Society's Child
According to a police statement, the girl was repeatedly harassed by the 22-year-old man while she waited at a bus terminal in Minden, near Hanover, with her 14-year-old friend just before 9pm local time on Saturday.
The girl and her friend sought safety from the man, and his 21-year-old friend, by running to a nearby bus, where the bus driver, 41, let them on. However, the persistent pair also got onboard and the 22-year-old dragged the girl from the bus by her hair - after it had started to move.
Except he didn't.
Nathan Phillips served in the United States Marines from 1972-1976.
He claimed he was a Recon Ranger - there is no such thing as a Marine Recon Ranger, Rangers are in the Army.
Retired US Navy SEAL Don Shipley, who is known for publicly outing people for 'stolen valor,' obtained Nathan Phillips' DD-214 form and exposed the truth.
The woman gave birth to a boy Dec. 29. Staff members told a 911 operator that they had not known she was pregnant.
"From the minute we first became aware of the crime, we have virtually worked non stop seven days a week to resolve this case," Phoenix Police Chief Jeri Williams said in announcing the arrest Wednesday morning.
Williams joined Mayor Thelda Williams at Phoenix police headquarters to provide an "important" update on the investigation into the rape.

Zoo officials said a lion and a lioness were in the enclosure and the lioness attacked the man first.
A man was mauled to death by lions on Sunday at Chhatbir Zoo in Zirakpur, around 20 km from Chandigarh.
According to zoo officials, the man entered the enclosure by scaling an over-25-feet wall and as soon as he crossed over, he was attacked by two lions.
Officials said the incident happened at 2.20 pm and the man, who is in his early 30s, was yet to be identified.
"The injury on his neck was deep. He was taken to civil hospital in a critical condition where he died," said the zoo's field director M Sudhagarb.
A lion and a lioness were in the enclosure, he said, adding the female lion attacked the man first.
Called "a map of deadbeat debtors", the program allows users to find out whether there are any debtors within 500 meters.
The debtor's information is available to check in the program, making it easier for people to whistle-blow on debtors capable of paying their debts.
"It's a part of our measures to enforce our rulings and create a socially credible environment," said a spokesman of the court.
Comment: The app discussed is a further extension of the "social credit" system being implemented in China. A two-edged sword, as it is meant to encourage pro-social behaviour, helping to govern the world's most populous country, but also a means of punishing those who step out of line. Who determines the line?
China's building a digital dictatorship through "social credit" to exert control over its 1.4 billion citizens
[M]most don't seem to comprehend the all-encompassing control social credit is likely to have, and there's been no public debate about implementing the system inside China. In private, there's been some disquiet in the educated middle classes about the citizen score being the only criterion for character assessment.
- China's all-seeing credit score system rewards good behavior, punishes bad
- China assigns each citizen a 'social credit score' based on behavior to determine trustworthiness
- Pick up poo or we take the dog: Chinese city rolls out 'social credit' system for pet owners
Detective Luther Hall's statements about the night he was attacked were used by the FBI to justify searches of four officers' cellphones and associated accounts as agents investigated both Hall's attack and the arrest or detention of other protesters following the Sept. 15, 2017, acquittal of former St. Louis police Officer Jason Stockley.
They provide the most detailed retelling of Hall's version of the attack and new information about the resulting FBI investigation.
That investigation resulted in charges in November against four police officers. Officers Dustin Boone, Randy Hays and Christopher Myers were accused of the physical assault and charged with depriving Hall of his constitutional rights and conspiracy to obstruct justice. Myers also is charged with destruction of evidence, accused of destroying Hall's cellphone. Officer Bailey Colletta was accused of lying to a federal grand jury investigating the attack. All have pleaded not guilty. Hays' lawyer, Brian Millikan, declined to comment. The other lawyers did not respond to requests for comment Monday.
The actor, former speechwriter to President Richard M. Nixon, and political commentator even made comparisons to Adolf Hitler.
Ocasio-Cortez has made headlines for advocating higher marginal tax rates of up to 70 percent on earnings past $10 million in income as well as a "Green New Deal" to tackle the climate crisis.
Greece Police Chief Patrick Phelan said the probe kicked off after a 16-year-old student showed a picture of another person on his phone to friends in the cafeteria and "made a comment to the effect 'he looks like the next school shooter, doesn't he?'"
Other students alarmed by that student's remarks reported them to school officials.
Through a series of subsequent interviews, police were eventually led to what Phelan said was a "serious plot" to attack the community of Islamberg in Delaware County, near the Catskills.
During the investigation, police recovered 23 firearms and three homemade bombs, Phelan said.
The horrible case of alleged gross negligence and animal cruelty happened in the far-eastern Amursk Region. The shelter is located in Chigiry, a satellite village of the provincial capital Blagoveshchensk. Until recently, it had a contract with the authorities to house stray dogs after they are caught by animal control services.
The contract expired in December, however, and the owner, Vyacheslav Zolotarev, apparently decided that caring for the animals was no longer his job. Instead, he and his wife went on a trip to Thailand, according to reports in the local media, but apparently made no effort to ensure that the animals were cared for in their absence.
On Monday, the Washington Post quietly issued a correction to their story about the activist, saying that while he served in the Marines, he was never deployed to Vietnam.
"Correction: Earlier versions of this story incorrectly said that Native American activist Nathan Phillips fought in the Vietnam War. Phillips served in the U.S. Marines from 1972 to 1976 but was never deployed to Vietnam," the update reads.














Comment: For more on Nathan Phillips and this recent incident: