Monday, August 18, 2008
The site has not been updated for awhile. The Owner "The HateLord" was shot during a home invasion robbery of his home in Las Vegas. I am a friend and was given the password the other day , so the site could be updated. The HateLord was seriously wounded , but is still alive. He has been unable to maintain the site as he is recovering in the hospital. So stay tuned if you are a daily reader ...He will be back.
Monday, July 21, 2008
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Las Vegas Cop Caught Smoking Weed
An off-duty NHP Sergeant who caused a deadly car accident is now under arrest. When it happened last month, investigators said a diabetic episode caused Sgt. Edward Lattin to black out behind the wheel.
Now they say it wasn't diabetes, but marijuana.
According to this criminal complaint, Lattin was incapable of driving. He was speeding and driving erratically. He slammed into a car, killing a passenger. Police say he did it all under the influence of marijuana.
Back in June, investigators said diabetes may have been to blame. They also said Lattin actually wanted to be drug tested in order to prove his innocence.
According to the criminal complaint, Lattin was speeding down Rainbow and Tropicana in his truck when he rammed another car from behind. The impact was so strong, Ying Warren was ejected and died at the scene.
The driver Manuel Ramirez suffered serious injuries.
Lattin was a fixture at accidents just like the one he caused. He was on NHP's Fatal Service Patrol, working at accident scenes to piece together what happened.
Lattin has been put on administrative leave while a DPS investigation continues.
Director Jerry Hafen tells the I-Team the Department of Public Safety has zero tolerance for substance abuse, either on or off-duty and they hold police officers to the highest standards of conduct.
A source says Lattin turned himself in to police in his attorney's office. If convicted, Lattin could face two to 20 to years in prison.
Now they say it wasn't diabetes, but marijuana.
According to this criminal complaint, Lattin was incapable of driving. He was speeding and driving erratically. He slammed into a car, killing a passenger. Police say he did it all under the influence of marijuana.
Back in June, investigators said diabetes may have been to blame. They also said Lattin actually wanted to be drug tested in order to prove his innocence.
According to the criminal complaint, Lattin was speeding down Rainbow and Tropicana in his truck when he rammed another car from behind. The impact was so strong, Ying Warren was ejected and died at the scene.
The driver Manuel Ramirez suffered serious injuries.
Lattin was a fixture at accidents just like the one he caused. He was on NHP's Fatal Service Patrol, working at accident scenes to piece together what happened.
Lattin has been put on administrative leave while a DPS investigation continues.
Director Jerry Hafen tells the I-Team the Department of Public Safety has zero tolerance for substance abuse, either on or off-duty and they hold police officers to the highest standards of conduct.
A source says Lattin turned himself in to police in his attorney's office. If convicted, Lattin could face two to 20 to years in prison.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Sweatiest City List!!!
If you want to sweat, the desert is still the place to go.
For the fourth year in a row, Phoenix has been named America's sweatiest city by Old Spice. Las Vegas came in second, and Tallahassee, Fla., placed third.
Old Spice said its findings are based on computer simulations of the amount of sweat an average person would have produced walking around for an hour during June, July, and August of last year.
Residents in Phoenix pump out an average of 26.4 ounces of sweat an hour during the summer, company research found. That's the equivalent of more than two cans of soda.
Here are the top 10 sweatiest cities.
* Phoenix
* Las Vegas
* Tallahassee, Fla.
* Tucson
* Memphis
* Miami
* Houston
* Tampa, Fla.
* Baton Rouge, La.
* Fort Myers, Fla.
San Francisco was the least sweaty city on the list, coming in at No. 100.
For the fourth year in a row, Phoenix has been named America's sweatiest city by Old Spice. Las Vegas came in second, and Tallahassee, Fla., placed third.
Old Spice said its findings are based on computer simulations of the amount of sweat an average person would have produced walking around for an hour during June, July, and August of last year.
Residents in Phoenix pump out an average of 26.4 ounces of sweat an hour during the summer, company research found. That's the equivalent of more than two cans of soda.
