Manslaughter for man who dismembered ex wife, then chopped up her body on a bonfire and burned it in a burning house” — John Doe from Denton, TX
“I heard gunshots in the car and ran to see what had happened and found that two friends were dead … In another area of Dallas, a woman died and a man took over her body from her husband. I called 911. … Her ex-husband had been drinking and smoking pot, and was beating his wife. He마닐라카지노 shot her repeatedly and then cut up and burned her body.” — John Doe from Fort Worth, TX
“My friends were in the middle of a bar mitzvah party. An older woman was shot to death and she and her boyfriend were thrown over the balcony.” — Anonymous from Fort Worth, TX
“After a week of having my girlfriend shot, she got a gun, shot and killed her ex.” — “Kiss my cock for me”, by Anonymous on Instagram (Photo: Photo credit: @Bobby_Rhodes)
In all, here are the 12 mass homicides that struck Texas cities from January 2010 to November 2015, according to Texas Monthly:
1) January 2014: 27 killed
Kilpatrick, OK, 24
Hays, KS, 20
Laredo, TX, 18
Kelvin, TX, 18
Lubbock, TX, 17
Fort Worth, TX, 16
Tulsa, OK, 14인터넷 바카라
Austin, TX, 13
San Antonio, TX, 12
Haysville, TX, 12
Austin-Round Rock, TX, 11
Edinburg, TX, 11
San Marcos, TX, 11
Shreveport-Bossier City, LA, 11
Austin-San Marcos, TX, 10
Rio Grande Valley, TX, 9
The above-average number of Texas cities hit over their combined population is indicative of some of the problems in that state: there are a lot of people in rural, underserved areas that may want to shoot up a music festival or a bar.
In terms of people killing each other (at least over time), the most populous, populous cities in Texas are Austin and El Paso.
A quick gla모바일 카지노nce at the above stats reveals that cities in the upper right of the above map have seen a lot of violent crime in the past 24 hours, and most of that crime has come from the Texas cities liste