Posts mit dem Label Murder Crime werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Murder Crime werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Samstag, 24. Mai 2014

Idahos Most Wanted: LOREZO CALDERON
Wanted for a murder committed in the City of Blackfoot on July 22nd, 2000


LOREZO CALDERONA.K.A.:
1. Calderon, Lorenzo Jiminez
2. Jiminez, Lorenzo Calderon
3. Padilla, Juan Carlos

Race: HISPANIC
Sex: MALE
Hair Color: BLACK
Eye Color: BROWN
Height: 5'07''
Weight: 160
Birth Date: 09/05/1961


Tattoo/Scars:
  • Panther Tattoo left hand 
  • Scar from chest to back 
  • Burn mark on one thumb



Calderon is wanted for a murder committed in the City of Blackfoot on 07/22/2000. A warrant for 1st degree murder has been issued for the arrest of Calderon. Calderon is currently on the run and should be considered armed and dangerous. Calderon may be in the Southern California area or Texas area.

DO NOT ATTEMPT to apprehend Calderon. 
Contact your local Law Enforcement or contact the Blackfoot Police with any information on Calderon.
Contact the Blackfoot Police Deptartment
(208)785-1235
blkftpd@blackfootpolice.org
SOURCE: blackfootpolice.org


Freitag, 23. Mai 2014

Hawaii 1999 Cold Case: Ex-Soldier DARNELL GRIFFIN
Sentenced to two life terms for murdering Evelyn Luka
while on parole for an earlier homicide


DARNELL GRIFFIN
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Suspect in 1999 Hawaii murder tagged as threat in '96 memo
FROM: the.honoluluadvertiser.com (October 17th 2008)
Direct Source Link

Evelyn Luka

Darnell Griffin, now awaiting trial for the 1999 rape and murder of Evelyn Luka, was identified three years before the crime as a dangerous sexual predator whose movements after leaving prison should be restricted by parole authorities, according to court records. The warning, issued in January 1996 by state sex-offender specialist Barry Coyne, virtually predicted the way in which prosecutors now say Griffin met and attacked Luka on September 6th, 1999.

Griffin had been convicted in 1980 of murdering another woman. Before Griffin was paroled on March 5th, 1996, Coyne recommended that he be subjected to "more intense supervision" than normal, including a 9 p.m. curfew and a warning that if he visited nightclubs in central Honolulu or Waikiki, his parole could be revoked.

The VLounge
Coyne also recommended that Griffin be required to regularly take and pass polygraph tests to make sure he was not violating the terms of his release from prison. According to records filed in the Luka case, the victim was last seen leaving Venus Nite Club (Now called VLOUNGE) on Kapi'olani Boulevard around midnight with a man matching Griffin's description in a vehicle matching the one that Griffin drove at the time.

Specialist B. Coyne
Luka, 20, was found barely alive early the next morning on the side of H-2 Freeway. Sexually assaulted and strangled, she died the following month of brain injuries when her family removed her from life support. Hawai'i Paroling Authority administrator Max Otani said that, despite Coyne's concerns about Griffin, the parolee remained under "intensive supervision" only through December 1996.

That program imposed a 9 p.m. curfew and Griffin was subjected once to a polygraph examination, in November 1996, Otani said.

Sketch of the Suspect
As of 1997, Griffin was transferred to general parole status, which included an 11 p.m. curfew and instructions not to consume alcohol or visit premises where alcohol is served, Otani said.

There is no indication in court files that parole officials or Honolulu police detectives identified Griffin as a possible suspect in the Luka murder until a DNA sample he provided in 2006 was later matched with evidence collected in 1999. Griffin was required to supply the DNA under a 2005 state law requiring collection of such samples from all convicted murderers.

To read the rest of this Article, go to:

GUILTY IN 1980 KILLING

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DARNELL GRIFFIN TIMELINE

* Oct. 23, 1978: Army transfers Darnell Griffin to Hawaiçi.

* Oct. 17, 1979: He’s accused of rape by 26-year-old female tourist; case dismissed.

* Oct. 11, 1980: Murders Lynn Gheradi.

Feb. 14, 1983: Sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole for murdering Gheradi.

Jan. 12, 1996: State official Barry Coyne writes warning memo, advises close supervision of Griffin as parolee.

