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Showing posts with label October. Show all posts
Showing posts with label October. Show all posts

Suzanne Saunders



Woman, Estranged Husband Identified In Carmel Shootings

Police: Handgun Found Near Man

October 11, 2011

CARMEL, Ind. -- Police are investigating the fatal shootings of a woman and her estranged husband in a Carmel condominium as a murder-suicide.

Carmel police said the bodies of Aaron Saunders, 46, and Suzanne Saunders, 50, were found Tuesday morning in a home at the Traditions on the Monon in the 900 block of 3rd Avenue, near 136th Street and Rangeline Road, 6News' Julie Pursley reported.

"Both bodies appeared to have gunshot wounds. A handgun was found in close proximity to the deceased male," Carmel police Lt. Jeff Horner said.

Police rushed to the home about 6:45 a.m., when the oldest of Suzanne Saunders' three children, boys ages 16 and 11, along with a 12-year-old girl, heard gunshots and called 911.

"(The children) were at home getting ready for school when their stepfather stopped by the house," Horner said. "They heard an argument break out between their mother and stepfather."

Soon after the argument began, the children heard the gunshots and heard their mother scream, police said.

Neighbor Debbie Edstrom described the horror of what she witnessed.

"I heard a woman scream, and I called 911, and I heard a young boy, a voice say, 'Mom,'" Edstrom said. "(The boy) had walked to the end of our building, and he met the police as they were coming into the complex and he was directing them to his house, and I heard him say it was his stepfather had come into the house and shot his mother."

Investigators said the boys ran out of the home after the shooting and that the girl hid in an upstairs room. They were not injured.

Autopsies are planned.

Latrice Long-Payton

 Latrice Long-Payton

Man accused of dumping woman's body in trash pleads guilty

Police said Coleman killed Long-Payton by strangling her and then put her body in the garbage.

September 29, 2011

A man accused of murdering a woman and then putting her body in the trash entered a guilty plea Wednesday.

Joseph Coleman, 29, pleaded guilty to the murder of Latrice Long-Payton, 29, in September 2010.

Police said Coleman killed Long-Payton by strangling her and then put her body in the garbage.

In October 2010, officers with the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department received an anonymous tip there might be a dead body inside a home in the 5900 block of East Rawles Avenue. The caller told police the female was chocked and beat to death and then wrapped in plastic. The caller also stated there was a strong smell of rotting flesh inside the home.

According to a probable cause, Long-Payton was paying Coleman rent to stay in his house. He told police he last saw her three weeks before her body was found. He also told police the foul smell in his home was from dead possums he killed.

When police searched the trash can in the back of the home, they found the body of missing Long-Payton.

Police said Coleman told them he and Long-Payton got into a verbal argument, because he wanted her to move out of the home. He said she hit him in the face so he began beating and choking her until she died. Coleman also stated Samuel Taylor, 33, helped him wrap the victim’s body in plastic and place the body in the crawlspace of the home.

Taylor was charged with assisting a criminal.

Coleman will be sentenced October 28.

Tina Williams Daniels



Indy man held in shooting death of his wife

October 9. 2011

An Indianapolis man was arrested early this morning in connection with the shooting death of his wife on the city's Eastside, according to Indianapolis metropolitan police.

The suspect, identified as Kenneth Daniels, 62, was taken into custody after police arrived at a house in the 4700 block of East 30th Street. That’s where they found 50-year-old Tina Williams suffering from multiple gunshot wounds to her chest and arms.

She was pronounced dead at the scene when emergency services personnel arrived.

The suspect was holding a gun at the time officers arrived, according a news release from Ptl. Kendale Adams, a spokesman for the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department. Daniels told homicide investigators that he shot his wife during an argument, the release said, and he subsequently was arrested and preliminarily charged with murder.

Officers also discovered an unharmed four-year-old child in an upstairs bedroom. The child’s relationship to the victim or the suspect was not immediately known.  Daniels was transported to the Marion County Arresting Processing Center, where he awaits the filling of formal charges.

Child Protective Services arrived and took the child into custody. Tina Williams’ next-of-kin has been notified, police said.

Shirlen Dyson


Daughter Speaks Out After Father Kills Mother

Shirlen Dyson was just seconds away from her mother's house in Noblesville when her estraged husband, Vincent Dyson, shot and killed her.

October 19, 2010

Noblesville, Ind. — Shirlen Dyson was just seconds away from her mother's house in Noblesville when her estraged husband, Vincent Dyson, shot and killed her.

Police say he had followed her from her job near downtown Indianapolis and when she arrived in the subdivison, he ended her life. Then, minutes later, he killed himself near I-465 and Meridian Street in the middle of the evening rush hour.

In one day, Sheena Dyson lost both of her parents.  "I'm not angry but I am hurt. And it's a hurt I don't wish on anybody," she told Fox59's Kara Brooks.

Shirlen and Vincent had broken up 20 years ago but they reunited about year ago and got married. They lived in a northwest side neighborhood where neighbors knew something just wasn't right back in August.  "He heard some knocking in the garage and he heard her cry for help. And so when he heard that he called the police," said neighbor Michelle Perkins.

Sheena also knew there was trouble in her parent's relationship. She was very close with her mother and they talked often.  "After he hit her, she told me 'Sheena I'm scared.' I said, 'Mom you got to get out of this, you know.' She was like, 'I don't know how," said Sheena.  "Once he hit her she just finally got the courage to leave. He was acting crazy."

Shirlen got a protective order against Vincent but neighbors still saw him lurking around.  "{He} went real fast passed and then went on around. So I think he had been stalking her," said Michelle.  So she moved in with her mother to get away but he still found her.  "My momma is gone and that's hard to believe because I was just on the phone with her," said Sheena.

Sheena Dyson says her mother had a strong faith and described her as someone who always found the best in somebody.


