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Sunday, January 31, 2010
Tiffany Wright & Cherica Adams' Killers Didn't Want The Babies
Why has degrading Black Women and Black Children become so acceptable in American Society?
Racist Idiots can mock First Lady Michelle Obama comparing her to a monkey and surprisingly even Pres. Obama quietly ignores such despicable behavior.
I guess Barack Obama's Political Career is more important than his Wife's Honor but that's a subject for another post, on a different day.
Has America now adopted the same ideology about Women being Third Class Citizens that many other Countries have embraced for centuries?
Why does the White & Black community so often place the blame of Unwed Pregnancies primarily on Black Females when it takes both Males & Females for Conception to occur?
Why is it American Society only becomes concerned about Fair, Equal Justice when the victim murdered is a White Woman or a Young White Girl?
Just as it is terribly wrong for Black Men to impregnate Black Girls & Women without financially supporting their offspring, its even more horrible for these same men to murder the mothers of their offspring to avoid paying Child Support.
If you are a Man (Black, White, etc.,) who doesn't want children, than either double up on the Condoms or have a Vasectomy!
Stop using Murder as a form of Birth Control!
Using Murder as a method of Birth Control is what both Royce Mitchell (Tiffany Wright's Murderer or Co-Conspirator of her Murder) and former NFL Star (Charlotte Panthers) Rae Carruth did.
Royce Mitchell (36) slept with Tiffany Wright (15) and when she became Pregnant he panicked.
Why?
Because he thought the baby she carried was his.
That's right!
Royce Mitchell slept with his 15-year-old Adopted Sister which constitutes Statutory Rape in the State of North Carolina.
When Tiffany refused to Abort her baby, Mitchell than conspired to have her killed.
Tiffany was Murdered (shot in the head) when 8 months pregnant.
Cherica Adams was murdered (multiple shots including one in her abdomen) when 6 months pregnant.
If Royce Mitchell and Rae Carruth had NOT slept with Tiffany or Cherica, the fears about their pregnancies would never have existed.
However it did happen because both men slept with those Black Females. One being a 15-year-old Teenage girl (Tiffany Wright) who had dreams of becoming a Lawyer.
This is why both men need to remain in Prison as long as possible. Perhaps even for LIFE!
Instead many N.C. officials are working behind the scene to free Royce Mitchell from Prison.
No one seems to care that this man has a Violent Criminal History, including serving 5 years in a NY Federal Prison for being one of New York's biggest Drug Dealers (more than $1 Million a year; Trafficking Cocaine), they just want to get him out.
No one seems to consider how ironic it is for Tiffany Wright, Royce Mitchell and Adrian Powell the other Murder (Co-Conspirator) suspect to all hail from Buffalo, NY.
Its also very strange as to how a Man with Royce Mitchell's violent criminal background was able to adopt a N.C. Foster Care Child and....be hired by the City of Charlotte.
Hmmm, Something smells fishy here.
Nevertheless Human life is Valuable in God's eyes.
It doesn't matter if the Human life is Black, White, Asian, Hispanic, Greek, Poor, Wealthy, Educated, Uneducated, Young, Older, etc.,
All Human life is Valuable in God's eyes.
Thus its imperative the National Black Community (including Charlotte, NC) stop protecting Men who kill Black Girls and Black Women.
Especially Black Men!
The first news video (WCNC) below reports that Federal Judge Bob Conrad orders Royce Mitchell (Tiffany Wright's Murderer or the Co-Conspirator for Tiffany's murder) back to prison where he belongs.
On the second news video (WCNC) you can hear Tiffany Wright's pre-death recorded testimony about her Sexual relationship with Royce Mitchell.
May she and her baby finally rest in peace.
Tiffany wanted love. To this Young, Black Foster Care Girl Sex was love.
Now she has found true love in the arms of Jesus.
Thank God for good Judges like Bob Conrad.
Check out the articles below to learn why both men should remain in prison versus being protected.
Protected for what?
Murdering Black Girls & Black Women?
I think not!
A series of missteps in Tiffany Wright's case:
• A Mecklenburg court clerk appointed Royce Mitchell as Tiffany's legal guardian, even though he was a convicted felon who served time in prison, and was once charged with murder. Police say he is now a person of interest in her killing.
• Charlotte-Mecklenburg police waited weeks to try to talk to Mitchell about a report from DSS that he might have committed statutory rape with Tiffany. They say such cases are complex and take time, but child advocates say police should respond more quickly.
