Bgog Guns Found on Bed of Boy Charged in Mom s Death
CBS/AP MASSILLON, Ohio - Authorities are planning an autopsy for a northeast Ohio woman whose husband is allegedly shot her in a possible mercy killing while she was in a hospital s intensive care unit.The Summit County medical examiner s office said the autopsy had been delayed and will now be performed Tuesday or Wednesday on 65-year-old Barbara Wise, of Massillon. The autopsy originally was scheduled for Monday.John Wise, Ohio man, faces court in wife s ho
stanley cup spital shootingAkron police say 66-year-old John Wise entered his wife s hospital room at Akron General Medical Center on Saturday and shot at least one round from a handgun while standing at her bedside. Barbara was declared dead Sunday morning.In a 911 phone call obtained by CBS affiliate WOIO in Akr
stanley canada on, Ohio, a nurse at the hospital said, We all went in the room because we thought it came from there, that it was an oxygen tank. Then we saw him sitting there with a gun. He was like loading it or whatever. Akron assistant city prosecutor Craig Morgan said Monday that Barbara was incapacitated before her husband shot her in the head. She had been in the hospital s intensive care unit in in an extremely disabled state. Capt. Dan Zampelli confirmed she was in critical condition, and had been in the ICU for several days. We are in the preliminary stages of the investigation, Zampelli said.
stanley termoska Certainly him wanting to end his wife s suffering is one of the motives we re looking into. The incident was isolated, and no Tcmw Hurry Up And Give Birth, The Game Is On
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stanley tazas omething more to worry about. By isolating 24 genetic variants, researchers have developed a computer program that can construct surprisingly accurate 3D models of facial features. Forensic science is progressing quickly these days owing to a number of breakthroughs. Investigators can use DNA evidence to predict hair and eye color of suspects, use maggots to extract a victim DNA from their otherwise unrecognizable bodies, detect hidden faces by zooming into hi-res photos of eyes, and use DNA to create virtual mugshot of a suspect face.
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https://gizmodo/hidden-faces-can-be-found-by-zooming-into-hi-res-photos-1491607189 But unlike previously limited efforts to map human faces using DNA, the new initiative by anthropologist and population geneticist Mark Shriver of Pennsylvania State University has taken the process to the next level. His team managed to isolate the most critical genetic variations required to create accurate facial reconstructions. They did so by using a stereoscopic camera to capture 3D images of almost 600 volunteers of various ancestry. From New Scientist: 8230;Claes and Shriver superimposed a mesh of more than 7000 points onto the scanned 3D images and recorded the precise location of each po