woensdag 21 juni 2017

Tapes of the Toy box David Parker Ray part 2

#Cautionisadvised

Description of the many tortures and rape the victim is going to get.

Tapes of the Toy box David Parker Ray

#Warning# Shocking

Listen to the transcript of the tapes where David Parker Ray tells his victims what is going to do to them.

dinsdag 20 juni 2017

Evil in the desert David Parker Ray

On March 22, 1999, a living victim, Cynthia Vigil, escaped after being kidnapped and enduring torture in a three-day ordeal. To escape, Vigil waited until Ray went to work and then managed to get the keys to the lock of her chains which Ray's accomplice, Cindy Hendy, left on a table nearby while she was in another room on the phone. After getting the keys, Hendy noticed Vigil's attempt at escaping and fighting ensued. During the struggle, Hendy broke a lamp on Vigil's head, but she still managed to unlock her chains and then proceeded to stab Hendy in the neck with an icepick she found on the floor and escaped. Vigil ran away naked, wearing only an iron slave collar and padlocked chains. After Vigil's escape and rescue, Ray and Hendy were apprehended by the police.

Parker was arrested the day his last victim escaped. Throughout the trial, the prosecution brought forward two victims along with the mother of a deceased victim. Cynthia Vigil and Kelly Garret testified against Ray, describing the horrible tortures they endured. Garret was one who said she did not want him to receive the death penalty because she thought that was too easy. She wanted him to endure the pain she went through. She wanted him to stay in prison for his entire life.
Ray was sentenced to 224 years in prison after being convicted of numerous offenses involving the abduction and sexual torture of three young women at his Elephant Butte Lake home. His first trial ended in a hung jury in Tierra Amarilla, New Mexico. His trial was then relocated to a small town where he had been raised decades before. He was convicted of his crimes against Angie Montaño, and then admitted his crimes against Cynthia Vigil Jaramillo and another young woman, as part of a plea deal for a light sentence for Ray's daughter. He died eight months after sentencing, having been held for two and a half years while awaiting trial and re-trial. Hendy, who testified against Ray, received a sentence of 36 years for her role in the crimes.

Toy box of David Parker Ray

#WARNING# Graphic content

Crimes

David Parker Ray tortured and presumably killed his victims in a $100,000 homemade torture chamber he called his "toy box", which was equipped with what he referred to as his "friends": whips, chains, pulleys, straps, clamps, leg spreader bars, and surgical blades and saws. With these tools it is thought that he terrorized Truth or Consequences for several years with the added assistance of multiple accomplices.

Inside the torture room, along with numerous sex toys, torture implements, syringes and detailed diagrams (made by Ray himself) showing different methods and techniques for inflicting pain, there was a homemade electricity generating device that was used in torture. Ray would often have a recorded audio tape of himself played for his victims whenever they regained consciousness.

Ted Bundy's crime scene photos

#Warning GRAPHIC CONTENT# In December 1987, Bundy was examined for seven hours by Dorothy Otnow Lewis, a professor from New York University Medical Center. Lewis diagnosed Bundy as a manic depressive whose crimes usually occurred during his depressive episodes. To Lewis, Bundy described his childhood, especially his relationship with his maternal grandparents, Samuel and Eleanor Cowell.


According to Bundy, grandfather Samuel Cowell was a deacon in his church. Along with the already established description of his grandfather as a tyrannical bully, Bundy described him as a bigot who hated blacks, Italians, Catholics, and Jews. He further stated that his grandfather tortured animals, beating the family dog and swinging neighborhood cats by their tails. He also told Lewis how his grandfather kept a large collection of pornography in his greenhouse where, according to relatives, Bundy and a cousin would sneak to look at it for hours.

Family members expressed skepticism over Louise's "Jack Worthington" story of Bundy's parentage and noted that Samuel Cowell once flew into a violent rage when the subject of the boy's father came up. Bundy described his grandmother as a timid and obedient wife, who was sporadically taken to hospitals to undergo shock treatment for depression. Toward the end of her life, Bundy said, she became agoraphobic.

Louise Bundy's younger sister Julia recalled a disturbing incident with her young nephew. After lying down in the Cowells' home for a nap, Julia woke to find herself surrounded by knives from the Cowell kitchen. Three-year-old Ted was standing by the bed, smiling at her.

Bundy used stolen credit cards to purchase more than 30 pairs of socks while on the run in Florida; he was a self-described foot fetishist.

