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#2
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#3
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A trucker was the one who stopped the DC snipers.
Must be cool to be a trucker, sorta like a super hero. Joe |
#4
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![]() "Joe" wrote: A trucker was the one who stopped the DC snipers. Must be cool to be a trucker, sorta like a super hero. Yeah, Scotty's got a big 'S' tatooed on his chest! Seahag |
#5
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Seahag wrote:
"Joe" wrote: A trucker was the one who stopped the DC snipers. Must be cool to be a trucker, sorta like a super hero. Yeah, Scotty's got a big 'S' tatooed on his chest! Seahag Well, "S' stands for a lot of things.... |
#6
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I think truckers are America's superheroes!
Bless them! Amen! "Joe" wrote in message oups.com... A trucker was the one who stopped the DC snipers. Must be cool to be a trucker, sorta like a super hero. Joe |
#7
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![]() "Seahag" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote: A trucker was the one who stopped the DC snipers. Must be cool to be a trucker, sorta like a super hero. Yeah, Scotty's got a big 'S' HEY! I'm just big boned. Scotty |
#8
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Is that your kind of hero?
Amen! "Mys Terry" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 24 Feb 2006 15:40:08 GMT, "Bob Crantz" wrote: I think truckers are America's superheroes! Bless them! Amen! "Joe" wrote in message groups.com... A trucker was the one who stopped the DC snipers. Must be cool to be a trucker, sorta like a super hero. Joe Suspect Had Rape Record Florida Truck Driver Was Jailed, Released February 18, 2006 By TRACY GORDON FOX, Courant Staff Writer The truck driver charged Friday with the kidnapping and rape of an Ashford woman served 12 years in a Florida prison for committing nearly exactly the same crime 18 years ago. Thomas E. Hooks, 50, was sentenced to 27 years in prison for an April 4, 1988, attack. In that incident, he rammed a woman's vehicle off the road with his 18-wheeler, forced her into the truck at gunpoint and raped her twice before discarding her at the side of the road, according to published reports. Hooks was released in 2000, having served less than half of his sentence, and soon got another job as a truck driver, working for Southern Cal Transport of Birmingham, Ala., according to police records. On Feb. 6, police said, Hooks waved down the Ashford woman on an I-84 exit ramp, telling her there was something wrong with his truck. When she got out of her car to offer her cellphone, he forced her into the sleeper cab, where he blindfolded her, raped her and threatened to shoot her if she looked at him, police said. Initially, the details seemed sketchy. The rapist was described as a heavy-set black man, 45 to 50, driving a common-looking white tractor-trailer one exit from a major truck stop where hundreds of big rigs drive through daily. But using details from the victim and information from witnesses who saw Hooks and his truck, detectives from the Department of Public Safety's Eastern District Major Crime Squad tracked Hooks and the Alabama trucking company he had been working for. The state police forensic laboratory also found Hooks' DNA on a piece of evidence left at the crime scene, sources said. Hooks, of 1030 Cynthia Lane, Pensacola, Fla., was charged with first-degree kidnapping, first-degree aggravated sexual assault, criminal use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, unlawful restraint and third-degree sexual assault. Now Connecticut authorities said they would be working with police along the East Coast to determine whether Hooks is responsible for similar unsolved crimes. "We will certainly provide the information we have in our case to law enforcement, due to the transient business he was in," said Sgt. J. Paul Vance, a state police spokesman. Hooks was arrested Friday shortly after 11 a.m. at Route 372 and Industrial Park Road in Cromwell, on a run through Connecticut, state police said. Troopers seized the truck and plan to search it for evidence. Hooks was held, with bail set at $1 million, and is scheduled to appear in Superior Court in Danielson Tuesday, police said. The woman and her family learned the details of Hooks' prior crime after his arrest Friday. "I'm furious. That's disgusting," the Ashford victim's brother said of Hooks' being convicted of a similar crime and released early. Hooks' picture can be found on Florida's sexual offender website. The Ashford mother of three was ecstatic that state police detectives had been able to track down her attacker, her brother said. "She's extremely relieved. The nightmare is over," he said, adding that she had gone out to lunch with her sister to celebrate after hearing the news. "We are all elated. My mom called me in tears." The day after the Feb. 6 assault, the victim's family put up signs along the highway, urging anyone who may have seen the white tractor-trailer or its driver to call a tip line. State police also set up roadblocks, and questioned commuters coming home around the time of the evening attack. The woman was returning home from her job with warm Chinese food in the back of her car and heading to pick up her children at day care when she stopped to help the truck driver, she told police. Police credit the woman's "great courage with her ability to recall specific important detail," in helping them solve the crime, Vance said. The woman managed to call 911 from a cellphone and shout for help during the attack, a call that sent troopers to the exit where her car had been left, its engine still running. But the truck driver had already driven to the next exit, near the truck stop, where he eventually dragged the woman out of his truck and tied her to a tree, police said. She managed to get free of the ropes and flagged down a passing motorist, who called state police. The woman "suffered a great deal in this criminal act," Vance said. "The victim's cooperation with the state police detectives has enabled them to keep this investigation moving forward." She was able to identify Hooks through photographs after police learned of his identity, sources said. The trucking company he worked for was cooperative in the investigation, police said. No one was available for comment at the company Friday. A team of detectives used cellphone records, satellite tracking systems and some forensic evidence to track Hooks, sources said. "Since the 6th of February, certain investigators have worked nonstop," Vance said. The victim's brother said he has been amazed by her strength. The family is hoping Hooks will be convicted and not be set free this time. "She's strong and pulling through this better than most," her brother said. "She could have just crawled up in a ball. But she wanted everyone to know what had happened if it helps to save one person." |
