Daquan Armstead charged in string of random NYC attacks on women over the past month: NYPD

A deranged woman-hating maniac wanted for more than a half-dozen random attacks on women in the Big Apple is finally in custody, police and sources said Tuesday.

Daquan Armstead, 31, was picked up by cops shortly after midnight and charged with third-degree assault and harassment in eight unprovoked attacks on women over the past month, the sources said.

That includes an April 17 attack on a 27-year-old administrator at New York University, who was slugged in the face while walking through Washington Square Park around 10:30 a.m., according to police.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating, although details weren’t released.

Daquan Armstead, 31, is charged with eight random attacks on women in the Big Apple dating to February. Matthew McDermott

Armstead is also being charged in seven other attacks this year.

The violent spree began on Feb. 12, when police said Armstead allegedly walked up to a 30-year-old woman on Elizabeth Street around 11:50 a.m. and punched her without warning, then fled.

On March 24 he allegedly attacked a 30-year-old woman on Delancy Street at around 2 a.m., hitting the victim in the back of the head as she turned. He then ran from the scene.

The following day Armstead is charged with punching a 36-year-old woman in the back as she walked along Chrystie and Rivington streets around 10:15 a.m., police said.

On April 2, he allegedly slugged another woman after he asked the 38-year-old victim for $1 and she replied that she had no cash so he punched her in the back of the head.

Police said he is also accused of attacking two women in separate incidents on Delancey Street on April 5 a 25-year-old who was slugged on the right side of her head around 12:25 p.m. and a 44-year-old who was punched in the face just five minutes later, according to cops.

In the last alleged attack before the assault on the NYU administrator, police said Armstead punched a 24-year-old woman on Stanton Street after she also refused when he asked her for $1 shortly before 10 a.m.

Police said Daquan Armstead allegedly attacked a woman at Essex and Delancey streets on April 5 — and another woman down the street five minutes later. Google Maps
Daquan Armstead is chaarged with random attacks on two women on Delancey Street earlier this month — and six other assaults since Februrary. Google Maps

Records show his prior busts date to a 2021 misdemeanor asault case.

He is expected to be arraigned on the new charges later on Tuesday.

Police have also been investigating a series of other attacks on woman that have not been linked to Armstead, including a 23-year-old woman slugged outside Union Square McDonald’s last month.

Among the other recent victims was Halley Kate, an influencer with 1.1 million followers on TikTok, who posted a video last week saying she was assaulted so viciously that she blacked out.

Daquan Armstead, 31, was arrested early Tuesday and is being charged with eight random attacks on women. Obtained by NY Post

Skiboky Stora, 40, a criminal with an extensive criminal record, was busted in that case.

In another random attack, a 57-year-old Brooklyn school bus aide was slugged by an unhinged man — a brutal attack that broke her jaw and knocked out several teeth — in Crown Heights, cops said.

Franz Jeudy, 33 — who has a history of sucker-punch attacks and mental illness — was hit with misdemeanor assault charges in that attack, according to a criminal complaint..

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Devils coach Andrew Brunette’s golf cart DUI arrest video emerges

New Jersey Devils associate coach Andrew Brunette appeared to walk away from his DUI tests, aggravating the police, according to body cam surveillance footage during his Feb. 1 arrest in Florida.

The footage, posted by Fox Sports 640’s Andy Slater on Tuesday, showed Brunette being pulled over while driving his golf cart — and later storming off during a series of sobriety tests.

“Alright, I’m going to call my lawyer,” the coach can be heard saying while quitting his sobriety tests — after an officer instructed him to walk with his “feet straight.”

That’s when two officers grabbed Brunette by the arms and told him not to walk away.

“You f–king fight me and you’re going to f–king regret it,” the arresting officer can be heard saying before repeatedly asking Brunette to put his hands behind his back.

“Put your hands behind your back and don’t f–king move, do you understand me?” the cop said.

Brunette was then handcuffed and detained.

“I’m just trying to go home, like a block away,” he said as the cop filled out paperwork.

(Warning: Language)

“You know I coached the Florida Panthers,” Brunette asked, adding, “You don’t care.”

The officer responded with: “No. No disrespect, but no.”

