A kidnapping suspect in Ohio characterized as a “serial abductor” and a “monster” has been apprehended by the FBI after a six-month search, People confirms.
Justin Christian was arrested in Lorain, Ohio, and has been charged with kidnapping and rape, according to a statement from the FBI’s Cleveland Division.
Christian, 29, is suspected in the May 21 abduction of a 6-year-old girl from her Cleveland home and the attempted kidnapping of a young girl from Elyria, Ohio, in February. He is being held on an unspecified amount of bail and has not entered a plea to his charges. It was not...
Justin Christian was arrested in Lorain, Ohio, and has been charged with kidnapping and rape, according to a statement from the FBI’s Cleveland Division.
Christian, 29, is suspected in the May 21 abduction of a 6-year-old girl from her Cleveland home and the attempted kidnapping of a young girl from Elyria, Ohio, in February. He is being held on an unspecified amount of bail and has not entered a plea to his charges. It was not...
- 12/6/2016
- by chrisharristimeinc
- PEOPLE.com
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The FBI is asking for any information to help in their pursuit of a suspected serial “child predator” in Ohio who remains at large after he was caught on video, People confirms.
The FBI believes the same man is responsible for an attempted child abduction in Elyria, Ohio, in February and a day-long abduction of a 6-year-old girl in Cleveland in May, bureau spokeswoman and special agent Vicki Anderson tells People.
“We’re scared he’s going to strike again, and that’s why we really need the public’s help,” Anderson says.
The FBI is asking for any information to help in their pursuit of a suspected serial “child predator” in Ohio who remains at large after he was caught on video, People confirms.
The FBI believes the same man is responsible for an attempted child abduction in Elyria, Ohio, in February and a day-long abduction of a 6-year-old girl in Cleveland in May, bureau spokeswoman and special agent Vicki Anderson tells People.
“We’re scared he’s going to strike again, and that’s why we really need the public’s help,” Anderson says.
- 10/17/2016
- by Adam Carlson
- PEOPLE.com
She created some of Hollywood's most memorable roles in such revolutionary films as Bonnie and Clyde, Chinatown and Network while simultaneously seducing a generation, but Faye Dunaway never thought she was beautiful as a young girl growing up in Bascom, Florida. When she first saw herself in the early dailies of Bonnie and Clyde in 1967, she couldn't look at the screen. "Just to see the face, to see that it's too round - but it was more than that," she says. "I didn't think my face was beautiful. I guess I found a lot wrong with it." And what about her remarkable cheekbones?...
- 9/2/2016
- by Liz McNeil and Kara Warner
- PEOPLE.com
She created some of Hollywood's most memorable roles in such revolutionary films as Bonnie and Clyde, Chinatown and Network while simultaneously seducing a generation, but Faye Dunaway never thought she was beautiful as a young girl growing up in Bascom, Florida. When she first saw herself in the early dailies of Bonnie and Clyde in 1967, she couldn't look at the screen. "Just to see the face, to see that it's too round - but it was more than that," she says. "I didn't think my face was beautiful. I guess I found a lot wrong with it." And what about her remarkable cheekbones?...
- 9/2/2016
- by Liz McNeil and Kara Warner
- PEOPLE.com
Why do we play games? Some might say it’s purely for the challenge, others may insist it’s for the love of competition, certain misguided individuals may even say it’s not the outcome that counts but rather the taking part. Whether the arena is an Olympic stadium or dining room table, ultimately, we play to win.
For centuries we have competed within the rules and regulations of games (sometimes outside of according to that gold monopoly money stuffed in your back pocket) in the hope of triumphing over our fellow-man or woman and in the process walk away with our pockets filled with the spoils and our bellies brimming over with a comforting cocktail of pride and hubris.
However, when it comes to depictions of games on the big screen, there’s often a far greater prize on the line: the fate of the planet, the heart of a lover,...
For centuries we have competed within the rules and regulations of games (sometimes outside of according to that gold monopoly money stuffed in your back pocket) in the hope of triumphing over our fellow-man or woman and in the process walk away with our pockets filled with the spoils and our bellies brimming over with a comforting cocktail of pride and hubris.
However, when it comes to depictions of games on the big screen, there’s often a far greater prize on the line: the fate of the planet, the heart of a lover,...
- 6/9/2014
- by Brody Rossiter
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Film-makers have tried sex, murder and intrigue, and yet that most intellectual of spectator sports remains remarkably difficult to depict on screen
• Peter Bradshaw's review of Computer Chess
• Computer Chess: watch the trailer
Throw a rock at the sports genre and you'll hit a film about baseball or football, or hockey, or racing. Odds are, you won't strike a film about chess. Chess isn't generally considered a stadium filler (although it can be). It's perceived as a game for eccentric intellectuals and elderly historians. It doesn't have the glamour or sex appeal of more sedentary sports, such as pool, as demonstrated by Paul Newman in The Hustler. Chess won't even fit snugly in to other genre films, where the banality of cards, for example, naturally lends itself to a seedy, gambling gangster underworld (Rounders), the exotic highlife of a casino (Casino Royale), or even more piquant, a combo...
• Peter Bradshaw's review of Computer Chess
• Computer Chess: watch the trailer
Throw a rock at the sports genre and you'll hit a film about baseball or football, or hockey, or racing. Odds are, you won't strike a film about chess. Chess isn't generally considered a stadium filler (although it can be). It's perceived as a game for eccentric intellectuals and elderly historians. It doesn't have the glamour or sex appeal of more sedentary sports, such as pool, as demonstrated by Paul Newman in The Hustler. Chess won't even fit snugly in to other genre films, where the banality of cards, for example, naturally lends itself to a seedy, gambling gangster underworld (Rounders), the exotic highlife of a casino (Casino Royale), or even more piquant, a combo...
- 11/29/2013
- The Guardian - Film News
While Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight were all rescued after being missing for over a decade, Ashley Summers has still not been found. Is her disappearance connected?
Ariel, Onil and Pedro Castro were arrested on May 7 for allegedly holding Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight captive in their home for nearly ten years.The girls have been safely returned to their families, but another teen called Ashley Summers who disappeared in the same area has still not been found. The FBI now plan to interview the girls to see if they knew anything about Ashley’s disappearance, because they believe the Castro brothers could be involved.
Ashley Summers Vanished In Cleveland Area
Ashley was 14-years-old on July 6, 2007, when she went missing from her home in the same neighborhood where Amanda and Gina had vanished. Her family now hope that the discovery of the other girls will offer...
Ariel, Onil and Pedro Castro were arrested on May 7 for allegedly holding Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight captive in their home for nearly ten years.The girls have been safely returned to their families, but another teen called Ashley Summers who disappeared in the same area has still not been found. The FBI now plan to interview the girls to see if they knew anything about Ashley’s disappearance, because they believe the Castro brothers could be involved.
Ashley Summers Vanished In Cleveland Area
Ashley was 14-years-old on July 6, 2007, when she went missing from her home in the same neighborhood where Amanda and Gina had vanished. Her family now hope that the discovery of the other girls will offer...
- 5/8/2013
- by Eleanore Hutch
- HollywoodLife
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