James Derosa Oklahoma Execution

james derosa

James Derosa was executed by the State of Oklahoma for a double murder. According to court documents James Derosa and John Castleberry would go to a ranch where James worked. The two men would talk themselves into the home where they would murder the elderly couple and rob the home. John Castleberry would quickly plead guilty and be sentenced to life and James Derosa would go to trial where he was convicted and sentenced to death. James Derosa would be executed by lethal injection on June 19, 2013

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Oklahoma executed a man Tuesday for the stabbing deaths of a couple on whose ranch he had worked.

James Lewis DeRosa, 36, was killed by lethal injection at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester. He was the second inmate the state executed this year.

Prosecutors say DeRosa and John Eric Castleberry, 33, went to the home of Curtis and Gloria Plummer in the LeFlore County town of Poteau on Oct. 2, 2000, and persuaded the couple to let them inside. DeRosa had worked at the couple’s ranch.

Authorities say DeRosa and Castleberry stabbed the couple, who were in their 70s, and slashed their throats. Prosecutors say the two made off with $73 and the Plummers’ pickup. Castleberry pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and testified against DeRosa as part of a deal that included a no-parole life prison term.

Although it’s been nearly 13 years since the killings, the Plummers’ relatives say they still feel the void their deaths created.

“I miss having a sister. I struggle when someone asks if I have a sister,” Jo Milligan wrote in an April 24 letter to the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board. “Glo was my big sister – my only sister – my only sibling. And Curt became my brother when I was 5 years old,” Milligan wrote. “When shopping and I pass birthday cards, Valentine cards, etc., always the ones for ‘Sister’ reach out to me. And I cry in the card aisle.”

Janet Tolbert, the victims’ daughter, wrote that she still has nightmares after discovering her parents’ bodies.

“I saw my 70- and 73-year-old parents laying in pools of blood that went through the carpet to the cement foundation, with both of their throats slashed from ear to ear and stab wounds all over,” she said.

The Pardon and Parole Board voted 3-2 last month to reject DeRosa’s request for a commutation. Speaking at the hearing via teleconferencing from prison, DeRosa apologized.

“I can’t express how truly sorry I am for the pain I’ve caused the Plummer family,” he said. “I take full responsibility for their deaths. If not for me, they wouldn’t have died that night.”

DeRosa told the board he had since turned to religion and urged the board to set aside his death sentence so he could be a positive influence on other prisoners.

DeRosa was one of two Oklahoma death row inmates set to be executed this month.

Brian Darrell Davis, 39, is scheduled to be executed June 25 for the rape and murder of his girlfriend’s mother nearly 12 years ago in Ponca City. The Pardon and Parole Board recommended June 6 that Davis’ death sentence be commuted to life in prison, a recommendation that was rejected by Gov. Mary Fallin.

Another death-row inmate, Anthony Rozelle Banks, 60, is scheduled to be executed Sept. 10 for the June 6, 1979, killing of Sun “Kim” Travis, 24.

Travis was abducted from a parking lot at her Tulsa apartment complex, raped and shot in the head.

https://tulsaworld.com/news/state-and-regional/killer-executed-for-deaths-of-leflore-county-couple/article_75f7a395-70d0-5274-9acb-fd7b17f9d59d.html

William Van Poyck Florida Execution

William Van Poyck

William Van Poyck was executed by the State of Florida for the murder of a prison guard during an escape. According to court documents William Van Poyck and Frank Valdes would ambush prison guards while they were transporting inmate James O’Brien to a medical appointment outside of the prison. Correctional officer Fred Griffis was fatally shot in the chest. Unable to complete the escape William Van Poyck and Frank Valdes would take off and were pursued by police until they hit a tree and were arrested.

William Van Poyck and Frank Valdes were both convicted and sentenced to death. Frank Valdez was murdered in prison by correctional guards in 1999. William Van Poyck would be executed by lethal injection on June 12 2013

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In the summer of 1987, sleep deprived from a 48-hour cocaine bender, a Miami bank robber named William Van Poyck hatched a last-minute plan.

