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Showing posts with label 2007. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2007. Show all posts

NC- Suspect in Johnson City park sex sting kills himself

10-2-2007 North Carolina:

JOHNSON CITY — Less than 24 hours after Johnson City police announced charges against dozens of men allegedly involved in sex acts at city parks, one of those accused is believed to have killed himself.

A resident of Newland, N.C., 55-year-old Jerry McCloud, reportedly was found dead inside his home around 10 a.m. Tuesday.

Authorities told a source in Avery County, N.C., that McCloud died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. His body reportedly was found by a family member.

McCloud had been scheduled to appear in Washington County Sessions Court on Tuesday to answer to charges of indecent exposure and disorderly conduct.

He was one of 40 men charged in a two-week undercover investigation conducted by Johnson City police last month at Winged Deer and Buffalo Mountain parks.

Authorities said Monday their investigation into the inappropriate sexual behavior is far from over.

As news of the sting hit newspapers and local television stations Tuesday, undercover investigators arrested yet another man allegedly looking for sex at a park.

According to reports, an officer was conducting surveillance at Buffalo Mountain Park around 1 p.m. Tuesday when Clifford Deloach, 44, 2819 Emory Lane, approached him and asked him to engage in sexual activity.

Deloach allegedly led the officer to an area frequently used for such activity, and the pair made plans to engage in sex.

At that time, Deloach was issued a citation charging him with disorderly conduct.

All of the men charged in the recent sting are no longer allowed to visit any city park, police said. ..News Source.. by Kristen Swing

TX- Teacher kills himself after sex allegations

1-2-2007 Texas:

An English teacher committed suicide days after he resigned from his job at Clark High School amid allegations of sexual impropriety with a student, a district official said.

The body of Tommy Ford, 60, was discovered Sunday in a duplex in the 7000 block of Glen Mist. He had died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, according to the Bexar County medical examiner's office.

His body was decomposed, though investigators could not pinpoint how long he had been dead, the medical examiner's office said.

On Dec. 14, a 17-year-old male student and his family alleged Ford had engaged in "inappropriate conduct of a sexual nature" with the teen, said Pascual Gonzalez, spokesman for the Northside Independent School District. Ford was put on administrative leave with pay the same day, and an internal district investigation was launched.

On Dec. 21, Ford resigned. Gonzalez couldn't say if his suicide was linked to the incident, but he added the investigation was incomplete at the time of Ford's death.

Ford had been an English teacher at Clark since 1978 and had been with the school district since 1968, according to his Web site.

School counselors already were preparing to help students returning from their winter vacation grip with both their teacher's passing and the death of Clark senior Cassandra Hicks.

Hicks died in a traffic accident Dec. 26 on a two-lane highway near Sweetwater, southwest of Lubbock. ..more.. by Vianna Davila, Express-News

WI- Sex offender found dead at home

1-25-2007 Wisconsin:

NEWARK TOWNSHIP-A convicted sex offender scheduled to be sentenced Friday apparently killed himself in his home Wednesday night.

Indications are that Donald L. Ostenson, 63, of 8102 W. Grove School Road, Beloit, died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, said Lt. Bill Harper of the Rock County Sheriff's Department.

An Orfordville ambulance was called to the scene at 7:53 p.m., Harper said. A representative of the coroner's office pronounced Ostenson dead at the scene.

Ostenson was charged in August 2005 with sexual assault of a child younger than 13.

A charge of first-degree sexual assault of a child later was dismissed, but Ostenson pleaded guilty Oct. 26 to a related felony, according to online court records.

Ostenson was scheduled to be sentenced Friday morning in Rock County Court. ..more.. by GazzetteXtra

NM- Body found near airport

3-5-2007 New Mexico:

LAS CRUCES — Doña Ana sheriff's investigators are looking into the suspicious death of a man found inside a hangar near the Santa Teresa Airport in southern Doña Ana County. A source has confirmed that the body is that of Arturo Carreon, a former officer with the El Paso Police Department who was fired in 1998 after he was charged and convicted of having sex with a teenage girl.

Sheriff's investigator Sgt. Mark Perea said authorities were called to a hangar at 100 Lindbergh in Santa Teresa about 3:30 p.m. on Feb. 16 by a security guard patrolling the area. Perea said the victim was found with a gunshot wound to the head, but investigators did not find a gun at the scene. An El Paso police source, who asked not to be identified because the onging investigation, confirmed the body was that of Carreon, 37.

TX- Serial Rapist Commits Suicide Before Sentencing

2-21-2007 Texas:

.A Dallas man who prosecutors call a serial rapist will not go to jail for his crimes. That's because Robert Eugene Bird committed suicide by hanging hours before he was scheduled to face a punishment of life in prison. Bird's string of abductions and rapes were not widely publicized three years ago. But Dallas County prosecutors said he's one of the most vile criminals they've encountered.

