Sentences with phrase «story went to the police»

Later, someone who heard the story went to the police station and identified the pump action gun as his, which was robbed from him at a galamsey site.

Not exact matches

If you went to the press or the police with such stories, the first thing they'd ask for is proof.
My abuser went to the police yesterday to demand another arrest for my sharing my abuse story.
I do nt unsually comment on these grab attention stories but this one I got to let go of something... I do nt care if it's Muslim, Catholic, Methodist, Bhuddist, or whatever fly by night belief you want to have in OUR great country (thats right it's all ours) you have that right but get one thing straight... if you come on MY property and steal something thats mine, imma shoot and call the police... you bring something to MY property thats not mine imma shoot and call the police... you set whatever it is on fire on MY property imma shoot, call the police and the fire department and I promise you you will get a chance to bask in the glory of your religion.
The stories told about this man (one goal, nearly achieved, was to race past the police dept in Woodbury 100 times going over 100mph) were so many and indicated a love for life I couldn't help but admire to the nth degree.
He told the paper his story and then went to the police.
«I went there because I wanted a proof of the fact that the site was just fenced and there was a heap of sand there as Nana Addo was claiming... I went there with the MP of Salaga, with the Regional Minister and with the Police Department that was escorting the Regional Minister and we filmed the whole place and that is the story we put out for people to know and for Nana Addo to know that if they are relying on information by his propagandists then he is threading on dangerous grounds; because what we saw there was an exact opposite of what he sought to portray in his true state of the nation's address and what we saw vindicated the President's assertion that there was a 60 - bed hospital construction in Salaga.»
On October 25th, I published a story that in retrospect goes a long way towards explaining Latimer's hostile response to what I believe were rather obvious questions about his car crash — or any car crash - given the police report of the incident.
The newspaper says that before the court appearance, Nojay contacted his lawyer and said he planned to take his life, and the story says the lawyer then contacted police who went to Riverside Cemetery.
Based on a popular book series, the story follows a mining crew that ends up on the run after being attacked by a mysterious ship; meanwhile a police detective looks into the case of a politician's daughter who's gone missing and seems to have fallen in with a group of revolutionaries.
The film is based on the true story of Ron Stallworth, an African - American police officer who infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan, even going as far to become head of the local chapter.
It's clear right from the get - go that director John Huston (who co-wrote the screenplay with Peter Viertel) isn't interested in presenting both sides of this story - said Chief of Police is almost ridiculously evil, completely devoid of any redeeming qualities - but that's not necessarily a bad thing, as the filmmaker does an effective job of establishing each of these rebels (to the point where we're genuinely rooting for them to accomplish their complicated mission).
The movie, produced by Get Out director Jordan Peele, is about the real - life story of Ron Stallworth, the black police officer who went undercover in 1978 to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan — speaking on the phone to Klansmen and sending white officers in his place when face - to - face meetings were required.
The advanced techniques of the Hong Kong action cinema translated from the period kung fu and wuxia film to the modern world of cops and robbers, from swordplay to gunplay, not for the first time (it was preceded into the present by Jackie Chan's Police Story from the previous year, as well as Cinema City's highly profitable Aces Go Places series of comic adventures and a whole host of films from the Hong Kong New Wave like Tsui Hark's own Dangerous Encounters - First Kind, not to mention earlier films like Chang Cheh's Ti Lung - starring Dead End, from 1969), but better than anything before it.
Domino tells the story of a Danish police officer (Nikolaj Coster - Waldau aka Jaime Lannister in Game of Thrones) that goes rogue to pursue a terror suspect in the wake of his partner's untimely death.
The film is based on the true story of an African - American police officer who went undercover to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan.
Casablanca (Michael Curtiz)-- 1, 1942 Cops and Robbers (Alex Cheung)-- 15, 1979 Aces Go Places (Eric Tsang)-- 36, 1982 Duel to the Death (Ching Siu - tung)-- 25, 1983 Police Story (Jackie Chan)-- 3, 1985
From director Spike Lee comes the provocative story based on Ron Stallworth's real life as Colorado Springs's first African - American police officer who went undercover to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan.
Trying to keep the story going in a linear direction creates some predictable moments, particularly with the way the police act and react.
The narrative of the story is really what keeps things going, but at times I almost just wanted to see how things played out instead of having to go through the motions of a police work day.
You can discover the stories behind Chase McCain and other key players in the hunt for Rex Fury, including Chief Dunby, the head of the LEGO CITY Police Department; Chase's bumbling buddy Frank Honey; colleague Ellie Phillips, who chimes in through the Wii U GamePad; Natalia Kowalski, the apple of Chase's eye who's gone into witness protection; and a host of bad guys Chase must defeat to bring Rex Fury to justice.
But outside of the hacking, police chases go on too long, side - missions feel repetitive, the audio diaries or home hacks aren't that interesting and never try to form a bigger picture of the story a la Assassin's Creed's extras.
Stories about BP contractors working hand in glove with the Coast Guard and local police to prevent full coverage of the effects of the oil spill have been coming out for some time now — and don't seem to be going away.
When his main client, Héctor Reynoso, goes missing, Seeley begins to realize that there is more to the story than music, and that a far deeper conspiracy is involved that might include both the Cuban secret police and his former law firm.»
The Court found that the Production Orders were overly broad and went well beyond what was reasonable to gather evidence concerning the jewelry story robberies such as requiring production of information on subscribers remotely located from the robbery sites, production of bank and credit card information and production of personal information on over 40,000 subscribers when the police really only sought information on the few individuals who may have been proximate to more than one of the robbery sites.
For example, one famously defamatory story reported police had seized documents from a lawyer's office, he was unavailable for comment and went on to suggest the police investigation was why he resigned from public office weeks earlier.
But I am saying that the decision to go to the police involves so many factors extraneous to the truth / falsity of her story, that I think it's a bit goofy to view that decision as a significant indicator of truth / falsity.
Another issue I found that will be problematic to the case going forward is that while the story says a third party passenger in the car called the BART police to the scene, nobody was able to identify the man despite the fact that he had yet to leave the car when the police left (but was identifiable with the aid of the video).
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