of them is my first name and I say, 'Is that me?' He goes yeah and he had illustration for each one how he was gonna kill each one," Pace said.

He says he saw 20 names in all. He told a teacher at Southold Junior Senior High School. Administrators say they quickly notified police, who removed the 12-year-old for an interview and a medical examination. Even though he's been suspended from school, investigators declined to file criminal charges.

"Usually it turns criminal when it is a direct threat from one person to another person and at this point I don't think our investigation has leaned towards any direct threats being made," police said.

In fact, school administrators say they're convinced the student who wrote the list didn't actually understand what it meant when he drew it up. Still, Superintendent David Gamberg says they haven't taken it lightly, suspending the student who may not be allowed back.

"We take all of these matters - anything that approaches anything like this is taken seriously and should be taken seriously," Gamberg said.

But not seriously enough for Noah's mom, who has chosen to home school her son until she knows for sure his classmate isn't coming back.

"The child has instilled fear in students in the place they're supposed to feel safe," she said.

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long island, southold, student threat, long island news, josh einiger
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Search for Mickey Shunick: Video of cyclist found

Investigators who've expanded their search after combing the area where Michaela "Mickey" Shunick disappeared found surveillance video showing a glimpse of someone riding a bicycle who they believe could be the Louisiana student.

The footage is too blurry to tell whether the person is Shunick, a senior anthropology major at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, police said. The 22-year-old left friend Brettly Wilson's house on her bike last week after a night out, and hasn't been heard from since.

As investigators and the woman's family expand the search, even sending out a recorded plea for help mentioning a $25,000 reward for information, some people in the area where she vanished have begun to wonder whether Shunick was abducted at all.

"What concerns us is, where is her bicycle?" Det. Stephen Bajat of the Lafayette police department said. "If it is some kind of abduction, most people would snatch and go on and not concern themselves with the bicycle."

Investigators searching for any clues have found no cellphone, purse or virtually any trace of Shunick since she left Wilson's house on her bicycle at 2 a.m. Saturday morning.

"The only way to solve this is if someone comes forward with a tip -- and [investigators] need the public," former FBI profiler and ABC News consultant Brad Garrett said.

Hundreds of people from the community and beyond have come to aid in the search for Shunick. So many are coming to help that the volunteer headquarters had to be moved to the nearby university to accommodate them all.

Now Equusearch, the well-known search and recovery group, has turned out in force.

"We're hoping for the best," Tim Miller of Equusearch said. "We don't sugarcoat anything. It does not look good, doesn't look good at all, but we believe in miracles."

Wilson, the last person to see her the night she vanished, has turned to the Web with his plea for assistance in the search. He has posted a YouTube clip seeking help via social media.

"This is the power of social media ... To bring back somebody, and end a family's heartbreak … You have the chance to extend the information about this young woman to everyone you know," Wilson says in the clip.

Friends and family held a candle light vigil Tuesday night, and announced a reward for tips leading to her whereabouts. Searches by K-9 units, police and volunteers have turned up no hints of what happened, but her family remains hopeful.

A benefit concert is scheduled for the weekend to increase the $25,000 reward for information on what happened to Shunick.

Shunick is 5-foot-1 and 115 pounds. She was last seen wearing a pastel multi-colored striped shirt, light-wash skinny jeans and gray shoes.

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Sunday, 13 May 2012

Police investigating burning body found in Queens

WOODHAVEN (WABC) -- Firefighters responding to a park fire in Queens Saturday discovered a dead body.

They arrived on the scene following a 911 call of a rubbish fire along the southern tier of Forest Park.

The firefighters discovered that the burning trash was actually a man's body that had been set on fire.

The body was found just north of Park Lane South and 86th Street in the Woodhaven section of Queens.

EMS responded and the man was pronounced dead at the scene.

There is still no word on the man's identity or the cause of death. An autopsy will be performed on Sunday.

Investigators spent the day searching the woods for clues.

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new york city, queens, body found, fire death, new york news, darla miles

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Tuesday, 1 May 2012

76 neglected dogs found in Wallkill home

See it on TV? Check here. WALLKILL (WABC) -- A Wallkill woman was arrested and charged with two counts of animal cruelty on Monday morning after police executed a search warrant at her home on Derby Road.

Police say they found 76 neglected dogs at the home of 64-year-old Sylvia Panetta. Two of the dogs were seriously injured, including one who had to have his leg amputated.

Pancetta was reportedly breeding Rottweilers for sale on the Internet, except officials say her dogs were in a heartbreaking state of neglect, disease and deformity. Pancettal allegedly starved them on a diet of bread and water.

