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Former Eminem employee accused of stealing, selling pop star’s unreleased music

A former employee of Marshall Mathers — aka entertainer Eminem — is named in a federal criminal complaint for allegedly stealing and selling some of his unreleased music.

Joseph Strange, 46, of Holly is charged with two counts of criminal infringement of a copyright and interstate transportation of stolen goods.

According to the criminal complaint, filed in U.S. District Court – Eastern District of Michigan, the FBI launched an investigation in January after employees of Mathers’ music studio in Ferndale reported finding a list of Mathers’ unreleased music — still in development — available for puchase on the Internet. The list was reportedly taken directly from a hard drive in Mathers’ Ferndale studio.

FBI tracked down multiple people who had bought the unreleased music who identified Strange as the seller, the complaint states. Strange reportedly worked for Mathers from approximately 2007 through 2021.

“This investigation underscores the FBI’s commitment to safeguarding artists’ intellectual  property from exploitation by individuals seeking to profit illegally,” Cheyvoryea Gibson,  special agent in charge of the FBI in Michigan, stated in a news release. “Thanks to the cooperation of Mathers Music Studio, FBI agents from the Oakland County Resident Agency were able to swiftly enforce federal laws and ensure Joseph Strange was held accountable for his actions.”

If convicted of the copyright infringement charge, Strange could be sentenced to up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. The interstate transportation of stolen goods charge is punishable by up to 10 years in prison/

“Protecting intellectual property from thieves is critical in safeguarding the exclusive rights of  creators and protecting their original work from reproduction and distribution by individuals  who seek to profit from the creative output of others,”  Acting U.S. Attorney Julie Beck stated in the release.

The case is being investigated by special agents of the FBI Oakland County Resident Agency, and prosecuted by assistant U.S. attorneys Timothy Wyse and Alyse Wu.

Clarkston man accused of having ‘tens of thousands’ of child porn images — some involving animals

Lengthy prison sentence for habitual offender for fatal Auburn Hills crash

Eminem performing in Detroit (file photo, Carlos Osorio/AP)

Clarkston man accused of having ‘tens of thousands’ of child porn images — some involving animals

A 47-year-old Clarkston man is facing charges for allegedly having “tens of thousands” of child pornography images — including some involving animals, officials said.

The complaint against Benjamin Guy Weeks, issued March 18 in 52-2 District Court, lists charges of three counts each of aggravated child sexually abusive activity and using a computer to commit a crime.

According to the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office, law enforcement confiscated approximately 35 hard drives, multiple thumb drives, CDs and computer devices from Weeks’ home containing tens of thousands of files showing child sexual abuse, including bestiality.

It’s believed Weeks was attempting to create a computer server to manage and share the files, the prosecutor’s office said.

“The scale of depravity uncovered in this case is shocking,” Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald said. “Behind every one of these images and videos is a child who was the victim of unspeakable abuse. I’m committed to aggressively prosecuting child pornography cases so we can protect the next child from becoming a victim.”

The court file shows the alleged crimes dating back to 2023. Jeff Wattrick, spokesperson for the prosecutor’s office, told The Oakland Press that the casa wasn’t turned over to the Oakland County prosecutor until this month and that the prosecutor’s office “moved quickly to file charges and authorize an arrest.”

Aggravated child sexually abusive activity is punishable by up to 25 years in prison and/or a $125,000 fine. Using a computer to commit a crime carries a penalty of up to 20 years in prison and/or a $20,000 fine, possibly as a consecutive sentence, the prosecutor’s office said.

Arraignment is pending.

Lengthy prison sentence for habitual offender who killed driver in 2-vehicle crash, hid from cops

Judge suspends communication privileges for Pontiac woman accused of abandoning kids in squalor

‘Hockey doc’ Zvi Levran pleads to 28 sex crime charges

52-2 District Court (Aileen Wingblad/MediaNews Group)

Lengthy prison sentence for habitual offender who killed driver in 2-vehicle crash, hid from cops

A Lake Orion was handed a lengthy prison sentence Tuesday for a fatal hit-and-run last year in Auburn Hills.

At a hearing in Oakland County Circuit Court, Judge Yasmine Poles sentenced 35-year-old Kenneth Briddnell Carroll to 25-60 years for the June 6, 2024 crash that killed Thomas Jerome Fisher, 68. The collision happened on Walton Boulevard near Perry Street in Auburn Hills, and also caused critical injuries to Carroll’s passenger.

According to police, Carroll fled after crashing a Kia Forte into a Ford F-150 pickup truck, trapping Fisher in the Ford F-150. Fisher was subsequently extricated and transported to an area hospital where he died, police said.

mugshot
Auburn Hills Police Dept.
Kenneth Carroll

Moments before the crash, an Auburn Hills patrol officer had pursued the Kia after witnessing it speeding south on Lapeer Road and attempted a traffic stop, but the driver — later identified as Carroll — accelerated and fled, reportedly reaching speeds up to 88 mph. The officer reportedly chased the Kia for approximately a quarter mile before ending the pursuit. Further down the roadway, the officer discovered the collision, police said.

Carroll was arrested after a citizen reported seeing him in a wooded area approximately a half-mile from the crash site, police said. When he was arrested, Carroll was in possession of a controlled substance, police said.

In January, Carroll pleaded no contest to reckless driving causing death, reckless driving causing serious impairment of bodily function, fleeing and eluding, failing to stop after the crash, driving without a valid license and narcotics possession. For the drug charge, he was sentenced to the 284 days he already served in the Oakland County Jail. The jail credit was also applied to his sentence on the other charges.