In the Dobson interview before his execution, Bundy said that violent pornography played a major role in his sex crimes. According to Bundy, as a young boy he found "outside the home again, in the local grocery store, in a local drug store, the soft core pornography that people called soft core...And from time to time we would come across pornographic books of a harder nature...."

Bundy said, "It happened in stages, gradually. My experience with pornography generally, but with pornography that deals on a violent level with sexuality, is once you become addicted to it — and I look at this as a kind of addiction like other kinds of addiction — I would keep looking for more potent, more explicit, more graphic kinds of material. Until you reach a point where the pornography only goes so far, you reach that jumping off point where you begin to wonder if maybe actually doing it would give that which is beyond just reading it or looking at it."

In a letter written shortly before his escape from the Glenwood Springs jail, Bundy said "I have known people who...radiate vulnerability. Their facial expressions say 'I am afraid of you.' These people invite abuse... By expecting to be hurt, do they subtly encourage it?"

In a 1980 interview, speaking of a serial killer's justification of his actions, Bundy said "So what's one less? What's one less person on the face of the planet?" When Florida detectives asked Bundy to tell them where he had left Kimberly Leach's body for her family's solace, Bundy allegedly said, "But I'm the most cold-hearted son of a bitch you'll ever meet."

maandag 19 juni 2017

Ted Bundy's final story

Bundy fought for his life, spending years appealing his death sentence. An infamous national figure since his Florida trials, he remained a source of fascination for many. Actor Mark Harmon even played Bundy in the 1986 television movie The Deliberate Stranger. Bundy tried to take his case as high as the U.S. Supreme Court, but he was turned down. Bundy even offered information on some of unsolved murders to avoid Florida's electric chair, but he could not delay justice forever.


On January 24, 1989, Bundy met his fate at the Florida State Prison. He was put to death around 7 a.m. that morning in an electric chair sometimes known as "Old Sparky." Outside the prison, crowds cheered and even set off fireworks after Bundy's execution. In the end, he had admitted to thirty-six killings, but experts believe that the final tally may be closer to one hundred.

Death did not stop the public's interest with Ted Bundy. His life has been the subject of countless books and documentaries, trying to shed some light on this brutal killer's crimes.

zondag 18 juni 2017

JonBenét the questions part 5

Karr has been forced to change his name several times since the murder and he now lives in Thailand.


He refused to name the killer or detail the "accident."

Karr added her lifeless body was “tampered” in a bid to cover up who the killer was.

“Something happened to her [and I] had to take care of it,” Karr said.

“I have always been able to fix things. Nobody came in there and did a paedo-erotic thing to that little girl, but it was made to look as though it was done that way.”

He went on to claim the kidnap letter which was found was fake.

He insists her death was an accident, and that he tried to save her on the night of December 26th 1996.

Speaking out, Karr, 51, said: “Nobody wanted that little girl to die that night— nobody. Her death was an accident. I was with her when she died. But I was not the person who caused it.”

He explained there was a "panic" after the little girl died and added she was not discovered in the place she lost her life.

John Mark Karr has given a tell-all interview to Investigation Discovery in the US, taking part in a three part series called  JonBenét: An American Murder Mystery.“How she was found, that’s not how she died. Where she was found in that basement is not where she died."He said it was a prop to make her death look like a “botched kidnapping.”Karr was cleared of  her death because his tissue samples and body fluids did not match that found on Ramsey's body.But, oddly, he insisted during his interview the DNA evidence discovered by authorities “has absolutely no connection to that little girl’s death.”

zaterdag 17 juni 2017

Aileen Carol Wuornos

Between December 1989 and September 1990, the bodies of several men were found murdered along the highways of northern and central Florida, including Richard Mallory, Dick Humphreys, Troy Burress, David Spears, Walter Gino Antonio, Peter Siems, and Charles Carskaddon.

