hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink marsbahisizmir escortsahabetpornJojobetcasibompadişahbetjojobetBakırköy Escort

Tag: jail

  • Rapper freed early from jail flaunts £2,000,000 Rolls-Royces | UK News

    Rapper freed early from jail flaunts £2,000,000 Rolls-Royces | UK News

    Rapper freed early from jail flaunts new lifestyle with ?2,000,000 Rolls-Royces
    Asco appears in a music video surrounded by the trappings of a millionaire’s lifestyle after being released from jail in October 2024 (Picture: @Grmdaily, YouTube)

    A ‘Wordsworth’ rapper who was released early from a 12-year jail term for heading a drugs operation has flaunted his high-rolling lifestyle.

    Asco, real name Asfa Allen, is shown in a music video arriving at his homecoming party in a convoy of black Rolls-Royces before his group open bottles of champagne.  

    Appearing in his first track since being released from jail as the second phase of the government scheme to ease overcrowding took place in October, he is surrounded by ‘drip’ which includes at least one £430,000 Phantom with a personalised plate.  

    Flashes of prisons where he has served time also appear in his hotly anticipated upload, entitled Straight Drop 5.

    In one scene the lyricist displays a T-shirt bearing the names of ‘lifers’ who are still behind bars as he reflects on life in and out of jail.  

    Sporting a diamond watch, chain and head-to-toe designer wear, the Londoner says he has encountered backstabbers and rumours but has been able to rise above it all and stack money. He smokes what appears to be a spliff as he delivers his bars at the party in a designer residence where bottles of Moët & Chandon are laid out on the tables.  

    Each of the high end cars has a single letter spelling out his nickname — Mulli. A group of masked men stood in front of the luxury vehicles send a firm message to anyone wanting to target the rapper.

    Asco, from Hackney, east London, says he is ‘fresh off a six-year tour, right after the fall’ and reflects that the lifers have it tougher than him.

    Rave reviews greeted the release on the GRM Daily channel on Friday, with YouTuber Walkz saying, ‘that’s some Wordsworth shit!’ 

    Asfa Allen asco_mullionz ? Outside Liked by professorgreen and 47,986 others asco_mullionz's profile picture Came home on my Gday, the rest is history? Allhamdullilah 21h
    Rapper Asco shared pictures of his first taste of freedom after being released from jail (Picture: @asco_mullionz, Instagram)

    Allen, 37, made up to £1,500 a day as the head of a county lines gang distributing heroin and crack cocaine from London to Colchester, Essex.  

    He was jailed for 12-and-a-half years in 2019 and his sentence is understood to have qualified for the emergency government scheme.   

    BBC Radio 1 DJ Tiffany Calver was among those welcoming the release of the promising artist, who signed a deal with Warner Bros in 2018 which could have been worth up to £1 million. 

    Latest London news

    To get the latest news from the capital visit Metro’s London news hub.

    In October, the urban music presenter responded to news of Allen’s freedom with three ‘hands raised’ emojis on his Instagram page.    

    He wrote: ‘Came home on my Gday, the rest is history…Allhamdullilah.’ 

    Allen’s promising music career was interrupted by a police investigation which involved officers raiding 15 properties across London and the home counties, seizing £25,000 in cash, around half a kilogram of heroin, expensive designer footwear and vehicles.   

    At his sentencing, he was told by Judge Gregory Perrins: ‘You held and controlled the drugs line until your music career took off in the summer of 2018. I am satisfied that even when your music career took off, you still maintained a controlling interest in the drugs business. 

    ‘You plainly made a significant amount of money and enjoyed a lavish lifestyle funded, at least in part, by dealing drugs.’ 

    The court also heard how Allen, who at the time lived in Reading, had purchased jewellery worth £19,500 between July and December 2018 and complained of losing £50,000 worth of jewellery on a trip to Dubai. 

    He was said to have been the head of the drug operation’s ‘Bobby line’, taking £1,500 from its £2,000 to £3,000 a day profits. 

    The judge noted Allen’s talent for music but said he had no one else but himself to blame for putting his career in jeopardy. 

    The TMC Music Connoisseur X channel reported in October that Asco had been freed as part of the government’s drive to free up prison space and told followers: ‘The rap scene about to go crazy!’  

    The channel also shared a music video showing Allen rapping in front of a Rolls-Royce and being driven through London in the car.   

    He has previously spoken of having more dimensions as a rapper than simply someone specialising in drill or trap-style lyrics. 

    Asfa Allen
    Asfa Allen was jailed for his part in a county lines drug dealing network (Picture: Metropolitan Police)

    Allen told the AmardonTV channel: ‘The songs you mentioned are songs of substance, a lot of people don’t know me for that kind of music. 

