View allAll Photos Tagged Unsolved

My Note: Apparently a fabrication on the part of an illustrator (sic) journalist (1936 equivalent of a modern day 'blogger') creating a story to explain the unsolved 1865 murders of two children in the area. (The Bussey Woods Murders)

 

Boston Public Library

644 South St., Roslindale, "Murder Chamber" House

 

File name: 08_06_035136

 

Title: 644 South St., Roslindale, "Murder Chamber" House

 

Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)

 

Date created: 1936-04

 

Physical description: 1 negative : film, black & white; 3 1/8 x 4 1/4 in.

 

Genre: Film negatives

 

Subject: Historic buildings; Roslindale (Boston, Mass.)

 

Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.

 

Collection: Leslie Jones Collection

 

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

 

Rights: Copyright Leslie Jones.

 

Preferred credit: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.

 

Cars&Bikes Around Us. Автомобили и Мотоциклы Вокруг Нас.

dieses foto und blut 1/3 sind mit lebensmittelfarbe entstanden

 

this and pic blut 1/3 were made with food coloring

The aftermath of the unsolved crime as yet of the missing cash machine.

Three years since the Wolfeboro mother was murdered. I'm sure the people who gathered at the State House today feel better for doing so, but I doubt they've spurred the police into action. At the time of her death there was some suggestion a police officer, or someone known to the police was involved but, amazingly, no one followed up on that lead.

As I type I can hear a diesel engine, but when I look up I see my kitchen. Since nothing in there is diesel powered I must not have heard anything at all.

Most famous unsolved serial murder case since Jack the Ripper stalked the streets of London.

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

This is a series of photos taken July 19, 2010 of a still unsolved pollution spill in the Huron River, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Photos are taken from 7:31 pm to 9:12pm on July 19th. First video taken at 6:49pm, last video taken at 9:01pm. No rain, so event was not caused by rain. Photos taken near pedestrian bridge, located near Nichols Arboretum and Mitchell Field. This case is still unsolved.

 

NOTE: This spill was not caused by a rain event. It rained that night, but the initial flushing/dumping was NOT caused by a rain event. Booms were in the water before the river rose.

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

 

The AAFD photos and my photos are the only known photos of this event. I tried giving these photos to University of Michigan Police (who investigated the spill that ran through University of Michigan grounds), but they weren't interested in entering them as evidence. So you won't find these photos in the official police record of the spill. But, I saw it and you can see it here.

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

Have patience with everything that is unsolved in your heart

and try too see your questions with love, like rooms that are

closed, or like books in an completely strange language.

Don't search for answers, that cannot yet be given,

because you would not be able to live them.

It matters too live everything.

Live now the questions.

Maybe you will gradually, without knowing,

find yourself one day in the answer.

 

Rainer Maria Rilke

1ste schilderij uit reeks Unsolved Case 7

Courtesy Marlborough Fine Art, Londen © Joost Huysman

Found in the burned out trunk of his car in the desert near Flagstaff. He had disappeared from Albuquerque. No arrests have ever been made.

 

1977-1994

Quinton has grown considerably in recent years, but Lower Quinton still retains a palpable atmosphere of the past. Friday Street is lined with lined with half-timbered and Georgian houses and the church of St Swithin is one of the most interesting in the area, with the brooding mass of Meon hill beyond, infamous for the unsolved murder of Charles Walton in 1945 with its rumours of witchcraft. An elegant church with north and south aisles and west tower with a tall C15 spire visible for miles around. The south aisle is c 1100 and is thought to have been cut through the Saxon wall of an earlier church, while the north aisle shows the transition from round to pointed arches and is c 1170. The chancel is Early English and above the chancel arch the arms of Elizabeth I are still visible. A clerestory was added in the C15 and the nave has a late C16 oak roof. The aisles end in chapels to Our Lady and St Anne built in the C13 and C14. A Norman font stands by the north door. There are five Armorial windows designed by Geoffrey Webb between 1929-32. Webb asked local school children to suggest subjects to decorate the blank panes. At the end of the Transitional north aisle the Lady Chapel has an east window which incorporates a C14 niche which houses a modern Virgin and Child. Fragments of the original glass fill the tracery and Webb has designed panels depicting the Virgin's Life. The Chancel c 1255, was restored in 1862, when a large window by F. Preedy was inserted in the blank east wall. The south aisle has a chapel dedicated to St Anne which has a double piscina and a triple sedilla, 1340. The jewel of this chapel is an Altar tomb to Joanna, Lady Clopton c 1430 who entered a religious order after the death of her husband. The brass shows her wearing a wimple and a widows barbe. She originally lay next to her husband Sir William, but they were separated in 1749 and his effigy is now lies between the south aisle and the nave. Sir William is depicted in full armour, though he is thought to have been the victim of Parliamentary troops, who damaged the sculpture.

