Showing posts with label child murder murder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label child murder murder. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Custodial dad sentenced to 16 years for stabbing death of 6-year-old son (Los Angeles, California)
Convicted child killer ALEJANDRO SANCHEZ was a custodial father--though that fact is not reported here. True to one of our major axioms here at Dastardly Dads, the killer dad's custodial status is typically "forgotten" by the time he goes to trial.
See our previous post.
http://homicide.latimes.com/post/father-sentenced-16-years-life-stabbing-death-6-year-old-son/
Father sentenced to 16 years to life in stabbing death of 6-year-old son
Posted Aug. 3, 2015, 4:34 p.m.
A father who stabbed his 6-year-old son to death last year was sentenced Aug. 3 to 16 years to life in prison.
Alejandro Sanchez, a 39-year-old Latino, pleaded no contest in June to second-degree murder and using a knife to kill Nathan Sanchez inside a small white trailer behind their home in South L.A. in June 2014.
Sanchez was under the influence of methamphetamine when he killed his son, prosecutors said. Authorities said Sanchez was found standing in his front yard on East 88th Street, speaking incoherently.
Nathan’s body was found on a bed inside a trailer tucked behind a home in the Florence-Firestone neighborhood.
Nathan had been stabbed with a kitchen knife and later died at St. Francis Medical Center. Sanchez’s sister, Yolanda Sanchez-Santoyo, told The Times last year that she was stunned by the boy's death.
“He was my nephew and I loved him very much,” Sanchez said.
-- Joseph Serna
See our previous post.
http://homicide.latimes.com/post/father-sentenced-16-years-life-stabbing-death-6-year-old-son/
Father sentenced to 16 years to life in stabbing death of 6-year-old son
Posted Aug. 3, 2015, 4:34 p.m.
A father who stabbed his 6-year-old son to death last year was sentenced Aug. 3 to 16 years to life in prison.
Alejandro Sanchez, a 39-year-old Latino, pleaded no contest in June to second-degree murder and using a knife to kill Nathan Sanchez inside a small white trailer behind their home in South L.A. in June 2014.
Sanchez was under the influence of methamphetamine when he killed his son, prosecutors said. Authorities said Sanchez was found standing in his front yard on East 88th Street, speaking incoherently.
Nathan’s body was found on a bed inside a trailer tucked behind a home in the Florence-Firestone neighborhood.
Nathan had been stabbed with a kitchen knife and later died at St. Francis Medical Center. Sanchez’s sister, Yolanda Sanchez-Santoyo, told The Times last year that she was stunned by the boy's death.
“He was my nephew and I loved him very much,” Sanchez said.
-- Joseph Serna
Thursday, February 19, 2015
Dad faces murder charges in death of 2-month-old son (Butler County, Ohio)
Dad is identified as AUSTIN MORRIS. No mention of a mother in the home. Was there one?
Here we find out that it was the mother's second day back at work after maternity leave. This is why we need longer maternity leaves for moms. So they don't have to leave their babies with violent, impulsive fathers who are so easily "frustrated."
http://www.journal-news.com/news/news/crime-law/fairfield-dad-faces-murder-charge-in-death-of-infa/nkDRg/
Posted: 11:16 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2015
Fairfield dad faces murder charge in death of infant son
By Lauren Pack Staff Writer
BUTLER COUNTY — A Fairfield father is now facing a murder charge for allegedly causing the death of his 2-month-old son.
Austin Morris, 23, of West Point Pleasant Circle, was indicted today by a Butler County grand jury for felony child endangering. Fairfield police say Morris caused the injuries on Jan. 13 that led to the death of his infant son two days later.
Morris was originally charge with felonious assault and child endangering hours after the child was taken to Cincinnati Children’s Medical Center where he died of his injuries, according to police.
At a preliminary hearing last month in Fairfield Municipal Court, Fairfield police detective Rebecca Ervin said that while questioning Morris on Jan. 13, he told her he became frustrated with the infant, Benjamin, while giving him a bottle at his home.
He “shook the baby and threw him against the wall,” Ervin testified. Morris told her he believed the baby struck his head against a windowsill after he was thrown.
Doctors at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center said the infant had several head injuries, including a skull fracture, and did not think the injuries were accidental, Ervin said during testimony.
Morris is being held in the Butler County Jail in lieu of $500,000 bond. He is scheduled to be arraigned on the indictment at 8:30 a.m. Feb. 25 in Judge Craig Hedric’s courtroom.
