Author Archives: Shelia

UnAuthorized Press Release

Murder Divided by Two

Two Authors

One Mystery Series

DALLAS, TX – May 2011 – National Best Selling Authors Shelia Goss and John A Wooden have written a fast paced suspense thriller. UnAuthorized will keep readers on the edge of their seats.  UnAuthorized is currently available as an e-book (JBOW Productions; May 2010; ISBN: 0-9767404-2-7; $2.99 U.S.) from all the online retailers and will later be available in paperback.  

About UnAuthorized:

What happens when a know it all reporter meets an overworked detective – you get UnAuthorized.

Rachel Murphy is used to getting threats. It came with the job of being one of the top investigative reporters in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area. Michael Henderson has received many accolades as a detective with the Dallas Police Department. He is known for investigating a case with the tenacity of a hungry lion in search of his prey.

Detective Henderson’s investigation into a brutal murder leads him to Rachel Murphy’s doorstep. Their personalities immediately clash. Rachel sees Michael as an obnoxious and overbearing cop. Michael sees Rachel as a meddlesome overeager reporter. In order to solve the case, they must push their personal feelings to the side and work together.

Danger and suspense draws these two unlikely people together in more ways than one.

About the Authors:

Shelia M. Goss is the Essence Magazine & Black Expressions Book Club Best-Selling author of My Invisible Husband, Roses are Thorns, Paige’s Web, Double Platinum, His Invisible Wife, Hollywood Deception, Delilah, Savannah’s Curse, Ruthless (Jan 2012), and the teen series The Lip Gloss Chronicles: The Ultimate Test, Splitsville, Paper Thin & Secrets Untold. Besides writing fiction, Shelia is a freelance writer. She’s also the recipient of three Shades of Romance Magazine Readers Choice Multi-Cultural Awards and honored as a Literary Diva: The Top 100 Most Admired African American Women in Literature. To learn more, visit her website: www.sheliagoss.com  or follow her on Facebook www.facebook.com/sheliagoss.

John A. Wooden is a retired Major from the U.S. Air Force, a feature writer/columnist for The Perspective magazine in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and a freelance editor and ghostwriter who clients have appeared on several bestsellers’ lists. His first novel, A Collection of Thoughts, was an expression of his thoughts on life and love. His second and third novels, A Moment of Justice, and An Eye for a Deadly Eye, were murder/suspense thrillers that introduced the world to Special Agent Kenny “KC” Carson, and brought his unique writing style to the forefront of the literary industry. John is the proud father of a son and daughter. To learn more, visit his website: www.jwooden.com.

To schedule Ms. Goss or Mr. Wooden for an interview, contact:
email: sheliagoss@aol.com or jwooden61@yahoo.com


Happy New Year from the Dynamic Duo

We hope 2008 brings you your hearts desire. Our collaboration is complete; however we’re going through the editing stages. We can’t wait to reveal the final book to the masses, but in the meantime, we want to thank you for stopping by. Soon we’ll be posting exerpts.


Can You Solve These?

Try to figure out these three mysteries. The answers will be posted in another post.

Mystery one:

             A man was found murdered Sunday morning.  His wife
immediately called the police

The police questioned the wife and staff and got these answers:

             The wife said she was sleeping.

             The cook was preparing breakfast.

             The gardener was gathering vegetables.

             The maid was getting the mail.

             The butler was polishing shoes in the pantry.

             The police instantly arrest ed the murderer.  Who did it
and how did they know?

Mystery two:

             A man walks into his bathroom and shoots himself right
between the eyes using a real gun with real bullets.

He walks out alive, with no blood anywhere and no, he didn’t miss and he
wasn’t Superman or any other crusader wearing a cape.

             How did he do this?

Mystery three:

Old Mr. Teddy was found dead in his study by Mr. Fiend.  Mr.

Fiend recounted his dismal discovery to the police:

“I was walking by Mr. Teddy’s house when I thought I would just

pop in for a visit. I noticed his study light was on and I decided to
peek in from the outside to see if he was in there. There was frost on
the window, so I had to wipe it away to see inside.

