Tag: Americas

  • Former deputy accused of killing store clerk and his wife nearly 46 years ago

    PUNTA GORDA, Fla. (TCN) — Investigators have identified a suspect in the death of a store clerk that occurred more than four decades ago when the alleged killer worked as a deputy.

    According to a Dec. 31 news release from the Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office, in the early hours of Monday, Nov. 5, 1979, Deputy John Greer found 25-year-old Adele Easterly deceased at the Farm Store on Highway 17 and North Washington Loop Road. Easterly had sustained gunshot wounds to her back and head. Authorities were unable to identify a suspect at the time, and the case went cold.

    The sheriff’s office said many “investigators and commanders were concerned” about Greer, and some “believed he could be responsible for Adele’s death but lacked substantial evidence to back up their suspicion.” Deputies said Greer exhibited “strange behavior.”

    Seventy-one days before the discovery, in a separate incident, Greer reported that his wife, Jackie Greer, shot herself. The investigation was inconclusive, and there was no evidence to suggest foul play, but officials “suspected something was not right about the incident.”

    On Oct. 3, 1980, Greer was suspended from his position while under investigation, and he resigned the same day. Cold case investigators believe he was under investigation after one of his female acquaintances was found dead in her vehicle in a wooded area in September 1980. The sheriff’s office said the acquaintance’s “body was too decomposed to determine the cause of death,” and there were no signs of trauma. However, investigators located empty pill bottles and suspected she overdosed. They also found a suicide note. The woman’s husband reportedly told authorities that Greer “had been following his wife around and was coming to their house while on duty and attempting to have sexual relations with her.” Deputies said there are no records to confirm whether this is why Greer was under investigation.

    Nearly seven years after finding Easterly’s body, detectives reportedly interviewed one of the victim’s friends, who said she feared coming forward “because she was afraid of a deputy.” The friend allegedly told officials Easterly was dating a Charlotte County deputy who “would visit her on night shift and bring his gun into the Farm Store to ‘protect’ her.”

    According to the sheriff’s office, Greer had a personal double barrel 12-gauge shotgun in his vehicle, which was the same type of weapon the victim was killed with. Deputies often carried personal guns in their patrol vehicles at the time.

    Easterly allegedly told her friend the deputy she was dating was married, and she tried to end their relationship. The deputy reportedly told the victim that he told his wife he wanted a divorce, and she took his service revolver to kill herself. The deputy allegedly said he and his wife fought over the weapon before it went off, fatally hitting her.

    Approximately two weeks before Easterly’s death, the victim informed her friend she was afraid of the deputy. A detective brought up John Greer’s name to Easterly’s friend, and she believed that to be the name of the deputy Easterly was dating.

    In November 1986, a Broward County Sheriff’s Office investigator reexamined Greer’s wife’s death scene and couldn’t confirm if it was suicide or homicide. Greer had reportedly told deputies he was asleep when he heard a “pop” and noticed smoke coming out of the closet. He went inside and allegedly found his wife deceased. However, the investigator found evidence of blood in the doorjamb, suggesting the closet was open at the time of the shooting.

    The sheriff’s office current cold case unit formed in 2009, and detectives featured Easterly’s case in 2016. In 2019, a former Sheriff’s Office Explorer came forward and told authorities Greer had sexually assaulted her multiple times and threatened to kill her. According to deputies, the explorer said that during one of the assaults, Greer told her to “ask them dead b–ches like Adele Easterly what happens when they say no to me.”

    The explorer said she was working dispatch when Easterly’s body was found in the Farm Store. She allegedly observed Greer enter the east side door of the sheriff’s office complex with an apparent gun, and “he looked disheveled.” The explorer reportedly noticed Greer had one of his gloves off and saw “something on his bare hand that could be blood.”

