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Japanese Schoolgirl Decapitator Wanted to Dissect Someone (a la Dahmer?)

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commentary by Patrick H. Moore

More information has been provided concerning the recent tragic death of Japanese schoolgirl Aiwa Matsuo in Sasebo, Nagasaki prefecture, Japan. Ms. Matsuo was reportedly struck in the head repeatedly prior to being strangled with a rope by an unnamed – and obviously mentally unstable – 16-year-old assailant. The victim’s funeral on Tuesday was attended by several hundred people including schoolmates of Ms. Matsuo and their parents.

aiwBased on her photographs, it seems pretty clear that Ms. Matsuo was an extremely sweet-faced and gentle-looking girl, a fact which is demonstrated in a statement by a woman who knew the child:

“She was a cute one. I can’t take what happened. I just hope I can do something for her dejected parents.”

Although at first Japanese police believed the 16-year-old perpetrator held a grudge against Ms. Matsuo, on Tuesday, Nagasaki investigators reversed themselves saying they “have so far not been able to confirm any personal trouble between the two.”

aii3The police also stated that the suspect told them that she “had no grudge” against Ms. Matsuo. Although at first blush, one is tempted to think that anything the perpetrator says must be taken with a grain of salt, the evidence suggests that Ms. Matsuo went to her apartment quite willingly, apparently believing that it would simply be a pleasant evening of socializing with a friend.

According to Japanese authorities, the suspect lured her victim to her apartment, where she lived alone despite her tender age, with the express intention of killing her. The murder took place on Saturday, about a week after they arranged to get together.

“I told her (the victim) that I wanted to see her and asked her to come. I came home with her so I could kill her,” police quoted the girl as saying.

aii6The suspect also told investigators that she and Matsuo went shopping in central Sasebo on Saturday during the day before retiring to her apartment for the evening. In an effort to verify exactly where they went shopping, police are checking security camera footage.

The police believe that the murder took place at around 8 p.m. Saturday, about five hours after the girls met up. The actual murder appears to have been simple. The suspect allegedly came up behind Ms. Matsuo and hit her over the head a number of times, possibly with a hammer that was found near the victim’s body, prior to strangling her.

 

The Jeffrey Dahmer Connection

Although it is perhaps unlikely that the suspect has ever heard of the master dissector, Jeffrey Dahmer, she appears to have shared the Wisconsin serial killer’s predilection for dissecting dead bodies.

aii8In addition to severing Ms. Matsuo’s head and left hand from her body, the perpetrator apparently cut her abdomen wide open, no doubt a horrific sight for the police when they arrived at the apartment. The suspect reportedly not only said that she “wanted to kill someone,” but that she also “wanted to dissect a dead body.”

She also told investigators that she has experience “dissecting cats”, which, along with the other facts of the case, has understandably led the authorities to believe that she needs to undergo psychiatric testing.

It should be stated that an interest in dissection is probably not in and of itself an indication of psychological abnormality. Surgeons and Medical Examiners may very well share this fascination. When you feel, however, that you must first murder someone and then dissect them, it’s a clear indication that something is not quite right.

* * * * *

There were other strong indications that the alleged perpetrator had serious problems. According to the Japanese prefectural board of education, she only attended school for three days of the first semester of this school year.

aiiIt is reported that a teacher from her junior high school used to visit her apartment once a week to talk with her.

Although I don’t have proof, I personally believe that the suspect’s family problems may have hastened her psychological collapse. After her mother died last fall, her father soon remarried. It’s very hard on a child who is grieving over the loss of a parent to accept the surviving parent remarrying quickly.

aii4Individuals who know her have stated that the suspect was scheduled to study abroad and that she began living alone in this past April, presumably in preparation for living on her own overseas. This to me sounds like a bit of a rationalization. It’s certainly possible that her father and/or his new bride did not object to having her out of the way so that they could enjoy their “lovenest” without being plagued by a moody and (it turns out) irrational teenager.

Of course, I have no evidence that such is the case. Because the suspect does not appear to be reticent about speaking her mind, more information may be revealed as this sad and tragic case progresses.

 


Necrophilia Girl Has 3-Way Sex Atop 2 Murdered Corpses: Gets 10 Years in Return for Future Testimony

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commentary by Patrick H. Moore

A few days ago I remarked that serious American violent crimes — which of course include sexual assaults — tend to be unimaginative. My statement was, in part, probably a defense mechanism designed to help me endure the horrific nature of the endless array of awful crimes that I cover on All Things Crime Blog. Now I’ve discovered that I was wrong, dead wrong. While sleuthing around I uncovered a horrifying case of American necrophilia that included two dead corpses and the perpetrator, an 18-year-old murderess named Alisa Massaro, having sex with her boyfriend(s) atop the dead bodies.

Decadent though it undoubtedly is, Europe may never match this nightmare for sheer dark orgasmic horror. Unsurprisingly, this all took place in Joliet, Illinois, the same beleaguered mid-American community that now bears the stigma of having more “Krokodil” hospitalizations than any other American community up to this point. Here is what happened as reported by The Independent:

alis6An 18-year-old woman who was apparently “obsessed with necrophilia,” has been accused of having three-way sex on top of the corpses of two men she and her sexual partners allegedly murdered.

A police investigation into a brutal double murder in the town of Joilet, Illinois is said to have found that the bodies of 22-year-olds Eric Glover and Terence Rankins were placed in a pile after being strangled, so that Alisa Massaro could lie on them to have sex.

One of the accused murderers, 24-year-old Joshua Miner, admitted to being Alisa Massaro’s long-term boyfriend. He stated that “for years back she wanted to have sex with a dead guy”He is reported to have said that he had hoped to help Massaro with her fantasy by offering to have sex with her on top of the bodies of the two men he is accused of helping to kill. I am somewhat dubious of the validity of part of Miner’s claim. Massaro was only 18 at the time of the murders. Given her age, it seems improbable that she had been fantasizing for years about necrophilia.

Police reports seen by JoiletPatch.com apparently state that Massaro pooh-poohed Miner’s offer at first and said she didn’t actually want to do it, although she “later acknowledged she and Josh did have sexual intercourse on top of the two bodies”.

alis3According to the police documents, a third member of the alleged 4-person murder team, Adam Landerman, may well have joined in with the copulating couple. In one of its articles, the Daily Mail reported that 19-year-old Landerman is the son of a local police sergeant.

It’s a tall task for the authorities to sort out what actually transpired in this horrific double murder and sexual violation. Along with Massaro, Miner and Landerman, 18-year-old Bethany McKee is also charged with taking part in the slayings, though not the sex act. All four of the accused parties have provided the police with differing versions of what happened.

According to McKee, Miner was the ringleader who came up with the plan to brutally murder Glover and Rankins. She apparently said Landerman was simply a “follower” who did whatever Miner told him to do.

According to what is known, the four alleged perpetrators lured the victims to the Massaro’s house in Joliet with plans to rob them but instead strangled them both.  All four are being held in the Will County jail in lieu of $10 million bail.

alis5Police Chief Mike Trafton said: “This is one of the most brutal, upsetting things I’ve ever seen in my 27 years in law enforcement…Not only the crime scene, but the disregard for common decency towards human beings.”

The mother of deceased victim Terence Rankins called the killings“demonic” and “evil”, and stated that her son and Eric Glover had been friends since childhood.

Although the circumstances of the murder are still under investigation, police have said they believe drugs were involved.

Alisa Massaro’s father is naturally shocked by what his daughter has been accused of and has stated:

“I don’t know what happened…I’m too devastated and I can’t talk about it.”

Later, he is reported to have added:

“All I can say is it’s a terrible thing that happened and I can’t believe my daughter had anything to do with it.”

*     *     *     *     *

All I can say is that I’m awfully glad my daughter doesn’t hang out with this crowd.

alis7The death penalty was abolished in Illinois in 2011 which means the stiffest penalty any of these perpetrators can receive is life in prison, which I’m sure many people will find upsetting. Based on the photographic evidence, one can’t help wondering how these young people became so vile at such a young age. And I’m not referring to their clothes or hair, but rather to their sullen “get off of my cloud” expressions. Even that by itself would not be that upsetting but when you combine their look with their actions, you cannot help but find it intensely disturbing.

 

Update: Twenty-year-old Alissa Massaro pleaded guilty in May to two counts of robbery and two counts of concealment of a homicide – all felonies – in the January 2013 slayings of Terrance Rankins and Eric Glover, both 22. In exchange for her plea, prosecutors dropped Massaro’s first-degree murder charge, according to the paper. She received a 10-year prison sentence.

Massaro’s attorney, George Lenard, said his client’s plea deal was “based on evidence and her willingness to assist” the state in convicting the three other suspects: 25-year-old Joshua Miner, 20-year-old Adam Landerman and 19-year-old Bethany McKee. All three are charged with murder; it has yet to be determined whether or not they will be tried separately.

“If the others go to trial, and if [Massaro] is called as a witness, she will testify truthfully,” said Lenard.

 

14 Cold-Blooded Quotes by Serial Killer Ted Bundy

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After his arrest and while waiting to go to the electric chair, Ted Bundy, who was apparently somewhat intelligent in addition to being absolutely lethal, uncorked quite a few pithy one-liners. Here we present 14 of them courtesy of BuzzFeed along with our brief responses to Bundy’s “wit and wisdom.”

 

“We serial killers are your sons, we are your husbands, we are everywhere. And there will be more of your children dead tomorrow.” (Probably an exaggeration. Although there are certainly plenty of serial killers, I feel confident they are still a very small segment of the population).

 

ted“You feel the last bit of breath leaving their body. You’re looking into their eyes. A person in that situation is God!” (God? Or the Devil? Or just a demented sicko?)

“Sometimes I feel like a vampire.” (Figure of speech or did Bundy actually feel this way?)

 

 

 

ted3“Murder is not about lust and it’s not about violence. It’s about possession.” (Possession equals absolute control.)

“There lots of other kids playing in streets around this country today who are going to be dead tomorrow, and the next day, and the next day and month, because other young people are reading the kinds of things and seeing the kinds of things that are available in the media today.” (Bundy liked to blame society for his problems. This is a cop-out of the first order.)

 

ted4“I’m the most cold-hearted son-of-a-bitch you’ll ever meet.” (This may well be true.)

“I’ve met a lot of men who were motivated to commit violence just like me. And without exception, without question, every one of them was deeply involved in pornography. “ (Probably an exaggeration but another good example of Bundy blaming his murderous ways on society and outside factors.)

 

 

ted5“I didn’t know what made people want to be friends. I didn’t know what made people attractive to one another. I didn’t know what underlay social interactions.” (Ted was apparently not an advanced student of the “rules of attaction”.)

“What’s one less person on the face of the earth, anyway?” (Bundy was in a flippant mood, either that or he was a firm believer in population control.)

 

ted6“I don’t feel guilty for anything. I feel sorry for people who feel guilt.” (I too feel sorry for people who are obsessed with their feelings of guilt; however, there are some things that one should feel guilty about.)

“I just liked to kill, I wanted to kill.” (Speaks for itself.)

 

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“… I deserve, certainly, the most extreme punishment society has and society deserves to be protected from me and from others like me, that’s for sure.” (A rare moment of honesty.)

“Well-meaning, decent people will condemn the behavior of a Ted Bundy, while they’re walking past a magazine rack full of the very kinds of things that send young kids down the road to be Ted Bundys.” (Once again, Bundy is making excuses for his aberrant behavior.)

 

ted8“I’m as cold a motherfucker as you’ve ever put your fucking eyes on. I don’t give a shit about those people.” (Another moment of lucidity.)

 

Jeffery Wayne Wansley: Nothing from Nothing Leaves Nothing but you gotta have Somethin’ if you Want to Be Free

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by Lise LaSalle

On February 20, 2012 the Attorney General’s office, made the following statement to CNN: “Our office has the singular responsibility to not only ensure that the guilty are punished, but that the innocent are set free.”

Well Mr. Attorney General, put your money where your mouth is and start unlocking them cells. While you are at it, throw in a little compensation for our friend Jeffery Wansley who has been told over and over by the Justice system that his life did not matter because it is their party and they’ll keep him incarcerated if they want to. 

jeffery-trailerYou cannot logically take anything away from someone who has nothing, but in the case of Jeffery Wansley, the State took his freedom, his reputation and his future. So do not go on thinking you have nothing until the system comes after you and proves you wrong.

To make a long and wrongful story short, Wansley was charged, tried and convicted for the sale of a controlled substance and the State of Mississippi never produced the alleged evidence for which he was charged, or proved that it ever existed.

He was sentenced to thirty years, the maximum allowed under the drug sales statute, and he is incarcerated since 2000 and has not had a parole hearing for 4 years after he became eligible. The courts have ordered the State to comply, but it has not and the question is being argued in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Factual and Procedural History

  • On December 8, 1999, Jeffery Wayne Wansley was convicted in the Circuit Court of Newton County, Mississippi, of selling $100 worth of cocaine within 1,500 feet of a church.
  • He was charged and convicted under two statutes: the first one makes it unlawful to sell cocaine, among other controlled substances and carries a maximum 30-year term of imprisonment. The second one authorizes a defendant’s sentence and fine to be doubled by the trial Judge when a substance is sold within 1,500 feet of a church, school, or other public facility. It is known as a ‘’sentence enhancement.’’
  • The jury found that Wansley had sold cocaine within 1,500 feet of a church. Accordingly, the second statute required Wansley to be punished in accordance, and then, “in the discretion of the court,” permitted the trial judge to double that punishment. The trial judge sentenced Wansley to 30 years of imprisonment, the maximum term authorized and no further sentence or fine was assessed.
  • Wansley’s conviction and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal by the Mississippi Supreme Court. His state habeas petitions were denied. A federal habeas petition also was denied.
  • Years went by and on April 28, 2009, the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) calculated Wansley’s sentence as without sentence enhancement. The record also showed a parole date because the Mississippi law generally allows non-violent offenders to be eligible for parole after service of at least 10 years’ time.
  • Approximately two weeks later, however, on July 29, 2009, MDOC recalculated and reprinted Wansley’s time sheet and the new calculation showed that Wansley had been sentenced to an “Enhanced Penalty.”
  • On September 23, 2009, Wansley filed a grievance with MDOC’s Administrative Remedy Program explaining his sentence and alleging that the enhancement first appeared after he applied for parole.
  • Also in November 2009, Wansley filed a motion for clarification in the Mississippi Supreme Court. He again described the parole-eligibility problem and asked for either the court or the Attorney General’s office “to clarify this sentence discrepancy.”
  • His motion was denied as “not well taken” on December 30, 2009 and no explanation was given.
  • In September 2010, Wansley filed a petition for habeas relief. He claimed that MDOC had erroneously denied him the right to seek parole. He then sought parole or eligibility for parole, as well as damages for his allegedly extended incarceration.
  • After a number of filings and motions, the Judge entered a Report and Recommendation proposing to grant the State’s motion to dismiss them all.

Statement of the case

church baptistAfter living overseas for 23 years, Jeffery Wansley came back to Union Mississippi, on April 19, 1999. He obtained employment two weeks later in furniture retail. He eventually ended up working the night shift at La-Z-boy and would sleep most of the day in his trailer that happened to be located behind Emmanuel Baptist Church.

On September 30, 1999, he was approached by a police officer who told him that the MBN (Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics) wanted to talk to him about some drug activity in the area. Wansley assured him he had nothing to do with drugs, but he was told that they only wanted to talk to him. In fact, Wansley did not drink, smoke or use drugs of any kind.

They took him to the house of Trellis Windham who was an ex-police officer suspected of dealing drugs in the neighborhood, and where they were conducting a search. Wansley knew him because they had gone to school together in the 70’s and hung out together a few times. As they came up empty with the search, the cops asked Wansley if he would consent to a search of his own house. He asked if he was under arrest and they told him no. He ended up signing the consent form thinking he did not have anything to hide. Not a very wise move but like many other citizens, Wansley was not too savvy in these matters.

house searchNothing was found but they took him to the station for questioning anyway and assured him everything was copacetic. However, in the discovery, it said that two glass vials were found in his house containing pieces of cocaine for a total of 39.4 grams. But no one has ever seen them and no photos were taken of this ‘evidence.’

Wansley was taken to jail awaiting questioning but he was never interrogated. Instead, an MBN agent went to get an affidavit of arrest for 1 count. When the chief of police came to get him, he thought he was being released because he was taken outside. Another agent showed up and put him under arrest for 5 counts of sale of cocaine, 1 count of possession and 1 count of conspiracy. When Wansley asked him when, where and who he could have been selling to, he was ignored.

Not only did Wansley deny selling any illegal substances but the report was dated a month earlier to make him look like a dealer. The Mississipi Crime lab had no evidence of drugs, weapons, audiotape or photos of drugs or cash to support the allegations.

How could he be charged, tried and sentenced without evidence?

8 amendThe discovery was suppressed from Wansley before the trial and his sister managed to obtain an affidavit of arrest with 1 count. But the judge quoted seven counts and set bail at $175,000.00, which represented a violation of the Eight Amendment which prohibits excessive bail.