Items belonging to Mallory and Antonio were pawned near Daytona Beach and the alias names used were traced to Wuornos through thumbprints left on the pawn shop cards.
Wuornos confessed to the murder of all six men, claiming that she was picked up by the men when she was working as a highway prostitute, and shot them in self defense after they attempted to sexually assault her.
Wuornos was convicted of the murder of Richard Mallory after a jury trial in Volusia County and was sentenced to death. At trial, the State was allowed to introduce similar crimes evidence about Wuornos' commission of several other murders.
While on death row, it was discovered that Mallory had previously served time for Attempted Rape. Wuornos pleaded no contest to the murders of the other 5 men and was sentenced to death in each case.
Within two weeks of her arrest, Wuornos and her attorney had sold movie rights to her story. Investigators in her case did likewise. The case resulted in several books and movies, and even one opera on the life of "America's first female serial killer."
Wuornos’s father, Leo Dale Pittman, was a child molester and a sociopath who was strangled in prison in 1969. Wuornos was pregnant at age fourteen. Shortly thereafter, she dropped out of school, left home and took up hitchhiking and prostitution. Wuornos had a prior conviction for armed robbery in 1982.
Citations:
Wuornos v. State of Florida, 19 Fla. Law W. S 455 (September 22, 1994). (Mallory)
Wuornos v. State of Florida, 1996.FL.545 (May 9, 1996). (Antonio)
Final Meal:

Wuornos declined the traditional last meal, which could have been anything she wanted for under $20, and instead was given a cup of coffee.
Final Words:

"I'd just like to say I'm sailing with the rock, and I'll be back like Independence Day, with Jesus June 6. Like the movie, big mother ship and all, I'll be back."

donderdag 15 juni 2017

JonBenét the questions part 4

But more than simply covering the case, the media has become part of the case, putting pressure on investigators and piquing public curiosity. 

This began almost immediately after the Christmas 1996 killing. On January 13, 1997, supermarket tabloid the Globe published stolen crime-scene photos. A former sheriff's deputy and a photo lab employee were arrested two days later for leaking the pictures. 
That was only the beginning of the tabloid infiltration. In a new book which details the investigation, author Lawrence Schiller reveals that Globe reporter Jeff Shapiro regularly spent hours at a time in the company of Boulder District Attorney Alex Hunter, getting scoops on the continuing investigation. Hunter's office did not immediately return a call for comment. 
Fox News's Boulder correspondent Carol McKinley, who has covered the Ramsey murder case from day one, says tabloids have "come out with some really good stories on this because people close to the case were leaking, knowing that they were using the tabs — and the tabs were using them." 
The only problem, she says is that with their wild-eyed headlines and sensational insinuations, tabloids "take a small kernel and embellish it until it (is) huge and make it mean something else. A lot of times they're right, but (only) half right, and they go 100 miles further than they should have — and a lot of times they're downright wrong." 
In covering the Ramsey murder, McKinley has witnessed the extreme tactics of the tabloids, which she says sometimes come "close to extortion." 
"They misrepresent themselves, they pretend like they're church members and go and sit in a church, they've become friends with families so they can get things," she said. "You can't trust anyone in a story like this because you don't know who they are, and the tabs were able to infiltrate Boulder because Boulder didn't know that. It's basically a sleepy university town, and no one was prepared to be fooled." 
Just as the case has fed the press, the press has changed the case. Without the media heat, "the investigation may have gone on as long, but certainly there wouldn't have been the subtext of the story," Schiller told Fox News. "There wouldn't have been the existence of all the dirt under the carpet because it's the tabloid media that really produced people to act differently than they were accustomed to act." 
This has the potential to hurt the case. "It's unhealthy for the investigation," said Bob Grant, Adams County D.A. and an advisor to Boulder D.A. Hunter. "Thanks to an overabundance of tabloid journalism and the legitimate press too, everybody's got an opinion. Everybody thinks they know whodunit and how." 
The worst danger is that the grand jurors charged with bringing an indictment in the case will be influenced by the press, Grant said. But this is unlikely, he added. "They are to put everything out of their minds except what they hear in the courtroom. They were selected with that in mind." 