A no contest plea is not an admission of guilt but is treated as such for sentencing purposes. It can also offer some liability protection in civil cases.

Carroll got an enhanced sentence due to him being a habitual offender. His criminal history includes convictions for aggravated domestic violence and probation violation.

Fisher’s obituary states he was the father of two, an accomplished musician and “a successful and premier interior painter” with his own business. He grew up in Birmingham.

Judge suspends communication privileges for Pontiac woman accused of abandoning kids in squalor

‘Hockey doc’ Zvi Levran pleads to 28 sex crime charges

Injured man arrested, released after rollover crash in Bloomfield Township

file photo (Aileen Wingblad/MediaNews Group)

2 Ypsilanti men charged in attempted car theft in Southfield

Charles Ramirez, The Detroit News

Two Ypsilanti men were arrested over the weekend for trying to steal a vehicle after leading Southfield police on car chases, officials said.

Both have been charged, Southfield Police Chief Elvin Barren said Monday.

Tyree Pitts, 21, and James Harris, 18, both of Ypsilanti, were arraigned Friday in 46th District Court, the police chief and court records said.

Tyree Pitts (Photo courtesy of Southfield Police Department)
Tyree Pitts (Photo courtesy of Southfield Police Department)
James Harris (Photo courtesy of Southfield Police Department)
James Harris (Photo courtesy of Southfield Police Department)

Barren announced their arrests and charges against them at a midday news conference Monday at police headquarters. He was joined by Southfield Deputy Police Chief Aaron Huguley, Southfield Deputy Police Chief Jeffrey Jagielski, and Southfield Police Lt. Mostapha Bzeih.

Pitts is charged with third-degree fleeing and eluding police, a 5-year felony, unlawful driving away of a motor vehicle, a 5-year felony, and receiving and concealing a stolen vehicle, also a 5-year felony.

A judge set his bond at $50,000 and scheduled his next court hearing for March 28.

Court records did not list an attorney for Pitts on Monday.

Barren said Pitts has prior convictions for assault with a dangerous weapon, breaking and entering, receiving and concealing stolen motor vehicles, felony assault, and malicious destruction of property.

Harris is charged with unlawful driving away of a motor vehicle and receiving and concealing a stolen vehicle, Barren said.

A judge set his bond at $1,500 and scheduled his next court hearing for March 28.

Court records did not list an attorney for Harris on Monday.

Barren said Harris does not have a documented criminal history.

Two other people were arrested in connection with the attempted theft, police said.

One, an 18-year-old Atlanta, Ga., man, was given a ticket for giving police officers a false name when questioned, they said.

The other, a 17-year-old Detroit resident, was processed and turned over to his parents, the chief said. The 17-year-old will be prosecuted in Wayne County Juvenile Court. Barren explained juveniles accused of crimes in Michigan are prosecuted in the counties of their residence not where the crimes allegedly happened.

He also said police continue to investigate and determine if any others may be charged in connection with the crime.

Authorities said the incident happened at about last Thursday in the 27000 block of Berkshire Drive near West Eleven Mile and Evergreen roads.

Barren said dispatchers received a 911 call at about 3:30 a.m. Thursday from the car’s owner. She reported her home’s security camera alerted her to a man trying to get inside her parked 2017 Dodge Charger, Barren said.

After checking the video, she told police she saw multiple suspects near her car and gave a description of them.

Officers arrived within minutes and saw a suspect run to get into a white 2015 Mazda sedan, according to the Southfield police chief. They then saw the Mazda and a green Ford Fusion that had been reported stolen earlier in the day in Southfield traveling one behind the other through the neighborhood.

“Based on the officers’ observations, it was apparent that both vehicles were involved and acting in concert with one another,” Barren said. “Both vehicles were observed leaving the subdivision at the same time. Both vehicles turned in unison onto northbound Evergreen Road.”

The chief said the Ford was in front with the Mazda behind it. Officers followed the vehicles as they reached Villa Pointe Condominiums where they drove off in separate directions, he said.

Officers following the Ford shone their vehicle’s spotlight on the car and saw multiple occupants inside wearing masks.

“The Ford Fusion immediately accelerated away from officers,” Barren said. “As the driver fled, he drove over grass, and rocks, and the vehicle became disabled. The occupants got out and ran.”

Simultaneously, officers were pursuing the Mazda. Barren said the car turned onto northbound Evergreen Road, made an abrupt turn at Kingswood Place Condominiums, and continued to flee.

Police then used a so-called PIT Maneuver — using a police car to strike a fleeing vehicle’s rear quarter panel — to disable it, officials said.

“That resulted in the vehicle spinning out and becoming disabled,” Barren said.

He said the occupants remained in the car until officers ordered them out and took them into custody. Police later identified the driver as Pitts and his front seat passenger as Harris, the chief said.

No injuries were reported, he added.

On Monday, Southfield police released the 911 call reporting the attempted car theft as well as officers’ dash cam video of one of the car chases and body camera footage of the arrest of a couple of suspects.

Car thefts have become such a growing problem for law enforcement and car owners, that the Michigan Attorney General’s Office said last month it was expanding its auto insurance fraud task force to include stolen vehicles as thefts spike in the state.

“Southeast Michigan is experiencing a crisis when it comes to individuals stealing vehicles,” Barren said. “It’s also a national crisis. It’s a multi-million dollar industry and that’s what keeps individuals committing these crimes.”

Barren said the city of Southfield is attractive for car thieves because of the three freeways — Interstate 696, the Lodge and the Southfield — that run through it. It also has a lot of hotels and apartment complexes, he added.

