YTread Logo
YTread Logo

Quiet Town Haunted By Gruesome Murder Of A Hunter | The New Detectives | Real Responders

May 04, 2024
Okay, a Missouri man is shot in the head on a deserted country road. Is it a

murder

? The only clue. A shattered bullet. Identify the gun he fired. It will be almost impossible. In Florida. A man is beaten to death in his house. Here the police discover fingerprints and rumors. of an exotic weapon, that's what it seems to law enforcement, the toughest opponent is often a killer with no clear ties to the victim who uses science as his most powerful weapon. Investigators must find these hitmen and make them pay the true price of

murder

in this episode, some of the names have been changed Hillsboro Missouri is a small

town

located a few miles west of the Mississippi River, November 21, 2000, on a stretch of commercial property owned by a chemical manufacturing plant outside Hillsboro, a security guard spotted a parked vehicle. in a field he discovered a man in the driver's seat slumped over the steering wheel the man was unresponsive he was bleeding from a wound to the back of his head the security guard called 911 gon County 911 what is your emergency a man in a The dispatcher alerted Jefferson County Sheriff's Department units 7214 617.
quiet town haunted by gruesome murder of a hunter the new detectives real responders
Within minutes, paramedics and deputies were on the scene, but for the man lying motionless in the driver's seat it was too late. , paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene. Sheriff's deputies cordoned off the area and called. At the crime scene, Detective William McDaniel, Crime Scene Investigator, took over the case when I pulled up, there was a car partially off a gravel driveway. I had a white man slumped over the wheel. The rear passenger side window was broken. He looked like he had been hit by a bullet. Well I guess. evidence suggested to Detective Michael Gray that the car was moving when the man was shot, do it here when it was found the vehicle was running his foot was still on the brake pedal we assumed the vehicle was idling initially We were analyzing the possibility that it was related to hunting simply because of the time of year the area in question is known for, as many hunting

detectives

examined the car inside and out for clues about 30 feet away in the floor.
quiet town haunted by gruesome murder of a hunter the new detectives real responders

More Interesting Facts About,

quiet town haunted by gruesome murder of a hunter the new detectives real responders...

Highway investigators found shards of glass and believe the bullet hit the car and driver, after which it left the road. The driver was removed from the vehicle and identified by his license. His name was Larry Holman, 44, of nearby Hillsboro. He contacted the victim's wife. Detective McDaniel knew the victim from

town

. He was a church-going family man and was not a man prone to having many enemies. I opened the right door after he was also an avid

hunter

. Yes Yes. P on the same street. The security guard revealed that the subject was in the field area looking for deer for possible hunting spots.
quiet town haunted by gruesome murder of a hunter the new detectives real responders
It's the last day of deer season and there were reports of poachers on the property. The car is in a field where deer cross, so there is a chance that someone might have thought it was a deer moving across the field. Detectives turned to forensics to find the source of the fatal gunshot. The important thing was to try to determine the direction from which the projectile came. Once we had an address, we had a line on where to look for any item of forensic evidence, any bullet casing, it was left behind, so it was important to try to put everything back in its original location, we repositioned the vehicle back on the road, We figured out a trajectory angle based on the approximate height of the knight's head, it was a matter of setting up a tripod, taking a trajectory chain and then simply extrapolating it out into the wooded area.
quiet town haunted by gruesome murder of a hunter the new detectives real responders
Coleman had been shot from behind and the bullet went through the window and headrest of the car before killing him, okay that's good, the police used this information to reconstruct the trajectory of the bullet. Ming, we ran the trajectory angle from the vehicle about 40 to 50 feet away near the wood line, the trajectory rope was about shoulder height, which would be consistent with an individual aiming or shooting with a gun. I like that, what do you think is right? Actual investigators scoured the woods in that area looking for potential evidence left by a careless

