Category: Feel Good Stories

  • Monday morning feel good stories.

    From PORTLAND, OR

    Portland police are investigating a shooting Sunday morning on the Springwater Corridor trail in southeast Portland.

    At about 9:15 a.m., officers responded to Southeast Lambert Street where it crosses the Springwater Corridor on a report of a shooting.

    Officers arrived in the area and spoke with the caller, who told police he was confronted by an unknown man on the trail.

    The caller said during the encounter, he fired a shot at the man in self-defense. He said the unknown man away towards a homeless camp.

    The caller believes he may have hit the man, but officers have not found any evidence of an injury.

    Gun Violence Response Team detectives are investigating.

     

  • Sunday morning feel good stories

    Sunday morning feel good stories

    From COLORADO SPRINGS, CO

    A one-time bride-to-be accused of killing her fiance will not be charged with a crime, prosecutors said Friday.

    At the end of the day, there just was not enough evidence to file murder charges against Jacqueline Souza, said Deputy District Attorney Andrew Vaughan.

    “Under the circumstances of this case, I would be required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Ms. Souza did not act in self-defense … the facts are not sufficient to support a conviction in this case.”

    Souza, 31, could have faced second-degree murder charges in the stabbing death of Brandon Watkins over the summer. Arrest papers obtained by 11 News in July state Souza admitted to having a fight with her groom-to-be over the invitation list just before he died. Vaughan said evidence casts doubt that what happened next fits the criteria for a murder charge.

    “Ms. Souza consented to have a medical examination done, forensic medical examination done. The results of the medical examination of Ms. Souza showed that she did have pinpoint bruising to the neck. Which is one sign of strangulation, some evidence of strangulation.”

    Vaughan said the medical findings backed up Souza’s claims that Watkins strangled her during the fight, and that along with physical evidence, witnesses also corroborated her account. Neighbors told authorities they heard a man yelling angrily from the couple’s garage that same night, Vaughan said in court Friday.

    “Other evidence that I used to examine witness statements that supported Ms. Souza’s statement that there was an altercation inside the garage where she was being strangled by Mr. Watkins prior to Mr. Watkins’ death,” he told 11 News.

    The victim’s family pleaded with the judge Friday to change the course of action. After much discussion, the judge said it was not in her power to make that decision, and the prosecuting attorney is the only one who can press charges in this situation.

    “Murder in Colorado is acceptable,” an enraged Roger Watkins told 11 News after the hearing. “A veteran can get killed, she can admit it, and the [deputy district attorney] can get her off. How to get away with murder, come to Colorado Springs.”

    Brandon Watkins’ mother, Susanne Franzolin, said she was heartbroken by the decision.

    “I feel nauseous, and we are not giving up.”

    Both parents had harsh words for Vaughan.

    “The DA is [Souza’s] best defense,” Roger Watkins said.

    “I believe that he never really cared about Brandon, and he was so afraid of losing that he wouldn’t file the charges; he was afraid of losing.”

    Vaughan told 11 News that he was sorry for the family’s loss, but he could not convince a jury of 12 people that there was no doubt Souza murdered Watkins unprovoked.

    “In the state of Colorado you can rely on self-defense to protect yourself from what you believe is an unlawful use of force. The degree of force that you use has to be a reasonable use of force. But based on the evidence in this case, allegations of strangulation, allegations of Mr. Watkins was using a knife, we have come to the determination that the use of force, we would not be able to disprove beyond a reasonable doubt that she used a unreasonable amount of force.”

    Vaughan said he encourages the family to pursue “any avenue” they feel would be justice for Watkins.

  • Saturday morning feel good stories.

    Saturday morning feel good stories.

    From Phoenix, AZ

    A husband captured and restrained a man after he sexually abused his wife in Phoenix on Tuesday, police said.

    It all started when Leobardo Salas went into a house through an open screen door near 83rd Avenue and Indian School on Tuesday, according to court documents.

    He saw a woman bathing her 2-year-old in the bathroom and police said he grabbed her arm and chest.

