Police are investigating what made a 36-year-old man fatally shoot his seven-year-old daughter and then himself in a shopping mall parking lot in California.
The apparent murder-suicide took place while Carlos Garcia and his daughter Yaxtel were sitting inside the family’s black Kia Soul Sunday afternoon outside the busy Capitola Mall in Capitola, in Santa Cruz County.
“Our investigation will hopefully be able to answer that as regards to why,” Capitola Police Chief Terry McManus tells People. “We don’t know right now.”
McManus said police have ruled out kidnapping as a motive. “There is nothing to indicate it was a kidnapping,...
The apparent murder-suicide took place while Carlos Garcia and his daughter Yaxtel were sitting inside the family’s black Kia Soul Sunday afternoon outside the busy Capitola Mall in Capitola, in Santa Cruz County.
“Our investigation will hopefully be able to answer that as regards to why,” Capitola Police Chief Terry McManus tells People. “We don’t know right now.”
McManus said police have ruled out kidnapping as a motive. “There is nothing to indicate it was a kidnapping,...
- 3/21/2017
- by Christine Pelisek
- PEOPLE.com
An Arizona mother who left Mexico and entered the United States illegally when she was 14-years-old has been detained and might be one of the first people deported since President Trump’s executive order on immigration and border security went into effect.
Guadalupe Garcia de Rayos, a 36-year-old mother of two American teenagers, was taken into custody on Wednesday during one of her regular check-ins with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, according to The Los Angeles Times.
“We all knew something could be different this time with the new administration,” Carlos Garcia, director of the immigrant advocacy group Puente Arizona, told The Los Angeles Times.
Guadalupe Garcia de Rayos, a 36-year-old mother of two American teenagers, was taken into custody on Wednesday during one of her regular check-ins with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, according to The Los Angeles Times.
“We all knew something could be different this time with the new administration,” Carlos Garcia, director of the immigrant advocacy group Puente Arizona, told The Los Angeles Times.
- 2/9/2017
- by Caitlin Keating
- PEOPLE.com
Mexico City, March 18 (Ians/Efe) Spanish musicians are looking to Mexico for opportunities amid the deep economic recession that has hurt music sales and dampened concert attendance in their homeland.
Mexico is a dynamic market that offers Spanish musicians the chance to keep sharing their work with the world and earn a living from their art.
Carlos Garcia, director of planning for the Spanish Music Producers Association, or Promusicae, plans to travel to Mexico and the Us in coming days to try to find new markets.
"With the Spanish market having dropped so much, one of the increasingly necessary options is to go outside, both for the groups and their managers, and the music companies," Garcia told Efe in a telephone.
Mexico is a dynamic market that offers Spanish musicians the chance to keep sharing their work with the world and earn a living from their art.
Carlos Garcia, director of planning for the Spanish Music Producers Association, or Promusicae, plans to travel to Mexico and the Us in coming days to try to find new markets.
"With the Spanish market having dropped so much, one of the increasingly necessary options is to go outside, both for the groups and their managers, and the music companies," Garcia told Efe in a telephone.
- 3/18/2013
- by Machan Kumar
- RealBollywood.com
More coming in from Koldo Serra's Dead Perros (aka Perros Muertos), and it's not just a couple of quick announcements or minor updates. We're talking eye candy and a trailer, folks! Just in time for lunch!
Serra co-wrote Perros with Carlos Garcia Miranda, who penned smash hit TV skein "El Internado". It stars Spanish heartthrob Hugo Silva. Nava said Perros plays like From Dusk Till Dawn meets Spanish B-movies -- especially the 70s-80s sub-genre of "quinqui" movies, featuring mop-haired, drug-addled criminals, still only in their teens. According to Nava, the budget is around E4 million ($5.6 million).
Dig on the plot crunch -- Perros has a petty criminal, Cocacolo, pulling a Barcelona bank job and fleeing south, just as a family leaves Northern Spain for holidays. The motley group join together in the Spanish countryside to battle a zombie outbreak sparked by the locals' consumption of adulterated rapeseed oil.
Serra co-wrote Perros with Carlos Garcia Miranda, who penned smash hit TV skein "El Internado". It stars Spanish heartthrob Hugo Silva. Nava said Perros plays like From Dusk Till Dawn meets Spanish B-movies -- especially the 70s-80s sub-genre of "quinqui" movies, featuring mop-haired, drug-addled criminals, still only in their teens. According to Nava, the budget is around E4 million ($5.6 million).
Dig on the plot crunch -- Perros has a petty criminal, Cocacolo, pulling a Barcelona bank job and fleeing south, just as a family leaves Northern Spain for holidays. The motley group join together in the Spanish countryside to battle a zombie outbreak sparked by the locals' consumption of adulterated rapeseed oil.
- 4/5/2011
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
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