Monday, February 24, 2014

Mass Murder in Prince George’s County, Maryland Discovered on Saturday

 
PGPD District III Commander on scene of triple homicide in Capitol Heights. Photo: PGPD
 

 

Re-posted by Nicholas Stix

Thanks for this story to Former PGC Resident, who remarks,

Prince George’s County, Maryland: Just an extension of Washington, D.C.

"It's just a reality that it can happen anywhere. People live in a bubble where they don't think it can happen to them, but it does," Lexington Court resident Jeanette Carraway said.

The just quoted lady is white, but seeks to sound black, so as to be acceptable to her black neighbors. She's full of crap, and she knows it. The phrase seeks to make it sound as if crime were an inescapable, natural phenomenon, like the rain. It's a variation on "Every group has criminals," and "They were in the wrong place at the wrong time."

But I thought poverty "caused" crime?

If we were to take the lady in question seriously, there would be no point in living anywhere but in the poorest, cheapest sections of the worst black ghettoes. After all, why waste money on overpriced property and schools, if you're just going to get hit with violent crime, anyway?

Jeanette Carraway doesn't believe that for a minute, or she wouldn't be living in Lexington Court

We will likely find out that the victims were involved in crime.

Keep in mind that PGC is both one of the most affluent counties in the nation, yet it has the crime rate of an impoverished county.

How does it manage to accomplish such a dubious Double Daily? It’s a black thing; you wouldn’t understand. The wealth, like the criminality, is all confiscatory. Virtually no one in PGC produces any wealth. The county is dominated by blacks with highly-paid, affirmative action jobs in both the public and private sectors, and by their black criminal relatives and neighbors. Sometimes the AA employees and the criminals are same people.

When whites or Asians of average or higher intelligence come from humble circumstances, they devote themselves to the goal of insuring that their children have better lives than they did.

In blacks’ delusional world, they are even more devoted (unwed) parents than the aforementioned (married) whites and Asians. That is because in blacks’ delusions, they are smarter, more industrious, thriftier, more virtuous, heroic, patriotic and more oppressed than any other group in America.

However, in the real world, we know that most black parents are unfit, that their children act accordingly, and that most black “role models”--who are paid out of our pockets--handcuff the police, aid and abet black criminals, and encourage all young blacks to break the law. On top of that, PGC is black-ruled, in today’s Jim Snow America.

Confiscating every penny produced by America’s white and Asian net tax base would have no positive effect on blacks in PGC, or anywhere else. Money is not the problem, black racist evil is.

 

911 Caller Alerts PGPD to Triple Homicide in Capitol Heights By Kevin Lewis February 22, 2014 - 8:54 p.m. WJLA News

CAPITOL HEIGHTS, Md. (WJLA) - Prince George's County Police are investigating the worst homicide scene, in terms of death toll, since Aug. 2010.

Around 5:30 p.m. Saturday, an individual called 911 upon finding three bodies in an apartment in the 5200 block of Marlboro Pike in Capitol Heights.

Patrol officers responded to the unit, at the Lexington Court Apartment Homes, and located three adults lying dead. Names, ages and genders have not been released.

"All I can tell you is he was a good person, a good father, a good son, happy, joyous in general," Iris Mattox, who identified herself as the aunt of a male victim, told ABC7.

A sea of squad cars and yellow police tape blocked pedestrian and vehicle traffic in the community, which heralds itself on its leasing website as, "the best apartment community in Capitol Heights."

"It's just a reality that it can happen anywhere. People live in a bubble where they don't think it can happen to them, but it does," Lexington Court resident Jeanette Carraway said.

Last summer, burglars broke into Carraway's apartment, less than one month after she moved in. "Crime does happen here," she contended, "but nothing like this."

For hours Saturday, homicide and intelligence detectives trudged through the dark, going door-to-door looking for eyewitnesses, hoping to ID a suspect(s), in addition to determining a motive in the triple slaying.

While detectives worked the streets, crime scene technicians processed the apartment from top-to-bottom. Police spokeswoman Julie Parker said beyond conventional tools, investigators were utilizing the department's new 3D imaging scanner. The high-tech device provides police, and potentially a jury, with a 360-degree view of a crime scene, in-effect, bringing it back to life weeks, months, even years later.

"This is a highly unusual crime. You can tell by the amount of resources we have out here, we're working diligently to get this solved," Parker said.

Based-on memory, police told ABC7, Saturday's killings were the worst since an Aug. 2010 quadruple homicide. It was a hot summer day, when Darrell Bellard, 46, and Tkeisha Gilmer, 18, allegedly killed two women and two young children. It happened in a trash-filled detached Riverdale garage, turned makeshift apartment. Police say the woman, and their three and four-year-olds, were killed "execution-style" during a drug deal gone terribly wrong.

Now tasked with yet another large-scale homicide, detectives will return to the Lexington Court Apartment Homes Sunday to pass out Crime Solvers flyers, and talk with more residents.

"Very often in a case like this, it's a citizens tip, a call into Crime Solvers. Information that may or may not seem big or small to them, but in a time like this when we are working against the clock, it's very valuable," Parker added.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Prince George's County Police Department's Homicide Unit at 301-772-4925. Callers wishing to remain anonymous may call Crime Solvers at 1-866-411-TIPS (8477), text "PGPD plus your message" to CRIMES (274637) on your cell phone, or go to www.pgcrimesolvers.com and submit a tip online. A reward of up to $25,000 is offered to anyone who provides information leading to an arrest and indictment in this case.

2 comments:

  1. "They were in the wrong place at the wrong time."

    Being in your own apartment when you want to be there is hardly being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It was a robbery gone wrong.

    ReplyDelete