“It can become a target for individuals who are planning auto theft crimes because the cars are on display,” he said.

Southfield police officers and the task force have arrested 43 auto theft suspects since October 2024, the chief said. Southfield police have arrested 21 people, which resulted in 47 felony charges so far in 2025, he said.

The Southfield Police Department houses the Oakland County Auto Theft Task Force, which includes officers from Oakland County Sheriff’s Office and the Southfield, Hazel Park, Farmington Hills and Detroit police agencies.

Pitts and Harris are the latest Michigan residents to be accused of auto theft.

Last week, a Warren man was charged with conducting a criminal enterprise, a 20-year felony, after authorities linked him to an alleged auto theft ring that targeted Cadillacs in a carmaker’s lot.

Earlier this month, three Detroit men were ordered to stand trial for allegedly being part of a ring that stole hundreds of vehicles in southeast Michigan.

Last month, two Detroit were charged for allegedly being part of an auto theft ring that targeted dealerships in Macomb, Oakland, and Genesee counties.

cramirez@detroitnews.com

Mugshots and shows as Elvin Barren, Southfield's police chief, talks during a press conference on Monday about the arrests of two men from Ypsilanti after an attempted car theft. (David Guralnick, The Detroit News)

Southfield man charged after leading Berkley police on a car chase

Charles Ramirez, The Detroit News

A 19-year-old Southfield man accused of leading Berkley police on a car chase Wednesday while carrying a concealed weapon has been charged.

Cameron Scott has also been banned from entering the cities of Berkley and Royal Oak by a judge, officials said.

Scott was arraigned Thursday in 44th District Court in Royal Oak, according to court records. He is charged with third-degree fleeing police, carrying a concealed weapon, and driving with a suspended license.

A judge set his bond at $11,000 and scheduled his next court hearing for next Friday, records said.

Police said the judge also prohibited Scott from entering the cities of Berkley and Royal Oak except for court purposes.

Scott was arraigned Thursday in 44th District Court in Royal Oak, according to court records. He is charged with third-degree fleeing police, carrying a concealed weapon, and driving with a suspended license.

A judge set his bond at $11,000 and scheduled his next court hearing for next Friday, records said.

Police said the judge also prohibited Scott from entering the cities of Berkley and Royal Oak except for court purposes.

Berkley police said officers on Wednesday tried to pull a white Ford Fusion over for a traffic stop near 12 Mile Road and Coolidge Highway.

They said the driver refused to stop and continued to speed south towards 11 Mile. Officers gave chase.

Authorities said shortly after the chase began, the driver tossed a firearm from the car. Police boxed in the vehicle and arrested the driver, later identified as Scott.

Berkley police also released dash camera video of the chase.

cramirez@detroitnews.com

Cameron Scott (Photo Berkley Police Department)

Police say clothing theft attempt leads to arrest of alleged Venezuelan gang member

George Hunter, The Detroit News

Two Venezuelan nationals, one of whom is an alleged Tren de Aragua gang member accused of multiple crimes in Colorado, are in police custody after an attempted “snatch-and-grab” theft this week from an Auburn Hills clothing store, authorities said.

The incident started at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday, when an Auburn Hills police officer was at the Nordstrom Rack store at the Great Lakes Crossing Outlet mall following up on an unrelated matter, Auburn Hills Deputy Chief Scott McGraw said Friday.

“The officer saw three males running through the store grabbing handfuls of merchandise off the shelves, so he chased them,” McGraw said.

During the foot pursuit, the officer radioed for help, and Auburn Hills Police set up a perimeter around the area, the deputy police chief said.

“With help of an Oakland County Sheriff’s K-9 unit, we were able to find two of the men hiding in a subdivision across the road from the mall,” McGraw said. “We think the third man must’ve gotten away in a vehicle.

“The men were interviewed and fingerprinted, and they didn’t speak English well,” McGraw said. “None of the names they provided came back with a valid identification. Typically, when that happens, we’ll contact Border Patrol. They told us both men were in the country illegally.”

McGraw said Auburn Hills Police turned the two men over to Border Patrol agents.

Federal officials said one of the men was a gang member who was wanted for several crimes in Colorado.

“Yesterday, in Detroit, MI, (U.S. Border Patrol) agents and Auburn Hills PD responded to a shoplifting call that escalated into the takedown of a dangerous fugitive,” U.S. Border Patrol Chief Michael W. Banks wrote in a Thursday X post. “A Venezuelan national wanted for kidnapping and torture in Colorado and is linked to the notorious Tren de Aragua gang was taken into custody. He is now facing charges (of) … willfully refusing to depart the U.S.”

The suspect was not identified. Banks posted photos on X showing the man being arrested, although his face was blurred.

The U.S. Border Patrol Detroit Sector said in a Facebook post Wednesday that the man has a felony warrant out of Arapahoe, Colorado, for kidnapping-sex offense/robbery, aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon/intent to kill, burglary of a dwelling, extortion, felony menacing, and committing a violent crime with a weapon.

Border Patrol spokesman Youssef Fawaz said in an email: “For privacy reasons, we do not comment on ongoing cases.”

Last month, President Donald Trump formally designated Tren de Aragua, MS 13 and other gangs as “foreign terrorist organizations,” carrying out a Jan. 20 executive order.

According to a Wednesday Facebook post by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol’s Office of Field Operations, “the Detroit Field Office has apprehended more than 20 Tren de Aragua gang members or affiliates at ports of entry across Michigan.”

A crackdown on illegal immigration by the Trump Administration has led to a spike in cases filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern Court of Michigan, The Detroit News reported last week. Those arrested included a Venezuelan man living in Detroit with alleged ties to the Tren de Aragua gang.

