Antoinette Frank Women On Death Row

Antoinette Frank women on death row

Antoinette Frank is on Louisiana death row for the murders of three people including a fellow police officer. At the time of the murders Antoinette Frank was working for the New Orleans Police Department as an officer. In this article on My Crime Library we are going to take a closer look at Antoinette Frank

Antoinette Frank Beginnings

Antoinette Frank was born in Louisiana on April 30, 1971

Antoinette would apply to the New Orleans Police Department in 1993 and was caught lying in several areas of her application and would fail two psychological evaluations. However due to certain changes Frank would be allowed to reapply as the New Orleans Police Department lost a number of officers due to corruption. This time Antoinette Frank would be hired.

After she finished the Police Academy and even though she was one of the top performers in her class she was not thought of as a strong officer and many fellow officers would state she knew little about policing. Antoinette Frank would be sent for a supervisor review on a number of occasions

Antoinette Frank And Rogers Lacaze

Antoinette Frank and Rogers Lacaze met in 1994 and started to date even though she was police officer and he was a known drug dealer. The couple would soon attract the attention of the New Orleans Police Department as fellow officers saw her driving a vehicle belonging to Lacaze.

Soon Antoinette and Rogers were driving around together in her patrol car where they would pull over and rob motorists. Frank would also raise red flags when she bought ammunition for a 9mm hand gun that belonged to Rogers.

Antoinette Frank Murders

On March 5, 1995 Antoinette Frank and Rogers Lacaze would enter a Vietnamese restaurant where Frank had worked as part time security. Soon after a shooting would take place where Rogers Lacaze would shoot a police officer in the back of the head, the officer had been working security for the restaurant..

The employees of the restaurant would hide in the freezer.

Once inside the freezer Antoinette Frank began pistol whipping on of the employees demanding money. Frank would obtain the money than fatally shot the employee and would then fatally shoot another employee.

When leaving the restaurant Frank overheard the 911 call and would grab a patrol car and return to the scene where she planned to kill remaining witnesses. However one of the employees was able to escape and run to other officers arriving at the scene. Antoinette Frank and Rogers Lacaze were arrested.

Antoinette Frank Trial

Antoinette Frank would stand trial on September 1995 where she was convicted of the murders, it took the jury 22 minutes to find her guilty and she would be sentenced to death.. Antoinette Frank remains on Louisiana Death Row

Rogers Lacaze would also be convicted and sentenced to death although later his sentence would change to life in prison without parole.

Antoinette Frank Photos

Antoinette Frank 1
Antoinette Frank 2

Antoinette Frank Videos

Antoinette Frank More News

There is just one woman rotting away on Louisiana’s death row.

Antoinette Frank can be kindly be described as the worst of the worst

A onetime New Orleans cop, Frank, now 48, was always going to go rogue.

Oldtimers at the police academy thought so and put it in writing.

And officers in the New Orleans Police Department have always been familiar with its cultural corruption.

As long as there have been cops in the Big Easy, there has been bad cops. Very bad.  Murders and drug trafficking were just part of the mix when Frank joined the force in 1993.

She was 22 at the time and got caught lying several times on her application. PD headshrinkers marked her file DO NOT HIRE.

But Frank — described by fellow cops as weak, indecisive and occasionally irrational — weaselled her way in.

NOPD was a historically poorly paid department (hence the corruption) and had a tough time keeping good officers and detectives. Plus, she was black and relations between cops and the black community have never been great.

Enter Rogers Lacaze, an 18-year-old small-time dope dealer who got a case of lead poisoning.

Frank took his statement. Then the cop and the crook began having sex.

Lacaze would ride with Frank in her police cruiser and they would have romps in alleys and behind housing projects as he pedalled crack.

On March 4, 1995, around 11 p.m., Frank and her boy toy rolled into the Kim And Vietnamese restaurant. She’d picked up a few extra bucks there working security.

“The Vus took a real liking to her,” Frank’s ex-partner later said. “I mean they were in love with this girl. They bought her presents for this, presents for that. Anything she wanted, anything she needed, they gave her.”

Fellow NOPD Officer Ronald Williams was working security at the time. He knew Frank well. Problem was, Williams knew her boyfriend as a third-rate thug.

Around midnight, Chau Vu, 24, was working the restaurant with her sister and two brothers. It was slow, time to call it a night.

Then, she noticed the key was missing. Still, she decided to pay Williams and let him go home.

When she walked into the dining room, there was Antoinette Frank.

Sensing something was wrong, she slid into the back, hid the cash in a microwave and returned to the front of the joint.

Chau didn’t trust the cop, partly because of her sleazy looking beau with his chains and gold teeth.

Williams asked Antoinette Frank about the missing key. She ignored him and went to the kitchen.