March 5, 1996: Griffin paroled under “intensive supervision.”

Dec. 30, 1996: Intensive supervision of Griffin lifted by Hawaiçi Paroling Authority.

Sept. 6, 1999: Evelyn Luka raped and strangled.

Sept. 6, 2004: DNA evidence from Luka case entered in national database.

Nov. 24, 2006: DNA sample obtained from Griffin by parole officer.

Dec. 9, 2006: Griffin allegedly exposes himself, solicits sex from 26-year-old woman.

Feb. 26, 2007: Griffin DNA sample matched to DNA from Luka case.

March 28, 2007: Griffin arrested and charged with rape and murder of Evelyn Luka.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Police Make An Arrest in Cold Case Murder in Waipio
FROM: the.honoluluadvertiser.com (October 17th 2008)
Direct Source Link

Evelyn was murdered eight years ago !

Now, a breakthrough in this cold case: Using DNA technology, Honolulu police arrested and charged Darnell Griffin in the 1999 killing of a young woman in Waipio. David Katina says his mind is racing. His next-door neighbor, 48-year-old Griffin, is accused of killing a woman eight years ago. "He knew my kids. We knew his kids and his wife," Katina said. "And he's a good guy."
 

20 year-old Evelyn Luka was found unconscious and severely beaten along the H-2 Freeway near Ka Uka Boulevard September 6th, 1999. Investigators say early that morning, she was seen leaving Venus Nite Club on Kapiolani Boulevard with a man. Police released a composite sketch of the suspect. But the case went cold, until now.

H-2 Freeway
"DNA analysts from our Scientific Investigation Section informed our Homicide Detail that they got a hit," Capt. Frank Fujii, from the Honolulu Police Department, said. He also says the DNA sample taken off the victim matches Griffin's DNA profile, which is already in the national Database because he was convicted of murdering a 26-year-old woman back in 1980. "In both cases, the victims died of strangulation," Fujii said. "I'm shocked," Katina said. "He did tell me he had, you know, trouble with the law years ago and he was getting his life back together again. In fact, he visited our church."

HPD crime lab officials say there are more than 4.2 million convicted offenders with DNA profiles in the national database. They say this is their first DNA cold case arrest in history. "Sometimes, it's not very satisfying because you can not, you're not able to provide the information that the investigators need," Wayne Kimoto, HPD's forensic lab supervisor, said. "But in times such as these, when we are able to provide information, we're very happy."

Police won't say why the case broke open now (???).
Griffin was released on parole in 1996, after serving 15 years in prison for an earlier murder. Now, he's being held in lieu of $5 million bail.


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Information about the Case can be found at the following Links:

Ex-Soldier sentenced to two life terms for murder

Two-time convicted killer must serve back-to-back life terms

Alleged statement to officer thrown out

Donnerstag, 15. Mai 2014

California, February 15th 1944:
GLENARD BROWN

Executed in San Quentin by Gas
for the Murder of 78-year-old Ada Belle Turner

 

People vs. Brown , 22 Cal.2d 752

[Crim. No. 4486. In Bank. Sept. 15, 1943.]
THE PEOPLE, Respondent, v. GLENARD BROWN, Appellant.
COUNSEL
Charles A. Tuttle for Appellant.
Robert W. Kenny, Attorney General, and T. G. Negrich, Deputy Attorney General, for Respondent.
OPINION
THE COURT


Direct Source Link

On September 27th, 1942, Mrs. Ada Turner, a widow seventy-eight years of age, was living alone at her home in Colfax, Placer County, California. She was seen that day in her yard by neighbors. She was seen in the rear yard of her home with Brown on the same day, and he was carrying a gun.

DOWNTOWN Colfax
The dead body of Mrs. Turner was discovered in the basement of her home the following morning, and shortly thereafter, County and State Peace officers were at the scene. The basement where the killing occurred showed blood on the floor, walls and furniture. There were large smears of blood on the floor indicating that the body of Mrs. Turner had been dragged about. Mrs. Turner's body was practically nude.

Dr. Smith made a post-mortem examination of the body and examined all wounds, as well as the vaginal tract. Eight knife wounds were found; also one wound on the face made by a blunt instrument. The blow producing this last wound was of sufficient force to fracture the jaw bone. The cause of death was hemorrhage due to multiple lacerations. There was no evidence of trauma in the vaginal tract; the vagina was dry and there was no evidence of rape.

