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131 Sentences With "burglarizing"

How to use burglarizing in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "burglarizing" and check conjugation/comparative form for "burglarizing". Mastering all the usages of "burglarizing" from sentence examples published by news publications.

He was also charged with burglarizing the same victim's home.
Image from surveillance footage showing man fleeing after burglarizing a church.
Police said Wednesday they arrested a man suspected of burglarizing homes in Leilani Estates.
Tuesday night, police in Morgan Hill arrested two people suspected of burglarizing a car.
In 1998, he was convicted for burglarizing a friend's home, stealing a bong and audio equipment.
He was also charged with burglarizing the same victim's home in mid-February, the statement said.
Later in the night, McNeill awoke from her slumber to the noise of someone burglarizing her home.
Guyger has claimed she shot 26-year-old Jean because she thought he was burglarizing her home.
Police in Indiana believe a pet pig might've thwarted would-be robbers from burglarizing a home in Indianapolis.
In 1992, a man caught him burglarizing a South Dakota doughnut shop, and Rhines stabbed him to death.
Brown and another man finished had burglarizing a home in New Castle when they spotted Tompkins walking outside.
They sneak downstairs armed with fireplace-pokers, bickering about whether Sid actually ever bought Kay any jewelry worth burglarizing.
He was prosecuted for burglarizing a home in a St. Louis suburb and assaulting the homeowner with a gun.
The case involves Denard Stokeling, who pleaded guilty to possessing a gun after burglarizing a restaurant in Miami Beach.
Four decades ago, breaking into the files of the Democratic National Committee meant burglarizing the headquarters at the Watergate hotel.
He is also accused of burglarizing Louck's house the day before she died — which he denies, according to his attorney.
A Beverly Hills realtor and another man have been charged with burglarizing the homes of celebrities, mostly during open houses.
Following her arrest, Goins told investigators that she killed Roberts in self-defense because, she said, Roberts was burglarizing the residence.
On Friday, St. Lucie County Sheriff's deputies arrested 30-year-old Keith Francis Adams for allegedly burglarizing a business, ABC reports.
Kellen is telling friends he knows the owners of the home which he is accused of burglarizing -- they're friends of his from church.
According to CNN affiliate KTVT, Johnson allegedly saw suspects burglarizing a vehicle and chased them in his own vehicle after they took off.
On 2014's "I Ain't Mad At U," he shared the story of his grandmother being killed by drug addicts burglarizing her home.
The case involved Denard Stokeling, who pleaded guilty to possessing a gun after burglarizing the Tongue & Cheek restaurant in Miami Beach, where he worked.
DeAngelo was an officer with the nearby Exeter Police Department around the time a criminal dubbed the "Visalia Ransacker" was burglarizing homes in the community.
The statement alleges Buggs committed the murders while burglarizing Partch's condo, but does not include any details on how the slayings were allegedly carried out.
At 16 years old, Jonathan Irons was accused of burglarizing a home in the suburbs of St. Louis and assaulting the homeowner with a gun.
The Los Angeles Police Department released surveillance video showing two men burglarizing Puig's home last month and asked for the public's help in identifying them.
Turns out the guy who was arrested for burglarizing the home of Rams wide receiver Robert Woods was targeting celebs ... at least that's what cops say.
"Yesterday at 3 pm ish on Ventura blvd in Sherman oaks after lunch my date came across a man burglarizing my car red-handed," she tweeted.
Craig Koblitz, 62, a yacht repairman who lives across the street, said some neighbors had suspected him of burglarizing a nearby house a few years ago.
Former "Desperate Housewives" star Josh Henderson got arrested Tuesday for allegedly burglarizing his neighbors' home, TMZ has learned ... but our Henderson sources say the bust is bogus.
Tellis, now 29, is serving a five-year sentence in a Mississippi state prison after an unrelated conviction for burglarizing an unoccupied dwelling, according to jail records.
Kelly Fyff-Marshall, one of three black people wrongfully accused of burglarizing their Airbnb rental, said it's time to make a conscious effort to stop racial profiling.
After the original bling ring was arrested for burglarizing the homes of young Hollywood, including former Kardashian BFF Paris Hilton, blame was also directed at the victims.
An actor who appeared in a minor role on Netflix's 0003 Reasons Why has been charged with burglarizing elderly people in the San Francisco Bay area, PEOPLE confirms.
The sentencing comes exactly 3 years after Alberto Hinojosa Medina, 25, stabbed DelVesco and set her apartment on fire before fleeing after burglarizing a different apartment moments before.
Leahy says these programs can help people before they're burglarizing homes or robbing people to feed their habit -- before they're burdened with a rap sheet full of felonies.
