Tuesday, August 31, 2010

UPDATED~High Speed Police Pursuit Ends In Fatal Crash In Aurora:

Authorities in Aurora are attempting to notify the family of a Springfield man who was involved in a fatal car crash during a police pursuit early Saturday morning.

The pursuit, which at times reached 120 m.p.h., began in Billings and ended at approximately 3:55 a.m. when 33 year-old Elchico Barnes (who was identified through police fingerprint records) attempted to make right turn on MO 39 at the intersection of U. S. 60 and slammed into a light pole.
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A few minutes earlier, Aurora PD had been notified that Billings police officers and a Lawrence County deputy were in pursuit of a vehicle travelling westbound on Highway 60.
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A medical chopper was called to the scene but left after a ground ambulance transported the man to St. Johns hospital in Springfield where he was pronounced dead.

The vehicle was later determined to have been reported stolen in Springfield.

An accident reconstructorist from the Highway Patrol is assisting in the investigation.

Simmons Extradited Back To Texas To Face Capital Murder Charges:

Mark David Simmon (mug shot HCTX)

The man who kept authorities at bay in an eight-and-a-half hour standoff at the Walnut Lane Motel in late June has been extradited back to Texas to face capital murder charges.

An officer on routine patrol attempting to locate the getaway car believed used in the robberies of the Super 8 and Spinning Wheel motels discovered a stolen 2008 Hyundai Sonata in the parking lot of the Walnut Lane Motel. When he ran the plates, he discovered that Mark David Simmons was wanted for murder.

Hays County, Texas District Attorney Sherri Tibbe filed a governors warrant to have Simmons extradited back to Buda, Texas after Taney County Prosecutor Jeff Merrell dropped weapons charges related to the robberies against Simmons to expedite the process.

Prosecutors in Texas say Simmons murdered his business partner, Steven Wayne Woefel in April. Simmons allegedly lived with Woefel's dead body for a week before he moved it to the garage and set it on fire. Investigators say Simmons stole firearms from Woefel’s home and rigged the house to explode in an effort to cover up evidence and injure first responders.

Taney County Sheriff Jimmie Russell says the governors warrant was served on Simmons Thursday in the county jail. Texas Rangers and officers with the U.S. Marshal’s Service conducted the extradition.

Merrell says depending on the outcome of the murder case, his office may pursue the gun charge and possible burglary charges related to the motel robberies a few days before the June 29 standoff.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Christian County Deputy Charged With Unlawful Use Of A Weapon In Two States:

Brent Paoli (mug shot JCSO)

An off duty deputy from Christian County has been charged with unlawful use of a weapon after allegedly firing his service revolver during a dispute with a woman near the Missouri/Kansas border Saturday.

Authorities in Crawford County, Kansas received a 9-1-1 call from a woman who told them that Brent W. Paoli fired two shots and ran into the woods. She told investigators that Paoli allegedly fired another shot from a 9 mm handgun at her vehicle as she drove away.

Officers at the scene heard a fourth shot a short time later, according to the Crawford County Sheriff’s Department.

About two hours later authorities received information that Paoli was in the area of the Mo-Kan Dragway on the Missouri side of the state line. A Kansas Highway Patrol chopper spotted him hiding near the speedway, where he was taken into custody by Jasper County authorities.

Paoli, who is a corporal and has been with department for almost four years, was placed on paid administrative leave while an internal investigation is conducted.
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He was released from custody after posting $3,500 bond.
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Christian County Sheriff Joey Kyle says Paoli is one of his better officers and that he has had no disciplinary issues with him.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Not Remotely Crime Related....Wandering Goat Gaining Facebook Fans:

Wandering goat in Mexico, MO, photo courtesy of facebook fan page

This story is not remotely crime related, but it makes me smile!

A goat that has been wandering around the small eastern Missouri town of Mexico has a facebook following, much to the chagrin of animal control officers.

KXEO reports that the goat was first spotted by a motorist last Saturday near an underpass on the east side of town. Animal control says it has fielded more than a dozen reports of the adult goat being seen around town, including downtown Mexico.

Officers, who have named the wandering animal, Billy Goat Gruff, are trying to catch the goat.

Now people are donning t-shirts that say "Goat Watch 2010" on the front, and "Catch me if you can" on the back.

In a time where there is just so much bad news, it's refreshing, at least for me, to have a chuckle!

Friday, August 27, 2010

Seymour Man Fined $1,000, Sentenced To 60 Days For Attempting To Infect Police Officer With HIV:

Michael Sartin (mug shot WCSO)

A judge in Webster County found a Seymour man guilty of assault of a law enforcement officer after the man intentionally tried to infect a Fordland police officer with the HIV virus.

On May 29th Officer Josh Burris was transporting Michael Sartin, who was arrested on an outstanding warrant, to the Webster County jail when he noticed Sartin attempting to slip out of his handcuffs. As Burris adjusted the cuffs, Sartin bit his tongue and then spat in the officer's face as he put him back in the patrol car.

According to court documents, Sartin told Burris, "I bit my tongue . . . it's bleeding, so now you can have HIV like me. . . Now you're gonna know what it's like to live knowin' you're gonna die." Burris says that on the ride to jail Sartin, "made several threats of how he was going to kill me and members of my family."

Sartin was sentenced to 60 days and fined $1,000.

Burris has tested negative for virus that causes AIDS.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Did Tommy Lynn Sells Kill Ena And Rory Cordt?:

By Dave Warren and
Kathee Baird

The murder of Ena Cordt and her son Rory, in Forsyth, has remained unsolved for a quarter of a century and theories about what happened that July day in 1985 have been almost as numerous as the years that have transpired.

Was it a killing based on a chance encounter and drugs, as some claim? Was it a murder for hire as others allude to? Were there ties to other killings in the area? Were there sinister forces at work in the local government at the time?

Conspiracy theories often tend to cloud issues with partial facts or statements that cannot be confirmed. During our investigation of this double homicide we checked fact after fact on the case that is, by all accounts, colder than ice. However, while some new claims came to light in our investigation, some of the theories were discounted, while some others still remain viable solutions to this crime.

