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READ: Ariel Castro plea agreement filed in court

Written By kolimtiga on Rabu, 31 Juli 2013 | 17.05

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 PDF Document: Castro Plea

CLEVELAND -- Attorneys have filed the Ariel Castro plea agreement with Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court.

Read the agreement in the attached link.

Among the details:

  • Castro will transfer the 2207 Seymour Avenue property to the Cuyahoga County Land Reutilization Corporation
  • That protective orders will remain in effect
  • That Castro cannot profit from from the commission of these crimes
  • Castro will forfeit $22,268.83 in U.S. currency to the land utilization corporation for use in securing and demolishing the property
  • Any remaining funds will be turned over to the Cleveland Courage Fund
  • Castro pleads guilty to 937 of the 977 counts against him 
  • Castro will have his family photo albums and personal clothing returned to him
  • Castro will never be released from incarceration during the period of his remaining natural life for any reason
  • The numerous and multiple 10-year life sentences will be served consecutively
  • Castro will be classified as a Sexually Violent Predator and a Tier III sex offender
  • Castro will forfeit the Ruger handgun he had in his possession

WKYC-TV


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Police: Amanda Berry visits Seymour house before Castro sentencing

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CLEVELAND -- On Thursday we may hear some of the first details about what happened inside 2207 Seymour Avenue as Ariel Castro is sentenced for his crimes.

Castro pleaded guilty to aggravated murder, kidnapping, rape and other crimes for a total of 937 charges Friday, agreeing to a minimum sentence of life in prison without parole, plus 1,000 years time.

His sentencing hearing is likely to be a window into what a trial might have looked like, a chance for both sides to present to Judge Michael Russo what they believe are the facts and determining factors in this case.

Read Castro plea agreement

"You have not seen the evidence yet of what took place. We'll make a presentation on that next Thursday," said Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Tim McGinty, in a news conference following the plea hearing.

McGinty says the state will call witnesses to the stand to explain Stockholm Syndrome and other coping mechanisms that allowed the women to survive captivity.

Detectives will also testify on some of the horrors they faced inside.

"He's a manipulator. He has no remorse, and we will elaborate on that at the sentencing," said McGinty.

Castro himself seemed to be searching for a chance to explain Friday.

"My addiction to pornography and my sexual problem has really taken a toll on my mind," he told the court. "I would like to state that I was also a victim as a child and it just kept going," he said, before Judge Russo interrupted him.

"That's certainly something you can bring up at your sentencing hearing," said Russo.

Castro, his family members or other defense witnesses are likely to discuss the alleged abuse and sexual addictions he mentioned out of turn. His victims get that same chance to speak.

But sources close to the family of Gina DeJesus tell us that neither she nor Amanda Berry or Michelle Knight is likely to be in the courtroom.

Prosecutors or a victim's advocate can deliver a statement on behalf of the victims, if they so choose.

An officer on duty on Seymour Avenue told Channel 3 News Amanda Berry visited the house Tuesday afternoon, spending about 15 minutes outside talking to neighbors.

The house is scheduled to be demolished "as soon as possible," according to McGinty, once it's in the hands of the Cuyahoga County Land Bank.

One thing is certain: theree's no set witness list required to be presented to the court before the sentencing begins. Who will or won't be appearing could be changing even throughout the day on Thursday.

Russo expects a long day of evidence from both parties. Channel 3 News will have gavel-to-gavel coverage on air and on wkyc.com beginning at 9 a.m. Thursday.

WKYC-TV


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Blog: Turning the page on the Plain Dealer

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Between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Wednesday, Plain Dealer journalists will learn if they still have their jobs. Layoffs will reduce the newsroom by about one-third of its staff.

Late Tuesday afternoon, editors, reporters, photographers and other staff were told to wait by their phones Wednesday morning.

That's when they will be told whether to show up for work or not. Harsh? Efficient? Is that any better than getting a pink slip in your paycheck?

Cuts in other departments have already occured. And staffers also learned Monday that more than a dozen more staffers will be added to the original list of cuts. 

The loss of newspaper coverage in Northeast Ohio will be felt quickly. The owner of the Plain Dealer -- Advance Publications -- also owns the Sun Newspapers, where (in an effort of full disclosure) I was once a reporter.

I left Sun more than six years ago, right before they began the buyouts and downsizing there.

Sun has gone from 22 editions to 11, closed all of its satellite offices and I am wondering, since my Chagrin Solon Sun is delivered with my Thursday Plain Dealer, what will happen to its delivery because the Plain Dealer isn't making home delivery on Thursdays?

I am still a Plain Dealer subscriber and it will be hard to get used to not stepping outside every single morning while my water boils on the stove for my morning tea. It's a habit, a hard habit to break.

Despite the fact that I am primarily the reporter/producer for WKYC-TV's online website wkyc.com, and read the bulk of my news online, I still like the tactile feel of a newspaper in the morning.

I have been reading the Plain Dealer since I was in grade school and we had it delivered daily to our house. I also remember when the Cleveland Press published its last edition -- June 16, 1982.

That was just over 31 years ago.

Of course, that was long before we had the digital age where you could get your news, weather and sports online. I liked reading both newspapers -- one in the morning and one at night. I also liked the different editorial opinions.

But the loss of the Cleveland Press didn't leave a complete void because we still had the Plain Dealer. And though there will still be a few days of home delivery, it won't be the same.

Now we will become a large city without any daily newspaper and many hard-working journalists will lose their jobs. We always need good journalists to dig for the good stories and bring issues out in the open.

Of course, getting your news online is much faster than waiting for a paper to be delivered. Whether online or in print, we will get the news.

And it's no coincidence that other media -- radio and TV, for example --  have taken their message online long ago as well.

They still maintain their over-the-airwaves products but know full well that the habits of their listeners and viewers have changed from "appointment" TV or radio to "what-I-want-when-I-want-it."

It's just a shame that the Plain Dealer can't remain a seven-day-a-week home delivery for those who want it, instead of just Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

The economy was the main reason the Cleveland Press stopped publishing. Advertisers were dwindling.

On the Save the Plain Dealer Facebook page, it was written:  Other newspapers are adopting innovative and far less disruptive strategies that allow them to continue to serve their readers and maintain journalistic excellence while confronting the challenges of the digital era.

That's just not what Advance decided to do. I'll be thinking about the PD staffers Wednesday morning.

WKYC-TV


17.05 | 0 komentar | Read More

READ: Ariel Castro plea agreement filed in court

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 PDF Document: Castro Plea

CLEVELAND -- Attorneys have filed the Ariel Castro plea agreement with Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court.

Read the agreement in the attached link.

Among the details:

  • Castro will transfer the 2207 Seymour Avenue property to the Cuyahoga County Land Reutilization Corporation
  • That protective orders will remain in effect
  • That Castro cannot profit from from the commission of these crimes
  • Castro will forfeit $22,268.83 in U.S. currency to the land utilization corporation for use in securing and demolishing the property
  • Any remaining funds will be turned over to the Cleveland Courage Fund
  • Castro pleads guilty to 937 of the 977 counts against him 
  • Castro will have his family photo albums and personal clothing returned to him
  • Castro will never be released from incarceration during the period of his remaining natural life for any reason
  • The numerous and multiple 10-year life sentences will be served consecutively
  • Castro will be classified as a Sexually Violent Predator and a Tier III sex offender
  • Castro will forfeit the Ruger handgun he had in his possession

WKYC-TV


13.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

Police: Amanda Berry visits Seymour house before Castro sentencing

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CLEVELAND -- On Thursday we may hear some of the first details about what happened inside 2207 Seymour Avenue as Ariel Castro is sentenced for his crimes.

Castro pleaded guilty to aggravated murder, kidnapping, rape and other crimes for a total of 937 charges Friday, agreeing to a minimum sentence of life in prison without parole, plus 1,000 years time.

His sentencing hearing is likely to be a window into what a trial might have looked like, a chance for both sides to present to Judge Michael Russo what they believe are the facts and determining factors in this case.

Read Castro plea agreement

"You have not seen the evidence yet of what took place. We'll make a presentation on that next Thursday," said Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Tim McGinty, in a news conference following the plea hearing.

McGinty says the state will call witnesses to the stand to explain Stockholm Syndrome and other coping mechanisms that allowed the women to survive captivity.

Detectives will also testify on some of the horrors they faced inside.

"He's a manipulator. He has no remorse, and we will elaborate on that at the sentencing," said McGinty.

Castro himself seemed to be searching for a chance to explain Friday.

"My addiction to pornography and my sexual problem has really taken a toll on my mind," he told the court. "I would like to state that I was also a victim as a child and it just kept going," he said, before Judge Russo interrupted him.

"That's certainly something you can bring up at your sentencing hearing," said Russo.

Castro, his family members or other defense witnesses are likely to discuss the alleged abuse and sexual addictions he mentioned out of turn. His victims get that same chance to speak.

But sources close to the family of Gina DeJesus tell us that neither she nor Amanda Berry or Michelle Knight is likely to be in the courtroom.

