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Lil Tjay Arrested In Connection With Offset Shooting, Sheriff's Office Releases Mugshot
With Offset being shot in South Florida, what will come of Quavo? Takeoff departed this life in 2022 at the height of his career. What will happen to beef up security around the Migos rapper who has yet to be involved in a shooting?
By Skyler Saunders14 minutes ago in Criminal
The Kid Who Hacked the Pentagon (True Story)
On its surface, the International Space Station (ISS) heats up to a scorching 120°C. The only thing keeping the astronauts inside from being literally cooked alive is an intricate onboard temperature and humidity control system. In 1999, that critical system was compromised. The culprit wasn’t a hostile foreign power; it was a 15-year-old boy in his bedroom in South Florida.
By Edge Words29 minutes ago in Criminal
How Cops Robbed The Dark Web King
It is 11:00 a.m. in a quiet suburban neighborhood in Spanish Fork, Utah. Curtis Green, a 47 year old man, is at home alone, washing down powdered mini donuts with a bottle of Coke. The peace is shattered when his doorbell rings, sending his two Chihuahuas into a barking frenzy. Surprised, Green grabs his wife’s pink walking cane and shuffles to the window.
By Edge Wordsabout an hour ago in Criminal
Russian "consultants" tried for plotting to destabilize Angola
In August 2025, Angolan police stormed an apartment rented by two Russian nationals in central Luanda. The men - who were in the country as "tourists" - were actually operatives in a sophisticated plot to destabilize one of Africa's most resource-rich nations.
By Aurel Stratanabout 4 hours ago in Criminal
Jasseca and orc
There's been a viral video circulating online claiming to show a dolphin attacking a marine trainer named Jessica Radcliffe, also known as "Jessica Dolphin." However, fact-checking organizations have confirmed that the video is entirely fabricated using AI-generated content.
By Tariq Pathan about 7 hours ago in Criminal
The Overturn Podcast
According to The Innocence Project, estimates suggest that between 2% and 10% of convicted individuals in U.S. prisons are innocent, which translates to approximately 46,000 to over 230,000 people out of the roughly 2.3 million incarcerated, according to various studies. While the exact number is impossible to know, even a conservative 1% estimate indicates over 20,000 innocent people are incarcerated.
By Frank Racioppiabout 7 hours ago in Criminal
Trump Threatens Iran’s Power Plants & Bridges Over Hormuz Deadline
U.S. President Donald Trump has once again escalated his rhetoric toward Iran, reiterating threats to bomb the country’s power plants and bridges unless Tehran agrees to reopen the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz by a hard deadline this week.
By Story Prismabout 21 hours ago in Criminal
Werewolf Trial of 1521: Pierre Burgot and Michel Verdun
In the early 16th century, a chilling case emerged from eastern France that would become one of the most infamous werewolf trials in European history. The story of Pierre Burgot and Michel Verdun, executed in 1521 in Besançon, sits at the crossroads of folklore, fear, and the brutal justice systems of the time.
By Wade Wainioabout 22 hours ago in Criminal
The Serial Killer . Content Warning.
Why America's Most Prolific Murderer Wanted to Be Caught THE CONFESSION NOBODY BELIEVED 😱 On a quiet Tuesday evening in November 2009 a man walked into a police station in Hammond, Indiana, sat down across from the desk sergeant and calmly announced that he had killed multiple women over a span of two decades and that he was tired of carrying the weight of what he had done and wanted to confess everything before he lost the courage to tell the truth, and the desk sergeant who had been processing paperwork and who initially assumed this was either a prank or a mentally ill person seeking attention asked the man to wait while he called a detective, and the man who identified himself as Darren Deon Vann sat patiently in the lobby of the police station like someone waiting for an appointment at the dentist while inside the detective division officers debated whether to take the confession seriously, and they decided to interview him primarily because Indiana law required them to investigate any confession regardless of how improbable it seemed, and what unfolded over the next forty-eight hours of interrogation would reveal one of the most prolific serial killers in Indiana history and would raise disturbing questions about how he had operated for so long without detection in communities where women disappeared regularly and where law enforcement had not connected the cases because the victims were poor, Black, and involved in sex work, demographics that American criminal justice systems have historically treated as less worthy of investigation and protection than other victim populations 🚔
By The Curious Writera day ago in Criminal










