Society's Child
On Thursday, Jereh Lubrin, 30, Rafael Rodriguez, 28, and Matthew Farris, 28, were all found guilty of beating Michael Tyree to death, according to a press release from the District Attorney's office. All three are facing 15 years to life in prison. They are scheduled to be sentenced on September 1.
"Michael Tyree's tragedy was worthy of our outrage, his death will never be invisible," District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement. "We will think of him as we work toward making the justice system a better, more fair and safe place for the vulnerable men and women suffering from mental illness."
The three guards, who have been out on $1.5 million bail each, were taken away in handcuffs after the verdict.
New Secret Service director Randolph Ailes told reporters Thursday he recently changed the policy.
Previously, agents were disqualified for using pot more than a certain number of times, but candidates will now be considered based on the last time they used it, as well as the amount of time between the final use and when they applied to the Secret Service.
Ailes said he hopes the change will help boost numbers at the Secret Service.
Currently, the agency has around 6,500 people on staff. Ailes would like that number to reach 10,000 in the next eight years.
The Secret Service is best known for protecting the president and former U.S. leaders and their families but it also investigates and works to prevent financial crimes.
The operation is taking place at a home on Jonathon Street and is expected to wrap up before midnight. Law enforcement personnel from other regions are also on scene. The operation involves an incident that apparently happened out of state. Suspects tied to that incident were tracked down in the Detroit area.
FBI spokesperson Timothy Wiley declined to comment on specifics of the operation, stating only:
FBI personnel are on scene conducting a law enforcement operation. There is no threat to public safety.More details are expected to be released sometime Friday.

Eliza Wasni, 16, of Chicago has been charged as an adult with first-degree murder in the slaying of Uber driver Grant Nelson on May 30, 2017.
Eliza Wasni, 16, kept her eyes mostly to the floor Wednesday afternoon as a Cook County judge ordered her held without bail in the killing of Grant Nelson of Wilmette — an act prosecutors called "heinous" and "not provoked in any manner."
Prosecutors said Nelson, 34, had picked up Wasni early Tuesday a few blocks from a Walmart in Skokie and, minutes into the ride, near the corner of Touhy and Lincoln avenues in Lincolnwood, she began stabbing him.
He managed to pull over his Hyundai and run to a nearby condominium building lobby, where he pushed buzzers and yelled, "Help me, help me. I'm going to die," Assistant State's Attorney Michelle Cunningham said.
Wasni took off in Nelson's car but quickly struck a median and then ran off on foot, Cunningham said. She was found nearby wearing just a bra and leggings; a bloodstained Chicago Cubs shirt was found nearby, and a trail of blood led responding officers to the condominium lobby and then to the seriously injured Uber driver, Cunningham said.
"The utter depravity of the crime — a father killing his infant son — speaks for itself," Judge Elpedio N. Vitale said during the sentencing at the Middletown court, reported the Hartford Courant.
Moreno, 23, will not be eligible for parole as murder is one of five crimes in the state that automatically disqualifies those convicted.
Speaking outside the court, Aaden's mother, Adrianne Oyola, said her son could "rest in peace knowing that justice is served." She added that she "felt bad" for Moreno's mother, Denise. "She done the best she did with her son, it is not her fault."
A spokeswoman for Hillel Yaffe Medical Center, where both the teen and the soldier were being treated, said the girl died of her wounds early Friday, Reuters reported.
The incident took place at the gate of the Mevo Dotan Israeli settlement, near the town of Jenin, in the northern West Bank on Thursday.
Some 14,200 tickets were set aside for those in attendance on the night of the attack on May 22, but "more than 25,000"people applied for access to the concert at the Old Trafford cricket ground this weekend.
"At Ticketmaster we are doing everything we can - including extending today's deadline - to ensure that tickets go to the actual fans and not the opportunists or touts who have also been applying for free tickets," Ticketmaster said in a statement sent to RT.
The decision was taken on Thursday, with 69 legislators voting in favor. An attempt to push the renaming through the same council failed last December, when it won only 41 votes. This time, the bill's sponsors managed to collect the 61-vote benchmark needed to pass the draft into law.
Shukhevich is a controversial figure in Ukrainian history. Born in what is now western Ukraine, he joined the ranks of a radical, nationalist group called the Ukrainian Military Organization in 1925, when his homeland was part of Poland. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, he was involved in killing a number of Polish officials and ethnic Ukrainians that the organization considered to be collaborators.
In 1935, he and some of his fellow terrorists were caught, and Shukhevich was handed down a prison sentence that he served until 1937.
In 1941, Shukhevich became commander of the Nachtigall Battalion, a Nazi German unit formed from Ukrainian nationalists drafted to fight the Soviet Union. According to some accounts, the unit was involved in pogroms in the city of Lvov in late June of 1941, though those allegations are disputed.
The unit was finally recalled and disbanded because its Nazi superiors disapproved when the nationalists declared an independent Ukrainian state allied with Germany with Lvov as its capital. However, Shukhevich continued his service in Belarus as a Nazi company commander in Nachtigall's successor, Schutzmannschaft Battalion 201, which was used for guard duty, sweeping woods for partisans, and rounding up the Jewish population.
The Egyptian criminal court of the Nile Delta province of Dakahlia delivered its initial judgment in early May but later referred it to the highest religious authority, the Grand Mufti, for approval, which is not binding but is a routine procedure for death sentences in Egypt. The final judgment was delivered on Thursday.
The man, 35, was accused of kidnapping a girl, just 20 months old, from her house in the Nile Delta village of Belqas and raping her. The man took the girl to a secluded location, raped her and fled the scene, leaving the toddler in a pool of her own blood, according to the investigators.
Europol's mandate is to combat serious international crime and terrorism, including cybercrime. As part of its operations to end child abuse and human trafficking within the 28 EU member states, the organization has launched the new initiative 'Trace an Object.'














Comment: See also: Video shows cops beat father, ignore cries for help until he dies