1)Orange/black pumpkin, 1) Black-/White Ghost, Gd Cond. $7.00 each….
See all stories on this topic
A very good friend said that he wants to dress up as a penis on Halloween.But he doesn’t have the balls.Courtesy of Chi-Town Hustler
See all stories on this topic
JAKARTA – Grup Idola terpopuler JKT48 bersiap menyambut malam Halloween yang dirayakan tiap 31 Oktober. Caranya, dengan meluncurkan single baru yang berjudul Halloween Night, Rabu (26/8). Lantaran lagunya bertema Halloween, kostum yang anggota JKT48 kenakan juga tidak imut-imut seperti biasanya. Singl…
See all stories on this topic
The man accused of murdering rising league star Luke Tipene later hid from police and texted friends that he felt “like s***”, the court has heard. Witness testimony continued to be heard at the murder trial of Vincent Angene Skeen in the Auckland High Court on Thursday. Skeen, 17, is accused of murdering 17-year-old Luke Tipene, after the junior rugby league star died from injuries sustained in an Auckland street fight. Tipene was allegedly stabbed in the throat with a broken bottle outside a Halloween party in the suburb of Grey Lynn early on Saturday, November 1. Two friends recounted to the court how Skeen had sent them numerous texts in the early hours of November 1, worried that he may have killed Tipene. “IDK [I don’t know] what’s going to happen,” he texted to one friend about 12.30am, shortly after the altercation in Grey Lynn. “ODK [a typo of IDK] if he’s going to die.” And then: “I’m f****ed.” Another friend, who Skeen was texting until about 4.15am, he told he was hiding downstairs in his house while police were looking for him. At 3.30am Skeen texted: “OMG [Oh my God] he might die … I can’t believe it.” Later that morning he wrote: “I feel like s***.” READ MORE: * Stabbing victim whispered the word ‘ambulance’ * Witnesses describe screams to court Earlier on thursday it was revealed the accused had allegedly told a friend immediately after a stabbing that he’d “stuffed up”. Dominic Bellfield, 18, said he had driven Skeen to the party about 11pm. Immediately after the alleged bottle stabbing, Skeen jumped back into Bellfield’s car briefly. “I couldn’t tell who was fighting … [but then] people started running and there were people screaming as well,” the witness said. Bellfield said Skeen ran and got into his car and was clearly shaken. “I asked him what had happened. He sort of wouldn’t tell us. He said, ‘I’ve caked it’.” Pressed by lawyers to describe the meaning if the term “caked it”, Bellfield said: “like, ‘I’ve stuffed up’ … ‘I’ve messed up’.” “He was definitely a bit shocked. I was trying to ask him what happened. I was driving for about 20 metres then he said ‘I’ll walk home.’ He jumped out. “He sort of looked like he didn’t know what he’s done. He was shocked.” Other witnesses to the stabbing death of the young league star had earlier described hearing screams and seeing Tipene stumble and fall, bleeding, as his accused ran away. The Crown is arguing that Tipene’s death was murder, while the defence for the 17-year-old argues it was manslaughter only. On Wednesday, witnesses described how a street fight between two males arguing over a girl spilled over into another fight between Skeen and Tipene. During the second fight, witnesses have described how Skeen was twice knocked down by Tipene. There was then the sound of a bottle breaking before a “collective gasp” and a high-pitched scream. The court was told Tipene was then seen stumbling and falling, with blood running down his chest, as Skeen ran from the scene with some other men. Crown prosecutor Zannah Johnston has said Skeen became enraged when struck down by Tipene, and subsequently stabbed Tipene a number of times with a broken clear glass bottle, causing 13 sharp force cuts to his forearm, arms and neck. “Finally and fatally the defendant struck Luke Tipene on the left hand side of his neck…it’s believed a piece of jagged glass bottle broke off the bottle…the effect on Luke was immediate.” Defence counsel Lorraine Smith said in opening that Tipene was bigger and stronger than Skeen. “And if the blow from the bottle had hit his shoulder or his arm or anywhere else, we would not be here today. Vincent simply swung at a boy who was bigger and stronger and who had already knocked him down twice. “What Vincent did was wrong and dangerous but it was not murder.” Tipene was a member of the New Zealand Under-16s league side last year and the captain of the Akarana team that won the national 17s competition this year. – Stuff
See all stories on this topic
Leave a Reply