In 2014, Gus Polly Adams originally faced a murder charge, after his girlfriend was shot and killed while they were burglarizing an elderly man's home in Long Beach.
The three teens — ages 15, 16, and 17 — who police say were burglarizing the house were tracked down at their families&apos homes in Baltimore, Chief Terrence Sheridan said.
A local prosecutor says authorities also anticipate bringing felony murder charges against three other teens who police say were burglarizing a nearby home while Harris waited in the car.
Swimsuit model Samantha Hoopes fell victim to some punk burglarizing her car ... and she's telling friends the suspect could be the same guy who's been harassing her for years.
He and his mother moved to the Albany Houses in Brooklyn in 2011, but two years later, Mr. Reeves was arrested on suspicion of burglarizing a factory in Greenpoint.
The records, according to Novack, relate to "Operation Snow White," a criminal conspiracy in the 1970s, in which Church of Scientology leaders were accused of infiltrating and burglarizing government offices.
The man accused of burglarizing two of R. Kelly's homes while the R&B singer was on tour last month has turned himself in to authorities, Georgia officials said Tuesday.
The alleged plot was discovered after a teen was caught burglarizing a pawn shop; he said he and others were there to steal guns and bullets to shoot police officers.
The plaintiff was then subjected to a pattern of abuse from the football players, including harassing phone calls to her and her family, public humiliation, and the burglarizing of her apartment.
Harris-Moore pleaded guilty as part of a plea deal to federal charges of stealing an airplane, piloting it without a license, burglarizing a bank and possessing a firearm as a fugitive.
The bizarre saga of Steve Francis has taken another crazy twist -- turns out, there's a warrant out for his arrest for allegedly BURGLARIZING a BMW outside of a clam restaurant in Florida.
He said in court filings that he had "engaged in an extraordinarily extensive data theft scheme" by burglarizing the office several times after his ouster to steal sensitive information he could use later.
Two Beverly Hills men are facing the possibility of spending more than three decades behind bars after they were arrested on suspicion of burglarizing the homes of celebrities including Usher and Adam Lambert.
You'll recall ... Kendall just got the hell out of WeHo this past summer after a string of scary incidents -- including an obsessed fan following her up her driveway ... and someone burglarizing the home.
UFC star Travis Browne is telling TMZ Sports exactly how he hunted down the people suspected of burglarizing the home he shares with Ronda Rousey ... and why he held back from beating their asses.
A Texas woman is dead after two teens allegedly beat her with baseball bats and then slit her throat after she interrupted them burglarizing her home — and one of the suspects is the woman's son.
Also, the locking mechanism on Jean's door was damaged, Armstrong said, affecting the door's ability to shut properly, which Guyger's defense team said is one of the reasons she thought someone was burglarizing her home.
The Golden State Killer, also known as the East Area Rapist, the Original Night Stalker, and the Diamond Knot Killer, terrorized residents of the Sacramento area, burglarizing hundreds of houses before progressing to rape and murder.
Wisconsin authorities have accused a man of burglarizing a home where a married couple was killed and their 13-year-old daughter went missing earlier this month — but police say he's not a suspect in that case.
So much so that by halfway through my sophomore year I'd been kicked off the wrestling team, arrested twice (once for drinking, once for fistfighting), and then suspended from college for burglarizing the room of another student.
Ving Rhames was recently held at gunpoint in his own home by police officers who suspected he was burglarizing the property after a neighbor reported that a "large black man" had broken in, the actor said on Friday.
And this past May, 19-year-old Blake Elliott of Springfield, Ohio, was arrested for burglarizing the home of a woman who was attending her grandmother's funeral—a funeral for which Elliott was scheduled to be the pallbearer.
So far, no case has been filed with the D.A. A man suspected of burglarizing celebrity and high-end homes -- including Usher's -- has been nabbed by police, who found lots of stolen property worth millions ...TMZ has learned.
From 227 to 220, one man struck fear in the hearts of Californians from Sacramento to San Francisco to Los Angeles, killing 21987 people, raping at least 227 people and burglarizing more than 22017 homes in meticulously planned crimes.
With neatly cropped hair and wearing dad jeans and glasses, Knight doesn't look very hermit-y, but he confesses to burglarizing camps, cabins and houses about 40 times a year for as long as he's lived in the woods.
FWIW, our law enforcement sources tell us this suspect is not tied to the big bust from earlier last year, in which police charged multiple suspects for allegedly burglarizing the homes of stars like Rihanna, Yasiel Puig, Viola Davis and others.
In a version of the story printed in a French magazine in 1721, the thieves strangled plague victims in their beds before burglarizing their homes, and shared the details of their concoction to mitigate their punishment from burning to hanging.
