Rocker Scott Weiland never arrested; authorities tricked by impostor

Rocker Scott Weiland never arrested; authorities tricked by impostor

Former Stone Temple Pilots frontman Scott Weiland is not happy with a Thursday TMZ report claiming he is cooling his heels in jail on a $95,000 bond. He even said so in a video he posted on Facebook shortly after the story was published.

Rather than being in jail, Weiland said, "I’ve actually been touring, writing and recording my new album."

The gossip outlet claimed that Weiland had been in jail since July after he was arrested for shoplifting razors, and said that while police were searching him at that time, they found meth.

Part of the story is somewhat true, police said. A man claiming to be Weiland was arrested July 26 on suspicion of shoplifting and officers did allegedly find a "controlled substance" on his person, they said. His bail was set at $20,000.

But wait, it gets stranger: According to the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department Inmate Information Center ***site, there was a current inmate with the same name and birth date as Weiland.

Turns out the inmate, identified as Jason Michael Hurley, 44, was able to trick police and jail staff into thinking he was the famous rocker, police said late Thursday night.

The hoax went on for about four weeks before it was discovered Thursday, thanks to the real Weiland’s video.

The now properly identified inmate will most likely face charges of giving ***** information to officers, police said.

Just how Hurley was able to trick police and jail staff is unclear, but he did have an upcoming court appearance Tuesday, according to records.

The real Weiland is threatening TMZ with legal action for what he called "a lie."

Attempts to reach TMZ for comment were unsuccessful.

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Read more at ONTD: Oh No They Didn't! – Rocker Scott Weiland never arrested; authorities tricked by impostor

Authorities are Suspicious of Toddler’s Death, Left in a Hot Car

Authorities are Suspicious of Toddler’s Death, Left in a Hot Car

Case against Georgia father Justin Ross Harris in son’s death doesn’t point to ‘simple negligence,’ police say | AL.com

Case against Georgia father Justin Ross Harris in son’s death doesn’t point to ‘simple negligence,’ police say

خليجية

By Carol Robinson | crobinson@al.com
Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on June 25, 2024 at 7:26 PM, updated June 26, 2024 at 10:06 AM

COBB COUNTY, Georgia – Parents have accidentally Left their children to die in hot vehicles, but that isn’t necessarily what happened in the June 18 death of 22-month-old Cooper Harris, investigators in Georgia said late Wednesday afternoon.

Detectives uncovered physical and testimonial evidence that led them to believe a more serious crime was committed, police said Wednesday, and those findings ultimately led to a murder charge against Cooper’s father, 33-year-old Justin Ross Harris. Harris is an Alabama native and University of Alabama graduate who worked as a police dispatcher for the Tuscaloosa Police Department for three years.

"I understand that tragic accidents similar to this one do occur and in most cases the parent simply made a mistake that cost them the life of their child,” said Cobb County police Chief John R. Houser in a prepared statement. "This investigation, although similar in nature to others, must be weighed on its own merit and the facts that led our detectives to charge the father must be presented at the appropriate time during the judicial process."

"The chain of events that occurred in this case does not point toward simple negligence and evidence will be presented to support this allegation,” Houser said.

Houser’s statement went on to say that police officials cannot share specific details of the investigation with the public. "In fairness to everyone involved in this emotional case, I would ask that you not make conclusions ****d on rumor or suspicions and let our judicial system work as it is designed."

Cobb County police spokesman Mike Bowman held a press conference Wednesday evening. "Let us do our job," Bowman said, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution. "Let us get the information out there. Don’t be so quick to judge."

Officials, however, didn’t release any additional details at the news conference.

خليجية
denisedillon @DillonFox5 Follow Cobb Police not going into specifics of Cooper Harris case… say investigation "active and far from over" #fox5atl
7:16 PM – 25 Jun 2024

Earlier Wednesday, information surfaced that Harris went to his car midday on the day that his son died. A new warrant was issued changing the charges against Harris from first- to second-degree child cruelty. Harris, 33, is also charged with murder.

Citing a law-enforcement source, Fox 5 Atlanta reported Harris’ computer contained a search for how long it would take an animal to die in a hot car. The report didn’t say when Authorities believe that computer search was done.

According to the warrant made public Wednesday by a Cobb County magistrate, Harris placed Cooper into the rear-facing car seat of his 2024 Hyundai Tucson after eating at Chick-Fil-A on Cumberland Parkway, which is just two-tenths of a mile from Harris’ Home Depot office. Cobb County police spokesman Officer Mike Bowman said he doesn’t know what time Harris and his son were at Chick-Fil-A that morning.

Harris then drove to his office a couple of blocks away, and Left his son strapped into the car seat in the SUV while he went into work. During lunch, the warrant says, Harris went back out to his car and was seen opening the driver’s side door to put something in the vehicle.

He then closed the door and Left the car, going back into work. The warrant doesn’t specifically say whether Harris saw or knew Cooper was in the SUV when he went to the vehicle at lunch.