Belgium monster part 2 - Video Dailymotion

Belgium monster part 2 - Video Dailymotion: One week after Delhez and Dardenne harrowing testimonies, the two women returned to the dungeon where they were held captive, beaten and repeatedly raped by Dutroux before being freed in 1996. Accompany the women were several judges, court officials, lawyers, family members of the victims and Dutroux. According to the BBC article 'Dutroux Victims Return to Cell', the women returned to the house in Marcinelle to 'come to terms' with their ordeal. They also wanted those present to understand the horrific conditions in which they were held captive and what they experienced. Back in court, Dutroux continued to deny that he was a murderer, placing responsibility on his alleged accomplices, Michel Lelievre, Michel Nihoul and his ex-wife, Michelle Martin. However, Dutroux did confess to the rape and kidnapping charges against him for which he expressed his 'sincere regret.' Yet, for the victims it was already too late. On June 14, 2004, the jury, consisting of eight women and four men were sent out to deliberate at the end of a three-month- trial. The jurists convened at a fortified Arlon army barracks to review approximately 400,000 pages of evidence, including the testimonies of over 500 witnesses. Moreover, the judge gave them 243 questions to evaluate, pertaining to the criminal charges against Dutroux, Martin, Lelievre and Nihoul. It took a little more than three days for the jury to come back with a verdict. On June 17th, Dutroux was found guilty of kidnapping and raping all six girls. He was also convicted of murdering An Marchel and Eefje Lambrecks, as well as his alleged accomplice Bernard Weinstein. Additionally, Lelievre was also found guilty of kidnapping but managed to escape murder charges. The jury has not yet come to a decision on the fate of Martin, who later admitted at trial to starving 8-year-old Melissa Russo and Julie Lejeune to death. There is a strong chance that she will be condemned for the children's deaths. According to the BBC article 'Child Killer Convicted in Belgium,' the jury could not agree on a verdict concerning the case of Nihoul. In both his and Martin's cases, the jury was sent back to further review evidence and complete the 243 questions handed down by the judge. A verdict is expected sometime around June 24th, around the same time Dutroux's sentence will be handed down. The defendants face a maximum sentence of life in prison. However, they could be eligible for parole after 10 years on good behavior. Belgium has no death penalty, yet the Dutroux case has prompted many to rethink capital punishment laws. It is clear that there is no place for people like Dutroux in today's society. June 22, 2004 brought a life sentence to Dutroux. He was also 'put at the government's disposition,' which means that if he were released at some point in the future, the government could send him back to prison. Michelle Martin was sentenced to 30 years in jail and Michel Lelievre got 25 years. Michel Nihoul was sentenced to 5 years. What has never been satisfactorily answered for the people of Belgium is whether the network of pedophiles that Dutroux claimed to be serving ever really existed.

woensdag 14 juni 2017

JonBénet the questions part 3

Her parents John and Patsy had called police to report her kidnapping and said they found a note demanding a ransom of $118,000 for her safe return - and that they had not contact the authorities.

Despite this, police arrived to their home shortly after in clearly marked vehicles.
John and Patsy would remain the primary suspects in their daughter's death for more than a decade, and it was not until 2008 that police finally cleared them of any wrongdoing.
At that time, Patsy had been dead for two years after a lengthy battle with ovarian cancer.
She was initially suspected by many of being the murderer after reports emerged that handwriting on the ransom note was similar to her own, but after she willingly provided a sample to police it was determined she did not write the note.
Many also suspected someone in the family as they claimed there were no footprints in the snow around the house and the ransom amount was the exact amount that John had just received in his annual bonus.
Gray however says that if police had just listened to Kenady they could have solved the case, but they refused to call him back despite the fact that he reached out almost 20 times with information about Helgoth.
'Kenady provided very relevant information that should have been a priority lead,' said Gray.
'But I got the distinct feeling that the Boulder police had absolutely no interest in anything that took away from the theory that John and Patsy Ramsey killed their daughter.' 
Then, on February 13, 1997, Alex Hunter, who was then the district attorney, held a press conference where he spoke to JonBenet's unknown killer, saying; 'The list of suspect narrows. Soon there will be no one on the list but you.' 
Helgoth died of an apparent suicide two days later at his home. Kenady believes he was murdered by an accomplice or accomplices who were with him when he killed JonBenet.
'The gun was found on Helgoth's right side, but the bullet hole goes from left to right. It doesn't make sense why someone would commit suicide in that manner,' said Kenady.
'He was murdered to keep his mouth shut.'
A few years after his death however Helgoth was cleared when it was revealed that none of his DNA was found under JonBenet's fingernails or in her underwear. 
Gray however thinks that he is the killer, and claims he knows how to officially solve the case once and for all. 
'If they could find out who killed Helgoth it could lead police to his accomplices in her murder,' he explains.