hunter

, but police came up empty-handed, with no shell casings. cigarette butts or any clue that helps explain what happened a sheriff's deputy interviewed the security guard at the entrance to the property he was the last person to see Larry Holman alive the police hoped the guard could remember some small clue that To help them find the killer the guard had known the victim, Larry had worked there and hunted on the property often on the day of his death.
Larry Hullman arrived alone and in a good mood, it was his day off and he told the guard that he would be in the field looking for deer, according to a signature sheet yes sir, Holman had entered the property at 4:20 in the afternoon there yes sir he would never sign out right mrsan yes police spoke to the victim's wife, Tammy, to see if she could shed any additional light on the investigation. I need to talk to you about her husband. I don't understand. She said she had last seen him the morning he was killed. The couple had been married for almost 15 years.
She described her marriage as happy and couldn't think of anyone who would want Larry to hurt her. happened, she was unable to provide any additional information after an autopsy was performed, although she offered few clues that could point to a perpetrator according to the coroner's report. Larry Holman died instantly. A high-velocity bullet was removed from his skull, but it was not identifiable. The lead core of the bullet disappeared, only a shattered copper jacket survived. Well, investigators hope to recover more pieces of the bullet in the victim's car to see if we can preserve that bullet that had fragmented when it went through the glass when we processed the vehicle we found.
Fragments of the projectile embedded in the headrest of the driver's seat, so we decided to recover them in an effort to try to determine the caliber of the weapon and perhaps the ammunition that was used at the Missouri State Highway Patrol forensic laboratory. Expert Todd Garrison was accused of reassembling the bullet, first it hit a car window, the second impact was the headrest of the car, the third impact was the victim's head, each of those impacts contributed a little more to its damage and distortion. Garrison analyzed the size and weight of the pieces, one of the copper fragments protruding from the headrest had a striated engraving that was similar to the engraving seen on the bullet that exited the victim's head and determined that he was looking at pieces. of a .243 caliber bullet usually the .243 Winchester caliber is associated with a hunting rifle, such as for big game deer hunting in the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department.
The

detectives

formed a task force, if this were a hunting accident, it would be almost impossible to solve. thousands of hunters passed through basic area 30 4T Detective Gray laid out how little they knew, so you're saying you have an individual who is what we call uh low risk, the guy is a family man, the guy had no known enemies , um, he did not live a lifestyle that would encourage violence, however, investigators were not yet willing to declare the case an accident. I think I'm going to take the four names I got, Woodline. Something didn't seem right to me.
Accidental shootings usually end up somewhere else along the way. Body and head shots are usually a named shot, would be or something like that. When you start to think about the laws of probability, we have a moving target, a small back window, the thickness of the forest, it didn't seem like an accident, I think we need to get out and Maybe I talked to some residents. Police officially classified the death as suspicious, but they had no clues pointing them to the killer. It seemed investigators had reached the end of their trail of evidence. Weeks turned into months and no new leads emerged.
The police issued press releases. Throughout the small community asking the public for help in January little progress had been made in the case, then the police got a break from an unlikely source. Hi Tammy Holman, the victim's widow told investigators about a series of disturbing letters she had been receiving after her husband. A man named Carter Davis was shot started writing her love letters. She's a little suspicious. Ella Tammy said she had rejected him but he wouldn't leave her alone. She handed over her letters to the police. I love you and I won't let you go read one. re soul mates read another the detective's interview with Holman's widow left them with some questions wouldn't say who it was no he wouldn't say who it was they knew that a man named Alan trip had moved in with her shortly after her husband was killed check This Mrs.
Holman began to seem suspicious to us, her actions did not

real

ly befit a grieving widow. Our research began to expand. Detectives ran Tammy's name through the system. Her record was clean, but they also knew her name was on it. Another important document: Larry Holman's insurance policy offered a payout of $125,000. He had an additional $2 million policy if he died in a hunting accident. The beneficiary was his wife for the detectives. What started as a simple accident now seemed like a cold-blooded murder. November 2000, Missouri deer hunter Larry Holman was found dead in a field. He had been shot in the head with a .243 caliber bullet fired from a hunting rifle.
At first it seemed like it was an accident, but the police were beginning to have doubts. They were not the only ones. In January 2001, the victim's brother, Randy Holman, turned in a Winchester 243 bolt-action rifle. He knew that the police were looking for that type of weapon and suspected that Larry's death was not an accident. Randy feared that the killer was someone his brother knew. He may have used this gun to murder you, okay, if he wants to sit right there, Jefferson County Detective William McDaniel, we interviewed Randy Hullman, Larry Hullman's brother. He actually brought a deer rifle from Larry and wanted us to do a comparison. from the deer rifle to the ballistic bullet what was found at the crime scene at the time of the murder the gun had been kept at Larry and Tammy Holman's house that I ended up getting from T Randy had good reason to suspect his brother was murdered you said you told the police your brother Larry had been shot before we were at my parents house days before his death Larry had gone hunting deep in the Missouri Woods Randy said he and Larry had had a conversation later that night after hunting Larry said it was close and Randy asked, well what do you mean close and he said, "I had a bullet whizzing through my head because there was a lot of gun activity in the northern part of Missouri, during deer season." He kind of joked about it, but now he knew it wasn't a joke and he wondered if Larry had been shot with his own gun.
But I didn't think much about it, I just wanted that weapon to be discarded so that I would know the weapon. had no involvement in the death of his brother, thank you, they came, yes, the investigators sent the weapon to ballistics and began interviewing the suspects. First on her list was Alan Trip, the widow's new love interest, you know what we want to talk about, Trip had grown up with him. Tammy Holman and came to his side shortly after Larry's death. Oh, I've known her since elementary school. We went to primary school again in the last two months.
Alan Trip had moved in with Mrs. Holman and actually gave her an engagement ring. His actions were not considered. some red flags with us, he stated that he had no knowledge of the incident, that he had spoken to Ms. Holman several times about the so-called accident and she stated that there was nothing there to call her all the time in case the investigators also They will look for a local. man named Carter Davis, yes, he's there clarifying that. Tammy said Davis had fallen in love with her, showering her with flowers and love letters. I need to ask some questions about the letters concerning Tammy Holman, oh like a trip, he insisted she had nothing to do with it. the crime Tammy and our friends at one point Carter Davis actually put a note on Alan Trip's car that said if you killed him, she and he just believed that Allan Trip had something to do with his death, but other than that, she He never said much that the police had.
They also got a very interesting clue, they found out about that trip and Davis were not the only men close to Tammy Holman. We received a distressing phone call. He was a male subject. The person he called suggested they check a third man's alibi.It was a person who called by mail. Yes. He was the informant who said Charles Miller had a gun similar to the one police were looking for. McDaniel checked Miller's history for previous arrests. Miller had a record of him being arrested for check fraud a few days later on January 9, 2001, investigators found another opportunity, okay?
Thank you, I have a seat, nice to meet you, a woman gave the police new information about the case. I have information that I don't know if she can use. He told Detective McDaniel that he lived near the field where Holman was shot for several days before the crime that he observed a suspicious-looking man with a gun walking near the crime scene beating McDaniel showed the woman a lineup to recognize anyone she identified Charles Miller without hesitation yes, right there, I'm sure within hours they had their man in sight Miller Charles Miller was arrested and taken for questioning admitted he was a friend of the men but claimed to know nothing of the crime is good they had attended Sunday school together Miller would come and work in the man's house he would bring eggs he would bring you He knew bacon, so Tammy made him breakfast in the morning and Larry Miller offered to cooperate with investigators.
