Shahboz Rajabboev Murders 4 In Brooklyn

Shahboz Rajabboev
Shahboz Rajabboev

Shahboz Rajabboev is an accused killer from Brooklyn New York who has been charged with the murders of four people including two young children

According to police reports Shahboz Rajabboev would stab and slash to death Fayzieva Mavlyuda, 56, Maftuna Khakimova, 27, and the two chidren, 5-year-old Kamila Shavkatova and her little brother, Timur Shavkatov, 4.

Police officer would arrived at the scene finding three people dead and Fayzieva Mavlyuda with stab wounds to their neck who would die from their injuries. The two bodies of the children were found stuffed into a laundry bag

Shahboz Rajabboev was arrested at the murder scene and has been charged with four counts of murder

Shahboz Rajabboev News

A man has been arrested after two young kids and two women were stabbed to death inside a Brooklyn home Friday night, police said.

Police identified the suspect as 24-year-old Shahboz Rajabboev of Brooklyn

Rajabboev was charged with four counts of Muder 1st degree and four counts of Murder 2nd degree, policec said.

Police received a call of an assault in progress on Avenue P and West 8th Street in Bensonhurst around 10 p.m.

When they arrived, they found a woman, 56, stabbed multiple times in the neck.

Police also found a 27-year-old woman, a boy, 4, and a 5-year-old girl.

Fayzieva Mavlyuda, 56, Maftuna Khakimova, 27, Kamila Shavkatova, 5, and Timur Shavkatov, 4, from Brooklyn, were identified as victims in the incident.

Police said Mavlyuda is the grandmother and Shavkatova is the mother to both of the children.

All of them were pronounced dead at the scene.

The motive is unclear at this time.

The investigation remains ongoing.

https://www.fox5ny.com/news/suspect-arrested-after-4-stabbed-death-brooklyn-home-nypd

Brandon Kendrick Murders Family In Alabama

Brandon Kendrick
Brandon Kendrick

Brandon Kendrick is an alleged killer from Alabama who has been charged with the murder of his wife and four young children

According to police reports deputies would go to a home in Bibb County Alabama where they would find the body of 24-year-old Kelsey Kendrick and the bodies of four children aged nine, two and two six year olds. Two of the children were biologically Brandon Kendrick and the other two were those of a relative

Police would arrest Brandon Kendrick and have charged him with five counts of capital murder. Right now police are trying to figure out the reason behind this family massacre

Brandon Kendrick News

An Alabama man has been charged with capital murder in the shooting deaths of five people, including his wife and two children, authorities said.

The quintuple homicide occurred in West Blocton in Bibb County on Thursday around 10 p.m. CT, according to the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency’s State Bureau of Investigation.

The suspect — Brandon Kendrick, 32 — is accused of fatally shooting his wife, 24-year-old Kelsey Kendrick, a 2-year-old, two 6-year-olds and a 9-year-old, ALEA said.

Among the juvenile victims, two were the suspect’s children and two were relatives, according to ALEA.

Kendrick was arrested and has been charged with five counts of capital murder. He has been booked into the Bibb County Jail with no bond.

It is unclear if he has an attorney.

ALEA’s State Bureau of Investigation has launched an investigation into the quintuple homicide.

No additional information has been released amid the ongoing investigation, including an alleged motive.

The agency’s findings will be turned over to Alabama’s Fourth Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office.

https://abcnews.go.com/US/alabama-bibb-county-shooting/story?id=112108472

Brandon Kendrick More News

An Alabama man has been charged with murder in the shooting deaths of a woman and four children.

Bibb County Sheriff Jody Wade said that Brandin Kendrick, 32, was arrested and charged with five counts of capital murder, WBRC reported.

Wade said deputies were called after 8 p.m. Thursday to a home West Blocton.

WBMA identified the woman as 24-year-old Kelsey Kendrick, Brandin Kendrick’s wife. Two of the children were 6, and the other two were 2 and 9, the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency said. Two of the children were the Kendricks, and two belonged to other relatives.

Arrest records said that all five were shot in the head, WTVM reported.

No further details were released.

Megan Sattizahn Murders Infant

Megan Sattizahn
Megan Sattizahn

Megan Sattizahn is an alleged killer from North Carolina who has been charged with the murder of her nine month old daughter

According to police reports Megan Sattizahn was seen walking around naked in her neighborhood and someone called 911. When police arrived they would follow Megan back to her home where they would discover the body of nine month old Samantha Sattizahn

When questioned by police Megan Sattizahn would admit to murdering her daughter which she described as a mercy killing. Sattizahn would also admit to attempting to kill the little girl months before by poisoning her

Megan Sattizahn would be arrested and has been charged with murder

Megan Sattizahn News

A mother has been arrested and charged in the death other 9-month-old daughter, Samantha Sattizahn.

