Tina Mejia And Jacob Gano Murder 7 Month Old

Tina Mejia Jacob Gano
Tina Mejia Jacob Gano

Tina Mejia and Jacob Gano are two accused killers from Arizona who have been charged with the murder of Mejia seven month old son

According to police reports the seven month old infant was brought to the hospital with severe injuries. The couple would tell doctors that the child had fallen the night before from about a foot high Tina Mejia and Jacob Gano would deny causing any harm to the infant however the twisted couple would admit to not bringing the child to the hospital right away to seek treatment.

Instead Tina Mejia and Jacob Gano would spend the day driving around buying drugs before bringing the seven month old infant to the hospital. The infant would die from his injuries and an autopsy would reveal that the infant skull had been fractured as well as other injuries that were not consistent from a small fall

Tina Mejia and Jacob Gano would be arrested and charged with murder and child abuse

Tina Mejia And Jacob Gano News

A Glendale mother and her boyfriend are accused of murder and child abuse in the death of the woman’s 7-month-old son.

Tina Mejia, 26, and Jacob Gano, 23, were arrested after Mejia’s infant son was brought to a hospital with severe injuries on March 31.

“Hospital staff stated the child had bruising to his body and swelling on the right side of his head,” court documents read. “His skull was fractured. There was a small laceration on his penis.”

Both Mejia and Gano denied causing the child’s injuries and said the infant fell out of bed the night before at their apartment. The couple claimed the boy “appeared to be acting normally,” so they went to bed.

The next day, the couple allegedly drove around to buy and sell drugs before bringing the boy to the hospital that night, police said.

“Both admitted that they believed the child needed medical attention but knowingly did not seek it out for him,” court documents read.

An autopsy revealed the child sustained a skull fracture, leading to his death.

“The injuries were inconsistent with a fall from 11″ high as described by Jacob and Tina,” court documents read, “The severity of the injury would have caused a severe altered mental state and screaming/crying continuously caused by the pain.”

Mejia and Gano were booked into jail on April 9.

https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/glendale-mother-and-her-boyfriend-accused-of-murder-child-abuse

Sophia Simmons Murders 5 Yr Old Girl

Sophia Simmons

Sophia Simmons is an alleged killer from Arizona who has been charged with the murder of her five year old daughter

According to police reports Sophia Simmons allegedly called a friend and told them that she had beaten her daughter and then she left the house. When Sophia returned the little girl was unresponsive. Instead of calling for help Simmons would leave the little girls body and five days later would throw it into a trash bin

When police went to Sophia Simmons home they would find that someone had attempted to cover up the crime scene. An autopsy would reveal both new and old injuries to the little girl

Sophia Simmons has been charged with first-degree murder, child abuse, and abandonment/concealment of a dead body.

Sophia Simmons News

An Arizona woman is accused of killing her daughter and dumping her body in a large trash can on Christmas Eve.

Sophia Simmons, 38, is facing multiple charges, including first-degree murder, child abuse and tampering with physical evidence, according to Phoenix police.

Phoenix police were called to the area around 8 p.m. on Dec. 24 after a man looking for firewood inside a dumpster found the body of a small child between the ages of five and seven stuffed inside a plastic storage tote, according to a probable cause statement obtained by PEOPLE.

The child had multiple injuries on her legs, arms and torso.

“Some of the injuries appeared to be open wounds and others were in multiple stages of healing and there were scars from previous injuries on her limbs and torso,” the document states.

The following day, police received a call from a tipster in New York who alleged they received a call from Simmons who allegedly “told the person that she had beaten her child and it went too far.”

Simmons allegedly told the tipster that after the beating she left her home and when she returned her daughter was not breathing, according to the statement. She allegedly told the tipster she tried CPR but she couldn’t revive her.

“Sophia then remained with the victim for the next five days before taking the victim to a dumpster and placing the victim in a dumpster,” according to the statement.

Phoenix officers reported surveilling Simmons’ townhouse and “it appeared that someone had been attempting to clean the townhouse,” the document states.

Police served a search warrant and discovered the home “appeared to have been emptied of its contents, the couches were in the patio and the cushions were missing.”