    Her husband, who was in another building on the property with two other people, heard his wife’s screams and ran to see what was going on.

    When he went into the bathroom, Salas was trying to take the woman’s pants off, police said.

    The husband then “subdued” Salas and restrained him with a belt until police arrived, court paperwork said.

    Salas later told police the husband beat him up.

    Earlier that evening, officers said police were called on Salas because he refused to leave St. Augustine Catholic Church near 71st Avenue and Osborn.

    He is also a suspect in a burglary that happened in the same neighborhood of the attempted sexual assault.

    Salas was booked into jail on one count of sexual abuse, one count of attempted sexual assault and one count of second-degree burglary.

    Police said Salas told them he hears voices that make him sexually assault.

    From Temple Hills, MD

    Authorities on Friday identified a man who was fatally shot in Temple Hills, Md., after he allegedly broke into a neighbor’s home.

    The man who died was David William Taylor Sr., 55, who lived in that area, according to police in Prince George’s County.

    Police said the incident happened just after 8 a.m. Wednesday in the 4300 block of 23rd Place. Police found Taylor unresponsive with a gunshot wound in a backyard. He was pronounced dead on the scene.

    An initial investigation found a resident in a nearby home shot Taylor after he apparently broke into the person’s home, police said. After he was shot, Taylor fled and collapsed several houses away, they said.

    Officials said they are consulting with the State’s Attorney’s Office about any potential criminal charges.

  • Vet Climbs Mountain

    I saw this on one of the military online blogs and thought it might make a truly nice Feel Good story.  (No, that is not Kilimanjaro, but I needed a mountain.)

    This soldier, SGT Adam Keys, who lost three limbs in Afghanistan to a truck bomb,  did the strenuous climb to the top of Kilimanjaro on prosthetic legs, and has future plans for more things to keep himself busy.  This story speaks for itself. There is a link to a video included in the article. He left his Purple Heart medal at the summit of Kilimanjaro.

    https://www.military.com/daily-news/2018/10/13/afghanistan-war-veteran-climbs-mt-kilimanjaro-prosthetic-legs.html

    That’s a 19,000++ foot climb, and there are plenty of guides and assistants, and they provide food, plenty of water, and shelter for climbers. There is also sunburn the higher you go, and the possibility of altitude sickness when you near the summit, if you aren’t used to heights, but the view from up there is beyond spectacular. My niece did the climb last year, got sunburnt, found herself freezing in the cold, but made it to one of the peaks, and developed altitude sickness while she was there and had to descend.

    That he made it to the peak on prosthetic legs is, by itself, a huge feat. Kudos to SGT Keys and may he never run out of places to run or mountains to climb.

  • Friday morning feel good stories.

    Friday morning feel good stories.

    From Fresno, CA

    Police in California has confirmed that they will not charge a 16-year-old in the fatal shooting of his father after they concluded that he acted in self-defense. It was determined that the boy, whose name has been withheld because of his juvenile status, had shot and killed his 54-year-old father, Javier Vera, to protect his mother from physical abuse.

    According to a news release by the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office, dispatchers received a call of an injured person inside a home on the 6800 block of W. Clinton Avenue in Fresno at around 4:30 p.m. on Saturday. On arrival, responding officers found Vera had been shot and later succumbed to his injuries.

    The officers learned that Vera, who had allegedly been drinking at the time, and his wife had been involved in a verbal argument that escalated into a physical confrontation. It reached a point where the 54-year-old began to strangle the woman, which prompted the 16-year-old to retaliate in turn.

    A short time later, the teen discharged the gun, striking his father. He then dialed 911 to report the incident to the sheriff’s office, following which the murder weapon was secured, and the boy was taken into custody. Sheriff’s homicide detectives who later arrived at the scene had obtained a warrant to search the premises and questioned both the mother and the son.

    Speaking about the incident, the sheriff’s office public information officer Tony Botti revealed to Your Central Valley that there was evidence of long-term domestic violence between the couple. He said, “[The boy was] visibly shaken up. Scary situation, your mom and dad are in this fight, next thing you know you end up taking your dad’s life.”

