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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/29/2016 6:03:11 PM

ABDEL MALIK PETITJEAN: WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT SECOND ISIS-INSPIRED PRIEST ATTACKER

Authorities had earmarked Petitjean as radicalized before he struck at the Église St Étienne.

BY ON 7/28/16 AT 1:22 PM


As Father Jacques Hamel led a small gathering for mass on Tuesday, Abdel Malik Petitjean stormed the Église St Étienne in the northern town of Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray alongside accomplice Adel Kermiche, holding five people hostage before forcing the church’s priest to kneel before them. The pair were armed with knives, as well as fake weapons.

One of the pair, it is still unclear who, proceeded to slit Hamel’s throat and kill him in his place of worship, filming the incident, according to authorities. The attack also left an elderly worshipper in critical condition. Both attackers had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State militant group (ISIS), stating their motives during the attack and in a video recorded beforehand that was posted by the ISIS Amaq news agency, which called the pair its “soldiers.”

Kermiche, a 19-year-old who grew up on an estate in the town, had attempted to enter Syria twice in 2015. Authorities released him from prison in March and he was under surveillance, forced to wear an electronic tag and on probation at the time of the attack. His radicalization was so severe that his family had alerted authorities so as to prevent him attempting to reach Syria.


Abdel Malik Petitjean, 19, one of two men who stormed into a church in the northern French town of Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray during morning mass and cut the throat of an 84-year-old priest at the altar.
STRINGER/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

But what do we know so far about Petitjean?

Petitjean, a 19-year-old French national of Algerian origin born in November 1996, was known to French authorities and they had earmarked him as radicalized and a potential Islamist militant, opening a special file on him as recently as June 29. Security services were searching for him the week prior to the attack, police sources told Reuters, after a foreign intelligence service alerted the French to his plans to conduct an assault.

French intelligence only had an image of Petitjean, with the counter-extremism unit UCLAT sending the photograph to different police units four days earlier on July 22, reading that the man “could be ready to participate in an attack on national territory.”

It added that the unidentified person “could already be present in France and act alone or with other individuals. The date, the target and the modus operandi of these actions are for the moment unknown,” according to a UCLAT flyer obtained by the Associated Press. But authorities never flagged Petitjean after the image’s release and his identity was not known, hampering the search, another source close to the investigation told Reuters Thursday.

Authorities only identified Petitjean after the attack, in which police killed both him and his accomplice, via DNA tests as he was disfigured in the police shooting.

Few details have yet to surface on Petitjean’s radicalization, a judicial source told Reuters, but authorities have detained three people close to him who may provide more information about Petitjean’s path to committing the attack against France’s most popular religion, Catholicism. Petitjean was one of 10,000 people that French authorities have marked as radicalized or on the verge of radicalization.

Those who knew Petitjean, who have spoken so far, have said he showed no signs of becoming radicalized. Djamel Tazghat, head of a local mosque in the southeastern town of Aix-les-Bains where Petitjean lived, told AFP news agency: “I liked him a lot. We never had a problem with him at the mosque. No strange observations, he was always smiling... It’s incredible,” he said.

“All the believers are shocked because he was known for his kindness, his calm. We never had any sign of radicalisation. What was going on inside his head?”

His mother Yamina, speaking to France’s BFM TV, said that Petitjean had never mentioned ISIS, indicating that she had no knowledge of his radicalization, unlike the family of Kermiche. “I know my kid, he is kind. I haven’t created a devil. He never talked about ISIS. We are positive people, we talk about good things.” she said.

A police officer stands guard at the Saint-Etienne church that was the center of the ISIS attack blamed, July 27.
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

British media outlets reported Thursday that Petitjean had attempted to reach Syria but failed, resulting in his placement on the French watchlist. He had no previous convictions, however, unlike Kermiche. Friends of Kermiche, Petitjean’s associate, say that he had transformed from a videogame-loving geek to a young man “brainwashed” by ISIS, saying openly that he supported the radical group. Details of Petitjean’s youth and transformation into an ISIS-inspired murderer are yet to surface.

French publication The Obs said that Petitjean, who reportedly used the nom de guerre Abu Omar, was from the town of Saint-Dié-des-Vosges in northeastern France, more than 600 kilometers from where the attack took place and he had finished school with no issues.