Their malicious goals could include anything from tracking the vehicle's movements (perhaps with an eye toward robbing passengers or burglarizing their homes when they are far enough away) to disabling its brakes, putting people both inside and around the vehicle in danger.
For 11 years in the 1970s and '80s, the Golden State Killer stalked across California in one of the longest and most vicious crime sprees in U.S. history — burglarizing more than 120 homes, raping more than 43 people and murdering another 12.
In an entertainment era filled with reboots, it's darkly fitting that Hollywood would get a new version of the bling ring — the group of teens who began burglarizing the homes of celebrities like Rachel Bilson, Orlando Bloom, and Paris Hilton in 2008.
For this reason, authorities say the three were charged with first-degree murder in the killing of Baltimore County police officer Amy Caprio even though they were allegedly burglarizing a nearby home when she was fatally injured Monday on a suburban cul-de-sac.
Benjamin Eitan Ackerman was taken into custody for allegedly burglarizing the homes of several stars, including Usher, Adam Lambert, Real Housewives' Dorit Kemsley and Jason Derulo, and stealing more than 2,000 designer items from the residences of the rich and famous, Los Angeles Police Department said on Wednesday.
But the two big twists in "The Great War and Modern Memory" — that Amelia married Hays and wrote about the case, and that the little girl is still alive in 1990 and apparently burglarizing pharmacies in Oklahoma — are expertly handled, and the various suspects and witnesses are laid out clearly and carefully.
In one case, an off-duty police officer wasn't disciplined after shooting someone he wrongly believed was carrying a weapon — only to later go on and kill another person whom he wrongly believed had a weapon: [A]n off-duty CPD officer spotted the silhouette of a man in a vacant building and suspected the man was burglarizing it.
In a particularly striking example, an off-duty police officer wasn't disciplined after shooting someone he wrongly believed was carrying a weapon — only to later go on and kill another person whom he wrongly believed had a weapon: [A]n off-duty CPD officer spotted the silhouette of a man in a vacant building and suspected the man was burglarizing it.
It's hard to say which is more remarkable, Coppola's ability to do extensive filming at Versailles for "Marie Antoinette" or Paris Hilton's mad narcissism in letting Coppola use her home as a major location for "The Bling Ring," a movie about the actual burglarizing of Hilton's home by a gang of well-off, star-struck teenagers who used online gossip sites to track the whereabouts of celebrities and plot their schemes.
Sunstein assesses his articles of impeachment thus: not impeachable for evading taxes (too personal a crime); probably impeachable for resisting a congressional subpoena (but a president could potentially make a legitimate, if dubious, claim about executive privilege); definitely impeachable for covering up an impeachable offense (abusing the powers of the F.B.I., the C.I.A. and the Department of Justice to conceal evidence of an attempt to subvert an election by burglarizing the Democratic National Committee).
In the Laurel & Hardy feature film Babes in Toyland, Laurel & Hardy are sentenced to the ducking stool, followed by banishment to Boogeyland, for burglarizing Barnaby's house.
After the media was allowed to televise a portion of their case, two Miami Beach police officers filed suit objecting to the coverage case. The two police officers were charged with burglarizing a Miami Beach restaurant.
In 1932, former fireman James F. Fourong was arrested for burglarizing Engine House No. 18. Fourong had looted other fire stations by phoning in false alarms and then entering the firehouse while the men responded to the call. In February 1932, Fourong attempted a robbery at Engine House No. 18 but was surprised by a fireman while burglarizing the lockers. After the building had been vacant for sixteen years, the Community Redevelopment Agency in 1984 agreed to a $28,000 contract with Woodford & Bernard, architects, to prepare construction documents for the restoration of Engine House No. 18.
In a New York Times review, critic Bosley Crowther called the plot "preposterous" but added, "It is still a delightful lot of flummery while it is going on, especially the major, central business of burglarizing the museum." The film currently scores 100% on Rotten Tomatoes with an average rating of 6.9/10.
Dana left the police force following the charge. In November 2014, two married SDPD officers, Bryce and Jennifer Charpentier, were arrested for burglarizing homes in the San Diego area. They were trying to steal prescription painkillers to feed their drug addiction. They were both subsequently terminated from SDPD, and sentenced to three years in prison.
In the 1979 novel Suttree by Cormac McCarthy, the title character's friend, Gene Harrogate, is sentenced to a three-year prison term at Brushy Mountain after being caught burglarizing a store.Jack Neely, The End of Brushy Mountain, Metro Pulse, June 10, 2009. Accessed at the Internet Archive, 2 October 2015.Cormac McCarthy, Suttree (Vintage, 1992), p. 466.
In 2014, Whaley became an assistant coach for Utah Elite, a talented AAU program made up primarily of fifth-graders. On March 7, 2016, Whaley was ordered to serve 60 days in Davis County Jail after pleading guilty to a third-degree felony count of burglary. He was arrested on May 1, 2015 for burglarizing a Layton Marriott Hotel.
