Claire🐻

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Claire🐻

Claire🐻

@sheecm81

I'm not an option, I am a choice. ✌🏻🤘🏻 When people show you who they are, believe them. https://t.co/y5YZTocT3F Grace is always appropriate.

Somewhere Unknown Katılım Ağustos 2016
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Claire🐻
Claire🐻@sheecm81·
Join me on this adventure! Eclectic and conversational, Adult topics, informational, current events and a dash of humor. @ClaireView307" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@ClaireView307
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Murdered By Crayons 🖍️
Murdered By Crayons 🖍️@CrayonMurders·
If you’re angry with Russell Brand for his admission of being with a minor, but are a fan of the Tate brothers, I have some bad news for you. Romanian court documents contain allegations of sex acts with a 15 year old and trafficking a 17 year old. And no, this wasn’t dropped.
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Catch_LISK
Catch_LISK@Catch_LISK·
1/3 Gilgo Beach serial killer: How task force built case against Rex Heuermann The evidence in the Gilgo Beach killings was vast and, at first, potentially useless in court. To make the case stick, investigators would have to rebuild it from the ground up, turning years of scattered leads into a single, prosecutable story that was admissible in court. When Suffolk County’s new district attorney, Raymond Tierney, first reviewed the case in early 2022, he quickly grasped the problem. Detectives and analysts had amassed troves of information — including intricate cellphone data mapping connections between suspects and victims — but there was no clear path to introduce much of it as evidence at trial. “It got ugly really, really fast,” Tierney said in an interview, recalling his first briefing on the investigation. “I said, ‘Great, how are we getting this into evidence?’ And everybody just looked at each other.” The distinction was crucial. Gathering evidence is one thing. Making it admissible, and persuasive to a jury, is another. In the Gilgo case, that gap threatened to undermine more than a decade of work. Tierney left the meeting angry, he said, convinced that without a fundamental reset, the investigation risked collapsing under its own weight. He turned to a recently hired chief investigator, Richard Zacarese, a soft-spoken former New York Police Department lieutenant with a reputation for untangling complex cases. Zacarese, 49, had spent years refining a method in gang prosecutions: build sprawling, multidefendant cases by weaving together disparate crimes into a single narrative, supported by legally sound evidence at every step. It was a meticulous, methodical approach, and one that had not been fully applied to the Gilgo investigation. Now, it would become the blueprint. Working with a newly formed task force that eventually spanned 17 law enforcement agencies, Zacarese took on what colleagues describe as a sweeping overhaul. Evidence collected over more than a decade — phone records, witness accounts, forensic findings — had to be reexamined, restructured and, in some cases, reobtained to ensure it could withstand legal scrutiny. From the outset, the focus shifted. Investigators were no longer simply gathering information; they were building a case that could be told, step by step, in a courtroom. “It was about making sure every piece fit,” Zacarese said. “Not just what we had — but how we got it, and how we were going to use it.” Within weeks, the retooled approach began to sharpen the investigation. By the spring of 2022, the task force had zeroed in on a suspect: Rex A. Heuermann, a Massapequa Park architect whose movements, vehicles and phone activity began to align with the timeline of the killing. Tierney, Zacarese and assistant district attorneys Nick Santomartino and Andrew Lee spoke with Newsday exclusively about the early, sometimes tense and all-consuming days of the Gilgo Beach probe. Tierney and former Suffolk Police Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison agreed that a task force approach was what they needed to jump start the investigation and get the case ready for a trial unlike any Long Island had seen before. The prosecutorial team ended up with evidence so strong and overwhelming that Heuermann, 62, who was indicted on murder charges in the killing of seven Gilgo victims — Amber Lynn Costello, Megan Waterman, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, Jessica Taylor, Valerie Mack, Sandra Costilla and Melissa Barthelemy — pleaded guilty on April 8 to the strangulation homicides. Heuermann also admitted as part of his plea to killing Karen Vergata,  although he wasn’t charged with that crime. He is scheduled to be sentenced on June 17 to life terms in prison.
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Catch_LISK
Catch_LISK@Catch_LISK·
I stayed away from social media today. My voice wasn’t necessary- really isn’t necessary anymore. Instead, I focused on a Vigil for the girls. I stood in solidarity alongside women and men who honored each person. We said their names aloud, slowly, and with intention. A family member was present and spoke first, I followed after her…hard to follow after that but so grateful for her. I have more friends now and those friends have a steadfast ally in me. I care not for the plethora of podcasts, tubers or documentaries- being present to truly honor the girls means more to me than anything else, adding my voice to theirs is much more impactful. Today should not have been about a documentary. It should never be about #LISK. It should always be about the girls and wherever I go and whatever I do it will always be as such.
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Seeking Justice
Seeking Justice@Seekers4Justice·
⚖️ Here is your court docket curated from the files in Seeking Justice of who is scheduled to appear in court tomorrow. 🔎 Find current documents & media related information pertaining to these cases and MANY others by scanning the QR code for free access to our Discord!
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Claire🐻
Claire🐻@sheecm81·
Based. Go, Sen. Cassidy ... they hate it when you get them with their own incorrect statements. Apparently, RFK Jr. can't even read a study properly, but alas, we know they were only shelling garbage to prove their agenda. I hope people wake up.
Acyn@Acyn

