Woman accused of killing bride in DUI golf cart crash must remain in custody, S.C. judge orders


A woman accused of killing a bride when she crashed into a newlywed couple’s golf cart while allegedly driving under the influence must remain in custody as she awaits trial, a South Carolina judge ordered Tuesday.

Jamie Komoroski, 25, asked Circuit Court Judge Michael G. Nettles for bail after spending three months behind bars without trial following the April 28 crash in Folly Beach. She was denied.

Jamie Komoroski appears via remote camera feed for a court session in Charleston, S.C., on Aug. 1, 2023.
Jamie Komoroski appears via remote camera feed for a court session in Charleston, S.C., on Tuesday.WCBD

Samantha Miller, 34, died in the late-night crash. Her husband, Aric Hutchinson, sustained a brain injury and broken bones, his mother, Annette Hutchinson, said on a GoFundMe page in May.

Two other people were injured, Folly Beach Department of Public Safety said at the time.

Komoroski’s blood alcohol content was more than three times the legal limit after the crash, according to a toxicology report released by the department.

Authorities said Komoroski was traveling at 65 in a 25 mph zone when the vehicle she was driving struck the cart, which police said was street legal for the area, according to The Associated Press.

Komoroski has been fighting the case, which includes charges of reckless homicide and DUI. On Tuesday, defense attorney Christopher Gramiccioni said his client has “zero criminal history.”

“She’s never even been disciplined at her college at Coastal Carolina or in high school,” he said in court. “I mean she has as clean of a record as you can imagine.”

Attorney Jerry Meehan said in a statement Miller’s family was pleased with the outcome and agreed with the judge’s decision that Komoroski “was a danger to the community.”

“I wouldn’t want anybody else to go through this,” the victim’s mother, Lisa Miller, said in a statement read in court.

Outside the courtroom, she said of the defendant, “Why should she just get out and go about her merry way?” according to NBC affiliate WCBD of Charleston.

Komoroski was being held at the Sheriff Al Cannon Detention Center in Charleston. Nettles, the judge, said during his rejection of bail that if trial hasn’t happened by spring 2024, he’ll allow $150,000 bond with house arrest.

“We appreciate the court’s decision to release Jamie on bond in March 2024 if the State is not ready for trial, but we nonetheless believe that she has met the legal criteria for release today,” Gramiccioni said in a statement after Tuesday’s ruling.





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Florida woman arrested after biting ear off another woman during fight over vape pens and alcohol


A Florida woman was arrested after biting the top of another woman’s ear off during a fight over vape pens and alcohol on July 4th, according to the Bay County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputies responded to an assault and battery call at a home in Callaway, a suburb of Panama City, just after midnight. An investigation revealed the incident had occurred at a house party next door at 6526 Olokee Street that was thrown by unsupervised minors.

When a fight kicked off between several men at the house party, 23-year-old Macy Regan attempted to leave and walk to her home next door, the sheriff’s office said in a news release.

It was then that Dixie Stiles, 18, confronted Regan and accused her of stealing vape pens and alcohol.

Regan allegedly pulled out a 9 millimeter gun from her waistband, which Stiles shoved out of the way. A physical altercation ensued where Regan bit the top of Stiles’ ear off, the sheriff’s office said in the release.

The women received multiple bruises and lacerations in the fight and Stiles’ ear was unable to be re-attached, the sheriff’s office said.

Both women were arrested. Stiles was charged with battery while Regan was charged with felony battery causing bodily harm.

This investigation into the incident is ongoing.



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A serial killer said he killed a woman in Texas. Four decades later her remains have been identified.


More than four decades since law enforcement found the remains of a young woman on the side of a Texas highway, her remains have been identified, Bastrop County Sheriff’s Office announced at a news conference on Thursday. 

The woman was found in Elgin, Texas, when law enforcement was driving by. She was wearing a white shirt with red neck trim and dark blue jeans, according to DNA Solves, which helps crowdfund identification investigations. 

Her name was Kathy Ann Smith. She was just 22 years old, almost 23, at the time of her murder, the sheriff’s office said. Investigators at the time had no leads on who she was or who killed her. 

In 1984, serial killer Henry Lee Lucas –who confessed to killing hundreds of people, although only three were confirmed– claimed responsibility for Smith’s death.  But local officials still didn’t know the identity of the woman they had found. 