Police: Noblesville, Carmel shootings were murder-suicide

Police now say two deadly shootings that occurred Monday in Noblesville and Carmel are connected. They're calling the incidents murder-suicide.

Marion County court records show a pending divorce and allegations of abuse leading up to the murder-suicide on Monday in Noblesville. Police say that 46-year-old Shirlen Dyson was shot and killed in her car by her husband, 46-year-old Vincent Dyson, in a Noblesville neighborhood near Verizon Wireless Music Center.

Police believe Vincent Dyson ran her off the road and fired two rounds into the vehicle, hitting Shirlen Dyson in the chest.  A short time later on I-465 in Carmel, Fishers police stopped a vehicle matching the description of the suspect vehicle given by witnesses at the Noblesville shooting scene. Police say as they approached the car, Vincent Dyson shot himself in the head.

Shirlen Dyson filed a burglary report with Indianapolis Metro Police on August 11th after the home she shared with her husband was burglarized. That was two days after officers were called to the home for a domestic disturbance.

According to court records, Shirlen Dyson filed for a protective order the following week saying that her husband struck her and that she planned to file for divorce. The judge granted the protective order in September.prohibiting Vincent Dyson from calling or contacting his wife. Investigators are zeroing in on what was apparently a stormy relationship.  "What the situation was between the two of them and then what potentially led up to this incident," said Lt. Bruce Barnes, Noblesville Police Department.

According to court records, when Shirlen Dyson filed for protective orders, she also requested an eviction notice forcing her husband to leave the home they shared.

Amy Meyer White


Wells County Man Charged in Wife's Death

Story Published: Oct 28, 2009 at 12:14 PM EDT 
 
WELLS COUNTY, Ind. (Indiana's NewsCenter) - A Wells County man appeared in court Wednesday morning on charges that he shot and killed his estranged wife.

27-year-old Tyler White is charged with murder, and is tentatively scheduled to stand trial on April 20th.
Police arrested him Tuesday morning after they say they found him next to his wife's body at their Wells County home on County Road 100 South.

They claim he confessed.

Officials say he shot and killed 28-year-old Amy Meyer White while they were exchanging custody of their toddler.

The couple had been going through a divorce.  The child is now in the custody of relatives.

Amy Meyer White was the Assistant Cross-Country Coach at South Adams High School, and had been an Assistant Basketball Coach at the University of Saint Francis, where she had also played.

Mike Pries, Athletic Director for South Adams says Amy White has a big impact.

"She was a very positive and encouraging coach," explained Pries. " She was a good person. She was one of the best athletes that ever graduated from South Adams."

Meyer-White graduated from South Adams in 1999, and still remains the school's all-time leading scorer in basketball.

The results of an autopsy conducted on Tuesday are expected next week.

Trisha Cottrell

Trisha Cottrell

Suspect In Triple Slaying: Wife 'Got What She Deserved'

POSTED: 6:01 pm EST November 17, 2005
A man charged with killing his wife and his two stepdaughters said to reporters Thursday that his spouse "got what she deserved."Chad A. Cottrell's comment came as officers led him into a courthouse, where a hearing was held over prosecutors' intention of filing for the death penalty in the case, RTV6's Jeremy Brilliant reported.

Prosecutors allege that Cottrell, 35, killed his wife, Trisha Cottrell, 29, and her daughters, Brittany Williams, 12, and Victoria Williams, 10, in late October after he molested the girls. The three were found shot to death in their Rockville-area home.

Video: Hear Man's Comments
Previous Slideshow: Slain Mother, Daughters Laid To Rest
Previous Slideshow: Man Sought After Wife, Stepdaughters Found Dead

As he exited a police vehicle that brought him to the courthouse Thursday, Cottrell called his wife a name that RTV6 chose not to reveal.Seconds later, after someone asked him whether he deserved the death penalty, he said, "She got what she deserved."Cottrell faces murder charges.

In court documents, prosecutors listed the following aggravating factors that they say support their pursuit of the death penalty for Cottrell: that he committed more than one murder; that one victim was under the age of 12; and that he killed his stepdaughters after molesting both of them.

Parke County Sheriff Charles Bollinger said Thursday that investigators have physical evidence that Cottrell molested the girls.During a preliminary court hearing two weeks ago, authorities said Cottrell shot the three and then told a 6-year-old boy who overheard the noise that he had shot three deer.The unidentified boy told police that Brittany and Cottrell were arguing before the shootings, according to a probable cause affidavit signed by Bollinger.

Cottrell was arrested in central Minnesota Nov. 1 after he failed to pay for fuel at a service station and was chased by police.




Also see posts for dear daughters Brittany Williams and Victoria Williams.

Brittany Williams

Brittany Williams

Authorities: Triple-Homicide Suspect Lied To Boy About Shootings

Man Told Child He Shot Deer, Court Records Say

POSTED: 7:42 pm EST November 3, 2005
A man charged with killing his wife and two stepdaughters told a boy who overheard the shootings that he had shot three deer, authorities said Thursday. A judge entered not-guilty pleas for Chad Cottrell, 35, during the rural Rockville man's initial court appearance on three murder charges Thursday. Cottrell was captured Tuesday in central Minnesota and was returned to Indiana on Wednesday. Killed in the shootings Saturday night were Trisha Cottrell, 29, and her daughters Brittany Williams, 12, and Victoria "Tori" Williams, 10.
Authorities released a probable cause affidavit signed by Sheriff Charles Bollinger that quoted an unidentified, 6-year-old juvenile who was present at the home during the shootings late Saturday. The child said Cottrell was arguing with Brittany "when he heard multiple gunshots in the residence. Chad Cottrell then told the juvenile he had just shot three deer."

