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The incredible stories of the last two accused witches in England and their links to Hertfordshire

The incredible stories of the last two accused witches in England and their links to Hertfordshire
hertfordshiremercury.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hertfordshiremercury.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Northland police pursuit: Accused gives evidence in High Court at Whangārei

Northland police pursuit: Accused gives evidence in High Court at Whangārei 17 Mar, 2021 04:00 PM 3 minutes to read A man accused of leading police on a high-speed chase and firing two shots in the air has denied being the driver of the car. Photo / NZME Imran Ali is a reporter for the Northern Advocateimran.ali@nzme.co.nznorthernadvocat A Northlander accused of fleeing from police and firing shots in the air during the pursuit told a jury it wasn t him because he was out fishing with a cousin at the time. Heta Brass, also known as Heta Lloyd, chose to give evidence in the High Court at Whangārei yesterday where he and his partner Stacey Leah Walker-Haturini are on trial on a raft of charges.

High Court allowing East West Link road problematic - Forest and Bird

An artist s impression of the completed East West roading project. Graphic: Supplied / NZTA The High Court has upheld a Board of Inquiry decision granting resource consent to the East West Link road in Auckland. Forest and Bird is now considering asking for the case to be heard in the Supreme Court. Plans for the four-lane arterial road connecting Onehunga to Penrose first proposed by the National government have stalled - with the Transport Agency Waka Kotahi saying the project is currently under review. Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei and Forest and Bird opposed the road and took the agency to court.

The State of Aloha | News, Sports, Jobs

808stateofaloha@gmail.com Four armed men walked into the Dixie Furniture Store in Fulton County, Ga., in broad daylight. Customers were rounded up and forced to lie face down on the floor. Employees were tied up with tape and the manager handed over store receipts, his watch and $6. A lone police officer responded to a silent alarm and sneaked into the store. He was shot in the face and died. Warren McCleskey later confessed to robbing the store but denied killing the policeman. At his trial, the prosecution presented evidence that the bullet came from a gun matching McCleskey’s firearm in the store. (No gun was ever presented at trial. Witnesses just described it.)

The Case That Made Texas the Death Penalty Capital

The Case That Made Texas the Death Penalty Capital In an excerpt from his new book, ‘Let the Lord Sort Them,’ Marshall Project staff writer Maurice Chammah explains where a 1970s legal team fighting the death penalty went wrong. Jerry Jurek was convicted of killing 10-year-old Wendy Adams in 1973. His case went to the Supreme Court as one of several testing new death penalty laws around the country. Pictured here in 1979, left, and 2015, right. Left, Bruce Jackson; right, Maurice Chammah Looking Back at the stories about, and excerpts from, the history of criminal justice. 1. The town of Cuero, halfway between San Antonio and the Gulf Coast, was small enough that a child’s disappearance would be noticed quickly. In August 1973, a little after dusk, the grandmother of 10-year-old Wendy Adams arrived to pick her up at the pool in the town park. Her clothes were still in a locker. “The child was obedient,” her grandmother later recalled, “a

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