Saturday, 25 June 2016

MOTIVES: Murder-For-Hire II


In 1987, Alex Sgourdos and his two brothers-in-law bought the Tick Tock Diner, the diner not only became a successful business enterprise, it grew into a landmark. In February 2013, one of the diner's managers, 45-year-old Georgious Spyropoulos, tried to hire a hitman to kill his Uncle Alex. Spyropoulos was married to the daughter of one of Mr. Sgourdos' partners. In late February 2013, Mr. Spyroupoulos asked a regular patron of the diner if he could put him in touch with a professional killer. The man Spyropoulos reached out to happened to be a regular informant for the State Police. As is often the case, the murder-for-hire plot unraveled before it got off the ground.

     In March, the police informant came to the diner with an undercover officer playing the role of contract killer. Later that month, at a meeting in a nearby Home Depot parking lot, Spyropoulos and the undercover cop discussed how the murder-for-hire target would be killed. According to court records, the hitman was to enter Mr. Sgourdos' 6,000-square foot house late on a Sunday night after the diner owner had deposited that day's receipts in his home safe. (The daily receipts usually came to about $20,000.) The mastermind provided the phony hitman with instructions on how to circumvent the dwelling's security system, and said that if the target's wife got in the way, she should be murdered as well.

     Mr. Spyropoulos, according to police affidavits, informed the hitman that his uncle kept a lot of cash in his safe. To acquire the combination, the mastermind suggested that torture might be required. "You can get anything out of anybody with a pair of pliers," he said. According to the plan, after the hitman murdered Mr. Sgourdos, Spyropoulos wanted the body disposed of in a way that would cause the authorities to treat the matter as a missing persons case. Spyropoulos handed the undercover cop $3,000 and a revolver, and said they would split whatever was in the Tick Tock Diner owner's safe. Hinting that the Sgourdos hit would be one of a series of murder assignments, Spyropoulos said, "We'll have a lot more to do." (As is always the case, the entire murder-for-hire conversation was taped by the police.)

On April 9, 2013, officers entered the Tick Tock Diner at noon and took Georgios Spyropoulos into custody. Charged with conspiracy to commit murder, and solicitation of murder, the suspect was incarcerated in the Passaic County Jail on $1 million bond. On July 13, 2014, Georgios Spyropoulos pleaded guilty to plotting the murder of his uncle. In September 2014, Judge Ernest Caposela sentenced Spropoulos to eight years in prison. Had Spyropoulos been convicted as charged, he would have been sent to prison for at least 20 years. According to the state prosecutor who handled the case, Spyropoulos, even after he entered his guilty plea, showed no remorse for his role in the murder-for-hire plot. He is eligible for parole in less than seven years.

When it comes to sentencing, our criminal justice system often makes no sense.


Actual court photo of Georgios Spyropoulos


DEVIL IN THE DETAIL: The good doctor


Since 2007, Dr. Sarah Wolfe, a 38-year-old child and adolescent psychiatrist, had been treating victims of domestic abuse. On Friday, February 7, 2014, the sisters' co-workers at the psychiatric clinic became concerned when Sarah and and her sister Susan failed to show up for work. This prompted a visit to the their house by a police officer.

   
The police officer knocked on the Wolfe's front door and no one responded, the officer walked around the dwelling and peeked into windows. Seeing nothing unusual inside the house, the officer headed toward his patrol car. Before he drove off, a man who identified himself as Sarah's boyfriend, approached the officer, he possessed a house key the officer used to enter the dwelling.

In the basement of the home, the officer discovered the bodies of Sarah and Susan Wolfe. Susan was nude, her sister clothed. They had been each killed by a single bullet to the head. The killer had poured some kind of liquid over one of the bodies in an effort to destroy physical evidence. Susan Wolfe had been badly beaten as well as shot. Detectives at the murder scene found no evidence of a forced entry. Dr. Sarah Wolfe's car was not at the house. The vehicle was last seen by a neighbor at 9:25 PM on Thursday, February 6, 2014.

A police officer, in the morning of February 8, spotted the Wolfe vehicle parked about a mile from the scene of the double murder. Crime scene investigators processed the car for traces of physical evidence that could shed some light on the murders. Homicide detectives theorized that when Dr. Sarah Wolfe arrived home that Thursday night, she walked into a crime in progress. Police found her sister naked and doused with chemicals. Sarah lay nearby at the foot of the basement stairs with her coat half off.


Clue: The next door neighbor of Sarah is a man with a history of burglary and robbery, is he capable of this crime? and to what gain?

The victims' ATM has been used few days after the murder

BUT: Police found a mixture of male and female DNA under Susan's fingernails

Could Sarah's boyfriend be the killer? if so, what could be the motive?