    ‘People associate me as a trap rapper but I feel the tape was a chance to show other angles and beliefs of mine. 

    ‘Obviously my religion’s important, I’m not hiding away from Islam.’ 

    It is understood that his sentence qualified for the second tranche of the early release scheme, which took place on October 22.   

    The measure took place to avoid the ‘collapse of the criminal justice system’ according to justice secretary Shabana Mahmood.  

    The second tranche of releases, part of her plan to free up around 5,500 places, applied to those serving sentences of five years or more.     

    Certain custodial sentences have been reduced from 50% to 40% under the scheme, which is aimed at easing the pressures on the prison estate, excluding sexual and serious violence offences. 

    Ms Mahmood has said that the move was needed to avert a crisis where courts would be forced to delay sending offenders to jail and police unable to arrest dangerous criminals.

    Speaking at HMP Five Wells in July, she warned of a ‘total breakdown of law and order’ if immediate action was not taken.  

    A Ministry of Justice spokesperson, speaking at the time of Allen’s release, said: ‘The new government inherited a prison system on the point of collapse. 

    ‘It has been forced to introduce an emergency early release programme to avert a crisis that would have overwhelmed the criminal justice system, meaning we would no longer be able to lock up dangerous criminals and protect the public. 

    ‘We will build the prison places to ensure serious offenders can always be punished in jail, while our Sentencing Review will bear down on reoffending, cut crime and make sure we are never again left on the brink of disaster.’ 

    Source link

  • In Connecticut, saying there would be ‘hell to pay’ in an email will get you arrested with threat of jail | Law Enforcement Today

    In Connecticut, saying there would be ‘hell to pay’ in an email will get you arrested with threat of jail | Law Enforcement Today

    GUILFORD, CT – By now, we have read ad nauseum about cases where individuals commit actual crimes…crimes like assault, robbery, rape, and even manslaughter…and where those cases are either dismissed or not prosecuted in the first place. 

    This brings us to the small coastal town of Guilford, Connecticut, which has just over 22,000 people and is located in the south-central portion of the state. 

    In 2023, a former police officer, board of education candidate, and Guilford resident, William Maisano, emailed high school principal Julia Chaffe advising her that “there will be hell to pay” if the school permitted a teacher, Regina Sullivan, to dye her hair rainbow colors to celebrate LGBGTAQ pride during the 2023 high school graduation, according to Inside Investigator. 

    The Guilford Police Department was notified of the alleged “threatening” email, and the incident was closed the same day, according to police records. Sometime over the ensuing few days, “someone” caught wind of the incident, and a second investigation was started. This resulted in the arrest of Maisano. 

    The original report, filed by Sgt. Martina Jakoberl of the Guilford PD did not specifically identify a complainant. In her report, Jakoberl stated the school only wished to have Maisano spoken to because they “were concerned” about the language in the email. 

    In her report, Jakoberl said she contacted Maisano to get his side of the story and to ask about the intent of the email, specifically asking him if he intended to harm anyone. The report said Maisano said he was “not interested in hurting anyone and would never do that.” He said he was concerned about the political statement that would detract from the seniors graduating that day. Maisano also said he would not be going to the graduation and would not disrupt the event. 

    Jakoberl explained to Maisano that “due to the ever-increasing threats against public events, it was important” that he clarify his words for the school. She also said, “that language in emails, letters, and text are up to the person receiving them.” [emphasis added] 

    After she spoke with Maisano, Chaffe forwarded another email to the school resource officer, Officer Gingras from Maisano, in which he explained his “phrasing was meant as a statement that if she [Sullivan] were allowed to make graduation about herself, then [Maisano] would respond. Not with violence but with media exposure.” 

    Several days later, a second case was opened, and this one saw Maisano arrested on a Second-Degree Breach of Peace (53a181) for the alleged “threat.” The second case was instituted on June 30, 2023, by Regina Sullivan, the teacher who was the subject of Maisano’s email to the school principal, and was investigated by an officer, Salvatore Nesci of the Guilford Police Department. 

    Sullivan taught at Guilford Public Schools for 23 years and is chair of the Physical Education and Health Department. She is also (tellingly) the president of the teacher’s union. The arrest warrant affidavit notes that she is a “lesbian female” who is the school advisor to the Gender and Sexualities Alliance Club, or GSA for short. The affidavit explained that GSA “have emerged as vehicles for deep social change related to racial, gender, and educational justice.” In other words, it is a far-left progressive organization. 

    Sullivan told Nesci that she’s had negative interactions with Maisano over the years, and he was “vehemently and vocally opposed [to] LGBTQ+ curriculum, instruction, visual aids, and lifestyle.” 

