logo
Woman, 27, arrested after being caught travelling with girl, 2, stuffed inside SUITCASE

Woman, 27, arrested after being caught travelling with girl, 2, stuffed inside SUITCASE

The Sun8 hours ago
A WOMAN in New Zealand has been arrested after being caught travelling with a two-year-old girl trapped inside her suitcase.
An alarmed bus driver called the police when he spotted a moving bag at a stop in Kaiwaka - 62 miles north of Auckland.
2
Detective Inspector Simon Harrison said the woman, 27, was charged with ill-treatment and child neglect.
"When the driver opened the suitcase, they discovered the two-year-old girl," Harrison said.
"The little girl was reported to be very hot, but otherwise appeared physically unharmed."
The luggage was stored in a separate compartment to where the passengers sat.
Harrison said the girl is in hospital undergoing medical assessment.
More to follow... For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos.
2
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Another hopeful 'spotting' of triple daughter killer Travis Decker goes cold... as manhunt for murderer dwindles in size
Another hopeful 'spotting' of triple daughter killer Travis Decker goes cold... as manhunt for murderer dwindles in size

Daily Mail​

time6 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Another hopeful 'spotting' of triple daughter killer Travis Decker goes cold... as manhunt for murderer dwindles in size

Yet another potential sighting of accused killer Travis Decker has gone cold as officials in Washington state have begun scaling back their search efforts for the man accused of killing his three young daughters. Authorities in the state have been searching for the 33-year-old ever since his daughters - Paityn, 9, Evelyn, 8, and Olivia, 5 - were found strangled to death at a campsite outside Leavenworth, Washington in early June. It is now believed Decker, 33, dumped their bodies and his truck, and he has been wanted on murder charges since. There was a glimmer of hope on Friday, when the King County Sheriff's Office announced it had received a tip at around 6pm that the killer father was seen near Snoqualmie Pass and the Pacific Crest Trail area - about 55 miles from Seattle. 'As locating Decker is a priority, KCSO dispatched multiple patrol units, along with TAC-30, K9 Units and Guardian 1 to aid in the search,' the sheriff's office told KIRO. 'Neighboring law enforcement agents were notified as well.' But an extensive search for the former Army Ranger came up empty, and the search efforts were called off at around 9.15pm. The announcement came just days after the Chelan County Sheriff's Office - which initially led the search efforts - said it was scaling back its response after receiving fewer tips about Decker's possible whereabouts. Much of the search efforts have been focused on national forest areas and parts of the Pacific Crest Trail - which runs from the Canadian border in Washington all the way down to the Mexican border in California. The failed search this week follows a number of similar sightings that have not materialized, with officials admitting in June that a trove of evidence taken from his suspected hiding site did not match any of his DNA. Thus far, each effort to find and capture Decker - who is wanted on state and federal charges for murder and kidnapping - have ended in a dead end. Even a tip that Decker may be hiding out in Idaho proved to be false, with someone mistaking a local man for the wanted killer. As the search efforts now reach a third consecutive month, Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison suggested it is 'not likely' Decker is still alive and on the loose. 'His ability to go through that area and not be detected would have been challenging, let alone the challenges involved with him having to hike through all the snow that was up there toward the Pacific Crest Trail at the time,' he told reporters on Thursday. Still, he insisted to KHQ that the department remains 'optimistic' it will locate the accused killer, even if it is just his body. 'We still recognize we have a job to do,' Morrison said. He added that deputies 'are going through and making sure that we are covering our paths twice, sometimes three times, and also making sure that we are utilizing our search and rescue investigative units appropriately.' Yet some experts, including law enforcement and security analyst Todd McGhee, have said Decker's extensive military background may have enabled him to live in the wilderness undetected. He had joined the Army in 2013 and served in Afghanistan before transferring to the Washington National Guard in 2021, a communications director for the Washington Military Department previously confirmed to the Daily Mail. The Guard was in the process of a disciplinary discharge due to Decker's absences when his daughters were killed. He had been suffering from mental health issues at the time, and had recently been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. Decker was even court-mandated to receive mental health treatment and domestic violence anger management counseling but had refused. Police said he was also homeless and living out of his car by the time he picked up his three girls from their mother's house on May 30. Still, his ex-wife Whitney told police she didn't believe Decker was dangerous, and that he loved his daughters, with whom he had a 'good relationship.' However, dashcam footage from a May 27 traffic stop has added to the image of Decker's poor mental state at the time. Decker appeared in the 19-minute video with his arms crossed and a bored expression before he leaned on his car and then sat on the bumper. At one point, he could be seen resting his head on his truck bed as the other driver and police officer interact. After the incident, the other driver told KING 5, which obtained the video, that Decker appeared 'nervous and fidgety' and 'kept telling me not to call police' claiming he would go to jail over the accident. When the driver told Decker he had to call police to report the crash, he said the alleged killer's body language was 'almost intimidating.' 'I could tell he was not in his full senses,' the driver added. At the end of the video, Decker shook the driver's hand for nine seconds. When the driver tried to pull away, Decker continued asking if he was going to be okay, the driver said. The traffic stop happened three days before Decker picked up his daughters at their mother's house for the last time, according to police. Whitney called police after Decker failed to bring them back. She told cops he was 'quieter than usual' when he collected the girls, which was 'out of character' for him. His vehicle was eventually found on June 2, with his daughter's remains nearby. An ensuing autopsy then confirmed that the three girls died of suffocation and their deaths were ruled a homicide.

