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We Live in a Fantasy World of Crime

We Live in a Fantasy World of Crime By Lenore Skenazy Eric Schulzke: Daydreaming may be the next childhood psychiatric target Kathryn Moody: Investors, Are You Ready for the Next Global Crisis? Meghan Streit: Pitching In When Caregivers Need Help The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Caprese is a light, fresh salad; the perfect quick and easy accompaniment to any summer meal Jonathan Tobin: Care about the Jewish state s future? Obama, in interview, reveals even more reasons to worry Alan M. Dershowitz: Confirmed: Needless death and destruction in Gaza Katie Nielsen: As a mother, I m all I need to be

Law Enforcement, Social Media Users Turn An Act Of Kindness Into A Human Trafficking Investigation

Tue, Feb 23rd 2021 3:58am Tim Cushing With enough self-delusion, any act of humanity can be considered a criminal act. It works for cops. It also works for the general public. When you re a suspicious busybody with an overactive imagination and too much time on your hands, you can waste everyone s tax dollars by panicking. A Walmart employ, who is apparently convinced human trafficking is as common as the common cold, decided to get law enforcement involved, resulting in this message from the Coshocton (OH) County Sheriff s Office: On 2/15/2021 the Sheriff’s Office received a call from the Walmart Security Department in regards to suspicious activity in their parking lot involving a vehicle and two, what appear to be, males looking into vehicles and placing a single red rose under the windshield wipers of those vehicles. While reviewing the Walmart Surveillance Cameras, the two unknown males are seen exiting from, what appears to be, a newer style dark gray Ford Explorer, o

Roses left on vehicles create temporary panic at Coshocton Walmart

Roses left on vehicles create temporary panic at Coshocton Walmart Dozens of roses were left on vehicles, leading people to call the sheriff’s office, which issued a warning about a potential tie to human trafficking. Author: Brittany Bailey Updated: 7:21 PM EST February 19, 2021 COLUMBUS, Ohio Brittaney Strupe had a fantastic Valentine’s Day weekend. She got engaged and had plenty of leftover red roses to show for it. “I think (my fiancé) ended up saying that he spent over $300 in just roses,” Strupe said. “He was just going to throw them outside or in the trash, so I told him, instead of wasting, we should pass it on.”

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