    Sullivan spoke of an incident at a local Dunkin Donuts when Moisano was running for the school board. He allegedly  made some comments as she entered the building. Maisano is alleged to have made a comment to her that caused her to become “confused and embarrassed.” 

    On April 25, 2023, just weeks before the email was sent, Sullivan attended a meeting as a union representative where a parent complained to the principal about a book that had been assigned to her students. The parent was displeased with the book’s content and requested a meeting with the principal and the teacher. The parent invited Maisano to attend the meeting. Sullivan said Maisano was “sarcastic and dismissive of her and objected to her presence” at the meeting because it wasn’t a union matter. 

    Sullivan further complained that Maisano had filed several FOIA requests for information regarding the GSA’s fundraising activities for Pride Month. The affidavit further confirmed that Sullivan did express her personal political beliefs at the graduation ceremony by dying her hair in the colors of the rainbow. 

    The affidavit claimed that the “threatening undertone and strong language” in the email was “ominous.” Nesci said that Maisano’s status as a retired police officer should have made him realize that “his word choice would cause inconvenience, annoyance, alarm, and panic.” He took it further by claiming that “violence and threats against members of the LGBTQ+ community and public institutions like schools appears to be on the rise.” 

    It appears clear that Sullivan’s complaint was retaliation for Maisano’s FOIA requests. The fact the initial complaint was cleared with no action, yet a second investigation was opened and resulted in an arrest smacks of political intervention in the case. 

    According to Inside Investigator, Moisano is facing up to five years in prison after Connecticut prosecutors added a charge of Threatening in the Second Degree (53a-62), using the section of the statute that makes it a Class D felony because the “threat” occurred in a public school. 

    Maisano underwent a jury trial and refused a plea deal to reduce the charges. A six-member jury found him guilty on October 11, 2024. 

    The case has caught the attention of Connecticut free speech attorney Mario Cerame, who called the conviction “absurd” while noting that the term “hell to pay” is a euphemism that could mean many things; however, it does not specifically threaten physical harm. 

    ‘This isn’t even a close question, this is basic First Amendment law,” Cerame said. “This cannot stand. This is not okay. It’s obvious viewpoint discrimination.” 

    Inside Investigator said Cerame spoke about a 2014 case in which a man was arrested and convicted for second-degree threatening and breach of peace relative to an altercation. In that case, State v. Krijger, Watertown, Connecticut resident Stephen Krijger was arrested after a confrontation with town attorney Nicholas Kepple outside a courthouse after a zoning dispute. 

    During the confrontation, Krijger told Kepple, whose son was severely injured and disabled in a car accident, that “what happened to your son is going to happen to you. I’m going to be there to watch it happen.” 

    In that case, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that “only serious expressions of an intention to commit an act of unlawful violence are punished” while admonishing the state for not offering evidence that “a reasonable listener, familiar with the entire factual context of the defendant’s statements, would be highly likely to interpret them as communicating a genuine threat of violence rather than protected expression, however offensive and repugnant.” 

    “If Kreijger came out as not a true threat, it’s very difficult for me to understand how [Maisano] could possibly be a true threat,” Cerame said. 

    The United States Supreme Court has also addressed the threatening issue, issuing a 7-2 decision in Counterman v. Colorado that to establish a “true threat” that is not protected by freedom of speech, “the state must prove that the defendant had some subjective understanding of the statements’ threatening nature, based on a showing no more demanding than recklessness.” 

    Maisano’s arrest sends a chilling message to any parent who might consider complaining about teachers, other school officials, or even a public official. If someone using the words “hell to pay” can be arrested and convicted for such language, where could it stop? 

    Law Enforcement Today spoke to Todd Callender, an attorney, who believes Maisano got the shaft from the Guilford Police Department and the court. 

    “The cops, town, and court knew there was no Articulable Reasonable Suspicion to even investigate such a broadly-worded statement–yet they sent their message, and I’m astounded that a jury even heard that case,” Callender said. “It should have been dismissed by the judge before jury selection. THAT goes to show you how horribly corrupt these institutions are and corrupted the minds are that conceived such a plan.” 

    For Maisano, he remains adamant that he did nothing wrong. He told Law Enforcement Today that he believes he is being targeted for retribution by the town of Guilford and its board of education because he has a pending class action lawsuit against the Guilford Board of Education and officials within the Guilford Public Schools. . 

    The suit, filed on March 14, 2024 filed by Maisano and co-plaintiffs Danielle Scarpellino and Tim Chamberlain, alleges that the Guilford Public Shools were focused on “indotrinating their children in a radical political doctrine that is inherently racist” and that the school system implied “that the parents were racist because they did not blindly accept the radical agenda that the Defendants were attempting to impose.” 