#9
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Bill has issues with truckers, his Mom worked the parking
lot of the New Haven truckstop. he knows his Dad is a trucker, but doesn't know which one, out of thousands, he is. Every night, on CB channel 19 you can hear Billy boy calling out, ''Breaker, breaker...Daddy, is that you?'' Sad & pathetic, eh? SV "Bob Crantz" wrote in message news ![]() Is that your kind of hero? Amen! "Mys Terry" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 24 Feb 2006 15:40:08 GMT, "Bob Crantz" wrote: I think truckers are America's superheroes! Bless them! Amen! "Joe" wrote in message groups.com .... A trucker was the one who stopped the DC snipers. Must be cool to be a trucker, sorta like a super hero. Joe Suspect Had Rape Record Florida Truck Driver Was Jailed, Released February 18, 2006 By TRACY GORDON FOX, Courant Staff Writer The truck driver charged Friday with the kidnapping and rape of an Ashford woman served 12 years in a Florida prison for committing nearly exactly the same crime 18 years ago. Thomas E. Hooks, 50, was sentenced to 27 years in prison for an April 4, 1988, attack. In that incident, he rammed a woman's vehicle off the road with his 18-wheeler, forced her into the truck at gunpoint and raped her twice before discarding her at the side of the road, according to published reports. Hooks was released in 2000, having served less than half of his sentence, and soon got another job as a truck driver, working for Southern Cal Transport of Birmingham, Ala., according to police records. On Feb. 6, police said, Hooks waved down the Ashford woman on an I-84 exit ramp, telling her there was something wrong with his truck. When she got out of her car to offer her cellphone, he forced her into the sleeper cab, where he blindfolded her, raped her and threatened to shoot her if she looked at him, police said. Initially, the details seemed sketchy. The rapist was described as a heavy-set black man, 45 to 50, driving a common-looking white tractor-trailer one exit from a major truck stop where hundreds of big rigs drive through daily. But using details from the victim and information from witnesses who saw Hooks and his truck, detectives from the Department of Public Safety's Eastern District Major Crime Squad tracked Hooks and the Alabama trucking company he had been working for. The state police forensic laboratory also found Hooks' DNA on a piece of evidence left at the crime scene, sources said. Hooks, of 1030 Cynthia Lane, Pensacola, Fla., was charged with first-degree kidnapping, first-degree aggravated sexual assault, criminal use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, unlawful restraint and third-degree sexual assault. Now Connecticut authorities said they would be working with police along the East Coast to determine whether Hooks is responsible for similar unsolved crimes. "We will certainly provide the information we have in our case to law enforcement, due to the transient business he was in," said Sgt. J. Paul Vance, a state police spokesman. Hooks was arrested Friday shortly after 11 a.m. at Route 372 and Industrial Park Road in Cromwell, on a run through Connecticut, state police said. Troopers seized the truck and plan to search it for evidence. Hooks was held, with bail set at $1 million, and is scheduled to appear in Superior Court in Danielson Tuesday, police said. The woman and her family learned the details of Hooks' prior crime after his arrest Friday. "I'm furious. That's disgusting," the Ashford victim's brother said of Hooks' being convicted of a similar crime and released early. Hooks' picture can be found on Florida's sexual offender website. The Ashford mother of three was ecstatic that state police detectives had been able to track down her attacker, her brother said. "She's extremely relieved. The nightmare is over," he said, adding that she had gone out to lunch with her sister to celebrate after hearing the news. "We are all elated. My mom called me in tears." The day after the Feb. 6 assault, the victim's family put up signs along the highway, urging anyone who may have seen the white tractor-trailer or its driver to call a tip line. State police also set up roadblocks, and questioned commuters coming home around the time of the evening attack. The woman was returning home from her job with warm Chinese food in the back of her car and heading to pick up her children at day care when she stopped to help the truck driver, she told police. Police credit the woman's "great courage with her ability to recall specific important detail," in helping them solve the crime, Vance said. The woman managed to call 911 from a cellphone and shout for help during the attack, a call that sent troopers to the exit where her car had been left, its engine still running. But the truck driver had already driven to the next exit, near the truck stop, where he eventually dragged the woman out of his truck and tied her to a tree, police said. She managed to get free of the ropes and flagged down a passing motorist, who called state police. The woman "suffered a great deal in this criminal act," Vance said. "The victim's cooperation with the state police detectives has enabled them to keep this investigation moving forward." She was able to identify Hooks through photographs after police learned of his identity, sources said. The trucking company he worked for was cooperative in the investigation, police said. No one was available for comment at the company Friday. A team of detectives used cellphone records, satellite tracking systems and some forensic evidence to track Hooks, sources said. "Since the 6th of February, certain investigators have worked nonstop," Vance said. The victim's brother said he has been amazed by her strength. The family is hoping Hooks will be convicted and not be set free this time. "She's strong and pulling through this better than most," her brother said. "She could have just crawled up in a ball. But she wanted everyone to know what had happened if it helps to save one person." |
#10
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Now that's funny!
-- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "Bob Crantz" wrote in message news ![]() Is that your kind of hero? Amen! "Mys Terry" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 24 Feb 2006 15:40:08 GMT, "Bob Crantz" wrote: I think truckers are America's superheroes! Bless them! Amen! "Joe" wrote in message egroups.com... A trucker was the one who stopped the DC snipers. Must be cool to be a trucker, sorta like a super hero. Joe Suspect Had Rape Record Florida Truck Driver Was Jailed, Released February 18, 2006 By TRACY GORDON FOX, Courant Staff Writer The truck driver charged Friday with the kidnapping and rape of an Ashford woman served 12 years in a Florida prison for committing nearly exactly the same crime 18 years ago. Thomas E. Hooks, 50, was sentenced to 27 years in prison for an April 4, 1988, attack. In that incident, he rammed a woman's vehicle off the road with his 18-wheeler, forced her into the truck at gunpoint and raped her twice before discarding her at the side of the road, according to published reports. Hooks was released in 2000, having served less than half of his sentence, and soon got another job as a truck driver, working for Southern Cal Transport of Birmingham, Ala., according to police records. On Feb. 6, police said, Hooks waved down the Ashford woman on an I-84 exit ramp, telling her there was something wrong with his truck. When she got out of her car to offer her cellphone, he forced her into the sleeper cab, where he blindfolded her, raped her and threatened to shoot her if she looked at him, police said. Initially, the details seemed sketchy. The rapist was described as a heavy-set black man, 45 to 50, driving a common-looking white tractor-trailer one exit from a major truck stop where hundreds of big rigs drive through daily. But using details from the victim and information from witnesses who saw Hooks and his truck, detectives from the Department of Public Safety's Eastern District Major Crime Squad tracked Hooks and the Alabama trucking company he had been working for. The state police forensic laboratory also found Hooks' DNA on a piece of evidence left at the crime scene, sources said. Hooks, of 1030 Cynthia Lane, Pensacola, Fla., was charged with first-degree kidnapping, first-degree aggravated sexual assault, criminal use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, unlawful restraint and third-degree sexual assault. Now Connecticut authorities said they would be working with police along the East Coast to determine whether Hooks is responsible for similar unsolved crimes. "We will certainly provide the information we have in our case to law enforcement, due to the transient business he was in," said Sgt. J. Paul Vance, a state police spokesman. Hooks was arrested Friday shortly after 11 a.m. at Route 372 and Industrial Park Road in Cromwell, on a run through Connecticut, state police said. Troopers seized the truck and plan to search it for evidence. Hooks was held, with bail set at $1 million, and is scheduled to appear in Superior Court in Danielson Tuesday, police said. The woman and her family learned the details of Hooks' prior crime after his arrest Friday. "I'm furious. That's disgusting," the Ashford victim's brother said of Hooks' being convicted of a similar crime and released early. Hooks' picture can be found on Florida's sexual offender website. The Ashford mother of three was ecstatic that state police detectives had been able to track down her attacker, her brother said. "She's extremely relieved. The nightmare is over," he said, adding that she had gone out to lunch with her sister to celebrate after hearing the news. "We are all elated. My mom called me in tears." The day after the Feb. 6 assault, the victim's family put up signs along the highway, urging anyone who may have seen the white tractor-trailer or its driver to call a tip line. State police also set up roadblocks, and questioned commuters coming home around the time of the evening attack. The woman was returning home from her job with warm Chinese food in the back of her car and heading to pick up her children at day care when she stopped to help the truck driver, she told police. Police credit the woman's "great courage with her ability to recall specific important detail," in helping them solve the crime, Vance said. The woman managed to call 911 from a cellphone and shout for help during the attack, a call that sent troopers to the exit where her car had been left, its engine still running. But the truck driver had already driven to the next exit, near the truck stop, where he eventually dragged the woman out of his truck and tied her to a tree, police said. She managed to get free of the ropes and flagged down a passing motorist, who called state police. The woman "suffered a great deal in this criminal act," Vance said. "The victim's cooperation with the state police detectives has enabled them to keep this investigation moving forward." She was able to identify Hooks through photographs after police learned of his identity, sources said. The trucking company he worked for was cooperative in the investigation, police said. No one was available for comment at the company Friday. A team of detectives used cellphone records, satellite tracking systems and some forensic evidence to track Hooks, sources said. "Since the 6th of February, certain investigators have worked nonstop," Vance said. The victim's brother said he has been amazed by her strength. The family is hoping Hooks will be convicted and not be set free this time. "She's strong and pulling through this better than most," her brother said. "She could have just crawled up in a ball. But she wanted everyone to know what had happened if it helps to save one person." |
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