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潮州白癜风早期症状表现
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发布时间: 2025-05-31 18:40:18北京青年报社官方账号
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  潮州白癜风早期症状表现   

dousing her with a toxic chemical and setting her on fire inside her Florida home.Police said the woman has died from her injuries.According to an arrest report, police responded to a home in the Colonnades at Glen Oaks community in Boca Raton, Florida, around 9:15 a.m. on Monday.Officers said they found the 75-year-old victim unconscious on the laundry room floor with injuries to the head and severe burns to a majority of her body.A worker for a delivery company that's contracted to deliver appliances for Best Buy said he and 21-year-old Jorge Dupre Lachazo delivered a washer and dryer to the victim's home Monday morning.After the appliances were installed, the witness said he went outside to return some phone calls, and Lachazo remained inside the home with the victim to acclimate her to the appliances and answer any questions.The witness said he "heard multiple screams from inside the residence," so he entered the home and noticed blood on laundry room floor, and the victim on the floor near the blood.The witness told police "Lachazo was acting very strange," and said he had to leave. The witness said Lachazo got in the delivery truck and fled the scene.According to an arrest report, officers stopped Lachazo in the 7100 block of W. Glades Road. Police said "Lachazo was very sweaty and was shaking as if he was nervous."The hair on his legs was burned and there were ashes on his legs, police said.The arrest report stated officers found burn marks in the laundry room along with a "strong odor of a chemical." In addition, "a wooded handled mallet was on top of the washing machine. Blood was observed on the mallet."There was also a glass wine bottle on the floor, and long hair in dried blood on the bottle.In the kitchen, police said the stove was pulled away from the wall, and a blue metal can of Acetone without a lid was on the counter. All the burners on the kitchen stove were turned on.Detectives said Lachazo told them he was inside the victim's home showing her how to use her appliances. He admitted to hitting her on the head with the mallet and knocking her out.Police said Lachazo claimed he then got a chemical from the garage."(Lachazo) made a physical motion with his hands indicating that he doused (the victim) and room with the chemical agent. He then made a motion with his hands that the chemical spontaneously combusted," the arrest report said.Lachazo said he then got in the delivery truck and fled the scene.Police said "Lachazo admitted to recently using cocaine, as well as marijuana through a vape." However, the motive of the crime remains unclear.According to his arrest report, Lachazo's fingerprints were found on the can of Acetone.Police said the victim suffered multiple skull and facial fractures, as well as severe brain bleeding and second and third-degree burns over the majority of her body.Lachazo is facing charges of attempted second-degree murder, aggravated battery on a person 65 years of age or older, and arson causing great bodily harm. Those charges could be upgraded now that the victim has passed away.In court on Tuesday, a judge denied Lachazo bond, and ordered him to not have any contact with the victim, her family, witnesses, or the business he worked for.Best Buy said it's taking action following the attack, suspending its relationship with that local subcontracted delivery company and also hiring an independent security firm to review its screening and safety programs.It's also closing its Boca Raton, Florida, store Tuesday out of respect for the victim.The company's CEO, Corie Barry, released this statement to WPTV:"One of our customers in the Boca Raton, Florida area was tragically attacked yesterday, suffering extremely serious injuries. We are profoundly sorry and offer our deepest sympathies to our customer and her family. Out of respect for them, we have closed our Boca Raton store today. Beyond working with law enforcement in any way we can, we have suspended our relationship with the small, local company that was sub-contracted to deliver to the customer’s home. In the hours after we initially learned what happened, we immediately re-visited our delivery and installation programs and, in the coming days, will do two things: 1) ensure all our processes were followed and 2) work with our delivery partners to do anything more we can to help ensure that this type of tragedy will not happen again. Additionally, we are hiring an independent security firm to review our existing screening, audit and safety programs and share with us their assessment on how we can improve. For more than 20 years, millions of Americans have trusted us to come into their homes and, on days like this, I am fully aware of how precious that trust is and how vital it is that we do everything in our power to earn it. Today, we redouble our efforts to do just that."This story was originally published by 4900

  潮州白癜风早期症状表现   

after he allegedly asked two women for their phone numbers in exchange for dropping a traffic ticket.According to a press release from the office of Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy, Chancellor Dmitri Searcy, 32 allegedly twice asked women he pulled over for their phone numbers in exchange for dropping the ticket.The first incident allegedly occurred on July 2, 2018, when he pulled over a 21-year-old woman and asked for her number. The woman says she received unwanted phone calls and text from Searcy after the incident.A month later on Aug. 14, Searcy pulled over a 29-year-old woman. Searcy reportedly told the woman she would receive a ticket, and be taken to jail unless she gave him her phone number. He also allegedly threatened to impound the woman's car. That woman also said she began receiving unwanted calls and texts from Searcy.Searcy faces a maximum penalty of up to five years in prison if he's found guilty. He will be arraigned on Aug. 17. In the past, Searcy has faced charges that he stole thousands of dollars from people he pulled over. He was found not guilty of those charges in 2017.This story was originally published by 1155

  潮州白癜风早期症状表现   

early Sunday morning.Police say Harold Treadwell III was on duty when a gunman shot a bullet into his car. It's unclear how far he drove before he swerved across the median and crashed his car."We don't know much more than he suffered a gunshot wound and died," Sgt. Maggie Cox said. "We are really depending on anybody that we have not already talked to call us."Investigators did not say the shooting was random, but they also said there is no indication that Treadwell was targeted or that anything led up to the gunfire.Treadwell was originally from Indiana and moved to Arizona in 2003. According to a Facebook post by his wife, Frances, the couple was celebrating their 52nd wedding anniversary Sunday."Today is our 52nd wedding anniversary and we spoke right before he was killed and wished each other a HAPPY ANNIVERSARY (thank you God for allowing me to have that last conversation with him so I could tell him that I loved him!)" Frances Treadwell wrote, according to a 982

  

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lawyers representing Covington Catholic student Nicholas Sandmann announced plans to seek an even bigger financial concession from CNN: 5,000,000. “CNN’s agenda-driven fiction about Nicholas and the January 18 incident was not only false and defamatory, it created an extremely dangerous situation by knowingly triggering the outrage of its audience and unleashing that outrage,” lawyer L. Lin Wood wrote in the new suit, which was filed Tuesday in the Eastern District of Kentucky.CNN declined WCPO's request for comment. Sandmann, 16, became the subject of widespread press coverage after videos of a January 18 encounter among Covington Catholic students, members of a fringe religious group known as the Black Hebrew Israelites and Native American demonstrators were widely disseminated online. Much of the initial coverage, including that of the Post, shared the story told by Native American demonstrator Nathan Phillips: That he and other members of the Indigenous Peoples March felt surrounded and threatened by the students, almost all of whom were white and many of whom wore red “Make American Great Again” caps, and that some taunted them with chants of “Build that wall!” “It was getting ugly, and I was thinking: ‘I’ve got to find myself an exit out of this situation and finish my song at the Lincoln Memorial,’ ” Phillips 1343

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