Simmons was later detained in Tonopah, Ariz. She is being held on a $1 million bond. A court appearance is scheduled for Jan. 2. It’s unclear if she has retained an attorney.

https://people.com/mom-arrested-daughters-body-found-dumpster-christmas-eve-8420639

Sophia Simmons Other News

Phoenix police say a woman is accused of killing her daughter and putting the body in a dumpster on Christmas Eve.

At around 8 p.m. on Sunday, December 24, officers responded to the area of 31st and Grand avenues regarding a body that was found in a dumpster near a business. Officers determined the body was that of a “school-aged” girl.

A tip was received on Monday that 38-year-old Sophia Simmons placed the child’s body in a dumpster and that the child may have died from injuries during an assault by the suspect.

According to court documents, a witness was looking through a dumpster for firewood when they saw a storage tote with the lid partially opened. When the witness looked inside they reportedly saw a child’s body.

The witness alerted a nearby security guard who helped call the police. When Phoenix police officers and an official with the Medical Examiner’s Office arrived at the scene, they located the body of a girl believed to be between 5 and 7 years old.

The girl’s body appeared to have injuries to the legs, arms and torso, according to court documents. It also appeared to investigators that some of the wounds were in multiple stages of healing and there were scars from previous injuries.

On December 25, a witness in New York reported to police that they received a phone call from Simmons who claimed she had “beaten her child and it went too far.” The witness claims Simmons told her she left the house after beating the victim and when she returned the victim was not breathing.

According to the police report, Sophia Simmons remained with the victim’s body for the next five days before taking it to a dumpster where it was later found on December 24.

Detectives secured a search warrant for Sophia Simmons’ home near 51st Avenue and McDowell Road and found evidence of someone trying to clean a crime scene. At that time, Simmons was not home.

Authorities obtained a search warrant for Simmons’ phone records and learned her device was near Indio, California, and was headed back toward Arizona. Records state she was later stopped outside of Phoenix, near 411th Avenue and Interstate 10, and was taken to Phoenix Police Headquarters.

A review of her phone records showed Simmons’ device was in the area of the dumpster where the victim was found at around 10:30 a.m. on December 24.

She was booked into jail on multiple charges including first-degree murder, child abuse, and tampering with evidence.

According to an attorney during the initial court appearance, Simmons was involved in a prior case in another state involving a child, though details of that investigation were not immediately known.

The investigation is ongoing

https://www.abc15.com/news/region-phoenix-metro/central-phoenix/phoenix-woman-accused-of-killing-young-daughter-dumping-body-on-christmas-eve

Pedro Quintana-Lujan Kills 2 Cyclists

Pedro Quintana-Lujan

Pedro Quintana-Lujan is a man from Arizona who is facing serious charges after his pickup truck slammed into a group of cyclists killing two of them. According to police reports Pedro Quintana-Lujan would run into a large group of cyclists in Goodyear Arizona that would leave two people dead and another eleven more injured.

Pedro Quintana-Lujan would be arrested and has been charged with two counts of manslaughter, three counts of aggravated assault, 18 counts of endangerment and two counts of causing serious injury or death by a moving violation.

Pedro Quintana-Lujan More News

The man who hit a group of cyclists biking on a Goodyear highway on Saturday in the West Valley has been arrested.

Goodyear Police say 26-year-old Pedro Quintana-Lujan was arrested and booked on Saturday. He faces various charges, including two counts of manslaughter, three counts of aggravated assault, 18 counts of endangerment, and two counts of causing serious injury or death by a moving violation.

Two of the cyclists died, one at the scene and one later at a nearby hospital. One victim was visiting from out of state, and the other was from Goodyear. Another cyclist is still in critical condition after the incident. The investigation is still underway, and details regarding impairment being a factor have not been released. The crash was reported Saturday around 8 a.m. near Cotton Lane Bridge, next to the MC-85. Many individuals were treated at the scene and taken to hospitals.

The Goodyear Police Department released a statement saying that it is deeply saddened by this tragedy and extends condolences to the loved ones of the victims as well as to the cycling community and the community as a whole.