Bollinger has said separately that a "very young boy" was at the home around the time that the slayings occurred but was not harmed, and Cottrell took the boy to stay with a relative. The affidavit also said Cottrell on Monday had given a friend a phone message that said he had "reached the end of my dusty trail."

"Tell my family that I love them -- what's left of them," Cottrell said in the message, according to the affidavit. Parke County prosecutor Steve Cvengros on Thursday said Cottrell qualified for the death penalty but that he would consult with the families of the victims before deciding whether to file capital charges. Each of the murder charges also carries prison sentences of 45 years to 65 years.

The girls' father, Ryan Williams, said he favored the death penalty. "I feel lost. My daughters are dead and I'm lost. I know that the world's going to keep turning and the sun's going to come up, but it's going to turn a little slower and the sun's not going to be as bright," Williams said at a news conference.

Judge Sam Swaim ordered Cottrell held without bond in the Parke County Jail and appointed attorney Jessie Cook to represent him. The sheriff's affidavit said the bodies were discovered Monday morning by the girls' grandmother, Tricia Parker, and that the victims all appeared to have died from gunshot wounds. Cottrell was arrested in Minnesota on Tuesday after not paying for fuel at a service station and being chased by police.

Williams, during the news conference with Cvengros, recalled his slain daughters with fondness. "Brittany was really rambunctious. She was just so much into dresses and jewelry. And Tori, we called her Tori-bear, because when she hugged you she kind of growled," Williams said. The girls' stepsister, 13-year-old Ambreena Adams, wiped away tears as she also spoke at the news conference. "If you have a brother or sister, show them that you love them and that you need them and that you can't live without them, because I don't know how I'm going to live without my sisters," she said.


Also see posts for dear mother Trisha Cottrell and sister Victoria Williams.

Victoria WIlliams

Victoria Williams

Defendant in triple murder asks for death penalty

Posted: Mar 12, 2009 10:27 PM EDT

Chris Proffitt/Eyewitness News

Noblesville - A Parke County man accused of three murders told a judge he wants to die for his crimes Friday.

Chad Cottrell admitted in court that he murdered his wife and two young stepdaughters. The judge accepted his guilty plea and could sentence him to death next month.

Trisha Cottrell, 29, and her daughters, 12-year-old Brittany and 10-year-old Victoria Williams were shot to death in their Rockville home in October 2005.

"There's evil out there in the world and I think that's identified in the person of Chad Cottrell," said Rick Zaikovsky, Trisha's father and the girls' grandfather.

The victims' family says that after murdering his wife and stepdaughters, Cottrell calmly played a round of golf, then fled to Minnesota. He was captured there and brought back to Indiana, where prosecutors sought the death penalty. Citing pre-trial publicity, Cottrell's attorneys received a change of venue from Parke County to Hamilton County, where his trial was set for this month.

While awaiting trial, Cottrell wrote a letter to the judge in the case, admitting his guilt, waiving his right to a trial and asking for the death penalty. After an evaluation by two psychiatrists, who determined Cottrell was competent to enter a guilty plea, the judge accepted the plea and scheduled sentencing in late April.

Cottrell's attorney, Eric Koselke, told Eyewitness News he would comment when the case is over. His client admitted in court to murdering his wife and stepdaughters after trying to molest the two girls. The judge in the case could impose the death penalty, life without parole or a term of years.

"This is not a day of celebration, but it is a day of justice for my daughter Trisha and granddaughters Brittany and Tory," Zaikovsky said.

Saying he wants to die by lethal injection, Cottrell may get his wish. The sentencing hearing is April 29 and could last 2-3 days. The judge denied Cottrell's request to return to the Parke County Jail.


Also see posts for dear mother Trisha Cottrell and sister Brittany Williams.

Cherlyn Reyes

Cherlyn Reyes

Boyfriend arrested in South Bend woman's death

By ALICIA GALLEGOS and MARY KATE MALONE, Tribune Staff Writers

By WSBT 24/7 News

SOUTH BEND — A man accused of murdering his girlfriend had abused her in the past, according to court documents, including a February incident where he allegedly struck the then-pregnant woman in the stomach.

On Friday, police charged 25-year-old Brice L. Webb in the shooting death of his 21-year-old girlfriend, Cherlyn Reyes.

Police found Reyes dead on her bathroom floor just after midnight Friday in the apartment they shared on Lincoln Way East. Reyes died of a single gunshot to her head, police said.

Webb faces one count of murder for Reyes’ death. Police believe he killed the woman during a heated argument late Thursday or early Friday.

Friends and court documents paint a violent picture of Webb and a cycle of ongoing abuse surrounding Reyes.

In February, Webb was charged with two counts of battery against Reyes, according to court documents, but the charges were dropped after Reyes recanted.

In that case, Mishawaka police were dispatched to a home after a reported domestic dispute where a man had punched his girlfriend in the face, according to court documents.

When they arrived, officers reportedly found Reyes crying in a field across from the home with a visible red mark on the left side of her face. Reyes, who was pregnant, told police Webb had struck her during an argument and pushed her by the throat.

According to probable cause documents, Reyes said Webb also punched her in the stomach with a closed fist telling her, “ I’m going to kill this … baby. I don’t even want it.”

The state charged Webb with battery and issued a no-contact order against the man, but Reyes later took back her statements and asked that charges not be pressed against Webb.

A notarized letter signed by Reyes and her brother – who had reportedly been a witness – called the confrontation a “misunderstanding.”

“He did not hit me in my face or in my stomach,” Reyes wrote. “He just wanted to leave and I was afraid for him. We are pregnant and I would just like for him to be home. I’m sorry this all got taken way out of proportion.”

The St. Joseph County Prosecutor’s office said they could not move forward after Reyes rescinded her report.

“Without Ms. Reyes’ cooperation in testifying, the State could not prove the elements of the crime,” according to a statement sent by the prosecutor’s office after an inquiry.