    Detectives developed probable cause to arrest Greer and continued the investigation to secure a conviction. Greer had reportedly been living in Kingsport, Tennessee, for several years and lived at an extended care facility. Investigators went to Kingsport to interview Greer in April 2023, and he was bedridden at the time and was only able to provide brief answers. Greer allegedly confessed to shooting Easterly and his wife. However, detectives weren’t able to conclude whether he shot his wife intentionally or if it was an accident.

    According to the sheriff’s office, authorities determined Greer would never be healthy enough to stand trial, “but the deaths of Adele Easterly and Greer’s wife were confirmed to have been at the hands of John Greer.” He died on March 2 at the age of 77.

    MORE:

    • CCSO Cold Case Unit Closes 1979 Homicide Case and Names Former Deputy as Offender – Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office

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  • Virginia NICU nurse arrested after babies sustain fractures at hospital

    HENRICO COUNTY, Va. (TCN) — Authorities recently arrested and charged a nurse after infant patients in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) sustained unexplainable fractures.

    According to Henrico County Police, detectives learned of an internal investigation at Henrico Doctors’ Hospital and began working on the case. WTVR-TV reports the hospital temporarily halted admissions to the NICU after three victims were found with fractures in November and December.

    Police identified 26-year-old Erin Strotman as a suspect. She faces charges of malicious wounding and felony child abuse and was booked into the Henrico County Jail on Jan. 3.

    As part of the investigation, officials are reviewing videos from inside the NICU and reexamining similar incidents at the hospital from 2023.

    Per Virginia Department of Social Services records reviewed by WTVR, in 2023, Strotman was placed on paid administrative leave following an internal investigation. Strotman reportedly had contact with babies who suffered injuries in the NICU at the time.

    Strotman reportedly no longer works for the hospital.

    In a statement, Henrico Doctors’ Hospital said, “We are both shocked and saddened by this development in the investigation and are focused on continuing to care for our patients and providing support to our colleagues who have been deeply and personally impacted by this investigation. We are grateful to those colleagues, who have dedicated their professional lives to the care and safety of our patients, as well as to law enforcement and the other agencies who have worked aggressively and tirelessly with us on this investigation.”

    MORE:

    • Chesterfield County Woman Charged in Connection to NICU Investigation – Henrico County Police
    • News Release – Henrico Doctors’ Hospital
    • Henrico Doctors’ Hospital NICU nurse charged with child abuse, malicious wounding – WTVR
    • Henrico County Jail

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  • Wash. corrections deputy allegedly drove over ex-girlfriend’s head during argument

    TACOMA, Wash. (TCN) — A 22-year-old corrections officer is sitting on the other side of the bars after he was arrested for allegedly running over his girlfriend’s head after a fight in a parking lot.

    According to court records cited by the Tacoma News Tribune, Cameron Boucher and the victim were both at the same bar in the early morning hours of Jan. 1. They both went outside around the same time and the victim reportedly collapsed in the parking lot. Boucher started his car and drove in reverse, hitting the victim with his front wheel. A witness reportedly attempted to stop Boucher by slamming on his windows, but Boucher reportedly kept going over the victim’s head.

    KING-TV, which also cites court documents, reports the woman saw Boucher in the bar and approached him in the lot, where they reportedly argued. She fell to the ground and started “screaming very loud” when the truck went over her head. One witness reportedly said they were “confident” Boucher knew the victim was under his vehicle when he ran over her.

    Bystanders reportedly moved the victim away from the vehicle as a witness and a Boucher got into a physical altercation. Two people ended up holding Boucher down until police arrived at the scene. Officers reportedly noted Boucher smelled of alcohol, and his blood alcohol content level was 0.19.

    Boucher was hired in August as a Pierce County Jail deputy, but he has reportedly since been fired from his job. KING reports the victim sustained several facial fractures and “substantial bodily harm.”

    Pierce County Jail records show Boucher is in custody on charges of vehicular assault and driving while intoxicated. He posted bail Friday, Jan. 3.

