Ass Hat
Home
News
Events
Bands
Labels
Venues
Pics
MP3s
Radio Show
Reviews
Releases
Buy$tuff
Forum
  Classifieds
  News
  Localband
  Shows
  Show Pics
  Polls
  
  OT Threads
  Other News
  Movies
  VideoGames
  Videos
  TV
  Sports
  Gear
  /r/
  Food
  
  New Thread
  New Poll
Miscellaneous
Links
E-mail
Search
End Ass Hat
login

New site? Maybe some day.
Posting Anonymously login: [Forgotten Password]
returntothepit >> discuss >> Night watchman arrested for banging mummy by the_reverend on Feb 4,2016 10:33pm
Add To All Your Pages!
toggletoggle post by the_reverend   at Feb 4,2016 10:33pm



toggletoggle post by god jesus at Feb 4,2016 11:17pm
i hope he used birth control!



toggletoggle post by god jesus at Feb 4,2016 11:22pm
[URL='WORCESTER%20- The remains of the man whose company built City Hall and the Worcester Art Museum may have been among those stolen by grave robbers who struck Hope Cemetery last year, according to police.
The distinctive beehive-shaped mausoleum of James A. Norcross (1830-1903) has been identified as the second mausoleum breached by thieves last year in a bizarre case involving the removal of eight skeletons allegedly for use in Santeria religious rituals.
Three of the skeletons were reported stolen from the Norcross Mausoleum, resting place of the noted Worcester contractor and 10 of his family members. Exactly whose remains were taken from the crypt was not reported.
That the Norcross Mausoleum had been targeted was made public this week, after a second arrest in the grave-robbing case.
“I’ve heard absolutely nothing about it,” said Philip Norcross Gross, of Ottawa, Ontario, great-grandnephew of James Norcross and a Norcross family genealogist who has done extensive research at the Worcester Historical Museum.
“This is total news to me,” Mr. Gross said, reached by phone Thursday. “I’m amazed.”
Lyanne Trumbull, an Arlington, Virginia, social worker who is James Norcross’ great-great-granddaughter, also said she had not heard of the breach of her ancestor’s mausoleum until reached by the Telegram & Gazette by phone Thursday.
“I am surprised,” Ms. Trumbull said. “I’m not overly shocked that something like that would happen, because there’s a cemetery (in Falls Church, Virginia) not far from where I live where they’ve had incidents similar to that.”
Robert C. Antonelli Jr., assistant commissioner of the DPW and Parks, said in an email Thursday that he notified John F. Norcross of Virginia, as soon as the city learned of the theft. He said he contacted Mr. Norcross because his was the last information the city had on file and the person who had handled the handover of the mausoleum to the Friends of Hope Cemetery in 2005.
James A. Norcross and his brother Orlando W. Norcross (1839-1920) operated one of America’s most prominent construction companies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and were noted for their work for such architects as H.H. Richardson and McKim, Mead & White. Their projects included Trinity Church, Symphony Hall and South Station in Boston, the Rhode Island state capitol and the New York Public Library, in addition to the City Hall and art museum in Worcester and many of the nation’s most well-known public buildings of the age.
Both Norcross brothers have mausoleums in Hope Cemetery. The cemetery office on Thursday identified James’ as the mausoleum that was targeted in the break-in.
The name of the Norcross Mausoleum came to light when a second arrest in the grave-robbing case was made this week.
Felix “Cuba” Delgado, 40, who reportedly describes himself as a Santeria priest, was arrested Tuesday at his apartment at 518 Hallett St. in Bridgeport, Connecticut, where police said they found multiple altars adorned with human skulls, dead chickens and blood, according to The Associated Press.
Mr. Delgado was charged with being a fugitive from justice in Worcester, where he is wanted on eight counts of disinterment of bodies. Arrangements were being made Thursday for him to be brought to Massachusetts for arraignment, according to the office of Worcester District Attorney Joseph D. Early Jr.
The Norcross mausoleum was one of two breached at city-owned Hope Cemetery last year. Five skeletons - those of three adults and two children - were reported stolen from the other, the chapel-like Houghton Mausoleum. The Houghton break-in was discovered in October but the locks may have been cut as far back as May, police said.
On Dec. 4, Amador Medina, 32, of 245 Preston St., Hartford, a self-described practitioner of a Santeria offshoot called Palo Mayombe, was arrested in connection with the grave robberies at the Worcester cemetery. Police who took him into custody at his Hartford apartment reported finding human bones arrayed in shrines, along with at least one skeleton dressed in what appeared to be the clothes in which the deceased was buried.
Mr. Medina said he had hired a man - later identified as Mr. Delgado - to obtain the human skeletons for him, for use in religious rituals, according to police. Mr. Medina was ordered held on $100,000 cash bail at his arraignment in Central District Court in December, when he pleaded not guilty to the theft of human remains.
On Dec. 8, Worcester police reported the discovery of the break-in and theft at the second mausoleum. All mausoleums at cemeteries across the city were checked as Police Chief Gary J. Gemme warned that a ring of grave robbers may be active in the area.
The second mausoleum was not publicly named until this week when the Norcross Mausoleum was identified in a criminal complaint document filed in Worcester District Court in connection with Mr. Delgado’s arrest.']WORCESTER - The remains of the man whose company built City Hall and the Worcester Art Museum may have been among those stolen by grave robbers who struck Hope Cemetery last year, according to police.
The distinctive beehive-shaped mausoleum of James A. Norcross (1830-1903) has been identified as the second mausoleum breached by thieves last year in a bizarre case involving the removal of eight skeletons allegedly for use in Santeria religious rituals.
Three of the skeletons were reported stolen from the Norcross Mausoleum, resting place of the noted Worcester contractor and 10 of his family members. Exactly whose remains were taken from the crypt was not reported.
That the Norcross Mausoleum had been targeted was made public this week, after a second arrest in the grave-robbing case.
“I’ve heard absolutely nothing about it,” said Philip Norcross Gross, of Ottawa, Ontario, great-grandnephew of James Norcross and a Norcross family genealogist who has done extensive research at the ...ok him into custody at his Hartford apartment reported finding human bones arrayed in shrines, along with at least one skeleton dressed in what appeared to be the clothes in which the deceased was buried.
Mr. Medina said he had hired a man - later identified as Mr. Delgado - to obtain the human skeletons for him, for use in religious rituals, according to police. Mr. Medina was ordered held on $100,000 cash bail at his arraignment in Central District Court in December, when he pleaded not guilty to the theft of human remains.
On Dec. 8, Worcester police reported the discovery of the break-in and theft at the second mausoleum. All mausoleums at cemeteries across the city were checked as Police Chief Gary J. Gemme warned that a ring of grave robbers may be active in the area.
The second mausoleum was not publicly named until this week when the Norcross Mausoleum was identified in a criminal complaint document filed in Worcester District Court in connection with Mr. Delgado’s arrest.



toggletoggle post by god jesus at Feb 4,2016 11:23pm


http://www.telegram.com/article/20160204/NEWS/160209552

worcester grave robbers strike again, for santeria



Enter a Quick Response (advanced response>>)
Username: (enter in a fake name if you want, login, or new user)SPAM Filter: re-type this (values are 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E, or F)
Message:  b i u  add: url  image  video(?)show icons
remember:Nocturnal Crimson Apprentice
[default homepage] [print][8:11:51am Mar 29,2024
load time 0.00973 secs/15 queries]
[search][refresh page]