At the County jail, MBN agent Stanley Wash told Wansley he could greatly help his case by telling on Trellis Windham. He refused as he was not aware of Trellis’s activities after having been in the country for only 5 months. Stanley told Wansley that he had heard that he was selling cocaine; he was basically going on a hunch to fry two fishes at once. What a catch it would be for him, but the problem is that Wansley would not cooperate.

After his refusal to ‘cooperate’ Wash immediately took Wansley  in front of the municipal court judge where all his constitutional rights were violated. First with the 7 counts instead of 1. He asked for a court appointed attorney to get a preliminary hearing, review the discovery and get a bond reduction.

drug arrestNo court appointed attorney ever came until the day of his trial and he never received a preliminary hearing, bond reduction or the discovery; a blatant violation of his federally protected rights of Due Process and Equal Protection.

After two months of incarceration, he was rushed into court on December 4, 1999, and asked what his plea was. He answered not guilty. On December 7, 1999, he was taken to court and asked the same question.

Wansley had not managed to talk to an attorney yet so he asked the court to hire a private attorney that his family would pay for. After a five minute recess, the court denied his request and set the trial for the day after. He was told to keep the court appointed attorney that he had never met.

With one day to prepare for trial, he sat in his cell and received the visit of another inmate with a message for him: That there was no evidence against him but someone was going to lie and testify he had sold him $100 worth of cocaine. It sure sounded like a shake down hoping Wansley would sing and throw Trellis under the bus.

He was then denied the obligatory process of having favorable witnesses or requesting evidence. When Wansley asked his attorney to request the $100 bill or audiotape of the alleged drug deal, his legal defender stood up and said the defense rests.defense rests

On top of dealing with a forced attorney, the 12 jurors picked for his trial came from a pool of 48 people. Some of the jurors were cousins of the MBA agent and one had served three times under the same judge and officials. Just like in the movies but much worse.

bureau of narcoticsAt trial, the prosecution and its witnesses; the MBN and a convicted felon/drug abuser named McCall testified that Wansley used a $100 bill of Official State Funds, bearing serial number #AH30644253A and that a 60’’audio cassette tape was used in an undercover sting operation to produce a recording of the deal. By the way, this McCall fellow also testified against Trellis Widham who then received a 30 year sentence.

Even though the jury was led to believe there was a $100 bill and an audiotape in evidence, it never materialized

To prove his innocence, Wansley even submitted the serial numbers to the United States Dept. of Treasury, under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), and that agency verified that the serial numbers came from a $20 bill.

Grounds for Appeal

  • Ineffective counsel: counsel failed to communicate with him about the case
  • Counsel failed to subpoena witnesses for his defense
  • Counsel was unprepared for trial
  • Counsel failed to seek a continuance in order to familiarize himself with Wansley’s case
  • Counsel failed to file a motion for a suppression hearing as requested
  • Counsel failed to object to the seating of a jury whom had previously heard three civil cases
  • Counsel failed to allow Wansley to review discovery materials
  • Counsel failed to inform the court that Wansley had been denied the opportunity to obtain private counsel and failed to subpoena transcripts from the trial court, with the results that by the time Wansley purchased his own copy, they had been tampered with.
  • The arrest was made several weeks after the sale. The marked bill was never recovered.
  • There is a conflict between the prosecution witnesses over whether the transaction took place more or less than 1500 feet from a church and it is impossible to prove. Wansley happened to live in a trailer near the Church but the exact location of alleged deal was not determined with certainty.
  • The alleged marked $100 bill was never recovered. There is no photocopy of it from the Crime Lab proving its existence. It should not have been considered as evidence.
  • The defendant was refused the right to a private attorney.
  • The defendant was refused access to the discovery.

Conclusion

Wansley’s appeal has been denied and his conviction for sale of a controlled substance and sentence of 30 years were affirmed. His endless fight for parole and retribution always seem to be met with denial and contempt.

If Wansley has sold $100 worth of cocaine, which he strongly refutes, the way he was denied his fundamental legal and human rights would still be scandalous. And the sentence he received would still be scandalous.

miss attorney generalThe unabashed way the State of Mississippi went after Jeffery Wansley is a hard pill to swallow. If you are a minority with not much to your name, you better watch out because they might decide to deny your rights and throw you in jail just because they want to. There has to be a remedy and we must call on the Attorney General to keep his word and set free the innocents like Wansley.

You can call the office of the Mississippi’s Attorney General and tell Jim Hood that nothing from nothing means something: (601) 359-3680. Or you can write to the Mississippi’s Governor on twitter at  @PhilBryantMS or through his website www.governorbryant.com/ 

 

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7 Most Badass Statements Before Being Executed

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adapted by Patrick H. Moore

Sooner or later we all face that moment of truth — the Grim Reaper comes knocking and there’s no way to talk him out of it. Some of us will handle it bravely; others may flinch and quail. I suspect that in our private moments many of us wonder whether we’ll be up to the task when that day of reckoning comes. Here, therefore, as a sort of twisted inspiration, are some truly badass final statements by some strong — and in some cases evil — condemned men. The list was compiled by Ian Chessman of Cracked, who also gets credit for calling the statements “badass”, which they truly are. The quotes are in the public domain.

 

carliCarl Panzram, Serial Killer, about to be hanged:

“Hurry up, you Hoosier bastard, I could kill ten men while you’re fooling around!”

Panzram also stated on another occasion:

“I have no desire whatever to reform myself. My only desire is to reform people who try to reform me. And I believe that the only way to reform people is to kill ‘em.”

 

carli2Chief Sitting Bull’s final words when he was about to be shot by 43 members of the Bureau of Indian Affairs:

 ”I am not going. Do with me what you like. I am not going. Come on! Come on! Take action! Let’s go!”

The Chief also stated on another occasion:

“I wish it to be remembered that I was the last man of my tribe to surrender my rifle.”

 

carli3George Engel, union activist and founder of the Socialistic Labor Party of North America as he awaited hanging:

“Hurrah for anarchy! This is the happiest moment of my life.”

Engel was convicted of Conspiracy in the famous Haymarket Square labor riots in Chicago in 1893 which resulted in the death of seven policemen and four civilians.

 

 

 

carli4Giles Corey, colonial farmer and accused Massachusetts Bay Colony witch, while being crushed with stones, in a futile attempt to make him confess his crime:

“More weight. Add more stones.”

Corey never did confess as the life was slowly squeezed out of him. I’m convinced he was innocent. You probably are too.

 

carli8James French was a convicted murderer serving life in prison in Ohio. He decided a life sentence was just too long and decided to force the issue by killing his cell mate. His plan worked and he was given the electric chair. Unphased by it all, but glad to be going, French quipped as they strapped him in:

“Hey fella! How about this for a quote for tomorrow’s paper? ‘French fries.’”

French is not known to have made any other notable statements.

 

carli7While facing the Irish Free State firing squad, Irish nationalist Robert Erskine Childers insisted on shaking hands with every marksman and then encouraged them to:

“Take a step forward lads — it’ll be easier that way.”

Childers was also a poet and novelist and wrote three respected spy novels: Riddle of the Sands; The Great Impersonation; and The Czar’s Spy.

 

 

carli9And then there was Tom “Black Jack” Ketchum, a thief, a murderer, and worst of all a “morning person.” He was wide awake for his early morning hanging and full of “piss and vinegar”.

“I’ll be in hell before you start breakfast! Let her rip!”

Ketchum’s executioners apparently didn’t appreciate being subjected to his racket so early in the day. They accidentally on purpose gave his line some additional slack which caused him to be decapitated when he dropped through the gallows.

Top Ten Bizarre Courtroom Scenes: Tell Me I’m Dreaming?

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by BJW Nashe

The George Zimmerman trial got off to a dramatic start when attorneys delivered opening salvos laced with jokes and profanity. Prosecutor John Guy’s first words to the jury were,  “Good morning,” followed immediately by a quotation of Zimmerman’s own words spoken just prior to the killing of Trayvon Martin: “Fucking punks. These assholes always get away.” Guy emphasized that “those were the words in that grown man’s mouth as he followed a seventeen-year-old boy.” To further drive home the point, Guy repeated the phrase “fucking punks” three times.

donnyZimmerman’s defense counsel Don West tried to counter by opening with a “knock knock” joke. “Knock knock… Who’s there?… George Zimmerman… George Zimmerman who?… Ah, good. You’re on the jury. West’s attempt at humor fell flat, and confused many of us. Zimmerman is no doubt hoping that West is a better attorney than he is a comedian. Louis C.K. will not be calling any time soon for tips on new material. West continued with a line of reasoning that presumed the sidewalk to be a weapon. How could Martin be considered “unarmed,” in other words, when he had the sidewalk at his disposal, which he could allegedly slam Zimmerman’s held against? With this kind of logic, we surely have nothing to fear.

Courtroom drama is nothing new. People have always enjoyed the theatricality of a good trial — especially highly publicized proceedings such as the State of Florida vs. George Zimmerman.odjThe O.J. Simpson trial seemed to set a new standard for judicial entertainment in our era. Now more than ever — with cameras in the courtroom, feeding directly into our media-saturated culture — we expect pure conflict, raw emotion, surreal moments, strange outbursts, and just plain bad behavior. We seek the raw impact of reality TV, in all of its inglorious, trashy, and often ridiculous splendor.

In court, many Americans are more than happy to oblige. Compared to some of the recent antics seen in courtrooms across the country, the Zimmerman trial so far is rather tame. But there’s still plenty of time for scandal and drama to develop. Hopefully, reason will prevail amidst all of the antics. Meanwhile, consider the following bizarre incidents, which seem better suited to the Jerry Springer Show than to the Halls of Justice.

 

Nazi Dad in Court. Earlier this month, in the middle of a child custody battle, Heath Campbell decided to wear a Nazi uniform to court in New Jersey. Campbell was petitioning anazi2family court judge to allow him to see his youngest son. The father claims he lost custody of three older children because he gave them Nazi-inspired names. The state claims there is a history of violence in the home. Campbell was in the news back in 2008 when he raised a fuss because a supermarket refused to write his son’s name on a birthday cake; the kid’s name is “Adolf Hitler Campbell.” Asked whether his Nazi costume would help or harm his child custody case, Campbell replied, “If they’re good judges and they’re good people, they’ll look within, not what’s on the outside.”

 

Spastic Fits and Coprophilia in Court. On June 5, Tyler Lee Rodgers made a spectacle of himself in the Torrance courtroom where he was being tried for attempted murder. Rodgers istylercharged with slashing a store clerk’s throat during a robbery in Manhattan Beach, California.  While three witnesses testified during the hour-long proceeding, Rodgers veered from appearing calm and composed, to rocking back and forth in his chair, demanding medication, smacking his forehead on the defense table, and then being unable or unwilling to rise and be escorted out of the courtroom. He kept repeating, “I want my radio.” The bailiff and deputy had to restrain and drag the spastic defendant off to a holding room. The District Attorney accused Rodgers of “putting on a show,” and pointed out that doctors had deemed the 19-year-old to be healthy and sane. Rodgers has a history of strange behavior in court. Last year, his trial was suspended for a psychiatric evaluation after he put feces on his face in the holding room. He also reportedly ate his own feces during a previous courtroom appearance. This is probably too much even for the Springer show. Other defendants must be wondering, if eating your own feces in court will not get you declared insane in Torrance, what will?

 

Courtroom Butt-Slap. Former NFL wide receiver Chad Johnson was reprimanded during an early June court appearance when he reached over to playfully whack his attorney on the rear chadend as they both stood in front of the judge. Johnson was at a hearing in Broward County Circuit Court after being charged with violating probation in regard to a domestic violence case. Johnson had reached a plea deal that would have kept him out of jail, in lieu of counseling and community service. One quick butt-slap in the courtroom, however, changed all of that. Judge Kathleen McHugh scolded the football star for goofing around in her courtroom, and sentenced him to 30 days in jail. There is no word on whether the attorney will file sexual harassment charges. Best to keep one’s hands to oneself in front of the judge!

 

 

 

Flipping the Bird in Court. Penelope Soto of Miami appeared to be struggling with anger management issues during a court appearance in February of this year. At one point she grew pennyso agitated that she gave the judge the finger and blurted out, “Fuck you.” Judge Jorge Rodriguez-Chomat was not amused. He sent Soto to jail for 30 days on a contempt charge. Soto had been arrested for drug possession when she was allegedly found with Xanax. Her court hearing was only intended to determine the appropriate bail. But one thing led to another, the bird was flipped, the judge was irked, and Soto ended up spending time behind bars before her case was even heard. When Soto was subsequently released after apologizing to the judge, she explained that she was under the influence of alcohol and Xanax at the time of her outburst. Evidently the disinhibitory quality of these substances outweighed whatever calming effect they were supposed to induce!

 

joddyPhone Sex in Court. American jurisprudence reached a new level of salaciousness when defense attorneys in the Jodi Arias murder trial played a lengthy phone sex recording for the jury. Among other things, the kinky conversation included the victim, Travis Alexander, telling Arias how he would like to tie her to a tree and sodomize her. The courtroom phone sex was a field day for the heavy-breathing press, but it failed to sway the jury in Arias’s favor. They found her guilty of first degree murder.

 

 

 

 

Defendant Punches Attorney in Court. In October 2012, Lamarcus Williamson of markyCharlotte, North Carolina, pleaded guilty to assault, robbery, and drug charges pertaining to an incident involving a female college student. When the judge announced a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison, Williamson turned and punched his defense attorney in the face. Despite being handcuffed, Williamson was still able to land a knockdown blow. This did nothing to improve his standing with the court. The judge tacked on some additional time to his sentence.

 

 

Refusing to Take the Oath. Last October, Otis Jackson Jr., the former General Sessions Court Clerk from Nashville, Tennessee, rejected an offer that could have led to the dismissal of official misconduct charges against him, preferring to go ahead and face trial. During the hearing, Jackson shocked the courtroom by initially refusing to raise his right hand and swear to tell the truth. Special Judge Walter Kurtz told Jackson: “In 30 years and six months, you’re the only person I’ve ever run across that refused to be sworn in court, which I find kind of odd and inexplicable.” After coaxing Jackson to go ahead and take the oath, and even threatening him  with contempt, the defendant simply stated: “I shouldn’t be here.” After several minutes of awkward drama, Jackson finally gave in, and said he would “do his best” to tell the truth.

 

Dazed and Confused, with Orange Hair. In July 2012, Batman shooter James Holmes holmesmade his first public appearance in a Colorado courtroom since his movie theater gun massacre. He looked strangely dazed and unresponsive, with his unruly hair still dyed bright reddish-orange. His demeanor alternated from a sleepy, nearly comatose expression, to a bizarre bug-eyed stare. According to Arapahoe County District Attorney Carol Chambers, there would be no information provided as to whether Holmes was on drugs or some kind of medication. Holmes was being held in solitary confinement and was brought to the courtroom via an underground tunnel. He was also wearing a bullet-proof vest.

 

 

The Judge is Packing Heat. In February 2012, a Superior Court Judge in Lumpkin County, Georgia, shocked the courtroom when he pulled out his pistol and brandished it in order barto“make a rhetorical point.” Judge David Barrett was presiding over a case in which a woman brought charges of rape and aggravated assault against a former sheriff’s deputy from Fall County. When the victim took the stand to testify, Barrett told her that she was “killing her case” because she wasn’t cooperating fully. The judge then pulled out his gun and pretended to hand it over to her, reportedly telling her, “You might as well shoot your lawyer.” The District Attorney objected and approached the bench to ask the judge to put the gun down. Now that’s what I call a trial. It should be noted that Georgia law allows judges to carry concealed handguns in the courtroom, but it’s a crime to point a gun at another person if there’s no reason to do so.

 

Rage Against the Machine. In 2007, Anthony Viscussi from Everett, Washington, found himself in a Snohomish County courtroom facing charges of assaulting a woman. He displayed such bizarre viscbehavior, including angry outbursts and screaming at witnesses, that the judge had to have him removed to a holding room, and then strapped to a chair so he could be wheeled in and out of the courtroom. Viscussi was also forced to wear netting over his head and a mask over his face, Hannibal Lecter-style, to prohibit him from spitting at corrections officers. In jail, officers reportedly needed to don riot gear in Viscussi’s presence. Pepper spray was often used to subdue him during his violent rages. A psychologist testified that Viscussi suffers from schizophrenia exacerbated by methamphetamine use. We might sympathize, were it not for the fact that he was accused of beating a woman with a metal rod in front of her 6 year-old son.

 

World’s Best “Cook Your Child” in a Hot Car Story (Whistleblower Run Over by Negligent Mom Is Now Wheelchair Bound)

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commentary by Patrick H. Moore

It seems that one of the never-ending obligations a modern parent faces is that at some point you must do the right thing and COOK your child till he or she dies (or at least suffers severe brain damage) in a blistering hot car on an unmercifully hot summer day. Part of the challenge is to get the temperature in your “cooker” of a vehicle up to 140 degree F or even possibly 160 degree or higher.

This peculiar rite of parental passage seems to be growing in popularity, and it seems we hear about another incident of “child car cooking” on an almost daily basis now.