Here we find out that it was the mother's second day back at work after maternity leave. This is why we need longer maternity leaves for moms. So they don't have to leave their babies with violent, impulsive fathers who are so easily "frustrated."
http://www.journal-news.com/news/news/crime-law/fairfield-dad-faces-murder-charge-in-death-of-infa/nkDRg/
Posted: 11:16 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2015
Fairfield dad faces murder charge in death of infant son
By Lauren Pack Staff Writer
BUTLER COUNTY — A Fairfield father is now facing a murder charge for allegedly causing the death of his 2-month-old son.
Austin Morris, 23, of West Point Pleasant Circle, was indicted today by a Butler County grand jury for felony child endangering. Fairfield police say Morris caused the injuries on Jan. 13 that led to the death of his infant son two days later.
Morris was originally charge with felonious assault and child endangering hours after the child was taken to Cincinnati Children’s Medical Center where he died of his injuries, according to police.
At a preliminary hearing last month in Fairfield Municipal Court, Fairfield police detective Rebecca Ervin said that while questioning Morris on Jan. 13, he told her he became frustrated with the infant, Benjamin, while giving him a bottle at his home.
He “shook the baby and threw him against the wall,” Ervin testified. Morris told her he believed the baby struck his head against a windowsill after he was thrown.
Doctors at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center said the infant had several head injuries, including a skull fracture, and did not think the injuries were accidental, Ervin said during testimony.
Morris is being held in the Butler County Jail in lieu of $500,000 bond. He is scheduled to be arraigned on the indictment at 8:30 a.m. Feb. 25 in Judge Craig Hedric’s courtroom.
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Dad charged with murder in beating death of 4-year-old son; was this a custodial situation? (Marion County, Indiana)
Some interesting things are said--and not said--here.
Notice that dad DENNIS PRICE admitted (or so the police say) that he beat this child to death OVER SEVERAL DAYS. Which raises the question of why did another adult (i.e. the mother?) NOT intervene? If there was another adult in the home, and this person failed to intervene, then typically that person is charged with child neglect or some variation thereof.
But that didn't happen. Which suggests that Daddy lived alone.
So what happened to Mom? Is this a custody/visitation situation? And if so, why was a violent father with a history of drug abuse AND BATTERY granted any unsupervised contact with a young child?
Indiana is a big fathers rights state, so the possibility that this goon had custody of some sort is a very real possibility.
http://www.indystar.com/story/news/crime/2014/08/26/father-accused-beating-year-old-son-death/14625153/
Father accused of beating 4-year-old son to death
Bill McCleery and Diana Penner
5:08 p.m. EDT August 26, 2014
Over the course of several days, a 29-year-old father repeatedly beat his 4-year-old son with a belt and fists until the boy died of traumatic injuries, police said in a court document.
Dennis Price was being held Tuesday at the Marion County Jail on charges of murder, battery resulting in serious bodily injury of a person less than 14 years old and neglect of a dependent resulting in death.
Formal charges were filed today in Marion Superior Court by the Marion County prosecutor's office.
Police were called around 7 p.m. Saturday to Price's home in the 900 block of East 42nd Street on the Northside, according to court documents. Price apparently called 911 and reported that the child was not breathing after a "possible overdose," according to a detective with the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department.
The child, Derick Jones, was pronounced dead at 7:45 p.m. Saturday at IU Health Methodist Hospital, police said. Officers arrested Price early Sunday.
Price admitted, police said, that "over the course of the last couple of days," he "repeatedly whipped with a black belt and punched his son, DJ, about the body and head to the point where DJ eventually began acting differently, lost consciousness and ultimately died," the documents state.
Price said he gave the child Ibuprofen in efforts to reduce swelling to the boy's face. When he saw the boy was no longer responding, Price waited about 15 minutes before calling 911, police said. Price told police he attempted CPR, according to court documents.
An autopsy found the boy sustained "blunt force trauma on all extremities, including the torso, sides, chest, stomach, neck and head area," according to court documents. "Also specifically noted were a broken rib on the left side" and hemorrhaging in the boy's right lung and elsewhere.
Price has a criminal record that includes convictions for cocaine dealing in 2008 and battery with a deadly weapon in 2003. In 2011, he was charged with domestic battery but convicted of a lesser charge of invasion of privacy.
Notice that dad DENNIS PRICE admitted (or so the police say) that he beat this child to death OVER SEVERAL DAYS. Which raises the question of why did another adult (i.e. the mother?) NOT intervene? If there was another adult in the home, and this person failed to intervene, then typically that person is charged with child neglect or some variation thereof.