Crime Spree is a 2003 Canadian-British comedy-heist thriller film, written and directed by Brad Mirman, starring Gérard Depardieu, Harvey Keitel and French singers Johnny Hallyday and Renaud. The fish out of water film concerns a band of French thieves who get more than they bargain for after burglarizing the home of a Chicago mafia boss.
Ray Terrill began working with the famed Central Park Gang based in Tulsa, Oklahoma during the early 1920s. Many future Depression-era outlaws came from this group, most prominently, Volney Davis and the Barker Gang. Then using the alias "G.R. Patton", he was arrested with Arthur Barker while burglarizing a bank in Muskogee, Oklahoma on January 15, 1921.
Gardner's mother married Bill Lucas, who had been incarcerated in Wyoming in 1968. The Gardner-Lucas family eventually had nine children. Gardner admired Lucas, who used his stepsons as lookouts while burglarizing homes. By his early teens, Gardner had been held in detention at a series of institutions, including an involuntary commitment at Utah State Hospital in Provo.
The cafeteria and gymnasium were not seriously damaged. Two 14-year-old students were later held responsible for burglarizing the school and igniting the drapes in the auditorium. They were reprimanded and sent to a reform school. Classes were held in Hunter's basement and at John W. Ligon Junior- Senior High School until repairs were completed.
Cooper had an extensive criminal past that included rape and burglary. He was sentenced to a one-to-two year prison term in 1977 for burglarizing a home in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Cooper later stipulated in court to kidnapping and raping a minor female who interrupted him during a burglary in Pennsylvania. During the crime, he threatened to kill the teen-age victim.
He had been arrested eight times and held in small jails, and had escaped every time. Thompson had a record of eight escapes from custody by the time he was transferred to Alcatraz in October 1945. Detective Savage was shot and killed while transporting Thompson and Elber Day to jail. Savage had arrested the two when he found them burglarizing a store.
Dunn was finally released on August 16, 1957. He was accused of burglarizing a store in Westphalia, Iowa, but no charges were brought against him. He was, however, arrested in Russell, Kansas on November 21 in connection with another burglary in nearby Palco. He was indicted on that charge six days later and transferred to the county lockup in Lincoln.
A young drifter named Ernest joins a troupe of phony mystics working in a carnival, led by a Professor Xeno. Ernest learns that his colleagues are systematically burglarizing some of the wealthy homes in the towns through which they travel. Ernest finds out that Xeno has stooped to murdering an old lady for her jewelry, and sets about trying to expose Xeno to the authorities.
In December 1973 Morris was paroled from McNeil Island Corrections Center. 18 months later, Johnson was arrested in Louisville, KY and charged with robbing a bank in Atlanta in March 1974 and burglarizing a bank in Marietta, GA in April 1974 in which he dug a 135-foot tunnel to enter the bank. He was then sent back to the Atlanta Penitentiary for 15 years.
At the time of the murder the area was a semirural rainforest. Petty criminals James Majors (19) and John Palakiko (21) escaped a prison work crew on March 10, 1948. The next day they intended to get supplies by burglarizing a neighbor of Therese Wilder (68), widow of William Wilder. The pair were hungry and when they smelled Wilder's cooking they decided to rob her instead.
On December 5, 1980, Halberstam was shot at his Washington, D.C. home by Bernard C. Welch Jr., a prolific thief and escaped convict who lived in nearby Great Falls, Virginia.Ledbetter, Les (December 6, 1980). Michael J. Halberstam, Physician and Writer, Is Slain; Wrote Several Books and Articles. The New York Times Halberstam and his wife surprised Welch when they returned home that evening to find Welch burglarizing their house.
A week later, the three men were caught by police burglarizing a bank with two others in Joplin, Missouri. The gang fled into getaway cars and split up during the police chase. Matt Kimes and the two unknown men escaped into Kansas after a high-speed pursuit. Terrill and Barker however were followed to a house in Carterville where, after Barker was wounded in a shootout with police, the outlaws surrendered.
At the age of 9, Dahl began working at the family bakery which was founded by his father James A. "Jim" Dahl in 1955. Dave often fought with his father because he did not like working there and began smoking cigarettes and using other drugs in his teens. He dropped out of high school in 1980. In 1987, Dahl was incarcerated for the first time after burglarizing a house.
He and his friends had grown up mistrusting the police, and Foley's hatred for them tripled after his kid brother Tim was shot dead while burglarizing a newsstand in December 1906. Tony was convinced that the cops had let Tim Foley's killer escape justice. On the night of February 10, 1907, Tony and several of his friends attacked and nearly killed Patrolman Patrick Stapleton. near the corner of Twenty-third and Franklin streets.
