Arizona Safeway Shootings Fast Facts
Here’s a look at the January 8, 2011 shootings in Tucson, Arizona. Six people were killed and 13 were wounded including Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. Shooter Jared Lee Loughner pleaded guilty in 2012 and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Victims
Dorothy “Dot” Morris, 76
Phyllis Scheck, 79
Injured
Ronald Barber, 65
Giffords’ district director, returned to work on July 5, 2011. On June 12, 2012, Barber wins 52% of the vote against Republican opponent Jesse Kelly’s 45% in a special election in Arizona to serve the remainder of Giffords’ term in Congress.
Kenneth Dorushka, 63
Mavanell Stoddard, 75
2007 – Loughner is arrested for possession of drug paraphernalia, but the charges are dismissed.
Arizona Safeway Shootings Fast Facts
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FAIRFIELD-SUISUN, CALIFORNIA
Receiver in Champion-Cain case gets permission to go after investors profiting from her Ponzi scheme [The San Diego Union-Tribune]
A judge in the Gina Champion-Case securities fraud case cleared the way Thursday for the court-appointed receiver to go after those investors who profited from the years-long Ponzi scheme.
U.S. District Judge Larry Burns, however, left open the question of whether receiver Krista Freitag can also sue Chicago Title, who she and many investors believe was complicit in the fraudulent liquor-license lending operation originally conceived by Champion-Cain, a once prominent San Diego restaurateur.
While Burns said he had been inclined to grant the request, he was persuaded Thursday to hold off for a few more months to allow ongoing mediation talks with aggrieved investors to play out. He also wants a full accounting from the receiver and Chicago Title as to the total number of affected investors and the total amount of their los
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A judge in the Gina Champion-Case securities fraud case cleared the way Thursday for the court-appointed receiver to go after those investors who profited from the years-long Ponzi scheme.
U.S. District Judge Larry Burns, however, left open the question of whether receiver Krista Freitag can also sue Chicago Title, who she and many investors believe was complicit in the fraudulent liquor-license lending operation originally conceived by Champion-Cain, a once prominent San Diego restaurateur.
While Burns said he had been inclined to grant the request, he was persuaded Thursday to hold off for a few more months to allow ongoing mediation talks with aggrieved investors to play out. He also wants a full accounting from the receiver and Chicago Title as to the total number of affected investors and the total amount of their losses.