• Charlotte-Mecklenburg DSS took some steps to keep Tiffany safe but ultimately failed to protect her.
Tiffany Wright's biological, maternal grandmother Shirley Boston of Buffalo, NY speaks out to the media about justice for Tiffany.
Ms. Boston expresses deep concern regarding how Tiffany's death could have been easily avoided if the CMPD and North Carolina DSS officials had truly cared.
Federal Judge Denies A Motion To Re-open Royce Mitchell Case
Royce Mitchell, sentenced last month to 2 1/2 years in prison after a judge ruled that he'd likely had sex with his 15-year-old adopted sister, lost a chance Tuesday to prove his innocence and win his freedom.
U.S. District Judge Bob Conrad denied a motion to re-open the case so Mitchell and his defense lawyers could present additional evidence.
Defense attorney Claire Rauscher had informed the judge that police considered 17-year-old Adrian Powell a suspect in the Sept. 14 murder of Tiffany Wright and that the former West Meck football player could be the father of her baby.
The defense lawyer argued that prosecutors had not disclosed that information to the defense, and that Mitchell's supervised release hearing should be reopened because of the newly discovered evidence.
But Conrad, in denying the defense request, said the additional information about police suspicion surrounding Powell is not material.
"Powell's potential paternity has no bearing on whether the defendant violated his supervised release terms by also having sex with Wright...," the judge wrote in his 8-page ruling. "Police suspicion of Powell's potential paternity or status as a murder suspect also fails to establish a reason to reopen the hearing."
Federal prosecutors had urged the judge not to reopen Mitchell's hearing. The purpose of last month's hearing was to determine whether or not Mitchell had sex with Tiffany, they argued, and the investigation of another suspect in Tiffany's murder, who may be the father of her baby, has no bearing on whether Mitchell had sex with the teenager.
Rauscher told the Observer that Mitchell would appeal the judge's Tuesday ruling and last month's sentencing.
Mitchell, 36, was charged with statutory rape and taking indecent liberties with Tiffany. He was arrested after the pregnant teenager was shot to death waiting for her school bus.
But prosecutors dismissed the charges in October after a DNA test showed that Mitchell was not the father of Tiffany's baby.
Even so, federal prosecutors moved to send Mitchell back to prison after he was accused of violating the terms of his 2007 release from federal prison. Mitchell had been sentenced in 2002 to five years and 10 months in prison after pleading guilty to his role in a drug trafficking conspiracy. He was placed on four years of supervision when he got out of prison.
During last month's two-day hearing, Conrad heard Tiffany's voice on a tape recording telling a Police Investigator that she'd had sex twice with Mitchell.
She said Mitchell had not forced or threatened her to have sex but had later pressured her to have an Abortion.
Powell testified that he'd had sex with Tiffany but couldn't be the baby's father because he wore a condom.
Mitchell vehemently denied the sex allegations. "I did not have sex with Tiffany ...," he told the judge before being sentenced. "This is definitely a nightmare for me and my family."
Police had called Mitchell a "person of interest" in Tiffany's slaying.
But last month, a state homicide prosecutor obtained a judge's order for Powell to provide a DNA sample to determine if he's the father of Tiffany's baby. The order says there are reasonable grounds to suspect that Powell committed the murder.
Powell had a sexual relationship with Tiffany and had deleted all telephone calls and text messages with the victim after being advised to do so by a Charlotte-Mecklenburg schoolteacher, a court document said.
Powell said that on the day of Tiffany's murder he was in class at 7:15 a.m., but CMS records and teacher interviews revealed that he was late to class, according to the court document. "The suspect withdrew from school and moved to Buffalo, N.Y., after initial contact with police," the document said.
2nd Murder Suspect A former W. Meck High School Student, But Has No Bearing On Royce Mitchell's Statutory Rape Crime
Charlotte-Mecklenburg County Court documents name a former West Meck football player as a new suspect in the killing of pregnant teen Tiffany Wright, an accusation his family vigorously denies.
Tiffany Wright, 15, was eight months' pregnant when she was shot and killed in September while waiting for her school bus. Her baby died soon after.
Investigators have said they were focused on Royce Mitchell, 36, Tiffany's adoptive brother. A judge ruled in November that he had sex with Tiffany, violating conditions of his 2007 release from prison and sending him back for 30 months.
But Mitchell's attorney Claire Rauscher now argues that Adrian Powell, 17, was also a suspect in the killing and that she wasn't told until after Mitchell's hearing.
Rauscher is requesting a new hearing for Mitchell, on the grounds that Powell's status in the investigation casts doubt on testimony from the first hearing.
Adrian Powell has not been arrested or charged with any crime.
Federal Prosecutors said in a court filing that Rauscher had been informed, and that Powell's status as a suspect has no bearing on whether Mitchell had sex with Tiffany.
Mitchell turned himself in to police the day of Tiffany's killing and was arrested on statutory rape charges. Those were dropped when a paternity test showed he wasn't the baby's father.
A tape of Tiffany telling a Charlotte-Mecklenburg police detective she had sex with Mitchell convinced the judge there was reason to believe Mitchell committed statutory rape and send him back to prison for 30 months.
At Mitchell's hearing, Powell testified that he had sex with Tiffany but that he couldn't be the baby's father because he wore a condom.
Powell's mother, Kathryn Powell, vehemently denied he had anything to do with the killing.
"He's an innocent kid who just happened to be in a relationship with her," Kathryn Powell said. "The next person (Tiffany) was with, will they pin it on him, too?"
Another teenager also testified at Mitchell's hearing that he had sex with Tiffany.
Tiffany had told some of her friends at Hawthorne High that her baby's father was a football player at West Meck. Powell is listed as a football player on a Web site for the squad.
A court order mandating that Powell give police a DNA sample sheds light on why investigators are looking at him.
The document, signed by a CMPD homicide detective, says Powell was late to school the morning Tiffany died. Investigators learned that he and Tiffany had slept together, and Powell consented to a DNA swab to see if he was the baby's father.
But he soon changed his mind. On the advice of one of his teachers, Powell deleted all of his text messages and phone records from Tiffany, according to the court order.
Police say he had changed her name in his phone to "Don't Answer." The document also says he had told Tiffany he wanted nothing to do with the baby or her.
Powell swiftly withdrew from West Meck and moved to Buffalo, N.Y., after the killing.
Kathryn Powell said Powell's father lives in Buffalo and he had planned to move there before Tiffany was killed.
When detectives found out he would be back to testify as a witness at Mitchell's parole hearing, they got the court order for his DNA.
Results from the paternity test haven't been released.
Mourners Remember Tiffany Wright 15, Shot At Bus Stop
Tiffany Wright stood alone in the dark, waiting for her school bus.
It was just before 6 a.m., and her foster grandmother had walked back home to get Tiffany's water bottle.
Tiffany, 15, was eight months pregnant but determined to stay on track in school. She wanted to be a lawyer. And after just a few weeks at Hawthorne High, she had impressed teachers as smart and ambitious, despite a difficult childhood.
At 5:51, Tiffany sent a text.
"Wheres the bus?"
One stop away, replied her friend, already on the bus.
At 5:55, as the bus lumbered toward Tiffany's stop, people began calling police to report gunshots.
A school bus dispatcher radioed Tiffany's bus driver: Change course - something's happening ahead.
Tiffany lay dead in the road, shot in the head, that morning, Monday, Sept. 14. Her baby girl was delivered at the hospital and lived a week, but died Sunday.
Nobody's charged in the killings, but police call Tiffany's adoptive brother, Royce Mitchell, a "person of interest."
In the months before she died, local agencies took steps aimed at stabilizing her home life and keeping her safe. But her story exposes failures in the system that was supposed to protect her.
Among the missteps:
•In February, a Mecklenburg court clerk appointed Mitchell as Tiffany's temporary guardian - even though he was a felon who served time in federal prison. He was also tried in 2006 for murder, but found not guilty. And last year, he was accused of domestic violence, though the case was dismissed.
•In July, social workers told police that Mitchell, 36, might have committed statutory rape with Tiffany, but police didn't question him about it for seven weeks, and didn't charge him with the rape until after Tiffany was killed.
•This month, Mecklenburg social services failed to cut off communication between Tiffany, who was in foster care, and Mitchell, said a source close to the investigation.
On the day of Tiffany's killing, Charlotte-Mecklenburg police jailed Mitchell for statutory rape and indecent liberties with a child, naming Tiffany as the victim.
Police defend their work, saying they followed the industry's best practices - which takes time. Police didn't feel a need to rush, they say, because they believed Tiffany was secure, hidden in a foster home with no threat to her safety.
Police say it's hard to prove statutory rape: Of the 262 reports of statutory rape police received over three years, only 16 percent - 42 cases - were accepted by prosecutors.
Experts say statutory rape cases are complicated because they involve victims ages 13, 14 or 15 who often consider themselves voluntary participants in sex with someone at least six years older. So victims can be reluctant to help police.
But child advocates say in cases like Tiffany's, police should act more aggressively. An immediate arrest sends a signal to a suspect and can persuade them to stay away from victims.
"The cases may be difficult to win, but they're not difficult to charge," says Brett Loftis of Charlotte's Council for Children's Rights.
UNCC criminologist Paul Friday says: "Often, nothing is done in these kinds of cases because they're based on improper assumptions about the rationality of someone that age. But the minors are often unaware of disease, birth control and they can be exploited by someone."
Adopted by foster mother
Tiffany first entered the child welfare system as a toddler in Buffalo, N.Y., when her mother lost custody.
She was adopted at 4 by her foster mother, Alma Wright, an older woman with eight grown children, who was excited about raising another child.
One of Wright's grown sons was Royce Mitchell, a star quarterback in high school who'd gone on to play for a semi-pro team in Buffalo. But Mitchell also was indicted in 1999 as part of a drug trafficking ring and went to federal prison.
While he was in prison, authorities also charged Mitchell with an earlier murder, but a jury found him not guilty.
In 2004, Alma and Tiffany left Buffalo for North Carolina, settling near Kings Mountain. Tiffany made friends easily at school and church. She ran track at Bessemer City High School.
In 2007, Mitchell was released from prison and followed his mother to North Carolina.
But last fall, Alma Wright got sick. Friends at church helped out with Tiffany, inviting her for dinners and weekends. Tiffany spent time with Mitchell and his wife, too.
Alma Wright died Jan. 25, and Tiffany moved in with the Mitchells in Charlotte.
On Jan. 30, Royce Mitchell asked a Mecklenburg court to appoint him and his wife as Tiffany's guardians.
On his application, he wrote: "We are seeking guardianship because we were requested to do so by Mrs. Alma Wright before she died."
He wanted to transfer Tiffany to West Mecklenburg High School.
The court set a hearing for Feb. 5 and appointed a child advocate to study the situation and look after Tiffany's best interests in court.
There's no transcript of what happened in court, and the clerk who handled Tiffany's case declined to discuss his decision.
Frederick Benson, a Mecklenburg assistant clerk of superior court, appointed Mitchell the temporary guardian of Tiffany's welfare.
It's unclear if Benson, a lawyer, knew about Mitchell's criminal background. Court clerks are not required to perform background checks in guardianship cases, says Clerk of Superior Court Martha Curran. It's up to each clerk to decide what checks are necessary, and they often rely on court-appointed child advocates to advise them in such cases.
Tiffany's advocate, lawyer Martha Efird, declined to discuss her actions in the case.
It was in the weeks surrounding the Feb. 5 court hearing that Tiffany got pregnant, if hospital estimates are accurate.
But friends say Tiffany, who started at West Mecklenburg High in February, wouldn't realize for four or five months that she was pregnant.
On Feb. 27, clerk of court Benson ordered DSS to conduct a "home study" of the Mitchell household. Officials won't release their findings.
But Mitchell didn't keep custody long, according to several of Tiffany's friends in King's Mountain.
In late March, Mitchell left Tiffany at a group home called With Friends in Gastonia, according to Marlene Jefferies and Cruceta Jeffeirs, two adult family friends who watched Tiffany grow up.
The group home wouldn't confirm that. But the friends say the home reported to social services that Tiffany was abandoned. And she was soon back in foster care.
On March 31, Jeffeirs, a Shelby pastor, wrote a letter to Benson seeking custody of Tiffany: "My desire is to see Tiffany accomplish all the goals that she has set for herself and I believe she can do that in a stable environment with lots of guidance and love."
DSS officials in Gaston and Mecklenburg won't discuss Tiffany's case or answer questions about what steps they took to protect her.
But friends and family say Tiffany was eventually placed in the care of foster parent Susan Barber, in a townhome off Mallard Creek Road in Derita.
By July, it was clear Tiffany was pregnant, friends say.
Barber tried to shield Tiffany from talking to those she believed might be bad influences, according to Tiffany's cousin Brittany Page. But a source close to the investigation said Tiffany and Mitchell continued communicating.
Despite repeated attempts, Barber could not be reached.
As the school year approached, Tiffany prepared to change schools again, this time to Hawthorne High in Charlotte, which offers a special program for pregnant students.
Delayed investigation
On July 27, social workers reported to police that Royce Mitchell might have committed statutory rape with Tiffany.