Of course, it doesn’t always work out like you’d planned it. There are those depressing occasions when you leave your little brat in the “cooker” and go off to do your thang only to return to your car later assuming brat-boy will be lobster red only to discover that some busy body (AKA good Samaritan) has called the authorities. Your kid is safe and sound, but at a minimum, you’re under arrest for child abuse charges.

car7So what should you do if you come back from a “quick hitter” with a clandestine lover, or a trip to the supermarket, or even a job interview (cause after all, kids are expensive and you’ve got to feed them) only to discover that the ubiquitous “good citizen” is on the phone reporting you.

Well, that depends. If it’s not too late, you might just jump in your car and “tear ass” out of there hoping your vehicle has not already been identified by its license plate number. Or, of course, you could try and reason with the good Samaritan but you know how these officious folks are – they’re unlikely to simply listen to reason.

So chances are, you’re going to have to resort to Option #3. You’re going to try to kick the busy-body’s ass, or shoot them if you’re “carrying”, or perhaps run them over with your steaming hot car.

Unsurprisingly, several of these options actually came to pass a few days ago in Colorado.

Dominic Kelly of Opposing Views writes:

car6A Colorado couple called the police when they discovered a young boy locked in a hot car, but before the police could get there, the boy’s mother returned to the car, became angry that the couple reported her, and ran the two over. Now, one of them may never walk again.

Shannon Dominguez, 43, was outside a store with her boyfriend Alan Mason when they spotted a young boy trapped inside a hot car.

“All four windows were rolled up,” explained Dominguez. “And it was in the direct sun. It scares the heck out of me. It’s some innocent child might die.”

car2So concerned citizen Dominguez, a resident of Longmont, Colorado, decides to call the police. While she’s on the phone, Mom, an angry 27-year-old women named Kristina Riddell, who according to Fox 13 has an extensive criminal record (which includes arrests for assault, domestic violence and multiple driving violations), gets hopping mad and decides to “fight fire with fire”.

Now although it could be argued that Riddell may not be the world’s best mother, there’s little doubt that she’s an ass-kickin’ mama. She reportedly approached the couple with “bloody hell” in her eyes. First, she threatens to beat up Dominguez, but realizing that’s a bit on the lightweight side, she proceeds to punch Mason the Man right in the chops.

Tough mama, meat shakin’ on the bone!

Then Mother Riddell must have decided that she wasn’t being forceful enough. According to the reports, she then “quickly got into her car and proceed(ed) to” drive straight at Dominguez and Mason apparently intending to “flatten them like pancakes”.

At this point, we’ll let Mason briefly assume the narrative voice:

“She had her windows down, so I grabbed onto the door. She drug me about 20 feet. I realized she was not going to stop, so I let go. I tumbled in the parking lot.”

car3According to a separate report, Mason was thrown over the hood of the car while Dominguez’s leg was crushed under Mother Riddell’s white Honda. According to physicians, Mason suffered internal and external bruising, but poor Dominguez may never walk again.

“My tibia has a spiral break. My fibula has three breaks in it. They put a rod in there,” Dominguez to FOX 31. “Every day is a chore. Every day is stressful.”

car4It was apparently all in the day’s work for Mother Riddell. She appears to have driven home; perhaps she fed her son dinner, read him a bedtime story and tucked him in for the night. We don’t know for sure. What we do know is that she was later arrested at her home and that her charges include hit and run, assault, and child abuse (and I would imagine they’ll add a GBI enhancement to the assault charge based on the fact she transformed her white Honda into a lethal weapon).

Our good Samaritans, Mason and Dominguez, say that despite the devastating results of their good deed (truly no good deed goes unpunished), they would do it all over again if it meant helping a child.

I would only add that if the occasion ever arises and they do “do it all over again”, they would be wise to “run for cover” when Mad Mother Riddell gets behind the wheel of her over-heated white Honda.

Colorado Teenager Slashes Mother’s Throat and Stabs Her 79 Times; Pleads Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity: Updated!

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compiled by Patrick H. Moore

Based on the photographic evidence, 18-year-old Isabella Guzman of Aurora, Colorado is quite an attractive young lady. Her Facebook page contains selfies which seem to combine poise and a natural loveliness that are striking. Nonetheless, Isabella now stands charged with 1st-degree murder for slashing her mother, 47-year-old Yun-Mi Hoy’s, throat and stabbing her a total of 79 times in the upstairs bathroom of their suburban home on the evening of August 28, 2013.

It’s not yet clear what specifically caused Isabella to go berserk as if she were a psychopathic monster. Yet she did.

izzy4There had been signs since Isabella’s early childhood — when she was sent for a period of time to live with her biological father after her parents separated — that all was not right between her and her mother, but no one expected matters to deteriorate to this point of no return. After Isabella’s arrest in a parking garage the following day 16 hours after the slaying, homicide detectives were unable to offer any clues as to a motive for the brutal act. Isabella’s stepfather, Ryan Hoy, however, informed them that raising the teenager had been a challenge.

izzy5In fact, Ryan Hoy told the detectives that on the day of the murder, Isabella’s mother had called the police because of the ongoing strife between Isabella and her mother. Hoy stated his step-daughter had become “more threatening and disrespectful” toward Yun-Mi Hoy in recent days. In fact, according to the arrest affidavit, Isabella Guzman had allegedly threatened Yun-Mi Hoy in an email telling her, “You will pay.” The police had reportedly told Isabella that her mother could kick her out of their home if she did not shape up.

In an attempt to ameliorate the situation, Isabella’s father, Robert Guzman, had spoken to her about her “teen rebelliousness” about three hours before the 911 call.

“I went to talk to her because her mother was worried and wanted me to talk to Isabella,” Guzman told 7News. “So, I went to talk to Isabella and we sat down in the backyard looking at the trees and the animals and I started to talk to her about the respect that people should have for their parents. And I was trying to let her know that she should be obedient to her parents, not rebellious, that she should try to listen more and everything was going fine.”

“In the conversation, I thought that I made progress,” he added. “But obviously it didn’t do nothing, because hours later, this thing happened.”

*     *     *     *     *

izzy7The police report states that Aurora police dispatch received a 911 call just past 10 p.m. on August 28 from Ryan Hoy. Hoy told dispatch that Yun-Mi Hoy had come home from work about 9:30 p.m. Wednesday and had taken a shower. Soon after, he heard a “thumping” and his wife calling his name. Hoy moved quickly to investigate but he couldn’t get in the bathroom, because — according to the affidavit — Guzman was holding the door closed from the inside. A separate report states that Hoy could not get in the bathroom because the door was locked.

izz3In any event, Hoy could see blood seeping out from under the door. Hoy raced downstairs to call the police, and when he returned he said he saw Isabella — dressed in a pink sports bra and turquoise shorts — standing in the bathroom doorway holding a knife. His wife on the floor, covered in blood. There was a baseball bat beneath her.

“He never heard Guzman say anything, and she didn’t speak to him as she exited the bathroom,” the affidavit says. “Guzman was just staring straight ahead when she walked past him.”

After Isabella fled, Ryan attempted to revive his wife, but to no avail. Her throat had been slashed and by the coroner’s count, she suffered 31 stab wounds to the face and an additional 48 to her neck.

*     *     *     *     *

izzyAlthough Isabella may still have been in the area when the police arrived, she managed to elude capture. At 11:30 a.m. the next day, officers were called to a parking garage at 2851 South Parker Road based on a report that a body had been spotted inside a car. That proved to be a false alarm, but the police did detect items that they linked to the previous evening’s violence.

More cops arrived and began to canvass the area. Eventually, someone spotted Guzman trying to walk out of the garage. She was then taken into custody, and on Friday, she was formally charged with first-degree murder, appearing before Arapahoe County Judge Stephen F. Collins, who ordered her to remain in custody without bond on suspicion of first-degree murder. During the proceedings, Isabella sat there silently in an orange jumpsuit, a bandage on her right wrist.

*     *     *     *     *

Isabella Guzman looks neither poised nor particularly attractive in her mug shot. Rather, she looks like someone who may just be starting to catch on to the enormity of what she has done — now that it is too late.

 

Update:

Isabella Guzman, 18, has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to first-degree murder charges for stabbing her mother 79 times. The troubled teen entered the plea during a hearing in early December, according to Arapahoe County court records. She was later sent to the Colorado Mental Health Institute in Pueblo for a psychiatric evaluation.

It appears from court records that officials expect Guzman’s psychiatric evaluation to be lengthy. A judge scheduled the next hearing in the case for Feb, 28, but said Guzman does not have to appear, she does have to appear for another hearing March 21.

According to an arrest affidavit filed against Guzman, she had been feuding with her mother in the days leading up to the attack.

Hoy’s husband and Guzman’s stepfather told police that two days before the attack, Guzman threatened her mom and spit in her face.

 

2nd Update:

Michael Roberts writes that a judge has accepted  Guzman’s not guilty by reason of insanity plea and she has been remanded to a state hospital in Pueblo, Colorado where she will receive treatment.


“Don’t Behead Me, Dude!”: The Rise and Fall of the Guillotine

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by Darcia Helle

Throughout world history, criminals have been executed as punishment for their crimes. Early methods were brutal and torturous. Held as public events, entire towns gathered to watch the accused be drawn and quartered, hanged, beheaded, or burned at the stake.

Dr. Joseph-Ignace Guillotin came into this unforgiving world on May 28, 1738 in Manchester, England. Some say his mother went into premature labor after witnessing a criminal being broken on the wheel of the public scaffold at Saintes. The victim’s screams were too much for her. Guillotin initially obtained a Master of Arts degree from the University of Bordeaux. The essay he wrote for his degree so impressed the Jesuits that they persuaded him to join their order. Guillotin then took the position of professor of literature at the Irish College at Bordeaux.

Within a few years, Guillotin left the college and travelled to Paris to study medicine. In 1768, he earned his diploma from the faculty at Rheims.

guyOddly enough, Guillotin opposed the death penalty. Elected to the National Assembly in Paris on May 2, 1789, he directed most of his attention toward medical reform. On October 10, 1789, during a debate on capital punishment, Guillotin stated that “… the criminal shall be decapitated; this will be done solely by means of a simple mechanism.” This mechanism was defined as “… a machine that beheads painlessly”.

Twin GuillotinesBeheading had become a common, if imprecise practice in France during the 1700s. Most often, several strikes of the sword or axe were needed before a victim died. The executioner would miss. The process could be grisly. Furthermore, considered a noble death, beheadings were reserved for the privileged class. Commoners of that time were typically hanged. Dr. Guillotin believed that the public would be more appreciative of their rights if all capital punishment was done by mechanical decapitation, regardless of class.

Guillotin also took issue with the fact that a criminal’s family suffered monetary punishment for the criminal’s misdeeds. Property was confiscated and family members were not allowed to inherit anything of worth. Guillotin opposed this practice, believing that the criminal alone should be held responsible for the crimes and that his or her family should not suffer because of those actions.

A civil rights activist of his time, Guillotin believed that adopting a more humane method of execution was the first step toward total abolition of the death penalty. Opposed to the public spectacle these events had become, Guillotin also worked toward making the execution more private. He wanted to spare people the trauma of witnessing these executions.

guy3In 1789, Guillotin helped pass a law requiring beheading be done by machines, rather than swords or axes. Guillotin stated that “… the privilege of decapitation would no longer be confined to nobles, and the process of execution would be as painless as possible.”

At a follow-up meeting, Guillotin spoke of his ideal machine. In his exuberance, he said, with a flourish, “Now, with my machine, I cut off your head in the twinkling of an eye, and you never feel it!” His statement elicited laughter and quickly became a popular joke. Within days, a comic song about Guillotin and “his” machine forever linked the two together.

Primitive machines for beheading had been in use for approximately 500 years. By the 1700s, beheadings of the elite by machine were routine in Italy, Germany, Scotland, and Persia. The most popular machine of the time, the Italian Mannaia, made its first appearance in France in 1631. The device held an axe that descended between two perpendicular slipboards. Other beheading machines of the time included the Scottish Maiden and the Halifax Gibbet. None of these machines held the body still, which allowed for slips and misses.

The design of this new killing machine fell to the king’s physician, Dr. Antoine Louis. He sought expert advice from Charles-Henri Sanson, the official executioner. Sanson believes that the problem with current beheadings was that the accused often lacked the “firmness which was absolutely necessary for such executions”. Criminals who were made to kneel for their beheading often fainted. He or she would fall sideways, blunting the effect of the first swing of the sword or axe. Sanson’s solution was to confine the criminal’s body to a horizontal position.

guy7Sanson then conferred with Tobias Schmidt, a German instrument maker. Schmidt sketched the design of what would later become the guillotine.

Dr. Louis approved the design, though he questioned the crescent-shaped blade. Sanson and Schmidt agreed that a diagonal blade might be better. Both were put to the test.

On March 20, 1792, a carpenter by the name of Guidon was paid 5,500 francs to make the first prototype. Upon completion, Sanson tried it out on three corpses in the courtyard of a prison at Bicetre. The first two strikes with the diagonal blade were successful. The third try, using the crescent-shaped blade, was not. The diagonal blade then became a permanent part of the design.

guy6This new killing machine initially took the name Louison or Louisette, after the king’s physician, Dr. Louis. Some time later, the French began calling it the guillotine, after Dr. Guillontin, the perceived inventor. An English poet added the extra ‘e’ for easier rhyming.

On April 25, 1792, at the Place de Greve on the Right Bank, the guillotine made its first public appearance. The victim was Nicolas Jacques Pelletin, a common criminal. Upon facing his death sentence, Pelletin fell into a dead faint. This would have made beheading by sword or axe impossible. The guillotine was an instant success.

For the first seven months, the guillotine primarily took the heads of common thieves and forgers. However, France’s political situation quickly grew more volatile and the machine soon found uses in political executions. Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette were among the guillotine’s most famous victims.

guy4Dr. Joseph-Ignace Guillotin died in 1814 of natural causes and is now buried in the Pere-Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. The association of their name with this killing machine so embarrassed Dr. Guillotin’s family that they petitioned the French government to rename it. When the request was denied, the Guillotin family changed their last name.

In 1870, assistant executioner and carpenter Leon Berger made improvements to the guillotine. Berger added a spring system, stopping the mouton at the bottom of the grooves. He also added a lock/blocking device, as well as a new release mechanism for the blade. All guillotines built after 1870 incorporated these improvements.

The murderer Hamida Djandoubi holds the dubious honor of being the last victim of the guillotine. The execution took place on September 10, 1977 in Marseilles, France.

 

Please click to below to view Darcia’s Helle’s many excellent posts:

Modern Day Executioners Despise the Death Penalty

‘Trial by Media’ Is Not a New Phenomenon: The Kangaroo Hanging of Alvin Edwin Batson

“Met Her on the Mountain”: Cold Case Social Worker Hog-Tied, Raped and Killed in Appalachia

Jovial Private Bartender Snaps; Assaults and Drags Obnoxious 84-Year-Old Club Patron

Frank Lloyd Wright and the Great Gasoline Mass Murder

Edward Elmore Rode the Legal Railroad to 30 Years on Death Row: His Crime? Simple! He Was Black and Poor

 “The Wrong Carlos”: Non-Violent Manchild Executed for Murder He Did Not Commit

The Electric Chair Nightmare: An Infamous and Agonizing History

Autopsies: Truth, Fiction and Maura Isles and Her 5-Inch-Heels

Don’t Crucify Me, Dude! Just Shoot Me Instead! Spartacus and Death by Crucifixion

To Burn or Not to Burn? Auto-Da-Fé Is Not Good for Women or Children!

The Disgraceful Entrapment of Jesse Snodgrass: Keep the Narcs Out of Our Schools

Why Should I Believe You? The History of the Polygraph

“Don’t Behead Me, Dude!”: The Story of Beheading and the Invention of the Guillotine

Aileen Wuornos, America’s First High-Profile Female Serial Killer, Never Had a Chance

The Terror of ISO: A Descent into Madness

Al Capone Could Not Bribe the Rock: Alcatraz, Fortress of Doom

Cyberspace, Darknet, Murder-for-Hire and the Invisible Black Machine

darcDarcia Helle lives in a fictional world with a husband who is sometimes real. Their house is ruled by spoiled dogs and cats and the occasional dust bunny.

Suspense, random blood splatter and mismatched socks consume Darcia’s days. She writes because the characters trespassing through her mind leave her no alternative. Only then are the voices free to haunt someone else’s mind.

Join Darcia in her fictional world: www.QuietFuryBooks.com

Dog Owners Charged with 2nd-Degree-Murder in Mauling Death of Michigan Jogger

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commentary by Patrick H. Moore

Dog Fear. Some of us have it; some of us don’t. Some of us have it worse than others. My Pops had dog fear and I picked it up from him as a kid, but then I shed it later on. For a few years, I took pride in “routing dogs” when they got a little too aggressive by taking one quick step toward them while shouting ferociously. No better sight than to see an aggressive canine change its tune and retreat in fear.

But the fact of the matter is, I was never attacked by a beast except on one occasion later on when a man-hating canine [who had clearly been abused by previous owner(s)] snuck up behind me and took a chunk out of my thigh. Since then, some of my early dog fear has returned and I’m far more reluctant to try and rout them.

aig5On balance, though, I’ve been reasonably lucky in the dog-bite sweepstakes, far luckier than Craig Sytsma, 46, of rural Metamora Township, 45 miles northwest of Detroit, Michigan.

