tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post3874151213819901651..comments2024-03-18T04:20:15.987-04:00Comments on Statement Analysis ®: Deception Detection Training: The Art of Conclusion Statement Analysis Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13607372649929274491noreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-83079064475928793732017-08-02T11:20:51.362-04:002017-08-02T11:20:51.362-04:00ima.grandma
hi
she shows distancing language fro...ima.grandma<br /><br />hi<br /><br />she shows distancing language from her daughter.<br /><br />"<i>No it is not my fault this happened to her but it is hard not to blame <b>yourself</b>, this is a lesson learnt & hopefully other parents can take something from this & make sure you are checking the rooms in your house because thy can be as dangerous as a hot car."</i><br /><br />It is mostly about herself. What she went through. What about her daughter.<br /><br />Parents will often blame themselves even in small accidents. When their son/daughter trips over a parent will blame themselves. Why didn't i watch them closer, why didn't i see the small stone etc..what they tripped over. <br /> <br />She takes no responsibility. <br /><br />I suspect neglect.John Mc Gowanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00430624388902099338noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-91133349257027511062017-08-02T11:00:54.336-04:002017-08-02T11:00:54.336-04:00OT cont'd:
"THIS was my evening, this wa...OT cont'd:<br /><br />"THIS was my evening, this was the scariest moment I've had to imagine, THIS is severe heatstroke. There is nothing scarier than not being able to wake your baby up. THIS is clear proof a child doesn't need to be in the sun to get heat stroke. It took us 20 minutes to wake her up, when ambulance came, they came with investigators because they didn't know what to expect as did I. This was proof how fast things change. Anastasia put herself for a nap, I had no idea how hot her bedroom was until I went to wake her up soaked in sweat, red face, boiling and unable to wake her for 15 minutes, ambulance arrived faster then I could have ever imagined and took her sugars which were 1.2 and should be above 4, they administered sucrose and in minutes she started crying clearly scared. No it is not my fault this happened to her but it is hard not to blame yourself, this is a lesson learnt & hopefully other parents can take something from this & make sure you are checking the rooms in your house because thy can be as dangerous as a hot car. Still I'm shook and I can't imagine what would have happened if I didn't go check on her. We definitely had god on our side yesterday and I am thankful for emergency services and Jay who came as fast as possible to keep me together" ???????? #iloveyou #summertimeima.grandmahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09319771909287767461noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-25180724478542096582017-08-02T10:58:45.067-04:002017-08-02T10:58:45.067-04:00OT
EDMONTON, Alberta, Canada) — A Canadian mother ...OT<br />EDMONTON, Alberta, Canada) — A Canadian mother is hoping to bring awareness to the dangers of indoor heatstroke, which she said could have taken the life of her 3-year-old daughter.<br /><br />Jenn Abma of Edmonton, Alberta, told ABC News that she went upstairs to wake her toddler, Anastasia, from her hour-long nap on July 13. Abma said Anastasia was overheating in her bedroom and would <br />not wake up.<br /><br />“I had a gut feeling something was wrong,” Abma recalled. “I went upstairs and it was extremely hot. It was like a sauna in there. The curtains were closed and the windows were open and she was in the direction of the direct sun. Being that hot outside, even with the window open, it’s not circulation — it’s just heat.”<br /><br />Abma, a mother of two, dialed 911 and EMS immediately arrived, she said. Anastasia’s blood glucose level read below average, so first responders administered glucose liquid to raise the sugar in her body, according to Abma. Her body temperature reached 104 degrees Fahrenheit before EMS were able to cool the child down and she awoke minutes later, Abma said.<br /><br />According to Accuweather.com, the temperature in Edmonton was at a high of 84.2 degrees Fahrenheit on July 13, the day Anastasia was affected by heatstroke.<br /><br />Abma said she does not have an air conditioning unit in her home, but noted that it had never been an issue until now.