Bizarre astronaut story

Avery

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Jul 7, 2003
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When you read this, it makes you wonder how useful are the numerous psychological tests that NASA gives its prospective astronauts!

Police charge U.S. astronaut with attempted murder

06/02/2007 3:00:27 PM

U.S. astronaut Lisa Nowak, already accused of trying to kidnap a romantic rival, has been charged with attempted murder and now faces an additional US$10,000 bond for her release.

Police say U.S. Navy Capt. Lisa Nowak drove thousands of kilometers from her Houston home to the Orlando International Airport to confront Colleen Shipman, a woman she believed was a rival for the affections of Navy Cmdr. William Oefelein.

She wore a diaper on the long journey so she wouldn't have to stop to urinate, and police say they found a steel mallet, knife, rubber tubing and garbage bags in her possession.

"The intent was there to do serious bodily injury or death," claimed Orlando Police Sgt. Barb Jones.

Orange County Circuit Judge Mike Murphy had earlier granted $15,500 bail for Nowak, 43, who was arrested Monday on charges including battery and attempted kidnapping.

But shortly before she was to be released, police charged her with attempted second-degree murder and bail was raised by US$10,000.

Nowak, a married flight engineer with three children, was initially charged with destruction of evidence, but the judge said he found no probable cause for that charge.

Chief astronaut Steve Lindsey, who flew with Nowak to the international space station last July aboard space shuttle Discovery, and fellow astronaut Chris Ferguson attended the hearing.

"Our primary concern is her health and well-being and that she get through this," Lindsey told reporters afterward.

Oefelein, Nowak's apparent love interest, was a pilot during space shuttle Discovery's trip to the space station last December.

But in a taped statement given to police, Nowak described her connection to Oefelein as "more than a working relationship but less than a romantic relationship."

The arrest affidavit says that when she found out that Shipman was flying to Orlando from Houston, Nowak decided to confront her.

Nowak raced from Houston to Orlando. And then, dressed in a dark wig, glasses and a trench coat, she boarded an airport bus that Shipman took to her car in an airport parking lot.

Shipman told police she noticed someone following her, hurried inside the car and locked the doors, according to the arrest affidavit.

Nowak tapped on the window, tried to open the car door and asked for a ride.

Shipman refused but rolled down the car window a few centimetres when Nowak started crying. Nowak then sprayed a chemical into Shipman's car that burned her eyes, the affidavit said.

Shipman drove away and called the police at about 3:50 a.m., the affidavit says.

Shipman told authorities she had been followed from the airport to a parking lot by a woman wearing a trench coat with a hood pulled over her head.

An officer who followed Nowak spotted her throw away a bag containing the wig and a BB gun, police said.

Inside Nowak's vehicle, which was parked at a nearby motel, authorities uncovered a pepper spray package, an unused BB-gun cartridge, latex gloves and emails between Shipman and Oefelein.

They also discovered directions to Shipman's house and receipts indicating Nowak paid only in cash during her trip from Houston, including for her hotel stay.

They also found Shipman's home address and handwritten directions to the address, the arrest affidavit said.

In her statement to police, Nowak said she did not intend to physically harm Shipman, but only wanted to scare Shipman into talking with her.

"If you were just going to talk to someone, I don't know that you would need a wig, a trench coat, an air cartridge BB gun and pepper spray,'' said Sgt. Barbara Jones, a spokeswoman for the Orlando Police Department.

"It's just really a very sad case. ... Now she ends up finding herself on the other side of the law with some very serious charges.''

Nowak could face a maximum of life in prison if convicted of attempted kidnapping.

According to NASA's official biography, Nowak is married with three children. During her 13-day mission on Discovery in July she operated the robotic arm during three spacewalks.

Oefelein is unmarried. He piloted Discovery in December as part of a separate mission that continued construction on the International Space Station. He has two children, according to a NASA biography.

The Orlando Sentinel described Shipman as a captain in the U.S. Air Force assigned to the 45th Launch Support Squadron at Patrick Air Force Base, near the Kennedy Space Center.

Nowak and Oefelein trained together but never flew together.

NASA spokesperson Doug Peterson told CTV Newsnet that Nowak's status with the astronaut corps will be "on hold" for a while -- "until we find out ... how this is all going to turn out. Those particular issues are being worked out now within NASA and the astronaut office," Peterson said in a phone interview from Johnson Space Station in Houston, Texas.

Peterson said his organization is "stunned" by the whole situation.

"We're perplexed by it and also deeply concerned about Lisa Nowak and everyone else involved in this situation," he said.

"It's just an amazing turn of events -- something we've never seen before."
 

PeterLongwood

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Jul 23, 2006
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This story keeps getting weirder and weirder

Astronaut to face attempted murder charge

Story Highlights
• NEW: Judge grants bail; planned attempted murder charge prevents release
• Lisa Marie Nowak can't contact alleged victim, must wear tracking device
• Both were vying for the affection of astronaut Bill Oefelein, police report says
• Nowak, 43, is married with three children; she's been astronaut since 1996


ORLANDO, Florida (CNN) -- A judge granted bail Tuesday to a NASA astronaut charged with pepper-spraying a romantic rival before attempting to kidnap her from a parking lot at the Orlando airport.