On Friday July 12th, around 4:54 a.m. deputies with the Catawba County Sheriff’s Office responded to a report of suspicious person near Section House Road.

Upon arrivals, detectives say they encountered a woman, identified as Megan Sattizahn who appeared disoriented. Deputies say they followed this woman to her residence on Tanglewood Drive.

When deputies arrived, they discovered a 9-month-old infant dead inside of the residence.

A news release confirmed that the infant was the daughter of Sattizahn.

Deputies say foul play is suspected. Foul play is suspected. Sheriff’s Investigators are consulting with the District
Attorney’s Office and are awaiting autopsy results.

Sattizahn was admitted to a local hospital at the time of the suspected murder.

As a result of the investigation, Sattizahn has been charged with murder, and is being held in the Catawba County Detention facility under no bond.

Megan Sattizahn has her first appearance in Catawba County District Court on July 22nd

Megan Sattizahn More News

A woman has been arrested and charged with murder for the death of her 9-month-old daughter in Catawba County.

Megan Stack Sattizahn, 39, is in the Catawba County jail with no bond. She’s accused of killing her daughter, Samantha Sattizahn, on July 12

Channel 9 has learned that mother was also involved in a 2017 nationwide search involving another daughter that started in the Charlotte area.

Authorities were called around 5 a.m. that day for a suspicious person walking without clothing on Section House Road, north of Conover. They found Sattizahn, who seemed to be disoriented. She ran off and they followed her to a nearby home along Tanglewood Drive and found the baby girl’s body inside.

Deputies said Sattizahn was taken to the hospital for a mental health evaluation. They announced her arrest on Friday, seven days after they were called to the home.

According to court documents, Sattizahn admitted to deputies that she killed her daughter, describing it as a “mercy killing.” The search warrant also describes how Sattizahn allegedly tried to poison her daughter back in December saying “God told her to,” but that attempt was never reported to authorities.

Back in 2017, Sattizahn, who went by Megan Stack, was accused of picking up her 8-year-old daughter from elementary school and then couldn’t be located for days. At the time, police said Megan Stack’s emotional state and recent behavior left them with serious concerns for their safety.

Days later, mother and daughter were found safe in Missouri.

Channel 9′s Dave Faherty tried to talk with Sattizahn’s husband on Friday but he declined to comment. He also reached out to the Department of Social Services to see if they’ve had any involvement in the case after what happened in Charlotte.

Sattizahn is scheduled for a first court appearance on Monday.

https://www.wsoctv.com/news/local/woman-arrested-charged-with-murder-death-9-month-old-daughter/FQGFZ4WEA5FMPGQCVD4VRK57WA

Deputy Sean Grayson Murders Sonya Massey

Sean Grayson
Sean Grayson

Former Deputy Sean Grayson is an alleged killer from Illinois who has been charged with the murder of Sonya Massey

According to police reports Sean Grayson was employed as a Deputy at the Sangamon County Police Department when he was called to the home of Sonya Massey in Springfield Illinois.

Sonya Massey had called 911 to report that she believed there was a prowler outside of her home. Once inside of the home Deputy Sean Grayson would allow Massey to remove a pot of boiling water from the stove. The Deputy then became aggressive and pulled out his service weapon. Massey would put her hands up in the air and say she was sorry before Sean Grayson would fatally shoot her. Grayson then refused another Deputy to render aid to Ms Massey

After an investigation Sean Grayson would be arrested and charged with first degree murder. Grayson has also been fired from the Sangamon County police department

Sean Grayson News

n Illinois sheriff’s deputy charged with murder in the death of a Black woman shot her in the face during a tense moment over a pot of water in her home and then discouraged his partner from trying to save her, authorities said Thursday.

The details were in a court document filed in support of keeping fired Sangamon County Deputy Sean Grayson in custody without bond. County Circuit Judge Ryan M. Cadagin agreed, denying Grayson pretrial release at a hearing Thursday in Springfield.

In a courtroom guarded by a dozen sheriff’s deputies with three more patrolling the hall, Cadagin described the actions the former deputy is accused of as “such a departure from the expectations of a civil society.”

Sonya Massey, 36, was killed at her home in Illinois’ capital city, about 200 miles (322 kilometers) south of Chicago, after deputies responded to her 911 call about a possible prowler early on July 6.

Prosecutors alleged that after Grayson allowed Massey to move a pot of water heating on the stove and she set it on a counter, Grayson then “aggressively yelled” at Massey over the pot and pulled his 9 mm pistol. Massey then put her hands in the air, declared “I’m sorry” and ducked for cover before being shot in the face. Grayson also discouraged the other deputy from getting his medical kit, prosecutors said.