SERIAL OFFENDERS: Not too smart for a cop


Now here’s the thing about applying for a law enforcement gig: there will probably be an extensive background check. If you have several outstanding warrants, including one for rape, you might want to focus your job search elsewhere. Somehow, this didn’t occur to a man named John Wesley Rose.

The 25-year-old strolled into the Wayne County Sheriff’s Department that’s in Detroit to apply for a job as a jail deputy. At first, he seemed a decent candidate. But when the agency ran an in-depth background check on Rose, it found he was wanted in Madison, Kentucky on rape, sexual abuse, and sodomy charges. The victim in the case was a 14-year-old girl.

Rose’s would-be employers lured him back into the sheriff’s office by pretending he needed to fill out more paperwork. Eager for the gig, he “practically ran” to complete the task. Instead, on November 10, he was promptly arrested and scheduled for an extradition hearing, according to the Detroit News:

Rose’s girlfriend and her parents with whom the couple was living  apparently had no idea about his criminal past, and it’s not clear why a wanted man would pursue such a conflict-of-interest sort of career.  BE CAREFUL WHO YOU LET IN.

Actual mugshot of John Wesley Rose

MOTIVES: Murder-For-Hire


Years ago, the person who said that marriages start in bed and end up in court wasn't thinking of murder. Those were the good old days. Today, a few marriages end up with one of the parties in court, and the other in the morgue. Wives engineer the deaths of their estranged husbands out of fear they will be left penniless following the divorce. For women trapped in bad marriages, murder, compared to divorce, is quicker and a lot more satisfying.

On July 13, 1995, Kerry Voit, his wife Sharon and their three daughters were watching television in the den of their home. Dr. Voit, stating that he was tired and wanted to retire for the night in that room, switched off the TV. This enraged his wife, and in the scuffle that ensured, Sharon took a punch in the eye. Dr. Voit suffered scratches on his arm, and came away from the fight with a bruised leg. Sharon ordered her husband out of the house. When he refused to leave, she phoned the police.

The deputies who responded to the domestic disturbance received conflicting stories from the Voit daughters. Two of the girls sided with their father, the third with Mrs. Voit. The officers decided not to arrest anyone, but ordered Dr. Voit to leave the house for 72 hours. He spent the next few nights in Harwood Heights at his mother's house.

In 1999, Sharon mentioned to her daughter's coach thats she wished she could find someone to have her husband "taken care of" but they all dismissed it as a joke. She started making inquiries about his life insurance policy and murder-for-hire and her husband found out and decided to take it a little more seriously, he told his friends and also reported to the police and the police decided to enter a case as an undercover hitman. Sharon responded to the advert and requested a meeting and made a deal to kill her husband. Meanwhile Sharon claimed that Dr. Voit had forced Sharon to have video-taped, three-way, cocaine-laced sex with him and his friend, she also claimed also told Dr. Nowak that her husband, during "violent" sexual intercourse, would hold a pillow over her face against her will.

The undercover police made tapes and video recording that they presented to the court when they arrested Sharon.

If this murder was successful, would it have been a justified killing?

Actual Mugshot of Sharon Voit

SERIAL OFFENDERS: Peter Tobin / Rapist / Murderer


Rape of juveniles:

On 4 August 1993, Tobin attacked two 14-year-old girls at his flat in Leigh Park, Havant, after they called to visit a neighbour, who was not at home. They called at Tobin's flat and asked if they could wait there. After holding them at knifepoint and forcing them to drink strong cider and vodka, Tobin sexually assaulted and raped the girls and stabbed one of them whilst his younger son was present. He then turned on the gas taps and left them for dead but both of them survived the attack. To avoid arrest, Tobin went on the run and hid, under a false name, with the Jesus Fellowship, a religious sect, in Coventry. He was later captured in Brighton, after his blue Austin Metro car was found there.

Killings:

Angelika Kluk was a 23-year-old student from Skoczow, near Krakow in Poland. She was staying at the presbytery of St Patrick's Church, where she worked as a cleaner to help finance her Scandinavian Studies course at University of Gdansk. She was last seen alive in the company of Tobin on 24 September 2006, and is thought to have been attacked by him in the garage attached to St Patrick's presbytery. She was beaten, raped and stabbed and her body was concealed in an underground chamber beneath the floor near the confessional in the church. Forensic evidence suggested that she was still alive when she was placed under the floorboards. Police found her body on 29 September, and Tobin was arrested in London shortly afterwards. He had been admitted to hospital under a false name, and with a fictitious complaint.

In June 2007, Tobin's old house in Bathgate, West Lothian was searched by police in connection with the disappearance of a 15-year-old girl, Vicky Hamilton, who was last seen on 10 February 1991, as she waited for a bus home. The last sighting of her was as she was eating chips on a bench in the town centre. On 14 November 2007, Lothian and Borders Police confirmed that human remains found in the back garden of 50 Irvine Drive,[21] a house in Margate occupied by Tobin in 1991, were those of Vicky Hamilton.

