Tuesday, 14 Apr 2026
Las Vegas News
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • News
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Las Vegas
  • Las
  • Vegas
  • news
  • Trump
  • crime
  • entertainment
  • politics
  • Nevada
  • man
Las Vegas NewsLas Vegas News
Font ResizerAa
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Search
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Crime

5 Criminal Cases That Turned Ordinary Lives Into National Headlines

By Matthias Binder April 14, 2026
5 Criminal Cases That Turned Ordinary Lives Into National Headlines
SHARE

Most people who end up at the center of a criminal case never expected to be there. They were college students, a woman dating a police officer, a bookkeeper at a nursing home, or a PhD student with academic ambitions. Then, in an instant or across a slow unraveling of hidden choices, their names became the ones read on national news broadcasts, debated on social media, and dissected in courtrooms watched by millions.

Contents
Luigi Mangione and the UnitedHealthcare CEO Killing: A Shooting That Ignited a NationBryan Kohberger and the Idaho Student Murders: A Ph.D. Student’s Dark SecretKaren Read and the Death of John O’Keefe: Two Trials, One Verdict, Unanswered QuestionsCarly Gregg and the Rankin County Murder: A Teen’s Deadly SecretAmy Elizabeth Curry and the Nursing Home Embezzlement: A Bookkeeper’s Slow Betrayal

These five cases, stretching from 2022 through 2025, share one defining quality: none of the people involved started out as public figures. The crimes themselves, the investigations that followed, and the verdicts that came down reshaped how Americans thought about justice, healthcare, grief, and the criminal system itself.

Luigi Mangione and the UnitedHealthcare CEO Killing: A Shooting That Ignited a Nation

Luigi Mangione and the UnitedHealthcare CEO Killing: A Shooting That Ignited a Nation (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Luigi Mangione and the UnitedHealthcare CEO Killing: A Shooting That Ignited a Nation (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Brian Thompson, the CEO of the American health insurance company UnitedHealthcare, was shot to death in Midtown Manhattan on December 4, 2024, as he walked outside an entrance to the New York Hilton Midtown. The words “delay,” “deny,” and “depose” were inscribed on the cartridge cases used during the shooting, a reference many observers immediately connected to a widely criticized insurance industry practice of rejecting policyholder claims. On December 9, 2024, authorities arrested 26-year-old Luigi Mangione in Altoona, Pennsylvania, and charged him in a Manhattan court with Thompson’s killing.

Mangione was indicted on eleven New York state charges and four federal charges, including first-degree murder in furtherance of terrorism, criminal possession of a weapon, and stalking. In September 2025, a New York state judge dismissed Mangione’s two terror-related murder charges, though he still faces a charge of second-degree murder. Federal prosecutors initially sought the death penalty, but a district judge dismissed two charges against Mangione in January 2026, including the federal murder charge that carried the possibility of execution. Opinion polls showed that a majority of American adult respondents found the killing unacceptable, but a plurality of younger respondents viewed the killing as acceptable, and a majority of Americans believed that health insurance claim denials contributed to Thompson’s death.

- Advertisement -

Bryan Kohberger and the Idaho Student Murders: A Ph.D. Student’s Dark Secret

Bryan Kohberger and the Idaho Student Murders: A Ph.D. Student's Dark Secret (Image Credits: Pexels)
Bryan Kohberger and the Idaho Student Murders: A Ph.D. Student’s Dark Secret (Image Credits: Pexels)

Kohberger, a former criminology Ph.D. student, admitted in court that he planned and carried out the brutal stabbings of Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin at their off-campus Moscow, Idaho, home in November 2022. Investigators later revealed that in July 2022, four months before the murders, Kohberger’s cell phone had begun pinging a cell tower near the victims’ home, and from July through the night of the killings, his phone connected to the area approximately 23 times between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m. The case gripped the country for more than two years, with the eventual resolution coming not through a jury trial but through a plea agreement that shocked several of the victims’ families.

Kohberger pleaded guilty to four counts of first-degree murder and burglary in the deaths of Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin. As part of the deal, he admitted to the killings and waived his right to appeal in exchange for prosecutors agreeing not to seek a death sentence. Idaho District Judge Steven Hippler sentenced Kohberger, 30, to four consecutive life sentences. Goncalves’ father publicly stated that Idaho had failed him and his family when the prosecutors let Kohberger accept a plea deal without the family’s input, a tension that underscored just how differently grief and justice can look to those living through both at the same time.

Karen Read and the Death of John O’Keefe: Two Trials, One Verdict, Unanswered Questions

Karen Read and the Death of John O'Keefe: Two Trials, One Verdict, Unanswered Questions (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Karen Read and the Death of John O’Keefe: Two Trials, One Verdict, Unanswered Questions (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Karen Read, 45, was accused of killing John O’Keefe in January 2022 by hitting him with her Lexus SUV and leaving him to die in the snow after a night of heavy drinking. Her defense team blamed O’Keefe’s fellow law enforcement officers for killing him in a house fight and dragging his body outside, then tampering with evidence in order to frame Read. Her 2024 trial ended in a hung jury, forcing a retrial that drew even greater national attention.

