Wanted Gonzalo Lopez Reward $22500 For Capture

Gonzalo Lopez

Everyone in Texas is searching for missing inmate Gonzalo Lopez and the reward for his capture has been increased to $22,500. According to police reports Gonzalo Lopez, who was serving a life sentence for capital murder and attempted capital murder was being transported on a Texas Department Of Criminal Justice bus when he was able to get out of hiss restraints and stab the bus driver in the head. Another correctional guard would fire his weapon at Gonzalo Lopez however it is not known if he was hit. The bust would crash into a ditch and Gonzalo Lopez would flee and has not been seen since however all bets are pointing to him attempting to get to Mexico. Texas police are reminding the public that Gonzalo Lopez is extremely dangerous and has nothing to lose.

Gonzalo Lopez More News

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) wrote Friday that a $22,500 reward is being offered for information leading to the capture of escaped inmate Gonzalo Lopez. 

A manhunt is currently underway for Lopez, 46, who was convicted of murder and escaped from a prison bus after stabbing a correctional officer during a Thursday transport.

In a Saturday Facebook post, the Leon County Sheriff’s Office said that while they have no reason to believe he had left the area,” there is no evidence to support that, at this time.”

“Inmate Gonzalo Lopez is still not captured. We have no reason to believe he has left the area, there Hwy 7 between Robbins [and] Centerville is still shut down, please avoid the area as much as you can. We have multiple [agencies] working together to get Lopez back in custody,” the office wrote. 

People who live in the search area are instructed to keep all doors locked on houses, buildings and vehicles. 

Lopez – who was one of 16 prisoners on the bus – was reportedly able to remove his constraints before using an unknown object to stab the bus driver in the hand, according to Fox 26. 

The station said the officer struggled with Lopez to keep him from getting his gun and that another officer fired shots at him – but it remains unknown is Lopez was hit. The bus crashed into a ditch and the other inmates were not injured. 

Lopez was wearing a white jail-issued uniform when he escaped, according to the sheriff’s office.

Jason Clark, chief of staff for the TDCJ, told the Associated Press that the bus driver sustained non-life-threatening injuries,  

Fox 26 said Lopez was last seen heading across a cow pasture west of Centerville.

Lopez was serving a life sentence for capital murder and attempted capital murder. He was convicted in 2006 of killing a man along the Texas-Mexico border.

Prison records show Lopez was most recently being held at a lockup in Gatesville.

People who see something suspicious should call the sheriff’s office at (903) 536-2749, contact TDCJ OIG CRIME STOPPERS at 1-800-832-8477 or 936-437-5171 or call 911. 

Authorities say to not approach Lopez.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/texas-authorities-reward-escaped-killer-gonzalo-lopez?yptr=yahoo

Melissa Lucio Execution Delayed

Melissa Lucio

Melissa Lucio execution has been delayed by the The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. According to court reports Melissa Lucio was convicted in the murder of her two year old daughter. Prosecutors claimed that Melissa Lucio severely beat the child causing her death however Lucio has always claimed that the little girl fell down a flight of stairs. What complicated the case is that Melissa Lucio would make a full confession to the murder however Lucio would later claim that the confession was forced. Anyway The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has ruled that the execution should be delayed by 120 days so they more closely examine her claims.

Melissa Lucio More News

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has ordered a district court to consider new evidence in the case of Melissa Lucio and the death of her daughter Mariah. Luciois on death row for her daughter’s death and was scheduled to be executed on April 27.

The execution will be halted as the 138th Judicial District Court of Cameron County considers the evidence

In a statement following the announcement, Lucio thanked those who have supported her fight for clemency.

“I thank God for my life,” Lucio said. “I am grateful the Court has given me the chance to live and prove my innocence. Mariah is in my heart today and always. I am grateful to have more days to be a mother to my children and a grandmother to my grandchildren.”

Lucio was sentenced in 2007 for the death of her 2-year-old daughter, one of Lucio’s 14 children.

Her lawyers say new evidence shows that the cause of her daughter’s injuries and subsequent death were caused by a fall down a steep staircase outside their apartment in Harlingen, Texas.

They say Lucio was coerced into a false confession after hours of intense police interrogations.

A supplementary filing submitted by Lucio’s attorneys asserts that the conviction was based on a false confession and false or poor testimony from medical examiners and specialists. They are asking the court to withdraw its order setting Lucio’s execution date.

