Detroiters charged in severe beating of Grosse Pointe man, but not with hate crime
For nearly 20 minutes, the assailants punched and kicked the new father while allegedly using racial slurs.
For nearly 20 minutes, the assailants punched and kicked the new father while allegedly using racial slurs.
The 24-year-old man who shot and killed a teenager at the Cinco de Mayo Parade in Detroit last month won’t be charged because he was acting in self-defense, the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office announced today.
The new father is undergoing surgery today after he said three men severely beat him while shouting racial epithets following a car crash on Detroit’s east side.
Two of the victims had been shot before being set on fire.
Police believe the perpetrators were looking for guns outside of the precinct on the west side.
There’s one problem with Detroit’s plan to crack down on the proliferation of graffiti: Most of its police officers aren’t trained to issue tickets to vandals.
If you count the drug house and squatters, W. Robinwood has eight occupied houses, and the remaining 82 lots are either empty or have abandoned, dilapidated houses.
Tigers relief pitcher Evan Reed, 28, is accused of sexually assaulting a woman in the Motor City Casino Hotel last month, just before the baseball season began.
Building owner Scott Kraz is angry and says cops should remove the graffiti from his wall.
Dozens of vacant Detroit schools are riddled with graffiti, driving down adjacent property values and making it difficult for the cash-strapped district to find a new buyer for the buildings.