It took eight days for a detective to look at the case, and three days more for it to be officially assigned to Teresa Johnson, a detective with CMPD's youth crime and domestic violence unit.
Another 12 days passed before Johnson interviewed Tiffany.
It's unclear when detective Johnson discovered Mitchell's background, but it wasn't enough to ramp up the investigation. Investigators say they believed Tiffany was safe in a foster home and faced no threats from Mitchell.
Police say their performance in the case followed procedure and met standards.
Police interview alleged victims immediately if the crime has occurred within the previous 72 hours, so they can gather evidence that may remain. But in cases like Tiffany's - where months had elapsed since the alleged offense - police try to arrange just one interview when children and teen victims of abuse are involved.
Police acknowledge that strategy takes time but minimizes trauma and reduces the chances that young victims might be led into inaccurate testimony by repeated questioning.
Police also let such victims decide when they want to be interviewed at the county's child-victim center called Pat's Place. There, specially trained interviewers talk to victims, while social workers, psychologists, police and others watch from another room.
Tiffany chose an Aug. 19 interview. She didn't say much during the formal interview. But later that day, Johnson won her trust and obtained enough information to move forward with the investigation.
No response from Mitchell
The next day, Aug. 20, the detective made her first call to Mitchell to ask him about the charge, she says. Johnson left a message and gave him a few days to call back.
When Mitchell didn't respond, she made calls over the next two weeks to social workers and a federal probation officer to ask Mitchell to come talk to police.
Police say they didn't immediately arrest him because they believed they could get better information if he talked voluntarily.
On Sept. 9, a federal probation official told Johnson that Mitchell was not coming in.
On Sept. 10, a team of social workers, police and other agencies held a standard follow-up meeting to discuss how to proceed in Tiffany's case.
On Friday, Sept. 11, detective Johnson phoned Mitchell's wife and left a message. She asked her to call back to discuss Tiffany, Johnson says, but didn't give details of the rape allegation.
That Monday, Tiffany was shot and killed.
As emergency vehicles rolled to the scene, Tiffany's school bus was diverted from its normal route. But the students could see flashing lights. Tiffany's friends on the bus, Cimone Black and Tamia Corpening, began to worry.
"I kept texting her phone...," Cimone said. Then she started calling, but all she got was voice mail.
The bus continued on to Hawthorne. For Tamia, the hourlong ride was excruciating.
Nobody said a word.
TEARS Flow For Cherica Adams' As Her Family Mourns While Carruth Sits In Jail
The sad whistle of a freight train greeted 1,300 mourners as they filed out of the Victory Christian Center church yesterday, after the funeral for Cherica Adams.
A few hours later, not far from the church, the Panthers played a game against the 49ers at Ericsson Stadium.
Rae Carruth, once Adams' lover and a highly regarded receiver for the Panthers, was at neither. He sat in a Tennessee jail while Charlotte police worked to have him returned this week to face a first-degree murder charge.
Friends and family eulogized and buried Adams, 24, yesterday, and prayed for her baby boy, Chancellor Lee Adams, delivered by Caesarean section Nov. 16, the night she was shot. The baby, born 10 1/2 weeks prematurely, is in fair condition at Carolina Medical Center, where his mother died Tuesday.
Authorities say Carruth, believed to be the boy's father, instigated the plot to murder Adams, his pregnant girlfriend, who was struck in the neck and chest by four bullets fired from a passing car as she drove through a southeast Charlotte neighborhood. Prosecutors have said Carruth was in a car near the shooting, and three other men were in a separate vehicle talking with him by cell phone.
Carruth, William Watkins, 44, Michael Kennedy, 24, and Stanley Abraham, 19, all face first-degree murder and other charges and are being held without bond. Prosecutors said they intend to seek the death penalty.
Adams rented a two-bedroom apartment at 4200 Dunbarton Place, part of a tree-lined community on the best side of town. The apartment was dark and empty late last week. No furniture could be seen through the blinds and no one in the neighborhood admitted knowing its famous last resident.
She was on her way home after seeing a movie with Carruth when, authorities say, she fell behind a car driven by the football player. A second vehicle, with three men in it, pulled up and four shots hit Adams.
Somehow, she slowed her BMW, managed to place a 911 call, and drove up on the lawn of a nearby home.
There were few references to the shooting during the 90-minute "celebration service" for Adams before a standing room-only crowd, but the ones that were made reflected a community in shock.
"We need a higher purpose in life," the Rev. Robyn Gool said. "If you can blow somebody away, so to speak, a pregnant woman, you need a higher premium."
