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Riverside Artisans welcomes two new members
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Riverside Artisans in downtown Oswego welcomes two new members
nny360.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nny360.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Legal Fellow, Meese Center The police did not need a warrant to query the public consumer genetics website, as some privacy advocates and legal scholars have argued. Ashley Cooper / Getty Images
Key Takeaways
Police don’t need a warrant to collect abandoned DNA at a crime scene . and don’t need a warrant to query CODIS because it is a government database.
A criminal who leaves his DNA at a crime scene does not have standing under the Fourth Amendment to complain about what a distant relative does with her own DNA.
Law enforcement officials should not be required to obtain a warrant to search third-party genetics websites that allow for public access.
Promiscuous dental hygienist, 61, is found guilty of beating and strangling female US Navy recruit to death in 1984 and is sentenced to life in prison after telling court If I had casual sex with her, I probably wouldn t remember
Florida jury on Thursday convicted Thomas Garner of first-degree murder for the 1984 strangulation death of Navy recruit Pamela Cahanes
Garner testified during his trial, telling the court he was pretty promiscuous in the 80s and may have had sex with Cahanes - but that he couldn t remember
Cahanes, 25, was found beaten and strangled to death two days after graduating from Orlando Naval Training Center in August 1984
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SANFORD, Fla. A dental hygienist accused of killing a U.S. Navy recruit nearly 40 years ago has been found guilty of first-degree premeditated murder. He was subsequently sentenced to life in prison for the crime, according to reports.
Thomas Garner, 61, was convicted by a 12-member jury Thursday at the Seminole County Courthouse in Sanford, about 25 miles northeast of Orlando. Garner was on trial for fatally beating and strangling Navy recruit Pamela Cahanes in 1984 before dumping her body in an overgrown field.
“Pamela Cahanes enlisted in the Navy to fight for her county. Instead she had to fight Thomas Garner for more than [eight] minutes, only to lose her life.” Assistant State Attorney Anna Valentini said in a statement, according to the Orlando Sentinel. “We’re grateful we were able to win this fight for Pamela and her family. I hope they can rest easier knowing that tomorrow, and every day after, Thomas Garner is go
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