Prosecutors or a victim's advocate can deliver a statement on behalf of the victims, if they so choose.

An officer on duty on Seymour Avenue told Channel 3 News Amanda Berry visited the house Tuesday afternoon, spending about 15 minutes outside talking to neighbors.

The house is scheduled to be demolished "as soon as possible," according to McGinty, once it's in the hands of the Cuyahoga County Land Bank.

One thing is certain: theree's no set witness list required to be presented to the court before the sentencing begins. Who will or won't be appearing could be changing even throughout the day on Thursday.

Russo expects a long day of evidence from both parties. Channel 3 News will have gavel-to-gavel coverage on air and on wkyc.com beginning at 9 a.m. Thursday.

WKYC-TV


13.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

Blog: Turning the page on the Plain Dealer

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

Between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Wednesday, Plain Dealer journalists will learn if they still have their jobs. Layoffs will reduce the newsroom by about one-third of its staff.

Late Tuesday afternoon, editors, reporters, photographers and other staff were told to wait by their phones Wednesday morning.

That's when they will be told whether to show up for work or not. Harsh? Efficient? Is that any better than getting a pink slip in your paycheck?

Cuts in other departments have already occured. And staffers also learned Monday that more than a dozen more staffers will be added to the original list of cuts. 

The loss of newspaper coverage in Northeast Ohio will be felt quickly. The owner of the Plain Dealer -- Advance Publications -- also owns the Sun Newspapers, where (in an effort of full disclosure) I was once a reporter.

I left Sun more than six years ago, right before they began the buyouts and downsizing there.

Sun has gone from 22 editions to 11, closed all of its satellite offices and I am wondering, since my Chagrin Solon Sun is delivered with my Thursday Plain Dealer, what will happen to its delivery because the Plain Dealer isn't making home delivery on Thursdays?

I am still a Plain Dealer subscriber and it will be hard to get used to not stepping outside every single morning while my water boils on the stove for my morning tea. It's a habit, a hard habit to break.

Despite the fact that I am primarily the reporter/producer for WKYC-TV's online website wkyc.com, and read the bulk of my news online, I still like the tactile feel of a newspaper in the morning.

I have been reading the Plain Dealer since I was in grade school and we had it delivered daily to our house. I also remember when the Cleveland Press published its last edition -- June 16, 1982.

That was just over 31 years ago.

Of course, that was long before we had the digital age where you could get your news, weather and sports online. I liked reading both newspapers -- one in the morning and one at night. I also liked the different editorial opinions.

But the loss of the Cleveland Press didn't leave a complete void because we still had the Plain Dealer. And though there will still be a few days of home delivery, it won't be the same.

Now we will become a large city without any daily newspaper and many hard-working journalists will lose their jobs. We always need good journalists to dig for the good stories and bring issues out in the open.

Of course, getting your news online is much faster than waiting for a paper to be delivered. Whether online or in print, we will get the news.

And it's no coincidence that other media -- radio and TV, for example --  have taken their message online long ago as well.

They still maintain their over-the-airwaves products but know full well that the habits of their listeners and viewers have changed from "appointment" TV or radio to "what-I-want-when-I-want-it."

It's just a shame that the Plain Dealer can't remain a seven-day-a-week home delivery for those who want it, instead of just Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

The economy was the main reason the Cleveland Press stopped publishing. Advertisers were dwindling.

On the Save the Plain Dealer Facebook page, it was written:  Other newspapers are adopting innovative and far less disruptive strategies that allow them to continue to serve their readers and maintain journalistic excellence while confronting the challenges of the digital era.

That's just not what Advance decided to do. I'll be thinking about the PD staffers Wednesday morning.

WKYC-TV


13.59 | 0 komentar | Read More

Brunswick: Hundreds affected in fuel mixup at GetGo

Written By kolimtiga on Selasa, 30 Juli 2013 | 17.05

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BRUNSWICK -- Giant Eagle has a warning for customers who filled up at the Brunswick GetGo on Center Road.  

The company is notifying drivers that a shipment of unblended ethanol was mistakenly dispensed into the 87 octane fuel tank.  

Giant Eagle says the fuel was purchased by approximately 500 people between 7:45 p.m. on Sunday and 2:30 p.m. Monday afternoon.  

Giant Eagle released a statement, in part saying :

"Customers who have purchased the affected product should call their local mechanic or car dealership and have their vehicle towed to the site for inspection. Additionally, customers may contact Giant Eagle at 1.800.553.2324 between 9:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. to process a claim related to the Brunswick GetGo incident."  

In the statement, Giant Eagle apologies for any inconvenience and says they will work to satisfy all affected customers.  

WKYC-TV


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Plain Dealer union workers plan to picket

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CLEVELAND -- The newspaper guild plans to picket outside the Cleveland Plain Dealer headquarters at noon.

The protest is due to more apparent cuts to the union staff.

Earlier this year, the union and paper had agreed to approximately 58 cuts from several different departments, but now it seems the paper could lay off an additional 12 or more staff members.

Meanwhile, today is the last Tuesday you'll be able to get the paper at home.

Starting next Monday, home delivery goes down to 3 days a week.

The Plain Dealer had been planning on this change for months.

WKYC-TV


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Cleveland: 2 shot, 1 dead in gas station robbery

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CLEVELAND -- Two people were shot and one has died, following a gas station robbery on Cleveland's near east side early Tuesday morning.

The shooting was reported close to 4 a.m. at the Biggie's Food Mart gas station along E. 55th Street near Cedar Avenue. Police describe the incident as a robbery gone bad.

Two people were shot. One was shot in the chest and arm, the other was shot in the chest. Both were taken to MetroHealth Medical Center in critical condition.

One of those victims died at the hospital.

It is not clear if police have any suspects in custody at this time.

The shooting is on the same block as George Washington Carver School.

Cleveland Police are investigating.

A Channel 3 News crew is at the scene working to get the latest information.

WKYC-TV


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Can your doctor 'fire' you as a patient?

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CLEVELAND --  It's extremely rare, but it does happen. That exam room is the one place you can literally bare yourself and your soul to your doctor.

"Like any relationship, this involves collaboration, sharing, a mutual trust and understanding of one another," says Dr. Michael Nochomovitz, president of Physician services at University Hospitals.

But sometimes, that relationship just doesn't work.

As a consumer, you have the right to leave and find another doctor, but if you're a difficult patient, your doctor can "fire" you too.  You must receive 30 days notice before that can happen.

"During that period, the physician is required to provide emergency care that the patient needs. At the end of the 30-day period, the patient really needs to have another physician and the physician does not have any additional obligations," Dr. Nochomovitz says.

In a large hospital system, there's usually a staff of doctors who have the same specialty, but if you can't find a fit, you must move on.

And it may be more difficult for patients using doctors in private practice.

Dr. Michael Wojtnowski is a plastic surgeon with the Ohio Clinic for Aesthetic Surgery. He's had to fire a few patients in his career.

"Most commonly in my business the reason we would fire a patient would be a patient being too demanding, I call it the 'Michael Jackson syndrome,' a patient who is such a perfectionist that they want to do the same surgery over and over to achieve a result that is not practical or even possible," Dr. Wojtnowski says.

The most common reasons a patient would be fired include non-compliance, failure to keep appointments, rude behavior, non-payment of bills, type of insurance not accepted or drug abuse and drug seeking behavior.   

"Patients and doctors are both people. We both have personalities, we both have feelings, we both care. We really, in general, have their best interest at heart, so it's important that we get along," Dr. Wojtnowski says.

So how can you avoid being fired as a patient?

Be a team player and an active participant in your care. That means taking your medication like you're supposed to and following doctors' orders. If you don't agree with your doctor, discuss it, don't just do things on your own.

When can't your doctor fire you?

When you're in the middle of care, such as about to give birth or a cancer patient in the middle of chemo treatments.  If you haven't visited your primary care doctor in a few years, that's another reason for being dropped. If it does happen, make sure you get your medical records from your old doctor.

Below is the Ohio Law.

OHIO REVISED CODE

Chapter 4731-27 Termination of Physician-Patient Relationship

4731-27-01. Termination of the physician-patient relationship 

A physician-patient relationship is established when the physician provides service to a person to address medical needs, whether the service was provided by mutual consent or implied consent, or was provided without consent pursuant to a court order. Once a physician-patient relationship is established, a person remains a patient until the relationship is terminated.

(A) Except as provided in paragraph (B) of this rule, in order to terminate a physician-patient relationship, a physician shall comply with the following requirements:

(1) Mail to the patient via regular mail and certified mail, return receipt requested, a letter containing the following information:

(a) A statement that the physician-patient relationship is terminated;

(b) A statement that the physician will continue to provide emergency treatment and access to services for up to thirty days from the date the letter was mailed, to allow the patient to secure care from another licensee; and

(c) An offer to transfer records to the new physician upon the patient's signed authorization to do so.