Clip 1: RFK JR cites a study. Clip 2: RFK JR cites another study. Clip 3: Cassidy finds the first study and suggests the study contradicts RFK JR’s claim. Clip 4: Cassidy finds the second study and points out the study was published before the vaccine came out.

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Catch_LISK
Catch_LISK@Catch_LISK·
I am deeply honored to be standing alongside these powerful people this beautiful evening to honor Sandra, Karen, Valerie, Jessica, Maureen, Melissa, Megan and Amber.
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Acyn
Acyn@Acyn·
Markey: Your MAHA report from May of 2025, cites studies linking glyphosate to cancer. Yet strangely, only 4 months later, your second MAHA report did not even mention glyphosate What happened during those 4 months? Well, the CEO of Bayer which owns Monsanto, which makes Roundup met multiple times with the White House
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Catch_LISK
Catch_LISK@Catch_LISK·
One year ago today, a woman and her daughter, once known only as “Peaches and Toddler” were finally given their names back: Tanya Denise Jackson and Tatiana Marie Dykes. For so long, both existed in fragments: nicknames given by investigators, a case that lingered without answers, a life reduced to questions. That day changed everything. It restored their identities, their dignity, and a truth that should have never been lost- both were people, a woman and her child, each with a name, a story, and a life that mattered. There is something profoundly emotional about marking this anniversary. It is impossible not to feel the weight of the years they spent seperated and unnamed, the silence that surrounded them for so long. And yet, within that sorrow, there is also something deeply powerful. Their names were not forgotten forever. People kept searching, kept pushing, refusing to let them remain just “Peaches and Toddler.” That determination speaks to a kind of collective care, one that insists that no one should be left behind, no one should remain unknown. Today, we remember Tanya Denise Jackson and Tatiana Marie Dykes, not for the mystery that once surrounded them, but for who they are. Saying their names is an act of restoration. It is a reminder that even after years of darkness, there can still be light, that identity can be reclaimed, and dignity can be returned. One year later, their names continues to carry, ensuring that both are seen, remembered, and honored in the way they always deserved.
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Viral Reel Addict
Viral Reel Addict@ViralReelAddict·
Trump in 2008: Anyone who invades the Middle East under false pretenses should be impeached. Be a real shame if everyone reposted this.
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Seeking Justice
Seeking Justice@Seekers4Justice·
We invite you to join us tomorrow evening 4/23 at 7pm ET as we watch the new episode of "The Gilgo Beach Killer: House Of Secrets" in Discord. Connect with us! If you're not already a member of our amazing community, scan the QR code or find the link in our bio to join.
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Gisela K
Gisela K@truecrimegisela·
What 👀 8 days for the defense to "poor poor Tanner" us 😱 (I know they have a job to do 🤣) ... oh man we better triple buckle up and get LOTS OF coffee! Live here later: youtube.com/live/9lPg2iYzd… #tannerhornertrial
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