    Specifically, the lawsuit alleges six causes of action: (1) retaliation in violation of the First Amendment, (2) compelled speech in violation of the First Amendment, (3) religious discrimination in violation of the First Amendment, (4) discrimination in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, (5) common-law negligence, and (6), intentional infliction of emotional distress. 

    Among the allegations made in the lawsuit, the plaintiffs complain that the Guilford schools molded its curriculum to mirror the ideas promoted by Ibram X. Kendi’s 2019 book, “How to Be an Antiracist,” which pushes the idea that the only remedy to past discrimination is current and future discrimination. One of the plaintiffs also claims that one of their students, a “white, male, Christian student” was the target of discirmination, including “manufacturing…reasons to discipline” the student, including 21 separate complaints that the students “COVID mask momentarily slipped below his nose.” 

    It appears clear that Maisano is being targeted because of his pending lawsuit against the Guilford Board of Education, et.al. 

    Maisano was asked about the fact that the initial complaint, investigated by a Guiilford Police sergeant was closed without any action being taken, but a second case, investigated by a patrol officer, was pushed to the point of an arrest warrant being issued. 

    “The officer in question, who came to Guilford from Meriden, was only on the Guilford PD for a few years. After I was arrested, he was miraculously promoted from officer to deputy chief of police,” Maisano told LET. Quid pro quo? Perhaps. 

    For Maisano, his arrest and subsequent conviction stings. He served the Guilford Police Department for around 20 years until he suffered a career-ending injury during a training class. He said that when the initial arrest warrant was submitted, the judge refused to add the threatening charge. It was only after he was arrested that the prosecutor at GA-23 in New Haven added the threatening charge. 

    Maisano said the jury only spent one hour in deliberations before finding him guilty. He said the jury instructions lasted longer than the actual deliberations. He believes that since it was a Friday, the jury was anxious to get out and start their weekend. His sentencing is scheduled for December 12. 

    Meanwhile, Cathleen Walsh, a police advocate from Wethersfield, is organizing a rally at the New Haven courthouse on December 12 in support of Maisano. Walsh told Law Enforcement Today that she is “hoping to get a huge rally of support going” for Maisano. 

    “This is so bloody wrong,” she said. “This entire thing is so dirty.” 

    Walsh said there is a GiveSendGo to assist Maisano with his appeal with a goal of $6,500. 

    Law Enforcement Today stands in full support of retired officer Bill Maisano and pray that he doesn’t do one second of jail time. We will keep our readers up to date on the progress of his case and subsequent appeal. 

     

    Source link

  • In Connecticut, saying there would be ‘hell to pay’ in an email will get you arrested with threat of jail | Law Enforcement Today

    In Connecticut, saying there would be ‘hell to pay’ in an email will get you arrested with threat of jail | Law Enforcement Today

    GUILFORD, CT – By now, we have read ad nauseum about cases where individuals commit actual crimes…crimes like assault, robbery, rape, and even manslaughter…and where those cases are either dismissed or not prosecuted in the first place. 

    This brings us to the small coastal town of Guilford, Connecticut, which has just over 22,000 people and is located in the south-central portion of the state. 

    In 2023, a former police officer, board of education candidate, and Guilford resident, William Maisano, emailed high school principal Julia Chaffe advising her that “there will be hell to pay” if the school permitted a teacher, Regina Sullivan, to dye her hair rainbow colors to celebrate LGBGTAQ pride during the 2023 high school graduation, according to Inside Investigator. 

    The Guilford Police Department was notified of the alleged “threatening” email, and the incident was closed the same day, according to police records. Sometime over the ensuing few days, “someone” caught wind of the incident, and a second investigation was started. This resulted in the arrest of Maisano. 

    The original report, filed by Sgt. Martina Jakoberl of the Guilford PD did not specifically identify a complainant. In her report, Jakoberl stated the school only wished to have Maisano spoken to because they “were concerned” about the language in the email. 

    In her report, Jakoberl said she contacted Maisano to get his side of the story and to ask about the intent of the email, specifically asking him if he intended to harm anyone. The report said Maisano said he was “not interested in hurting anyone and would never do that.” He said he was concerned about the political statement that would detract from the seniors graduating that day. Maisano also said he would not be going to the graduation and would not disrupt the event. 

    Jakoberl explained to Maisano that “due to the ever-increasing threats against public events, it was important” that he clarify his words for the school. She also said, “that language in emails, letters, and text are up to the person receiving them.” [emphasis added] 

    After she spoke with Maisano, Chaffe forwarded another email to the school resource officer, Officer Gingras from Maisano, in which he explained his “phrasing was meant as a statement that if she [Sullivan] were allowed to make graduation about herself, then [Maisano] would respond. Not with violence but with media exposure.” 