Dinah McNicol, an 18-year-old sixth was last seen alive on 5 August 1991, hitchhiking home with a male companion from a music festival. He was dropped off at Junction 8 of the M25, near Reigate, and she stayed in the car with the driver. She was never seen again. After her disappearance, regular withdrawals of £250 were made from her building society account at cash machines. On 16 November 2007, a second body was found at 50 Irvine Drive in Margate, later confirmed by police to be that of McNicol.

Actual Photo of Peter Tobin

DEVIL IN THE DETAIL: The Facebook Catfishing Killer


This is the story of a shocking crime. A young couple, just getting out of bed and readying for their day, suffered a home invasion. Each of them was gunned down and murdered. When the mother’s body was found by a family friend, within her arms was her infant son, still alive but left for dead.
As unbelievable as that horror is, the reasons behind the killings are even more bizarre. Jealousy. Insecurity. Manipulation. Devious use of fictitious online identities. Undiagnosed mental illness. All of those descriptions are featured in this unforgettable case where a lonely, 30-year-old woman with limited intellectual abilities began a long, disturbing journey of preoccupation with other women who had things she didn’t. Things like popularity, attractiveness, relationships, children, and independence. Jenelle Potter had none of those things, and by journeying through her online correspondence, it was clear she didn’t like certain women who did.

This case took a weird turn as among people prosecuted was Jenelle Potter and her mother Barbara, Jenelle’s father Buddy and Jenelle’s secret boyfriend Jamie Curd as defendants in the killings. There were mountains of emails and Facebook posts, many of which were written by a “Chris,” whom no one had ever met. Jenelle posed as “Chris,” a man who represented himself to be a CIA agent and was preoccupied with Jenelle’s interests and investigating her enemies. Two of those enemies were these victims, Bill Payne and Billie Jean Hayworth. “Chris” manifested himself after Billie Jean began living with Bill and soon thereafter became pregnant with their child. The writings of “Chris” revealed a raging jealousy of Billie Jean. Through the fictitious identity of “Chris,” Jenelle wrote emails to her mother and boyfriend, telling them of the danger posed towards Jenelle by these victims. “Chris” told them of his surveillance efforts on the Payne home. He told them that the victims were planning to harm Jenelle, even kill her.

Chris was a CIA agent who was concerned about Jenelle. Seeing the cyberbullying she had endured, and worried for her safety, Chris got in touch with Jenelle’s protective parents, and her devoted boyfriend, warning them that Payne and Hayworth were a danger to Jenelle. He got especially close with Jenelle’s mother, Barbara, who thought of Chris like a son, though she had never met him. Chris claimed that surveillance of Payne and Hayworth revealed that the two of them were planning on harming Jenelle, that it was imminent, and that something needed to be done immediately. Chris promised that he would see them clear if they were to act to protect Jenelle. And so they did. Jenelle’s father, Buddy, and her boyfriend, Jamie, broke into the home of Payne and Hayworth and murdered them in their bed. What the police investigation turned up, though, made this crime all the more terrifying. Jenelle had been Chris the entire time, catfishing her family and her boyfriend to act in vengeance on her behalf. Using forensic linguistics and diving through the brambles that Jenelle laid to cover her tracks, police were able to put together a chilling portrait of a sociopath, made all the more ruthless by the anonymity of her online life.

Jenelle Potter, said she had trouble making friends. Because of health problems, including Type 1 diabetes, Potter spent most of her time living at home with her parents, who cared for her every day. She didn’t have a job or drive a car. While it seemed that Jenelle’s social life was finally blooming, she was being relentlessly bullied online with anonymous comments appearing on her Facebook page. Jenelle was always saying that somebody was mad at her. Somebody hated her. Somebody wanted to kill her,” Greenwell said. “She was paranoid about it. But Jenelle said there were real threats of violence against her. In one incident, police photographed a rock, that was found in the Potters’ front yard with the names Billy Payne and Billie Jean written on it. Eventually both sides ( Billy Payne and Janelle) deleted each other as friends on Facebook. According to Janelle: “I think that we did it to each other. I unfriended them. They unfriended me,” Jenelle said. “I did Bill first and then I think Billie did me. And I unfriended her.”

On Jan. 31, 2012, a friend of Payne and Hayworth found them dead by single gunshots to their faces. Payne’s throat had also been slashed as he lay in bed, and Billie Jean had been cradling their baby in her arms when she died. The 7-month-old boy survived unharmed. It takes a cold-blooded person to shoot someone holding a baby. Hayworth was holding her 7-month-old baby boy in her arms when she and Payne were fatally shot in the head. Her child survived but police found the screaming child covered in his mother's blood.