A prison break. Quick. Easy.

He enlisted an accomplice, fellow bank robber Frank Valdes, and they drove to West Palm Beach in a red Cadillac. A jailed buddy had an appointment with a downtown dermatologist, and in a few minutes, they’d have him out of the prison van, into the Cadillac and on the way to freedom.

But the prison guards were defiant and one of them was shot dead. Van Poyck and Valdes left their friend behind and fled at 100 mph down Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard. Van Poyck blasted rounds at pursuing police officers, who peeked over their dashboards but refused to back off. Suddenly Valdes lost control and crumpled the Cadillac into a palm tree.

Now, almost 26 years after correctional officer Fred Griffis died from three bullets, Van Poyck, 58, is scheduled to die for his role in the crime. Executioners at the Florida State Prison in Raiford have orders to inject Van Poyck with lethal chemicals at 6 p.m. Wednesday.

Van Poyck maintains he didn’t pull the trigger and the jury that gave him a death sentence never heard the full story. So far, appeals courts have said it doesn’t matter under the law.

“They took one good man’s life,” said Norman Traylor, 58, a cousin of Griffis. He was in the room when the sentence came down. “He had no regret, no remorse.”

By 1987, Miami was dealing with cocaine-fueled hell-raisers, but West Palm Beach was not. On June 24, Van Poyck’s cinematic blitz brought all of crime’s worst aspects — drugs, murder, a high-speed chase — deep into the urban core.

The stunned employees of the dermatology office watched Griffis slump against their building as blood pooled around him.

“Unfortunately, we saw more than we ever wanted to experience,” said Dr. Steven P. Rosenberg, who has since relocated from North Olive Avenue. Although Rosenberg believes everyone deserves quality medical care, he asked the Department of Corrections to find another dermatologist.

Van Poyck could not be interviewed for this article because the DOC denied a Sun Sentinel request. But he has published a memoir, and he maintains a blog through his sister, Lisa, who lives in Virginia.

“I have thought of Fred many times over the years and grieved over his senseless death,” he said in the blog. But of Griffis’ family, he wrote: “I suspect when I’m gone, if they search their hearts, they will grasp the emptiness of the closure promised by the revenge of capital punishment.”

Van Poyck and his allies treat it as fact that Valdes fired the shots that killed Griffis.

They say Griffis’ blood was on Valdes, not Van Poyck. But courts snubbed a request for DNA tests. They say even if Van Poyck can prove Valdes pulled the trigger, it wouldn’t change the death sentence. Under Florida’s felony murder statute, a felon whose crime gets someone killed is culpable in the homicide.

The person who squeezed the trigger and killed Griffis may never been known. Valdes was beaten to death in prison in 1999. Rosenberg said neither he nor the other employees could tell who was who. They even thought it was a SWAT operation at first.

One man, Steven Turner, says the ambush is “still fresh” in his mind.

Turner was Griffis’ partner on transport duty that day. They drove an inmate named James O’Brien (convicted of felony murder) from Glades Correctional Institution in Belle Glade to Rosenberg’s office for a skin cancer examination.

Van Poyck and O’Brien had done time together, and Van Poyck, a sharp jailhouse lawyer, had made O’Brien’s case his mission. But the law wouldn’t budge. So O’Brien tipped off Van Poyck from prison about the doctor’s appointment.

Griffis parked, and Turner glanced down at some paperwork. When he looked up, a 9mm was pointing at his head. Van Poyck ordered him under the van. Valdes, meanwhile, ordered Griffis to give him the keys to the padlock.

Instead, Griffis chucked them into a bush. It was the last choice he ever made.

Because he was underneath the van, Turner testified, he didn’t know for sure who shot Griffis.

He was sure that it was Van Poyck who aimed the pistol at his own forehead. (Van Poyck denies he tried to kill Turner.)

“I watched the trigger go down, and by the grace of God it did not go off,” Turner said by phone from Georgia, where he now works as a contractor. “I will remember that for the rest of my born days.”

