Quantcast
Channel: ABC 7 News
Viewing all 19561 articles
Browse latest View live

Pentagon plans to lift ban on transgender individuals in the military

$
0
0

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pentagon leaders are finalizing plans aimed at lifting the ban on transgender individuals in the military, with the goal of formally ending one of the last gender- or sexuality-based barriers to military service, senior U.S. officials told The Associated Press.

An announcement is expected this week, and the services would have six months to assess the impact of the change and work out the details, the officials said Monday. Military chiefs wanted time to methodically work through the legal, medical and administrative issues and develop training to ease any transition, and senior leaders believed six months would be sufficient.

The officials said Defense Secretary Ash Carter has asked his personnel undersecretary, Brad Carson, to set up a working group of senior military and civilian leaders to take an objective look at the issue. One senior official said that while the goal is to lift the ban, Carter wants the working group to look at the practical effects, including the costs, and determine whether it would affect readiness or create any insurmountable problems that could derail the plan. The group would also develop uniform guidelines.

During the six months, transgender individuals would still not be able to join the military, but any decisions to force out those already serving would be referred to the Pentagon's acting undersecretary for personnel, the officials said. One senior official said the goal was to avoid forcing any transgender service members to leave during that time.

Several officials familiar with the planning spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the issue publicly before the final details have been worked out.

In a statement to The Associated Press, Carter said, "we must ensure that everyone who's able and willing to serve has the full and equal opportunity to do so. And we must treat all of our people with the dignity and respect they deserve. Going forward the Department of Defense must and will continue to improve how we do both."

Some of the key concerns involved in the repeal of the ban include whether the military would conduct or pay for the medical costs, surgeries and other treatment associated with any gender transition, as well as which physical training or testing standards transgender individuals would be required to meet during different stages of their transition.

Officials said the military also wants time to tackle questions about where transgender troops would be housed, what uniforms they would wear, what berthing they would have on ships, which bathrooms they would use and whether their presence would affect the ability of small units to work well together. The military has dealt with many similar questions as it integrated the ranks by race, gender and sexual orientation.

Transgender people - those who identify with a different gender than they were born with and sometimes take hormone treatments or have surgery to develop the physical characteristics of their preferred gender - are banned from military service. But studies and other surveys have estimated that as many as 15,000 transgender people serve in the active duty military and the reserves, often in secret but in many cases with the knowledge of their unit commander or peers.

"Obviously this isn't finished, but Secretary Carter's clear statement of intent means that transgender service members should and will be treated with the same dignity as other service members," said Allyson Robinson, Army veteran and policy director for an association of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender military personnel called Service members, Partners, and Allies for Respect and Tolerance for All, or SPARTA.

The move follows several weeks of high level meetings in the Pentagon among top ranking military chiefs, secretaries and Defense Department leaders, including one on Monday involving Carter and the chiefs of the various services.

Military leaders have pointed to the gradual - and ultimately successful - transition after the ban on gays serving openly in the military was lifted in 2011. Although legislation repealing that ban passed Congress in late 2010, the military services spent months conducting training and reviews before the decision actually took effect the following September.

The latest Pentagon move comes just weeks after the Supreme Court upheld the right of same-sex couples to marry.

Officials familiar with the Pentagon meetings said the chiefs of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force did not express opposition to lifting the ban. Instead, they said the military leaders asked for time to figure out health care, housing and other questions and also to provide information and training to the troops to insure a smooth transition.

Although guidelines require that transgender individuals be dismissed from the military, the services in recent months have required more senior leaders to make the final decisions on those cases, effectively slowing the dismissal process.

The transgender issue came to the fore as the military struggled with how to deal with convicted national security leaker Chelsea Manning's request for hormone therapy and other treatment while she's in prison. Manning, arrested as Bradley Manning, is the first transgender military prisoner to request such treatment, and the Army approved the hormone therapy, under pressure from a lawsuit.

Manning, is serving a 35-year sentence. The former intelligence analyst was convicted in August 2013 of espionage and other offenses for sending more than 700,000 classified documents to WikiLeaks while working in Iraq.


Man shot twice when he comes home to NoMa apartment, finds 2 burglars

$
0
0

WASHINGTON (WJLA) - An investigation is underway into how two men got into a Northeast apartment building where police say a 26 year old man was shot not once but twice.

"I came out Sunday morning and saw all the police outside," one resident told ABC7.