The retrial ended with the jury returning verdicts of not guilty on charges of second-degree murder, manslaughter while operating under the influence, and leaving the scene of an accident, though the jury found Read guilty of operating under the influence of alcohol. As she was cleared of the most serious charges, Read hugged her lawyers as booming cheers could be heard from the crowd outside. Judge Beverly Cannone sentenced Read to one year of probation on the DUI charge, the standard consequence for a first-time offender. A jury acquitted Karen Read of murder and manslaughter in the 2022 death of her boyfriend, bringing an end to a case that drew national attention – though what actually happened to John O’Keefe on that January night remains officially unresolved.

Carly Gregg and the Rankin County Murder: A Teen’s Deadly Secret

Carly Gregg and the Rankin County Murder: A Teen's Deadly Secret (Image Credits: Pixabay)
Carly Gregg and the Rankin County Murder: A Teen’s Deadly Secret (Image Credits: Pixabay)

In September 2024, Carly Gregg was sentenced to life in prison for killing her mother, life in prison for attempting to kill her stepfather, and 10 years for tampering with evidence. The sentences were handed down after a dramatic weeklong trial in Rankin County Circuit Court, where defense attorneys attempted to paint the teen as a troubled youth who had no memory of the violent incident. According to court records, Gregg shot and killed her mother, Ashley Smylie, a math teacher at Northwest Rankin High School, point blank with a .357 handgun. The case gripped Mississippi and reverberated nationally, partly because of how starkly it defied assumptions about family, youth, and the inner lives of teenagers.

- Advertisement -

Gregg then texted her stepfather, Heath, using her mother’s phone to ask when he would be home. After Heath arrived, the teen shot him in the shoulder, less than six inches from his face. The prosecution built a case that showed calculated, premeditated behavior, while defense attorneys tried to frame Gregg’s actions through the lens of trauma and mental health struggles. The jury rejected those arguments entirely, delivering a verdict that landed with the weight of finality in a community that had known Gregg’s mother as a beloved teacher.

Amy Elizabeth Curry and the Nursing Home Embezzlement: A Bookkeeper’s Slow Betrayal

Amy Elizabeth Curry and the Nursing Home Embezzlement: A Bookkeeper's Slow Betrayal (Image Credits: Pexels)
Amy Elizabeth Curry and the Nursing Home Embezzlement: A Bookkeeper’s Slow Betrayal (Image Credits: Pexels)

A case from 2024 reached its conclusion when 48-year-old Amy Elizabeth Curry, the former bookkeeper for Silver Bluff Village in Bethel, was sentenced to nearly six years in federal prison for embezzling more than $1.5 million from the retirement home. Curry’s embezzlement began in December 2022. Over the next five months, she fraudulently made 154 transfers from a Silver Bluff account to at least five different bank accounts managed by herself and her then-boyfriend. She also took measures to cover her tracks, including deleting the transfer history from the facility’s bank account.

Curry’s defense attorney claimed the embezzlement was the result of a crippling gambling addiction and stated that more than $700,000 of the embezzled money was spent gambling at a casino. Curry was ordered to pay $1,469,407.24 in restitution to Silver Bluff Village. The case drew attention precisely because of what it exposed about institutional vulnerability – a trusted position held for years, a slow theft that accelerated over months, and a victim that was a retirement home whose residents had no idea the funds meant to care for them were quietly disappearing. It’s not the most dramatic story in this list, but in some ways it’s one of the most quietly unsettling.

- Advertisement -

Each of these five cases arrived in the national conversation carrying a different kind of weight. Some raised questions about systemic injustice, others about grief and accountability, and at least one about the quiet damage a single trusted person can do when no one is watching closely enough. What they all shared was the ability to turn an otherwise unremarkable life into a story that millions of strangers felt compelled to follow.

Previous Article 4 Events That Escalated Into Some of the Most Notorious Crimes 4 Events That Escalated Into Some of the Most Notorious Crimes
Next Article 3 Historical Identity Mistakes That Changed What We Teach Today 3 Historical Identity Mistakes That Changed What We Teach Today
Advertisement
10 Times History Was Changed by Someone Being Late
10 Times History Was Changed by Someone Being Late
Entertainment
What If Some Widely Taught Theories Turned Out to Be Partly Wrong?
What If Some Widely Taught Theories Turned Out to Be Partly Wrong?
Education
The 13 Books That Shaped Entire Fields of Study and Thought
The 13 Books That Shaped Entire Fields of Study and Thought
Education
10 Disguises Criminals Used to Evade Authorities - Some Actually Worked
10 Disguises Criminals Used to Evade Authorities – Some Actually Worked
Crime
11 Times Everyday Objects Were Used to Hide Criminal Activity
11 Times Everyday Objects Were Used to Hide Criminal Activity
Crime
Categories
Archives
April 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
« Mar    
- Advertisement -

You Might Also Like

Las Vegas restaurateur, son of Piero’s founder, accused of loan fraud, shooting threat
Crime

Las Vegas Restaurateur and Son of Piero’s Founder Faces Loan Fraud and Threat of Shooting Charges

May 20, 2025
Henderson police: Man tried to kill woman over $100 debt
Crime

Man Attempts to Kill Woman Over $100 Debt in Shocking Incident

October 16, 2025
Crime

Las Vegas man discovered responsible of homicide, abandoning sufferer's physique in barrel

February 28, 2025
Operation Digital Shield: How the FBI Just Took Down a Global Identity Theft Ring
Crime

Operation Digital Shield: How the FBI Just Took Down a Global Identity Theft Ring

March 31, 2026

© Las Vegas News. All Rights Reserved – Some articles are generated by AI.

A WD Strategies Brand.

Go to mobile version
Welcome to Foxiz
Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?