Mr. Miller gave us permission to give him consent to search the firearms he had owned. We were only looking for high powered rifles and he actually gave us three rifles, one of them was a brownie bolt action. 243 agents also confiscated boxes of .243 caliber ammunition and cell phone records that indicated Miller had called the man's residence on the day of the crime. Once the gun was confiscated from Charlie Miller during the consent search, it was turned over. to the Missouri State Highway Patrol CRI crime lab. In Jeff City, for a ballistic match, criminalist Todd Garrison examined Miller's rifle and Larry Holman's gun brought by his brother Randy.
He test fired both rifles in question. I got bullets that I could do microscopic comparisons with. I eliminated the 243. Winchester caliber Savage rifle, the rifle taken from the victim's home was not involved, leaving Charles Miller's gun there were key similarities, but damage to the bullet recovered from the body prevented a 100% match. I observed the engraving of the rifle and also isolated agreements from some individuals. The features are not enough to say that yes, this firearm fired this bullet, but enough that it was consistent with that particular firearm. The forensics seemed to point directly to Charles Miller.
Now she was his main suspect. Miller was already in custody. He was questioned by Detective McDaniel. There is something? that we need to talk, he was not a very emotional person, he asked us questions if it was his gun, we explained to him that yes, it was with the gun that we seized and he bowed his head and looked back and said I killed him, I killed him , it surprised us all, we found out later that Mr. Miller was a very religious person and I think this was eating him up inside, you know what kind of police officer now had a confession, but what was Miller about.
Telling them would open the case who owns a 243 in Jefferson County Missouri an accident investigation had uncovered a homicide the police had a suspect in custody Charles Miller Charlie you know why we are here and when presented with the forensic evidence he confessed the rifle but the confession was just the beginning could you help me with Charles Miller fell in love with uh I guess Mrs. Holman told us that he always thought she was a very well-kept woman. He and Ms. Holman began a relationship without Mr. Holman's knowledge. Miller told police that he and Tammy were close and that her husband was worried.
I like that Tammy knew that you killed. He went on to say that Tammy asked him to kill Larry. Tammy was the one who made it look like she wanted me to do it during hunting season. As if it were an accident, Miller believed that with Larry dead, he and Tammy would be free to live the life he dreamed of. I still have. Miller had tried once and lost. November 21 was his last chance. The last day of the hunting season. Mr. Miller came down. I arrived at the property around 2:00 and actually saw Mr. Holman driving into the field.
Miller was on the roads and positioned against a tree and as Mr Holman began to leave the property he took the photo and saw Mr Homan drop his head. forward and leaned on the steering wheel and the car swerved, police believe she then packed up his rifle, collected the shell casings and left the scene. That's when he called Tammy Holman, can you hear me? She told him they set up one less place at the table on January 10, 2001. Detectives arrested Tammy Hullman for the murder of her husband. Charlie Miller was basically betrayed by Mrs. Holman. He thought she was going to live the life that Larry Holman lived, and instead she attracts Allan Trip, who now takes over Larry's position in the family.
She was a black widow and she had all these lovers out there and she used them all to do her dirty work for her. Charles Miller pleaded guilty to second degree. murder and is serving a 25-year prison sentence Tammy Hullman was sentenced to 7 years in prison for conspiracy to commit murder. A sniper's bullet often gives him away, but a hitman using a darker weapon poses an additional challenge for police on November 7, 1995. 8:31 p.m. A 911 dispatcher received a frantic call from a woman in Green Cove Springs Florida we'll call someone okay Caller Linda Jones reported three men had broken into and ransacked her home Jones said she had been tied up and her husband had been severely beaten.
Deputies with the Clay County Sheriff's Department rushed to the address looking for three intruders. They approached the house with caution, so I'm glad they're here. I need you to come back to review this. I just need you to wait for me and tell me what's going on. In an officer secured the living room the salant appeared to have fled Linda's husband, Jack Jones, was lying on the floor in a pool of blood, his hands and feet bound with duct tape, he was not breathing, the officer began to perform CPR, distraught and inconsolable, his wife could not.