    MORE:

    • Probationary jail deputy allegedly ran over ex’s head in Tacoma. Now he’s been charged – Tacoma News Tribune
    • Pierce County jail deputy terminated after driving over ex-girlfriend’s head in Tacoma – KING
    • Pierce County Jail inmate information

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  • Entering the New Year with a Bang!

    Another History-Making Year in 2024

    Another History-Making Year in 2024

    Your Judicial Watch is fighting to ensure clean elections, secure borders, and transparency in government – and battling to thwart the Left’s attack on our constitutional republic through their censorship of free speech and abuse of power.

    We had another history-making year in 2024, including the following selection of lawsuits and victories that I have no doubt helped preserve our constitutional republic.

    We filed a civil rights lawsuit on behalf of the Libertarian Party of Mississippi, challenging a Mississippi election law permitting absentee ballots to be received as long as five business days after Election Day. In an election law victory, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit issued an opinion reversing the lower court ruling on Mississippi’s election law that permitted the practice.

    We filed federal lawsuits against Illinois, Oregon and California to force clean-up of voting rolls.

    We filed a $30 million a wrongful death lawsuit against the U.S. Government on behalf of the family of Ashli Babbitt, the U.S. Air Force veteran who was shot and killed inside the U.S. Capitol by then-Capitol Police Lt. Michael Byrd on January 6, 2021.

    We received records from the U.S. Department of Justice in a FOIA lawsuit, that showed that the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) opened a criminal investigation of Ashli Babbitt after her killing and listed four “potential violations of federal law,” including felony rioting and civil disorder.

    We uncovered Secret Service records from the Department of Homeland Security in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit that showed Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas personally declined then-presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s request for Secret Service protection.

    One of our investigations revealed FBI records that included an April 2020 email exchange with several officials in the bureau’s Newark Field Office referring to Dr. Anthony Fauci’s National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) grant to the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) in China as including “gain-of-function research” which “would leave no signature of purposeful human manipulation.”

    We filed a class action lawsuit against Evanston, Illinois, on behalf of six individuals over the city’s use of race as an eligibility requirement for a reparations program which makes $25,000 payments to black residents and descendants of black residents who lived in Evanston between the years 1919 and 1969. The lawsuit was filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.

    We forced the admission from the White House in federal court that the transcript of Biden’s testimony to Special Counsel Robert Hur was not accurate and was missing “filler words (such as ‘um’ or ‘uh’)” and words that “may have been repeated when spoken (such as ‘I, I’ or ‘and, and’)” which were sometimes “only listed a single time in the transcripts.” In its subsequent filing the Biden Justice Department made the extraordinary assertions of executive privilege and privacy to hide the Biden audio. The agency made the unprecedented assertion that because “AI” could be used to alter Biden’s words the material should be kept secret. Later, we requested that the court reject the Biden Justice Department’s request to rewrite the Freedom of Information Act and that it order the release of the audio recordings of Biden’s interviews with Hur.

    One of our lawsuits forced records from the Department of Justice which showed that the FBI’s Office of Congressional Affairs provided a Democrat staffer with information on FBI whistleblowers who detailed the bureau’s targeting of political opponents and retaliation for their testifying at a May 18, 2023, hearing of the House Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government.

    Heavily redacted records from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in one of our lawsuits showed state election officials in the days before and after the 2020 election flagging online content deemed “misinformation” and sending it to the Center for Internet Security (CIS), a DHS-funded nonprofit, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the Election Integrity Partnership (EIP), and others.

    We uncovered Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) records that showed Mike Morell, former acting CIA director under President Obama, requesting CIA permission to publish a letter by former intelligence community leaders stating that they believed the laptop emails exposing Hunter Biden’s connections to Ukraine were Russian disinformation. Morrell’s request for prepublication review was approved in just six hours by the CIA.

    We discovered that 113 noncitizens had voted in the June 2024 DC presidential primary.