(2) For each letter sent in accordance with paragraph (A)(1) of this rule, the physician maintains in the patient record a copy of the letter, the original certified mail receipt, and the original certified mail return receipt.

(B) The requirements of paragraph (A) of this rule do not apply in the following circumstances:

(1) The physician rendered medical service to the person on an episodic basis or in an emergency setting and the physician should not reasonably expect that related medical service will be rendered to the patient in the future;

(2) The physician has formally transferred the patient's care to another health care provider who is not in the same practice group; or

(3) The physician who is leaving a practice, selling a practice, or retiring from practice, with retirement evidenced by the relinquishment of all clinical privileges and either termination of or conversion of medical liability insurance to extended reporting period coverage only, has provided notice of retirement, leaving the practice, or the sale of the practice no later than thirty days prior to the last date the physician will see patients, via the following methods:

(a) Mailing a notice, sent by regular mail addressed to the last known address, to all patients seen by the physician within the immediately preceding three years;

(b) Publishing a notice in the newspaper of greatest circulation in each county in which the physician has practiced and in a local newspaper that serves the immediate practice area; and

(c) Posting a sign in a conspicuous location in or on the facade of the physician's office. The required notices and sign shall advise the patients of their opportunity to transfer or receive their records and, for patient records remaining in the physician's possession once the physician is no longer seeing patients, the contact information for obtaining the records.

(C) A physician-patient relationship shall be considered terminated by the patient if both of the following requirements are met:

(1) The patient terminated the relationship, either verbally or in writing, or has transferred care to another physician for the same or a related condition.

(2) The physician maintains documentation in the patient record of the patient's action terminating the relationship.

(D) A physician assistant or anesthesiologist assistant may not independently terminate the physician-patient relationship.

(E) A physician's termination of a physician-patient relationship other than in accordance with the provisions of this rule, as determined by the state medical board of Ohio, shall constitute "a departure from, or failure to conform to, minimal standards of care of similar practitioners under the same or similar circumstances, whether or not actual injury to a patient is established," as that clause is used in division (B)(6) of section 4731.22 of the Revised Code.

(F) For purposes of this rule, "emergency setting" means an emergency department or urgent care center.

(G) Nothing in this rule shall limit the board's authority to investigate and take action under section 4731.22 of the Revised Code.

WKYC-TV


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Local reaction to Pope Francis comments about gays

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While speaking with reporters on the flight from Brazil to Rome, the pontiff shared his feelings on gay people.

 "If a person is gay and accepts the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge them?" said Pope Francis.

He added that gays, including gay priests, shouldn't be marginalized and, "they're our brothers."

The pope's remarks appears to signal a change in the Vatican's earlier positions. His predecessor Pope Benedict, had said that men with homosexual tendencies should not become priests.

It's a big change in policy from previous leaders of the church's 1.2 billion followers.

Asked if Bishop Lennon of the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland would be commenting or releasing a statement, spokesman Robert Tayek responded that  Bishop Lennon will not be releasing a statement on the Pope's remarks.

Tayek included the following in his reply:

"Here is our bulletin announcement for June 15-16 which appeared in most parish bulletins as part of a Year of Faith---getting know your Catechism. So this would have been included in many of the 185 parish bulletins."

"Homosexuality---What is the Church's Judgment? God created man as male and female and destined them for each other in a bodily way. The Church accepts without reservation those who experience homosexual feelings. They should not be unjustly discriminated against because of that."

"At the same time, the Church declares that all homosexual relations in any form are contrary to the order of creation because man and woman are designed to need each other's complementary traits and to enter into a mutual relationship so as to give life to children. (From the Youth Catechism of the Catholic Church) (Youcat #415)"

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Cleveland Weather: Just chillin'

We are stuck in a bit of a cool pattern for the foreseeable future.

Average highs this time of year are in the low 80s, and our forecast has temperatures holding just below that.

No major hot weather coming anytime soon.  Refreshing change or summertime disappointment?  Weigh in on my Facebook page...you can find the link below when you click on "Betsy's Facebook Page".

Tonight:  Becoming partly cloudy.  Mid/upper 50s

Tuesday:  Partly cloudy.  Comfortably cool.  Upper 70s

Wednesday:  Increasing clouds with rain chances late.  Low 80s

Thursday:  Mostly cloudy with scattered rain and rumbles.  Near 80

Friday:  Lingering shower chances early, otherwise partly sunny.  Upper 70s

Saturday:  Partly sunny.  Near 80

Sunday:  Partly cloudy.  Mid 70s

Monday:  Partly cloudy with scattered rain and storm chances later in the day.  Low 80s

-------

Get more weather info and connect with us on Twitter and Facebook!

WKYC Weather Warriors on Facebook or @wkycweather on Twitter

Betsy Kling: @BetsyKling on Twitter or Betsy's Facebook Page

Holly Strano: @holliesmiles on Twitter or Hollie's Facebook Page

Marcus Walter: @MarcusDWalter on Twitter or Marcus's Facebook Page

Bruce Kalinowski on Bruce's Facebook Page

WKYC-TV


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Ariel Castro's son to appear on Today Show

Written By kolimtiga on Senin, 29 Juli 2013 | 17.04

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Complete Coverage - Click Here

Photos: See Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus pictures

Photos: Gina DeJesus, Amanda Berry come home

Photos: Ariel Castro in court

Photos: Decade in isolation

The house: Photos show backyard at Castro's house

Deal in the making?: Plea deal in the works

House's future: Castro home headed for wrecking ball?

 

Viral Video: Amanda, Gina and Michelle release thank-you video

 

Analyzing the viral video: What the survivor video really says

 

Watching out for the women: Team protects Amanda, Gina and Michelle

 

Judge denies request: Castro denied request to see Amanda Berry's child

 

What's next: Castro: Trial or plea deal?

 

Look up: Judge orders Castro to open his eyes in court

 

The evidence: Attorney General puts together Castro evidence puzzle

 

Seymour hero's media battle: Charles Ramsey fights back against Daily Mail

 

EARLIER STORIES:

 

Psychic responds: Sylvia Browne makes statement on Amanda Berry case

Officer's story: Police recount finding Amanda, Gina, and Michelle

Investigator: How Castro spends his time behind bars

Investigator: Utilities visited Castro home often

Investigator: Castro says he loves his daughter

Video: Ariel Castro's lawyers give extended interviews

Tourist spot?: Seymour Avenue a destination for all the wrong reasons

Speaking Out: Rescued women release statement

Released brothers: Castro brothers talk to media

Complete coverage: Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, Michelle Knight found

911 Call: Help me I'm Amanda Berry

Dispatch tapes: "We found them!"

Rude dispatcher?: Police investigate dispatcher's handling of Amanda Berry's 911 call

How to help: Charitable fund set up for missing girls

Investigator: What Castro told police

Investigator: Amanda Berry's baby born in plastic pool

Investigator: Ariel Castro's past

Investigator: Women raped resulting in pregnancies

Details: Women only outside twice in past 10 years

Police audio: Police audio reveals how officers found women

Found alive: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus found alive

DeJesus homecoming: Gina gives a thumbs up

Amanda Berry homecoming: Family thanks community

Charges: Charges announced against Ariel Castro

Castro family: Ariel Castro's family mortified to be related

Charles Ramsey: Neighbor tells how he helped rescue Amanda Berry

Charles Ramsey: Listen to 911 call that led to Amanda Berry rescue

Inside the house: Details emerge about house where victims held

Padlocks in house: Suspects' son says Seymour house had padlocks throughout

No human remains: No human remains found at home where women escaped

Timeline: Gina DeJesus

Timeline: Amanda Berry

Watch: Last 10 years looking for Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus

Twitter trends: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus on Twitter

Family celebrates: Amanda Berry's family celebrates

Police: Amanda is the real hero here

Family shocker: DeJesus family reacts to Gina's return

Inside the house: Safety director talks about home where Berry, DeJesus were held

Mayor reacts: Mayor Jackson talks about the release of the three missing women

 


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Massillon: Hostage standoff ends, suspect shot and killed

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MASSILLON, Ohio -- A hostage situation at a Massillon business ended when the suspect was shot and killed by police Sunday evening, officials confirm.

Police first responded to the scene at the Great Clips on Indian River Road SW since about 5 p.m.

An estranged boyfriend attempted to visit his ex-girlfriend's workplace. She was not working at the time, but he took a female coworker hostage in the back room, the sheriff's department says.

A witness at the scene says the man was armed with a knife.

Other employees and customers were able to escape the store unharmed.

Canton SWAT forces and Stark County Sheriff's deputies were called to respond alongside Massillon Police. Roads in the area were blocked off.

Officials say the suspect was shot and killed by SWAT forces during a rescue attempt, around 8 p.m.

The woman held hostage was unharmed.

The Stark County Sheriff's Office is handling the investigation. Members of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation were also at the scene, report WKYC News crews.

The name of the suspect has not been released.

No other information has been released.

WKYC-TV


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Cleveland: Homeowner shoots, kills intruder

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CLEVELAND -- A homeowner shot an alleged intruder at his home on Cleveland's east side early Monday morning.