Still, those prosecutors and his victims didn't want him to die before he could spend time in prison. "By committing suicide, he's avoided that too and that just doesn't seem fair," said one of his victims. The 31-year-old Dallas woman was on her way to work in March 2004 when she was attacked. Bird, a 61-year-old retired Vietnam veteran, pleaded guilty last week to raping two women.

Prosecutors said three years ago, Bird trolled northeast Dallas streets in a white van looking for victims. He subdued them with weapons that included duct tape, an ice pick and a stun gun. Two of Bird's victims now feel victimized again by their tormentor. It also leaves prosecutors worried that other possible victims of Bird will never be found. "There are other victims out there," said prosecutor Rebecca Dodds. "He indicated to [his victims] while they were being attacked that he had done this before and in fact had gotten away with it." ..more.. : by CBS 11 News

MD- Hunter Finds Convicted Child Rapist Dead of Suicide

12-7-2007 Maryland:

On Thursday morning, St. Mary’s Bureau of Criminal Investigations (BCI) detectives responded to a wooded area in Charlotte Hall after a hunter found a dead man hanging from a tree.

Police identified the man as George R. Hayes, 50 of Marshal Road, Mechanicsville.

St. Mary’s Sheriff Sgt. Steve Hall said it appeared Haynes took his own life within the last few days.

Sgt. Hall, spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office, said there was no immediate indication of foul play, and the man’s hands were not bound together.

BCI detectives are continuing to investigate.

Hayes is listed as a “Child Sexual Offender” on the Maryland Sex Offender Registry after being convicted on charges of gross sexual imposition/rape. ..more.. by Sean Rice

Police: Accused pedophile kills self

1-9-2008 New York:

LEE – Prosecutors have dismissed sex charges against a 70-year-old town of Lee man following his apparent suicide in December, officials said.

William James Hawkins Sr. shot himself four days after he was charged with first-degree sodomy Dec. 14 stemming from allegations that he sexually abused a 10-year-old child in 2000, according to state police and investigators with the Oneida County Child Advocacy Center.

Hawkins had returned to his Lee Valley Road residence after being released from jail that weekend on a $40,000 bond, police said. On Dec. 18, Hawkins’ wife left their residence for about 15 to 20 minutes, only to discover Hawkins’ body when she returned, police said.

Police said Hawkins left no suicide note.

Oneida County District Attorney Scott McNamara said Hawkins’ case has since been “abated by death of the defendant.” ..more.. by ROCCO LaDUCA, Observer-Dispatch

Suicide didn't clear allegations

1-7-2008 Mississippi:

Capt. Pete Collins received thousands upon thousands of letters of admiration.

"A lot of people here really look up to you. Including me!" wrote one high school student from Kentucky.

A Mississippi student wrote, "I won't forget you. I had thought about suicide, but it is not worth it. Now, I wouldn't commit suicide for anything in the world."

Collins spent 28 years serving Mississippi as a highway patrolman. It was for his motivational speeches - inspiring, cautionary tales delivered over a 25-year speaking career - that Collins became, in the words of Louisa Dixon, former commissioner of the Department of Public Safety, "a great ambassador for Mississippi. Pete's talent for public speaking was of the highest caliber."

"Pete had a gift," Jackie Moore, his fiancee, said recently. "He could have you buckled over, laughing out loud one second, and crying your eyes out the next."

This 62-year-old man who was presented with enough awards to fill a home's walls slipped his socks off on a Sunday last August and hung himself with them inside the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility in Rankin County.

Convicted of molesting a 13-year-old girl, Collins was two days into a 10-year prison sentence when he ended his life.

"I don't worry about Pete. I know where he's at," Gail Jones, his older sister, said. "It's just the way he had to go - it's not right."

It took two trials to convict Collins. The first one, in August 2006, ended in a hung jury.

Lee County Assistant District Attorney Clay Joyner prosecuted Collins during the second trial, in August 2007. Joyner's investigation brought to the surface a portrait of Collins few wanted to see.

"In talking with current Highway Patrol investigators, I discovered a lot of them had problems with Pete," said Joyner. "Pete would take other people's stories and during his speeches put himself in their shoes. That rubbed a lot of people in the department the wrong way."

Jim Ingram, former commissioner of the Department of Public Safety, testified during the second trial. Ingram told jurors that he viewed Collins, after years of working with him, as a "dishonest" person. "I was subpoenaed, came forward and testified, under oath, to the truth," was all Ingram would say about his testimony.

More incriminating, Joyner uncovered five women who claimed to have been molested by Collins when they were teenagers, stretching back to 1967.

"None of them, whatsoever, have a motive to make something like this up," said Joyner. "When you've got a group of victims who match a sex and specific age range, from 13 to 15 years old, that, in and of itself, speaks to his situation."

A judge did not allow the women to testify at Collins' trial.

One of the victims was Kay Swindell. The Winona resident attended both of Collins' trials.

"I kept it a secret for 40 years. I never told a soul," said Swindell, who claims Collins molested her when she was 15. "That's because I didn't think anyone would believe me. Pete went out and made a big name for himself, and through all of those years, I wanted someone to know the truth about him."

