To: rdkflorida2 who wrote (101697 ) 12/18/2015 1:27:18 PM From: John 1 RecommendationRecommended By Honey_Bee
Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 103300 If Obama had sons, they would all look like these three very dangerous Black felons who have been beating and robbing senior citizens in their own homes!3 suspects indicted for 'extremely violent' home invasions lasvegasnow.com excerpt: Three men are facing serious charges in a string of "extremely violent" home invasions that occurred over the summer in the southwest part of the Las Vegas valley.Metro Police and the Clark County District Attorney's office held a news conference Wednesday afternoon to announce the indictments of 28-year-old Brandon Black, 42-year-old Wilbert Knight, Jr. and 23-year-old Quincy Williams. Metro Lt. Jack Clements said the home invasions were random and happened in July and August over a five-week period. He said the victims in the homes were often beaten and sometimes sexually assaulted. "Imagine that you're at home with your family, watching TV, making dinner, and then all of a sudden, the door to your house gets broken in," Lt. Clements said. "They tie you up. They ransack your house, steal items out of your house, and then, in some instances, commit a sexual assault." Ronald Lawrence with the Community Counseling Center of Southern Nevada says a traumatic home invasion like that can lead to Acute Stress Injury. "What this involves is disturbing recollections, not feeling safe anymore in your environment, scanning the horizon for dangers, nightmares," he said. "It causes a sense of alarm in the public as well, because what the public wonders, 'If the next person will be me.'" In some cases, Lawrence says home invasions can lead to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Investigators got a break in the investigation when some physical evidence was left at one of the home invasions, District Attorney Steve Wolfson said. The three men are facing 46 felony charges, including robbery, home invasion, sexual assault, kidnapping and other charges. "They will not see the light of day for a long, long time," he said. "One of the charges is first degree kidnapping. If these individuals are convicted of first degree kidnapping, they're looking at life sentences." Many of the victims were senior citizens, Wolfson said. "They are very violent individuals," he said. "We are glad they are off the streets today."