Slater was first to report the news of Brunette’s arrest for driving under the influence in Broward County, Florida.

Police said in the body cam footage that Brunette was being pulled for not stopping at two different stop signs.


New Jersey Devils associate coach and former Florida Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette during his Feb. 1, 2023 arrest in Florida, where he was charged with driving his golf cart under the influence of alcohol.
Twitter/Andy Slater

New Jersey Devils associate coach and former Florida Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette during his Feb. 1, 2023 arrest in Florida, where he was charged with driving his golf cart under the influence of alcohol.
Twitter/Andy Slater

Brunette was also charged with disobeying a stop sign or yield sign, and he was held on a $500 bond, according to the county’s arrest log.

He was taken to the Main Jail in Broward County.

The deputy observed “Brunette’s speech was slurred and that he was unsteady on his feet.”

In the arrest footage, Brunette told police that he did not have his driver’s license or information regarding the golf cart and then handed over his wife’s driver’s license.


New Jersey Devils associate coach and former Florida Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette during his Feb. 1, 2023 arrest in Florida, where he was charged with driving his golf cart under the influence of alcohol.
Twitter/Andy Slater

New Jersey Devils associate coach and former Florida Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette during his Feb. 1, 2023 arrest in Florida, where he was charged with driving his golf cart under the influence of alcohol.
Twitter/Andy Slater

He can be seen telling officers in the body cam footage that he wasn’t driving the golf cart, as his wife was sitting in the passenger’s seat.

The Devils said in a statement to The Post at the time that they “were aware of the reports” regarding Brunette and were “in the process of gathering additional information.”

In July 2022, the Devils hired Brunette as an associate coach on head coach Lindy Ruff’s staff.

New Jersey general manager Tom Fitzgerald called Brunette a “walking encyclopedia hockey-wise” and also referenced Brunette’s coaching chemistry with Ruff, according to NHL.com.


Associate coach Andrew Brunette of the New Jersey Devils directs the players during a break in action against the Florida Panthers at the FLA Live Arena on March 18, 2023 in Sunrise, Florida.
Getty Images

The Devils suffered a 5-1 loss to the Rangers in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series at the Prudential Center on Tuesday.

Game 2 is set for Thursday in New Jersey.



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Grand National delays lead to over 100 activists arrested

The Grand National, one of the world’s most famous horse races, was delayed Saturday after animal rights activists scaled fences around the perimeter of Aintree racecourse and got onto the track.

A total of 118 people were arrested on suspicion of criminal damage and public nuisance offenses in a bid to disrupt the race, Merseyside Police said.

Many activists from an estimated group of 300 climbed the high fences around the racecourse just outside Liverpool and got onto the track a few minutes before the race was scheduled to start.

Some affixed themselves to the race fences using glue and lock-on devices, according to the Animal Rising organization, before being taken away by police and security officials.

Police and security officials were seen stopping other activists by shaking the perimeter fences to prevent them being climbed. Local residents were seen helping security keep activists away from the course.

The race was delayed as a result and the 39 competing horses were kept in the parade ring. It was originally scheduled to begin at 5:15 p.m. local time and ended up starting around 15 minutes later.


A total of 118 people were arrested on suspicion of criminal damage and public nuisance offenses in a bid to disrupt the race, Merseyside Police said.
AP

Many activists from an estimated group of 300 climbed the high fences around the racecourse just outside Liverpool and got onto the track a few minutes before the race was scheduled to start.
AP

The day started with three people arrested in connection with a plan by the activists to disrupt the race. All three were arrested on “suspicion of conspiracy to cause public nuisance,” police said.

Their names were not disclosed.

“We respect the right to peaceful protest and expression of views,” Merseyside Police said, “but criminal behavior and disorder will not be tolerated and will be dealt with robustly.”

Animal Rising had called on protesters to gather outside the racecourse to demand an end to “animal cruelty for entertainment.” The group tweeted a video that it said shows one of its spokespeople being arrested at the protest.


The race was delayed as a result and the 39 competing horses were kept in the parade ring. It was originally scheduled to begin at 5:15 p.m. local time and ended up starting around 15 minutes later.
REUTERS

Police said they have been working with race organizers ahead of and during the Grand National Festival, which started Thursday.

