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EXCLUSIVE The 'screaming ghost' photo still haunts police. I consider it proof of the afterlife... and what people see in their final moments

EXCLUSIVE The 'screaming ghost' photo still haunts police. I consider it proof of the afterlife... and what people see in their final moments

Daily Mail​13 hours ago
John Boulware's life was snatched from him in a grisly car crash when he was just 16-years-old in 1984.
The St Paul, Minnesota high school student was traveling to a Prince concert with three friends two days after Christmas, when their car careened into a tree at an estimated 40 miles an hour around 7:45 p.m.
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BREAKING NEWS British teenager jailed in Dubai for sex with fellow UK tourist is HOME after being freed following royal pardon
BREAKING NEWS British teenager jailed in Dubai for sex with fellow UK tourist is HOME after being freed following royal pardon

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  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS British teenager jailed in Dubai for sex with fellow UK tourist is HOME after being freed following royal pardon

A British teenager jailed in Dubai for having sex with a fellow UK tourist is finally home after being freed following a royal pardon. Marcus Fakana, now 19, from Tottenham, was 18-years-old when he was arrested for having sex with a 17-year-old girl from London while he was on holiday with his parents in the UAE city in August. The girl was just one month away from turning 18, but sex with anyone under the age of 18 is an offence in the Gulf state. He returned to the UK on Thursday July 3 following several months in prison.

'We could've died on Carlton Road, now we want change'
'We could've died on Carlton Road, now we want change'

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

'We could've died on Carlton Road, now we want change'

"It just feels like we're being punished all the time," says Louise Chaplin, who suffered brain damage and permanent knee damage in a car and her husband Darren were involved in a collision on the B686 Carlton Road two years ago, a road that residents say is consistently couple, who said they could have died, have joined a campaign to improve safety on the road, which runs through Nottingham and Nottinghamshire. Police have urged residents to report all crashes that happen on accepted Carlton Road residents have "justifiable anger", but Nottingham councillor David Mellen said that statistically, the road is not the most dangerous in the city. Mr Chaplin said he has been left traumatised by the incident and has frequent Chaplin said she has had to give up her driving licence because of the brain damage she suffered in the crash."It's just horrible, I've got no recollection of the accident, but living the aftermath every day it just feels like we're being punished all the time," she said."Nothing's been resolved for us and every time we hear of [another crash] my fear is that somebody else might not be as lucky, and die."The pair attended a meeting of residents last week to demand action from the local authorities and the police spoke in favour of potential changes including the installation of speed cameras, a lower speed limit overall, and improvements to the Porchester Road junction. Katie Sarah Keating, who organised the meeting, said she has "personally witnessed and heard" many of the crashes on the road."The problem is we know there's a lot of speeding drivers that have evaded prosecution because there isn't the evidence to prosecute them," she saidShe has been campaigning to get improvements for two years, but laments that potential solutions are held up by their costs."Nothing seems to be happening because no-one's got any money," Ms Keating said."A fix is not going to happen overnight, I'm not an idiot, but if we'd started doing something two years ago, when I was banging the drum, we'd already be a little bit further to sorting it out." City councillor David Mellen, whose ward covers part of Carlton Road, said he would work to see what was financially possible."We've recently had money for Mansfield Road and other roads in the city, there might be more coming out and when that happens I want to lobby for my ward," he he said the road was not statistically the most dangerous in the city so resources may need to be prioritised elsewhere. Police 'thin on the ground' County councillor Jim Vernon, whose ward covers a different part of the road, said there was a lot of "justifiable anger" from residents."At [the county council], this whole team has been working hard on issues around improving roads and highways issues that fall within the county," Mr Vernon said."[I've got] permission to support the organisers to manage an effective campaign, and advise and feedback any findings for consideration where [we] have responsibility."Meanwhile, a spokesperson for Nottingham Police at the meeting acknowledged that safety data could under-report crashes, because the force only records those in which people are advised residents to get involved in the community speed watch."I've been to a lot of RTCs on that road, it is a massive issue, and we'd encourage you to keep reporting things to us," the spokesperson said."We are very thin on the ground, and we'll get out if we can, but the community speed watch is probably the way forward."

Pennsylvania man accused of beheading father and posting video of his severed head to stand trial
Pennsylvania man accused of beheading father and posting video of his severed head to stand trial

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Pennsylvania man accused of beheading father and posting video of his severed head to stand trial

A Pennsylvania man accused of killing his father and posting video of his severed head online — and calling for others to help him try to overthrow the U.S. government — is set to stand trial Monday in the Philadelphia suburbs. Justin D. Mohn, 33, faces charges of murder, abuse of a corpse, terrorism related crimes and other offenses for the 2024 killing of Michael F. Mohn at the Levittown home where they lived with the defendant's mother. She found her husband's body in a bathroom. Prosecutors have said Justin Mohn shot his father with a newly purchased pistol, then decapitated him with a kitchen knife and machete. The 14-minute YouTube video was live for several hours before it was removed. Mohn was armed with a handgun when arrested later that day after allegedly climbing a 20-foot (6-meter) fence at Fort Indiantown Gap, the state's National Guard headquarters. He had hoped to get the soldiers to 'mobilize the Pennsylvania National Guard to raise arms against the federal government,' Bucks County District Attorney Jennifer Schorn said at a news conference last year. Mohn had a USB device containing photos of federal buildings and apparent instructions for making explosives when arrested, authorities have said. He also had expressed violent anti-government rhetoric in writings he published online, and the YouTube video included rants about the government, immigration and the border, fiscal policy, urban crime and the war in Ukraine. Mohn's defense attorney, Steven M. Jones, said last week he did not anticipate the case being resolved with a plea deal. Michael Mohn, who was 68, had been an engineer with the geoenvironmental section of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. In the video, Justin Mohn described his father as a 20-year federal employee and called him a traitor. During a competency hearing last year, a defense expert said Mohn wrote a letter to Russia's ambassador to the United States seeking a deal to give Mohn refuge and apologizing to President Vladimir Putin for claiming to be the czar of Russia.

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