We offer some lucid details Paramedics rushed to the scene as officers tried to get a description of the attackers. They didn't have much to go on. Linda said the men were wearing balaclavas and the rest was a blur. Lt. Tom W was assigned to the case. We were told that uh, three masked men while Salant entered the residence, they had some kind of bat with them and um, they had tied her up, tied up her husband and literally hit him with this with this gun, then they went through the residence and stole several items. such as money and jewelry paramedics examined Linda Jones her injuries appeared minor she complained of tingling and pain in her left arm and was taken to a local hospital for treatment her husband was not so lucky Jack Jones was dead the crime scene itself it was very violent we I immediately noticed a lot of blood, there was blood on the floor because there was blood splatter on the wall and, uh, it looks like he was drugged in an adjacent room and on the wall, when he turned the corner, it looked like he had his hands on the corner of the door trying to restrain himself and then once he was in the other room, where he was literally beaten to death, pieces of duct tape were scattered throughout the house along with a partially used piece of paper, officials found him they believed It had probably been used on the wife; she had also been tied up, he told officers, but she freed herself before calling the police.
The motive for the robbery seemed less clear the more detectives looked. Valuables were found in plain sight. Look it was made to look like it was looted, you know, just disheveled jewelry, an expensive watch, a man's wallet with cash and credit cards left behind, those are the things you can turn around the fastest, they would be gone and why would you leave money? Why would you leave jewelry that didn't look right at the hospital? To recognize someone. Officers took a statement from Linda Jones. Jack and I were sitting in the living room taking fingerprints to help eliminate the ones found in the hallway of the house if she claimed her wrists were tied and her mouth sealed with duct tape but something about her story didn't bother him. sat well Detective they threw me into the fire you would have some signs that there was any redness in his mouth or his face which didn't seem entirely true because normally duct tape leaves a residue or leaves a redness when you take that thing off the police would tell you many questions remained an autopsy provided few answers the coroner's report revealed broken ribs, skull fractures and severe bruises from the knees to the top of his boss, Lt.
Jim Redmond recalls the official findings Jack Jones' injuries were the result of blunt force trauma injuries were indicative of a bat or some type of club the brutality of the crime sent shockwaves through the community detectives were baffled The Joneses lived in a pleasant neighborhood in the Lake Asbury area of ​​Clay County, Why did someone choose this house in this fluid neighborhood? It was random to come in and commit this crime it just wasn't the right morning. Lind investigators hoped Jones' widow could shed some light on the case. Her response, however, surprised them. Linda felt the need to have a lawyer immediately and indicated that we could not contact.
Her behavior, although legal, seemed strange, why would she hire a lawyer? You know, why a victim whose husband was murdered? Why would she need a lawyer? Investigators began canvassing the neighborhood, the woman in particular, they hoped someone had seen something that could identify the killer. We learned about Jack and Linda's relationship from several people and it was a stormy relationship supposedly they just weren't happy according to neighbors Jack Jones was having an affair and Linda had discovered that he became angry a neighbor noticed a suspicious vehicle parked outside the Jones's Residence at the time of the murder it was a brown van and had dark tinted windows and left the scene High speed with no lights on in the vicinity of Jacksonville The police tracked down Samantha Thomas, Jack Jones' girlfriend, she came to take me to That day something else happened.
The two had been romantically involved for several months and she told him that the young woman claimed that Jack was planning to divorce her wife, but Linda had threatened to commit suicide. The girlfriend also told police about another incident a week before the murder. On October 31st outside his house, Thomas' car was vandalized, the tires slashed, it could have just been a Halloween prank, if it wasn't, but according to his girlfriend, Jack Jones felt differently, Jack felt that Linda was Behind this alone because of all the Ruckus was raising about Samantha and their relationship, the story seemed a little strange, but W's next discovery only increased his suspicions according to his insurance policy.
Linda Jones would receive half a million dollars in the event of her husband's death, it was a compelling reason. But to prove murder investigators would have to turn to evidence, although Linda Jones kept her

