Nicholas Ecker Starts Fatal Fire Kills Baby

Nicholas Ecker

Nicholas Ecker is from Kansas that would start a fire that would kill an infant inside of the home. According to court documents Nicholas Ecker was mad at his former partner and would start her home on fire which would kill an infant inside. Some news reports are saying that Nicholas Ecker is actually the father of the dead baby however this has not been confirmed. Nicholas Ecker has been in and out of jail including charges of domestic assault against the former partner which were later drop. Now the Ecker is facing arson and murder charges.

  • News reports are confirming Nicholas Ecker was the father of the infant who died in the fire

Nicholas Ecker More News

A man has been charged in connection with the death of a baby and house fire in Shawnee that happened over the weekend.

According to court documents, Nicholas A. Ecker was charged Monday with first-degree murder and aggravated arson.

The court documents state that the charges are in connection with the Shawnee fatal house fire from early Sunday morning on West 69th Terrace, which led to the death of a child born in 2020.

The boy’s mother posted pictures and videos of the child Monday on social media, saying the family would be setting up a GoFundMe account at some point. On her Facebook, she identifies the man charged as the baby’s father.

Shawnee police have taken one person into custody in the Sunday morning house fire that killed a baby.

The Shawnee Police Department and Shawnee Fire Department are conducting a joint investigation into the fire. Crews responded around 1 a.m. early Sunday morning to the home on West 69th Terrace, just off of Larsen Lane.

The house was fully engulfed in flames, and crews ended up pulling a dead infant from the home. There were no other injuries reported in the fire.

Authorities did not elaborate Monday morning on their update other than to say one person was taken into custody.

Stay with KCTV5 News for more on this developing story.

https://www.wibw.com/2022/02/15/court-docs-man-charged-with-murder-after-setting-fire-that-killed-baby/

Nicholas Ecker Other News

A man is facing murder charges in a Shawnee house fire early Sunday that killed a baby boy.

Court records say Nicholas Ecker, of Prairie Village, has been charged with arson and first-degree murder. He is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday.

“It’s hard to process something like this,” said Cory Holmes, a family friend.

There is a growing memorial near the home, which went up in flames just before 1 a.m. Sunday.

“Just shock and awe, I’d never see anything like this happen to this family,” Holmes said.

We’re learning new information about the suspect in connection with the fire. The Johnson County District Court website lists him as Nicholas Adam Ecker.

He appeared in Johnson County Court Monday afternoon on suspicion of violating a protection order against the child’s mother.

He’s now facing charges of first-degree murder and aggravated arson with risk bodily harm. Ecker’s bond was set at $1 million cash.

“They’re a great family so they need all the support they can get,” Holmes said.

Nicholas Ecker More News

The father of an infant killed in a house fire in suburban Kansas City, Kansas, has been charged with first-degree murder and other counts in the case.

The fire was reported around 1 a.m. Sunday in Shawnee, and firefighters battling the flames found the body of the infant inside home. Television station WDAF reports that police later arrested 28-year-old Nicholas Adam Ecker.

Ecker was charged Monday in Johnson County Court Monday with first-degree murder and aggravated arson. Ecker is also charged with felony stalking, domestic aggravated assault and illegal possession of a firearm. He is being held on $1 million bond.

https://salinapost.com/posts/e0c3501c-568f-4566-8092-febcade9354f

Nicholas Ecker More News

Accused child murderer Nicholas Ecker appeared in Johnson County District Court for a preliminary hearing Thursday via video conference from county jail.

All four outstanding cases against Ecker, who was arrested Sunday and charged with first-degree murder and aggravated arson for allegedly setting fire to a Shawnee home that left a small child dead, were combined.

The deadly fire happened shortly before 1 a.m. on Sunday in the 10500 block of West 69th Terrace in Shawnee.

He is scheduled to appear again for a scheduling hearing for all four pending cases at 10:30 a.m. on March 31

Ecker, 28, has an extensive criminal history in Johnson and Wyandotte counties.

Among the current pending cases, Ecker was arrested in November 2019 for domestic violence for allegedly strangling a woman and felon in possession of a firearm

The domestic violence charge was dropped as part of a plea agreement, but he was placed on probation, which ran through Feb. 6, 2022, for the weapons charge.

He was arrested and charged Jan. 4, 2022, with aggravated domestic battery for allegedly choking a different woman. KSHB 41 News does not name victims in domestic violence cases.