The dogs that needed the most urgent care were removed immediately, while the rest will be rescued later.

Panetta was charged with animal cruelty and was allowed back on her property. More charges could follow as authorities finish removing the rest of the dogs.

Most did them will likely end up at the animal sanctuary Pets Alive, where they can be nursed to better health.

If you would like to help by donating, visit PetsAlive.org.

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wallkill, animal abuse, animals, dogs, northern suburbs news, lucy yang
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Monday, 30 April 2012

Yacht debris, bodies found off US-Mexico coast

Coast Guard crews searching for a missing yacht racer after the accident that killed three crew members. Coast Guard crews searching for a missing yacht racer after the accident that killed three crew members.

AP  By ELLIOTT SPAGATLOS ANGELES -- A 37-foot racing yacht was reduced to debris that looked it "like it had gone through a blender," a searcher said Sunday after the boat apparently collided with a larger vessel, killing three sailors and leaving a fourth missing.

The U.S. Coast Guard, the Mexican navy and civilian vessels scoured the waters off the shore of both countries for the missing sailor from the Aegean, which was taking part in a 124-mile race that began Friday from Newport Beach, Calif., to Ensenada, Mexico. The sailboat, carrying a crew of four, was reported missing Saturday.

It was California's second deadly accident this month involving an ocean race.

Race officials said they had few explanations for what may have happened to the Aegean other than it must have collided with ship like a freighter or tanker that did not see the smaller vessel. The Coast Guard said conditions were fine for sailing, with good visibility and moderate ocean swells of 6-to-8 feet.

If the smaller boat was bobbing around in light wind, the crew might not have been able to get out of the way of a larger ship, perhaps a freighter, said Rich Roberts, a spokesman for the Newport Ocean Sailing Association, the race organizer.

The race goes through shipping lanes and it's possible for a large ship to hit a sailboat and not even know it, especially at night, Roberts said.

A race tracking system indicated the Aegean disappeared about 1:30 a.m. PDT (4:30 a.m. EDT) Saturday, he added.

Searchers were focusing on an area about 10 miles off the Mexican coast and about 10 miles south of U.S. waters, said Coast Guard Petty Officer Henry Dunphy.

Other yachts near the Coronado Islands in Mexico - four small, mostly uninhabited islands - reported seeing debris Saturday morning.

Two of the dead were William Reed Johnson Jr., 57, of Torrance, Calif., and Joseph Lester Stewart, 64, of Bradenton, Fla. The San Diego County Medical Examiner's office was withholding the name of the third sailor pending notification of relatives.

Calls to Johnson's and Stewart's homes went unanswered Sunday.

The Aegean is registered to Theo Mavromatis, 49, of Redondo Beach, Calif. The race association didn't know if he was aboard, but Gary Gilpin at Marina Sailing, which rents out the Aegean when Mavromatis isn't using it, said the 49-year-old skipper took the yacht out earlier in the week for the competition.

Gilpin said Mavromatis, an engineer, was an experienced sailor who had won the Newport to Ensenada race in the past. A woman answering a call at a number listed for Mavromatis declined to answer questions.

Eric Lamb was the first to find debris of the boat - most no larger than six inches - scattered over about two square miles Saturday as he worked safety patrol on the race. He saw a small refrigerator, a white seat cushion and empty containers of yogurt and soy milk.

"We pulled a lot of boats off the rocks over the years and boats that hit the rocks, they don't look like that. This was almost like it had gone through a blender," said Lamb, 62.

A Coast Guard helicopter circling overhead directed him and a partner to two floating bodies. Both had severe cuts and bruises, and one of them had major head trauma.

Two race participants who were in the area at the time the Aegean disappeared said they saw or heard a freighter.

Cindy Arosteguy of Oxnard, Calif., remembers hearing on her radio someone say, "Do you see us?" as she saw a tanker about a half-mile away.

"I got back on the radio and said, 'Yes, I see you,'" she said. "It was definitely a freighter."

In Ensenada, several hundred people held a minute of silence for the victims at an awards ceremony that spilled out in a courtyard from a large white canopy at a hotel that served as race headquarters.

Chuck Iverson, commodore of the sailing association, said in an interview that the collision was a "fluke," noting how common night races are along Mexico's Baja California coast.

"We're all shocked by this whole event," he said.

The deaths are the first fatalities in the race's 65 years, the sponsor said.

Racing boats are required to use lights at night, Iverson said, although the boats are not inspected unless a competitor suspects a problem and tells race officials.

The race attracts sailors of all skills, including some who are new to long distances.

