A Missing persons case with a twist. Turns out that this one was charged with manslaughter and child abuse.
According to the AP, the body found by hikers near Albertville has been identified as Aaron Wade Bell. Aaron Wade Bell had been missing since August and had been found November 23 but had just been positively identified.
A missing persons report had been issued for Aaron Wade Bell on August 15, 2005 by Farrah Elizabeth Carr. However, there is a catch to this missing persons story. Bell had gone missing after being charged with manslaughter and child abuse in his infant’s death.
A body found by hikers near Albertville has been identified as a Marshall County man missing since August after being charged with manslaughter and child abuse in his infant’s death.
The body found Nov. 23 was identified this week as Aaron Wade Bell, a Marshall County Sheriff’s Department investigator said Friday.
The cause of death remains under investigation.
Both Aaron Wade Bell and Farrah Elizabeth Carr were charged with manslaughter in the death of their 3 month old baby.
When Bell tried to drive away, the person at the home got into a physical altercation with him to prevent him from driving while intoxicated. Bell left on foot.
Bell was 21 years old at the time of his arrest in April on charges of manslaughter and child abuse. Carr, the baby’s mother, was 20 years old.
The two were charged in the death of their 3-month-old baby. The baby, while still strapped in the car seat, fell off a bed at home Nov. 2, 2003.
Looks like the people of AL got a twofer; a missing persons case solved and tax payers do not have to pay for the trial of at least one of the two people charged in the death of a three month old baby.
The parents, Bell and Carr, told police they woke about 12 hours later to find the child not breathing. An autopsy showed that the baby died from suffocation. Traces of methamphetamine were found in the child’s body
December 3rd, 2005 at 09:34pm
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A small plane piloted by 66 year old George F. Baker III, a New York Philanthropist is missing off Nantucket, MA.
The twin-engine Beechcraft was flying at 200 feet and was about 2 1/2 miles from Nantucket Memorial Airport when it disappeared from radar around 4:45 p.m., said Jim Peters, an FAA spokesman.
The plan was en route from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey, Peters said. Baker filed a flight plan through the Islip Flight Service Station on Long Island, Peters said.
He said the pilot spoke to FAA air traffic controllers at Otis Air Force Base on Cape Cod shortly before the plane disappeared. The plane already had been cleared to land at Nantucket airport, and the pilot did not issue a distress signal.
According to Baker’s wife, he is an experienced pilot who had been flying since he was 18.
Coast Guard spokeswoman Kelly Newlin said there was no immediate sign of any wreckage in the water or on land, although police told the Coast Guard they saw a red light in the water near the airport’s runway.
“We still haven’t found anything — no debris,” she said Friday morning.
UPDATE: December 3, 2005: NBC4, Search Ends For Plane Piloted By NY Philanthropist
BOSTON — The Coast Guard has suspended its search for a plane piloted by a New York philanthropist that went missing off Nantucket, Mass.
The Coast Guard has not found any wreckage in the water or on land.
New England News (WHDH-TV): Search ends for missing plane piloted by NY philanthropist
The Coast Guard searched through the night, but did not find Baker’s plane. They suspended their search around 1:10 p.m. Friday, according to Coast Guard spokeswoman Kelly Newlin.
Nantucket police officers found a First Aid kit, a bottle of aviation lubricant and “a couple pieces of plastic” near Nobadeer Beach, but no other debris was immediately discovered, said Police Chief William Pittman.
“I don’t know if they came from the airplane or not,” Pittman added. “There’s nothing that points directly at that plane.” He said police planned to resume their search Saturday morning.
Palm Beach Post: Aircraft missing off Mass. piloted by zoo benefactor Baker
On Friday, the Coast Guard suspended its search of the waters near Nantucket Island for the twin-engine plane piloted by George F. Baker III, 66, whose family established the Harvard Business School. Baker is the senior trustee of the George F. Baker Trust, a foundation that in 1999 donated $500,000 for the redevelopment of the Palm Beach Zoo at Dreher Park.
In 1993, the trust donated $100,000 to help start a guided boat tour on the zoo’s Baker Lake. Several of Baker’s relatives have homes in Palm Beach County.
December 3rd, 2005 at 09:06pm
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Amber Alert Canceled for Patricia Lynn Visco by New York State Police as she was found alive and okay, at about 1:50 Friday morning near Syracuse.
Geneva Police tell NewsChannel 9 that Visco was found alive and okay, at about 1:50 Friday morning near Syracuse. The Onondaga County 911 Center says the girl was found at the Knight’s Inn in Liverpool, just west of the city. Authorities are not saying how Visco got to Liverpool or why she was there. They are also not saying if there are any arrests pending in the case.
With this discovery, the Amber Alert has been canceled. Stay tuned to NewsChannel 9, Newsradio 570 WSYR and 9wsyr.com for more updates as we learn the details.
The Geneva Police Department has issued an Amber Alert Thursday for a missing teenager.
December 3rd, 2005 at 08:41pm
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Amber Alert, Found Alive, Missing, Missing Teen |
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