A woman convicted of multiple felonies for scamming thousands of dollars from prospective Miami apartment renters is now in even more serious trouble — this time in Hialeah.
Accused rapist posh property broker Oren Alexander was denied bail by a Manhattan federal judge Wednesday — after his Miami lawyer argued the married new dad should be released because
The brothers, who have been accused in dozens of rapes and sexual assaults, are facing federal sex crime charges.
Defense attorneys for the three Alexander brothers argue in court papers that they committed no sexual assaults, and that their relationships with the alleged victims were consensual and sometimes involved text messages to get together again.
MIAMI - Prominent real estate broker Oren Alexander, one of the three Alexander brothers facing multiple rape and sex trafficking charges, is set to appear Tuesday afternoon in Miami federal court for a pre-trial release hearing.
A man facing an ongoing court case centered around allegations that he sexually battered a teenage boy in Indian River County is now suspected of committing a similar crime in Miami-Dade.
Three wealthy brothers are accused of drugging and sexually assaulting dozens of women in multiple states, and prosecutors said new video "trophies" have been seized as evidence.
Ex-San Francisco 49er Dana Stubblefield will remain in California state prison for now after a judge declined to make a bail ruling.
Denton releases its latest Friday Staff Report online, allowing residents to subscribe for email and text updates.
A couple engaged to be married was found mysteriously stabbed to death inside their burning home in 2000, Florida authorities said. A key chain with a girl’s photo on it cracked the case open 25 years later.
More than a month after their arrests, a federal judge in New York on Wednesday ordered the detention of three wealthy brothers from Miami Beach before trial on sex trafficking charges that allege the Alexander siblings drugged and raped dozens of women over the past two decades.
Sources close to the Alexanders said they were going to be hauled from their native Miami all the way to New York by bus, a trip set to last up to five days,