www.bwthornton.co.uk/visiting-stratford-upon-avon.php

Am dritten Jahrestag seiner Ermordung, wurde mit einer Kundgebung am Ort der Tat in Berlin Neukölln dem damals 22jährigen Burak B. gedacht. An der Feierstunde nahmen auch die Eltern von Burak B., sowie Faruk Arslan, der Vater der in Mölln ermordeten Kinder teil.

Burak B. wurde von einem bis heute unbekannten Täter erschossen. Die Anwälte der Familie, sowie eine Initiative zur Erinnerung an Burak B. vermuten den Täter, der auch zwei weitere Jugendliche bei dem Angriff schwer verletzte, im rechtsextremistischen Umfeld. Sie weisen auf Ähnlichkeiten mit den Morden das Nationalsozialistischen Untergrunds (NSU) hin. Zudem gebe es in rechtsextremen Kreisen Hinweise auf Täterwissen.

24 hours have now passed and still that puzzle remains unsolved! Will delay my application of membership for MENSA for another year...

This is a series of photos taken July 19, 2010 of a still unsolved pollution spill in the Huron River, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Photos are taken from 7:31 pm to 9:12pm on July 19th. First video taken at 6:49pm, last video taken at 9:01pm. No rain, so event was not caused by rain. Photos taken near pedestrian bridge, located near Nichols Arboretum and Mitchell Field. This case is still unsolved.

 

NOTE: This spill was not caused by a rain event. It rained that night, but the initial flushing/dumping was NOT caused by a rain event. Booms were in the water before the river rose.

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

 

The AAFD photos and my photos are the only known photos of this event. I tried giving these photos to University of Michigan Police (who investigated the spill that ran through University of Michigan grounds), but they weren't interested in entering them as evidence. So you won't find these photos in the official police record of the spill. But, I saw it and you can see it here.

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

October 15, 2015- Mayor Martin Walsh joins Mary Franklin in rasing a flag at Boston City Hall Plaza to note October 15, 2015 as Unsolved Homicides Awareness Day. (Mayor's Office Photo by Isabel Leon)

grand place, belgium puzzle.

This is a walk made in the autumn of 2018, 32 years AFTER the murder of prime minister Olof Palme of Sweden. It follows his path that fatal evening. People in the streets have, of course, nothing to do with the case. The murder remains unsolved and has given rise to conspiracy theories.

 

On Friday, 28 February 1986, at 23:21 CET (22:21 UTC), Olof Palme, Prime Minister of Sweden, was fatally wounded by a single gunshot while walking home from a cinema with his wife Lisbet Palme on the central Stockholm street Sveavägen. Lisbet Palme was slightly wounded by a second shot. The couple did not have bodyguards at the time.

 

Christer Pettersson, who had previously been convicted of manslaughter, was convicted of the murder in 1988 after having been identified as the killer by Palme's wife. However, on appeal to Svea Court of Appeal he was acquitted. A petition for a new trial, filed by the prosecutor, was denied by the Supreme Court of Sweden. Pettersson died in late September 2004, legally declared not guilty of the Palme assassination. The case remains unsolved and has given rise to conspiracy theories.

 

Despite being Prime Minister, Palme sought to live as ordinary a life as possible. He would often go out without any bodyguard protection, and the night of his murder was one such occasion. Walking home from the Grand Cinema with his wife Lisbet Palme on the central Stockholm street Sveavägen, close to midnight on 28 February 1986, the couple was attacked by a lone gunman. Palme was fatally shot in the back at close range at 23:21 CET. A second shot wounded Mrs Palme.

 

Police said that a taxi driver used his mobile radio to raise the alarm, and two girls in a nearby car tried to assist. He was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital at 00:06 CET on 1 March 1986. The attacker escaped eastwards on the Tunnelgatan.

