A woman angry with a stranger on a bus in Kansas City, Mo., is accused of splashing gasoline on passengers and threatening to light a match.
There was a time when all you had to worry about when you rode the bus was some psycho having a knife, a gun, or extreme body odor.
At about 5:30 a.m. Monday, 32-year-old Ebony D. Williams ”got mad because someone was sitting beside her,” witness Randy Harris told The Kansas City Star. “The bus was crowded, and she asked him to move.”
The man didn’t move, and Williams allegedly responded by whipping out a gasoline-filled water bottle and splashing it on her seatmate, as well as five other passengers nearby, according to the local media.
Police say she threatened to set everyone on fire.
“Right after the gasoline, she pulled out matches and tried to flick it,” Harris said.
A scuffle ensued between Williams and the other passengers, at which point police say she began brandishing a large knife.
This chick was carrying a knife, and a water bottle full of gasoline?! What type of party was she going to.
The bus driver stopped the bus and ceased the altercation. Passengers were transferred to a different bus.
“The driver absolutely did what she was supposed to. First and foremost is to take her safety and the safety of passengers into consideration,” Area Transportation Authority spokesman B.J. Garcia told KMBC. “As soon as it became apparent that there was a harmful substance on the bus, she pulled the bus over immediately and I can’t even say she pulled over she stopped immediately and opened the doors and had everyone exit the bus.”
No one was injured in the incident. Williams was charged with six counts of assault.
The bus driver is a hero, and THANK GOD there were no injuries.
This next story falls under the category greedy, stupid criminals. Social media can either be your best friend or your worst enemy, depending on how you utilize it. Case in point. Be careful what you Instagram, would-be criminals.This seemingly benign photo of steak at a Morton's in South Florida led to the arrest of Nathaniel Troy Maye and Tiwanna Tenise Thomason, who recently pleaded guilty to aggravated identity theft.
An undercover IRS witness told investigators about a man who claimed to have access to 700,000 identities, which could be used to file fake tax returns. The only problem was how to find him, obviously, the investigation turned to Instagram.
A flash drive the couple gave the witness which contained 50,000 identities held data that linked it to a Troy Maye, which also happened to be Maye's Instagram handle. Investigators were able to link the steak photo, which was captioned "Morton's," to a meeting between the witness and Maye at the steakhouse chain.
Really?! All 3 of his followers just had to know that he was having steak?
That meeting and Maye's user ID photo helped investigators make the arrest.
Maye and Thomason are currently awaiting sentencing. Sadly, Maye's Instagram account is now private (OOOPS, too late!), so there are no further clues as to which high-end chain restaurants identity thieves prefer. You can still see his bio, though, which reads: "Good things will come to those who wait, but only the things left by those who hustle!" For Maye and Thomason, the hustle is over.
I hope that steak was good because you can't get Morton's on Cell Block 5.
Be careful out there, would be food photographers. First it turns out taking pictures of your food may be a sign of mental illness. So that must mean that half of my Pinterest friends are crazy. Now Instagram is becoming the playground of criminals. Who knows what doom lurks behind your next snapshot at The Waffle House?
PR
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