Teenager accused of regularly raping 9-year-old boy since June in South Dallas

Edilberto Romero

A teenager has been accused of raping a 9-year-old boy nightly since June in a South Dallas home.

Edilberto Romero, 17, has been charged with aggravated sexual assault of a child. He remains in the Dallas County jail in lieu of $25,000 bail. He has also been placed on an immigration hold.

Police responded to a call around 4:30 p.m. Wednesday at a house near Hatcher Street. A 9-year-old boy said that Romero had been climbing into his bed at night and raping the boy, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.

The boy told police that Romero started assaulting him on a nightly basis in late June, police records show.

Grand Prairie police seek public’s help identifying burglary suspect

Grand Prairie police are asking for the public’s help identifying a man accused burglarizing a vehicle and home.

According to police, on Tuesday the man burglarized a person’s vehicle and later the same person’s home on Wellington Drive, near West Marshall Drive.

The man, who was caught on a home surveillance video, was seen driving a gray Isuzu Rodeo with black wheels.

Crimestoppers is offering a $1,000 reward for any information leading to the man’s arrest.

Anyone with information is asked to call Crimestoppers 972-988-8477.

Police say man dumped at northwest Dallas gas station was shot while committing robbery

Dallas police say a man who was fatally shot and dumped at a northwest Dallas gas station Wednesday night had just committed a robbery.

Saeid Ardestani, 56, was found wounded about 6:15 p.m. at the Valero station at Webb Chapel Extension and Larga Drive. Surveillance video shows a man and woman leaving him there and speeding off after calling 911.

Detectives are trying to identify the women in the video below:

Saeid Ardestani's mug shot, from a 2011 arrest. (Dallas County Jail)

Ardestani was taken to Parkland Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

About the same time, police received another 911 call reporting a robbery at the nearby Spanish Pueblo Apartments in the 9700 block of Dale Crest Drive.

The caller said two men knocked on his door asking for spare change. One of the men then forced his way into the apartment and demanded money, holding his hand in his pocket as though he was armed and threatening to shoot the man.

The victim, identified as 74-year-old Thomas Lopez, actually was armed, and he drew a pistol from his waistband and shot the would-be robber. Both robbers then fled.

Lopez later identified Ardestani in a photo lineup as the intruder. He was questioned and released, and the case will be referred to a grand jury, police said.


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Dallas deputy police chief a finalist in Miami police chief search

Deputy Chief Malik Aziz (File photo / The Dallas Morning News)

A Dallas deputy police chief has been named one of the finalists in the search for a new chief of the Miami Police Department.

Malik Aziz, deputy chief of the support services in the Dallas Police Department, is one of four finalists to take over as police chief in Miami, the Miami Herald reported.

The current Miami police chief plans to retire in January. The other three candidates are all based in Miami.

Aziz declined to comment on being named a finalist.

Fort Worth police searching for men suspected in armed robbery outside a Walmart

Fort Worth police are asking for the public’s help identifying two men suspected in an Oct. 29 armed robbery.

About 7:25 p.m., a man armed with a knife approached a woman who was putting groceries in her car near the entrance of the Walmart in the 8500 block of North Beach Street, near North Tarrant Parkway, police said.

The man demanded items and cut her when she yelled and resisted, police said. Witnesses chased the man as he fled to the Dairy Queen parking lot north of the Walmart where a vehicle picked him up and drove north on Beach Street.

Surveillance footage showed the suspects were sitting in a dark green or blue mid-2000′s Dodge Ram pickup with new black and white Texas license plates for about 30 minutes watching customers. The pickup has darked-out wheels on all sides except the driver’s front, which has a stock wheel.

Police described the man with the knife as a white male, 25-30 years old, about 6-foot-2 and 250 pounds. He was wearing a black t-shirt with writing, a dark baseball cap and jeans torn around the ankles. His hair was tucked behind his ears, one of which might have been pierced. Police said he spoke with a distinctive southern accent, had an overbite and a light mustache and goatee.

The second man was wearing a light-colored short-sleeve shirt and had dark hair and a possible beard.

Anyone with information on the incident should call Detective Raynsford at 817-392-4469 or email edward.raynsford@fortworthtexas.gov


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DNA on cigarette butt leads to arrest in May fatal shooting of a security guard, police say

Rico Lara

DNA evidence from a cigarette butt found at the scene of a May fatal shooting has been linked to a man jailed in the beating of two children, police said Thursday.

Rico Lara, 31, has been charged with capital murder in connection with the death of a security guard May 14 at an illegal gaming room in Stemmons Corridor. Lara has been in the Dallas County jail since May 20 on two counts of injury to a child after police said he beat two young relatives for breaking his phone, police records show.

Lara and a second suspect known as “Primo” shot and killed 43-year-old Donald William Kovar during a robbery around 7 a.m. at the gaming room in the 4600 block of Irving Boulevard, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.

Lara and “Primo” were sitting at one of the machines in the business before they shot Kovar and robbed another employee. A cigarette butt was found near the machine, and DNA evidence from the cigarette was matched to Lara, police records show.