Red flags

Friends said Friday they knew Reyes was in an abusive relationship.

“He hit her a lot,” said Angi Northern, Reyes’ former co-worker at Burger King. “I’m surprised this didn’t happen sooner.”

Northern, 29, said Reyes had given birth last month, but the baby was put up for adoption

A neighbor who asked not to be named added that Reyes, who was petite, often seemed scared.

According to a charging affidavit, witnesses who were present the night Reyes died told authorities that Webb and his girlfriend had been arguing throughout the evening on Thursday.

The group had been handling a handgun, and later in the evening Webb took Reyes into the bathroom with it, according to court documents.

Webb and Reyes argued in the bathroom, and seconds later a gunshot sounded. Then Webb came out of the bathroom and said, “I just shot her,” a witness told police.

A friend then drove Webb to a second residence while another witness called police. Webb was later arrested at that residence.

Webb reportedly told police he was not at the apartment when Reyes was shot and that he had not hit her during the evening.

But police said Webb’s hand was “swollen and discolored as though he had punched something or somebody,” according to a police affidavit.

Two neighbors also said they heard gunshots around 9 p.m., which would have been more than three hours before police were notified.

Neither the police nor the county coroner’s office would disclose the time of Reyes’ death, stating only when police were called to the scene by the witnesses.

Webb’s criminal history also includes a criminal confinement and attempted burglary from 2002. In that case, he accepted a plea agreement and was sentenced to 18 months probation.

Webb will be arraigned Tuesday at 1 p.m. in St. Joseph County Superior Court.

Cherlyn's MySpace tribute page here.


Woman_Shot
A woman was shot in the head early Friday morning while in an apartment at this building in the 700 block of Lincoln Way East in South Bend. WSBT-TV Photo

Timothy Ellingsworth




Foreclosure May Have Led To Homicide-Suicide

Couple Found Dead In Home Monday

POSTED: 6:23 am EDT October 17, 2007

A house foreclosure may have led to a homicide-suicide of a husband and wife in southern Indiana.Police said Timothy Ellingsworth, 58, and his wife Sandra, 44, were found dead in their home Monday night of gunshot wounds.Investigators said they think Sandra shot her husband and then turned the gun on herself.

Murder-suicide update, death times very different

Update, 2pm Wed: The Dubois County Coroner tells 14 News that the murder-suicide in Jasper this week actually took place over an extended period of time.

According to Coroner Tony Matthews, Timothy Ellingsworth's time of death is estimated at late Friday night on October 12th or during the early morning hours on October 13th.

Sandra Ellingsworth's time of death is estimated to have occurred during the afternoon hours of Saturday, October 13th.

Reporter: Stefanie Silvey
New Media Producer: Rachel Beavin

UPDATE, TUE 5:32 PM: We're learning more about a story we broke Monday on 14 News at 10.

The Monday night murder-suicide on Berne Strasse is the first murder by a female in Jasper's history.

Police say Sandy Ellingsworth, 44, shot her husband, Timothy before later killing herself.

The coroner says it appears Timothy Ellingsworth had been dead some time before his wife. Neighbors are still reeling from Monday night's events.

They aren't only shocked this happened in this their neighborhood, but even more shocked at who was apparently involved, friends of theirs for years.

Their pets, or the weather is usually the topic of conversation for Kenny and Rita Cooper and their neighbor Clara Hollen.

But all that changed when their quiet neighborhood suddenly was lined with cop cars.

Neighbors say the Ellingsworths, found dead in their home from an apparent murder-suicide, were loved by everyone.

But they say they did notice a change in the couple in recent weeks. Rita Cooper says, "They've been very quiet over there and they would go in the garage door and I guess they would go in the back door, because we hadn't really seen them lately."

They say the fact that Sandy left behind children from previous marriages makes them saddest of all.

Clara says, "If she would have just let somebody know in the neighborhood that she was having problems, anybody would have helped her."

But despite what happened, Clara says that's not how the Ellingsworths will be remembered on their street, "I won't remember her this way, I will remember her as this kind girl who was always there to help. That's the way I will remember her."

Preliminary autopsy results show each died of a single gunshot wound to the head. A complete autopsy could take weeks.

Police aren't discussing a motive at this point in the investigation. Records show there was no criminal or domestic violence history.

However, Stefanie Silvey researched court records which showed the couple appeared to be having some financial issues recently.

Update, 11:30am: We have more information on Monday evening's shooting in Jasper.

Police tell 14 News that the deaths are a murder-suicide. They say that 44-year-old Sandra Ellingsworth shot her husband, 58-year-old Timothy Ellingsworth and then shot herself.

New Media Producer: Amanda Lents

Police continue to investigate a death in Dubois County, Indiana.

Jasper Police say the call came in just before 6 pm Monday from a Jasper subdivision. While few details are being released, crews were on the scene until late Monday night.

14 News will continue to follow this story and bring you more information as we get it.

New Media Producer: Rachel Beavin

Jasper police tell 14 News they are working a death investigation on Berne Strasse.

As of now, we are unsure of the manner and cause of the death.

We will continue to provide you updates, on-air and online, as information become available.

Jacob Lord

Jacob Lord

Man To Be Arraigned In 2-Year-Old's Slaying

November 2, 2009

SELLERSBURG, Ind. -- An Indiana man charged with killing his ex-girlfriend's 2-year-old son will be arraigned Monday.

Police say Jacob Lord was injured after his mother dropped him off at Hensley's apartment. Lord's mother told WLKY News the boy came home covered in bruises from head-to-toe.

Lord’s mother said Hensley told her the boy had fallen from a bed. Hensley later told the boy’s mother he fell down the stairs and hit his head on the chair.

Lord's mother said her son was napping at home when he had a seizure. She brought the toddler to Scott Memorial Hospital with serious injuries on Wednesday.  He was later taken to Kosair Children’s Hospital in Louisville, where he died Wednesday evening.