Belgium monster - Video Dailymotion

Belgium monster - Video Dailymotion: Some of the following describes the events as alleged by the prosecution. Julie Lejeune (age 8) and Mélissa Russo (age 8) were kidnapped together on June 24, 1995, probably by Dutroux, and imprisoned in Dutroux's cellar. Dutroux repeatedly sexually abused the girls and produced pornographic videos. 17-year-old An Marchal and 19-year-old Eefje Lambrecks were kidnapped on August 22, 1995 while on a camping trip in Ostend, probably by Dutroux and his drug-addicted accomplice Michel Lelièvre, who was being paid with drugs. Since the dungeon was already in use, Dutroux chained the girls to a bed in a room of his house. His wife was aware of all these activities. The prosecution alleged that Dutroux killed An Marchal and Eefje Lambrecks several weeks later, but the exact circumstances of the murder are unknown. In late 1995, Dutroux came under investigation for his involvement in stolen luxury cars. He was in custody from December 6, 1995 until March 20, 1996. It is likely that Julie Lejeune and Mélissa Russo starved to death during this time. Sabine Dardenne was kidnapped and imprisoned in the dungeon on May 28, 1996 on her way to school, probably by Dutroux and his accomplice Michel Lelièvre. She was 12 at the time. On August 9, 1996, the two men kidnapped Laetitia Delhez (14) when she was walking home at night from a public swimming pool. A police investigation found an eye witness who could remember part of a license plate which matched Dutroux's. Dutroux, his wife Martin and Lelièvre were arrested on August 13, 1996. A search of his houses did not turn up anything. After two days, both Dutroux and Lelièvre confessed. Then Dutroux led investigators to the dungeon hidden in his basement. Sabine Dardenne and Laetitia Delhez were found alive there on August 15. In an interview conducted several years later, Ms. Dardenne related that Dutroux told her that she was being kidnapped by a gang, that her parents did not want to pay, and that the gang therefore was planning to kill her. He presented himself as the 'good guy' protecting her from the gang. He let her write letters to her family, which he read but never posted. On August 17, Dutroux led police to another house of his, in Sars-la-Buissière (Hainaut). The bodies of Julie Lejeune and Mélissa Russo as well as Dutroux's supposed accomplice Bernard Weinstein were found in the garden. An autopsy found that the two girls died from starvation. Dutroux had crushed Weinstein's testicles until he revealed a money hiding place, then he drugged him and buried him alive. Dutroux told police that he had killed Weinstein because he had failed to feed the girls during Dutroux's time in custody. Finally, Dutroux told police where to find the bodies of An Marchal and Eefje Lambrecks. They were located on September 3, 1996 in Jumet (Hainaut), buried under a shack next to a house owned by Dutroux. Weinstein had lived in that house for three years.

dinsdag 13 juni 2017

JonBénet the questions part 2

What followed was what some say were unforgivable errors by the Boulder Police Department. The crime scene was compromised when John Ramsey brought his daughter upstairs; the Ramseys were not immediately and separately interviewed.

For the next four years, the investigation came up short, with the Ramseys themselves as lead suspects. The evidence, though circumstantial, made the Ramseys appear guilty in the eyes of the public: The ransom note was extremely long, cryptic, unusually specific, and written on paper belonging to the Ramseys; fiber found on the duct tape used to bind the child was consistent with that found on Patsy's clothing; there were inconsistencies in their stories and the Ramseys appeared blameworthy in many media interviews. 
In December 1999, the Boulder grand jury voted to indict John and Patsy Ramsey for their alleged role in their daughter’s murder; however, Boulder District Attorney Alex Hunter decided not to file charges against them. The Ramsey family moved back to Atlanta, Georgia, and published a memoir, The Death of Innocence, in 2001 to counter the media persecution they felt had ruined their lives. Patsy died a few years later of ovarian cancer at the age of 49. John claims he has lost his entire family fortune after being a multi-millionaire in the 1990s. In 2016, JonBenét’s brother Burke made a surprising appearance on The Dr. Phil Show, breaking his 20-year silence about the case but bringing no new evidence to the story.
Countless books, documentaries, and true crime shows have featured their own theories about JonBenét’s murder. The mom, the dad, the brother, the convicted child sex offender (Gary Oliva), the electrician (Michael Helgoth), the school teacher (John Mark Karr), the housekeeper (Linda Hoffman-Pugh), and the town Santa (Bill McReynolds) have all fallen under suspicion—at least by media and news outlets—but none have been charged. 
In July 2008, new "touch DNA" technology seemed to exonerate all members of JonBenét’s family in the 1996 killing. Boulder County District Attorney Mary Lacy formally apologized in a letter to John Ramsey for the cloud of suspicion his family had lived under for nearly 12 years. However, recent 2016 evidence suggests that the DNA evidence is actually a mixture of DNA and more testing is expected.