However, Nowak was not released because Orlando police were planning to add a charge of attempted first-degree murder to the three charges she already faced, a jail spokesman said.

Before the new charge was filed, the judge warned that Navy Capt. Lisa Marie Nowak is to have no contact with NASA engineer Colleen Shipman and must wear a GPS, or global positioning satellite device, to ensure she does not travel east of Orange County, where Shipman lives.

The charges against Nowak stem from an alleged love triangle in which Nowak and Shipman were competing for the affections of astronaut Bill Oefelein, police said.

The judge emphasized to Nowak that she could not have any contact with Shipman, good or bad. The judge told her she couldn't even send flowers to apologize.

Col. Steve Lindsey, Nowak's superior and commander of her space shuttle mission last July, testified Nowak had no reason to have any contact with Shipman and said the GPS device would not hamper Nowak's work.

Nowak's attorney, Donald Lykkebak, told the judge that his client has an "exemplary record of commitment" and should be released without bond.

"At times like this, judge, one's good works must count for something," Lykkebak said.

The judge ordered bail set at $15,500 on three counts. A future court date was not set.

Nowak, 43, a married mother of three, has been charged with battery, attempted kidnapping and attempted vehicle burglary with battery. She also was initially charged with destruction of evidence, but the judge said he found no probable cause for that charge.

Nowak's cuffed hands were shackled to her waist as she stood before the judge. She looked down and remained still during most of the hearing but shook her head when prosecutors said she planned to kidnap and harm Shipman.

Nowak, who flew her first shuttle mission as a mission specialist aboard Discovery in July, and Shipman were both reported to be "in a relationship" with Oefelein, a Navy commander, according to a police report of the incident.

Nowak drove almost 1,000 miles from Houston, Texas, to Orlando on Monday to confront Shipman about her alleged relationship with Oefelein, according to a police report.

Shipman, an Air Force captain and engineer assigned to the 45th Launch Support Squadron at Patrick Air Force Base, was flying the same route, the report said.

Nowak wore a diaper during the 14-hour drive so that she wouldn't have to stop for bathroom breaks, the report said. Astronauts wear what NASA calls maximum-absorbency garments to collect their waste during space travel.

Shipman told police she arrived at the Orlando International Airport about 1 a.m. and had to wait two hours for her luggage.

As Shipman walked to her car she noticed a woman in a trench coat who appeared to be following her, the police report said. She quickly jumped into her car and heard "running footsteps" behind her, Shipman told police.

Nowak slapped the window of the car as Shipman locked it, the report said. Nowak then tried to open the car door, saying that her ride had not arrived.

Shipman told Nowak she would send for help, but when Nowak said she couldn't hear her and started to cry, Shipman cracked her window, the report said. The 2-inch space in the window was all Nowak needed to send pepper spray into the car, police said.

Her eyes burning, Shipman drove to a tollbooth and reported the incident.

When an officer found Nowak at a bus stop, she was wearing a different coat, and the officer observed her putting items in a trash can, the police report said. The officer retrieved a wig and a BB gun from the trash can, the report said.

Police found in Nowak's bag a tan trench coat, a new steel mallet, a folding knife with a 4-inch blade, 3 to 4 feet of rubber tubing, large plastic garbage bags and about $600 in cash, the report said.

Nowak acknowledged details of Shipman's allegations, according to police, and allowed officers to search her car. There, police found diapers, six latex gloves, directions from Houston to Orlando International Airport, e-mails from Shipman to Oefelein, a letter indicating how much she loved Oefelein and directions to Shipman's home address in Florida, the report said.

Nowak told police she didn't intend to harm Shipman and "that she only wanted to scare Ms. Shipman into talking with her," a police report said. Asked about the BB gun, Nowak told police it "was going to be used to entice Ms. Shipman to talk with her," the report said.

According to the report, she told police that her relationship with Oefelein was "more than a working relationship but less than a romantic relationship."

Nowak has been an astronaut since 1996. Oefelein, 41, was the pilot of the last shuttle mission, also aboard Discovery, which flew in December.

Oefelein would not make any comments through NASA at this time, Johnson Space Center spokeswoman Eileen Hawley said.

Lindsey and Navy Capt. Chris Ferguson went to Florida to establish contact with Nowak, Hawley said, adding that her status as an active-duty astronaut remains unchanged.

Lindsey said he came to support Nowak "like we would any employee at NASA if they were to get into this situation."

"We're a close family, and we try to take care of our own," he added.

Lindsey would not comment on whether NASA will take any disciplinary actions against Nowak, saying, "Those are ongoing things, and we'll let the process work in those areas."
 

Randy Whorewald

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Sep 20, 2005
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www.randydyck.com
Talk about having "the right stuff"!!


 

steven69

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May 16, 2004
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This will make a great movie of the week

or there may be enough material for a miniseries
 

littlejimbigher

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Jun 21, 2006
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Randy Whorewald said:
Talk about having "the right stuff"!!


Good one.
PS: That image of nipple piercing sends shivers up my spine.
 
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