Animal Rising activist Alex Lockwood this week told British radio station talkSPORT that they planned to disrupt the Grand National, arguing that standing outside and handing out fliers “never stopped anything.”

Further inflaming matters was the news that two horses — Dark Raven and Hill Sixteen — died in races at Aintree on Saturday.


An Animal Rising activist has said they planned to disrupt the Grand National, arguing that standing outside and handing out fliers “never stopped anything.”
REUTERS

Hill Sixteen was in the field for the Grand National and died after sustaining an “unrecoverable injury,” organizers said.

On Thursday, another horse — Envoye Special — suffered a fatal injury in the Foxhunters’ Chase, which is run over the fences used for the Grand National.

“This horrific ‘sport’ continues to take lives right in front of our eyes.


Some affixed themselves to the race fences using glue and lock-on devices, according to the Animal Rising organization, before being taken away by police and security officials.
AP

Animal Rising had called on protesters to gather outside the racecourse to demand an end to “animal cruelty for entertainment.”
REUTERS

It’s time to BAN this horrific industry,” Animal Rising wrote Saturday.

The Grand National is among the biggest occasions on the British sporting calendar and is regarded as one of the most dangerous horse races in the world because of the size of the fences.

Changes were made in 2012 to make the course safer, including softening some of the fences, after two horses died in the Grand National that year and in 2011.


The Grand National is among the biggest occasions on the British sporting calendar and is regarded as one of the most dangerous horse races in the world because of the size of the fences.
AP

There have been four fatalities from 356 runners in the nine Grand Nationals since.

Four horses died at the Aintree festival last year, including two who were injured in the Grand National.



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Stripper Tierah Miller attacked ex with cash wad, police say

A disgruntled Florida stripper was arrested last month after she allegedly hurled a “large amount of rolled up money” at her co-worker’s head.

Tierah Miller, 29, and her accuser — a 34-year-old man that she had previously dated for six months, both work at the Baby Dolls strip club in Clearwater, according to a criminal complaint obtained by Smoking Gun.

The alleged cash attack happened inside the club on Feb. 26 at 11:55 a.m. — a week after the couple had called it quits, the complaint said.

When the man “attempted to walk across the stage to speak to another co-worker,” Miller purportedly hurled a “large” wad of cash at him, striking him in the back of the head, the report stated.

Miller was slapped with a misdemeanor domestic battery charge, according to the complaint — which noted that she appeared to be sober and the attack did not draw blood.


Tierah Miller, 29, was arrested after allegedly throwing a “large” wad of cash at her ex-boyfriend’s head on Feb. 26.

The alleged attack happened at Baby Dolls strip club in Clearwater, Florida.
Google Maps

A criminal complaint obtained by The Smoking Gun.

It was unclear how much money was used in the attack, with the outlet speculating that “singles would appear to be a likely component.”

Miller was reportedly released from jail without bond and ordered to avoid contact with her ex-boyfriend, even as she was allowed to continue dancing at the club that employs them both.

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Alyssa Zebrasky from viral mugshots removes face tattoos

An Ohio woman whose mugshots went viral for her spooky skeleton and cobweb face tattoos has unveiled a dramatic transformation after undergoing grueling laser treatments to remove the ink.

Alyssa Zebrasky, 31, first made headlines in Dec. 2018 after she was arrested in Ohio on charges of shoplifting and drug possession.

Her booking photo showed her forehead covered with a spider web tattoo, along with Day of the Dead-inspired skull design around her eyes, cheeks, nose and lips.

In April. 2019, Zebrasky and her macabre ink were back in the news after she was picked by the police again.

But now, more than three years later, Zebrasky has turned her life around after completing a drug court program and rehabilitation.

As part of her recovery process, she has decided to get rid of all her face tattoos in a bid to forget about an ex-boyfriend.