 

Deputy Prime Minister Ingvar Carlsson immediately assumed the duties of Prime Minister and as new leader of the Social Democratic Party.

 

Sequence of events

Cinema decision

Palme's decision to visit the Grand Cinema was made at very short notice. Lisbet Palme had discussed seeing a film when she was at work during the afternoon, and called her son, Mårten Palme, at 17:00 to talk about the film at the Grand Cinema. Olof Palme did not hear about the plans until at home, at 18:30, when he met with his wife, by which time Palme had already declined any further personal bodyguard protection from the security service. He talked to his son about the plans on the phone, and they eventually decided to join Mårten and his girlfriend, who had already purchased tickets for themselves to see the Swedish comedy Bröderna Mozart ("The Mozart Brothers") by Suzanne Osten. This decision was made about 20:00. The police later searched Palme's apartment, as well as Lisbet's and Mårten's work places, for wire-bugging devices or traces of such equipment, but did not find any.[1]

 

Grand Cinema

 

Grand cinema.

 

Crossing of Sveavägen–Tunnelgatan where Palme was shot.

 

Tunnelgatan. The assassin's immediate escape route.

At 20:30 the Palmes left their apartment, unescorted, heading for the Gamla stan metro station. Several people witnessed their short walk to the station and, according to the later police investigation, commented on the lack of bodyguards. The couple took the subway train to the Rådmansgatan station, from where they walked to the Grand Cinema. They met their son and his girlfriend just outside the cinema around 21:00. Olof Palme had not yet purchased tickets which were by then almost sold out. Recognizing the prime minister, the ticket clerk wanted him to have the best seats, and therefore sold Palme the theatre director's seats.[2]

 

Murder

After the screening, the two couples stayed outside the theatre for a while but separated about 23:15. Olof and Lisbet Palme headed south on the west side of Sveavägen, towards the northern entrance of the Hötorget metro station. When they reached the Adolf Fredrik Church, they crossed Sveavägen and continued on the street's east side. They stopped a moment to look at something in a shop window, then continued past the Dekorima shop which was then located on the corner of Sveavägen and Tunnelgatan.

 

At 23:21, a man appeared from behind, shot Mr. Palme at point-blank range and fired a second shot at Mrs. Palme. The perpetrator then jogged down Tunnelgatan street, up the steps to Malmskillnadsgatan and continued down David Bagares gata [street], where he was last seen

This was the oldest section of wall fronting Bradshawgate until 2008 when it was demolished following a fire at the building on the right.

It was the entrance to the Bolton Brewery built and owned by Mr M C Dawes.

The yard beyond this arch was the scene of an unsolved murder in 1940, when Minnie Stott was found strangled.

Biltmore Hotel - The original lobby where Elizabeth Shore waited with Robert Manley

Window well at St Patrick's-Alexander School that local children refer to as the "Dungeon" where Tanya Jean Brooks was found May 11/09. Still unsolved.

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

This is a series of photos taken July 19, 2010 of a still unsolved pollution spill in the Huron River, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Photos are taken from 7:31 pm to 9:12pm on July 19th. First video taken at 6:49pm, last video taken at 9:01pm. No rain, so event was not caused by rain. Photos taken near pedestrian bridge, located near Nichols Arboretum and Mitchell Field. This case is still unsolved.

 

NOTE: This spill was not caused by a rain event. It rained that night, but the initial flushing/dumping was NOT caused by a rain event. Booms were in the water before the river rose.

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

 

The AAFD photos and my photos are the only known photos of this event. I tried giving these photos to University of Michigan Police (who investigated the spill that ran through University of Michigan grounds), but they weren't interested in entering them as evidence. So you won't find these photos in the official police record of the spill. But, I saw it and you can see it here.