Perhaps one of the more interesting theories (or if you believe the suspect, a confession) comes from a man on death row in Texas. His claim is that the murders were not a random act, but rather a plot to silence someone who posed a threat.

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PART I - He has been called the Coast-to-Coast killer and while he has confessed to more than 60 murders, authorities say they aren’t buying all of the confessions, but they do confirm his suspected involvement in at least 15. Following his arrest in 2000 for a killing in Texas, Rangers began looking into the killer’s claims and have identified a double homicide in Missouri in 1985 as likely one of his first.

For their part, some authorities in Missouri have no interest in his confession and a crime that should have been solved decades ago remains in limbo.
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For 25 years the murder of Ena Cordt and her son Rory in their Forsyth home, has remained an open case in Missouri. The Missouri Highway Patrol say they do not consider the confession of a convicted serial killer as true. In fact, the patrol told The Ozarks Sentinel earlier this year that, “He is not a suspect. He has been dismissed.”
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Tommy Lynn Sells

In Texas, where Tommy Lynn Sells sits in a cell, a Texas Ranger who was been interviewing Sells since 2000 disagrees and says the double homicide in Taney County is one he strongly believes Sells committed.

New evidence uncovered could point to another suspect, or two, according to the serial killer.

So, why the difference of opinion between these two law enforcement agencies? To understand that, one needs to go back 25 years and closely examine what Sells said happened and just who he claims was involved. One also needs to examine the early life of Sells and what motivated him to become of the nation’s most prolific serial killers.

Sells was born along with his twin sister, on June 28, 1964. His twin sister died a short time later from a high fever. Sells exhibited the same high fever at age 18 months, but survived. Early in his life Sells was sent to live with his mother’s Aunt Bonnie, and during that time his mother never visited. Aunt Bonnie wanted to adopt Sells, but his mother took him back and refused to allow him to visit her again.

Aunt Bonnie said in an interview years later that Sells’ favorite activity was to ride his tricycle up and down a sidewalk. Sells claims that this was one of the only bright spots in his entire life.

At age seven, Sells said he began to drink alcohol that was kept at his grandfather’s house. In talks with psychiatrists following his capture, he said the alcohol was hidden...but when he found it he would drink as much as he could. In 1972, at the age of eight, Sells befriended a known pedophile in the Missouri town of Frisbee. At age 10 he began smoking marijuana and told
psychologists that he continued to drink heavily and use drugs up to the time of his arrest.

Other aspects of Sell’s early life are mired in controversy. Sells claims he had sex with other aunts and even his mother. His mother discounted the story and claims such acts never happened.

One key incident Sells claims affected him was when his mother would entertain men in a motel room that they lived in. Sells said he watched through the window as his mother engaged in improper acts with the men. That incident, he claimed, would play a role in what happened in 1985.

July 26, 1985 was a typical summer day in the Ozarks. In the small town of Forsyth, MO., the Taney County Fair was underway and people from around the area were enjoying all the fair had to offer. According to some, the fair is where Sells encountered Cordt and her son and made the decision to go home with the attractive woman and have sex with her.

At least that’s the popular story told on web sites across the Internet. It’s not what Sells claims happened, although the fair does play a pivotal role in the murders.

At the time Cordt, who was known as a young woman who like to party, worked at a dress shop and sometimes at a local car wash. Her mother worked for the Taney County Clerk. The single mother didn’t have a lot of money, but she managed to get by and did the best she could raising her son. By most accounts, she got along well with her mother and visited her at the courthouse where the clerk’s office was located.
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During the time of the county fair, Cordt would have been very aware of the murder of a young woman 38 days earlier just a few miles up the road in Nixa. It was front pages news for most papers in several neighboring counties and was the top story on local television news for several weeks.

Police had discovered the body of 20 year-old Jackie Johns floating in Lake Springfield in June of 1985. Despite some leads, police were unable to identify a suspect and that case would also remain unsolved for decades. A break in the cold case finally came in 2007 when a Sgt. with the Highway Patrol asked to investigate the the cold case.

The work of Sgt. Dan Nash led to the arrest of businessman Gerald Carnahan, who was always the chief suspect in the case, and who is now scheduled to go to trial for Johns' murder in September. Carnahan is represented by attorney's Dee Wampler and Joe Passanise.

Carnahan's life in 1985 and years after held almost as much drama as Sells’. In 1986 a grand jury indicted the businessman for allegedly tampering with evidence connected to Johns' murder. A judge dismissed the case, saying "lying does not constitute physical evidence." In 1987 Carnahan's step-daughter, Sara Collins, was indicted by a grand jury for perjury for allegedly lying about her stepfather's whereabouts the night Johns went missing. A judge found her not guilty (The Ozarks Sentinel will have the complete Carnahan timeline and trial coverage when his trial gets underway.)

So, on that fateful summer day in 1985, Cordt was aware that someone, unknown to police at the time, was killing women in the Ozarks. Being approached by Sells at the fair, and as some insist, being asked to take him home with her (Cordt), seems remote at best.

The story that Sells is telling now, and has been for at least a decade, is much more sinister.

“Now I am certain that this is the same Deputy who faced me down for making some remark to that woman at the Taney County Fair,” Sells writes in a letter obtained by The Ozarks Sentinel. “He asked me if I wanted her and acted tough. Then he told me that if he said the word, she would accuse me of rape and I’d be in prison for the rest of my life.”

Sells indicates that a Taney County deputy approached him at the fair, (where witnesses saw Cordt and her son) and that the deputy admonished him for making a pass at the woman. If true, that deputy was one of the first to know Sells was in the Forsyth area, unless of course, he was in the area at the request of someone else.

Interestingly, five days earlier, Sells had been questioned by local police about the theft of a car. He was, at the time, a patient at New Horizons Drug Rehabilitation Center in Blue Eye after being released from prison for felony theft. According to records, he left the center shortly after being questioned.

Sells was on parole at the time and the deputy should have arrested him rather than letting him go. So why did he choose to let Sells go? Was it that decision that eventually led to the murder of more than nine and as many as 20 people by Sells, who became known as the Coast-to-Coast Killer?

In her book, "Through the Window," published in 2003, Diane Fanning helped perpetuate the story that Sells picked Cordt up at the Taney County Fair, but it is an inaccurate account of what happened, at least according to Sells.