The shooting was reported just before 12:30 a.m. on E. 178th Street, off of Nottingham Road.

When police arrived, they found a man shot, laying in the driveway. That man died at the scene.

It appears that the man was an intruder attempting to rob the homeowners as they were returning home, sources tell Channel 3.

Police are investigating the exact circumstances surrounding the shooting and have not released any information.

WKYC-TV


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Cleveland Weather: Seasonable week ahead

We have a chance for showers this evening, but other than that, drier weather will be prevalent across Northeast Ohio over the next few days. Temperatures also move toward the low 80s by the end of the work week.

Sunday Night:  A few evening showers, otherwise, Mostly Cloudy & Cool.  Low: 55. Winds: SW 5-10 mph

Monday: Partly Sunny and breezy. A few lake shore showers are possible.  High: 73.   Winds: SW 10-15, gusts-25 mph.

Monday Night:  Mostly Cloudy & Comfortable.  Low: 58.  Wind: West 10-15 mph.

Tuesday: Mostly Sunny & Milder. High: 77.  Wind: West 5-10 mph.

Tuesday Night:  Partly Cloudy & Mild.  Low: 61.  Wind: East- 5 mph.

Wednesday: Morning Sunshine, afternoon clouds.  Milder.  High: 80.

Thursday:  Mostly Cloudy with scattered showers and storms.  High: 80.

Friday: Mostly Sunny.  High: 81.

Saturday:  Mostly Cloudy with scattered showers.  High: 79.

-------

Get more weather info and connect with us on Twitter and Facebook!

WKYC Weather Warriors on Facebook or @wkycweather on Twitter

Betsy Kling: @BetsyKling on Twitter or Betsy's Facebook Page

Holly Strano: @holliesmiles on Twitter or Hollie's Facebook Page

Marcus Walter: @MarcusDWalter on Twitter or Marcus's Facebook Page

Bruce Kalinowski on Bruce's Facebook Page

WKYC-TV


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Massillon: Hostage standoff ends, suspect shot and killed

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MASSILLON, Ohio -- A hostage situation at a Massillon business ended when the suspect was shot and killed by police Sunday evening, officials confirm.

Police first responded to the scene at the Great Clips on Indian River Road SW since about 5 p.m.

An estranged boyfriend attempted to visit his ex-girlfriend's workplace. She was not working at the time, but he took a female coworker hostage in the back room, the sheriff's department says.

A witness at the scene says the man was armed with a knife.

Other employees and customers were able to escape the store unharmed.

Canton SWAT forces and Stark County Sheriff's deputies were called to respond alongside Massillon Police. Roads in the area were blocked off.

Officials say the suspect was shot and killed by SWAT forces during a rescue attempt, around 8 p.m.

The woman held hostage was unharmed.

The Stark County Sheriff's Office is handling the investigation. Members of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation were also at the scene, report WKYC News crews.

The name of the suspect has not been released.

No other information has been released.

WKYC-TV


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Cleveland: Homeowner shoots, kills intruder

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CLEVELAND -- A homeowner shot an alleged intruder at his home on Cleveland's east side early Monday morning.

The shooting was reported just before 12:30 a.m. on E. 178th Street, off of Nottingham Road.

When police arrived, they found a man shot, laying in the driveway. That man died at the scene.

It appears that the man was an intruder attempting to rob the homeowners as they were returning home, sources tell Channel 3.

Police are investigating the exact circumstances surrounding the shooting and have not released any information.

WKYC-TV


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Gina DeJesus' parents lead Walk for Salvation

Written By kolimtiga on Minggu, 28 Juli 2013 | 17.04

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CLEVELAND -- Gina DeJesus' parents, Nancy Ruiz and Felix DeJesus, joined the Guardian Angels' Salvation Walk on the West Side Saturday.      

Three years ago, Felix was here focusing on finding his daughter, but now he's able to say thank you to the community.      

Their goal is to increase awareness of violence against women and human trafficking in the neighborhood.  

WKYC-TV


17.04 | 0 komentar | Read More

Amanda Berry makes surprise appearance at RoverFest

Instagram screenshot showing Amanda Berry at Roverfest

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CLEVELAND -- Amanda Berry surprised the crowd when she made an appearance at RoverFest.

Dozens of pictures started to show up on social media networks after Berry appeared on stage with rapper Nelly.

The hip-hop artist dedicated a song to her, then invited her to come out on stage with him.

RoverFest performers included 10 Years, Nelly, and the Wailers. The event was hosted by comedian Jim Florentine.

(Pictures from social networks embedded below)

WKYC-TV


17.04 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cleveland Weather: Sunday Sunshine !!

A Cold Front slips across Northern Ohio into Pennsylvania after Midnight,and so will the wet weather.  The second half of our weekend will feature Sunshine & Breezy, Cool weather.  

Next week, as we wrap up July & head into August, we'll have seasonable temperatures with some scattered rain on Thursday & next Saturday.

Saturday night: Showers & storms, moving east.  Breezy.  Low: 59.  Wind: SW 5-10, gusts-20 mph.

Sunday: Some morning Clouds, followed by a Sunny, Breezy, Cool afternoon.  High: 71.  Wind:  SW 10-15, gusts-25 mph.

Sunday Night:  A few evening showers & thunderstorms.  Clearing overnight.  Low: 56.  Wind: SW 10-15 mph.

Monday: Partly Cloudy, Breezy & Mild.  High: 74.  Wind: West 10-15, gusts-25 mph.

Monday Night:  Clearing & Comfortable.  Low: 60.  Wind: West 10-15 mph.

Tuesday: Mostly Sunny & Milder.  High: 77.

Wednesday: Partly Cloudy & Warmer.  High: 83.

Thursday: Partly Sunny with scattered showers & storms.   High: 80. 

Friday: Mostly Sunny & Warm.  High: 83.

Saturday:  Mostly Cloudy with scattered showers.  High: 80.

-------

Get more weather info and connect with us on Twitter and Facebook!

WKYC Weather Warriors on Facebook or @wkycweather on Twitter

Betsy Kling: @BetsyKling on Twitter or Betsy's Facebook Page

Holly Strano: @holliesmiles on Twitter or Hollie's Facebook Page

Marcus Walter: @MarcusDWalter on Twitter or Marcus's Facebook Page

Bruce Kalinowski on Bruce's Facebook Page

WKYC-TV


17.04 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gina DeJesus' parents lead Walk for Salvation

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

CLEVELAND -- Gina DeJesus' parents, Nancy Ruiz and Felix DeJesus, joined the Guardian Angels' Salvation Walk on the West Side Saturday.      

Three years ago, Felix was here focusing on finding his daughter, but now he's able to say thank you to the community.      

Their goal is to increase awareness of violence against women and human trafficking in the neighborhood.  

WKYC-TV


14.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

Amanda Berry makes surprise appearance at RoverFest

Instagram screenshot showing Amanda Berry at Roverfest

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

CLEVELAND -- Amanda Berry surprised the crowd when she made an appearance at RoverFest.

Dozens of pictures started to show up on social media networks after Berry appeared on stage with rapper Nelly.

The hip-hop artist dedicated a song to her, then invited her to come out on stage with him.

RoverFest performers included 10 Years, Nelly, and the Wailers. The event was hosted by comedian Jim Florentine.

(Pictures from social networks embedded below)

WKYC-TV


14.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cleveland Weather: Sunday Sunshine !!

A Cold Front slips across Northern Ohio into Pennsylvania after Midnight,and so will the wet weather.  The second half of our weekend will feature Sunshine & Breezy, Cool weather.  

Next week, as we wrap up July & head into August, we'll have seasonable temperatures with some scattered rain on Thursday & next Saturday.

Saturday night: Showers & storms, moving east.  Breezy.  Low: 59.  Wind: SW 5-10, gusts-20 mph.

Sunday: Some morning Clouds, followed by a Sunny, Breezy, Cool afternoon.  High: 71.  Wind:  SW 10-15, gusts-25 mph.

Sunday Night:  A few evening showers & thunderstorms.  Clearing overnight.  Low: 56.  Wind: SW 10-15 mph.

Monday: Partly Cloudy, Breezy & Mild.  High: 74.  Wind: West 10-15, gusts-25 mph.

Monday Night:  Clearing & Comfortable.  Low: 60.  Wind: West 10-15 mph.

Tuesday: Mostly Sunny & Milder.  High: 77.

Wednesday: Partly Cloudy & Warmer.  High: 83.

Thursday: Partly Sunny with scattered showers & storms.   High: 80. 

Friday: Mostly Sunny & Warm.  High: 83.

Saturday:  Mostly Cloudy with scattered showers.  High: 80.

-------

Get more weather info and connect with us on Twitter and Facebook!

