| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"HR" |
| Date: |
06 Sep 2006 07:46:29 PM |
| Object: |
Sons of Christian clergymen beat homeless man to death |
Sep. 06, 2006
Four friends allegedly beat a homeless man to death
By Madeline Baro Diaz
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
MIAMI - Angry over a homeless man's catcall, four friends went on a
"feeding frenzy," police said, beating the elderly man to death with a
metal chair, a steel rebar, a rock and a wooden stick.
Two men accused in Saturday's attack are the sons of Christian
clergymen. All four have been charged with second degree murder.
"This was pure bloodlust," said Miami police spokesman Lt. Bill
Schwartz. "There was no reason for this."
According to a police report, the attack was sparked when Janice
Guillen, 18, went to her car to get cigarettes. Guillen told police
she heard Jose Perez, 67, who was in the building across the street,
toss out a pickup line "she felt was nasty," the report said. She told
police she confronted Perez and punched him in the face.
Perez allegedly hit her back, prompting Magdiel Wingfield, 28, Kevin
Stone, 27, and Jason Cardenas, 19, to run downstairs from Guillen's
Little Havana apartment. The four of them allegedly jumped Perez,
punching and kicking him and hitting him with the chair, the rebar and
the other objects. At one point they pushed Perez through a glass
door, shattering it, the police report said.
Perez was taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital, where he died from his
injuries.
Wingfield and Cardenas' fathers are clergymen with the Soldiers of the
Cross church based in Little Havana. Neither could be reached for
comment on Wednesday.
Earlier this year, Guillen was arrested on a misdemeanor theft charge,
according to court records. Wingfield was arrested for misdemeanor
battery in 2005, but charges were dropped earlier this year. In 1998,
he was also arrested for malicious destruction of property and entered
a pretrial diversion program.
Police are trying to locate Perez's relatives. He apparently lived in
the hallway of the building where he was killed and did odd jobs for
people in the neighborhood, Schwartz said.
"He seemed to be a harmless guy," Schwartz said. "Granted, he might
not have been the most gentle or the most sophisticated of people, but
he certainly did not deserve this type of torturous end to his life."
The brutal beating is part of a nationwide trend of increased violence
against the homeless, said homeless advocate Sean Cononie.
Cononie pointed to the case of three teens awaiting trial in the
beating death last January of a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., homeless man.
William "Billy" Ammons, 18, Thomas Daugherty, 17, and Brian Hooks, 18,
are also facing two counts each of attempted murder for allegedly
beating two other homeless men. Across the country, homeless people
have been set on fire, decapitated and killed in other gruesome ways,
Cononie said.
"These crimes toward the homeless are always vicious," he said. "I
guess people don't put a value on homeless people's lives."
---
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Sons of Christian clergymen beat homeless man to death |
06 Sep 2006 08:47:48 PM |
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HR wrote:
Sep. 06, 2006
Four friends allegedly beat a homeless man to death
By Madeline Baro Diaz
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
MIAMI - Angry over a homeless man's catcall, four friends went on a
"feeding frenzy," police said, beating the elderly man to death with a
metal chair, a steel rebar, a rock and a wooden stick.
Two men accused in Saturday's attack are the sons of Christian
clergymen. All four have been charged with second degree murder.
"This was pure bloodlust," said Miami police spokesman Lt. Bill
Schwartz. "There was no reason for this."
According to a police report, the attack was sparked when Janice
Guillen, 18, went to her car to get cigarettes. Guillen told police
she heard Jose Perez, 67, who was in the building across the street,
toss out a pickup line "she felt was nasty," the report said. She told
police she confronted Perez and punched him in the face.
Perez allegedly hit her back, prompting Magdiel Wingfield, 28, Kevin
Stone, 27, and Jason Cardenas, 19, to run downstairs from Guillen's
Little Havana apartment. The four of them allegedly jumped Perez,
punching and kicking him and hitting him with the chair, the rebar and
the other objects. At one point they pushed Perez through a glass
door, shattering it, the police report said.
Perez was taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital, where he died from his
injuries.
Wingfield and Cardenas' fathers are clergymen with the Soldiers of the
Cross church based in Little Havana. Neither could be reached for
comment on Wednesday.
Earlier this year, Guillen was arrested on a misdemeanor theft charge,
according to court records. Wingfield was arrested for misdemeanor
battery in 2005, but charges were dropped earlier this year. In 1998,
he was also arrested for malicious destruction of property and entered
a pretrial diversion program.
Police are trying to locate Perez's relatives. He apparently lived in
the hallway of the building where he was killed and did odd jobs for
people in the neighborhood, Schwartz said.