According to the police report, the victim came home around 1:30 a.m. Sunday to find two men rummaging through his apartment at 140 M St. NE.

Police say when the two suspects noticed the man, they tried to flee, then one opened fire, striking the man in the stomach.

The victim began to run towards the elevators but was again shot by one of the suspects, this time in his buttocks.

Witnesses tell police the two men ran out using the stairs.

The victim was taken to the hospital, and is expected to be okay.

The apartment complex sent a letter to residents expressing concern over what they called an unfortunate situation.

The letter goes on to say the management was "notified of a reported altercation that resulted in one male guest being shot at the property."

"It's terrifying but sometimes people hold the door open for people they don't know so that I guess sometimes how hear things happen," said Mary Scully a resident who lives in a different section of the complex.

Donald Trump asks FBI to investigate 'El Chapo' related Twitter threat

$
0
0
NEW YORK (ABC News) - Presidential candidate Donald Trump has asked the FBI to look into a threatening tweet he received in the wake of a post on the social network he wrote about Mexican drug lord El Chapo, who recently escaped from prison, ABC News has learned.

Sources tell ABC News Trump contacted the FBIs Office in Manhattan on Monday.

The tweet from user @ElChap0Guzman, originally in Spanish, reads: Keep [expletive] around and I'm gonna make you swallow your [expletive] words... It was not clear who owns the account.

Trump has been tweeting about El Chapos escape to bolster his claims on immigration and border security.

I'm fighting for much more than myself," Trump said in a statement Monday. "I'm fighting for the future of our country which is being overrun by criminals. You can't be intimidated. This is too important."

A massive manhunt is currently under way for Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who escaped over the weekend from a maximum security prison in Mexico.

The leader of the Sinaloa cartel escaped from the Altiplano prison, 55 miles west of Mexico City, shortly before 9 p.m. Saturday, said Monte Alejandro Rubido, the head of Mexico's National Security Commission. He had been arrested in February 2014 after more than 10 years on the run.

Trump has been in the middle of a heated debate since raising the issue of illegal immigration when he announced his candidacy last month.

When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending their best, Trump said in his announcement speech. They're bringing drugs. They're bringing crime. They're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people. Since making those remarks, many companies including Univision, NBC and Macys have ended their business relationship with Trump. ABC News Aaron Katersky contributed to this report.

Authorities to hold press conferences this week on Lyon sisters case

$
0
0
WHEATON, Md. (WJLA) - Law enforcement officials are scheduled to hold two press conferences this week to discuss major developments in the case of the missing Lyon sisters.

The press conferences are slated for 12 p.m. Wednesday, July 15 and Thursday, July 16.

Wednesday's press conference will take place at the Mid-County Services Center on 2424 Reedie Dr. in Wheaton Md. Thursday's press conference will be held at the Central Virginia Community College, Main Training Room on 1633 Ventrure Blvd. in Bedford, Va.

10-year-old Katherine Lyon and 12-year-old Sheila Lyon disappeared in 1975 after walking to a mall for lunch.

In February 2014, police said they identified a convicted child sex offender in a Delaware prison as a person of interest in the case.

Investigators established that Lloyd Lee Welch, 57, was at the mall the day the girls vanished and was seen paying attention to them.

Caregiver charged with looting man's Leisure World apartment after he dies

$
0
0
SILVER SPRING, Md. (WJLA) - A woman grieving the loss of her elderly father, discovered his apartment ransacked, and every item inside missing.

After months of investigating, Montgomery County Police have charged the man's trusted live-in caregiver, Diane Harris, 45, of Norwich, Conn., in connection with the post death burglary.

Montgomery County District Court paperwork states Harris stole hundreds of items from the condo located along the 3500 block of Forest Edge Drive in the gated Leisure World retirement community. The list of items taken include, gold jewelry, computers, a blue recliner, dresser, mattress, folding dinner trays, silver glass candle sticks, a digital picture frame, dishes, pots, pans, and even the 91-year-old man's 2004 Cadillac DeVille.

"They stole the Cadillac?" Leisure World resident Gloria Sherman asked in a state of shock. "I can't think of any reason why somebody would think that's okay to do."

Detectives said Harris also snagged her deceased client's wallet, and then made thousands-of-dollars in charges with his American Express, Citibank and Sears credit cards. In one case, she spent $831 on a U-Haul truck and tow dolly, which the 45-year-old allegedly used to transport her plunder (Cadillac DeVille included) to her new home in Connecticut.