On October 1st, 1942, Brown made a statement to the District Attorney and Peace Officers. In this statement he admitted the killing and asserted repeatedly that he did not know why he had done it. The rifle and knife used by defendant in the killing were found by officers at places designated by Brown.

Glenard Brown, (a Goat Herder) testified that he drank large quantities of intoxicating liquors the day of the killing; that he was "rumdum" as a result of such drinking; and that he was eighteen years of age at the time of the killing.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Youth Sentenced To Gas Chamber

Nineteen-year-old Glenard Brown will be executed in the prison gas chamber Friday for the knife slaving of 78-year-old Mrs. Ada Bell Turner of Colfax, Placer County. Brown employed as a goat herder in the Oolfax area, was convicted in November 1942. He admitted knifing Mrs. Turner to death after she refused to lend him 4 Dollars. He was arrested soon after Mrs. Turner's body was found in the basement of her home. She was the widow of a former Colfax City Councilman.


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Who's Who in the Colfax District cemetery

FROM: www.colfaxhistory.org
Direct Source Link

Ada Belle Turner (Maiden Name: Powers) 1864-1942

A Colfax housewife and widow of Colfax City Coucilman Randle L. Turner, who preceded her in death by 19 months. She was murdered by 19-year old Glenard Brown, who was employed as a goat herder in this area. He was convicted in November 1942 for knifing Mrs. Turner to death after she refused to give him $4. He was executed at San Quentin in 1944. She is buried next to her husband at the Colfax District Cemetery.


Another event happened in 1942 when an infamous murder occurred in Colfax. A 78-year-old woman, Ada Belle Turner, was found dead in the basement of her Auburn Street home. Coroner West took part in the investigation that led to the arrest and conviction of a local goat herder. Glenard Brown was found guilty and sentenced to the death penalty, which was carried out in the San Quentin gas chamber on February 15th, 1944.

Source Link: http://www.auburnjournal.com/article/funeral-home-has-lively-history


Mittwoch, 14. Mai 2014

Cold Case Child Killer DONALD PRESTON FERGUSON
Arrested in January 2014 for the rape and murder
of 7-year-old Shalonda Poole


DONALD PRESTON FERGUSON
NORTH CAROLINA OFFENDER INFORMATION:
Source: www.guilfordcountysheriff.com/


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Young Girl, 7, Is Found Dead In Woods

FROM: The Dispatch (July 24th 1990)
Direct Source Link

The body of a 7-year-old girl was found bound and gagged in woods behind an elementary school Sunday, more than a day after she was reported missing, officials said. Shalonda Poole of Greensboro was found dead about 9 A.M. in the woods behind Jones Elementary School. Police declined to say how she was killed and would not say whether they have any suspects.

No arrests had been made Sunday night, said police Sgt. Gary Wilson. Shalonda, who lived in a public housing community with her parents, Marilyn and Gatts Poole, had a twin sister, Shanda, who was the last family member to see her alive.
Jones Elementary School, Greensboro
About 6 A.M. Saturday, Shanda realized that her twin sister had crawled out of the bed they shared.

Shalonda was standing on their back stoop amid the crowded rows of brick apartment houses, whose small yards are enclosed by low and feeble fences. Shanda said she told her sister to come in (that their parents were still asleep and they weren't supposed to leave the house) but Shalonda said she didn't want to, her twin recalled Sunday.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Family Friend Finally Charged in 7-Year-Old's Gruesome Murder 

FROM: thestir.cafemom.com (January 9th 2014)
Direct Source Link

The murder of  7-year-old Shalonda Poole in 1990 that has haunted a North Carolina community for 24 years has finally been solved. Her body was found in the woods behind her elementary school (Jones Elementary School) in July 1990, sexually assaulted and strangled. Her family never gave up hope ... and this week a family friend who "helped" them look for their missing daughter has been arrested.

Shalonda Poole
The main suspect back in 1990 was a mentally disabled cafeteria worker, but he was found not guilty two years later. Fast forward two decades, and police say advancement in forensics helped them nail Donald Preston Ferguson, now 52, for the murder and assault of the little girl all those years ago.