Prosecutors say that Potter had a crush on Payne and wanted him and his young wife dead after the two had a child together. Prosecutors believe that Jenelle Potter created a fake identity named Chris who worked as a CIA agent in order to fool her parents and her boyfriend and to get her father to kill Hayworth and Payne. Jenelle Potter's act of posing online as someone else is referred to as catfishing. Police later impounded Marvin Potter's truck and they found bags of shredded emails inside. An agent put them back together and found that in one email with Chris Barbara Potter said she wanted Hayworth and Payne dead.'We've had enough. No one wants to kill anyone but we will,' Barbara Potter wrote in the email. Barbara showed the emails to her husband who eventually decided he couldn't take the supposed threats against his daughter anymore.

Jenelle Potter's defense attorney argued that she has the intellect of an 8- or 9-year-old' to which the prosecutor replied: 'She may be on a fourth-grade level, but she has a Ph.D. in manipulation. Jenelle Potter, her mother Barbara, and her father Marvin are all serving two consecutive life sentences after being convicted in October 2013. Janelle’s boyfriend Jamie Curd took a plea deal of 25 years.
Actual investigation photos of the Potter's crime.
 Billy Payne and Billie Jean with their baby.

Actual photos of the investigation

(The victims: Billy Payne and Billie Jean and the Survived Son)


Barbara, Jenelle and Buddy Potter

The shredded documents




DEVIL IN THE DETAIL: The Bloody Benders


John Bender, Sr., and his family settled in Kansas in 1870, near the Great Osage Trail through which innumerable travelers passed on their way to settle the in the West. The older Bender, called "Pa, there is also a "Ma" and a daughter named Kate. Ma and Pa spoke mostly German, and their English was so heavily accented that no one understood them. The younger Benders spoke fluent English.

The family built a one-room house near the Osage Trail, with a curtain that divided the home into two areas. The front area was a public inn and store, and the family quarters were in the back. Travelers on the trail were welcome to refresh themselves with a meal and resupply their wagons with liquor, tobacco, horse feed, black powder, and food from the Bender home. And they often spent the night.

The stunningly attractive Kate was the most outgoing Bender. Calling herself a psychic and spiritual healer, she gave lectures on spiritualism and conducted séances. The Benders distributed notices advertising her supposed supernatural talents. She sometimes lectured on spiritualism. Although she was popular, some viewed her occult interests as “satanic.”

Hundreds of men passed through Kansas on their way to seek their fortune in the West, and some were never heard from again. It took time for such disappearances to draw attention, as there were many reasons for travelers, adventurers, and settlers to be out of touch or even dead. But over the course of a couple of years, more and more missing persons appeared to have dropped off the face of the earth about the time they passed through Labette County. Several bodies were even found in the area, murdered, but no one knew who did it.

In 1872, George Loncher and his infant daughter left Independence, Kansas, to settle in Iowa after the death of his wife. They never arrived. Dr. William York went looking for them, following the Osage Trail. He questioned people all the way to Fort Scott, but then Dr. York himself disappeared on his way back to Independence. And that was the turning point in the story. Dr. York had two powerful brothers who were determined to find out what happened: Colonel Ed York and Kansas Senator Alexander York.

Colonel York led an investigation into Labette County. They questioned the Benders about a woman who claimed Ma had threatened her with a knife. The township held a meeting in which it was decided to search every homestead for evidence of the murders. Colonel York attended the meeting, as well as both male Benders. But the weather turned bad, and it was several days before such a search could begin.

Within three days, Bender neighbor Billy Tole was driving his cows past Bender Inn and noticed that the Bender farm animals appeared unfed and the property abandoned.

Tole reported this to Township Trustee Leroy F. Dick who formed a search party. Dr. York’s brother, Colonel A. M. York, joined the search party. Searching was delayed for several days due to bad weather. When the search party went to the Bender property, they found the Bender cabin emptied of food, clothes, and other personal possessions. They were shocked by the terrible smell inside the former inn and home. The discovered a trap door that was nailed shut. After prying it open, they found a hole that had clotted blood but no bodies.

The entire search party worked to physically move the cabin to one side so they could search underneath. No bodies were found there either.

A man noticed an area around the garden on which the dirt appeared disturbed. Almost as soon as they began digging, they found the body of Dr. William H. York because the grave was so shallow it barely concealed his feet. He had been buried face down. Upon examining the corpse, the search party found that his skull had been bludgeoned and throat slit. Seven more bodies were found that night, and another the next day. The throats had been cut, and the skulls were bashed in. The exception was Mr. Loucher's infant daughter, who was buried under her father. One of the bodies was that of a girl estimated to be about eight years old, whose body was badly mutilated. Ten bodies were ultimately found at the Bender farm, but 21 murders are attributed to the family.

