Tag Archive for 'homicide'

Lexington death ruled a homicide

By Greg Kocher
gkocher1@herald-leader.com

Lexington police are investigating the Sunday afternoon death of a 78-year-old woman as a homicide.

Shortly before 4 p.m., police were called to 3728 Red River Drive in south Lexington, where a woman had found her grandmother dead, said Lexington police Lt. Scott Blakely.

Blakely initially said circumstances surrounding the death led police to believe it is “suspicious,” but he would not give other details to explain why.

“At this point, all I’m going to say is it’s suspicious,” Blakely said shortly before 6 p.m. Sunday.

As the evening and investigation progressed, Blakely said the death is being investigated as a homicide.

The grandmother, whose identity police have not released, lived alone, Blakely said. He did say she was found in a bedroom and that there was no forced entry to the house.

Police have interviewed several relatives.

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Police look for truck and leads in Shelby murder

UPDATED: The missing pickup was found i Shelby County at 11:30 p.m. Monday night, according to KSP.

By Steve Lannen
slannen@herald-leader.com

Police are investigating a murder and robbery in Shelby County.

Jim Duckett Jr., 43, was found dead late Monday morning at his residence at 5300 Rockbridge Road, according to a Kentucky State Police press release.

The cause of death was not disclosed by authorities who chose to withhold that piece of information, Trooper Ron Turley said.

Duckett’s newly purchased 2004 Dodge Ram pickup was missing from the driveway and state police are looking for it or anyone who might have seen it. It is possible the truck is connected to the murder, but it is impossible to know for sure until it is recovered, Trooper Ron Turley said.

The truck is a 2004 four-door Dodge Ram, gray with temporary tag number 5311587. The truck has chrome wheels, chrome grill and chrome above the wheel wells.

Anyone with information should contact state police at (502) 227-2221 and ask for Det. Mitch Harris or call local police.

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Investigators call April death a homicide

By Steve Lannen

slannen@herald-leader.com

Family members found Regina Renea Johnson dead on her bed in early April.

On Tuesday, more than six months later, authorities said publicly that the 44-year-old Lexington woman was murdered.

Jones was strangled and suffocated, said a Fayette County coroner’s press release on Tuesday. An autopsy was conducted in April at the state medical examiner’s office in Frankfort and later ruled a homicide.

“From day one, in my heart, I thought it was a homicide and not a natural cause of death,” said Camisha Young, a longtime close friend. “It’s been real hard just knowing she was murdered and not having any answer as to how.”

Lexington police Lt. James Curless said Tuesday evening that police early on thought Johnson’s death was suspicious.

“The more we looked at it, the more concerns we had about it,” he said.

Announcing the case in the local media could help shed more light on Johnson’s death, Curless said. “There are people we feel who have information that could help us resolve this case,” he said.

Last night, Young stood outside the apartments where Johnson died at 420 Rogers Road, off North Broadway and across from the Joyland Bowl and Park.

Johnson had lived there for about three months with three teenage children and a 2-year-old grandchild, Young said. Her daughter’s boyfriend also lived with them, she said.

She recalled a phone conversation she had with Johnson, who told her she was going to ask the boyfriend to move out of the house because she thought he was causing problems for her daughter.

Young, however, doesn’t know what happened next.

“There were four people in the house, no (signs of) breaking in. Somebody knows something,” she said.

Anyone with information is asked to call Lexington police at (859) 258-3700 or call CrimeStoppers (859) 253-2020.

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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: 3 found dead, 1 injured after Ky. fire

By LUCAS L. JOHNSON II
Associated Press Writer

ROARING SPRING, Ky. (AP) — Three people were found dead in a home engulfed by flames in rural western Kentucky, including one whose death was ruled a homicide, Kentucky State Police said Thursday.

Another was found injured at the house near the sprawling Fort Campbell military post, police said.

Investigators remained on the scene Thursday at the house in southern Trigg County near the northwestern edge of the military post and released few details.

An autopsy confirmed that one person was the victim of homicide, police said. The autopsy on the second victim was pending, while workers were still trying to recover the third body from the house, police said.

A fourth person was injured at the residence Wednesday. Police would not name the people who were found dead.
State police spokesman Dean Patterson said Thursday afternoon that the victims were found at different places on the property but would not be specific.

Patterson said troopers were conducting a criminal investigation.

“It’s considered a crime scene because we’ve got people who are dead,” Patterson said.

A California man told The Associated Press on Thursday that he is worried about his 17-year-old daughter after learning from relatives there was a fire at her mother’s Roaring Spring home, where she recently moved.

“I know that I’ve had no contact with my daughter and obviously suspect the worst at this point,” said Doug Williams of Atwater, Calif.
Williams said he called the sheriff’s office and spoke to a deputy.

“They wouldn’t tell me anything. I’ve heard nothing,” he said. “I understand they’re doing an investigation. I understand it, I know we’ve all got a job to do. It certainly doesn’t help as a father wondering where your daughter is.”

Richard Coleman, 32, said he and his wife were preparing dinner Wednesday when one of their children ran in and said he saw a black cloud of smoke. Coleman said he and his wife saw the smoke and drove to the blaze about a half-mile away.

“By the time we got there, the house was fully engulfed,” Coleman said. “There was nothing they could have done at the time to save the structure.”

Coleman said they heard a woman yelling for help. About the same time, an emergency worker ran around the back of the house and found a woman, Coleman said.

Hopkinsville businessman John Schrecker, who was bicycling through the area with a friend, said he saw smoke from about three miles away.

“As we got there, the house was in flames,” he said.

Tim McGinnis, superintendent of Trigg County schools, said he’s staying in touch with law enforcement.

“We are prepared and are in anticipation that whatever did occur may have an impact on our schools,” McGinnis said.“A lot of our students are hearing different stories. … That is what makes it difficult because our students are hearing things that I can’t confirm.”

Police blocked off a quarter-mile area around the house, and there was no answer Thursday morning at the front doors of several nearby homes in the rural community about 75 miles northwest of Nashville, Tenn.

Coleman said Fort Campbell soldiers frequently perform maneuvers as close as 500 feet behind his house.
———
Associated Press Writers Dylan T. Lovan, Brett Barrouquere, Rebecca Yonker and Malcolm C. Knox contributed to this report from Louisville, Ky.

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Kentucky inmate charged with 1997 Lexington murder

shopkins@herald-leader.com

A man serving time in the Kentucky State Penitentiary in Eddyville has been indicted on murder, rape, assault and other charges stemming from events that occurred when he was a juvenile.

Two years ago, Lexington police used DNA evidence to link Aarion Lamon Johnson, now 28, to death of Susanne Stoffels, who was found on her home on Ross Street in 1997.

He was also charged with abusing her corpse. He admitted to the killing Stoffels in June 2006 while in the penitentiary, court records say. He also admitted to abusing her corpse.

Johnson was also charged with assaulting and sodomizing another woman in May 1996, and raping a third woman in June 1996.

He was serving a 70-year sentence in the state penitentiary for previous burglary and sexual offenses when the arrest warrant for those charges was issued two years ago.

On Wednesday, a Fayette County grand jury indicted Johnson on those charges as well as four counts of first-degree burglary related to the incidents in the late-90s.

Johnson is expected to appear in court at 1 p.m. Sept. 26.

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