Bokio Johnson Murders Sons Alleged Killer

Bokio Johnson

Bokio Johnson was arrested in New Orleans Louisiana for shooting and killing the man who was on trial for killing his son. According to police reports Hollis Carter was headed to court where he was to stand trial for the murders of Caleb Johnson, 18, and his sister Breyiana Brown, 25 when Hollis, allegedly, opened fire killing Caleb and injuring his mother who was in the vehicle with him. Hollis Carter who somehow was out on bond for the double murder was fatally shot inside of the vehicle. Hollis mother is in critical condition.

Bokio Johnson is now charged with the murder of Hollis Carter and the attempted murder of Hollis’s mother. Caleb Johnson and Breyiana Brown were shot and killed in March 2021, authorities believe that Breyiana was the target and Caleb just happened to be there.

Bokio Johnson More News

olice have arrested a man accused of killing a murder suspect and wounding his mother Tuesday morning.

According to the New Orleans Police Department, Bokio Johnson, 46, shot and killed Hollis Carter, 21, who was heading to court for the slaying of an Edna Karr student and his sister.

Carter was out on bond despite facing two second-degree murder charges in the March 2021 deaths of Caleb Johnson, 18, and his sister Breyiana Brown, 25

Detectives believe Carter shot and killed the siblings during a gun sale gone wrong. A third unidentified person suffered non-fatal injuries in the shooting.

On Tues., March 23, Carter was headed to court when Bokio Johnson allegedly shot him in the head and injured his mother in their vehicle.

Bokio Johnson faces second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder charges.

An obituary page for Caleb Johnson lists Bokio as his father

https://www.fox8live.com/2022/03/25/arrest-made-street-justice-killing-double-murder-suspect/

Bokio Johnson Other News

 A crime watchdog raises concerns about the snowball effect of crime, after Wednesday’s murder of a man who was out on bond, in spite of two second-degree murder charges pending against him. Hollis Carter was killed in Gentilly, after his arrest for the murders of an Edna Karr High School student and his sister last March.

21-year-old Carter was shot to death Wednesday morning in front of a place that has trained dozens of ministers.

“When they heard it everybody turned and they saw a gentleman standing out with his rifle pointing in the car,” said Pastor Mike Smith, with Bethel Baptist Community Church.

Carter was out on bond in spite of being charged with 2 counts of second-degree murder, for the March 2021 deaths of 18-year-old Karr High student Caleb Johnson and his 25-year-old sister Breyiana Brown, who was killed wearing an ankle monitor. She was released from jail in spite of a manslaughter guilty verdict, which was thrown out because it was rendered by a non-unanimous jury.

“Even the attorney representing the deceased called it street justice and he’s absolutely right,” said Rafael Goyeneche with the Metropolitan Crime Commission. He is among those who question whether Carter should’ve been out on bond at all. In addition to 2 second-degree murder charges, Hollis was also charged with attempted second-degree murder obstruction of justice and illegal carrying of a weapon.

“Even though Breyiana Brown was the target, her brother was murdered and his acquaintance who was there was also wounded showing the collateral damage,” said Goyeneche.

Hollis’s bond was set at $300,000, according to court documents. He was shot to death while being driven to a court appearance by his mother, who was also wounded.

“Shots went off, within moments the lady who is the driver fell out of the car,” said Pastor Smith.

Witnesses were stunned to see the brutality of Hollis’s murder in front of the cemetery in broad daylight they were all also startled to see the wounding of his mother.

“She was hurt she couldn’t feel her legs and they called the police. She kept saying my baby, he’s in the car is he ok? They didn’t tell her that he was deceased they just sent her to the hospital,” said Smith.

Carter’s mother is reported to be in critical condition after an apparent retribution shooting which some say could’ve been avoided.

“This is a case where I believe the judge needs to drill down and do their due diligence and they can reduce the potential for this occurring,” said Goyeneche.