Investigators pieced together what happened. Guests at the inn were urged to sit in the place of honor, which was against the separating curtain. While dining, the guest of honor would be hit in the head with a hammer from behind the curtain, his throat would be slit, and then his body dropped into the trap door to the cellar. One man, Mr. Wetzell, heard the story and remembered when he was at the inn and declined to sit in the designated spot. His decision caused Ma Bender to become angry and abusive toward him, and when he saw the male Benders emerge from behind the curtain, he and his companion decided to leave. William Pickering told an almost identical story.

The Benders' wagon was eventually found some miles away from the homestead. Twelve men were arrested as accessories to the murders, mostly for receiving stolen goods. Senator York offered a $1,000 reward for the Benders, and the governor chipped in another $2,000, but the reward was never claimed. In the years following the sensational crimes, several women were arrested as Ma or Kate, but none were positively identified by evidence. Several vigilante groups claimed to have found the Benders and murdered them, but none brought back proof. The official investigation notes that testimony from railroad employees placed the Benders boarding a train for Humboldt, and traced the younger Benders to trains going to Texas or New Mexico. The older Benders were allegedly seen on their way to St. Louis by way of Kansas City. No one knows what ultimately became of them. The house in which the murders took place was disassembled and carried away piece by piece by souvenir seekers. Today, nothing remains to even indicate the exact location where the Bender house stood, although the property is said to be haunted by the victims.

However, these ghastly crimes did not make the Benders wealthy. The total take from their victims was estimated to be $4,600, a pony, a saddle, and two teams of horses and wagons.

Those are the facts as known. Rumors that surrounded the case were legion. Some said that John Gebhart was a "half-wit," while others said his behavior was a ruse. Others say that Kate was a prostitute as well as a psychic and murderer. Ma supposedly killed three of her older children because they were witnesses to the murders of her husbands (Kate was her fifth child). And another rumor says that Ma murdered Pa over stolen property soon after they fled. It was also reported that Pa committed suicide in Lake Michigan in 1884.

The tale of the Bloody Benders remains one of the most horrifying stories of the Old West. It is also one of the most haunting because the ultimate fate of these terrible murderers is likely to be forever cloaked in mystery.

Actual photos of the Bender's Investigation.





Saturday, 4 June 2016

RICH KIDS WHO KILLED III: Susana Toledano


Suzy and Rick Wamsley were a well-liked couple in their mid-40s. They lived a comfortable, upper-middle-class life, and didn’t seem to have any enemies. But in the wee hours of December 11, 2003, just days after they’d hung holiday decorations around the home they’d lived in for 10 years, the unthinkable happened. Police, responding to a hang-up 911 call, found the home’s garage door, and the door leading from garage into the house, standing wide open. The scene inside was awful, writes the Dallas Observer in a detailed piece published in July 2004:

Suzy was lying on the living-room couch. The attackers had shot her in the left ear with a large-caliber weapon, according to an autopsy report, and then stabbed her at least 18 times in the chest and neck.

Rick 6-foot-1 and 240 pounds, wearing only boxer shorts had been shot in the face and back and stabbed numerous times. Police found two sets of bloody shoeprints throughout the living room, dining room and entryway. There was no sign of forced entry, and nothing appeared to be missing.

 In April 2004, law enforcement arrested a 19-year-old high school student named Susana Toledano after DNA tests determined Rick Wamsley held a clump of her hair in his lifeless hand. Once they had Toledano, the cops nabbed her best friend Chelsea Richardson, 20, and Richardson’s boyfriend, Andrew Wamsley, 19 Rick and Suzy’s youngest child. Also arrested was 24-year-old Hilario Cardenas, who was the night manager of a nearby IHOP that served as an after-hours hangout for the group.

But the stakes were higher than that, owing to the $1.56 million Andrew stood to inherit from his parents’ untimely demise.

Of course, he’d only get the money if he could get away with murder, and that didn’t happen. As Mansfield Detective Ralph Standefer told the Dallas Observer before the 2005 trial, the motive was crystal clear:

The twist in the case, though, was that the jury decided Chelsea Richardson not the son of the victims was the “murder mastermind.”

Cardenas, whose connection to the crime (other than facilitating the venue to plan it) was that he’d supplied the gun that became the murder weapon, was conviced of conspiracy to commit capital murder, and given a 50-year sentance.

Andrew Wamsley refused a plea deal, was convicted of murder, and got a life sentence. Richardson also refused a plea deal and was convicted of murder but despite her age, and the fact she’d never been arrested before, she received the death penalty.

She became one of 10 women on Texas’ death row.

Actual Mugshot of Susana Toledano


RICH KIDS WHO KILLED II: Stephen Seddon


A group of Texas youths decided killing one young man’s parents was the best get-rich-quick plan. It ended badly for everyone as does the tale of Manchester, England’s Stephen Seddon, who was more than old enough to know better.

He was also determined enough to try twice.

In March 2012, Seddon (who was in his mid-40s), his parents Robert and Patricia (both in their late 60s), and Seddon’s teenage nephew Daniel, who was being cared for by his grandparents, were in a terrible car crash.