"He seemed to be a harmless guy," Schwartz said. "Granted, he might
not have been the most gentle or the most sophisticated of people, but
he certainly did not deserve this type of torturous end to his life."
The brutal beating is part of a nationwide trend of increased violence
against the homeless, said homeless advocate Sean Cononie.
Cononie pointed to the case of three teens awaiting trial in the
beating death last January of a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., homeless man.
William "Billy" Ammons, 18, Thomas Daugherty, 17, and Brian Hooks, 18,
are also facing two counts each of attempted murder for allegedly
beating two other homeless men. Across the country, homeless people
have been set on fire, decapitated and killed in other gruesome ways,
Cononie said.
"These crimes toward the homeless are always vicious," he said. "I
guess people don't put a value on homeless people's lives."
Since they don't care about people with homes,
they're not going to care about people without homes.
Florida is and idiot state. Unless you got front row
parking in Disneyworld, and a Quasi-Canadian moron friend
like Micheal Moore, that's the only thing that matters.
---
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Sons of Christian clergymen beat homeless man to death |
06 Sep 2006 09:49:35 PM |
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HR wrote:
Sep. 06, 2006
Four friends allegedly beat a homeless man to death
By Madeline Baro Diaz
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Wingfield and Cardenas' fathers are clergymen with the Soldiers of the
Cross church based in Little Havana. Neither could be reached for
comment on Wednesday.
'Soldiers of the Cross church", eh?
Sounds more like some weirdo sect.
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| User: "Igor The Terrible" |
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| Title: Re: Sons of Christian clergymen beat homeless man to death |
06 Sep 2006 08:29:21 PM |
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Typical southern rank and file, hillbilly law enforcement and criminal
justice system. Were you foolish enough to expect greater things from
the state of Flori-DUH? If that poor ***** was a prominent
insurance, real estate, or securities broker, the sawed-off pieces of
***** charged in this crime would be facing first degree murder. CAN
YOU SPELL DOUBLE STANDARD?????. The same ***** happened in Holly Hill,
Flori-DUH and the same charges were leveled. No wonder law enforcement
has become fair game in street warfare--and rightfully so! Who the
***** respects them? The whole goddamned system from stem to stern
doesn't even respect itself.
Why don't we take every goddamned law on the books and throw them to
hell out? They are not worth the paper the paper they're written on;
much less, to wipe your ***** with. The same goes for the skeletal
remains of our constitution. They are long forgotten antiquated relics
of a broken society sinking deeper by the day.
And people sit in front of their TVs scratching their brain wondering
WHY this country is going to hell!
....and justice for all! Yea...in a pig's eye.
HR wrote:
Sep. 06, 2006
Four friends allegedly beat a homeless man to death
By Madeline Baro Diaz
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
MIAMI - Angry over a homeless man's catcall, four friends went on a
"feeding frenzy," police said, beating the elderly man to death with a
metal chair, a steel rebar, a rock and a wooden stick.
Two men accused in Saturday's attack are the sons of Christian
clergymen. All four have been charged with second degree murder.
"This was pure bloodlust," said Miami police spokesman Lt. Bill
Schwartz. "There was no reason for this."
According to a police report, the attack was sparked when Janice
Guillen, 18, went to her car to get cigarettes. Guillen told police
she heard Jose Perez, 67, who was in the building across the street,
toss out a pickup line "she felt was nasty," the report said. She told
police she confronted Perez and punched him in the face.
Perez allegedly hit her back, prompting Magdiel Wingfield, 28, Kevin
Stone, 27, and Jason Cardenas, 19, to run downstairs from Guillen's
Little Havana apartment. The four of them allegedly jumped Perez,
punching and kicking him and hitting him with the chair, the rebar and
the other objects. At one point they pushed Perez through a glass
door, shattering it, the police report said.
Perez was taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital, where he died from his
injuries.
Wingfield and Cardenas' fathers are clergymen with the Soldiers of the
Cross church based in Little Havana. Neither could be reached for
comment on Wednesday.
Earlier this year, Guillen was arrested on a misdemeanor theft charge,
according to court records. Wingfield was arrested for misdemeanor
battery in 2005, but charges were dropped earlier this year. In 1998,
he was also arrested for malicious destruction of property and entered
a pretrial diversion program.
Police are trying to locate Perez's relatives. He apparently lived in
the hallway of the building where he was killed and did odd jobs for
people in the neighborhood, Schwartz said.
"He seemed to be a harmless guy," Schwartz said. "Granted, he might
not have been the most gentle or the most sophisticated of people, but
he certainly did not deserve this type of torturous end to his life."