Goyeneche urges judges to take a look at the totality of the circumstances surrounding a crime before setting bonds which he says all too often lead to the release of suspects who are involved in more shootings.

https://www.fox8live.com/2022/03/24/double-murder-suspect-out-bond-was-murdered-while-heading-court/

RaDonda Vaught Medical Mistake Or Murder

RaDonda Vaught

RaDonda Vaught is a nurse that use to work at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center and has been charged with reckless homicide after giving a patient the wrong medication. According to police reports RaDonda Vaught was suppose to give the patient a sedative called Versed however she would give the patient a paralyzing agent called vecuronium instead. Unfortunately the patient would die and RaDonda Vaught was eventually charged with reckless homicide. Now of course the debate that is surrounding the medical community is whether a mistake constitutes criminal charges. RaDonda Vaught jury is to begin deliberations tomorrow, Friday March 25 2022, and it will be interesting to see what takes place.

RaDonda Vaught More News

RaDonda Vaught, a Tennessee nurse, is the central figure in a criminal case that has captivated and horrified medical professionals nationwide.

RaDonda Vaught , 36, of Bethpage, has been criminally indicted on abuse and reckless homicide charges after she allegedly gave a patient the wrong medication, leading to her death. Many say they fear her case could set a precedent of prosecuting medical professionals for honest mistakes, so the case has become a rallying cry for nurses.

But Vaught’s case is also confusing.

The story of this fatal error spans three years, two legal proceedings and at least three investigating agencies. Many of the facts of the case were initially obscured from the public, and details that trickle into the public sphere are often incomplete and out of order.

RaDonda Vaught trial starts:Jury chosen in homicide trial of ex-Vanderbilt nurse RaDonda Vaught

This timeline, which combines reporting from more than a dozen Tennessean stories and hundreds of pages of county, state and federal investigation records, is an effort to help it all make sense.

October 2015 — RaDonda Vaught, a licensed nurse, begins working at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, the largest hospital in Nashville and one of the most respected hospitals in the nation.

Dec. 24, 2017 — Charlene Murphey, 75, a long-time resident of the Nashville suburb of Gallatin, checks into Vanderbilt with a subdural hematoma, or bleeding in her brain.

Dec. 26, 2017 — Murphey’s condition improves and she is almost ready to leave Vanderbilt. During a final scan in the hospital’s radiology department, Murphey is supposed to be given a sedative, Versed, but is accidentally given a dose of vecuronium, a powerful paralyzing medication, according to a federal investigations report. The drug leaves her brain dead.

RaDonda Vaught allegedly admits to hospital staff she is responsible for the medication error.

Dec. 27, 2017 — Murphey’s family gathers at Vanderbilt to say goodbye. She dies at about 1 a.m. after being disconnected from a breathing machine.

Later that day, two Vanderbilt neurologists report Murphey’s death to the Davidson County Medical Examiner without mentioning the medication error or vecuronium. Murphey’s death is attributed to bleeding in her brain and deemed “natural.” Based on information provided by Vanderbilt, the medical examiner does not independently investigate the death.

January 2018 — In the wake of Murphey’s death, Vanderbilt officials take several actions that obscure fatal medication error from the government and the public. The error is not reported to state or federal officials, which is required by law, or the Joint Commission, an accrediting agency that recommends but does not require reporting.

RaDonda Vaught is fired by Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Early 2018, exact date unknown — Vanderbilt negotiates an out-of-court settlement with Murphey’s family that requires them not to speak publicly about the death or the medication error. The settlement is not publicly known.

May 2018 — Vaught begins working as a “throughput coordinator” at TriStar Centennial Medical Center in Nashville, according to state records and her LinkedIn account. This is not a clinical position, but it does require a nursing license, records say.

Oct. 3, 2018 — An anonymous tipster alerts state and federal health officials to the unreported medication error that was responsible for Murphey’s death.

The Tennessee Department of Health, which is responsible for licensing and investigating medical professionals, decides not to pursue disciplinary action against Vaught. In a letter to Vanderbilt, the agency’s investigations director says Vaught’s case “did not constitute a violation of the statutes and/or rules governing the profession.” On the same day, Vaught is sent a letter saying “this matter did not merit further action.”

Oct. 31 to Nov. 8, 2018 — In response to the anonymous tip, the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services conducts a surprise inspection at Vanderbilt. The inspection confirms that Murphey died from an accidental dose of vecuronium and that Vanderbilt did not report the medication error to the government or the medical examiner, according to an inspection report.