An autopsy performed Thursday in Louisville determined Lord died of an inflicted closed head injury.  Hensley, an ex-boyfriend of Lord’s mother, was arrested at home Friday afternoon in Austin, Ind. on murder and felony battery charges. He was taken to the Scott County Jail and is awaiting his first court appearance.

"He seemed nice in front of everybody else, but every time my grandson would come over and stay with him by himself he always got hurt,” said Lord’s grandmother Joyce Bowling.

The case is still under investigation.

"As we go through this investigation, if we find anybody else that bears responsibility to the crime that's happened to this child, then we're going to be presenting to those charges to the prosecutor's office and we're going to be arresting those people too,” said ISP Sgt. Jerry Goodin.

Denise Hudson Caraway



Bedford Woman Murdered by Husband

October 9, 2009

A woman who died from a gunshot wound Wednesday evening was shot multiple times in the head, chest and lower abdomen, according to Lawrence County Coroner John Sherrill.

The gunshot wounds were from the .22-caliber revolver recovered at the scene.

Bedford police received a call at 7:23 p.m. Wednesday for an ambulance on Washington Ave. where Denise Caraway, 48, had been shot according to police. After arriving at the scene, officers discovered she was dead from a gunshot wound.

Her husband Larry Michael Caraway, 47, was arrested Wednesday evening on a preliminary charge of voluntary manslaughter in the shooting. Caraway remains in the Lawrence County Security Center on a $200,000 cash. At this point, he has not appeared in court.

Denise (Hudson) Caraway was a teacher at Head Start and her husband is a Times-Mail newspaper carrier and mows lawns. The couple has two adult sons, one of whom lives at the residence, according to police. Only the couple was home when the shooting happened.

Parsley said police officers had been to the home before to investigate domestic disputes between the couple, the most recent being in June.

UPDATE:

(BEDFORD, IN) - A Bedford man will serve the maximum 65 years in prison for murdering his wife in October of 2009.  48-year-old Larry Caraway plead guilty in February to shooting his wife, 48-year-old Denise Caraway, seven times.

Initially, Caraway told police he and his wife were arguing about bills when she retrieved a gun and shot herself.  He later admitted he had fabricated that story.

Jessica Jones

Jessica Jones

Police Kill Homicide Suspect Who Allegedly Threatened Kid

Authorities: Man Shot Ex-Wife, Led Chase With 4 Children

October 4, 2007

PLAINFIELD, Ind. -- A state trooper fatally shot a homicide suspect who pointed a gun at a child in his lap following a chase on Interstate 70 west of Indianapolis Wednesday night, police said.

Major Jones III, 28, of Indianapolis, killed his ex-wife, Jessica Jones, outside a Terre Haute hotel late Wednesday before leading officers on the chase with four children -- ages 2, 4, 5, and 6 -- in his SUV, according to police.

Police chased Major Jones east for about 40 miles at speeds up to 90 mph, and he stopped on I-70 at about 11:35 p.m. after deflating three tires on stop sticks between the Monrovia and Plainfield exits, authorities said.

Jones released three of the children during a 25-minute standoff in which he stayed in the SUV and became increasingly agitated, state police said. The standoff ended at about midnight when Trooper Terry Watson shot him after Jones pointed a gun at the fourth child and officers, state police said.

"(Jones) did make a wave of the gun toward the child and was making some comments that were considered life threatening," state police Sgt. Rich Myers said. "It turned out good in one way that we were ultimately able to get the children out safely."

None of the children was hurt. Police said three of the kids were the couple's and one was Jessica Jones' by another man.

Watson, 52, is a three-year veteran of the Indiana State Police and a member of their SWAT team.

Police said Major Jones killed his ex-wife before leading officers on a chase in this SUV with four children as passengers. The SUV stopped after 40 miles, and a state trooper shot Jones after Jones pointed a gun at a child in his lap, police said.

Police said Major Jones and Jessica Jones, 26, planned to meet Wednesday at a Ramada Inn in Terre Haute so he could give her child support money. They had been divorced for about four years.

The two met at the Ramada and got into an argument, and Jessica Jones escaped and ran to the nearby Drury Inn, where she worked, but could not get in because the building was locked after hours, said Bill Bergherm, assistant chief of criminal investigations for Terre Haute police.

Major Jones fired several shots just before 11 p.m., and Jessica Jones died near the doors of the Drury Inn, police said.

Vigo County Coroner Dr. Roland Kohr said Jessica Jones died of multiple gunshot wounds, at least one to the head. Five casings were found outside the Drury Inn.

County officials were working to place the children with Jessica Jones' mother, Bergherm said.

Major Jones had lived at his mother's east-side Indianapolis home since his divorce. At that home, a family representative said relatives saw no sign that he would kill his ex-wife.

"Our primary focus and concern right now is for the children. We want to see them safe and sound and taken care of," said the spokesman, Mel Keaton.

Major Jones and Jessica Jones had joint custody of their three children, court records show.

Eternity Brame

Eternity Brame

Appeals Court Affirms Sentence for Gary Baby Puncher

January 11, 2011

INDIANAPOLIS | The Indiana Court of Appeals on Friday refused to adjust the 35-year prison sentence for a Gary man who punched an infant while walking along Fifth Avenue in Gary, causing her death.

Christopher K. Washington, 21, pleaded guilty in September 2009 to felony battery in connection with the death of 5-month-old Eternity Brame.

According to court and police records, Washington was walking with his girlfriend's children, ages 5 and 6, and Brame, the daughter of Washington's girlfriend's sister, along Fifth Avenue toward Fillmore Street on Oct. 4, 2007, when Washington punched Brame several times.