    From WAUKEGAN, IL

    After a botched gun robbery early Tuesday in Lindenhurst, one man is dead and the other has been charged with his murder and armed robbery, according to the Lake County Major Crimes Task Force. Police received a 911 call around 2:30 a.m. about a possible robbery at a home in the 300 block of Teal Road. When officers arrived, they found a Chicago man dead and an Evanston man being detained at the scene by a resident.

    Michael J. Zachery, 23, of the 1600 block of Simpson Street in Evanston, was charged with first degree murder and armed robbery, according to task force spokesman Sgt. Chris Covelli.

    Investigators believe he and the Chicago man, identified by the Lake County Coroner’s Office as 34-year-old Joseph McHaney, traveled to a home in the 300 block of Teal Road purporting to be interested in purchasing a firearm from a homeowner. Instead, Covelli said, they tried to rob the gun-owning resident with a knife and a hammer.

    Zachery was armed with a knife as McHaney struck the homeowner multiple times with a hammer, according to the task force investigation. The resident responded by shooting in self-defense. McHaney was fatally shot by the homeowner and pronounced dead at the scene, Covelli said. Preliminary autopsy results suggest he died as a result of multiple gunshot wounds, according to the Lake County Coroner’s Office.

    Someone called 911 from inside the house, and when Lindenhurst police arrived they found Zachery being held at the scene by a resident. Tuesday evening prosecutors approved felony murder charges for the death of his fellow robber for his involvement in the incident, according to Covelli.

    Under Illinois law, anyone found to have engaged in a “forcible” felony, such as armed robbery, where someone dies can be charged with first-degree murder, regardless of their intent.

    Zachery appeared in bond court Wednesday morning, according to the Lake County Sheriff’s Office. A judge set his bail at $5 million, meaning he would need to provide $500,000 in cash to secure his release ahead of trial.

    From Clarksville, IN

    Police have not yet identified the man they say was killed Tuesday after a bystander intervened during an alleged domestic violence incident at a Clarksville apartment complex.

    Police responded to a report of shots fired in the 600 block of Harvard Drive in River Chase apartments just after 10 p.m. Tuesday. There, they found a deceased man with “multiple gun shot wounds,” according to a news release.

    After talking with witnesses, police determined a domestic dispute started in an apartment which led to the man chasing a woman into the parking lot, beating and kicking her and her daughter, who is under 10 years old.

    A neighbor intervened and held the man at gunpoint, reportedly to stop the attack. The woman and her daughter were able to escape, at which time the suspect reportedly went after the neighbor. The neighbor shot the suspect after multiple warnings, according to police. The shooter is not currently facing charges, although the case remains under investigation, said Clarksville Police Chief Mark Palmer.

    Both victims were transported to a hospital in Louisville and treated for minor injuries. Palmer said they were in stable condition as of Wednesday afternoon.

    The actions of the shooter are protected under Indiana’s Stand Your Ground Law, which states that individuals do not need to back down from threats against their person or others while in a public place, Palmer said.

    Palmer wouldn’t comment on whether what the individual did in the situation was correct, but he said him being there may very likely have prevented further violence.

    “I do believe that had the individual not stepped in, it would have been far worse for the female that was being attacked,” Palmer said. “It could have been a life-threatening situation for [her] or the child.”

    He said people who witness a domestic incident or other abuse should contact police as soon as possible, and if they do feel they have to step in — because a person is in imminent danger of being seriously injured or killed —they should take their own safety into account.

    “Use common sense and use the safest means that are available to you to help somebody, if that’s the only option you have,” Palmer said.

    Melissa (Wynn) Weston lives in the apartment complex near where the shooting happened Tuesday. She said she and her husband were watching TV when she thought she heard someone scream. Soon after, she said they heard gunshots.

    “I asked my husband to turn the TV down and we heard what we thought was just kids playing outside,” Weston said in a text message.