WKYC Weather Warriors on Facebook or @wkycweather on Twitter

Betsy Kling: @BetsyKling on Twitter or Betsy's Facebook Page

Holly Strano: @holliesmiles on Twitter or Hollie's Facebook Page

Marcus Walter: @MarcusDWalter on Twitter or Marcus's Facebook Page

Bruce Kalinowski on Bruce's Facebook Page

WKYC-TV


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Survivors, families say they are pleased by Castro deal

Written By kolimtiga on Sabtu, 27 Juli 2013 | 17.04

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

Free iPhone app | Free Android app

Complete Coverage - Click Here

Photos: See Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus pictures

Photos: Gina DeJesus, Amanda Berry come home

Photos: Ariel Castro in court

Photos: Decade in isolation

The house: Photos show backyard at Castro's house

Deal in the making?: Plea deal in the works

House's future: Castro home headed for wrecking ball?

 

Viral Video: Amanda, Gina and Michelle release thank-you video

 

Analyzing the viral video: What the survivor video really says

 

Watching out for the women: Team protects Amanda, Gina and Michelle

 

Judge denies request: Castro denied request to see Amanda Berry's child

 

What's next: Castro: Trial or plea deal?

 

Look up: Judge orders Castro to open his eyes in court

 

The evidence: Attorney General puts together Castro evidence puzzle

 

Seymour hero's media battle: Charles Ramsey fights back against Daily Mail

 

EARLIER STORIES:

 

Psychic responds: Sylvia Browne makes statement on Amanda Berry case

Officer's story: Police recount finding Amanda, Gina, and Michelle

Investigator: How Castro spends his time behind bars

Investigator: Utilities visited Castro home often

Investigator: Castro says he loves his daughter

Video: Ariel Castro's lawyers give extended interviews

Tourist spot?: Seymour Avenue a destination for all the wrong reasons

Speaking Out: Rescued women release statement

Released brothers: Castro brothers talk to media

Complete coverage: Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, Michelle Knight found

911 Call: Help me I'm Amanda Berry

Dispatch tapes: "We found them!"

Rude dispatcher?: Police investigate dispatcher's handling of Amanda Berry's 911 call

How to help: Charitable fund set up for missing girls

Investigator: What Castro told police

Investigator: Amanda Berry's baby born in plastic pool

Investigator: Ariel Castro's past

Investigator: Women raped resulting in pregnancies

Details: Women only outside twice in past 10 years

Police audio: Police audio reveals how officers found women

Found alive: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus found alive

DeJesus homecoming: Gina gives a thumbs up

Amanda Berry homecoming: Family thanks community

Charges: Charges announced against Ariel Castro

Castro family: Ariel Castro's family mortified to be related

Charles Ramsey: Neighbor tells how he helped rescue Amanda Berry

Charles Ramsey: Listen to 911 call that led to Amanda Berry rescue

Inside the house: Details emerge about house where victims held

Padlocks in house: Suspects' son says Seymour house had padlocks throughout

No human remains: No human remains found at home where women escaped

Timeline: Gina DeJesus

Timeline: Amanda Berry

Watch: Last 10 years looking for Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus

Twitter trends: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus on Twitter

Family celebrates: Amanda Berry's family celebrates

Police: Amanda is the real hero here

Family shocker: DeJesus family reacts to Gina's return

Inside the house: Safety director talks about home where Berry, DeJesus were held

Mayor reacts: Mayor Jackson talks about the release of the three missing women

 


17.04 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cleveland: RTA drivers fight human trafficking

CLEVELAND -- The decision came coincidentally, just after Ariel Castro's three women victims were rescued from their captivity and abuse.

RTA chose to become the nation's first transit system to respond to a federal request to combat human trafficking.

RTA spokesperson Mary Shaffer said, "Because we have so many eyes and ears on the street, it may give us a chance to help somebody in need."

So far 1500 workers have taken the voluntary training which includes viewing a video.

The system plans to install placards with the theme "Look below the surface," to alert 200,000 daily commuters what the signs are for trafficking victims in trouble.

The program amounts to an extension of the existing Safe Place campaign. All buses and trains have yellow and black diamond- shaped signs alerting juveniles who are runaways or have problems they can ask the driver to help them get assistance.

Shaffer said, "We have a couple reports a month .... usually a juvenile will go up to a driver and say  'I need help' and we've been able to help them."

The agency is paying for the cost of the placards and training.

Shaffer said helping one person would be worth the modest cost.

Transit Union President William Nix thinks the program makes sense.

Drivers have been concerned about their own security lately with several incidents involving confrontations or incidents with passengers.

But Nix says they want to do all they can to protect the public.

WKYC-TV


17.04 | 0 komentar | Read More

Investigator: Ariel Castro pleads guilty, avoids death penalty

CLEVELAND -- Ariel Castro has accepted a plea deal sparing him execution but putting him behind bars for the rest of his life.

He has pleaded guilty to amended charges and the prosecution and defense have agreed to a recommended sentence of life in prison plus 1,000 years.

"I am fully aware and I do consent to that [plea agreement]," Castro told the court.

The plea deal was accepted in court during a pre-trial hearing before Judge Michael Russo. 

The judge said before the hearing started that Castro will be sentenced at a later date.

After avoiding eye contact and remaining silent through the prior court hearings, Castro entered the court today wearing glasses and was alert and talkative to the judge during the hearing. He stared straight ahead and maintained eye contact with Judge Russo.

While answering questions about his understanding of the deal Castro offered details about himself to the judge. Castro made references to his "sex problems."

He also told the judge that he had an addiction to pornography which "took a toll on his mind." 

As part of the agreement, Castro will be labeled a sex predator.

Judge Russo told Castro that he will be given the opportunity to allocute at his sentencing hearing and have family members speak on his behalf. 

The sentencing hearing is scheduled for Thursday, August 1. 

Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight will also have the opportunity to address the court as well at that time if they choose to do so.

Judge Russo says the women can appear in person, have someone speak on their behalf, write a letter or send a video if they choose.

The hearing was interrupted due to clerical errors within the agreement pertaining to the numbering of charges. 

Castro pleaded guilty to the charges but said repeatedly he disagreed with the wording.  Specifically, Castro objected to the characterization of him as violent in the description of charges.

He also told the court that he "missed his daughter very much."  He is referring to Amanda Berry's child, fathered while she was held hostage. 

In a previous pre-trial, Judge Russo denied Castro's request to see the girl.

As part of the deal, Castro has agreed to turn his home over to the Cuyahoga County Land Bank and Prosecutor Tim McGinty told the court the house would be demolished "and soon." 

Castro also forfeits more than $20,000 and other property.  He also agrees not to profit from his crimes.

Castro, who turned 53 earlier this month, faced 977 criminal counts including kidnapping, rape and aggravated murder.  

The deal called for him to plead guilty to 937 of them.

His plea also spares his three victims -- Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight -- the trauma of testifying during a trial.

"Overall, the evidence was overwhelming," said Craig Weintraub, one of Castro's defense attorneys. "There are no winners, even though we avoided the death penalty in this case, which was our primary goal.

"My client understood that the last thing he wanted to do was to re-victimize these women."

The case was slated for trial Aug. 5. Castro was initially arrested in May after the three women escaped his Seymour Avenue home where they had been held for a decade.

Earlier this month, the three women released a "thank you" video that took the web by storm as they offered an update on their lives two months after being found alive.

WKYC was the first to deliver the news Thursday that Castro had been offered the plea deal as well as plans already being made to tear down the Seymour Avenue home where the women were held.

NBC News later reported the deal would take the death penalty off the table with Castro accepting a sentence of life without parole plus 1,000 years.

WKYC-TV


17.04 | 0 komentar | Read More

Survivors, families say they are pleased by Castro deal

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

Free iPhone app | Free Android app

Complete Coverage - Click Here

Photos: See Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus pictures

Photos: Gina DeJesus, Amanda Berry come home

Photos: Ariel Castro in court

Photos: Decade in isolation

The house: Photos show backyard at Castro's house

Deal in the making?: Plea deal in the works

House's future: Castro home headed for wrecking ball?

 

Viral Video: Amanda, Gina and Michelle release thank-you video

 

Analyzing the viral video: What the survivor video really says

 

Watching out for the women: Team protects Amanda, Gina and Michelle

 

Judge denies request: Castro denied request to see Amanda Berry's child

 

What's next: Castro: Trial or plea deal?

 

Look up: Judge orders Castro to open his eyes in court

 

The evidence: Attorney General puts together Castro evidence puzzle

 

Seymour hero's media battle: Charles Ramsey fights back against Daily Mail

 

EARLIER STORIES:

 

Psychic responds: Sylvia Browne makes statement on Amanda Berry case

Officer's story: Police recount finding Amanda, Gina, and Michelle

Investigator: How Castro spends his time behind bars

Investigator: Utilities visited Castro home often

Investigator: Castro says he loves his daughter

Video: Ariel Castro's lawyers give extended interviews

Tourist spot?: Seymour Avenue a destination for all the wrong reasons

Speaking Out: Rescued women release statement

Released brothers: Castro brothers talk to media

Complete coverage: Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, Michelle Knight found

911 Call: Help me I'm Amanda Berry

Dispatch tapes: "We found them!"