"This is horrendous," neighbor Ruth Hunter exclaimed. "She had to organize and actually come in here with a moving van to loot the man's house after he passed away."

All told, Harris is accused of taking $43,656 from a dead man who planned on gifting his belongings to loved ones. Calls to her cell phone listed in court paperwork went unanswered and unreturned.

"Our society is coming to have such a sense of entitlement... It's a societal problem of our values and our ethics and it needs to be addressed from the ground up," Hunter concluded.

Harris is charged with five crimes, including embezzlement, theft scheme between $10,000 and $100,000 and obtaining property from a vulnerable adult. She will return to Montgomery County on Wednesday, July 22, for her next court appearance.

K2 community meeting held to discuss dangers of synthetic drugs

$
0
0
WASHINGTON (WJLA) - Community Leaders in D.C.s Wards 7 and 8, east of the Anacostia River, held a meeting Monday evening at Campbell A. M. E Church to tell residents about the evils of the synthetic drug K2.

Leaders emphasized that the drug is not marijuana even though it's sometimes called synthetic marijuana.

The chemicals are unknown and dangerous, and people are overdosing and dying from it," said Arrington Dixon, chairman of the Anacostia Coordinating Council, a sponsor of the event.

But K2 is not just a problem east of the Anacostia River. A newly built plaza, Starburst Plaza, which features murals of Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks is quickly becoming a public eyesore because of the K2 users who have taken over this public place.

There is trash strewn from one side of the plaza to the other. The trash includes empty packets of K2 that go by the name Bizarro. Also tobacco from hallowed out cigars replaced with K2 are used to make a drug-laced cigar.

Asked about the campaign against K2, Darryl Finney who said he was not a user, insisted that theres nothing the authorities can do to stamp out K2.

"Its not going to go away and you can't enforce it by law because it's not an illegal drug. Its a chemically made substance," said Finney.

A big problem for authorities is that the manufacturers of various substances that go by the general name K2 change chemical properties once authorities deem one set of chemicals illegal.

For ANC Commissioner Kathy Henderson what has happened to the plaza is a travesty. She said people have started referring to that area as the zombie corridor.

Henderson said with all the people sitting around amidst trash and drugs, "they're gone on K2 and it's a public safety and health crisis."

On July 10, Mayor Muriel Bowser signed into law emergency legislation to crack down on retail stores that sell K2 products. The penalty for a first offense is a four day shut down and $10,000 fine. For a second offense the penalty is permanent closure and a $20,000 fine.

Mother, uncle charged with murder in beating death of 9-year-old Hagerstown boy

$
0
0
HAGERSTOWN, Md. (WJLA) - Hagerstown Police arrested and charged two more people in connection with a child abuse death that has horrified the city.

On Monday, both the mother and the uncle of 9-year-old Jack Garcia were taken into custody.

Police said 26-year-old Oriana Iris Garcia and her brother, 24-year-old Jacob Andrew Barajas, have both been charged with second degree murder and child abuse resulting in death.

Police had already charged Garcia's boyfriend, 30-year-old Robert Leroy Wilson, with four charges. Police believe he severely beat Garcia after the boy took a piece of birthday cake that didn't belong to him.

The beating allegedly happened June 30 at Wilson and the family's apartment on Lynnehaven Drive. Garcia died five days later.

Police said that Oriana Garcia at first refused to let emergency responders treat her son even though she knew Wilson had seriously assaulted him.

In a written update police said Barajas handcuffed the boy before the beating, "allowing Wilson to strike Jack Garcia without resistance."

Authorities believe both Oriana Garcia and Barajas had participated in past physical abuse of Jack as well.

Monday night Hagerstown Police told ABC7 they anticipate Wilson will face new charges after a grand jury convenes. Wilson was charged in connection with the alleged beating of Jack, but the charges were filed before the boy died.

The announcement of the charges against Jack Garcia's mother and uncle came a day after hundreds gathered at Hagerstown City Park for a vigil for Jack Garcia.

Garcia had only lived in Hagerstown a few months. Police said he and his family are from the West Coast. Police said Monday's arrests came after detectives learned that Oriana Garcia and her brother were planning on going back there.

11-year-old girl missing, last seen in Southwest D.C.

$
0
0
WASHINGTON (WJLA) - The Metropolitan Police Department is seeking the public's assistance in locating a missing girl.