Last month, Border Patrol agents at the Sault Ste. Marie Station arrested a suspected Tren De Aragua gang member during a traffic stop.

McGraw said there’s been a rash of “smash-and-grab” and “snatch-and-grab” thefts in Oakland County recently, including a 2023 incident in which four Chilean nationals who were in the U.S. with temporary visas were charged with stealing jewelry from multiple locations, including the Great Lakes Crossing mall.

“It happens more often than people know,’ McGraw said. “A lot of stores don’t bother prosecuting, or don’t call us, it happens so often. I wouldn’t say it’s an everyday occurrence, but it’s happening more and more.”

ghunter@detroitnews.com

Auburn Hills Police vehicle. (Oakland Press file photo)

Michigan Supreme Court selects its new chief justice

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — The Michigan Supreme Court announced its justices have selected a new chief justice with the upcoming departure of the current incumbent.

The justices unanimously selected Megan Cavanagh to succeed Elizabeth Clement when she steps down, according to a Thursday announcement from the court. In February, Clement announced her intention to retire from the court before the end of April.

“The Court decided to make the choice now to ensure that the transition will be as smooth as possible and to confirm that our commitment to the path the Court is on will not waver,” Cavanagh said in a statement.

Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has the opportunity to appoint a justice to fill Clement’s vacancy and create a 6-1 majority of Democratic-backed justices. Whoever is appointed must run for retention in 2026 for a full eight-year term.

Michigan’s justices are technically nonpartisan, but they are nominated by state parties or appointed by the governor in the case of a vacancy. The court currently has a 5-2 majority of justices backed by Democrats after picking up a seat in the November election.

Cavanagh, backed by Democrats, narrowly beat out an incumbent justice in 2018. She is up for another term in 2026.

Clement was appointed to the Supreme Court in 2017 by Republican Gov. Rick Snyder. She is leaving to join the National Center for State Courts as president.

“I believe strongly that collaboration and cooperation are the keys to building public trust in our branch of government,” Cavanagh said.

FILE - Megan Cavanagh, a candidate for the Michigan Supreme Court, speaks during a rally in Detroit, Friday, Oct. 26, 2018. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, FIle)

Detective says boy ‘would still be alive’ but Oxford Center failed to use grounding wire

Hannah Mackay, The Detroit News

Grounding wires, or safety straps worn around a wrist to prevent static electricity inside a hyperbaric oxygen chamber, were found inside a “junk drawer” at a Troy medical facility where a chamber exploded, killing a boy, and could’ve saved the child’s life, according to testimony by a Troy police detective.

A transcript of Det. Danielle Trigger’s testimony to 52-4 District Court Magistrate Elizabeth Chiappelli, given March 7, sheds light on the Jan. 31 explosion at the Oxford Center. Thomas Cooper, 5, of Royal Oak was inside the hyperbaric chamber and died when it exploded.

Thomas on his 36th of 40 treatments in the hyperbaric chamber, which creates a pressurized environment of pure oxygen. His mother, standing nearby, burned her arms trying to rescue her son. Police have not revealed what the boy was being treated for.

CCTV footage of the oxygen chamber gave police insight into what preceded the tragedy: Cooper lay in the chamber wearing pajamas and holding a gray blanket. His head rested on a pillow with a patterned pillowcase, according to March 7 transcripts.

“Cooper is moving around within the chamber, moving the blanket and sheet around with him. He rolls onto his side and pulls his knee up towards his chest, which results in a visible ignition,” Trigger said. “The chamber immediately begins to burn internally and in what could only be described as a fireball, ultimately killing Thomas Cooper. At the time of the initial ignition to the time the inside of the chamber is fully engulfed in flames, killing Cooper, is approximately three seconds.”

Police found the grounding wrist straps in a “junk drawer” in the facility’s laundry room, Trigger said. She described the cords as oxidized, like they hadn’t been used or moved for an extended period. They also found a multimeter in the drawer, which is used to test grounding, Trigger said.

“The multimeter was still in the bag with the caps on both ends of the cords and the cords appeared to have never been unraveled, which was consistent with it never having been utilized to test grounding,” Trigger said.

Tamela Peterson, the Oxford Center’s owner and CEO, was arraigned Tuesday in 52-4 District Court on second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter charges, as was Gary Marken, the facility’s primary manager, and safety director Jeffrey Mosteller. If bound over for a trial, a jury will decide where either charge fits the defendants’ conduct.

Aleta Moffitt, the operator of the hyperbaric chamber that exploded, was charged with involuntary manslaughter and intentionally placing false information on a medical record. All four pleaded not guilty.

Second degree murder is punishable by up to life in prison, while involuntary manslaughter can result in a sentence of up to 15 years behind bars.

The Michigan Attorney General’s office, which filed the charges, has accused the Oxford Center’s CEO and employees of disregarding safety protocols and using the chamber in ways it wasn’t intended to be used. The Oxford Center has said the “safety and well-being of the children we serve is our highest priority.”

Moffitt’s lawyer Ellen K. Michaels said Thursday Moffitt was an hourly worker at the Oxford Center who was adhering to the corporate policies presented to her by the center’s decision-makers.

“Everything that has been presented to the court to this point are allegations, not facts, not evidence,” Michaels said in a Thursday statement. “We look forward to reviewing the information that will be given to the defense through the discovery process and performing our own investigation. We believe in letting this process unfold.”