Upon reaching Brame's aunt's home, Washington put Brame in a bed and didn't tell anyone what happened, according to court records. An autopsy showed the child died of a lacerated heart and liver, and a depressed skull fracture from several blows to her head, chest and back.

At the time of the incident, Washington was 18 years old and just three months out of the Lake County Juvenile Detention Center.

Washington asked the appeals court for a reduced sentence claiming the 35-year term was inappropriate in light of his character and nature of the crime.

In a 3-0 decision, the Court of Appeals emphatically rejected Washington's request, pointing out that he received less time than the 50-year maximum sentence and agreeing with the trial court that Washington's actions were "brutal."

"Washington struck a defenseless infant with his fist several times, causing her death, in the presence of other young children," Senior Judge John Sharpnack wrote.

The court said Washington's juvenile record, including crimes equal to robbery and intimidation for an adult, history of substance abuse and repeated probation violations, also weighed against a sentence reduction.

Obituary:

BABY ETERNITY UNIQUE BRAME Gary, Indiana Age 4 months, passed away on Wednesday, October 4, 2007. Eternity was born May 7, 2007, in Gary, Indiana. She was a well loved daughter of Kortisha R. Spencer & Eugene J. Brame. She departed from many family members, mother, Kortisha Spencer; father, Eugene Brame; brother, Eugene Brame Jr.; sister, Tyaisha Brame; great-grandmother, Louise Johnson; grandparents, Linda (Larry) McJefferson, Janice Brame, Ronald Overton, James Bobo; 5 aunts, Rose Bobo, Tiffany Spencer, PaTrisha Brame, Jamie Kimbrough, Jermil Kimbrough; 5 uncles, Jermaine Kimbrough, Antione Brame, Dewon (Kim-berly) Brame, William Lewis, and Louis Spencer; godmother/ cousin, Mozell Quarles; and all her loving cousins, great-aunts, great-uncles, other relatives and friends who reside in Gary, IN, and many different cities. Visitation Sunday, October 14, 2007, from 12 noon to 8:00 p.m. with family hour from 6 - 8:00 p.m. at the Guy & Allen Chapel, 2959 W. 11th Ave. Funeral service Monday, October 15, 2007, at 2:00 p.m. at Old Path COGIC, 2117 McKinley Street. Pastor Lynnell Walters officiating. Interment Oak Hill Cemetery. Professional services rendered by: Guy & Allen Funeral Directors, Inc. Published in Post-Tribune on October 14, 2007

Eva B. Groves


Man Sentenced in "Granny" Stabbing

Published : Wednesday, 03 Jun 2009, 4:29 PM EDT

NEW CASTLE, Ind. (AP) -- - A central Indiana man has been sentenced to 50 years in prison for stabbing his grandmother to death.

36-year-old Gregory Lee Galloway had been found guilty but mentally ill of murder in the October 2007 death of 84-year-old Eva B. "Granny" Groves in the mobile home they shared in Hillsboro, about 40 miles east of Indianapolis.

Henry Circuit Judge Mary Willis sentenced Galloway on Tuesday and noted his long history of mental problems.

Family members said they had repeatedly sought treatment for Galloway, who was diagnosed with disorders related to schizophrenia.

Susan Moulder

Susan Moulder

Carmel police puzzled over apparent murder-suicide

October 7, 2007

Carmel - Police are puzzled by an apparent murder-suicide involving a couple who were about to get married. There were no signs of violence or any other warnings to indicate trouble with the relationship.

A graduate of Purdue University and Carmel High School, 29-year-old Susan Moulder lived to travel and loved music. She posted her interests on her MySpace and Facebook pages. There are also messages on those pages of congratulations for her recent engagement, as well as pictures of Moulder and her fiance, 36-year-old Jason Broadwater.

The two lived together in a Carmel home for the past three months. They died there together. Police found their bodies Friday. Investigators say it was Broadwater who pulled the trigger in an apparent murder-suicide.

The case comes as a surprise to police, who say they've never been called to the home before for domestic problems. Police say the two attended neighborhood functions and were well liked.

Broadwater was a nuclear technician for the Care Group at the Heart Center. His family declined to talk, but wrote in his obituary that he "cherished patient care."

Moulder offered no indication of problems or second thoughts on her MySpace site, only excitement over their impending nuptials. Her last entry, dated October 2, three days before her death, simply states, "Engaged!"

Police say they found two guns in the home, including one located next to Broadwater.

Toxicology tests will be conducted, but investigators may never know why the lives of a couple with such a promising future came to such a tragic end.

Debra Wilson


Arrest made in Ossian Murder

December 12, 2006

Terry Lee Brabson, 47, of 906 Woodview Blvd., Fort Wayne, has been charged with murder in connection with the death of Debra S. Wilson, 45 ("Debbie"), of 610 Ingle Dr.

He was held at the Wells County Jail under $1.5 million bond. Brabson was scheduled for a 1 p.m. appearance today in Wells Circuit Court.

Wilson’s body was found by her daughter around 2 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 11 lying in a pool of blood in the bedroom of her Rose Ann Heights residence. The cause of death was later ruled by the Wells County Coroner as blunt force trauma to her head.

The investigation has revealed that Wilson was probably killed during the evening hours, Tuesday, Oct. 10, the day before she was discovered by her daughter.

According to the probable cause affidavit filed with the court, Ossian Police Chief David Rigney, the lead investigator in the case, and Wells County Sheriff’s Det. Lt. Diane Betz and Detective Scott Holliday, in the course of their investigation, determined that Wilson was involved in illegal narcotic activity. A man that Wilson is alleged to have been involved romantically with reportedly told the Chief that Wilson was a “heavy drug user” and had been known to bring people to her Rose Ann Heights residence whom she hardly knew for the purpose of abusing illegal narcotics.

