July 5



NORTH CAROLINA:

Scott to pursue death of McLellan



The man charged in the death of Hania Aguilar will face the possibility of being put to death for the crime if convicted.

District Attorney Matt Scott had already said he would make the trial of Michael Ray McLellan, 34, of Fairmont, a capital case, but made that official in court on Thursday.

McLellan is charged with 1st-degree murder, 1st-degree rape, 1st-degree forced sex offense, statutory rape of a child, statutory sex offense with a child, 1st-degree kidnapping, felonious restraint, abduction of a child, concealing the death of a child and larceny of a motor vehicle.

“We do intend to seek the death penalty in this case,” Scott told Judge Robert “Frank” Floyd Jr.

Scott described the death of Aguilar, who was 13 at the time, as “especially heinous, atrocious and cruel” and said the nature of her death weighed heavily on the state’s decision to move forward with capital punishment.

McLellan, dressed in a gray jumpsuit and wearing white sneakers, did not speak. Blood was apparent from his right eye.

Sheriff Burnis Wilkins said when McLellan arrived at the jail for holding, he was wearing a watch, which is against the local policy, and he fought officers as they removed it. Wilkins said he also banged his head against the wall repeatedly while in the holding cell, and refused medical treatment.

Floyd scheduled McLellan’s next hearing for Sept. 9.

The last person executed in North Carolina was Samuel Flippen, who was put to death Aug. 18, 2006, for the murder of his 2-year-old stepdaughter. There has essentially been an unofficial moratorium on executions in North Carolina because of legal challenges calling the process brutal, and many district attorneys electing not to pursue the death penalty.

In the case of capital punishment, the law allows the defendant two lawyers, said Harold Butch Pope, McLellan’s defense attorney. He will review the evidence and collaborate with the other defense attorney as soon as one is appointed.

Pope told the court that communication with the defendant was challenging and that there had not been enough time to review the information or properly communicate with McLellan. Pope had to speak with his client via a telephone while separated from McLellan by a glass barrier.

“It was difficult for him to hear me and difficult for me to hear him,” Pope said.

Pope also said that during visits with McLellan at Central Prison in Raleigh, he was given limited information and access.

“Today is the first day I have been in the same room without a glass or barrier and am able to see or hear him,” Pope said.

Hania’s mother, Celsa Maribel Hernandez Velasquez, was in attendance Thursday, but did not wish to comment. She was escorted to her car by courthouse personnel after the hearing.

Scott and Pope also declined to comment after the hearing.

Aguilar was kidnapped about 6:50 a.m. on Nov. 5 as she went to start her aunt’s Ford Explorer sport utility vehicle, which was parked outside of their home in Rosewood Mobile Home Park on Elizabethtown Road in Lumberton. Her cousin witnessed the kidnapping and told law enforcement that a black man, wearing dark clothing and a yellow bandana on his face, approached the girl, forced her into the SUV and drove away.

Aguilar’s body was found Nov. 27 near Wiregrass Road in Orrum. An autopsy revealed she had been raped and likely died from strangulation.

McLellan was arrested for Aguilar’s kidnapping and death on Dec. 7. On May 6, he was indicted on the 10 charges by a grand jury seated in the Robeson County courthouse.

In 2007, McLellan was convicted on charges of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury and first-degree burglary. He was sentenced to between 10 years and 12 years and nine months in prison. He was released on parole in February 2016.

McLellan was convicted in February 2017 on charges of felony breaking and entering, and larceny of a motor vehicle, according to state records. He was sentenced to between nine months and 20 months, and was released on parole in June 2018.

McLellan was indicted on Dec. 5 by a grand jury in relation to a rape on Oct. 20, 2016, of a Lumberton woman that occurred during a burglary. A state crime lab connected McLellan to the rape, but that information was never acted on by the Sheriff’s Office, leading to an internal investigation. Two officers were suspended during the probe, and one ended up being dismissed with the other retiring.

Hania’s case prompted an outpouring of support from the local community as people joined in prayer for Hania’s safe return. Her family was given a furnished manufactured home so the could move away from the park where she was abducted, and more than $20,000 was raised through GoFundMe in a short time.