Lucas recanted some of his confessions, but didn’t recant this particular case, the sheriff said at the news conference. “I know Henry Lee was capable of committing murder,” said Bastrop County Sheriff Maurice Cook, but couldn’t definitely say he was responsible for this particular crime. However, Lucas was listed in the investigation files, and still remains the only suspect, the sheriff said.

The grave was exhumed in 2019 to collect DNA samples after Sergeant James Miller began examining the case, the sheriff’s office said. There was not enough information to produce a DNA profile at that time. In 2022, another exhumation was conducted, the sheriff’s office said, and enough DNA existed for a lab to identify the remains through forensic genealogy.

The lab built a profile and provided law enforcement with a name in April 2023. “The problem was she was adopted,” Cook said at the news conference. Law enforcement had to get court permission to get access to the adopted family’s information so they could notify both families of what happened to the victim, before they notified the public.

The sheriff’s office worked the case “to give closure to the family,” they said.

Last week would have been Smith’s 67th birthday, the sheriff’s office. Smith left behind a daughter, who asked not to be identified, the sheriff’s office said.  “The daughter now knows what happened to her mother,” Cook said. 



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Alabama woman charged with faking her own kidnapping


Alabama woman charged with faking her own kidnapping – CBS News

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An Alabama woman who went missing after calling 911 from the side of a highway earlier this month, prompting a massive search, was charged Friday with falsely reporting to law enforcement. She returned home about two days after going missing.

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Singapore hangs first woman in 19 years after she was convicted of trafficking heroin



KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Singapore conducted its first execution of a woman in 19 years on Friday and its second hanging this week for drug trafficking despite calls for the city-state to cease capital punishment for drug-related crimes.  

Activists said another execution is set next week.

Saridewi Djamani, 45, had been sentenced to death in 2018 for trafficking nearly 31 grams (1.09 ounces) of diamorphine, or pure heroin, the Central Narcotics Bureau said. Its statement said the amount was “sufficient to feed the addiction of about 370 abusers for a week.”

Singapore’s laws mandate the death penalty for anyone convicted of trafficking more than 500 grams (17.64 ounces) of cannabis and 15 grams (0.53 ounces) of heroin. 

Djamani’s execution came two days after that of a Singaporean man, Mohammed Aziz Hussain, 56, for trafficking around 50 grams (1.75 ounces) of heroin.

The narcotics bureau said both prisoners were accorded due process, including appeals of their conviction and sentence and petition for presidential clemency.

Human rights groups, international activists and the United Nations have urged Singapore to halt executions for drug offenses and say there is increasing evidence it is ineffective as a deterrent. Singapore authorities insist capital punishment is important to halting drug demand and supply.

Human rights groups say it has executed 15 people for drug offenses since it resumed hangings in March 2022 , an average of one a month. 

Anti-death penalty activists said the last woman known to have been hanged in Singapore was 36-year-old hairdresser Yen May Woen, also for drug trafficking, in 2004. 

Transformative Justice Collective, a Singapore group which advocates for the abolishment of capital punishment, said a new execution notice has been issued to another prisoner for Aug, 3 — the fifth this year alone.

It said the prisoner is an ethnic Malay citizen who worked as a delivery driver before his arrest in 2016. He was convicted in 2019 for trafficking around 50 grams (1.75 ounces) of heroin, it said. The group said the man had maintained in his trial that he believed he was delivering contraband cigarettes for a friend he owed money and he didn’t verify the contents of the bag as he trusted his friend. 

Although the court found he was merely a courier, the man still had to be given the mandatory death penalty, it said. The group “condemns, in the strongest terms, the state’s bloodthirsty streak” and reiterated calls for an immediate moratorium on the use of the death penalty.

Critics say Singapore’s harsh policy merely punish low-level traffickers and couriers, who are typically recruited from marginalized groups with vulnerabilities. They say Singapore is also out of step with the trend of more countries moving away from capital punishment. Neighboring Thailand has legalized cannabis while Malaysia ended the mandatory death penalty for serious crimes this year.  



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New Jersey woman posed as a doctor for more than a year and wrote prescriptions, prosecutors say


A New Jersey woman who posed as a doctor, treated patients and prescribed medications has been arrested, prosecutors in Ocean County said Thursday.

Toms River resident Maria F. Macburnie, 62, also known as Marife L. Macburnie, was charged with practicing medicine without a license, forgery, health care fraud, and distributing a dangerous substance, the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement.