Here are the top 10 sweatiest cities.
* Phoenix
* Las Vegas
* Tallahassee, Fla.
* Tucson
* Memphis
* Miami
* Houston
* Tampa, Fla.
* Baton Rouge, La.
* Fort Myers, Fla.
San Francisco was the least sweaty city on the list, coming in at No. 100.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
NFL Player Robbed and Beaten On the Las Vegas Mean Streets
Oakland Raider Javon Walker could be released from Sunrise Hospital Tuesday.
The wide receiver was admitted Monday after he was beaten, robbed, and left unconscious on the Las Vegas Strip after a night of partying, according to police.
He was found in the driveway of the Summer Bay Resort.
Police say a large amount of cash and some jewelry were taken from Walker, who suffered "significant injuries."
Police say he has an orbital fracutre, but they haven't release how he received the fracture.
Walker signed a six-year, $55 million deal with the Raiders after being released by the Denver Broncos in February.
A Raiders spokesman says the team is in the process of gathering information and has no further comment.
The wide receiver was admitted Monday after he was beaten, robbed, and left unconscious on the Las Vegas Strip after a night of partying, according to police.
He was found in the driveway of the Summer Bay Resort.
Police say a large amount of cash and some jewelry were taken from Walker, who suffered "significant injuries."
Police say he has an orbital fracutre, but they haven't release how he received the fracture.
Walker signed a six-year, $55 million deal with the Raiders after being released by the Denver Broncos in February.
A Raiders spokesman says the team is in the process of gathering information and has no further comment.
Deaths of 2 Men in Ruled Murder-Suicide
The shotgun deaths of two Phoenix men whose bodies were found north of Las Vegas was a murder-suicide, a Nevada sheriff said Tuesday.
But the exact circumstances surrounding the deaths of William Joshua Kim, 27, and James Joseph Dyer, 33, may never be known, Lincoln County Sheriff Kerry Lee said.
Lee said one man shot the other, then shot himself. But the sheriff wouldn't say which of the men fired the gun.
Lee said detectives found no signs of a struggle and no suicide notes. Investigators were still trying to determine whether both men planned to die.
"We still don't know why they came where they came, why they did what they did," Lee told The Associated Press. "We're still trying to get to what their actual relationship was."
Lee said Dyer, who had a criminal history in Arizona and had been identified by the FBI based on fingerprints, cashed about $10,000 out of a retirement fund before the trip.
Kim was identified through his tattoos and by his family in Illinois, Lee said.
Their bodies were found Thursday off a dirt road near a lake in the Pahranagat National Wildlife Refuge, about 80 miles north of Las Vegas.
Investigators learned the men rented a car in Phoenix and spent the night of June 11 at the MGM Grand resort on the Las Vegas Strip.
Authorities were working with MGM grand security officials to use surveillance tapes to piece together how the pair spent their time at the resort and whom they encountered while there, Lee said. Lee said authorities still hadn't determined where the gun found near the bodies was purchased.
Dyer and Kim had separate addresses in Phoenix but may have worked together at a large retail chain store, Lee said. Their families did not know one another, he said.
Dyer's family was from Michigan, he said.
But the exact circumstances surrounding the deaths of William Joshua Kim, 27, and James Joseph Dyer, 33, may never be known, Lincoln County Sheriff Kerry Lee said.
Lee said one man shot the other, then shot himself. But the sheriff wouldn't say which of the men fired the gun.
Lee said detectives found no signs of a struggle and no suicide notes. Investigators were still trying to determine whether both men planned to die.
"We still don't know why they came where they came, why they did what they did," Lee told The Associated Press. "We're still trying to get to what their actual relationship was."
Lee said Dyer, who had a criminal history in Arizona and had been identified by the FBI based on fingerprints, cashed about $10,000 out of a retirement fund before the trip.
Kim was identified through his tattoos and by his family in Illinois, Lee said.