He moved to the southeastern town of Aix-les-Bains where his mother lives. It is unclear how he met Kermiche but he had told his family he was leaving their home on Monday to see a cousin in the northeastern city of Nancy, before he appeared in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray to carry out the attack. His mother told AFP that his last text message read: “Don’t worry, everything is fine...I love you.”

Days later, Petitjean would appear in an ISIS video released by Amaq after the attack but recorded before, posing with an ISIS sign and holding hands with Kermiche while both declared their support for Baghdadi’s radical Islamist group.

That the French security services had prior knowledge of Petitjean’s radicalized view of the world, and potential plans to carry out an attack in the country, shows the scale of the intelligence failure in preventing the murder of Hamel, says Dr. Alan Mendoza, executive director of London-based think-tank The Henry Jackson Society.

“Unfortunately, this incident highlights how intelligence failures can make all the difference in whether terrorists succeed or fail in their murderous intentions. Had proper monitoring and intelligence analysis taken place, neither of the two culprits would have been able to conduct their attack. It is important that we learn lessons from this.”

(Newsweek)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/30/2016 1:44:30 AM

Leaked emails, rigged elections, media blackout: Welcome to democracy, American-style

Published time: 29 Jul, 2016 11:09


Activists hold a banner against Hillary Clinton amid protest outside the Wells Fargo Center on the final day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., July 28, 2016 © Dominick Reuter / Reuters

The United States, which espouses democracy and has invaded countries in the name of democracy, is far from the perfect democratic state with fair elections, says Carla Howell, political director of the Libertarian Party.

Hillary Clinton has marked a place for herself in the history books after officially accepting the Democratic nomination for president on Tuesday. She becomes the first female candidate to represent a major US party in the presidential elections.

Outside the Democratic National Convention demonstrators have been protesting against Clinton's nomination for a fourth day in a row. Protesters showed their support for Clinton's former rival, Senator

Bernie Sanders, lashing out at the party's decision to go with Clinton.
Chanting “we won't vote for Hillary,” some even vowed to quit the Democratic Party. There have also been claims the media has turned a blind eye to the large demonstrations.

RT: How significant were the protests that were staged during the Democratic National Convention and will they play a part in Hillary Clinton’s chances for being elected the next US president?

Carla Howell: It is hard to know exactly the extent of the protests going on. I’ve seen different accounts. But I think it is quite significant. I think it is fair to say that the Democratic Party has a lot of incentive to suppress that protest. Lots of delegates walked out of the convention and that was not shown on the US television very clearly; it was mentioned more in passing where there were apparently a significant number of delegates who did walk out, who were Bernie Sanders supporters. So, we see this in the political process in the US all the time, both in the Democratic Party, the Republican Party and in the press that there is a strong bias not only for the two parties but also for their anointed representative candidates. In this case, Hillary Clinton. So there is no question that this is not being played to the degree that a lot of people wanted it to be played, and revealed as to what’s actually going on.

RT: Are US voters talking about the thousands of leaked emails that pointed to the manipulation of Bernie Sanders support base?

CH: It is obviously getting attention. It is a story that seems to be unsubstantiated. It is hard to know where hackers really come from and I am guessing no one will ever really know. But it’s being thrown out there. An official with the Democratic National Committee did go on the mainstream media alleging that some expert claimed there was a link. As far as I can tell no one substantiated this and no one will. And so, you’ve got something that you could say the media is actually being irresponsible about and even perpetuating as a story when there is so little to back it up.

What I think is more important here is the rigging of the American elections. I think probably most countries are all guilty of it to varying degrees. But the US that espouses democracy and has invaded countries in the name of democracy and establishing democracy is far from the perfect democratic state with fair elections. The elections in this country are not fair and evidence of that is speaking for the Libertarian Party. We find that when we go out and talk to voters that the principles of the Libertarian Party – our platform, which is low taxes, minimal foreign intervention, a foreign policy of peace, free trade, open borders… these are very popular themes and things that people want to see and yet we get boxed out of a lot of media coverage. It is changing somewhat in this election; we are getting more coverage than usual, but it’s still far from representative of what the American people really want to see.

