Skip to content
Advertisement

Law_Crime

Latest Stories

12603edabfa96d084d0f6a70670079ae.jpg

12603edabfa96d084d0f6a70670079ae.jpg

John Leon, center, the father of slain Denver computer technician and pizza deliveryman Nathan Leon, answers questions from members of the media following a sentencing hearing for a woman who pleaded guilty to buying the handgun used to kill Leon and the director of Colorado Prisons, at the Federal Courthouse, in Denver, Monday March 3, 2014. John Leon's wife Jaye Leon stands with him. Prosecutors had asked for six years for Stevie Marie Anne Vigil, for buying the handgun for Evan Ebel, a parolee and member of a white supremacist prison gang. But federal Judge Christine Arguello said prosecutors had failed to show Vigil knew of Ebel's plans. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

43e03d4fbfb86d084d0f6a7067005985.jpg

43e03d4fbfb86d084d0f6a7067005985.jpg

Katie Barnhart-Leon, center, the widow of slain Denver computer technician and pizza deliveryman Nathan Leon, walks with her mother Bernadette Alness, left, and father Marty Alness, as they arrive for a sentencing hearing for a woman who pleaded guilty to buying the handgun used to kill Leon and the director of Colorado Prisons, at the Federal Courthouse, in Denver, Monday March 3, 2014. Stevie Marie Anne Vigil was sentenced to more than two years in prison and three years supervision for buying the handgun for Evan Ebel, a parolee and member of a white supremacist prison gang. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

870481babfc86e084d0f6a7067000fb0.jpg

870481babfc86e084d0f6a7067000fb0.jpg

Texas Deputy James Boyd walks from court during a break in a sentencing hearing for a woman who pleaded guilty to buying the handgun used to kill Nathan Leon and the director of Colorado Prisons, at the Federal Courthouse, in Denver, Monday March 3, 2014. Stevie Marie Anne Vigil was sentenced to more than two years in prison and three years supervision for buying the handgun for Evan Ebel, a parolee and member of a white supremacist prison gang. Boyd, who was shot by Ebel, spoke during the hearing. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

23d00f18bfc96e084d0f6a7067006584.jpg

23d00f18bfc96e084d0f6a7067006584.jpg

Members of the prosecution team arrive for a sentencing hearing for a woman who pleaded guilty to buying the handgun used to kill Nathan Leon and the director of Colorado Prisons, at the Federal Courthouse, in Denver, Monday March 3, 2014. Stevie Marie Anne Vigil was sentenced to more than two years in prison and three years supervision for buying the handgun for Evan Ebel, a parolee and member of a white supremacist prison gang. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

9da7662dc0086f084d0f6a7067005bfb.jpg

9da7662dc0086f084d0f6a7067005bfb.jpg

FILE - In this June 27, 2012 photograph is the entrance to St. Johns Military Academy in Salina, Kan. An attorney for a Kansas military school says the issues brought in a lawsuit in which 11 former students alleged abuse have been resolved. St. John's Military School attorney John Schultz said in an email Monday, March 2, 2014, that federal case is being dismissed. The court confirmed that the trial scheduled to begin Tuesday in federal court in Kansas City, Kan., has been cancelled. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)

ba2333f0bfb76d084d0f6a70670013b9.jpg

ba2333f0bfb76d084d0f6a70670013b9.jpg

This undated photo provided by the Tri-County Regional Jail in Mechanicsburg, Ohio, shows Andrew Boguslawski. Explosive devices seized from Boguslawski, an Indiana guardsman who was pulled over for speeding in Ohio, were capable of causing injuries and death to people nearby if they were detonated, according to a federal complaint. Boguslawski appeared briefly in court Monday, March 3, 2014 at hearing where he acknowledged he’d read the charge against him: possession of destructive devices not registered to him in a national firearms database. He was not required to enter a plea and waived a bond and preliminary hearing, meaning the government now has 30 days to seek an indictment. (AP Photo/Tri-County Regional Jail)

a9b67659bfb86d084d0f6a7067000470.jpg

a9b67659bfb86d084d0f6a7067000470.jpg

In this Friday, jan. 10, 2014 photo shows Andrew Boguslawski, left, and his attorney, Mark Babb, reviewing evidence at a preliminary hearing in Madison County Municipal Court in London, Ohio. Explosive devices seized from Boguslawski, an Indiana guardsman who was pulled over for speeding in Ohio, were capable of causing injuries and death to people nearby if they were detonated, according to a federal complaint. Boguslawski appeared briefly in court Monday, March 3, 2014 at hearing where he acknowledged he’d read the charge against him: possession of destructive devices not registered to him in a national firearms database. He was not required to enter a plea and waived a bond and preliminary hearing, meaning the government now has 30 days to seek an indictment. (AP Photo/Jessica Heffner, WHIO)

7c546e3abf5f6c084d0f6a7067002952.jpg

7c546e3abf5f6c084d0f6a7067002952.jpg

FILE-This Wednesday, July 11, 2007 file photo shows Michael and Sharen Gravelle walking through downtown Norwalk, Ohio. Attorneys for 11 adopted and foster children forced to sleep in cages by their adoptive parents in northern Ohio have reached a $2 million settlement. Their adoptive parents, the Gravelles, spent two years in prison for abusing some of the children. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak, File)