    Records from the Department of Homeland Security, thanks to a FOIA lawsuit, showed, contrary to what it told media, at least one U.S. Secret Service agent broke in to a hair salon and taped over the salon’s security camera in Pittsfield, MA, during a July 27, 2024, campaign fundraising visit by Vice President Kamala Harris.

    The Superior Court in Fulton County, GA, entered an order granting a motion for default judgment against District Attorney Fani Willis in our lawsuit for communications Willis had with Special Counsel Jack Smith and the House January 6 Committee. In doing so, the court granted our request for attorneys’ fees and ordered Willis to search for and provide releasable records to Judicial Watch.

    2024 also marked the release of my fourth Judicial Watch book, Rights and Freedoms in Peril: An Investigative Report on the Left’s Attack on America. In it, I detail a long chain of abuses officials and political groups have made against the American people. The new book is available at JudicialWatchBook.com and I encourage you to get a copy if you haven’t already.

    On behalf of our board and all the hard-working staff of Judicial Watch, we appreciated your support in 2024 as we pursued these and so many more investigations and lawsuits on the important issues facing our nation. We pledge to continue fighting aggressively on your behalf in 2025.

    As we begin the year, I encourage you to renew (or begin!) your support of Judicial Watch!

     

    Until next week,

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  • Man pleads guilty to killing and dismembering 2 of his girlfriends, leaving bodies in storage units

    ST. PAUL, Minn. (TCN) — A 41-year-old man will likely spend the rest of his life in prison for killing and dismembering two of his girlfriends — both of whom went missing over the course of two years — and leaving their remains in a storage unit.

    Court records show Joseph Jorgenson pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree murder for the deaths of Manijeh “Mani” Starren and Fanta Xayavong. The Minnesota Star Tribune reports Jorgenson will get 40 years in prison for each count with the terms running concurrently. His formal sentencing is scheduled for February.

    Starren’s family reported her missing to the St. Paul Police Department on May 1, 2023, saying they had not heard from her since April. Investigators went to Starren’s apartment and found blood inside. That evidence and video surveillance led them to identify Jorgenson as a suspect in her disappearance. St. Paul SWAT team members attempted to apprehend Jorgenson on June 26, 2023, but he started a fire inside and fought with the responding officers. Law enforcement eventually detained him and discovered additional blood evidence in his home.

    On June 28, 2023, St. Paul Police executed a search warrant at a storage facility, where they found human remains. The remains were positively identified the next day as Starren’s.

    According to Jorgenson’s probable cause statement, investigators spoke with a man who has a child with Starren, and he was “very concerned” for Starren’s safety. Starren reportedly told the man, who was identified as SS, that “Joe had once wrapped a rope around her neck and things got out of hand, and she ran from the apartment.” Other neighbors reportedly noticed marks and bruises on Starren’s body prior to her disappearance.

    Surveillance footage last showed Starren running from her apartment on April 21, 2023, and Jorgenson following her. He reportedly “grabbed her, turned her around, and pushed her back into the apartment.” She was not seen alive after that. Video reportedly caught Jorgenson walking in and out of Starren’s apartment, and on one occasion, leaving with duffle bags.

    The probable cause statement said Jorgenson made multiple purchases using Starren’s EBT card in the weeks following her disappearance. In June 2023, investigators searched Jorgenson’s browser history and found he Googled topics such as “jugular,” “how to clear cookies from Android phone,” “What do police do with a missing person’s report,” and “lime for soil.”

    Lime can reportedly help reduce the smell of decomposition.

    In May 2023, Jorgenson’s apartment manager reportedly received complaints from other tenants about a “foul smell” from Jorgenson’s apartment. The manager and a maintenance worker went to Jorgenson’s apartment to inspect it, but Jorgenson was “verbally hostile, and he physically denied access to a bedroom where the smell seemed to be coming from.”

