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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Newtown CT Limo Service 800-914-RIDE (7433)

          


Airports, to the city, a doctors appointment, Four Seasons Limousine does it all, and we do it well. Since 1989 with outstanding service in the Newtown CT area.  203-746-8300
          

Newtown, Connecticut



We at Four Seasons Limousine appreciate when our job is recognized as done well. That is why we leave the tipping up to the customer and not make it mandatory but a reward for doing well!

                                  


Zoe Eggleston, a Newtown High School senior, is the inventor and patent holder of the Ice Device, a machine that monitors ice thickness on bodies of water, telling the user if it is safe to walk on. Photo: Jason Rearick / The News-Times
Zoe Eggleston, a Newtown High School senior, is the inventor and patent holder of the Ice Device, a machine that monitors ice thickness on bodies of water, telling the user if it is safe to walk on.


Pair accused of passing fake $100 bills in Newtown


            A man and woman from Elmhurst, N.Y., were arrested in Newtown after passing counterfeit $100 bills, police said.
Azicema Z. Amcako, 32, and Ivan Javier Gonzalez, 39, were arrested Thursday evening after Newtown Police responded to a call from the Big Y Supermarket at 6 Queen St.
It was reported a female customer, later identified as Amcako, was attempting to make a purchase with a counterfeit $100 bill, police said. After investigation, Amcako and her accomplice, Gonzalez, were taken into custody and charged with first-degree forgery, police said.
A total of 16 counterfeit $100 bills were seized. It was determined that the suspects had already made a successful transaction at the Walgreens at 49 South Main St.
Amcako and Gonzalez were making small purchases at stores, paying with a counterfeit $100 bill and taking the items and change, police said.
Amcako and Gonalez were held on $3,500 bond Friday, with a court date of April 9 at state Superior Court in Danbury. Both pleaded not guilty.
Newtown Police were assisted by the Connecticut State Police, Monroe and Seymour Police, and theSecret Service.


FBI papers shed no new light on Sandy Hook


042- Lobby Area SHES

Photos from the Report of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Danbury on the Shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School and 36 Yoganda Street, Newtown Connecticut. Photo: Office Of The State's Attorney J / Connecticut Post contributed


Documents newly released by the FBI offer no additional details about the 2012 shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown and are even devoid of information that has already been made public, according to a published report.
The Hartford Courant reported on its website Thursday afternoon that of the 175 pages of documents obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request, 64 pages were completely blacked out and the remaining 111 were heavily redacted.
Twenty first-graders and six staff members were killed after 20-year-old Adam Lanza blasted his way into the building on Dec. 14, 2012, shortly after he killed his mother, Nancy, in their Yogananda Street home.
Lanza committed suicide as police arrived at the school.
None of the people interviewed by FBI agents who assisted in the investigation were identified in the documents, including Ryan Lanza, the gunman's older brother, who was initially thought to have carried out the massacre because Adam Lanza was carrying an identification card bearing his name.
The person believed to be Ryan Lanza did tell the agents his brother was "computer savvy" and had briefly worked at a computer repair shop, according to the Courant. He also said Nancy Lanza owned at least four guns, including the semi-automatic rifle that Adam Lanza used in the shooting, and the weapons were kept in a gun safe in his brother's bedroom closet.
The documents make no reference to attempts by the FBI to retrieve data from a computer hard drive that Adam Lanza destroyed before embarking on his rampage, according to the newspaper.
The person believed to be Ryan Lanza also said Adam Lanza had never been violent or used drugs and alcohol, and he couldn't provide investigators with any motive for his actions.

                  



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