But that didn't happen. Which suggests that Daddy lived alone.
So what happened to Mom? Is this a custody/visitation situation? And if so, why was a violent father with a history of drug abuse AND BATTERY granted any unsupervised contact with a young child?
Indiana is a big fathers rights state, so the possibility that this goon had custody of some sort is a very real possibility.
http://www.indystar.com/story/news/crime/2014/08/26/father-accused-beating-year-old-son-death/14625153/
Father accused of beating 4-year-old son to death
Bill McCleery and Diana Penner
5:08 p.m. EDT August 26, 2014
Over the course of several days, a 29-year-old father repeatedly beat his 4-year-old son with a belt and fists until the boy died of traumatic injuries, police said in a court document.
Dennis Price was being held Tuesday at the Marion County Jail on charges of murder, battery resulting in serious bodily injury of a person less than 14 years old and neglect of a dependent resulting in death.
Formal charges were filed today in Marion Superior Court by the Marion County prosecutor's office.
Police were called around 7 p.m. Saturday to Price's home in the 900 block of East 42nd Street on the Northside, according to court documents. Price apparently called 911 and reported that the child was not breathing after a "possible overdose," according to a detective with the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department.
The child, Derick Jones, was pronounced dead at 7:45 p.m. Saturday at IU Health Methodist Hospital, police said. Officers arrested Price early Sunday.
Price admitted, police said, that "over the course of the last couple of days," he "repeatedly whipped with a black belt and punched his son, DJ, about the body and head to the point where DJ eventually began acting differently, lost consciousness and ultimately died," the documents state.
Price said he gave the child Ibuprofen in efforts to reduce swelling to the boy's face. When he saw the boy was no longer responding, Price waited about 15 minutes before calling 911, police said. Price told police he attempted CPR, according to court documents.
An autopsy found the boy sustained "blunt force trauma on all extremities, including the torso, sides, chest, stomach, neck and head area," according to court documents. "Also specifically noted were a broken rib on the left side" and hemorrhaging in the boy's right lung and elsewhere.
Price has a criminal record that includes convictions for cocaine dealing in 2008 and battery with a deadly weapon in 2003. In 2011, he was charged with domestic battery but convicted of a lesser charge of invasion of privacy.
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Dad, step charged in torture death of 6-year-old daughter (India)
Dad is identified SUBRAMANIAN NAMBOODIRI.
http://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/dad-step-mother-charged-for-death-of-girl-113072000243_1.html
Press Trust of India | Kozhikode July 20, 2013 Last Updated at 13:05 IST
Dad, step-mother charged for death of girl
The charge sheet filed in the 'Adeethi murder case' in a local court has revealed that continuous torture by her father and step-mother led to the death of the six-year-old girl.
Besides beating up the child, they often denied food to her as the post-mortem report showed that starvation was one of the reasons for the death.
The charge sheet filed by police on Friday arraigned Adeethi's father Subramanian Namboodiri and his (second) wife Devika alias Ramla Beegum as the first and second accused.
Based on accounts of witnesses, including neighbours, they have been charged under IPC sections 302 (murder), 307 (attempt to murder) and 324 (voluntarily causing hurt) and relevant sections of the Juvenile Justice Act.
Severe brutality the girl suffered from her father and step-mother came to light when she was admitted to a hospital in a critical condition with serious burns in April last.
The couple then claimed that the child had fallen into a hot water tub but the doctors, who examined her, refused to buy that theory and immediately informed police.
A few days later she succumbed to injuries and the post-mortem report revealed that the death was due to continuous physical torture and starvation.
The police investigation that followed revealed shocking details of how the hapless child was subjected to inhuman treatment and physical torture by her father and step-mother.
The two are in judicial remand after their arrest.
A temple priest, Namboodiri had moved to Bilathikkulam area in the city about a year ago after taking up the priest's job in a nearby temple. He married Devika after Adeethi's mother died in a road accident a few years ago.
The case is one among recent ones on child torture reported in Kerala. In a similar case, a five-year-old boy is battling for life in a hospital in Idukki after he was tortured brutally by his father and step-mother.
http://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/dad-step-mother-charged-for-death-of-girl-113072000243_1.html
Press Trust of India | Kozhikode July 20, 2013 Last Updated at 13:05 IST
Dad, step-mother charged for death of girl
The charge sheet filed in the 'Adeethi murder case' in a local court has revealed that continuous torture by her father and step-mother led to the death of the six-year-old girl.
