Monthly Archive for October, 2008Page 3 of 13

Court: Redo sentence in retired teacher’s killing

By DAVID BROCK
dbrock@amnews.com

HARRODSBURG- The Kentucky Supreme Court has vacated the sentence of life without parole for confessed killer Louis Lee Anderson and remanded the case to Mercer County Circuit Court for resentencing.

No date has been set yet for a hearing.

Anderson pleaded guilty to the 2006 robbery and murder of retired teacher Louise Pulliam of Harrodsburg and was given life without parole by Judge Darren Peckler.

Read the full story in the Danville Advocate-Messenger

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Police in Ky. charge man in Halloween gag

The Associated Press

PARIS — When a Paris chicken restaurant employee found her boss lying in a pool of blood, she ran screaming from the restaurant and called police.

WKYT-TV in Lexington reported the scenario was set up by Joe Watkins as a Halloween prank on one of his workers at the Chicken Ranch restaurant. Her name wasn’t revealed.

Watkins said he tried calling the woman’s cell phone to tell her it was a prank, but she didn’t answer. He says he also called police to tell them it was a gag.

They came anyway and charged Watkins with making a false report.

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Police look for robbery suspect

Herald-Leader Staff Report

Lexington police are looking for a suspect in the early Tuesday morning robbery of the Thornton’s gas station at 1201 South Broadway.

A man entered the store at 2:40 a.m. with a sharp object and demanded money. He fled on foot toward Pyke Road with an undetermined amount of cash, said Lexington Police Lt. Thomas Curtsinger.

During the robbery, a male clerk received a minor cut from the sharp object.

A canine unit tracked a scent, and police found an article of clothing, but would not say what it was.

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Body found near Cincy/NKY airport

HEBRON - A worker mowing brush at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport has found skeletal human remains.

The Kentucky Enquirer quoted airport spokesman Ted Bushelman saying the body was found Monday.
It will be examined at the state medical examiner’s office in Frankfort.

Boone County Coroner Doug Stith said authorities will investigate whether the remains could be those of 37-year-old Angela Hild of Dayton, Ohio, who has been missing for two months.

Police believe Hild was killed by her husband Michael Hild on Aug. 21 and that her body was dumped in northern Kentucky.

Michael Hild was killed in a gunfight with police in Melbourne, Fla., two days after his wife disappeared.
———
Information from: The Kentucky Enquirer, http://www.enquirer.com

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Attorney seek stay of execution for child killer

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Attorneys are seeking a stay of execution for a confessed child killer who has volunteered to be put to death.
The Kentucky Supreme Court cleared the way last week for Marco Allen Chapman to become the first death row inmate executed in the state in nearly 10 years. The execution date is set for Nov. 21.
Chapman dismissed his public defenders in 2004, entered a guilty plea and asked to be put to death.
The public defenders questioned Chapman’s competency in one motion for a stay. In another, they argued that Chapman shouldn’t be executed until appeals are exhausted in a separate case that questions the validity of Kentucky’s execution protocol. That case is pending before the state Supreme Court.

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Police investigate Madison County shooting death

Central Kentucky Bureau

Kentucky State Police are investigating the death of a man from a gunshot wound Sunday night.

Shortly before 7 p.m. Sunday, troopers responded to a disturbance where shots were fired on Charlie Norris Road in eastern Madison County.

Upon their arrival, the troopers found one man dead, a state police release said. State police have not released the victim’s name, but an autopsy was to be conducted Monday in Frankfort.

Detectives Brian Reeder and Bill Collins are conducting the death investigation.

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Police: Woman found in trunk might have been dead 2 years

A Georgetown woman might have been dead two years before her body was discovered in the trunk of her brother’s car late last week, police said Monday.

Penny Brown’s body was found Friday in the trunk of a 1998 Chevy Malibu that police had towed from St. Louis. The car is registered in the name of her brother, Timothy Allen Brown of Georgetown.

Investigators were searching for Timothy Brown, 30, who is wanted for the knowing abuse or neglect of an adult and interstate flight to avoid prosecution. The FBI and the U.S. Marshal’s Service have assisted in the investigation.

Georgetown Police Chief Greg Reeves said Timothy Brown was cashing his disabled sister’s Social Security Income checks, which were between $600 and $700 per month. Police have stopped the checks.

“It’s pretty sad that someone would do this to a family member,” Reeves said during a news conference on Monday. “He was the caregiver and he was receiving a check, and he was cashing that check, and she wasn’t getting any care.”

While she might have been dead for two years, Reeves said no missing person report was made until Sept. 20.

That’s when police began looking for Penny Brown, 31, who used a wheelchair. Timothy Brown had initially told police that Penny was staying with an aunt, but a check with the aunt found that to be false, Reeves said.

When police later searched Timothy Brown’s apartment on Myers Drive, they did not find him or his sister, Reeves said.

The Chevy Malibu was found last week on Bancroft Avenue in St. Louis. Two Georgetown police detectives went to St. Louis and had a wrecker tow it back Wednesday to Scott County, where it remains in a locked facility.

Reeves said it took a couple of days to obtain a search warrant to look in the car for any clues about Timothy’s or Penny’s whereabouts.

Upon receiving the warrant Friday, police unlocked the trunk and “found a very badly decomposed body that was turned over” to Scott County Coroner John Goble and state medical examiner Emily Craig.

“The body was wrapped in blankets, which was an attempt to conceal the decomposition,” Reeves said. “It was bagged with industrial-grade plastic” possibly to contain the odor, he said.