Members of the cycling community are feeling the loss. Arizona’s Family spoke to two bike shop owners, hoping their friends in the hospital will recover soon. The owner of Trek Bicycle West Phoenix, Brandon van Leuven, said he knows four cyclists in the hospital. One of them is his employee, 65-year-old Mike Smith. “He’s seriously injured. He’s not going to be back for a long time,” said van Leuven.

Paraic McGlynn, the owner of Cyclologic in Scottsdale, said one of the crash victims Clay Wells, became his friend after walking into his store 11 years ago. McGlynn said Wells recently retired and has undergone two surgeries since the crash. “He’s had surgeries to stabilize his cerebral spine, and there are more surgeries to make sure they triage his injuries to ensure for little, long term damage as possible,” said McGlynn.

Both McGlynn and van Leuven worry their friends will no longer ride after they recover due to their injuries or trauma. “These people’s lives will never be the same again, even the ones that are going to come back to us and keep riding with us,” said van Leuven. He hopes they will come out stronger and not let this tragedy keep them from their passion.

Man arrested after hitting multiple cyclists on Goodyear highway (azfamily.com)

Pedro Quintana-Lujan More News

A suspect has been arrested and is facing multiple charges following a crash in Arizona that left two cyclists dead and 11 others injured, police announced. 

Pedro Quintana-Lujan, 26, is facing multiple charges, including two counts of manslaughter. According to police, Quintana-Lujan was driving a pickup truck when he crashed into a large group of bicyclists on the Cotton Lane Bridge in Goodyear, Arizona, at around 8 a.m. local time Saturday. One female cyclist was pronounced dead at the scene and another died after being taken to a local hospital. Eleven others were injured and transported to three separate hospitals, police said. One still had life-threatening injuries as of Sunday evening, Goodyear police said.

Quintana-Lujan remained at the scene of the crash and was cooperating with law enforcement, police said Saturday.

The suspect is also facing three counts of aggravated assault, 18 counts of endangerment and two counts of causing serious injury or death by a moving violation, according to The Associated Press.

The victims in the crash had not yet been publicly identified. One of the cyclists who was killed was a resident of Goodyear and the other was visiting from out of state, police said.

The Cotton Lane Bridge was closed for several hours on Saturday while the crash was being investigated.

Man facing manslaughter charges in Arizona crash that killed 2 cyclists (msn.com)

Christopher Clements Trial For Murder Of 6 Year Old Begins

Christopher Clements

Christopher Clements is a convicted sex offender and a convicted murderer from Arizona who will now stand trial for the murder of a six year old girl. Last year Christopher Clements was convicted in the murder, kidnapping of  13-year-old Maribel Gonzalez in 2014. Now Christopher Clements has been charged in the kidnapping and murder of six year old Isabel Celis who disappeared from her parents home in 2012. According to police reports Christopher Clements allegedly broke into the home and kidnapped the six year old girl. Christopher Clements who is serving a life sentence for the murder of Maribel Gonzalez faces another life sentence. To be honest I am wondering if there are more victims out there and why he was not sentenced to death.

Christopher Clements More News

A jury has been seated for Christopher Clements’ second murder trial.

The jury was selected on Thursday, Feb. 9, and opening statements are scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 14.

13 News’ Mary Coleman will cover the trial and we will be updating our website throughout the day.

Clements, already serving life for another murder conviction, is accused of kidnapping and killing 6-year-old Isabel Celis in 2012.

Clements was sentenced last year to life in prison for the 2014 kidnapping and murder of 13-year-old Maribel Gonzalez.

On Wednesday, Clements was in court for a pre-trial hearing.

Clements’ attorneys argued he had to return to Maricopa County because of a medical appointment for a condition that could result in permanent eye damage, but the judge denied the request. He will remain in Pima County for the trial, which is slated to last into March.

Clements was present in court Wednesday and occasionally whispered to his lawyer. He also smirked a few times and was swaying back and forth in his chair, but he did not speak.

https://www.kold.com/2023/02/09/jury-seated-christopher-clements-second-murder-trial-opening-statements-set-tuesday/

Christopher Clements Other News

A man already convicted of killing a Tucson teenager now is facing another murder trial, this one involving a 6-year-old girl.

Jury selection from a pool of nearly 100 potential jurors began Thursday in Pima County Superior Court with Christopher Clements’ trial expected to start Tuesday and last 18 days.

