he ended the post with i am ready for jail, then he was tossed into the brig. if anyone is truly guilty of breaking the chain of command or disparaging the military and his general mark millie. before and after the election he hopscotch over the commander-in-chief to coordinate with chinese counterparts and when nancy said donald trump is crazy millie said he agreed. but millie remains typically dismissive and defiant. at no time was i attempting to change or influence the process, usurp authority or insert myself in the chain of command, but i m expected, i am required to give my advice and ensure the president is fully informed on military matters. it deserves to be held accountable here, a marine corps officer with a stellar career who risked his pension and benefits to tell the truth about our military leadership or
upset at our school system is all the parents have been on display and we are listening to them, sharing with them a future where we are going to have charter schools where they can have choice and they are in fact part of this movement of parents who will march us to victory this fall and on behalf of all-america virginians are going to win and make a statement rejecting the last liberal progressives. this is going to happen and it is humbly to be part of. laura: small businesses in northern virginia, fascinated what happens. other revealing take away from last night s virginia debate mcauliffe mentioned president biden 0 times. what became of what he said the price tag for democrats, $3.5 trillion boondoggle is too high. another them is running to distance himself from president biden s agenda and who can blame him? his national standing has taken
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A Jamaican man who reportedly used intake from a lottery scam he operated to purchase a new home in Jamaica and a vineyard in Argentina, was jailed for almost six years in relation to scamming an elderly American man of almost US$1.2 million.
Stieve Fernandez, a 35-year-old resident of Lucea, Hanover, was sentenced to 71 months in prison by US District Judge Kari A Dooley in Bridgeport, Connecticut on Friday.
Fernandez had pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud in February.
The charges emanated from a scam in which he and two others targeted an elderly man from Mystic in Connecticut, United States, defrauding a total of US$1,196,207 from him.
Lottery scammer gets prison for swindling $1.2 million from elderly Connecticut retiree
Hartford Courant (CT)
The leader of a ring of Jamaican swindlers, whose victims included an elderly Mystic man who lost more than
$1 million, was sentenced Friday to nearly six years in prison.
Federal prosecutors described 35-year old Stieve Fernandez, part of a flourishing, underground network of so-called lottery scammers in
Jamaica, as a “callous” thief. As is typical of the scammers, they said he looted the life savings of vulnerable senior citizens. He spent the money on a new home in
Jamaica and a vineyard in
Argentina.
Fenandez named two dogs he kept at the Argentine vineyard after the Mystic victim and his wife, bragging to an associate that “they were the people whose money had paid for them,” the prosecution said.
news@tribtoday.com
WARREN Twenty-eight people were indicted Wednesday on various criminal charges by a Trumbull County grand jury.
Arraignments will be scheduled with the next two weeks before the case is assigned a judge at the county courthouse.
The following people will answer felony charges in common pleas court:
⢠James Finlaw, 46, 305 Harmon Ave. NW Apt. 102, Warren, escape;
⢠Juan Jordan, 30, 505 Tod Ave. SW, Warren, escape;
⢠Armonte North, 20, in care of Trumbull County jail, assault;
⢠Bradley Woolard, 27, 305 Harmon Ave. NW, Apt. 102, Warren, escape;
⢠Nicholas Lee, 39, 3004 Lancer Court NW, Warren, superceding indictment of felonious assault, domestic violence nine counts misdemeanor violating protection order;