Quinton has grown considerably in recent years, but Lower Quinton still retains a palpable atmosphere of the past. Friday Street is lined with lined with half-timbered and Georgian houses and the church of St Swithin is one of the most interesting in the area, with the brooding mass of Meon hill beyond, infamous for the unsolved murder of Charles Walton in 1945 with its rumours of witchcraft. An elegant church with north and south aisles and west tower with a tall C15 spire visible for miles around. The south aisle is c 1100 and is thought to have been cut through the Saxon wall of an earlier church, while the north aisle shows the transition from round to pointed arches and is c 1170. The chancel is Early English and above the chancel arch the arms of Elizabeth I are still visible. A clerestory was added in the C15 and the nave has a late C16 oak roof. The aisles end in chapels to Our Lady and St Anne built in the C13 and C14. A Norman font stands by the north door. There are five Armorial windows designed by Geoffrey Webb between 1929-32. Webb asked local school children to suggest subjects to decorate the blank panes. At the end of the Transitional north aisle the Lady Chapel has an east window which incorporates a C14 niche which houses a modern Virgin and Child. Fragments of the original glass fill the tracery and Webb has designed panels depicting the Virgin's Life. The Chancel c 1255, was restored in 1862, when a large window by F. Preedy was inserted in the blank east wall. The south aisle has a chapel dedicated to St Anne which has a double piscina and a triple sedilla, 1340. The jewel of this chapel is an Altar tomb to Joanna, Lady Clopton c 1430 who entered a religious order after the death of her husband. The brass shows her wearing a wimple and a widows barbe. She originally lay next to her husband Sir William, but they were separated in 1749 and his effigy is now lies between the south aisle and the nave. Sir William is depicted in full armour, though he is thought to have been the victim of Parliamentary troops, who damaged the sculpture.

www.bwthornton.co.uk/visiting-stratford-upon-avon.php

A schoolgirl passes the candlelight memorial for James Andrew Murchison, 16, on South Street in Newburgh, NY on Friday, May 23, 2008. Murchison is the Newburgh teenager who was stabbed to death last week and who's funeral is today. Times Herald-Record/CHET GORDON

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

Once owned by powerful Frankopan family it looks like a castle from some fairy tale.

Unsolved propriarty problems, and continuous devastating left terrible marks on this magnificant castle.

Now it is returned to propriarty of district Bosiljevo, and they are seeking for serious investor to restore castle to previous state. Though this is tough task, since all valuables from the caslte, furniture, art, books from library etc were stolen. Even rocks and stone balustrade were taken away and used for decorations of gardens.

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

This is a series of photos taken July 19, 2010 of a still unsolved pollution spill in the Huron River, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Photos are taken from 7:31 pm to 9:12pm on July 19th. First video taken at 6:49pm, last video taken at 9:01pm. No rain, so event was not caused by rain. Photos taken near pedestrian bridge, located near Nichols Arboretum and Mitchell Field. This case is still unsolved.

 

NOTE: This spill was not caused by a rain event. It rained that night, but the initial flushing/dumping was NOT caused by a rain event. Booms were in the water before the river rose.

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

 

The AAFD photos and my photos are the only known photos of this event. I tried giving these photos to University of Michigan Police (who investigated the spill that ran through University of Michigan grounds), but they weren't interested in entering them as evidence. So you won't find these photos in the official police record of the spill. But, I saw it and you can see it here.

Quinton has grown considerably in recent years, but Lower Quinton still retains a palpable atmosphere of the past. Friday Street is lined with lined with half-timbered and Georgian houses and the church of St Swithin is one of the most interesting in the area, with the brooding mass of Meon hill beyond, infamous for the unsolved murder of Charles Walton in 1945 with its rumours of witchcraft. An elegant church with north and south aisles and west tower with a tall C15 spire visible for miles around. The south aisle is c 1100 and is thought to have been cut through the Saxon wall of an earlier church, while the north aisle shows the transition from round to pointed arches and is c 1170. The chancel is Early English and above the chancel arch the arms of Elizabeth I are still visible. A clerestory was added in the C15 and the nave has a late C16 oak roof. The aisles end in chapels to Our Lady and St Anne built in the C13 and C14. A Norman font stands by the north door. There are five Armorial windows designed by Geoffrey Webb between 1929-32. Webb asked local school children to suggest subjects to decorate the blank panes. At the end of the Transitional north aisle the Lady Chapel has an east window which incorporates a C14 niche which houses a modern Virgin and Child. Fragments of the original glass fill the tracery and Webb has designed panels depicting the Virgin's Life. The Chancel c 1255, was restored in 1862, when a large window by F. Preedy was inserted in the blank east wall. The south aisle has a chapel dedicated to St Anne which has a double piscina and a triple sedilla, 1340. The jewel of this chapel is an Altar tomb to Joanna, Lady Clopton c 1430 who entered a religious order after the death of her husband. The brass shows her wearing a wimple and a widows barbe. She originally lay next to her husband Sir William, but they were separated in 1749 and his effigy is now lies between the south aisle and the nave. Sir William is depicted in full armour, though he is thought to have been the victim of Parliamentary troops, who damaged the sculpture.

www.bwthornton.co.uk/visiting-stratford-upon-avon.php

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

"she has long been / one of my central questions / so / day in and day out..."