    Later that day, the manager and maintenance worker saw Jorgenson dragging bags out of his apartment and noticed that he looked like he was “carrying a dead body.”

    Investigators reportedly found blood in Jorgenson’s closet where the smell came from, as well as signs of “recent maggot activity.”

    Starren’s dismembered body was located in coolers and wrapped in plastic in the storage unit. The probable cause statement noted, “Great care had been taken to wrap the remains.”

    Detectives discovered Xayavong’s body in 2023 while searching for Starren. Xayavong was last seen in September 2021. The Minnesota Star Tribune reports her hands were reportedly tied behind her back and her remains were placed in styrofoam boxes.

    Jorgenson reportedly said in court Thursday, Jan. 2, that he killed Starren by choking her after she asked him to get out of her apartment. As for Xayavong, he reportedly hit her in the head with his knee while he was “very drunk.”

    He admitted, “I did feel bad about it immediately afterwards, but my intent at that time was to kill her.”

    Ramsey County Attorney John Choi reportedly said in a statement, “These heinous acts of cruelty took the lives of two young women and forever altered the future of their friends and family.”

    St. Paul Police Chief Axel Henry shared, “A community is safer today because a monster has been brought to justice. We can’t undo the past, but we can try and help secure the future.”

    MORE:

    • State of Minnesota vs. Joseph Steven Jorgenson
    • Maplewood man pleads guilty to murdering, dismembering girlfriends within 2-year span – Minnesota Star Tribune
    • Body Located and Identified as Missing St. Paul Woman, 6/30/2023 – St. Paul Police Department
    • Minn. man accused of killing and dismembering missing girlfriend, hiding remains in storage facility, 7/5/2023 – TCN
    • Search Warrant Leads to Discovery of Second Missing Woman, 7/7/2023 – St. Paul Police Department
    • St. Paul Police Department

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  • Crosley Green case: Man released from prison in overturned conviction only to return after reversal – TCN Sidebar

    In this episode of True Crime News The Sidebar Podcast: Joshua Ritter examines the case of Crosley Green, a man who was sentenced to death for the murder of Chip Flynn despite a complete lack of physical evidence and doubts from investigators. After a decades-long legal battle, Green’s conviction was overturned, finally allowing him freedom. It was short-lived, however, because the decision was reversed, and he was sent back behind bars.

    YouTube: Crosley Green case: Man released from prison in overturned conviction only to return after reversal



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  • Maryland mother arrested after infant dies from brain bleeds and multiple skull fractures

    HARFORD COUNTY, Md. (TCN) — A 32-year-old woman faces charges after allegedly fatally abusing her infant daughter over the weekend.

    On Sunday, Dec. 29, the Harford County Sheriff’s Office responded to Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center to a report of possible child abuse. Detectives met with medical staff and learned a 5 1/2-month-old baby girl had been transported to the hospital via ambulance and had sustained multiple skull fractures, brain bleeds, a fractured leg, and other life-threatening injuries.

    Per charging documents reviewed by WBAL-TV, the child’s mother, Maya Dennis, was the one who called 911 and said her daughter wasn’t breathing. The baby had reportedly returned home shortly before the holidays after spending time in the NICU since birth.

    Authorities executed a search warrant at the child’s home on Mayberry Drive and interviewed potential witnesses and suspects. Dennis, who had sole custody of the infant, allegedly made “statements indicating she was responsible” for the injuries. The girl died Dec. 31.

    Dennis faces charges of first-degree murder and first-degree child abuse. She was booked into the Harford County Detention Center.

    Harford County Sheriff Jeff Gahler told WBAL, “It’s heartbreaking to even talk about it, but there was a brain bleed, a fracture in the skull, a broken leg and other serious internal injuries. Here, around the holiday season, to be involved in the case of a murder of a defenseless child, it’s truly a heartbreaking thing for our people.”

    According to WBAL, the victim was one of Dennis’ six children.

