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Stacked bar chart of U.S. law enforcement deaths in the line of duty from 1791 through 2020. General cause of death shown by color. [1] This is a list of U.S. law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty. Summaries of the overall casualty figures, by year, are also provided.
Sixteen months after Cheok's disappearance, Ang was arrested as a suspect and charged with murder. Ang was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death by a unanimous decision in one of Singapore's last jury trials before the local government abolished the jury system in 1970. Ang was executed on 6 February 1967.
This is a list of people reported killed by non-military law enforcement officers in the United States in March 2024, whether in the line of duty or not, and regardless of reason or method. The listing documents the occurrence of a death, making no implications regarding wrongdoing or justification on the part of the person killed or officer ...
At the time of her murder, Gretchen was 51 years old and had a 12-year-old daughter from a previous marriage. [1] David Ethan Anthony, originally David Anthony Deutsch, was a fitness trainer. He served a brief stint in jail after holding up a Blockbuster video store with a squirt gun. Anthony was fired in 2017; his manager allowed him to return ...
Officer Scott Smith shot Franklyn Reid to death during a foot chase. The following month, Smith was charged with murder in Reid's death, and was sentenced to 6 years of prison in 2000. The conviction was appealed, and Smith pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of criminally negligent homicide, and received two years of probation. [52 ...
Bradley's cause of death is undetermined, [245] as the autopsy could not reveal what he died from, so his death remains a mystery. The Peter Bergmann case is an unsolved mystery pertaining to the death of an unidentified man in County Sligo , Ireland, whose naked body was found on a beach; the autopsy found no signs of drowning or foul play and ...
Anthony Joe LaRette Jr. (October 1, 1951 – November 29, 1995) was an American serial killer and rapist. Convicted of one murder in St. Charles, Missouri in 1980, he later confessed to thirty-one murders in eleven states dating back to the late 1960s, fifteen of which were closed based on information provided by him.
After a change of venue motion due to publicity, the trials of Taylor and Wade were moved to Lexington, Kentucky where Taylor was convicted in 1986 of kidnapping, robbery, sodomy, and murder. Wade had previously testified against Taylor but recanted his testimony, which led to Taylor unsuccessfully appealing his conviction.