Sells paints a much different picture of the crime in letters written to an area man who has worked on the case for several years, and who is considered to be an expert on Sells by at least one state agency. He has appeared on national television shows as an expert on Sells.

In another letter Sells states that the murder of Ena and Rory wasn’t a random act, but rather a murder for which he was to be paid $2,500. Sells states in his written correspondence that the deputy not only threatened him with the accusation of a rape, but convinced him to agree to take on a murder in exchange for the money.

“I knew I was in trouble so I asked a friend I was drinking with what to do,” Sells writes.

According to Sells, the deputy was also the same one who was sent to Texas to interview him following his arrest by law enforcement in that state. That officer was also running for political office at the time of the 2000 interview, something that lends credibility to Sells' claim of conspiracy within local government at the time of Ena and Rory Cordt's murder.

While Sells' letter does name some names, it also names positions of those elected to public office that he claims hired him to kill Cordt.

In next week’s edition we’ll examine more of the claims of Sells and tell you what he claimed led to the double homicide of Ena and Rory Cordt.


THE MISSOURI HIGHWAY PATROL IS ACTIVELY SEEKING INFORMATION ON THIS CASE AND IS REQUESTING THAT ANYONE WITH INFORMATION CONCERNING THE DEATH OF ENA CORDT AND HER SON RORY, CONTACT THEM AT 866-362-6422.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Southwest City Police Office Charged With Manslaughter In Shooting:

Bobby L. Stacy (family photo)

A police officer in Southwest City has been charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection to the deadly shooting of a man following a traffic stop five months ago.

McDonald County Prosecutor Janice Durbin filed the charge today against Brian G. Massa, 34, of Anderson, after a lengthy investigation by the Missouri Highway Patrol.

According to the probable cause statement written by Highway Patrol Sgt. James Musche, Bobby L. Stacy, 26, was in a stolen GMC Suburban shortly before 2 a.m. on March 28 when Massa attempted to stop the vehicle on the parking lot of Seven Sons storage in Southwest City.
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Brian Massa (mug shot MCSO)

The Suburban stopped on the lot for a few moments then sped away after Massa exited his patrol car. Massa pursued the Suburban with his lights and sirens activated, southbound on Missouri 43 through Southwest City.

Based on footage from Massa's dash cam video, at approximately 02: 15 :40, the Suburban ran off the right side of Frye Road into a ditch, approximately 1 mile from Missouri Route PP. At approximately 02:15:47 the Suburban accelerated out of the ditch, traveling back northbound on Frye Road as Massa's patrol car was coming to a stop. At approximately 02:15:48, the drivers door of the stolen Suburban struck the front bumper of the patrol car causing minor damage.

Based on the footage from Officer Massa's in dash cam and footage from the digital video recorder attached to a jacket he was wearing, Officer Massa opened the door of his patrol car and began to exit as the Suburban passed by his driver's door.

In a matter of five seconds Massa fired four rounds form his service issued revolver. Based on trajectory analysis, one shot entered the right rear cargo window and and hit the roof, another hit the left rear passenger door and another passed through the rear passenger window.

At 02:15:54 Officer Massa fired the fourth and fatal shot which struck Stacy in the right side of the head. Stacy was transported to a hospital in Grove, Oklahoma and then air lifted to a hospital in Tulsa where he died the next day.
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In the court document Musche writes McDonald County sheriff’s deputy Richard Gidcumb told him he saw Massa pick up a shell casing lying in the road between Massa’s patrol car and the SUV.

"When processing the scene on Frye Road on the morning of March 28, 2010, I only recovered 3 of the 4 shell casings, all of which were located near the front of the patrol car. Based on the evidence, Massa fired the fatal shot approximately five seconds after [the] Suburban had passed by his location and could no longer be a threat to his or any other person’s immediate safety,” Musche wrote.

Massa says he feared the Suburban was going to strike him which led t0 him firing four founds in rapid succession into the driver's side of the Suburban.

Massa, who turned himself in after a warrant was issued for his arrest, has been released on his own recognizance. He has been placed on paid administrative leave pending resolution of the case.

Carthage Man Could Get Twenty Years For Raping Infant:

Christopher Wayne Cooper (mug shot JCSO)

A man from Carthage is facing up to 20 years in prison after pleading guilty to raping a baby girl three years ago.

Christopher Wayne Cooper, 27, pleaded guilty Monday in Jasper County Circuit Court in Joplin to first-degree statutory rape, an offense that carries a punishment range of 10 to 30 years, or life, in prison in Missouri.

According to court documents, the 1-year-old little girl had been in Cooper’s care for three days when she fell down some stairs. Cooper undressed the infant and removed her diaper to check her injuries. He says it was at that point that he decided to rape her.

Cooper entered into a plea deal with the Jasper County prosecutor’s office. As part of the plea agreement prosecutors say they will ask that he not serve more than 20 years. Judge David Dally delayed formal acceptance or rejection of the plea bargain and set sentencing for November 1st.

Cooper has been in custody at Fulton State Hospital pending the outcome of his criminal case.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Inmate Charged In Plot To Kill Christian County Sheriff's Deputy:

Cody James Hastings (mug shot CCSO)

A Christian County man already behind bars for alleged child abuse and domestic assault is in more trouble with the law for allegedly plotting to kill a deputy in Christian County.

Christian County Prosecutor Ron Cleek says Cody James Hastings, 34, of Clever, allegedly told two other inmates incarcerated in the county jail that he wanted to kill Deputy Richard "Brett" Leslie.

According to the probable cause statement filed with the charges, Hastings was being held in booking cell #66 with Jimmie M. Williamson and Jesse L. Waltz when Leslie brought in a prisoner. He told his cellmates that he was mad because Leslie had arrested him and that he wanted to kill him. Waltz told Hastings he knew where Leslie lived and allegedly drew him a map of how to get to the deputy's house.

Waltz told Deputy D. J. Outhouse, "Cody said he would use a guitar E-string to slit Deputy Leslie's throat while he was sleeping. Jesse (Waltz) said Cody then said he would shoot him with a .38 multiple times saying there would probably have to be multiple gunshots. Jesse said Cody said he would use a .38 because it would be easier. Jesse told me Cody asked him about neighbors and said he would take Deputy Leslie to an open field so the bullets could just pass through him."

