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Showing posts with label Michigan City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michigan City. Show all posts

Michelle Brown



Woman brain dead after Monday night shooting

by STAN MADDUX
MICHIGAN CITY

A Michigan City woman is dead from a gunshot and the father of two of her children -- currently hospitalized -- is charged with murder.

Michelle Brown, 29, was declared brain dead just before 8:30 a.m. Tuesday at St. Anthony Memorial Health Center, according to Michigan City Police Detective Bureau Commander Lt. Sue Harrison.

Randolph Sanders II, 31, was charged about 2 p.m. when a judge in LaPorte Superior Court 1 found sufficient evidence to bring him to trial.

Sanders was still in the intensive care unit Tuesday afternoon at the same hospital.

Harrison said she did not know his official condition or prognosis.

According to police, officers responded to Normandy Village Apartments on the city's south side Monday just after 5 p.m.

Harrison said Sanders and Brown were inside a vehicle in the parking lot when he shot her once in the head then turned the gun on himself.

Harrison said an argument led up to the shooting but what led to the fight was not fully clear.

According to police, inside another vehicle nearby were three children including two boys, ages 6 and 2, the sons of Sanders and Brown.

Caitlin Wolpinek


Shooting death is not cut and dry

March 17, 2010

MICHIGAN CITY — After more than a full day of questioning, La Porte County authorities released from custody the boyfriend of Caitlin Wolpinek, 19, who was found dead of a gunshot wound Sunday in her Woodland Crossings apartment.

Despite the statements of several people who say her boyfriend told them he shot her, authorities on Tuesday were still trying to piece together what led to the shooting, and they had not gathered enough evidence to decide whether to seek charges in the case. Wolpinek’s relationship with her boyfriend was stormy, hindering the ability of police to pin blame for her fatal shooting, said John Boyd, La Porte County Police Chief of Detectives.

“This case has many layers,” Boyd said. “At no time did we ever say it was a homicide. This is a death investigation. We have to get a clearer picture of what transpired.”

But no one close to Wolpinek was notified of his release on Monday, so when he showed up on Brian and Samantha Pacius’ doorstep Tuesday morning in Chicago, they said they were shocked.

“He came here looking for my daughter,” said Brian Pacius. Jessica Pacius, 19, was one of Wolpinek’s best friends, he said. “I don’t know what he wanted. And after he told everyone he knows here that he shot Caitlin, I feel like my daughter could be in danger. She always told her to leave him.”

Police have not released her boyfriend’s name because he has not been charged, but the Paciuses identified him as Jeffery Maldonado, 22.

“They’ve been together for so long, and nothing could convince that girl to leave Jeffery. Nothing,” Samantha Pacius said.

Police about 9 a.m. Sunday were called to the couple’s apartment at 328 Woods Edge Drive in Woodland Crossing, which is just outside the city limits on U.S. 20 just east of Woodland Avenue. The 911 center received a call from a man who said he shot his girlfriend in the neck, according to police.

Caitlin led a troubled life because she didn’t have much family support, Samantha Pacius said. Her mother died of a drug overdose when she was 3 years old, she said. She then lost her father a few years ago. He was an alcoholic. Her closest relative, her brother, Tyler Wolpinek, lives in Fort Hood, Texas.

“She was a wild little girl, but there was a reason. There was no one there to help her,” Pacius said.

Wolpinek had a chance to live with her aunt in a nice home in Oak Lawn, Ill., and attend a private school, Pacius said, but she dropped out after she met Maldonado and started participating in his “wannabe gangbanger” lifestyle. At her wit’s end, Pacius said, her aunt made her leave the house, and that’s when Wolpinek moved in with them.

“It was only a few months, then she got an apartment with Jessica. When we heard Jeffery wanted to move her to Indiana, we offered to help with the apartment to keep her here but she just wouldn’t listen,” she said. “That was the ultimate act of control for him, taking her away from her family and friends.”

Maldonado had always been controlling and abusive toward Caitlin, Pacius said, but sometimes Wolpinek “gave it right back.”

“All accounts are they loved each other but it was a volatile relationship. It was volatile on both ends. That’s what’s making it difficult for us in this case,” Boyd said.

Wolpinek, a server at Applebee’s in Michigan City, died from a single gunshot to the neck, said La Porte County Coroner John Sullivan.

It wasn’t the first time police had been called to the residence. Officers responded in November to reports of gunfire in the home, but no charges resulted from that incident.

Maldonado has been cooperative with investigators, but there has been no confession to a crime, Boyd said.

“We can’t just leap to the assumption that because she’s dead, he’s responsible,” he said. “We know in speaking with family members that Caitlin would want us to conduct a thorough investigation.”

Investigators hope the results of a forensic examination scheduled Tuesday afternoon could shed further light. Undisclosed evidence is also being turned in for analysis to help clear up the uncertainty.

Sullivan said the autopsy can determine things like how close the victim was to the gun when it was fired and if there were signs of a physical struggle.

Boyd said he hopes some results arise from the autopsy right away but it might take several days before all of the findings of the forensic examination come in.

“We want to let the evidence speak for itself,” Boyd said.

But those who loved Caitlin want justice.

“She did not deserve to die battered and abused,” Brian Pacius said. “It doesn’t seem like anyone is doing anything about it.”

Tonya Earley


Ex-boyfriend shot woman in front of their kids, then killed himself

November 10, 2009

Police said a woman was fatally shot by her ex-boyfriend Tuesday at a Michigan City area school bus stop while their children looked on.

About 7:30 a.m. Tuesday, police were called to LaPorte County Road 1000 North and County Road 425 West, just east of Michigan City, where officers found 30-year-old Tonya Earley dead from a single gunshot, police said. The shot was fired either as the bus was pulling up or just seconds prior to the bus arriving.

LaPorte County Sheriff Mike Mollenhauer said Earley's body was found lying in the street beside her car and the children were still in the vehicle when she was shot.

"That's something they're going to remember the rest of their lives. It's a very unfortunate situation," Mollenhauer said.

About 10 minutes later, police found her ex-boyfriend -- 41-year-old David Streeting -- dead of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound in a vehicle about a half-mile north from where Earley was shot, police said.

Investigators also learned that an acquaintance of Earley was with her at the time of the shooting and he fled when she was shot. Police said he suffered an injury while leaving the scene of the shooting. Police did not release his name, the type of injury he suffered, his condition or how he knew Earley.

Earley and Streeting, both of LaPorte County, were the biological parents of the children, ages 8 and 10, police said.

Michele Pokuta, who lives on County Road 1000 North, was driving to her job in New Buffalo, Mich., and saw the body at the crime scene. She said police had not arrived yet and Earley was lying on her back with one arm draped over her chest.

The school bus was stopped and the driver was on his cell phone.

"I was pretty shaken up. At first, I couldn't think straight," Pokuta said.

Because the shooter already had fled the scene when officers arrived, authorities placed Springfield Elementary School -- two miles away -- under a lockdown, police said.

Mollenhauer said Earley lived at Green Acres Trailer Park and drove a short distance to her parents' home, where the couple's children were residing. She picked them up and took them to the bus stop to see them off to school.

Because the couple used to live together, Mollenhauer said Streeting likely knew exactly when to show up at the bus stop.

"When she pulled up, he pulled up," Mollenhauer said.

According to court records, a hearing was held for the couple Sept. 9 and an order was issued governing child visitation and child support.

Mollenhauer said preliminary information from the investigation indicates there was a protective order against Streeting.

Michigan City school officials did not return calls regarding the lockdown or students who might have been of the school bus.