Rude dispatcher?: Police investigate dispatcher's handling of Amanda Berry's 911 call

How to help: Charitable fund set up for missing girls

Investigator: What Castro told police

Investigator: Amanda Berry's baby born in plastic pool

Investigator: Ariel Castro's past

Investigator: Women raped resulting in pregnancies

Details: Women only outside twice in past 10 years

Police audio: Police audio reveals how officers found women

Found alive: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus found alive

DeJesus homecoming: Gina gives a thumbs up

Amanda Berry homecoming: Family thanks community

Charges: Charges announced against Ariel Castro

Castro family: Ariel Castro's family mortified to be related

Charles Ramsey: Neighbor tells how he helped rescue Amanda Berry

Charles Ramsey: Listen to 911 call that led to Amanda Berry rescue

Inside the house: Details emerge about house where victims held

Padlocks in house: Suspects' son says Seymour house had padlocks throughout

No human remains: No human remains found at home where women escaped

Timeline: Gina DeJesus

Timeline: Amanda Berry

Watch: Last 10 years looking for Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus

Twitter trends: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus on Twitter

Family celebrates: Amanda Berry's family celebrates

Police: Amanda is the real hero here

Family shocker: DeJesus family reacts to Gina's return

Inside the house: Safety director talks about home where Berry, DeJesus were held

Mayor reacts: Mayor Jackson talks about the release of the three missing women

 


14.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cleveland: RTA drivers fight human trafficking

CLEVELAND -- The decision came coincidentally, just after Ariel Castro's three women victims were rescued from their captivity and abuse.

RTA chose to become the nation's first transit system to respond to a federal request to combat human trafficking.

RTA spokesperson Mary Shaffer said, "Because we have so many eyes and ears on the street, it may give us a chance to help somebody in need."

So far 1500 workers have taken the voluntary training which includes viewing a video.

The system plans to install placards with the theme "Look below the surface," to alert 200,000 daily commuters what the signs are for trafficking victims in trouble.

The program amounts to an extension of the existing Safe Place campaign. All buses and trains have yellow and black diamond- shaped signs alerting juveniles who are runaways or have problems they can ask the driver to help them get assistance.

Shaffer said, "We have a couple reports a month .... usually a juvenile will go up to a driver and say  'I need help' and we've been able to help them."

The agency is paying for the cost of the placards and training.

Shaffer said helping one person would be worth the modest cost.

Transit Union President William Nix thinks the program makes sense.

Drivers have been concerned about their own security lately with several incidents involving confrontations or incidents with passengers.

But Nix says they want to do all they can to protect the public.

WKYC-TV


14.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

Investigator: Ariel Castro pleads guilty, avoids death penalty

CLEVELAND -- Ariel Castro has accepted a plea deal sparing him execution but putting him behind bars for the rest of his life.

He has pleaded guilty to amended charges and the prosecution and defense have agreed to a recommended sentence of life in prison plus 1,000 years.

"I am fully aware and I do consent to that [plea agreement]," Castro told the court.

The plea deal was accepted in court during a pre-trial hearing before Judge Michael Russo. 

The judge said before the hearing started that Castro will be sentenced at a later date.

After avoiding eye contact and remaining silent through the prior court hearings, Castro entered the court today wearing glasses and was alert and talkative to the judge during the hearing. He stared straight ahead and maintained eye contact with Judge Russo.

While answering questions about his understanding of the deal Castro offered details about himself to the judge. Castro made references to his "sex problems."

He also told the judge that he had an addiction to pornography which "took a toll on his mind." 

As part of the agreement, Castro will be labeled a sex predator.

Judge Russo told Castro that he will be given the opportunity to allocute at his sentencing hearing and have family members speak on his behalf. 

The sentencing hearing is scheduled for Thursday, August 1. 

Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight will also have the opportunity to address the court as well at that time if they choose to do so.

Judge Russo says the women can appear in person, have someone speak on their behalf, write a letter or send a video if they choose.

The hearing was interrupted due to clerical errors within the agreement pertaining to the numbering of charges. 

Castro pleaded guilty to the charges but said repeatedly he disagreed with the wording.  Specifically, Castro objected to the characterization of him as violent in the description of charges.

He also told the court that he "missed his daughter very much."  He is referring to Amanda Berry's child, fathered while she was held hostage. 

In a previous pre-trial, Judge Russo denied Castro's request to see the girl.

As part of the deal, Castro has agreed to turn his home over to the Cuyahoga County Land Bank and Prosecutor Tim McGinty told the court the house would be demolished "and soon." 

Castro also forfeits more than $20,000 and other property.  He also agrees not to profit from his crimes.

Castro, who turned 53 earlier this month, faced 977 criminal counts including kidnapping, rape and aggravated murder.  

The deal called for him to plead guilty to 937 of them.

His plea also spares his three victims -- Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight -- the trauma of testifying during a trial.

"Overall, the evidence was overwhelming," said Craig Weintraub, one of Castro's defense attorneys. "There are no winners, even though we avoided the death penalty in this case, which was our primary goal.

"My client understood that the last thing he wanted to do was to re-victimize these women."

The case was slated for trial Aug. 5. Castro was initially arrested in May after the three women escaped his Seymour Avenue home where they had been held for a decade.

Earlier this month, the three women released a "thank you" video that took the web by storm as they offered an update on their lives two months after being found alive.

WKYC was the first to deliver the news Thursday that Castro had been offered the plea deal as well as plans already being made to tear down the Seymour Avenue home where the women were held.

NBC News later reported the deal would take the death penalty off the table with Castro accepting a sentence of life without parole plus 1,000 years.

WKYC-TV


14.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

What will be put in place of Ariel Castro's house?

Written By kolimtiga on Jumat, 26 Juli 2013 | 17.05

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

CLEVELAND -- As the steps move forward toward demolishing Ariel Castro's home on Seymour Avenue, neighbors and strangers alike have ideas on what should happen to the space.

Thursday, a demolition inspector from the Land Bank was on site at 2207 Seymour Avenue, taking pictures of Castro's house and the two vacant houses to the west.

While the Land Bank does not own the properties, they want to acquire as much land as possible to be put to use to benefit the community, the inspector told Channel 3.

Castro still owns the house at 2207, but it is in foreclosure.  Currently, no one can access the building, as it is considered evidence in the criminal case.

But once the case is over -- if Castro pleads, or at the conclusion of a trial -- investigators will release the condemned home to the City of Cleveland.

Cleveland City Council members have received all kinds of suggestions on what to do with the property.

Some have suggested bringing in Habitat for Humanity or a similar organization, to renovate the property.

Neighbors like Javier Marti want to see it demolished and turned into a park. 

"It's an eyesore. I don't want no reminder of what happened there," said Marti, who lives across the street on Seymour Ave.

Ward 14 City Councilman Brian Cummins says, since the beginning the consensus has been that the home where Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, and Michelle Knight were kidnapped and abused for a decade, needs to go.

"Our gut feeling, from knowing the area, knowing the people on the street, knowing the context of investors is, no one is going to be interested in investing in this street for a couple of years," said Cummins.

It's a parallel situation to that of Imperial Avenue, where Anthony Sowell murdered 11 women in his home.

When Sowell was sentenced to death in August 2011, it took about four months for his home to be demolished.

Today it stands an empty field.

It's unclear if the lot at 2207 Seymour will become anything more.

"What is the most respectful thing based in the survivors interests, and the interests of the residents who live on that street? They should be the ones guiding our decisions," said Cummins.

Cummins hopes, in a few years the City of Cleveland can look at reinvesting in Seymour Avenue; not just the property at 2207, but in fixing up many of the homes on this street.

WKYC-TV


17.05 | 0 komentar | Read More

NBC: Castro deal for life plus 1,000 years in prison

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

Free iPhone app | Free Android app

Complete Coverage - Click Here

Photos: See Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus pictures

Photos: Gina DeJesus, Amanda Berry come home

Photos: Ariel Castro in court

Photos: Decade in isolation

The house: Photos show backyard at Castro's house

Deal in the making?: Plea deal in the works

House's future: Castro home headed for wrecking ball?

 

Viral Video: Amanda, Gina and Michelle release thank-you video

 

Analyzing the viral video: What the survivor video really says

 

Watching out for the women: Team protects Amanda, Gina and Michelle

 

Judge denies request: Castro denied request to see Amanda Berry's child

 

What's next: Castro: Trial or plea deal?

 

Look up: Judge orders Castro to open his eyes in court

 

The evidence: Attorney General puts together Castro evidence puzzle

 

Seymour hero's media battle: Charles Ramsey fights back against Daily Mail

 

EARLIER STORIES:

 

Psychic responds: Sylvia Browne makes statement on Amanda Berry case

Officer's story: Police recount finding Amanda, Gina, and Michelle

Investigator: How Castro spends his time behind bars

Investigator: Utilities visited Castro home often

Investigator: Castro says he loves his daughter

Video: Ariel Castro's lawyers give extended interviews

Tourist spot?: Seymour Avenue a destination for all the wrong reasons

Speaking Out: Rescued women release statement

Released brothers: Castro brothers talk to media

Complete coverage: Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, Michelle Knight found

911 Call: Help me I'm Amanda Berry

Dispatch tapes: "We found them!"