Waltz told Outhouse he drew Hastings a "fake" map of where the deputy lived, and that Hastings asked him if the deputy had a wife, kids, or dog, and asked about the deputy's neighbors.
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Jimmie Williamson (mug shto CCSO)

Williamson, who is also facing charges of conspiracy to commit murder, told Outhouse he didn't think Hastings was serious until he heard the other inmate giving Hastings directions to the deputy's house. "He (Williamson) didn't know if Jesse provided Cody with an actual drawn map to Deputy Leslie's house but he overheard Jesse's verbal directions and that they were detailed enough to provide him a mental map."

Williamson says he warned Leslie that he was in danger.

Outhouse said he interviewed Hastings after reading the man his rights. Hastings admitted getting a map to the deputy's home from one of the other inmates. "Cody told me Jesse gave him a map to Deputy Leslie's house. Cody provided me with a reconstruction of the map he said Jesse (Waltz) gave him and I noticed that it matched very closely to the one Jesse had given me before. Cody told me he asked Jesse several questions about Deputy Leslie's house including: type of siding, trees and fence in the yard, location of neighbors, and if he had a wife, kids, or dog."

"Cody said he didn't really have any intention of killing Leslie," the detective wrote in the probable cause statement, "then immediately said, 'I thought about it, I wanted it, you know what I mean.' Cody said, 'I'd like to do it.' Cody said, 'Like you said, ya, you can't away with a cop, killing a cop.'"

The plan was allegedly hatched between August 11 - 18th.

According to online court records, Hastings has been convicted of third-degree assault, domestic assault, and theft. He was being held on $27,500 bond on the domestic violence and child abuse charges.

His bond on the conspiracy to commit murder charge has been set at $75,000. If convicted, Hastings could face anywhere between 5 and 15 years in prison.

Assault Charges Upgraded To Murder In Loftis' Death:

Billy Ray Hankins (mug shot GCSO)

A career criminal originally charged with assault for running down his wife's former boyfriend with his truck last month is now facing murder charges following the mans death.

Prosecutors say Billy Ray Hankins, 56, of Springfield, allegedly attempted to run over several people before he backed his truck over forty four year-old Charles Loftis near Harrison and Laurel. Loftis died from his injuries about two weeks after he was critically injured.

Court records indicate that a group of men went to confront Hankins for allegedly beating his wife. When authorities arrived, Hankins had already fled and a police dog was called in to track the man. Hankins was found hiding in some bushes not far from the scene of the assault.

According to court documents, Hankins allegedly told investigators his wife called six to 10 men on motorcycles and in black trucks to beat him up, and that those men shot the tires off his vehicle.

Hankins, whose preliminary hearing is set for September 30th, is being held in the Greene County jail on $200,000 bond.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Missouri Supreme Court Overturns Conviction Of Post Office Burglar From Neosho:

Dwight Laughlin mug shot (MODOC)

A Neosho man who has spent 17 years in prison for burglarizing a post office in Neosho has been ordered released because he was tried in state court.

The Missouri Supreme Court ruled the state did not have jurisdiction to charge, convict and sentence Dwight Laughlin because the burglary occurred on federal property.

The fifty one year-old man was sentenced to 40 years in prison for first-degree burglary and first-degree property damage stemming from the February 1993 break-in at a Neosho post office.

When Laughlin was arrested by authorities inside the post office they found a scanner tuned to the Neosho police frequency, a flashlight, crowbar, pipe wrench, screwdrivers and bags containing mail, stamps and money. By the time they got there a combination lock to a safe had been removed.

Laughlin, who was sentenced as a repeat offender, already has served more time in prison than the five year-sentence he would have received if he had been convicted in federal court and the statute of limitations to charge him has expired.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Former Greene County Jailer Charged With Drug Possession:

John Nicholas Edmonds (mug shot GCSO)

A former Greene County jailer who used to enforce the law found himself behind the same bars he once put criminals after a three month investigation into the jailers alleged drug activity outside of work.

After the three month investigation, prompted by a tip by a citizen, a search warrant was served at the home of John Nicholas Edmonds and Andrea Evans at 2254 E. Livingston on August 6th. Authorities allegedly found pot, methamphetamine and assorted drug paraphernalia in the raid.

Edmonds, who had been a jailer in Greene County for about 11 years, was fired the same day. An internal investigation found no evidence of Edmonds supplying drugs to inmates.
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Andrea Edmonds (mug shot GCSO)

COMET Drug Task Force officers reported a strong smell of marijuana in the home during the search and Andrea Edmonds allegedly admitted to officers that she bought meth the night before.

Charges have not been filed against two other adult family members who were in the home at the time of the raid.
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Both of the Edmonds, who have been charged with drug possession, were released from jail after posting $1,000 bond each.
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COMET and the Missouri Highway Patrol assisted in the investigation.

Joplin Man Charged With Raping Girlfriends 8 Year-Old Daughter:


A Joplin man has been charged with statutory rape and statutory sodomy of an 8-year-old girl.

Prosecutors say twenty eight year-old Daniel L. Menteer allegedly inappropriately touched his girlfriends daughter. Menteer was arrested in a Joplin courtroom when he appeared for another matter.

In 2004 Menteer was sentenced to four years in prison after he pled guilty to deviate sexual assault of a child under the age of 14.
Menteer is being held in the Jasper County jail on $20,000 bond.

Four Charged With Kidnapping In Jasper County:

Donald D. Simonds Jr. (mug shot JCSO)

Five people have been charged with allegedly kidnapping a Joplin man late Thursday night and restraining him for over five hours in a home in rural Carthage.

Prosecutors have charged Donald D. Simonds Jr., 36, Carthage; Darrell W. Thomason, 41, Jasper; Brandy L. Swinford, 22, Lamar and Christopher B. Haskins, 25, of Carthage with kidnapping.
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Darrell W. Thomason (mug shot JCSO)

Jasper County Sheriff's Captain Derek Walrod says investigators are still trying to piece together exactly what happened after Ricky Prigg, 54, got into a vehicle with Simonds, Thomason, Swinford and Haskins. Walrod says somewhere along the drive to 10607 Cedar Road Ricky Prigg, 54, was tied up.

