For Man Paroled in Wife’s Killing, Familiar Terrain
The man, Charles Baeza, was charged with criminal solicitation and attempted criminal possession of a weapon and was held without bail. As he left court on Staten Island, he said, “It was all a joke!” Mr. Baeza tried to buy the weapon to kill his <a href="http://www.trading666.com/T-shirt-polo-men-t-shirt-f2-61-c3-89.html"><strong>wholesale fashion polo men t-shirt online from china </strong></a> 52-year-old girlfriend, the police said, because she had not paid him back for 5,000 in dental work. He had been paroled on Feb. 16, 2010, after serving two decades in prison for the shooting death of his estranged wife, Ruth. A call to Mr. Baeza’s lawyer was not immediately returned. Recently, the police, working closely with Mr. Baeza’s parole officers, learned that he wanted to buy a weapon, the authorities said, and they had an undercover officer contact him. Mr. Baeza met with a parole officer on Wednesday. On Thursday, he met with the undercover <a href="http://www.trading666.com/brand-bags-t1-8.html"><strong>wholesale juicy handbags online</strong></a> officer inside a Staten Island pizzeria, where, the authorities said, he haggled over buying a gun and silencer and was arrested. He had been working as a tow-truck operator. It was not clear how long he had been with his girlfriend. She was placed under special protection when the authorities uncovered <a href="www.trading666.com"><strong>wholesale Cheap Replica Handbags from china </strong></a> the plot, Paul J. Browne, a New York Police Department spokesman, said. Mr. Baeza was convicted of manslaughter in the death of Ruth Baeza on Aug. 16, 1990, according to the state Department of Correctional Services. He was fleeing New York for North Carolina when a Virginia state trooper halted him for a routine traffic stop and discovered Ms. Baeza’s body in the back seat.
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