Rude dispatcher?: Police investigate dispatcher's handling of Amanda Berry's 911 call

How to help: Charitable fund set up for missing girls

Investigator: What Castro told police

Investigator: Amanda Berry's baby born in plastic pool

Investigator: Ariel Castro's past

Investigator: Women raped resulting in pregnancies

Details: Women only outside twice in past 10 years

Police audio: Police audio reveals how officers found women

Found alive: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus found alive

DeJesus homecoming: Gina gives a thumbs up

Amanda Berry homecoming: Family thanks community

Charges: Charges announced against Ariel Castro

Castro family: Ariel Castro's family mortified to be related

Charles Ramsey: Neighbor tells how he helped rescue Amanda Berry

Charles Ramsey: Listen to 911 call that led to Amanda Berry rescue

Inside the house: Details emerge about house where victims held

Padlocks in house: Suspects' son says Seymour house had padlocks throughout

No human remains: No human remains found at home where women escaped

Timeline: Gina DeJesus

Timeline: Amanda Berry

Watch: Last 10 years looking for Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus

Twitter trends: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus on Twitter

Family celebrates: Amanda Berry's family celebrates

Police: Amanda is the real hero here

Family shocker: DeJesus family reacts to Gina's return

Inside the house: Safety director talks about home where Berry, DeJesus were held

Mayor reacts: Mayor Jackson talks about the release of the three missing women

 


17.05 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cleveland: Police shoot suspect who shot bartender, turned gun on them

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CLEVELAND -- Cleveland Police are investigating an officer-involved shooting outside Winston's Bar on East 131st Street Friday morning.

After getting kicked out of Winston's Bar, the man pulled out a gun and shot the bouncer, according to reports at the scene. 

When police arrived, they say the suspect would not put the gun down, then pointed the gun at officers and fired shots. 

Police then returned fire, hitting the suspect. 

Both the suspect and the bouncer were taken to MetroHealth Medical Center. Their conditions are not available. 

Police have E. 131st Street blocked off from Caine Street to Miles Avenue.

No other details have been released.

WKYC-TV


17.05 | 0 komentar | Read More

NBC: Castro deal for life plus 1,000 years in prison

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

Free iPhone app | Free Android app

Complete Coverage - Click Here

Photos: See Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus pictures

Photos: Gina DeJesus, Amanda Berry come home

Photos: Ariel Castro in court

Photos: Decade in isolation

The house: Photos show backyard at Castro's house

Deal in the making?: Plea deal in the works

House's future: Castro home headed for wrecking ball?

 

Viral Video: Amanda, Gina and Michelle release thank-you video

 

Analyzing the viral video: What the survivor video really says

 

Watching out for the women: Team protects Amanda, Gina and Michelle

 

Judge denies request: Castro denied request to see Amanda Berry's child

 

What's next: Castro: Trial or plea deal?

 

Look up: Judge orders Castro to open his eyes in court

 

The evidence: Attorney General puts together Castro evidence puzzle

 

Seymour hero's media battle: Charles Ramsey fights back against Daily Mail

 

EARLIER STORIES:

 

Psychic responds: Sylvia Browne makes statement on Amanda Berry case

Officer's story: Police recount finding Amanda, Gina, and Michelle

Investigator: How Castro spends his time behind bars

Investigator: Utilities visited Castro home often

Investigator: Castro says he loves his daughter

Video: Ariel Castro's lawyers give extended interviews

Tourist spot?: Seymour Avenue a destination for all the wrong reasons

Speaking Out: Rescued women release statement

Released brothers: Castro brothers talk to media

Complete coverage: Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, Michelle Knight found

911 Call: Help me I'm Amanda Berry

Dispatch tapes: "We found them!"

Rude dispatcher?: Police investigate dispatcher's handling of Amanda Berry's 911 call

How to help: Charitable fund set up for missing girls

Investigator: What Castro told police

Investigator: Amanda Berry's baby born in plastic pool

Investigator: Ariel Castro's past

Investigator: Women raped resulting in pregnancies

Details: Women only outside twice in past 10 years

Police audio: Police audio reveals how officers found women

Found alive: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus found alive

DeJesus homecoming: Gina gives a thumbs up

Amanda Berry homecoming: Family thanks community

Charges: Charges announced against Ariel Castro

Castro family: Ariel Castro's family mortified to be related

Charles Ramsey: Neighbor tells how he helped rescue Amanda Berry

Charles Ramsey: Listen to 911 call that led to Amanda Berry rescue

Inside the house: Details emerge about house where victims held

Padlocks in house: Suspects' son says Seymour house had padlocks throughout

No human remains: No human remains found at home where women escaped

Timeline: Gina DeJesus

Timeline: Amanda Berry

Watch: Last 10 years looking for Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus

Twitter trends: Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus on Twitter

Family celebrates: Amanda Berry's family celebrates

Police: Amanda is the real hero here

Family shocker: DeJesus family reacts to Gina's return

Inside the house: Safety director talks about home where Berry, DeJesus were held

Mayor reacts: Mayor Jackson talks about the release of the three missing women

 


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What will be put in place of Ariel Castro's house?

CLEVELAND -- As the steps move forward toward demolishing Ariel Castro's home on Seymour Avenue, neighbors and strangers alike have ideas on what should happen to the space.

Thursday, a demolition inspector from the Land Bank was on site at 2207 Seymour Avenue, taking pictures of Castro's house and the two vacant houses to the west.

While the Land Bank does not own the properties, they want to acquire as much land as possible to be put to use to benefit the community, the inspector told Channel 3.

Castro still owns the house at 2207, but it is in foreclosure.  Currently, no one can access the building, as it is considered evidence in the criminal case.

But once the case is over -- if Castro pleads, or at the conclusion of a trial -- investigators will release the condemned home to the City of Cleveland.

Cleveland City Council members have received all kinds of suggestions on what to do with the property.

Some have suggested bringing in Habitat for Humanity or a similar organization, to renovate the property.

Neighbors like Javier Marti want to see it demolished and turned into a park. 

"It's an eyesore. I don't want no reminder of what happened there," said Marti, who lives across the street on Seymour Ave.

Ward 14 City Councilman Brian Cummins says, since the beginning the consensus has been that the home where Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, and Michelle Knight were kidnapped and abused for a decade, needs to go.

"Our gut feeling, from knowing the area, knowing the people on the street, knowing the context of investors is, no one is going to be interested in investing in this street for a couple of years," said Cummins.

It's a parallel situation to that of Imperial Avenue, where Anthony Sowell murdered 11 women in his home.

When Sowell was sentenced to death in August 2011, it took about four months for his home to be demolished.

Today it stands an empty field.

It's unclear if the lot at 2207 Seymour will become anything more.

"What is the most respectful thing based in the survivors interests, and the interests of the residents who live on that street? They should be the ones guiding our decisions," said Cummins.

Cummins hopes, in a few years the City of Cleveland can look at reinvesting in Seymour Avenue; not just the property at 2207, but in fixing up many of the homes on this street.


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Police investigating Cleveland bar shooting

CLEVELAND - Cleveland police are investigating a shooting outside Winston's Bar on East 131st Street Friday morning.

Channel 3 crews on the scene report a man pulled out a gun after getting kicked out of the bar overnight, and shot the bouncer. Another person was also shot. Police have East 131st street blocked off from Cain Street to Miles. This is a developing story look for updates as we get them here on WKYC.com and on Channel 3 Today.


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East Cleveland: Rally against violence

Written By kolimtiga on Kamis, 25 Juli 2013 | 17.04

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One by one they came to look in East Cleveland. The same area where the bodies of  Sheetisha Sheeley, Shirellda Terry and Angela Deskins were found.

Volunteers and the community group Black on Black Crime Inc. covered a lot of ground.

The call was for 300 men to join the search. About 30 showed up but the message was still strong.

Leonard Davis volunteered his time and said, "It is my duty as a man to help after these atrocious crimes. I need to get involved."

They searched woods and abandoned homes. The idea was for the volunteers be seen so others would join.

No new victims were found and this group hopes to drive some of the fear out of East Cleveland.

WKYC-TV


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East Cleveland 'United in Tragedy'

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EAST CLEVELAND - The families of the East Cleveland victims joined together Wednesday night along with members of the community for a rally aimed at stopping violence against women.

The rally took place near the intersection of Hayden and Shaw avenues where the three women's bodies were discovered.

Dozens of people, community leaders, and elected officials from all over showed up in solidarity for the event and pledged to work together toward change.

"We will take our streets back we will protect our families," shouted minister Tanya Robinson Williams as she addressed the crowd.

"Begin to question suspicious men and women, begin to ask people what are they doing in your neighborhood, begin to not just see but start to look, begin to recognize and make them feel uncomfortable in our neighborhoods."