Their bodies were found Thursday off a dirt road near a lake in the Pahranagat National Wildlife Refuge, about 80 miles north of Las Vegas.
Investigators learned the men rented a car in Phoenix and spent the night of June 11 at the MGM Grand resort on the Las Vegas Strip.
Authorities were working with MGM grand security officials to use surveillance tapes to piece together how the pair spent their time at the resort and whom they encountered while there, Lee said. Lee said authorities still hadn't determined where the gun found near the bodies was purchased.
Dyer and Kim had separate addresses in Phoenix but may have worked together at a large retail chain store, Lee said. Their families did not know one another, he said.
Dyer's family was from Michigan, he said.
Monday, June 16, 2008
Another Strip Construction Project Death
Another Las Vegas construction worker has been killed on the job. A construction worker at the Echelon resort lost his life Monday morning.
THE 50-year-old carpenter was working 15 to 20 feet off the ground and somehow he fell through, or off, the scaffolding. Boyd Gaming officials tell us he was wearing his harness, but fell on his head.
This marks the twelfth construction accident on the Strip in the last 18 months.
THE 50-year-old carpenter was working 15 to 20 feet off the ground and somehow he fell through, or off, the scaffolding. Boyd Gaming officials tell us he was wearing his harness, but fell on his head.
This marks the twelfth construction accident on the Strip in the last 18 months.
Woman Killed In Hit and Run Accident
Police are investigating a hit & run accident that killed a woman. The accident happened around 6:30 p.m. on Friday at Maryland Parkway near Stewart.
Police say the woman was transported to the hospital in critical condition where she later died. Metro's Fatal Detail has been called to the scene to investigate.
No other information has been released. Metro, NHP and HPD, report on an average... 75 hit and runs a WEEK in the Las Vegas Valley!
Police say the woman was transported to the hospital in critical condition where she later died. Metro's Fatal Detail has been called to the scene to investigate.
No other information has been released. Metro, NHP and HPD, report on an average... 75 hit and runs a WEEK in the Las Vegas Valley!
Tracking Down Nevada Sex Offenders
Metro Police are asking for the public's help tracking down sex offenders. Police say there are 275 unregistered sex offenders loose in the valley and they don't know where to find them.
Sex offenders are required to list their addresses with law enforcement so they can be tracked. But some of them have moved, used fake addresses or just hiding out and police are franticly trying to find them before they attack again.
For six months Metro Police Officers have been going door to door trying to pin down where the valley's 4,200 sex offenders live. In nearly 300 cases, officers came up empty handed.
"We have found some vacant addresses, vacant lots where people have used as their addresses," said Captain Vincent Cannito with Metro's Crimes Against Youth & Family Detail.
Larry James Washington is one of the sex offenders who didn't keep his address up to date. Police found him after his dogs attacked a salesperson. Now investigators are trying to track down 275 others who didn't keep their contact information on file.
"When they disappear in a big city, you can only do so much. Peverted people want to hide and out can't always find them," said parent Lisa Racine.
Lisa says she checks Metro's sex offender database to see if there are any offenders in her neighborhood. But with so many of offenders listed as non-compliant, checking the database isn't good enough anymore.
"It's your job to teach your kids that they can't trust or take for face value, because a lot of times they don't look like what we will stereotype they are," she said.
Lisa knows who and where the sex offenders are in her neighborhood, and as of July 1, 2008, she may find out about more. That's because all sex offenders will be required to register, no matter what level of sex crime they commit.
"It's better that they are having them register. That makes me feel a little bit better," said parent Brian Vonneida.
The rules for offenders will get tougher ad parents will be able to find more sex offenders. But for Metro, that means they will have to spend more time tracking down the offenders who don't follow the rules.
Metro officers say under the new laws, in southern Nevada the number of tier 3 sex offenders rapists, pedophiles and other violent criminals will jump from 125 to more than 2,000.
Although the new laws create tough, new requirements, last month parole officers say they don't have enough the manpower to enforce them.