Swindell said she came forward because she knew what the 13-year-old victim was going through.

"I knew that Pete would do everything in his power to try and discredit that little girl, and I knew how scared she was," said Swindell.

Joyner said he found a pattern in Collins' behavior.

"In these types of cases, you find repetition," he said. "And that's what you have here."

Collins would gain young girls' trust over a period of time before molesting them, Joyner said. "But he made a mistake with the last one. ... He never groomed her."

The incident that led to Collins' conviction began the night before Thanksgiving 2004. Visiting his son's home in Tupelo for the holidays, Collins went to bed in his grandchildren's bed.

"I'm going to sleep with them as often as I can because they are all I got," Collins testified during his first trial.

His granddaughter had a friend over, visiting.

The 13-year-old victim testified during both trials that she woke up in the middle of the night with Collins' hands down the front of her pajama bottoms.

All five of the previous victims Joyner found said they were teenagers when Collins first molested them. At least one of the girls says Collins had intercourse with her over a two-year period, beginning when she was 12.

"No man I know walks around with girls accusing him of that," Joyner said. "Again, that speaks to Collins."

Collins' family contends that his suicide was a combination of a false conviction, a 10-year sentence, public humiliation and lack of proper medication. ..more.. by William Browning

Sex Assault Suspect Killed

12-27-2007 South Carolina:

A West Ashley High School teacher accused of raping a woman drove his car into a tree and died this morning, Charleston County Sheriff's Major John Clark said.

A suicide note was found in 38-year-old Scott Knight’s car.

Knight was free on a $20,000 bond after being arrested for criminal sexual conduct and assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature. Knight was accused of forcing a woman to have sex with him at his home in Concord West of the Ashley on 45 Sycamore Ave.

He had been on administrative leave from West Ashley High School since November, when he was arrested and charged with harassing two students.

Knight taught computer tech and was employed at the high school for four years. ..more.. by LIve 5 News


Teacher Arrested Second Time, Faces Two New Charges
12-24-2007 South Carolina

A West Ashley High School teacher, first accused of harassing a student, now faces serious new charges.

Scott Knight charged with Criminal Sexual Conduct and Assault and Battery of a High and Aggravated Nature.

The September incident happened in Knight’s bedroom, deputies said.

The woman told detectives Knight lured her into his bedroom, after he claimed he had gifts for her.

Instead, police say, he closed and locked the bedroom door and then pushed her down on his bed.

Reports show the woman tried to convince Knight to let her leave the room.

Instead, the arrest affidavit says knight pinned the woman down to the bed, then sexually assaulted her.

Investigators are still trying to figure out the connection between the two and how this woman ended up in Knight's apartment.

The 38-year old is out on a 20-thousand dollar bond...and on paid administrative leave.

No word on whether the new charges will change his status at the school district.

Mary Runyon, principal at West Ashley High School, by phone told Live 5 News it’s unfortunate any time something like this happens especially when it’s a teacher.

Runyon considers Knight a good teacher. ..more.. by Hatzel Vela,




Bond Set For West Ashley Teacher Accused Of Harassing Student
11-15-2007 South Carolina:

A West Ashley High School teacher is expected to get out of jail Thursday after he was arrested, accused of harassing a student.

Scott Knight, 38, was arrested Wednesday. He's being held at the Charleston County Detention Center.

A student complained Knight had been harassing her for the last month and a half.

She says he made vulgar sexual advances and continually insulted her boyfriend, saying he wasn't good enough for her. ..more.. by Hatzel Vela,

Gloucester man facing child porn trial kills himself in jail

12-18-2007 Virginia:

GLOUCESTER - A Gloucester man facing state and federal charges of child pornography and child molestation killed himself in jail this weekend, days before his case was scheduled to go to trial in Gloucester County Circuit Court, according to Gloucester Commonwealth's Attorney Robert D. Hicks.

John P. Monahan, 43, was to go to trial today on nine counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child, one count of forcible sodomy of a child and one count of sexual penetration of a child. Monahan, who worked at Eastern State Hospital in Williamsburg, is accused of molesting three different children between 2005 and August of this year.

Monahan was first arrested in August after investigators found images of child pornography on his computer.

A Gloucester grand jury indicted Monahan on molestation charges Sept. 4, after an investigation conducted by the Gloucester Sheriff's Department and the FBI. On Oct. 11, a federal grand jury indicted Monahan on charges of producing and receiving child pornography.

If convicted of the federal charges, Monahan had faced a mandatory life sentence.

Monahan, of Hayes, was being held at Western Tidewater Regional Jail when he committed suicide, according to Mr. Hicks. He said the commonwealth's attorney's office dropped its charges against Monahan on Monday. ..more.. by NICOLAS ZIMMERMAN

Arkansas inmate suicide rate highest since ’01

12-10-2007 Arkansas:

As they struggled with a bedsheet knotted into a noose, correctional officers noted Scott D. Walls’ pale face. Blood spotted his white prison jumpsuit.