<br /><br />“This is her first summer in the house and I was unaware that bedroom got hotter than the rest,” she added.<br /><br />The EMS of Alberta Health Services responded to Abma’s call, she said. “Alberta Health Services EMS did respond to a call for Anastasia,” a spokeswoman told ABC News.<br /><br />Moments after EMS had answered Abma’s emergency call, Abma said she snapped a photo of her daughter in the middle the ordeal.<br /><br />“They [EMS] said, ‘You should probably share this with your family and friends,’ so they were there when I took the photo,” Abma said.<br /><br />The next day, Abma shared the image on Instagram to raise parents’ awareness of heatstroke dangers.<br /><br />“No it is not my fault this happened to her but it is hard not to blame yourself, this is a lesson learnt [sic] & hopefully other parents can take something from this & make sure you are checking the rooms in your house because thy [sic] can be as dangerous as a hot car,” Abma wrote on July 14. “Still I’m shook and I can’t imagine what would have happened if I didn’t go check on her.”<br /><br />Abma said she has received mixed responses on the post about her daughter. She also said that she invested in an oscillating fan and heat-resistant curtains since the incident.<br /><br />“People are [saying], ‘How are you so stupid that you didn’t know the bedroom was that hot?'” Abma said. “For every nasty comment, there’s something positive though. It has done a lot of good and I am glad that I shared it, despite the rude things that have been said. It is that hot and it’s going to be again. You hear about kids in hot cars dying daily, but to think this could happen in a bedroom … I can’t have someone else lose their baby and that’s why I shared [Anastasia’s] story.”<br /><br />Dr. Venkatesh Bellamkonda, emergency medicine specialist of Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said indoor heatstroke is possible depending on the conditions.<br /><br />“Heatstroke is about being in a room or environment where the body temperature is forced to rise unnaturally,” Bellamkonda told ABC News. “It can be in a boiler room, in a greenhouse, it can be in front of the sun. Heatstroke might be something other than the person’s own body causing that temperature [to rise].”<br /><br />Bellamkonda said there are three different levels of heatstroke. The first is heat stress, where the body becomes uncomfortably warm. The second is heat exhaustion, where the body temperature rises above 100 degrees, water levels are decreased and the person begins to feel dehydrated and fatigued. And the final stage, the most dangerous, is when the body temperature rises to 104 degrees or above.ima.grandmahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09319771909287767461noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-27275118343666982262017-08-02T10:53:17.758-04:002017-08-02T10:53:17.758-04:00OT Update:
Family Files Lawsuit Against Man Rescu...OT Update:<br /><br /><b>Family Files Lawsuit Against Man Rescued At Sea</b><br /><br />July 17, 2017 6:03 PM<br /><br />BOSTON (CBS) — The aunts of Nathan Carman have called him a murderer and filed a lawsuit to prevent him from inheriting the millions left behind by his late grandfather and presumed-dead mother.<br /><br />John Chakalos, Carman’s grandfather, was found murdered in 2013. Three years later, Carman’s mother Linda Carman, went missing at sea while on a mother-son fishing trip.<br /><br />The family has faced repeated tragedy because of the “heinous act out of malice and greed” by Carman, said the court documents of Valerie Santilli, Elaine Chakalos, and Charlene Gallagher.<br /><br />A statement from the women’s lawyer Dan Small said, the “surviving sisters cannot stand idle while their father’s killer, and perhaps their sister’s killer also, profits from his actions.”<br /><br />Last September, the 23-year-old was found at sea after floating alone on a life raft for days off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard last September.<br /><br />He and he mother were out fishing on their boat, Chicken Pox.<br /><br />Carman stated his mother tragically never made it to the lifeboat when they realized the boat was taking on water.<br /><br />The lawsuit accused Carman of leaving his mother behind on purpose.<br /><br />“On information and belief, Nathan put on one of the boat’s life jackets; he never gave one to his mother. He deployed and entered the Chicken Pox’s sole life raft, with his bag of provisions. He left his mother behind.”