Sasha Goldstein writes for the New York Daily News:

The owners of two massive cane corsos that mauled to death a man as he jogged along a rural Michigan road could face charges in the death, the third attack involving the dogs since 2012, authorities said. (Note: The owners, Valbona Lucaj and husband Sebastiano Quagliata, have been charged with second-degree-murder and have agreed that the cane corsos will be euthanized.)

aig6The 3-year-old dogs were untethered when they pounced on Craig Sytsma, 46, as he jogged along Thomas Road, a rural dirt road in Metamora Township around 5:30 p.m. Wednesday. A neighbor mowing his lawn waved to the runner as he did a pass in the yard — then saw the man lying in a ditch, the two dogs ripping at the man’s arms, the next time he came around.

“He was jogging, doing what everybody else does out there, running and riding bikes,” Metamora Township police Officer Sean Leathers, one of the first on scene, said.

When the neighbor saw the dogs “ripping at the man’s arms,” he grabbed his gun and fired it, grazing one of the beasts, in an attempt to scare them off.

“He yelled at the dogs,” Lapeer County Sheriff’s Office Det. Sgt. Jason Parks told the Detroit Free Press. “They would not release.”

aigThe dogs eventually disengaged and ran back home. The helpful neighbor and another witness, a nurse who tried CPR, did everything they could to save the man, who had no identification and no cellphone, but to no avail.

Sytsma died an hour later at a local hospital. A divorcee, he leaves three surviving children.

It took a full day for police to identify Sytsma. An employee arrived at his office in nearby Oxford Township, and realized his car had been there overnight, which seemed strange because the building was unlocked with no sign of Sytsma. The employee reported his discovery to law enforcement who then put the pieces together.

The American Kennel Club describes the Italian mastiff-like cane corsos as “noble, majestic, and powerful in presence.” They are bred to hunt wild boar and typically weigh around 100 pounds.

aig11The second-degree-murder charges against Lucaj and Quagliata stem from the fact that the dogs, which have been in Metamora since 2011, were already known to law enforcement and animal control DUE TO A BITING INCIDENT IN 2012 – AND A SECOND INCIDENT IN 2013.

aig9Sebastiano Quagliata reportedly made quite an impression on his neighbors when he and and his menagerie of pets moved to the neighborhood a few years ago. He allegedly approached one local resident, who has a young daughter, with a pet hawk perched on his arm and one of the corsos running unleashed.

Ashley Winter, 31, told the Free Press that she asked Quagliata if the cane corso was aggressive and he responded by saying, ‘Yeah, everything I own is aggressive.’ Ms. Winter reports that she then said to herself, ‘What have we gotten ourselves into?’

aig7Ms. Winter’s question was answered soon enough. Local resident April Smith was walking by the Lucaj-Quagliata home one day in May 2012 when one of the dogs ran up behind her and latched onto her leg. The damage at that time: 3 holes in Ms. Smith’s leg and some bleeding.

That attack was fortunately aborted when the owner’s son called the animal off.

“I cannot believe this happened to someone,” Smith told the Free Press. “I’m not mad at the dogs, I’m so upset with the owners. I thought something would be done with these dogs, but nothing was done. Nothing was ever done. Those dogs are vicious. It’s not a joke.”

aig8The authorities report that a man in his 70s was attacked one year later in 2013. It’s unclear how much damage was done in the second attack.

“It’s just crazy to me,” said Smith. “Animal control should have done something. It should have never gone this far. The fact this has led to a death, it’s sickening.”

After Mr. Sytsma’s death, Det. Sgt. Parks stated. “They’re a public threat. They’re beyond rehabilitation.”

aig4The AP now reports that Lucaj and Quagliata have signed an agreement with Lapeer County authorities stating that the two cane corsos and a third cane corso will be euthanized as soon as possible. The dogs are currently in custody along with eight puppies at a location separate from Lucaj and Quagliata. The puppies will be offered up for adoption to an animal rescue group.

aig12Bond has been set at $500,000 each for Lucaj and Quagliata, although prosecutors wanted $1 million, believing the suspects might flee the country. Furthermore, although he settled for the lower amount, Magistrate Judge Mike Delling noted that there’s “some question” about the couple’s immigration status.

Assistant prosecutor Michael Hodges stated outside of court that an “extensive history” of previous attacks by the dogs played a role in the charges, which include possessing a dangerous animal causing death.

aig14Needless to say, murder charges against dog owners are quite rare. In May 2013, a Los Angeles County man was charged after a 63-year-old woman died from more than 150 bites by four pit bulls. The case is still pending.

Lucaj, 44, a native of Albania, and Quagliata, 45, a native of Italy, have had a long-running legal battle with federal immigration officials after arriving here in the late 1990s.

They are scheduled to return to court on Aug. 8.

* * * * *

aig10To make the second-degree-murder charges stick, the prosecutors would have to convince a jury that Sytsma’s death occurred based on malevolent intent on the part of Lucaj and Quagliata, which might not be easy. Given the situation, a manslaughter conviction would appear to be a much easier.

In some cases, a conviction for involuntary manslaughter constitutes a “crime of moral turpitude” which, to the best of my knowledge, automatically triggers deportation in immigration cases. Here, given what appears to be clear negligence on the part of the owners, I suspect that this offense will be considered a “crime of moral turpitude. If Lucaj and Quagliata are convicted of voluntary manslaughter, once they’ve completed their sentences they will certainly be “gone, baby, gone.”

And, just for the record, I would be remiss if I failed to point out that the obvious — that the cane corsos who are about to be euthanized would probably be living long happy lives were it not for the clear negligence (and possible mistreatment) on the part of their masters that led them to this unfortunate pass. There does not appear to be any evidence suggesting that these dogs started out as killers, but if they were innately aggressive for whatever reason, they should have been tethered at all times both for their protection and the protection of the humanoids in the neighborhood.

 

 

 

 

The Murder Bush Trials

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by Lise LaSalle

The accident that claimed the life of Patty Wlasiuk took place in the early morning hours of April 3, 2002 in the small town of Oxford, New York, a rural upstate area in Chenango County.

atty2Emergency services received a call informing them of a pickup truck that had been submerged into a lake in the area of Guilford Lake. When they arrived on site, Peter Wlasiuk who was married to Patty, appeared soaking wet and told emergency workers that his wife had been driving the truck and had to swerve abruptly when she saw a deer on the road. He managed to get out of the truck but could not save his wife from the frigid water.

A State Police diver swam to the bottom of the lake to retrieve Patty’s body and bring it to shore. EMT’s tried to resuscitate her and she was taken to the hospital where they attempted to revive her again. She was pronounced dead shortly after her arrival at the hospital.

The Chenango County Sheriff’s Department rapidly called it a homicide instead of an accident, even though that same day, forensic pathologist Dr. James Terzian, after performing an autopsy, had declared Patty’s death to be a ‘’probable drowning – pending toxicology.’’

burdocksAfter hearing negative reports from family and friends about Peter and Patty’s mariage,  the police had theorized that Peter could have drowned his wife at another location and then taken her to Guilford Lake, but they soon solidified their theory because of the fact that Patty had burdocks in her hair and on some of her clothing. Burdocks were also found on the boots Peter was wearing during the accident and that washed up on the shore. The police claimed to have inspected the scene of the accident and to not have seen any burdock bushes in the area, so they then decided that Patty had to have been killed near some burdock bushes.

After obtaining search warrants, the cops went to the Wlasiuk residence and found and secured some burdock bushes in the yard. On one of the bushes near the pool, they found two to three hairs stuck on the branches. In the lab, the final count became 18 hairs.

Four days after the accident, divers examined the bottom of the lake for burdocks. They found Patty’s coat and took pictures of it. When they turned inside, they realized that it was covered with burdocks. They found her driver’s license in one of the pockets and took more photos. Once at the lab, additional items were found in the pockets. A tool box was also found but they did not open it or take pictures of it, but rather left at the bottom of the lake.

With the discovery of the burdock bushes, the police presented the case to a Grand Jury on April 11th, 2002 and Wlasiuk was indicted on a single count of second degree murder. They also went back to Dr. Terzian to tell him about the burdock situation. Based mostly on that fact, he changed his opinion on the manner of death and declared it to be ‘’asphyxiation due to suffocation.’’

They did not intend to beat around the bush when they strongly identified the burdocks as the smoking gun.

The truck

truck open windowThey removed the pickup truck from the lake the morning following the accident. It was towed and secured in the Chenango County Sheriff’s Department garage. An unqualified accident re-constructionist from the Sheriff’s Department conducted the accident and reconstruction work which included a thorough examination and measurements at the scene and of the truck. The department’s evidence technician/photographer was also present during this process and took photographs. All of this took place in the first few days following the accident.

The State stated that Wlasiuk could not have come out through the driver’s window because the opening was too small. But when you look at the photos they took, it raises questions. I think most people could go through this opening, especially if it was an emergency.

The hair

The lead detective, James Lloyd and the District Attorney, Joseph McBride, went to the hospital to meet with Dr. Terzian who gave them several controlled head hair samples he had pulled from Patty after her body had been subjected to organ donation, a funeral and a second autopsy. Lloyd went back to Chenango County with this evidence.

The NY Sheriff’s Department’s forensic team was asked to conduct a forensic examination of the truck, but let’s not forget that the submersion and removal from the lake and all that had been done over the last three weeks before the forensic exam could have affected the outcome. And by some lucky coincidence, and without using special equipment or lighting, during a visual examination of the truck, they found a strand of hair in the bed of the truck, stuck to a burr in the liner.

The lab results on the 2 or 3 hairs on the bush at the residence, that became 18 by the time they got to the lab, were examined. DNA was found on several hairs that matched Patty. DNA on the hair found in the bed of the truck also matched Patty’s.

bush areaPolice came up with the theory that Peter had killed his wife after a violent struggle in the yard where he dragged her which led to some burdocks attaching all over her clothes and hair. According to them, he pulled her to the truck and put her in the bed and staged an accident at the lake.

In April, the ground was muddy after the snow had melted, and Patty had no mud on her shoes, clothes or hair. There were no drag marks near the truck or in the yard close to the bushes. There were no defensive wounds at all found on Patty’s body or dirt under her fingernails.

Peter’s version of the accident 

Peter’s trial was set for November 2002 and he testified under oath during an insurance deposition while he was incarcerated: On this fatal day, he drove his wife and their three daughters to the babysitter in his pickup truck. Patty borrowed the babysitter’s car to drive to Sidney Hospital where she worked the 3-11 shift as a nurse. Peter went to work at his own bar, the Angel Inn. He closed the bar early and went home and waited for his wife who was supposed to stop to pick up the kids after work. At about 11:40PM, the babysitter called him to ask if he knew where Patty was. He told her she should be there soon but shortly after, Patty arrived home without the kids and Peter asked her where they were and an argument ensued over who was supposed to pick them up. The argument intensified.

The babysitter called again and Peter told her Patty just came home and that she had grabbed his truck keys and they were going to be on their way. Patty took the wheel and Peter put his boots on and ran to jump in the passenger’s seat. They argued some more and Patty rolled down her window to flick her cigarette and glowing ash blew into the back seat area. She pulled over on the right shoulder and leaned over to put it out and Peter smelled beer on her breath which made the argument escalate even more. He demanded that she pull over immediately and go back home because he did not want her driving drunk with the kids. She was so upset that she pulled to the left into a driveway to turn around to go back home. Peter heard a grinding sound and yelled out. His wife made a comment with words to the effect, “I should just drive this thing right into the lake”.

lakeThe next thing he knew, the truck was going into the lake. His first thoughts were, “Now what am I going to do, how am I going to get this out of here.” Right after, water was coming in and they were sinking. He tried getting out and couldn’t. Patty froze behind the wheel. Her window was down so he climbed over her and through the open window. He grabbed her by the collar and pulled her out with him but as he struggled to get out, the force of the current made him lose his grip. He surfaced and swam to shore which was about 60 feet away. He got out of the water and started yelling her name repeatedly. He knocked on doors of cottages near the scene and got no answer. Someone finally answered and agreed to call 9-1-1. He returned to the scene with the caller and his friend and continued looking for Patty before first responders arrived. Shivering and cold, he stood on the road and flagged down the first police car. The deputy put him in the car so he could get warm. He later was taken by ambulance to Sidney Hospital.

First trial 

neroniIn November 2002, the case went to trial in Chenango County, NY before the Honorable Howard Sullivan. Wlasiuk had changed attorneys and Frederick Neroni was now representing him. Peter was subsequently convicted and sentenced to 25 years to life in state prison.

An appeal was filed on his behalf. A long list of prosecutorial and judicial errors was put together and the case was returned for a re-trial.

Neroni had Wlasiuk sign his house over as collateral, and he stood to make more money with the deal if he lost the case. Not reassuring for a client. And let’s just say that he ended up being disbarred so I will leave it at that.

scharfRandel Scharf was assigned as his new Attorney for the next trial.

In November 2007, Peter hired private investigator David Beers who met with Scharf to review the case.

Beers was previously employed by the NY State Police as an investigator with experience in narcotics, major crimes and the forensics unit. He had over 34 years of investigative experience.

After a preliminary review of the case with Scharf, Beers agreed to take the case. To this day, he is still actively involved. He managed to identify major issues and concerns right away concerning the police investigation and the physical evidence.

beersIt became obvious that Peter’s original attorney had never provided all of the discovery information or had failed to ask for it. As additional discovery materials were received and reviewed, more and more problems were discovered about the police investigation and the physical evidence. If these issues had been addressed and properly dealt with before the first trial, Beers believe that Peter would have been exonerated. For example, another forensic pathologist, Dr. Michael Sikirica, had been brought in and had concluded that this was a drowning, but he was never called as a witness for the defense. Moreover, the unqualified accident reconstruction work was never challenged. And the list goes on. Trying to repair everything that wasn’t done became an uphill battle.

Second trial 

The second trial started in September 2008 before acting Chenango County Court Judge, Martin Smith. This time, the jury knew Wlasiuk had badenalready been convicted. Even if a change of venue was warranted and requested, it was denied. During the trial, Dr. Sikirica testified for the defense and the details of the case were challenged. Dr. Terzian’s findings were bolstered this time by none other than TV personality, Dr. Michael Baden, concerning both the autopsy and cause of death.

The defense called a qualified accident re-constructionist. Beers even testified about definitely finding burdocks growing all around the lake and in the area where the accident occurred. He had photographs to prove it and testimony from divers ‘’ Robert Small stated since September 1995 I have made numerous dives in Guilford Lake all of which are logged. In the course of my diving in Guilford Lake I have observed the commonly recognized spiny spheres referred to as burdocks laying partially exposed on the bottom silt in shallow water. On one occasion as my diving buddy, Tony Mangini, and I exited the water he brought to my attention that he had several burdock spheres stuck to the Velcro portion of the pocket flap of his buoyancy control vest.  Read the rest of the report for further information.’’

diaryThe jurors were split during deliberations but convicted Wlasiuk again because of evidence offered by Scharf. Without limiting instructions from the court, the jury misinterpreted the evidence and it became the turning point of their decision. The result: another conviction for 25 to life. Part of Patty’s diary was presented at trial and some notes written on it had convinced some jurors of Peter’s guilt, but it turned out that the notes had been written by detective Lloyd. When 4 of the jurors found out, they signed affidavits to the effect that they would have voted not  guilty had they known it was not Patty’s handwriting.

Peter Wlasiuk did not blame Scharf and is convinced that the jury being misled was totally unintentional. In fact, he was very impressed with his work.

Another appeal filed. The burning bush still in flame 

Even before the second trial, Beers was convinced that one or more of the police investigators could have engaged in official misconduct or even tampering. While awaiting the appeal decision, he continued to examine the facts of the case.

In July 2011, he wrote a letter to the NY State Attorney General’s Office in Binghamton, New York expressing his concerns. In September 2011, he met and interviewed two investigators from the AG’s office. He provided information, documentation and photographs in support of his findings. After the meeting, he compiled additional information and sent it all back to them, but to this day, he never received a reply.

In December 2011, the appeals court granted the appeal finding Attorney Scharf ineffective for offering the evidence that convinced the jury to convict again, and Wlasiuk was granted a third trial.

In January 2012, NY Attorney Mark Loughran was assigned to represent Wlasiuk for his next go-round. A change of venue was requested but denied once again.

The third trial

chinagoThe third trial started in June 2012 in Chenango County Court. Once again, the jurors were fully aware throughout the course of the trial that Wlasiuk was twice convicted of murdering his wife Patty. He was convicted again. Beers has been doing defense work for over 15 years, and it was one of the few times he believed his client totally innocent. He strongly believes that Wlasiuk has been wrongly convicted. It seems like finding a fair and impartial jury in such a small community where the image of Wlasiuk has been badly damaged, is not an easy task and could have accounted for the verdict.

