A Crime So Cruel: 'Redefined Inhumanity'

in2fitness

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I don't know if any of the Texas MadJackers have heard about this story but this bitch is f--ked in da head!!

A Crime So Cruel: 'Redefined Inhumanity'

By Cathryn Conroy

She worked as a nurse's aide--someone who helped people in need. But what Chante Mallard, 25, of Fort Worth, Texas is accused of doing is so heinous that the district attorney has called her actions cruel, heartless, and inhumane. Mallard allegedly struck Gregory Glen Biggs, 37, last October with her car with such force that he was hurled headfirst into the windshield where he was then trapped. His broken legs were sprawled on the hood of the automobile. She drove home, parked the car in her garage, and let Biggs bleed to death over the course of two to three days. Mallard never attempted to help him despite his pleas, but told police that she apologized to him. His body was dumped in a nearby park where it was recently discovered. A tip to police led to Mallard's arrest on Wednesday.

Police said Biggs probably would have survived the accident had he received medical attention. Mallard confessed to police that she had been drinking and taking the drug Ecstasy before the accident. "I'm going to have to come up with a new word. Indifferent isn't enough. Cruel isn't enough to say. Heartless? Inhumane? Maybe we've just redefined inhumanity here," Tarrant County Assistant District Attorney Richard Alpert told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. When police searched Mallard's home, they found the car in the garage. The windshield was broken and blood and hair evidence are intact.
 

Howie

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and, one other thing, if you know anything about nursing homes, that is about par for the course for a nurse's aid.
 

Felonious Monk

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The Link

I just think it's crazy she strolled into the garage and apologized to him the next day while he was still alive.

"Oh, what are you still doing here? I figured you'd be gone by now."

I don't know who is more inhumane....the chick for what she did or her attorney for the statement he made:
"this was simply a case of failure to stop and render aid."

You have got to be fuhking kidding me. How the hell could anyone say that with a straight face? She impailed the guy in her windshield then hid him in her garage for days until he died.

This will make a great David Lynch movie.
 

dr. freeze

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i dated a girl in Houston for over a year here with about the same amount of heart......luckily for me, i no longer see her
 

Dr Raider

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What a SICK PERSON. . . .

First heard the news on a local station here in Ft Lauderdale-
couldn't believe it
 

Patternseeker

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Saw this again on morning news and still cannot believe it.

Wonder what these people in other cars, who passed her when she was driving home with this dude stuck in her windshield, were thinking?

This is just unreal.
 

Skinar

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Unreal. Surreal actually. I cannot imagine how anyone could attempt to justify any of this, and that includes attorneys. Furthermore, unless this story is told loudly and this person is punished to the max and also that she is excoriated at the same time, unless all those things take place, then our society is just as sick.

I'm fed up with people making excuses of one sort or another for these twisted assholes that infest America. She had no mercy, and that's exactly what she should get in return.
 

in2fitness

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follow up

follow up

For those of you who may be interested, this bitch is back in jail!!

Public outcry in Fort Worth over callous hit and run

By: The Los Angeles Times

Gregory Biggs (RIP)
biggs0308.jpg


Chante Mallard (fat piece of shit bitch)
mallard0308.jpg

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

HOUSTON -- A nursing home aide who said she ran over a homeless man, then hid him in her Fort Worth garage and ignored his moans while he bled to death, was back in police custody Friday night.

Chante Mallard was charged with murder in the death of 37-year-old Gregory Glenn Biggs on Thursday, and released on $10,000 bond. But as word of Mallard's indifference to the vagrant's agonizing death spread, the prosecutor's office was pegged with furious telephone calls.

In response to the outcry, Judge James Wilson on Friday bumped Mallard's bond up to $250,000. If she comes up with the money, Mallard will be placed under house arrest and tracked by an electronic monitor.

"It is no secret that the community is outraged by the offense of the defendant and I'd remind the court this is a murder charge," said Richard Alpert, a Tarrant County assistant district attorney.

Fort Worth police say the Mallard, 25, got drunk and took the drug ecstasy in late October, then hopped into her car and drove home. She slammed into Biggs -- and kept on driving until she reached her garage, the man's torso wedged through the windshield.

"She then went inside, had sex with her boyfriend and ... went out to the garage and the man wasn't dead yet, but he was dying," says an affidavit released this week. "The man was asking them to help him, but they just walked back inside."

It took Biggs days to bleed to death, police say. In the meantime, Mallard trailed in and out of the garage to check on the progress of his demise, but ignored the dying man's pleas for help, says the affidavit.

More arrests could follow, police said. On Friday, investigators were scrambling to figure out how many others knew about the death, and who dumped Biggs' body in woodsy Cobbs Park. "We're just trying to determine who else was involved," police spokesman Duane Paul said Friday.

Mallard was arrested Wednesday after telling her story to girlfriends over cocktails in February.

"It's the most horrific thing I've ever heard of in my life," said Don Shisler, president of Union Gospel Mission, a Fort Worth homeless shelter where Biggs frequently slept. "It really saddens me that Greg had all these problems, living on and off the streets. And then this. Who has the worst problem here, you know?"

A former Fort Worth school bus driver and bricklayer, Biggs had fallen on hard times in recent years and slumped into homelessness. Still, he kept his clothes clean and his hair neat, and plucked bouquets of flowers for shelter workers.

If she hadn't held forth to her friends, Mallard might never have heard another word about Biggs. As soon as she got her hands on her income tax return, she told her friends, she'd burn her old car and start fresh with a new vehicle. Then nobody could link her to the homeless man whose bones were buried in a pauper's grave in Dallas.

But one of Mallard's friends called police, and detectives paid a visit to the garage in Fort Worth. Inside, they discovered the dented, gutted car with blood-stained floors. In the backyard, they found the seats. One of them had been burned. When questioned, Mallard told police her story.
 
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