

Take That FINALLY reveal why Jason Orange quit the iconic group in 2014 and why he WON'T return Look after mind, body and soul: Here are our top 10 health and wellness tips this June 'Come outside Zach, we won't hurt you!' Love Island's fans get FURIOUS as tattooed islander kisses Molly during challenge instead of Catherine 'Every struggle we could have faced we were faced with': Love Island's Paige Turner admits lockdown contributed to her split from Finley Tapp one day after quietly tying the knot at a Manhattan courthouse Newlyweds Naomi Watts and husband Billy Crudup wear wedding bands in NYC. I wish that I hadn’t spoken nonstop about Travis for so long, but I didn’t want to seem crazy by randomly bringing up a chimpanzee for unknown reasons,' Smiggles wrote. 'It didn’t go as horribly as I anticipated. Smiggles also posted about the call the next day. It seems like Travis would be a poster-chimp of his philosophy.' 'I'm really surprised that I haven’t been able to find anything he’s written or said about the incident, considering how often he brings up random acts of violence. 'I should call in on John Zerzan's radio program about Travis,' Smiggles wrote. On the discussion board Shocked Beyond Belief, user Smiggles wrote about Zerzan just before the call believed to be from Lanza was made. 13, "executors have failed and refused to provide information necessary to complete the settlement.Confirmed: Kyle Kromberg (pictured), who went to school with Lanza, said the voice is definitely hisĪ public safety investigation report on Lanza's shooting spree - which left 20 students and six teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary dead - indicates Lanza was known to use the alias Smiggles on internet forums. 13 to finalize it.Ī lawyer for Michael Nash, Matthew Newman, said in a court document filed Tuesday that since Nov. It is not nice."Ĭourt documents obtained by the AP on Thursday show the settlement between Nash's family and Herold's estate was approved by the Stamford Probate Court on Sept. "And I also pray that I hope this never happens to anyone else again. "I hope and pray that the commissioner will give me my day in court," Charla Nash told reporters following a hearing in August before Claims Commissioner J. Nash wants to sue the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, which she holds responsible for not seizing the animal before the attack despite a state biologist's warning it was dangerous. The state is immune from lawsuits unless they're allowed by the claims commissioner. Nash' family is also trying to sue the state for $150 million, but is awaiting permission from the state claims commissioner. Travis had previously bitten another woman's hand and tried to drag her into a car in 1996, bit a man's thumb two years later and escaped from her home and roamed downtown Stamford for hours being captured in 2003, according to the lawsuit.

Woman's body found stuffed in plastic bin near NYC community garden The lawsuit alleged Herold knew Travis was dangerous, but failed to confine him to a secure area and allowed him to roam her property. But the animal went berserk and ripped off Nash's nose, lips, eyelids and hands before being shot to death by a police officer.Ī month after the mauling, Nash's family sued Herold for alleged negligence and recklessness. She had gone to Herold's home on the day of the attack to help lure Herold's 200-pound chimpanzee, Travis, back into her home. Lawyers in the case and Nash family members didn't immediately return messages Thursday.Ĭharla Nash, 57, now lives in a nursing home outside of Boston. Lawyers for Nash's twin brother, Michael Nash, accused executors of Herold's estate this week of failing to provide information needed to complete the settlement, according to a court document obtained by the AP. Nash was blinded, lost both hands and underwent a face transplant after being mauled outside Herold's home in Stamford in February 2009. Lawyers for a woman mauled by a chimpanzee in Connecticut have agreed to settle a lawsuit against the estate of the primate's now-dead owner, but there's a dispute over the final details, according to court documents obtained Thursday by The Associated Press.Īttack victim Charla Nash's brother filed the lawsuit on her behalf in 2009 in state Superior Court seeking $50 million in damages from chimp owner Sandra Herold, who died in 2010.
