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Couple Arrested - Hilo/Puna
#1
FYI: (*Snipped - More at link incl. mug shots/BBM)

http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/28365...s-offenses

Big Island police arrested a Hilo couple Thursday (March 5) after receiving a report of a man breaking into a vehicle.

Shortly after 7 a.m. Thursday, a concerned citizen saw a man breaking into a vehicle at the Hilo Bayfront area. The man, after being confronted by the citizen, left in a vehicle being driven by a woman. This vehicle was later located by South Hilo patrol officers in the area of the University of Hawai'i at Hilo.

At 7:50 a.m., police arrested 33-year-old Aubrey A. Harper and 37-year-old Gregory P. Harper, both of Hilo. The two were taken to the Hilo police cellblock while officers continued the investigation. Through their investigations, it was determined that the couple may have been involved in two separate burglaries which occurred earlier in the week in Puna.

On Sunday (March 1), the caretaker of a Kalapana Seaview Estates home reported confronting a man and a woman leaving a home on Moaniala Street. The pair left in a vehicle with items that had been removed from the home. On Monday (March 2), a Leilani Estates woman reported finding that her home on Malama Street had been broken into and that a television and other items had been removed from within.

Officers were able to locate and recover some of the items removed in these burglaries and link them to the couple. On Friday (March 5), after conferring with the Prosecutor's Office, Aubrey A. Harper was charged with two counts of first-degree burglary, second degree theft, fourth-degree theft, reckless endangering in the second-degree, and a variety of traffic offenses. Her total bail was set at $14,275. Gregory P. Harper was charged with two counts of first-degree burglary, second degree theft, unauthorized entry into a motor vehicle, theft in the fourth-degree and resisting arrest. His total bail was set at $14,750.


Scumbags.[Sad!]

JMO.
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#2
Are we still in a state of emergency? If so, aren't these the types of crime that are subject to much tougher sentencing?
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#3
Yes, Sir.

Bunch of bottomfeeding, scum sucking, mud between the toes of elephants, twelve sandwich eatin', bunch of low lifes who infiltrate our community, should be subject to the highest penalty available. Ugh! [Sad!]

Oh, and there's more going on in the Puna area then one wants to freaking know! OMG!

(Sorry all, for the outburst; just sick of people who are so HEWA! [V])

JMO.
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#4
In the mugshot picture <img src="http://khnl.images.worldnow.com/images/6986110_G.jpg"> the women appears to have a black eye, and the man a bloody ear. I wonder how that happened?


********
* ALOHA *
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#5
True dat opihikao! Gotta clean um out! So sick already!

Born&Raised Hawai'i Island
Born&Raised Hawai'i Island
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#6
Took the words and feelings right out of me Opihikao, mahalo. Me thinks that creating a penal colony on Kahoolawe for them is in order where their remaining existence is to clean up military junk that was left behind. Bomb go boom, oh well....

Community begins with Aloha
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#7
err... community begins with aloha and ends with the lynch mob?
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#8
quote:
Originally posted by PunaMauka2

err... community begins with aloha and ends with the lynch mob?


Some people choose to invite aloha into their lives. Some people choose to invite a lynch mob into their lives. What are you gonna do?
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#9
had been thinking to invite the lynch mob over for afternoon tea, but... now that you put it that way.
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#10
I don't see the connection of a "lynch mob" to my comment of a penal colony for those that choose to continually disrespect the people or their lands by breaking the rules set forth. Giving a man ( or woman) the shirt off your back is aloha. Stealing the shirt off your back is not.

Community begins with Aloha
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