Interviews with neighbors showed that Wilson had a visitor to her residence on Oct. 9 and 10—a man who was reportedly seen unloading a large potted chrysanthemum from Wilson’s vehicle the day before the murder. The same man was also reportedly seen leaving Wilson’s residence in a hurry the night of Oct. 10.

Wilson’s boyfriend reportedly advised Rigney that Wilson may have been using her credit card to purchase drugs. A check of Wilson’s credit records reportedly revealed she had made several large purchases on two credit cards. Several of the purchases were at stores in Fort Wayne on Oct. 9 and 10 and videotapes of the days’ transactions were obtained by Rigney and Betz.

In their review of the tapes, they reportedly saw Wilson in the company of a man and a woman. The man was reportedly wearing a green T-shirt. One of the items that was reportedly purchased was a large potted chrysanthemum

The night that the murder is believed to have taken place, a man was reportedly seen carrying a laundry basket in the Rose Ann heights Addition. The same man was reportedly seen exiting the addition and heading north on Ind. 1.

A basket matching the description of the one the man was reportedly seen carrying was later located in the dumpster outside of the Ossian Medical Center, which is located along Jefferson St. It reportedly contained a pillowcase matching the bed linens in Wilson’s bedroom. Inside the pillowcase was a torn piece of mail, drug paraphernalia—and a soaking wet green T-shirt, matching the T-shirt worn by the man seen with Wilson in the store videos.

The Indiana State Police lab in Fort Wayne later determined that blood allegedly found on the back of the T-shirt was a DNA match to Wilson.

Rigney and officer Stephanie Tucker, who was also instrumental in the investigation, received a call from two employees at Fort Wayne Wire & Die that a man had spoken to them at their workplace, reportedly stating he had been in a fight with his girlfriend and she had thrown him out. He then walked from Ossian all the way to Fort Wayne.

The man was reportedly carrying a carton of Marlboro cigarettes. A carton of Marlboros was reportedly one of the items purchased by Wilson using her credit card as shown in the store videos.

As the investigation widened, a Fort Wayne patrolman reportedly recognized the man with Wilson in the store videos as Brabson. The officer said he had attended high school with Brabson and had recently spoken with him. Other police officers also identified the woman with Wilson.

Both Brabson and the woman had been earlier arrested on unrelated charges. On the book-in sheet, Tucker noticed that one of the items that Brabson had in his possession was a 4-inch long knife. Wilson reportedly had several cuts on her that appeared to have been made by a knife. A search warrant was used to obtain the knife from property that Brabson allegedly left behind at a Fort Wayne woman’s residence where he had been staying after he had posted bond following his arrest.

Also obtained was a pair of shoes with a tread pattern similar to a tread pattern found at the crime scene.

Search warrants had been used to search Wilson’s residence the day the murder was discovered and again later in the course of the investigation. During the search, a used potato chip bag was reportedly found that later was allegedly discovered to contain a print belonging to Brabson.

As the investigation narrowed its focus on Brabson as a prime suspect, Rigney, Betz and Tucker interviewed three known associates of Wilson. Reportedly, all three stated that Brabson had been with Wilson at her residence Oct. 9 and 10 and had gone shopping with her.

All three allegedly admitted that Brabson had spoken to them about an incident he claimed to have been involved in with Wilson.

Reportedly Wilson told Brabson he would have to leave her house because she was expecting someone to come to the house. She allegedly gave Brabson $25 and some crack cocaine and told him that he would either have to get a cab or walk back to Fort Wayne.

Allegedly, Brabson smoked the crack and then began smoking some of his own personal stash of dope. At that point, Wilson is alleged to have become enraged and tried to get her $25 back.

The two allegedly fought and Brabson is alleged to have left the residence and walked back to Fort Wayne.

Rigney and Wells County Prosecutor Mike Lautzenheiser are both declining to make any statements about the investigation out of concern the impact that anything that they say could be used by Brabson’s defense to weaken the case. All information has been gleaned from the probable cause affidavit filed with the court.

Rigney did, however, thank all of the agencies that were involved with the investigation including the sheriff’s department and Wells County Sheriff Barry Story, the Bluffton Police Department—which provided a crime scene investigator for the case—the Indiana State Police, the Allen County Sheriff’s Department and the Fort Wayne Police Department Detective Bureau, Homicide Division and Neighborhood Response Team.

UPDATE:
Late plea negates Wells murder trial
Admits to manslaughter in '06 death of Ossian woman; 30 years possible
As the attorneys were getting ready to pick a jury in his Wells County murder trial, a Fort Wayne man admitted his role in the 2006 death of an Ossian woman inside her home.

Terry L. Brabson, 48, pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter. While the charge is a Class A felony, it offers a slightly lighter prison sentence than Brabson would have faced if convicted of murder after the two-week trial.  Wells County Prosecutor Michael Lautzenheiser Sr. said he was relieved by the unexpected plea, which will likely bring a sentence of 30 years.

Had the state won the murder conviction, Brabson would have likely faced up to 50 years in prison; but had the jury settled on a lesser offense, such as a lower-level felony manslaughter charge, Brabson would have had a 10-year sentence, Lautzenheiser said.

Doyle Nesbitt


South Bend man shot on Wednesday dies

October 30, 2006

ELKHART - South Bend man shot on Wednesday dies.  Doyle Nesbitt, the 24-year-old South Bend man shot in Elkhart on Wednesday night, died Saturday. A spokeswoman at Elkhart General Hospital confirmed Nesbitt's death Sunday afternoon. The Elkhart Police Department's Homicide Unit was called to an apartment in the 200 block of North Third Street in Elkhart at about 9 p.m. Wednesday. Kendra Ellis, 19, of South Bend, was arrested Thursday and was initially facing attempted murder charges.