Alyssa Zebrasky is pictured after undergoing multiple sessions to laser off her macabre face tattoos, some of which are still visible.
Kennedy News and Media
Zebrasky’s mugshot from Dec. 2018 went viral following her arrest on shoplifting and drug charges.
Kennedy News / Mahoing County Sh

Zebrasky said that she had agreed to acquire the grim body art more than four years ago while in a toxic relationship with her then-partner, who at the time was in a gang that she wanted to join. To become part of the group, the boyfriend told her she needed to get face tattoos.

The woman went under the needle during two arduous sessions in June 2018, from which she emerged looking like the stuff of nightmares, reported Kennedy News.

Zebrasky found herself in police custody three times in six months, including one incident with her ex that resulted in short police chase, which they blamed on him “needing the bathroom.”

After undergoing rehabilitation, Zebrasky became desperate to permanently get rid of the tattoos, so she turned to a Texas-based charity called INK-nitiatve, which helps people remove undesired body art to get a fresh start free of stigma.

Zebrasky said her ex-boyfriend, who was in a gang, had encouraged her to get the tattoos in 2018 — and even picked up the Day of the Dead design.
Kennedy News and Media

With support from her family and her new partner, with whom she is in “the healthiest relationship” she’s ever been in, Zebrasky has been documenting her ink removal journey on social media.

“Looking back at those pictures, I just feel disappointed in myself,” she said of her viral mugshots. “But I have to remember that I hadn’t worked on myself or tried to learn how to love myself like I have now.

“So then I feel proud because change is possible and healing and learning new things are possible. I like being able to look back and see my personal growth.”

Despite sporting tattoos all over her body, heavy machinery worker Zebrasky only wants to remove the ones on her face and hands due to the association of them with her ex, which she said had pushed her to get the inkings – and even picked out the Dead of the Dead design.

“Initially I said no and then he just kept talking about it. [Now I believe it was] so nobody else would want me,” she said.

The Ohio woman added that while she was in jail, her then-boyfriend visited her only twice.

“I have to think about that every time I look in the mirror,” she said. “I started healing mentally from all the stuff I went through with him.”

The 31-year-old machine worker says people stare at her wherever she goes, which makes her feel uncomfortable.
Kennedy News and Media

Zebrasky started the grueling de-inking process in October 2019 at the Pittsburgh Removery as part of her quest to feel “normal” — and be regarded as such by those around.

“I go into a store, and people stare at me. It makes me uncomfortable,” she said in a testimonial shared on the tattoo removal clinic’s website. “I want to be looked at like a normal person. I live my life just like everybody else.” 

Zebrasky was told she’d need a dozen 20-minute sessions to clear up her face.

“When I first started going, they did my cheeks, forehead, and hands because like a tattoo your body can only heal so much at once,” she explained. “Now the cheeks are gone but we haven’t started around the mouth yet.”

Zebrasky will require a dozen 20-minute sessions to remove all the ink from her face.

Zebrasky said the process of removing the ink from the nose has been especially painful.

“The initial pain from the laser I would relate to having a rubber band snapping against your skin, that’s what the laser feels like and then like afterwards it’s sore for 30 minutes,” she said.

“It welts up afterwards and there’s some pain almost like if you spilt oil from the stove on your hand, that’s the closest I can compare to what it feels like on my hands,” she added.

Becca, a Removery technician who has been working with Zebrasky, stated on the business’s website that initially she was “intimidated” by her client’s appearance.

“I’ve never seen so many tattoos on someone’s face,” she said. “We didn’t know what her background was; why she went to jail.” But Becca said she soon discovered that the 31-year-old was “sweet” and “funny.”

As the tattoos get blasted off her skin, Zebrasky said she’s now “accepted” her face and hopes that by being honest about her experiences she will help others in a similar situation.

“For a very long time, I felt like I wasn’t free. Like I had to live a certain way because of things that were going on in my life with addiction and self-harm,” Zebrasky said in her testimonial. “And now, I feel like I don’t have to live like that anymore. I can just live my life — I’m finally free.”

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Bodycam footage shows arrest of Tyson CFO John Tyson

Newly released bodycam footage shows the moment Arkansas police wake up a Tyson Foods executive after he allegedly passed out drunk in a stranger’s bed earlier this month.

Tyson CFO John Tyson appears disoriented and even tries to go back to sleep in the early morning ordeal on Nov. 6 as a Fayetteville police officer informs him he’s sleeping in someone else’s home.

