Missing Woman Eleni Kassa Found In Trunk Of Car

Eleni Kassa

A missing woman from Tennessee, Eleni Kassa, body was found in the trunk of a car in Michigan following a police chase. According to police in Detroit officers attempted to pull over a vehicle driven by Dominique Hardwick, 36, of Lebanon, Tennessee. who would take off. Soon after Dominique Hardwick would be involved in a crash and instead of being arrested Hardwick would fatally shoot himself. When officers were searching the vehicle they would find the body of Eleni Kassa in the trunk of the car. Eleni Kassa was reported missing in Tennessee on November 18 2022

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The body found in the trunk of a vehicle that crashed at the border of Detroit and Dearborn has been identified as a missing woman from Tennessee.

Michigan State Police have identified the woman found in the trunk, as well as the driver who was fatally shot after a chase and ended in a crash and a shooting on Sunday.

According to Michigan State Police and the Murfreesboro Police Department, the woman found in the trunk of the vehicle that crashed has been identified as Eleni Kassa, 31, who was reported missing to Murfreesboro police on Nov. 18.

The driver of the vehicle has been identified as Dominique Hardwick, 36, of Lebanon, Tennessee.

Officials say that the autopsy results for Hardwick are consistent with a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

The circumstances surrounding Kassa’s death have not yet been determined.

Detectives are still interviewing witnesses, including a passenger who was detained and taken to a hospital after the crash.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out to Eleni’s family and the community of Murfreesboro,” Michigan State Police said in a tweet

Kassa was first reported missing to Murfreesboro police by family members after she failed to pick up her daughter from school, officials say.

Murfreesboro police conducted a missing person’s investigation, which revealed a possible domestic incident between Kassa and her girlfriend, Hardwick.

Kassa’s cellphone and car were left at her apartment after an argument between the two.

Murfreesboro Police Criminal Investigations Division (CID) conducted a weeklong search for Kassa, which included two K-9 searches and interviews with family members and witnesses.

The license plate and vehicle information of Hardwick’s black Dodge Charger was entered into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database.

Almost 10 days after the missing person’s report, the Dearborn police spotted the vehicle and attempted a traffic stop.

After a police pursuit, a crash into a Detroit residence, and gunfire, Kassa and Hardwick were both found dead in the vehicl

https://www.clickondetroit.com/news/local/2022/11/29/body-found-in-trunk-after-police-chase-to-detroit-dearborn-border-idd-as-missing-tennessee-woman/

Katie Quackenbush Shoots Homeless Man Gets Probation

Katie Quackenbush mugshot

Katie Quackenbush is a woman from Tennessee who after an encounter with a homeless man she pulled out a gun and shot him in the stomach. Initially Katie Quackenbush was charged with attempted murder however she would eventually be charged and convicted of reckless endangerment which carries a penalty of up to a year in jail. However she would be sentenced to 11 months and 29 days of probation.

Apparently Katie Quackenbush and the man were arguing about the exhaust fumes coming from her Porsche and the loud music. Katie Quackenbush allegedly asked the man if he wanted to die tonight before shooting him in the stomach. Yep sounds like reckless endangerment to me …… yeah right. If she was a woman without an expensive lawyer it would have been attempted murder and a prison sentence.

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A woman shot at a homeless man who had asked her to move her Porsche. Now, she escaped the charges with a slap on the wrist, Radar has learned.

Katie Quackenbush was arrested in 2018 in connection to the case. Recently, a judge in Tennessee sentenced the 32-year-old to 11 months and 29 days of unsupervised probation. She was not sentenced to jail, according to WKRN.

The incident happened in the Nashville area on Music Row, but Quackenbush will complete her sentence in Texas, where she now lives, the report noted.

She faces up to a year in prison after being found guilty of reckless endangerment.

The shooting happened on Aug. 26, 2017, and injured Gerald Melton who was homeless at the time, according to reports.

Police said the Porsche owner shot the victim after an argument about exhaust fumes and loud music coming from her SUV, reports noted. Melton was trying to sleep on the sidewalk around 3 a.m.

Quackenbush asked Melton if he “wanted to die tonight,” and she shot him as he walked away from the scene.

The suspect then went to Taco Bell with a passenger and then returned home, reports noted. Melton needed at least three surgeries to treat his injuries.