"It does seem that there was more attention paid to the various outbursts that took place at the Republican convention than the attention that has been paid to those at the Democratic convention. This doesn’t surprise me. I think that in many cases the so-called ‘prestige press’ seems to be more inclined to overlook problems, protests and the like with respect to Democratic candidates than Republican candidates. It may simply be that Donald Trump makes better press and they are more inclined to cover any sort of problems associated with him than they are with problems associated with Hillary Clinton or President Obama."James Lark, secretary, International Society for Individual Liberty

RT: Explain the Democrat strategy at this point in the race to the White House.

CH: Clearly, they want to divert attention away from the content of the emails, especially during the all-important Democratic National Convention, which is very important to the Democrats in positioning themselves and giving publicity to their top spokespersons and of course greasing the skids for the Hillary Clinton campaign for president. They have every incentive to try to create a distraction. They have a lot of allies in the media who are willing to talk about this and cover someone making effectively unsubstantiated claims. It is a distraction.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/30/2016 10:10:31 AM

Elephant sedative emerges as new threat in overdose battle

July 28, 2016

This undated file photo provided by the Franklin County Sheriff's Office in Ohio shows Rayshon LaCarlos Alexander of Columbus, Ohio. Rayshon Alexander was arrested July 11, 2016, and has pleaded not guilty to 20 counts, including murder, following a death and nine other overdoses that investigators say were caused by drugs that buyers thought were heroin, but were actually the animal tranquilizer carfentanil, used to sedate elephants and other large animals. (Franklin County Sheriff's Office via AP, File)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A drug used to sedate elephants and other large animals, 100 times as potent as the fentanyl already escalating the country's heroin troubles, is suspected in spates of overdoses in several states, where authorities say they've found it mixed with or passed off as heroin.

The appearance of carfentanil, one of the most potent opioids known to investigators, adds another twist to the fight against painkillers in a country already awash in heroin and fentanyl cases.

Each time authorities start to get a handle on one type of drug, another seems to pop up, said Joseph Pinjuh, chief of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force and narcotics unit for the U.S. attorney in Cleveland.

"You feel like a kid with his finger in the dike, you know?" he said. "We're running out of fingers."

A man suspected of selling carfentanil as heroin was indicted this week in central Ohio on 20 counts, including murder, in connection with a July 10 death and nine other overdoses that happened within hours of one another. Some of the surviving users told investigators they thought they were buying heroin, but testing found none, Franklin County prosecutor Ron O'Brien said. The suspect, Rayshon Alexander, pleaded not guilty.

Investigators are trying to track down the source of the carfentanil. Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said he was unaware of any thefts of the drug, which, he noted, could be shipped from abroad or produced here.

Chinese companies sell carfentanil online, but it hasn't shown up much in the U.S. drug supply, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. There hasn't been much evidence of carfentanil on the streets or in testing related to criminal cases, said agent Rich Isaacson, a spokesman for the DEA's Detroit Division, which covers Ohio.

The drug has been suspected in overdoses or found in seized drugs in central Kentucky, in Florida's Tampa Bay and Sarasota areas and in other Ohio cities. Akron authorities have seen more than 230 overdoses in July, 20 of them fatal, and police said evidence of carfentanil was found in some of those.

The drug is thought to be similar in strength to a painkiller known as W-18, which has shown up in heroin in Philadelphia, New England and Canada. Such drugs up the ante in a market where sellers already mix powerful painkillers with or disguise them as heroin to increase their products' potency, which can increase overdose risks for users, especially when they're unaware of what they're using.

A traditional businessman might conclude that killing his customers is bad for business, but dealers looking to increase profits can find a burst of overdoses to be a boon, helping to draw customers to their product, Pinjuh said.

"They know that's the high that'll take you right up to the edge, maybe kill you, maybe not," he said. "That's the high that they want."

Carfentanil is so powerful that zoo veterinarians typically wear face shields, gloves and other protective gear — "just a little bit short of a hazmat suit" — when preparing the medicine to sedate animals because even one drop splattered into a person's eye or nose could be fatal, said Dr. Rob Hilsenroth, executive director of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians.