Walrod says Prigg somehow was able to free himself after being held for five and a half hours and ran through woods to an RV lot and had a someone call 9-1-1. "We're still looking for a motive in the case. At this point Mr. Prigg says the incident was not related to drug activity."
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Christopher B. Haskins (mug shot JCSO)

Walrod said Prigg sustained some cuts and scrapes as he ran through the woods when he bolted from the house.

While officers were waiting on a search warrant for the residence, a car full of suspects attempted to leave and were arrested. Walrod says, "When they were stopped, they were trying to burn a controlled substance with a three year-old child in the vehicle."

Simonds and Thomason have been charged with kidnapping, possession of a controlled substance with the intent to distribute, tampering with evidence and endangering the welfare of a child. They are each being held in the Jasper County jail on $65,000 bond. Haskins has been charged with kidnapping and is being held on $50,000 bond.
Jamie D. Delmont, 28 of Carthage was arrested on an outstanding warrant.
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Brandy L. Swinford (mug shot JCSO)

Swinford, the little girl's mother, has been charged with possession of a controlled substance with the intent to distribute, tampering and endangering the welfare of a child. She is being held on $15,000 bond.

The little girl has been placed in protective custody with the Division of Family Services.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Store Employee In Branson Critically Injured Trying To Subdue Shoplifter:


An employee of a shoe store in Branson is fighting for his life tonight in a Springfield hospital after he was critically injured as he attempted to subdue a shoplifter shortly after 10:00 a.m. at Shoe Carnival on Branson Hills Parkway.

Branson police say the employee followed a black male in his late teen's or early 20's to a Chrysler Sebring convertaible (that has extensive body damage) and was holding onto the vehcile when he fell and hit his head as the vehicle sped away.

The shoplifting suspect is a black male, approximately 5'5"-5'7" tall, with a thin build. He was wearing a black t-shirt and baggy blue jeans. The driver of the getaway vehicle is a white male, approximately 6'-6'3" tall, with a large build last seen wearing a white shirt and black gym shorts.

If you have any information that can help police you're asked to call the Branson Police Department at 417-334-3300 or 9-1-1. To remain anonymous call the department's CATCH line at 417-334-1085.

FULL PRESS RELEASE:

The Branson Police Department is investigating an incident that left an employee of the Shoe Carnival Store on the Branson Hills Parkway in critical condition. The incident occurred at approximately 10:15 a.m. this morning when a man shoplifted a pair of shoes from the store. The man then ran out into the parking lot and entered a vehicle with a second male. As they left the area, the store employee attempted to stop them by hanging onto the vehicle. He then fell as the vehicle sped away. The employee sustained head injuries and was airlifted to Cox South Hospital in Springfield, where he is listed in critical condition.

The suspects were described as both being in their late teens or early 20's. The suspect taking the shoes is described as a black male, approximately 5'5"-5'7" tall, with a thin build. He was wearing a black t-shirt and baggy blue jeans. The second suspect, the driver of the vehicle, is described as a white male, approximately 6'-6'3" tall, with a large build. He was wearing a white shirt and black gym shorts.

The suspect vehicle is an older model black Chrysler Sebring convertable with extensive body damage.

Anyone having information to offer regarding this incident is asked to contact the Branson Police Department at 334-3300 or to remain anonymous, the Department's CATCH line at 334-1085.

Illegal Immigrant Sentenced In Child Sex Case:


A man from Monett who was scheduled to go to trial on four counts of first-degree statutory sodomy with a child entered an Alford plea as jurors were being called for jury selection yesterday (08-18-10.)

Lawrence County Prosecutor Robert "Bob" George says twenty six year-old Audel Leonardo Lopez Rodriguez was the live in boyfriend of the ten and eleven year-old victim’s mother at the time of the offense. George says when one of the victims told her mom that Rodriguez had been touching her she immediately took the girls to a hospital.

“Our victims were 10 and 11 years of age at the time of the offenses. While both were prepared to testify against the defendant, they were relieved that they did not need to face him in the courtroom.” George noted.

Rodriquez was sentenced to four 15 year sentences that will be served concurrently (at the same time.) After Rodriquez serves at least 12 years behind bars he will be deported to Guatemala because he is in the country illegally.

Additional Charges Filed In Connection To Murder Near Bennett Springs State Park:

Jesse Dean Driskill (mug shot LCSO)

Additional charges have been filed against a Laclede County man accused of killing an elderly couple in their home near Bennett Springs State Park last month.

Laclede County Prosecutor Angie Hemphill-Wright filed forcible rape and sodomy charges against Jesse Dean Driskill after autopsy results confirmed that seventy six year-old Coleen Wilson was raped before she was shot to death.

Coleen Wilson and her husband, Johnnie, 80, were discovered dead in their modest home July 27th. Court documents reveal that the Wilson's were shot and an accelerant poured on their bodies.
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Johnnie and Coleen Wilson

Driskill, who was wanted for a parole violation, was spotted by a Laclede County deputy in the state park shortly before midnight on July 26th before he fled into a heavily wooded area. By all indications it appears that Driskill stumbled on the couples remote home which is about two miles from where he was last seen.

The probable cause statement says that the Wilson's discovered Driskill stealing property outside and confronted him.

Driskill allegedly confessed to someone who picked him up in Dallas County, not far from where the Wilson's stolen vehicle was found on fire, that he killed a couple and set their house on fire.

Wright says that the aggravating factors in the case could lead either she, or the newly elected prosecutor, to seek the death penalty.

Driskill's preliminary hearing is scheduled for September 22nd.

Murder Trial Of Willard Babysitter Postponed:

Lucas Payton Theede-Bennett (family photo)

The murder trial of a babysitter from Willard that was supposed to begin next week has been postponed until November.

Defense lawyers for Brenda Jean Caringer asked for a continuance at a hearing yesterdays.

Caringer is charged with second-degree murder and child abuse resulting in death for the January 6, 2009, death of nine-month-old Lucas Payton Theede-Bennett.

