Strange criminal files




















But in Japan they have drive-by urine throwing. Last year a man was arrested for slowly driving up beside a woman and hurling a cup full of his urine at her. Amazingly there were 19 other similar cases that month. The arrested man confessed to 10 of them but you would hope, like the police in Saitama, they were all done by the same person. Possibly a copycat of the above drive-by urine thrower, but police in Japan arrested a young male who had a very strange fetish of throwing mayonnaise on women from behind.

But breaking in only to order room service? A couple brutally murdered in Houston, Texas, 40 years ago has been identified — but their daughter remains missing. Best Shopping Deals. Learn how to request records. Requests for bulk court data are governed by Administrative Rule 9 F and must be submitted in writing to the Indiana Office of Court Services.

Learn how to request data. More FAQs. Judiciary IN. Find courts Search cases E-file a case Watch trial court hearings. Find an IN. Courts Home. In his pocket was a train ticket to Henley Beach, never to be used. It would be a month later when they would find a suitcase linked to him at Adelaide Railroad Station. Its label was removed as well as those on the articles of clothing inside it.

Unfortunately, it led to no clues, just like his autopsy, which reported no foreign substance in his body that could directly link his death to poisioning. A month later they would find the most substantial but puzzling evidence in a secret pocket in the man's trousers. It read, "Taman Shud. Public library officials called in to translate the phrase. They concluded that it meant "ended" or "finished", which can be found in a collection of poems entitled The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam.

Immediately police ran a nationwide search for the book where this scrap paper was torn from. A man came forward, claiming that he found the book in the backseat of his unlocked car a week or two before they discovered the body. On the back of it was a strange code scrawled out in pencil. A phone number linking to a nurse was also discovered, though the nurse said she had given a copy of the Rubaiyat to an army officer named Alfred Boxall. Both the man who found the book and the nurse denied any connection with the dead man.

They never got any further with the case, although many suspect it may have been a suicide since the book's theme was about having no regrets when life ends. Others think he may be a spy. And until there are any breaks in the case, his grave will remain reading, "Here lies the unknown man who was found at Somerton Beach 1st Dec. Read more about The Taman Shud Case here. On the morning of September 20th, in Belen, New Mexico, it seemed like a perfect day to ride a bike. Tara Calico borrowed her mother's pink bike to go out for a spin.

Extroverted and active, she worked as a bank teller and was studying to become either a psychologist or psychiatrist. She planned to play tennis that afternoon and asked her mom to drive out after her in case she got a flat tire and didn't return home by noon.

She never did return. Every lead went to a dead end until a year later, when a photo was found depicting a young woman her age and a missing boy, both gagged. The nine-year-old, Michael Henley, went missing in the same area as Calico in April of when he was hunting turkeys with his father. They appeared to be in the back of a van, with a copy of a book written by V. Andrews, Calico's favorite author, lying right beside the girl.

Initially, Tara's mother didn't think the girl was her, but the girl in the photograph had a scar identical to Calico. But still, due to the lack of evidence, many experts dismiss the photograph. In , Michael Henley's body was found in Zuni Mountains where he was hunting, which strongly disconnects the theory that the two were abducted and taken to Florida. Calico's parents would eventually die, never finding out who took their daughter.

Read more about the Tara Calico Case here. In , a girl was roaming a beach in British Columbia when she found a sneaker. To her horror, as she opened up the sock, she found that a human foot was inside. Since then, a number of severed feet have washed ashore.

The feet have been connected to five men, one a woman, and three of unknown sex. Throughout the years, with a hoax foot thrown here and there, the case has never been completely closed, with many theories floating around as to who the feet belonged to. The Vancouver police managed to identify one foot in , matching its DNA to a man who was described as suicidal. They later were able to match two other feet to a woman who was also believed to have committed suicide.

Because of these findings, many speculate that the feet belong to those who jumped off a bridge to their deaths. However, because of the rarity of only feet and no other body parts showing up, some believe that the feet were connected to a plane crash by a nearby island.

Other suggest they were those of the victims of the Asian Tsunami in , since the make of the shoes were all manufactured before Whatever sources these feet are coming from, they have left the world baffled for years. Read more about The Severed Feet Mystery here. Although this case has been solved, how it was solved remains a mystery. In , a respiratory therapist in Chicago was murdered in her apartment. Teresita Basa was found under a flaming mattress, a butcher knife buried in her chest.

Police attempted to track her stolen jewelry with no luck. They also failed in trying to link any of the suspects to the crime. It seemed impossible to find the perpetrator, that is, until Remy Chua, a co-worker who barely knew the victim, involuntarily became a leading source of information. Chua began having frequent visions and nightmares about Basa. It started in the locker room of her work, where she experienced seeing a man's face behind Basa.

This would repeat in her dreams. Chua then began channeling Basa's spirit when conversing with her husband. While channeling Basa's shirit, Chua told her husband the entire story of Basa's murder.

She claimed an orderly at the hospital named Alan Showery was helping Basa with her television when he assaulted her. He then killed her and set her mattress on fire. The spirit was even able to give the details of what happened to her jewelry, which was given to Showery's common-law-wife. Chua convinced his wife to give these details to the police. The police were skeptical at first, but after seeing the Basa's jewelry on Showery's wife Basa's cousin was able to confirm it just as the spirit said she could , the police were able to convict the man for fourteen years in jail.

Unfortunately, there was not enough evidence to convict him longer. But was it really Basa's ghost who named her killer? Perhaps Chua had knew some facts in the case and disguised it as a spirit possessing her? What ever led police to the killer remains to be a mystery.

It was the year in Philadelphia when a hunter found the bruised body of a boy in a JC Penney box. The boy, around four to six years-old, was nude and wrapped in flannel. He seemed to have died from blows to the head. Fearing his muskrat traps would be confiscated by police, the hunter didn't report the body.

It was two days later when a college student found the body, that the police started on the case of "America's Unknown Child. Although police received thousands of leads, they were never able to uncover the identity of the young boy. They tried tracing back the JC Penney box and checking the boy's fingerprints, but everything led to a dead end.

However, there were two promising leads of note. One lead involved a foster home located 1. A medical examiner, who pursued the case until his death, had a psychic lead him to the foster home, where he found a bassinet similar to the one that was sold in the box. Hanging on the clothesline were blankets much like the one wrapped around the boy.

He believed the boy belonged to the stepdaughter of the man who ran the home, and she didn't want to be found as an unwed mother. Police interviewed the couple, but closed the investigation.



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