#anniek
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Spoiler alert😱


Ft: Anniek,proge,linny,my sis (millychan_fox),me,Charlie,old Justin (the kemono) there's no verra because he doesn't want to come to camping together:P
#non tickles#non friends system#non ask#non art#anniek#justin_verra#dokidobe#proge#millychan_fox#linny_fox
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*tickles ur gacha venus >:]
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For u!!!
Awwwwww that's so sweet! I love it
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Anoniem
Anoniem (Serie 2023) #AnniekPheifer #MarcelHensema #JeroenSpitzenberger #JoumanFattal #RoelandFernhout #PeterBlok Mehr auf:
Serie Jahr: 2023- Genre: Drama / Thriller Hauptrollen: Anniek Pheifer, Marcel Hensema, Jeroen Spitzenberger, Jouman Fattal, Roeland Fernhout, Peter Blok, Aus Greidanus sr., Guido Pollemans, Tarikh Janssen, Aus Greidanus jr., Hannah van Lunteren, Bobbie Mulder, Teun Luijkx, Marieke Heebink, Olaf Ait Tami … Serienbeschreibung: Jurre und Saar leben mit ihren Kindern in Rotterdam. Saar arbeitet…

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Or maybe it’s Coping Daydreaming?
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Us core:

(I'm short as hell in there...:'>)
The design is great but the problem is, I'm colour blind and I don't remember what the colour of your OC
#friends system#lightning system#non tickles#non ask#non art#friend system Justin#lightning system zert#doki's oc#anniek oc#alther oc
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Tragically American yes. BUT. i was having a really hard day last week; getting out of bed seemed to be a ridiculous concept. You know what made me get my depressed butt out of the comforter nest? I was out of International Delights Iced Coffee. So i got my happy (derogatory) self up, took a shower, dressed, got in the car and drove to the market and bought that precious sugar/coffee hybrid. And i drank a glass full. My day was a little better, and I was up and dressed.
tragically american sentence: sometimes it feels like Big Iced Coffee is all that’s keeping me tethered to this world
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Louis on stage at ZOA City photographed by Anniek
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Post 1223
“You are a follower, Please work on that." --Judge
Jake Kenneth Lee Burghduff, Montana inmate 3035396, born 2002, incarceration intake December 2023 at age 21, sentenced to 15 years, with 10 suspended; scheduled release date not available
Deliberate Homicide
In October 2023, a Ludlow, South Dakota, man was convicted for his role in the murder of a Montana man.
Jake Burghduff, who was found guilty of deliberate homicide by a Prairie County, Montana, jury on Aug. 23, 2023, was given a 15-year sentence in a Montana courtroom with 10 years suspended. Judge Olivia Rieger placed Burghduff, 21, in the custody of the Montana Department of Corrections.
That means he will be evaluated before he is placed in prison, where he would be eligible for parole, or in a treatment facility, or even sentenced to serve his term at his home. Burghduff was given credit for the 253 days he has served since he was arrested for taking part in the murder of Isaac Carrier, a 30-year-old Fallon, Montana, man.
Carrier was in bed and likely asleep in his apartment when he was shot in the back of the head and killed on January 23, 2023. The apartment was then set on fire. Suspicion immediately centered around another South Dakota man, Sterling Brown of Camp Crook. His wife, Katie Bivens, was previously married to Carrier, and they had a young son, Stetson.
Carrier was engaged in a highly emotional battle over Stetson with Bivens and Brown. A custody hearing on the boy’s status was scheduled for January 25, but Carrier’s death canceled that and placed a bigger issue on the table: Who killed him?
Montana Division of Criminal Investigation agents interviewed Brown and Bivens at the Spearfish, South Dakota, Police Station on January. 31, but they denied any involvement in Carrier’s death. That’s a position they maintain.
Montana investigators learned Burghduff had been with Brown the night of the murder, and asked him for an interview. After at first showing reluctance to talk with them, he drove to Spearfish and met with two agents on February 7.
After hours of interrogation, he confessed to his role in the crime, saying he and Brown met, left their cell phones behind and drove to Fallon on the night of January 23. Both were carrying handguns, and they stopped and bought a gas can and filled it with fuel.
During his trial in August 2023, Burghduff said he didn’t grasp the full nature of their trip until they arrived in Fallon. He said he remained in Brown’s pickup while he went into the small, four-apartment building in the Montana town.
Brown shot Carrier, poured gasoline on his body and throughout the apartment and set it on fire before driving back to South Dakota, Burghduff told the investigators. He said once he realized the crime that had been committed, he drank more beer to get drunk and not think about what had happened.
Burghduff was originally charged with arson and tampering with evidence. But before his trial opened on August 21, he was charged with deliberate homicide.
After a three-day trial in which he did not testify, a jury, made up of six women and six men, returned the verdict of guilty.