quiet

, the duct tape said it all. Dawn Walters, a criminal analyst with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, examined pieces of tape collected by police at crime scenes, the minute details of which caught her. Please note, some of the duct tape that was sent was torn or torn and some of the duct tape that was sent appeared to have been cut. The duct tape found on the victim was stretched and frayed, signs that the man had struggled to free himself from the wrapped tape.
However, around his wife's wrists there was a small triangular pattern; it was determined that the duct tape had been cut with what appeared to be pinking shears or another similar cutting instrument. Walters also looked for fingerprints, but none were visible, at least not to the naked eye. she decided to use the Cino acrate Esther smoking process, also known as the superglue process. The superglue smoking process is done by adding drops of superglue to a cotton ball soaped with sodium hydroxide which then begins to smoke and these vapors will adhere to the Laten print residue that is present.
In one article, I used white fingerprint powder to further enhance the fingerprints. Within seconds, an image appeared. Linda Jones had not removed the duct tape from her wrists and now the police had not one of hers, but two fingerprints to prove that someone had freed her. On the night of the murder in 1995, Florida police were searching for three masked intruders who beat a man in the heart of his home after weeks of investigation. Lt. Tom W only had two major clues: a pair of fingerprints left at the scene and a mysteriousbrown truck. the van remained unmarked the window the fingerprints did not match anyone on file according to information gathered by the police the victim was a used car salesman with no known enemies and a married couple in the Rocks Linda W suspected that the wife of the victim was involved but she couldn't have acted alone Not very far into this investigation after Jack Jones died I felt like this was going to be a murder for hire okay good cop then she got a tip confirming her suspicions.
The chamber had a diamond ring. An anonymous source accused a local man. of being involved in the crime very well, it was a landscaper named Donald Bradley, the police took a closer look and we determined that Donald Bradley owned a brown truck with dark tinted windows, Maron, the description of the truck matched the one police were looking for a check. of the finances of his landscaping business led him to the accounting office in Jacksonville where Linda Jones worked Linda Jones did Donald Bradley's taxes and worked for him she knew him and boom immediately he was coming into focus in this case one of the things I routinely do when someone is identified as a suspect.
He would begin to discover who they called the night of Mur. In the case of Donald Bradley, not only was it who, but when on the night of the murder I got Donald Bradley's cell phone, the cell phone records indicated that he had committed three. calls to the Jones House on November 7 throughout the time the crime occurred on January 22, 1996, Lieutenants Tom W and Jim Redmond interviewed their suspect at his home in Orange Park, Florida. Sheriff's Office Jim Bradley admitted he knew the Joneses but said he had no knowledge of the crime, anything he told police he had been driving for part of the night in question, the last time we spoke to him that day, he was very arrogant, the detectives soon revealed his hand, well, we got a 911 call. when we started telling him about the phone calls to the house, he said oh uh uh uh uh yeah, it was about taxes uh and then he got very, very nervous and then he