Montana shooting victims named as manhunt for suspect continues
Montana shooting victims named as manhunt for suspect continues

The Guardian

time39 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Montana shooting victims named as manhunt for suspect continues

Montana's attorney general on Sunday released the names of the four people who were shot to death in a mass murder at a bar two days earlier. The victims were Daniel Edwin Ballie, 59; Nancy Lauretta Kelly, 64; David Allen Leach, 70; and Tony Wayne Palm, 74. All four were residents of Anaconda, Montana, where the quadruple murder took place, a statement from the Montana attorney general, Austin Knudsen, said. Former US army soldier Michael Paul Brown, 45, is suspected of having killed Ballie, Kelly, Leach and Palm at The Owl Bar in Anaconda. Kelly was a bartender, and the others were patrons, Knudsen said at a news conference Sunday. Brown remained at large as of Sunday, with officials warning that he may be armed as well as getting around in a stolen car containing clothes and camping gear. Knudsen alleged that Brown carried out Friday morning's mass murder with a rifle that law enforcement believes was his personal weapon. The attorney general warned residents in the town of just more than 9,000 people that Brown, who lived next door to the bar where he was a regular, could come back to the area. Anaconda is about 75 miles (120km) south-east of Missoula in a valley hemmed in by mountains. 'This is an unstable individual who walked in and murdered four people in cold blood for no reason whatsoever,' Knudsen remarked on Sunday. 'So there absolutely is concern for the public.' Numerous local public events were canceled over the weekend as the search for Brown entered its third day, according to Facebook pages in the area. Robert Wyatt, 70, told the Associated Press that he was neighbors with Leach. The two men lived next door to each other in a public housing complex for elderly people and people with disabilities. 'Everybody is nervous' since Friday, Wyatt said. Leach was deaf and kept mostly to himself, Wyatt said – and he only recalls Leach having a family visit once almost a year ago. But Leach was always happy to help his neighbors with chores like moving furniture. 'If you needed help, Dave would help,' Wyatt said to the AP. 'He was a good neighbor.' Among the areas that investigators have searched for Brown are woods where he hunted and camped while he was a child. Brown served in the Army as an armor crewman from 2001 to 2005 and deployed to Iraq from early 2004 until March 2005, said Lt Col Ruth Castro, an army spokesperson. Brown was in the Montana national guard from 2006 to March 2009, Castro said, and left military service at the rank of sergeant. Brown's niece, Clare Boyle, told the AP that her uncle had spent years struggling with mental illness. Boyle said she and other family members repeatedly sought help. 'This isn't just a drunk/high man going wild,' she said in a Facebook message. 'It's a sick man who doesn't know who he is sometimes and frequently doesn't know where or when he is either.' Knudsen said on Sunday that local law enforcement was familiar with Brown prior to the mass murder. It was widely believed that he knew at least some of the victims, given how close he lived to the bar. Authorities circulated a photograph of Brown from surveillance footage taken shortly after the fatal shootings. He appeared to be barefoot and in minimal clothing. But law enforcement now believes Brown ditched the vehicle he escaped in and stole a different one that had camping gear, shoes and clothes in it – leaving open the possibility that Brown is now clothed. The last time that law enforcement saw Brown was on Friday afternoon, but there was 'some confusion' because there were multiple white vehicles involved, Knudsen said. There is a $7,500 reward for any information that leads to Brown's capture. 'This is still Montana,' Knudsen said. 'Montanans know how to take care of themselves. But please, if you have any sightings, call 911.' Elsewhere in the US on Sunday, authorities in Tennessee were searching for a man wanted in the murders of the parents, grandmother and uncle of an infant found alone and alive in a discarded car seat. Austin Robert Drummond, 28, was named as the suspect in that quadruple murder. Two other men had been arrested on allegations that they assisted Drummond, according to investigators. The victims in that case were found dead in Tiptonville, Tennessee, about 40 miles from where the baby was left, officials have said. They were identified as James M Wilson, 21; Adrianna Williams, 20; Cortney Rose, 38; and Braydon Williams, 15. Associated Press contributed reporting

Inside baby killer Constance Marten's 'new life' inside notorious prison dubbed 'female monster mansion' as fellow lags reveal she 'might be wise to pal up with Lucy Letby for protection'
Inside baby killer Constance Marten's 'new life' inside notorious prison dubbed 'female monster mansion' as fellow lags reveal she 'might be wise to pal up with Lucy Letby for protection'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Inside baby killer Constance Marten's 'new life' inside notorious prison dubbed 'female monster mansion' as fellow lags reveal she 'might be wise to pal up with Lucy Letby for protection'