Facts as presented by defense and prosecution 

  • The prosecution claims that if Wlasiuk lied about his wife swerving on the road because there was a deer, he must have lied about the rest.
  • The defense asserts that Wlasiuk was trying to protect his wife because she could have lost her nursing license if she had a sixth DUI.
  • Dr. Terzian original conclusion was drowning but he changed it to suffocation after hearing about the burdocks. He believed that Patty’s lungs did not contain enough water for a drowning.
  • Dr. Sikirica who testified for free and who is more experienced than Terzian was of the professional opinion that Patty’s death was a drowning and the injuries sustained were consistent with a combination of the accident, drowning and rescue efforts. After examining Patty’s lungs, the conclusion was that their weight signified their water content was enough to have been a drowning.
  • The Prosecution said there were no burdocks by the lake so Patty had to have been killed and dragged at home near the bushes.
  • The Defense argued and demonstrated that there were burdocks around the scene of the accident and no drag marks in the Wlasiuk’s yard. Also no defensive wounds on the victim or dirt or DNA under her fingernails. Her white shoes and clothes were pristine. Even if she was underwater, some grass or mud stains are pretty resistant even when submerged.
  • A non-qualified expert for the prosecution declared that the truck had to be have been driven slowly into the lake and that the driver did not lose control.
  • A qualified expert for the defense recreated the drive and demonstrated that the truck lost control at high-speed. The type of tires and the tire marks were photographed and used.
  • The prosecution insisted that Patty would not have gone off the road.
  • The defense had toxicology reports indicating that she was inebriated and had a history of DUI’s.
  • The prosecution said that Peter’s hair was dry and the rest of his body soaked.
  • The defense had interview notes of initial testimonies where it was constantly said that Peter was soaked from head to toe.
  • The prosecution said that if a few hairs belonging to Patty were found on burdocks in the backyard, it meant the crime happened there.
  • The defense argues that it is totally normal to have found hair blown away in the yard because Patty lived there.
  • The prosecution said that Patty had to have been placed in the bed of the truck.
  • The defense argued it made no sense for Wlasiuk to have put her in such a visible place when she could have been placed in the cab with a seat belt. Plus Patty was found in the lake and not in the bed of the truck.

Conclusion

This is a very troubling case that badly needs a change of venue to be able to retain a jury not aware of the case and the previous convictions. Because Peter Wlasiuk first trial happened without the help of the right experts and testimony, it seems that history repeated itself.

tracksThe evidence without the burdocks, and without going on gut feelings or on the alleged difficult relationship the Wlasiuk had, is pretty convincing and in my opinion, raised a reasonable doubt. I could not help noticing some terziansimilarities with the movie My Cousin Vinny when the defense expert proved how the tire tracks meant the car was out of control. I am also sorry to say that there was also a little comedic vibe when Dr. Terzian explained how Patty was suffocated but there were no signs of a physical struggle. (see attached video) The arrival of Dr. Baden was surely meant to afford more credibility  to the court.

Let’s be serious here, to base a prosecution on the presence of burdocks does not give much confidence in the State’s investigation. In this case, they did not seem to be able to see the forest for the trees or the truth for the burdocks.

Video outlining both sides of the case and accident reconstructions

http://www.veoh.com/watch/v701003153TeMre8r?h1=Deep+Waters.+The+Case+of+Peter+Wlasiuk

 

wlasiuk and hubbie

 

“Behind and Beyond the Wall”: If I Could Turn Back the Page…

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This is the fourth in our series of posts by Tyler who received several life sentences for an armed robbery he took part in when he was 17. No one was injured in the “stick-up” but that did him no good when it came to sentencing.

by Tyler (June 7, 2014)

Recently, my father asked me, “If you could go back in time and talk to yourself, what would you say?”

The more I thought, the more I realized how complex a question that is. For example, when do you feel you could have used the advice from the future “you” the most? Do you think you would have listened? Do you know not only what you would say, but how to say it? These are only a few of the questions that come to mind. It makes me wonder…

ard9How many of you out there can relate to this topic?

As for myself, I sure as hell wish I could go back in time. If I could, here is a little bit of what I would say to myself.

“Hey Tyler. It’s me. Well…by me, I actually mean you. The “future you,” that is. I’m here to talk to you about some of the choices you are going to make, and the paths you are going to walk if you continue on your course.

No, don’t shut down. Don’t tune me out, or try to explain. Don’t get angry and all worked up. I know what you are going to say. Hell, I am you, remember?

Ty, I want to address the immediate issue. I know that you are at your breaking point and have been thinking about becoming a gang member.

ard7Actually, I take that back. Thinking is too strong a word. That’s part of the problem. Thinking is something you haven’t been doing much of lately.

You feel as though this is the life you want now – a life representing a “set.” A brotherhood of others who are just as screwed up as us. You find comfort in an identity of “Me against the world.” This inspires purpose and meaning within you. Believe me, I get it.

You ran away from home almost a year ago, and have felt the “freedom” of the streets ever since – late nights spent with the homeboys talking about how “fucked up” life is, a group of teenagers blind to the fact that they cannot see reality for what it is. No rules, no school and no one to point out how lost you really are. In your mind, you are in control and can handle whatever comes your way.

ardTyler, the road that you are choosing is dark and cruel, kid. Things are going to become far crazier than you can keep up with. Oh, you will stay alive. You are lucky enough for that. But, how you feel right now will change. The way you look at life is going to shift drastically.

When you come out of this fog and the dust settles, the weight of your choices will bow your shoulders and bend your back. What I mean is you will feel so bad about who you have become, the decision you have made and the circumstances as a result of those choices that life will seem unbearable.

It is going to quickly become brutal for you, Tyler, and you will continue to lose yourself for a long time.

ard10It is not too late! Go home! Life is going to become better with your family. They miss you more than you realize. Right now, you remember the bad times, but they think of the good. They want you back. They need you! The feelings you have of young comrades and “Us against it all” pale in comparison to Christmas with your brothers and sister, Mom tickling your back with her long fingernails, or hiking in the mountains with Dad.

Think Tyler! I know that it is painful to remember this, but don’t push it away. You have been angry long enough. Remember that you are smart, funny, likable. Life will be so much more if you would only go home and give up this way of living.

ard4Damn It! You know this! All I want is for you to see! You are so stubborn, trying to prove that you can make it. Why not prove that you can handle something else? Can you handle a job? High School? College?

No…I can see it in your eyes. You have stopped listening. Even though it is me…you…us.

ard8Instead, you will have to prove you can handle other situations. You will have to prove that you will fight for your shoes in juvenile hall. That you can handle the “hole” in county jail and the “bucket” in prison. You will prove that you can survive race riots and “Torpedoes,” broken bones, block guns and razor blade slashes.

You will have to make it through the betrayal of those “homeboys,” and the hurt you have caused your family and the shame of victimizing innocent people.

ard2But the day will come that you will blink and suddenly you will start to think differently. You will crave the love of your family, and want to be a part of them again, so much it hurts. Realizations will set in that “this person” is not you, nor who you were raised to be. You will see others around you for the examples that they are. Men who went too far for too long and aren’t coming back.

Imagine extending your arms and touching both sides of a concrete cage you call “Home.” It will cause you to cringe, because you will finally be thinking, and your thought will be…

Is this Forever?”

Thanks for reading.

Tyler

 

Click here to view Tyler’s previous posts:

“Behind and Beyond the Wall”: Tyler’s Life and Death on the Mainline

“Behind and Beyond the Wall”: The Gift of Freedom

“Behind and Beyond the Wall”: Tyler’s Story of Finding Life in Darkness

Ohio Grandmother Sentenced to 3 Years for Gagging Granddaughter with “Fecal-Soiled” Men’s Underwear

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commentary by Patrick H. Moore

A 13-year-old New Straitsville, Ohio girl has a steel plate in her head, a souvenir of abuse she suffered at the hands of an unidentified adult.  So when this girl’s present caregiver, her 54-year-old grandmother Karen Sharpe, began to systematically abuse her and her 11-year-old sister, the 13-year old decided she wasn’t going to take it anymore. Instead, she made a video of Grandma Karen abusing her younger sister and showed it to detective Sgt. Ed Downs of the Hocking County Sheriff’s Office who immediately took the affirmative step of arresting Grandma Karen while describing her particular form of abuse as “the most disgusting, heinous child abuse I’ve ever dealt with.”

ed3Authorities still might not know about the abuse was it not for the older sister, whom Sgt. Downs has described as “wise well beyond her years,” taking the clever and courageous step of recording her sister’s abuse. The reported provocation that spurred Big Sister into action was Grandma Karen allegedly punching her in the face. After that, it was just a matter of time until Big Sister had the opportunity to film Grandma Karen in flagrante delicto.

So what exactly did Grandma Karen do that was so disgusting and heinous?

ed4Very simple. While cursing at the younger sister for reportedly stepping on her injured foot, Grandma Karen allegedly forced a pair of feces-soiled men’s underwear into the 11-year-old’s mouth and taped it there. When the girl vomited, Sharpe allegedly told her to swallow it.

 “I’ve never seen an animal being treated this way,” Downs said.

(It’s easy, of course, to dump on Grandma Karen and she obviously mistreated her granddaughters in an egregious manner. It was revealed at sentencing, however, that the underwear were not soiled with feces although Grandma Karen told the child they were.)

granAccording to Downs, Grandma Karen had been given custody of the two girls, who share the same biological mother. The girls have now been removed from Grandma Karen’s home and relocated by the county’s children’s services.

Sharpe has been charged with kidnapping, two felony counts of endangering children, and misdemeanor counts of endangering children, assault and domestic violence. She is being held on $1 million bond at the Southeastern Ohio Regional Jail in Nelsonville. Detectives also are investigating Sharpe’s live-in boyfriend, according to Downs.

*     *     *     *     *

As has become increasingly clear during the time All Things Crime Blog has been in existence, child abuse of all types may be the number one problem facing this nation (and perhaps all nations). Whereas violent crimes — including murders, burglaries and robberies –have been for the most part steadily decreasing over the past 20 years, I suspect that child abuse levels remain at historic highs and are unlikely to decrease without a major shake-up due to the fact that this type of crime for the most part hides behind closed doors and thus, in many instances, can neither be measured nor detected .

ed2Therefore, it is extremely gratifying to see a courageous child such as 13-year-old Big Sister refuse to allow her and her sister to remains the victims of an abusive caregiver like Grandma Karen.

Part of the reason it is so difficult to protect children from abusive caregivers is because the time-honored America notion of the sanctity of the home complete with the right to substantial privacy flies in the face of any attempt on the part of “society” to monitor what goes on “behind closed doors.”

gran9In fact, as long as private citizens have the right to shield their private matters from prying eyes, there is no way for children’s protective services to intercede on behalf of abused children until things have gotten so out of hand that the abuse becomes obvious to outside eyes.

In short, we have a problem without any obvious solution – a problem that ultimately results in untold numbers of abused children growing up to become criminals, thus swelling our already bloated prison populations.

 

Updated:

In June, Hocking County Common Pleas Judge John T. Wallace sentenced Karen Sharpe, 54, of New Straitsville, to three years in prison, the maximum allowable by law for the third-degree felony of endangering children, after Sharpe pleaded guilty to one count.

As part of her plea deal, Sharpe admitted abusing the 11-year-old as punishment for stepping on her injured foot.

In turns out that there was no fecal matter in the underwear Sharpe stuffed in her granddaughter’s mouth:

“There was no fecal material in the underwear. She made the child believe that (there was),” K. Robert Toy, Sharpe’s attorney, said in court. “She is remorseful, she is sorry. She did not have the best parenting skills, obviously.”

“There was, at least, psychological harm,” Judge Wallace responded. “Ms. Sharpe, the children needed you desperately. You were a safe harbor. Things didn’t work out. The sentence needs to reflect that.”

Sharpe had custody of her two granddaughters for about three years because they had been abused by their parents. They have the same mother and different fathers, Attorney Toy reported.

Sharpe herself was raised in an abusive household and  endured an abusive marriage. She has health problems that include diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and congestive heart failure, Toy and Sharpe’s daughter, Brandi Cooper, told the judge.

“She was trying to do right” by her granddaughters, but her age, illness and lack of parenting skills got in the way, said Cooper, who is not the girls’ mother.

Sharpe, who sat in a wheelchair and was tethered to the oxygen tank that Toy said she uses around the clock, wept as she listened to her daughter.

“I accept responsibility for my actions,” she told the judge. “I love my grandchildren. I apologize to them.”

*     *     *     *     *

The pain, the pain! Grandma was abused. She may have abused her children. Her granddaughters were abused by their parents which is why Grandma gained custody of them. Then Grandma abused them. Will they granddaughters abuse their children or will they be the courageous ones who will find the strength to BREAK THE CHAIN. I like to think they will…

2-Year-Old Found Dead and 13-Year-Old Critically Wounded in Oregon Beach Town; Police Seek Missing Mother (Updated)

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commentary by Patrick H. Moore

For the most part, life is pretty calm, even a trace corny in Cannon Beach, a touristy hamlet of around 1,700 souls in the far Northwestern corner of the great state of Oregon. Where else, for example, would you find a town sponsoring an official, annual sand-castle building contest. Perhaps nowhere. It’s one of those places with a quaint downtown, lovely hotels including the SurfsandResort at 148 West Gower Avenue, and its piece de resistance, Haystock Rock, a mighty piece of igneous rock off the coast that measures 235 feet in height and is often accessible by foot at low tide.

baby7Today, however, there’s serious excitement and more than a smidgen of fear and sorrow in Cannon Beach. In fact, there probably hasn’t been this much excitement since a nasty tsunami in 1964 damn near washed the whole place away. [According to Wikipedia, the annual sand-castle building contest was instituted to win back the tourist trade, some (or much) of which had been lost as a result of tsunami which apparently washed away Highway 101.]

Sara Roth of KGW writes:

baby3A makeshift memorial outside of a Cannon Beach hotel was growing Saturday after a housekeeper found a 2-year-old girl dead and teenager seriously injured there Friday.

It was the first homicide in Cannon Beach in at least 50 years, police said.

Officials were searching for the victims’ mother and her SUV in relation to the incident. Police said the father was working with authorities and was not a suspect.

Ms. Roth reports that the good people of Cannon Beach tethered colorful balloons in the shapes of hearts, stars and Sesame Street characters outside the Surfsand Resort where the victims were discovered by a housekeeper in a third-floor hotel room at 9:40 a.m. Friday.

The toddler was found dead and the 13-year-old girl critically cut, according to Cannon Beach Police Chief Jason Schermerhorn.

The teen was flown by medical helicopter to Doernbecher Children’s Hospital at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland. She came out of surgery on Friday night and although seriously injured, is reportedly stabilized, according to Clatsop County District Attorney Josh Marquis.

There were no cuts on the toddler. An autopsy was scheduled for Sunday.

* * * * *

baby4There are several details in this case that are very interesting and could possibly ultimately contradict a claim by the authorities that at present, the children’s mother Jessica Smith, 40, of Goldendale, Washington, is merely a person of interest and not a suspect.

At present, Police Chief Schermerhorn has stated that the authorities merely want to make sure that Jessica is OK. In a sense, it’s certainly not hard to understand the Police Chief’s reluctance to view Jessica as a suspect. She’s a young-looking 40-year-old who certainly doesn’t look like the kind of person who would kill her toddler and critically wound her teenage daughter.

baby6If it wasn’t her, however (assuming it’s not the father), it would have had to have been either an unidentified intruder or the 13-year-old daughter who (although it seems unlikely) could conceivably have killed her little sister and then critically wounded herself with a series of knife wounds.

This scenario however, seems somewhat unlikely because if this had happened, the mother Jessica would probably not be MIA somewhere in her white SUV, but rather would have gone immediately to the authorities.

baby2On the other hand, although the police have said that there were no signs of a forced entry, someone Jessica knew could have entered the third floor room, done the dirty work and then abducted Jessica in her white SUV. The advantage of this scenario, assuming the mysterious violent criminal does not kill Jessica, would be that we would not have to once again face the horrible truth that a certain number of mother’s can and will murder their children.

Jessica’s vehicle is a 2007 gold Chevy Suburban with Washington license plate #APX3141.

Jessica reportedly checked into the hotel with her two children on Wednesday.

baby10Police Chief Schermerhorn has stated that Washington State officials have made contact with Smith’s husband, Gregory Smith, and that he is NOT a suspect and IS cooperating with authorities. It must be noted that Jessica and Gregory Smith had separated at some previous point and that according to Clark county records, Jessica Smith had requested a restraining order against Gregory Smith just a few weeks ago on July 17, and that her request WAS DENIED.

Thus, whether we like it or not, we are confronted with the raw materials for a horrible tragedy that COULD go something like this: Mother fears father from whom she is separated. Because she is unable to get a restraining order protecting her and her kids from father whom she fears, she decides to kill the kids to keep them out of father’s clutches.

Tragically, this is the sort of thing that mothers who are at the end of their rope sometimes do. I keep hoping that it’s not so, however, and much prefer the EVIL INTRUDER hypothesis.

Residents of the small community of Goldendale, Washington, which has a population of approximately 3,500, were naturally shocked by the tragedy.

baby11“It’s beyond any of our understanding as to why something like that might happen,” said Goldendale resident Carol Martin.

The Smiths formerly lived in a mobile home several miles outside of town, but neighbors told KGW the family has since moved.

Other than these few details, the Smith’s neighbors said they knew very little about the family and rarely had any interaction with them.

