Category: Crime

  • Gag order remains in Dyleski trial

    Gag order remains in Dyleski trial

    Allred loses bid to lift gag order in teen murder trial:

    California attorney and all-around shrew Gloria Allred has lost her bid to have the gag order removed from the Scott Dyleski trial…

    California attorney Gloria Allred lost an emergency appeal Tuesday to the U.S. Supreme Court seeking to lift a gag order in the case of a teenager accused of killing a prominent lawyer’s wife.

    Justice Anthony M. Kennedy refused without comment to lift the order preventing Allred from publicly discussing the upcoming trial of Scott Dyleski, 17, who is accused of murdering Pamela Vitale, wife of television legal analyst Daniel Horowitz.

    Allred represents an undisclosed witness in the murder case, which is set for trial July 17 in Contra Costa County Superior Court.

    Why does she want the gag-order lifted? So her client can make the talk show rounds to make some money? Not to mention tainting the jury pool in the process.

    I, personally, think Dyleski is guilty, but I want to see him receive the fairest trial possible, so there will be no question of his guilt.

  • Sierra Vista High hazing trial starts

    Sierra Vista High hazing trial starts

    High School Hazing Trial Gets Underway:

    The trial in the Sierra Vista High School hazing charges has begun. Some really disturbing quotes in this article…

    Opening statements got underway today in the case against the 17-year-old Sierra Vista High School student charged with sexually assaulting one of his varsity basketball team mates.

    Was this hazing incident a case of sexual assault or just boys being boys? The prosecution says it was rape the defense says it was horseplay.

    Prosecutor Mary Brown said, “It’s a game we play we call it play rape.”

    Defense attorney Frank Cremen said, “The evidence will show that my client did not commit the offenses that he is accused of. There was conduct that night that was horseplay and it might well be expected in any boys sporting activity.”

    Since when did getting digitally sodomized become “horseplay”? And is the UFIA now expected in any boys sporting activity?

    And we have allegations of an administration cover-up…

    The Metro officer who originally responded to the victim’s home also testified. When he arrived he says the victim was on the phone with the vice principal of Sierra Vista High School.

    The officer spoke with the vice principal and testified that he said, “Can’t this just wait until after basketball season?”

    Someone better start updating his résumé.

  • Zarate’s brother to be tried as an adult

    Zarate’s brother to be tried as an adult

    Teen to be tried as adult in Randolph murder:

    Jonathan Zarate’s brother, formerly known as “J.Z.”, will be tried as an adult, for assisting his brother in the killing and dismembering of 16-year-old Jennifer Parks…

    A youth who was 14 when he allegedly helped his older brother maim and murder next-door neighbor Jennifer Parks in Randolph last year will be tried as an adult, a Superior Court judge ruled this afternoon.

    Family Division Judge John B. Dangler ruled that James Zarate, now 15, will be prosecuted as an adult on charges of stabbing and chopping off the legs of the 16-year-old victim on July 30.

    James and his now-19-year-old brother, Jonathan Zarate, are accused of getting Parks to visit their father’s home on Old Brookside Road around 2 a.m. and then ambushing the girl shortly after her arrival.

    Parks’ mother, Laurie Parks, asked the judge to order James Zarate to be prosecuted as an adult.

    “Our loss is complete. We only had one child; now we only have pictures, videos and our memories,” she said.

  • Jamie Rose Bolin’s autopsy results

    Jamie Rose Bolin’s autopsy results

    Report: Okla. Girl Died of Lack of Oxygen:

    The autopsy results of Jamie Rose Bolin have been made public. You may not want to read this, as some of the details are quite disturbing…

    OKLAHOMA CITY — A 10-year-old girl who prosecutors say was killed by a neighbor who wanted to eat human flesh died from a lack of oxygen but also suffered other injuries, the medical examiner’s office said.

    Jamie Rose Bolin was struck in the head, her neck was cut to the bone from ear-to-ear and she was sexually assaulted, according to an autopsy report released Thursday.