Prosecutors filed both second degree murder and abuse of a child resulting in death to cover all aspects of this case. The charges were filed alternatively, meaning jurors---or a judge, could find Caringer guilty of either crime .....or neither.

An autopsy determined the infant died from abusive head injuries that are consistent with a crushed skull, and bleeding on the brain. The doctor that performed the autopsy said the baby's injuries were not more than two hours old and that Lucas would have been symptomatic immediately.

A pre-trial conference is scheduled for October 21st and jury selection is scheduled to begin on November 8th.
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A wrongful death lawsuit filed against Caringer by the Lucas' parents is making it's way through the court system. The next hearing will be held on September 9th.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Missing Branson Woman Found Alive!:

Louise Edna Parker

An elderly woman from Branson who had been missing for almost two days has been found alive.
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Sharon Green, who works at the recycling center in Branson, says eighty seven year-old Louise Edna Parker, "Wandered into the recycle center about 10 a.m. and asked me to call a taxi for her. " Green says when she went to her office to get a phone book it dawned on her that this could be the missing woman that authorities were searching for, "She found me!"

Green says Parker was talkative but thirsty. "She drank three glasses of water pretty quickly. She said it wasn't easy roughin' it in the woods for two days. She said she'd been hollerin', but nobody heard her."


Sharon Green (photo courtesy City of Branson)
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Parker sustained a bump to the head and some minor bruising when she fell into a ravine during the time she was missing. Assistant Police Chief Steve Dalton says, "after she fell in the ravine she laid there for a bit because she thought she had broken a bone. When she realized she hadn't, she said she had to climb back up the hill to retrieve her pocketbook. She said the only thing that scared her during her ordeal was when she saw a snake."
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Mona Menezes, who also works at the recycle center says, "She told us she had been to a program that talked about wildflowers out in the woods and she wanted to go find some lady slippers."
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Lady Slippers

Police say they aren't sure what wooded area Parker was lost in as the area is heavily wooded in the area just west of the home where Parker lives with her daughter, Betty Lou Smith, in Lakewood Estates.

Green says after she realized the woman she had with her was indeed Parker she called police and told them, "I have Ms. Parker here with me.....she's wants to go home."

Dalton says Parker is in good physical condition and was reunited with her daughter after the 40-hour ordeal. "I asked her if she was gonna do this again and she said yep.....I just want to go home and take a shower now. The only thing I think I convinced her of was to start carrying a cell phone so we could find her if she ever got lost again."

Green says, "I would like to sit down and chat with her. It's not everyday we recycle a missing person!"

Convict From Neosho Sentenced For Threatening To Kill President Obama:

Josh Randall McCallum (mug shot DOC)

A man from Neosho serving time in a Missouri prison for burglary and tampering in McDonald County in 2001, has been sentenced for threatening to kill President Barack Obama.
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The Ozarks Sentinel first told you about Josh Randall McCallum, 33, in October of last year after he pleaded guilty to sending the threat from the Bowling Green prison on August 3, 2009.
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While serving time in prison, McCallum was charged with unlawful use of a weapon in Randolph County. He was given an additional five years in prison after pleading guilty to that charge.

McCallum was incarcerated at the Northeast Correctional Center in Bowling Green in August 2009 when he mailed the threatening letter that read in part, "The president needs to be shot....if I was out there I would do it myself or at least try to. When I get out, all those I’ve mentioned will be dealt with.”
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The threat on the President's life will cost McCallum two and a half years behind bars in federal prison. He will also serve two years supervised release. He will begin serving the federal sentence after he is let out of state prison in 2018.
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McCallum was ordered to participate in mental health programs while in prison.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Stillings Remains Next Circuit Clerk After Recount:

Recount photo courtesy of Christian County Headliner

After a hand recount of ballots in Christian County today, it was determind that the next Circuit Clerk will be Barb Barnett-Stillings.

Stillings opponent, Amy Russell, who is currently deputy circuit clerk, petitioned the court for a recount on August 9th after she lost the election by .13 %. State statute allows a candidate to petition the court for a recount if the loss is less than 1 percent.
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Barb Barnett-Stillings

Christian County Clerk Kay Brown says 16 judges spent the majority of the day counting the ballots and at about 4:30 p.m. today the outcome remained the same.

Brown says that the recount showed an electronic machine at the West Finley precinct gave one vote to Stillings that should have gone to Russell and that reduced the margin of victory from 15 votes to 14. The recount cost taxpayers about $1,500.

The current Circuit Clerk, Rick Lamb, is retiring.

Commander Of Reserve Deputies In Baxter County, Arkansas Arrested For Alleged Domestic Assault:

Brian K. Rowe (mug shot BCSO)

The commander of reserve deputies in Baxter County, Arkansas has been suspended after his arrest last night (08-16-10) for misdemeanor domestic assault.
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Mountain Home police chief Carry Manuel says forty year-old Brian K. Rowe, of Mountain Home, was arrested by police in Mountain Home after a verbal fight between Rowe and his estranged wife allegedly became physical when Rowe shoved his 15 year-old stepson into a doorway, cutting the boy's head.

Rowe, who has been the commander of reserve deputies for the past two years, was released on $500 bond.

Baxter County Sheriff John Montgomery placed Rowe on administrative leave until his case is resolved in District Court.

Code Red Alert Issued In Branson For Missing Elderly Woman:

Edna Louis Parker

Authorities in Branson are asking for help from the public as they search for an eighty seven year-old woman who has been missing since about 4:00 p.m. Monday August 16th.

Assistant Police Chief Steve Dalton says Louise Edna Parker was last seen near her residence in the area Lakewood Estates near Lake Taneycomo. Parker was reported missing by a daughter she lives with.

Dalton says the Missouri Water Patrol is searching Lake Taneycomo near the woman's residence and Branson Landing.

Parker, who wears glasses, is 4-feet-11 inches tall, weighs 137 pounds, has gray hair and blue eyes. She was wearing a white t-shirt, dark colored capri pants and tennis shoes.

