صور Brooke Burke – promoting the Wella Professionals Color Discovery Tour in Los Angeles, June 21, 2024

صور images فضيحة فضائح Pictures 2024Brooke Burkepromoting the Wella Professionals Color Discovery Tour in Los Angeles, June 21, 2024

خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية

صور images فضيحة فضائح Pictures 2024Brooke Burkepromoting the Wella Professionals Color Discovery Tour in Los Angeles, June 21, 2024

4CHAN user supposedly posts murder photos online before ****’s discovery

4CHAN user supposedly posts murder photos online before ****’s discovery

This is just unreal. The guy posted the photos and when 4CHAN people didn’t believe him, he told them to watch for it to come up in the news:

A man wanted in the killing of a Washington woman — and who may have posted photos online of her **** with details of the crime — is believed to have led police in Portland, Oregon, on a high-speed chase Wednesday but was not caught, police said.
A driver thought to be murder suspect David Kalac, 33, was pulled over during a traffic stop just after 1 a.m. and then suddenly roared off in the victim’s 2001 gold Ford Focus. Police pursued him across a bridge and down a major road before calling off the chase after the driver began swerving into oncoming traffic, police said. "Kalac is believed to be armed and dangerous," police said in a statement.
The slain woman was found in an apartment in Port Orchard, a city located across Puget Sound from Seattle. Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Scott Wilson told NBC News station King 5 that police were investigating images of a naked woman with red marks around her neck that were shared anonymously on the online forum 4chan.
The photos were accompanied by the message: "Turns out it’s way harder to strangle someone to death than it looks on the movies." When other users questioned the authenticity of the pictures, which have now been deleted, a reply said: "Check the news for Port Orchard, Washington, in a few hours. Her son will be home from school soon. He’ll find her, then call the cops. I just wanted to share the pics before they find me."
The woman, who was aged in her 30s, was found by a family member. "We do not believe this is a random assault," Wilson said. "We believe this person was targeted by a yet-to-be determined other person."
Wilson added: “Any time we have images of this graphic nature that are posted on social media, and purport to be this crime scene, we are going to take those seriously. But we are unable to confirm whether those photographs are of this victim right now.”
The Port Orchard Independent was among several local newspapers to quote Wilson as saying the images appeared to have been posted before officers were called at 3:32 p.m local time (6:32 p.m. ET) on Tuesday.


A woman who lived next door to the victim said she was so unnerved by the violence she wants to move.
"I can’t help but think, did she cry out for help? Did she bang on the wall?" Marlene Fecto said. "It’s all I can think of — was my TV up too loud? Why didn’t I hear her?"

صور Brooke Burke – promoting the Wella Professionals Color Discovery Tour in Los Angeles, June 21, 2024

صور images فضيحة فضائح Pictures 2024Brooke Burkepromoting the Wella Professionals Color Discovery Tour in Los Angeles, June 21, 2024

خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية خليجية

صور images فضيحة فضائح Pictures 2024Brooke Burkepromoting the Wella Professionals Color Discovery Tour in Los Angeles, June 21, 2024

Discovery of graves affects UMMC parking plan (1,000 bodies)

Discovery of graves affects UMMC parking plan (1,000 bodies)

Discovery of graves affects UMMC parking plan | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com

Quote:
Discovery of graves affects UMMC parking plan

1,000 bodies may have been asylum patients

Future progress for the state’s longtime medical school has collided with the ghosts of Mississippi’s past — the Discovery of a 1,000 bodies buried on its campus and the likelihood of more.Officials of the fast-growing University of Mississippi Medical Center had planned to build a parking garage east of the dental school, where a grove of trees now sits.But testing in the area revealed 1,000 bodies, believed to have been patients at the Mississippi State Lunatic Asylum a century ago.“None have ****s,” said Dr. James Keeton, dean of the medical school.Paying for reburials elsewhere would cost about $3,000 apiece, or $3 million total, he said. “We can’t afford that.”New plans include building the parking garage next to the dental school, he said.Others plans may have to change, too. Medical center officials had hoped to use the property west of the dental school for future expansion, but Keeton said they might have to rethink that approach, because other bodies may lie beneath the earth — former slaves, TB victims and possibly even Civil War dead.The UMMC ground on which Keeton and Gov. Phil Bryant recently stood to announce construction of the $11 million American Cancer Society Hope Lodge is believed to contain yet more bodies.For that reason, UMMC officials said both the lodge and a new Children’s Justice Center would likely have to be relocated on the 164-acre campus, where both space and parking seem to be growing scarce.The State Lunatic Asylum opened on the site in 1855, housing 150 patients.Eight years later, the Union’s 46th Indiana Infantry Regiment arrived at the asylum. One soldier wrote that the patients “were terribly excited and were seen at the ******s shouting to the soldiers.”Readying for the siege of Jackson, the soldiers set up camp, built fortifications and grew vegetables to sustain themselves, said Jim Woodrick, director of the Historic Preservation Division of the state Department of Archives and History.During the ensuing battle, Confederate soldiers fired back and hit the asylum, injuring at least one patient, he said.By the time the Union Army left, one soldier penned that Jackson is a “ruined town,” he said.After the Civil War ended, the mental facility expanded to house 300 patients, and the area became known as “Asylum Hill,” a neighborhood that included houses, a school and a church for former slaves, Cade Chapel M.B. Church.The area eventually saw construction of a fertilizer factory, a Baptist orphanage and a sanatorium for those suffering from tuberculosis.The hill had several cemeteries: one for asylum patients, one for M.B. church members and one for paupers. Some have suggested there may be Civil War graves there, too.In 1935, Mississippi moved the asylum to its present ******** at Whitfield.

There is a video at the link, this page was ridiculously hard to copy. I thought it was interesting that they found so many unmarked graves when there was an official cemetery available.