Besides beating up the child, they often denied food to her as the post-mortem report showed that starvation was one of the reasons for the death.
The charge sheet filed by police on Friday arraigned Adeethi's father Subramanian Namboodiri and his (second) wife Devika alias Ramla Beegum as the first and second accused.
Based on accounts of witnesses, including neighbours, they have been charged under IPC sections 302 (murder), 307 (attempt to murder) and 324 (voluntarily causing hurt) and relevant sections of the Juvenile Justice Act.
Severe brutality the girl suffered from her father and step-mother came to light when she was admitted to a hospital in a critical condition with serious burns in April last.
The couple then claimed that the child had fallen into a hot water tub but the doctors, who examined her, refused to buy that theory and immediately informed police.
A few days later she succumbed to injuries and the post-mortem report revealed that the death was due to continuous physical torture and starvation.
The police investigation that followed revealed shocking details of how the hapless child was subjected to inhuman treatment and physical torture by her father and step-mother.
The two are in judicial remand after their arrest.
A temple priest, Namboodiri had moved to Bilathikkulam area in the city about a year ago after taking up the priest's job in a nearby temple. He married Devika after Adeethi's mother died in a road accident a few years ago.
The case is one among recent ones on child torture reported in Kerala. In a similar case, a five-year-old boy is battling for life in a hospital in Idukki after he was tortured brutally by his father and step-mother.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Dad fatally shoots 8-year-old daughter, mom; despite extensive history of violence, still had visitation rights with the kids (Louisville, Kentucky)
Mom knew very well how dangerous dad GARY W. STEWART JR. could be. He had threatened to kill her before, he had battered her before. She had even managed to take out of orders of protection against him. I can't even summarize his extensive criminal history here. You can see the highlights below.
So the guy was EXTREMELY crazy and violent. And contrary to Daddy's nitwit attorney, there were tons of red flags that this guy was a homicidal risk. What else is new. There are lots of abusive nut jobs in this world. Not all of them become killers.
The real problems were two:
1) The criminal justice system never really held the father accountable for anything he did. Most charges were dismissed or treated with a slap on the wrist. Even the ones not involving threats or violence against the mother. Is it any surprise that she stopped showing up in court? The outcome was already clear. I also wonder if the sheriff's office even took his weapons away as ordered. I doubt it.
The end result of judicial coddling is that abusers grow even more entitled and cocky. They know they can get away with any sh** they do, and all they'll get is a wink. So their violence accelerates over time.
Combine that with a second problem.
2) This sh** still had weekend visitation with the kids!!! Mom was REQUIRED to interact with this dangerous lunatic on a regular basis. He even had "scheduled visits" when the order of protection was in place!
We have seen over and over again what happens when mothers are FORCED to interact with men who have threatened to kill them and have assaulted them before. People are eventually killed. Exactly what we saw here. Contrary to the family friend's denial, this is a VERY TYPICAL setup for a family annihilator. An abuser who gets a wink from law enforcement, where the victims can never truly get away from him because of the courts insist that a homicidal maniac stay "involved." And not only that, mothers are pressured into "cooperating" and encouraging that involvement.
And of course, by going off with the crazy daddy for a visit, they inadvertently set themselves up for the slaughter.
Both judicial indifference to violence against women and children and abuser "rights" to kids are KEY TENETS OF THE FATHERS RIGHTS MOVEMENT. It's their movement that has created a climate where mere abusive crazies are "nurtured" into mass killers. Congratulations, boys. This one is on you.
http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20130620/NEWS01/306200023/Louisville-man-who-fatally-shot-mother-daughter-had-violent-history
Louisville man who fatally shot mother and daughter had violent history
Jun. 20, 2013 9:48 PM
Written by Antoinette Konz, Andrew Wolfson and Mark Boxley
The Courier-Journal
A Louisville man who fatally shot his ex-girlfriend and their 8-year-old daughter before killing himself had a history of violence against women and had been “in and out of mental institutions,” according to court documents and the victims’ family.
Shortly after noon Wednesday, Gary W. Stewart Jr., 40, of the 2600 block of Delor Avenue, showed up with his mother at the home that his 36-year-old ex-girlfriend, Jillian Wood, shared with her twin sister, Jocelyn Wood, off Bardstown Road, saying he wanted to take his daughter and son swimming at his uncle’s condominium.