Sex offenders are required to list their addresses with law enforcement so they can be tracked. But some of them have moved, used fake addresses or just hiding out and police are franticly trying to find them before they attack again.
For six months Metro Police Officers have been going door to door trying to pin down where the valley's 4,200 sex offenders live. In nearly 300 cases, officers came up empty handed.
"We have found some vacant addresses, vacant lots where people have used as their addresses," said Captain Vincent Cannito with Metro's Crimes Against Youth & Family Detail.
Larry James Washington is one of the sex offenders who didn't keep his address up to date. Police found him after his dogs attacked a salesperson. Now investigators are trying to track down 275 others who didn't keep their contact information on file.
"When they disappear in a big city, you can only do so much. Peverted people want to hide and out can't always find them," said parent Lisa Racine.
Lisa says she checks Metro's sex offender database to see if there are any offenders in her neighborhood. But with so many of offenders listed as non-compliant, checking the database isn't good enough anymore.
"It's your job to teach your kids that they can't trust or take for face value, because a lot of times they don't look like what we will stereotype they are," she said.
Lisa knows who and where the sex offenders are in her neighborhood, and as of July 1, 2008, she may find out about more. That's because all sex offenders will be required to register, no matter what level of sex crime they commit.
"It's better that they are having them register. That makes me feel a little bit better," said parent Brian Vonneida.
The rules for offenders will get tougher ad parents will be able to find more sex offenders. But for Metro, that means they will have to spend more time tracking down the offenders who don't follow the rules.
Metro officers say under the new laws, in southern Nevada the number of tier 3 sex offenders rapists, pedophiles and other violent criminals will jump from 125 to more than 2,000.
Although the new laws create tough, new requirements, last month parole officers say they don't have enough the manpower to enforce them.
10 People Run Down On The Las Vegas Strip
Police are investigating a hit and run accident that happened early Sunday on the Las Vegas Strip. At about 2:30 a.m., a car driving northbound on Las Vegas Boulevard veered off the road near the MGM Grand and went onto the sidewalk.
The car hit at least 10 people. Eight were taken to the hospital for injuries. The driver and its occupants fled the scene. Their car was found near Harmon and Audrey with a flat tire.
Witnesses say there were four black men in the car. They're still on the loose.
The car hit at least 10 people. Eight were taken to the hospital for injuries. The driver and its occupants fled the scene. Their car was found near Harmon and Audrey with a flat tire.
Witnesses say there were four black men in the car. They're still on the loose.
Monday, June 09, 2008
Mexican Thugs On The Loose
Police are looking for three thugs accused in a home invasion robbery that happened in the Northwest part of the valley today.
Metro says three Mexicans, between 18 to 20 years-old, broke into an apartment on Tenaya near Lake Mead. The suspects were armed with a weapon but it's unclear if the robbers took anything. Officials do say that the suspects were searching for Methadone.
The residents of the apartment were not hurt. The suspects took off in a burgundy car, which may have been a newer maroon-colored Mercury.
Metro says three Mexicans, between 18 to 20 years-old, broke into an apartment on Tenaya near Lake Mead. The suspects were armed with a weapon but it's unclear if the robbers took anything. Officials do say that the suspects were searching for Methadone.
The residents of the apartment were not hurt. The suspects took off in a burgundy car, which may have been a newer maroon-colored Mercury.
Las Vegas Graduation Party Turns Deadly
A Las Vegas high school graduation party turned deadly early Sunday morning at Bob Baskin Park. Metro Police say it began with a fight at a party near Lindell Road and Rainbow Boulevard, Soon after, a number of shots were fired at the park on West Oakey Boulevard near Rancho Drive. An 18-year-old man was found dead inside a car at the park. A second man was shot in the torso. He was taken to University Medical Center. Detectives say the victims had just graduated from Spring Valley and Clark High schools. Police are searching for a dark-colored small car, possibly a Scion TC coupe with customer wheels and a paint job that appears to change colors at different angles.