    MORE:

    • Mother Charged in Infant Daughter’s Homicide – Harford County Sheriff’s Office
    • Mom charged in killing of infant left with brain bleed, skull fracture, broken bones – WBAL

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  • Man killed in Ohio shoot-out identified as suspect in 1981 cold case beating death of teen

    MANSFIELD, Ohio (TCN) — Law enforcement officials closed a 43-year-old cold case after DNA from a man killed in a shoot-out with U.S. Marshals was linked to the 1981 beating death of a young woman.

    According to the Mansfield Police Department, 18-year-old Debra Miller was found “brutally murdered” in her apartment on April 29, 1981. Officials said in a press conference that Miller had been beaten to death with pots, pans, and oven plates. Mansfield Police Detective Terry Butler called it a “bloody, very bad scene.”

    Despite the investigation at the time, Miller’s case eventually went cold. Butler and DNA analyst Dawn Fryback reexamined the case in 2021 and looked at it “as if it had happened yesterday, through an entirely new lens.” Their work brought up “staggering” findings, including a similar DNA profile on multiple pieces of evidence. They eventually identified the suspect as James Vanest.

    Vanest reportedly lived above Miller at the time of her killing. Police questioned him but did not identify him as a suspect. Butler interviewed Vanest in 2021, and Butler “felt Mr. Vanest was trying to create an alibi by justifying his DNA being present in the apartment.” Butler, however, never brought that up during their conversation. Vanest also reportedly confessed to Butler that he lied to police in 1981.

    Butler tried to interview Vanest again in 2024, but Vanest “ended the second interview in 2024 before it could even begin” because he reportedly “felt like Det. Butler was building a case against him and he refused to speak and requested an attorney.”

    Not long after that second attempted interview, Vanest sold his house and moved to West Virginia. He left several personal belongings behind, which investigators used for DNA analysis. Police said that conclusively showed Vanest killed Miller 43 years ago.

    According to Mansfield Police Chief Jason Bammann, some of those belongings still in Ohio included multiple firearms. Authorities in West Virginia arrested him on state charges after finding other guns on him. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) took over the case in West Virginia. He posted bond for the state charges and went back to Ohio.

    On Nov. 18, 2024, members of the U.S. Marshals Northern Ohio Violent Fugitive Task Force went to a hotel in Canton, Ohio, to serve Vanest his indictment on federal gun charges. Vanest pointed a gun at marshals, then barricaded himself in his room. The task force members reportedly “gave the fugitive numerous opportunities to surrender but the fugitive did not comply with officer’s orders.”

    Canton SWAT arrived at the scene, and Vanest reportedly began firing at law enforcement. One of the rounds struck a SWAT team member in his arm and another hit a vehicle. The SWAT member sustained non-life-threatening injuries and was treated at an area hospital. Officers shot back at Vanest, killing him. Officials went into Vanest’s hotel room and found him deceased alongside two firearms and multiple spent shell casings.

    U.S. Marshal Pete Elliott said Vanest had an “extensive violent criminal history dating back to the 1970s.”

    Bammann called the case “sad and tragic,” adding, “Although the closing of this case does not bring Debra back or replace the last 43 years, we hope her family can now have some closure.”

    MORE:

    • Debra Miller Homicide Update – Mansfield Police Department
    • Mansfield police provide update on 1981 cold case – WKYC-TV
    • Fugitive Wanted for a Weapons Offense Shoots at Police During Arrest Attempt at Jackson Township Hotel, 11/18/2024 – U.S. Marshals Service

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  • Parents, caregiver accused of leaving son with cerebral palsy alone and starving him to death

    UPPER DUBLIN, Pa. (TCN) — Two people were taken into custody and a third is wanted for allegedly neglecting to care for a 21-year-old man with cerebral palsy and starving him to death.