The sleazeball boyfriend Lacaze then entered and shot Williams in the back of the head with a single .9 mm slug. The boy toy terror then parked two more bullets into Williams’ paralyzed body.

Lacaze took his gun and wallet

Chau grabbed her brother and another employee and they hid in the walk-in cooler, turned out the lights and prayed.

Greedy Frank and Lacaze scoured the restaurant for the dough.

As Chau watched through the cooler’s glass windows, her heart was shattered in a million pieces as Antoinette Frank stood over her brother and sister, who were holding hands, sobbing and begging for mercy.

It mattered not a whit. Frank shot them both in the head as ice cold as can be.

The two psychos then fled the restaurant.

Her brother ran to a neighbour’s and called 911.

But within minutes, terror returned.

Officer Antoinette Frank in her uniform. Chau ran. Frank pursued her but other cops stopped the killer in blue.

Frank told her fellow officers three armed men had run out the back.

To legendary NOPD homicide detective Eddie Rantz, the whole scene stunk.

Balls of brass Frank then approached Chau who was talking to Rantz. She asked the terrified woman “if she was alright.”

Shaking, and speaking in broken English, Chau said: “Why would you ask that? You were there. You knew what happened.”

That was enough for Rantz, who said years later: “There’s no doubt in my mind she went back there to kill the rest of them.

Frank stumbled fast under the rapid fire questioning at the scene from Rantz and his partner Det. Marco Demmo.

When it became clear what went down, the veteran detective said, “I wanted to vomit.”

The low-rent Romeo and Juliet pointed the finger at each other.

Lacaze was sentenced to death.

And Frank? On Oct. 20, 1995, she was also sentenced to death via the rocket ride to oblivion that is lethal injection.

After 30 years on the job, Rantz went back to school and joined the district attorney’s office. He still thinks about Antoinette Frank.

“She is, without a doubt, the most cold-hearted person I’ve ever met,” Rantz said

https://torontosun.com/news/world/crime-hunter-antoinette-frank-worst-of-the-big-sleazy

Antoinette Frank FAQ

Antoinette Frank 2021

Antoinette Frank is on Louisiana Death Row For Women

Why Is Antoinette Frank On Death Row

Antoinette Frank was convicted of three murders including the murder of a police officer

Daniel Hamilton Teen Killer Murders Stepfather

Daniel Hamilton Teen Killer

Daniel Hamilton was sixteen when he murdered his stepfather. According to court documents Daniel Hamilton walked up behind his stepfather and would shoot him six times in the head. For some reason after he was arrested for the murder he would be let out on bond and when his relatives would later revoke his bond due to personal safety, Daniel Hamilton plotted with another inmate to murder them as well. This teen killer would be convicted and sentenced to life in prison

Daniel Hamilton Other News

A man who was 16 when first accused of shooting his stepfather to death in their Covington home was found guilty of second-degree murder on Friday, said Warren Montgomery, District Attorney for Louisiana’s 22nd Judicial.

Daniel Hamilton, now 19, was also found guilty on two counts of solicitation for murder, after plotting to have his aunt and uncle killed in 2016 after they pushed to have his bond revoked, sending him back to prison. 

The St. Tammany Parish jury assigned to Hamilton’s case deliberated for about an hour and a half Friday before finding the man guilty of the solicitation charges and for slaying his stepfather, James “Kenny” Hamilton on March 4, 2016.

According to prosecutors, Daniel Hamilton shot James six times in the back of his head with a .22-caliber gun after James had refused to let him borrow his truck. 

James was in their family room eating dinner when he was shot from behind and killed, prosecutors said. 

“You’re dealing with a cold-blooded killer,” Assistant District Attorney Angad Ghai said. “That’s not what I’m saying. That’s what the evidence shows.” 

After killing his stepfather, Daniel Hamilton took his truck and debit card and met friends at a pizza parlor in Abita Springs, after failing to use the debit card at a Wal-Mart because he didn’t know the pin, prosecutors said. 

Daniel Hamilton spent the next two days drinking with friends at a hunting camp, then returned to his home to take a PlayStation gaming system out to sell at a GameStop store with friends. 

In that process, he walked past his father’s body, “casually, comfortably, with his friends outside,” Ghai said. 

James’ body was not discovered until three days later, after family members checked on him when he didn’t show up to work that Monday. 

After the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office’s investigation into the death opened, detectives found the .22-caliber gun Daniel used to kill his stepfather at the hunting camp where he had been that weekend. 

Daniel Hamilton was arrested and booked in connection to the murder but posted bond. James’ brother and sister-in-law, however, requested his bond be revoked and he was sent back to prison later that year, officials said. 

Once he was back in jail, evidence found that Daniel Hamilton had plotted with his girlfriend and another inmate to have his aunt and uncle killed for the request. 