The brutal beating is part of a nationwide trend of increased violence
against the homeless, said homeless advocate Sean Cononie.
Cononie pointed to the case of three teens awaiting trial in the
beating death last January of a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., homeless man.
William "Billy" Ammons, 18, Thomas Daugherty, 17, and Brian Hooks, 18,
are also facing two counts each of attempted murder for allegedly
beating two other homeless men. Across the country, homeless people
have been set on fire, decapitated and killed in other gruesome ways,
Cononie said.
"These crimes toward the homeless are always vicious," he said. "I
guess people don't put a value on homeless people's lives."
---
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| User: "Joe S." |
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| Title: Re: Sons of Christian clergymen beat homeless man to death |
06 Sep 2006 09:18:52 PM |
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"Igor The Terrible" <igor_the_terrible@mad.scientist.com> wrote in message
news:1157592561.115852.307750@e3g2000cwe.googlegroups.com...
Typical southern rank and file, hillbilly law enforcement and criminal
justice system. Were you foolish enough to expect greater things from
the state of Flori-DUH? If that poor ***** was a prominent
insurance, real estate, or securities broker, the sawed-off pieces of
***** charged in this crime would be facing first degree murder. CAN
YOU SPELL DOUBLE STANDARD?????. The same ***** happened in Holly Hill,
Flori-DUH and the same charges were leveled. No wonder law enforcement
has become fair game in street warfare--and rightfully so! Who the
***** respects them? The whole goddamned system from stem to stern
doesn't even respect itself.
Why don't we take every goddamned law on the books and throw them to
hell out? They are not worth the paper the paper they're written on;
much less, to wipe your ***** with. The same goes for the skeletal
remains of our constitution. They are long forgotten antiquated relics
of a broken society sinking deeper by the day.
And people sit in front of their TVs scratching their brain wondering
WHY this country is going to hell!
...and justice for all! Yea...in a pig's eye.
Which is why this liberal Democrat has a concealed carry permit and one of
these:
http://tinyurl.com/mmfxx
and one of these:
http://tinyurl.com/s6uxt
HR wrote:
Sep. 06, 2006
Four friends allegedly beat a homeless man to death
By Madeline Baro Diaz
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
MIAMI - Angry over a homeless man's catcall, four friends went on a
"feeding frenzy," police said, beating the elderly man to death with a
metal chair, a steel rebar, a rock and a wooden stick.
Two men accused in Saturday's attack are the sons of Christian
clergymen. All four have been charged with second degree murder.
"This was pure bloodlust," said Miami police spokesman Lt. Bill
Schwartz. "There was no reason for this."
According to a police report, the attack was sparked when Janice
Guillen, 18, went to her car to get cigarettes. Guillen told police
she heard Jose Perez, 67, who was in the building across the street,
toss out a pickup line "she felt was nasty," the report said. She told
police she confronted Perez and punched him in the face.
Perez allegedly hit her back, prompting Magdiel Wingfield, 28, Kevin
Stone, 27, and Jason Cardenas, 19, to run downstairs from Guillen's
Little Havana apartment. The four of them allegedly jumped Perez,
punching and kicking him and hitting him with the chair, the rebar and
the other objects. At one point they pushed Perez through a glass
door, shattering it, the police report said.
Perez was taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital, where he died from his
injuries.
Wingfield and Cardenas' fathers are clergymen with the Soldiers of the
Cross church based in Little Havana. Neither could be reached for
comment on Wednesday.
Earlier this year, Guillen was arrested on a misdemeanor theft charge,
according to court records. Wingfield was arrested for misdemeanor
battery in 2005, but charges were dropped earlier this year. In 1998,
he was also arrested for malicious destruction of property and entered
a pretrial diversion program.
Police are trying to locate Perez's relatives. He apparently lived in
the hallway of the building where he was killed and did odd jobs for
people in the neighborhood, Schwartz said.
"He seemed to be a harmless guy," Schwartz said. "Granted, he might
not have been the most gentle or the most sophisticated of people, but
he certainly did not deserve this type of torturous end to his life."
The brutal beating is part of a nationwide trend of increased violence
against the homeless, said homeless advocate Sean Cononie.
Cononie pointed to the case of three teens awaiting trial in the
beating death last January of a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., homeless man.
William "Billy" Ammons, 18, Thomas Daugherty, 17, and Brian Hooks, 18,
are also facing two counts each of attempted murder for allegedly
beating two other homeless men. Across the country, homeless people
have been set on fire, decapitated and killed in other gruesome ways,
Cononie said.