That is when I saw his body.  So I kicked in the front door to

confirm my suspicions of foul play.  I called the police immediately
afterward.”

The officer immediately arrested Mr. Fiend for the murder of Mr.

Teddy.

How did he know Mr. Fiend was lying?


Gunman Wounds Schoolmates

I was in shock when I saw this on the  news wire:

CLEVELAND (Oct. 10) – A 14-year-old suspended student, dressed in black, opened fire in his downtown high school Wednesday, wounding four people as terrified schoolmates hid in closets and bathrooms and huddled under laboratory desks. He then killed himself. To read more…


Denzel Washington stars in American Gangster

I recently found out that Denzel Washington’s upcoming movie “American Gangster” is based on the real-life notorious Frank Lucas. He was said to have made $1 million a day selling drugs in Harlem.

Federal judge Sterling Johnson, who was special narcotics prosecutor in New York at the time of Lucas’s crimes called Lucas’s operation “one of the most outrageous international dope-smuggling gangs ever, an innovator who got his own connection outside the U.S. and then sold the stuff himself in the street.”

I surfed upon this article on Frank Lucas.  I think you will find it interesting. Check it out for yourself by clicking here.

To see the movie trailer, see below:

Add Video to QuickList

AMERICAN GANGSTER- Full Trailer

Synopsis:
American Gangster is a 2007 crime film written by Steve Zaillian and directed by Ridley Scott. The film stars Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe. Washington portrays Frank Lucas, a real-life heroin kingpin from Manhattan who smuggled the drug into the country in the coffins of American soldiers returning from the Vietnam War. Crowe portrays…
(more)


Free Jena 6

The situation in Jena, LA outrages me and others of African-American descent because it is 2007 and we are still dealing with injustices of this nature. I’m outraged about not only this incident but other incidents that I know personally of. Maybe this time with national exposure, these 6 young men can get justice.  Maybe other young Black men who have been given unfair treatment will benefit from the attention that Jena 6 is now getting.

I was listening to Rev. Jesse Jackson this morning, who has been back and forth to Jena, and some of the things he said reminded you of documentaries we watched in school about things that happened in the ’50s and ’60s.

The struggle for racial justice didn’t stop in the 1960′s, but its an ongoing fight.

I came across this interview on Democracy Now.

Democracy Now! correspondent Jacquie Soohen has more on the story from Jena.

    JESSE BEARD: Black girls over there, black boys right here. Some black people standing right — a couple. All the band geeks right there. White folks under the tree. And then you might — it’s like…JACQUIE SOOHEN: Jesse Beard, a freshman in high school and one of Jena 6, took us to where the nooses were hung.JESSE BEARD: One day, I just wanted to — maybe the first, second day, we started riding the bus, me and Robert. And we came through, and I seen something hanging there. I told Robert. He looked at it. He’s like, “Them nooses right there.” He was getting mad. Everybody was getting — I started getting mad. By the time everybody came, they was trying to cut them down.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: Robert Bailey, seventeen years old and a safety receiver for the school football team, is another of the Jena 6 facing life behind bars. He described his reaction to the nooses.

    ROBERT BAILEY: It was in the early morning. I seen them hanging. I’m thinking the KKK, you know, were hanging nooses. They want to hang somebody. Real nooses, the ones you see on TV are the kind of nooses they were, the ones they play in the movies and they were hanging all the people, you know, and the thing dropped, those were the kind of nooses they were. I know it was somebody white that hung the nooses in the tree. You know, I don’t know another way to put it, but, you know, I was disappointed, because, you know, we do little pranks — you know, toilet paper, that’s a prank, you know what I’m saying? Paper all over the square, all the pranks they used to do, that’s pranks. Nooses hanging there — nooses ain’t no prank.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: The school’s superintendent dismissed the nooses as a prank, and after three days’ suspension, the three white students who hung the nooses were allowed back to school. Caseptla Bailey, Robert’s mother, said the school did not inform the parents of the incident.