Jocelyn Wood said her sister and Stewart had a turbulent past, including protective orders Jillian had taken out against him, but the two recently had tried to work together in parenting their two children — 8-year-old Shelbi and 13-year-old Gary Jr.
“Jillian went with (them) because she wanted to make sure the kids would be OK,” Jocelyn Wood said in an interview Thursday. “She whispered to me on the way out to call her in a few hours because she would likely need a ride back home. I tried calling her several times ... but she never picked up.”
Louisville Metro Police Lt. Todd Kessinger said that at approximately 4:22 p.m. Wednesday, in his uncle’s condominium complex on Gardiner Lane, Gary Stewart shot Jillian Wood with a gun he had brought with him, then shot his daughter, before shooting his mother when she tried to stop him. He then fatally shot himself.
“(The coroner) said (Jillian) didn’t have time to fight because he shot her three times in the chest, and then he went to my niece and he shot her in the head,” Elizabeth Wood, a sister of Jillian and Jocelyn Wood, said in an interview. “And then he shot his mom. Little Gary got away, and I thank God that he got away.”
Elizabeth Wood said that 13-year-old Gary told family members after that his father asked the children if they wanted to “die fast or die slow” and the boy said Shelbi responded, “she wanted to die fast.”
Stewart’s mother, whose name has not been released, remained in critical condition at University of Louisville Hospital Thursday evening.
Stewart’s uncle and son, Gary Jr., were also in the second-floor condominium but escaped, said Kessinger, who said the shootings appeared to be “premeditated.”
“We don't know exactly what made the situation erupt,” Kessinger said.
Wood said Stewart was “very unstable” and has been “in and out of mental institutions.”
“I think when he came over yesterday afternoon, he had the intent of killing them all,” said Elizabeth Wood, fighting back tears.
Elizabeth Wood said the boy, who is in the temporary custody of Jocelyn Wood, saw his mother shot before escaping to the pool area, where he frantically asked someone to call police. She said the teen told them that his parents had been arguing over Gary Stewart’s visits to his children.
“The kids didn’t want to go over and see him as often because they started seeing how he really was,” she said.
Jocelyn Wood said she and her twin sister were “very close.”
“We always said it was us against the world,” Jocelyn Wood said, tears flowing down her face. “She was everything to me. And her kids are like my kids, we were always doing things together. We were one big family.”
History of violence
Gary W. Stewart Jr., 40, had a history of violence against women, including against Jillian Wood.
“I am terrified he will seriously kill me to get me out of the way,” she said in a petition for a protective order in 2010.
In that case, Wood said in a criminal complaint that Stewart threatened to shoot her, and in another case the next year, Stewart assaulted another woman — a stranger — for no apparent reason in the emergency room waiting area at University of Louisville Hospital.
In the first case, Wood alleged that after she refused to tell Stewart where she was living, he threatened to find her and “put a bullet in your head and leave you in a ditch where nobody will find you.”
Wood said she had picked up her children at basketball practice, where Stewart was an assistant coach, said she drove away with her sister Jocelyn and the two children in her car and that Stewart “followed her every move” for 35 minutes until she managed to elude him.
He was charged with terroristic threatening, menacing and stalking, but the charges were dismissed when Wood failed to appear twice in court.
Stewart’s lawyer in the case, Steve Schroering, said his client’s conduct in court raised no red flags.
“There was nothing that suggested that anything like this would happen,” Schroering said. “He was always pleasant and respectful to me.”
Jillian Wood took out a domestic-violence order against him in February 2010, making the same allegations as in the criminal case. She also charged that he had put a gun to her head and cocked it in 2001.
The order, which expired Feb. 2, 2013, required him to stay away from her and the children, except on scheduled visits at a fast-food restaurant, and to not possess a firearm.
Jillian Wood said in the order that Stewart was angry because he was at risk of going to jail for failing to pay child support, and that two months earlier he had asked a family member to kill her.
She said Stewart treated their daughter “like a princess” and their son “like he is in the army.” She also said he also had killed animals and told the children about it.
Jefferson District Judge Angela Bisig ordered the sheriff’s office to store and retain Stewart’s firearms while the protective order was in effect.
Assaulting a stranger
In the emergency room case, Stewart was convicted of assaulting a 19-year-old woman, Nikkole L. Morris, in September 2011 in the hospital waiting room.
A warrant said Stewart stood up and started striking Morris in the face, then began fighting with security officers who came to her aid. She was treated for swelling to her face and a black eye, and he was placed in the hospital’s psychiatric ward.