“The other deputy still rendered aid and stayed with Ms. Massey until medical help arrived,” First Assistant State’s Attorney Mary Rodgers wrote. Grayson “at no time attempted to render aid to Ms. Massey.”

The 30-year-old Grayson, who is white, was indicted on charges of first-degree murder, aggravated battery with a firearm and official misconduct. He pleaded not guilty in his first court appearance Thursday.

More than 30 of Massey’s family members and their supporters filled the seats of the courtroom Thursday, several of whom declined to comment afterward.

No one argued with the state’s contention that body camera footage of the incident upheld the first requirement in ordering Grayson detained — that there is a strong presumption that the actions alleged in the indictment occurred. Authorities said they plan to release the body camera footage publicly Monday.

“At no point did this defendant show anything but callousness to human life,” Rodgers said.

Defense attorney Dan Fultz argued for Grayson’s release, contending the state’s arguments fell short on other arguments. Fultz said Grayson is not a threat to the community because was compliant and turned himself in within a half-hour after his arrest warrant was issued.

He said the Army veteran owns a home in Riverton, a community just east of Springfield, with his fiancee, whom he plans to marry this fall. His detention would pose a burden on the county, he said, because of Stage 3 colon cancer diagnosed last fall that requires special medical treatment.

Fultz asked for Grayson’s release on condition that weapons be removed from his home, that he undergo a mental health evaluation and the be put on around-the-clock electronic monitoring.

Cadagin decreed that Massey, weighing about 110 pounds (50 kilograms), posed no threat to the 6-foot-3 (190-centimeter), 228-pound (103-kilogram) Grayson, who was armed and accompanied by another deputy, and after shooting her refused to render aid.

Sheriff Jack Campbell said Wednesday that Grayson was fired because it is evident that the deputy “did not act as trained or in accordance with our standards. … With our badge we accept enormous responsibility, and if that responsibility is abused, there should be consequences.”

Ben Crump, an attorney for Massey’s family, said the charges were a “step toward justice for Sonya’s loved ones, especially her children, who have endured unimaginable pain and suffering since they were notified of this tragedy.”

As many as 200 people gathered Wednesday at the Springfield NAACP building to express support for Massey and her family.

“I am enraged that another innocent Black woman had her life taken from her at the hands of a police officer,” Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said after the indictment.

Grayson is due back in court Aug. 26. He has been with the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Department about 18 months, Fultz said, after serving as an officer with several other police agencies in central Illinois for about seven years before that.

https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/illinois-sheriffs-deputy-charged-murder-fatal-shooting-woman-112059619

Sean Grayson Bodycam Video

Ruben Gutierrez Execution Scheduled For Today

Ruben Gutierrez
Ruben Gutierrez

The State of Texas is getting ready to executed Ruben Gutierrez for the murder of Escolastica Harrison in 1998

According to court documents Ruben Gutierrez and two accomplices would break into the home of 85 year old Escolastica Harrison. During the robbery the elderly woman would be beaten and stabbed to death

Ruben Gutierrez would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Gutierrez has insisted over the years that he had nothing to do with the murder of Esccolastica Harrison and has been pushing for DNA testing to prove his innocence

Ruben Gutierrez will be put to death by lethal injection tonight, July 16 2024, unless he gets a last minute stay

  • Update- The execution was postponed at the last minute by the Supreme Court due to the DNA issues

Ruben Gutierrez Execution News

Texas is set to execute Ruben Gutierrez on Tuesday for the 1998 murder of an elderly woman in Brownsville after he spent the past decade fighting for DNA testing of evidence that he says would prove he did not kill her.

Gutierrez would be the third person executed by the state of Texas this year. For the rest of 2024, Texas has scheduled five more executions, the same as all other states combined, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Gutierrez, now 47, was sentenced to death in 1999 for the stabbing and beating murder of 85-year-old Escolastica Harrison during a home robbery. Harrison, who lived with her nephew in the mobile home park she owned and who distrusted banks, had $600,000 stashed in her home at the time of her death, according to court records.

Alex Hernandez, the victim’s nephew and godson, planned to drive six hours from his home in Brownsville to the Texas State Penitentiary in Huntsville to attend the execution with his girlfriend and a few friends on Tuesday. He had made the trip in 2020 and was in the waiting room when the warden told him the U.S. Supreme Court had halted Gutierrez’s execution just over an hour before it was set to take place. He thought the news was a “really bad joke.”