11-year-old Yanria Duncan was last seen Sunday, July 12 on the 1300 block of Half Street in Southwest D.C.

Duncan is described as a black female, 52 tall, weighing 110 pounds with brown eyes and black hair in braids. Duncan was last seen wearing a white t-shirt and burgundy overalls.

Authorities ask anyone with information regarding the whereabouts of Yanria Duncan to call the Metropolitan Police Department at 202-727-9099 or the Youth and Family Services Division at 202-576-6768, or 911.


Washington, D.C. Weather Forecast: Severe storms later today

$
0
0
This Morning:
Mostly cloudy and very humid. Patchy fog.
Temperatures: 70s
Wind: Light
This Afternoon:
Scattered showers and severe storms.
Highs: 85-90°
Wind: SSW 5-10 mph
Tonight:
Mostly cloudy. Scattered showers and storms.
Lows: 68-75°
Wind: W 5 mph

For more updates, follow me on Facebook and Twitter!

Stay weather alert today with strong to severe storms possible this afternoon and evening. High temperatures will climb into the upper 80s with very high humidity. A cold front, approaching from the west, will trigger thunderstorms later today. The Storm Prediction Center highlights our area under the 'Slight' risk category. Storms that develop could contain damaging winds, large hail, and heavy downpours. Download the StormWatch7 weather app to stay ahead of the storms while you're on-the-go. We'll have to monitor the storm development around Nationals Park where Taylor Swift will perform again this evening. The front will slide through late Wednesday ushering in drier, less humid air. A lingering shower is possible Wednesday with breezy NW winds. We round out the work week with beautiful weather. Expect slightly below average highs in the low to mid 80s with comfortable humidity. The heat, humidity, and late day storm risks return for next weekend.

Stay with StormWatch7 via ABC7 News / NewsChannel8 / Mobile App.

Garner family to discuss $5.9 million settlement in chokehold death

$
0
0

NEW YORK (AP) - The family of a black man who died after being placed in a white police officer's chokehold is holding a news conference Tuesday to discuss the $5.9 million settlement it reached with the city days before the anniversary of his death.

The news conference will be held by attorneys for Eric Garner's family and the Rev. Al Sharpton, who is calling on New Yorkers to attend a rally Saturday in honor of Garner and other victims of police misconduct.

The settlement was announced Monday. Garner's family in October filed a notice of claim, the first step in filing a lawsuit against the city, asking for $75 million.

Garner, who was 43, was stopped last July 17 outside a Staten Island convenience store because police officers believed he was selling loose, untaxed cigarettes. A video shot by an onlooker shows Garner telling the officers to leave him alone and refusing to be handcuffed.

Officer Daniel Pantaleo placed his arm around Garner's neck to take him down. Garner, who had asthma, is heard gasping "I can't breathe!" 11 times before losing consciousness. He was pronounced dead later at a hospital.

The city medical examiner found the police chokehold contributed to Garner's death. But a grand jury declined to indict the officer in the death. A federal probe is ongoing.

Chokeholds are banned by New York Police Department policy. Pantaleo says he used a legal takedown maneuver known as a seatbelt, not a chokehold.

Garner's death sparked demonstrations and became a flashpoint in a national debate about relations between police and minority communities.

While the city has a legal department that fields lawsuits, the comptroller's office also can settle claims. Comptroller Scott Stringer has made a point of doing that in civil rights cases, saying that resolving them quickly saves the city money on legal fees.

"Following a judicious review of the claim and facts of this case, my office was able to reach a settlement with the estate of Eric Garner that is in the best interests of all parties," Stringer said.

The city did not admit any liability.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said that hopefully Garner's family "can find some peace and finality" from the settlement. He was scheduled to speak Tuesday at a church memorial service in Garner's honor.

Longtime civil rights attorney Jonathan Moore, the family's lawyer, said there also was a settlement with the Richmond University Medical Center, which responded to the scene. That settlement is confidential, and there was no one available at the hospital to comment.

Sharpton said the settlement to the family was deserved but didn't resolve the larger questions around policing and minorities.

"We did not march and build a movement just to get money," he said.

Rusty part two: Animal escapes enclosure at National Zoo

$
0
0

WASHINGTON, D.C. (WJLA) -- A male agouti escaped from his enclosure at the National Zoo Monday night before he was herded back 30 minutes later Zoo officials said in a press release Tuesday. He was unharmed in the process.

According to the Zoo's press release, the agouti, named Macadamia, escaped just after 7 p.m. Monday.