“Mr. Tyson! John! Fayetteville Police Department, you’re not in your house,’” an officer loudly tells Tyson as he’s snuggled beneath the covers in his underwear, according to the footage obtained by Vice.

The 32-year-old scion of the Tyson meatpacking empire raises his head and briefly looks at the police officers before rolling over without saying anything.

“John, I need you to wake up and talk to me before I drag you out of here butt naked,” the officer continues.

After refusing to get up out of the woman’s bed, the officer shrugs at his partner and the two rip the sheets off of him, the footage shows. Tyson sits up, and tries to pull the sheets back over him before the officer tells him to “put your hands behind your back.”

“Yo yo yo yo — hey, hey, whoa, whoa” was all Tyson could mumble as the officers try to cuff him.

Tyson CFO John Tyson was arrested for public intoxication and trespassing.
Washington County Sheriff’s Office via AP

“I’m going to sleep,” he sluggishly tells the officers as they try to get him out of the bed.

“No you’re not, you’re going to jail. You’re in the wrong house,” an officer replies.

“The girl who lives here doesn’t know you. Came home to find you asleep in her bed,” another cop tells the clearly befuddled executive.

As the officers lead Tyson out of the house, he asks, “Can I go pee real quick?” Police denied the request and placed him in the back of a police vehicle.

Tyson was charged for public intoxication and trespassing after a college-aged woman came home and found him sleeping in her bed around 2 a.m.

The officers wrote in the arrest report that there was an odor of intoxicants coming from Tyson’s breath and body and that his movements were “sluggish and uncoordinated.” 

The woman who lived at the home told investigators that the front door was left unlocked, allowing Tyson to enter the premises.

Tyson was booked that morning and released later that evening, according to the Washington County, Arkansas, Sheriff’s Department.

Earlier this week, Tyson apologized to investors during the company’s quarterly earnings meeting.

The chicken company CFO apologized to investors after the incident.
Motherboard/YouTube

“I’m embarrassed, and I want to let you know that I take full responsibility for my actions,” Tyson CFO John Tyson, CNBC reported.

“I just wanted you guys to hear this directly from me and to know that I’m committed to making sure this never happens again,” he said.

Tyson is the great-grandson of Tyson Foods’ founder. He joined the family business in 2019 after previously working in investment banking for J.P. Morgan and as a private equity and venture capital investor. 

According to the Wall Street Journal, The Harvard graduate is being groomed for the roles of CEO and chairman — positions his father and grandfather held at the company.

He is also a member of Tyson Foods’ enterprise leadership team, reporting directly to president and CEO Donnie King, according to the company’s website.

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Delphi murder suspect Richard Allen involved in 2015 incident

Before Libby German an Abby Williams were murdered in Delphi, Indiana, local sheriff’s deputies responded to the home of accused killer Richard Allen over a “domestic” incident.

Officers with the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office were sent at around 3:30 a.m. on June 18, 2015, to the home of Richard and Kathy Allen, according to records obtained by the station Fox 59.

Sheriff Tobe Leazenby said Allen, a dad-of-one CVS technician, was allegedly drunk, and his wife took him to a hospital for a medical evaluation.

According to the sheriff, responding deputies’ role during the incident was to “keep the peace,” and no arrests or charges followed.

Until his arrest last week on two counts of first-degree murder, Allen, 50, had no prior criminal record.

Delphi murder suspect Richard Allen, 50, was involved in a domestic incident in June 2015, less than two years before the Feb. 2017 killings.
AP
Libby German, 14, and Abby Williams, 13, were killed while taking a walk on Feb. 13, 2017.
Facebook

He has now been charged with two counts of murder related to the deaths of German, 14, and her friend Williams, 13, on Feb. 13, 2017, while the girls were taking a walk along the Monon High Bridge Train in Delphi.

Allen — who is being held with no bond — has pleaded not guilty ot the charges and will go to trial in 2023.

The girls’ bodies were discovered the following day half a mile from the trail. Their causes of death have never never been made public and prosecutors have deliberately withheld details of the case from the public to aid their investigation.

