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Roy Raymond (1947-1993) was an American entrepreneur who started the lingerie retail store Victoria's Secret with his wife Gaye in 1977. He sold the company to Leslie Wexner in 1982, but later faced financial troubles and personal struggles that led to his suicide.
This web page provides a comprehensive list of people on death row in the U.S. by state and federal jurisdiction, as of July 1, 2024. It also includes demographic and statistical data on the death row population, such as ethnicity, gender, education, mental illness, and time on death row.
Roy Champlain [61] [73] 2 June 1916 Murder Giovanni Supe [61] [73] 2 June 1916 Murder Oresto Shillitani (a.k.a. Harry Shields) [74] [75] 30 June 1916 Murder Bradford, Allen [61] 4 August 1916 Murder Jan Trybus [61] 1 September 1916 Murder-Burglary Joseph Hanel [61] 1 September 1916 Murder Thomas Bambrick 7 October 1916 [76] Murder Charles ...
This web page lists people who have been legally exonerated or historically proven innocent of crimes they were convicted of in the United States. It covers cases from before 1900 to 2024, with details of crime, location, sentence, time served, and exoneration status.
Find out who served the longest prison sentences in the world, without a period of freedom followed by a second conviction. See the names, countries, crimes, and durations of the longest sentences, from 70 years to 60 years.
Raymond George Riles (born June 1, 1950) is an American convicted murderer who was on death row in Texas from 1976 until he was resentenced to life imprisonment in June 2021. At the time of his resentencing, Riles had been on death row longer than anyone else in the United States.
I (Almost) Got Away with It is an American television documentary series on Investigation Discovery.It debuted in 2010, [1] [2] ending after eight seasons, in 2016. The series profiles true stories of people who have committed crimes, and have avoided arrest or capture, but ultimately end up being caught. [3]
After August 1939 the Executive Council had automatically commuted death sentences to a term of imprisonment. [191] In 1955, with the Labor party in control of both houses of the State Parliament, New South Wales abolished the death penalty for crimes such as murder and rape.