<br /><br />The aunts also claim that Carman deliberately told neighbors that he was fishing in a different location that he intended and left holes in their boat, which made the vessel “more dangerous and easier to sink.”<br /><br />Court documents said Linda Carman was set to inherit several million once her father Chakalos’ estate was settled and argued Carman left her at sea for the money.<br /><br />Carman was Linda’s only living descendant and would have the trust passed onto him when she died.<br /><br />Officials have long been aware that Carman was most likely the last person to have seen his grandfather alive. Chakalos was found shot to death in his Windsor, Connecticut home on December 20, 2013.<br /><br />No one was ever arrested in connection to his murder.<br /><br />“According to investigators, Nathan purchased a Sig Sauer 716 Patrol .308 caliber semi-automatic rifle from a gun store in New Hampshire prior to John’s murder. This is the same caliber weapon used to kill John,” said court documents.<br /><br />The lawsuit also claimed that Carman threw out the hard drive of his computer and the GPS in his car the same day his grandfather died.<br /><br />If the lawsuit is successful, Small said they would use the funds to investigate the Chakalos’ death and Linda’s disappearance. Anything leftover would go to charity.<br /><br />He also said, “this is not about money, it is about justice.”<br /><br />http://boston.cbslocal.com/2017/07/17/family-files-lawsuit-against-man-rescued-at-sea/John Mc Gowanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00430624388902099338noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-59160283211383447642017-08-01T16:57:27.575-04:002017-08-01T16:57:27.575-04:00off topic further info on above.
A California man...off topic further info on above.<br /><br />A California man pleaded guilty Tuesday to killing his 5-year-old son after a family trip to Disneyland set off a two-month search for the boy's body.<br /><br />Prosecutors say Aramazd Andressian Sr., 35, killed his son, Aramazd Andressian Jr., to get back at his estranged wife Ana Estevez while they were going through a divorce.<br /><br />After investigators repeatedly combed the area surrounding Lake Cachuma in Santa Barbara County, they found the boy's remains on June 30. It remains unclear how he was killed or what evidence linked the father to his death.<br /><br />Andressian Sr. made national headlines in June when he cracked a joke during his extradition hearing. A police officer also said his behavior was inconsistent with that of a grieving parent.<br /><br />On Tuesday, Estevez was surrounded by sobbing family members as she wept in the front row of the courtroom while holding the urn with her son's ashes.<br /><br />Andressian Sr., who wore yellow jail scrubs, entered the plea to first-degree murder in Los Angeles County Superior Court in Alhambra. <br /><br />He previously pleaded not guilty to a murder charge and was being held on $10 million bail.<br /><br />Los Angeles County sheriff's investigators believe the boy was killed in the six-and-a-half hours after he left Disneyland and headed to Lake Cachuma about 150 miles away with his father on April 21. <br /><br />When Andressian Sr. failed to hand the boy over during a planned custody exchange on April 22, Estevez reported her son missing. <br /><br />Officials believe the 35-year-old had attempted suicide after he was found alone the following day in Arroyo Seco Park, passed out from prescription pills in a car doused with gasoline.<br /><br />While Andressian Sr. was unable to account for his son's whereabouts, investigators believe the murder was 'pre-planned' and motivated by the divorce from Estevez. <br /><br />Investigators searched the area surrounding Lake Cachuma several times before the boy's remains were finally discovered on June 30.<br /><br />Officials have not explained what led them to find the body, and how the boy died.<br /><br />Andressian Sr. was arrested and released when police didn't have enough to keep him behind bars.<br /><br />He later moved to Las Vegas, where Lt. Joe Mendoza said his behavior was inconsistent with that of a grieving parent.<br /><br />'I can only speak for myself. If my son was missing, I would be doing things that (the boy's mother) was doing. Circulating fliers, looking for your son,' Mendoza said. 'He was not doing that. He was socializing in Vegas.'<br /><br />Mendoza also said: 'He has not been cooperative, whatsoever.'