Indiana Mom Kills Her Own Kids

July 22, 2005
A mother was charged with two counts of murder in the beating deaths of her two sons. Police say Magdalena Lopez, 30, beat the boys with a 10-pound dumbbell because she believed they would be better off in heaven. Lopez was arrested Tuesday night after police responded to her 911 call and found 9-year-old Antonio Lopez and 2-year-old Erik Lopez dead in separate rooms of their home.

Vermont State Police Ticket Mom Who Rushed Her Burned Baby To Hospital

May 2, 2005
Vermont State Police said that theyissued a civil ticket for failing to obey a police officer after leading police on a high speed chase to the hospital. Police reported that she was traveling as fast as 90 to 100 mph.

No Parents, No Entrance at New Hampshire Mall

April 20, 2005
When you're a kid hanging out with mommy and daddy isn't always peaches and cream, but if you want to shop at the Pheasant Lane Mall on Friday or Saturday nights you're gonna have to take them along. Two weeks ago, in response to recent "disorderly and disruptive" acts, the security at Pheasant Lane Mall started passing out flyers detailing the Simon-owned mall's "general code of conduct," according to mall manager Ginny Szymanski. From 6 p. m. to 9:30 p. m. on Fridays and Saturdays, security guards stand outside two mall entrances to make sure anyone under 16 has someone over the age of 21 accompanying them. "That's when we approach them and give them a copy of the code of conduct and ask the parent to come in with them," Szymanski said. She said the code - which outlines 13 rules governing acceptable conduct and clothing, among other things - will be enforced by security. Szymanski said the mall rules have always been intact and posted, though the fliers were printed in response to the large amount of teenagers loitering, not shopping, on Friday and Saturday nights. If kids are found to be disrupting the mall's business, Szymanski said they will be escorted to the command center to call a parent to pick them up. "We're not out to punish anyone," she said. "We're just trying to better manage the shopping experience. " Shoppers interviewed by The Telegraph weren't too excited by the recent enforcement of the code. "I feel as though if I want to drop my kids off, I should. They're responsible," said Leann Newcomb of Lowell, Mass. , who was shopping Monday with her 15-year-old daughter, Ashley. Ashley felt the same. "I can come here and I can be fine without my mom," she said. This problem with kids' isn't happening at all New Hampshire malls. Scott Payrits, senior marketing manager at the Steeplegate Mall in Concord, said kids come to his mall to shop, not to be menaces. "We do not have any sort of problem with disruptive incidents, especially with kids," he said. "We have very good public safety. We don't have the need for a children-specific code of conduct. " One of the rules at Pheasant Lane prohibits dress "commonly recognized as gang-related. " Szymanski said they don't have a problem with gangs, it's the attire that the kids are wearing -- long chains, studded bracelets and necklaces that can be used as weapons -- that are the problem. Leann Newcomb questioned the code. "They sell that stuff," said Newcomb. "How are they going to tell the kids after they buy that stuff not to wear it? Isn't that a violation of your constitutional rights?"

Police Mistakenly Pull Over New Mom At Gunpoint

March 31, 2005
Debbie Coleman likely never expected to give birth behind the wheel. . . and was probably even more shocked to find herself looking down the barrel of a gun afterwards. As she tried to make her way to the hospital, Coleman pulled into a gas station realizing she was about to give birth. After having the baby, she once again began driving toward the hospital with her newborn sitting on her chest and the umbilical cord still attached. Other drivers called police to report a woman attempting to throw a baby out of a moving vehicle. Police pulled her over and ordered her out of her vehicle with their guns drawn. Upon realizing the situation, authorities allowed her to proceed and called ahead the hospital to alert them of the situation. Coleman was released from hospital the next day, while her 6-pound 8-ounce baby boy remains in intensive care.
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