    Prosecutors have charged her neighbor, 26-year-old Kevin Ray Underwood, with first-degree murder. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for August.

    Police and prosecutors allege Underwood abducted the child as she was going to the library and killed her to fulfill a fantasy of becoming a cannibal. Law enforcement officers found her body unclothed April 14 in a plastic storage tub in a bedroom closet of Underwood’s apartment.

    According to a police affidavit, Underwood confessed that he killed Jamie.

    Police and prosecutors allege Underwood struck Jamie in the head with a cutting board, then smothered her with his hand and duct tape. They also accused him of trying to decapitate and possibly molesting her corpse.

    The autopsy report supports all the descriptions but the post-mortem sexual assault, which a deputy state medical examiner said would be difficult to determine.

    Dr. Inas Yacoub found that the girl suffered blunt force trauma to the back, right arm, right thigh, left thigh and left ankle, as well as the top of the head.

    Underwood’s trial can’t come soon enough.

  • Robert Bonelli sentenced

    Robert Bonelli sentenced

    BONELLI GETS 32 YEARS IN PRISON FOR MALL SHOOTING:

    Robert Bonelli, the 26-year-old Columbine obsessed Upstate New York mall gunman, was sentenced yesterday…

    KINGSTON – Hudson Valley Mall gunman Robert Bonelli Jr. was sentenced on Friday to 32 years in state prison, the maximum allowed under the guilty plea he entered in March.

    State Sup-reme Court Justice Mich-ael Kavanagh handed down the sentence after Bonelli’s father tearfully pleaded for mercy and after a security camera video showing the shooting spree’s first moments was shown in court.

    The judge said Bonelli was “truly a disturbed, troubled man” but that the defendant clearly knew what he was doing when he opened fire in the mall on Feb. 13, 2005.

    “You had to know that you … placed lives in grave danger,” Kavanagh told the 26-year-old defendant, who was clad in orange jail garb. “You simply did not care what the consequences were when you fired that weapon.

    “What happened here was horrendous,” the judge said.

    BONELLI apologized during Friday’s court proceeding, which the two victims, Thomas Haire of Pine Plains and Stephen Silk of Kingston, attended.

    “I’m sorry that all this happened. This is not the kind of person that I am,” Bonelli said.

    Bonelli asked to address Haire directly, but Kavanagh said no.

    HAIRE, a 20-year-old National Guardsman who was manning a recruiting table at the mall on the day of the shooting spree, read from a prepared statement in court.

    “I wish there were mall security to protect us from Mr. Bonelli and to inform us of his whereabouts and what to do,” said Haire, who suffered a serious leg injury in the shooting. “I just don’t think he should have gotten as far as he did. But he did.”

    BONELLI’S attorney, Ulster County Public Defender Andrew Kossover, described his client as a man wracked with low self-esteem and deep depression and twisted by years of alcohol and drug abuse.

    All of those things taken together created a “perfect storm,” Kossover said.

    Bonelli, who lived in Glasco at the time of the shooting, said in court that he felt everyone was against him and that his life was doomed in the time leading up to the shooting spree. He also said he “should have got help” long ago for his substance abuse problem.

    “I just hope that this court forgives me for what I have done,” Bonelli said.

    “This man’s judgment was not impaired,” Williams said.

    To make his point, Williams read aloud a journal entry that Bonelli made in 2004: “The wolf within is crawling out of my skin. … The only one who can stop me is me. … I will kill as many as fate allows. … Hate is a terrible thing to waste.”

    Williams also quoted from a note found in Bonelli’s vehicle after the shooting: “The lonely man strikes with absolute rage.”

    Bonelli’s defenders, including psychiatrist Dr. Steven Price, noted that some of Bonelli’s writings merely were taken from song lyrics.

