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Man gets 3 life sentences for kidnapping 4-year-old Johns Island girl

Thomas Evans will serve each sentence back to back

Man gets 3 life sentences for kidnapping 4-year-old Johns Island girl

Thomas Evans will serve each sentence back to back

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    WEBVTT OUT OF HIS CAR WITH A GUNDUNCAN WAS HURT, BUT SHOULD BETHE SBI HAS TAKEN OVER THE CASE.THE MAN ACCUSED OF KIDNAPPING ADURING A FEDERAL COURTHE’S ACCUSED OF TAKING THE GIRLEVANS AND THE GIRL WER
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    Man gets 3 life sentences for kidnapping 4-year-old Johns Island girl

    Thomas Evans will serve each sentence back to back

    The man convicted of attacking a Johns Island woman and kidnapping her 4-year-old daughter will face three life sentences behind bars, according to WCSC.Thomas Lawton Evans, 38, will serve the life sentences consecutively, meaning he will serve each sentence back to back.Judge David Norton said the sentence was “necessary to reflect the seriousness of the crimes and protect the public.” He received one life sentence for each of the counts of kidnapping, transportation of a minor to engage in sexual activity and aggravated sexual abuse.Evans will serve the time in a super-maximum security prison in Colorado, Norton said, calling the facility “the only place suitable for a soulless, sorry excuse for a human being.”The mother and father both spoke at the sentencing hearing. More than 20 U.S. Coast Guard members also attended to support the father, who is in the Coast Guard.After the sentencing was complete, the judge looked at Evans and ordered, “Get him out of the courtroom.”The child’s mother, Brittany Todd, spoke to reporters briefly after the hearing outside the courthouse."I honestly just wanted to say thank you to Charleston, thank you to this community," she said. "I have been continually overwhelmed by the impact that Charleston law enforcement, the fire department, FBI, MUSC, countless other people, I've been overwhelmed by them. Our family, we'll be able to move forward."She said her daughter will be able to be happy in kindergarten and still take dance classes because of the impact the community has had on their family.Though the child’s mother chose to speak publicly for the first time about the case, because her daughter was a sexual assault victim, we are not identifying the child by name.The family members did not take questions after making their statement.Prosecutors said Evans attacked the woman on Feb. 13, 2018, as she returned home with three of her children after dropping off two of her children at school.Investigators say Evans attacked her from behind with a knife, pushed her into the home and tackled her to the ground before physically assaulting her and causing significant injuries that included facial fractures and brain bleeding.Later that same day, school officials called police when the woman did not return to the school to pick up her children and the school could not reach her.Police went to the home at approximately 5:50 p.m. that same afternoon to perform a welfare check and saw evidence consistent with a physical assault. Inside, they found the victim and two of her children, but they could not locate the 4-year-old daughter.The woman was taken to the hospital for treatment of her injuries.Meanwhile, investigators began a massive search for the missing child. Police, fire, Coast Guard and rescue personnel were called to the area to search and dive teams also searched a nearby pond. The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division issued a statewide “BOLO” or “be on the lookout” bulletin to law enforcement. Charleston police set up a 24-hour tip line and the FBI offered a reward for information that would lead to her recovery.The following morning, investigators learned a credit card that belonged to the child’s mother was used at a gas station in Greensboro, Georgia.Later that day, three Norfolk Southern employees decided to call 911 to report a suspicious vehicle they saw near the railroad tracks in Riverside, Alabama.Police Chief Rick Oliver went to the scene and located the car with the 4-year-old girl and her alleged kidnapper inside, the affidavit states.Evans was caught hours later in Mississippi and charged with the crime. He pleaded guilty in September 2018 in federal court. According to court documents, the sentencing guidelines for the crimes would be life in prison.It also cites Evans’ previous convictions, which included an armed robbery in 2009, assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature, and a strong armed robbery in 2002. When the kidnapping happened, Evans had been out less than a month for the 2009 armed robbery.Two days before the kidnapping, Evans ran out of gas in St. Stephen while driving his girlfriend’s car. Berkeley County deputies say he had a suspended license but they could not arrest him because they did not actually see him driving the vehicle.The owner of the car, 39-year-old Sharon Hayden, could not be located at her Spartanburg County home and hasn’t been seen since.Evans also told investigators he had a fight with Hayden and stabbed her. Evans said he chased her into the woods near her Spartanburg home where he believed she died and left her there, but could not tell investigators where Hayden’s body is located, investigators say.Both Hayden’s mother and daughter have gone public with pleas for information in her disappearance.Copyright 2019 WCSC. All rights reserved.