Murder in disguise - Video Dailymotion

Murder in disguise - Video Dailymotion: Durst, for example, has maintained his friendship with the Altmans. In 2000, just before he fled New York, he got married again, to New York real estate broker Debrah Charatan. “This is somebody who’s been married twice, who does have some ability for human connection,” says Bernstein. “If he’s capable of normal human interaction, he’s capable of feeling emotions. And if he’s capable of feeling emotions, he’s capable of doing things that human beings do – including murder.” In Christmas 2000, another dead body was discovered – this time in Los Angeles. The victim was Susan Berman, a flamboyant writer with a storied past. Her father was Davie Berman, one of the pioneer mobsters who founded Las Vegas. The timing of Berman’s death sparked suspicion in people who followed Durst’s story. She was shot just a month after newspapers reported that police had re-opened their investigation into the mysterious disappearance of Kathie Durst. Berman was once Durst’s close friend and had been living in New York when Kathie disappeared. Investigators had planned to talk to her, but before they could meet with Berman, she was murdered, shot in the back of the head. “Susan would not have let anyone into her house. It was someone she knew,” says Kathie’s friend, Ellen Strauss. She thinks Durst killed Berman because she helped him cover up his wife’s murder back in 1982. “She knew too much.” Strauss says that the morning after Kathie disappeared, a woman called her medical school, identifying herself as Kathie, to say she wasn’t feeling well. “I think it was Susan Berman who made that call,” says Strauss. “I think that’s why Susan Berman was killed. Once the story broke about the case re-opening, I think Bob was trying to mop up all the loose ends.” Durst’s attorney, Chip Lewis, says Berman’s murder was a clear and simple mob hit: “The fact of the matter is Susan Berman had cried out soon before her murder that she was about to expose the mob in a tell-all book about what she knew. It was a hit-style murder.” But sources close to the L.A. investigation say that there wasn't any mob connection -- and that Durst is a focus of the investigation. And when Berman was found murdered in L.A., New York District Attorney Jeanine Pirro, of Westchester County, turned up the heat on the long cold case of Kathie Durst. “We really didn’t get involved in the case until after Susan Berman was shot in Los Angeles,” says Pirro. There are now active murder investigations on both coasts. In Berman’s case, Durst denies that he was in Los Angeles, but authorities tell 48 Hours that they have documents which they believe prove that he was in California at the time Berman was killed. Still, no charges have been filed, and Durst’s attorneys say it’s unfair to jump to conclusions in either the disappearance of his wife or the death of Susan Berman.

maandag 12 juni 2017

George Michael - Freedom! '90

Thanks for the partnerschip Freedom!

Texas injustice - Video Dailymotion

Texas injustice - Video Dailymotion: To this day, despite the videotape, despite the $25,000 he gave, Cullen Davis insists he was set up. But he has forgotten some of the specifics about what occurred at the time. For example, I asked, “what was the $25,000 for?” He answered, “I don’t remember. That was – that’s why I said, there was something about the – the $25,000, but I don’t – I don’t remember how that came into play.” At the trial in Houston, they conceded Cullen was on the videotape, but said he was assisting investigators. He says the jury believed him. “The jury listened to those tapes real closely, and they said, “Wait a minute, Cullen’s telling the truth, here,” he said. Certainly some of the jury did. It deadlocked 8-to-4 to convict. The judge declared a mistrial. But for Cullen Davis, the ruling was clear: he was and is innocent. A born-again Christian now, forgiveness has taken on new meaning for Cullen Davis. In an hour-long interview, he told News 8, he has forgiven all of the people who have accused him falsely. Some of them have forgiven him, but not Dee Davis. “You have to acknowledge and admit you’re wrong to ask for that forgiveness,” she said. “And so far, I haven’t heard him claim any kind of responsibility for anything.” But Cullen insists it is not about any guilt, but submission to being born again. Dee Davis gets that, but while Cullen may be at peace, questions linger for her. “Who killed my sister then?,” she asked. “If Cullen Davis didn’t do it, then who did it?”