No grounding wire

Investigators made copies of hyperbaric chamber maintenance and service records at the scene and learned that the chamber that exploded was from 2013, while the other two in the facility were only a few years old, Trigger said. They also found a manual showing a wrist strap that patients should use when receiving treatment in the chamber to ground them. CCTV footage showed that Cooper was not wearing one, Trigger said.

“Photos taken of the scene at the time that the incident occurred were also re-reviewed,” Trigger said. “I observed what appeared to be a grounding wire for the chamber involved in the incident was wrapped in electrical tape and was clearly in worse condition or inconsistent with the other chambers in the room.”

The other patient receiving treatment at the time of the explosion and previous patients and employees at the Oxford Center all told police that a grounding wire had never been used in their hyperbaric treatments there, Trigger said. Employees who expressed concern to Peterson, Mosteller, and Marken about this policy were told that grounding wrist straps were not necessary, she added.

Police also found that starting in 2019, the Oxford Center removed items related to checking the chamber and patient grounding from daily and weekly checklists performed on the chambers.

Representatives from Sechrist, the hyperbaric chamber’s manufacturer, were shown a photo of the chamber that exploded and the electrical tape wrapped around the grounding wire.

“Sechrist personnel advised that they would have never repaired a wire in that way,” Trigger said. “They further advised that had a wire been repaired by an outside electrician, they would have had to tag out the chamber as being unusable. They would then have had to return to the location to inspect the work in the chamber before it could be used again. That did not occur.”

Trigger also claimed that one previous Oxford Center employee told her superiors she would no longer administer hyperbaric treatments due to the lack of safety practices and was fired.

The police consulted with two industry experts with “decades of experience in hyperbaric oxygen treatments,” according to Trigger. They also asked hyperbaric facilities at multiple hospitals and a privately run facility for insight into safety protocols, she said.

“The experts were able to determine, based on their opinion, that had Cooper been wearing the grounding wrist strap, he would still be alive,” Trigger said.

Mosteller told Trigger in an interview that Peterson had advised him that grounding straps were not necessary and said he performed his own testing to “convince himself to agree with that theory,” the detective said.

“Mosteller indicated that he would occasionally check the chamber grounding, but it was not done regularly,” Trigger said. “Employees were both advised of and shown an ‘experiment,’ that Jeff Mosteller had conducted that he felt made the grounding wrist straps unnecessary in order to justify not using them.”

At her Tuesday arraignment, Peterson’s attorney Gerald Gleeson said her parents both used the facility’s hyperbaric chambers, discounting the idea that she was operating the machines with “reckless abandon.”

Keeping the chambers full

Hyperbaric chambers are approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat 13 conditions, ranging from decompression sickness to severe burns. The Oxford Center advertises their use for treatment of over 90 different conditions, including Alzheimer’s Disease and diabetes.

Upon reviewing Peterson’s cellphone and laptop, police found messages in which people ask whether the company was promoting hyperbaric treatments for erectile dysfunction, Trigger said.

“Peterson responds stating, ‘Whatever gets bodies in those chambers, lol,’ ” the detective said.

Police also found messages containing still photos from CCTV footage of Cooper burning in the chamber.

“In the message exchange along with those photos, she stated something to the effect of, ‘If my leg was on fire, I would at least try to hit it and put it out. He just laid there and did nothing,'” Trigger said.

When police attempted to execute a search warrant for Peterson’s cellular devices and laptops at the Brighton facility, she initially ran from investigators, Trigger said. She also allegedly told investigators that she’d had her son wipe her laptop days after the explosion, Trigger said.

“Conversations with investigators at the attorney general’s office made Troy investigators aware that the CEO of the company, Tamela Peterson, along with her IT personnel had a history of tampering with and/or destroying evidence, specifically CCTV footage and records related to the investigation that the AG’s office had previously been conducting,” Trigger said.

Investigators observed nine inconsistencies between internally recorded time stamps for Cooper’s treatments provided by Peterson’s attorney and CCTV footage of the treatments, Trigger said.

Cooper’s records that police recovered from the facility show that on the day of the explosion he continued to receive treatment after the fire occurred and he had died.

Rolling back machines

Two previous employees told police they observed Marken manually manipulating the hyperbaric chamber’s cycle counters, which measure the lifespan of the machine, Trigger said.

“They reported that they had personally observed Marken using a screwdriver to remove the panel from the side of the chamber, remove the cycle counter, and roll back the number in order to make the cycle count look lower and to extend the life of the chamber,” the Troy detective said. “They advised that they were confident that this was likely done at the direction of Peterson due to her level of involvement in the ongoings of the company.”

Previous employees also told police that Marken was Peterson’s “muscle” and they were “one and the same,” Trigger said.

Marken’s attorney Raymond Cassar said at his arraignment that he had not been to the Oxford Center facility in Troy in over three years.

“I don’t know where the information is coming from that he is rolling back any of these things, but I can tell you that we’re confident he hasn’t been to that facility because he worked at the Brighton facility,” Cassar said Tuesday.

“They reported that they had personally observed Marken using a screwdriver to remove the panel from the side of the chamber, remove the cycle counter, and roll back the number in order to make the cycle count look lower and to extend the life of the chamber,” the Troy detective said. “They advised that they were confident that this was likely done at the direction of Peterson due to her level of involvement in the ongoings of the company.”

Previous employees also told police that Marken was Peterson’s “muscle” and they were “one and the same,” Trigger said.

Marken’s attorney Raymond Cassar said at his arraignment that he had not been to the Oxford Center facility in Troy in over three years.

“I don’t know where the information is coming from that he is rolling back any of these things, but I can tell you that we’re confident he hasn’t been to that facility because he worked at the Brighton facility,” Cassar said Tuesday.