Police asked anyone who has information about Smith or the location the SUV to call Cannon Beach police immediately at 503-436-2811. The Clatsop County Major Crime Team, along with federal agencies, was handling the investigation.

* * * * *

This is a very dark scenario and I fear that the facts of the case will only become more shocking as the details unfold.

 

Update:

It was bound to happen and it has. As some point today, the authorities announced that Jessica Smith is no longer merely a “person of interest”; rather, she is now wanted on suspicion of having murdered her two-year-old daughter.

Although she was seriously wounded, it was also announced that her 13-year-old daughter is expected to make a full recovery.

Watching Karla Homolka: A U.S. Perspective on Karla Homolka’s Plea Bargain

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by Patrick H. Moore

The case of Karla Homolka and her husband Paul Bernardo is one of the most spectacular criminal cases in recent memory. The case outraged many Canadians, particularly the fact that Karla received only a 12-year-sentence based on her serving as the Crown’s star witness at Bernardo’s trial.  Furthermore, in recent years, the theory that it was actually Karla who committed the murders of two Canadian teens has been presented and vigorously supported by a sizable number of individuals who have studied this case closely.

karl6In this post, I will wade cautiously into the treacherous waters of the Karla Homolka debate and offer certain observations about the case based, in part, on my discussions with Michael D. Sellers, writer/producer of the film Karla, and further reading suggested by him, and partly on my own experience working as a private investigator for many of Southern California’s finest criminal defense attorneys during the past decade. During this time, I have worked on over 200 state and Federal criminal cases, reviewed and commented on hundreds of plea agreements, and witnessed dozens of defendants receive either lenient or very lenient sentences in Federal court.

In addition, it must be stated that some of these favorable outcomes were achieved by combining the mitigating factors with the fact that the clients cooperated wholeheartedly with law enforcement and, in many instances, testified against co-defendants at trial.  Strong factors in mitigation combined with effective cooperation can eliminate years, and even sometimes decades, from what would otherwise be very lengthy sentences.

 

 A Brief Review of the Case

sisterPaul Bernardo operated independently, as the “Scarborough Rapist,” carrying out as many as 25 rapes, and was also the apparent leader in his and Karla’s criminal activities. Together, they were responsible for the rape and murder of two teen victims, Leslie Mahaffy and Kristen French, and the rape and accidental death of Homolka’s younger sister Tammy. Opinions vary dramatically with respect to who did the actual murdering.  Was it Paul, as the Crown successfully argued in its case, who murdered the girls? Was it Paul and Karla working together? Or, as some claim, was it Karla alone who did the killing? Although this question may never be definitively answered, common sense suggests that it was a team effort.  After all, the video evidence clearly demonstrates that Paul and Karla were both involved in Tammy’s death, Karla giving her the knockout drops, while Paul raped her both vaginally and anally. In addition, at Paul’s behest, Karla also sexually assaulted her younger sister. In the deaths of the two teen victims, the video evidence shows that both Karla and Paul were there together at their house while they held the two courageous girls captive.  Thus, from a legal standpoint, it makes little karl8difference which one “pulled the trigger.” Paul and Karla, to a large degree, acted in unison and they are both responsible for the outcome.  A good analogy would be a bank robbery in which two perpetrators go into the bank to execute the robbery while the getaway driver waits outside. If something goes awry and the robbers panic and shoot and kill two tellers, the getaway driver is also held responsible for the two homicides, which would probably be charged as 2nd Degree Murders, even though neither he nor the other two robbers initially intended for anyone to be hurt, much less killed.  If Karla Homolka and Paul Bernardo had been bound over for trial here in the United States, and if neither had received major credit for cooperation, they would both likely have been charged with Conspiracy to Commit 1st Degree Murder. The one who did the actual murdering, assuming they didn’t gang up on the victim and commit the deed in unison, would be charged with 1st Degree Murder. The other partner would be charged with aiding and abetting 1st Degree Murder or some variation thereof. The fact that both girls were tortured to varying degrees prior to the slayings would likely trigger the “torture enhancement” and if Paul and Karla were both convicted of these charges in California, they would almost certainly get the death penalty.

 

Karla Homolka’s Plea Agreement

Many individuals, both in Canada and in the United States, feel strongly that Karla Homolka’s Plea Agreement, which called for her to serve 12 years in prison based on a reduced charge of Manslaughter was much too lenient.  From a technical standpoint, Manslaughter is the appropriate charge when the defendant’s conduct does not meet the criteria of 1st or 2nd Degree Murder.  To be guilty of 1st Degree Murder, the deed must have been premeditated and committed with malice aforethought (malicious intent).  2nd Degree Murder occurs when premeditation is lacking but malicious intent is present.  Thus, if someone goes berserk and pulls out a gun and shoots someone, that person would typically be guilty of 2nd Degree Murder.  Manslaughter is readily distinguishable from Murder I and Murder II.  The key difference is that Manslaughter requires “intent to harm the victim,” not “intent to kill the victim.”
Paul Bernardo and Karla HomolkaBased on the trial evidence, it seems clear that Karla played a major part in doing in Leslie Mahaffy and Kristen French.  She clearly intended to harm them, but according to her testimony, she did not intend from the outset to kill them.  In the case of Leslie Mahaffey, when Bernardo said, “I’ve got to kill her,” because Leslie’s mask had fallen off and she could now identify them, Karla’s response was: “Well, give her some pills or something so she doesn’t feel anything.” Then, when Paul got the pills and gave them to Leslie prior to strangling her, Karla stood by and did nothing.  In the Kristen French case, Karla helped Paul capture their victim. Later, when it appeared Paul was going to finish the job on poor Kristen, Karla went and took a shower.

Based on these facts, the outrage over Karla’s plea deal on the part of the Canadian public is completely understandable.  Karla’s actions were utterly horrific and are made all the worse by the fact the victims were young and incredibly vulnerable.

karl2So the question becomes, based on this level of evidence against Karla, was the 12 year sentence reasonable? The natural and justified revulsion on the part of the citizenry toward Karla still needs to be set off against the fact that she cooperated and testified at trial, as well as the fact that she was severely abused on an ongoing basis by Bernardo.  My sense is that upon weighing all the factors, the 12 year sentence would probably be viewed as more or less reasonable by many legal professionals here in the United States.  It should be noted, however, that in a court of law, there is seldom such a thing as a completely fair sentence.  The results are always open to interpretation and, as we all know, reasonable minds can differ.

And, off course, there is the further issue that the Crown absolutely needed Karla in order to successfully prosecute Bernardo.  Without her testimony, their case against Bernardo might never have been brought to trial.

It’s important to recognize that time-honored phrases such as “the wheels of justice,” the “justice system,” and the “legal system” may convey a false sense of how the system actually works.  The phrase, “wheels of justice” suggests that the system is karl12machine-like in its scope and breadth, that it grinds away day and night, crossing all manner of terrain in its irrevocable pursuit of justice.  Well, in reality, it doesn’t actually work quite that way.  Sure, the system grinds away, and no doubt intends to perpetuate justice, but the fact remains that it consists not of machines but rather people, real human beings, flesh and blood with all that entails.  In any criminal case, the human element plays a huge and decisive factor.  And it is certainly true that this human factor sometimes results in inequities.  For example, a woman, particularly an attractive woman like Karla Homolka, will often get a better deal than a man would facing the same charges. Some would say that chivalry is not dead; others might term it sexism, plain and simple.  But no matter how you slice this particular onion, these are the facts. Judges, the majority of whom are male, are loathe to send a pretty woman away to prison for a protracted period of time if they can come up with an excuse not to.  The statistics bear this out. And, of course, there are exceptions to this general rule.

There are several factors that influence the drafting and the signing of the plea agreement.  First of all, it’s a back-and-forth process.  First, the prosecution floats a proposed plea agreement to the defendant and his/her defense team.  If the defense is not satisfied, it proposes changes. So then it goes back to the prosecution. Both sides negotiate.  This is called “acting in good faith”; the parties, although fiercely advocating their respective positions, are required to proceed in a civil and professional manner.

There are also purely practical considerations such as the current workload faced by the participants.  How much time do you want to put into this case? How many more important cases are you handling at that particular moment? But in the case of Karla Homolka and Paul Bernardo, it’s safe to assume that there was no other more critical case in all of Canada at that time.  So time was not a big factor. This brings us back to my earlier point: The Crown needed Karla in order to successfully prosecute Paul Bernardo.  Without her, they had no shot at obtaining the murder convictions.

Two quick observations and then we will move on to the “abuse factor” and how it may have affected Karla’s ultimate sentence.

karl11The profound outpouring of rage and frustration on the part of the Canadian public upon learning more about the case during the course of the trial is now legendary. But it is instructive to stand back for a moment and consider what would have happened if the Crown had refused to give Karla the deal they ultimately did and she had gone to trial.  Similarly to Bernardo’s trial, Karla’s proceedings would have been very much in the public eye, whether or not the media gag order was imposed. At the trial, much of the same information that came out at Bernardo’s trial would have been presented: Karla as abuse victim, Karla as good girl gone bad, Karla and her lawyers claiming that Paul Bernardo was the real criminal and that he should have been the one standing trial. Now, when one eschews emotionality and takes a hard look at this case, it becomes clear that the Crown was, to a large degree, stuck between “a rock and a hard place.” They could not afford for Karla to go to trial considering the fact that, notwithstanding her outcome, it would have inserted Paul Bernardo directly into the crosshairs of public consciousness — yet it would have done so without the Crown having sufficient evidence with which to prosecute him. So let’s say Karla went to trial and was convicted of 2nd degree murder in the cases of Leslie Mahaffey and Kristen French. The Crown would then have still needed her testimony to convict Bernardo.  Suppose Karla, through her attorneys, had then refused to comply with the Crown’s needs? The public anger that would have then erupted based on the Crown’s inability to prosecute and convict Bernardo would have dwarfed the ultimate outrage over Karla’s allegedly overly-lenient Plea Agreement. Keep in mind that the legal professionals handling the case were painfully aware of all of these possibilities.  They don’t want the roof to blow off.  Sure, they know that they’re going to take a beating down the road when the truth comes out at the trial, but that beating, to these seasoned professionals, is more akin to a severe paddling than the pummeling they would have sustained had they been unable to take Bernardo to trial.  The parties were undoubtedly very cognizant of the risks they faced. They knew that both sides had to cooperate in good faith. The larger catastrophe of Paul Bernardo escaping prosecution for the murders of Leslie Mahaffy and Kristen French had to be avoided. At all costs. It was as simple as that.

 

The Abuse Issue:

A further factor that influenced the decision to give Karla Homolka a moderately good deal was the physical and psychological abuse that she endured.  The control exercised over her by Bernardo was considered to be Svengali-like in its nature and raises an important question: can (and should) spousal abuse be viewed as a factor in mitigation, and if so, to what degree? Keep in mind that factors in mitigation are in no way exonerative. They simply help to reduce the sentence.

There is no doubt that substantial actual physical abuse occurred.  The ER examination of Homolka in January 1993 reads as follows, (Galligan report, p. 42)

On examination today, Karla is in distress, quite anxious and understandably so. Her eyes reveal raccoon’s eyes, bruising all around the orbits, large contusion to her head with what feels almost like a depressed fracture, although x-rays have ruled this out. She has a subconjunctival haemorrhage in her left eye, which was seen by Dr. Marriott, and she was re-assured. She has several bruises down the left side of her neck, along her arms, with a very large bruise in the upper right arm which is three centimetres by three. About 75% of her legs from mid-thigh down are bruised, quite dramatically and swollen to touch. She cannot move them due to pain. On the right thigh, about 3 cm. above the right knee, there is a puncture wound which she said was caused by Paul Bernardo when he punctured her with a screwdriver. On the left leg, there is a large isolated contusion about 6 inches by 3 inches, quite warm and tender.

urlKarla Homolka suffered one hell of a beating at the hands of Paul Bernardo. It’s hard to see how any reasonably objective observer would doubt that Paul had beaten Karla repeatedly — given his documented history of violent sexual assaults in the Scarborough rapes, his violent assaults on his girlfriend prior to Karla, and the physical evidence with Karla.

So we must ask: what role did the abuse play in affecting Karla’s eventual sentence?

The answer is the abuse became an essential element in the plea bargaining process. Karla’s attorney initially sought full immunity – with the abuse as a key bargaining chip, and the Crown had little choice other than to view the abuse as a strong factor in mitigation for the simple reason, as discussed previously, that Canadian law enforcement did not have enough evidence to arrest and convict Paul Bernardo without Karla’s ongoing cooperation.

To its credit, the Crown does not appear to have at any point considered giving Karla full immunity, and thus there seems to have been no inclination to consider the spousal abuse to be fully exonerative.

In Canada, there was relatively little reaction to the deal when it was first announced, in large part due to the fact that at that time, in July of 1993, the videotapes showing Karla’s active involvement in the sexual crimes (but not the murders) had not yet been turned over to the Crown.  When the videotapes were later found and introduced at trial, a strong wave of anti-Karla sentiment began to build, and with it, the popular perception that she had simply failed to disclose the extent of her involvement to the police.

karl5Crown officials contend, however, that Karla did fully disclose her active participation in the sexual crimes against Kristin French and Leslie Mahaffey from the moment she first approached the authorities, on February 13, 1993.  The Crown, however, chose not to share those details publicly, or otherwise prepare the public for the revelations that would occur at the trial.

Physical and emotional abuse perpetrated by unstable spouses is endemic in our society. It’s impossible to accurately gauge how prevalent it truly is because so much of the time it goes unreported. Karla had literally been abused for years before she finally came forward.

An F.B.I. article entitled: “The Disturbed Mind – Compliant Victims of the Sexual Sadist” provides useful information on this topic.  The article is presented as “a descriptive summary of the experiences of a sample of women who have been consensually involved with criminal sexual sadists.” The article describes “the physical, sexual, and psychological abuse” that seven female victims endured and discusses “the process by which they were transformed from independent, competent women to compliant appendages of their criminally active partners.” This is scary stuff and the article pulls no punches.  The descriptions of the victims’ sufferings are truly horrific:

Physical abuse

All the women suffered physical abuse during their relationship with the sadists. They reported being frequently beaten with fists and other blunt objects. One woman reported that her husband called his arms ‘guns’ and would periodically give her ‘body shots’ or blows to the chest and stomach. Another woman advised that her boyfriend kept her in captivity for 3 days during which he bound her from head to feet in adhesive tape. Hourly, he would stand her upright and strike her viciously in the body, knocking her over. Four of the women suffered broken bones at the hands of their ‘loved ones’.

karl7Five of the women were whipped with leather whips, ropes or belts…  Another woman was suspended by the wrists and whipped with a belt periodically over a number of years.

Four of the women were burned with matches, cigarettes or lighters… Biting, as a means of physical abuse, was reported by all of the women. Painful clamping devices were used on the nipples and labia of five of the respondents.

Six of the women reported that they were strangled manually or by ligature during sexual activities. Most reported either losing consciousness or being on the verge of doing so. Painful bondage was used on all the women…

While all the women advised that some of their injuries were visible to others, only one sought medical assistance. This woman’s husband broke her arm while forcing her to engage in anal sex.

Sexual abuse

All the women were sexually abused by the men. Three victims were forcibly penetrated by large foreign objects. One subject used a 12 cell flashlight and also a long cylindrical piece of wood. Almost invariably these items were inserted anally, so as to cause maximal suffering.

karl4Six of the women reported anal intercourse to be their sadistic partner’s preferred mode of sexual release. Forced fellatio was also reported by all seven women…

Two of the seven women advised that they had been urinated on, and one reported being required to administer enemas to herself. Three of the women were forced to have sex with others; two were raped by friends of the sadists, and one was forced to engage in sexual acts with another woman who had been kidnapped by her husband.

All seven of the respondents agreed that the men were sexually insatiable…

When asked to describe the worst sexual abuse suffered, one woman told being hung by her wrists and whipped to the point of unconsciousness, explaining that this degree of suffering and humiliation enabled her partner to become sexually aroused for vaginal intercourse. During the whippings she was not allowed to cry, scream or plead.

teddyThe article states that the majority of the woman had been sexually, physically and/or emotionally abused as children. All seven women in the study, like Karla, were raised in middle class or upper middle class families. Karla, based on what we know about her upbringing, was not abused as a child. Nothing in her past would seem to explain her compliance with Paul Bernardo’s demands. Of course, the absence of solid evidence that Karla was abused prior to meeting Bernardo does not establish that she was not abused.  We simply do not know. What we do know is that her relationship with Bernardo was progressively abusive, which may have served to gradually render her, in some respects, a “compliant victim.”

Another key difference between Karla and the women depicted in the study is that Karla, unlike the other victims, does not appear to have entered the relationship from a place of weakness or powerlessness. She was the aggressor in their initial sexual encounter; she precipitated their initial act of anal intercourse, and, in the early videos, she seems quite normal and content. Yet, as her relationship with Bernardo progressed, she became increasingly subservient. Since Karla did not seem to share the childhood abuse characteristic common to many “compliant victims of the sexual sadists,” and did not enter the relationship in a weakened state, we struggle to understand why she stuck around for as long as she did “once the game got rough.”

karl10One glaring fact, which may at times have been overlooked in trying to unpack this thorny case, is the extent to which THE DEATH OF HER SISTER TAMMY CHANGED EVERYTHING. It probably provided Bernardo with a ten-ton bludgeon, metaphorically speaking, with which to beat Karla. If she had gone to the authorities after Tammy’s death and simply confessed, she would have been in huge trouble and would have undoubtedly received a protracted prison sentence. Furthermore, if Bernardo had gotten wind of this, he might have had time to destroy the video evidence and Karla, if she had already confessed to accidentally asphyxiating Tammy, would have ended up, at the very least, with an aggravated Manslaughter conviction.