The court issued a no-contact order at that time and he was freed after posting bond.

Ecker, who had the case continued at a hearing Jan. 13, allegedly violated the protection order put in place in the domestic violence case on Feb. 4.

Court records show the charges in that case weren’t filed until Monday against Ecker.

The violation of a protection order charge was amended Monday to stalking after being served, which bumps it from a Class A misdemeanor to a Level 9 felony

According to the amended complaint, Ecker is accused of “recklessly engaging in at least one act constituting a course of conduct, that violates the provisions of the order and would cause a reasonable person to fear for their safety, or the safety of a member of their immediate family, and the targeted person was actually placed in such fear.”

After he was arrested on the new domestic violence charge, Johnson County moved Jan. 26 to revoke his probation in the 2019 case, but he not been re-arrested and returned to jail yet.

That case along with the murder and arson charge, the second domestic violence charge and the amended charge for violating an order of protection remain pending in Johnson County court, but Ecker’s criminal history — including a years-long stint in state prison — goes back more than a decade.

When Ecker was 15 years old, he was charged in April 2009 for falsely reporting a crime.

Six months later, Ecker was charged Oct. 7, 2009, with battery and Oct. 21, 2009, with possession of an illegal butterfly knife and drug paraphernalia.

Two days later, Ecker was charged with damaging the plumbing and a door as well as disorderly conduct at a juvenile detention facility in Prairie Village.

All four cases were combined and he received one year of probation for the incidents, but the problems continued.

Ecker was charged with disorderly conduct again on Nov. 18, 2009, and added two new charges — making a criminal threat and battery — on Jan. 21, 2010. The criminal threat charge was amended to assault in June 2010.

Three months later, Ecker was arrested and charged with possession of a firearm with identification marks changed or altered, unlawful possession of a firearm, and theft of wheels.

Ecker was charged for the first time as an adult in September 2011 after being arrested for marijuana possession then a few weeks later with stealing a Dodge Dakota truck and Kawasaki motorcycle.

Both arrests came within days or weeks of his 18th birthday and Johnson County Judge Brenda Cameron noted that “reasonable efforts” to help Ecker as a minor “have been made and failed.”

“Juvenile (Ecker) has over 10 prior cases, has had virtually every juvenile service — including probation, house arrest, juvenile correctional facility and aftercare,” but he remained a persistent offender.

Johnson County moved to revoke his probation in the stolen vehicles case after his release from prison and Ecker’s probation was revoked on Sept. 12, 2016.

He went back to prison until June 9, 2018.

A little more than a year later, Ecker was charged with aggravated domestic battery in November 2019 for allegedly strangling a woman, but not the same woman from the complaint last month.

He also was charged with illegal possession of a firearm by a felon.

The domestic battery charge was dropped in May 2020 as part of a plea agreement, but Ecker pleaded guilty to the weapons charge and was placed on probation for 18 months at an August 2020 sentencing.

Ecker’s probation in that case ended earlier this month, but it was pending revocation prior to the deadly Shawnee fire that killed a 1-year-old child family has identified as “Junior.”

https://www.kshb.com/news/crime/johnson-county-murder-suspect-nicholas-ecker-appears-in-court

Dennis Rader BTK Serial Killer

dennis rader btk

Dennis Rader is a serial killer who was known at the BTK killer. BTK which stands for Bind, Torture and Kill reign of terror starting in 1974 and ending with his arrest in 1991. In this article on My Crime Library we are going to take a closer look at Dennis Rader the BTK killer.

Dennis Rader Early Years

Dennis Rader was born in Kansas on March 9, 1945 and was one of four children. Both of his parents worked long hours and Rader would later state that he felt ignored by his mother. Dennis would harbor thoughts of sexual violence and would commit a number of violent acts against animals.

Dennis Rader would join the US Military in 1966 and would serve until 1970. When he left the military Dennis Rader would work in a supermarket, where his mother worked as a bookkeeper. In 1971 Dennis would get married to Paula Dietz and the pair would have two children Kerri and Brian

Dennis Rader would go back to school and graduate with a Bachelor of Science degree, majoring in Administration of Justice. Rader would work for a security company where he would install security alarms in private homes.

In 1991 Dennis Rader would start a new job as a dog catcher and compliance officer in Park City Utah.