He later was evaluated for mental competency at Central State Hospital, but both sides agreed he was competent and he pleaded guilty.
Attorney Stephen Berry, who defended him in that case, said Stewart “went crazy” in the hospital and had no recollection of what he had done. Berry said that Stewart was a nice man “when he was on his meds.”
Judge Donald Armstrong sentenced Stewart to 365 days in jail. He was given credit for 33 days he had spent in jail and placed on home incarceration for 60 days.
The balance of the sentence was conditionally discharged for two years. Armstrong also ordered him to undergo treatment at Seven Counties.
Stewart had other charges for drunk driving, moving violations and fleeing from police. Most were dismissed.
In a series of Facebook posts in December on a page that a friend confirmed was his, Stewart expressed concerns about children, including his own, and violence.
In one, he wrote, “Enjoy today and hav (sic) love for children they are our future and we let them play killing games and toy guns as adults the whole nations (sic) is retard.
In another he said, “My own daughter was stalked by a known child sex abuser and by a vision from god I was able to stop it and save my child.”
Hard times
Sue Strothman, Gary Stewart’s neighbor of Stewart's on Delor Avenue, said she has known the family for about three years.
She said Stewart was living with his mother and his two children would visit on the weekends.
Strothman said she thought of Gary Stewart as a father who cared about his children, but he was unemployed and experiencing other problems, including the recent death of his sister from cancer, and his mother told her that she wanted him to find another place to live.
“I never dreamed Gary was that sick to do something like that,” Strothman said. “I don’t know why people who are that sick kill not only themselves, but their children.”
She worried about the affect of the deaths on his 13-year-old son.
“Little Gary lost his dad, sister and mother,” Strothman said. “He’ll need a lot of counseling, but I don’t know if he will ever get over it.”
'Daddy's girl'
Jocelyn Wood said Shelbi had just finished third grade at Price Elementary School and was looking forward to celebrating her ninth birthday on July 18. Both Jocelyn and Elizabeth Wood described Shelbi as a “daddy’s girl.”
“She was a typical little girl who loved getting her nails done and her hair done — she couldn’t wait to be a teenager,” Jocelyn Wood said. “And she always had a smile on her face, every picture you see of her, she’s smiling.”
And Shelbi loved her big brother.
“They were very, very close,” Elizabth Wood said, pausing. “Little Gary is really having a terrible time, thinking about what he could have done differently to save his sister ... we’re going to have to get him a lot of counseling. There are a lot of things we’re going to have to do now that I never thought we would have to do.”
In addition to her son, Jillian Wood is also survived by her mother, Jacqueline Wood of Lake City, Fla., six sisters and three brothers.
Elizabeth Wood said she and her siblings always joked about the “nine of us being a baseball team.”
“Now we are a player short,” she said.
Jillian Wood did not have life insurance and the family doesn’t know how they are going to bury their loved ones.
“I live paycheck to paycheck and don’t have the money to bury them,” Jocelyn Wood said. “The county said they could bury them, but that they wouldn’t be able to be buried together and the thought of that just tears me apart.”
Reporter Zahra Farah contributed to this report.
So the guy was EXTREMELY crazy and violent. And contrary to Daddy's nitwit attorney, there were tons of red flags that this guy was a homicidal risk. What else is new. There are lots of abusive nut jobs in this world. Not all of them become killers.
The real problems were two:
1) The criminal justice system never really held the father accountable for anything he did. Most charges were dismissed or treated with a slap on the wrist. Even the ones not involving threats or violence against the mother. Is it any surprise that she stopped showing up in court? The outcome was already clear. I also wonder if the sheriff's office even took his weapons away as ordered. I doubt it.
The end result of judicial coddling is that abusers grow even more entitled and cocky. They know they can get away with any sh** they do, and all they'll get is a wink. So their violence accelerates over time.
Combine that with a second problem.
2) This sh** still had weekend visitation with the kids!!! Mom was REQUIRED to interact with this dangerous lunatic on a regular basis. He even had "scheduled visits" when the order of protection was in place!
We have seen over and over again what happens when mothers are FORCED to interact with men who have threatened to kill them and have assaulted them before. People are eventually killed. Exactly what we saw here. Contrary to the family friend's denial, this is a VERY TYPICAL setup for a family annihilator. An abuser who gets a wink from law enforcement, where the victims can never truly get away from him because of the courts insist that a homicidal maniac stay "involved." And not only that, mothers are pressured into "cooperating" and encouraging that involvement.
