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Husband Shot in Spine By Stepdaughter Had Elaborate Plans to Kill Wife, Say Prosecutors

Secretary of State Pompeo Offers Congratulations Ahead of Communist China’s National Day, Makes Subtle Revision From His

With the 70th anniversary of the People’s Republic of China’s establishment coming up on Oct. 1, the U.S. Department of State has issued a short statement of goodwill from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo addressing the Chinese people: “On behalf of the people of the United States, I offer congratulations to the people of China as you celebrate your National Day on October 1. The United States wishes the people of China happiness, health, peace and prosperity in the year to come.” Published Sept. 27, Pompeo’s remarks read like simple diplomatic courtesy. But when compared with his congratulations given for China’s National Day last year, there are some notable differences in wording. The secretary of state’s 2018 press statement is the same as the 2019 statement, except it addressed the…

Police tape in a file photo. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

A retired Navy captain was left permanently paralyzed after his stepdaughter shot him in the spine in self defense during what prosecutors say was a botched elaborate murder plan.

Traveling without a phone, paying by cash, and avoiding stores with security cameras, Henry Herbig hoped to leave no digital fingerprint, according to prosecutors, as he drove from Florida to Virginia Beach to kill his estranged wife.

According to WIFR, prosecutors told a court that on arrival on Sept. 8, Herbig donned a wig and went to the house armed with a large wrench, leaving a journal that detailed his plans on the car seat.

But things didn’t go according to plan. Instead of passing off the murder as a robbery gone wrong, Herbig wound up permanently paralyzed, after his spine was severed by a bullet fired by his stepdaughter.

Herbig, 65, has been charged with two counts of aggravated malicious wounding and breaking into a home to commit a felony, according to a police statement.

Despite medics testifying that Herbig is now permanently unable to move from the waist down, and cannot feed himself, a judge ruled on Sept. 25 that he must remain in jail.

Henry Herbig. (Virginia Beach Jail)

According to The Virginian-Pilot, the judge decided Herbig—who is a retired Navy captain and pilot—is still a flight risk because he has relatives who are also pilots and he has plenty of money to escape.

Herbig’s wife filed for divorce this summer, according to the Pilot, after 10 years of marriage, and moved to Virginia Beach to live with her daughter.

Both women were seriously hurt during the attack, Autumn Blackledge, an attorney representing Herbig’s wife in her divorce case, told the Pilot.

“She’s on the mend, but her injuries were extensive,” Blackledge said.

Herbig’s stepdaughter won’t be charged after investigators determined she acted in self defense, according to police.

Prosecutors say that Herbig first attacked his stepdaughter with the wrench when she was letting the dog into the backyard at the house on Bunsen Drive, reported WTKR, before forcing himself into the house to attack his wife.

Bunsen Drive, Virginia Beach. (Screenshot/Google Maps)

In the meantime, her daughter retrieved a gun and shot him.

Prosecutors said that Herbig had written detailed notes in a journal. According to ABC, prosecutors said he had towed a second car loaded up with garbage bags, duct tape, zip ties, and extra gas so he wouldn’t have to stop.

According to WIFR, he also allegedly left his cellphone at home in Florida to avoid GPS breadcrumbs, used only cash, avoided tolls, and stopped only at corner stores to avoid security cameras.

This article is from the Internet:Husband Shot in Spine By Stepdaughter Had Elaborate Plans to Kill Wife, Say Prosecutors

Hong Kong’s Sky-High Property Prices Prove Resilient in Face of Protests

HONG KONG—While months of Hong Kong protests have scared away tourists, sent jitters across the financial center and cast a dark cloud over the local economy, there’s one thing residents of the city are confident they can bank on—sky-high property prices. Home prices in the former British colony have rocketed over 200 percent in the past decade, driven by limited housing supply and large capital flows from mainland Chinese buyers, angering many residents who can’t afford to get on the property ladder. And despite the worst protests since Hong Kong reverted to China rule, property prices have hardly budged. Lily Chow, a 32-year-old clerk, is among the lucky ones. She and her husband recently snapped up a two-bedroom apartment off the plans for HK$7.5 million ($957,000) in the New Territories.…