The filing states that there is “overwhelming evidence that the judgment this Court set for execution on April 27, 2022, represents a miscarriage of justice.”

Lucio had said she is “at peace” regardless of the decision, according to a recently released statement.

“Either way I will get my freedom soon,” the statement read. “I will go home to my family or go to heaven. If I get a new trial, I am ready for the fight. I am not the same person I was in that interrogation room. I would stand up for my rights today. I want other survivors of domestic violence and assault to stand up for their rights too.”

In the days leading up to Lucio’s clemency hearing, political and social justice figures held rallies and prayer vigils to protest her death sentence.

State lawmakers including Reps. Joe Moody, Rafael Anchia, Alex Dominguez, Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr. and more met with Lucio in early April to join the fight.

“Melissa Lucio checked all the boxes of the ideal culprit, right? She is a little Latina mom with too many children, with a drug addiction,” Sabrina Van Tassel, the director of the documentary “The State of Texas Vs. Melissa,” said at a press conference Sunday.

“After a three-year investigation, I’m here to tell you that she’s not … The world’s not going to be a better place if Melissa Lucio is executed tomorrow,” Van Tessel said.

Lucio’s children have also issued a plea to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to grant their mother clemency.

“She’s more worried about her kids than anything,” Bobby Alvarez, Lucio’s son, said in an interview with ABC station KVUE in Austin, Texas.

On Monday, a petition delivery and prayer vigil will be held outside Abbott’s office at the Texas State Capitol, as protesters await action from the state district attorney, the Texas Board of Pardons & Paroles or Abbott.

Celebrity Kim Kardashian has also spoken out against the planned execution online.

“So heartbreaking to read this letter from Melissa Lucio’s children begging for the state not to kill their mother,” she wrote. “There are so many unresolved questions surrounding this case and the evidence that was used to convict her.”

If Lucio is executed, she would be the first Latina to be put to death by Texas and the first woman to be executed by the state since 2014.

https://abcnews.go.com/US/texas-review-melissa-lucios-death-sentence-calls-clemency/story?id=84294053

Billy Chemirmir Charged With Killing 18 Women

Billy Chemirmir

Billy Chemirmir is an alleged serial killer who is on trial for the murder of 18 women in the Dallas Texas area. According to police reports Billy Chemirmir was arrested after a 91 year old woman told officers that a man forced his way into her home and stole a number of items. When police arrested Billy Chemirmir he had a number of valuables and cash on him. Dallas police would later say that Billy Chemirmir was using a his job as an elderly aide to scope out women he would later rob and murder. Billy Chemirmir was later charged with eighteen murders.

However when he went on trial for the murder of Lu Thi Harris the jury would end up deadlocked when it came to the verdict. Now Billy Chemirmir is back on trial for the Lu Thi Harris and still faces seventeen more charges of capital murder

Billy Chemirmir More News

The retrial of a man charged with killing 18 older women in the Dallas area over a two-year span is set to begin Monday, after the first jury to hear a case against him deadlocked. Billy Chemirmir, 49, faces life in prison without parole if he’s convicted of capital murder in the smothering of 81-year-old Lu Thi Harris. Prosecutors have said he followed the widow home from Walmart, killed her, and stole her jewelry and cash. Chemirmir faces capital murder charges in all 18 of the women’s deaths — 13 in Dallas County and five in nearby Collin County. However, he’s currently only scheduled to stand trial in the death of Harris. Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot, who isn’t seeking the death penalty for Harris’ killing, has said he plans to try Chemirmir for at least one more death, though he hasn’t said whose. Chemirmir has maintained that he’s innocent. Loren Adair Smith, whose 91-year-old mother, Phyllis Payne, is among those Chemirmir is charged with killing, said she was shocked by the mistrial in November and plans to attend the retrial.

“We want justice and we want closure, and we want him to not be able to hurt anyone again,” Smith said. Billy Chemirmir was arrested in March 2018 after 91-year-old Mary Annis Bartel said a man forced his way into her apartment at an independent living community for older people and held a pillow over her face. Bartel, who survived the attack, later discovered she was missing jewelry. According to police, when officers tracked Chemirmir to his nearby apartment following that attack, he was holding jewelry and cash. Documents in a large red jewelry box that police say he had just thrown away led them to a home, where Harris was dead in her bedroom, lipstick smeared on her pillow. The number of people Chemirmir was accused of killing grew after his arrest, with most of the families of his alleged victims only learning months or years after their loved one’s death that authorities believed they had been killed. Most of the people Chemirmir is accused of killing were found dead in their apartments at independent living communities for older people, where he allegedly forced his way in or posed as a handyman. He’s also accused of killing women in private homes, including the widow of a man he had cared for in his job as an at-home caregiver.

