Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Man Goes Straight to Police When Cousin Hints He Killed His Girlfriend | Crime Alert 03.13.25

Episode Date: March 13, 2025

Cops find woman's body stuffed in trash bag after a family member calls police with concern for his cousin's girlfriend. Family Dollar Thief caught by fingerprints on stolen goods.  For more crim...e and justice news go to crimeonline.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to an iHeart Podcast. Crime Alert, I'm Nancy Grace, breaking crime news now. A Provo, Utah man calls police worried cousin, Othuro Carrion, has hurt his girlfriend, Lisa Hyde. Carrion allegedly tells cousin he, quote, pulled a rick, which the cousin took to Maine, referencing a family member who murdered his girlfriend. The cousin tells cops Carrion then nodded toward a shed in the backyard.
Starting point is 00:00:31 Following up on the man's claims, cops immediately smell decomp coming from the shed. Inside, find body parts stuffed in trash bags. Nancy, cops made contact with Carrion before searching the shed, who admitted there was a dead body inside. Cops found Hyde's body stuffed into a trash bag. Hyde's hands were bound behind her back. She had another trash bag wrapped tightly around her head and taped to her neck, bruising on her thighs, shoulders, and arms, a broken sternum, and several broken teeth. As Carrion was escorted to a police car in handcuffs, he called his cousin a snitch and commented that he never should have told him. Arturo Carrion, 53, charged with murder. When Michael Gizmo Gonzalez walks out of a Florida family dollar with
Starting point is 00:01:16 about 50 bucks worth of cleaning supplies and snacks, an employee follows him trying to stop the robbery. Employee 65 confronts Gonzalez as he hands the stolen groceries to a passenger in a car parked outside the store. Gonzalez responds by hitting her in the face with a bag of goldfish. Gonzalez takes off in the car while bystanders call police. Cops track down Gonzalez using fingerprints lifted from the bag of crackers. Gonzalez, 29, now charged with strong-arm robbery. And what about assault by goldfish? More crime and justice news after this.
Starting point is 00:01:54 Now with the latest crime and justice breaking news, Crime Online's John Lindley. A Kansas man will spend the rest of his life behind bars for the murders of two sheriff's deputies. 36-year-old Antoine Fielder has been sentenced to two life terms for the 2018 killings of Wyandotte County deputies Teresa King and Patrick Rohr. The deputies were escorting him between a courthouse and jail in Kansas City, Kansas when he overpowered them and opened fire. 35-year-old Rohrer died at the scene.
Starting point is 00:02:25 King, 44, succumbed to her injuries the next day. Fielder pleaded guilty in December to two counts of capital murder and one count of aggravated robbery, avoiding the death penalty. His violent history extends further. He had twice been tried for the 2015 murder of 22-year-old Kelsey Iwones, but both cases ended in hung juries, forcing prosecutors to drop the charges. Authorities say that in December 2017, Fielder shot and killed 55-year-old Rosemary Harmon in Kansas City, Missouri, and wounded her friend. A stolen gun linked him to that crime. At the time of the deputy's killings, he was already
Starting point is 00:03:05 facing murder and carjacking charges in Missouri and Kansas. Iwones' family, devastated by their loss, had long feared Fielder would kill again. Now to New York State, where a former Long Island detective has been convicted of lying to federal agents to shield a notorious mafia family's illegal operations. Crime Online correspondent Sydney Sumner reports. Hector Rosario, a 15-year veteran of the Nassau County Police Department, was found guilty of making false statements to the FBI. Prosecutors revealed that Rosario accepted $1,500 monthly payments from the Bonanno crime family, one of New York's infamous Five Families. In
Starting point is 00:03:45 return, Rosario tipped off mobsters about ongoing investigations and orchestrated fake raids targeting rival gambling operations linked to the Genovese family. One such sham raid on a rival casino was so unconvincing that patrons immediately recognized it as illegitimate. U.S. Attorney John Durham condemned Rosario as a corrupt detective who prioritized personal gain over his duty to the public. Nassau County District Attorney Ann Donnelly echoed this sentiment, stating Rosario disgracefully compromised his colleagues' investigative efforts. While Rosario was acquitted of obstruction of justice, a charge carrying up to 20 years in prison, his conviction for lying to federal agents could result in a five-year sentence. His defense team plans to appeal, arguing the prosecution relied heavily
Starting point is 00:04:30 on testimonies from cooperating mobsters with questionable credibility. This case is part of a broader crackdown on organized crime in the New York suburbs, leading to charges against nine individuals associated with illegal gambling and other illicit activities. Rosario remains free on bail as he awaits sentencing. Thanks, John. Maria Nina Miller, 34, on the job at Dandy Mini Mart, shares plans to take two days off to visit husband Kenneth's ill mother, Charleston, West Virginia. She and Kenneth drive to the hospital but have an argument in the parking lot.
Starting point is 00:05:02 Kenneth, who's in the Army, claims Maria insists on going to Virginia Beach, so he drops her off at an unknown apartment complex there. Four months pass and she's finally reported missing by the U.S. Army. In February, the FBI Pittsburgh Field Office, Pennsylvania State Police, and West Virginia State Police collaborate, offering a combined $7,000 reward for any info that could solve the case. Maria Nina Miller, 5'1", 125 pounds, black hair, brown eyes, now 46 years old. If you have info on the whereabouts of Maria Nina Miller, please contact Pennsylvania State Police in Tawanda, 570-265-2186. For the latest crime and justice news, go to CrimeOnline.com. And please, join us for our daily podcast, Crime Stories,
Starting point is 00:05:54 where we do our best to find missing people, especially children, and solve unsolved homicides. With this crime alert, I'm Nancy Grace. You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.

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