He also told an inmate that his only regret was that he did not look James in the face when he killed him, prosecutors said. 

Daniel Hamilton More News

A state court judge sentenced an Abita Springs-area teenager to life in prison Monday (May 20) for shooting his stepfather to death as the man ate his evening meal in 2016.

A jury in March convicted Daniel T. Hamilton, 19, of second-degree murder in the death of James “Kenny” Hamilton, 51.

Judge Alan Zaunbrecher ordered the sentence to be served with the possibility of parole, based on new sentencing guidelines for offenders who were juveniles at the time of the crime, District Attorney Warren Montgomery’s office said in a news release. Daniel Hamilton was 16 at the time of the crime.

“This was a heinous crime that was especially shocking because of the defendant’s age and relationship to the victim,” Montgomery said. “I am proud that my assistant district attorneys obtained justice on behalf of the victim’s family members. I hope they are now able to close this painful chapter of their lives.”

Zaunbrecher also sentenced Hamilton to 20 years in prison for each of two counts of solicitation for murder for planning to have the victim’s brother and sister-in-law killed. Hamilton was angry at the couple at the time because they had requested a revocation of his pre-trial bond after he was found in possession of a firearm in another parish, the DA’s office said.

The judge ordered one of the 20-year sentences to be served consecutive to the murder sentence; the other 20-year-sentence is to be served at the same time that Hamilton is serving the sentence for murder.

Zaunbrecher acknowledged receiving several letters, including two from the murder solicitation victims, but they did not speak in court Monday. Hamilton also chose not to speak.

Abita Springs-area teen convicted of murdering stepfather in 2016

Sheriff’s deputies went to the Lenel Road home Daniel and James Hamilton shared on March 7, 2016, after James Hamilton failed to show up for work and a relative found his body, authorities said.

The elder Hamilton had been shot multiple times in the back of the head with a .22-caliber gun three days earlier as he sat in a chair in the family room and finished his evening meal.

Daniel Hamilton surrendered two days after the body was found

After the killing, Daniel Hamilton spent two days drinking and partying with friends at a hunting camp, authorities have said.

During trial, prosecutors presented text messages showing that Hamilton had refused his stepson’s request to borrow his truck the week before the killing

https://www.nola.com/news/crime_police/article_ca346f37-113c-5ddd-9dbc-ee7423b134d5.html

Akeeley Blade Jr Teen Killer Murders Man During Robbery

Akeeley Blade Jr Teen Killer

Akeeley Blade Jr is a teen killer who was convicted in the murder of a man during a robbery. According to court documents Blade along with three other teens went to a motel where they would fatally beat a man during the course of a robbery. The other three teens would immediately plead guilty for shorter prison sentences however Blade would try his luck in court.

Needless to say it did not go well as the teen killer received a life sentence after he was convicted. Akeeley Blade Jr is still facing other charges from the time he spent in jail including assault on a correction worker and the sexual assault of a mentally handicapped inmate. Needless to say he will probably never get out of prison and that is not a bad thing

Akeeley Blade Jr Other News

A year and a half after Akeeley Blade Jr, 20 of Alexandria, was found guilty by a Rapides Parish jury of first-degree murder and felony criminal conspiracy, he will be sentenced to life in prison.

Akeeley Blade Jr was convicted for the beating death of Michael Butler, 55 of Lecompte, at a Motel 6 in Alexandria. Butler was killed back in Aug. 2016. Three other defendants in the case – Camryn Lasyone, Travis Weston and Brooke Daniels have already been sentenced for their roles.

Lasyone received a sentence of 15 years for the lesser charge of manslaughter. Weston received a sentence of 25 years for a count of criminal conspiracy. Daniels received a sentence of 10 years for conspiracy to commit second-degree robbery.

The delay in Blade’s sentencing came as a result of several post-trial motions filed by his attorney, Michael Brewer, that were unsuccessful. A first-degree murder conviction carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison.

The sentencing, which was scheduled at a court appearance on Monday, is set for Aug. 26 in front of Judge Chris Hazel. The case was initially prosecuted by Jermaine Harris, who left the office after the trial wrapped to pursue a private practice. It is now being overseen by Johnny Giordano.

Akeeley Blade More News

Akeeley Blade, Jr., 20 of Alexandria, was sentenced on Monday to life in prison without the benefit of probation or suspension of sentence by Rapides Parish Judge Chris Hazel for the 2016 beating death of Michael Butler at a Motel 6 in Alexandria. Because Blade, Jr. was a juvenile at the time of the crime, he will be eligible for parole after 25 years.

Akeeley Blade, Jr. was found guilty in Dec. 2017 by a Rapides Parish Jury on charges of first degree murder, conspiracy to commit second degree robbery and second degree robbery.