UPDATE:

According to our reporting partners at The Truth, an Elkhart woman faces eight years behind bars after admitting she shot and killed her boyfriend. 22-year-old Kendra Ellis pleaded guilty Thursday to shooting Doyle Nesbitt to death.
According to our reporting partners at The Truth, an Elkhart woman faces eight years behind bars after admitting she shot and killed her boyfriend.  22-year-old Kendra Ellis pleaded guilty Thursday to shooting Doyle Nesbitt to death.  It happened back on October 25th at the couple's apartment on Third Street in Elkhart.
 

You may also remember Ellis was accidentally released from jail after her arrest for the shooting, but was quickly re-arrested.  Her sentencing is set for January 18th.

Jesse L. Livingston



Defendant's outburst interrupts trial

August 9, 2006

An emotional outburst by the defendant interrupted a murder trial Tuesday before the first witness took the stand.

Geraldine A. Livingston began to sob as the Tippecanoe County prosecutor's staff started setting up audio equipment in preparation to play a recording of a 911 call involving the death of her estranged husband, Jesse Livingston.

Judge Don Johnson of Tippecanoe Superior Court 1 dismissed jurors from the courtroom, hoping that Livingston would calm down. But when the prosecutor's staff began playing the 911 recording to test the equipment, the defendant erupted in loud groans. 

Livingston, 43, is charged with murder in connection with the Oct. 21, 2004, fatal shooting of her husband, who had left her two months earlier.

Courthouse bailiffs restrained Livingston, who is in custody, while family members attempted to calm her down. But eventually, she had to be led out of the courtroom.

Johnson dismissed jurors for the day at 2:50 p.m. and will attempt to resume the trial at 8:15 this morning.

He directed the Tippecanoe County Jail staff to have Livingston evaluated by a psychiatrist overnight to see if she can proceed with the trial.

If she is unable to keep her composure, Johnson likely will have to declare a mistrial. The judge told attorneys there's too much at stake in a murder trial to allow it to proceed without the defendant present.

Before opening statements in the case, Graham already had conceded that Livingston had shot her husband. He spent much of his time during jury selection coaching prospective jurors on the difference between murder -- intentionally killing another human being -- and manslaughter, which Indiana law defines as killing another person "in sudden heat."

"It's a manslaughter -- not a murder," Graham told jurors during his opening statement. "This is not a murder. This not a hit. This is not a drive-by. This is not a sniper shooting."

But John Meyers, chief deputy prosecutor, argued there is evidence, including the fact that Livingston bought the .38-caliber handgun nine days before the shooting, that the killing was planned.

Meyers said the evidence would show that Livingston fired four shots at her husband from the doorway to his apartment. One bullet struck him in the chest; another in his back. Two others went into the apartment floor. Then she fled the scene and called her daughter.

Two passersby discovered Jesse Livingston, 29, lying in the doorway of his apartment building in the 1300 block of North 15th Street, calling for help. He died in surgery later at St. Elizabeth Medical Center.

"There's no evidence of anything that could remotely be called provocation" by Jesse Livingston, Meyers said. "His only offense was not wanting to be married to the defendant."

(This was the only information I could find on dear Jesse.  Any other information or memories added to the comments would be appreciated greatly.)

Cody Stanfield

Cody Stanfield

Memorial for Son by his Dear Mother


This memorial website was created in the memory of our loved one, Cody Stanfield. He was born in Indiana on July 06, 2004 and passed away on October 12, 2004 . We will remember him forever. Cody was my dream come true. He was a fraternal twin and the preemie of the two.

From the beginning he was a strong little boy with a beautiful defined face and a quiet spirit within him. He was born with the help of a procedure known as Invito Fertilization. Because of medical reasons this was my only hope of ever becoming a mother. Thank God after the first procedure I found out that the two eggs that was put in took and I for the first time ever was pregnant with TWINS!

Around four or five months I found out that they was going to be a girl and a boy. But even still until I saw their faces I knew the ultrasound could be wrong. I did pick out two names though and its funny but the two I picked just seemed to fit. The pregnancy was good up until my 29wk when I started to go into pre-term labor. I was admitted and stayed until their birth which was at 36wks.

Cody was born first weighing 4# 13 0z. What a angel! I couldn't believe this beautiful baby was mine finally. My dream came true. His faint little cry was so precious to hear for the first time.I never would have thought that his precious life would have been so short lived.

He was just two months old while in his father's care that the tragic event took place. Cody was a victim of Shaken Baby Syndrome, but passed away from blunt force trauma from being tossed onto our couch after being shook.

I still cannot believe that he is gone or that my precious baby boy suffered and died in that manner. I feel violated that my son was taken from me and I will never get to see him grow up with his twin sister, or to see him get married and start a family of his own. I feel betrayed that a man I loved and shared my life with would do this type of crime to his own child and to me and our family. I did not just lose a son, but a family and a husband.

My life will never be the same now. Every holiday, anniversary of my pregnancy events and his birthday will be a constant reminder of the loss of his life. How do I explain to his twin sister what her own father did to her twin brother? And how can I really go on......I have been in shock ever since that night I saw my son at the hospital.

The pictures are hard to look at of him like that. But my family and I took them in hopes that we could help people see what danger shaking a baby can do and to try to help spread awareness in that a life may be saved. If anyone having trouble coping with a crying baby or just being a new parent comes upon this memorial site and gets touched by it or helps them in anyway, then my son's life will not be in vain. Since this happened I have divorced and gotten counseling to help with my loss. His father plead guilty to battery and got 5 yrs but he only did 1 year and 9 months for it! I can't believe that's all he had to serve for killing our son.

Even though Cody was here for such a short time his presence and sweet spirit touched everyone who came in contact with him. His big smile made you grin and when his little fingers would grasp yours...you would melt. At Cody's funeral, it was said that his life was....."Born on Earth to Blossom in Heaven". That he is.

How beautiful.