    CASEPTLA BAILEY: The school didn’t tell me. I didn’t know that it happened, so therefore I didn’t call to find out what happened on that particular day.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: To Caseptla Bailey, the meaning of the nooses was clear.

    CASEPTLA BAILEY: It meant hatred, to the other race. It meant that “We’re going to kill you, you’re going to die.” You know, it sent a message: “This is not the place for you to sit. This is not your damn tree. Do not sit here. You know, you ought to remain in your place, know your place and stay in your place. You’re out of your boundaries.” And the first thing now that the sheriff department or that the chief of police want to say that — as well as the superintendent — one had nothing to do with the other. Now, come on now!

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: Most people we spoke to in Jena’s white community, however, see no connection between the students’ charges and race. Barbara Murphy, the town librarian, claims there isn’t a race problem in Jena.

    BARBARA MURPHY: We don’t have a race problem. It’s not black against white. It’s crime. The nooses? I don’t even know why they were there, what they were supposed to mean. There’s pranks all the time, of one type or another, going on. And it just didn’t seem to be racist to me.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: A few days after the nooses were hung, the entire black student body staged an impromptu demonstration, crowding underneath the tree during lunch hour. Justin Purvis, the student who first asked to sit underneath the tree, described how the protest came about.

    JUSTIN PURVIS: It was like, the first beginning, in the courtyard, they said, “Y’all want to go stand under the tree?” We said, “Yeah.” They said, “If you go, I’ll go. If you go, I’ll go.” One person went, the next person went, everybody else just went.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: The school responded to the protest by calling police and the district attorney. At an assembly the same day, the District Attorney Reed Walters, accompanied by armed policeman, addressed the students. Substitute teacher Michelle Rogers, one of the few black teachers at the school, was there. She recalls the DA’s words to the assembled high schoolers.

    MICHELLE ROGERS: The kids didn’t say anything. They were listening. The kids were quiet. And so, District Attorney Reed Walters, you know, proceeded to tell those kids that “I could end your lives with the stroke of a pen.” And the kids were just — it was like in awe that the district — you know, Reed Walters would tell these kids that. He held a pen in his hand and told those kids that, “See this pen in my hand? I can end your lives with the stroke of a pen.”

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: A series of incidents followed throughout the fall. In October, a black student was beaten for entering a private all-white party. Later that month, a white student pulled a gun on a group of black students at a gas station, claiming self-defense. The black students wrestled the gun away and reported the incident to police. They were charged with assault and robbery of the gun. No charges were ever filed against the white students in either incident. Then, in late November, someone tried to burn down the high school, creating even more tension.

    Four days later, a white student was allegedly attacked in a school fight. The victim was taken to hospital and released shortly with a concussion. He attended a school function that evening. Six black students were charged with attempted second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder, on charges that leave them facing between twenty and one hundred years in jail. The defendants, ranging in age from fifteen to seventeen, had their bonds set at between $70,000 and $138,000. The attack was written up in the local paper as fact, and DA Reed Walters published a statement in which he said, “When you are convicted, I will seek the maximum penalty allowed by law.”

    MINISTER: We have come today to stand against what we consider to be a great evil.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: Since their arrest, the defendants’ families have been speaking out and fighting for the release of their sons. Two of the six, including Mychal Bell, who was recently convicted, were unable to make bond and have spent close to seven months in jail to date.

    CASEPTLA BAILEY: No justice!

    PROTESTERS: No peace!

    CASEPTLA BAILEY: No justice!

    PROTESTERS: No peace!

    CASEPTLA BAILEY: No justice!

    PROTESTERS: No peace!

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: Caseptla Bailey began writing letters to state and national agencies, including the Department of Justice, immediately after the charges were filed.

    CASEPTLA BAILEY: The first thing was devastation. You know, I was down when it first happened. You know, I was very devastated. I was hurt, upset, angry, mad, frustrated. You know, I had so many emotions, crying a lot of nights, you know, trying to figure out where can I go from here. You know, a lot of times when you’re backed into a corner or you’re backed into a wall, naturally you’re going to come out fighting. You know, you’re not going to — you’re either going to fall and die, or you’re going to come out fighting.

