A 70-year-old woman is accused of lacing her husband’s coffee with ant and roach killer multiple times, causing him to become sick. Suncha Tinevra was caught on home surveillance video Jan. 12 retrieving a bottle from beneath a sink and squeezing its white powdery contents into her husband’s coffee, Queens County District Attorney Melinda Katz said Saturday. “The victim. Conspiracy Oct 30, 2020
Six people, including two former airport workers, have been indicted for allegedly stealing more than $6 million worth of designer merchandise, including Chanel handbags and jewelry, using tractor-trailers in a series of complex heists at John F. Kennedy Airport this year, prosecutors in Queens announced Thursday.
Oskaloosa News Recap For January 21st, 2021
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US Customs and Border Protection officials seized two separate shipments from Hong Kong that contained more than 800 counterfeit Cartier jewelry products. An estimated value of $8.72 million.
The first shipment was inspected in Cincinnati, Ohio and contained over 400 designer bracelets headed to a residence in West Palm Beach, Florida.
On the same night, a second shipment containing 401 Cartier rings and bracelets was stopped in Louisville, Kentucky, also headed to the same residence in West Palm Beach.
CBP seizes millions of counterfeit goods every year as part of its mission to protect US businesses and consumers.
New Jack City and the Keenen Ivory Wayans-directed classic
I’m Gonna Git You Sucka opened up about attending the 2002 funeral of Run-DMC’s Jam Master Jay and confessed Busta Rhymes actually needed to
physically help him out of the Allen A.M.E. Cathedral in Saint Albans, Queens because he was so upset.
“I love Busta as an entertainer, as a hip dude I don’t know, I just love Bus,” Rock says in the clip exclusively obtained by HipHopDX. “I remember I was at Jam Master Jay’s funeral. I was crying, like I almost fainted I was crying so hard.
Christmas music is a nostalgia trip.
Generally speaking, pop music prizes novelty fresh songs, surprising sounds, this week’s hit, the Next Big Thing. But once a year, a soundtrack that reaches back decades and centuries chimes into earshot once more. Of course, nostalgia is built into the holiday season, when our secular religion of capitalist consumption gets stirred together with Christian traditions, ancient pagan rites and a vague longing for the old-fashioned comforts of home, hearth and the pastoral yesteryear. In December, we long to hear songs, as Irving Berlin once put it, “just like the ones I used to know.”