Baby killer Constance Marten has been told to befriend Lucy Letby 'for protection' as she faces life behind bars inside a notorious prison dubbed the 'female monster mansion'. The socialite is locked up at Surrey's HMP Bronzefield where she previously whinged in a prison magazine about her treatment. The runaway aristocrat, 38, had already reportedly become close to Sara Sharif 's killer stepmother Beinash Batool during her murder trial. Batool has already struck up a friendship with killer nurse Letby where the pair play Uno together and make cheese toasties together in the kitchen. Violence is said to be rife on the ward with child killers a target among other inmates. A source told The Sun: 'Letby and Batool have become friends, and that is partly for their own protection, because child killers are a target for all the women there. 'Marten comes out in the same group as Letby and Batool. She is not yet friendly with them and mostly keeps herself to herself. They added: 'It might be wise for Marten to try to pal up with Letby and Batool, otherwise her time at Bronzefield could become extremely tough.' Marten and her lover Mark Gordon were convicted last month of killing their baby. The couple shook their heads in the dock of the Old Bailey as they were found guilty of manslaughter by gross negligence of their daughter Victoria after going on the run to stop her being taken into care. In an extraordinary case which gripped the country, the couple went on the run with their baby in a 'desperately selfish' bid to prevent her being taken into care after their four previous children were removed by social workers, who feared they would come to harm. Scotland Yard launched a nationwide manhunt, spending more than £1.2million chasing the couple around the country after discovering a placenta in their car when the vehicle was ablaze on a motorway in Greater Manchester on January 5, 2023. More than 100 officers pursued the couple as they fled in taxis, travelling hundreds of miles across the country from Bolton to Liverpool, then to Harwich in Essex, and on to East London before finally resorting to camping on the South Downs in the freezing cold. A day later, when Victoria died in their flimsy freezing tent, Marten and Gordon, 50, dumped their baby in a soiled nappy inside a Lidl bag for life. There is equally grisly company for Marten inside HMP Bronzefield, which also houses Sian Hedges, locked up for life last year for killing her 18-month-old son Alfie Phillips. Former prison officer Linda de Sousa Abreu, disgraced for having sex with an inmate, was also locked up there before her release last month. When Batool was jailed last year for life with a minimum of 33 years for the murder of little Sara, the girl's father Urfan Sharif was also locked up for life and will serve at least 40 years. Sara's uncle Faisal Malik was also imprisoned for 16 years minimum for causing or allowing the death of a child. The young girl suffered more than 70 fresh injuries and 25 fractures after her father and stepmother battered her to death at their home in Woking, Surrey - before fleeing to Pakistan. Meanwhile, Marten, who is from an aristocratic family, had previously made headlines within jail when she featured as the cover model for a magazine selling itself as 'for women with conviction'. Appearing on the cover of The View, Marten wore a glamorous dress and earrings in a shot said to have been taken at least 10 years ago. In an article written during her retrial, Marten set out some of her objections about prison life, becoming a notorious irritant for staff at the prison due to her constant complaints about jail conditions. In a bid to sway jurors midway through her prosecution, Marten's magazine interview was titled 'Surviving Serco', in which she claimed her trial was 'prejudiced' by the 'inhumane' conditions she endured behind bars. In an accompanying podcast which proclaimed, 'this is the very foundation of a fair trial being undermined', Marten bemoaned the long journeys to court in transport provided by private contractor Serco and 'disgusting' microwave meals in her 'stone-cold' Old Bailey cell. Letby (pictured) was given 15 life sentences after being found guilty of the murder of seven babies and attempting to murder another eight whilst she worked at the Countess of Chester Hospital. One of her fellow inmates revealed in February that the killer was struggling with life behind bars 'I'm being made to survive these 17 to 19-hour days with little or no rest, no food,' she said. Marten also breached a High Court anonymity order by providing photographs to the magazine, risking prosecution for contempt of court. It was one of the many extraordinary attempts she and her partner Gordon made to derail a prosecution which has cost taxpayers around £2.8million over two trials across the last two years. Over that period, the couple conspired to delay, lie and obfuscate, often failing to turn up to court, inventing fictitious ailments and disregarding the judge's orders, shouting across him and chatting in the dock as the evidence was outlined. As a consequence, their first trial last year was scheduled to last six weeks but ended up taking six months – and concluded with jurors unable to agree verdicts. Then their retrial overran by more than a month as the pair continued to manipulate proceedings. Letby was given 15 life sentences after being found guilty of the murder of seven babies and attempting to murder another eight whilst she worked at the Countess of Chester Hospital. One of her fellow inmates revealed in February that the killer was struggling with life behind bars. The insider, who lives with Letby in Houseblock Four, described her fellow prisoner as 'really weird' and claimed the baby killer was always accompanied by a prison officer for her own protection and to ensure she does not harm other inmates.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store