The 46-year-old Garland County man, convicted in 2001 of a sex crime, was the first prison suicide of the year.

Four more men would follow suit by Thanksgiving, giving the Arkansas prison system the dubious distinction of having a suicide rate so far this year of more than twice the national average.

An off icer found Walls hanging from his cell bars just minutes after making a security check midafternoon on Jan. 3, according to an Arkansas State Police report.

By the time 19-year-old Patrick Collins hung himself on Thanksgiving Day, the Department of Correction had its highest suicide total in six years.

Prison officials call this year’s suicides, like the six in 2001, aberrations — unexplainable spikes that need to be compared against only nine suicides in the five intervening years. Since 1988, they say, the state inmate suicide rate is closer to the nationwide average.

If inmates want to kill themselves, they will, prison officials say.

“I don’t think if someone is determined to kill themselves, we can come up with a way to prevent it,” said Wendy Kelley, the department’s deputy director for health and correctional services.

That thought is echoed by at least two other state prison officials.

But experts say that Arkansas is ignoring national trends toward revamping isolation units to provide more mental health care and reduce the risk of suicide.

Since 2000, 23 Arkansas inmates have committed suicide — 35 percent higher than the national prison rate of 14 per 100, 000.

And, during the past seven years, Arkansas inmates killed themselves at about double the rate of the general population.

Nationally, prison suicides have declined by more than half since 1980, when the rate was similar to Arkansas’ 2007 rate of about 35 per 100, 000.

That drop, which has narrowed the gap between suicides in prison and the general population to negligible levels, is the result of decades of change and closer attention paid to suicide risk among inmates, said Lindsey Hayes, project director for the National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, who has tracked prison suicides since 1980.

Every prison official interviewed said he mourns every inmate suicide and each death deals a serious blow to inmate and staff morale.

Still, the argument that convicts killing themselves isn’t a cause for much concern has its proponents outside prison walls. For that, Hayes offers moral and legal justifications for why it’s important to care about inmate suicide.

“We should care because it’s a human life. Simply that. They’ve been convicted of a crime, but the state still has a moral responsibility for their safety. And the state, by the way, is required by various federal laws to provide adequate medical and mental health care to those inmates, and that includes suicide prevention,” Hayes said.

All five inmates who killed themselves this year did so while being held in some kind of isolation. But prison officials say no immediate changes are planned in the department’s isolation policies.

An authority on inmate suicides, Hayes, who helped make changes at Massachusetts’ troubled prisons earlier this year after 10 suicides in 2005-06, said sentiments like those expressed by Correction Department officials need an adjustment. “If the systemic attitude is that if an inmate wants to kill himself, [he ] will, that [attitude ] is starting off on the wrong foot. It’s impeding your prevention efforts,” Hayes said. The state needs to aggressively confront any possible gaps in its procedures that have allowed this rate to climb so high, Hayes said.

DYING ALONE Walls committed suicide just four days after being placed in an isolation cell at the Varner Supermax Unit for failing to obey an order and indecent exposure on Christmas Day. Stephen Partin, the next inmate to commit suicide, had been in isolation at the East Arkansas Regional Unit at Brickeys for about a month when he hanged himself just five days after Walls.

Mitchell Gustafson hurled himself from a third-story tier to the concrete floor below at the Diagnostic Unit in Pine Bluff on Sept. 14.

Gustafson, a career criminal, had just returned to prison to serve a 222-year sentence and was being held in a single cell, as all inmates are during intake, their preliminary evaluation upon arriving in prison.

He had been deemed suicidal and placed under watch before his death, according to a state police report.

On Nov. 3, Andre T. Washington hanged himself in an isolation cell at Brickeys.

Less than three weeks later, Collins did the same at Varner.

An officer in the isolation wing at Varner noticed that Collins had “been looking strange all day” when she went to get him some toilet paper. When she returned, he had hanged himself and was dead.

The investigations into Walls’, Gustafson’s and Collins ’ deaths have been closed by state police. Partin’s and Washington’s cases remain open with the investigative files exempt from public disclosure.

Prison officials don’t see a connection that all died in isolation. And only two of the five inmates who killed themselves had been previously treated for mental illness, they said.

“There hasn’t been anything that struck me as a pattern,” said Kelley, whose duties include suicide prevention.

The inmates who ended up in isolation, with the exception of Gustafson, did so for breaking prison rules — fighting, disobeying orders and otherwise misbehaving. Those inmates are more likely to be impulsive and emotional, said Dina Tyler, the department’s spokesman.

“They end up in isolation because they have adjustment issues,” she said. “This is a troubled population, and they’re in a situation that they don’t like.” Hayes, the prison suicide expert, agreed, saying that most isolation suicides happen within days or weeks of an inmate being placed there.