And of course, by going off with the crazy daddy for a visit, they inadvertently set themselves up for the slaughter.
Both judicial indifference to violence against women and children and abuser "rights" to kids are KEY TENETS OF THE FATHERS RIGHTS MOVEMENT. It's their movement that has created a climate where mere abusive crazies are "nurtured" into mass killers. Congratulations, boys. This one is on you.
http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20130620/NEWS01/306200023/Louisville-man-who-fatally-shot-mother-daughter-had-violent-history
Louisville man who fatally shot mother and daughter had violent history
Jun. 20, 2013 9:48 PM
Written by Antoinette Konz, Andrew Wolfson and Mark Boxley
The Courier-Journal
A Louisville man who fatally shot his ex-girlfriend and their 8-year-old daughter before killing himself had a history of violence against women and had been “in and out of mental institutions,” according to court documents and the victims’ family.
Shortly after noon Wednesday, Gary W. Stewart Jr., 40, of the 2600 block of Delor Avenue, showed up with his mother at the home that his 36-year-old ex-girlfriend, Jillian Wood, shared with her twin sister, Jocelyn Wood, off Bardstown Road, saying he wanted to take his daughter and son swimming at his uncle’s condominium.
Jocelyn Wood said her sister and Stewart had a turbulent past, including protective orders Jillian had taken out against him, but the two recently had tried to work together in parenting their two children — 8-year-old Shelbi and 13-year-old Gary Jr.
“Jillian went with (them) because she wanted to make sure the kids would be OK,” Jocelyn Wood said in an interview Thursday. “She whispered to me on the way out to call her in a few hours because she would likely need a ride back home. I tried calling her several times ... but she never picked up.”
Louisville Metro Police Lt. Todd Kessinger said that at approximately 4:22 p.m. Wednesday, in his uncle’s condominium complex on Gardiner Lane, Gary Stewart shot Jillian Wood with a gun he had brought with him, then shot his daughter, before shooting his mother when she tried to stop him. He then fatally shot himself.
“(The coroner) said (Jillian) didn’t have time to fight because he shot her three times in the chest, and then he went to my niece and he shot her in the head,” Elizabeth Wood, a sister of Jillian and Jocelyn Wood, said in an interview. “And then he shot his mom. Little Gary got away, and I thank God that he got away.”
Elizabeth Wood said that 13-year-old Gary told family members after that his father asked the children if they wanted to “die fast or die slow” and the boy said Shelbi responded, “she wanted to die fast.”
Stewart’s mother, whose name has not been released, remained in critical condition at University of Louisville Hospital Thursday evening.
Stewart’s uncle and son, Gary Jr., were also in the second-floor condominium but escaped, said Kessinger, who said the shootings appeared to be “premeditated.”
“We don't know exactly what made the situation erupt,” Kessinger said.
Wood said Stewart was “very unstable” and has been “in and out of mental institutions.”
“I think when he came over yesterday afternoon, he had the intent of killing them all,” said Elizabeth Wood, fighting back tears.
Elizabeth Wood said the boy, who is in the temporary custody of Jocelyn Wood, saw his mother shot before escaping to the pool area, where he frantically asked someone to call police. She said the teen told them that his parents had been arguing over Gary Stewart’s visits to his children.
“The kids didn’t want to go over and see him as often because they started seeing how he really was,” she said.
Jocelyn Wood said she and her twin sister were “very close.”
“We always said it was us against the world,” Jocelyn Wood said, tears flowing down her face. “She was everything to me. And her kids are like my kids, we were always doing things together. We were one big family.”
History of violence
Gary W. Stewart Jr., 40, had a history of violence against women, including against Jillian Wood.
“I am terrified he will seriously kill me to get me out of the way,” she said in a petition for a protective order in 2010.
In that case, Wood said in a criminal complaint that Stewart threatened to shoot her, and in another case the next year, Stewart assaulted another woman — a stranger — for no apparent reason in the emergency room waiting area at University of Louisville Hospital.
In the first case, Wood alleged that after she refused to tell Stewart where she was living, he threatened to find her and “put a bullet in your head and leave you in a ditch where nobody will find you.”
Wood said she had picked up her children at basketball practice, where Stewart was an assistant coach, said she drove away with her sister Jocelyn and the two children in her car and that Stewart “followed her every move” for 35 minutes until she managed to elude him.