After the shooting, Lara and the second suspect took a recording machine that was used to save surveillance footage. A cable from the machine was also at the scene. Evidence from that cable was also matched to Lara, the warrant says.

Witnesses to the shooting identified Lara from a photo lineup as the man who was with “Primo” during the fatal robbery, police records show.

Lara’s bail has been set at $550,000 for the capital murder charges and two counts of injury to a child.

Police described the second suspect as a Hispanic male, between 30 and 35 years old, approximately 6 feet tall and weighs 200 pounds.

Anyone with information is asked to call Dallas police at 214-671-3684 or Crimestoppers at 214-373-8477. A reward of up to $5,000 is being offered for information leading to an arrest and indictment in the case.

Duncanville PD asks residents to steer clear of flat tire scam

Duncanville police are asking people to be alert when parking cars in local shopping centers and gas stations.

In a news release, police said they have received several reports of a man approaching people — particularly women and the elderly — and offering to fix their flat tire for money.

Police believe the man might be running a scam.

“The problem is there is probably nothing wrong with your tire, they just let the air out,” the news release states.

Here are a few tips from Duncanville police about flat tires:

  • Contact road side assistance, a relative or a friend for help changing or repairing a flat tire
  • If a stranger offers to fix the flat, turn them down and immediately report the incident to police.
  • Report any criminal mischief, such as someone messing with a car’s tires, to police.

In ‘first of its kind’ case, federal authorities arrest McKinney man for allegedly running a Bitcoin Ponzi scheme

From the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan comes breaking and possibly groundbreaking news that hits a little closer to home: 32-year-old Trendon Shavers, a McKinney man accused of operating a Bitcoin-related Ponzi scheme, was arrested today on securities fraud and wire fraud. He was taken into custody at his McKinney home, and is due in federal court in Sherman later today.

The feds have been after Shavers — otherwise known as “pirateat40,” suggesting he’s a Jimmy Buffet fan? — for quite a while. In July 2013 and again in September of this year the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has filed civil complaints against him alleging that his so-called Bitcoin Savings and Trust was nothing but a front selling investments in the virtual currency intended to bilk investors out of millions. According to the feds’ release today, Shavers raised “at least 764,000 Bitcoin in BCS&T investments, which amounted to more than $4.5 million based on the average price of Bitcoin during the period of the scheme.”

Today’s arrest is considered something of a landmark: Prosecutors say this is a “first of its kind” securities fraud case.

Bitcoin, of course, isn’t tangible money you carry in your wallet, but virtual currency that exists solely on the Internet. And according to the feds, Shavers would go into the Bitcoin Forum and find folks willing to lend him their Bitcoin in exchange for 7 percent interest weekly with the promise they could withdraw their investment in Bitcoin Savings and Trust whenever they wanted. And for a while, from September 2011 through the following September, it worked: “At the peak of the scheme,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office says, “Shavers raised and had in his possession about seven percent of all the Bitcoin that were then in public circulation.”

But in the indictment unsealed today, prosecutors say he was doing nothing more than running an old-fashioned Ponzi scheme with investors’ Bitcoin, and using the rest for day-trading on a Bitcoin currency exchange that converts the virtual currency to real dollar bills. About half of his 100 investors are said to have lost everything, according to the U.S. Attorney and the FBI.

“As alleged, Trendon Shavers managed to combine financial and cyber fraud into a Bitcoin Ponzi scheme that offered absurdly high interest payments, and ultimately cheated his investors out of their Bitcoin investments,” says U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara in a prepared statement. “This case, the first of its kind, should serve as a warning to those looking to make a quick buck with unsecured currency.”

The securities fraud count comes with a max sentence of 20 years behind bars and a $5 million fine; the wire fraud count comes with the same possible amount of time in prison and a max fine of $250,000. But it will be up to the judge to sentence Shavers if he’s found guilty.

“Shavers used a new currency, but the same old reprehensible tricks,” says FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge George Venizelo. “He claimed to offer a Bitcoin market-arbitrage strategy. In reality, it was nothing more than an insidious scheme motivated by greed. Today, Shavers’ jig is up.”

Former Ritz-Carlton employee accused of sexual assault

A Dallas County grand jury indicted a former spa employee at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Dallas spa on a charge of sexual assault Tuesday.

Roderic Henderson, 37, was arrested on suspicion of sexual assault in May, but he later was released after posting $5,000 bond.

According to an arrest warrant affidavit, the woman, who has only been identified as Jane Doe, said in March that Henderson touched her inappropriately after her scheduled massage.

According to documents, Henderson is no longer employed at the hotel.

The woman has also filed documents related to a civil suit against The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company. A hearing is set for Dec. 1

Police investigating fatal shooting

A man was shot and brought to a Northwest Dallas gas station on Wednesday night.

The man was transported from the scene near the intersection of Webb Chapel Road and Larga Drive, north of West Northwest Highway, to an area hospital where he was pronounced dead, said police spokesman Officer Juan Fernandez.

Dallas police received the call about 6:15 p.m. Police told KXAS-TV (NBC5) that the man was shot elsewhere and then brought to the location in Northwest Dallas.

The incident is under investigation.


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