Im in TOTAL SHOCK
#31
superuser
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Glen Allen VA
Posts: 20,827
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Re: Im in TOTAL SHOCK
Stop wondering why the person you knew from your past committed the acts of the person you read about now. Let it go, Jenn, people change and not always for the better.
Watch for the "warning signs" you've mentioned and ensure that your current friends do not follow the same destructive path.
Elsabeth Kubler-Ross defined the well known "5 Stages of Receiving Catastrophic News": Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance.
Watch for the "warning signs" you've mentioned and ensure that your current friends do not follow the same destructive path.
Elsabeth Kubler-Ross defined the well known "5 Stages of Receiving Catastrophic News": Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance.
#33
#36
ur hot now go away
Thread Starter
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Chix Beach
Posts: 2,173
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Re: Im in TOTAL SHOCK
Rich im far from denial, i accept what hes done I just dont understand his motive. but you can label me how ever you like.
#38
superuser
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Glen Allen VA
Posts: 20,827
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Re: Im in TOTAL SHOCK
Originally Posted by 1TZ JENN
Rich im far from denial, i accept what hes done I just dont understand his motive. but you can label me how ever you like.
There are 3 people that I have told that they will no longer be a part of my life, and have moved forward. In some circumstances, making a clean break in a past relationship is best.
#39
superuser
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Glen Allen VA
Posts: 20,827
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Re: Im in TOTAL SHOCK
TIMES-DISPATCH
Jun 12, 2004
A Henrico County man accused of fatally beating his father and stepmother last week was arrested in Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday after police said he jumped from the top of his speeding car.
Adam Russell Baumann, 21, was trying to jump onto a police car that was pursuing him. But he missed, hit the pavement and rolled into a grassy, hilly median that separates the north- and southbound lanes of Interstate 295, the beltway around Jacksonville, police told The Florida Times-Union.
Baumann apparently was not seriously injured. A Times-Union reporter said Baumann could have "walked away" from the fall. Baumann was taken to Shands Jacksonville Medical Center, where he was reported in fair condition last night.
Henrico County police had sought Baumann since last weekend, when they obtained first-degree murder warrants against him in the slayings of Russell Baumann, 61, and his wife, Diana Baumann, 58.
Police told the Times-Union they believe Adam Baumann was trying to commit suicide when he climbed through the sunroof of the 1999 Lincoln Continental, the same car taken last week from his family's Glen Allen home.
Reached last night, Fred Baumann, Russell Baumann's younger brother, said he had feared his nephew might try to harm himself if cornered by police.
"That was one of the concerns that his mother and I both had, if [the charges against him] were true," Fred Baumann said from his Albany, N.Y., home.
The 24-minute chase reached speeds of 120 mph, police told the Times-Union, but it was unclear how fast Baumann's car was traveling when he jumped.
After Baumann jumped, the northbound Lincoln veered across the grassy median as if it were heading toward the southbound lanes, but it suddenly turned back and headed toward the northbound lanes before slowing to a stop, according to the Times-Union. Miraculously, the car didn't crash or collide with any objects, the paper reported.
Police found the bodies of Russell and Diana Baumann on June 4 inside the family's home in the 10700 block of Brookley Road, less than a block from the Glen Allen Community Center. Both died from blunt-force trauma to the head.
Investigators found a baseball bat and a hammer, both with red stains, in the house near the bodies, along with a pipe and a couple of knives, according to court documents. Police said they believe both victims' heads had been covered with black trash bags, although only one was still covered when police entered.
Police have not offered a possible motive for the slayings, but family members said Adam Baumann had spiraled out of control in recent years, primarily from heavy drug use. Family members said he frequently used crack cocaine and stole money, jewelry and other items from his parents and stepmother, largely to support his drug habit.
Jun 12, 2004
A Henrico County man accused of fatally beating his father and stepmother last week was arrested in Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday after police said he jumped from the top of his speeding car.
Adam Russell Baumann, 21, was trying to jump onto a police car that was pursuing him. But he missed, hit the pavement and rolled into a grassy, hilly median that separates the north- and southbound lanes of Interstate 295, the beltway around Jacksonville, police told The Florida Times-Union.
Baumann apparently was not seriously injured. A Times-Union reporter said Baumann could have "walked away" from the fall. Baumann was taken to Shands Jacksonville Medical Center, where he was reported in fair condition last night.
Henrico County police had sought Baumann since last weekend, when they obtained first-degree murder warrants against him in the slayings of Russell Baumann, 61, and his wife, Diana Baumann, 58.
Police told the Times-Union they believe Adam Baumann was trying to commit suicide when he climbed through the sunroof of the 1999 Lincoln Continental, the same car taken last week from his family's Glen Allen home.
Reached last night, Fred Baumann, Russell Baumann's younger brother, said he had feared his nephew might try to harm himself if cornered by police.
"That was one of the concerns that his mother and I both had, if [the charges against him] were true," Fred Baumann said from his Albany, N.Y., home.
The 24-minute chase reached speeds of 120 mph, police told the Times-Union, but it was unclear how fast Baumann's car was traveling when he jumped.
After Baumann jumped, the northbound Lincoln veered across the grassy median as if it were heading toward the southbound lanes, but it suddenly turned back and headed toward the northbound lanes before slowing to a stop, according to the Times-Union. Miraculously, the car didn't crash or collide with any objects, the paper reported.
Police found the bodies of Russell and Diana Baumann on June 4 inside the family's home in the 10700 block of Brookley Road, less than a block from the Glen Allen Community Center. Both died from blunt-force trauma to the head.
Investigators found a baseball bat and a hammer, both with red stains, in the house near the bodies, along with a pipe and a couple of knives, according to court documents. Police said they believe both victims' heads had been covered with black trash bags, although only one was still covered when police entered.
Police have not offered a possible motive for the slayings, but family members said Adam Baumann had spiraled out of control in recent years, primarily from heavy drug use. Family members said he frequently used crack cocaine and stole money, jewelry and other items from his parents and stepmother, largely to support his drug habit.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post