    BONELLI has said he tried to commit suicide in the hours before the mall shooting but couldn’t bring himself to do it. So he decided to open fire at the mall, he said, figuring he’d be killed by police – a practice commonly referred to a “suicide by cop.”

    Williams said that didn’t make sense because there typically are no armed police officers in a shopping mall.

    The prosecutor also noted that materials found in Bonelli’s home after the shooting indicated he had a “perverse” interest in the 1999 shooting rampage at Columbine High School in Colorado.

    Paul Fowler, a family friend, said the sentence was unjust.

    “This was a case where the court system failed,” Fowler said. “What it failed to do is to look at other aspects of this case.”

    Silk, who suffered superficial wounds in the shooting spree, said the sentence was correct.

    “He got the maximum, and that is just what he deserved,” Silk said.

    THE 32-YEAR sentence comprises concurrent 25-year terms for two counts of first-degree assault and two counts of criminal use of a firearm, and a seven-year term for one-count of second-degree assault.

    Bonelli also was sentenced for several less-serious counts. Those sentences will be included in the 32-year term. Bonelli will be eligible for parole in 26 years.

    Unjust? No. An unjust sentence would have been if no consequences came to a man who shot two people in a mall shooting spree.

  • Jennifer Parks remembered II

    Jennifer Parks remembered II

    Slain Randolph teen leaves legacy:

    Jennifer Parks, the 16-year-old New Jersey girl who was brutally murdered and dismembered by Jonathan Zarate, will be remembered by her high school…

    RANDOLPH — It’s closing in on one year since Laurie Parks’16-year-old daughter, Jennifer, was senselessly murdered.

    Parks, who attended Randolph High School, will be honored on May 13 by her classmates during the Pennies for Jen Memorial Walk, an idea generated by the student council that will raise money for a scholarship and memorial park at the school.

    “I thought it was a great idea,” Laurie Parks said on Thursday.

    “(I’m) really proud of what they’re doing. They’ve done so much for me and my husband.”

    Parks said the scholarship fund already has $900, and that she and her husband, David, will award the scholarship to a student who wants to study editing or journalism in college.

    “That’s what my daughter loved to do,” Parks said. “She wanted to be an editor or in journalism when she graduated.”

    The walk will begin at 9 a.m. at the Randolph High School parking lot and will wind through a nearby trail system that connects the township.

    The event is sponsor- and donation-driven, said Kimberly Standridge, 17, a junior who also is treasurer of the student council’s executive board.

    Proceeds will go toward the scholarship, as well as a memorial garden.

    Standridge said Jennifer Parks’ mother didn’t want the garden to be only about her daughter.

    “She didn’t want the memorial garden just to be for Jen, so it’s going to be dedicated to Jen and other high school students who lost their lives during their high school careers,” Standridge said.

    The walk is open to anyone and donations will be accepted on the day of the event. Standridge hopes the event is held every year.

    I’m working on getting an address to send donations to.

  • Supporters react to Esmie Tseng’s sentence

    Supporters react to Esmie Tseng’s sentence

    Friends stand by Tseng, call sentence poor:

    Some supporters of Esmie Tseng react to her sentencing…

    “Nobody’s really better served by this (sentence),” Horwitz said. “When the judge talks about rehabilitation in the prison system … She needs help (after) years and years of challenges and what many argue to be abuse in the home situation.”

    Another Tseng family friend, Grant Mallett, said his daughter used to play with Esmie. He said Esmie would not be forgotten.

    “We’re committed to stay in touch and help her out as best we can,” Mallett said. “I saw her last week. Her spirits seemed to be quite good, and I was pleased and impressed with how she seems to be doing personally.”

    Horwitz said real friends would not abandon Esmie.

    “Everybody wants to visit her and write her. She has a lot of true friends,” he said. “She’s been in the community since kindergarten and the people who have known her her whole life know that this is a really good kid and a terrible set of circumstances.”

    I am neither a supporter nor detractor of Esmie Tseng, but I can sympathize with Esmie. I really do. I also grew up in a house of abuse, so I know to some extent what she went through.