The shooting wasn’t reported to police until a person found Melton with gunshots and called 911.

Quackenbush tried to claim she shot in self-defense and that she feared the homeless man. But prosecutors dispelled that notion.

“The only thing unusual in this situation was her behavior and how the defendant reacted in this particular situation to the words that Mr. Melton was saying,” Davidson County Assistant District Attorney Amy Hunter said, according to The Tennessean.

“We heard from an eyewitness who was feet away from the defendant when this happened who said that she was not frightened by Mr. Melton. That she didn’t take his words seriously. That the only the person who was dangerous in this situation was the defendant.”

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/wealthy-porsche-owner-escapes-jail-time-for-shooting-homeless-man-who-asked-her-to-move-her-suv/ar-AA13Q0aa?ocid=EMMX&cvid=2cd1de2a2cd04603b5b5867a33b50ce9

Juanita Bruce Teen Killer Murders Toddler

Juanita Bruce tennessee

Juanita Bruce is a nineteen year old alleged teen killer from Tennessee who was involved in an argument with another woman that ended with her fatally shooting a toddler. According to police reports Juanita Bruce was involved in an argument with Kavious Askew when Bruce opened fire striking three people and killing one year old Karlie Wright, the daughter of Kavious Askew, who was sitting in the back seat of a vehicle. Juanita Bruce has been charged with first-degree murder, four counts of attempted first-degree murder and four counts of employment of a firearm with intent to commit a felony.

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 A 19-year-old woman from Tennessee is facing multiple charges, including first-degree murder, after a toddler and her mother were shot, allegedly over a disagreement.

Police say 19-year-old Juanita Bruce is charged with first-degree murder, four counts of attempted first-degree murder and four counts of employment of a firearm with intent to commit a felony.

Police responded to a shooting before 5 p.m. Friday at New Chicago Park in Memphis. Witnesses say Bruce got into a fight with Kavious Askew, the mother of 1-year-old Karlie Wright. Bruce knew the mother and daughter, according to police.

During the fight, police say Bruce pulled a gun from her purse and started shooting. Three victims were hit, including Askew and her daughter, WMC reports.

Askew, who was shot in the leg, was found on the ground near a 2013 Nissan Altima. Her daughter, who was in the backseat of the car, was hit in the chest and died at the scene, police say.

Another woman was grazed with a bullet on the upper right shoulder.

Askew was hospitalized in critical condition.

“We have to be better about conflict resolution. There is no reason for a baby to be dead tonight because adults couldn’t do right by one another,” said Sgt. Louis Brownlee, Memphis Police public information officer.

Police say Bruce turned herself in hours after the shooting.

According to the affidavit, Bruce allegedly confessed to shooting Askew but said she did not intend to shoot Karlie.

There were two other children in the Altima during the shooting, the affidavit states. They were not harmed.

https://www.kalb.com/2022/11/06/woman-accused-killing-toddler-shooting-mother-during-fight/

Angel Bumpass Teen Killer Awarded A New Trial

Angel Bumpass

Angel Bumpass was thirteen years old when prosecutors said that she would murder a man during a robbery. Angel Bumpass would go on trial years later as apparantly they found a fingerprint on a piece of duct tape that was used during the robbery. Angel Bumpass would go on trial with Mallory Vaughn who was thirteen years her elder and at the end of the trial she would be found guilty of robbery and murder and he was found not guilty on both charges. Since her incarcerated, life in prison, Angel Bumpass and her many supporters have been fighting to get her back in front of a judge for a new trial and finally that was awarded. The Supreme Court ruled in her favor on several factors and have ruled that she deserves another chance to prove that she is innocent of the charges.

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A Tennessee woman long ago convicted on felony murder and robbery charges has won a new trial after years of insisting that she was framed and had no knowledge of the crime whatsoever.

In 2009, 68-year-old Franklin Bonner was tied to a table and chair during an alleged robbery attempt in Chattanooga. Officers found him dead, his home in a state of chaos, and with little evidence pointing to a killer. The case went cold and stayed that way for nearly a decade.

Angel Bumpass, 27, was tied to Bonner’s death in 2019 and tried alongside a co-defendant, 40-year-old Mallory Vaughn. At the time of trial, Bumpass was 24; Vaughn was 37; she was convicted; he was found not guilty on both counts. Bumpass was later sentenced to life in prison. The condemned young woman, and her legions of defenders online, have consistently maintained she was wrongfully convicted.