Late November 2018 — The circumstances of the fatal mediation error become public for the first time. CMS releases an investigation report that details the error without identifying RaDonda Vaught or Murphey. CMS threatens to suspend Vanderbilt’s Medicare payments, crippling the hospital’s revenue, if Vanderbilt can not prove it has taken steps to prevent a similar error. Vanderbilt quickly responds with a “plan of correction” that appeases the federal agency and secures its Medicare reimbursements. Vanderbilt declines to release the plan of correction, although The Tennessean later obtains it through a public records request.

Feb 4., 2019 — RaDonda Vaught is publicly identified for the first time when she is arrested on a criminal indictment for her alleged role in Murphey’s death. She is charged with reckless homicide and impaired adult abuse.

Court documents also reveal Murphey’s identity for the first time. In an interview with The Tennessean, Murphey’s family members say she would forgive Vaught.

Feb. 5, 2019 — Vanderbilt executives speak about the fatal error during a meeting of the Tennessee Board of Licensing Health Care Facilities, which is responsible for disciplining hospitals. Vanderbilt Health System CEO C. Wright Pinson admits the death wasn’t reported to state regulators and said the hospital’s response was “too limited.” Vanderbilt officials also confirm for the first time that they negotiated a settlement with Murphey’s family. The board takes no disciplinary action against Vanderbilt.

Feb 8, 2019 — In a GoFundMe post to raise money for her legal defense, RaDonda Vaught appears to admit she made a mistake but does not elaborate.

“Many feel very strongly that setting the precedent that nurses should be indicted and incarcerated for inadvertent medical errors is dangerous,” she wrote.

(As of Feb. 24, 2020, this GoFundMe has raised more than $100,000.)

Feb. 20, 2019 — RaDonda Vaught makes her first appearance in court in her criminal case and enters a not guilty plea to all charges. The court hearing is attended by several dozen nurses, some of whom have traveled from outside of Tennessee to show their support for Vaught.

After the hearing, Vaught’ criminal defense attorney, Peter Strianse, insists that Vanderbilt shares blame for Murphey’s death.

“I think when this case is tried, and the facts come out, it’s a mistake and it’s not all of her fault either,” Strianse said. “There are some real systemic problems with the way they dispense medicine through that automatic dispensing system.”

March 27, 2019 — In court records, prosecutors reveal far more details about Vaught’s case. Investigators allege that Vaught made 10 separate errors when giving the wrong medication to Murphey, including overlooking multiple warning signs that she had the wrong medication. Court records state that Vaught would have had to look directly at a warning saying “WARNING: PARALYZING AGENT” before injecting the drug.

Court documents also say that Vaught admitted her error to investigators.

August 20, 2019 — At the request of law enforcement, Nashville Medical Examiner Feng Li re-examines the circumstances of Murphey’s death. Now aware of the medication error, Li changes Murphey’s official manner of death to “accidental.”

Sept. 27, 2019 — The Tennessee Department of Health reverses its prior decision not to pursue professional discipline against Vaught. Agency officials charge Vaught with three infractions before the Tennessee Board of Nursing. The agency refuses to explain why it reversed its prior decision. Vaught is charged with unprofessional conduct, abandoning or neglecting a patient that required care and failing to maintain an accurate patient record. Charging documents say Vaught could face thousands of dollars in fines and suspension or revocation of her nursing license

Late October to mid-November, 2019 — Because RaDonda Vaught is now facing two legal proceedings — a criminal trial and a professional discipline hearing — a debate begins over which case should proceed first. Vaught’s attorney attempts to delay the discipline proceeding until after her trial, arguing that if she defends herself by testifying in the discipline hearings, prosecutors may use that information against her at trial.

However, attorneys for the health department oppose this delay, insisting that Vaught is an urgent “threat” to the public. Much of the health department’s argument hinges on Vaught’s job at Centennial Medical Center, where she still works as a throughput coordinator.

An administrative judge, Elizabeth Cambron, decides not to delay the proceeding, saying Vaught’s desire to delay the hearing is “outweighed” by the “seriousness of the allegations against Ms. Vaught.”

Dec. 15, 2019 — A Tennessean investigation reveals how actions taken by Vanderbilt officials obscured the circumstances of Murphey’s death, delaying and hampering an investigation into the hospital. The story also includes the first public statements from Charlene Murphey’s grandson, Allen Murphey, who is not constrained by the confidentiality agreement signed by other family members.

