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Posted: 6/11/2013 2:35:34 PM EST
File - In this June 3, 2013 file photo, former Houston police officer Drew Ryser, the fourth and final Houston police officer accused of wrongdoing in the 2010 videotaped beating of teenage burglar Chad Holley, looks on during the first day of his trial, in Houston. On Thursday, June 6, 2013, Ryser told jurors he used physical force against a black teenage burglary suspect only because he thought the teen might have a gun. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, James Nielsen, File) MANDATORY CREDIT
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Posted: 5/14/2013 7:17:36 PM EST
This image provided by Lyon County Sheriff’s Office shows Jeremiah Bean, a A 25-year-old person of interest who has been arrested after five people were found dead in one morning in northern Nevada. Bean was arrested Monday, April 13, 2013, on suspicion of burglary after he was found with items from one of the crime scenes. (AP Photo/Lyon County Sheriff’s Office)
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Posted: 4/18/2013 7:29:58 AM EST
"North Pond Hermit" Christopher Knight, left, and his attorney Walter McKee appear via video conference during a court hearing on new burglary and theft charges on Tuesday April 16, 2013 in Kennebec County Superior Court in Augusta, Maine. Knight and McKee were appearing on video connection from the nearby Kennebec County jail. (AP Photo/Kennebec Journal/Joe Phelan)
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Posted: 4/9/2013 7:48:22 PM EST
This undated photo provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows Rickey Lynn Lewis. Six months after he was paroled in early 1990 from a 25-year term for a third burglary conviction, Lewis was arrested for shooting and killing 45-year-old George Newman, raping Newman’s fiancée and stealing her truck after breaking into the couple’s home about 90 miles east of Dallas in Smith County. On Tuesday, April 9, 2013Lewis, 50, of Tyler is scheduled to become the second man executed in Texas this year. (AP Photo/Texas Department of Criminal Justice, File)
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Posted: 4/3/2013 3:10:19 PM EST
Bob Woodward (L), a former Washington Post reporter takes a tour of the Richard Nixon Presidential Library with director Timothy Naftali before his discussion about the Watergate Hotel burglary and stories, in Yorba Linda, California April 18, 2011. REUTERS/Alex Gallardo
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Posted: 4/2/2013 3:38:24 PM EST
A Photo Courtesy of Iron County Sheriff's Office shows Troy James Knapp, in a 2001 parole photo from a California burglary conviction. Authorities say they have arrested Knapp a survivalist suspected of burglarizing Utah cabins and evading law enforcement for years. (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune,The Sanpete County Sheriff's Office) DESERET NEWS OUT; LOCAL TV OUT; MAGS OUT
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Posted: 3/21/2013 8:23:39 PM EST
Colton Harris-Moore, right, who is also known as the "Barefoot Bandit," appears in a court hearing as his attorney, John Henry Browne, center, looks toward prosecuting attorney Erik Pedersen, left, Thursday, March 21, 2013, in Mount Vernon, Wash. Harris-Moore is already serving a seven-year prison term after pleading guilty to state and federal crimes, but Skagit County Prosecutor Rich Weyrich filed theft and burglary charges earlier in 2013 against Harris-Moore, accusing him of stealing an airplane from Anacortes, Wash. and flying it to the airport on Orcas Island, Wash. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
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Posted: 3/21/2013 8:23:39 PM EST
Colton Harris-Moore, right, who is also known as the "Barefoot Bandit," appears in a court hearing with his attorney, John Henry Browne, left, Thursday, March 21, 2013, in Mount Vernon, Wash. Harris-Moore is already serving a seven-year prison term after pleading guilty to state and federal crimes, but Skagit County Prosecutor Rich Weyrich filed theft and burglary charges earlier in 2013 against Harris-Moore, accusing him of stealing an airplane from Anacortes, Wash. and flying it to the airport on Orcas Island, Wash. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
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Posted: 3/21/2013 5:18:30 PM EST
Colton Harris-Moore, who is also known as the "Barefoot Bandit," appears in a court hearing, Thursday, March 21, 2013, in Mount Vernon, Wash. Harris-Moore is already serving a seven-year prison term after pleading guilty to state and federal crimes, but Skagit County Prosecutor Rich Weyrich filed theft and burglary charges earlier in 2013 against Harris-Moore, accusing him of stealing an airplane from Anacortes, Wash. and flying it to the airport on Orcas Island, Wash. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
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Posted: 3/17/2013 8:43:23 AM EST