real

ized that he didn't know where to go. go, but keep your composure.
I would ask Donald, how could Linda be talking about taxes with you on the phone when she's taped up and her husband is being beaten to death and a guy is sitting on top of her in her living room? I mean, how could this happen and he couldn't respond that since Lieutenant Redmond Donald Bradley's story was incredible, we felt pretty sure at the time that he was somehow involved in some way with the murder. by Jack Jones. All the detectives had was a gut feeling to make an arrest. They needed evidence and obtained a search warrant to seize Bradley's van.
Blood Air Carpet Fibers Investigators looked for anything that could link Donald Bradley to the murder of Jack Jones, but the truck was immaculate, it had been cleaned. Detectives had a break several weeks later, when Bradley was arrested on an unrelated charge, they questioned the suspect, who changed his story slightly. He admitted that Linda Jones had approached him about killing her husband. He didn't, but he claimed she had refused. Bradley made up a story that Linda had murdered Jack Jones and used this African war club to do it. His story seemed implausible, but with his fingerprints now in the system they were finally able to compare his fingerprints with those found on the conduit faucet.
They prepared it for the investigators. It was a step forward. Two Steps Back. Bradley's Prince was a mismatch, which meant at least one more accomplice was still on the loose in 1995 Florida. Officials believed Linda Jones had hired a local landscaper named Donald Bradley to kill her husband, but an unidentified fingerprint indicated that at least one other man had participated in the crime in September 1996. Jeremy Harrison, a former employee of the Bradley's landscaping business, had been stopped. on an unrelated charge, police wanted to talk to him about Jones' murder. Prosecutor Timothy Collins 15 years old Ms. Jones' initial report at the time of the homicide said there were three people involved.
I think what you generally find in these types of cases is that in every LIE there is a threat of Truth, so looking at the crime scene it was pretty clear that more than one person was involved for a long time. Then it was a matter of trying to determine who and how many other people were with him. Well, 15 years. Could you defend me? So the critical decision was to find that fingerprint. Who did it belong to? Fingerprint specialist Don Walters received Harrison's ink print to compare with archived evidence to compare lat and prints. Well, I look for the individual features that are present in the latent print and the ink print features, like dots and end ridges and forks.
I was able to identify the two late fingerprints on the tape. The prince belonged to Jeremy Harrison. They finally had their test. They presented what they had found to Harrison. He started talking, he had no problem telling us that he was involved in the murder and that Bradley was involved in the murder, but there was a third person and he didn't want to discuss who that third person was and he held back for a reason that Harrison didn't point out. With the finger on the third suspect, it seemed like the investigator had hit another brick wall, then they learned of a family connection that seemed likely to provide them with the break they so desperately needed.
Shortly after we learned about his brother Jonathan Harrison. They stopped him for questioning, we left the door open in the interview room and let his brother in and his brother looked at him and said, "I told him everything, let it go, brother," after eluding suspicion for almost a year, both Jeremy and Jonathan Harrison confessed. According to the Harrison brothers, the weapon used on the night of the crime was an ancient Zulu warrior's club. Yes, the artifact had been stolen from a local man hunting big game in Africa. The hunter provided a complete description of the club, but was never recovered by police.
On September 14, 1996, law enforcement officials arrested Donald Bradley and charged him with murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder. That same day, investigators surrounded Linda Jones, a woman betrayed by a cheating spouse and her own unbridled brutality. She wanted her husband back when she finally came to the conclusion that was never going to happen, she didn't kill anyone, then it became a matter of money, it will be used against her in court, she has the right to have a lawyer and I guess . In her own mind, she felt that she was not going to get the amount of money she wanted from a divorce.
Investigators reconstruct the events that led to the murder of Jack Jones according to the brothers. Donald had contacted him and said he would pay him $100 a piece. go beat this guy up and that's what they thought they were going to do Donald Bradley had other plans after calling Linda Jones several times that night to make sure his victim was in his place. The Harrison brothers burst through the front door that Linda had left open. attacked from a side entrance, get out of here Bradley grabbed the Zulu warrior's stick and proceeded to beat the man with merciless fury.
Linda's wrists were bandaged and then cut and the men disappeared into the night. Later that night, the men destroyed, destroyed everything. evidence burning their ski masks, their bloody clothes and the Zulu Warrior Club Jeremy and Jonathan Harrison pleaded guilty to felony third-degree murder were sentenced to 10 years and 6 months the jury found Donald Bradley guilty of murder, conspiracy to commit murder and robbery with a firearm. she was sentenced to die in the electric chair Linda Jones was found guilty of first degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder. she was sentenced to life in prison without parole for a murder.
The For Hire police must not only identify the murderer but also the culprit who invented it. Crime, life insurance, cell phone calls and suspect behavior provide guides for police, but often it is the smallest evidence that speaks the loudest and a microscope that shows who must pay the price for murder.

If you have any copyright issue, please Contact