I scoured my photo files for images to make this piece, including an old receipt, old handwriting, an envelope, old papers, postage stamps from Denmark and Japan, a bridge tally sheet, ink splotches, and more. As I worked on the assemblage, it began looking more and more like elements from a crime scene! Who knows what happened here? The case remains unsolved.

One of the biggest unsolved mystery of Life: how come such a simple thing like Croissant can bring so much happiness?

 

Blacksmith, 1018 Westheimer Rd, Houston, TX 77006

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

Unsolved Mystery Club: Amelia Earhart is now available for download on We Should Play!

The idea is fun and simple: Help the Unsolved Mystery Club find out what happened to the legendary aviator Amelia Earhart in this fun Hidden Object Adventure game!

Here's a screenshot

Download Unsolved Mystery Club: Amelia Earhart on We Should Play!

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

Quinton has grown considerably in recent years, but Lower Quinton still retains a palpable atmosphere of the past. Friday Street is lined with lined with half-timbered and Georgian houses and the church of St Swithin is one of the most interesting in the area, with the brooding mass of Meon hill beyond, infamous for the unsolved murder of Charles Walton in 1945 with its rumours of witchcraft. An elegant church with north and south aisles and west tower with a tall C15 spire visible for miles around. The south aisle is c 1100 and is thought to have been cut through the Saxon wall of an earlier church, while the north aisle shows the transition from round to pointed arches and is c 1170. The chancel is Early English and above the chancel arch the arms of Elizabeth I are still visible. A clerestory was added in the C15 and the nave has a late C16 oak roof. The aisles end in chapels to Our Lady and St Anne built in the C13 and C14. A Norman font stands by the north door. There are five Armorial windows designed by Geoffrey Webb between 1929-32. Webb asked local school children to suggest subjects to decorate the blank panes. At the end of the Transitional north aisle the Lady Chapel has an east window which incorporates a C14 niche which houses a modern Virgin and Child. Fragments of the original glass fill the tracery and Webb has designed panels depicting the Virgin's Life. The Chancel c 1255, was restored in 1862, when a large window by F. Preedy was inserted in the blank east wall. The south aisle has a chapel dedicated to St Anne which has a double piscina and a triple sedilla, 1340. The jewel of this chapel is an Altar tomb to Joanna, Lady Clopton c 1430 who entered a religious order after the death of her husband. The brass shows her wearing a wimple and a widows barbe. She originally lay next to her husband Sir William, but they were separated in 1749 and his effigy is now lies between the south aisle and the nave. Sir William is depicted in full armour, though he is thought to have been the victim of Parliamentary troops, who damaged the sculpture.

www.bwthornton.co.uk/visiting-stratford-upon-avon.php

Daily Deals on Books = www.bookzio.com/in-our-blood-4/

Evil isn’t always learned…sometimes it’s In Our Blood.

THE GAME UNFOLDS.

Homicide Detective Jake Hawksworth, still reeling from the unsolved hit-and-run death of his wife, is investigating the murder of a local woman. Best-selling author Drew McCauley is penning his latest...

#books #booklover #freebooks #bookgiveaway #kindle #Mysteries

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

This is a series of photos taken July 19, 2010 of a still unsolved pollution spill in the Huron River, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Photos are taken from 7:31 pm to 9:12pm on July 19th. First video taken at 6:49pm, last video taken at 9:01pm. No rain, so event was not caused by rain. Photos taken near pedestrian bridge, located near Nichols Arboretum and Mitchell Field. This case is still unsolved.

 

NOTE: This spill was not caused by a rain event. It rained that night, but the initial flushing/dumping was NOT caused by a rain event. Booms were in the water before the river rose.

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

 

The AAFD photos and my photos are the only known photos of this event. I tried giving these photos to University of Michigan Police (who investigated the spill that ran through University of Michigan grounds), but they weren't interested in entering them as evidence. So you won't find these photos in the official police record of the spill. But, I saw it and you can see it here.

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

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