    The man convicted of attacking a Johns Island woman and kidnapping her 4-year-old daughter will face three life sentences behind bars, according to WCSC.

    Thomas Lawton Evans, 38, will serve the life sentences consecutively, meaning he will serve each sentence back to back.

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    Judge David Norton said the sentence was “necessary to reflect the seriousness of the crimes and protect the public.” He received one life sentence for each of the counts of kidnapping, transportation of a minor to engage in sexual activity and aggravated sexual abuse.

    Evans will serve the time in a super-maximum security prison in Colorado, Norton said, calling the facility “the only place suitable for a soulless, sorry excuse for a human being.”

    The mother and father both spoke at the sentencing hearing. More than 20 U.S. Coast Guard members also attended to support the father, who is in the Coast Guard.

    After the sentencing was complete, the judge looked at Evans and ordered, “Get him out of the courtroom.”

    The child’s mother, Brittany Todd, spoke to reporters briefly after the hearing outside the courthouse.

    "I honestly just wanted to say thank you to Charleston, thank you to this community," she said. "I have been continually overwhelmed by the impact that Charleston law enforcement, the fire department, FBI, MUSC, countless other people, I've been overwhelmed by them. Our family, we'll be able to move forward."

    She said her daughter will be able to be happy in kindergarten and still take dance classes because of the impact the community has had on their family.

    Though the child’s mother chose to speak publicly for the first time about the case, because her daughter was a sexual assault victim, we are not identifying the child by name.

    The family members did not take questions after making their statement.

    Prosecutors said Evans attacked the woman on Feb. 13, 2018, as she returned home with three of her children after dropping off two of her children at school.

    Investigators say Evans attacked her from behind with a knife, pushed her into the home and tackled her to the ground before physically assaulting her and causing significant injuries that included facial fractures and brain bleeding.

    Later that same day, school officials called police when the woman did not return to the school to pick up her children and the school could not reach her.

    Police went to the home at approximately 5:50 p.m. that same afternoon to perform a welfare check and saw evidence consistent with a physical assault. Inside, they found the victim and two of her children, but they could not locate the 4-year-old daughter.

    The woman was taken to the hospital for treatment of her injuries.

    Meanwhile, investigators began a massive search for the missing child. Police, fire, Coast Guard and rescue personnel were called to the area to search and dive teams also searched a nearby pond. The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division issued a statewide “BOLO” or “be on the lookout” bulletin to law enforcement. Charleston police set up a 24-hour tip line and the FBI offered a reward for information that would lead to her recovery.

    The following morning, investigators learned a credit card that belonged to the child’s mother was used at a gas station in Greensboro, Georgia.

    Later that day, three Norfolk Southern employees decided to call 911 to report a suspicious vehicle they saw near the railroad tracks in Riverside, Alabama.

    Police Chief Rick Oliver went to the scene and located the car with the 4-year-old girl and her alleged kidnapper inside, the affidavit states.

    Evans was caught hours later in Mississippi and charged with the crime. He pleaded guilty in September 2018 in federal court. According to court documents, the sentencing guidelines for the crimes would be life in prison.

    It also cites Evans’ previous convictions, which included an armed robbery in 2009, assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature, and a strong armed robbery in 2002. When the kidnapping happened, Evans had been out less than a month for the 2009 armed robbery.

    Two days before the kidnapping, Evans ran out of gas in St. Stephen while driving his girlfriend’s car. Berkeley County deputies say he had a suspended license but they could not arrest him because they did not actually see him driving the vehicle.

    The owner of the car, 39-year-old Sharon Hayden, could not be located at her Spartanburg County home and hasn’t been seen since.

    Evans also told investigators he had a fight with Hayden and stabbed her. Evans said he chased her into the woods near her Spartanburg home where he believed she died and left her there, but could not tell investigators where Hayden’s body is located, investigators say.

    Both Hayden’s mother and daughter have gone public with pleas for information in her disappearance.

    Copyright 2019 WCSC. All rights reserved.