Safety and clothing guidelines

The National Fire Protection Association’s guidelines for hyperbaric chambers indicate that there should be a safety pause before a patient enters one to check that the clothing they wear is 100% cotton and that they don’t have any lotions or medical patches on, Trigger said. CCTV footage of Cooper’s entire visit shows that this did not occur, she said.

The experts that police consulted with also advised that a physician is required on scene for hyperbaric oxygen treatments, although one was not present for Cooper’s treatment, Trigger said. Of the defendants, Mosteller is the only one with a current certification to administer the treatments and none are physicians or nurses, she added.

While on scene at the Oxford Center in Troy, the experts noted that pillows inside the chambers were filled with 100% polyester, which is not allowed inside them, partially due to fire risk, Trigger said. The disclosure forms and waivers that patients and parents signed did not mention the risks of fire or death.

hmackay@detroitnews.com

 

Defendant Tami Peterson stands during her arraignment Tuesday, March 11, 2025, on charges related to the death of a 5-year-old boy inside a hyperbaric chamber in Troy. (Katy Kildee, The Detroit News)

Woman stabbed multiple times, allegedly because she had worn suspect’s clothes

A 24-year-old Pontiac man is in police custody, accused of stabbing a woman multiple times Monday night allegedly because she had worn his clothing.

According to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office, deputies spoke to the woman at an area hospital’s emergency department where she had gone for treatment of multiple stab wounds. The woman, a 25-year-old Pontiac resident, reportedly told deputies she had been stabbed during a fight over her wearing the suspect’s clothes.

Based on further information from the woman and a witness who reportedly had driven the woman to the hospital, deputies went to a residence in the 100 block of Cherry Hill Drive in North Hills Farms housing complex to confront the suspect, the sheriff’s office said.

As stated in the deputies’ report: “Initially, the suspect refused to answer the door, but after continued announcements of law enforcement presence and a secure perimeter being set, the individual ultimately surrendered to deputies without further incident. Another male was located inside of the home and taken into custody as well for investigative follow up.”

Charges are pending for the suspect, who’s held in the Oakland County Jail.

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This photo shows some homes in North Hill Farms in Pontiac, a housing complex where the stabbing reportedly occurred. (file photo)

Pontiac mother facing additional charges

The Pontiac woman facing felonies for allegedly abandoning her three children to live in a filth-ridden home for years has been charged with additional crimes.

As announced Tuesday by the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office, three counts of welfare fraud are filed against Kelli Bryant, in addition to the three charges of first-degree child abuse filed against her last month.

Bryant, 34, is accused of collecting $29,397 from January 2022 through February 2025 in support payments by the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services while the children were living alone. It’s alleged Bryant abandoned the children in 2020 or 2021.

The prosecutor’s office said a review of Bryant’s MDHHS payments showed the overpayment, leading to the charges.

Prosecutor Karen McDonald said the alleged fraud indicates Bryant stole from her children.

“The defendant appears to have effectively abandoned her children while collecting their public assistance,” McDonald stated in a news release. “This crime is, first and foremost, a theft from Kelli Bryant’s children. These resources were intended to ensure they had the basic necessities denied to them. The children deserved better.”

Welfare fraud more than $500 is punishable by up to four years in prison and/or a $5,000 fine. For the first-degree child abuse charges, Bryant faces up to life in prison if convicted.

The case against Bryant unfolded in February after deputies were called to a residence on Lydia Lane in the Stonegate Pointe townhomes for a welfare check and found Bryant’s children, a 15-year-old boy and his sisters, ages 13 and 12, hiding inside. The townhome was filled with large piles of garbage, mold and human waste throughout, had an overflowing toilet and a feces-filled bathtub, officials said. It was described as “uninhabitable.”

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A view from inside the townhome, showing large amounts of debris with garbage piled as high as 4 feet in some rooms, and mold and human waste found throughout (photo provided by Oakland Couny Sheriff’s Office)

When rescued, the girls were covered in feces, and all three children had matted hair and toenails several inches long making it difficult to walk, officials said.

Bryant had reportedly been arranging for food to be dropped off at the home each week, but toilet paper, soap and hygiene products were never provided, officials said. The children, who’ve since been placed with relatives, hadn’t gone to school for years.

Bryant is held in the Oakland County Jail, with bond set at $50,000 — recently reduced from the $250 million bond set at her Feb. 20 arraignment for the child abuse charges.

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Kelli Bryant booking photo

Two dead after shooting at Auburn Hills motel

A man and a woman were found dead inside an Auburn Hills motel on Friday night, moments after police heard gunshots in the room.

The deaths are considered a homicide-suicide, Auburn Hills police said in a Facebook post.

Officers had been sent to the Holiday Inn Express on Baldwin Road at 10:45 p.m. Friday, March 7, after a report of a possible domestic violence.

“Officers arrived on the scene and heard two gunshots while in the hallway approaching the room,” Auburn Hills police posted on Facebook. “Officers immediately entered the room and found a 34-year-old white female deceased, a 33-year-old white male deceased, and a 3-year-old white female unharmed.”

Early investigation leads police to believe the man, a Vassar resident, shot the woman, a Saginaw resident, and then shot himself, officials said.

“Out of an abundance of caution, the (girl) was taken to an area hospital and later released to a family member,” police said.

If anyone witnessed the pair or has information about them or what happened, they are asked to call police at 248-370-9460.

Police described the situation as “an isolated incident between the two deceased individuals; no one else was injured or involved in the altercation.”

Police said they would not immediately release their named.

