The Cleveland man who pleaded guilty to 937 charges related to his kidnapping and imprisonment of three women between 2002 and May of this year was sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole.
As I Lay Dying singer Tim Lambesis is due in court yet again. Facing very serious charges for allegedly attempting to hire a hit man to kill the his estranged wife, Lambesis will report to the North County Superior Courthouse in Vista, Calif. on Friday, Aug. 2.
Bradley Manning, the U.S. Army private who leaked classified documents to the website Wikileaks in 2010, was acquitted Tuesday of aiding the enemy, the most serious of the many charges brought against him. He will still go to jail, though, likely for a very long time, because he was convicted of numerous lesser charges.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation announced Monday that it executed an extensive operation over the weekend that led to the arrest of 150 people on child-prostitution charges and the rescue of 105 children.
Ariel Castro, the Cleveland man who abducted and imprisoned three women in his home for a decade, agreed to a plea deal on Friday that will ensure that he does not face the death penalty. He will be in jail, without chance for parole, for the rest of his life.
There’s another crazy story of captivity and this time it’s centered around a house in Houston.
Houston police say they've rescued four homeless men who were being held captive in "deplorable conditions" at a local house.
There are varying reports about how many people are involved, with one story claiming four men between the ages of 50 and 80, along with three other women, have been he
Burzum mastermind Varg Vikernes has been arrested in France for suspicion of planning a "massacre." Vikernes has been convicted of church arson and murder in the past, the latter of which kept him in prison for 15 years. According to various news sources, the French Ministry of the Interior deemed Vikernes "likely to prepare a large-scale act of terrorism."
A six-person jury comprised of all women in Florida found George Zimmerman not guilty in the killing of Trayvon Martin on Saturday after more than 16 hours of deliberation over two days.