Dalton says Parker does not suffer from dementia or any serious medical conditions, "But she does like to visit with people. We hope that she's with friends."
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If you see Parker or have information on her whereabouts, call the Branson Police Department at 417-334-3300 or 9-1-1.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Enough Back And Forth....Schedule The Debates!:

Scott Eckersley

The Democratic candidate for the 7th District U.S. House seat is ready to rumble, but his opponent was on vacation and not responding to a series of debates according to a news release.

It's been two weeks since Scott Eckersley challenged Republican nominee Billy Long to a series of 10 debates, one in each of the counties that make up the 7th District, but still no word on when the two will hash out the issues.

In a news release Eckersly wrote, "I'm disappointed that Mr. Long isn't taking the public's call for candid debate more seriously. This is exactly the kind of attitude that frustrates the people of southwest Missouri."

The campaign manager for Long's campaign, Royce Reding says, the delay in scheduling the debates was because Long had been in Las Vegas for a vacation with his wife and daughters.
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Billy Long

"He enjoyed some time off with his family," said Reding. "It was a hard-fought 18 month campaign, and he needed a break."

"Now that Billy is back from vacation, he is rested and ready to move forward and campaign for the general election. If Scott Eckersley wants to make this into a circus, then he is going to need to bring his own tent. Maybe he just doesn’t want to tell us where he stands on earmarks, cap and trade, Obamacare, the stimulus, immigration reform or other important issues to Southwest Missourians.”

Eckersley is asking that newspapers in the ten counties sponsor the debates and would like questions to be selected by newspaper editors. He has proposed a series of one-hour debates on Tuesdays and Thursdays to be held in county courthouses at noon.

The Ozarks Sentinel has been selected to host the forum set for Stone County.

In a news release Eckersley stated, “There is a lot of work to be done before November. These are serious times and the people of southwest Missouri deserve more than 30-second sound bites. I intend to show the people of southwest Missouri that I’m here to work for them and respond to their questions and concerns.”

Reding said in a news release on Monday August 16th, "The Long for Congress campaign tried to reach Scott Eckersley on Friday (August 13th) at 11:16 a.m.; 2:18 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. No one picked up the phone at his campaign headquarters. At 4:03 p.m., Scott Eckersley himself answered the phone and told us he did not have time to talk with us.

Eckersley plans to hold a news conference at noon Tuesday August 17th on the steps of the Greene County courthouse outlining his plans to move forward with the district-wide courthouse debates.

Mountain Home Man Behind Bars For Alleged Sexual Assault Of Mentally Handicapped Child:

Anthony Ray Wiser (mug shot BCSO)

A Mountain Home, Arkansas man is behind bars after a local minister contacted police about the man allegedly sexually assaulting a 14 year-old mentally handicapped child.

The minister contacted Lt. Terry Johnson, with the Baxter County Sheriff's Office, and told him forty five year-old Anthony Ray Wiser wanted to turn himself in to "make things right."

Wiser has been charged with forcible rape and second-degree sexual assault. He is being held in the Baxter County jail on $25,000 bond.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Arkansas Man Charged For Threatening To Kill Child For Walking On Street:

Emile Joseph Landry (mug shot BCASO)

An elderly man from Salesville, Arkansas has been charged with threatening to kill a little boy for walking down the street with his skateboard.

Baxter County Sheriff John Montgomery says Emile Joseph Landry, 74, began yelling at the 11 year-old as the child was walking down the street.

Landry was charged with terroristic threatening after a witness told authorities Landry threatened to kill the child and told the child he had a gun and would shoot him. The witness told the deputy that Landry removed a .22 caliber handgun from his pocket and handed it to him to keep before deputies arrived on scene.
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Both the witness and child said Landry did not displayed the weapon during the incident.

Landry is being held in the Baxter County jail on $10,000.

Nixa Woman Sentenced To 30 Days Shock For Stealing From Dentist:

Sandra Jean Martin (mug shot CCSO)

A woman who pleaded guilty to stealing at least a hundred thousand dollars from the dentist she worked for in Nixa has been sentenced.

Prosecutor Ron Cleek says Sandra Jean Martin, Nixa, doctored the books and hid credit card statements from Dr. Michael Butterfield.

Martin was sentenced to five years probation. She was ordered to serve 30 days shock time in the Christian County jail and has to pay Butterfield $114, 842.25 in restitution.

Court documents reveal that Butterfield became alarmed when his credit card was declined. When he asked Martin for the statements, she left a resignation note on her desk and left.

Busy Week For Tri-Lakes Internet Crimes Task Force; Springfield Man Nabbed:

Edward T. Resch (mug shot SCSO)

The Tri-Lakes Internet Crimes Task Force has busted a Springfield man after a ten month investigation by authorities in Stone County.

Stone County Sheriff Richard Hill says, Edward T. Resch, 51, was arrested on August 12th by deputies with the Stone and Greene County sheriff’s offices. Resch has been charged with sexual misconduct of a child after allegedly sending pornographic material to an undercover detective posing as a 14 year-old girl.

After Resch was arrested, detectives executed a search warrant at his home and recovered electronic media components allegedly used in the crime.

Resch is being held in the at the Stone County Jail on $20,000 bond.

Family From Arkansas Busted After Attempting To Shop Lift From Branson Wal-Mart:




A family from Bergman, Arkansas found themselves bars in Taney County after allegedly going on a shopping spree without paying for their merchandise.

Prosecutors have charged Larry Sowders, 54, Diana Sowders, 58, their son Chase, 21, and his 17 year-old wife, Christian with felony stealing after they attempted to steal almost $1,700 worth of merchandise from the Branson Wal-Mart on Branson Hills Parkway by pushing their loaded shopping carts out the door.

They each posted $10,000 bond and are scheduled to appear in court on September 20th.

Part of the bond conditions state that none of the Sowders can step foot on the premises of ANY Wal-Mart.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Conservation Agents Warn Motorists To Be On The Lookout For Black Bear As Second Bear Is Hit:

Bear fatally injured (photo courtesy of Neosho Daily News)

The Missouri Highway Patrol and conservation agents are warning motorists to be on the lookout for black bears after a young male bear was hit yesterday on Highway 59 near Neosho.

A motorist called the Missouri Department of Conservation in Springfield after a witnessing a motorist in front of them hit the bear. Deputies with the Newton County Sheriff's Office and Highway Patrol troopers responded to the call.

