Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Crime Alert 11.17.22
Episode Date: November 17, 2022The FBI gets involved in a murder-for-hire plot. Criminal out on bond strikes again. Domestic violence aggressor picks a fool proof hiding spot. Bold thief steals patrol car. For more crime and justic...e news go to crimeonline.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart Podcast.
Crime Alert, I'm Nancy Grace. Breaking crime news now. North Carolina business owner Naro
Inab offers a man 15 grand to kill his old business partner who Inab believes stole from him.
The hired man reports the plot to the FBI, which fakes a crime scene to catch Inab in the act.
That's right, Nancy. Inab drives his hitman-turned-informant around the city,
pointing out locations that are part of his target's usual routine
and suggesting the murder is carried out at a parking lot
where the man leaves his personal car and gets into a work truck.
The FBI takes measures to protect the targeted man
and set up a fake crime scene at
the parking lot to convince Inob the murder had been carried out. Once Inob's convinced the murder
has been done, he meets up with his hitman, pays him a grand with the promise of more to come.
Inob now in federal custody facing multiple charges. A man charged with attempted rape
bonds out of jail, taken back to custody
after missing his next court date. Then he bonds out again. The second time Octavius Wilson gets
out, he kidnaps and rapes another victim. Wilson's original bond was set at $20,000.
After his no-show, Charlotte Judge Carla Archie set his new bond at half the original. Nearly a month to the day after his second
release, Wilson attacks a woman walking on the street, drags her to a nearby location,
and sexually assaults her. 29-year-old now rebooked with first-degree kidnap,
rape, assault, and sex battery. Bond, two million. Daryl Dickerson pulls a gun on two family members
threatening to kill them if they try to leave. One of the victims manages to Daryl Dickerson pulls a gun on two family members threatening to kill them if they
try to leave. One of the victims manages to call 911 and Dickerson runs. Once the victims get
medical attention, South Carolina police attempt to make contact with the 52-year-old at his home,
but call in a helicopter and SWAT team to help search for Dickerson. After a quick search of
the property, the 52-year-old is found. South Carolina cops find him hiding under a tarp in a barn behind the house.
He's now charged with domestic violence, ag assault, battery, and kidnap.
Jared Brown steals Virginia cops' patrol car while they're on a call,
then tries to run the cops over while they try to prevent the theft.
Yeah, it's quite the chaotic scene.
Brown speeds away, later crashing the police car and abandoning it,
but not before stealing guns from the vehicle.
The police department offered a $3,000 reward for information leading to Brown's capture
and had over 100 people searching the area.
Brown is finally caught the next day and booked on attempted murder on a cop.
Grand theft auto and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
Well, that's no surprise.
More crime and justice news after this.
Now with the latest crime and justice breaking news, Crime Online's John Limley.
Four University of Idaho students found dead in an off-campus home were targeted,
and the killer or killers used a knife
or other edged weapon in the attack. Our friends at Crime Online. The Moscow, Idaho Police Department
made the announcement in a news release adding that investigators were working to establish a
timeline to recreate the victims activities before they were found dead Sunday. Police said the
killings likely occurred in the early morning hours and the bodies were found around noon.
The students deaths were considered to be an isolated event, and there is no threat to the community at large.
Autopsies expected to be completed later this week could provide more information about how the victims were killed.
A University of Virginia student accused of killing three members of the school's football team
and wounding two other students in an on-campus shooting will be held without bond.
A judge issued that order on Wednesday.
Christopher Darnell Jones Jr. did not enter a plea to the numerous charges he faces during
his first court appearance.
Appearing by video link from jail, Jones told the judge he plans to hire an attorney, but
the judge appointed a public defender to represent him for the time being.
Jones faces three counts of second-degree murder,
two counts of malicious wounding, and additional gun-related charges.
A man walked into a downtown Los Angeles Target store on Tuesday where he stabbed and critically
injured two people, including a nine-year-old boy, before he was
shot and killed by a security guard, LAPD Captain Elaine Morales. The security guard did observe the
suspect inside target with a knife. The security guard fired one round. The man, described as 40
years old and homeless, grabbed the large knife from a shelf and approached a nine-year-old boy,
saying several times he was going to kill him.
When the boy tried to move away, he stabbed the boy in the neck, wounding him in the shoulder,
then went to another area of the store where he stabbed a 25-year-old woman in the chest.
Maine Attorney General Aaron Frey says that new DNA testing hasn't shaken his confidence
in a man's conviction for the killing of a 12-year-old girl more than three decades ago.
Our friends at Crime Online.
Dennis Duchesne is serving a life sentence for the murder and sexual assault of Sarah Cherry, who disappeared while babysitting in Bowdoin in July 1988.
Her body was found two days later.
His attorney, John Nail, successfully argued for new DNA tests because of
improvements in the technology. Those tests conducted in California excluded Duchesne's
DNA from several items found at the crime scene, but couldn't exclude it from several other items.
Nail says he'll be filing a request for a new trial in six to eight weeks based on the test
results. A 17-year-old tries to steal 18 grand worth of handbags
from a Washington Louis Vuitton store.
Instead of running through what the teen thought was the door,
he crashes into a plate glass window and knocks himself out cold.
Well, at least he made it easy for the cops to cuff him.
He's now booked on theft and felony stupidity.
For the latest crime and justice news, go to crimeonline.com.
With this crime alert, I'm Nancy Grace. This is an iHeart podcast.