"Agoutis are large beautiful rodents about the size of a large house cat," The Zoo explained in a press release.

Zoo staff reportedly located an escape hole in the "industrial stainless-steel mesh and deduced that the agouti chewed through the mesh."

"Having an animal get out of its primary enclosure is always a risk,the same way that you know a dog can get out of their yard you don't expect it but we plan for it just on the outside chance it would happen" said Steve Sarro, Curator at the Smithsonian's National Zoo.

"The animal was out of its enclosure behind the small mammal house and that's where it was seen and our staff was able to keep eyes on it," he added. "It was a perfect textbook recapture, we just got him in an enclosed area and moved it back into an area off exhibit," said Sarro.

French celebrate Bastille Day amid heightened security

$
0
0

PARIS (AP) - France is celebrating Bastille Day with a spectacular display of fighter jets - and with anti-terror forces marching in the yearly parade in Paris for the first time as the country's leadership tries to show its muscle against extremists abroad and at home.

The national holiday comes after the country was hit by terror attacks in January that killed 20 people, including the three attackers, and after an extremist beheaded his employer last month and caused an explosion that injured two people.

One spectator, Philippe Bastelisa, 55, who lives in Paris, said "it was really important that (security forces) participated in the parade, considering the situation right now and the drama of the beginning of the year."

Another, Katy-Pauli Giraud, 58, led a group of spectators from Calais to the festivities, and called it "great" that there was heightened protection against threats on such an important holiday.

"I'm not scared. I feel secure," she said.

French President Francois Hollande presided over the yearly parade on the Champs-Elysees, meeting and greeting members of the military. Alongside him was his guest of honor, Mexico's president Enrique Pena Nieto, whose government is smarting following the audacious prison break of a major drug lord.

The parade gave special recognition to the three armies, more than 10,000 soldiers, who participated in France's stepped-up security measures following the attack on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. For the first time, accolades also went to emergency first-responders as well as several elite units of the national police force and gendarmerie specializing in counterterror and hostage kidnappings.

Hollande additionally commemorated the 70th anniversary of France's liberation from Nazi Germany, saluting members of France's Order of Liberation. The spectacle included nearly 100 military planes and helicopters.

How to get a free meal from Chick-fil-A today for 'Cow Appreciation Day'

$
0
0

WASHINGTON (WJLA) -- Chick-fil-A is giving away free meals and entrees to customers dressed in cow attire today.

The fast food chain is celebrating its 11th annual Cow Appreciation Day July 14 by awarding free meals to those "fully dressed as a cow" and free entrees to those in "partial cow attire," according to the company's website.

To qualify as "fully dressed as a cow," a person must attempt to dress as the animal from head to toe. A person wearing a single cow accessory such as a hat or a vest will be deemed as wearing "partial cow attire."

More than one million customers participated in Cow Appreciation Day last year, according to a Chick-fil-A press release.

Chick-fil-A celebrated the special occasion on social media with a series of #CowAppreciationDay tweets. 


Visit Chick-fil-A's restaurant locator to find the location nearest you.

"How does it feel??": Man holds sign at scene of shooting of a police officer

$
0
0

ST. LOUIS (KDNL) -- A photo of a man in St. Louis holding a sign that reads "how does it feel??" at the scene of a shooting of a police officer is going viral.

A man with this sign has shown up to the scene of the shooting of a police officer this morning in Central West End.

Posted by ABC St. Louis KDNL on Tuesday, July 14, 2015

As of 2 p.m. on Tuesday the photo, which was taken by a photojournalist for our sister station ABC KDNL, has been shared more than 2,500 in four hours.

D.C. lawmaker wants to impound cars of suspected 'johns'

$
0
0

WASHINGTON (AP) - A D.C. Council member wants to combat what he calls a rise in street prostitution by impounding the cars of people who pick up prostitutes.

Councilmember Jack Evans introduced a measure on Tuesday that he calls the "Honey, I lost the car" bill. It would require police to tow and impound a car when officers have probable cause to suspect it's been used by a so-called "john."

Evans says the intent is to deter people from picking up prostitutes because they'd be embarrassed to lose their vehicle. The Democratic councilmember says people from out of state have been driving to downtown Washington to solicit prostitutes.


Ingmar Guandique, convicted of killing Chandra Levy, will stay in prison waiting for retrial

$
0
0

WASHINGTON (AP) - A man convicted of killing Washington intern Chandra Levy will stay in prison while waiting to be re-tried.