The young bear, who weighed about 150 pounds, had to be euthanized after injuries to his side and back legs left him unable to stand. This is the second black bear killed in as many months. Another young male bear was killed after being hit by a car on I-44 near Sarcoxie in June.

"Our bear population has been slowly increasing over the years. Keep in mind that a bear can surprise you just as quickly as a deer. They move pretty quick, so motorists need to be on the lookout for them around wooded areas," said Scott Burger, Missouri Department of Conservation protection district supervisor.

It is illegal to hunt black bear in Missouri, but there is no penalty if you hit one of the animals.

Burger says agents and landowners are seeing more and more of the animals that were once native to the area. "They're making a comeback. We didn't re-introduce the bears to the area, they're migrating north from Arkansas. We are going to get together with landowners and set some trap sites so we can tag some of the animals and fit them with radio collars so we have an idea of the number of bear in the area."

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

UPDATED: Howell County Woman Charged In Plot To Kill Husband:

Tamera K. Gower Lindsley (mug shot HCSO)

A Howell County woman is behind bars for allegedly attempting to hire undercover cops to kill her husband.

Prosecutors say that Tamera K. Gower Lindsley, 42, Willow Springs, thought she was talking to two hit men when she plotted to have her husband, James, killed.
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According to the probable cause statement, Lindsley allegedly offered to give D.D. L. and M. L. B. her part in the bar, Times Lost, that she and her husband own if they would kill her husband. She also told them that after her husband was dead she would move to Michigan.
D.D.L and M. L B. went to authorities and told them of the plan.
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Lindsley allegedly supplied the undercover officers with bullets and weapons to kill her husband. However, she told them she wanted the 12-gauge Remington shotgun back after she paid them $5,000 because it was a family heirloom.

On August 5th prosecutors charged Tamera Lindsley with third-degree domestic assault. The probable cause statement says she allegedly punched her husband in the face several times during an alleged assault on her husband in July.
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On the same day, prosecutors charged James Lindsley with second-degree domestic assault for an incident on August 4th in which he allegedly threw a glass mug that hit his wife in the back of the head causing a laceration.
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Lt. Albert Jones with the Howell County Sheriff's Office says, "It's an ongoing situation with those two or up at their bar. In fact, he's waiting in the lobby right now to talk to me."
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Tamera Lindsley, who was charged with conspiracy to commit murder, is being held in the Howell County jail on a $100,000 cash only bond.

Two Prisoners At Fed Med Indicted For Fellow Inmates Death In January:

Federal Medical Center For Prisoners--Springfield, MO

Two prisoners at the Federal Medical Center for Prisoners in Springfield have been charged with murder for the death of a fellow inmate last January.

Repeated attempts to obtain the April indictments were unsuccessful. They were finally forwarded to The Ozarks Sentinel this morning.

A grand jury indicted Wesley Paul Coonce Jr., 30, Mansfield, Texas, and Charles Michael Hall, 39, for the January 26th murder of Victor Castro-Rodriquez.

Castro-Rodriquez, 51, who was incarcerated "because he was dangerous due to mental illness" was found unresponsive in his cell. After failed attempts to resuscitate him, Castro-Rodriquez was pronounced dead about 8:40 p.m.

Warden Marty Anderson says that Castro-Rodriquez, who was from southern Florida had been incarcerated at the Fed Med since 2002, and did not have a cell mate.

The indictments state:

  • 1. The death or injuries resulting in death, occurred during the commission or
    attempted commission, of an offense (murder by prisoner serving life
    term.)

  • 2. The defendant has previously been convicted of 2 or more Federal or State
    offenses punishable by a term of imprisonment of more than 1 year, committed on different occasions, involving the infliction of, or attempted infliction of, serious bodily injury or death.
  • 3. The defendant committed the offense in an especially heinous, cruel, or depraved
    manner in that it involved torture or serious physical abuse to Victor Castro-Rodriguez.

  • 4. The defendant committed the offense after substantial planning and premeditation
    to cause the death of Victor Castro-Rodriguez.

  • 5. The victim, Victor Castro-Rodriguez, was particularly vulnerable due to infirmity,
    in this case, mental illness.
Coonce was sentenced to life in prison after he pleaded guilty to kidnapping and carjacking a woman from the parking lot of a Fort Worth grocery store in March of 2002. Coonce sexually assaulted the woman in Texas and Oklahoma then told her he was taking her to Michigan.
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The woman told authorities that after Coonce stopped for gas in Missouri, she grabbed the truck keys off the store counter when he turned away. She ran back to the truck and attempted to flee but the emergency brake was engaged. When she ran back into the convenience store and asked the clerk to call police, Coonce fled in her pickup.
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Charles Michael Hall is incarcerated at the Fed Med for making telephone bomb threats targeting former President George Bush's Kennebunkport home and the Portland International Jetport while he was incarcerated on an unrelated matter .  He also mailing threatening letters to the U. S. Attorney Jay P. McCloskey who was investigating the bomb threats. He was scheduled to be released from prison on September 27, 2018.

Taney County Man Convicted Of Stabbing Girlfriend Last Summer:

Donald Shane Sperling (mug shot TCSO)

After two days of testimony and fifteen minutes of deliberation, a jury in Taney County has convicted a man who repeatedly stabbed his girlfriend last summer in Hollister.

Forty-one-year-old Donald Shane Sperling, Forsyth, will be sentenced in November for first-degree assault and armed criminal action.

On June 25, 2009, Sperling and his girlfriend, (T. M.) were in a verbal dispute on the front lawn of a residence on Iowa Colony Road in Hollister when the verbal fight allegedly became physical and Sperling stabbed the woman multiple times.

According to court documents, after the victim (T. M.) was stabbed she stumbled inside and told her son, "I'm going to die, he stabbed me." The victim's son met the ambulance at a central location because they lived in a remote area, and his mother's wounds were life threatening.

T.M. was transported to Skaggs hospital then transferred to a Springfield hospital with critical injuries.

The day after the assault, Sperling walked in to the Ava police department and told them he was wanted in Hollister for stabbing his girlfriend multiple times the night before.

Sperling is scheduled to be sentenced November 4th.