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Investigators searching for an ex-police officer s wife are focusing on the Global Positioning System in her husband s vehicle along with biological material and other physical evidence, according to a published report.The Chicago Tribune reported in its Thursday editions that it obtained a warrant served on Drew Peterson in the investigation of his miss
stanley cup ing 23-year-old wife, Stacy.The warrant called for the seizure of items containing plastic shavings, blood, bodily fluids, fingernail scrapings, palm or fingerprints, chemicals that may alter body decomposition and other biological material that may be evidence of the offense of first-degree murder. A separate warrant executed Nov. 1 and also obtained by the newspaper indicates authorities sought all GPS records, cellular service records, logging records or any other electronic records in the possession of OnStar Inc. relating to a
stanley website 2005 GMC Yukon Denali driven by Peterson.The warrant did not say what investigators sought to learn from OnStar, General Motors driver assistance subscription service. OnStar spokesman Jim Kobus said the service does not track subscribers vehicles. Tuesday s warrant omitted specific language about OnStar; in its place was a generic description that included in-dash GPS navig
stanley cup ation systems, according to the Tribune.Joel Brodsky, Peterson s attorney, on Thursday told The Associated Press that the newspaper s description of the warrants is accurate, but did not comment further.Stacy Pe Ouev Study: Solar Energy Will Be as Cheap as Fossil Fuel Energy by 2016
Tourists visiting the Richard III Visitor Centre in Leicester can gaze into the empty grave where the king skeleton was discovered in 2012. His actual bones are being reinterred in Leicester Cathedral.
stanley cup But a 3D-printed replica is there, revealing details such as the late monarch twisted spine and mortal wounds. King Richard III was killed in 1485 on his way from Nottingham to Bosworth, where he encountered Henry Tudor. An excavation led by the University of Leicester found a skeleto
stanley cups uk n beneath a parking lot and, early last year, researchers confirmed the identity of the remains. The 3D replica was made in cooperation with the University of Dundee. Like the original, the printed skeleton reveals that Richard spine has a spiral shape, indicating that he had severe scoliosis. The replica also r
stanley tumbler eveals the damage that Richard III sustained in his final battle, where he ultimately died from a halberd strike during an attempt to kill Tudor. Investigators have identified a total of ten injuries that his bones suffered shortly before his death, including a slice that was taken out of the skull, a cut to the ribcage and a pelvic wound. [Image: Richard III Visitor Centre] 3D printinghistoryScienceTechnology