He tricks the kids into thinking they have burglarizing a house, when in fact they are merely helping their neighbor Mrs. Wilson clean out her junk. Things take an unexpected turn when a real-life fugitive from justice chooses the gang's clubhouse as his hideout, with the cops hot on his heels. Assuming the police are after them, Alfalfa and the gang confess to their "crime," not knowing what the real crime committed by the real criminal was.
David "Chippy" Robinson (1897–1967) was a St. Louis armed robber and contract killer responsible for many crimes during the Prohibition era. He was a top ranking member of the Egan's Rats gang. Born David Michael Robison in the North Side neighborhood of Baden, Robinson joined the Rats as a young man in the mid-1910s. Along with Tony Ortell, Chippy was caught burglarizing a North Side gas station on August 18, 1918 when Charles Hoffman surprised them.
He told his followers that it would be necessary have to seize the Temple by force and hold it for the momentous event. The conspiracy involved burglarizing adjacent church-homes and committing murder as part of the takeover. Lundgren called the land around the temple "The Vineyards", which had to be "redeemed" or "cleansed" for him and his followers to take the temple. By this time, seven of Lundgren's 12 followers had moved into the family home.
Peter soon realizes something is amiss with his own luck and enlists the aid of Doctor Strange to remove the "hex" on him. By doing so, he alters the hex's source and changes the Black Cat's powers in the process. She finds she has heightened strength, agility, balance, vision, and retractable claws. While burglarizing the mercenary known as the Foreigner, Black Cat is attacked by Sabretooth, the Foreigner's hitman; Spider-Man saves her life.Spectacular Spider-Man #115.
The Sifrits were arrested on May 31, 2002, but not for the murders: they were caught burglarizing a Hooters restaurant. When police searched Erika's purse, they uncovered the drivers' licenses of Ford and Crutchley, who at that point had been reported missing for days. Erika confessed to murdering the couple shortly after her apprehension, but claimed the idea was her husband's. Because of the heavy publicity of the case, the Sifrits' trials were moved out of Worcester County, Maryland.
The five students involved were charged with battery and disruption of a school environment. On April 13, 2018, 17 year old Angel Lopez was killed while riding his bicycle from the school after being struck by a Florida Highway Patrol trooper while he was attempting to cross Killian Parkway near 107th Avenue on his bicycle. On February 5, 2018, two former Miami Killian students Adrian Abanto and Abraham Pedilla were accused and charged with burglarizing the school.
On April 5, 1986, in the spring of her freshman year, Jeanne Clery was raped and murdered in Stoughton Hall at Lehigh University by Josoph M. Henry, who was also a student. Clery was awakened by Henry while he was in the process of burglarizing her room. He then beat, cut, raped, sodomized, and strangled her. Prior to Clery's death, there were reports that her dorm had 181 situations of auto-locking doors being propped open by residents.
Following the jail break of Matthew Kimes, Inman became a regular member of the Kimes-Terrill Gang. Arrested for burglarizing an Oklahoma City store on December 27, 1926, he was convicted and sentenced to 7 years imprisonment on February 9, 1927. While being transported to McAlester, Inman escaped from custody near Bolton and soon rejoined the gang. After a near-5 month crime spree across Kansas and Oklahoma, Kimes and gang member Raymond Doolin were arrested at the Grand Canyon in June.
After her father Isaac's murder, Shaun Russell travels with her two children, daughter Jasmine and son Glover, to the house where she grew up. Shaun intends to settle her father's estate and sell the remotely located house, which has multiple security features, including a hand-held remote monitor. When they arrive, the security system is offline, but Jasmine soon reactivates it. Unknown to the family, four offenders – Peter, Sam, Duncan, and the crime boss Eddie – were in the house before them, burglarizing it.
"The Last Testament of Perry David Russo", interview by Will Robinson and Marilyn Colman, The Lighthouse Report radio program, October 1992. In August 1970, Perry Russo and another man were arrested for burglarizing a New Orleans residence, stealing property valued at eight thousand dollars, and being in possession of a stolen safe-deposit key. Garrison’s office declined to prosecute on the burglary and theft charges. Russo pled guilty to possessing the stolen key and was given a three-month suspended sentence.
The ransom was paid by wealthy Florida businessman John D. MacArthur and he was present on September 2, 1965, when the ruby was recovered at the designated drop off site: a phone booth at a service plaza on the Sunshine State Parkway near Palm Beach, Florida."$140,000 RUBY RANSOMED", Chicago Tribune, September 3, 1965, p1 Months later Dick Pearson was arrested burglarizing a jewelry store in Georgia and was found in possession of $100 bills with serial numbers matching the ransom money.
