True Crime Update 3/28/06
Published March 28, 2006
So as an employee, and prone to nose bleeds, it's possible that Littlejohn had a nosebleed at some point while rooting around The Falls bar's cellar.
Source: Bloody nose likely DNA source
By Michele McPhee
Boston Herald
Thursday, March 23, 2006 - Updated: 01:26 PM ESTNEW YORK - A history of nose bleeds could explain why Darryl Littlejohn's blood was found smeared on the plastic bindings used to tie up murder victim Imette St. Guillen, a law enforcement said last night, hours after the career criminal was indicted and charged in her macabre murder.
The career criminal accused of killing the Boston native claimed in a TV report aired last night that the absence of wounds on his body should raise questions about the blood allegedly containing his DNA found on plastic straps that bound St. Guillen's wrists.
But a law enforcement source said jailed suspect Darryl Littlejohn is prone to nose bleeds, easily accounting for the evidence. He is charged with first-degree murder, kidnapping, and unlawful imprisonment.
In a jail interview with WCBS-TV, Littlejohn, 41, denied killing St. Guillen and said police "have the wrong person."
Bi-polar Debra LaFave Goes Free
And she's damn mad about the media attention.
Her press conference chastised us idiots out here in la-la land who don't get it that bi-polar disorder could cause such odd actions as teachers having sex with a young teen student in the back seat of a car.
She's working on her public image, although I wouldn't be surprised to see this young woman as a Playboy centerfold sometime in the near future.
The prosecutors settled on a plea deal in this case because LaFave's young victim would not testify. Simple as that. This decision has nothing at all to do with any bi-polar disorder, as LaFave would have us believe.
The picture above is from LaFave's wedding day.
If You Can't Be Drunk In a Bar, Then Where?
Public drinking to the point of intoxication is a problem in that drunks tend to do bad things like drive or engage in any manner of behavior that is not to the public's greater good.
So Texas plans on arresting drunk people right at the source.
Well it might work.
Texas arresting people in bars for being drunk.SAN ANTONIO, Texas (Reuters) - Texas has begun sending undercover agents into bars to arrest drinkers for being drunk, a spokeswoman for the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission said on Wednesday.
The first sting operation was conducted recently in a Dallas suburb where agents infiltrated 36 bars and arrested 30 people for public intoxication, said the commission's Carolyn Beck.
- True Crime Update 3/28/06
- Published: March 28, 2006
- Type: News
- Section: Culture
- Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Health/Fitness, Culture: Society, Culture: Media, Culture: Family and Relationships
- Part of a feature: True Crime Update
- Writer: Patfish
- Patfish's BC Writer page
- Patfish's personal site
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Comments
Thanks, Elvira.
We understand the Winkler woman has an attorney now so look for this guy to be leaking his client's story real soon.
Interesting and disturbing stuff, Pat, though I don't know about those "handsome cable news anchors." Something about them is quite unsettling, almost as creepy as some of the perps you've written about here.









Fascinating stuff, Pat--and I loved those alcohol warnings too.