A loaded syringe of a reversal drug is kept on hand just in case, and the extremely limited carfentanil supply regulators allow for such facilities is kept locked away and subject to auditing, Hilsenroth said.

Investigators are taking the risks seriously. In a bulletin to law enforcement agencies last week, DeWine's office discouraged police from field-testing suspected heroin or fentanyl for fear it contains carfentanil or other potentially harmful synthetic opioids. Instead, the office recommended sending samples straight to a lab for testing.

DeWine said drugs used for animals have showed up in street drugs before, but carfentanil is so new on the investigative scene that the state's crime lab didn't even have a standard for comparing samples.

In some suspected carfentanil cases, emergency responders have had to administer multiple doses of the overdose antidote naloxone, often known by the brand name Narcan, to save people, but even the antidote might not be enough.

Dr. Lakshmi Sammarco, the Hamilton County coroner in Cincinnati, publicly warned users during a recent news conference: "Narcan may not save you on this one."

___

Find Kantele Franko at http://www.twitter.com/kantele10. Her work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/author/kantele-franko.


(Yahoo News)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/30/2016 10:33:08 AM

Computer Systems Used by Clinton Campaign Are Said to Be Hacked, Apparently by Russians



Souvenirs at a Clinton rally in Philadelphia on Friday. CreditMark Makela for The New York Times


WASHINGTON — Computer systems used by Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign were hacked in an attack that appears to have come from Russia’s intelligence services, a federal law enforcement official said on Friday.The apparent breach, coming after the disclosure last month that theDemocratic National Committee’s computer system had been compromised, escalates an international episode in which Clinton campaign officials have suggested that Russia might be trying to sway the outcome of the election.

Mrs. Clinton’s campaign said in a statement that intruders had gained access to an analytics program used by the campaign and maintained by the national committee, but it said that it did not believe that the campaign’s own internal computer systems had been compromised.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, the fund-raising arm for House Democrats, also said on Friday that its systems had been hacked. Together, the databases of the national committee and the House organization contain some of the party’s most sensitive communications and voter and financial data.

Meredith Kelly, a spokeswoman for the congressional committee, said that after it discovered the breach, “we immediately took action and engaged with CrowdStrike, a leading forensic investigator, to assist us in addressing this incident.”

The attack on the congressional committee’s system appears to have come from an entity known as “Fancy Bear,” which is connected to the G.R.U., the Russian military intelligence service, according to an official involved in the forensic investigation.

The same arm of Russia’s intelligence operation was also implicated in the attack on the national committee, in which it gained access to opposition research on Republicans, including the party’s presidential nominee, Donald J. Trump.

“It’s the same adversary,” the official involved in the forensic investigation said. “These are sophisticated actors.”

The F.B.I. said on Friday that it was examining reports of “cyberintrusions involving multiple political entities” but did not identify the targets of the attacks.

The Clinton campaign used the program that was hacked to analyze voter data, but it did not contain voters’ Social Security numbers or credit card information, a campaign aide said. The campaign said it was confident, based on a review by outside experts, that getting into the program would not have allowed the hackers to gain access to the campaign’s internal emails, voice mail messages or other data.

The reports of attacks against Democratic Party organizations began in mid-June, when the Democratic National Committee said its computer systems had been breached by two groups of Russian hackers working for competing government intelligence agencies. After that breach, WikiLeaks last week released some 20,000 committee emails, many of them embarrassing to Democratic officials, which led Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida congresswoman, to resign as the group’s leader.

WikiLeaks’ founder, Julian Assange, has made it clear that he hopes to harm Mrs. Clinton’s chances of winning the presidency, opposing her candidacy on both policy and personal grounds. He has said that he has more material about the presidential campaign that he could release, which has raised the specter of more embarrassing disclosures just as Democrats try to capitalize on the momentum coming out of their convention this week.

American intelligence agencies have told the White House they have “high confidence” that the Russian government was behind the theft of emails and documents from the Democratic National Committee. But it is unclear whether the break-in was fairly routine espionage or part of an effort to manipulate the election.

The attacks on the Clinton campaign and the Democratic congressional committee were first reported by Reuters.