Therefore, it is my belief that after Tammy’s untimely death, Karla “sucked it up” for a very long time. It was only after Bernardo’s abuse had escalated to such a degree that it was approaching but had not quite reached the level of suffering experienced by the female victims in the F.B.I. study (note the apparent screwdriver puncture wound and Karla’s sea of bruises from her mid-thigh on down), that Karla saved her life by going to the authorities.  It was only a matter of time.  Sooner or later Paul Bernardo would probably have killed her, perhaps accidentally, perhaps with malice aforethought. As a result of the stark reality of the final beating and the abject terror she must have experienced, Karla Homolka “read the tea leaves” and turned herself in.  Had she not, we would be dealing with an entirely different story.

Although we will probably never know for sure if Karla killed the two Canadian schoolgirls, or if Paul killed them, or if it was a joint effort on their part, we should, in a sense, be grateful that things have turned out as they have.  If Karla had not gone to the authorities, there is little doubt that Paul Bernardo would have raped and murdered more innocent victims. By turning herself in, Karla brought a halt to the carnage. No matter what we may think about her, the reality is that her decision, self-serving though it obviously was, had the practical effect of bringing the killings to an end.

 

Click on the following links to read previous Karla posts:

Paul Bernardo Engaged to Lovely and Sensitive 30-Year-Old Woman?

Watching Karla Homolka: Karla Just Did As She Pleased

Watching Karla Homolka: The Game Gets Real

Watching Karla Homolka: Karla Stacks the Deck

Karla Homolka Psychological Evaluation, Part One: Abuse Victim or Just Plain Evil?

Watching Karla Homolka: It’s a Family Affair

Was Karla Homolka a Normal Child? The Answer Is a Resounding No

Is Karla Homolka the Most Hated Woman in North America?

The Karla Homolka Files: A U.S. Perspective on Karla Homolka’s Plea Bargain

Karla Homolka and Paul Bernardo: Canada’s Most Notorious Serial Killer Case


Ted Bundy’s Amazing Double-Barreled Jailbreaks

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compiled by Patrick H. Moore

On June 30, 1976, the notorious serial killer,Ted Bundy, was sentenced in Utah to 1 to 15 years in state prison with the possibility of parole for the kidnapping of Carol DaRonch. Thus, Bundy found himself serving real time. While he was incarcerated in Utah State Prison, investigators began searching for evidence to connect him to the murders of Caryn Campbell and Melissa Smith. The die was cast and from this point forward, Bundy’s legal problems were only going to get worse. Rachel Bell of Crime Library writes:

tedd7Detectives discovered in Bundy’s VW hairs that were examined by the FBI and found to be characteristically alike to Campbell’s and Smith’s hair. Further examination of Caryn Campbell’s remains showed that her skull bore impressions made by a blunt instrument, and those impressions matched the crowbar that had been discovered in Bundy’s car a year earlier. Colorado police filed charges against Bundy on October 22, 1976, for the murder of Caryn Campbell.

In April of 1977, Ted was transferred to Garfield County Jail in Colorado to await trial for the murder of Caryn Campbell.

tedd2While preparing for his trial, Bundy became increasingly unhappy with his attorney as he became convinced that the man was inept. Well-versed in the law, Bundy became convinced that he could do a better job representing himself and fired his lawyer. His self-confidence was such that he convinced himself that he would succeed at the trial which was scheduled for November 14, 1977. Bundy talked his way into being granted permission to leave the jail occasionally to utilize the courthouse library in Aspen to conduct legal research. What the police didn’t know was that he had a backup plan known as jailbreak.

Rachel Bell writes:

On June 7th, during one of his trips to the library at the courthouse, Bundy managed to jump from an open window, injuring his ankle in the process, and escaped to freedom. He was not wearing any leg irons or handcuffs, so he did not stand out among the ordinary citizens in the town of Aspen. It was an escape that had been planned by Ted for a while. Aspen Police were quick to set up roadblocks surrounding the town, yet Ted knew to stay within the city limits for the time being and lay low. Police launched a massive land search, using scent tracking bloodhounds and 150 searchers in the hopes of catching Ted. However, Ted was able to elude them for days.

tedd5Rachel Bell explained that while he was on the run, Bundy managed to live off of food he filched from local cabins and nearby campers. At times he slept in ones that were abandoned. Bundy knew he couldn’t hide in Aspen forever and that what he really needed was a car. Ted believed that he was destined to be free. According to an interview with Michaud and Aynesworth, Bundy explained that he felt as if he were invincible:

“(N)othing went wrong. If something did go wrong, the next thing that happened was so good it compensated. It was even better”.

tedd3Filled with his peculiar combination of positive thinking and hubris, Bundy eventually stole a car with the keys left in it. But, his luck was short-lived. While trying to flee Aspen in the stolen vehicle, he was spotted and taken back into custody.

Amazingly, although Bundy was now required to wear handcuffs and lef irons, he was still allowed to continue conducting his legal research at the Courthouse law library. Meanwhile, he bided his time and planned his next escape attempt.

Seven months later, Bundy tried again. Rachel Bell writes:

tedd6On December 30th, he crawled up into the ceiling of the Garfield County Jail and made his way to another part of the building. He managed to find another opening in the ceiling that led down into the closet of a jailer’s apartment. He sat and waited until he knew the apartment was empty, then casually walked out of the front door to his freedom. His escape would go undiscovered until the following afternoon, more than fifteen hours later.

By the time police learned of his escape, Bundy was well on his way to Chicago. Chicago was one of the few stops that Bundy would make along the route to his final destination, sunny Florida. By mid-January of 1978 Ted Bundy, using his newly acquired name Chris Hagen, had settled comfortably into a one-room apartment in Tallahassee, Florida.

Although Bundy’s back-to-back jailbreaks seem almost miraculous, and he briefly enjoyed his new-found freedom, his penchant for murdering girls soon got the best of him, and in February of 1978, he was arrested for the final time in Tallahassee.

 

Click here to view our previous Ted Bundy posts:

The Lonesome (and Thoroughly Dramatic) Death of Ted Bundy, Serial Killer

Ten Fatal Facts about Ted Bundy’s Formative Years

14 Cold-Blooded Quotes by Serial Killer Ted Bundy

Were Heather Elvis’s Remains Wrapped in a Homemade Mickey Mouse Print Bed Sheet?

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commentary by Patrick H. Moore

Unless you know her personally, or are a friend of the family, although you may have a modicum of sympathy for Tammy Moorer (after all her husband Sidney hurt her feelings badly by having sex on multiple occasions with cute, young Heather Elvis), it’s impossible to justify murdering Heather (assuming this is what happened) based on jealousy (or for any other reason). It takes two to tango and Sidney is certainly just as responsible as Heather for the fact the two of them apparently “got their limbs all entangled.”

Nonetheless, Heather is almost undoubtedly very dead while Sidney rocks on, albeit in county jail.

annn4Although Tammy and Sidney have been in custody on first-degree-murder charges since February, the case against them, although apparently quite strong, up until now has been largely circumstantial. That may be beginning to change, however, given that there now appears to be some suggestion that the skeletal remains of an adult body found on Oak Street near International Boulevard outside of DeLand, FLA on March 20th could turn out to be (I repeat: could turn out to be) the remains of Heather Elvis.

DeLand, FLA is about 40 miles north of Orlando and 58 miles from Walt Disney World.

Michael Smith of myhorrynews.com writes:

annn16A new report about human remains found in Florida says the remains belonged to an adult and were skeletal in nature, but there still are no indications whether or not they belong to Heather Elvis.

“We’ve been in contact with Horry County Police as well as many other agencies regarding this case and the possibility of the remains matching missing persons in their respective jurisdictions,” said Gary Davidson, spokesman for the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office, which is investigating the remains.

“I’m not willing to say when the contacts took place with Horry County Police or the nature of the discussions,” Davidson said.

The Horry County police, of course, are prohibited from commenting on the report out of Volusia County due to a local gag order that’s been imposed. Local prosecutors and defense attorneys are also not allowed to discuss the case due to the gag order.

ann17Prepared on Tuesday, July 29, the preliminary report from the Volusia County (Fla.) Medical Examiner’s Office provides the following new information about the state of the skeletal remains:

The remains were wrapped in a pink bathrobe, curtains and a homemade Mickey Mouse print bed sheet.

Spokesman Davidson stated that the remains have not been identified. He did not disclose whether the clothing and linens found with the remains are still in the possession of Volusia County authorities or whether they’ve been shared with other police agencies (which of course could include the Horry County police).

It is known that the Horry County police contacted the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office in March to discuss the remains to determine whether there was any connection to the Heather Elvis case (translated: whether the remains might be what was left of Heather Elvis).

annn18Part of the reason the remains captured the attention of Horry County police is because the Moorers (who were huge Disney fans) visited Orlando, FLA frequently, which, of course, is just a hop, skip and a jump down the road from DeLand.

In fact, the Moorers vacationed in Walt Disney World in January, about three weeks after Elvis disappeared on December 18, and a month before police arrested them on Feb. 21.

Spokesman Davidson said the Florida Department of Law Enforcement is performing DNA analysis of the remains. He did not say how long that process would take. He did state, however, that “there hasn’t been a confirmed match to any known cases and the identity of our victim is still unknown at this time.”

The Volusia County report is now posted online to the National Unidentified Person’s Data System, which operates under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Justice.

This report represents the first public disclosure about the human remains since they were sent to the University of Florida for testing and identification in April of this year.

annn12The report states that the remains belong to an adult of unknown age. The race, ethnicity and gender of the victim cannot be determined.

Body conditions were classified as “not recognizable” and as a “near complete or complete skeleton.” Nor could the victim’s weight and height be estimated, and time of death could not be determined. Furthermore, fingerprint information was not available and there were no other distinctive body features found…

* * * * *

On balance, there seems to be little, if anything, about the skeletal remains that tie them to Heather Elvis (and/or Tammy and Sidney Moorer), unless a positive DNA match can be made. I don’t know enough about DNA testing to know what sort of matches are possible when dealing with remains that are largely skeletal in nature.

annnThere is one non-skeletal piece of powerful circumstantial evidence, however, that could tip the scales in favor of conviction at trial and that is the homemade Mickey Mouse print bed sheet. It is well known that Tammy Moorer was/is a huge Disney fan and their house was reportedly filled with Disney and Mickey Mouse stuff.

Did Tammy and/or Sidney make homemade Disney/Mickey stuff? I don’t know but that would seem to be an easy question for the investigators to answer. It’s even possible that Mickey Mouse print bed sheets were found when the Moorer residence was searched and were taken into evidence.

But this theory is not without flaws. First of all, the Southeastern part of our nation is full of hardcore Disney/Mickey Mouse fans. You can be certain that Tammy Moorer was far from the only one. Any true Disney fan with a sewing machine could knock out a Mickey Mouse print bed sheet. Also, isn’t Tammy Moorer rather a crafty early middle-aged thing? Well, perhaps not. Luring and murdering Heather (assuming the Moorers are responsible) was probably not very smart. Perhaps Tammy was foolish enough to dump Heather in a homemade Mickey Mouse print bed sheet made by her own hand?

annn14But do the authorities have any way of proving that the Mickey sheet found wrapped around Heather was Tammy’s? It could have been another Mickey-lover killing a different victim for entirely different reasons.

Also, and I am certainly not suggesting there is any malfeasance going on, but we know, evidence can be doctored or exaggerated. Given Tammy’s love for Mickey, one would be hard-pressed to come up with a more powerful piece of circumstantial evidence in the Heather Elvis case than a Mickey Mouse homemade print bed sheet wrapped around her skeletal remains.

In addition, when the Moorers traveled to Disney World three weeks after Heather’s untimely disappearance, one would assume that they were accompanied by their three kids. Unless they took two vehicles, one filled with wholesome children and good, clean family stuff, and the other filled with Heather’s skeletal remains, it would be rather tricky to transport what was left of the body without the kids getting “wind” of it.

All in all, there are still a great many unanswered questions, and although the mind immediately wants to think the skeletal remains are Heather’s (all right, we’re pretty darn sure that she’s dead), based on good old American fair play, we would be premature in jumping to that conclusion without further hard evidence.

 

Please click here to read our previous posts on the Moorer-Elvis saga:

The Sound and the Fury of Tammy Moorer!

How Tammy and Sidney Moorer May Have Lured Heather Elvis to Her Death

Heather Elvis’s Father and Sister Receive Death Threats

Swingers Sidney and Tammy Moorer Charged with Murder in Death of Heather Elvis!

Myrtle Beach Couple Arrested in Heather Elvis Missing Persons Case

Can Tammy and Sidney Moorer Be Convicted of Murdering Heather Elvis without a Body as Evidence?

 

 

Who Killed Nurse Cindy James?

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by Lise LaSalle

On June 8, 1989, a 44-year old Canadian nurse named Cindy James was found dead in Richmond, a suburb of Vancouver. She had been drugged and strangled, with her hands and feet tied behind her back. She was found in the yard of an abandoned home a mile and a half from a small shopping mall where her car was parked.  She had been missing since May 25th, when her car was discovered in the parking lot. There was blood on the driver’s side door and items from her wallet were found under the car.

cin4When her body was discovered at the abandoned house, it looked like Cindy James had been brutally murdered. A black nylon stocking was tied tightly around her neck and the autopsy revealed that Cindy died from an overdose of morphine and other drugs. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, however, believed her death to be an accident or a suicide. The Vancouver coroner ruled that Cindy’s death was not suicide, an accident, or a murder, claiming that she died of an ‘’unknown event.’’ This was despite the fact that in the seven years preceding her death, Cindy had reported nearly a hundred incidents of harassment beginning four months after she divorced her husband.

sin6To this day, her death remains a mystery even after a public inquest at which 84 witnesses were called to testify. Her father Otto Hack and his wife Matilda never believed that Cindy killed herself or that she would have been able to stage the death scene. Her sister Melany Hack, who was 27 when Cindy died and who is now married with two children and lives in British Columbia, ended up writing a book titled Who Killed My Sister, My Friend. It took her 14 years to conduct research into the toxicology, the autopsy, and the medical and police reports to obtain enough information into her sister’s unsolved death.

This case, which became the subject of the show Unsolved Mysteries and was discussed on some American TV talk shows including A Current Affair and Maury Povich, was not really sensationalized or kept alive to fuel anger towards a specific perpetrator. There was no villain or hero in this story; rather, it was the puzzling case of an upstanding nurse who struggled for seven years with an imagined or real threat and ended up losing her life in the most mysterious and baffling way. This story had legs and created endless speculation.

In 1989, forensics investigation was in its infancy and the technology did not exist to solve a case the CSI way, or to determine if James was creating her own drama. Instead, the investigators had to rely on basic traditional techniques to determine if her stories of attacks, kidnapping and harassment were true.

cin2Cindy was the eldest of six children. At age 19, she had married Dr. Roy Makepeace who was 18-years her senior. She worked as a nurse but also loved to counsel children with emotional problems. From all accounts, she appeared happy but when she decided to end her marriage in 1982 and move on with her life, all hell broke loose.

She had a very close relationship with her parents and she approached them first with stories of harassment. She ended up going to the police because she was getting death threats by phone and by mail. With each incident, this beautiful, vibrant woman took one step down physically and mentally.

Three dead cats were found hanging in her garden, her porch lights were smashed and her phone lines cut. Bizarre notes began to appear on her doorstep and five violent physical attacks were reported. One night, Cindy’s good friend, Agnes Woodcock, dropped by and when there was no answer when she knocked on the door, she went around the back of the house and found Cindy crouched down with a nylon stocking tied around her neck. She had gone to the garage to get something and was grabbed from behind by an unidentified intruder.

cin8Messages were left on the windshield of her car along with a picture of a covered corpse being wheeled into a morgue. Raw meat was delivered to her house and even her dog, Heidi, was found shaking with fright sitting in her own feces with a cord tied tightly around her neck. The harassment would stop and start again, leaving Cindy feeling more and more destabilized. She expressed her despair in her private journals.

sin7Cindy moved to a new house, painted her car and changed her last name. She finally hired Ozzie Kaban, a local private investigator. The police were investigating but as time passed, they were starting to doubt her stories. Ozzie reported later that Cindy would be evasive at times and withhold information.  Her mother thought that her daughter was reluctant to tell the truth because she was threatened and feared for her sister and family.

Her private investigator installed lights at her residence and gave her a two-way radio and a panic button. The police would do surveillance on a regular basis. One night, Kaban heard strange sounds coming from the radio and rushed to the house. He found Cindy on the hallway floor with a paring knife through her hand with a note on it saying ‘you are dead bitch’. He checked her pulse and thought she was dead. She was hospitalized and only recalled that a needle was put into her arm. The police did not take fingerprints and were growing tired of the whole saga. But Kaban was adamant that nobody could have done that to themselves. Cindy subjected herself to several hypnosis sessions and polygraph tests to try to get to the bottom of this but was considered too ‘traumatized’ to be a good candidate.