Now, four years later, “it’s just really hit home,” he said on Monday. “It’s really heart-wrenching, heartbreaking again having to relive it.”

Hernandez, 55, remembered his aunt, whom family members affectionately called “Aunt Peco,” as “a really happy person, always wanting to sing and always having a smile on her face.”

She taught ESL at the local elementary school, where Hernandez said she was a “really strict teacher” intent on helping her students, many of whom were migrants, learn English. Hernandez spent summers growing up with his aunt and uncle, and he recalled chasing butterflies around the trailer park and eating peaches plucked off the trees that surrounded Harrison’s home.

“She was just the most beautiful person,” he said. “She wasn’t just some old lady.”

Gutierrez and two other suspects — Rene Garcia and Pedro Gracia — were accused of planning to rob Harrison, but each pegged the other two for the murder. Garcia, who pleaded guilty, is serving a life sentence. Gracia was released from jail on a $75,000 bond and vanished. He has been wanted by authorities since.

Gutierrez maintains that he did not kill Harrison, that he was not inside her home when she was killed and that he did not know of nor consent to any intention to kill her.

In multiple appeals, Gutierrez has requested, and been denied, DNA testing of evidence that was collected at the scene but never tested, including fingernail scrapings, a hair found in Harrison’s hand and blood stains. He has argued that DNA testing of those materials would corroborate his claims that he did not kill Harrison, and because the court has denied his requests for testing, Gutierrez has argued that his due process rights were violated, rendering his execution unjust and premature.

“I just don’t understand what they’re afraid of,” said Shawn Nolan, Gutierrez’s lawyer. If the case happened today, he added, “they would test everything. That’s what they do with these cases, always, especially in a murder case, and especially in a capital case.”

His lawyers also argued that a jury would not have sentenced Gutierrez to death if the results of DNA testing pointed to another suspect as the killer.

“A juror who’s going to decide whether they’re going to sentence somebody to death or not surely should know whether that person was the actual killer,” Nolan said. “In this case, the prosecution argued to the jury that Ruben was the actual killer, even though there was no direct evidence of that.”

Cameron County prosecutors argued that because there may have been multiple killers, any evidence tested that did not match Gutierrez’s DNA would not prove his innocence.

Prosecutors also argued that under Texas’ law of parties — which allows all those involved in a crime to be held criminally responsible for it, even if they did not carry it out themselves — Gutierrez would remain eligible for the death penalty, regardless of any DNA test results, given his admission that he had “planned the whole rip off.”

Gutierrez has maintained that the statement he gave about planning the robbery was false, and that he had “assented to it only after detectives threatened to arrest his wife and take away his children,” his attorneys said in a June 2019 court filing.

Gutierrez’s lawyers have further argued that evidence suggests that Harrison’s nephew, Avel Cuellar, masterminded the robbery. Cuellar, who is now dead, was initially considered a suspect by law enforcement but then dropped from the investigation.

In 2019, Gutierrez’s attorneys also challenged the constitutionality of a Texas law that limits when evidence can be DNA-tested after conviction. That law requires a convicted person, in order to get DNA testing, to show that he “would not have been convicted if exculpatory results had been obtained through DNA testing.”

“It’s a catch-22,” Nolan said.

Nolan argued, and a federal district court agreed, that Texas’ DNA statute was unconstitutional because it denied Gutierrez the ability to test evidence that would demonstrate his innocence and challenge his death sentence. But the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that ruling this year, saying the federal district court did not have jurisdiction over Gutierrez’s lawsuit.

In a petition that was still pending as of Tuesday morning, Gutierrez’s attorneys asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Fifth Circuit’s ruling and halt his execution. Gutierrez’s application for clemency was denied on Friday.

Gutierrez’s execution has been delayed several times since he was sentenced to death 25 years ago.

In 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court halted Gutierrez’s execution just over an hour before he was set to die on the basis of an appeal he had filed saying that a new Texas policy banning religious advisers in the execution room with inmates violated his religious freedoms.

His execution was previously stayed in October 2019 by Texas’ highest criminal court due to a clerical error. Gutierrez’s attorneys had argued his death warrant was invalid because it didn’t have the proper seal from the court when it was delivered to the sheriff and an attorney. Before that, a federal district judge halted a September 2018 execution date to give Gutierrez’s new attorney more time to investigate his case.

Hernandez, the victim’s nephew and godson, said he had promised his mother that he would bear witness to Gutierrez’s execution.

“I’m not looking forward to the execution. I’m looking forward to the end,” he said. “My aunt would probably want me to forgive him, and I do. But he has to pay for his crime.”

https://www.texastribune.org/2024/07/16/texas-execution-death-penalty-ruben-gutierrez