A Costly Error…

Stephen Craig Campbell, a 76 year old Wyoming fugitive was arrested in New Mexico on February 19th, 2025 after evading authorities for over 40 years by assuming the identity of a deceased individual, only to be caught due to a key error.

Campbell allegedly used the identity of his former classmate, Walter Lee Coffman, who died in a car crash in 1975, to live undetected for decades.

Campbell’s unraveling began in 2019 when he attempted to renew a driver’s license in New Mexico using Coffman’s identity.

The National Passport Center’s Fraud Prevention Unit grew suspicious after cross referencing records that showed Coffman’s death, which then triggered an investigation.

This “crucial mistake” exposed Campbell’s long standing deception, during which he had fraudulently obtained a passport, purchased property, and claimed approximately $140,000 in Social Security benefits under Coffman’s name.

His arrest followed an armed standoff at his 44 acre property, ending his 40 year run from justice, initially sparked by a 1982 bombing incident targeting his estranged wife.

You can read the full release by following the link below!

LINK IS HERE

Swim With The Fishes!

Or better yet, drive with the fishes? Whatever floats the boat.

Let me tell you about The Seabreacher. This represents a dramatic breakthrough in recreational boating. Over ten years of meticulous engineering and extensive testing have resulted in a very safe and stable watercraft that can endure the continuous punishment of the marine environment. Each Seabreacher is hand built to the individual customer’s desired specifications.

Available in Shark style X model, Killer Whale Y mode, or Dolphin style Z model; each Seabreacher is a unique creation where customers can select from a vast array of individualized options. The organic lines of the vessel’s sculpted body present an unforgettable sight, like the twisted union of a marine mammal and a high performance fighter jet. The acrylic canopy and underwater view ports give pilot and passenger a near 360 degree view as they fly through the water at breathtaking speed.

Go right now and order yours today!

LINK IS HERE

The Top Toddler!

A toddler nicknamed “New Bawlins” dominated in the New Orleans Pelicans Baby Crawl Race!

This little champ, competing in the 2025 event, absolutely stole the show at the Smoothie King Center during a game against the San Antonio Spurs on February 23rd, 2025.

While most of the other babies (aged 9 to 11 months) were still figuring out the starting line, “New Bawlins” zoomed across the court with unmatched speed and determination, leaving the competition in the dust.

The crowd went wild, and the internet erupted with praise, calling it one of the most dominant baby crawl performances ever seen.

You can read more and see the video by clicking the link below!

LINK IS HERE

Soon Bang?

The internet lit up recently with a headline that sounds like it was ripped from a comedy sketch: Soon Bang, a 63 year old woman from Fairview, New Jersey, was charged with running a prostitution ring out of her massage parlor, Oasis Spa, in Denville.

Yes, her name is really Soon Bang. Sometimes you just can’t script reality.

Alongside her, a 67 year old employee, Yushun Li from Flushing, New York, was also nabbed in the bust.

The Morris County Prosecutor’s Office says this wasn’t your typical spa day.

Bang, also known as “Cindy,” allegedly offered a hidden menu of illicit services and the evidence backs it up.

You can follow the link for the full story!

LINK IS HERE

Daily Prompt @ The Pie!

Daily writing prompt
Describe a phase in life that was difficult to say goodbye to.

It was the post college haze, that liminal space between structured academia and the uncharted territory of “real life.”

I lived in a cramped apartment with two roommates, the kind of place where the furniture didn’t match and the walls were stained with stories we’d never know. We worked odd jobs (barista shifts, freelance gigs, a stint at a bookstore that smelled like dust and dreams) and spent our nights chasing laughter in dive bars or sprawled on a rooftop, counting stars we couldn’t name. Time felt elastic then, like it could stretch forever without snapping.

What made it so hard to say goodbye wasn’t just the simplicity, though that was part of it. It was the sense of potential humming beneath every moment. Every conversation felt like it could spark a revelation, every friendship like it might last a lifetime.

The world was wide open and I was naive enough to believe I could grab it all. We could travel everywhere, write something brilliant, fall in love a dozen times over.

There were no mortgages, no 401(k)s, no creeping dread of routine. Just the raw, messy beauty of being young and untethered.

Saying goodbye wasn’t easy. It never is when you’re leaving something that shaped you. But I’ve learned that closing one door doesn’t erase what was behind it. That phase lives in me still, a warm memory I can visit without needing to stay. And maybe that’s the trick: to honor what was, while making room for what’s next.