Terrible, and odd.

Somehow, en route to a belated Mother’s Day meal, the rented BMW Stephen was driving plunged into Bridgewater Canal. Though he was disabled, Daniel was still able to free himself from the waterlogged car and claw his way to safety. Stephen, who conveniently had a seatbelt cutter and a steering-wheel lock suitable for smashing out windows within reach, also made it to the surface.

With his parents trapped in the back seat, slowly running out of air, Seddon managed to act both helpfully (screaming for assistance) and suspiciously (climbing onto the roof of the car, as if encouraging it to sink even faster). Fortunately, firefighters were quick to respond, and the seemingly doomed couple was saved. Questioned by police canal-side, Seddon had a hard time keeping his story straight.

This time, he made his move armed with a sawed-off shotgun and three cartridges; the third was apparently intended for Daniel who very fortunately wasn’t at home. (Much later, Seddon vehemently denied that he’d planned to kill the teen, blustering at “the sick assumption I would want to kill a disabled child.”)

But the older Seddons were not so lucky; they were both home that July day. Stephen shot his mother first as she tried to fight back, then turned the gun on the man who’d started to suspect the worst about his own flesh and blood. As if that wasn’t bad enough, Stephen then staged the crime scene to make it look like a murder-suicide. But the police saw right through his clumsy attempt to cast the blame elsewhere. His self-centered behavior after the bodies were discovered didn’t help his cause, as the
Independent reported:

Seddon’s reaction when police called with the “news” of his parents’ murders, was: “What am I going to do now? I’m going to lose the house, the mortgage is in my dad’s name.” He denied the shooting and said it was “ridiculous” to claim he had tried to kill his own mother and father.

What’s worse, it was discovered that he’d tried clumsily, again to provide himself with an alibi to further distance himself from the crime. After committing double murder, he drove 150 miles to buy beer, making sure he appeared on the store’s surveillance cameras. (He must’ve used his last dollar on this scheme, because it was later revealed Stephen was so broke that day, he had just £5.45 in his bank account.) He then drove to meet his wife and two of their three children for one last stay in the caravan that his parents had bought for them.

“Despite the fact that your parents had always been very generous in supporting you, you wanted more and you wanted it now  hence the plan to kill them and get your inheritance up front.?


RICH KIDS WHO KILLED I: Brian Blackwell


Eighteen-year-old Brian Blackwell was so bright his nickname was “Brains.” But that intelligence, which earned him top marks in school, also enabled him to craft an elaborate fantasy world—one he needed his parents’ money to sustain, and one he was willing to kill for.

Brits Sydney and Jacqueline Blackwell were 71 and 60 when Brian was 18; they’d had their only child later in life, and they had big dreams for him. They hoped the next step of his education would lead him to medical school, and a career as a surgeon. His grades were more than good enough. But his ambitions led him elsewhere, and it came to a head on July 25, 2004.

He was motivated, in part, by his need to impress his girlfriend, who was also 18 and a fellow student at Liverpool College, where parents forked over five grand per school term. Though they were classmates, she apparently believed his elaborate lie about being a professional tennis player. And she though he was filthy rich, so she didn’t question it when he invited her on a lavish vacation. They flew first-class to America (including a three-night stay in a suite at New York City’s Plaza Hotel), made a stopover in Barbados, and returned to Merseyside, where Brian moved in with his girlfriend and her parents, explaining his folks were on vacation in Majorca. The total cost of Brian’s trip was estimated at around fifty grand, all charged to cards in Sydney Blackwell’s name.

In fact, Sydney and Jacqueline had been dead for weeks. Their bodies weren’t discovered until September 4, when a concerned neighbor called the police to report a rotting odor emanating from their home. It was a terrible scene, as the Guardian reported:

Inside, officers found Mr Blackwell’s decomposing body in the living room. He had been beaten with the hammer while he sat in his armchair. Mrs Blackwell’s remains had been dragged into the bathroom. She had been stabbed with a kitchen knife after seeing her son batter her husband to death.

There had been an argument possibly over Brian’s financial irresponsibility, though he also told police that his parents disapproved of his relationship with his girlfriend, and that he didn’t believe they loved him anymore that turned violent. In his confession, Brian describes hitting his father with a claw hammer, and then attacking both parents with a knife:



DC Lockie: You stabbed her (your mum) repeatedly?

Blackwell: Yes but it didn’t seem hard. It didn’t seem like it was doing anything. I’ve never stabbed anyone but it didn’t feel like it was going in or anything.

DC Lockie: How many times did you stab him (your father)?

Blackwell: A few, it didn’t seem to have much effect on him and I had to push him away to stop him. He pushed back an awful lot. (Sobbing) I couldn’t believe what I’d done. I just couldn’t believe what I’d done.

