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Identical twin confesses to murder after brother spends 20 years in prison

Mr Dugar was released after his brothers confession

A man spent 20 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. The statement is bound to send chills down anyone’s spine but this has been Kevin Dugar’s reality for nearly two decades.

Mr Dugar, who is a resident of Chicago, was convicted in 2005 and sentenced to 54 years in prison for murder. But last week, he walked out of the Cook County jail following a revelation by his twin brother, Karl Smith.

Mr Dugar’s release came as a result of a letter Mr Smith sent, confessing to the gang-related shooting that confined his brother behind bars for 20 years.

Had it not been for Mr Smith’s confession letter, Mr Dugar would have remained incarcerated well into his 70s.

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According to reports, the brothers had always been inseparable – so much so that even relatives, friends, and teachers could not always tell them apart.

The two, however, had different surnames as Mr Smith took his mother’s maiden name. As men in their 20s, the duo turned to selling drugs in Chicago. Even here, they were referred to as one entity: “Twin.”

Gang-related violence followed. Things changed for the twins when a gunman opened fire on three people in Chicago’s Uptown area, killing one man and wounding another.

The police nabbed Mr Dugar, who maintained his innocence and refused a plea deal for a reduced jail term of 11 years. At that point, Mr Dugar even asked his twin if he had a hand to play in the murder. Mr Smith denied everything, and his brother believed him.

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Mr Smith, who was already serving a 99-year sentence for a separate armed robbery that resulted in the death of a six-year-old boy, confessed to the crime in 2013. In the letter – which came almost a decade too late – Mr Smith said that before it (crime) killed him, he needed to get it off his chest, and even sought forgiveness from Mr Dugar. –ndtv.com

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 Message in bottle floats from Canada to Ireland in 13 years

Message in a bottle
Message in a bottle

 A message in a bottle launched by visitors to Newfoundland’s Bell Island was found washed up on an Irish beach nearly 13 years later, after apparently crossing the Atlantic Ocean.

Kate Gay said she was walking a Dingle Peninsula beach this week when she spotted the wine bottle with a sheet of paper inside.

Gay showed the bottle to mem­bers of Creative Ireland NeartnaM­acharaí during a meeting at her house that evening, and they broke the bottle open.

The note, written by a couple named Brad and Anita, was dated Sept. 12, 2012. The letter described the couple’s day trip to Bell Island.

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There was a phone number on the letter, but there was no answer when group members tried to call.

The Maharees Heritage and Con­servation group posted photos of the bottleto social media on Mon­day, and within an hour group mem­bers were messaging with Anita.

Group member Martha Farrell said Anita reported that she and Brad had married in 2016 and are still together to this day. -upi.com

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 Woman earns world record for collection of 15,485 egg cups

 A Spanish woman who has been collecting egg cups for over 50 years earned a Guinness World Record when her collection was tallied at 15,485 items.

María José Fuster recruited two witnesses to help her tally her collection at a community center in her hometown of Campo, Spain.

Fuster’s collection includes mul­tiple patterns, colors, designs and even novelty cups bearing the im­ages of characters including Super­man, Betty Boop and Garfield.

Fuster maintains two blogs relat­ed to her hobby — one to catalog each piece, and one to list the names of the people who have do­nated egg cups to her collection.

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Some of her most prized egg cups, about 1,143 of them, are currently on display at a local museum.

-upi.com

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