A video captured by Libby German on the day she and Williams were killed showed a man walking near them along a trail.
Indiana State Police
Allen, right, is pictured posing in front of a police sketch depicting the wanted Delphi suspect.
Facebook / JC’s Bar

A grainy video recovered from Libby German’s phone showed a man in a blue jacket walking along the railroad bridge. In the audio accompanying the footage that was released by cops, a man’s voice is heard saying: “down the hill”. Only nine seconds of the 43 second video were released by cops.

Evidence against Allen worker has also been temporarily sealed to avoid jeopardizing the case, according to the police.

The Post reported Wednesday that plainclothes officers conducted a day-long search of Allen’s property about 10 days before his arrest, which came as a shock to those who knew him.

A fire pit in Richard Allen’s backyard in Delphi, Indiana, attracted the attention of law enforcement searching the property.
William Farrington

Neighbors said the officers spent about 12 hours scouring the property and paying an especially close attention to a fire pit located next to a shed in the yard.

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Man wearing Fireball whiskey costume arrested for drunken antics

He took his Halloween costume a little too seriously.

A California man who dressed up as a Fireball Cinnamon Whiskey bottle was arrested early Sunday for his drunken conduct, a report said.

Dominic Salazar, 31, was booked the day before Halloween while still in his costume for disorderly conduct domestic battery among other charges, according to California jail records reviewed by the Smoking Gun.

Dominic Salazar is seen in a Madera County booking photo dressed in a Fireball Whisky costume.
You can buy the costume through the company’s website.

Salazar is currently in Madera County lockup after failing to make his $55,000 bail, the site said. He is facing both felony and misdemeanor charges.

The whisky enthusiast smiled in his mugshot, wearing his costume, which retails for around $45.

The outfit can be bought directly from the Whiskey manufacturer, which said online that “Halloween is all about letting your wildest dreams come true, so this year, become a human-sized bottle of Fireball. You’re welcome. One size fits most, 100% polyester.”

The Madera County Sheriff did not immediately return the Post’s request for comment.

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3 suspects arrested after Phoenix mom killed in shooting with children in car

Three suspects linked to the shooting death of a Phoenix mother who was inside a car with her children have been arrested, authorities said Monday.

The shooting happened near an Arco gas station at 27th Avenue and McDowell Road in Phoenix early Monday, FOX10 Phoenix reported.

The mother was killed while in the passenger seat and shrapnel hit one of the children, who was expected to be OK, police said. Five children and two adults survived the shooting.

The victim was identified as 35-year-old Yenni Dominguez Leyva.

Responding officers arrived at the shooting scene and found weapons and arrested three people, including two teens. 

The adult was identified as 19-year-old Martin Ramirez-Contreras.

Police told the station that it was unclear why the suspects opened fire on the car and that the suspects and victim were unknown to each other.

The victim and the children were heading home when the shots were fired.

Police said that it was unclear why the suspects opened fire on the car and that the suspects and victim were unknown to each other.

The victim and the children were heading home when the shots were fired, police said.

“Somebody minding their own business, doing what they’re supposed to be doing, gunned down in the midst of living everyday life, is just the extra amount of tragedy that we see,” Phoenix Police Sgt. Phil Krynsky said.

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Florida police intercept 87 pounds of marijuana at UPS facility

Florida law enforcement officials arrested two suspects this week after intercepting packages containing 87 pounds of marijuana at a UPS in a St. Petersburg suburb last year, according to reports. 

Bennie Neely, 41, was arrested on Wednesday on charges of trafficking in cannabis, a first-degree felony, and importation of marijuana, a third-degree felony, according to court records. 

Corey Jovan Brown, 38, was arrested on the same charges on Friday. 

Police originally located two large boxes containing 87 pounds of “marijuana plant material” on Feb. 13, 2021, at a UPS location in Pinellas Park, according to WFLA. 

The two men were identified as suspects through the tracking numbers on the shipments, according to the local news outlet. 

Both suspects have since been released on bond, according to court records. 

Florida police arrested two suspects in connection to 87 pounds of marijuana that was found at a UPS facility last year.
Jill Connelly/Bloomberg via Getty Images

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