
Ecuador reveals how notorious gang leader 'Fito' hid in his hometown for 18 months after jailbreak
QUITO, Ecuador — Ever since Ecuador's most notorious gang leader vanished from his prison cell in January 2024, authorities have been searching the world, offering a $1 million reward for information leading to the capture of Adolfo Macías, alias 'Fito.'
It turned out the country's most wanted man was hiding out at a family member's mansion in his own hometown.

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Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Burglar and wife in plot to smuggle phones and steroids into HMP Birmingham using corrupt guard
A convicted burglar and his wife smuggled steroids, mobile phones and tobacco into HMP Birmingham with the help of a prison guard. David Bradley pressured his partner Tanya Parker to obtain the in-demand items and provide them to corrupt officer Christopher Lawley, who was paid around £2,000 to bring them in to the Winson Green jail. But the scheme was busted after the guard sparked suspicions due to the shape of the bag he was carrying in. READ MORE: Face of dad jailed over three-minute TikTok rant despite grovelling apology Four packages of illegal items were subsequently recovered, including from a waste bin and the urinals. Bradley, aged 34, and Parker, 36, both of Hermes Crescent, Coventry and who have four children together, were spared jail at Birmingham Crown Court on Thursday, June 26. But Judge Dean Kershaw blasted Parker in particular for falling pregnant having warned her previously she could be sent to prison. He questionned why she did not use contraception and accused her of trying to 'manipulate' the system to avoid custody. Both pleaded guilty to two offences of conspiring to convey prohibited articles into prison while Bradley also admitted an offence related to illegally having a mobile phone in prison. Bradley had been remanded to HMP Birmingham having carried out a number of domestic and commercial burglaries which involved ripping out ATM machines. He later received lengthy jail sentences. Lawley, who was jailed earlier this year for his involvement in the contraband scheme, had been a prison officer on the K Wing. Prosecutor Simon Rippon said: "Matters came to a head on the 30th of June 2019. "Prison officer Lawley was suspected to have carried illegal articles into the prison at the start of his shift on that date. "He was detained at the conclusion of his shift. A search was conducted of the wing. "A list of items were recovered from a number of packages." He stated Bradley carried out a 'key role' in identifying the in-demand items to Parker in calls made from a phone he was using illegally from prison. Steroids were also found at their home while Parker had received more than £3,800 in payments to her bank account. John O'Higgins, defending Bradley, stated he took 'full responsibility' for the racket and was 'ashamed' of involving his wife in it. But he argued the way in which his separate burglary cases had been handled had resulted in an 'extremely prejudicial' delay in the case. The barrister told the court Bradley had 'done everything right' since being released last October, including not reoffending, obtaining work at a carpet business and fully complying with his strict licence conditions which are due to last until 2029. Mr O'Higgins said: "For a man who has done everything required of him and who has served a substantial prison sentence - effectively double figures - it would be wrong in principle to send him back to prison for these offences." He added: "He has rebuilt himself in every possible way." Cathlyn Orchard, defending Parker, told the court at the time of the offences she was left to look after their four children while Bradley, who she has been with since the age of 16, was in jail. She said: "She was put under enormous amounts of pressure and did make a mistake in that situation. "She was put into an impossible situation by her partner." But in an extraordinary twist the barrister told the court Parker was currently seven weeks pregnant. In response Judge Dean Kershaw expressed dismay and questioned whether she used contraception. Ms Orchard initially replied that she had not 'gone into that detail' with her client, adding the pregnancy was 'unplanned'. Then, after speaking to Parker in the dock at the back of the court she confirmed she had not been taking the pill and did not know why. Judge Kershaw said: "What did she possibly think - having had children - happens? That some angel would come down and stop her getting pregnant? "It looks to me she is trying in some way to manipulate the process thinking this will be extra mitigation. It won't. It won't work with me." Moving to sentence he said: "The presence of unauthorised mobile phones and other contraband in prison undermines security and adds to crime. It is well-established just how serious it is." Judge Kershaw told Parker her pregnancy did not impact his decision, before concluding the public 'do not need protection from you'. He sentenced her to an 18-month community order with 100 hours of unpaid work and 30 days of rehabiliation. Judge Kershaw told Bradley he was the 'leading light' of the scheme