The Adamses asked the media not to disturb the prayers of a community with questions about a crime that shocked the nation. But it's difficult not to ask "Why?"
How could a star athlete, a young man earning millions of dollars playing a game he loves, an intelligent guy who was an academic standout at the University of Colorado, plan such a heinous crime, as the Charlotte-Mecklenburg police have charged?
Carruth, 25, was already paying $3,000 a month in child support to former girlfriend Michelle Wright, the mother of his 5-year-old son. Saundra Adams, Cherica's mother, also said Carruth had talked to Cherica about an abortion. He later seemed excited about the baby, but the wide receiver - sidelined much of this season with a sprained ankle - also worried about money.
"He seemed to be more pressured after his injury … more pressured about money and how much the baby was going to cost him," she told The Associated Press.
Still, many people who know Carruth say they've never seen a violent streak in him.
"This is a shock," said Dave Hoskins, Carruth's football coach at Sacramento's Valley High School, who described Carruth as a talented, driven kid, a practical joker. "I can't associate the person I'm hearing about with the person I knew."
Carruth had been going out with Adams for about a year. There was talk of a breakup, but Adams' cousin, Michael Edwards, said Adams was delighted to be pregnant. Pretty enough to be a model while in high school, Adams - known as Cookie - became a successful real estate agent.
She hung out with "an upscale type of crowd, very well known," said longtime friend Kia Quick, one of the friends who eulogized Adams.
Other speakers called Adams a hard worker who looked forward to the birth of her first child.
"Don't worry about Chancellor," Denise McManus, her former manager at a real estate office, said as she fought back tears.
"He'll be taken care of. And he'll be told about his mother's strength and love."
As a football player, Carruth could run the 40 in 4.17. But the FBI caught him from behind - in the trunk of a Toyota Camry, where he had been hiding for 105 minutes, outside a motel in Wildersville, Tenn., 505 miles west of here.
Carruth may have done for the Camry what O.J. Simpson did for the Bronco. Carruth, accused of first-degree murder and the object of a nationwide manhunt, was curled up inside when agents found him.
Carruth, who was cut by the Panthers on Friday and suspended indefinitely from the NFL, was originally arrested Nov. 25, then released on a $3 million bond that required him to turn himself in immediately if Adams died. When she did die, however, Carruth fled, ignoring pleas from family, friends and his lawyer to surrender. Instead, he got a friend, hair stylist Wendy Cole, to drive him west in her gray Camry.
His mother, Theodry Carruth, who has offered to help with the medical costs for Chancellor Lee Adams, said Carruth needed "time to think."
Her son was a well-respected athlete in Sacramento - one of the best football players in California in the late '80s - who overcame academic problems because he wanted to play football for a Division I school. At Colorado, he earned All-Big 12 academic honors.
"He was a great guy," said Colorado defensive end Brady McDonnell, a former teammate. "We never expected anything like this."
In the end, the FBI picked up Carruth through the help of his mother, who was worried that he might be hurt in a confrontation with police.
According to a federal affidavit, Ronnie DeLapp of D&D Bonding Services, the company that posted Carruth's bond, said Theodry Carruth tipped the company to his whereabouts.
The bondsmen called Charlotte police, who told the FBI to check out the Wildersville motel. No charges have been filed against Cole, the woman with him and the owner of the Camry.
The North Carolina plates on her car say "FIRST IN FLIGHT." The plates refer to the Wright Brothers, not to Carruth.
With Carruth in custody, maybe Charlotte could return to normalcy. Later yesterday, the trains whistled for the Panthers, who kept alive their playoff hopes with a 41-24 victory over the 49ers before 62,373 mostly joyous fans at Ericsson Stadium. On the local sports radio station, there was a discussion whether the Panthers' quarterback, Steve Beuerlein, deserves to make the Pro Bowl.
Carruth, meanwhile, was hundreds of miles away, but he was still on everybody's mind.
"Anybody who would do something like this doesn't have a conscience," said Wendell Gurly, owner of a Charlotte vacuum repair shop, "if they would kill a woman who was with child."
The Rev. Gool took a more philosophical approach.
"So many people want to ask why God didn't intervene in these circumstances," Gool asked. "Why didn't He stop it? He made us free moral agents. God gave us the right to choose. If a man wants to plot evil, he can choose to do so."
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Sources: McClatchy Newspapers, Charlotte Observer, The State, WCNC, WIVB, NY Daily News, Guardian.co.uk, Pentoon.com, Google Maps
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