Van Poyck and Valdes left O’Brien — who ended up back in prison — and fled.

Nearby in a squad car was Freddy N. Naranjo. He was 10 days out of the police academy, working at the West Palm Beach Police Department, and starting a new life in Florida with his young family.

The call came over the radio, and almost simultaneously, a red Cadillac screamed across his field of vision.

“My partner was saying, ‘Don’t lose sight of him. Don’t lose sight of him,'” said Naranjo, 54, now a detective planning to retire next year.

They gave chase, too high on adrenaline to think about the bullets. “Only in the movies” are windshields bulletproof, Naranjo said.

They were near Palm Beach International Airport when Valdes slammed into the palm tree.

Sometimes Van Poyck, his sister and friends wonder what the jury would have done if it had known at sentencing that Valdes was the trigger man. In the flurry of appeals leading up to this week’s execution, the defense team has focused on that point, among other more technical arguments.

Mark Wilensky was Valdes’ first lawyer in the case. He said he “always found the sentence troubling and the situation troubling from Day One.”

“There were a number of questions that remain unanswered,” he said.

Meanwhile, many who want Van Poyck dead are hesitant to say much, lest their words somehow delay the execution.

“I’d rather be more safe than sorry until justice 100 percent prevails,” Turner said. “It’s 26 years waiting for justice to prevail.”

But Van Poyck’s last day will be doleful for the people who love him. They say he is calmer now and finally capable of living up to the potential he showed as a smart kid from Miami whose father was an airline executive.

He wrote recently to Guy Moore, his old halfway house director in Tallahassee: “It is my eternal regret that I failed to live up to your expectations.”

Van Poyck ran away from that halfway house a few times in the 1960s and finally just didn’t come back. He was a professional criminal after that.

“God,” Moore said. “What if he’d gone back to Tallahassee? Maybe he’d have gone to school. Maybe he’d have channeled all that energy.”

https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-2013-06-08-fl-william-van-poyck-20130521-story.html

Darrell Brooks Arrested In Wisconsin Massacre

darrell brooks mugshot

Darrell Brooks has been arrested for the massacre in Wisconsin that has left five people dead and 49 injured. According to Waukesha Wisconsin police Darrell Brooks was driving the red SUV that plowed into crowds of people gathered at a Santa Clause parade. Darrell Brooks who was bailed out of jail after trying to run over his girlfriend and child earlier in November. Right now no motive is known for the senseless attack though some are pointing at the recent Kyle Rittenhouse acquittal. Among the many questions being asked today is why this violent felon was even allowed to post bail. Needless to say this is a breaking story.

Darrell Brooks Waukesha Timeline

4:00 pm – Waukesha Christmas parade begins

4:38 pm – A red SUV is observed traveling at a high rate of speed being chased by police cars

  • The red SUV barely misses a little girl dancing in the road
  • The red SUV strikes a marching band leaving several injured
  • The red SUV strikes several girls carrying pompoms
  • The red SUV leaves the area chased by police, gunshots are fired

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Police confirmed that five people were killed and 48 were injured, including two children in critical condition, when a 39-year-old man driving a maroon SUV plowed into a crowd at a parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin. 

The suspect, Darrell Brooks, will be charged with five counts of first-degree intentional homicide and other offenses, according to police chief Dan Thompson. 

Moments before the tragedy, Brooks was involved in a domestic violence incident that he was fleeing. Authorities said that it is “not a terrorist event.”

https://www.foxnews.com/live-news/wisconsin-waukesha-suv-plows-crowd-christmas-parade

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Milwaukee prosecutors are conducting an internal review into their own office’s decision to make an “inappropriately low” bail recommendation for Darrell Brooks Jr., the man suspected of plowing an SUV through a crowd in nearby Waukesha during a Christmas parade.

The horror left at least five people dead and 48 injured – including 18 children rushed to Children’s Wisconsin hospital in Milwaukee. Waukesha Police Chief Dan Thompson said during an afternoon news conference that prosecutors plan to bring five counts of first-degree intentional homicide and additional charges.

