Tag Archive for 'killed'

Argument over cigarettes turns deadly

- slannen@herald-leader.com

A caregiver in a Montgomery County veterans home was stabbed and killed Monday night, apparently in a dispute over cigarettes.

Darrell Neeley, 51, died from stab wounds caused by a pocketknife, Montgomery County Coroner Wallace Johnson said.

Kenneth Eugene Brasiel, 55, was charged with murder and lodged in the Montgomery County jail.

The stabbing occurred about 7:30 p.m. at a community care residency home for VA patients at 100 Yeller Hoss Lane, Montgomery sheriff Fred Shortridge said.

The stabbing stemmed from an apparent confrontation over cigarettes, the sheriff said.

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UPDATED: Frankfort man killed in Dallas shootings

- shopkins@herald-leader.com

FRANKFORT — William Scott Miller was supposed to arrive at Louisville airport Tuesday afternoon and head home to Frankfort, where he’d spend Christmas with his wife of about five years, their young daughter and his stepson.

But Miller, 42, was shot and killed Monday night during apparently random shootings on Dallas-area roads, authorities say. He had just unloaded a shipment and was going to park his truck in Texas and then fly home.

William Scott Miller, 42, is one of two people killed in freeway shootings during Monday evening rush hour in or near Dallas. (Photo provided to the Herald-Leader)

William Scott Miller, 42, is one of two people killed in freeway shootings during Monday evening rush hour in or near Dallas. (Photo provided to the Herald-Leader)

A Texas man was also killed in the shootings, and a third motorist was injured.

The suspect in at least one of the shootings was identified as Brian Smith, 37, a former Utah state trooper wanted on burglary and robbery warrants. Smith was critically injured when he shot himself during a standoff with police, authorities said.

In Frankfort, Miller’s wife, Shannon, said, “We’d been trying to get him off the road for a while now. He was gone too much. We didn’t see him enough.”

Her son, Jordan Riley, 14, nestled close to her as she sat on the family room sofa, surrounded by neatly wrapped presents in glistening wrapping paper and a tree decorated with baby pictures.

Jordan occasionally reached around to hug his mother, who was surrounded by family Tuesday as she wept.

The shootings, which happened within minutes of each other, started about 5:45 p.m. in a suburb of Dallas when a pickup truck pulled alongside a small Nissan stopped at a red light and the pickup’s driver began shooting, Garland police spokesman Joe Harn told The Associated Press in Dallas. The Nissan’s driver, Jorge Lopez, 20, of Rowlett, was killed.

Witnesses told police the pickup then drove off toward Interstate 635 in Dallas, where shots were fired at an 18-wheeler driven by Kenneth Black Harly. He was not injured, the AP reported.

Then the gunman continued west on the highway and shot into the United Van Lines rig that Miller was driving.

Dallas police Lt. Craig Miller told the AP that Miller was a hero.

“Despite being mortally wounded, he was able to control his rig to the point where other drivers weren’t injured,” Miller said.

An independent contractor, Miller had worked exclusively with Vincent Fister Inc. for about a year and a half, said Dennis Tolson, Vincent Fister’s president and general manager in Lexington.

“He was a fine man,” Tolson said. “He was a hardworking fellow who was trying to sustain his family. His customers loved him. Just a quality individual.”

After Miller was shot, police said, the shooter drove another half-mile on the interstate and fired at another semi-trailer. The driver, Gary Roberts, 46, was injured by debris and glass but not struck by any bullets, Bedford Wilhite, who works with Roberts at Dugan Truck Line, told reporters.

Garland police spokesman Joe Harn said his department has not been able to make a definitive connection between Smith and the killing of Lopez, but he acknowledged that Smith fit the description of the highway shooter: a balding, 40ish white man.

“We’re testing the bullets found in his vehicle with the other shootings,” Harn told reporters. “It’s just part of our investigation because of how close in time the events happened to each other.”

Miller said he thinks the suspect was angry and there was no pattern in selecting the victims.

“It’s just absolutely stunning to me that something like this would happen,” Wilhite told The Associated Press. “This is our way of surviving in this country — truckers hauling goods up and down the highways. Why would someone want to take potshots like this at our drivers?”

In Frankfort, Miller’s family struggled with that same question.

Shannon Miller had planned to pick up her husband about 12:50 p.m. Tuesday at Louisville airport. He would leave again on Sunday.