In all, he stabbed his mother 20 times. His father was stabbed 30 times. Their injuries were so violent that investigators initially assumed the cause of death was gunshot wounds.

Actual Mugshot of Brian Blackwell

Thursday, 2 June 2016

TOURIST MURDERS: Charles Sobhraj



A serial killer so scary he had multiple nicknames, including “the Serpent” (because of his escape-artist tendencies) and “the Bikini Killer” (based on a garment that was left behind by one of his victims), as well as “the Proofreader.” His preferred targets were Western tourists traveling the “hippie trail” in Asia in the mid-1970s; his preferred method was drugging them first, robbing them, and then killing them. (He didn’t have a preferred killing tactic, though he “bathtub drowned” at least one victim.)

Before the murders, Sobhraj and his wife Chantal who was pregnant left France in 1970 for Asia to escape arrest. After traveling through Eastern Europe with fake documents, robbing tourists whom they befriended along the way, the Sobhrajs arrived in Mumbai in 1970. Here, Chantal gave birth to a baby girl, Usha. In the meantime, Sobhraj resumed his criminal lifestyle, running a car theft and smuggling operation. Sobhraj's profits were used towards his growing gambling addiction.

In 1973, Sobhraj was arrested and imprisoned after an unsuccessful armed robbery attempt on a jewellery store at Hotel Ashoka. Sobhraj was able to escape, with Chantal's help, due to faking illness, but they were re-captured shortly thereafter. Sobhraj borrowed money for bail from his father and soon after fled to Kabul.

In Kabul, the couple continued robbing tourists on the "hippie trail", only to be arrested once again. And again, Sobhraj escaped in the same way he had in India – feigning illness and drugging the hospital guard. This time, Sobhraj fled to Iran, leaving his family behind. Chantal, although still loyal to Sobhraj, but wishing to leave their criminal past behind, returned to France and vowed never to see him again.

Sobhraj spent the next two years on the run, using as many as 10 stolen passports. He passed through various countries in Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Sobhraj was joined by his younger brother, André, in Istanbul. Sobhraj and André quickly became partners in crime, participating in various criminal activities in both Turkey and Greece. The duo were eventually arrested in Athens. After an identity-switch plan went awry, he escaped, but his brother was left behind. André was turned over to the Turkish police by Greek authorities, and served an 18-year sentence.

Charles Sobhraj gathered followers by gaining their loyalty: a typical scam was to help his target out of difficult situations. In one case, he helped two former French policemen, Yannick and Jacques. They sought Sobhraj's help to recover their missing passports. Sobhraj had actually stolen the passports. In another scheme, Sobhraj provided shelter to a Frenchman, Dominique Rennelleau, who appeared to be suffering from dysentery. Sobhraj had actually poisoned Rennelleau. He was finally joined by a young Indian, Ajay Chowdhury, a fellow criminal who became Sobhraj's second-in-command.

Sobhraj and Chowdhury committed their first (known) murders in 1975. Most of the victims had spent some time with the duo before their deaths and were, according to investigators, recruited by Sobhraj and Chowdhury to join the pair in their crimes. Investigators state that the victims had threatened to expose Sobhraj, which was his motive for murder. The first victim was a young woman from Seattle. Teresa Knowlton who was found drowned in a tidal pool in the Gulf of Thailand. She was wearing a flowered bikini. It was only months later that Knowlton's autopsy, as well as forensic evidence, proved that her drowning, originally believed to be a swimming accident, was murder.

The next victim was a young nomadic Sephardic Jew, Vitali Hakim, whose burnt body was found on the road to the Pattaya resort, where Sobhraj and his growing clan were staying. Dutch students Henk Bintanja, 29, and his fiancée Cornelia Hemker, 25, were invited to Thailand after meeting Sobhraj in Hong Kong. They, like so many others, were poisoned by Sobhraj, who then nurtured them back to health in order to gain their obedience. As they recovered, Sobhraj was visited by his previous victim Hakim's French girlfriend, Charmayne Carrou, who had come to investigate her boyfriend's disappearance. Fearing exposure, Sobhraj and Chowdhury quickly hustled the couple out. Their bodies were found strangled and burned on 16 December 1975. Soon after, Carrou was found drowned and wearing a similar-styled swimsuit to that of Sobhraj's earlier victim, Teresa Knowlton. Although the murders of both women were not connected by investigations at the time, they would later earn Sobhraj the nickname The Bikini Killer.