Dennis Rader Murdres

Dennis Rader started to kill people in 1974. According to court documents Dennis Rader would murder four members of the Otero family in Wichita Kansas. Dennis would murder Joseph Otero, age 38; Julie Otero, age 33; Joseph Otero Jr., age 9; and Josephine Otero, age 11. The murder victims would be discovered by other members of the family. After his arrest Dennis Rader would admit to the four murders

Between 1974 and 1977 Dennis Rader would murder three women Kathryn Bright (April 4, 1974), Shirley Vian Relford (March 17, 1977), and Nancy Fox (December 8, 1977). Dennis Rader would write the local press confessing to this crime and suggesting names that the press could call him. The BTK Killer was the one that they chose.

Dennis Rader attempted to murder another woman during this period but thankfully she was able to escape.

In 1985 the BTK Killer would murder Marine Hedge, aged 53, in Wichita Kansas. Dennis Rader would bring the victims body to his church where he posed her in a number of positions and taking photographs.

In 1988 someone claiming to be the BTK killer would murder three members of the Fager family. The press would later receive a letter from the BTK killer denying any involvement however during the letter approved of the killers work. It was later proven that Dennis Rader did write the letter however was not responsible for the triple murder.

In 1991 Dolores E. Davis, was found murdered in Park City Utah. This was the last known murder of Dennis Rader

dennis rader victims
NameSexAgeDate of DeathPlace of DeathCause of DeathWeapon Used
Joseph OteroM39January 15, 1974803 N. Edgemoor Street, WichitaSuffocatedPlastic bag
Julia Maria OteroF33StrangledRope
Joseph Otero, Jr.M9SuffocatedPlastic bag
Josephine OteroF11HangedRope
Kathryn Doreen BrightF21April 4, 19743217 E. 13th Street N., Wichita
(died at Wesley Medical Center)
Stabbed three times
in abdomen[80]
Knife
Shirley Ruth Vian RelfordF24March 17, 19771311 S. Hydraulic Street, WichitaStrangledRope
Nancy Jo FoxF25December 8, 1977843 S. Pershing Street, WichitaStrangledBelt
Marine Wallace HedgeF53April 27, 19856254 N. Independence Street,
Park City
StrangledHand(s)
Vicki Lynn WegerleF28September 16, 19862404 W. 13th Street N., WichitaStrangledNylon stocking
Dolores Earline Johnson DavisF62January 19, 19916226 N. Hillside Street, Wichita
(east of Park City)
StrangledPantyhose

Dennis Rader Arrest

Dennis Rader would send a floppy disc to the police and it would lead to his downfall. The police were able to find information on the disc that would identify Dennis Rader. On February 25, 2005 the BTK Killer would be arrested in Park City Utah.

Dennis Rader Prison Sentence

Dennis Rader would ultimately be convicted of ten counts of murder and would be sentenced to multiple life sentences with no chance of parole. Dennis Rader is kept away from the regular prison population and is allowed one hour of exercise per day. Due to his crime and notoriety he would not be safe in the general prison population

Dennis Rader 2022 Information

dennis rader 2022

Work or Program Participation Not Working

Earliest Possible Release Date (1) Feb 26, 2180

Current Status Incarcerated

Admission Date Aug 19, 2005

Current Location (2)El Dorado CF-Central

Custody Level Special Management

Dennis Rader More News

Dennis Rader appeared as an ordinary family man in Wichita, Kansas, who collected stamps and served as the president of his church.

But the seeming doting father and trusted Cub Scout leader was also a murderer who terrorized residents for decades using the moniker BTK – bind, torture, kill.

In 2005, Rader, now 76, pled guilty to killing 10 people from 1974 to 1991. And for over a decade, Rader corresponded with Dr. Katherine Ramsland, a professor of forensic psychology, to better understand how lust, as well as a desire for fame and power, drove him to kill. Now, she’s sharing her story.

Ramsland is speaking out in a new true-crime docuseries on A&E titled “BTK: Confession of a Serial Killer.” The two-night special from executive producer Dick Wolf of the “Law & Order” franchise features never-before-heard conversations between Rader and Ramsland as they discuss his past and gruesome crimes.

“When I first wrote to him, he appreciated the fact that I had academic credentials and that I was also an expert on serial killers because I had done a lot of writing on them prior to talking with him,” Ramsland told Fox News. “But he had a test for me. He wanted me to solve some codes that he sent me. 