    Several days later, a second case was opened, and this one saw Maisano arrested on a Second-Degree Breach of Peace (53a181) for the alleged “threat.” The second case was instituted on June 30, 2023, by Regina Sullivan, the teacher who was the subject of Maisano’s email to the school principal, and was investigated by an officer, Salvatore Nesci of the Guilford Police Department. 

    Sullivan taught at Guilford Public Schools for 23 years and is chair of the Physical Education and Health Department. She is also (tellingly) the president of the teacher’s union. The arrest warrant affidavit notes that she is a “lesbian female” who is the school advisor to the Gender and Sexualities Alliance Club, or GSA for short. The affidavit explained that GSA “have emerged as vehicles for deep social change related to racial, gender, and educational justice.” In other words, it is a far-left progressive organization. 

    Sullivan told Nesci that she’s had negative interactions with Maisano over the years, and he was “vehemently and vocally opposed [to] LGBTQ+ curriculum, instruction, visual aids, and lifestyle.” 

    Sullivan spoke of an incident at a local Dunkin Donuts when Moisano was running for the school board. He allegedly  made some comments as she entered the building. Maisano is alleged to have made a comment to her that caused her to become “confused and embarrassed.” 

    On April 25, 2023, just weeks before the email was sent, Sullivan attended a meeting as a union representative where a parent complained to the principal about a book that had been assigned to her students. The parent was displeased with the book’s content and requested a meeting with the principal and the teacher. The parent invited Maisano to attend the meeting. Sullivan said Maisano was “sarcastic and dismissive of her and objected to her presence” at the meeting because it wasn’t a union matter. 

    Sullivan further complained that Maisano had filed several FOIA requests for information regarding the GSA’s fundraising activities for Pride Month. The affidavit further confirmed that Sullivan did express her personal political beliefs at the graduation ceremony by dying her hair in the colors of the rainbow. 

    The affidavit claimed that the “threatening undertone and strong language” in the email was “ominous.” Nesci said that Maisano’s status as a retired police officer should have made him realize that “his word choice would cause inconvenience, annoyance, alarm, and panic.” He took it further by claiming that “violence and threats against members of the LGBTQ+ community and public institutions like schools appears to be on the rise.” 

    It appears clear that Sullivan’s complaint was retaliation for Maisano’s FOIA requests. The fact the initial complaint was cleared with no action, yet a second investigation was opened and resulted in an arrest smacks of political intervention in the case. 

    According to Inside Investigator, Moisano is facing up to five years in prison after Connecticut prosecutors added a charge of Threatening in the Second Degree (53a-62), using the section of the statute that makes it a Class D felony because the “threat” occurred in a public school. 

    Maisano underwent a jury trial and refused a plea deal to reduce the charges. A six-member jury found him guilty on October 11, 2024. 

    The case has caught the attention of Connecticut free speech attorney Mario Cerame, who called the conviction “absurd” while noting that the term “hell to pay” is a euphemism that could mean many things; however, it does not specifically threaten physical harm. 

    ‘This isn’t even a close question, this is basic First Amendment law,” Cerame said. “This cannot stand. This is not okay. It’s obvious viewpoint discrimination.” 

    Inside Investigator said Cerame spoke about a 2014 case in which a man was arrested and convicted for second-degree threatening and breach of peace relative to an altercation. In that case, State v. Krijger, Watertown, Connecticut resident Stephen Krijger was arrested after a confrontation with town attorney Nicholas Kepple outside a courthouse after a zoning dispute. 

    During the confrontation, Krijger told Kepple, whose son was severely injured and disabled in a car accident, that “what happened to your son is going to happen to you. I’m going to be there to watch it happen.” 

    In that case, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that “only serious expressions of an intention to commit an act of unlawful violence are punished” while admonishing the state for not offering evidence that “a reasonable listener, familiar with the entire factual context of the defendant’s statements, would be highly likely to interpret them as communicating a genuine threat of violence rather than protected expression, however offensive and repugnant.” 

    “If Kreijger came out as not a true threat, it’s very difficult for me to understand how [Maisano] could possibly be a true threat,” Cerame said. 

    The United States Supreme Court has also addressed the threatening issue, issuing a 7-2 decision in Counterman v. Colorado that to establish a “true threat” that is not protected by freedom of speech, “the state must prove that the defendant had some subjective understanding of the statements’ threatening nature, based on a showing no more demanding than recklessness.” 

    Maisano’s arrest sends a chilling message to any parent who might consider complaining about teachers, other school officials, or even a public official. If someone using the words “hell to pay” can be arrested and convicted for such language, where could it stop? 

    Law Enforcement Today spoke to Todd Callender, an attorney, who believes Maisano got the shaft from the Guilford Police Department and the court. 