The Oakland County Sheriff’s Office crime lab assisted, and the Oakland County Medical Examiner’s Office will conduct autopsies.

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File photo. (Stephen Frye / MediaNews Group)

Delta flight coming into Metro Airport aborts attempt to land at last minute

A Delta Air Lines landing at Wayne County Detroit Metropolitan Airport was more problematic than anticipated after the pilot was forced to abort an attempt to land.

The plane did have a safe landing on the second attempt.

According to a statement from the airline, Delta flight 1648 arrived at Metro Airport Thursday evening from Denver.

A spokeswoman did not include the number of passengers on the flight in the statement.

The statement said the pilot was instructed by air traffic control to execute a “go-around procedure.”

It did not, however, explain what a go-around procedure is and why it was necessary.

A request for a more detailed explanation for the abrupt procedure was made, but one has not yet been provided.

It appears the plane looped around, made another approach and was able to land without interference.

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Wayne County Detroit Metropolitan Airport

‘Many people will die:’ Teen arrested after alleged social media threat against Oakland County school

A 16-year-old male student at Lake Orion High School is facing a charge of making a threat of violence against a school which, according to Sheriff Mike Bouchard, resulted in hundreds of his fellow students staying home from school this week.

The teen was arrested Tuesday for allegedly stating on social media that an unnamed person was going to shoot up the school on March 5 “and many people will die,” the sheriff’s office said.

The threat was reportedly made at 3 a.m. last Saturday and was subsequently discovered by a resident who brought it to the attention of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office. The sheriff’s Computer Crime Unit detectives obtained search warrants to identify the message’s alleged sender, officials said.

The teen was being held in Oakland County Children’s Village on Wednesday ahead of a scheduled afternoon court hearing to determine next steps in the case.

Because of the threat, Bouchard said, 490 Lake Orion High School students called in sick on Monday; absences totaled 255 on Tuesday and 356 on Wednesday.

“Once again, we have someone who made a threat against a school and through the diligent work of our team we were able to locate and subsequently arrest him,” Bouchard said. “Let me reiterate, if you make a threat, you will be tracked down and held to account.”

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file photo (Oakland County Sheriff's Office)

Man charged for home invasions to have preliminary exam next month

The suspect in a series of home invasions is scheduled to have a preliminary exam in a few weeks for a judge to determine if there’s probable cause to advance the case against him in Troy to Oakland County Circuit Court for possible trial.

The exam is set for March 20 for the case against Brian Maurice Kellum, aka Brian Maurice Walker, charged with two counts of second-degree home invasion and driving while license suspended.

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Brian Kellum aka Brian Walker booking photo

Kellum, 41, was taken into custody at a traffic stop on Jan. 24 in Troy, about 90 minutes after a home break-in in the 2100 block of East Big Beaver was reported, police said.

Troy police said the arrest resulted from “an intensive investigation led by the Special Investigations Unit.” Kellum is believed to have been involved in other home invasions in Troy and the surrounding area, police said.

When arrested, Kellum had an expired identification from Georgia but had been staying with family in Troy, police said.

The preliminary exam will be held before 52-4 District Judge Maureen McGinnis. For now, Kellum is in the Oakland County Jail, with bond set at $100,000.

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52-4 District Court in Troy (Peg McNichol/MediaNews Group)

New trial date for woman accused of child’s murder

A new trial date is set in Wayne County for a Southfield woman accused of killing her friend’s young child in Detroit last year.

Jury selection is scheduled to start May 27 for the case against Iesha Harris, 30, charged with felony murder and first-degree child abuse in connection with the death of 3-year-old Harmoni Henderson. It’s alleged Harris fatally assaulted the child while babysitting her at a home in the 15700 block of Southfield Road. The child was privately transported to a local hospital where she was pronounced dead on March 17, 2024, officials said.

Trial had previously been scheduled to start last December.

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Iesha Harris (Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office)

According to the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office, the child died from blunt force trauma, believed to have been caused by Harris. Last year, Harris underwent a psychiatric/psychological evaluation and was found to be competent to stand trial.

Harris is scheduled to return to court in March for a pretrial hearing.

Judge Kelly Ramsey of Michigan’s 3rd Judicial Circuit Court in Detroit will preside over the trial. If convicted, Harris faces up to life in prison. She’s jailed in Detroit, denied bond.

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Frank Murphy Hall of Justice in Detroit, Michigan's 3rd Judicial Circuit Court (Aileen Wingblad/MediaNews Group)

Berkley man charged with sex crime in Oakland County arraigned for similar crime in Wayne County

A Berkley man recently charged with a sex crime against a young teen in Oakland County is facing a similar charge in Wayne County.

Darren Joshua Bradford, 24, was arraigned Thursday in Grosse Pointe Park Municipal Court on two counts of third-degree criminal sexual conduct that allegedly happened in his car with a 15-year-old girl. According to Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy, the assault occurred at approximately 5 p.m. on Feb. 5 in the area of Windmill Pine Drive and Berkshire Road.

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Darren Bradford booking photo, Oakland County Jail

Bond was set at $250,000.

In Oakland County, Bradford is charged with one count of third-degree criminal sexual conduct against a victim, age 13-15 years old, multiple variables. He was arrested Feb. 21 at this home. As reported earlier, Berkley’s Department of Public Safety said Bradford allegedly welcomed minors into his apartment regularly and allegedly gave them alcohol, marijuana and nicotine products, then allegedly had sex with one of them. The case unfolded after police reportedly received a tip and launched an investigation. Additional charges in the Oakland County case could be coming, police said.

