Sexy Criminal Jeremy Meeks Is Out Of Prison And Modeling 


Jeremy Meeks, dubbed the world’s most sexiest criminal, or “the hot felon,” is out of prison and ready to start modeling!

His mugshot racked up more than 80,000 likes after it was posted on the Stockton Police Department’s Facebook page in 2014 when he was charged with possession of a firearm.

As the attention poured in, Meeks was offered product endorsements and modeling contracts. Women offered to pay his bail and let him hide out at their houses.

Meeks is now a free man and ready to get out there and see what the modeling world has to offer. He took to his Instagram and posted the following:

‘I want to thank my family and everybody for all your love, support and prayers. I’m overwhelmed and grateful for what lies ahead. I’m ready.’

He told ABC News that he had been putting in time at the gym to be ready for his close-ups when he left prison.

‘I eat healthy. I do a lot of push-ups, pull-ups, dips, burpees, and I stay very active.’

Mr. Meeks isn’t the only good looking criminal offered the chance to cash in on his “killer looks.”

Stephanie Beaudoinof Canada also made headlines after she was offered modeling contracts as a result of being arrested on theft charges. The media nicknamed her, The World’s Hottest Thief, when her mugshot went viral on Facebook.

What do you think of criminals being made overnight celebrities as a result of their crimes? 

Join the discussion.

 

Female Store Clerk Chases Off Robber With Her Bare Hands And A Hammer

 

Georgia gas station employee fought off would be robber with her bare hands and a hammer.
 
This female might be one of the toughest chicks I’ve seen in awhile. She brought a hammer to the gunfight. Talk about badass! 

A would be robber came into to the Keysville Convenience Store on employee Bhumika Patel’s shift with intensions of sticking up the place. Instead of getting away with the cash, he ended up getting attacked by the fiesty lady clerk. Ultimately, he was chased out of the store by Patel and her hammer. LOL!
Here’s the gist:

The teenager waltzed into the gas station shop on Tuesday, picked up a can of Mountain Dew and approached the counter to pay for the soda. 

When Patel popped open cash register’s drawer to make change, the normal transition turned violent: the teen whipped out a gun from his hoodie pocket and pointed it at the clerk.

 

Patel told WFXG news after the stickup:

“I said, ‘Go ahead. You wanna shoot me? Go ahead.’” 

Patel credits her faith in a higher power for her stoic bravery in the ordeal:   

“I just believe strongly in my religion and my God, if he wants to save me, nobody can touch me,” she said. “That’s why I’m like, ‘No.’ I have my God everywhere with me.”

 “That’s why I’m like, ‘No.’ I have my God everywhere with me.”

NC Couple Met At A Doughnut Shop 67 Years Ago Still Married

 

Sam and Wiloree Johnson in the living room of their home in Raleigh, N.C., on Feb. 3, 2016. (Jill Knight/Raleigh News
 
“She’s my first wife,” jokes Sam Johnson. “The only one I’ll ever have.”

Wiloree throws her head back and laughs. “Oh my,” she says under her breath while looking at Sam. It’s his favorite joke, even after 67 years of marriage.

Sam and Wiloree Johnson, both 91 years old, have a love story made for movie screens.

The pair met on Fayetteville Street in Raleigh the 1940s. Wiloree was with friends headed to the doughnut shop when Sam first saw her. He met them there and offered the girls a ride home, saving them the bus fare. The Johnsons’ children will tell you that “Momma pushed a friend out of the way” that day to make sure Sam was hers. She’ll laugh and tell you it wasn’t a push, but a gentle nudge.

Sam, an N.C. State University graduate who had recently returned from serving in the U.S. Air Force, had found the one that made his heart beat faster.

After wedding in Bethel Hill in 1948, Sam and Wiloree raised a family in Raleigh.

They’ve shared kisses on the Boylan Street bridge, held hands walking down Fayetteville Street and maintained a sewing machine shop in Raleigh for more than 50 years.

In a small concrete building just a stone’s throw from Lake Wheeler Road, you’ll find Sam even today sitting in the bright window light of the Archie Johnson & Sons sewing machine shop. Wiloree jokes that Sam “loves those sewing machines more than me.”

Each weekday, Sam walks a couple hundred feet to the shop to work on sewing machines. Wiloree works in the kitchen to prepare a big lunch for her husband and some of her grown children, who now lend a hand in the shop that was passed down to Sam from his father. They eat leftovers for dinner once Sam comes in from the shop and spend time watching TV together in the evening before bed.

Would they change anything about their marriage?

“When we lived out in the other house we had some kind of refrigerator that had a big old tank on it,” Wiloree said. “I would have liked to have had a better refrigerator.”

Theirs is a love so sweet the only regret is the quality of the appliances in the house years ago.

Almost.

“Nothing is perfect,” Wiloree cautions. “Nothing is going to go good all of the time. But if you love each other like you’re supposed to love each other, you’ll put up with anything.

“I can’t be right all of the time,” she says, laughing.

“You just about are,” Sam adds.

By Jill Knight – The News & Observer