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    'This could happen to you': Woman warns about tabletop fire pits following family tragedy

    Woman says parents killed when flames surged from fire pit

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    'This could happen to you': Woman warns about tabletop fire pits following family tragedy

    Woman says parents killed when flames surged from fire pit

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      TRAGEDY. HERMAN AND THELMA STOLZENBERG HAD A LOVE STORY MADE FOR THE MOVIES. THE TWO FIRST MEETING IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL LATER BECAME HIGH SCHOOL SWEETHEARTS. MY MOM WAS A CHEERLEADER. MY DAD WAS IN THE BAND. HERMAN JOINED THE NAVY AND TOGETHER THE COUPLE BOUNCED AROUND THE COUNTRY UNTIL THEY SETTLED IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. THEY HAD THREE CHILDREN, THEN THREE GRANDCHILDREN AND EVENTUALLY SIX GREAT GRANDCHILDREN. THEY FED OFF EACH OTHER AND IT IT, UM, ONE OF THEM COULDN’T EXIST IN THAT HOUSE WITHOUT THE OTHER ON FATHER’S DAY, HE WAS SITTING ON THE PORCH WITH HER PARENTS. SHE JUST LIT A TABLETOP FIRE PIT WHEN SHE SAYS THINGS TOOK A TERRIBLE TURN. IT WAS A NANOSECOND AND THE THE FLAME JUST CAME OFF OF THAT THING, AND IT’S LIKE A BLOWTORCH AND ENGULFED BOTH MY PARENTS, HERMAN AND THELMA, WERE TAKEN TO AREA HOSPITALS BEFORE THEY WERE SENT TO MASS GENERAL HOSPITAL. THE COUPLE MARRIED 71 YEARS, DIED THREE DAYS APART, SO HE ACTUALLY DIED THREE THREE DAYS AND THREE HOURS ALMOST TO THE MINUTE OF MY MOM PASSING. DEE HAS SHARED HER FAMILY’S TRAGEDY ONLINE AS A WARNING TO OTHERS IN THAT POST. HAS SINCE GONE VIRAL, WITH HUNDREDS OF COMMENTS AND MORE THAN 1000 SHARES TO JUST MAKE PEOPLE VERY AWARE THAT THIS COULD HAPPEN TO YOU TOO. YOU KNOW, WE WEREN’T CARELESS. WE WERE ENJOYING A FATHER’S DAY AND MY FATHER’S DAY IS GOING TO BE FOREVER CHANGED. NOW. SO THE NEW HAMPSHIRE FIRE MARSHAL’S OFFICE CALLS THIS A TRAGIC ACCIDENT. THE AGENCY IS INVESTIGATIN
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      'This could happen to you': Woman warns about tabletop fire pits following family tragedy

      Woman says parents killed when flames surged from fire pit

      A New Hampshire woman is sharing a warning about tabletop fire pits after she recently lost her parents in an accident.Dee McEneaney said her parents, Herman and Thelma Stolzenburg, had a love story made for the movies. The two met in elementary school and became high school sweethearts. "My mom was a cheerleader. My dad was in the band," McEneaney said.Herman Stolzenburg joined the Navy, and the couple bounced around the country until they settled in New Hampshire. They had three children, three grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. "They fed off of each other, and one of them couldn't exist in that house without the other," McEneaney said.On Father's Day this year, McEneaney was sitting on her porch with her parents. She had just lit a tabletop fire pit when, she said, things took a terrible turn. "It was a nanosecond, and the flame just came off of that thing," she said. "It's like a blowtorch and engulfed both my parents."Herman and Thelma Stolzenburg were taken to area hospitals before they were sent to Mass. General Hospital. The couple, married 71 years, died three days apart. "He actually died three days and three hours, almost to the minute, of my mom passing," McEneaney said.McEneaney has shared her family's tragedy online as a warning to others. Her post has since gone viral, with hundreds of comments and more than 1,000 shares. "To just make people very aware that this could happen to you, too," she said. "We weren't careless. We were enjoying Father's Day, and my Father's Day is going to be forever changed now."The New Hampshire Fire Marshal's Office said the incident was a tragic accident. The agency is still investigating the exact cause.

      A New Hampshire woman is sharing a warning about tabletop fire pits after she recently lost her parents in an accident.

      Dee McEneaney said her parents, Herman and Thelma Stolzenburg, had a love story made for the movies. The two met in elementary school and became high school sweethearts.

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      "My mom was a cheerleader. My dad was in the band," McEneaney said.

      Herman Stolzenburg joined the Navy, and the couple bounced around the country until they settled in New Hampshire. They had three children, three grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

      "They fed off of each other, and one of them couldn't exist in that house without the other," McEneaney said.

      On Father's Day this year, McEneaney was sitting on her porch with her parents. She had just lit a tabletop fire pit when, she said, things took a terrible turn.

      "It was a nanosecond, and the flame just came off of that thing," she said. "It's like a blowtorch and engulfed both my parents."