    However, it doesn’t change the fact that she stabbed her mother with a kitchen knife and when her mother got the knife away from her, Esmie picked up another knife and stabbed her again. I have to agree with what the assistant D.A. said…

    Assistant District Attorney Richard Guinn said the sentence, considering all factors, represented a “fair and just outcome.”

    “We feel for the family, we feel for the dad, we feel for (Esmie) in terms of her situation at home,” Guinn said. “But we are also taking a very strong position here.”

    Guinn said stabbing someone multiple times should draw prison time as opposed to the shorter sentence, perhaps three years, available through the juvenile justice system. With good behavior and considering time already served, Esmie faces about seven years in an adult prison, he said.

    In prison, Esmie could advance herself academically through college classes, Guinn said.

    “It’s up to her what she chooses to make of this time,” he said. “My impression in talking with her attorney is that she has put this chapter of her life behind and is now doing everything she can to make a worthwhile life for herself.”

    I know I said I would never do one again, but I may have a special podcast on this sometime this weekend.

  • Esmie Tseng sentenced

    Esmie Tseng sentenced

    Esmie Tseng sentenced to prison:

    The Overland Park teen-ager who pleaded guilty to killing her mother was sentenced today to eight years and four months in prison.

    Esmie Tseng, 17, declined to say anything during the brief hearing in Johnson County District Court. She had pleaded guilty in March to voluntary manslaughter.

    The sentence imposed by Judge Brenda Cameron was recommended by both sides last month as part of a plea agreement.

    Esmie’s mother, 55-year-old Shu Yi Zhang, died after being stabbed to death on Aug. 19.

  • Esmie Tseng not eligible for juvenile detention

    Esmie Tseng not eligible for juvenile detention

    Esmie ineligible for youth prison:

    Supporters of Esmie Tseng, the Kansas girl who pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter in the stabbing death of her mother, had their hopes raised and summarily dashed last week…

    Supporters of Tseng who lost their fight to have her tried as a juvenile were still lobbying last week for the judge to show mercy.

    They were encouraged briefly when they learned the Kansas Department of Corrections was researching whether state law would allow Tseng to be placed in the state’s juvenile facility for females, in Beloit in north central Kansas. Then they were disappointed to find out Friday that she was not eligible to go there.

    Esmie Tseng agreed to a plea of voluntary manslaughter, an adult charge, and a recommended sentence of 8 years and 4 months. The judge is not bound to follow the agreement.

    Sentencing will take place later this month.

  • Correction of facts in Marshfield

    Correction of facts in Marshfield

    Teens tied up in court:

    This another article about how the trial of Tobin Kerns has been delayed yet again due to the immunity situation of the two witnesses, Daniel Farley and Joseph Sullivan. Nothing new that we haven’t talked about already, but I want to point out some things in the article…

    Kerns, 18, and another student, Joseph Nee, 20, were charged with promotion of anarchy, conspiracy to commit murder and threatened use of a deadly weapon in fall, 2004, after Marshfield Police found materials at Kerns’ home outlining a planned attack on Marshfield High School with a list targeting groups of students, teachers and administrators.

    Acting on a tip by Nee and other students, police found a binder and evidence that Kerns’ computer had been used to look at Web sites like the Anarchist’s Cookbook, which explains how to make explosives leading to Kerns’ arrest in September.

    According to a source that’s very close to the proceedings, there was no list found at the Kerns’ house. The source says that the only list of names was the one Joe Nee gave verbally to police while trying to implicate Tobin.

    And lastly, according to the source, witnesses have stated that Nee, Farley, and Sullivan were still talking about their plan after Tobin Kerns had broken ties with them and was in Oregon. And let’s not forget that Joe Nee had stayed at the Kerns’ residence, and the evidence seized could have belonged to Joe Nee himself.

    But as usual, let’s not let facts get in the way of journalism.