Bradford’s next court appearance for the Oakland County case is scheduled for March 7, for a probable cause conference. His probable cause conference in the Wayne County case is scheduled for March 12. Worthy said additional information on the Wayne County case will be placed on the record at Bradford’s preliminary examination.

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file photo (Dreamstime/TNS)

4th defendant accused in murder of marijuana businessman fighting extradition from Ohio

The fourth man accused in the slaying of marijuana businessman Sam Simko of Commerce Township remains locked up in a Cincinnati-area jail, fighting extradition to Michigan.

Christopher Matacia, 34, is facing charges of felony murder, armed robbery, two counts of felony firearm and firearm-possession by a prohibited person for his alleged role in the robbery and murder of Simko, gunned down on Jan. 13 at his cannabis grow facility in Pontiac.

The Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office said Matacia’s extradition was approved on Jan. 31, the same day he was admitted to the Hamilton County (Ohio) Jail. According to his jail record, Matacia has had a couple of court hearings on the case, with the next one scheduled for March 7.

Co-defendants in the case, Scott Aloysius Brown, 28, William Gregory Creasy, 24, and Deonte Damonte Prophett, 32, face charges of felony murder and armed robbery for Simko’s death and the theft of approximately 50 pounds of marijuana. Prophett, who detectives believe fired the fatal gunshots, is also charged with using a firearm in the commission of a felony and possession of a firearm by a prohibited person. The next court date for the three is March 18 for a probable cause conference before 50th District Judge Cynthia Walker.

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Scott Brown, William Creasy, Deonte Prophett booking photos (Hamilton County Jail)

According to the sheriff’s office, Creasy allegedly had arranged a meeting with Simko at the grow operation in the 1000 block of University Drive in Pontiac with the intention of robbing him and the business. Deputies were dispatched to the business at around 8:15 p.m. on Jan. 13 after Simko’s business partner found Simko had been shot and called 911. Simko was pronounced dead at the scene. He had been shot twice, officials said.

Brown, Creasy and Prophett are held in the Oakland County Jail, denied bond.

industrial building
The Pontiac building where Sam Simko was found fatally shot on Jan. 13. (Peg McNichol/MediaNews Group)

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Christopher Matacia booking photo (Hamilton County Jail)

City in Alabama suspends entire PD after five officers indicted on corruption

An Alabama city suspended its entire police department Thursday after most of its officers were indicted on corruption charges brought to light in part by the overdose death of a dispatcher.

The move came a day after a grand jury indicted five Hanceville Police Department officers, including the chief, and one of their spouses, citing a “rampant culture of corruption” and recommending that the entire force be abolished.

Jim Sawyer, mayor of the 3,200-population city about 45 miles north of Birmingham, temporarily handed law enforcement duties over to the Cullman County Sheriff’s Office, placing all department employees on leave as of 5 p.m. Thursday.

Chief Jason Marlin, 51, was charged with two counts of failure to report ethics crime and tampering with evidence, reported WBRC.

Charges against Cody Alan Kelso, 33; Jason Scott Wilbanks, 37; William Andrew Shellnutt, 39, and Eric Michael Kelso, 44, included evidence tampering, distribution of controlled substances, and a variety of other felonies. Kelso’s wife, 63-year-old Donna Reid Kelso, faced similar charges.

Especially concerning was the “unfettered access” people had to the department’s evidence room, Cullman District Attorney Champ Crocker said in a news conference Wednesday, illustrating his point with photos of a hole in the wall and a green broomstick that people would use to force the door open.

Such access may well have led to the death of 49-year-old dispatcher Christopher Michael Willingham, who had been found in his office on Aug. 23, 2024. The Cullman County Coroner’s Office ruled his death accidental, caused by a toxic combination of fentanyl, gabapentin, diazepam, amphetamine, carisoprodol and methocarbamol, according to WBRC.

The grand jury called his death a “direct result of Hanceville Police Department’s negligence, lack of procedure, general incompetence, and disregard of human life.”

“With these indictments, these officers find themselves on the opposite end of the laws they were sworn to uphold,” Crocker said Wednesday in announcing the indictments, calling it “a sad day for law enforcement, but at the same time it is a good day for the rule of law.”

With News Wire Services

Hanceville Police Department (Google)

Man accused of near fatal shaking of baby released from jail

A Springfield Township man accused of shaking his child and nearly killing him is out of jail since a judge changed his $1 million bond to a personal bond – requiring no cash or surety to be posted.

Daniel Gracer, 31, is charged with one count of first-degree child abuse in connection with the near-fatal injuries his then-2-month-old son suffered in December. At Gracer’s arraignment earlier this month, a magistrate set bond at $1 million dollars and Gracer was remanded to the Oakland County Jail. At a court hearing on Tuesday, 52-2 District Judge Kelly Kostin granted Gracer a personal bond and he was released from jail shortly before 6 p.m., records show.

According to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office, on Dec. 23, 2024 deputies were called to a home in the 7000 block of Meadow Lane in Springfield Township for a report of an unresponsive baby. Gracer was caring for the boy at the time, the sheriff’s office said.

The baby suffered serious head and brain trauma, and a child abuse specialist who examined the baby determined the injuries were non-accidental, the sheriff’s office said. The brain injury, according to the specialist, was due to rapid acceleration and rapid deceleration, consistent with being shaken, the sheriff’s office said. The trauma was “nearly fatal,” the sheriff’s office said, and the baby is likely to have severely delayed development.

Hospital staff reportedly relayed the findings to the sheriff’s office which launched an investigation.

Gracer’s next court appearance is scheduled for March 14 for a probable cause conference.

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Daniel Gracer
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