In May 2020, the A&E series Accused: Guilty or Innocent? ran an episode about the defendant’s plight entitled: “Cold Case Killer or Innocent Teenage Girl?

Key to the defense is another piece of time-age information; at the time of Bonner’s murder, Bumpass was a 13-year-old eighth grader.

According to court records, the defendant was largely convicted because her fingerprints were a match for partial fingerprints on duct-tape that had been used to restrain Bonner when he died.

In a late August ruling and order, a Hamilton County Criminal Court noted several errors and other deficiencies with the defendant’s trial. Enough of those problems, the court noted, piled up during the relatively quick proceedings and, therefore, demanded a new trial – but stopped just short of overturning her conviction entirely.

“[T]he Court reaffirms its finding that the evidence is legally sufficient to support the Defendant’s convictions,” Judge Tom Greenholtz writes. “However, the Court agrees that the cumulative effect of errors by the Court and the parties support the granting of a new trial. Accordingly, the Court grants the Defendant’s motion for a new trial.”

The court explains that a series of small errors that would not otherwise have marred a trial, may, over time, do exactly that, especially during a trial process that is particularly short-lived, as was the case here, where “jury selection began on October 1 [2019], and the jury’s verdict occurred two days later on October 3 [2019].”

The reviewing court found that jurors should have been sequestered during the questioning of a defendant’s family member – or that at least the trial court should have issued a curative instruction. During her testimony, she said the evidence “didn’t look good” for Bumpass. Notably, the defendant’s original attorney objected to this testimony on relevance grounds but never later objected after being initially overruled.

“This statement was repeated three times by Mr. Smith before the inquiry moved to other topics, and this statement communicated to the jury that even members of the Defendant’s own family believed that the proof at the trial demonstrated her guilt,” Greenholtz noted.

Another minor but compounded error was the way in which the defendant’s yearbook photo was treated. After quite a bit of legal back-and-forth, jurors were finally allowed to see it, but it was never treated as an official exhibit in the case. That should have been corrected by the trial court as well.

“[W]hile the Court should have allowed the photograph to be tendered as an exhibit, the Court does not believe that the exclusion of the photograph from the evidence of the case, by itself, would warrant a new trial, particularly with the later mitigating efforts taken,” the judge notes. “However, the Court does recognize that the photograph was an important part of the presentation of the defense.”

Another error cited was the prosecution asking an investigator whether, in the court’s words “the defense had requested DNA analysis on a hair follicle found near the Defendant’s fingerprint.”

Essentially, the court found that the prosecutor asked a loaded question – and had done so despite the co-defendant’s own attorney objecting to a substantially similar question just minutes before.

“No further objection was raised by the Defendant to this question, but the Court believes that the question, particularly in retrospect, elicited information that the Court ruled was inadmissible,” Greenholtz explained. “The Court does not find that this line of inquiry by itself would have affected the outcome of the trial, but the conclusion suggested by the inquiry, along with arguments on different but related issues, tended to suggest that the Defendant had a burden to prove her innocence.”

The judge then listed several instances in which he found the state’s presentation deficient, including the lack of “a connection” between Bumpass and Bonner, and the lack of any link between the defendant and her co-defendant at the time of Bonner’s death.

“In summary, the weight of the evidence supporting the Defendant’s intention to commit the underlying felony was not significant beyond its minimum evidentiary sufficiency,” Greenholtz noted. “In many cases involving claims of cumulative error, the claim often falls short due to the overwhelming nature of the evidence against the defendant. That is not the case here.”

In comments to the Chattanooga Times Free Press, the defendant’s current attorney, William Massey, praised the court’s ruling.

“I’m absolutely thrilled, I’m sure when I relay this information to Angel she would be thrilled as well,” Massey said. “It was particularly hard for her, she’s always maintained her innocence in this. We won a battle at this point, but we still have a war in front of us. The state has 60 days to file an appeal. It’s not a done deal yet.”