Though Billy Chemirmir was only tried in November for Harris’ death, jurors were also told about the attack on Bartel and the killing of 87-year-old Mary Brooks, who was found dead in her home about six weeks before Chemirmir’s arrest. Chemirmir told police in a video-recorded interview that was played at his trial that he made money by buying and selling jewelry and had also worked as an at-home caregiver and as a security guard. Chemirmir’s attorneys rested their case without calling any witnesses or presenting evidence. They dismissed the evidence against their client as “quantity over quality” and asserted that prosecutors hadn’t proved Chemirmir’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Prosecutor Glen Fitzmartin disputed that assertion. He said he proved that Chemirmir and Harris were at a Walmart at the same time, that two-and-a-half hours later he was in possession of her property and that she had been smothered. Creuzot told The Dallas Morning News: “Circumstantial evidence can sometimes be stronger than eye-witness testimony. So, in a case like this, it’s very important that the jury and every individual juror understands that.”

Toby Shook, a former Dallas County prosecutor who now works as a defense attorney, said he expects that during the retrial, prosecutors might “change up their preparation or presentation of some of their witnesses in order to make their case clearer to the jury.” “It was surprising that a hung jury resulted in that the state had the advantage of putting on several offenses for the jury to consider and that’s a powerful weapon the state has in a case like this,” said Shook, who isn’t involved in the case. Smith said her family assumed that her mother’s death six years ago in her apartment in an independent living center was from natural causes, though it came as a shock because she was still so active. She said that while packing up her mother’s things, they discovered missing jewelry and filed a police report but assumed the items had been taken by someone after her death. Smith said a police detective called two years later to say investigators believed her mother had been killed. She said that after so many years, a conviction would bring closure and “a great feeling that justice has prevailed.”

https://www.thestate.com/news/nation-world/national/article260715337.html

Ali Alabadi Charged In Pedrie Wannenburg Death

ali alabadi

Teen Ali Alabadi has been charged with felony murder following a car crash that left rugby legend Pedrie Wannenburg dead. According to Houston Texas police Ali Alabadi was driving a vehicle that was been pursued by police and slammed into the vehicle driven by Pedrie Wannenburg. The crash would kill the star rugby player and severely injure his young son. Police are saying at times the pursuit reached speeds of up to 100 mph. As you can see from the photo above the aftermath of the crash was devastating. Ali Alabadi has been charged with facing charges of felony murder, reckless aggravated assault with serious bodily injury and three counts of aggravated assault with bodily injury. 

Ali Alabadi More News

 A teen driver is facing charges after deputies with Harris County Sheriff’s Office said he caused a multi-vehicle crash that left one person dead and five others injured following a chase in NW Harris County Friday afternoon.

Ali Alabadi, 16, is charged with felony murder for the death of 41-year-old Pedrie Wannenburg, a former South African rugby player. He is also charged with reckless aggravated assault serious bodily injury, and three counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.

According to Sheriff Ed Gonzalez via Twitter, a deputy was attempting to conduct a traffic stop at the intersection of Greenhouse Road and Little York Road after receiving a call for a family disturbance in the area. The deputy spotted the vehicle Alabadi was driving in along with two other suspects inside, and deputies said he failed to stop, initiating a pursuit.

Deputies said Alabadi went far ahead of them in the pursuit, and that was when Sheriff Gonzalez said he crashed three other vehicles. A fourth vehicle was unable to stop in time and crashed into one of the vehicles struck.

Life Flight and Cy-Fair Fire Department were called to the scene.

Three suspects, including Alabadi, were transported to an area hospital. All three suffered non-life-threatening injuries.

A woman who was involved in the crash was transported by ground ambulance to Memorial Hermann Hospital in Katy

Wannenburg and his 8-year-old son were transported to the Texas Medical Center via Life Flight. Wannenburg died at the hospital, Sheriff Gonzalez said via Twitter. His son remains in critical condition

Additionally, the Rice Rugby Club has created a GoFundMe pagein hopes of raising funds to help support the Wannenburg family.

The Harris County Sheriff’s Office is handling the investigation.