    They turned the TV volume back up and then heard four to five “very loud booms,” she said.

    “We both knew it wasn’t just a car backfiring as we hear sometimes, living this close to the interstate.”

    The next minute, she looked outside and saw police lights.

    “This all happened within two minutes or less,” she said. Weston and her husband have lived in the apartment for 10 years; she said they’ve never seen anything like this happen.

    “My thoughts and prayers go out to all involved,” she said. “It’s so scary that these kinds of things happen in the world today. But for it to happen in my own neighborhood — and literally backyard — is horrifying.”

    A letter from apartment manager Rob Cissell was sent to residents following the incident, expressing condolences for those involved and asking residents to alert police or management if there is ever a situation with safety. An apartment official provided a copy of the letter to the News and Tribune.

    “Although we strive to maintain a safe, quiet and crime-free community, you never know when something could go wrong,” it reads, in part. “Thus we always ask our residents to speak up and notify the Clarksville Police, our courtesy police officer or the office if there is ever a concern.”

    He also asked residents to keep the families in their thoughts and “please take care of yourselves and be good to others.”

    Pending autopsy and toxicology reports may offer more information into the case, “to see if there could be outside influences on the suspect or if he was under the influence of anything,” Palmer said. “Or if this was… an anger issue.”

  • Thursday morning feel good stories

    Thursday morning feel good stories

    From Cleveland, OH

    A Cleveland police officer fired after he was accused of shooting and killing an unarmed burglary suspect in 2015 has been reinstated.

    Cleveland police union officials told the Fox 8 I-Team Wednesday that Alan Buford won an arbitration ruling and will be reinstated.

    “This is another example of the city wrongly firing a good police officer,” said Jeff Follmer, president of the city’s police union.

    City officials could not be reached to discuss the matter. It is not known if the city will appeal the ruling.

    Buford was acquitted in 2017 of negligent homicide after fatally shooting Brandon Jones, 18, outside a Parkwood Avenue store March 19, 2015.

    Buford and his partner confronted Jones as he was leaving the store with a bag of stolen cigarettes, the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office said.

    Cleveland police said the officers got into a struggle with Jones when they tried to arrest him. That’s when Buford fired his service weapon, killing Jones.

    Jones did not have a weapon. Buford’s attorney argued the shooting was justified because a reasonable officer would have feared for his life.

    Attorney Paul Cristallo, who represents the family of Brandon Jones, says a wrongful death lawsuit against the city and the officer is still pending in court.

    Cristallo released a statement on behalf of Brandon Jones’ family, “We are shocked and saddened, yet not surprised. This is why civil rights lawsuits are necessary. What other job can you shoot and kill a young man without provocation and get your job back without any ramifications. Brandon’s family did not get justice in the criminal case and now they are denied the satisfaction of knowing that this officer would be held accountable by the Cleveland Police Department. We are left with their last hope for acknowledgment in the civil court. It may ultimately take a jury to objectively judge Officer Buford for his wrongful actions.”

    From CLARKSVILLE, IN

    A violent domestic dispute between a man, a woman and her daughter ended in gunshots when a neighbor stepped in, potentially saving a life.

    The shooting happened around 10 p.m. Tuesday night at the River Chase Apartments on Harvard Drive in Clarksville. Police said the man accused of battery is the one who ended up dead.

    Clarksville Police said that man was beating a woman and her young daughter when a neighbor attempted to break up the fight. The neighbor grabbed the handgun he owned and tried to stop him.

    “He did approach the individual who was assaulting the lady and her child and did, at gunpoint, instruct him to leave them alone and sit down on the curb,” said Clark County Prosecutor Jeremy Mull.

    Police said the man complied for a while but then tried to attack the neighbor and ignored warnings to stop. When he came at the neighbor, police said he shot him.

    “Based upon what we learned last night, I’m of the belief that it was self-defense, that it was justified under the law and therefore there was no arrest made in the case,” Mull said. “In a case where an individual was acting violently and had just violently assaulted a child and a defenseless lady. Due to his intervention, that assault was terminated and this individual was ultimately killed in an act of self-defense.”