Sobhraj's next destination was Calcutta, where he murdered Israeli scholar Avoni Jacob simply to obtain Jacob's passport. Sobhraj used the passport to travel with Leclerc and Chowdhury - first to Singapore, then to India, and, in March 1976, returning to Bangkok, despite knowing that the authorities there sought him. In July 1976 in New Delhi, Sobhraj, joined by his three-woman criminal clan, tricked a tour group of French post-graduate students into accepting them as tour guides. Sobhraj then drugged them by giving them poisoned pills, which he told them were anti-dysentery medicine. However, when the drugs started acting more quickly than Sobhraj had anticipated, the students began to fall unconscious. Three of the students realized what Sobhraj had done. They overpowered him and contacted the police, leading to his capture. During interrogation, Sobhraj's accomplices, Barbara and Mary Ellen, quickly buckled and confessed. While in prison, Sobhraj's systematic bribery of prison guards at Tihar reached outrageous levels. He led a life of luxury inside the jail, with TV and gourmet food, having befriended both guards and prisoners.


TOURIST MURDERS II: Sara Kuszak



Savannah, Georgia resident Sara Kuszak hadn’t been in Puerto Rico more than two days when she went for a jog near the city of Fajardo in February 2009. She was excited for her upcoming Caribbean wedding and for the birth of her first baby. She was five months pregnant. But her condition didn’t stop 36-year-old Eliezer Marquez Navedo from grabbing the avid runner off the road and forcing her into his car trunk.

Incredibly, she was able to telephone her fiance from the trunk of the car telling him “I’m going to die” but also offering a description of the car. Authorities traced the cell phone signal of the call to Marquez, who still had bloodstains on his clothing when they arrested him. It was too late to save Sara, whose throat-slashed body was found an hour after she placed her frantic last call, and Marquez who claimed he didn’t realize she was pregnant confessed. He was convicted of kidnapping, rape, and first-degree murder and received a 105-year sentence.

No motive was ever established for the random crime, though NBC reported this oddity that seems too strange to be coincidental:

The killing was carried out in the same fashion as murders that Marquez’s mother, Ines Navedo, was convicted of committing in 1992. She slit the throats of two young siblings aged 2 and 3.

Actual Mugshot of Eliezer Marquez Navedo


TOURIST MURDERS: Yosemite National Park murders


There are plenty of things to worry about while traveling, without adding being brutally murdered into the mix. But it happens more often than you’d think, even in places that seem like paradise. Read on for terrible tales of vacations gone terribly wrong.


Cary Stayner had a rough childhood. His younger brother, Steven, was kidnapped and held captive by a child molester for seven years, his brother Steven died at age 24 in a motorcycle accident. A lot of people endure family tragedies, most people don’t become serial killers, like Cary Stayner did though he later admitted he’d dreamed of killing since he was just seven years old.

His original plan was to kill his girlfriend and her daughters, but when he lost his nerve, he targeted strangers, tourists who were staying at a motel where he lived and worked just outside of Yosemite National Park, the Cedar Lodge. He had spent many nights in the park on camping trips and was familiar with the area. His victims were 42-year-old Carole Sund, her 15-year-old daughter, Juli, and 16-year-old Argentinian exchange student Silvina Pelosso. Stayner’s actions, explained in the words of his confession (which was played at his trial) were nothing short of monstrous:

The weekend before the February 1999 slayings outside Yosemite, his murderous fantasies had become so intense that he prepared a murder/rape kit containing a rope, a roll of duct tape and a serrated kitchen knife, and later a gun and camera.

He zeroed in on Carole Sund and her two teenage charges. He tricked them into letting him into their room by posing as a maintenance man. Brandishing a gun, which he would later tell Juli Sund was unloaded, he bound and gagged the three on the room’s two beds. He took Carole Sund into the bathroom, strangled her, then put her in the trunk of his car.

Then, according to his taped confession, he ripped the clothes off the teenagers and sexually tortured and assaulted them for some time, including trying to get them to perform sex acts on each other.

After six or seven hours, Stayner said on the tape, he was frustrated by the girls’ lack of cooperation and his own inability to maintain an erection, and he took Pelosso into the bathroom and strangled her. He put her body in the trunk with Sund’s.

Then he again sexually assaulted Juli Sund, then took her to a point near Lake Don Pedro where he slashed her throat and threw her off the roadside.
After the killings, Stayner burned the car which held Carole and Silvina’s bodies, and toyed with authorities, sending a letter to the FBI with a map indicating where Juli’s body had been dumped with the caption “We had fun with this one.” He also dropped Carole Sund’s wallet in Modesto, 80 miles away, in a bid to further confuse law enforcement.

But his “fun” wasn’t over. Stayner continued working at the Cedar Lodge, having escaped suspicion in the triple murder case. His urge to murder boiled up again in July 1999, when he came upon Joie Armstrong, a 26-year-old naturalist who worked at the Yosemite Institute and who happened to be alone in the isolated cabin where she lived. In his frenzy, he decapitated her.

Stayner was captured thanks to a witness who’d spotted his truck near Armstrong’s cabin, and he soon confessed. He was found guilty of the four killings and is still on California’s Death Row.

Mugshot of Cary Staner