By Gordon Byrd
Dec 21, 2020
WINTER HAVEN Four people are facing felony charges after Polk deputies say they caught them selling Amazon Fire sticks that were modified to receive streaming services without paying for them, a practice known as jail breaking .
They visited the International Market World flea market in Auburndale after getting a tip. They found signs advertising the practice. Among those arrested:
71-year-old Lorinda Holm of Lakeland. According to undercover detectives she sold them two modified Fire Sticks for $107 each. Helm allegedly told them she jail breaks the devices herself and does the same for other devices brought to her by customers.
By Gordon Byrd
Dec 21, 2020
WINTER HAVEN Four people are facing felony charges after Polk deputies say they caught them selling Amazon Fire sticks that were modified to receive streaming services without paying for them, a practice known as jail breaking .
They visited the International Market World flea market in Auburndale after getting a tip. They found signs advertising the practice. Among those arrested:
71-year-old Lorinda Holm of Lakeland. According to undercover detectives she sold them two modified Fire Sticks for $107 each. Helm allegedly told them she jail breaks the devices herself and does the same for other devices brought to her by customers.
By Gordon Byrd
Dec 21, 2020
WINTER HAVEN Four people are facing felony charges after Polk deputies say they caught them selling Amazon Fire sticks that were modified to receive streaming services without paying for them, a practice known as jail breaking .
They visited the International Market World flea market in Auburndale after getting a tip. They found signs advertising the practice. Among those arrested:
71-year-old Lorinda Holm of Lakeland. According to undercover detectives she sold them two modified Fire Sticks for $107 each. Helm allegedly told them she jail breaks the devices herself and does the same for other devices brought to her by customers.
NYC cathedral shooter left note detailing plans to take hostages
A law enforcement official said that the cathedral shooter claimed the U.S. committed robbery against the people of Latin America
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The gunman who opened fire on the steps of a New York City Cathedral last Sunday before being shot and killed by police had a note in his pocket that stated his intention to take hostages, a law enforcement official said.
As previously reported by
theGrio, the gunman,
Luis Vasquez, fired into the air as people were leaving a Christmas concert that had just ended outside the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in Manhattan.
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