There was a public memorial service at Lumberton Senior High School that was attended by hundreds. Students in the Public Schools of Robeson County also wore purple to honor the Lumberton Junior High student as that was her favorite color.

(source: The Robesonian)








ALABAMA:

Prosecution of 2015 New Market killings that claimed 5 lives may face further delay



It has been nearly four years since a New Market murder case that left 5 dead, including a woman who was 9 months pregnant.

Now, the case may face a new delay.

Christopher Henderson is 1 of 2 people charged with capital murder in the case that claimed the life of his estranged wife Kristen Henderson – who was due to deliver a baby – 2 children and his mother-in-law.

The killings took place at Kristen Henderson's parents home on St. Clair Lane in New Market on Aug. 4, 2015.

Henderson’s co-defendant, Rhonda Carlson, was also his wife. He was married to two women at the time of the killings.

Henderson and Carlson are expected to be tried separately.

Henderson is due in court on July 26 for a scheduling conference – aimed at setting a trial date.

Carlson has a court date in late August, but the timing of her trial is less clear. Jake Watson, who is co-counsel in her case, informed the court Monday that he needs to withdraw because he’s taking a job as a federal public defender. It’s likely another attorney will have to be appointed to the case.

Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. Investigators say the pair set the New Market house on fire after the killings.

The victims were either shot or stabbed. Those killed include Kristen Henderson, her 8-year-old son Clayton Chambers, her mother Jean Smallwood, and her 1-year-old nephew Eli Sokolowski. Investigators say the younger child may have died from smoke inhalation.

(source: WHNT news)








OHIO:

Truck driver hysterically reports shooting deaths of wife & 3 in-laws. Months later, he’s charged with their murders: Report



An Ohio man was arrested Tuesday for the deaths of his wife and 3 of her relatives who were reportedly found shot to death in the family’s apartment in April.

Gurpreet Singh, 37, was charged with the aggravated murders of his wife, Shalinder Kaur, 39, her parents, Hakiakat Singh Panag, 59, and Parmjit Kaur, 62, and her aunt, Amarjit Kaur, 58. Singh claimed to have found the bodies at the New Haven apartment in a 911 call placed on April 28, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.

“My wife and my family are on the ground bleeding,” he told a dispatcher while pounding on doors, per the Dayton Daily News.

Singh’s wife was found on the dining room floor shot 3 times, his father-in-law was shot in the head 8 times, his mother-in-law was shot 4 times, and his aunt-in-law was shot twice in the head, WXKU reported.

The news station reported that prosecutors plan to seek the death penalty

The Daily News reported that 2 additional 911 calls were placed, 1 by a neighbor who claimed they overheard a man banging on doors and screaming for help.

Food was reportedly burning on the stove when the family-of-4’s bodies were discovered. A responding officer noted “a good amount of blood” in the living room.

An autopsy later revealed that rigor mortis had set in, suggesting the victims were dead for some time before law enforcement was called to the apartment, according to WLWT.

A motive in April’s quadruple homicide remains unclear. Singh and his wife reportedly had 3 children. Reports indicated that the aunt was visiting from India at the time of her murder.

Branford police said they apprehended Singh without incident in a Walmart parking lot. The news station reported that prosecutors plan to seek the death penalty.

Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser said, “There will be a day of reckoning in respect to this case.”

(source: crimeonline.com)








MISSOURI:

State Will Seek Death Penalty Against Second Miller County Murder Suspect



A Miller County murder suspect is scheduled to be back in the courtroom on Monday for 2 felony cases filed against him. Joseph McKenna, from Chicago, is scheduled to appear for one case for a preliminary hearing on charges of first-degree murder, armed criminal action and tampering with a witness in a felony prosecution…and for an arraignment on a second case in which he faces an attempted escape charge. It’s alleged that McKenna shot and killed Tyler Worthington, from North San Juan California, during an apparent drug deal gone bad in a case in which the state is seeking the death penalty. McKenna is also scheduled to be arraigned on the attempted escape charge. A probable cause statement filed in that case alleges that McKenna was trying to break out of the Miller County Jail so he could meet up with an unidentified individual in Jefferson City and then “take care of a witness.” McKenna is being held without bond.

(source: KRMS Radio news)
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