“He wanted to make sure I wouldn’t just dismiss it. But for practical purposes, he wanted to use codes to disguise what we were talking about when we got into very dark, raw subjects. And I was willing to do that. That was a good signal to him that I would work with him in the way he wanted.”

Ramsland first corresponded with Rader in 2010. They exchanged numerous letters, spoke on the phone and even met face-to-face at El Dorado Correctional Facility, a maximum-security prison in Kansas. In 2016, Ramsland wrote the book “Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer” under an agreement that proceeds from its sale would go to the victims’ families trust fund.

“My initial impression of Dennis Rader was that he wanted to challenge me,” Ramsland said. “And what surprised me was the fact that there wasn’t anything in his background that would correspond with the typical formula we have of serial killers. I recently heard a detective say that all serial killers have trauma in their background. He was wrong about that.”

“Dennis Rader challenges the idea we have about serial killers,” she added. “He was a family man. He was a churchgoer, even a president of his church congregation. He had a full-time job. He was part of his community. So we have to be careful about some of the stereotypes we form about these kinds of offenders. 

“Otherwise, we’ll start thinking we know them when we don’t. And in Dennis’ case, there wasn’t any particular reason in his background. No trauma. He was an all-American boy, the oldest of four boys in his family. He had an intact family and played on his farm. So where did it all come from? That intrigued me.”

Rader joined the Air Force and married Paula Dietz in 1971. Every Sunday, he and his spouse went to church. The couple shares two children, a boy and a girl. Rader’s father, who died in 1996 after retiring as a plant operator at a utility company’s generating station, was described by childhood pals as strict but never cruel, the New York Times reported. 

Rader struck as the BTK for the first time in 1974. Four members of the Otero family — Joseph, 38, wife Julie, 34, and two of their children — Josephine, 11, and Joseph II, 9 — were bound and strangled inside their homes. The slain matriarch had worked on an assembly line for the Coleman Company, the same place Rader worked in the early ‘70s.

Rader taunted the media and police with cryptic messages during a cat-and-mouse game that began after the murders. He signed the letters “BTK.”

That same year, 21-year-old Kathryn Bright, who also worked at the Coleman plant, was found stabbed in her home. She was bound with a cord and partially dressed. Her brother was shot but survived.

Rader returned to his seemingly normal life until 1977. Shirley Vian, 24, was found on her bed with a plastic bag over her head and a cord wrapped around her neck, hands and feet. That same year, 25-year-old Nancy Fox was strangled with nylon stockings in her home.

Rader hid in plain sight as he helped raise his family. Then in 1985, 53-year-old Marine Hedge was found strangled alongside a dirt road. The next year, 28-year-old Vicki Wegerle was found strangled in her bed.

Rader returned to a low-profile life once more as he became heavily involved in his church community. That changed in 1991 when he abducted 62-year-old Dolores Davis, his final victim, from her home. She was found strangled and bound under a bridge.

Ramsland said that growing up, Rader was “humiliated by his mother” which stayed with him over the years.

“That really played on him,” she explained. “It’s something he still thinks about, even to this day. And we haven’t studied humiliation as a factor in the development of extreme offenders much. And I think maybe we need to rethink that. And he certainly got an early exposure to using ropes for an erotic activity. 

“And then he began to read these true detective magazines that his father would hide in the car. So that made him clandestine … He wanted to feel significant. And he wanted to have power over women because females made him feel off balance.”

“He didn’t like that as the oldest boy, he was expected to be strong and masculine, and yet they seem to kneecap him right and left without even trying, just by being female,” she shared. “And his fantasy life certainly propelled him.”

Rader resurfaced in 2004 with more chilling, taunting letters. The break in the case came in 2005 after a computer disk Rader sent was traced to his church. His chilling courtroom confession ended a mystery that haunted Wichita for decades. He was sentenced to 10 consecutive life terms in prison.

“During that courtroom hearing, Dennis felt like he was in a position to teach people about who he was,” said Ramsland. “In a way, he also thought of himself as a victim. He thought he had some things in common with the victims … Rader is a narcissist, so he just thought this was a way to present himself.”

When asked if Rader saw himself as a monster, Ramsland said, “At times.”