Shalonda Poole & her Twin Sister
If they got the right guy, he sounds like a real creep. This is a guy who Shalonda's parents say was actually sitting at their kitchen table, playing cards with the family, just DAYS before the murder of their 7-year-old. Ferguson even helped the family look for their daughter before she was found.

As it turns out, Ferguson was arrested just months later, in October of 1990, for sexual assault. He stayed in a South Carolina prison until 1997. He's been on active probation since his release, but living in South Carolina. For at least seven years, he couldn't hurt any other kid, but who knows what has happened since.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Donald Preston Ferguson Arrested For 1990 Murder Of 7-Year-Old Shalonda Poole
FROM: www.huffingtonpost.com (January 15th 2014)
Direct Source Link

Woods behind the School
When a North Carolina cop got assigned to investigate the 1990 rape and murder of a 7-year-old girl, the detective promised the child's mother he'd never give up looking for the killer. Now Detective Tony Hinson of the Greensboro Police can finally rest without feeling like he's not trying hard enough to solve the case.

With the arrest of Donald Preston Ferguson last week by U.S. Marshals for allegedly killing Shalonda Poole in 1990, Fox News reported that the Greensboro police can close the file on the only child murder cold case in the department's records since 1969.

Poole's body was found behind an elementary school a day after she went missing in July 1990. She'd been sexually assaulted, stabbed and strangled, according to the station WGHP. Ferguson reportedly worked nearby and moved away from Greensboro in September that year.

“I remember having a conversation with Mrs. Poole and she asked me to promise her that I would never give up,” Hinson said on WGHP. “I would never promise to make an arrest or solve a case but I did promise her I would never give up. I am happy I fulfilled that promise.”

Police wouldn't reveal what evidence linked Ferguson, 52, to the crime yet. He was arrested in South Carolina where he's a registered Sex Offender for other crimes committed against a 10-year-old girl and 19-year-old woman, the Greensboro News & Record reported. On Monday, Ferguson appeared in court via closed circuit television to hear the charges of first-degree murder and first-degree sex offense read against him. He faces the death penalty if convicted.

A public defender will represent him, WITN reported. Poole's relatives appeared in court on Monday, too, including her older sister Janeen Poole.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tracing movements of Donald Ferguson

FROM: www.news-record.com (January 26th 2014)
Direct Source Link

Donald Preston Ferguson, the man charged in the July 1990 rape and killing of 7-year-old Shalonda Poole, served time in prison for another sexual assault on a child. He also was arrested in a South Carolina murder case in the late 1990s, although charges eventually were dropped for lack of evidence. Ferguson, 52, has lived most of his life in and around Spartanburg, S.C., and it's not clear what brought him to Greensboro.

  • May 31st, 1989: The mother of a 10-year-old Spartanburg, S.C., girl reported that Ferguson, then 28, assaulted and raped her daughter the night before as the child walked home alone.
  • June 1st, 1989: Ferguson was arrested and charged with "criminal sexual conduct — first-degree." He was freed on a 400 Dollar bond. While awaiting trial, he moved to Greensboro.
  • July 21st, 1990: In Greensboro, Shalonda Poole was raped and killed in the early morning hours near her Ashe Street home. Ferguson was an acquaintance of Shalonda's half-brother, Marvin Cowan.
  • July 22, 1990: Searchers found Shalonda's body.

Shortly afterward, Cowan went to visit Ferguson but learned that he had returned to South Carolina.

  • July 24th, 1990: Greensboro police made an arrest in Shalonda's death — Melvin Bennett, a mentally disabled cafeteria worker who worked with the victim's mother and had no prior criminal record.
  • August 3rd, 1990: Ferguson's partially blind grandmother, Annie Lou Jeter, 76, was shot and killed with her own gun in her Spartanburg home.
  • March 21st, 1991: Ferguson pleaded guilty in the 1989 Spartanburg rape case in a plea bargain. A judge sentenced him to eight years in prison on the reduced charge of third-degree criminal sexual conduct.
  • October 2nd, 1992: In Greensboro, a jury acquitted Bennett, then 35, of Shalonda's rape and murder, taking about an hour to reach that decision after a weeklong trial. City police said Bennett was guilty and declined to reopen the investigation.
  • October 11th, 1997: Ferguson was released after serving 6 and 1/2 years in the South Carolina prison system for the 1989 rape.
  • October 16th, 1997: Spartanburg police arrested Ferguson and several of his relatives in the 1990 killing of Annie Lou Jeter. Police said the motive was getting money for drugs.