Misinterpreting the cries made by children upset by the rioting, they accosted Berger, shouting "You Jew, you poison our children!". Berger was taken outside and handed over to the crowd. With a Jewish soldier, he managed to escape and hid in the police office before joining other Jewish victims in the hospital later that day. Cichopek and Kamenec estimate that 200 to 300 people of the 9,000 residents of Topoľčany participated in the riot, physically assaulting local Jews on the street and burglarizing their homes.
In the early 1920s gangs of outlaws roamed the state robbing and burglarizing banks and terrorizing the citizens of many Oklahoma towns. These gangsters often escaped lawmen by fleeing across county lines. The United States Marshals Service was the only law enforcement agency with statewide jurisdiction, but its officers were outnumbered by the bandits. In 1925, Governor of Oklahoma Martin E. Trapp, in his State of the State address recommended the creation of an agency of special investigators or state police to combat the outlaws.
Ferritto got involved in criminal activities in his youth. In 1942, at the relatively young age of 13, he was convicted of burglarizing two gas stations and was sentenced to two years of probation. One year later, while Ferritto was working at a bronzing factory, an accident caused the amputation of two of his toes. Ferritto left high school at the age of 17 and joined the Marine Corps, but was medically discharged a month later because of the injuries sustained to his foot.
The authorities believed that he shot himself so it would corroborate his story. In November 1990, Montecalvo was convicted of the murder, and was sentenced to 27 years to life in prison. In 1991, a neighbor named Suzan Brown confessed to burglarizing the home that resulted in the murder of Carol Montecalvo. According to Brown, she and several of her friends spent all of their money on speed and decided to burglarize the Montecalvo residence, assuming that they had gone to a vacation that was planned.
The wiretap uncovered evidence of far more criminal activities. This secret year-long federal investigation came to light over Memorial Day weekend in 2007 when agents monitoring the wiretap overheard McGee discussing a plan to harm a person suspected of burglarizing the home of a McGee friend. Concerned that McGee was plotting to murder this individual, the agents decided to arrest McGee and end their investigation. McGee and two others were eventually charged with conspiracy to commit a felony and conspiracy to commit substantial battery, both felonies.
Protesters at the boarded-up Cadillac Pawn shop in Minneapolis, July 21, 2020 At least two deaths were reported as a result of the civil unrest in Minneapolis. Calvin Horton Jr., a 43-year-old man from Minneapolis, was fatally shot by the owner of the Cadillac Pawn & Jewelry shop who believed he was burglarizing his business. The incident took place on East Lake Street about from the main protest site on the evening of May 27. The owner of the shop was a 59-year-old man from Galesville, Wisconsin.
During the course of their investigation, authorities determined that Porco had a history of anti-social behavior that included burglarizing his parents' home. In 2005, Bethlehem Police detectives traveled to San Diego, California to retrieve a laptop computer that Christopher Porco had stolen from his parents in a break-in on July 21, 2003. Porco had sold the laptop on eBay. Police contended that eight months earlier, on November 28, 2002, Christopher staged a burglary at his parents' home in which he stole a Macintosh laptop computer and a Dell laptop computer.
A second event at the station that same year would spark additional legal disputes. In May 1970, three tape cartridge machines were stolen from WPAS. Artabasy notified the Federal Communications Commission that similar equipment had just been installed at WDCF, away; the equipment was located three years later at WDCF, resulting in the arrest of its owner, Ray Webb, who published the Pasco East newspaper and called the arrest political retribution for editorials made in the newspaper. A former WDCF disc jockey, Tony Dexter, confessed to burglarizing WPAS.
Joseph Paul Jernigan (January 31, 1954 – August 5, 1993) was a Texas murderer who was executed by lethal injection at 12:31 a.m. In 1981, Jernigan was found guilty of "cold-blooded murder" and sentenced to death for killing Edward Hale, a 75-year-old homeowner who discovered Jernigan and an accomplice as they were burglarizing his home. Jernigan spent 12 years in prison before his final plea for clemency was denied. At the prompting of a prison chaplain, he agreed to donate his body for scientific research or medical use.
Composite of Johnston while he remained unidentified. In 2003, Johnston began his criminal career by burglarizing multiple areas of Ballarat for various odd items with which he supported himself, as well as stealing weapons and hiding them inside of his various campsites. Johnston was described as being elusive, and police spent many months attempting to capture him. It was suspected for some time that he might have been a terrorist, or at the very least that he had military training, as his endurance and evasion techniques were rather impressive and foiled the police for months.
