A post-mortem examination later concluded the pensioner had died from a single stab wound to the back. Gardai have yet to establish a motive.Items, including a number of kitchen knives, were recovered from the apartment where Mr Redmond was found and have been sent for technical examination.It is believed the knife that gardai suspect was used to inflict the fatal stab wound is among the items seized.Originally from Dublin, Mr Redmond, who had a number of underlying medical issues, moved to Limerick more than 10 years ago.A separated father with three grown up daughters, he was only recently released from hospital, where he was being treated for a number of medical issues including arthritis.It is understood he also suffered some minor injuries in a burglary at his apartment in recent weeks. His estranged wife and daughters are devastated by his death.Neighbours of Mr Redmond yesterday told of their shock at his murder. They described him as a quiet man who was often alone.Ayaz Binarshad, from Pakistan, has lived in the complex for the past year."I would see him on the street often and say hello.
I live here with my family. We were very shocked when the guards came to our door on Sunday. It has left us a little scared," he said.One woman who lives in the same building as Mr Redmond, but did not wish to be named, described him as a quiet man."He was just your typical older man living on his own, he didn't talk much but you'd always see him around," she said. A local woman says she's lucky to be alive after a man held her up at knife point while robbing a business she opened nearly a year ago."He said, I don't want to hurt you, give me all the money, and he had the bag open and the knife, the knife was literally inches from me. I could barely put the money in the bag but I had to gather myself because one wrong move and he could have easily stabbed me," recalls Merri Kellums.Merri Kellums and her sister own the resale shop Pennies in Your Pocket on North Main in Rockford. On Tuesday, she says a man came into her store, looked around, and left, then came back a second time with a knife. Kellums says during the robbery, she tried to use a device on her key chain that connects to a security company, but it took them 20 minutes to get in touch with her. Kellums says she's not bitter about what happened.
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They are dedicated to having ongoing sponsorships with national athletes, fitness models and yoga champions.Not all trendy fashions have to break the bank. FOX 11's Alexandra Limon and celebrity stylist Marcellas Reynolds hit two stores and found some high-end bargains. First up, they headed to Crossroads in West Hollywood. Marcellas says "navy is the new black"; it's very, very popular. And it was in big supply at Crossroads. Also in style: military green camouflage, for both men and women, and bold graphic prints for women. At Crossroads, Marcellas and Alexandra found dozens of chic and trendy outfits thought didn't break the bank. The best find: black and white pants with a $450 original price tag (still attached!) on sale at the store for $75. There was also lots of faux fur at non-fur prices… $30 for brand-name labels.If you live in Orange County, you will want to make a trip to the Goodwill in Tustin. Joe Burke of the OC Goodwill says "the idea here is to build a boutique store that's got more upscale items." Burke says there are "still great deals and you're going to find things that are about 80% less than you will at retail."
Eric Smissen, the store's visual designer, says if you don't see what you want during your shopping trip, keep coming back. Inventory is updates daily. "There's absolutely no difference between the merchandise that you're getting at a major retailer than you're getting here, except for the price," says Smissen. Not only are you getting a good price, you doing good work. A man apparently unhappy with his wife's choice of lingerie decided to burn the clothes rather than see her wear them.Newton County Sheriff's Office Deputy Cortney Morrison said the victim came home late Thursday night to find her clothes burning on the back yard grill.Deputies responded to the home on Landon Way when a family member called the Sheriff's Office to report the victim and her husband, James Freeman, were arguing."The responding deputy could smell something burning and saw smoke coming from the back yard," Morrison said,The deputy approached the victim and asked her what was burning."The victim said her clothes were put on the grill by Freeman and burned," Morrison said.
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Just past the entrance, his childhood bed with a patchwork quilt is on display. In a dresser drawer are some of the books Steinbeck, apparently a reading prodigy, devoured as a child, including Virgil's "The Aeneid," with penciled-in annotations. An audio recording directly over the bed reads excerpts from other childhood favorites of Steinbeck. He read Twain and Whitman's "Leaves of Grass"; influences of both permeate his later writing.The audio biography of Steinbeck calls him a bookish, "innately shy child." That was half right, according to Salinas native Edward Silacci, whose father went to school with Steinbeck."A friend of my dad's was in the same class with him and (Steinbeck) was a little devil in grammar school," Silacci said. "He was the kind of kid to put the ponytail in the inkwell."Interjected Silacci's wife, Barbara: "I remember your dad saying he would always see Steinbeck around the teachers, always writing something. Everyone in town expected great things from him.
"In fact, printed on a wall, amid other quotations about Steinbeck, was this declaration from his mother, Olive: "He'll either be a genius or amount to nothing."The second half of the tour provides the answer. It chronicles Steinbeck's time as a war correspondent during World War II, his forays into other types of writing (plays, screenplays) and photos and audio from his Nobel Prize acceptance speech. Literature fans will delight in the anecdote passed along by Steinbeck's third wife, Elaine. Steinbeck, apparently nervous about giving the customary Nobel laureate speech in Stockholm, called William Faulkner, who had won the honor in 1949, just before Faulkner's death.According to Elaine, Steinbeck asked, "Tell me about your speech." Faulkner said, "I don't know, I was so scared I drank so much I don't remember it."She added, "So John said to me, 'Elaine when we go over there will you do something with me? Will you go through the five days and not drink a drop of any liquor with me?'"Steinbeck remembered his speech, and it was memorable to others as well.
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A Middlesex County man has been charged with child endangerment after his 1-year-old son was found wandering by himself on a Montgomery street last month, authorities said.Dewitt Stallings III, 34, of Monroe, also was charged with drug offenses after police found marijuana and heroin in a nearby residence where he was babysitting the child, authorities said.Montgomery police were dispatched at about 9:30 a.m. on Oct. 18 to Primrose Court in the Belle Mead section of the township for a report of a 1-year-old boy found walking in the street, according to an affidavit filed on Wednesday in Superior Court in Somerville.When a township detective arrived on scene, the boy was only wearing a Onesie and socks, and carrying a bottle of milk, the affidavit states. The child also was "badly in need of a new diaper," the affidavit states.Other officers found Stallings in a Dominicus Court residence, a few blocks from Primrose Court, the affidavit states.
The child lives at the residence with his mother, said Capt. Jack Bennett, spokesman for the Somerset County Prosecutor's Office.Stallings responded to the detective's location to take custody of the infant and estimated that the child "could have been outside for 30-60 minutes during which time he stated he was asleep on the couch," the affidavit states.Township police accompanied Stallings and the child back to the residence in order to contact the state's Division of Child Protection and Permanency, the affidavit states.While changing the infant's diaper, Stallings attempted to conceal a cigarette box under a comforter in a bedroom, police said. Police also observed marijuana in plain view in the bedroom, and asked Stallings for consent to search the residence, the affidavit states.After Stallings agreed to the search, police found the marijuana on the bedroom dresser as well as 43 "decks of heroin" in the cigarette box, the affidavit states.
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