From The Herald-Journal (October 17th, 1997)
  • April 16th, 1999: Spartanburg prosecutors dropped the murder charges against Ferguson and other relatives in the slaying of his grandmother. Evidence was too weak, police said.
  • YEAR 2007: Greensboro police had reclassified Shalonda's killing as a cold case, and the case was assigned to Detective A.R. Hinson after several other investigators hit dead ends. Hinson noticed Ferguson's name on a list of family acquaintances who never were questioned by police. "Who's this?" he asked Marilyn Poole, Shalonda's mother.
  • August 18th, 2008: Ferguson was arrested in Gaffney, S.C., (near Spartanburg) for failing to register as a Sex Offender at his new residence, as required by law. He pleaded guilty and served 90 days in the county jail. 
  • November 19th, 2010: Ferguson was featured in an article about homelessness in his hometown newspaper. The article said he'd been homeless about eight years: "People don't pay the homeless any attention — they think we don't exist, that we're trash and the lowest of the low," he told a reporter.
  • November 7th, 2012: Spartanburg police arrested Ferguson on a fraud charge, saying he had scammed 480 $ from a local bank by opening a checking account and immediately overdrawing it.
  • March 15th, 2013: A judge sentenced Ferguson to one year in prison for bank fraud but suspended the sentence to time already served —127 days in the county jail.
  • January 7th, 2014: U.S. Marshals arrested Ferguson for Shalonda's slaying in Greensboro 23 years earlier. Authorities said recent advances in forensic technology helped them link him to the crime.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1990 murder investigators suspect 3 more in family

FROM: The Herald-Journal (October 17th, 1997)
Direct Source Link

Spartanburg police added three more family members Thursday to the list of suspects accused in the 1990 killing of a partially blind, elderly woman shot to death with her own gun. The list now includes the dead woman's son, daughter and two grandsons. Police say Annie Lou Jeter, 76, was gunned down in her home by family members for drug money. Police revived the case this year as part of an ongoing effort to solve "cold" cases that have been unsolved for more than a year.


On Wednesday, detectives charged Jeter's grandson, Jack Earl Ferguson, 39, of 271 Cammie Clagett Courts with murder. And on Thursday, they added Jeter's son, Larry Preston Jeter, 39, of 128 Phyllis Goins Courts. He was arrested about 2 p.m. at his job at Papa Sam's Restaurant on a murder charge. On Thursday night, Donald Ferguson, the 36-year-old grandson of the victim, turned himself in to police. He is accused of murder, and recently he was released from prison, authorities said.

At the time of the killing, relatives said Jeter had poor eyesight and probably thought she recognized the people who killed her. Police were still hunting Thursday for Jeter's daughter, Ruby Ferguson, 57. Ruby Ferguson is accused of obstructing justice. Police believe she fled the city but may still be in the area. Anyone who knows where she is should notify authorities, through the 911 emergency system, police said.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Man arrested for 1990 Triad murder could be connected to Shelby murder

FROM: charlotte.twcnews.com
Direct Source Link

The murder arrest of a man in South Carolina could be a needed break to end a nearly decade and a half cold case in Shelby. Donald Ferguson was charged early Wednesday with the murder of Greensboro girl Shalonda Poole in 1990.

Now investigators are looking into whether Ferguson could be connected to the Asha Degree cold case dating back to 2000. "The individual was arrested in Spartanburg County which means in all probability he had to come through Cleveland County numerous times," said Sheriff Norman.

Ferguson was arrested this week and charged in the 1990 murder of 7-year-old Shalonda Poole in Greensboro. Now Cleveland County and Greensboro authorities are exchanging notes to see if Ferguson is possibly connected to the 2000 disappearance of then 9-year-old Asha Degree. "We do hope that it opens a door. That's one of the main reasons for national databases and all sorts of things," said Capt. Mike Richey.

Asha Degree
Degree was last seen walking on a stretch of Highway 18 in Shelby on Valentine's Day 2000. Along with a missing person's billboard, Degree's family walks that route in her honor every February 14, never giving up hope.