“Dennis Rader does think of himself as a monster, but he also thinks of himself as a good person who did some bad things,” she explained. “He will talk about a monster in his brain. It’s his ‘Factor X,’ which is a way to distance himself from criminal responsibility. He thinks, for the most part, he’s not a monster. He certainly was in those instances when he selected a victim and carried through with his crimes. But overall, he doesn’t think of himself that way.”

https://www.foxnews.com/us/btk-killer-dennis-rader-katherine-ramsland-true-crime-documentary

Dennis Rader Videos

What Does BTK Stand For

BTK refers to Bind, Torture and Kill which is what Dennis Rader was dubbed as

Dennis Rader Now

Dennis Rader is currently incarcerated in a solitary cell at the El Dorado Correctional Facility

Dennis Rader Release Date

Dennis Rader is serving a life without parole sentence

Sierra Neihaus Teen Killer Murders Sister

Sierra Neihaus

Sierra Neihaus was fifteen years old from Kansas who would stab to death her thirteen year old sister. According to court documents Sierra Neihaus would get into an argument with her younger sister that ended violently with the thirteen year old stabbed multiple times. This teen killer would be sentenced to 16 years in prison

Sierra Niehaus 2023 Information

sierra niehaus 2022

Current Location (2)Topeka CF-Central

Sierra Neihaus More News

A 16-year-old Kansas girl has been ordered to spend nearly 16 years in prison in connection with the stabbing death of her younger sister.

Sierra Neihaus was sentenced Tuesday in Saline County. That’s where she pleaded no contest in March to amended charges of second-degree murder, felony theft, and two counts of interference with law enforcement.

Prosecutors allege Niehaus fatally stabbed her 13-year-old sister, Galazia, at the family’s rural home on Aug. 1, 2014

https://www.ksn.com/news/salina-teen-sentenced-to-nearly-16-years-in-sisters-death/1024182085/

Sierra Neihaus Other News

A 15-year-old Kansas girl will go on trial in September for first-degree murder in the stabbing death of her sister.

Sierra Niehaus pleaded not guilty Monday to killing her sister, 13-year-old Galazia, at the family’s home in rural Saline County on Aug. 1. She is being tried as an adult.

The Salina Journal reports the trial was scheduled to begin Sept. 15 and is expected to take about a week.

Attorney Julie Effenbeck was appointed to represent Niehaus, who earlier this month was transferred from juvenile detention to Saline County’s adult inmate population.

Judge Patrick Thompson ruled in April that Niehaus should be tried as an adult. She was 14 when her sister was killed.

https://fox4kc.com/news/trial-set-for-kansas-girl-accused-of-killing-sister/

Frequently Asked Questions

Sierra Niehaus Now

Sierra Niehaus is currently incarcerated at the Topeka Correctional Facility

Sierra Niehaus Release Date

Sierra Niehaus is scheduled for release in 2030

Samuel Vonachen Teen Killer Murders 2 In Fatal Fire

Samuel Vonachen photos

Samuel Vonachen was fourteen years old when he set his house on fire killing his mother and his sister., According to court documents Samuel Vonachen was upset at his parents so decided to set his house on fire killing his younger sister and mother and almost killing his father. Samuel Vonachen would be found guilty on both murders and this teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years

Samuel Vonachen 2023 Information

Samuel Vonachen 2021 photos

Work or Program Participation Working in a job

Earliest Possible Release Date (1) Oct 15, 2039

Current Status Incarcerated

Admission Date Aug 21, 2017

Current Location (2)Lansing CF-Central

Custody Level Low Medium

Samuel Vonachen More News

A judge on Friday sentenced Samuel Vonachen, the Hutchinson teen convicted of killing his mother and little sister in an intentionally set house fire in 2013, to life in prison.

At the conclusion of a 74-minute hearing Reno County District Judge Trish Rose sentenced Vonachen, 18, to the mandatory life sentence on each count of first-degree murder, plus 12 years, 11 months for the attempted murder of his father and 4 years, 11 months for aggravated arson.

The judge ordered the sentences to run concurrently – or all at the same time – rather than consecutively, as sought by prosecutors.

That means Vonachen could be eligible for parole in 25 years.

With credit for time served, Vonachen, who was 14 at the time of the September 2013 crimes, could be 39 the first time he faces the parole board.

