Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Crime Alert 12.14.22
Episode Date: December 14, 2022Nephew "accidentally" shoots uncle. Wrong way driver injures cops and pedestrians. Traffic stop turns into hours long man hunt. For more crime and justice news go to crimeonline.comSee omnystudio.co...m/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart Podcast.
Crime Alert, I'm Nancy Grace. Breaking crime news now, Joshua Corbin invites Uncle George
Bonnie to his home for drinks. Corbin pulls out his AK to show Bonnie and the gun, quote,
accidentally goes off. Uncle Bonnie shot in the back of the head. Corbin then dumps the
body and cleans up the crime scene. Nancy Corbin calls New Mexico police to report
the accidental shooting more than a week after the incident. The 41-year-old maintains that the
shooting was an accident despite his efforts to dispose of Bonnie's body and clean up the crime
scene, including when he burned several pieces of evidence. Corbin, 41, eventually caused Mexico cops to turn himself in. He's now
charged with murder one. Arizona cops stopped Nelius Horsley, the third, for driving the wrong
way on a busy street. He refuses to obey officers' orders, so cops try to physically remove him from
the vehicle. He manages to put the car in drive and peels off, injuring multiple cops and pedestrians.
And Nancy, the responding
officers called for backup when a passenger in the vehicle tried to run during the traffic stop.
Horsley became argumentative when cops asked him to turn off the car and exit the vehicle,
and they resorted to physically controlling the man. No one was seriously injured when Horsley
drove off, and the pedestrians are not pursuing hit-and-run charges.
Cops quickly find Horsley at the address listed on his driver's license, which he left with police.
He's booked on ag-assault on a cop with a deadly weapon.
Utah cops try to pull over a white van matching the description of a stolen car, but the driver, Boat Smith, speeds off. Smith, 22, leads cops on a chase, eventually ditching the vehicle and running on
foot. It turns out, Nancy, that Smith's van is not the stolen vehicle, and the Salt Lake Police
Department is left confused by Smith's decision to run. Authorities began a highly coordinated
effort to locate Smith and search for about an hour and a half before locating the man.
Well, the van's not stolen, so why did Smith run?
Cops finally find Smith hiding in a trash can and discover he's violating parole and driving on a suspended license.
He's now also charged with failure to stop.
More crime and justice news after this.
Now with the latest crime and justice breaking news, Crime Online's John Limley.
More than three decades after a bomb brought down Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, killing everyone on board, a former Libyan intelligence official accused of making the explosive has appeared in
federal court, charged with an act of international terrorism. Sydney Sumner is with Crime Online.
71-year-old Abu Agila Massoud, bearded, balding, and wearing a green jail uniform,
walked with a halting gait to the defense table. At one point, as the charges were being discussed,
Massoud said in Arabic that
he could not speak until he saw his attorney. A detention hearing is set for later in the month.
The New York-bound Pan Am flight exploded over Lockerbie less than an hour after takeoff from
London, December 21, 1988. Citizens from 21 countries were killed. Among the 190 Americans on board were 35 Syracuse University students
flying home for Christmas after a semester abroad. A family is pleading for information
on a college student missing in France. Kenny Deland Jr. is a study abroad student finishing
up a semester at the University Grenoble Alps in the southeastern part of France,
near the border of Italy and
Switzerland. His family told our friends at WROC-TV that he boarded a train November 27th,
and that was the last time they heard from him. Police pinged his phone November 30th,
and surveillance video shows Deland entering a store on December 3rd. DeLand, currently enrolled at St. John Fisher University
in Rochester, New York, spent $8.40 at the store and since then his family says there have been no
messages or social media posts, no bank charges or phone pings. The Supreme Court has agreed to
hear an appeal arising from a murder-for-hire ordered by the one-time leader
of a violent international crime ring. Crime Online's Sydney Sumner. The justices say they
will review the case of Adam Samia, who is serving a life sentence for killing a real estate broker
in the Philippines. Samia acted at the behest of Paul LaRue, a South African who led the crime
organization and cooperated with federal authorities after his arrest in 2012.
Samia's lawyers are challenging prosecutors' use of a confession made by another man,
a co-defendant in his murder trial, that they say implicated Samia in violation of his constitutional rights.
The co-defendant did not testify in his own defense,
so there was no opportunity for Samia's lawyers to question
the co-defendant. Jurors at the Los Angeles Rape and Sexual Misconduct Trial of Harvey Weinstein
have been deliberating for over a week now without reaching a verdict. The jury of eight men and four
women must decide on two counts of rape and five other sexual assault counts against the 70-year-old former
movie magnate. The jurors have had no questions for the court that might provide insight into
the status of their work. They were handed the case at the end of closing arguments December 2nd.
Henry Capuch is on a Florida vacation when a server at Jimmy B's Beach Bar goes for ice and discovers Kapush relieving himself
in the ice machine. Kapush shoves the server who asked him to stop, then continues to resist and
fight cops called to take him away. Kapush now charged with battery and disorderly conduct.
Why couldn't he just use a porta potty? For the latest crime and justice news,
go to CrimeOnline.com. With this crime alert, I'm Nancy Grace. This is an iHeart Podcast.