Jordin Roache Teen Killer Murders Kaytlynn Cargill

jordin roache

Jordin Roache was a sixteen year old from Texas when he would murder fourteen year old Kaytlynn Cargill. According to court documents Katylynn Cargill was walking her dog around an apartment complex in Bedford Texas when she disappeared. The next day police would narrow their search to Jordin Roache who was last seen with Kaytlynn Cargill.

Police would search his girlfriends apartment, Jordin also lived there, that was a haven for blood evidence as it covered the walls and floors. Police would also find Kaytlynn Cargill blood and DNA on a claw hammer which is believed to be the murder weapon. Jordin Roache would be arrested and finally five years later would plead guilty to murder and receive a ten year prison sentence. Unfortunately with time served this teen killer will be out of prison in less than five years.

Jordin Roache 2023 Information

SID Number:    50805722

TDCJ Number:    02391721

Name:    ROACHE,JORDIN LEESEAN

Race:    B

Gender:    M

Age:    21

Maximum Sentence Date:    2027-08-31       

Current Facility:    SMITH

Projected Release Date:    2027-08-31

Parole Eligibility Date:    2022-08-31

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

Jordin Roache More News

A man who pleaded guilty to murdering a 14-year-old girl when he was a juvenile is expected to spend at least the next five years behind bars after taking a plea deal Thursday.

According to the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office, 21-year-old Jordin Roache pled guilty to homicide in the 2017 death of 14-year-old Kaytlynn Cargill, of Bedford.

As part of the plea deal, Roache, who was tried as an adult, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for first-degree murder. Roache, who will be listed as a felon, has been incarcerated since his arrest in 2017 and will get credit for time served.

“This day has been a long time coming and we’re grateful for the hard work and countless hours put in by Bedford Police officers, detectives, and forensic investigators along with the prosecutors from the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office,” said Bedford Police Chief Jeff Williams. “The Cargill family remains in our thoughts as we reach the conclusion of this tragic case.”

Cargill’s mother, Trisha West, told NBC 5 Thursday afternoon the sentence will provide a little bit of relief for their family.

“I’m angry,” West said. “I’m sad. I’m almost a little bit relieved that we can finally find a way to maybe to move forward.”

But she isn’t satisfied with the outcome.

“I think more than anything I just want them to know that there’s been a huge injustice done today on behalf of my daughter’s life and our family,””

During victim impact statements West told Roache how she feels about this plea deal.

“I also shared with him that I feel as if he was offered the deal of a lifetime where we have to deal with this every day for the rest of our lifetime,” West said.

A statement read for Bo Cargill, Kaytlynn’s father, recalled favorite memories, including how his daughter participated in Easter Egg Hunts and excitedly opened Christmas presents.

“She was not yours for the taking, but you did it anyway,” her father’s statement said. “I am tormented every day about what she endured. It plays out in my mind.

“My hope is that every day you remember what you did to Kaytlynn,” her father wrote.

Kaytlynn Cargill was reported missing from her apartment complex off Forest Ridge Drive on June 19, 2017.

Police said they identified Jordin Roache, who was 16 at the time, as a possible suspect in her disappearance the next day after a witness reported seeing them together.

After two days of searching, Cargill’s body was found in the Arlington landfill.

Investigators found Cargill’s blood on the walls and floor of Jordin Roache’s girlfriend’s apartment, where he was living at the time, along with a claw hammer. A warrant obtained by NBC 5 in 2017 said Cargill went to buy marijuana from Jordin Roache when she disappeared.

If anyone has any additional information about the case, please contact the Bedford Police Department Criminal Investigations Division at 817-952-2411.

The Tarrant County District Attorney said in a statement Thursday that Cargill’s autopsy was performed by Dr. Marc Krause, who was later suspended from employment with the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office and then terminated.

The manner of death was listed as a generic finding by Dr. Krause, and, in part, unknown to the Tarrant County grand jury due to the condition of Cargill’s remains.

An audit of 40 homicide cases found a suspended Tarrant County coroner made 59 mistakes, according to a copy of the document obtained by NBC 5.

The extraordinary review of 10 months of autopsies and death investigations by deputy medical examiner Dr. Marc Krouse contains several errors itself, according to a review by NBC 5.

The audit was conducted by longtime Tarrant County Medical Examiner Dr. Nizam Peerwani in 2021. After 42 years, Peerwani retired late last year.

https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/man-pleads-guilty-to-2017-murder-of-14-year-old-kaytlynn-cargill/2946625/