So life here in the SLC is pretty good. Well I am really hating my job, but everything else is going really well. The time to move is fast approaching as is a little get together at the end of the month. I am soooooo looking forward to that! I can't wait to see all my friends again... I miss you all. After that comes the move... that is going to be crazy. I have no effing idea how I am going to get all my shit across the country, but by god I will. Don't worry though... I will find a way. I kinda have to have all stuff with me. Anyways there is more to talk about... but I can't really talk about it right now. There will come a time that I can. Anyways that's all I have for now. This is just going to have to be a shot blog.
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Erich, RIP.
WATERBURY -- A Waterbury prosecutor says a Newtown man charged with a pipe attack on his estranged wife and her boyfriend is going to face murder charges.
State's Attorney John Connelly says 31-year-old Nicholas Clark will be charged with murder when 26-year-old Erich Tabert dies. Connelly says Tabert was declared brain dead Monday and is to be taken off life support.
Police allege Clark used a length of pipe studded with screws to beat Christa Clark, his estranged wife, and Tabert, her boyfriend early Saturday morning, then called his father and said he'd killed them, according to documents made public Monday in Superior Court.
At virtually the same time a hysterical Christa Clark was calling the 911 operator in Waterbury to report the assault, Nicholas Clark was on the phone with his father, admitting he was the attacker, police said.
Christa Clark sustained extensive facial injuries in the 4:30 a.m. assault.
"They are both dead," Nicholas Clark allegedly said in a phone call with a police detective who was interviewing his father, Michael Clark of Newtown, at Waterbury police headquarters later Saturday morning.
Nicholas Clark initially refused to believe the detective who told him the victims were still alive, but then agreed to meet police at a commuter parking lot off Interstate 84 to surrender, according to the arrest warrant affidavit.
Clark was arraigned Monday morning in Waterbury Superior Court, where Judge Raymond Norko raised his bond from $1 million to $2.5 million. He was initially charged with two counts of first-degree assault, first-degree burglary, and violation of a protective order, and is due back in court Dec. 12.
Police said the couple separated after Nicholas Clark filed for divorce in February. Christa Clark continued to live at their Waterbury home, while he went to Newtown to live with his father. The couple have two children.
Court records indicate Nicholas Clark was charged with disorderly conduct after a family-violence incident Feb. 5, and Christa Clark subsequently obtained a protective order against him. The order was still in effect when Saturday's assault occurred.
Police said Clark apparently gained entrance to the house by removing a piece of aluminum foil that was covering a missing glass pane in the dining room, then unlocked the window.
Christa Clark told police she awakened to find her estranged husband beating Tabert with a pipe before he turned the weapon on her.
Investigators found the pipe on the bedroom floor near Tabert's blood-covered body, according to the affidavit.
Police said they received a call from Michael Clark about 4:34 a.m. The elder Clark said he had just spoken to his son by telephone, and that the younger Clark believed he had killed his wife. The elder Clark said his son told him there was "lots of blood" and a hammer may have been used as a weapon.
The senior Clark received another call from his son while he was being interviewed at police headquarters later in the day. Police said Nicholas Clark spoke with a detective, but hung up when the detective said that his wife and Tabert were still alive.
"You cops always lie," he allegedly said. But he called back a few minutes later and arranged to meet police at the Exit 11 commuter lot in Newtown, where he was taken into custody just before 3 p.m.
http://www.newstimes.com/latestnews/ci_7513755
RIP
Beating victim dies; attacker to face murder charges
A Waterbury man who was beaten with a metal pipe over the weekend died late Monday, police said.
An autopsy determined that 26-year-old Erich Tabert died from blunt trauma to the head. Police said 31-year-old Nicholas Clark beat Tabert with a metal pipe after breaking into the house where Tabert was sleeping early Saturday.
Waterbury State's Attorney John A. Connelly said charges will be increased against Clark during his next court appearance on Dec. 12. Connelly said Clark will face murder and felony murder charges because Clark committed the killing during the course of another felony, burglary.
Clark also faces assault charges because police said he also beat Christa Clark with the metal pipe.
Police said Tabert was dating Clark's estranged wife, 29-year-old Christa Clark. The Clarks are in the midst of a divorce and Tabert recently moved into the house the Clarks once shared at 49 Knoll St. in the city's East End. Talbert moved here from Utah after he and Christa Clark met online.
Nicholas Clark moved out of 49 Knoll St. about a year ago and has since lived with his father in Newtown
http://www.rep-am.com/articles/2007/11/21/
newsblog/299178.txt
i will never forget u erich. and one day i'll see u again. u can welcome me with ur open arms like youve always done.
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