“A cover-up — that’s what it screams,” Allen Murphey said. “They didn’t want this to be known, so they didn’t let it be known.”

Vanderbilt declines to comment. Spokesman John Howser said the hospital would not speak further about Murphey’s death “to avoid impacting either our former employee’s right to a fair trial or the district attorney’s ability to pursue the case as he deems necessary and appropriate.”

Jan 16, 2020 — Vaught’s attorney files a motion asking a county judge to overrule Cambron and delay the discipline proceeding until after the criminal trial. As of Feb. 25, a judge has not ruled on this request.

May 20-21, 2020 — Vaught’s professional discipline hearing is scheduled at a quarterly hearing of the Tennessee Board of Nursing.

July 13, 2020 —Vaught’s criminal trial is scheduled to begin.

Spring, 2020 — The coronavirus pandemic delays both Vaught’s professional discipline hearing and her criminal trial. 

Feb. 24, 2020 — Vaught’s professional discipline hearing is scheduled to begin at a meeting of the Tennessee Board of Nursing. However, days before this hearing is set to begin, Vaught’s attorney petitions a county judge to delay the hearing. The hearing is temporarily delayed.

July 22, 2021 — Vaught’s medical discipline hearing finally begins. During testimony, Vaught did not shirk responsibility for Murphey’s death, saying it is “completely my fault” that she did not double check the medicine she provided. 

But RaDonda Vaught and her attorney also argue the mistake was made possible because of flawed procedures at Vanderbilt. At the time, they said, Vanderbilt was struggling with a problem that prevented communication between its electronic health records, medication cabinets and the hospital pharmacy. This was causing delays at accessing medications, and the hospital’s short-term workaround was to override the safeguards on the cabinets so they could get drugs quickly as needed.

“Overriding was something we did as a part of our practice every day,” Vaught said. “You couldn’t get a bag of fluids for a patient without using an override function.”

July 23, 2021 — The Tennessee Board of Nursing revoked Vaught’s nursing license. Board members appear sympathetic to her case but do not overlook her errors. 

Board Vice Chairwoman Amber Wyatt said during deliberations it was clear there were “many mistakes and failures” involved in the case, but the scope of their proceeding was limited to Vaught. 

“The only thing we are charged with is the mistake that was made by the respondent in front of us today,” Wyatt said. “I feel like, as humans, every one of us make mistakes, none of us are perfect. But mistakes were made. And mistakes have consequences. And when we admit that we’ve done something wrong, it does not dismiss what happened.”

https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/health/2020/03/03/vanderbilt-nurse-radonda-vaught-arrested-reckless-homicide-vecuronium-error/4826562002/

Mark Walton NFL Player Arrested For Armed Robbery

Mark Walton

Former NFL running back Mark Walton has been arrested in Florida for armed robbery. According to court documents Mark Walton and an accomplice demanded money and valuables from the victim. In the end Mark Walton would make off with a Rolex watch. Mark Walton who is no stranger to the law was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in 2018 and the Miami Dolphins in 2019 however his NFL career was cut short after he was arrested three times in two years. Now Mark Walton is sitting in jail again as his robbery was caught on tape.

Mark Walton More News

Former Miami Hurricane Running Back Mark Walton is now facing a charge of armed robbery with a firearm or deadly weapon. The 24-year-old appeared in court today. Miami-Dade County records show Walton was booked at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center (TGK) just before 5 p.m. on Tuesday afternoon. He is being held on no bond. The alleged robbery was reportedly captured on nearby surveillance cameras.

According to the arrest report, Walton and another individual are accused of robbing a Rolex watch from someone on February 4th. The victim was reportedly walking toward the driver’s side of his car, when a vehicle pulled up and blocked his path.

The driver pointed a gun at the man while the passenger got out, approached the victim, and took his watch. After a struggle ensued, the driver got out of the car and they were able to snatch the watch from the man.

Police investigators discovered the vehicle was rented in Walton’s name. Police used data from cell-sites and GPS info from the rental to place Walton at the crime scene.

Investigators took Walton into custody on Tuesday and searched his home. They were able to locate Walton’s phone and a firearm presumed to be used in the crime.

