Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Richard Matt"


7 mentions found


The Indiana man charged in the 2017 killing of two middle school girls was convicted of murder Monday, NBC affiliate WTHR of Indianapolis reports. The jury’s decision came after a four-week trial in which Richard Allen, 52, pleaded not guilty to murder charges in the Feb. 13, 2017 slayings of close friends Abigail Williams, 13, and Liberty German, 14. “Richard Allen is the ‘bridge guy.’ He kidnapped them and later murdered them. After his arrest, Allen was held in solitary confinement in a maximum security prison while awaiting trial. “How much can one human endure?”Officers escort Richard Matthew Allen following a hearing on Nov. 22, 2022, in Delphi, Ind.
Persons: Richard Allen, Abigail Williams, Allen, Nick McLeland, ” McLeland, “ Richard Allen, , Libby, Brad Rozzi, Rozzi, Allen's, ” Rozzi, Richard Matthew Allen, Darron Cummings, WTHR, wasn't, he’d Organizations: NBC, Liberty, NBC Chicago, , Authorities Locations: Indiana, Indianapolis, Delphi, Carroll County, Ind
Prosecutors say Allen actually confessed over 60 times to the murders while in prison, to his wife, his mother, family members, the prison warden, the psychologist who treated him in prison, other prison employees and other inmates. The jury on Thursday heard recordings of seven prison phone calls Allen made to his wife and mother, according to WTHR. Monica Wala, the prison psychologist who treated Allen at Westville Correctional Facility, testified for the prosecution that he confessed to the crimes multiple times, once in great detail, according to WTHR. He also spoke about wanting to go back and change his actions and apologize to the families, Wala testified. He had a serious mental health history and had experienced both major depressive disorder and anxiety disorder, Wala testified during cross-examination.
Persons: CNN — “, Abby, Libby, Richard Allen, Allen, Abigail “ Abby ” Williams, Liberty “ Libby, “ Honey, , WTHR, , we’ve, , Monica Wala, I’m, Wala, , John Galipeau, Galipeau, Michael Clemons, Richard Matthew Allen, Michael Conroy, Deanna Dwenger, Brad Rozzi, ” WTHR, Frances Gull, Odinism, Gull, Tobe Leazenby, Darrell Sterrett, Stacy Bozinovski, Bozinovski, Jennifer Auger, “ Richard Allen Organizations: CNN, WTHR, Prosecutors, Liberty, Westville Correctional Facility, WRTV, CVS, Courthouse, AP Defense, Indiana Department of Corrections Behavioral Health, , Delphi Locations: Allen, an Indiana, Delphi , Indiana, Delphi, Westville, Wala, Carroll
The Food and Drug Administration’s “hands-off approach” to food additives, including those found in ultraprocessed foods and energy drinks, may allow unsafe ingredients to enter the nation’s food supply, according to the authors of an editorial published Thursday. While food manufacturers can request an FDA review of new ingredients before they are added to products — and they sometimes do — they are not required to do so. From 1990 to 2010, an estimated 1,000 substances were labeled GRAS by manufacturers and were used without notifying the agency, Pomeranz said, citing earlier research. Since then, she added, there have likely been many more ingredients added to the nation’s food supply without the FDA’s oversight. “We have no idea how many substances are in the food supply based on this self-GRAS mechanism,” Pomeranz said.
Persons: , Jennifer Pomeranz, , Pomeranz, ” Pomeranz, Xaq, ” Frohlich, Richard Mattes, ” Mattes, “ It’s Organizations: American, of Public Health, FDA, European Union, NYU School of Global Public Health, Auburn University, Purdue University Locations: India, Japan, GRAS, Alabama, Indiana
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPrivate investment in clean energy transition is taking place all over the world, says S&P's MattisonRichard Mattison, S&P Global Sustainable1 vice chair, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss if capital markets are ramping up enough to finance the clean energy transition, the level of opportunity for the fortune 500 companies to take advantage of the clean energy transition, and much more.
Persons: P's, Richard Mattison Organizations: Global
An Erie County, N.Y., judge on Wednesday set aside the convictions of two men who, despite their protests of innocence, were found guilty in the grisly 1993 murder of a young mother outside Buffalo. Justice Wojtaszek ordered that the two men, Brian Scott Lorenz and James Pugh, be granted new trials in the slaying of the young mother, Deborah Meindl, who was killed in her home in Tonawanda, N.Y. The judge rejected the men’s assertions of innocence. But he ruled that new trials were warranted because of new evidence, and because the original prosecutors had violated rules governing the sharing of evidence. The Erie County District Attorney’s Office said it would be appealing the judge’s decision.
Persons: Justice Paul B, Richard Matt, New York jailbreak, Justice Wojtaszek, Brian Scott Lorenz, James Pugh, Deborah Meindl Organizations: Court, Attorney’s Locations: Erie County, N.Y, Buffalo, New York, Tonawanda
London CNN —Russian oil is still finding its way to buyers around the world. Industry insiders estimate the size of that “shadow” fleet at roughly 600 vessels, or about 10% of the global number of large tankers. Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg/Getty ImagesThe expansion of the shadow fleet highlights the dramatic changes Russia’s war has brought to the global oil market. As a result, an estimated 25 to 35 vessels are being sold per month into the shadow fleet, according to another senior executive at an oil trading firm. There are also questions about who ultimately runs the shadow fleet.
“One of the worst things you can hear from your child is them screaming ‘I don’t want to die! Residents across the state are just beginning to understand the full extent of the damage, especially in marginalized communities, as they recover from the deluge. But instead of work, Naranjo and other farmworkers are faced with some 20,000 flooded farmland in Salinas, according to early estimates from the Monterey County Farm Bureau, a nonprofit association of farmers and ranchers. When asked if he would return to work soon, Naranjo answered: “I don’t know.”Cars driving through a flooded roadway in Planada, Calif., on Jan. 10. “In my head, I thought if it was that bad, someone would come tell us, but no one ever did.
Total: 7