FILE - This Aug. 6, 1963, file photo shows Clarence Earl Gideon, 52, the mechanic who changed the course of legal history, after his release from a Panama City, Florida, jail. Gideon was wrongly charged in 1961 with burglary and sentenced to five years in prison. He filed an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court arguing that his constitutional right to liberty was denied when Florida refused him an attorney. A unanimous Supreme Court issued its decision in Gideon v. Wainwright on March 18, 1963, declaring that states have an obligation to provide defendants with "the guiding hand of counsel" to ensure a fair trial for the accused. But in many states, taxpayer-funded public defenders face crushing caseloads, the quality of legal representation varies from county to county and people stand before judges having seen a lawyer only briefly, if at all. (AP Photo, File)
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Posted: 3/12/2013 9:38:31 AM EST
This photo provided by the King County sheriff’s office shows Michael "Chad" Boysen. King County sheriff's Sgt. Cindi West says 26-year-old Boysen was released Friday, March 8, 2013, after serving nine months on a burglary conviction. Now, Boysen is accused of killing his grandparents in Renton, Wash., since he was released. (AP Photo/King County Sheriff’s Office, Cindi L. West)
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Posted: 3/4/2013 7:39:45 AM EST
A man dressed as Batman and a burglary suspect stand in a police station in Bradford, northern England, on February 25, 2013, in this still photograph taken from video and provided by West Yorkshire Police on March 4, 2013. A mystery man dressed as Batman demonstrated the same crime-fighting skills as the caped crusader when he handed over a suspect wanted for burglary in Britain. Closed-circuit television footage showed a portly figure wearing an ill-fitting costume including gloves, cape and mask, bringing a 27-year-old man to a police station in Bradford in northern England. REUTERS/West Yorkshire Police/Handout
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Posted: 2/28/2013 5:59:07 PM EST
Bob Woodward, a former Washington Post reporter, discusses about the Watergate Hotel burglary and stories for the Post at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, California April 18, 2011. REUTERS/Alex Gallardo
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Posted: 2/28/2013 9:35:20 AM EST
Bob Woodward, a former Washington Post reporter, discusses about the Watergate Hotel burglary and stories for the Post at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, California April 18, 2011. REUTERS/Alex Gallardo
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Posted: 2/28/2013 9:35:20 AM EST
Bob Woodward, a former Washington Post reporter, discusses about the Watergate Hotel burglary and stories for the Post at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, California April 18, 2011. REUTERS/Alex Gallardo
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Posted: 2/28/2013 9:33:14 AM EST
Bob Woodward, a former Washington Post reporter, discusses about the Watergate Hotel burglary and stories for the Post at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, California April 18, 2011. REUTERS/Alex Gallardo
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Posted: 2/18/2013 3:38:35 AM EST
FILE - In this May 12, 2005 file photo, country singer Mindy McCready reacts as she testifies in Davidson County General Sessions court as part of a preliminary hearing for William McKnight, 38, her former boyfriend, who is charged with attempted criminal homicide and aggravated burglary in Nashville, Tenn. McCready, who hit the top of the country charts before personal problems sidetracked her career, died Sunday, Feb. 17, 2013. She was 37. (AP Photo/The Tennessean, Larry McCormack, File)
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Posted: 2/5/2013 11:18:31 PM EST
Tim Shier looks over a family bible dating from the 1700's on Feb. 3, 2013 in his home in Marysville, Ohio. The Lutheran Bible, written in German Gothic script and containing the handwritten dates of births, deaths and marriages for seven generations of Tim Shier's family, went missing in the burglary in Marysville, near Columbus, in December 2011. But thanks to a bit of luck, a sharp-eyed family member, local deputies and Goodwill, which had ended up with the Bible and then sold it online, the heirloom is back in Shier's hands. (AP Photo/The Columbus Dispatch, Chris Russell)
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Posted: 2/5/2013 11:18:31 PM EST
Tim Shier holds up his family bible dating from the 1700's on Feb. 3, 2013 in his home in Marysville, Ohio. The Lutheran Bible, written in German Gothic script and containing the handwritten dates of births, deaths and marriages for seven generations of Tim Shier's family, went missing in the burglary in Marysville, near Columbus, in December 2011. But thanks to a bit of luck, a sharp-eyed family member, local deputies and Goodwill, which had ended up with the Bible and then sold it online, the heirloom is back in Shier's hands. (AP Photo/The Columbus Dispatch, Chris Russell)
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Posted: 2/5/2013 11:18:30 PM EST
Tim Shier looks over a family bible dating from the 1700's on Feb. 3, 2013 in his home in Marysville, Ohio. The Lutheran Bible, written in German Gothic script and containing the handwritten dates of births, deaths and marriages for seven generations of Tim Shier's family, went missing in the burglary in Marysville, near Columbus, in December 2011. But thanks to a bit of luck, a sharp-eyed family member, local deputies and Goodwill, which had ended up with the Bible and then sold it online, the heirloom is back in Shier's hands. (AP Photo/The Columbus Dispatch, Chris Russell)