    “The cops, town, and court knew there was no Articulable Reasonable Suspicion to even investigate such a broadly-worded statement–yet they sent their message, and I’m astounded that a jury even heard that case,” Callender said. “It should have been dismissed by the judge before jury selection. THAT goes to show you how horribly corrupt these institutions are and corrupted the minds are that conceived such a plan.” 

    For Maisano, he remains adamant that he did nothing wrong. He told Law Enforcement Today that he believes he is being targeted for retribution by the town of Guilford and its board of education because he has a pending class action lawsuit against the Guilford Board of Education and officials within the Guilford Public Schools. . 

    The suit, filed on March 14, 2024 filed by Maisano and co-plaintiffs Danielle Scarpellino and Tim Chamberlain, alleges that the Guilford Public Shools were focused on “indotrinating their children in a radical political doctrine that is inherently racist” and that the school system implied “that the parents were racist because they did not blindly accept the radical agenda that the Defendants were attempting to impose.” 

    Specifically, the lawsuit alleges six causes of action: (1) retaliation in violation of the First Amendment, (2) compelled speech in violation of the First Amendment, (3) religious discrimination in violation of the First Amendment, (4) discrimination in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, (5) common-law negligence, and (6), intentional infliction of emotional distress. 

    Among the allegations made in the lawsuit, the plaintiffs complain that the Guilford schools molded its curriculum to mirror the ideas promoted by Ibram X. Kendi’s 2019 book, “How to Be an Antiracist,” which pushes the idea that the only remedy to past discrimination is current and future discrimination. One of the plaintiffs also claims that one of their students, a “white, male, Christian student” was the target of discirmination, including “manufacturing…reasons to discipline” the student, including 21 separate complaints that the students “COVID mask momentarily slipped below his nose.” 

    It appears clear that Maisano is being targeted because of his pending lawsuit against the Guilford Board of Education, et.al. 

    Maisano was asked about the fact that the initial complaint, investigated by a Guiilford Police sergeant was closed without any action being taken, but a second case, investigated by a patrol officer, was pushed to the point of an arrest warrant being issued. 

    “The officer in question, who came to Guilford from Meriden, was only on the Guilford PD for a few years. After I was arrested, he was miraculously promoted from officer to deputy chief of police,” Maisano told LET. Quid pro quo? Perhaps. 

    For Maisano, his arrest and subsequent conviction stings. He served the Guilford Police Department for around 20 years until he suffered a career-ending injury during a training class. He said that when the initial arrest warrant was submitted, the judge refused to add the threatening charge. It was only after he was arrested that the prosecutor at GA-23 in New Haven added the threatening charge. 

    Maisano said the jury only spent one hour in deliberations before finding him guilty. He said the jury instructions lasted longer than the actual deliberations. He believes that since it was a Friday, the jury was anxious to get out and start their weekend. His sentencing is scheduled for December 12. 

    Meanwhile, Cathleen Walsh, a police advocate from Wethersfield, is organizing a rally at the New Haven courthouse on December 12 in support of Maisano. Walsh told Law Enforcement Today that she is “hoping to get a huge rally of support going” for Maisano. 

    “This is so bloody wrong,” she said. “This entire thing is so dirty.” 

    Walsh said there is a GiveSendGo to assist Maisano with his appeal with a goal of $6,500. 

    Law Enforcement Today stands in full support of retired officer Bill Maisano and pray that he doesn’t do one second of jail time. We will keep our readers up to date on the progress of his case and subsequent appeal. 

     

    Source link

  • Arabella Del Busso flashes $1,400 heels in her ritzy apartment – as she leads lavish lifestyle after going to jail for fraud and being a no-show on the boxing circuit

    Arabella Del Busso flashes $1,400 heels in her ritzy apartment – as she leads lavish lifestyle after going to jail for fraud and being a no-show on the boxing circuit

    Arabella Del Busso has been flaunting her wealth on Instagram in recent weeks, after she was jailed for stealing $52,000 from her last employer as a receptionist.

    The disgraced footy WAG, 32, served only five months at Dillwynia Women’s Correctional Centre in Sydney’s west and walked free on July 12. 

    Now, the reality TV contestant and ex-girlfriend of NRL star Josh Reynolds has been posing it up in designer heels at her ritzy skyscraper apartment. 

    Arabella shared images to her socials recently which saw her sitting naked on a white throne as she flaunted a pair of Christian Louboutin heels worth $1,395. 

    She kept her modesty by crossing her legs and covering her breasts with a boxing champion belt and later her white boxing gloves. 

    ‘Give a girl the right shoes… and she can conquer the world,’ Arabella captioned one of the photos. 