Body Found In Eliza Fletcher Search

Eliza Fletcher

Police in Memphis Tennessee have announced that during the search for Eliza Fletcher a body has been found. The Memphis Tennessee police were quickly to add that the body has not yet been properly identified. In the last couple of days Memphis police have arrested convicted felon Cleotha Abston who has been charged with aggravated kidnapping and tampering with evidence. Cleotha Abston who spent over two decades in prison for a prior kidnapping has been described as a violent felon. The search for Eliza Fletcher was taking place around the home of the brother of Cleotha Abston who Cleotha had been staying with for the past month. Eliza Fletcher disappeared after she went for a jog near the University of Memphis

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Memphis police found an unidentified body Monday about 20 minutes from where teacher Eliza “Liza” Fletcher was violently abducted three days ago, according to a tweet from the police department.

“The identity of this person and the cause of death is unconfirmed at this time. The investigation is ongoing,” the tweet said.

Police have been searching the Memphis area for Fletcher, 34, since Friday. The mother of two was jogging around 4 a.m. when a black GMC Terrain SUV passed by her, according to surveillance footage obtained of the incident. A man was then seen getting out of the vehicle and running “aggressively” toward Fletcher and forcing her into the passenger side of the SUV. Once both individuals were inside the SUV, the vehicle remained in a parking lot for about four minutes before driving away, according to the footage cited in an affidavit obtained by CNN

The affidavit stated police found “physical evidence that she suffered serious injury.”

Cleotha Abston, 38, was arrested Saturday after police found the GMC Terrain in a parking lot near his residence, according to the affidavit. The vehicle had the same distinguishable damage and partial license plate identification seen in the surveillance footage from Fletcher’s abduction.

Abston attempted to flee after US Marshals located him nearby, the affidavit said. He was charged with especially aggravated kidnapping and tampering with evidence.

The suspect is being held in the Shelby County Jail on $500,000 bail and is scheduled to appear in court Tuesday, according to jail records. It is unclear whether he has an attorney.

DNA recovered from a pair of sandals found near where authorities believe Fletcher was abducted helped investigators identify and arrest Abston, according to the affidavit.

Surveillance footage captured from a local theater the day before Fletcher’s disappearance showed Abston wearing what authorities believe are the same pair of Champion slide sandals found at the crime scene, according to the affidavit.

Additional surveillance footage matched with statements from Abston’s employer confirmed the vehicle in question belongs to a woman associated with Abston’s home address.

Cell phone records also place Abston at the site during the time of Fletcher’s abduction on Friday morning, the affidavit said.

Fletcher’s damaged phone was found near the scene where she was abducted, CrimeStoppers Executive Director Buddy Chapman said, according to a news release obtained by CNN affiliate WHBQ.

According to the affidavit, a witness said she saw Abston at his brother’s house after the abduction. Both the witness and his brother said Abston was behaving oddly as he cleaned the interior of his SUV and washed his clothes in the sink.

Photos released by police show Fletcher running in the neighborhood near the University of Memphis. She was last seen wearing a pink jogging top and purple running shorts, police said in an alert.

Fletcher is White, 5 feet 6 inches tall, with brown hair and green eyes, police said. She weighs 137 pounds.

Her family is offering a $50,000 reward through CrimeStoppers for information leading to an arrest in the case, WHBQ reported.

“We look forward to Eliza’s safe return and hope that this award will help police capture those who committed this crime,” her family said in a statement shared by Chapman.

In a post on Twitter, St. Mary’s Episcopal School said Fletcher is a junior kindergarten teacher.

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said in a tweet it is assisting Memphis police in the investigation.

Abston previously served prison time for an aggravated kidnapping more than 20 years ago, court records show.

He pleaded guilty in November 2001 to the charge of especially aggravated kidnapping. He was released in November 2020, according to court records.

The Shelby County District Attorney’s Office told WREG Abston was convicted in the kidnapping of a local attorney in 2000.

Three additional charges were added for Abston since his arrest Saturday, according to Shelby County Jail Records. Those charges include identity theft, theft of property $1000 or less and fraudulent use/illegal possession of a credit or debit card $1000 or less, records show.

The newly filed charges Abston are not related to Fletcher’s abduction, according to an affidavit obtained by CNN affiliate WHBQ. The new charges are connected to a Thursday theft report filed by a woman who reported that someone was using her CashApp card and Wisley Card at gas stations without her knowledge.

CNN has reached out to the Shelby County District Attorney and Memphis Police regarding the additional charges.

https://www.cnn.com/2022/09/05/us/memphis-teacher-missing-suspect-prior-kidnapping-charge/index.html