She said she had rarely seen her husband, whom they referred to as Scott, since he started driving the truck about two years ago. He was home with his wife, stepson and 5-year-old daughter, Daliah, maybe one day a month.

He was never home more than two or three days at a time, Shannon Miller said. He was barely home for Thanksgiving.

“He was determined to be a good provider and take care of us,” she said.

There was also little time for Scott Miller to do the things he loved — hunting and fishing on a farm in Franklin County, playing poker, flipping channels on his big-screen TV, and riding his 1999 Softail Harley-Davidson motorcycle.

“He always said that was the best therapy,” his wife said.

Spurlin Funeral Home in Lancaster, where Scott Miller grew up and still has relatives, is handling arrangements, which were incomplete Tuesday.

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Mother charged in fire that killed 2 children

FORT CAMPBELL — A federal grand jury has charged a Fort Campbell soldier’s wife with setting a house fire on base that killed her two children.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Kentucky announced Tuesday that Billi Jo Smallwood has been charged with maliciously setting fire to her home in March 2007. She is also charged with attempting to destroy a residential facility for members of the U.S. Army that caused the death of two minors.

Smallwood’s two children, 9-year-old Sam Fagan and 2-year-old Rebekah Smallwood, were killed in the fire and her husband, Army Spc. Wayne Smallwood, was injured.

Smallwood, who is 35, could face death or life imprisonment if convicted. A spokeswoman for the attorney’s office said Smallwood does not have an attorney and she is currently in federal custody.

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Suspected intruder is shot, killed

 By Brandon Ortiz and Shawntaye Hopkins
bortiz@herald-leader.com,shopkins@herald-leader.com

Was it self-defense?

That question came into play Wednesday at a shooting scene near Lexington’s Hamburg Pavilion — and in two hearings before the Kentucky Supreme Court in Louisville.

In Lexington, police and prosecutors focused on the self-defense question as they investigated the shooting death of Brian Simpson, 28, a suspected home intruder who was killed by one of the home’s residents. According to police, a couple who live in the apartment answered knocks at the door and were “rushed by” three people with handguns. One of the apartment occupants got a handgun and shot and killed one of the alleged intruders.

In Louisville, meanwhile, state Supreme Court justices grappled with the 2006 law in play in the Lexington case. That law broadly expanded the right to self-defense. The court on Wednesday heard oral arguments in two Louisville homicide cases that involved the law, commonly called the castle doctrine.

 Fayette County coroner Gary Ginn, left, and Police Officer Ann Gutierrez answered questions for the media outside Gleneagles apartments on Polo Club Drive on Wednesday in Lexington. One intruder was shot dead during a home invasion in an apartment there Wednesday morning. (David Perry | Staff)

Fayette County coroner Gary Ginn, left, and Police Officer Ann Gutierrez answered questions for the media outside Gleneagles apartments on Polo Club Drive on Wednesday in Lexington. One intruder was shot dead during a home invasion in an apartment there Wednesday morning. (David Perry | Staff)

The cases were heard at the University of Louisville Louis D. Brandeis School of Law.

Officer Ann Gutierrez, a Lexington police spokeswoman, said officers are conferring with prosecutors as they investigate whether the Lexington shooting was self-defense.

Senate Bill 38, commonly called the castle doctrine, was premised on a centuries-old concept: a man’s home is his castle, and he has the right to defend it — with deadly force if necessary.

The law grants immunity to homeowners who kill a home intruder. It expands the right to use deadly force in self-defense to anywhere a person “has a right to be.”

It also codified decades-old Kentucky case law that victims have no obligation to retreat before defending themselves.

But the law did not address several key questions when the facts are disputed: Who decides whether the alleged perpetrator was really a home intruder? Police? A judge? A jury?

And when and how is that supposed to happen?

The castle doctrine has come into play twice before. The first instance resulted in a plea deal being offered midtrial. In the second case, a grand jury last month declined to charge a man who shot and killed a drunken man beating on his front door.

No ruling

The Kentucky Supreme Court did not make any rulings Wednesday. Supreme Court cases typically are not decided until months after oral arguments.

One of the key issues is the law’s immunity provision. Immunity means that the home owner can’t be sued and can’t be prosecuted. In theory, the law is supposed to prevent police from even arresting the homeowner.

In the first Supreme Court case heard Wednesday, Wines vs. Commonwealth, a public defender argued that Phillip Wines is entitled to a new trial because jurors were not instructed in his 2006 trial that he had no obligation to retreat when he stabbed James Hamilton in a fight.