    You know, I’m just sending out these letters to anyone that would have a listening ear and to anyone that, you know, I thought that might help the situation. That’s how I fight back, you know, by putting the pen to the paper.

    They want to take these kids — my son, as well as all these other children — lock them up, throw away the key. You know, that’s a tradition for black males. So they want to keep that tradition going, because they want to keep institutionalized slavery alive and well.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: At a friendly pickup game of football, Caseptla’s son Robert shows off the skills that made him a star player of the high school football team. Robert was in jail for over two months before his mother was able to raise the money for her son’s bond using three pieces of property from different family members. Seventeen-year-old Robert Bailey has no criminal record.

    ROBERT BAILEY: I ain’t got no criminal record, nothing. I ain’t got no probation, community service or nothing, nothing like that. The DA, he ain’t after finding the truth. That’s what a DA’s for, to after find the truth, you know, of the case. He’s just, you know, trying to put me up in a jail cell, for life. Fifty years, twenty-five to a hundred years, you can just say “forever.” Twenty years is forever, to me.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: Robert wasn’t the only one with a promising future. All of the Jena 6 were athletes, and five of the six were on the high school football team. Marcus Jones, the father of seventeen-year-old Mychal Bell, has a stack of scholarship offers for his son.

    MARCUS JONES: LSU, Southern Miss, Ol’ Miss, University of New York…

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: Mychal is a star running back and a strong student who is being actively scouted by a number of colleges.

    MARCUS JONES: We’re not blaming the victim for the charges or none of that. The DA is a racist DA. You know, I’m not calling him out for being a racist. I’m calling him out as being a racist due to his track record. The reason we is taking a stand for our kids for what he’s not doing is right, ’cause, you know, we’re tired of it, you know, ’cause if we, you know, we sat down and lay back and let him railroad our kids, too, he’s going to continue to do that to black people in this town. You know, so we have to take a stand now. Somebody has to take a stand now. If not, he’s going to continue to fill the prisons up with black people more and more.

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: Mr. Bell believes that his son is learning a valuable lesson from this experience.

    MARCUS JONES: One of the best lessons that my son could learn that’s one of the best lessons: to know what it is to be black now. You know, if this don’t teach him what it is to be black now, I don’t know what will. But he’s seventeen now. You know, he’s got a lot of life left ahead of him. And the day he set foot out of jail, I’m going to tell him, I’m going to tell him again, “You know what it is to be black now. Here it is.”

    JACQUIE SOOHEN: For Democracy Now!, this is Jacquie Soohen, reporting from Jena, Louisiana.

Other links:

More information on Jena 6: http://www.freethejena6.org/

List of Email, addresses, etc of senators/congressman, etc.: http://www.steveharvey.com/whatsnow/


Update – OJ Simpson Faces Kidnapping Charges

(AP Photo/Isaac Brekken)

O.J. can’t stay out of the news. This will an interesting case to follow.  The question is will O.J. now face some jail time?

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Police arrested O.J. Simpson on Sunday, saying he was part of an armed group who burst into a Las Vegas hotel room and snatched memorabilia that documented his own sports career, long ago eclipsed by scandal.

The arrest starts a new legal odyssey for the fallen football star who more than a decade ago was acquitted of the slayings of his ex-wife and a friend, and opens the possibility he could spend decades behind bars.

Simpson was taken away from The Palms casino-hotel by plainclothes officers a day after the arrest of a golfing buddy who police say accompanied him with a gun in the Thursday night holdup. Handcuffed and wearing a golf shirt and jeans, Simpson was placed in an SUV. He was later ordered by a judge to be held without bail, police said.

“He was very cooperative, there were no issues,” Capt. James Dillon said.

Simpson was at the Clark County Detention Center on Sunday night for booking on two counts of robbery with a deadly weapon, two counts of assault with a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit a crime and burglary with a firearm, police said. The district attorney, meanwhile, said he expected Simpson to ultimately be charged with seven felonies and one gross misdemeanor.

