Monday, April 23, 2007

hell hath no fury than that of a woman scorned

I guess this marriage just really wouldn't work out huh? think there might be to much...well, trust issues would be my guess. Two things that I found rather interesting about this case. He told her his true identity to come clean before getting married, she googled him and found out he was wanted but it wasnt until they had a domestic dispute that she called him in and reported who he really was. Guess it just goes to show that 'hell hath no furry then that of a woman scorned'. If you are going to tell the woman you love a really really big and important secret about yourself, I guess it only stands to reason that you either: a) do everything that she wants to make sure she keeps that secret to herself or b) find out a really big secret on her so that if she tattles on you, you can tattle on her. Man, what an idiot. I mean, going into that sort of thing and telling the truth and not having anything to hold against her is like going into a car dealership and just opening your bank book to a million dollar bank account and saying "please dont try to rip me off. I just need something to get around in".

Though, I have been hearing about this case (along with more on the Virginia Tech Masacre) on the NewsNet program, that according to the police on the Canadian side that after she called the police and told them that he was living with her she called back later and was saying things like "It probably isnt him..didnt konw what I was talking about...dont worry or dont send someone", so they know that there was some hesitation. Though if you read the America's Most Wanted briefing on the whole case, they make it sound like he told her his name, she googled him and then instantly called the police and waited for their arrival with no hesitation whatsoever. Funny how all the news reporters seem to have their own interpretation of the situtation. Makes you realize that there really is 4 types of truth. There is the 'he said', 'she said', 'the truth' and 'what the news people report'.

But, yeah, another case of trust gone amiss.

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20070423/american_fugitive_070423/20070423?hub=Canada

Fugitive turned in by fiancee faces deportation
Updated Mon. Apr. 23 2007 9:10 AM ET
CTV.ca News Staff

One of America's "most wanted" fugitives faces deportation from Canada this week after his new fiancee turned him in to police.

Mikhail Drachev, 24, was arrested in Toronto on Friday after his fiancee tipped off police about his identity. He had been living as a fugitive on a murder warrant for more than five years.
"It looks like she's been living with him for at least five years. They first met in Ottawa. They lived in Ottawa for a short time before moving to Toronto," Toronto police Staff Sgt. Paul MacIntyre told CTV's Canada AM on Monday.

Phoenix Detective Stacie Derge said Drachev had been living in Toronto under an alias, and decided a couple of weeks ago to reveal his identity before proposing.

"They were living in a common-law relationship since probably 2001, 2002. And just last week, he came clean, if you will, with his true identity to her," MacIntyre said.

Drachev's fiancee looked up his name online and found his profile on the "America's Most Wanted" website. (http://www.amw.com/fugitives/brief.cfm?id=25518)

But Derge says she didn't tell police about Drachev until Friday, after the couple had some sort of domestic dispute.

"She walked into one of our Toronto police stations out in the city's west end, and she told the officers there that she believed that was living with somebody who was profiled on "America's Most Wanted" TV show," MacIntyre said.

Drachev is charged in the brutal murder of a police informant in Phoenix, Arizona.
Konstantin Simberg, 21, was beaten, stabbed and set on fire before he died in December, 2001.
When Simberg was attacked, he was on the phone with a Phoenix police detective.

Police allege Simberg and four others were hired by a pharmacy manager and his friend to steal 6,000 vials of the human-growth hormone Saizen, worth about US$1 million wholesale and an estimated $3 million on the black market.

Two men have already been convicted in the killing.

Testimony during the trial of one of the men convicted in the slaying revealed Simberg may not have been killed for turning on his accomplices in the heist.

Rather, testimony suggested Simberg was killed after a car-loan deal went bad.

Toronto police worked in partnership with the Canadian Border Services Agency to obtain an arrest warrant.

When police arrived at Drachev's Toronto area high-rise apartment, he had barricaded the door with furniture.

"As we pushed our way in, he was pushing himself back against the door. We eventually made our way into the apartment, he was arrested," MacIntyre said.

Drachev now faces deportation back to Arizona.

"He will be going for an immigration hearing within the next 48 hours and we will be looking at deportation proceedings to return him to the States," MacIntyre said.

This is a survey that CTV did. I wonder what the accusations that people would turn their loved ones in for? obviously this ladies was murder....but would she have turned him in for drug trafiking, or perhaps would she have turned him in knowing that he was wanted for a crime that would get him the death penality?

Would you turn in a loved one if they were wanted by police?
Yes 2818 votes (29 %)
No 1096 votes (11 %)
Depends on the accusations 5919 votes (60 %)

Total Votes: 9833

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