Photos of Actor Johnny Wactor's Murder Suspects Released

preview_player
Показать описание
The mother of "General Hospital" actor Johnny Wactor is hoping a new grainy photo released by police will help find her son's killer. The 37-year-old was shot dead after trying to stop thieves from stealing his car's catalytic converter. The new image shows the three suspects and what police say is their getaway car, a stolen 2018 black Infiniti sedan. However, Wactor's mother is wondering why it took more than two months for the photo to be released.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Getting killed for a car part? .. it's senseless and disgusting!!..

sopamarucha
Автор

Wow 2 months later they decide to release it like why they could be long gone by now shaking my head

phlose
Автор

It took them two god d3mn months to finally get a grainy photo of three people who unalived a actor who was just trying to get his friend home because these things going to steal a convertible a part of a car it's so freaking disgusting.

hajime
Автор

Too grainy and they were wearing hoodies. 😞

BitLatinGamer
Автор

These guys some real meth heads to go around stealing catalytic converters. They're going to soon get that Karma

mugentuner
Автор

Yet another number to the long list of victims of senseless crimes. This club just keeps getting bigger

jmh
Автор

Love him on GH. I'm so sorry this happened. Prayers for his family.

shirlysmilesmusic
Автор

Very heartbreaking. My condolences to his family and friends 💞🙏🕊️

jaydenvaughn
Автор

I’m afraid it’ll end up a cold case if it’s already taken this long.

pakdrescott
Автор

hey those guys look familiar must be the hoodies

OptimisticCynic
Автор

They really waiting months to release that photo, too bad because I probably saw them at some point but didn’t know it

jaysee
Автор

Third time of the week of my favorite anchor lady 0:00

starmoonfurby
Автор

Not sure what you’re going to get from a photo taken off a flip phone from the early 2000’s over 2 months after the deed was done, but that’s none of our business.

xxfatalshottzxx
Автор

How much you wanna bet those thieves tell people that "life is more important than property" 20 times a day on social media?

blampfno
Автор

What do expect in lawless CA where Democrat politicians protect the criminals more than the victims 🤷‍♂

gmfitzg
Автор

Where’s BLM? Oh wait.. can’t profit off this one.

vmfpsku
Автор

How the decade of 2020 we still got low video cameras?

CaptainCJ
Автор

😢😢😢 SO. SORRY. WE. LOST A GREAT. ACTOR. GOD. BLESS. HIS. FAMILY. R. I. P. HE. WILL. BE. MISSED ❤❤

marieknox
Автор

Guys, I'm moving to LA by the end of the year and I wanted to know which neighborhood you think is a good place to live? and to walk around the center, I can use my cell phone without any problems

amandasilvaxg
Автор

Hi Inside Edition, Here's Your Top Headline Story: The Lives And Careers of Actors Simon Oakland And Kenneth Tobey: One of the movies' most memorable tough guys, Simon Oakland began his career as a concert violinist, turning to acting in the late 1940s. After a long string of roles in Broadway hits, including "Light Up the Sky, " "The Shrike" and "Inherit the Wind, " Oakland made his film debut as the tough but compassionate journalist who speaks up for Susan Hayward's "Barbara Graham" in I Want to Live! (1958). He would go on to play a long series of tough-guy types, albeit usually on the right side of the law, in such films as The Sand Pebbles (1966), Tony Rome (1967), Psycho (1960), and, most notably, nasty Lieutenant Schrank in West Side Story (1961). He was also a frequently seen face on TV, at one point serving as a regular or semi-regular on four different series at once. Much respected by his co-workers as a total professional, he died, after a long battle with cancer, one day after his 68th birthday. Born in Oakland, California, Kenneth Tobey was headed for a law career when he first dabbled in acting at the University of California Little Theater. That experience led to a year and a half of study at New York's Neighborhood Playhouse, where his classmates included Gregory Peck, Eli Wallach, and Tony Randall. Throughout the 1940s Tobey acted on Broadway and in stock; he made his film debut in a 1943 short, "The Man on the Ferry." He made his Hollywood film bow in a Hopalong Cassidy Western and has since appeared in scores of features and on numerous TV series. He even had his series, Whirlybirds (1957), in which he played an adventurous helicopter pilot.

LaShondaFelton