The threatening phone calls continued but could never be traced because they were too short. Mind you, there were never any calls when the police was doing 24-hour surveillance so you cannot blame them for growing suspicious. The incidents always happened when they were not around. Her parents thought her attacker was smart enough to stay away at the proper times in order to make Cindy look more and more suspicious. Nowadays, we could trace the calls and know exactly who is zooming who.

cin3After an “attack’’, Cindy was found lying in a ditch six miles from her home, wearing a man’s work boot and glove. She was suffering from hypothermia and had cuts and bruises all over her body. She also had a black nylon stocking around her neck, a trademark of her alleged attacks. She did not remember the event and asked her parents to stay with her. One evening, they were awakened by noises in the basement and saw flames. After realizing the phone was dead, they went outside to alert the neighbors. They saw a man at the curb and asked him to call the fire department but instead, he ran off. It was the second ‘arson.’

The police determined that the fire was started from inside the house because they saw no fingerprints on the window they think the perpetrator would have used to gain entry into the house. Therefore, they determined that Cindy had staged the incident. They also found it quite odd that Cindy would walk her little dog alone late at night when she feared being attacked. I must admit that they had a point there.

Her parents saw her condition deteriorating further and feared for her mental state. She was terrified and going downhill steadily. Believing she was suicidal, her doctor committed her to a local psychiatric ward. Ten weeks later, she was released. That’s when she admitted to friends and family that she knew more than she was saying about the perpetrator and would go after him/them herself. Was she falling deeper into delusion or was there a real person behind all this?

cin5Cindy became very depressed because she felt that her credibility was destroyed and that no one believed that someone wanted her dead or was pushing her towards insanity. Her life was a living hell and while hospitalized, she wrote about committing suicide.

She finally told police that she believed her tormentor was her ex-husband Roy Makepeace. They encouraged her to phone him to confront him and they taped the conversation. As a psychiatrist, Roy would have been familiar with the fine art of playing with her mind, but he totally denied any involvement during the conversation. This phone tape was played at the public inquest. In fact, Makepeace gave the police a recording from his own answering machine that contained a death threat. If the poor man had nothing to do with his former wife’s demise, imagine how awful it must have been for his reputation.

Cindy James was either confused, psychotic or totally innocent, but she was sounding more and more confused as her despair deepened. And it all ended when they found her body two weeks after she was reported missing. She had gone to the shopping mall to deposit her hospital paycheck and do some grocery shopping. You wonder why she would bother doing all this if she intended to kill herself. Plus, why not die in her bed quietly and give her family less pain and sorrow? After all, she loved them dearly.

Neal Hall, a Canadian journalist who wrote a book about the case now thinks she killed herself but her investigator Ozzie Kaban disagrees. He does not buy that her body took two weeks to be found when it was so close to traffic and pedestrian walks. He believes her body might have been dumped. She had an injection mark on her arm so she could have never walked a mile and a half to the spot where they found her and then tie herself up after injecting herself. They found no needle close to her car or around the crime scene. The police think she ingested the morphine and had plenty of time to do the rest. But they found no evidence to that effect and no proof of purchase of black nylons.

cinCindy also had a lover named Pat McBride who happened to be a cop. The police suspected him and Makepeace but had no concrete evidence against either one of them. The evidence in this case was quite contradictory and incomplete and very baffling but the police opted to blame Cindy. Her ex-husband came to believe that Cindy had multiple personalities and was unaware that she was tormenting herself. She adored her dog and her parents and would have never tortured them willingly. Her father states that the investigation was never aimed at finding a perpetrator but at pinning the responsibility on his daughter.

The only undeniable truth in this story is that Cindy James suffered immensely in this saga and she paid with her life. Her journals tell the heart-wrenching story of a woman tortured mentally and physically — either by her own hand and mental illness or because of an unscrupulous and sadistic perpetrator who wanted to drive her crazy and eventually killed her. If she was an innocent victim, the lack of support from the police must have caused her excruciating pain. In my opinion nurse Cindy James was a victim either way.

Otto Hack died in 2010 after a distinguished career in the military. His wife Tillie passed away in 2012. They believed till the end that their daughter did not commit suicide. Their daughter Melany continues their search for the truth.

 

 

Murder Stories I Can Never Forget: Snake River Serial Killer Still at Large?

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by JJ Rogers

I was born in Clarkston, Washington and grew up across the Snake River in Lewiston, Idaho.  The two cities are located in a deep valley at the confluence of the Clearwater and Snake Rivers.  They are not large cities and they didn’t traditionally experience the horrors of serial killers that metropoleis are known for.  That is, until the late 70’s and early 80’s when I was in my teens. That’s when everything changed.  That’s when one man, filled with loathing and complete disregard for human life, selected a series of girls and young women as the objects of his dark desires.

Every spring the Valley filled with excitement in anticipation of the Asotin County Fair, which was held on the Snake River just north of both cities. Everyone who possibly could attended. It was April 28, 1979. I was there. So was Christina White, a 12-year-old child.

Christina White and older woman -- probably her mother

Christina White and older woman — probably her mother

At some point during the day Christina felt ill from the early spring heat, and her mother suggested she get a damp towel to cool herself down.  Christina went to her friend’s house, where she was apparently given a wet towel and also used the phone.  She reportedly called her mother, but no one knows what was said. After that, Christina was never seen again.  No one saw her leave the house at 503 2nd Avenue — she simply vanished.  The home belonged to Patricia Brennan, Lance Voss’s girlfriend.  Lance and Patricia were married 26 months later on July 24, 1981.

For the next two years the rumors concerning Christina White’s death swirled like eddies in the mighty Snake River. These rumors created fear in our closely connected region of small towns and cities. For the first time in our lives, our parents admonished us not to walk alone and began locking our doors, even in the daytime.

Kristin David

Kristin David

Then it happened again. It was unthinkable but it happened. On June 26, 1981, 22-year-old Kristen David vanished while riding her bike between Moscow and Lewiston-Clarkston.  About a week later, the dismembered body of the 22-year-old University of Idaho student was found in the Snake River. The rumors spread fast that her dismembered body parts were found in plastic bags floating down the river.

Then in September 1982 it happened a third time. Three people turned up missing who were last seen at, or near, the Lewiston Civic Theatre, where Kristen David, the dismembered biker, had once worked. These three victims were 21-year-old Kristina Nelson, her stepsister, 18-year-old Brandi Miller and Former Air Force Cpl. Steven Pearsall who was 35.

On her last evening on earth, Sept. 12, 1982, Kristina left a note in her apartment for her boyfriend indicating that she and Brandi were going downtown to do some grocery shopping at the Safeway store.  A logical route downtown would have taken them by the Civic Theatre.

Steven Pearsall

Steven Pearsall

Steven Pearsall, 35, worked as a janitor there — he and Lance Voss had recently helped build a pirate ship that rolled on a dolly complete with several ropes for actors playing pirates to slide down.  Steven’s girlfriend dropped him off at the theater around midnight on Sept. 12th. Steven’s plan was to practice his music.  He may have walked in while Kristina and Brandi were being attacked. Steven was never seen again, nor was he ever considered a suspect. He is presumed dead.

The bodies of stepsisters Kristina Nelson and Brandi Miller were found 18 months later in March of 1984 at the bottom of a steep embankment near the community of Kendrick, along with rope that is presumed to have been “borrowed” from the Civic Theater’s pirate ship that Steven and Lance had built together.

The authorities noted that three of the four female victims had similar names: Kristin, Christina and Kristina, and that all three were about the same height.

One person of interest was interrogated by the police, twice. That person of interest was Lance Jeffrey Voss, a big man standing 6’ 5” and weighing roughly 200 lbs. Voss was not only seen at the theater, but actually admitted to being there at the time of the murders, working on the pirate ship for the play with the missing Steven. Voss had also, of course, dated (and later married) Patricia Brennan, the owner the house on 2nd Avenue where the 12-year-old Asotin girl, Christina White, was last seen alive. In addition, Voss admitted that he often drove the same route taken by 22-year-old Kristen David when she met her grisly fate.

Lance is quoted as stating, “I was in the theater, but asleep; yes, I just saw Kristina.” 

jeff2Lewiston authorities believe the same person killed Christina White, Kristin David, Kristina Nelson, Brandy Miller, and Steven Pearsall.  One Lewiston Police Captain went as far as to say he’s “99 percent certain” who the killer is.  But law enforcement doesn’t believe they can prove who the killer is in a court of law. Lance Jeffrey Voss moved back to the East Coast and no similar murders have occurred since he left town. It’s no secret that authorities want to bring formal charges against him, but to this day, they have taken no action.

jeffVoss is a self-proclaimed survivalist who enjoys listening to Rush Limbaugh.  Here is a quote by Voss that I came across while I was researching the case. Hunting is of course very popular in our part of the world but Voss’s quote is certainly not something we would expect a hunter to say:

“By the way, don’t neglect edged tools/weapons in your survival kit.  After you’ve shot your dinner rabbit, preparation is much easier if you don’t have to gut it with a rock.  It can be done, but it’s not fun.”

This case is still open and surfaces from time to time in the Valley. Many of us grew up hearing, telling and re-telling this awful tale and much as we would like to, these are murders we cannot forget.

Maricopa Judge Rules that Jodi Arias Can Represent Herself in Upcoming Death Penalty Trial

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commentary by Patrick H. Moore

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Sherry Stephens ruled on Monday that Jodi Arias can represent herself in the upcoming penalty phase of her murder trial. The trial is not a “bench trial” but is rather a trial by jury  in which the jurors will decide whether Ms. Arias should be put to death for killing her ex-boyfriend, Travis Alexander.

addy12I have no idea how the percentages break down but it’s very clear that a great many Americans feel very strongly about this case and the ultimate sentence. The “Justice for Travis” contingent, almost to a person, wants Ms. Arias to receive the death penalty, which in Arizona is administered by lethal injection for anyone sentenced after November 25, 1992. (To die in this manner in Arizona is certainly a scary proposition considering that Joseph Wood’s recent execution required 15 injections to kill him and was stretched out over an agonizing two hours. Even conservative Senator John McCain, who supports the death penalty, was horrified by Wood’s fate and suggested that what he experienced was tantamount to torture. It is noted that as a purported victim of torture while a prisoner of war in Vietnam, Sen. McCain’s remarks should be given all due consideration.)

addy3Another large group of individuals, myself among them, believe that Ms. Arias should have been convicted of second degree murder or possibly voluntary manslaughter, and believe that under no circumstances should she receive the death penalty. There is also a relatively small group of folks who believe that the defendant truly was acting in self-defense and therefore should have been acquitted of the charges.

Arias, 34, who was convicted of first-degree murder last year for the 2008 death of Travis Alexander, has already been through one sentencing phase in which the jurors were unable to reach a decision on sentencing. What this means under Arizona law is that the murder conviction stands, and prosecutors have the option of requesting a second penalty phase with a new jury in an effort to secure the death penalty, which is precisely what they have done.

Jodi AriasIf the new jury is unable to reach a unanimous decision, the death penalty will be removed from consideration. The judge would then have the option of sentencing Arias to either spend her life behind bars with no possibility of parole or, alternatively, to sentence her to a life term with the possibility of being released after 25 years. (I suspect that if the jury “hangs”, thus taking the DP off the table, Judge Stephens will most likely sentence Ms. Arias to LWOP.)

It’s well-known that Arias has long clashed with her defense team and has lobbied for their removal previously. As is her legal right, she has now asked Judge Stephens to let her serve as her own defense counsel during the second penalty phase which is set for Sept. 8.

addy13In granting the motion, Judge Stephens stated: “I do not believe it is in your best interest … I strongly urge you to reconsider.” Stephens further stated that there would be no further delays, which means that Ms. Arias, despite having no legal experience and no college degreem or even a standard high school diploma (she did get her GED in jail), has a mere four weeks to get ready for her momentous task of arguing why she should not receive the death penalty.

Her defense team will remain on as advisory council, which presumably means she can go to them with any inquiries she might have. They declined to comment on the latest developments, as did the prosecutors.

*     *     *     *     *

addy7Certain legal professionals have gone on record as saying the move might not be such a bad idea given the gruesome nature of the crime. At her trial, Arias admitted killing Alexander at his suburban Phoenix home, but claimed it was self-defense. There is no need to rehash the details of the killing, but everyone is painfully aware that it was not a pretty sight. The prosecutors argued that it was premeditated murder carried out in a jealous rage because the victim Alexander wanted to end their affair.

A San Francisco talk-show defense attorney named Daniel Horowitz weighed in with the following bizarre statement: “It’s actually probably a good idea to represent herself. She looks like a vicious psychopath with a ridiculous defense.”

First of all, I’m not sure what this means: “She looks like a vicious psychopath with a ridiculous defense.” Taken out of context, and I’m not sure Horowitz provides a context, it appears to be a meaningless and inflammatory statement. Is he suggesting she is a vicious psychopath, or that she is perceived as one by some observers? So I’m immediately skeptical about anything Horowitz may have to say on this issue.

addy14But just in case you’re wondering why Horowitz believes this extremely negative perception in the eyes of the jurors could help her, Horowitz elaborated by saying that the jury “may find her pathetic” and that “if she can get just one juror to bond with her on some level, even if they hate her, they’re getting to know her, and it’s harder to kill someone you know.”

So what Horowitz seems to be saying is that no matter how awful Ms. Arias may seem to the jury, if she succeeds in personalizing her awfulness, it may actually work to her benefit. To me, presenting the please let me live because I’m pathetic defense seems like one helluva risk for Ms. Arias to take.

At her trial, Ms. Arias described her life story in intimate detail over 18 days on the witness stand, describing an abusive childhood, cheating boyfriends, dead-end jobs, her sexual relationship with Alexander and her contention that he had grown physically violent.

“They thought she was a liar. She was narcissistic. She was arrogant, and it made it easy to convict her,” Horowitz said. “But that’s a lot different than killing somebody.”

addy10What Horowitz is saying is that Ms. Arias did not present well while on the witness stand, and I think this is probably correct, or at least this is the way she was perceived by the jurors and a great many people who followed the trial. This “perception” is probably the reason so many “true crime fans”, many of whom are no doubt generally reasonable people, and some of whom I’m in touch with on Facebook or by email, seem to despise the very ground she walks on. I also suspect that the tendency to put Travis Alexander up on a pedestal may be, in part, a reaction to the negative perception of Ms. Arias on the part of the trial watchers, a perception that was fostered in part by the frantic media witch hunt that already had her buried before she even reached the witness stand, and was further pounded into the mind of America by prosecutor Juan Martinez.

addy15Phoenix defense lawyer Mel McDonald is a former Maricopa County judge and federal prosecutor. In his analysis, which is certainly more measured than Horowitz’s, he agreed that Arias doesn’t have much to lose.

“I think generally that anybody that represents themselves has a fool for a client, but it also gives her a way, if she’s out there making a fool of herself, to maybe invoke some sympathy from a juror,” McDonald said.

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Boyfriend SlayingOne sometimes effective way to save one’s life in the death penalty phase of a proceeding is for the defendant to simply come clean, to stop making excuses for whatever they’ve done, to stop blaming others, to simply own up to the fact that they’ve screwed up royally; i.e., to explain to the jury that finally, at long last, they GET IT, and they’re sorry for what they’ve done. I’m acquainted with a recent death penalty case in another state where the death penalty mitigator spent the entire weekend with the defendant prior to him taking the stand. Somehow, the mitigator convinced the defendant to step up and take full responsibility which is exactly what the defendant did, and IT SAVED HIS LIFE. In fact, I think it was pretty much of a slam dunk on the jury’s part after his testimony; they were touched by his honesty and genuine remorse and wanted to give him a second chance (if you would call life in prison a second chance).

addy2So I must say that in response to these two luminaries, Horowitz and McDonald, that I’m not at all convinced that Ms. Arias making a fool out of herself while representing herself is the best strategy. Of course, they’re probably assuming that given her alleged diminished mental state, that’s all she’s capable of and would not be capable of expressing true and genuine remorse while asking for a second chance.

My bottom line is that while Ms. Arias representing herself may make for good theater, I would be much more comfortable if she had expert legal representation and a compassionate mitigation team working day and night to convince her to apologize from the bottom of her heart for what she’s done. I believe that at some point, she must have LOVED Travis Alexander deeply. Otherwise, she wouldn’t have turned so passionately against him. Deep in her heart, she must feel awful about having killed him, the man who, for a period of time, was her knight in shining armor and her hope for a better life.

addy11But most of all, I hope that whether or not she ends up representing herself, I hope the jury finds mercy in their hearts and votes to let her live. I long for a gentler, kinder America that is not convulsed with hatred, that does not take pleasure in watching a broken soul suffer further, and that gives up the ancient Old Testament monstrosity known as “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.” As a people and as a sovereign nation, we can do better than that, and a life sentence for Jodi Arias, rather than the death penalty, would be a step, however small, along that road.

 

 

 

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