"You get world-class sailors and you get first-timers. That's the good thing about it. ... It's kind of a safety-in-numbers thing," said Lamb, who has worked safety patrol for eight years.

The Newport Beach Patch website posted a photo of the Aegean's crew at the start of the race Friday. Four men in royal blue T-shirts are on the deck as the boat cuts through calm waters.

A total of 213 boats were registered, and the winner, Robert Lane of Long Beach Yacht Club, finished Saturday in 23 hours, 26 minutes, 40 seconds. Some boats still were arriving Sunday morning in Ensenada, and about 50 people gathered in the morning fog at a marina to watch. A notice tacked to a bulletin board alongside the racing times informed spectators of the tragedy.

The deaths come two weeks after five sailors died in the waters off Northern California when their 38-foot yacht was hit by powerful waves, smashed into rocks and capsized during a race. Three sailors survived the wreck and the body of another was quickly recovered. Four remained missing until one body was recovered Thursday.

The deadly accident near the Farallon Islands, about 27 miles west of San Francisco, prompted the Coast Guard to temporarily stop races in ocean waters outside San Francisco Bay. The Coast Guard said the suspension will allow it and the offshore racing community to study the accident and race procedures to determine whether changes are needed to improve safety. U.S. Sailing, the governing body of yacht racing, is leading the safety review, which is expected to be completed within the next month.

In 1979, a freak storm in the Irish Sea led to the deaths of 15 sailors in the Fastnet Race. In the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Race off Australia, a freak storm with hurricane-force winds struck the fleet in the Bass Strait, sinking several boats and killing six sailors.

Gary Jobson, president of the U.S. Sailing Association, said there have been too many accidents during races in the past year, and that the association is working to make the sport safer.

"I'm horrified. I've done a lot of sailboat racing and I've hit logs in the water, and I've seen a man go overboard, but this takes the whole thing to a new level," Jobson said. "We need to take a step back and take a deep breath with what we're doing. Something is going wrong here."

Jobson said U.S. Sailing will appoint an independent panel to investigate the Ensenada incident, as it has done in the Farallon Islands accident.

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california, u.s. & world news

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Saturday, 28 April 2012

Monsey child found alone on lawn of burning home

  Eyewitness NewsMONSEY, New York (WABC) -- A four-year-old boy was found sitting alone just outside his burning home in Rockland County.

The fire broke out in a home on West Central Avenue in Monsey, Friday afternoon.

Good samaritan Saul Katz and a Spring Valley DPW worker went to the back. The young child was spotted and pulled to safety. The child was found by fire officials sitting on the lawn of the burning home. The fire chief said the boy was left alone by the father for just a few minutes.

LINK: VIEW PHOTOS FROM THE SCENE

He was not hurt.

The home was destroyed.

It's not clear what started the blaze, but fire officials do say that it appears that the house was split up into four illegal apartments.

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Friday, 23 December 2011

Amber Alert mother and child found

  Eyewitness NewsHAMILTON, New Jersey (WABC) -- An Amber Alert has been canceled for a two-year-old boy in Hamilton, New Jersey.

The boy identified as Mason Ross, was thought to be taken by his non custodial mother, Cassidy Michaela Purdy. The pair were located around 8 p.m.

It was thought the two may be headed to Atlantic City on foot by bus.

The circumstances of their discovery are not yet known.

Stay with Eyewitness News and 7online for more on this breaking story.

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Man found murdered in Brooklyn apartment

See it on TV? Check here.   Eyewitness NewsNEW YORK (WABC) -- Police in Brooklyn are looking for a killer after finding a man stabbed to death in his apartment.

The crime was discovered shortly after 8:00 Thursday morning at an apartment on Lefferts Avenue.

Investigators found the 53-year-old victim dead on the floor of a bedroom.

He had multiple stab wounds to his back and neck, investigators said.

His name has not been released.

No further details about a possible suspect or motive were immediately available.

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Thursday, 8 December 2011

Police confident missing woman's body will be found

  Eyewitness NewsLONG ISLAND (WABC) -- The search for the body of a missing woman resumes Thursday on a Long Island beach where police say new clues were found.

Shannan Gilbert, a 24-year-old prostitute from Jersey City, disappeared on the south shore in May of 2010, and the ensuing investigation led to the discovery of 10 sets of human remains near Oak and Gilgo beaches. Those victims are believed to be the work of a serial killer.

Suffolk County Police Commissioner Richard Dormer said officers have not yet found any of Gilbert's remains, but said the search would resume on Thursday. After police found some of Gilbert's personal items this week, they say they are now confident they will find her body. Police are suggesting Gilbert's death may have been an accidental drowning. They think she drowned after becoming upset for an unexplained reason.