Now joined together through tragedy, the families of Angela Deskins, Shetisha Sheeley, and Shirellda Terry share a bond only few can understand.

Yvonne Pointer, whose daughter's rape and murder went unsolved for nearly 30 years, offered the following words of consolation.

"I do want the families to know, I'm speaking to you directly now, that your children your loved ones are more than the way they died," said Pointer.

"Remember how they lived think about the good things that they did."

Several community leaders and elected officials also attended charging the crowd to be aware of suspicious activity in the neighborhood and put words into action.

"There's a lot of grief going on right now especially in the African American community and it's important that they see leaders like me standing by their side," said State Sen. Nina Turner.

"Just as a mother and a wife and a sister this pains me...we've had a lot of pain go on through greater Cleveland and it must stop."

It's a growing sense of awareness and community support the loved ones of Shirellda Terry hope will continue. "You don't really realize how many people are missing until it personally affects you and how it really gets tossed to the side," explained Melissa Minor, Shirellda's sister.

"Shirellda was like the match that lit the flames to make the awareness of the people so that change could start," said family friend and pastor Kevin Hannah.  "We want to keep the flame going so that not only is she remembered but other people are saved."    

WKYC-TV


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Suspected E. Cleveland killer investigated for human trafficking

MANSFIELD -- The investigation into the murders of three East Cleveland women led federal and local authorities to Poplar Street in Mansfield.

"What?! You're from Cleveland?" recalled neighbor Eva Carpenter, of her reaction when teams of investigators spread out on the street to interview neighbors.

"They were just coming out everywhere, these guys, and I'm like, 'What's going on?'" she said.

EXPANDED COVERAGE | East Cleveland murders

Law enforcement sources tell Channel 3 News, that new evidence suggests a possible link between accused serial killer, Michael Madison, and human trafficking.

Neighbors said investigators described vehicles, and a bi-racial couple, and asked them if they were seen in the neighborhood. None of the residents who spoke to Channel 3 News, said they saw the cars or the people whom authorities described.

Residents said investigators showed particular interest in a vacant lot where a dilapidated home once stood, before it was torn down a couple of years ago.

An FBI spokesperson confirmed that agents were canvassing the neighborhood on Tuesday, and said they are following up on all leads, but gave no other details.

Law enforcement sources tell Channel 3 News that investigators are not ruling out Madison's involvement in other crimes, or that he may not have acted alone in the murders.

Madison, 35, faces charges of kidnapping and aggravated murder in the slayings. He is a registered sex offender, who served four years in prison beginning in 2002.

East Cleveland Police responded to a call about a foul odor last Friday, and discovered a decomposed body wrapped in plastic bags in a garage. Madison was arrested after a short standoff with police.

Two more bodies were found Saturday, after police questioned Madison. 

The first known victim was identified as Angela Deskins, 38, of Cleveland. The last two victims have been identified as Shirellda Terry, 18, of East Cleveland, and Shetisha Sheeley, 28, of Cleveland.

The possibility of a link between the triple murders and this Mansfield neigbhorhood, some 85 miles away, has residents shocked and concerned.

"It bothers me a lot because I have kids," said Korey Florence. "There are a lot of kids who play out here."

"It's nerve-racking," said April Clinton. "Especially considering the history of the crimes [in East Cleveland], and that the women were all living close by."

WKYC-TV


17.04 | 0 komentar | Read More

East Cleveland: Rally against violence

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

One by one they came to look in East Cleveland. The same area where the bodies of  Sheetisha Sheeley, Shirellda Terry and Angela Deskins were found.

Volunteers and the community group Black on Black Crime Inc. covered a lot of ground.

The call was for 300 men to join the search. About 30 showed up but the message was still strong.

Leonard Davis volunteered his time and said, "It is my duty as a man to help after these atrocious crimes. I need to get involved."

They searched woods and abandoned homes. The idea was for the volunteers be seen so others would join.

No new victims were found and this group hopes to drive some of the fear out of East Cleveland.

WKYC-TV


16.48 | 0 komentar | Read More

East Cleveland 'United in Tragedy'

DOWNLOAD OUR FREE WKYC APPS

EAST CLEVELAND - The families of the East Cleveland victims joined together Wednesday night along with members of the community for a rally aimed at stopping violence against women.

The rally took place near the intersection of Hayden and Shaw avenues where the three women's bodies were discovered.

Dozens of people, community leaders, and elected officials from all over showed up in solidarity for the event and pledged to work together toward change.

"We will take our streets back we will protect our families," shouted minister Tanya Robinson Williams as she addressed the crowd.

"Begin to question suspicious men and women, begin to ask people what are they doing in your neighborhood, begin to not just see but start to look, begin to recognize and make them feel uncomfortable in our neighborhoods."

Now joined together through tragedy, the families of Angela Deskins, Shetisha Sheeley, and Shirellda Terry share a bond only few can understand.

Yvonne Pointer, whose daughter's rape and murder went unsolved for nearly 30 years, offered the following words of consolation.

"I do want the families to know, I'm speaking to you directly now, that your children your loved ones are more than the way they died," said Pointer.

"Remember how they lived think about the good things that they did."

Several community leaders and elected officials also attended charging the crowd to be aware of suspicious activity in the neighborhood and put words into action.

"There's a lot of grief going on right now especially in the African American community and it's important that they see leaders like me standing by their side," said State Sen. Nina Turner.

"Just as a mother and a wife and a sister this pains me...we've had a lot of pain go on through greater Cleveland and it must stop."

It's a growing sense of awareness and community support the loved ones of Shirellda Terry hope will continue. "You don't really realize how many people are missing until it personally affects you and how it really gets tossed to the side," explained Melissa Minor, Shirellda's sister.

"Shirellda was like the match that lit the flames to make the awareness of the people so that change could start," said family friend and pastor Kevin Hannah.  "We want to keep the flame going so that not only is she remembered but other people are saved."    

WKYC-TV


16.48 | 0 komentar | Read More

Suspected E. Cleveland killer investigated for human trafficking

MANSFIELD -- The investigation into the murders of three East Cleveland women led federal and local authorities to Poplar Street in Mansfield.

"What?! You're from Cleveland?" recalled neighbor Eva Carpenter, of her reaction when teams of investigators spread out on the street to interview neighbors.

"They were just coming out everywhere, these guys, and I'm like, 'What's going on?'" she said.

EXPANDED COVERAGE | East Cleveland murders

Law enforcement sources tell Channel 3 News, that new evidence suggests a possible link between accused serial killer, Michael Madison, and human trafficking.

Neighbors said investigators described vehicles, and a bi-racial couple, and asked them if they were seen in the neighborhood. None of the residents who spoke to Channel 3 News, said they saw the cars or the people whom authorities described.

Residents said investigators showed particular interest in a vacant lot where a dilapidated home once stood, before it was torn down a couple of years ago.

An FBI spokesperson confirmed that agents were canvassing the neighborhood on Tuesday, and said they are following up on all leads, but gave no other details.

Law enforcement sources tell Channel 3 News that investigators are not ruling out Madison's involvement in other crimes, or that he may not have acted alone in the murders.

Madison, 35, faces charges of kidnapping and aggravated murder in the slayings. He is a registered sex offender, who served four years in prison beginning in 2002.

East Cleveland Police responded to a call about a foul odor last Friday, and discovered a decomposed body wrapped in plastic bags in a garage. Madison was arrested after a short standoff with police.

Two more bodies were found Saturday, after police questioned Madison. 

The first known victim was identified as Angela Deskins, 38, of Cleveland. The last two victims have been identified as Shirellda Terry, 18, of East Cleveland, and Shetisha Sheeley, 28, of Cleveland.

The possibility of a link between the triple murders and this Mansfield neigbhorhood, some 85 miles away, has residents shocked and concerned.

"It bothers me a lot because I have kids," said Korey Florence. "There are a lot of kids who play out here."

"It's nerve-racking," said April Clinton. "Especially considering the history of the crimes [in East Cleveland], and that the women were all living close by."

WKYC-TV


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Suspect crashes into Boys and Girls Club

Written By kolimtiga on Rabu, 24 Juli 2013 | 17.05

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ELYRIA, Ohio -- A police chase ended with a driver crashing into the Elyria Boys and Girls Club on Middle Avenue early Wednesday morning.

Ohio State Highway Patrol dispatchers confirmed troopers were chasing the driver for just a short time before the crash.

Two people inside the car were taken to the hospital.  They are expected to be okay. 

It's not clear what started the chase.

There is extensive damage to the building. 

WKYC-TV


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Akron: Bomb explodes on front porch

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AKRON, Ohio -- Akron Police are investigating an overnight explosion on McKinley Avenue.

Channel 3 has learned that the bomb went off on the porch of a home, blowing the screen door into pieces. 

No one was hurt.

We are working to get more information on this overnight blast. Look for updates throughout the morning on Channel 3 Today.

WKYC-TV


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