“There is a high degree of anxiety, a high degree of anger for [their perception of ] being unduly punished, their sentence perhaps extended or parole considerations removed. Their previous housing has been lost,” he said, adding that’s precisely why more attention needs to be paid to prevent them taking their own life.

More mental health resources need to be directed away from intake and toward isolation wings, Hayes said. Massachusetts responded to its increase in suicides by creating mental health units designed to house inmates that need to be separated from the general population, largely to keep a close eye on those most likely to harm themselves. One 60-bed unit is scheduled to open in about a month, said Diane Wiffin, spokesman for the Massachusetts Department of Correction. Wiffin said she could not estimate the cost of that unit or two more in the planning stages. But doing a thorough pre-isolation mental health examination is crucial, Hayes said, as is making sure adequate follow-up services are provided.

CHANGES MADE When the last spike in Arkansas prison suicides occurred in 2001, some changes were made in the state’s prisons. The top of some cells have been blocked off so a noose can’t be looped through the bars. Cameras have been put in some isolation cells at the Grimes Unit in Newport. And prison mental health workers now visit each isolation cell three times a week.

More needs to be done, Hayes said.

“It’s not just making rounds three times a week and saying, ‘How are you feeling today ?’” Hayes said. “It has to be every day.” Suicide prevention is taught to all security staff members while they are in the training academy and again in annual continuing education courses. Hayes is now scheduled to teach one of those courses this spring, Tyler said.

And discussions among the Board of Corrections and prison administrators about how to prevent suicides is under way. Nothing has been decided yet, and the substance of the talks is secret, officials said.

“I’m not at liberty to discuss what we might change,” Kelley said.

Board of Corrections member Mary Parker, a University of Arkansas at Little Rock criminologist, said the state is open to successful models from other states, like Massachusetts, but what works in one state might not be successful in another.

“Something that Massachusetts is doing might be a better match for the population they have,” Parker said.

And preventing many suicides, Parker said, ultimately comes down to factors outside of the state’s control.

“We can’t control who comes to us,” Parker said. “Some years [suicides are ] low. Some years [they are ] high.... When someone wants to commit suicide, there’s not a flashing sign on their forehead saying, ‘ I want to kill myself.’” Margaret Winter considers that kind of statement to be its own kind of warning.

Winter was the lead attorney in an American Civil Liberties Union lawsuit that challenged conditions in Mississippi’s Parchman Farm prison, winning a settlement this year that promises wide-reaching changes in that state’s isolation procedures.

Winter said that, generally, when state officials say inmates who want to kill themselves will find a way to do so, it raises troubling questions.

“To me, what it suggests is that when there is such a high rate of suicides and they say there was no reason to believe they were in jeopardy, there’s something wrong with that picture. If meaningful screening is going on, people like that should be identified.” Kelley said she believes that while there might be room for improvement, Arkansas has a good suicide prevention system already in place.

No one apparently noticed Walls’ torment until investigators searched his nearly bare isolation cell at the Supermax and found two notes that presented a grim portrait.

He wrote to his victim, whom he began having sex with when she was 16, begging her to tell the truth and report to authorities that the two had a consensual relationship.

Another note decried his exclusion from a sexual offender class needed for parole.

“I am so sick sick to actually believe in truth + honor,” read the unaddressed note. “Help me get rid of these sick concepts so I can be normal like you.” ..more.. by CHARLIE FRAGO

Inmate found hanging from bunk

12-1-2007 Florida:


ORANGE COUNTY - -An Orange County Jail inmate committed suicide early Friday while awaiting transfer to prison, a jail spokesman said.

Robert Lee Stafford II, 50, was found at about 1:20 a.m., hanged with a bedsheet tied to his bunk, jail spokesman Allen Moore said. Corrections officers dialed 911 and tried to revive him, but he was pronounced dead at the hospital.

The Orange County Sheriff's Office and jail officials are investigating. Moore said workers saw no signs Stafford would try to kill himself.

Stafford was in protective custody because he was arrested on child-molestation charges. He was the sole person assigned to his cell. He pleaded guilty Wednesday in Orange County Circuit Court to one count of lewd or lascivious battery and was sentenced to eight years in prison and seven years of sex-offender probation.

Stafford was to be transferred to the state Department of Corrections' Central Florida Reception Center to be assigned to a state prison. He had been in jail for a year. ..more.. by Robyn Shelton, Bianca Prieto, Katie Fretland, Sarah Langbein, Ludmilla Lelis, Denise-Marie Balona and Willoughby Mariano of the Sentinel staff contributed to this report.

Sex Offender Misses Sentencing, Found Dead

12-1-2007 Connecticut:

A man who sexually assaulted four underage girls was found dead after missing his sentencing hearing Friday, according to television news reports.

WTIC-TV, Fox 61, and WFSB-TV, Channel 3, reported Friday that Brian J. Woolf, attorney for Aaron Whitney, told them that when authorities went to re-arrest Whitney after his failure to appear in Superior Court in Middletown, they found his bedroom door locked. When authorities forced their way inside, they found that Whitney apparently had hanged himself with bedsheets, Fox 61 reported.