The 41-year-old Clements is facing felony charges of first-degree murder, kidnapping a minor under age 15 and second-degree burglary.

Last September, Clements was convicted of killing of 13-year-old Maribel Gonzalez in 2014. He was sentenced the following month to natural life in prison plus 17 years for kidnapping, to be served consecutively with the life sentence for first-degree murder.

A different jury will hear Clements’ trial involving Isabel Celis’ death.

Clements, a convicted sex offender with a long criminal record, was arrested in 2018 and indicted on 22 felony counts in the two girls’ deaths.

Celis vanished from her parents’ Tucson home in April 2012 while Gonzalez disappeared while walking to a friend’s house in June 2014.

Authorities said Gonzalez’s body was found days after her disappearance while Celis’ remains weren’t recovered until 2017 after Clements led federal agents to the location.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/arizona-man-convicted-killing-tucson-teen-faces-another-murder-trial

Murray Hooper Execution Scheduled For Today

Murray Hooper execution

Murray Hooper is scheduled to be executed by the State of Arizona for the murders of two people during a robbery. According to court documents Murray Hooper and two other men forced their way into a home and would shoot and kill  William “Pat” Redmond and his mother-in-law, Helen Phelps as well as shooting a third person. Murray Hooper would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Murray Hooper lawyers are attempting to get his execution stayed claiming that the surviving witness failed to identify him in a photo lineup. The two other men convicted with Murray Hooper, William Bracy and Edward McCall,  would die on death row before their executions could be carried out.

Murray Hooper More News

An Arizona prisoner scheduled to be executed Wednesday in the 1980 killings of two people asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review his claim that authorities had until recently withheld that a survivor had failed to identify him in a photo lineup.

Lawyers for Murray Hooper, who was convicted of killing William “Pat” Redmond and his mother-in-law, Helen Phelps, say the existence of the photo lineup wasn’t disclosed until this month.

A prosecutor told the state’s clemency board that Redmond’s wife, Marilyn, who survived being shot in the head, had been unable to identify Hooper as the attacker when she was shown a photo lineup. However, authorities now insist no such lineup was shown to Marilyn Redmond and that the claim is based on a mistake a prosecutor made in a letter to the board.

Marilyn Redmond eventually identified Hooper in an in-person lineup.

Hooper’s arguments have already been rejected twice this week by state courts, with the Arizona Supreme Court concluding Monday that the claim focusing on a photo lineup “has no evidentiary support and no basis in fact.”

Hooper’s attorneys keep pressing the matter. “The prosecutor’s belated admission flatly contradicts the state’s pretrial and trial assertions that no such (photo) lineup had ever been admninistered,” Hooper’s lawyers told the U.S. Supreme Court.

Hooper asked the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to postpone his execution as he appeals a ruling that rejected his bid to allow fingerprint and DNA testing on evidence from the killings. On Tuesday evening, the appeals court concluded a lower-court judge lacked jurisdiction over Hooper’s lawsuit seeking testing and ordered that the case be dismissed.

His lawyers said Hooper is innocent, that no physical evidence ties him to the killings and that testing could lead to identifying those responsible. They say Hooper was convicted before computerized fingerprint systems and DNA testing were available in criminal cases.

Authorities say Hooper and two other men forced their way into the Redmond home on Dec. 31, 1980. The three victims were bound, gagged, robbed and shot in the head. Marilyn Redmond testified against Hooper at his trial.

Two other men, William Bracy and Edward McCall, were convicted in the killings but died before their death sentences could be carried out.

Authorities say Robert Cruz, who was alleged to have had ties to organized crime, hired Hooper, Bracy and McCall to kill Pat Redmond, who co-owned a printing business. They said Cruz wanted to take over the business and was unhappy that Redmond had rejected his offers to enter several printing contracts with Las Vegas hotels, according to court records. In 1995, Cruz was acquitted of murder charges in both deaths.

Hooper’s lawyers say Marilyn Redmond’s description of the assailants changed several times before she identified their client, who said he was not in Arizona at the time. They also raised questions about the benefits received by witnesses who testified against Hooper, including favorable treatment in other criminal cases.