At 4:16 p.m., Harris pulled over at a shopping center on Akers Mill Road, got out and started screaming for help. Witnesses reported hearing Harris yelling, "What have I done? What have I done? I’ve killed our child." Cobb police Sgt. Dana Pierce told the AJC, "Apparently he forgot the child was in the car-seat."

Pierce later told Atlanta media questions had surfaced. "Much has changed about the circumstances leading up to the death of this 22-month-old since it was first reported," Cobb County Police Sgt. Dana Pierce told CNN. "I’ve been in law enforcement for 34 years. What I know about this case shocks my conscience as a police officer, a father and a grandfather."

The autopsy conducted on the boy suggested the manner of death was a homicide, Cobb County police said late Wednesday afternoon, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution. "The Cobb County Medical Examiner’s Office is waiting for toxicology test results before making an official ruling as to the cause and manner of death," police said in a written statement. "However, the Cobb County Medical Examiner believes the cause of death is consistent with hyperthermia and the investigative information suggests the manner of death is homicide."

A service for Cooper will be held Saturday at 1 p.m. at University Church of Christ in Tuscaloosa. A private family burial will follow. Visitation will be held at noon Saturday, before the service.

Efforts to reach Maddox Kilgore, Harris’ attorney, for comment have been unsuccessful. Atlanta defense attorney Kim Keheley Frye, who doesn’t represent Harris but is a colleague of Kilgore, has been outspoken about the way police have handled the Harris case. She said they’ve already released too much information that is prejudicial to Harris.

"Mr. Harris has the right to have a fair and impartial trial,” Frye told AL.com. "It’s really impacting the ability to presume him innocent. They are keeping him from having that by continuing to put things out."

She said there isn’t much the defense can say, even if willing to do so. "They (police) need to keep their mouths shut because the defense side can’t talk and that’s the problem, it becomes a dog pile,” Frye said. "We still don’t know what’s there. We just know what the police are saying is there."

Case against Georgia father Justin Ross Harris in son’s death doesn’t point to ‘simple negligence,’ police say | AL.com

‘Cold and callous’ murders of McStay family solved, authorities say

‘Cold and callous’ murders of McStay family solved, authorities say

This was a case that I’d been wondering about for a while. At first, the whole family disappeared. And no**** knew if they were alive or dead. Then, they found their remains, but still had no idea who did it. They finally made an arrest – and the guy was a business partner of the husband.

(CNN) — Almost a year to the day after an off-road motorcyclistfound the remains of a California family who had vanished from their home in 2024, authorities announced Friday they had arrested the man they believe is responsible for the deaths.
Charles "Chase" Merritt is charged with four counts of murder in the deaths of Joseph and Summer McStay and their two small boys, San Bernardino County, California, District Attorney Michael Ramos told reporters at a news conference.
Merritt, 57, was arrested Wednesday without incident in Chatsworth, California, Detective Chris Fisher said.
Police say they believe the family died of "blunt force trauma" inside their home north of San Diego, but they declined to discuss specifics of the deaths or a motive.
خليجيةWho killed the McStay family?


Merritt, who was a business partner of Joseph McStay’s, was scheduled to be arraigned Friday afternoon, Ramos said.
In an earlier interview with CNN, Merritt said he received a phone call from Joseph McStay the night they disappeared, but didn’t answer it because he was busy and tired.
"There are hundreds of scenarios," he told CNN at the time. "I have gone over all of them in my head. Of course I regret not picking up the phone."
On Friday, McStay’s brother, Michael McStay, choked back tears in thanking investigators for their work on the case.
"You have no idea what this means," he said.
5 questions about the McStay case
Police who searched their home days after the family disappeared found eggs on the kitchen counter and bowls of popcorn in the living room, along with the family’s two dogs. There were no signs of a struggle.
Despite finding the family’s SUV in San Ysidro, California — where it had been towed from the Mexican border — and video surveillance that showed a family matching the de******ion of the McStays crossing the border, authorities had no clue what happened to them until the discovery of their bodies on November 11, 2024.
A motorcyclist passing through the area found the remains in two shallow graves not far from Interstate 15 in San Bernardino County, more than 100 miles from the family’s home north of San Diego.
Authorities identified the remains using dental records. At the time, San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon said the killings appeared to be "extremely orchestrated" and carried out by more than one person.
But after reviewing 4,500 pages of investigative records, executing 60 search warrants and conducting 200 interviews, investigators zeroed in on Merritt, concluding he had acted alone in killing the family in their own home, San Bernardino authorities said.
He declined to say what specifically led them to that conclusion.
Fisher did, however, say there was no evidence the family had traveled to Mexico after their disappearance, calling the border video "unrelated" to the case.
"We don’t think it’s them," he said.
Ramos said he has not yet decided whether he will seek the death penalty in what he called a "cold and callous murder of an entire family."
The disappearance of the McStays
Joseph McStay’s mother credited investigators for their strength and determination to solve the case.
"I need justice from the law and the courts and to get to talk to the judge," she said. "And most of all, justice upstairs for my lovely family."