The station reported that the body had been taken to the state medical examiner's office for an autopsy, but neither that office nor state police would confirm the details late Friday.

Had he shown up in court Friday, Whitney would have been sentenced for having sex with four underage girls he met on the Internet.

But while the judge and lawyers involved in the case were waiting for him, the 28-year-old Chaplin resident was holed up in his bedroom, refusing his father's requests to come out.

Woolf, who had spoken to Whitney's father by phone earlier Friday morning, told the judge: "Aaron has taken an excessive amount of prescribed medications and locked himself in his room. I suggested that he be taken to the hospital, but he refuses to go to the hospital and he refuses to come to court."

The plan was to re-arrest Whitney, who pleaded guilty in September to four counts of second-degree sexual assault and four counts of risk of injury to a minor, to hold him on $1.2 million bail once he was taken into custody. Whitney had also faced a jury trial for similar charges involving other underage girls; the trial would have begun in Superior Court in Rockville on Dec. 12. He pleaded not guilty to those charges.

After explaining his client's whereabouts Friday, Woolf mentioned the upcoming proceedings in Rockville as a possible reason for Whitney's absence, but Judge Frank Iannotti had little patience with Whitney's actions.

"To be honest, we have continued this case many times. I have given you fair opportunity to work out the other matter in Rockville," said Iannotti who ordered a warrant for Whitney's arrest. "Apparently, he did something and it's clear that it's his intention not to be here. He knew he had to be here, and he did something not to be here."

The sexual assault and risk of injury charges involve four underage girls Whitney met and conversed with on MySpace.com in 2005 or 2006. In each instance, Whitney arranged to meet the girl and then brought her to either his Chaplin home or, in one case, a Portland motel, where he plied her with alcohol and prescription painkillers before having sex with her. Second-degree sexual assault carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine, while first-degree risk of injury to a minor carries a maximum of 20 years. Whitney would have had to register as a sex offender and undergo sexual assault evaluation treatment.

Outside the courtroom Friday and before reports surfaced of Whitney's death, Woolf said he was not sure whether he would continue to represent Whitney.

"I don't know if I can, because I was a witness to his failure to appear," Woolf said. "Based upon the charges which he pled to here, as well as what he is facing in Rockville, which is much more serious, I believe that put him over the edge." ..more.. by Melissa Pionzio at mpionzio@courant.com.

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Offender's Death Ruled A Suicide

12-2-2007 Connecticut:

Aaron Whitney, a Chaplin man scheduled to be sentenced Friday for sexually assaulting underage girls, committed suicide, according to the office of the chief medical examiner.

Whitney, 28, died of asphyxia as a result of hanging, according to the medical examiner's office.

When Whitney failed to show up for his sentencing in Superior Court in Middletown on Friday, Whitney's lawyer, Brian J. Woolf, told Judge Frank Iannotti that Whitney had taken an "excessive amount" of prescribed medication and locked himself in his room, refusing to go to the hospital or to court.

Whitney pleaded guilty in September to four counts of second-degree sexual assault and four counts of risk of injury to a minor. He was accused of finding the girls on MySpace.com and then meeting them, plying them with alcohol and prescription painkillers, and having sex with them.

He also faced a jury trial in Rockville for similar charges involving other underage girls. ..more.. by The Hartford Courant

Ex-Deputy, Under Investigation, Kills Himself

11-30-2007 Virginia:

A former Fairfax County sheriff's deputy who was being investigated for allegedly molesting a 12-year-old boy shot and killed himself in Herndon on Tuesday, one day after police searched his home.

David L. Ruel, 42, had been a Fairfax deputy for 19 years and was assigned to the county's code enforcement task force, Fairfax Sheriff's Lt. Basilio Cachuela said. Ruel retired in October, in a move apparently unrelated to the sex investigation, and had been working as a security specialist at Herndon High School for a month, a schools spokesman said.

On Nov. 15, an 18-year-old man told Fairfax police that he had been repeatedly sexually assaulted by Ruel beginning sometime in 2001 and continuing for about 18 months, according to a search warrant affidavit filed yesterday. The man reported that when he was 12 years old, Ruel sexually abused him on numerous occasions, supplied him with alcohol and photographed him while naked, the affidavit by Detective Richard L. Mullins states.

Police obtained a search warrant for Ruel's apartment and storage unit on Astoria Circle in Herndon on Monday afternoon and searched them for two hours, court records show. Computers and many other items were seized.

On Tuesday, police obtained more search warrants. When officers went back to Astoria Circle, Ruel was found dead on a nearby athletic field, Mullins wrote. Ruel died of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound, Fairfax police officer Don Gotthardt said.

Ruel was the second Fairfax deputy to be investigated for sex crimes this month. On Nov. 8, Deputy Robert A. Romero Jr. was arrested after federal agents discovered more than 1,000 images of child pornography on his home computer.