zondag 11 juni 2017

Fred uncle scrooge Keller - Video Dailymotion

Fred uncle scrooge Keller - Video Dailymotion: Friday, April 13, 2007 'The pain you caused by your actions is irreparable,' Keil said, looking at Keller. 'You ruined all our lives, including your own. And for what? For what? You committed the ultimate sin and you show no remorse for your actions.' One of his sisters, Angelika Emory, testified about Rosemarie Keller in personal terms. She and her fiance have custody of Fred Keller Jr., called Fredchen. Rosemarie Keller played the piano and enjoyed classical music and art and gave her haircuts when they were children, Emory said. 'I think about Rose every day. I miss her so much.' 'She would have loved to have more children,' Emory said. 'She was healthy and vibrant. She could have lived a long life. But you took that from her. She loved you, and you systematically destroyed her over the last three or four years of her life. Then you hunted her down like an animal in a closed room.' The Keil family's matriarch, Brigitte Keil, said Rosemarie made a mistake in marrying 'a hateful man. I think your only love is money and controlling people.' When Keller followed the Keils to the witness stand, he urged Brigitte Keil to visit him in jail so they could talk one-on-one. Then he began addressing Wolfgang Keil. 'Take responsibility for what you did, and stop lying to your family,' Keller said. 'Be a man. Look at yourself in the mirror.' He also began a critique of the justice system, saying it was biased against defendants. 'I don't need your opinions about the criminal justice system,' Judge Garrrison said. Afterward, Wolfgang Keil was almost speechless. 'He murdered my sister. Sitting there and blaming me is just unspeakable,' he said. 'I was just disgusted by his comments.' His mother said she has no interest in accepting Keller's invitation to visit him in jail. She said she doesn't want to 'look into the eyes of the devil.' In another dramatic development, Keller's stepson by his first marriage, Brian Bohlander, 52, came to court from his home in Virginia. He and his two stepbrothers were kidnapped by Keller when they were youngsters and told that their mother had been killed in a car accident. Bohlander - which is Keller's birth surname - has said that his stepfather physically and mentally abused him when he was a child. Today, he said he came to court 'to see him walk away in chains where he belongs. He's not human.'

Can money buy a way out ? - Video Dailymotion

Can money buy a way out ? - Video Dailymotion: Tuesday, January 28, 2014 “I can’t predict where things will ultimately go but I think I can predict one thing: We’re not going away,” Moores said. And, he said, he is equally sure that Sullivan hopes they would. “It’s always been about the money,” he said. “He’d rather pour lighter fluid on it and set it one fire than see one dime go to my clients. He’s a sociopath.” Had it not been for the civil wrongful death lawsuit Moores and Boone filed against him, both attorneys said, it is unlikely Sullivan would have been tried for his wife’s murder. The civil lawsuit kept the murder in the public eye and ultimately flushed out witnesses that prosecutors in Georgia used to build a criminal case against Sullivan. Both attorneys also regularly used newspapers and television shows such as “America’s Most Wanted” to appeal for help in locating Sullivan, who fled the country after the murder. People responded, providing clues to Sullivan’s whereabouts, Boone said. Tracked to Costa Rica when he was indicted by Georgia prosecutors, Sullivan slipped away. He was arrested in Thailand in 2004 at a posh coastal resort — 17 years after the murder. He fought extradition but was ultimately returned to Atlanta where he was convicted of paying a hitman $25,000 to kill his wife as they were going through a divorce. The clean-shaven hitman appeared on Lita Sullivan’s doorstep bearing pink roses and, when she opened the door, shot her dead. Moores said he suspects Sullivan is still in contact with a lawyer in Switzerland who helped him access and invest his millions when he was living in Thailand. He also suspects his fourth wife, Chongwattana Sricharoenmuang, whose daughters attended Palm Beach Community College, may be helping him keep tabs on the cash. The lawsuit should open the door for the attorneys to again question Sullivan about the location of the money, Moores said. Sullivan has refused to answer questions, asserting his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Now convicted of murder, Sullivan may no longer be able to raise such claims. Further, Moores suggested, in recent years Switzerland and other tax havens have shown more willingness to cooperate with the United States when asked to help track down ill-gotten gains. He said Lita Sullivan’s aging parents deserve closure. “I hope someday they get some satisfaction of knowing that no matter how slowly the wheels of justice grind, they don’t stop.”