"We want to bring closure to the Degree family, whether it's to bring back Asha back home, or to bring closure like what has happened with the Greensboro incident," said Sheriff Norman. Cleveland County Sheriff Alan Norman said an investigator from his office will spend the next week pinpointing exactly where Ferguson was around that date in 2000.

"We're looking back to see where this individual would have been 14 years ago, where he resided, where he worked," said Sheriff Norman. He also said they still get tips on the Asha Degree case, but he's hopeful this latest link could bring some kind of closure to another North Carolina family.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



ASHA JAQUILLA DEGREE Age Progression 
Case Type: Endangered Missing
DOB: Aug 5, 1990 Sex: Female
Missing Date: Feb 14, 2000 Race: Black
Age Now: 23 Height:  4'6" (137 cm)
Missing City: SHELBY Weight:  60 lbs (27 kg)
Missing State :  NC Hair Color: Black
Missing Country: United States Eye Color: Brown
Case Number: NCMC879788
Circumstances: Asha's photo is shown age-progressed to 19 years. She was last seen by her family sleeping in her bed at approximately 2:30 a.m. on February 14, 2000. At 4:00 a.m., she was seen by motorists walking along North Carolina Highway 18 in Shelby, North Carolina. She is believed to be wearing a white shirt, white jeans, white tennis shoes and may be carrying her purse and a black backpack.

http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PubCaseSearchServlet?act=viewChildDetail&orgPrefix=NCMC&caseNum=879788

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Samstag, 10. Mai 2014

VENECIA NICHOLS from Florida
-------------------------------------------
A young woman at the time
who murdered in Collaboration with
JESSIE MAE GRAHAM
her own adoptive-mother, Ernestine Nichols, in Cold Blood


VENECIA NICHOLS
FLORIDA OFFENDER INFORMATION (as of May 4th, 2014):
Source & Picture from: http://www.dc.state.fl.us/





'A hard-hearted woman'
10 months later, woman, friend charged in mom's death

FROM: The Lakeland Ledger (July 11th 1994)
Direct Source Link

Venecia Nichols walked into the Lakeland Police Department one day in May with a story to tell detectives — how her boyfriend killed her mother 10 months before. But when she left later that day it was in handcuffs. And she and an accomplice had been charged with the murder.

Police say Nichols, 24, smothered her adoptive mother with a pillow while she slept, in order to inherit the woman's two modest houses, car and 9.700 USD in savings and life insurance. "She's a hard-hearted woman," said Lakeland police Sgt. Randy Harrison. "She was a suspect in the thing from the very beginning, but we just didn't have enough evidence to do anything with it," he said. "We tried to talk with her before and she wouldn't cooperate with us." Venecia Nichols' mother, Ernestine, was a healthy, friendly and active 68-year-old, neighbors said. She mowed her own lawn, tended the garden at her periwinkle and peach home on Valencia Street 116 W in north-central Lakeland, cared for her invalid Graham brother and of ten entertained friends from the Beulah Baptist Church.

Valencia Street 116 W in north-central Lakeland, the place where Ernestine lived and died
But in the morning of July 24th, her dead body was found lying on her bed, with a pillow over her head. Venecia told police she'd been out all night with her boyfriend, Sherman Lattimore. When they returned about 7:50 in the morning, they discovered the back door open, with her mothers wallet, papers and cable television converter strewn across the lawn. It looked like the place had been burglarized. A television was missing.

Then they discovered the body of Ernestine. Judge Douglas Alexander (Ernestine's 76-year-old invalid brother) was asleep in another room and heard nothing. But earlier in the evening he overheard his sister and niece arguing. "They were fussing," he said, and Ernestine told her daughter not to go out. "Instead Venecia said, 'Well, I'm going,' and I heard her slam the door."

 Alexander Melamud, M.D., M.A.
Sometime during the night Ernestine Nichols died of cardiac arrhythmia, an autopsy showed. But the manner of death was classified as undetermined. Associate Medical Examiner Alexander Melamud told police, that Nichols could have been smothered, but died of a heart attack before she suffocated.

Seeds of trouble


Venecia's uncle, Nick Alexander of Brooksville, said, "I suspected her right away. When she came to the funeral she sort of dropped her head and looked away." Alexander's sister and her late husband, Lonzer, adopted Venecia when she was a little girl, and the small family got along well until Venecia got to be about 11 years old, he said. "I tried to tell her how she should've never done something like that (adopting), because she didn't know the background of the child," Nick Alexander said. "I was thinking something like this might happen."