It is unclear whether the reported breaches at the national committee, the Clinton campaign and the congressional committee were part of a single coordinated attack or a series of attacks aimed at the Democrats, said the law enforcement official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

In a statement, the F.B.I. said that it “is aware of media reporting on cyberintrusions involving multiple political entities, and is working to determine the accuracy, nature and scope of these matters.”

Nick Merrill, a spokesman for the Clinton campaign, said in a statement that “an analytics data program maintained by the D.N.C., and used by our campaign and a number of other entities, was accessed as part of the D.N.C. hack.”

“Our campaign computer system has been under review by outside cybersecurity experts,” he added. “To date, they have found no evidence that our internal systems have been compromised.”

The hacks have added another unexpected wrinkle to the presidential campaign, with Mr. Trump asking Russia this week to “find” some 30,000 deleted emails from Mrs. Clinton’s days as secretary of state. (That statement, made well after the cyberattacks on the Democratic organizations, was called borderline treasonous by some Democrats, and Mr. Trump later said that he was being sarcastic.)

Clinton campaign officials have suggested that President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia could be trying to tilt the election to Mr. Trump, who has expressed admiration for the Russian leader. But the campaign officials acknowledge that they have no evidence. The Trump campaign has dismissed the accusations about Russia as a deliberate distraction.

The C.I.A. director, John O. Brennan, speaking at the Aspen Security Forum, declined to comment on the specific allegations but said that “obviously, interference in the U.S. election process is a very, very serious matter, and I think certainly this government would treat it with great seriousness.”

Eric Schmitt and David E. Sanger contributed reporting from Aspen, Colo.

(The New York Times)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/30/2016 10:54:59 AM
Hidden room, bloody freezer, handcuffs found in student slaying probe

The room was hidden inside a barn, behind tall hay bales, on James Dean Worley’s three-acre property west of Toledo, Ohio.

Its furnishings were chilling: restraints attached to the walls and a freezer lined with blood-stained carpet.

Almost as chilling were the contents of Worley’s truck: zip ties, a ski mask, two sets of handcuffs, rope, tape and recording equipment.

Scattered around his property were more rope, tape, zip ties, handcuffs, firearms and ammunition, alongside several video recording devices and film, according to an arrest warrant released Thursday and obtained by the Toledo Blade.

Worley was arrested last Friday and has been charged with the abduction and aggravated murder of 20-year-old University of Toledo student Sierah Joughin. The judge has ordered him to remain in jail.

Authorities believe this may not be the first abduction allegedly committed by Worley.

“Worley fits the profile of a serial offender and could potentially have additional unknown victims who could have been kept at the above described location,” Sgt. Matthew Smithmyer of the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department, said in court documents obtained by the Toledo Blade.

With long brown hair — sometimes curled, sometimes straightened — and a white, toothy smile, Sierah Joughin looked like many young college girls with their lives ahead of them. She loved horses and was a member of the University of Toledo’s business fraternity, Alpha Kappa Psi, according to her obituary.

On her Facebook page, she shared videos of cute, floppy puppies, recipes for no-bake chocolate peanut butter bars and messages encouraging beginners to try a barre workout.

Her profile photo showed her and her mother, Sheila Vaculik, their arms wrapped around each other, smiles on their faces.

Tuesday, July 19, Joughin went for a bike ride around her hometown of Lyons, Ohio, a tiny hamlet of 562 people about 30 miles west of Toledo. Out there, the flat landscape stretches on endlessly, punctuated periodically by cornfields.

Perched on a purple bicycle, clad in neon yellow tennis shorts and shirt and bright teal shoes, Joughin was a flash of bright color amid all that green.

Her boyfriend, Josh Kolasinksi, rode slowly alongside her on his motorcycle, People magazine reported. Eventually, it was growing late, and the two parted ways. They assumed they would have much more time together — after all, they’d been dating since middle school.

Joughin didn’t come home that night. Or the next. Or the next.

“We are struggling and trying to stay hopeful,” Tara Shaffer Ice, Joughin’s aunt, told People the day after Joughin’s disappearance. “We just want her to come home safe and [whoever has her] to just leave her where she is and let us have her back.”

“It’s the worst nightmare I’ve ever experienced,” Ice added.

“I just want her to come home,” Vaculik said.

She never would.

