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A real estate developer charged with stealing millions of dollars was
stanley cup spain found stabbed to death Monday in the basement of his Greenwich mansion.Police said the victim, Andrew Kissel, 46, was found lying in a pool of blood, his hands and feet bound.Kissel had criminal cases pending in federal and state courts in New York. The federal case charged him with real estate fraud, and state prosecutors charged him with grand larceny, alleging he stole nearly $4 million from his Manhattan apart
stanley becher ment cooperative.Greenwich, a bedroom suburb of New York City, is one of the wealthiest communities in the nation.The New York Times reported that Kissel is scheduled to appear in federal court in White Plains, N.Y. on Wednesday to plead guilty to fraud charges in connection with a number of real estate deals. State prosecutors said Kissel was wearing an electronic monitoring anklet, which allowed him to leave home and travel only to certain places without sending an alarm.Kissel was the brother of Robe
kubki stanley rt Kissel, a wealthy banker whose wife, Nancy, was convicted of murdering her husband in Hong Kong in 2003 after feeding him a milkshake laced with drugs and then beating him to death.Andrew Kissel and his recently estranged wife, Hayley, had cared for Robert Kissel s three children until they were formally handed over to the custody of the Kissels sister who lives near SeattleWilliam Kissel, the father of the two slain men, told the Times: I haven t read the book of Job yet, but I m about t Lagl Young blood transfusions may be source of eternal youth
https://vimeo/99635253 While it still unclear whether or not plants can actually feel us sinking our teeth in, one thing is for certain: Y
stanley cup ou can be damn well sure they ;re hearing it. Thanks to a new report f
kubki stanley rom the University of Missouri-Columbia MU , researchers have discovered that plants respond to the specific sounds caterpillars make when eating them, and what more, the noises even prompt
stanley mug the plants into putting up additional defenses. We already knew that plant growth could change in reaction to certain sounds, but this is the first instance we ;ve seen of a plant actually protecting itself from a predator chomping, specifically. In the study, the researchers put caterpillars on Arabidopsis, a small, cabbage-like plant, and pointed a laser at a reflective section of the plant surface. That way, they were able to measure the different ways the plant moved in response to a chewing caterpillar. Then, the scientists removed the caterpillar from the equation entirely and only played back recordings they ;d made of the crunching caterpillar vibrations. For another plant, they played back only silence. After placing live caterpillars back on both sets of plants, the researchers found that the set that had been exposed to the caterpillar feeding sounds produced more mustard oil, a chemical that meant to fend off hungry critters. According to Heidi Appel, senior research scientist in the Division of Pl