Brooks has multiple pending cases in Milwaukee County – including a 2020 case involving two counts of second-degree recklessly endangering and being a felon in possession of a firearm, according to a spokesperson for Milwaukee District Attorney John Chisholm. Bail was originally set at $10,000 and later reduced to $7,500, the district attorney’s office said

But due to a court scheduling conflict that would have deprived Brooks of his right to a speedy trial his bail was again reduced, this time to just $500, which he posted on Feb. 21, 2021, according to prosecutors.

Earlier this month, Milwaukee authorities charged Brooks with another reckless endangering out, felony bail jumping, battery, obstructing an officer and disorderly conduct. He allegedly ran a woman over with what may have been the same SUV that wreaked havoc on the Christmas parade. He was released on $1,000 cash bail on Nov. 11.

“The State’s bail recommendation in this case was inappropriately low in light of the nature of the recent charges and the pending charges against Mr. Brooks,” Chisholm’s office said Monday. “The bail recommendation in this case is not consistent with the approach of the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office toward matters involving violent crime, nor was it consistent with the risk assessment of the defendant prior to setting of bail.”

The DA’s office said an internal review of the bail recommendation decision is underway.

In a recent case, a woman told police that Brooks charged into her hotel room, shouted profanity at her, and took her cellphone before driving away. He allegedly circled back later, found her walking to a nearby gas station and punched her after she refused to get into his car. When she started to walk away, he allegedly ran her over with his vehicle.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/waukesha-christmas-horror-milwaukee-darrell-brooks-bail-review

Darrell Brooks Videos

Perez Reed Charged With 6 Murders

Perez Reed photos

Perez Reed a suspected serial killer has now been charged with six murders. According to police Perez Reed who was initially charged with four murders in Missouri is now facing two more murder charges in Kansas. Below is Perez Reed timeline

Perez Reed Timeline

September 12 – Perez Reed would shoot a man several times in the chest. The man would survive

September 13 – Reed would shoot and kill 16-year-old Marnay Haynes

September 16 – Perez would shoot a woman in the face who thankfully would survive her injuries. That same day police would find the body of 49 year old Pamela Abercrombie

September 18 – Police believe that Perez shot and killed Carey Ross whose body would be found on the 19th

September 26 – Perez Reed would shoot and kill Lester Robinson

October 28 – Perez Reed would travel from St Louis to Kansas City where he would murder 35-year-old Damon Irvin

October 29 – Police would find the body of  25-year-old Rau’Daja Fairrow

Is Perez Reed A Serial Killer

The FBI who has been investigating the Perez Reed murders have been hesitant to name him a serial killer as he is not following the normal behavior of such behavior. Of course normally when someone is a spree killer all of the murders would have taken place during the same day. In the end it does not really matter what he is classified as for six people have lost their lives.

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A suspected serial killer accused of four homicides in Missouri was charged Thursday with two more counts of first-degree murder in Kansas, authorities said.

Perez Reed, 26, was accused of killing two people identified by police in Kansas City, Kansas, as Damon Irvin and Rau’daja Fairrow at an apartment complex in late October.

Authorities discovered their bodies while conducting a welfare check.

Reed, who was arrested Nov. 5 in Independence, Missouri, has also been charged with four counts of first-degree murder in the city and county of St. Louis, court records show.

He faces multiple allegations of assault and armed criminal action, as well as a federal weapons charge.

When Reed was arrested, he had a .40 caliber semi-automatic pistol, a caliber federal investigators said matched shell casings found at unsolved shootings in and around St. Louis, the FBI said in a statement.

The FBI added that the victims found in Kansas City were shot and killed in a manner “consistent” with the St. Louis shootings.

The four Missouri victims were shot in the head on separate days in September. They have been identified as Marnay Haynes, 16; Lester Robinson, 40; Pamela Abercrombie, 49; and Carey Ross, 24.

St. Louis County Lt. Craig Longworth has said there was no known connection between the victims.

A possible motive wasn’t immediately clear. Reed, who was being held on $2 million bond, has denied hurting anyone, according to an affidavit.