Judge Hazel also sentenced Akeeley Blade Jr for the other two charges: 30 years for second degree robbery and 15 years hard labor for conspiracy to commit second degree robbery.

Before the sentencing, Rapides Parish Assistant District Attorney Johnny Giordano withdrew the State’s motion to seek life without parole for Akeeley Blade Jr, saying, “The State does feel that we may fall short with that burden.”

In a last attempt to sway Judge Hazel, Brewer reminded Judge Hazel of the fact that Blade was only 17 years old at the time of the murder.

I don’t believe…that there was any intent to plan or stage a homicide,” Brewer added.

Akeeley Blade Jr shortly addressed Butler’s family. “I want to apologize for the pain that this has caused on the family,” he said.

Crystal Smith, Butler’s niece, then addressed the Court.

“We’re just ready to put it behind us and move forward,” she said “…We ask that justice be served in the right and proper manner.

“The defendant’s actions were heinous and cowardly,” Judge Hazel said moments before sentencing Blade to prison for life.

As Hazel addressed the crowd, describing the pain and injuries Butler received during his murder, some of Butler’s family members became emotional, leaving the courtroom momentarily.

Three other defendants in the case – Camryn Lasyone, Travis Weston and Brooke Daniels – have already been sentenced for their roles.

Blade is also one of three men accused of sexually assaulting a disabled inmate in the Rapides Parish Jail in 2018. He was indicted for two counts of oral sexual battery and two counts of sexual battery. He pleaded “not guilty” to all charges back in May of this year.

A pre-trial date for those charges is set for Nov. 20.

https://www.kalb.com/content/news/Akeeley-Blade-Jr-sentenced-to-life-in-prison-for-2016-beating-death-of-Michael-Butler-558322931.html

Akeeley Blade Jr Murder Conviction Overturned

Akeeley Blade Jr.’s conviction for first-degree murder in the 2016 death of a Lecompte man at an Alexandria motel has been vacated by an appeal court, which ordered a new trial because the verdict was not unanimous.

Blade was one of four teens arrested by the Alexandria Police Department after the Aug. 10, 2016, beating of 54-year-old Michael Butler Sr., who had been staying at the former Motel 6 on MacArthur Drive.

Akeeley Blade Jr, then 17, and the others were partying at the motel when they encountered Butler. A girl enticed Butler to open his door, allowing Blade and two others to rush in and beat him.

They stole Butler’s wallet and $60. However, Butler was able to speak to responding police officers. He died later at Rapides Regional Medical Center.

Blade had agreed to a plea deal in May 2017 that would sentence him on a manslaughter charge. But just before he was sentenced, he decided to withdraw his guilty plea.

With that, the deal based on the manslaughter charge was gone. Prosecutors began planning to try Blade on the first-degree murder charge and formally charged him with other charges that they had not acted on previously.

A Rapides Parish jury convicted him in December 2017 of first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit second-degree robbery and second-degree robbery. The verdict was 11 to one.

In August 2019, he was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole on the murder charge.

Akeeley Blade Jr was also sentenced to 15 years at hard labor on the conspiracy to commit second-degree robbery conviction and 30 years at hard labor on the second-degree robbery conviction.

All his sentences were to be served concurrently. The appellate court upheld the conspiracy and robbery sentences.

The others in the case — Brooke Ashlyn Daniels, Camryn Neil Lasyone and Travis Jamire Weston — all took plea deals. Daniels and Lasyone testified against Blade during his trial.

In appealing his convictions to the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeal, Blade’s defense attorney, Michael Brewer, alleged 10 errors were made that should reverse the trial court’s decisions and the verdicts.

The defense claimed there was not enough evidence to convict Blade on any of the charges, that his Sixth and 14th amendment rights were violated, that he actually had been charged with manslaughter at the beginning of his trial, not first-degree murder, and that the conspiracy and robbery sentences were excessive.

The defense also claimed, as it did in motions after Blade’s conviction, that it hadn’t been allowed to bring up evidence that Lasyone’s sentence was improper and that a juror had engaged in misconduct.

But the three-judge panel rejected or found moot all but one of those errors in its opinion published on Wednesday, writing that the non-unanimous verdict was cause to vacate Blade’s conviction and order a new trial.

The appellate court did find that the trial court acted properly in not allowing Brewer to question Lasyone about the legality of his own sentence.

His age and education did not prepare Lasyone for such testimony, reads the opinion, and “whether his sentence was illegally lenient was irrelevant.”

And although the panel rejected the error claim regarding juror misconduct, the opinion did state the juror would have been questioned about his impartiality if the information had been discovered during jury selection.

No new trial date or court dates have been set.

https://www.thetowntalk.com/story/news/2021/04/29/akeeley-blade-murder-conviction-tossed-because-non-unanimous-verdict/4873402001/