Archive for the ‘Americas Most Wanted’ Category

posted by Chris McElroy aka NameCritic on Mar 9

Fugitive Nai Yin Xue wanted in wife’s murder
By ROBIN FITZGERALD

You may have seen him at a restaurant or gas station in Biloxi or nearby. He’s an international fugitive wanted in a murder case and travelling in a dark blue 1996 Ford Thunderbird.

Nai Yin Xue

Nai Yin Xue was in Biloxi and Mobile as recently as January and may still be on the Coast, but he could be anywhere in the United States by now, said Justin Vickers of the U.S. Marshals Gulf Coast Regional Fugitive Task Force in Gulfport.

A provisional arrest warrant issued in Los Angeles lists him as wanted in the September 2007 murder of his wife, Anan Liu, in New Zealand. Her body was discovered in the trunk of a car at their residence. Federal authorities said Xue fled New Zealand with his 3-year-old daughter before the body was found.

The Rest of The Story here

Nai Yin Xue featured on America’s Most Wanted website

Fugitive Nai Yin Xue who abandoned his three-year-old daughter at an Australian train station and is the main suspect in his wife’s murder, has joined America’s worst criminals on the America’s Most Wanted (AMW) website.

Xue flew to Los Angeles after leaving his daughter, Qain Xun Xue, and was thought to be in hiding somewhere in California.

It also described how New Zealand police made the “chilling discovery” of Qain’s mother, 27-year-old Anan Liu, in the boot of the family’s car outside their Auckland home four days later.

The Rest of The Story here


posted by Chris McElroy aka NameCritic on Dec 28

I think this is a really good idea. The FBI will be putting mugshots of wanted fugitives, missing children, and more on billboards. people still read billboards because they are bored while driving or riding in a car. I think the FBI will get results from these billboards and wanted fugitives will be recognized more often.

I hope it has success with missing children as well. One out of Seven missing children that are found are found because someone saw their picture.

FBI to put criminals, security issues up in digital billboard lights

The FBI today said it wants to install 150 digital billboards in 20 major U.S. cities in the next few weeks to show fugitive mug shots, missing people and high-priority security messages from the big bureau.

The billboards will let the FBI highlight those people it is looking for the most: violent criminals, kidnap victims, missing kids, bank robbers, even terrorists, the FBI said in a release. And the billboards will be able to be updated largely in real-time —right after a crime is committed, a child is taken, or an attack is launched.

The ability to get that information out quickly is the best feature of this program. The first minutes and hours of a child being kidnapped are crucial as is the first span of time after a crime like bank robbery.

The homeland security aspect of this is also good. The FBI can act swiftly if they get a tip about a terrorist attack.

The FBI said it tested its first billboard in the Philadelphia area in September, with crystal-clear images of 11 of its most violent fugitives on eight billboards and a 24-hour hotline for the public to call. The billboards paid quick public safety dividends. In October, two fugitives were captured as a direct result of the publicity, the FBI said.

We at Most Wanted Newspaper know this is no exaggeration. This blog started long after our actual newspaper was published with pictures of local wanted fugitives in Modesto, Califoirnia.

In our very first publication, our first fugitive capture came two hours after the newspaper was distributed. There was some luck involved, but many times that is exactly what triggers a capture. A little luck never hurts.

Our distributor dropped papers off at a local restaurant where they were given to customers to read while waiting on their orders. One customer spotted our cover fugitive waiting at a bus stop right outside the restaurant.

So kudos to the FBI for using these realtime billboards. May they have all the success and luck they need to capture wanted fugitives and find kidnapped children.

I just hope that they do not turn the control of it over to America’s Most wanted Television Entertainment Show or the NCMEC.

America’s Most wanted is trademarked as an entertainment television show and that is exactly what it is.

When the Amber Alert first started, it was used for cases where a child was abducted by a stranger or where the child was in real danger. As soon as the NCMEC got control of it, they started using it for parental abductions where the child was not in danger.

When it was used only in serious cases where the child was in danger, people paid attention to it. There are about 100 stranger abductions in a year.

Now that you see daily Amber Alerts in cases where the child is not in danger, it has become mundane and people are desensitized to it and pay no attention.

If the NCMEC or America’s Most Wanted was to get control of this billboard system, the same thing would occur because they are interested in how much attention they can get and their PR experts have a million dollar a year budget and use commercial marketing techniques to make sure the organizations get a lot of attention.


posted by Chris McElroy aka NameCritic on Nov 22

In honor of thanksgiving I’m going to post about a turkey.


posted by Chris McElroy aka NameCritic on Aug 29

This is a new twist. Being featured on America’s Most Wanted and the Bill O’Reilly Show led to a couple committing suicide rather than deal with the implications.