He was charged with terroristic threatening, menacing and stalking, but the charges were dismissed when Wood failed to appear twice in court.
Stewart’s lawyer in the case, Steve Schroering, said his client’s conduct in court raised no red flags.
“There was nothing that suggested that anything like this would happen,” Schroering said. “He was always pleasant and respectful to me.”
Jillian Wood took out a domestic-violence order against him in February 2010, making the same allegations as in the criminal case. She also charged that he had put a gun to her head and cocked it in 2001.
The order, which expired Feb. 2, 2013, required him to stay away from her and the children, except on scheduled visits at a fast-food restaurant, and to not possess a firearm.
Jillian Wood said in the order that Stewart was angry because he was at risk of going to jail for failing to pay child support, and that two months earlier he had asked a family member to kill her.
She said Stewart treated their daughter “like a princess” and their son “like he is in the army.” She also said he also had killed animals and told the children about it.
Jefferson District Judge Angela Bisig ordered the sheriff’s office to store and retain Stewart’s firearms while the protective order was in effect.
Assaulting a stranger
In the emergency room case, Stewart was convicted of assaulting a 19-year-old woman, Nikkole L. Morris, in September 2011 in the hospital waiting room.
A warrant said Stewart stood up and started striking Morris in the face, then began fighting with security officers who came to her aid. She was treated for swelling to her face and a black eye, and he was placed in the hospital’s psychiatric ward.
He later was evaluated for mental competency at Central State Hospital, but both sides agreed he was competent and he pleaded guilty.
Attorney Stephen Berry, who defended him in that case, said Stewart “went crazy” in the hospital and had no recollection of what he had done. Berry said that Stewart was a nice man “when he was on his meds.”
Judge Donald Armstrong sentenced Stewart to 365 days in jail. He was given credit for 33 days he had spent in jail and placed on home incarceration for 60 days.
The balance of the sentence was conditionally discharged for two years. Armstrong also ordered him to undergo treatment at Seven Counties.
Stewart had other charges for drunk driving, moving violations and fleeing from police. Most were dismissed.
In a series of Facebook posts in December on a page that a friend confirmed was his, Stewart expressed concerns about children, including his own, and violence.
In one, he wrote, “Enjoy today and hav (sic) love for children they are our future and we let them play killing games and toy guns as adults the whole nations (sic) is retard.
In another he said, “My own daughter was stalked by a known child sex abuser and by a vision from god I was able to stop it and save my child.”
Hard times
Sue Strothman, Gary Stewart’s neighbor of Stewart's on Delor Avenue, said she has known the family for about three years.
She said Stewart was living with his mother and his two children would visit on the weekends.
Strothman said she thought of Gary Stewart as a father who cared about his children, but he was unemployed and experiencing other problems, including the recent death of his sister from cancer, and his mother told her that she wanted him to find another place to live.
“I never dreamed Gary was that sick to do something like that,” Strothman said. “I don’t know why people who are that sick kill not only themselves, but their children.”
She worried about the affect of the deaths on his 13-year-old son.
“Little Gary lost his dad, sister and mother,” Strothman said. “He’ll need a lot of counseling, but I don’t know if he will ever get over it.”
'Daddy's girl'
Jocelyn Wood said Shelbi had just finished third grade at Price Elementary School and was looking forward to celebrating her ninth birthday on July 18. Both Jocelyn and Elizabeth Wood described Shelbi as a “daddy’s girl.”
“She was a typical little girl who loved getting her nails done and her hair done — she couldn’t wait to be a teenager,” Jocelyn Wood said. “And she always had a smile on her face, every picture you see of her, she’s smiling.”
And Shelbi loved her big brother.
“They were very, very close,” Elizabth Wood said, pausing. “Little Gary is really having a terrible time, thinking about what he could have done differently to save his sister ... we’re going to have to get him a lot of counseling. There are a lot of things we’re going to have to do now that I never thought we would have to do.”
In addition to her son, Jillian Wood is also survived by her mother, Jacqueline Wood of Lake City, Fla., six sisters and three brothers.
Elizabeth Wood said she and her siblings always joked about the “nine of us being a baseball team.”
“Now we are a player short,” she said.
Jillian Wood did not have life insurance and the family doesn’t know how they are going to bury their loved ones.
“I live paycheck to paycheck and don’t have the money to bury them,” Jocelyn Wood said. “The county said they could bury them, but that they wouldn’t be able to be buried together and the thought of that just tears me apart.”
Reporter Zahra Farah contributed to this report.
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