    On Wednesday, the River Chase Apartments sit quiet. Police filled the area near units on Harvard Drive Tuesday night after reports came in that a man had been shot and killed.

     

  • Wednesday morning feel good stories

    Wednesday morning feel good stories

    From Atlanta, GA

    A husband and wife are in the hospital following a terrifying encounter with a gunman. Police said the husband stepped in to save his wife after a man shot her in the arm, then the husband shot and killed the gunman possibly in self-defense.

    Investigators said the shootings happened Sunday afternoon in a home on Donnebrook Lane in southeast Atlanta.

    Investigators said one of the renters inside the home argued with a woman and threatened to kill her. Police said he shot her in the arm. Her husband then charged at the gunman and was shot as well.

    Police said the husband managed to wrestle the gun away, and fired at the gunman; he then burst through a window, and died in the backyard.

    The husband and wife were taken to Grady Memorial Hospital in stable condition. All parties were between their late 30’s to 50’s.

    Police tell FOX 5 that the incident has been officially classified as a felon killed by a private citizen and that no charges will be filed.

    From BONNER COUNTY, ID

    A 39-year-old Spirit Lake man was shot and later died after an apparent attack of a woman and her mother in south Bonner County Friday evening.

    Friday around 5:15 p.m., Bonner County Sheriff’s Office Deputies responded to a disturbance report at the 100 block of Rebel Ridge Rd. Prior to arriving, dispatch advised that a man was shot by a 41-year-old female, who had been defending herself and her 70-year-old mother from the accused attacker.

    Lifesaving efforts were being conducted by bystanders before first responders arrived and took over. Joshua Cole of Spirit Lake would however succumb to his injuries.

    Upon investigation, preliminary findings showed the shooting was done in an act of self-defense. The investigation is ongoing.

  • Tuesday morning feel good stories.

    Tuesday morning feel good stories.

    From OREM, UT

    A man who was shot while apparently trespassing in a garage in Orem has died.

    Police confirmed around noon the man injured in Monday morning’s shooting died, but they are still working to notify his family so his identity is not being released yet.

    Police at the scene said things began shortly before 7 a.m. when a man found someone rummaging through his detached garage at a residence near 400 North and 800 West.

    “He walked back into his house, got his handgun, came back out ” Lt. Craig Martinez of Orem Police said of the homeowner. “There was a confrontation between he and the suspect, at which time there was several shots fired—a few of them hitting the suspect in the abdomen.”

    No further details about that confrontation were immediately available.

    Medics responded and performed CPR on the 49-year-old man before he  was taken to a hospital in extremely critical condition, where he later died.

    Police said he is from Orem and is not someone they are familiar with from a criminal history standpoint.

    “It was like something I’d hear in a movie,” said James Hopkins, who lives nearby. “Things like this can happen anywhere… but it still makes you wonder, makes you nervous, makes you think.”

    Martinez said the man is not someone who should have had access to the garage and they are investigating to determine why he was inside the structure.

    The homeowner, his wife and children were not injured, but Martinez said the man who pulled the trigger was shaken up by the incident.

    “He’s obviously distraught,” Martinez said. “This isn’t an easy thing for anyone to have to go through.”

    From CLEVELAND COUNTY, NC

    A North Carolina man who booby-trapped his backdoorwith a shotgun shot himself when he opened the door, according to deputies.

    WCNC reported that the 68-year-old man seriously injured himself with his own booby trap at about 11:30 a.m. Monday at his Cleveland County home.

    “I’ve never seen anything quite like this,” Capt. Jon Wright, with the Cleveland County Sheriff’s Office, told the Gaston Gazette.

    Deputies said the shotgun went off after the man opened the door to feed some squirrels, hitting him in the arm. An arriving deputy used a tactical tourniquet on the man.

    Authorities say the trap was just one of many that had been rigged around the property, according to WBTV.

    Deputies said the man was taken to Atrium Health in Shelby and will likely be flown Charlotte.