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Brittny Marie ADAMS

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Classification:  Murderer Characteristics:  Altercation Number of victims:  1 Date of murder:  July 17, 2013 Date of arrest:  Same day Date of birth:  1 993 Victim profile:  Gary Bell Edens, 51 Method of murder:  Shooting Location:  Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, USA Status:  Pleaded guilty. Sentenced to 155 months, or nearly 13 years, in prison on February 27, 2014 Topeka woman sentenced to 13 years for July 2013 murder of 51-year-old Lawrence man By Stephen Montemayor - Ljworld.com February 28, 2014 Seven months after seeing his father shot dead during an altercation at his Lawrence home, Jeremy Edens stood in Douglas County District Court and directed his gaze at the woman who pleaded guilty to the shooting. “You took a good man’s life,” said Edens, 29, who appeared while in custody and serving an unrelated sentence in Henry County in Missouri. He addressed 20-year-old Brittny Marie Adams, of Topeka, who was sentenced Friday to 155 months, or nearly 13 years, in prison for second

Nicole ABUSHARIF

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  Classification:  Murderer Characteristics:  Alcoholic - Lesbian love triangle - To collect insurance money Number of victims:  1 Date of murder:  March 15, 2007 Date of arrest:  2 days later Date of birth:  September 14, 1980 Victim profile:  Rebecca "Becky" Klein, 32  (her lesbian lover) Method of murder:  Suffocation  with a plastic bag Location:  Villa Park, DuPage County, Illinois, USA Status:  Sentenced to 50 years in prison without parole on July 27, 2009 Nicole Abusharif  is an American woman who was convicted of the 2007 Villa Park, Illinois murder of her lesbian lover, Rebecca "Becky" Klein. After being found guilty of first-degree murder in May 2009, Abusharif was sentenced to 50 years in prison at the Dwight Correctional Center in Nevada Township, Illinois. The case made national news due to the intrigue of a "lesbian love triangle" murder. Murder and Investigation On March 17, 2007, the body of Rebecca Klein was discovered in the trunk of her

Murder of the Lindbergh baby

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Rich and handsome, aviation here Charles Lindbergh was one of the most famous men in the world. But that fame made his baby son a target for kidnappers. Charles Augustus Lindbergh junior, only son of the first man to make a non-stop solo flight across that Atlantic, was put to bed at his usual time of 7.30 p.m. on Tuesday 1 March 1932. The 20-month-old toddler had had a bad cold, so Colonel Charles Lindbergh and his wife, Anne, had decided to stay on at their new country home near Hopewell, New Jersey, even though the builders were still there. Usually they went back during the week to New York, where they stayed with Anne’s mother, Mrs Dwight Morrow, on her estate in Englewood. Sitting after dinner with his wife, Colonel Lindbergh heard a cracking sound outside the house. He remembered it was shortly after 9 p.m. Anne put it down to a branch snapping in the high wind, and they thought no more about it. Later they would bitterly regret not going to investigate.   At 10 p.m. nanny Betty