In 1980, Harry James Barber tells his story about the California bank burglary he committed eight years ago to his girlfriend Molly Murphy, whose relationship is under strain after discovering his secret. In 1972, Harry lives next to a refurbished theater house in Pennsylvania and is a big fan of actor Steve McQueen. Harry had agreed to the plan led by the handler Enzo Rotella of burglarizing the bank supposedly containing the illegal slush fund of President Richard Nixon. The team is joined by Paul Callahan, Raymond Darrow, and Harry's brother Tommy Barber - a Vietnam War veteran.
On December 13, 1984, Margaret "Peggy" Park, a 26-year-old wildlife officer, came across Grossman (then aged 19) and Thayne Taylor (aged 17) shooting a stolen handgun in a wooded area of Pinellas County, Florida. Grossman, who was on probation for grand theft and other charges after burglarizing a former girlfriend's house, asked her not to turn him in for possessing a weapon and being outside Pasco County. Both were violations of his probation. As Park picked up her radio to call the sheriff's office, Grossman beat her on the head and shoulders with her flashlight.
After an attempt at installing a door with mishaps galore, the boys are recruited by the police commissioner (Bud Jamison) as police officers. The head of the citizen's league, Mr. Dill (John Tyrrell), warns the police commissioner that he must capture the "Ape Man", a criminal wearing a gorilla suit, that is terrorizing the city, or he will have his job. The boys get a tip that the Ape Man is burglarizing a particular store and head out to catch him. They patrol the antique store, with Curly pausing for a while in a rocking chair aside a cat whose tail happens to swing simultaneously with the rocker.
The Watergate Seven has come to refer to two different groups of people, both of them in the context of the Watergate scandal. Firstly, it can refer to the five men caught on June 17, 1972, burglarizing the Democratic National Committee's headquarters in the Watergate complex, along with their two handlers, E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy, who were Nixon campaign aides. All seven were tried before Judge John Sirica in January 1973. The second use of Watergate Seven refers to seven advisors and aides of United States President Richard M. Nixon who were indicted by a grand jury on March 1, 1974, for their roles in the Watergate scandal.
On June 12, 1981, he broke into a garage and stole a brand new Lincoln Continental, with which he was caught five days later while burglarizing a home. He plead guilty to robbery and burglary, and was sentenced to a 3-year imprisonment term at the Solano State Prison in Vacaville, where he was sent to on September 2. He was paroled on May 28, 1983, but was thrown into the San Quentin State Prison in September for grand theft auto and violating the conditions of his parole. On September 3, 1984, he was released on parole yet again and moved in to live with his mother in the Acorn Projects.
Pinson was a prisoner at Oregon State Penitentiary after being arrested August 28, 1950 at Pierre, South Dakota by South Dakota Highway Patrol and an FBI National Academy graduate. He had evaded capture after a shootout with police January 30, 1950, at Polson, Montana while burglarizing a hardware store. He became wanted in 1949 in eastern Washington and Idaho for burglary and was charged with unlawful flight September 7, 1949 when he crossed state lines after he escaped May 30, 1949 from the Oregon State Prison with a cellmate; he had been sentenced May 24, 1947 to life imprisonment at Oregon State Penitentiary for first degree murder.
The source of the fire initially appeared to be the nursery of the bowling alley, which was located in the basement under the clothing store. The exact location of the start of the fire proved to be very important, since it determined whether New York or Connecticut authorities had responsibility for the final investigation. Peter J. Leonard of Greenwich, an unemployed laborer and high school dropout who was 22 years old, was arrested by Connecticut authorities on July 12, 1974 on charges of setting the fire. Authorities stated that he was a frequent patron of the bowling alley and had been there early in the evening and then left when the alleys closed, returning later through a roof-top skylight with the intention of burglarizing the business.
Mitchell viewed the plan as unrealistic. Two months later, Mitchell approved a reduced version of the plan, including burglarizing the Democratic National Committee's (DNC) headquarters at the Watergate Complex in Washington, D.C.—ostensibly to photograph campaign documents and install listening devices in telephones. Liddy was nominally in charge of the operation, but has since insisted that he was duped by both Dean and at least two of his subordinates, which included former CIA officers E. Howard Hunt and James McCord, the latter of whom was serving as then-CRP Security Coordinator after John Mitchell had by then resigned as Attorney General to become the CRP chairman. In May, McCord assigned former FBI agent Alfred C. Baldwin III to carry out the wiretapping and monitor the telephone conversations afterward.
A note along with them said if a ransom of 25 percent of the remaining paintings' total value was not paid, they too would be returned in pieces. The paintings were recovered before that could occur when Paul Thouin, a petty criminal, was arrested after burglarizing a rail freight car. During interrogation, he confessed to stealing the paintings and led police to where he had buried them, wrapped in a tarpaulin with newspapers, in a one-metre- deep (3 ft) sandpit near the village of L'Épiphanie a short distance northeast of Montreal. Thouin, who had shot and killed a police officer attempting to apprehend him in a railroad warehouse, was reportedly terrified at the prospect of being returned to prison for what would likely be a very long time.