"It's very easy to get engulfed with water, muck, and fall down and not be able to get out of there," Dormer said. "We surmise that's what happened to Shannan and she's in there some place and we're going to do everything we can to find her."

Investigators do not think Gilbert was the victim of the serial killer who has left at least 10 bodies in the nearby dunes.

The search in a marshy will continue now that police have found what appear to be several of Gilbert's possessions, including her purse, cell phone, jeans and shoes. Her mother, Mari Gilbert, was called by investigators to link the items to her missing daughter.

"It's so cold and lonely and painful," Mari Gilbert said. "I don't want them to be her items, but if they are, hopefully they're just closer to finding her."

Mari Gilbert has been waiting 19 months, hoping for something more definite.

"I am still doubtful," Gilbert said. "I need to see the items for myself to believe it."

Gilbert was last seen at a client's home in Oak Beach, a gated seashore community several miles east of Jones Beach State Park. She was taken by a driver to the Oak Beach community, where she met a client for sex. The client, Joseph Brewer, was interviewed by police but is not considered a suspect, authorities said.

Brewer has told police that Gilbert became upset after about two hours and that he summoned the driver to remove her from his home. The woman then reportedly fled the house.

Oak Beach resident Gustav Colletti has told authorities that Gilbert banged on his door at around 4:45 a.m. on May 1, 2010.

"She was saying, 'I need help, I need help, they're after me,"' Coletti has told reporters. He said he told the woman he was calling police, but she immediately turned around and fled.

A few moments later, a man in a sport utility vehicle drove past the house and told Coletti he was looking for the woman. Coletti said the driver told him they had been at a party and the woman had become upset. The driver also has been interviewed but was not identified as a suspect.

Suffolk Chief of Detectives Dominic Varrone said witness reports that the woman was acting irrationally are consistent with her likely demise.

"Apparently what we found yesterday is very indicative, very supportive of the fact that she just wandered and ran aimlessly into this marshy area," he said.

While the inquiry into Gilbert's disappearance appeared to be coming to a conclusion, homicide detectives still have 10 unsolved murder cases to contend with. Police have received more than 1,200 tips about the case and have offered a $25,000 reward but have yet to identify any suspects.

Officers searched 90 specific locations in and around a several-mile stretch of Ocean Parkway on Monday; areas that were mapped after the FBI took high-tech surveillance photos of the area this year. Inspector Stuart Cameron noted that most areas had already been searched, but said the FBI surveillance photos prompted a return to the some of the sites.

The remains of the 10 people - eight women, a man and a baby - were found strewn mostly along the remote beach parkway, but some body parts from those victims were found on eastern Long Island and nearly 50 miles away on Fire Island. Police have identified only five of the 10 victims. Those five were all women working as escorts. The oldest remains are linked to a case 15 years ago.

Dormer has pulled back on earlier theories that multiple killers might have left the bodies along the parkway, the first of which was a woman who went missing in 1996. Dormer said last week he believes that because nine of the 10 were involved in the sex trade, their killings are likely related.

The tenth victim, a toddler girl, was linked by DNA to a woman believed to be her mother. The remains of the mother and child were found seven miles apart.

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Tuesday, 5 July 2011

Report: Found body is not missing IU student

  Eyewitness NewsINDIANAPOLIS (WABC) -- Police in Indianapolis say the badly decomposed body of a woman found in a local creek is NOT a 20-year-old Indiana University student who went missing in Bloomington more than a month ago.

WRTV is reporting the medical examiner says the body found on Monday is that of a black female, ruling out that it would be Lauren Spierer.

The body was spotted Sunday floating among debris in Fall Creek.

Authorities in Bloomington have been searching for Spierer, who was last seen June 3 near her Bloomington apartment after a night out drinking with her friends. Bloomington is about 50 miles south of Indianapolis.

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Body found in Hartsdale home labeled suspicious

See it on TV? Check here.body found   Eyewitness NewsHARTSDALE (WABC) -- Police are calling the death of woman in her Hartsdale home suspicious.

But they're still awaiting autopsy results to determine whether the case will be declared a homicide.

The body of 71-year-old Ida Austin was found Sunday.

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Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Swastikas found painted on Rockland restaurant

  Eyewitness NewsROCKLAND COUNTY (WABC) -- Police are investigating disturbing messages of hate found in Rockland County.

The owner of Cassie's Restaurant on Route 303 in Orangeburg says $1,000 was stolen by whoever left the swastikas.

There was also a message scrawled in German that translates as, "We want to kill Jews."

The restaurant owner is not Jewish.

Anyone with information is asked to call Orangeburg police.

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