<br /><br />Investigators also noted that he lightened his hair and appeared to be making plans to travel outside the country in order to avoid extradition. <br /><br />But Andressian Sr. appeared carefree and made national headlines when he cracked a joke during his extradition hearing in late June.<br /><br />The judge informed him that California authorities had 30 days starting Tuesday to claim him, but 'obviously given the media they're going to come pick you up'.<br /><br />Andressian smiled and then laughed when he said: ''They'll probably take me with them!' <br /><br />Estevez spoke to NBC4 after Andressian's bizarre court appearance and said: 'No justice in the world will bring my Piqui back,' Estevez said, using her son's nickname. 'However, Ara will pay tenfold for all that he has done.'<br /><br />She also released a statement saying: 'My heart is shattered and I will miss my son immensely each and every second of every day for the rest of my life.' <br /><br />http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4748944/California-father-accused-killing-5-year-old-court.html<br /><br /><br /><br />Tania Cadoganhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06511272355142175684noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-86295085557856265752017-08-01T14:23:51.526-04:002017-08-01T14:23:51.526-04:00off topic
LOS ANGELES – A California man pleaded...off topic<br /><br />LOS ANGELES – A California man pleaded guilty Tuesday to killing his 5-year-old son after a family trip to Disneyland, setting off a search for the boy that lasted more than two months before his body was found near a lake.<br /><br />Prosecutors contend Aramazd Andressian Sr., 35, killed his son, Aramazd Andressian Jr., to get back at his estranged wife. Investigators have refused to say how the boy was killed or what evidence linked the father to the boy's death.<br /><br />The boy's mother, Ana Estevez, was loudly weeping in the front row of the courtroom as she held the urn with her son's ashes. She was surrounded by family members — all holding hands and sobbing.<br /><br />Andressian Sr. entered the plea to first-degree murder in Los Angeles County Superior Court in Alhambra. He previously pleaded not guilty to a murder charge and was being held on $10 million bail.<br /><br />Los Angeles County sheriff's investigators have said they believe the boy was killed April 21 after a family trip to Disneyland. The next day, his father was found passed out in a park and police began searching for the boy.<br /><br />Andressian had taken prescription pills and was found in a car doused in gasoline in an apparent suicide attempt, sheriff's officials have said.<br /><br />The boy's body was found on June 30 near Lake Cachuma outside Santa Barbara — about 145 miles (233 kilometers) away from Anaheim, where Disneyland is located.<br /><br />Andressian told investigators that he drove to the lake the day his son was killed. Investigators had searched the lake several times before the boy's remains were discovered but have not said what led them to the body.<br /><br />http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/08/01/california-father-accused-killing-5-year-old-due-in-court.htmlTania Cadoganhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06511272355142175684noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-85072642604219076012017-08-01T13:34:02.926-04:002017-08-01T13:34:02.926-04:00Was Terry at the trial watching?Was Terry at the trial watching?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-5956404508834306882017-08-01T09:50:14.724-04:002017-08-01T09:50:14.724-04:00http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/news/local/crime/...http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/news/local/crime/article164575632.html<br /><br />Sidney Moorer says he was handcuffed to his bed the night Heather Elvis went missing<br /><br />Judge R. Markley Dennis denied a motion to kill a revised indictment charging Sidney Moorer with obstructing justice in two interviews he had with police after Heather Elvis’ disappearance.<br /><br />But Dennis is considering a motion to suppress one of those interviews in which Moorer said he never left his wife’s side and was even handcuffed to his bed the night Elvis went missing. In an interview with officers at the Horry County Police Department headquarters, Moorer said he never called Elvis that night, a statement he later corrected after police mentioned the call records and video evidence they obtained.