    The Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office and Upper Dublin Police Department released a joint statement Dec. 31 announcing the arrests of Sherrilynn Hawkins and Loretta Harris, and asked the public to look for Vernon Hatchett, who also goes by the name Khaliyl Ward, in connection with the death of Tylim Hatchett.

    According to the statement, on Sept. 18 at around 7:50 p.m., Upper Dublin Police Department officers received a call about an unresponsive male, and when they arrived, they found Tylim Hatchett “severely emaciated and lying on the floor.” He was declared deceased at the scene. Vernon Hatchett spoke with officers and allegedly told them he found his son at around 6 p.m. The autopsy showed Tylim Hatchett died from complications of cerebral palsy in the setting of neglect. The forensic pathologist ruled his death a homicide.

    Investigators learned Tylim Hatchett went from weighing 91 pounds in February 2024 to 59 pounds in September. Hawkins and Harris reportedly both served as caretakers for Tylim Hatchett through Aveanna Healthcare and were compensated for it. They reportedly submitted time cards and sent in hours they worked even though they allegedly were not with him for some of those times. The statement says Harris and Hawkins allegedly sometimes left Tylim Hatchett alone for 24 hours at a time. Between Sept. 1 and Sept. 18, Tylim Hatchett was reportedly “left in the apartment by himself for 356 of the 425 hours, translating to 82% of the time within those 18 days.”

    Tylim Hatchett reportedly had multiple medications he was supposed to take on a daily basis, but Harris allegedly regularly failed to give them to him. Hawkins reportedly messaged Vernon Hatchett “multiple times about their son’s deteriorating health,” but Hawkins “continued to leave him alone without providing him food or medicine.”

    Harris, Hawkins, and Vernon Hatchett are all charged with neglect of a care-dependent person. Hawkins is additionally being charged with first-degree murder, third-degree murder, theft by deception, and abuse of a care-dependent person, while Harris is also facing theft by deception. Vernon Hatchett is being charged with involuntary manslaughter.

    Court records show Hawkins was denied bail.

    WCAU-TV reports District Attorney Kevin Steele said in a press conference, “He was nonverbal, he was blind, and wheelchair bound, which made him dependent on caregivers for feeding, bathing and mobility. The victim was not provided food and water and was left alone for long, long periods of time where he starved to death.”

    MORE:

    • Sherrilynn Hawkins, Vernon Hatchett, and Loretta Harris Charged for Neglect of Care-Dependent Person in Upper Dublin – Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office
    • Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Sherrilynn Hawkins
    • Police: Parents charged after MontCo man with cerebral palsy starved to death – WCAU

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  • N.C. man accused of killing his mom and attacking bondsman with ax after failing to appear in court

    HOKE COUNTY, N.C. (TCN) — Authorities recently arrested a 46-year-old man on suspicion of killing his 73-year-old mother and attacking a bail bondsman with an ax.

    According to the Hoke County Sheriff’s Office, on Monday, Dec. 16, a bail bondsman called 911 to report an assault in progress against another bail bondsman, as well as an unresponsive woman.

    Officials told WNCN-TV that the bondsmen were at Caleb Jones’ home after he failed to show up to court for various charges, including violating a domestic violence protective order, communicating threats, and fleeing to elude arrest. The bondsman who called 911 reported an altercation between Jones and his mother, Linda Hall.

    Following the fight, Jones allegedly went after the bondsmen, and the reporting party said the other had been “hit with an ax in the upper body area.”

    The victims were transported to hospitals, and Hall was airlifted for further treatment but died from her injuries.

    Jones reportedly barricaded himself inside the home, but authorities later took him into custody and transported him to a hospital.

    Jones faces charges of second-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder, and two counts of assault inflicting serious injury with intent to kill. He was arrested on Dec. 23 and booked into the Hoke County Detention Center with a bond of over $1.77 million.

    MORE:

    • News Release – Hoke County Sheriff’s Office
    • Son kills mom amid axe attack on bondsman near Raeford, Hoke County deputies say – WNCN

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