A jury convicted Vonachen on Aug. 31, 2016, on the four counts for using gasoline to set fire to the family home on Sept. 23, 2013, killing his mother, Karla Jo Vonachen, 47, and sister, Audrey, 11. His father escaped the early morning fire.

Vonachen was 17 when finally convicted. His sentencing in the case, however, was delayed nearly a year waiting for a mental evaluation ordered by Rose.

During Friday’s hearing, Rose denied the routine defense motions for a new trial and judgment of acquittal. She also denied a request to delay sentencing to allow a defense expert to travel from Florida to testify.

That expert is a Florida college professor who testified at Vonachen’s trial last year that she believed the teen suffered from a “dissociative disorder” when he killed his mother Karla Jo Vonachen, 47, and sister, Audrey, 11, and thus could not form intent required by law to commit murder.

The defense wanted her to testify about her thoughts on a report submitted by a doctor at Larned State Mental Hospital, who had completed a mental assessment ordered by Rose prior to sentencing.

That psychologist, Dr. Roy Daum, testified Friday that Vonachen had no mental illness diagnosis and that he would benefit from the structured living environment available in prison.

“My understanding of what the court wanted to know was if the defendant had such a serious mental illness he needed the care of a hospital, versus going into the legal system,” Daum testified. “Over the two months (he was observed) with staff, there was no indication testifying to that need.”

Daum, however, did say Vonachen was “susceptible to negative influences because of his age and build,” and suggested programs at Larned State Correctional Facility and recently instituted at El Dorado Correctional Facility are targeted for such younger inmates to protect them from being preyed upon by older inmates.

Daum noted that during a two-hour interview with Vonachen, a lack of emotion shown by the teen, which he called a “flat affect,” surprised him.

“It was most unusual,” he said. “I’ve spent over seven years with cases just like this. Experience tells me when a young man comes in with accusations such as he had, I’d expect some kind of remorse.”

He also noted Vonachen spoke of his mother and sister in the present tense, as if they were still living.

Daum declined, however, to classify Vonachen as psychopathic because of his behavior, saying such a classification – as well as that of a dissociative disorder – would require witnessing more symptoms and repeated behavior.

“It’s a pervasive pattern, not a one shot, one-time thing,” he said.

Psychopathy is generally an untreatable disorder.

“He’s a young man who can control his feelings,” Daum said. “He chooses who to trust with his feelings.”

Grandmother, Ana Vonachen, also addressed the court, though she said she did not know she would be allowed to speak and was unprepared.

“The only thing I can say is I love my grandson very much,” she said. “I’m sorry for what happened, but I love him. I visited him many times and he’s always been very nice to me and very loving.”

“Aside from the legal process, everyone in this courtroom and community struggle with understanding this case,” Rose said, before asking each side their sentencing recommendations.

In arguing for consecutive sentences, Schroeder told the court several doctors who had assessed Vonachen over the course of his case “found Sam a very dangerous man.”

“The jury specifically rejected claims he suffered from a mental defect,” Schroeder said.

“He confessed to killing his family because ‘I want people to die, because human lives are worthless,‘” Schroeder continued, referring to statement Vonachen made to police following his arrest. “He denied hating anybody, but said ‘People as a collective are just bad.’ He even drew a diagram depicting the pattern he poured gas around his home, ‘to do a thorough job.’ He made a direct statement about wanting to hurt other people and he planned to kill his family.”

“There is no more violent death compared to being burned alive. That’s what this case is about. Firefighters were dispatched to Main Street in Hutchinson, Kansas, shortly after midnight Sept. 23, 2013, to find a house fully involved and people could be heard screaming inside.”

“He endangered and scarred first responders and he scarred the community,” Schroeder said. “His youth continues to scar the community…He doesn’t deserve a bargain sentence, one sentence for the two people’s deaths. He deserves two life sentences that are consecutive.”

Assistant Public Defender Lynn Burke argued that the U.S. Supreme Court has found life sentences for juveniles as cruel and unusual punishment and thus unconstitutional, because “they have less culpability, are more reckless, are less mature and make ill-considered decisions.”

All the cases she cited the court, however, referred to life sentences without the possibility of parole.

Burke asked Rose that, if she did not sentence Vonachen to the Larned State Mental Correctional facility, to give him concurrent sentences.