Walton, who will celebrate his 25th birthday next week on March 29th, has had a troubled path since losing his mother, Kimberly Rogers, due to complications from a Stroke back in March 2017. Walton’s Father passed when Mark was just 7 years old. Walton is the second-to-youngest of six children in his family and is also now a Father.

The former Miami Dolphin was suspended by the NFL for violating the league’s personal conduct and substance abuse policies during the 2019 off-season, but he was reinstated last year.

We are praying for this young man to get the help he so desperately needs before his situation gets any worse.

More developments to come on this breaking story.

https://www.stateoftheu.com/2022/3/23/22992550/breaking-former-cane-mark-walton-arrested-for-an-alleged-armed-robbery

Mark Walton Other News

Former Dolphins and Miami Hurricanes running back Mark Walton was arrested Tuesday and charged with armed robbery by Miami-Dade Police.

Police said Walton, 24, approached the driver of a parked vehicle, pointed a handgun and demanded the victim “give me everything.”

Police said a struggle ensued that was caught on surveillance video, which showed Walton ripping a Rolex from the victim’s right hand as he fell backward

Police said they pieced together the crime using the video, a GPS tracking device on the black Honda Accord rented by Walton and location services of Walton’s cellphone, all placing him at the scene of the crime when it occurred.

Walton was a fourth-round draft pick of Cincinnati in 2018. He lasted one season with the Bengals, rushing for 34 yards, before a seven-game stint with the Dolphins in 2019. He started four games for Miami amid a string of injuries to running backs and carried 53 times for 201 yards. He hasn’t played in the NFL since.

Walton was cut by the Dolphins after his fourth arrest in a year. He was charged with aggravated battery on a pregnant woman. He also has faced charges including misdemeanor marijuana possession, misdemeanor battery, reckless driving, openly carrying a weapon and resisting an officer without violence.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/ex-dolphins-hurricanes-running-back-201509818.html

Paul Brock Guilty Of Triple Murder

Paul Brock

Paul Brock is a man from Kentucky who was just convicted in the murders of three people and that of an unborn baby. According to court documents Paul Brock would go to the home of Mary Jackson and open fire killing Mary, her daughter Tiffany and her husband Aaron Byers. Tiffany was pregnant at the time of her murder. Paul Brock would be arrested and charged with multiple murders as well as tampering with evidence. Paul Brock would initially plead guilty to the murders however he would later withdraw his plea. However when he took the case to court Paul Brock would be convicted of the murders and now he could face the death penalty at sentencing.

Paul Brock More News

A Corbin man was found guilty of the 2018 murders of Aaron Byers, Mary Jackson, Tiffany Byers and the fetal homicide of Tiffany Byers’ unborn child Thursday evening in Whitley Circuit Court.

Paul Brock, of Corbin, was also found guilty of one count of tampering with physical evidence.

The 12-member jury returned the verdict at approximately 7:15 p.m.

The verdict was reached after nine days of testimony. Jury selection began on March 1.

“We appreciate the jury’s service,” said Commonwealth’s Attorney Ronnie Bowling after the verdict was announced. “They put their life on hold for a month for a four-week trial, and we are just extremely grateful they listened to the evidence and gave it meaningful weight. We are grateful on behalf of the victims’ family for the verdict that was returned.”

The sentencing deliberations are expected to take place on Tuesday.

Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.

For more information about the trial and sentencing, pick up a copy of the March 30 issue of the News Journal

https://www.thenewsjournal.net/corbin-man-found-guilty-of-three-counts-of-murder/

Paul Brock Other News

The man accused of killing four members of a Whitley County family is due in court Monday.

Paul Brock faces a hearing in the February crime spree.

The last time Brock was in court was nearly two months ago when Corbin police laid out the case against the 37-year-old.

Officers say Brock fatally shot 45-year-old Aaron Byers, his 33-year-old wife, Tiffany, who was pregnant at the time, and Tiffany’s 74-year-old grandmother, Mary Jackson.

Police testified that the women were killed in Jackson’s home

They said Tiffany’s brother heard the shooting from another room, fled and later led investigators to Brock. Then Brock’s stepsons led officers to land Brock owns, where Byers’ body was found.