"These crimes toward the homeless are always vicious," he said. "I
guess people don't put a value on homeless people's lives."
---
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| User: "Igor The Terrible" |
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| Title: Re: Sons of Christian clergymen beat homeless man to death |
07 Sep 2006 07:19:59 AM |
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I agree wholeheartedly!!! Before long, concealed permits will be
handed out with birth certificates. Outside of handing out traffic
citations and nailing hookers, and occasional siezures from drug
dealers, it takes an act of congress to get law enforcement to do their
jobs.
I can't wait till this worthless administration is history and the
republicans lose control of the house and senate...or at least one of
them.
This is getting to be something beyond a joke. It seems like every
issue outside the interests of this country is a priority. We'll
remember that in Niovember.
Joe S. wrote:
"Igor The Terrible" <igor_the_terrible@mad.scientist.com> wrote in message
news:1157592561.115852.307750@e3g2000cwe.googlegroups.com...
Typical southern rank and file, hillbilly law enforcement and criminal
justice system. Were you foolish enough to expect greater things from
the state of Flori-DUH? If that poor ***** was a prominent
insurance, real estate, or securities broker, the sawed-off pieces of
***** charged in this crime would be facing first degree murder. CAN
YOU SPELL DOUBLE STANDARD?????. The same ***** happened in Holly Hill,
Flori-DUH and the same charges were leveled. No wonder law enforcement
has become fair game in street warfare--and rightfully so! Who the
***** respects them? The whole goddamned system from stem to stern
doesn't even respect itself.
Why don't we take every goddamned law on the books and throw them to
hell out? They are not worth the paper the paper they're written on;
much less, to wipe your ***** with. The same goes for the skeletal
remains of our constitution. They are long forgotten antiquated relics
of a broken society sinking deeper by the day.
And people sit in front of their TVs scratching their brain wondering
WHY this country is going to hell!
...and justice for all! Yea...in a pig's eye.
Which is why this liberal Democrat has a concealed carry permit and one of
these:
http://tinyurl.com/mmfxx
and one of these:
http://tinyurl.com/s6uxt
HR wrote:
Sep. 06, 2006
Four friends allegedly beat a homeless man to death
By Madeline Baro Diaz
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
MIAMI - Angry over a homeless man's catcall, four friends went on a
"feeding frenzy," police said, beating the elderly man to death with a
metal chair, a steel rebar, a rock and a wooden stick.
Two men accused in Saturday's attack are the sons of Christian
clergymen. All four have been charged with second degree murder.
"This was pure bloodlust," said Miami police spokesman Lt. Bill
Schwartz. "There was no reason for this."
According to a police report, the attack was sparked when Janice
Guillen, 18, went to her car to get cigarettes. Guillen told police
she heard Jose Perez, 67, who was in the building across the street,
toss out a pickup line "she felt was nasty," the report said. She told
police she confronted Perez and punched him in the face.
Perez allegedly hit her back, prompting Magdiel Wingfield, 28, Kevin
Stone, 27, and Jason Cardenas, 19, to run downstairs from Guillen's
Little Havana apartment. The four of them allegedly jumped Perez,
punching and kicking him and hitting him with the chair, the rebar and
the other objects. At one point they pushed Perez through a glass
door, shattering it, the police report said.
Perez was taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital, where he died from his
injuries.
Wingfield and Cardenas' fathers are clergymen with the Soldiers of the
Cross church based in Little Havana. Neither could be reached for
comment on Wednesday.
Earlier this year, Guillen was arrested on a misdemeanor theft charge,
according to court records. Wingfield was arrested for misdemeanor
battery in 2005, but charges were dropped earlier this year. In 1998,
he was also arrested for malicious destruction of property and entered
a pretrial diversion program.
Police are trying to locate Perez's relatives. He apparently lived in
the hallway of the building where he was killed and did odd jobs for
people in the neighborhood, Schwartz said.
"He seemed to be a harmless guy," Schwartz said. "Granted, he might
not have been the most gentle or the most sophisticated of people, but
he certainly did not deserve this type of torturous end to his life."
The brutal beating is part of a nationwide trend of increased violence
against the homeless, said homeless advocate Sean Cononie.
Cononie pointed to the case of three teens awaiting trial in the
beating death last January of a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., homeless man.
William "Billy" Ammons, 18, Thomas Daugherty, 17, and Brian Hooks, 18,
are also facing two counts each of attempted murder for allegedly
beating two other homeless men. Across the country, homeless people
have been set on fire, decapitated and killed in other gruesome ways,
Cononie said.
"These crimes toward the homeless are always vicious," he said. "I
guess people don't put a value on homeless people's lives."
---
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