“The court is governed by law,” Rose said. “The sentence for this offense is life. That is the sentence of this court.”

https://www.hutchnews.com/news/20170728/vonachen-receives-life-sentence-for-murder-of-mother-sister

Samuel Vonachen Videos

Samuel Vonachen FAQ

Samuel Vonachen Now

Samuel Vonachen is currently incarcerated at the Lansing Correctional Facility

Samuel Vonachen Release Date

Samuel Vonachen is serving a life sentence and can apply for parole in 2037

Kyle Flack Kansas Death Row

Kyle Flack Kansas Death Row

Kyle Flack was sentenced to death by the State of Kansas for four murders. According to court documents Kyle Flack would murder a woman and her fourteen month old daughter. Kyle would hide the woman’s body and stuff the infant body in a suitcase. Kyle Flack was also responsible for the shooting of two men outside of a Ottawa farmhouse. Kyle Flack who was on parole for attempted murder would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Kansas Death Row Inmate List

Kyle Flack More News

Kyle Flack smiled at times Wednesday as a Franklin County District Court judge sentenced him to the death penalty in the shotgun slayings of a young mother and her 18-month-old daughter in 2013.

District Judge Eric Godderz also sentenced Flack to 22 years and three months for the second-degree murder conviction in the killing of Andrew Stout, 30, and a life sentence with parole eligibility only after serving 25 years for the first-degree murder of Steven White, 31.

Finally, the judge sentenced Flack to nine months for a firearms possession violation. When the judge said the four sentences would be served consecutively, Flack was swaying from side to side.

Flack received the death penalty for the capital murder convictions in the deaths of Kaylie Bailey, 21, and her daughter, Lana Bailey. Detectives think the four killings occurred in the spring of 2013 between April 20 and May 1. In sentencing Flack, Godderz said it was hard for anyone to figure out just how senseless these killings were. The victims were unarmed, they were shot at close range and shot in the back, the judge said.

“An infant was slain. How anyone makes sense of that is beyond me,” Godderz said.

The judge also said Flack knew what he was doing was wrong.

“The one thing though, Mr. Flack, is that no one will forget the harm you have done,” the judge said.

Godderz noted that before the killings, Flack had been convicted of attempted murder in the shooting of a man in May 2005 and that in both cases, they were done in a “cowardly fashion” when each victim was shot in the back.

Shortly before Godderz actually sentenced Flack, the judge said the only good thing on Wednesday is that with this sentence that “I’m imposing, you’ll never get to do it again,” the judge said.

The victims’ families clapped when they heard that remark.

Before the judge sentenced Flack, prosecution and defense attorneys made brief remarks.

“The evidence overwhelmingly supports the death penalty,” Franklin County Attorney Stephen Hunting told the judge. “He should be executed.”

Flack’s lead defense attorney, Timothy Frieden, briefly asked the judge to consider sentencing Flack to a life term without the possibility of parole.

Asked whether he wanted to say anything before he was sentenced, Flack answered, “No,” in a high-pitched voice.

On March 31, a Franklin County jury recommended Flack, 30, receive the death sentence after they convicted him of fatally shooting the three adults and the toddler on a Franklin County farm in 2013.

Flack hid the adult bodies and stuffed the child’s remains in a suitcase that was found floating in the Tequa Creek.

The jury that recommended Flack receive the death penalty was the same panel that convicted him of the four charges on March 23. On Wednesday, 11 jurors returned to the courtroom to watch Flack’s sentencing.

Survivors of the Baileys, Stout and White told the judge the crushing impact the slayings of the victims has had on them.

Randi White, widow of Steven White, said their son, Austin, suffers three or four nightmares a night in which he calls out for his father. Saturday will mark the third anniversary of Steven White’s burial, she said.

Shawn Bailey said Flack “stole the only good thing that I’ve done in this world,” referring to his daughter, Lana Bailey. He also is the widower of Kaylie Bailey.

Shawn Bailey told Flack to pray his death is soon because he will be a “baby killer” incarcerated in prison. “You will die slowly and burn in hell,” Shawn Bailey said.

Lisa Smith, the mother Kaylie and grandmother of Lana, said someone knew that her daughter and granddaughter wouldn’t return home — “the mass murderer who was convicted, he knew.”

Before Flack was sentenced, the judge denied a defense motion seeking a new trial linked to 12 alleged errors.

https://www.cjonline.com/news/2016-05-18/kyle-flack-who-killed-3-adults-and-toddler-sentenced-death-penalty-kansas-capital