Mittwoch, 4. Juni 2014

KEVIN RANDAL HILL, 30, of Ft. Sill, Oklahoma,
Admitted that he
"slapped, shook, threw, dropped, squeezed, and slammed the baby onto the couch and the floor"...............
SENTENCED TO MORE THAN 12 YEARS IN PRISON !

Kevin Randal Hill, 30, of Fort Sill, Oklahoma, was sentenced on April 5th, 2012, by United States District Judge Stephen P. Friot to serve 144 months in federal prison for child abuse of his 5-month-old daughter, announced Sanford C. Coats, United States Attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma.

USDJ Stephen Friot
According to court records and information from the plea hearing and sentencing, Hill had recently been medically discharged from the Army and was living on post at Fort Sill with his wife—an active duty soldier—when he abused their 5-month-old daughter.

At the plea hearing, Hill admitted that on January 28th, 2011, while his wife was away from home performing Army field exercises, he slapped, shook, threw, and dropped the baby onto the floor, where he then sat on her.

Hill also admitted that on January 30, 2011, while his wife was still performing Army exercises, he slapped, squeezed, and slammed the baby onto the couch, then pushed his weight into her, causing her to stop breathing.

Medical evidence at the sentencing hearing established that Hill’s abuse resulted in a fractured skull and severe, permanent brain damage to the baby. Medical testimony established that the child now suffers from severe cerebral palsy and epilepsy, which is expected to significantly shorten her lifespan. Hill presented testimony and evidence at sentencing regarding a diagnosis for post-traumatic stress disorder related to his three deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.

Hill was indicted on May 4, 2011. He pled guilty to two counts of committing child abuse on November 4, 2011.

This case was the result of an investigation conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United States Army Criminal Investigation Command. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Brandon Hale.

SOURCE: http://www.justice.gov

Montag, 2. Juni 2014

2013: DARRYL GREEN Murder
4 Men Charged 14 Years After 1999 Broadview Store Owner's Slaying


Almost 14 years after his twin brother was kidnapped, held for ransom and eventually killed, Darwin Green could only shake his head Sunday at the news that authorities had charged four men in the murder.

Anita Alvarez
"I had this feeling over the last 13 years that they weren't doing nothing," Green said of the FBI and state's attorney's office, whose investigation had gone cold.


Darryl Green
Dimeyon Cole, 30, Kevin Mitchell, 46, Menard McAfee, 38, and Raymond Winters, 46, were charged with first-degree murder in the death of Darryl Green, according to the office of Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez.

Prosecutors say that on June 18th, 1999, the four men abducted Green at gunpoint from a Broadview beeper store that he co-owned with his twin brother. The kidnappers bound Green, 28, and took him by van to a home on Chicago's West Side. There they made several phone calls to Darwin Green, asking for a cash ransom to secure his brother's release.

"At first, I thought someone was playing a prank," Green said in an interview at his home on Sunday. "Then I went to the shop and (Darryl) was gone."

Green recalled his last conversation with the kidnappers, in which he told them he was "trying to get some money together." Green remembers sensing that the kidnappers suspected him of alerting the police.

In their final call, the kidnappers told Green to "make arrangements for your brother," according to a police recording of the call.

The kidnappers then put Green into the van and drove to a secluded area near 20th Avenue and Grant Street in Gary, according to a news release from the state's attorney's office. Witnesses saw four people exit the van and carry a person into the woods (See pic below), according to the release. Gunshots were heard shortly after.


Darryl Green's body, with three gunshot wounds to the head, was later found by police.

Darwin Green said it was "a relief" to think that his brother's killers were finally behind bars, but the news raised more questions than answers.

Why had it taken so many years for investigators to identify the killers ? What was the key piece of evidence that helped solve the case ?

"It was just piecing together as much evidence as possible, continuing to develop those bits and pieces," said state's attorney spokeswoman Sally Daly. The state's attorney's gang crimes unit's persistent gathering of information about gangs played a big role, Daly said.

Green expects there will be no answer to his most pressing question: "Why did they pick my brother to kill ?"

Prosecutors say the four men had affiliations with the Black Souls and the Vice Lords street gangs. Green said his brother was not in a gang and he doubted if his brother even knew the men.

"If he knew them, I would have known them," Green said, insisting that he did not recognize any of the four men, whose pictures were included in the news release announcing the charges.

Cole, who is from Chicago, is expected in Cook County Bond Court on Monday, Daly said. McAfee and Winters, who are currently in state prison on other charges, are expected to appear in Bond Court within a week or two. Mitchell, who is from Jeffersonville, Indiana, will have to be extradited from Indiana, Daly said.

According to the Illinois Department of Corrections website, McAfee is serving a 50-year sentence for murder and Winters is serving a 25-year sentence for an attempted armed robbery.

Police initially suspected Mitchell of involvement in the Green killing because he drove a van like the one witnesses saw in Gary. Four months after the murder, police stopped Mitchell and searched the van, finding evidence with Green's DNA during that search. But authorities did not feel they had enough evidence to bring charges, according to the release.

Investigators later linked the phone that was used to make ransom calls to a prior address for Winters. Further investigation by the FBI and the gang crimes unit turned up additional evidence and witnesses, but the state's attorney's office did not provide any details about those developments.

Darwin Green said he was surprised by the news. The last time he heard from the state's attorney's office was about three years ago, he said. Officials had assured him then that the investigation was still ongoing, but he was doubtful.

Green learned of the charges from a friend who called after hearing a report on the radio.

Darwin and Darryl Green were identical twins who co-owned two businesses together.

After the murder, Darwin Green kept operating "Beep the Twinz," the beeper shop at 2124 S. 17th Ave. in Broadview where Darryl was kidnapped. He eventually closed the shop but continues to operate the brothers' other business, Twins Towing.

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LINKS:
  • http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2013-06-09/news/chi-4-charged-with-1999-murder-of-broadview-man-20130609_1_darryl-green-broadview-man-four-men
  • http://www.suntimes.com/20636860-418/4-charged-in-1999-kidnapping-shooting-death-of-broadview-shop-owner.html#.U4tHYfl_tFs
  • http://wheaton.patch.com/groups/police-and-fire/p/winters-jury-to-hear-about-ties-to-previous-killing