Hooper would be the state’s third prisoner put to death this year after Arizona resumed carrying out executions in May, following a nearly eight-year hiatus attributed to both the difficulty of obtaining lethal injection drugs and criticism that a 2014 execution was botched.

Arizona has 111 people on death row, 22 of whom have exhausted their appeals, according to the state attorney general’s office.

https://apnews.com/article/us-supreme-court-arizona-executions-7950302aecde9d17770a1bc4ccc18e89

Murray Hooper Execution

 An Arizona man convicted of murdering two people in 1980 was put to death Wednesday in the state’s third execution since officials started carrying out the death penalty in May after a nearly eight-year hiatus.

Murray Hooper, 76, died by lethal injection at the state prison in Florence for his murder convictions in the killings of William “Pat” Redmond and his mother-in-law, Helen Phelps, at Redmond’s home in Phoenix. Redmond’s wife, Marilyn, also was shot in the head during the attack but survived and testified against Hooper at his trial.

Authorities say the killings were carried out at the behest of a man who wanted to take over Redmond’s printing business.

Hooper’s death was announced by Frank Strada, a deputy director of the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry.

Hooper chuckled several times when interacting with the execution team. After the execution warrant was read aloud, Hooper said, “It’s all been said. Let it be done.”

It took about 20 minutes from the time the execution team members walked into the room until they inserted IV lines in his right leg and right forearm to administer a lethal dose of the sedative pentobarbital. There had been one earlier unsuccessful attempt to insert a line in his right arm. The IV in his leg was inserted through his femoral artery.

Once injected, his fingers quivered, and he yawned. After that, he made no movement. About 15 minutes passed between when a warden said let the execution begin and when Hooper was pronounced dead.

At one point while trying to insert the IV lines, a medical professional in the room couldn’t find a syringe with the anesthetic used to numb the area, so one was brought in and ultimately used on Hooper.

“It will hurt less,” the medical professional said. Hooper said, “OK, all right.” He later said, “I can’t believe this” and shook his head.

Arizona did not carry out the death penalty for nearly eight years after criticism that a 2014 execution was botched and because it encountered difficulty obtaining lethal injection drugs. No other executions are currently scheduled in the state.

rizona now has 110 people on death row.

Hooper was executed within a couple hours of the U.S. Supreme Court rejecting a last-minute appeal from him over his claim that authorities had until recently withheld that Marilyn Redmond had failed to identify him in a photo lineup. The high court made no comment in rejecting his appeal.

Authorities said that claim was based on a mistake a prosecutor made in a letter to the state’s clemency board and now insist that no such lineup was shown to Marilyn Redmond. She later identified Hooper in an in-person lineup.

Courts also rebuffed attempts by Hooper’s lawyers to order fingerprint and DNA testing on evidence from the killings.

Authorities say Hooper and two other men forced their way into the Redmond home on Dec. 31, 1980. The three victims were bound, gagged, robbed and shot in the head.

Two other men, William Bracy and Edward McCall, were convicted in the killings but died before their death sentences could be carried out.

Authorities say Robert Cruz, who was alleged to have had ties to organized crime, hired Hooper, Bracy and McCall to kill Pat Redmond, who co-owned a printing business. They said Cruz wanted to take over the business and was unhappy that Redmond had rejected his offers to enter several printing contracts with Las Vegas hotels, according to court records. Cruz was acquitted of murder charges in both deaths in 1995.

Hooper’s lawyers say Marilyn Redmond’s description of the assailants changed several times before she identified their client, who said he was not in Arizona at the time. They also raised questions about the benefits received by witnesses who testified against Hooper, including favorable treatment in other criminal cases.

Hooper’s execution came the same day that Stephen Barbee was set to receive a lethal injection in Texas for the February 2005 deaths of Lisa Underwood, 34, and her son Jayden. That would be the 15th execution in the U.S. this year, up from last year’s three-decade low of 11.

The executions come despite waning support in recent years for the death penalty across all political parties. About 6 in 10 Americans favor the death penalty, according to the General Social Survey, a major trends survey conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago. While a majority continue to express support for the death penalty, the share has declined steadily since the 1990s, when nearly three-quarters were in favor.