zaterdag 10 juni 2017

The kinky killer - Video Dailymotion

The kinky killer - Video Dailymotion: WHITE PLAINS, June 2,1989— Joseph Pikul, the former Wall Street securities analyst who was awaiting sentencing for the murder of his wife, died early today after a one-week stay in a Goshen, N.Y., hospital. The cause of his death ''will not be known until a full toxicological examination is conducted,'' said Alan Joseph, the Orange County assistant district attorney who prosecuted the case earlier this year. Both the hospital and the prosecutor refused to comment on the possibility, raised by Mr. Pikul's lawyer, that he was suffering from AIDS. His lawyer, Ronald J. Bekoff, said a tape recording of an argument between Mr. Pikul and his former wife, Diane, which was submitted last week as part of a motion to set aside the guilty verdict, included her angry assertion that she had heard he had had a homosexual encounter and had contracted the AIDS virus. The hospital declined to describe the treatment given the 54-year-old Mr. Pikul. Mr. Bekoff said his client ''was being treated for loss of weight and that he wasn't feeling well.'' He said Mr. Pikul ''was lucid, and he was optimistic that the verdict would be set aside.'' Admitted 'in Poor Health' A spokeswoman for Arden Hill Hospital in Goshen, Nina Lewis, said Mr. Pikul had been transferred from the Orange County jail in Goshen to the hospital's emergency ward last Friday ''in poor health.'' ''His condition worsened yesterday,'' she said, ''and he was transferred to the intensive care unit, where his condition was listed as critical.'' He died there after midnight, she said, saying an autopsy would determine the cause of death. Mr. Pikul was found guilty of strangling and beating Diane, his second wife, in their summer home in Amagansett, L.I., in 1987. He was facing 15 years to life in prison. Mr. Joseph, the prosecutor, said the micro-cassette tape recording ''was allegedly found by Mary Pikul,'' the defendant's third wife, whom he married while awaiting trial, ''while going through his personal effects'' after the verdict. The tape, according to Mr. Pikul's lawyers, included threats by Diane Pikul that she would kill him, thus presumably supporting the defense's central contention that Mr. Pikul killed his wife in self-defense. The jury foreman had said that self-defense was considered and rejected by the jury during its nine hours of deliberations.

vrijdag 9 juni 2017

Who killed Ted Ammon - Video Dailymotion

Who killed Ted Ammon - Video Dailymotion: Robert Theodore “Ted” Ammon murder 10/20/2001 East Hamptons, NY *Ted’s ex-wife’s, Generosa Ammon, new husband, Daniel Pelosi, was convicted of his murder, sentenced to 25 years to life in prison*

Investigation on Danny Pelosi

Daniel Pelosi (born 2 August 1963 in Center Moriches, New York) is the convicted murderer of Wall Street financier Ted Ammon, and the widower of Generosa Ammon.

Relationship
Pelosi met Generosa while seeking work as an electrician. Generosa, who was involved in a bitter divorce from Ammon, hired him to supervise the renovation of her townhouse, and they soon began an affair.
Pelosi, who was also married with three children, stayed at Ammon's East Hampton home with Generosa and her two adopted children, and drove Ammon's Porsche Carrera. As Ammon hadn't updated his will to reflect his marital situation, Generosa inherited the bulk of his $97 million estate after he was found murdered. Pelosi married Generosa on 15 January 2002, one day after his divorce from his wife became final.
Murder and trial
While police investigated Ammon's murder, Pelosi was arrested for punching a crew member of a tour boat when he refused to serve more alcohol. He was then charged with stealing $43,000 of electricity from the Long Island Power Authority.
Before she died in 2003, Generosa cut Pelosi out of her will. He later challenged the will and a postnuptial agreement which entitled him to $2 million for legal fees. He was arrested for Ammon's murder on March 24, 2004.
Prosecutors theorized that Pelosi killed Ammon to ensure his new-found lifestyle. His former girlfriend testified that he enjoyed killing Ammon. His father testified that Daniel had asked him how to get rid of incriminating evidence. Convicted in December 2004, Pelosi maintains his innocence. After Generosa's death he wanted custody of her children, who wanted to live with him. Generosa's children live with their aunt and uncle.
He pleaded guilty to witness tampering in his murder trial so that he could marry his fiancée, Jennifer Zolnowski, who was a bank teller as well as Pelosi's alleged accomplice. She gave birth to their son on August 31, 2004.
Pelosi is incarcerated in the Southport Correctional Facility and will be eligible for parole in August 2031.

donderdag 8 juni 2017

Despicable killer - Video Dailymotion

Despicable killer - Video Dailymotion: On November 14, 2002, Binney was sentenced to die for breaking into the Cherokee County home of Judy Southern and shooting her to death when she came home from work. 'He raped his own three-month-old child, but decided he would rather go to jail as a murderer rather than as a child molester'