      Herman and Thelma Stolzenburg were taken to area hospitals before they were sent to Mass. General Hospital. The couple, married 71 years, died three days apart.

      "He actually died three days and three hours, almost to the minute, of my mom passing," McEneaney said.

      McEneaney has shared her family's tragedy online as a warning to others. Her post has since gone viral, with hundreds of comments and more than 1,000 shares.

      "To just make people very aware that this could happen to you, too," she said. "We weren't careless. We were enjoying Father's Day, and my Father's Day is going to be forever changed now."

      The New Hampshire Fire Marshal's Office said the incident was a tragic accident. The agency is still investigating the exact cause.

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      These robot vacuums are already being marked down ahead of Prime Day

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      These robot vacuums are already being marked down ahead of Prime Day
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        Spring time, the season of sneezes and sniffles but fear not with *** few savvy strategies. You can transform your home into *** pollen free fortress. Start by embracing cleanliness, vacuum, dust and mop away those pesky particles opt for hardwood floors over carpets says the New York Post invest in blackout curtains for *** sneeze free sleep and choose hypoallergenic bedding for extra comfort. The mayo cleaning suggests and keys in pillows, mattresses and box brings in dust mite proof covers, washing bedding, weakling, hot water and swapping wool or feather for synthetic. When it comes to letting in the fresh air timing is key, crack those windows at day's end when pollen levels are lower and rely on indoor ventilation and air conditioning to keep things cool without inviting allergens inside. And for the plant lovers choose wisely, palms, orchids and ferns produce minimal pollen, keeping your sneezes at bay.
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        These robot vacuums are already being marked down ahead of Prime Day
        Amazon Prime Day, the highly anticipated annual sales event, is just around the corner, but shoppers eager for deals on robot vacuums are already in luck.Amazon has started rolling out early discounts on a variety of robot vacuum models, making this the perfect time to upgrade your home cleaning arsenal. Above video: Simple tips for a pollen-proof homeWhether you're seeking advanced features, enhanced cleaning performance, or simply looking to automate your chores, these early markdowns offer compelling savings on top-rated brands.Here are some of the early deals that we found.Save $320 on the roborock Q5 Pro+ Robot Vacuum and Mop, now selling at $379.00 (was $699.99)Save $300 on the Shark AI Ultra Voice Control Robot Vacuum, now selling at $299 (was $599)Save $250 on the ECOVACS Deebot 730S Combo Robot Vacuum and Mop, now selling at $950.00 (was $1,199.00)Take 50% off the ROPVACNIC Robot Vacuum Cleaner Robot Vacuum and Mop Combo with 4000Pa Suction, now $149.99 (was 299.99)Take 40% off the Shark RV2310 Matrix Robot Vacuum with Self-Cleaning Brushroll for Pet Hair, now selling for $179.99 (was $299.99)Take 11% off the highly-rated iRobot Roomba 694 Robot Vacuum, now selling at $245.01 (was $274.99)Didn't find what you're looking for? Click here to shop deals on all robot vacuums through Amazon. Robot vacuums are among the most sought-after deals of Amazon Prime Day, the blockbuster savings event from the online retail giant.Prime Day 2024 will take place from July 16 to July 17.It marks the tenth time Amazon has held Prime Day after it began the annual tradition in 2015 as a way to celebrate Prime members on Amazon’s 20th anniversary.Officials said Amazon Prime members will get access to “great savings” and will be able to take advantage of “deep discounts and get their shopping done early for Back-to-School supplies.”

        Amazon Prime Day, the highly anticipated annual sales event, is just around the corner, but shoppers eager for deals on robot vacuums are already in luck.

        Amazon has started rolling out early discounts on a variety of robot vacuum models, making this the perfect time to upgrade your home cleaning arsenal.

        Advertisement

        Above video: Simple tips for a pollen-proof home

        Whether you're seeking advanced features, enhanced cleaning performance, or simply looking to automate your chores, these early markdowns offer compelling savings on top-rated brands.

        Here are some of the early deals that we found.

        Didn't find what you're looking for? Click here to shop deals on all robot vacuums through Amazon.


        Robot vacuums are among the most sought-after deals of Amazon Prime Day, the blockbuster savings event from the online retail giant.

        Prime Day 2024 will take place from July 16 to July 17.

        It marks the tenth time Amazon has held Prime Day after it began the annual tradition in 2015 as a way to celebrate Prime members on Amazon’s 20th anniversary.

        Officials said Amazon Prime members will get access to “great savings” and will be able to take advantage of “deep discounts and get their shopping done early for Back-to-School supplies.”