<br /><br />“Had you used any other phones that night? Your wife’s phone? Did you make any payphone calls?” Detective Jonathan Martin asked Moorer in an interview that was replayed Monday in court during a hearing on pretrial motions.<br /><br />“Nope,” Moorer said. “Do they still have payphones?”<br /><br />“There was a phone call made to Heather that night from a payphone at the gas station on 10th Avenue. We have video from that. Did you try calling her for just a minute?” Martin asked in the recording.<br /><br />“No.”<br /><br />“Are you sure?” Martin asked in the recording.<br /><br />“No.”<br /><br />“How about we start again,” Martin says.<br /><br />“OK. I did. I called her,” Moorer admitted, but he said the call was only to tell Elvis to leave him alone and stop leaving notes on his car.<br /><br />In the interview, Moorer told police he didn’t want his wife to know he was calling Elvis so he parked across the street and walked to a payphone out of sight. But officers questioned that logic in the interview, adding that the payphone call lasted four minutes.<br /><br />Moorer said his wife had trust issues with him after learning of his affair with Elvis and he had agreed to be handcuffed to their bed each night for six months after she found out.<br /><br />Moorer struggled to recall exactly where he went with his wife the night anyone last heard from Elvis, which was another oddity Martin pointed out in court on Monday.<br /><br />“We’re talking about what you did two nights ago, not even 48 hours earlier and he was like, ‘Well, I think I went there. I may have gone there. No, no, I think we did that.’ And he said he hadn’t been drinking so for him to have such a loss of memory from two nights previous seemed out of context,” Martin said.<br /><br />Moorer’s wife, Tammy Moorer, raised her hand when the judge asked defense attorneys if they had any witnesses to call in support of their motion to suppress. No witnesses were called.<br /><br />Defense attorneys argued that the interview should be thrown out since Moorer was not read his Miranda rights before the interview with Martin began.<br /><br />But Martin was one of four officers Moorer spoke to at the station that day, according to testimony. The first officer was former Detective Allen Large, who Martin said was not a lead detective on the case.<br /><br />Large is facing six charges of misconduct in office and five charges of criminal sexual conduct.<br /><br />The judge said he would consider the motion and make a ruling on a later date.<br /><br />Sidney and Tammy Moorer have been charged with kidnapping in the disappearance of Heather Elvis, who was last seen in December 2013. Sidney Moorer is set to go to trial on the obstruction charge Aug. 28.<br /><br />Tammy Moorer was initially set to have a hearing Monday on a contempt of court charge after she was accused of violating a gag order in the case. That hearing was continued.<br /><br />Sidney Moorer was found to be in contempt for violating the gag order last July and served 61 days in jail after speaking to a reporter during the first trial on his kidnapping charge. That trial ended with a hung jury, but the state announced plans to retry the kidnapping case. The new trial — yet to be set — will be held in Georgetown County.<br /><br />No trial date has been set for Tammy Moorer’s kidnapping charge<br /><br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-78296827786349817792017-07-31T13:57:26.999-04:002017-07-31T13:57:26.999-04:00sorry OT
Livestream Sydney Moorer Trial, stream ...sorry OT <br /><br />Livestream Sydney Moorer Trial, stream began 30 mins ago<br />Monday 7/31/2017 1:56pm is present time<br /><br />Heather Elvis <br /><br />https://youtu.be/42_B_d8tA9EReadernoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-15476111794495041702017-07-31T13:49:51.846-04:002017-07-31T13:49:51.846-04:00Interesting! I look forward to the post on emotio...Interesting! I look forward to the post on emotions in statements.<br />I have noticed on FB a connection (in males) between posting about substance abuse recovery (detox), volunteering at food pantries, and complaining about how sore they are from working out (like whining about it & saying their body is in so much pain they may just watch s Tai Chi video instead. I used to power lift & that is the only thing that will cause a LOT of pain post workout...it will hurt to turn a steering a wheel, it will hurt when you do any motion, still I would have never dreamed of complaining. You pop a few Advil & love that you are getting stronger and toned.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com