Agamemnon
Member
That's a weird one for sure. How did they not smell him? It's a grocery store, with people in and out all day, and nobody smelled anything?
And nobody noticed a fair amount of unknown liquid oozing from up there?
That's a weird one for sure. How did they not smell him? It's a grocery store, with people in and out all day, and nobody smelled anything?
And nobody noticed a fair amount of unknown liquid oozing from up there?
I would think someone would have noticed insect and animal activity. This would have attracted various types of flies and carrion beetles. Both adults and larvae. Cockroaches would have been evident. And the rats would come....
Pan to retired Iowan farmer
"You know what you MIGHT find at No Frills Market? Flies, beetles, cockroaches and rats. Hell you might even find an illegal alien taking a permanent nap behind the cooler!
You know what you won't find? HIGH PRICES!
That's why me and missus shop at No Frills Market!
.
An out-on-bail Connecticut man who police say killed his ex-wife was found dead this week in a storage container on his son’s property after a lengthy standoff with cops — who swarmed the home when the accused killer’s GPS monitoring bracelet turned off.
Officers descended on the Fairfield home around 5:16 p.m. Tuesday and heard James Taylor’s cellphone ringing inside the 10-by-40-foot storage container, Capt. Robert Kalamaras said.
A Connecticut man accused of killing his ex-wife and attempting to murder his stepson was found dead in a shipping container Tuesday evening in what police believe was a suicide, according to reports.
Investigators say James Taylor, 75, stormed into his stepson’s Fairfield home on Feb. 3, fatally shot his 70-year-old ex-wife Catherine and tried to shoot his 45-year-old stepson, Donald Garamella.
Garamella managed to tackle Taylor as he was reloading his weapon and held him down until police arrived, the Connecticut Post reported.
Taylor was charged with murder, attempted murder, home invasion, first-degree burglary, third-degree assault and illegal discharge of a firearm. He pleaded not guilty and was freed on a $2 million bond. As a condition of release, he was required to wear a GPS tracking device and be confined to his son's home.
Officers descended on home shortly after 5 p.m. after the GPS device was turned off, Fox 61 reported. When police called Taylor’s phone, they could hear it ringing inside a 10-by-40 foot storage container on the property that was locked from the inside, Capt. Robert Kalamaras said.
A team of multiple law enforcement agencies, including a bomb squad from nearby Stamford, spent five hours working their way into the container, police said.
Story here: https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/n...man-ricardo-marquez-guilty-murder/7757527001/An El Paso man was sentenced to 75 years in prison in the death of a woman who went missing after a concert in 2019.
A jury last week found Ricardo Marquez guilty of murder in the death of 29-year-old Erika Andrea Gaytan, whose body remains missing. The prison sentence was handed down by Judge Sam Medrano on June 21 in 409th District Court.
Gaytan was the loving mother of a then-7-year-old boy when she vanished on a date with Marquez to El Reencuentro Norteño concert at the El Paso County Coliseum on July 13, 2019.
Gaytan made several social media postings from the concert featuring Los Rieleros del Norte, Polo Urias and La Maquinaria Norteña.
Erika Andrea Gaytan
Marquez told El Paso police detectives that he drove Gaytan back to his home after the concert, they got into an argument and claimed that she left on a ride-share service.
During a lengthy investigation, detectives found no sign on Gaytan's phone records that she used a ride-share application, according to a criminal complaint document.
Homicide detectives learned that Marquez asked to borrow a shovel from his sister and his brother's Jeep Wrangler even though Marquez had a car, a Ford Crown Victoria.
A Texas Department of Public Safety DNA lab report confirmed that blood found on the Jeep's rear cargo mat matched Gaytan, according to documents.
Investigators also obtained security camera videos showing the Jeep Wrangler traveling on Montana Avenue in the Montana Vista area to and from a desert off the East Montana area.
Ricardo Marquez was convicted of murder in the death of 29-year-old Erika Andrea Gaytan, who remains missing after attending a concert with Marquez at the El Paso County Coliseum in 2019.
Detectives found "sand-filled shoes" and "zip ties tied in a manner to be used as restraints" during a search of Marquez's home on Nehemiah Place in the far East Side, documents stated.
Detectives concluded that Gaytan was dead and had been killed by Marquez at his home before her body was transported in the Jeep to an unknown location only accessible by off-road vehicles and that he used the shovel to bury the body.
Law enforcement and volunteers have searched the Red Sands desert area several times but have not found Gaytan's body.
Son was fighting for 'his' life or ex-husband's?
Connecticut woman used iPad app to track ex-husband before she was shot dead, police say
A woman in Connecticut was using an iPad app to track her ex-husband's whereabouts when the man suddenly burst into her son's home Sunday and shot her dead, officials said.www.foxnews.com