The public defender’s office in St. Louis, which is representing Reed, couldn’t immediately be reached. It wasn’t clear if he had a lawyer in the Kansas City cases

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/suspected-midwest-serial-killer-charged-two-murders-rcna6097

Perez Reed Videos

Young Dolph Murder Suspects Photos Released

young dolph murder suspects

In todays crime news, Just days after the murder of Young Dolph in Memphis Tennessee police have issued a photo of the two suspects in hopes it will lead to arrest. Young Dolph whose real name is Adolph Thornton, Jr. was at a popular bakery called Makeda’s Homemade Butter Cookies when he was approached by the two suspects who would open fire killing the popular rapper. Yo Gotti who was a rival of Young Dolph has had Memphis police standing watch outside of Gotti restaurant in fear of retaliation for Young Dolph murder. Over the last few years Young Dolph had survived at least two murder attempts.

Young Dolph Murder More News

Three independent law enforcement sources confirmed to FOX13 that rapper Young Dolph was shot and killed in Memphis Wednesday afternoon.

Maurice Hill, the owner of the shop where the shooting happened, Makeda’s Butter Cookies, told FOX13 his employees said Young Dolph, 36, walked into the store to buy cookies. Someone then drove up and shot and killed him at the South Memphis bakery.

Shortly before 5 p.m., Memphis police released preliminary information about the shooting. Officers said the investigation is pointing to Young Dolph being the victim, but they said the identification process has not been completed.

One suspect holds what appears to be a semi-automatic rifle. The other aims a handgun into the bakery.

Memphis police said that the shooters pulled up in a white, two-door Mercedez Benz before running past Young Dolph’s car and shooting into the cookie shop.

Police called the shooting “senseless” and said, “our hearts go out to the Thornton family and all who were affected by this horrific act of violence.” The release closed by saying officers are committed to working to curb these types of incidents.

Back on the scene, hundreds of people flocked to the area as headlines broke across the world. Tensions flared and raw emotion spilled over. People laid on the ground, crying. Some onlookers called for an end to gun violence and peace. Others cursed and expressed anger at the loss of the Memphis icon.

Chaos broke out at times. A car with a man inside, apparently shot, drove into the crime scene. That man was taken away on a stretcher by paramedics.

For hours, police worked to push the crowd back from the scene while trying to make sense of the tragic death. Airways Boulevard, a major street in Memphis, was shut down during the course of the investigation.

The Memphis rap legend was no stranger to the bakery. A week before being shot to death, Young Dolph was there, spreading love and promoting the business.

His camouflage Corvette sat in the parking lot of the bakery when FOX13 crews arrived. Hours later, it was towed. Videos of the car went viral on TikTok as it was taken by police. Hundreds of people in the comments asking for answers.

The day after Young Dolph was gunned down inside of the bakery, a memorial popped up outside as fans paid tribute to the rapper.

Stuffed animals, balloons, flowers, candles and a dolphin sign hung around the cookie shop Thursday afternoon.

FOX13 spoke to people from as far away as Michigan who came to pay respects to the rapper.

Around 3:30 p.m., a man was shot near the memorial, police said.

The Memphis Police Department said the shooting happened at the Family Dollar right next door to the cookie shop.

Three people were detained in connection to that shooting, according to police, and the man was not critically injured in the shooting.

On Thursday, as Makeda’s Cookie’s sat boarded up, the community of Memphis community rallied to support the local bakeshop, named after a 7-year-old girl who died of Leukemia.

Tami Sawyer took to Twitter to support the business. CashApp donations to the bakery can be made to the owner Pamela Hill directly at $cookiequeen99.

Renowned Memphis chef Kelly English also voiced his support, saying that $1 from each dessert order he receives from Thursday to Sunday night will also go towards Makeda’s Cookies.

https://www.fox13memphis.com/news/local/rapper-young-dolph-shot-killed-memphis-law-enforcement-sources-confirm/Y37EQYI6TJBHHMLLBAR6KSMPNA/