Reeves said it does not appear that the body had been in the trunk of the car for two years. “We believe that the body had been stored in another location, put into the vehicle, and then transported to St. Louis,” Reeves said.

The cause of Penny Brown’s death is not known and might never be known “simply because of the condition of the body,” said Mike Wilder, executive director of the state medical examiner’s office in Frankfort.

“It’s a very complex ordeal when you have (skeletonized) remains and even some mummification involved,” Wilder said.

Penny Brown was discharged from Georgetown Healthcare Center, a nursing home, in 2006. That apparently was the last time anyone saw her, and police think she died shortly after that.

Not much is known about Timothy Brown. He was employed by a Speedway store on Darby Drive in Georgetown, not far from the apartment where he lived. Employees at Speedway declined to speak to a Herald-Leader reporter.

Timothy Brown is the father of an 8-year-old son, whom the state removed from the Georgetown apartment around the time that the missing person’s investigation began. Reeves didn’t have other information about that, but said Timothy Brown disappeared shortly after that.

Timothy Brown has no criminal record other than a misdemeanor charge for possession of marijuana last year. He paid $245 in a fine and court costs in January, according to records in the Scott Circuit Court Clerk’s Office.

Kristy Courtney, who lived in the apartment across from Timothy Brown, said he was quiet and “kept to himself.”

Timothy Brown is described as a white man with blue eyes and blond hair. He is 6 feet tall and weighs 230 to 250 pounds.

Reach Greg Kocher in the Nicholasville bureau at (859) 885-5775.

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Henry Earl checks into rehab at Hope Center after deal

By Brandon Ortiz
bortiz@herald-leader.com

Lexington’s most famous alcoholic checked into rehab Thursday.

Henry Earl, the Lexington homeless man who is an Internet celebrity for having been arrested more than 1,000 times for alcohol intoxication, checked himself into a four-month alcoholism recovery program at the Hope Center.

Henry Earl

Henry Earl

Earl sought treatment at the urging of Fayette District Judge Megan Lake Thornton, his defense attorney and prosecutors.

He was cut an unusual plea deal Thursday: two years probation, with a 90-day sentence hanging over his head if he gets arrested again.

The hope, said defense attorney Stephen Gray McFayden, was that the 58-year-old would check himself into the Hope Center program.

But he was under no obligation to do so.

The last time Earl was able to go two consecutive years without being arrested was in the mid-1970s, according to jail records provided to thesmokinggun.com.

Thornton has made it a priority to get Earl into treatment. But even she had doubts Thursday when she told Earl of the sentence he’d serve if he’s arrested again.

“I don’t know how that’s going to work,” Thornton said. “But when, and if — and I’m assuming it’s when — you come back here (to court), it’s going to be reassigned to me until you finish this process.”

Earl was offered the deal because a Hope Center treatment program in jail lasts four months. The maximum that Earl can serve for alcohol intoxication is 90 days, so Thornton could not force Earl to complete the program.

The judge is “really cheering for him,” McFayden said. “I am cheering for Henry. The community is. Henry has more fans than you could imagine.”

McFayden said that Earl is thankful that Thornton is taking an interest in him. Earl had planned to thank her Thursday but was apparently too nervous, the lawyer said.

“He feels that Judge Thornton is actually genuine in her intent to help him,” McFayden said.

For the first four months Earl would be in an inpatient program at the Hope Center. The second phase would help him transition into living on his own.

But Earl could walk away at any time.

“That was a concern for every party,” McFayden said.

McFayden hopes to get Earl Social Security disability payments and into low-income housing — and off the streets.

Earl, who is largely viewed as a harmless eccentric, has received attention lately after an Internet site erroneously reported that he was arrested for the 1,000th time. The report was based on jail records going back to 1992.

Actually — as the Herald-Leader reported in 2005 — his arrests far exceeded that, but nobody had tallied up his arrests because the jail did not have electronic records before 1992.

The Smoking Gun, through open-records requests, determined that Earl has been arrested 1,333 times.

Earl is an Internet celebrity, even though he told a reporter in 2005 that he’s never actually used the Internet. He became famous after humor Web site Fark.com began posting his mug shots and tracking his arrests.

Other Web sites devoted solely to Henry Earl have sprung up, including one that purports to have real-time stats of his arrests.

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Mom handcuffs kids to save food

By Kimball Perry

kperry@nquirer.com

Kenna Ross worried about running out of food.

So, the 29-year-old pregnant Winton Hills mother of six told police she did what she often did to make the food last – she bound her children’s wrists and ankles with plastic handcuffs to keep them from “hoarding food.”

Read the full story at cincinnati.com

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Jeffersonville man gets 20 years for murder

By Ashlee Clark
aclark@herald-leader.com

A Jeffersonville man accused of killing a Mount Sterling man was sentenced to 20 years in prison Wednesday for the murder.

Rick L. Puryear

Rick L. Puryear

Rick Lee Puryear, 37, was sentenced on Wednesday to serve 20 years for fatally shooting Michael A. Flora, 22, of Mount Sterling. A passerby found Flora’s body Jan. 20 along Ky. 15 in Powell County, about a mile east of Slade. He had been shot multiple times, Kentucky State Police said.

Puryear pleaded guilty on Oct. 8 to murder and two lesser charges in the case.

Puryear was also sentenced to five years for tampering with physical evidence and five years for being a felon in possession of a firearm, according to the Powell County Circuit Clerk’s office.

His sentences will be served concurrently. Puryear must serve at least 85 percent of the sentence before becoming eligible for parole.

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