Elizabeth McMahon, of the the Louisville public defender office, also argued that Wines should have received a pre-trial hearing before a judge to determine whether he was entitled to immunity. A victory in such a hearing would have meant dismissal of his charges and no trial.

McMahon also argued that the castle doctrine should be applied retroactively.

The second case, Rodgers vs. Commonwealth, presented the court with the exact same questions. Frank Rodgers was convicted of manslaughter for the August 2004 shooting death of Dewhon McCafee at a barbecue at McCafee’s house. Rodgers claimed that McCafee had pulled out a gun and he wrestled it away from him, then shot McCafee.

Prosecutors have a sharply different account of Hamilton’s death in the Wines case. They say Wines was the aggressor. They think he attempted to lure Hamilton onto his property so he could kill him and claim self-defense. Wines claims that Hamilton attacked him.

NRA lobbies for law

The National Rifle Association has lobbied for castle doctrine laws across the country.

Kentucky’s version overwhelmingly passed the House and Senate. A handful of lawmakers opposed it, saying it encourages people to shoot first and ask questions later.

Prosecutors have also opposed the law. They say the law’s presumption that shooters are justified forces the courts to ignore the actual facts.

Prosecutors have talked about asking the legislature to repeal or amend it. But such an effort would be futile, said Jefferson Commonwealth’s Attorney David Stengel said.

“Talking to the legislature when the NRA is involved is like sticking your head out the window and yelling,” said Stengel, a Democrat. “They are in lockstep with anything the NRA says.”

One of the sponsors of the castle doctrine, state Sen. Damon Thayer, R-Georgetown, says the concept behind the law is simple.

“The intention was to send a very strong message to criminals that they should not rob people’s houses,” Thayer said.

Thayer added that the law was not intended to be retroactive. He also did not say how the legislature wanted the courts and police to apply the law.

That’s something for the judiciary to decide, he said.

He said that, if the law is causing problems for the criminal justice system, the General Assembly would probably be open to clarifying it.

But “I have not been contacted by a single person saying the castle doctrine should be changed,” Thayer said. Not “a citizen, a homeowner, a prosecutor, a defense lawyer. None of the above.”

Shooting investigated

In Lexington Wednesday, police interviewed residents, searching for leads at the apartment complex where the shooting occurred.

Neighbors said they heard people yelling followed by at least three gunshots. The shooting was reported to police about 8:30 a.m.

A neighbor, who heard gunshots, flagged down officers and directed them to the apartment, Gutierrez said.

There were a lot of people at the scene when police arrived, she said. And officers were interviewing them Wednesday afternoon, trying to determine who was involved.

Investigators have not figured out why the intruders were at the apartment and whether they knew the residents.

Late Wednesday afternoon, Reginald Laron Jones, 24, was arrested on charges of first-degree burglary. Police say Jones, Simpson and a woman who has not been identified charged into a residence at Gleneagles Apartments at 2920 Polo Club Road.

Jones has an extensive criminal background and has been arrested for a number offenses, including several drug charges.

Police were still searching for the woman Wednesday night.

The shooter, who was interviewed and released, was not identified Wednesday.

Jeff Haddix said his 27-year-old daughter and her boyfriend live at the apartment where the shooting took place. He did not want to give his daughter’s name, but he quietly waited for several hours at the crime scene with other relatives as the woman was interviewed by police.

Haddix said police told him that she was all right, “just a little shaken up.” He said he was “terrified” when he arrived at the complex and saw the police cruisers.

Reach Shawntaye Hopkins (859) 231-1386 or 1-800-950-6397, Ext. 1386.

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Watkins Trial: Jury selection, opening statements

SCROLL DOWN FOR LIVE UPDATES OF THE TRIAL: Jury selection began Tuesday in the case of Michaela Watkins, the 10-year-old girl who was beaten and killed.

The jury will decide whether Patrick and Joy Watkins, Michaela’s father and stepmother, are responsible for the girl’s death.

Michaela was found dead March 11, 2007. Investigators say the severely underweight girl was held in scalding water and beaten with an object similar to a 2-inch-by-4-inch piece of lumber.

Investigators say the severely underweight girl was held in scalding water and beaten with an object similar to a 2-inch-by-4-inch piece of lumber.

Herald-Leader reporter Ashlee Clark will be covering the trial, which could last up to two weeks. Ashlee will send updates throughout the trial, so check here for live coverage.


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