    Arabella Del Busso, 32, (pictured) has been flaunting her wealth on Instagram in recent weeks, after she was jailed for stealing $52,000 from her last employer as a receptionist

    Arabella Del Busso, 32, (pictured) has been flaunting her wealth on Instagram in recent weeks, after she was jailed for stealing $52,000 from her last employer as a receptionist 

    She captioned a second similar photo a week later with: ‘This is my world… And you’re just living in it.’

    Arabella was also seen posing in very racy black lingerie on her sky-high balcony in mid-October.

    The raunchy set featured several sheer panels and a halter neck attached to the bra by a ring.

    ‘Out of sight… but on your mind,’ she wrote alongside the picture as she struck a sultry pose on her balcony in broad daylight. 

    Arabella’s most recent post came on Thursday as she took a mirror selfie in her lavish bathroom. 

    With a massive circular bathtub situated behind her, the jailbird snapped a photo as she modelled yet another saucy black lingerie set. 

    Arabella has been happily flaunting her lavish lifestyle and showing off her post-prison physique as the lingerie model prepares to step back into the boxing ring. 

    The SAS Australia star took to Instagram in September to share two images of her very fit form as she posed in her training gym in a one-piece leotard. 

    Arabella shared images to her socials recently which saw her sitting naked on a white throne as she flaunted a pair of Christian Louboutin heels worth $1,395

    Arabella shared images to her socials recently which saw her sitting naked on a white throne as she flaunted a pair of Christian Louboutin heels worth $1,395 

    ‘Happy Hump Day,’ she captioned the cheeky full-length selfie that showed off her behind.

    The Melbourne native, who is recognised in the boxing sphere as Lil Bellsy, proudly displayed the remarkable amount of muscle she has gained since incarceration.

    ‘If my mind can conceive it and my heart can believe it then I can achieve it…’ she captioned the video of herself working hard with a trainer in the same boxing gym.

    In the comments on the video, she also informally announced her plans to get back into the competitive sport.

    Responding to a fan who asked if ‘Queen B’ has plans to get back in the ring, Arabella hyped up her followers by answering: ‘The Queen is returning, clear your schedule.’

    She added that she’s looking to be back in competitions by ‘the end of the year’.

    The SAS Australia star walked free from Dillwynia Women’s Correctional Centre, in Sydney’s west, after 5am on Friday, July 12.

    Soon after Arabella’s release, she met with Secrets of the Underworld podcaster Neil ‘The Muscle’ Cummins to record an exclusive interview for his ‘bad girls’ series.

    Arabella's most recent post came on Thursday as she took a mirror selfie in her lavish bathroom

    Arabella’s most recent post came on Thursday as she took a mirror selfie in her lavish bathroom

    In it, she revealed how she managed to stay in shape behind bars and used personal training as a way to ‘form bonds’ with the other inmates.

    The former WAG, who is most infamous for faking pregnancies to her ex, NRL star Josh Reynolds, also said some of the women dubbed her ‘jail Barbie’.

    ‘I was doing boxing training with some of the girls, exercises, and I was using my hands as pads,’ Arabella said on the podcast.

    ‘Nobody judged you—depending on what you did. They were good with me and I was good with them. I never once started a fight.

    ‘They were absolutely loving it and it was good to see, to know that I was able to give them something in there that they can’t have.’

    Arabella said she was using full water bottles, staircases, and body weight exercises like squats to maintain her fitness in the absence of any actual gym equipment.

    Source link

  • FIRST LOOK of the majestic Bigg Boss 18 house: From jail to single bedroom and more

    FIRST LOOK of the majestic Bigg Boss 18 house: From jail to single bedroom and more

    In every season of Bigg Boss, the house always generates a lot of curiosity and excitement among fans, and here we bring you a tour of the Bigg Boss 18 house. The set has been thoughtfully designed to match the theme of the show, Time Ka Tandav, which blends elements from the past, present, and future. Let’s explore the new features of the Bigg Boss 18 house.

    The garden area of the house has an intriguing update. It has been divided into two sections: the main garden area and the poolside. Separating the two is a beautiful waterfall, offering a serene space that may serve as a calming escape amidst the chaos of the controversial house. The entire outdoor area has a traditional touch, evoking an ancient-era vibe.

    Take a look at the entire house tour of Bigg Boss 18 here:

    The living room of the Bigg Boss 18 house is expansive, offering separate corners where contestants can sit and have private conversations with their favorite people. The balcony overlooks the entire living room, adding a unique vantage point. With sofas and seating arrangements scattered across different spots, it seems the makers aim to encourage contestants to form smaller, distinct groups.