If convicted of the booking charges, Simpson would face up to 30 years in state prison on each robbery count alone.

“He is facing a lot of time,” said Clark County District Attorney David Roger.

Simpson, 60, has said he and other people were retrieving items that belonged to him. Simpson has said there were no guns involved and that he went to the room at the casino only to get stolen mementos that included his Hall of Fame certificate and a picture of the running back with J. Edgar Hoover.

Simpson told The Associated Press on Saturday that he did not call the police to help reclaim the items because he has found the police unresponsive to him ever since his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ron Goldman, were killed in 1994.

To read more…

****UPDATE – OJ facing kidnapping charges…Read more…


MN Toe Licker Nabbed

From the Smoking Gun:

Minnesota Toe Licker Nabbed

After mugging, creep told victim, “Now I’m going to suck your feet.”

SEPTEMBER 11–Meet Carlton Davis. The Minnesota man, 26, is facing felony charges for allegedly stealing a cell phone and purse from a woman he mugged on a St. Paul street early Saturday morning. According to police, after the woman turned over her belongings, Davis announced, “Now I’m going to suck your feet.” Which he did, after the 24-year-old victim removed her shoes. Davis, who fled when passersby approached, was apprehended by cops a few blocks from the crime scene. 

If you want to see a picture of this crazy dude, click here.


Megan Williams Raped and Tortured

A senseless crime. It’s sickening to read. I don’t even want to imagine what this young lady had to go through at the hands of some wicked people.

Does Anybody Care?

Williams was abducted and allegedly held for seven days in a house near Charleston, West Virginia. The young black woman was beaten, sexually assaulted and stabbed by six white people who used racial slurs while torturing her. Williams, 23, was also forced to eat rat and dog feces and drink out of the toilet.

Police were tipped off anonymously by a witness, and found Williams on Saturday. Police said Williams limped to the door of the house saying “Help me,” as one of the six suspects sat on the porch telling police no one else was there. Police are still looking for two suspects.

To read more…


Introducing the Dynamic Duo

Mystery Writer John A Wooden and Women’s Fiction Writer Shelia M Goss team up for a three book suspense series that will surely keep you on the edge of your seat.

 

Meet investigative reporter, Rachel Murphy and Detective Michael Henderson.  Separately they are a force to be reckoned with; together, the chemistry between the two could be deadly. Unauthorized is the first book in the series and will take readers on a journey into the world of medicine.

 

Meet John A. Wooden

John A. Wooden is a budding author in the mystery/suspense thriller genre. His goal is to become one of the top “mystery” writers in the world. He is a retired Major from the U.S. Air Force, a feature writer/columnist for The Perspective magazine in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and a freelance editor who clients have appeared on the Essence Bestseller’s List four times. His first novel, A Collection of Thoughts, was an expression of his thoughts on life and love. His second novel, A Moment of Justice, A Lifetime of Vengeance, is a murder/suspense thriller that spans thirty years and brings his unique writing style to the forefront of the literary industry. It is also the novel that made many stand and take notice to his storytelling skills. The young man, who wanted to see the world as a child, now considers the world as his stage for his many stories of suspense and mystery. He is the proud father of a young adult son and a beautiful teenage daughter.

 

More about Shelia:

Shelia M Goss is the author of the Essence Magazine and Black Expressions Book Club Best seller My Invisible Husband, Roses are thorns, Violets are true, Paige’s Web and Double Platinum.  Shelia has received numerous accolades over the years, including 2006 Infini’s Outstanding Author, Literary Divas: The Top 100+ Most Admired African-American Women in Literature,  Honorable mention in a New York Times article and Writer’s Digest article and the recipient of three Shades of Romance Magazine Reader’s Choice Awards. Besides writing fiction, Shelia is an entertainment writer.  To learn more, visit her website: www.sheliagoss.com.

 

John and Shelia will be posting more about the book later. In the meantime, the two will begin posting their journey to publishing and other tidbits.


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