After three days of searching, police found Joughin’s remains resting in a shallow grave in a cornfield just a mile away from Worley’s property, on July 22.

That same day, police arrested 57-year-old James Dean Worley, crediting “old-fashioned police work” for the collar.


An undated booking photo shows James Worley. (Fulton County Sheriff’s Department via The Blade via AP)

Police originally questioned Worley while they were canvassing houses near his property. He told them he had been riding his motorcycle at the time of Joughin’s doomed bike ride, but that his motorbike had broken down. He claimed to have lost his helmet, screwdriver, sunglasses and fuses when he pushed his motorcycle into a nearby field, presumably to work on it.

All of those items were found near Joughin’s bicycle. Human blood coated the helmet.

The court documents released Thursday and obtained by theToledo Blade show that, after arresting Worley, police searched his three-acre property.

In addition to the hidden room, outfitted with restraints and a freezer lined with bloody carpet, they found several pairs of women’s underwear.

One pair was bloodied.

Sgt. Matthew Smithmyer of the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department wrote in a statement he knows “based upon his knowledge and experience that these types of offenders will often keep trophies.”

The property was also littered with hidden cameras.

If convicted, this wouldn’t be Worley’s first time in prison for abduction. The details behind his first imprisonment are eerily similar to those in Joughin’s case.

On Independence Day in 1990, the sun bore down on 26-year-old Robin Gardner, who was sweating as she rode her bike through the endless rows of tall cornstalks. Obee Road was still, quiet. It was peaceful.

That peace was shattered when a red flat-bed truck zoomed by her.

Gardner kept pedaling anyway.

Suddenly, the truck re-appeared, slamming into the back tire of her bike.

She was thrown from it and rolled into a roadside ditch. Worley jumped out of the truck and ran over to her, asking if she was okay.

After she said “yes,” he struck her on the back of her head and dragged her out of the ditch and across the road to his truck, threatening to kill her the entire way.

He reached inside the car and produced handcuffs, as she screamed.

He forced her into the truck.

“I was screaming in the cornfield at the top of my lungs — a blood-curdling scream, a scream I didn’t know I had in me,” Gardner told the Toledo Blade.

Using “every ounce of energy,” she scratched and kicked her way out of the vehicle and away from Worley. Once back on the road, she ran toward a motorcyclist who had stopped after witnessing the scuffle.

Though he, too, was a stranger, Gardner hopped on the back of the bike, and the two sped off.

Gardner may have gotten away, but the incident lingered in the form of a concussion and a skull fracture. In fact, it still lingers — the emotional scars she suffered from the near-abduction have yet to heal. She even ended up moving to an urban area, because the rural countryside now frightened her.

“I can’t walk in the woods alone, I can’t hike, camp, bird watch,” she told the Associated Press. “I get very afraid if people aren’t around to help me if I’m in need.”

This case brought those memories flooding back to Gardner.

“It’s like this guy strikes when the corn is high,” she told the Toledo Blade. “My heart hurts.”

Worley was sentenced to four to 10 years in prison. He entered in November 1990 and was paroled in December 1993.

Worley didn’t stay out of prison long, though. He returned in 2000, this time for the illegal manufacture or cultivation of marijuana and having weapons while under disability, according to the Toledo Blade. He was released in 2002.

Adding to the suspicion that Worley has abducted and killed more women is a frightening statement he made to a court-mandated therapist after his original stint in prison. He said he “learned from each abduction he had done and the next one he was going to bury.”

Gardner certainly thinks he did.

“Of course, I think he’s done it before and after me,” she said.

Worley is currently being held in the Corrections Center of Northwest Ohio without bond. The Associated Press reported that Worley has declined interview requests from the media and that Worley’s attorney said Thursday he had not seen the warrants and could not comment. It is not clear from media reports if Worley has entered a plea since being arrested a week ago.

Joughin’s family has established a scholarship fund in her name to benefit one graduate of Evergreen High School, her alma mater, each year. Thus far, the crowd-sourcing campaign has raised more than $36,000, according to its Web page.


Travis M. Andrews is a reporter for The Washington Post's Morning Mix. Previously he was an editor for Southern Living and a pop culture and tech contributor for Mashable.

Follow @travismandrews


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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