Romero resigned the day of his arrest.

Fairfax Sheriff Stan G. Barry said the two cases were unrelated. "It's unfortunate that they came so close together," Barry said. "It's unfortunate they happened at all."

Barry said that the allegations against Ruel are "obviously very serious charges" and that he hoped the police would continue to investigate the case to determine whether the allegations are factual. Gotthardt said the investigation will proceed despite Ruel's suicide. ..more.. by Tom Jackman, Washington Post Staff Writer

Pennellville man is missing

11-26-2007 New York:

A 52-year-old man who left his Pennellville home early Sunday has not returned.

State police in Fulton are investigating the disappearance of John J. Jennings, of 631 county Route 54. He left home around 5 a.m. yesterday to go for a walk, troopers said.

Jennings' family called the Oswego County E-911 center shortly before 3 p.m. Sunday when he still had not returned home, and state police in Fulton were then notified, Trooper Alex Kurilovitch said.

Troopers said Jennings told family members over the Thanksgiving weekend that he was depressed because of "personal issues" he was having.

"As far as we know, he was in good health," Kurilovitch said.

Jennings is 5-feet-7-inches tall and weighs approximately 170 pounds. He has brown hair and hazel eyes, Kurilovitch said, and a "normal build."

He was wearing a blue baseball cap, brown Carhartt jacket, blue jeans and Nautica sneakers. Anyone with information on Jennings' whereabouts should call troopers in the Fulton barracks at 593-6194. ..more.. by Suzanne M. Ellis

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Missing Man's Past

11-27-2007 New York:

When New York State Police officials alerted the public to be on the lookout for a missing Pennellville man, they did not mention that he is a registered level three sex offender, CBS 5 News has learned.

John Jennings, 52, has been missing since early Sunday morning. In 1998, he was convicted of third-degree rape, stemming from allegations that he had had sex with one or more teenage girls. He was sentenced to prison and later requied to enroll in the sex offender registry.

The State Police barracks that issued the press release announcing Jennings' disappearance was aware of his sex offender status, but -- by law -- was not required to mention it.

"Even though the public has the right to know, criminal history records are confidential," said Sgt. Edwin Croucher, of the Fulton barracks.

Sgt. Croucher added that Jennings' disappearance is not believed to be related to any criminal activity.

Regardless of the circumstances, many people who spoke to CBS 5 News said they would prefer that an individual's sex offender status be included in missing person alerts.

"I don't really care about their privacy," said Gretchen Mulvihill, of Syracuse. "Honestly, if they're out there and they're a registered sex offender, then I think they've blown their opportunity to have their privacy."

Others argued the opposite point.

"If somebody found out that he was a registered sex offender, they could have gone out and...killed him," said Tamica Lockwood, of Syracuse.

Anyone with information regarding the whereabouts of John Jennings should call the State Police at 593-6194. ..more.. by WTVH

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Missing Pennellville man found dead

11-28-2007 New York:

John J. Jennings, a level 3 sex offender from Pennellville who had been missing since early Sunday, was found dead today in a heavily wooded area along county Route 54 in Schroeppel, state police said.

Troopers said they believe Jennings, who would have turned 52 next month, committed suicide.

State police and Department of Environmental Conservation officers helped in the search. Members of the Pennellville Volunteer Fire Department assisted after the officers found Jennings' body. ..Source.. by Catie O'Toole / The Post-Standard

Kernersville man dies in Guilford Jail

11-28-2007 North Carolina:

A Kernersville man being held at the Guilford County Jail in High Point died Monday from injuries the sheriff’s office said appeared consistent with a suicide attempt.

Timothy Allen Maynard, 30, was found in his cell just before 4 p.m. The sheriff’s office did say how he was injured and a spokesman could not immediately elaborate on the injuries.

Maynard was found during the normal rounds at the jail. An ambulance took him to High Point Regional Hospital, where he died just after 5 p.m.

Maynard was being held on two counts of first-degree sex offense, three counts of assault on a child under 12, first-degree kidnapping and indecent liberties with a child. He was arrested Aug. 23 and was scheduled to be in court Tuesday. An autopsy is pending. ..more.. by Dan Galindo, JOURNAL REPORTER

Deceased GFAFB airman headed for trial in possession child pornography

11-21-2007 North Dakota:

The Air Force airman found dead in his Grand Forks apartment Monday was facing a federal trial next month on child pornography charges.

A Grand Forks police report identifies the man who was found unresponsive, at 6:20 p.m. Monday at 506 N. Fourth St. as 38-year-old Mark Massucco. Federal investigators said his death apparently was self-inflicted, a federal prosecutor told the Herald.

After police responded to a medical assist call and determined Massucco was dead, the Air Force quickly took over the investigation, police said. Air Force officials have not identified Massucco, citing notification of relatives.

But according to court documents, Massucco was indicted June 6 in federal court on two counts of receiving of materials involving the sexual exploitation of minors and one count of possessing materials involving the sexual exploitation of minors.