At sentencing, the first people to provide victim impact statements were Carrier’s parents, Jackie and Chuck Carrier, his sister Toni Riley and his brother William Carrier. All asked for the maximum possible sentence of 100 years.
All four spoke via Zoom from the family home outside of Lockwood, Missouri. They were at times overcome with emotion, shedding tears as their voices broke.
Chuck Carrier, said he thought Burghduff had to be aware of the reason behind that drive to Montana on January 23, even if he is a person of “low intelligence.”
Burghduff’s parents, Lex Burghduff of Belle Fourche, South Dakota, and Heidi Sallquist of Camdenton, Missouri., as well as his sisters Anniekate Burghduff of Ludlow, South Dakota, and Lexy Ward of Bar Nunn, Wyoming, and two friends spoke on his behalf. Several others submitted written statements of support.
“Jake is my son and best friend,” Lex wrote. “He has been with me on the ranch his whole life.”
He said Brown was a “predator” who took advantage of his son’s good nature and as a way to retaliate against Lex for preventing him from dealing drugs to other young cowboys. Lex said Jake had been used both by Brown and the investigators and urged the judge to allow Jake to return home as soon as possible.
They said he was a kind, gentle and generous person who helped friends and neighbors on a regular basis.
Sallquist said she and her ex-husband shared custody of Jake and Anniekate, but when Jake was home in South Dakota, his father allowed him to drink beer and cocktails at a young age. That prevented him from allowing “his brain a chance to grow and develop,” she wrote.
Sallquist said she agreed with the judge’s decision not to dismiss the case, and said after near-daily calls with her son, she sees him growing and maturing. After dropping out of high school during his senior year because he did want to take classes remotely because of the COVID-19 pandemic, he now wants to complete his studies and obtain a diploma.
“I believe this experience as rough as it is has been a benefit to Jake,” Sallquist wrote.
Judge Rieger took note of Jake’s issues with alcohol. He was 20 years when the murder was committed, too young to legally drink in South Dakota, but he already had a pair of DUIs, as well as a minor in possession charge.
Montana Assistant Attorney General Meghann Paddock spoke for the prosecution, asking for a 40-year prison sentence with 20 years suspended. Prairie County Attorney Dan Rice was at her side but did not speak. Montana Assistant Attorney General Dan Guzynski, who led the team during the trial, was not in the courtroom and watched via remote.
Paddock said it’s still unclear exactly what happened in Fallon that night. While Burghduff insists he did not enter the apartment, a neighbor said she heard cowboy boots in the hallway. Burghduff was wearing boots, while Brown had soft shoes on.
“It’s the state’s position that he told just enough to point the finger at Sterling Brown,” Paddock said.
Burghduff was represented by Montana public defenders Hailey Forcella and Michael Haase of Miles City. Haase said he disagrees with the decision handed down by the jury, noting they come from a rural county with a low population and likely felt pressure to return a guilty verdict.
“This was not an easy decision,” he said, with some jurors in tears and wearing a defeated look on their faces when the verdict was read, in his view.
Haase also said Judge Rieger had come close to dismissing the case during the trial. She called a lengthy recess at one point before allowing the trial to continue.
“It’s clear, at least to me, that this court was very close to dismissing this charge,” he said. Rieger confirmed that as she announced the sentence. “It is very clear, the court did not enjoy this case at all,” she said. Rieger also said the jury’s verdict may be reversed. “I believe your appellate motions will have merit,” she said.
Haase said while his client had many several poor choices, he had not committed a crime. He said Burghduff was taken advantage of by an older man who talked him into riding along on a deadly mission even though Burghduff has no reason to harm Carrier.
“This is not justice,” Haase said. “The state has simply got this case wrong.”
Burghduff, who was silent throughout his trial, was sworn in and answered questions from the judge about his assets. He said he owns $22,000 worth of cattle and horses, along with saddles and some other items, and owes almost $18,000, mostly for a surgery he had in August 2022.
Burghduff, who was wearing white-and-orange striped jail clothing, declined an offer to make a statement.
She said Burghduff’s problems with alcohol were likely a factor in his participation in this crime. During a pre-sentence investigation, he said he started drinking heavily when he was 15.
She ordered him to undergo an alcohol use assessment, an anger management review and a mental health evaluation. During his time in DOC custody, he must complete a GED course to obtain the equivalent of a high school degree.
The judge also urged him to make better choices in friends.
“You are a follower,” Rieger said. “Please work on that.”
As of May 2024, a trial for Brown had not been conducted. He was released from custody in November 2023 on a $1 Million bond.
4y
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“Der Schrei Der Natur” - Anniek Kortleve, Antonia Wilson, Othilia Simon & Nadia Giramata by Charles Fréger for Pop Magazine F/W 2012 Supplement
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