Couple featured on ‘Most Wanted’ found dead
By Michael Leiby, Roundup staff reporter
Tuesday, August 28, 2007


Paul and Myrtis Gauthreaux were found dead in their car Aug. 9 by Gila County Sheriff’s deputies on Highway 60.


Detective Terry Blevins of the Gila County Sheriff’s Depart-ment said, “The couple had been featured on ‘America’s Most Wanted’ and the ‘Bill O’Reilly Show’ the night before this happened,” he said.


“They had been implicated in a child pornography investigation,” he said.


“Apparently, the deceased female’s mother called her daughter on the eighth, the day after they were featured on the two television shows and asked if the allegations were true,” Blevins said.


Both suspects denied any involvement in child pornography.



The Rest of The Story here




News and Media Blog
Things That Just Piss Me Off


posted by Chris McElroy aka NameCritic on Aug 2

I know I rant about this from time to time, but I just have to say it. I don’t mind giving credit where credit is due and America’s Most Wanted is a good television show.

However, we have a lot of real detectives, not tv detectives, that are out there catching wanted fugitives through good detective work. But if the suspect they capture was EVER profiled on America’s Most Wanted, then it’s America’s Most Wanted that gets the credit rather than the detective who did the actual work.

Those that are captured due to a tip called into America’s Most Wanted should be claimed by them. But look at the following story and tell me where America’s Most Wanted had ANYTHING AT ALL to do with this capture.

Americas Most Wanted fugitive captured, charges mount
By REBEKAH ALLEN, The News Journal

Note the headline. It looks as if the fugitive was captured by John Walsh himself. So if anyone just scans the headline, they think America’s Most Wanted captured this fugitive.

Further investigation into the Friday arrest of one of “America’s Most Wanted” fugitives Scott Alan Hornick has revealed numerous other criminal charges, Delaware State Police said today.

Hornick, 35, of New Jersey, was charged with three counts of obtaining controlled substances by misrepresentation fraud forgery, identity theft, three counts of second-degree forgery, receiving stolen property, two counts of possession of burglary tools, maintaining a dwelling for controlled substances, second-degree conspiracy, two counts of criminal impersonation and two counts of possession of drug paraphernalia.

Sgt. Joshua Bushweller said following Hornick’s arrest, officers discovered Hornick was in possession of a stolen 2006 Ford Explorer from New Jersey.

Okay, still looking for that connection to America’s Most Wanted.

He was also in possession of prescription drugs not prescribed to him.

Hornick is a wanted fugitive from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia, with all of the warrants are related to burglaries.

Bushweller said Hornick escaped from the Warren County Correctional Center in northern New Jersey.

According to “America’s Most Wanted” Web site, Hornick was serving time for writing bad checks, identity theft, burglary and a list of other felonies.

Alllllrighty then, the fugitive was also posted on their website. Still what has that got to do with his capture?

He was arrested twice this week — once for assault and the second time for violating a no contact order by returning to the house of the previous assault.

Bushweller said Hornick provided officers with a Florida driver’s license and social security card that indicated he was a Glenn Scott Kennedy of Hartly.

But it was after his fingerprints were checked against the FBI database officers learn they had been given a false identity.

Officers arrived at Hornick’s home in Hartly and took him into custody without incident, Bushweller said.

At the time of his arrest officers found Sasha J. Ingardi, 27, of Brooklyn to be living in the residence and is an alleged accomplice of Hornick’s since his New Jersey escape.

She was arrested on similar charges and a check revealed she was a fugitive from Fairfax County, Va. for burglary.

Hornick was arraigned and committed to Delaware Correctional Center in Smyrna for lack of bond.

Ingardi was arraigned and committed to the Baylor Women’s Correctional Institute for lack of bond.

Nowhere does it mention that America’s Most Wanted had anything to do with the capture of this wanted fugitive, yet the headline and a reference in the article leads people to believe that America’s Most Wanted actually had something to do with it.

I profile wanted fugitives on this website. If one of them gets captured, should the media write that a Most Wanted Newspaper fugitive was captured? Or should the credit go to the detectives that caught the guy?

The Source of The Story here

This Story even puts the America’s Most Wanted logo in the story about the same fugitive but notice the caption doesn’t say that tips to America’s Most Wanted led to THIS fugitive’s capture

News and Media Blog
Missing Children Blog


Key West Fishing Key West FL Caribbean Vacation