who put 'undue pressure' on his wife and abused her loyalty. Initially he announced a sentence of 27 months - too high to be suspended - but then he took an 'exceptional course' and reduced it to the 24-month threshold saying 'I believe you have changed'. Judge Kershaw added: "I'm satisfied you can lead a good and productive and from now law-abiding life. "I am sure the public don't need protection from you beyond the strict licensing provisions currently in place. "The hard work you have done over the last number of years in prison and now out of prison will be lost if I send you to prison immediately, so I'm not going to do that." Bradley was sentenced to 24 months suspended for 18 months as well as ordered to carry out 160 hours of unpaid work and 30 days of rehabilitation activity. Lawley, aged 43, of Bexley Grove, West Bromwich had admitting three offences of conveying or conspiracy to convey prohibited articles into prison. He was sentenced to two years and two months at hearing in May this year.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Todd Chrisley Says He 'Cried Myself to Sleep' on His First Night in Prison: 'I Was Angry at God'
Todd Chrisley reflected on his first night in prison during an interview for ABC News Studios' IMPACT x Nightline special The Chrisleys: Life After Lockup The reality star was joined by his wife Julie, who also served time behind bars after convictions for tax evasion and bank fraud, and their daughter Savannah for the interview The Chrisleys: Life After Lockup is now streaming on Hulu and Disney+Todd Chrisley is opening up about his time behind bars. Sitting down with Juju Chang for ABC News Studios' IMPACT x Nightline special The Chrisleys: Life After Lockup one month after he and wife Julie were pardoned and subsequently released from federal custody, the couple recalled their experiences in prison. "Todd, take us behind bars with you. What was that first night like?" Chang asks. "I was angry at God," Todd, 57, replied. "And when I went to bed that night and the lights went out, I cried myself to sleep and I said, 'God, why are you allowing this?'" "You don't realize the things that you took for granted until you don't have it," Todd shared. "So your freedom, your ability to go to church, your ability to go out to eat, you know, to stay in your bed all day, those things are taken from you, so when you have them back, it's a blessing." When asked about the "big things" and "little things" she missed while serving her sentence, Julie, 52, admitted, "My children and my husband, you know, I missed birthdays and holidays and graduations and things that I can never get back." "So now I just have to focus on what's ahead of us," she added. The couple, who were first indicted by a federal grand jury in 2019, had not seen each other since reporting to prison in January 2023 after being convicted of tax evasion and bank fraud the previous year, charges they have denied. They were initially sentenced to a combined 19 years behind bars, but later saw their sentences reduced by nearly two years each in September 2023. They immediately began appealing their case, and while Todd's conviction was upheld, Julie's was initially vacated due to insufficient evidence. However, a judge later ruled that her original punishment was sufficient. "You don't realize how much your freedom means to you until you don't have it," he says in the clip, adding that being incarcerated "has to change you." "If it didn't change you, then you're not human," he continues. Following his release from prison, the patriarch also spoke out what he claimed to be his and his wife's wrongful conviction in a press conference. "Even though this pardon has happened, I still was convicted of something that I did not do," Todd said. "It could be you, it could be you, it could be any of you, and somewhere in this room, someone has had a family member that has been affected by the system. So I understand the shame that's around it, but I refuse to feed into that, because shame is like a cancer that just spreads, and I have no shame." In the teaser, he added, 'I don't have an apology to give you or anyone else over the money that I've made." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The Chrisleys: Life After Lockup is available to stream on Hulu and Disney+. Read the original article on People


CBS News
10 hours ago
- CBS News
Pedestrian in 70s struck and killed by hit-and-run driver in South Los Angeles
Police are searching for an alleged hit-and-run driver that struck and killed a man in his 70s as he crossed a South Los Angeles street on Thursday. It happened at around 9 p.m. on 90th Street, when a four-door sedan heading northbound on Vermont Avenue struck the pedestrian in a marked crosswalk, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. The pedestrian, who has not yet been identified, was declared dead at the scene, police said. Investigators did not provide details on a suspect or vehicle involved. As with all deadly hit-and-run crashes in Los Angeles, a $50,000 reward is being offered by the city for information leading to the identification, arrest and conviction of the suspect. Anyone who knows more is urged to contact LAPD at (323) 421-2577.