    This season, the Bigg Boss 18 house has reintroduced the jail area, designed to resemble a cave. Basic necessities like a bed and blanket have been provided for the contestant who ends up there. The jail also features a telephone, and it’s likely that Bigg Boss will use it to communicate commands directly to the person inside. It will be intriguing to see how many contestants find themselves in jail this season.

    In a return to the original format, the house features a single bedroom, but the beds are arranged on different levels, adding an element of mystery that will likely unfold as the season progresses.

    In an exclusive chat with Pinkvilla, Omung Kumar, the set designer of Bigg Boss 18, revealed that the makers wanted a theme that reflected the past. He explained, “Creating palaces to reflect the past theme would be extremely traditional, so we went back to the time of civilization and developed the concept of caves. We also incorporated hand paintings and stone carvings. India is so beautiful, with art everywhere, and we tried to bring that into the show.”

    The house tour of Bigg Boss 18 is sure to spark curiosity, with fans eagerly awaiting the show’s premiere. The host, Salman Khan, has already started filming for the season, and the contestants are set to enter the house today. On October 4, 2024, Salman Khan shot for the show, and a few viral photos of internet personality Anirudh Acharya surfaced on social media.

    So far, several contestant hint-promos have been released, further building excitement among fans.

    ALSO READ: Bigg Boss 18: Anirudh Acharya gets clicked on sets of Salman Khan’s show; see PICS

    Source link

  • Romanian prosecutors lose appeal to jail Andrew Tate. He will remain under house arrest

    Romanian prosecutors lose appeal to jail Andrew Tate. He will remain under house arrest

    BUCHAREST, Romania — A court in Romania’s capital on Thursday rejected an appeal by prosecutors to jail divisive internet influencer Andrew Tate, who will remain under house arrest amid a second human trafficking investigation against him that allegedly involves minors.

    The Bucharest Court of Appeal also ruled to keep Tate’s brother, Tristan Tate, under judicial control, which typically involves restricting communication with certain people and reporting periodically to the police. The brothers’ spokesperson, Mateea Petrescu, said that the judge also lifted certain restrictions regarding the brothers’ communication with alleged victims in the new case.

    “They are free to meet and communicate with these alleged victims based on the close relationships they share and the children they have together,” she said, adding they “vehemently deny all allegations” against them.

    After the court’s decision, Andrew Tate posted on X that the prosecutors had made a “desperate attempt to put us in jail with no evidence.”

    The ruling comes weeks after Romania’s anti-organized crime agency, DIICOT, launched raids on four homes, including the Tates’ in Bucharest and nearby Ilfov county. After being briefly detained, prosecutors lost a request to keep the brothers in custody for 30 days, but appealed the decision.

    Andrew Tate, 37, and brother Tristan Tate, 36, both former kickboxers and dual British-U.S. citizens, are already awaiting trial in Romania in a separate human trafficking case along with two Romanian women. Romanian prosecutors formally indicted all four last year.

    In the new case, DIICOT said that it was investigating allegations of human trafficking, including the trafficking of minors, sexual intercourse with a minor, forming an organized criminal group, money laundering and influencing statements. The alleged crimes date between 2014 and 2024.

    The agency said the defendants used the coercive “loverboy” method to exploit 34 vulnerable victims who were forced to produce pornographic materials for a fee online, and that more than $2.8 million (2.5 million euros) it generated was kept by the defendants.

    An unnamed foreign man also sexually exploited a 17-year-old foreigner, DIICOT alleges, and said he kept all of the $1.5 million (1.3 million euros) made from the criminal activity. The same man “repeatedly had sexual relations and acts” with a 15-year-old, the agency alleges.

    After the court’s decision, Andrew Tate wrote in a post on the social media platform X that the prosecutors had made a “desperate attempt to put us in jail with no evidence.”

    Andrew Tate, who has 10 million followers on the social media platform X, is known for expressing misogynistic views online and has repeatedly said that prosecutors have no evidence against him and that there is a political conspiracy to silence him. He was previously banned from various social media platforms for misogynistic views and hate speech.

    One of the brothers’ lawyers, Eugen Vidineac, responded to the court’s decision Thursday by saying that it shows that Romania “is a country where the judicial system is diligent and impartial and does not succumb to sensationalism.”

    “We are looking forward to clearing my clients’ names and proving their innocence,” he added.

    After the Tate brothers’ arrest in December 2022, they were held for three months in police detention before being moved to house arrest. They were later restricted to the Bucharest municipality and nearby Ilfov county, and then to Romania.

    In April, the Bucharest Tribunal ruled in that case that prosecutors’ case file against them met the legal criteria and that a trial could start but didn’t set a date for it to begin.

    In July, a court overturned an earlier decision that allowed the Tate brothers to leave Romania as they await trial.

    ___

    Stephen McGrath reported from Sighisoara.

    Source link