Victim Talks About Deadly Crash

Last Updated on Tuesday, 15 September 2009 12:34 Written by admin Tuesday, 15 September 2009 12:10

By TONY SHIN
Updated 7:26 AM PDT, Tue, Sep 15, 200

Tessa Medearis may have only been 18 at the time, but she knew Ian Kinney was the love of her life.  “He was the one for me. I know it. I never wanted to leave him.”

But in July 2008, Ian Kinney was taken from Tessa by a drunk driver.  It happened at about 6 p.m. on State Route 78 as the couple drove in a Lexus from Julian to Vista.

“Out of the corner of my eye I see this white flash,” said Medearis.  The white flash was a white Chevy pick up truck that CHP investigators say El Cajon resident Shannon Shimp was driving.  According to investigators, Shimp was driving erratically, weaving in and out of traffic, when he lost control and broadsided Kinney and Medearis.

“I looked over at Ian and I knew it was pretty much over,”said Medearis.  “The car was pushed inside of him, there was blood everywhere and it wasn’t mine.”

Kinney was pronounced dead at the scene.  A passenger in Shimp’s truck, Joseph Edwards, 52, was also killed.

Medearis was alive but seriously injured.  Both her hands were shattered, her spine fractured and both feet broken.  “And my thumb was really bad it was actually in the middle of my hand,” Medearis said.

None of the injuries compared to the pain in her heart, she said, after losing the love of her life.  She is hoping an East County jury will convict Shimp on two counts of second degree murder.

“If we let someone out there that’s killed two people, what’s to stop them from doing it again,” Medearis said.

Closing arguments begin on Tuesday and the jury could get the case later that morning.

The defense has argued that this is not a murder case.  Shimp’s attorney told jurors that the back tires on the truck had low tire pressure, which may have played a role in the crash.

If convicted on all counts, Shimp could get 30 years to life in prison.

First Published: Sep 14, 2009 10:08 PM PDT
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If They Just Hadn’t Told Dr. Phil

Last Updated on Tuesday, 15 September 2009 12:15 Written by admin Tuesday, 15 September 2009 12:07

Updated 7:31 AM PDT, Tue, Sep 15, 2009

The No. 1 rule of fencing stolen property: Don’t announce on national television that you’re fencing stolen property.

A San Marcos couple made more than $100,000 by stealing toys and selling them on eBay. Last fall, they bragged about it on an episode of “Dr. Phil.” Turns out the feds watch TV, too.

Matthew and Laura Eaton, 34 and 26, were arrested Friday, and pleaded not guilty to federal charges stemming from the shoplifting spree on Monday.

The couple appeared on the “Dr. Phil” show last fall to share their story, aided by a video of their three small children accompanying them on a three-day shoplifting binge.

But what Matthew Eaton called “easy money” on-air got a lot harder when the Secret Service and the San Diego Regional Fraud Task Force searched their home and seized toys, a car and other belongings.

The couple stood silently wearing the white jump suits and blue slip-on shoes issued to them by the Metropolitan Correctional Center in San Diego, where they spent the weekend in jail.

They were arrested Friday at their Leslie Court home, according to the North County Times.

Each was charged with one count of conspiracy to transport stolen property in interstate commerce, a violation of federal law, and faces between 27 months and 37 months in prison if convicted, federal prosecutor Nicole Jones told the paper.

According to the show, the couple has been stealing for at least six years.

Talk show host Phil McGraw said in the episode that the couple’s children — who were shown in a video chronicling what the couple described as three-day shoplifting trip — were ages 4, 2 and 1 when the show aired in November.

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First Published: Sep 15, 2009 5:52 AM PDT
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The Geriatric Bandits: Not Your Usual Suspects

Last Updated on Tuesday, 15 September 2009 12:17 Written by admin Tuesday, 15 September 2009 12:05

By R. STICKNEY
Updated 8:30 AM PDT, Tue, Sep 15, 2009

Meet the Geriatric Bandits: One has a cane, the other needs an oxygen mask. They’re old enough to be your grandfather. This past week, they’ve both robbed banks. And one is still at large.

On Saturday, a man carrying an inhaler or an oxygen tank robbed the San Diego National Bank in La Jolla. The man, wearing a white beret, argyle sweater and sports coat, walked into the bank on Ivanhoe Avenue with a demand note.  In the picture caught by surveillance cameras, he looks to be in his 70s. An oxygen tube appears to hang from his face.

Investigators don’t know if he was armed, but they do know that he got away with some cash. Just look at him – would you stop him?

Then, two days later, another bank robbery. This time, the target was the Bank of America on El Cajon Blvd in City Heights. A 70-year old man — with cane, mind you — walked into the bank with a note and demanded a large amount of cash.

The bank manager attempted to evacuate the bank and lock the suspect inside, but Geriatric Bandit No. 2 was too crafty. Despite dozens of police cars surrounding the bank, he hobbled out of the bank using a side door and tried to hide on the porch of a home a few blocks away.

Police found him lying on the porch and arrested him — maybe his bright red hawaiian shirt gave him away.

First Published: Sep 15, 2009 7:47 AM PDT
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