“Beside the shovel and the mattock that were laying in the wooded area, just right off the road, we discovered Mr. Byers body,” said Corbin police Lt. Coy Wilson. “It was covered with a little bit of leaves and a little bit of dirt.”

Brock remains jailed in the Whitley County Detention Center on $1 million bail.

https://www.lex18.com/news/2018/04/16/suspect-in-whitley-co-quadruple-murder-due-in-court/

April Barber Teen Killer Released From Prison

April Barber

April Barber was a fifteen year old pregnant teen killer from North Carolina when she would murder her Grandparents. According to court documents April Barber was in a relationship with a man twice her age and became pregnant. The teen and her boyfriend decided the only way to be together was to get rid of her Grandparents. The pair would set the house on fire which killed Barber Aaron Barber during the blaze and her Grandmother Lilith would die from her injuries a few days later. April Barber would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to two life sentences without parole however the current North Carolina Governor would commute her sentence to 30 years in prison. April Barber walked out of prison today at the age of 45.

April Barber More News

A Triad woman behind bars for the past 30 years, convicted of killing her grandparents in 1991, is now free after being granted clemency.

April Barber left an Anson Correctional Facility early Thursday morning. She entered prison at 15 years old and was expected to serve two life sentences. She’s now 45 and a free woman

We were there the moment the gates opened for Barber. Corrections officials drove her to a nearby parking lot where family and friends greeted her, including her husband and son. 

Barber was pregnant with her son when she killed her grandparents with the help of her 29-year-old boyfriend Clinton Johnson. Johnson died in prison in 1999.

Gov. Roy Cooper commuted her sentence on the recommendation of the Juvenile Sentencing Board.

Barber met her husband, William Scales, while incarcerated, so this was the first time many of her loved ones have ever seen her outside of prison.

She left the prison with her husband and a caravan of cars following them.

Barber’s lawyer tells us she’ll begin working as a paralegal. She received her paralegal certificate while behind bars.

A Charlotte-based group gave her a check for $500 to help her as she adjusts to life outside prison.

Barber was just 15 years old and living with her grandparents in 1991. She got pregnant by a man twice her age. Together, the pair devised a plan to set fire to her grandparents’ home. Barber Aaron Barber died in the blaze. His wife Lillie died days later. 

Barber spoke to WFMY News 2 exclusively in 2015 from prison. She told us why she thought she deserved clemency. 

“I think I have proven myself as far as that I have changed, that I’m not the same irrational person, and I think that my story in itself could help deter people from making the same mistakes that I did,” Barber said.

WFMY News 2’s Grace Holland will have more on this story during our newscasts on Thursday.

https://www.wfmynews2.com/article/news/local/april-barber-released-from-prison-30-years-after-killing-grandparents/83-98311818-98e9-4b0c-bade-f7007b10a6f8

April Barber Other News

mency by Governor Cooper got to walk out of prison Thursday morning.

April Barber, who was granted clemency in early March, walked out of Anson Correctional Institute around 9:45 a.m. and was greeted by a handful of family and friends.

‘Freedom fighting missionaries’ gave April a check for $500 to help her get established as she begins her new life.

FOX8 wasn’t allowed to ask questions, but overheard April tell someone she felt “amazing.”

April Leigh Barber was sentenced to two consecutive life terms in 1992, when she was 16 years old, after being found responsible for the deaths of Aaron and Lillie Barber in North Wilkesboro. The Barbers had adopted April as an infant, and they had fought over her romance with a man more than twice her age. They died on Labor Day 1991.

In his commutation, Cooper cited the facts that Barber, now 46, has been employed and participated in significant programming at the prison and had earned her General Education Degree and a paralegal certification.

The commutation order includes specific requirements that Barber must meet and sets her release day for March 24.

Commutations are recommended to the governor by the Juvenile Sentence Review Board that he established by executive order last year. The applications were reviewed by the Office of Executive Clemency, the Office of the General Counsel and the governor, the release said.

“North Carolina law continues to change to recognize that science is even more clear about immature brain development and decision making in younger people,” Cooper said in the release. “As people become adults, they can change, turn their lives around, and engage as productive members of society.”

https://myfox8.com/news/north-carolina/piedmont-triad/april-barber-released-from-prison-after-governors-commutation/