The office building where the impersonation took place.
The office building where the impersonation took place.Google Maps

Prosecutors allege Macburnie assumed the identity of a relative who they said is licensed to practice. The relative could not not be reached for comment, as online information about her appears to lead to a medical office authorities said Macburnie used.

“The office is permanently closed,” the automated phone greeting for Shore Medical Associates states.

Prosecutors said Macburnie had been using the relative’s name from March 2022 to June 2023.

The prosecutor’s office said Macburnie issued multiple prescriptions under the relative’s name, and submitted insurance claims and bills for services during times when the relative “was unable to see and treat patients.”

Prosecutors did not specify any medications she allegedly prescribed. Macburnie was arrested Wednesday, the prosecutor’s office said.

She was booked into an Ocean County Department of Corrections facility, the office said. It wasn’t clear if she has been released, and it wasn’t clear if she has legal counsel.

The local public defender’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Prosecutors asked that anyone who was seen or treated by Macburnie reach out.

Patients of the Toms River office allegedly used by Macburnie are told in its automated phone greeting to send an email to request their medical records.

The Drug Enforcement Administration, economic crimes unit of the prosecutor’s office and Toms River Township Police Department helped in the investigation, the prosecutor’s office said.

Toms River, a township on the Jersey Shore, is nearly 60 miles east of Philadelphia.





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Florida woman sentenced to 4 years in romance scam that stole Holocaust survivor’s savings


A Florida woman who swindled the life savings from an 87-year-old Holocaust survivor in a “romance scam” was sentenced to over four years in prison Thursday, federal prosecutors said.

Peaches Stergo, 36, stole over $2.8 million in the scam, which lasted years. She was arrested in January and pleaded guilty to wire fraud in April.

Stergo met the victim, whom authorities have never publicly identified, on a dating website and asked for money that she said was needed to help get funds from a legal settlement, according to court documents.

She then told a series of more lies, fabricating stories that she needed money to gain access to a TD Bank account or else she would never be able to repay the victim, prosecutors said.

Stergo also sent heartless text messages, the U.S. attorney’s office for Southern New York said in a statement.

Stergo called the scam her “business” and told her real lover in a text that the elderly man said he loved her; she added “lol” to that message, the prosecutor’s office said. She also remarked that he had become “broke.”

Stergo was sentenced to 51 months in prison, or four years and three months, the prosecutor’s office said. She was also ordered to pay $2.8 million in restitution.

She also will forfeit the home she bought in a gated community, as well as over 100 luxury items, including Rolex watches and jewelry, prosecutors said.

Stergo’s attorney, Ann Fitz, said the 51-month sentence was fair. Prosecutors sought 96 months, according to court documents.

Stergo suffered childhood instability and trauma, which caused compulsive behaviors like past drinking and gambling, and the scam was also a compulsion, Fitz wrote in a sentencing submission.

Fitz said in an email Thursday night, “Ms. Stergo has expressed remorse for her actions and will make every effort to repay the restitution in this case.”

The scam lasted from around May 2017 until October 2021, prosecutors said.

The man’s son eventually found out what was going on and put a stop to it, but it was too late. The man lost his life savings and had to give up his Manhattan apartment, according to the indictment.

In a scheme to persuade the elderly man to send more money, Stergo created an email account to pose as a TD Bank employee and created fake letters and invoices.

At one point Stergo wrote to her real significant other that she needed money and a car, and “I don’t want you to work like you are it’s too hard,” prosecutors wrote in their sentencing submission. Prosecutors called the texts “jarring in their callousness.”

“Not only did she manipulate the Victim’s emotions for a period of years, she secretly mocked the Victim for saying he loved her,” prosecutors wrote. “She thought it was hilarious that she was destroying his life for her own benefit.”

The victim lost both his parents in the Holocaust and moved to the U.S. in his 20s for a better life, he wrote in a letter to the court, which is excerpted in the government’s sentencing request.

“Over the next 60 years, I worked tirelessly to establish a successful business, family, and home in New York,” the victim’s letter reads. “I am now 88 years old, and the last thing I expected was to finish my days in the same manner that I started them — penniless and betrayed.”

The FBI warns that romance scammers sometimes use fake profiles to gain people’s trust on dating websites, which eventually leads to asking for money. In some cases they ask to invest in cryptocurrency by falsely claiming insider knowledge and using fake websites.

Last year there were around 19,000 victims of romance scams in the U.S., with almost $740 million in losses, the FBI said.

There were around 24,000 victims in 2021, with losses reported at around $1 billion, it said.





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