As Venecia grew older she grew more insolent, he said, and the fights with Ernestine grew worse and more frequent. "She tried to get her to stay at home," Judge Alexander said, but Venecia would "leave home and stay three or four weeks away." "My sister was determined to stop her," Nick Alexander said, but "I told my sister to let her go on about her business."



Both of her uncles said that Venecia got "mixed up in a crowd that abused drugs.", though police could not confirm this. Once she was staying at Judge Alexander's home when he was at a veteran's hospital, and she racked up a 700 Dollar phone bill that she never paid, said Nick Alexander, 83, Ernestine's oldest brother.

When Ernestine Nichols died, Venecia inherited her mother's house, at 116 W. Valencia St., and the house across the street, which she had been renting out. Judge Alexander said that Venecia got 4.000 USD from her mother's life insurance policy, another 4.000 from her bank account plus 1.700 Dollar of his money his sister was keeping in her account. There was also a 1985 Cadillac and several things Judge Alexander said Ernestine had bought for her daughter: a 1984 Ford Mustang, a fur coat, and a baby grand piano.

"She kept everything in the house," he said. "She took it all and pawned it." He said his sister also had four television sets, so he asked Venecia for one of them. She refused. "She took them all and got rid of them," he said. "She pawned them. Got money for drugs."

"I believed something had happened to her,(Ernestine)" once Venecia started selling all of Ernestine Nichols' possessions, said Nichols' sister, 71-year-old Annie Ruth Hicks. Nick Alexander said the last time he saw his niece was in August, about 10 days after his sister's funeral.

He found her in the yard at the house. "I asked her what happened," he said. "She dropped her head and she couldn't explain herself." He could never get hold of her again after that, and is sure she was avoiding him.

An unlikely suspect as the months passed, Sgt. Harrison said, the family vented its frustration over the case. Convinced they knew who committed the murder, they felt police weren't doing anything about it, he said. "People don't realize it takes a lot of time," he said. "But that's difficult to explain to a family."

Then on May 11th, three days after Mother's Day, Venecia Nichols walked into the Lakeland police headquarters and asked to talk to Sgt. Harrison. She wanted to implicate her boyfriend in her mother's murder, Harrison said. But detectives had been busy the previous 10 months, talking to sources and Nichols' acquaintances. Each tidbit of information they provided helped form a clearer picture of that what really happened in Ernestine Nichols' bedroom that July night.

Annie Ruth Hicks, Ernestines Sister, died in December 1999
And with that, detectives were able to explain why the murder couldn't have happened the way Venecia said it did. "Apparently, it impressed her," Harrison said. "She was pretty stead-fast there for a few minutes, then I think she realized it was over with."

Earlier in the day she'd met with a real-estate agent, trying to sell some of her mother's property. But the deal was complicated by the fact that the case was still open, Harrison said. "There was a method to her madness. She needed somebody in jail," he said. But once she delivered herself to the police, and they confronted her with the information they had, police say she folded.

According to the arrest report, she gave a taped statement saying, that she and a friend, 23-year-old Jessie Mae Graham, talked about killing her mother for the inheritance, the night of July 23rd. She told police "that after her mother fell asleep they entered her bedroom and Venecia watched as Jessie Mae Graham killed her mother by holding a pillow over her face," the arrest report said. The report said also that Nichols promised Graham a car for her assistance.

837 N. Iowa Avenue in Lakeland, the place where Jessie Graham was living at the time
Police then picked up Graham at the house the women shared at 837 N. Iowa Avenue, and she came back to the station and agreed to talk. Graham told police "she held Ernestine Nichols' legs down, while Venecia smothered her.", the arrest report said. "During their discussion prior to the murder Venecia mentioned stabbing her mother but dismissed this method due to the mess it would make, it was then decided to smother her," the report said.

Ernestine
After Graham gave her statement, Lakeland detective Joe Louden said, that she told him: "I'm glad it's over.".

Under Florida law it doesn't matter who held the pillow; if both women participated in the crime, both could face the death penalty if convicted of first-degree murder.

