Folly of the DayAn Iowa Man Posted on Social Media That He Had Broken Into a Parked Car Blocking His Driveway, Photographed the Documents He Had Found Inside, and Shared the Owner's Personal Information. Police Arrested Him the Next Day.
Mirr published a public post that contained the crime, the evidence of the crime, and the victim's name — performing the work of a police affidavit on his own behalf, with photographs, on a platform that delivered the affidavit to investigators in the form of a tip.
Source: KMCH
The WireA Maine Man Was Subject to a Routine Bail Compliance Check. During the Check, He Grabbed a Bag of Drugs From the Officers' Hands and Swallowed It in Front of Them. He Had to Be Hospitalized to Prevent Overdose.
Chipman destroyed the only piece of evidence in front of the only people who needed to see it destroyed in order to confirm that it existed, and then required the same officers to escort him to the hospital for the consequences.
Source: Bangor Daily News
The WireA Florida Man Created an AI-Generated Deepfake Video of Four Men Breaking Into a Sheriff's Deputy's Patrol Car, Then Walked Up to That Same Deputy at an Academy Sports Store and Showed Him the Video. The Deputy Went Outside, Hand on His Weapon. The Car Was Untouched.
Martínez-Arizala spent meaningful effort producing an AI video designed to make a sheriff's deputy panic, located that specific deputy in person, hand-delivered the video, posted it to social media, and then waited for the response — which was the deputy's tactical exit followed by Martínez-Arizala's arrest.
Source: FOX 35 Orlando
The WireAn Illinois Man Was Arrested for an Econo Lodge Burglary, Was Released, and Then Returned to the Crime Scene to 'Avoid Getting More Charges.' Prosecutors Filed Twelve Additional Charges.
Page returned to the scene of his burglary under the theory that returning would help his legal position, and was greeted with twelve additional charges — a calculation in which the relevant authorities held a fundamentally different model of how additional charges are produced.
Source: Patch
The WireA Canadian Former Chef Pleaded Guilty to Selling Lethal Quantities of Sodium Nitrite Through 1,200 Online Orders. He Has Been Linked to at Least 112 Deaths in the UK. He Will Not Be Extradited to the UK Because He Will Be Sentenced in Canada First.
Law operated a mail-order business under his own name and personal accounts, shipping a substance whose only large-volume retail use is for the specific purpose he was facilitating, and confirmed his identity to investigators by the shipping labels he had been printing on each package.
Source: LADbible
The FaithfulA Maine Senate Candidate Polling Nine Points Ahead of Susan Collins Was Discovered to Have Maintained a Public Kik Account Featuring Shirtless Photos and Identifying Tattoos, Exchanging Sexually Explicit Messages With Multiple Women Throughout His Marriage. His Wife Had Already Warned the Campaign a Year Earlier.
Platner declared for federal office while leaving a publicly accessible profile featuring his bare torso and identifiable tattoos online under a handle linked to his other accounts — a level of digital hygiene that would be inadequate for a school-board race, exercised by a man whose wife had spent a year warning his staff about this exact problem.
Source: Washington Times
The VillagesA Villager Was Arrested for Removing Price Tags From Five Shirts at the Target Self-Checkout and Replacing Them With $6.99 Sock Tags. He Abandoned the Cart and Tried to Flee on Foot When Confronted.
Braun committed five separate acts of price-tag swapping at a Target self-checkout — which is the single retail environment most densely covered by overhead cameras — and, when confronted, attempted to escape a building designed to make confrontation outcomes legible to security personnel on multiple monitors.
Source: Villages News
Campus WatchKeroNgb: I FINALLY Found an ANDREW TATE SUPPORTER!
Source: YouTube / KeroNgb