Vincent Smothers, 27, says he's no stranger to death. He told police that he stealthily freelanced seven slayings on Detroit's poverty-stricken east side from 2006 to the end of last year.
Vincent Smothers, 27, says he's no stranger to death. He told police that he stealthily freelanced seven slayings on Detroit's poverty-stricken east side from 2006 to the end of last year, mostly drug dealers. But he also has confessed to killing two men who were targeted as federal informants and a Detroit police sergeant's wife.
Let us hope that he has not been relying too heavily on something so precarious. But the anguish in Henry Cecil was so obvious at York on Thursday that you have to fear otherwise.
He’ll be hard to miss, even among the hundreds of other young men and women cloaked in gaps and gowns on the crowded floor of the Hearnes Center. Just search around for the 6-foot-9 guy, the one sure to be wearing a smile even broader than his burly frame Saturday evening as he strolls across the stage to pick up his diploma in the commencement ceremony for the College of Agriculture, Food and
From a stream of eager applicants in San Francisco to a paperwork switch in Santa Clara County, clerks'offices - the first stop for anyone looking to get hitched - whirled into motion after Thursday's state Supreme Court ruling favoring gay marriage.
Most of the year, he's on the lower James River searching for big blue catfish, or near Pony Pasture looking for flathead cats. But for a couple of weeks in June, Mike Ostrander of the James River Fishing School brings his knowledge to the people. Ostrander is teaching the basics of freshwater fishing through the University of Richmond's school of continuing education.