D.C. Superior Court Judge Robert Morin ruled Tuesday that Ingmar Guandique would be held while waiting for his 2016 trial. Guandique is also being held on an immigration detainer.

Guandique was convicted in 2010 but his attorneys requested a new trial because they said a key witness in the case gave false testimony. Prosecutors said in May that they believe the jury's verdict was correct but would no longer oppose the request for a new trial. A judge granted it in June.

Levy's 2001 disappearance created a national sensation after the 24-year-old was romantically linked with then-U.S. Rep. Gary Condit. Condit, a California Democrat, was ruled out as a suspect.

Metro taking action after station manager altercation caught on camera

$
0
0

Alexandria, Va. (WJLA) -- Metro is taking action after an altercation between a Metro rider and a Braddock Metro station manager, that was all caught on tape.


In the video, which was filmed back in May, you hear the man say his daughter is going to have an accident if she doesn't use the restroom.


As the two men are walking, you hear the altercation play out, including the station manager yelling at the man, and the man yelling back "don't touch me."
Metro says they apologized to the customer. Watch the full video here:


In a statement, Metro spokesman Dan Stessel says " the behavior shown on the video is unacceptable to us and appropriate action is being taken."
In the video, the man says the two were arguing for ten minutes, the video however, is only about a minute long.

Donald Trump attends Albemarle Estate opening in Va.

$
0
0
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (WJLA) - It didn't take long for a ribbon cutting at Donald Trump's winery to turn into a political campaign stop

Trump has been at the center of a self-imposed firestorm on illegal immigrants. In D.C. the debate is centered on his development of the old post office and whether construction workers there are in the U.S. legally.

Tuesday at the Albemarle County event, the Republican presidential candidate said those workers are legal.

They've checked it very carefully and everyone says is there and by the way if you find someone...let me know we'll immediately fire that person, said Trump.

Trump added I think in the history of this country there's never been a building built that has been so careful having to do with illegal immigrants.

In the wake of Trump's comments about illegal immigrants, several high profile restaurateurs have pulled out of the downtown Washington Hotel, something Trump said they may regret.

They're going to pay me a big deposit, said Trump. They're going to pay me a lot of rent and they're never going to go in because they thought it was politically correct. Now all of a sudden everyone wants to go in.

While this was a local event, Trump talked about the U.S. debt and said it could be like Greece on steroids...and added the U.S. needs to take back its jobs.

Trump used the purchase of this property as an example of a great deal...and said the "U.S. should be making better foreign trade deals to help fully restore the economy."

Man tries to lure, grab girl at Herndon school bus stop; girl breaks away, runs home

$
0
0

HERNDON, Va. (WJLA) - A man tried to entice a girl at a school bus stop to come to his house early Monday morning in Herndon, police say. When she refused and walked away, he tried to grab her from behind and tried to force her to come with him, but the girl broke free and ran to her home.

The girl’s mother contacted police. Herndon Police responded and searched the area but didn’t find the man.

The girl was described by police as a juvenile, but no age was given. It happened in in the 1300 block of Springtide Place.

The man who approached her is described by police as a “Hispanic male, 35 to 45 years of age, tall with a thin build, short black curly hair, wearing a long sleeve green shirt with white stripes, khaki colored work pants with paint stains and black shoes.”

The Herndon Police Department asks anyone who may have information about this incident to call 703-435-6846.

Injuries of 9-year-old Hagerstown boy beaten to death 'consistent with torture,' charging docs show

$
0
0

HAGERSTOWN, Md. (WJLA) -- Injuries on the body of Jack Garcia, a 9-year-old who was allegedly beaten to death by his mother and uncle, were "consistent with torture," charging documents show.

The doctor who observed Garcia after he was transported to Children's National Hospital noted the boy had extensive head and brain injuries and extensive bruising consistent with blunt or compressive force, according to the documents.

Oriana Garcia, Jack's mother, said in a statement that her boyfriend, 30-year-old Robert Leroy Wilson, would strike Jack in the leg with a "wooden sword thing" if he was lying. The mother also said that Jack had been restrained with handcuffs "for a few hours at a time" in the past, according to the statement.

On Monday, Oriana Garcia and Jack's uncle Jacob Andrew Barajas were both taken into custody and charged with murder.

Oriana Garcia charging documents

Viewing all 19561 articles
Browse latest View live