Nixon's "plumbers" included former CIA officials Howard Hunt and Jim McCord. On July 7, 1971, John Ehrlichman, Nixon's domestic policy chief, told DCI Cushman, Nixon's hatchet- man in the CIA, to let Cushman "know that [Hunt] was in fact doing some things for the President... you should consider he has pretty much carte blanche" Importantly, this included a camera, disguises, a voice altering device, and ID papers furnished by the CIA, as well as the CIA's participation developing film from the burglary Hunt staged on the office of Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg's psychologist. On June 17, Nixon's Plumbers were caught burglarizing the Democratic National Committee offices in the Watergate. On June 23, DI Helms was ordered by the White House to wave the FBI off using national security as a pretext.
Famously, Nixon's Plumbers had in their number many former CIA agents, including Howard Hunt, Jim McCord, and Eugenio Martinez. On July 7, 1971, John Ehrlichman, Nixon's domestic policy chief, told DCI Cushman, Nixon's hatchet-man in the CIA, to let Cushman "know that [Hunt] was, in fact, doing some things for the President... you should consider he has pretty much carte blanche" Importantly, this included a camera, disguises, a voice- altering device, and ID papers furnished by the CIA, as well as the CIA's participation developing film from the burglary Hunt staged on the office of Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg's psychologist. On June 17, Nixon's Plumbers were caught burglarizing the DNC offices in the Watergate. On June 23, DCI Helms was ordered by the White House to wave the FBI off using national security as a pretext.
Appointed president, she denounced what she sees as the "systematic torture" practiced in her country since the accession to power of President Ben Ali 7 November 1987. Due to her professional activities in favor of human rights in Tunisia, Radhia Nasraoui continued to be exposed to repression and police brutality. The U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women reported: From 15 October to 10 December 2003, she went on hunger strike "to protest against government agents' burglarizing of her office and terrorizing her family and to demand that justice should be done after a physical assault suffered in July" she put an end to the strike on the day of the commemoration of the 55th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Radhia Nasraoui continued to be exposed to state repression until the revolution of 2011 marked the fall of President Ben Ali.
Barnhill told Carr that there was "video of Arbery burglarizing a home immediately preceding the chase and confrontation". The Georgia Attorney General's Office on May 10 said the following events happened on April 7: it received a request from Barnhill's office to transfer Arbery's case to another prosecutor, and Barnhill revealed that he had learned "about 3-4 weeks ago" that Arbery had previously been prosecuted by his son, a prosecutor for the Brunswick Circuit District Attorney's Office, in an earlier case. He also said that one of the defendants had served as an investigator on the same prosecution (this is a reference to Gregory McMichael, who was employed by the Brunswick D.A.'s Office). The request did not explain why Barnhill had delayed in recusing his office from the case, did not mention that Barnhill had advised Glynn County police on April 2 to make no arrests, and omitted Barnhill's involvement on February 24, instead recounting only his involvement "upon taking the case".
In fact, when censorship attempts are made by government agencies, they are either done in clandestine fashion (to keep it from being known the action is being taken by a government agency) or are usually ordered stopped by the courts when judicial action is taken in response to them. A publication must, in general, be committing a crime (for example, reporters burglarizing someone's office to obtain information about a news item); violating the law in publishing a particular article or issue (printing obscene material, copyright infringement, libel, breaking a non-disclosure agreement); directly threatening national security; or causing or potentially causing an imminent emergency (the "clear and present danger" standard) to be ordered stopped or otherwise suppressed, and then usually only the particular offending article or articles in question will be banned, while the newspaper itself is allowed to continue operating and can continue publishing other articles. In the U.S. the term underground newspaper generally refers to an independent (and typically smaller) newspaper focusing on unpopular themes or counterculture issues. Typically, these tend to be politically to the left or far left.
The film presents five childhood friends in their twenties who have grown up together in the town Falkenberg. The movie chronicles what they call "their last summer" in the town, faced with the prospect that sooner or later they have to move up to Gothenburg. Their lives in Falkenberg currently circle around nothing and each other: Holger, who seems to be the central figure of the five, faces fears of moving away from his hometown and becoming clichéd; his brother John, grumpy and lazy; Jesper, the only member of the group who already attempted to move away from the town, but ends up coming back nevertheless; Jörgen, who is in the process of setting up a catering business, but without much prospect; and David, the sensitive loner and Holger's best friend, whose diary serves as a narration for the story. The film offers vignettes of the seemingly empty lives of the five: wandering in nature, dealing with the parental expectations, swimming in the sea and burglarizing homes (although more as a pastime activity opposed to a financial source).

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