In spite of Venecia's apparent admission, her boyfriend, Sherman Lattimore, said, he still believes she's innocent. She told police they were together the night of the murder, and he reiterated that story last week. "I don't believe that she did" kill her mother, he said. "We were out for that night."

Now Nichols and Graham (who is Lattimore's cousin) are sitting in the Polk County Jail charged with first degree murder. Nichols wouldn't comment for this article without the consent of her attorney, Dan Brawley of Lakeland, who refused to allow it. He also refused to comment.

Nick Alexander said a woman, who visited Nichols in jail recently told him she asked for a 5 Dollar loan from her uncle.

"Hell, I won't give her a damn thing," Nick Alexander said. "I hope they burn her. They can throw her in the fire and burn her up, she done my sister like that."

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Woman sentenced to life in jail for killing 68-year-old adoptive mother for inheritance
FROM: The Lakeland Ledger (April 28th 1995)
Direct Source Link

Venecia Nichols, 25, will spend the next half of her life in prison for killing her adoptive mother, Ernestine Nichols, for a 10.000 US-Dollar inheritance. A jury found Venecia Nichols guilty of first-degree murder in the July 24th, 1994, suffocation death of her adoptive mother in their North Lakeland home.


Circuit Judge Daniel True Andrews immediately sentenced her to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years. Prosecutor Cass Castillo told a jury that the Nichols' case was about "a mother's love and a daughter's greed." Ernestine Nichols loved her daughter, but Venecia Nichols "rebelled and chose the streets," Castillo said. Nichols went on an immediate spending spree after the murder because "she had no emotion for her mother.", Castillo said. "It was like killing any-body," he said.

Nichols showed no emotion after the jury announced its verdict. Jurors deliberated for four hours. The woman that prosecutors said helped Nichols commit the murder, Jessie Mae Graham, 24, pleaded guilty to second-degree in March 1995 and testified against Nichols.


Graham reached an agreement with prosecutors that calls for her to receive between 10 and 20 years in prison. The exact length of the sentence will be up to Andrews. Nichols' defense attorney, Dan Brawley told the jury Thursday that Graham's plea agreement "was the deal of a lifetime.'

Brawley told the jury that Graham was the dominant woman in the relationship between her and Venecia Nichols. When it comes to manipulation, Brawley said, "Jessie Mae Graham takes the cake". The defendant is a big woman, Brawley said. "but no match for Jessie Mae Graham." Castillo said.

Both women were guilty because "They were soul-mates, in murder." Castillo said.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Plea bargain gets murderer 20 years

FROM: The Lakeland Ledger (June 22nd 1995)
Direct Source Link

After testifying against her friend in the murder of the friend's mother, Jessie Mae Graham of Lakeland was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Graham and Venecia Michelle Nichols had been charged in the July 1993 murder of Ernestine Nichols, 68, of Lakeland, Florida. The two women decided to kill Nichols' mother to get her money and valuables, according to court documents.


The murder went unsolved for almost a year, until Venecia Nichols went to the Lakeland police to say that she and Graham discussed killing Ernestine . She said it was Graham who held a pillow over her mother's face to kill her. Under a plea agreement signed in March 1993, Graham, 24 at the time, was allowed to plead to second-degree murder if she testified against her friend. If convicted at trial on the first-degree murder charge. Graham faced life in prison without the possibility of release for 25 years.

Sentencing guidelines suggested between 10 and 20 years in prison for Graham. Circuit Court Judge Daniel True Andrews sentenced her to the maximum, followed by 10 years of probation. If she qualifies for early release, Graham will serve about half of the sentence. Venecia Nichols, 25, was convicted in April of first-degree murder and is serving a 25-year minimum sentence. Judge Andrews requested that the two women not be sent to the same prison.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Jessie Grahams Mugshot 2004
Seems she did not learn from the 1st Case. 2nd Degree Murder ? See following Links:
  • http://www.florida-mugshot-locator.com/Counties/Polk-County/Jessie-Mae-Graham.23865333.html
  • http://www.justmugshots.com/florida/polk-county/15077652
Sherman Lattimore`s Mugshot(s):



For Details about Lettimore see following Links (Polk County):
  • http://florida.arrests.org/Arrests/Sherman_Lattimore_3622548/
  • http://florida.arrests.org/Arrests/Sherman_Lattimore_3616219/