FBI joins #debbiecollier case/ info about her cell phone
Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43ulZH0Rvnw
TRIGGER WARNING
Facts about narcissists, domestic violence awareness, and why do the narcissists come back?
Video used in the end:
https://youtube.com/shorts/PAqPFXjYGI?
feature=share
Song used in video:
Rest in peace by Taylor Austin Dye
https://youtu.be/PZ2ThvZC_fs
Sound effect “twinkle twinkle”
By:Leah Kate
Full song: https://youtu.be/CpCOyth5TRU
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mx4iUfnvbMk
#GabbyPetito #BrianLaundrie #domesticviolence #FoxNews
RIP GABBY! May you be protected by the angel's now.
Sources:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yihKFk23-Lo
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iF3fQJjXYQU
@Jewels of Thought @Sleuth Mom @Positively Parker @The Scoop with Barb @Save Robbie @Kelley The Advocate @Amber’s ALERTTS
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsBkAoD61qw
@smileystoreysworld2882 @VoiCeSbeHinDtheWaLL @alexerickson11 had to reupload it this way so y’all could see what I am talking about.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NL1pJTYnKsI
NOV. 10-12: GlaxoSmithKline co-workers Ann Miller and Derril H. Willard Jr. go to Chicago for a weekend at the Ritz-Carlton. Miller tells family the trip is for business; investigators later learn the trip was a romantic tryst.
NOV. 15: Eric Miller goes bowling with three of his wife’s co-workers from GlaxoSmithKline, including Willard, who buys and pours Miller a beer. Miller remarks that his beer tastes bad. He becomes sick later at the bowling alley. His wife, Ann, later drives him to Rex Healthcare, where he is admitted.
NOV. 21: Eric Miller is transferred to UNC Hospitals, where tests show traces of arsenic in his body, but there is a delay getting the information to Miller, his family and doctors treating him.
NOV. 24: Eric Miller goes home from the hospital. He does not return to his job at UNC.
NOV. 30: Eric Miller becomes ill again after eating a dinner his wife prepared and is taken back to Rex.
DEC. 1: The Miller family learns that tests show high levels of arsenic; treatment begins. A nurse calls Raleigh police, and Eric Miller says he has no idea how he came in contact with arsenic.
DEC. 2: At 2:50 a.m., Eric Miller dies. Police search Miller’s home for arsenic.
DEC. 4: Police look for arsenic or its derivatives at GlaxoSmithKline, where Ann Miller is a research scientist. Police seize sodium cacodylate, two expense reports, a fulfillment contract, a lab notebook and a computer and keyboard.
DEC. 6: Police search UNC’s computer network and take two disks loaded with Eric Miller’s e-mail files and his lab’s computer files.
DEC. 19: Police take a laptop computer from the Miller home.
2001
JAN. 21: Police search Willard’s home and seize documents and two computers. Police indicate Willard had a personal relationship with Ann Miller.
JAN. 22: Willard is found by his wife, Yvette, in their garage, dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. Police find a handwritten note in which Willard apologizes to his family and declares his innocence.
MAY 10: Eric Miller’s autopsy report confirms that he was killed by arsenic and that he received at least two doses, including at least one while in the hospital. A toxicology report also says that the substance seized by police from Miller’s wife’s laboratory was in Miller’s blood, liver and urine.
MAY 16: A new toxicology report is released by the state medical examiner showing that Eric Miller received at least one substantial dose of arsenic several months before he became ill and died.
2002
FEB. 20: Wake District Attorney Colon Willoughby asks a judge to force Raleigh defense lawyer Richard Gammon to divulge what his deceased client, Willard, might have revealed about the arsenic poisoning death. Willard’s widow had told Willoughby that Gammon advised Willard he could face a charge of attempted murder.
MARCH 7: Trying to persuade a judge to force Gammon to talk, prosecutors reveal evidence that Willard and Ann Miller had a romantic relationship.
MARCH 14: Gammon appeals after a judge orders him to divulge parts of what Willard told him.
DEC. 11: CBS airs an episode of “48 Hours” about the case.
2003
AUG. 22: The state Supreme Court rules that Gammon must tell a judge privately what Willard told him about Miller’s death. The judge is instructed to decide whether the information must remain confidential under attorney-client privilege or must be given to authorities.
OCT. 2: After reviewing a seven-page sealed affidavit, Wake Senior Resident Superior Court Judge Donald W. Stephens orders Gammon to reveal to investigators what Willard told him. The information remains secret while Gammon appeals.
NOV. 29: Ann Miller marries Christian rock guitarist Paul Martin Kontz of Wilmington. They live in Wilmington with Ann’s daughter by Eric Miller and Kontz’s daughter from a previous marriage.
2004
MAY 7: The N.C. Supreme Court denies Gammon’s appeal.
MAY 27: Gammon gives his notes on Willard’s statements to Willoughby. The statements are given to police investigators but are not made public.
JUNE 2: One of Ann Miller Kontz’s lawyers, Joseph B. Cheshire V, says that if she is charged in her husband’s death, she will surrender to authorities.
SEPT. 27: A Wake County grand jury hands down an indictment charging Ann Miller Kontz with first-degree murder in the death of Eric Miller.
NOV. 17: Willoughby announces that he will not seek the death penalty for Ann Miller Kontz.
DEC. 10: Gammon’s affidavit is read in court. In it, Gammon says that Willard told him that Kontz had admitted administering arsenic to Eric Miller through his intravenous line while he was in the hospital.
2005
FEB. 15: A judge agrees to transfer Kontz from Wake County jail to the state women’s prison in Raleigh, where her lawyers say she can more easily aid in her defense. She moves there March 18.
NOV. 7: Kontz pleads guilty to second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder in the death of Eric Miller.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n0P6nn14iJY