Wednesday, federal officials filed a motion to dismiss all charges. Massucco was scheduled to go to trial on the charges in Fargo on Dec. 11.

Convicted sex offender found dead in vehicle

3-13-2007 Iowa:

When Urbandale police seized a computer from his mother's home earlier this year, Robert Putney Jr. told an officer he had no intention of returning to prison, where he'd spent years as a convicted sex abuser. On Monday - the same day he was to have been questioned further by Urbandale police in connection with an investigation into alleged child pornography - Putney's body was found in a car near downtown Des Moines. The 40-year-old registered sex offender apparently gassed himself with chemicals in a car at 18th and High streets.

Police said he apparently combined some chemicals in a container in the car and rolled up the windows. He was found dead about 7:40 a.m. Putney lived at a downtown Des Moines motel but sometimes visited his mother's home in Urbandale. He is listed on the Iowa Sex Offender Registry as living at the Randolph Hotel in downtown Des Moines. Police earlier this year confiscated a computer from his mother's house in an investigation into alleged child pornography.

Passers-by on Monday found him unresponsive in the car and called for help. Rescue workers determined he was dead. A bucket of clear liquid was found on a folded-down back seat, officials said. Putney worked as a night janitor in a building near where his vehicle was discovered. Putney was sentenced to a 15-year prison term in August 1992 for sex-related charges involving teenage boys. He pleaded guilty to two counts of lascivious acts with a child, enticing away a child, lascivious conduct with a minor and third-degree sexual abuse.

This year's investigation in Urbandale did not include accusations of physical contact, officials said In the 1992 investigation, officials received help from one of the victims. Then-Assistant Polk County Attorney Melodee Hanes praised a 12-year-old boy who tape-recorded a conversation he had with Putney. In the conversation, Putney allegedly discussed sexual acts and indicated money could be obtained for the acts. "Because of this child who was smart enough to report to police investigators when approached by Mr. Putney, we were able to obtain a search warrant to Putney's house that led to discovery of a list with a dozen names of children," Hanes said in 1992. "This led us to other children Mr. Putney had attempted to solicit for sexual conduct."

Police said Putney used a child friend to meet young boys in the early 1990s, primarily at the Skate East roller rink at 2220 E. Ovid Ave. An autopsy will be conducted today to determine Putney's cause of death. "I've heard that chemicals were involved," Polk County Medical Examiner Dr. Gregory Schmunk said Monday afternoon. "But we are in the very early stages of the investigation. We will know a lot more tomorrow." ..more.. by Tom Alex can be reached at (515) 284-8088 or talex@dmreg.com

Suicide Ends Sex Abuse Case

11-6-2007 Virginia:

HARRISONBURG — An Elkton man facing an allegation of child abuse in Rockingham County Circuit Court killed himself in Norfolk last month, authorities say.

William Martin Johnson’s suicide came less than one month after Virginia State Police arrested him on an allegation that he sexually abused a child nine years ago, according to court records.

Johnson, 43, was found dead on Oct. 7, shot with a handgun at a home on Ocean View Ave. in Norfolk, according to a police report from the Norfolk Police Department.

Chris Amos, public information officer with Norfolk police, said Johnson is suspected to have killed himself sometime between Oct. 4 when acquaintances last saw him and Oct. 7.

No one else was involved in the incident and police say there’s nothing suspicious about Johnson’s death.

The Case

On Sept. 10, troopers with the Virginia State Police’s Harrisonburg office searched Johnson’s home in Elkton and arrested him on one felony charge.

According to a search warrant filed in the Rockingham County Circuit Court clerk’s office, an acquaintance of Johnson’s told police a day before the search that Johnson had abused one or two children in the past.

Police called one of the alleged victims the day of the search and that person repeated the allegation.

During the search of Johnson’s home in Elkton, troopers seized computer equipment and a Web cam, according to the search warrant.

Police arrested Johnson and charged him with one count of aggravated sexual battery, a felony, according to records in the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court.

The arrest warrant alleges that between January and December of 1998, Johnson sexually abused a child under 13.

Johnson was released on a $20,000 bond, pending trial, which had been scheduled for Dec. 27, according to court records.

Charge Dismissed

Late last month, Judge Marvin Hillsman dismissed the charge, according to the arrest warrant.

First Sgt. Bryan Hutcheson of the Virginia State Police said troopers are analyzing evidence seized in the search.

“We need to follow up before we consider the investigation closed,” Hutcheson said. But the case as it pertains to Johnson is over, he said.

Johnson’ attorney, Sherwin Jacobs called his client’s death tragic, adding that the suicide precluded anyone from learning what the outcome of the case against him would have been.

“What he did to himself is far worse than anything that ever would have happened to him if he had just worked with the system,” Jacobs said. ..more.. by David Reynolds at 574-6278 or reynolds@dnronline.com

Sex offender commits suicide after chase

Deflation devices stop car after police, sheriff deputies pursue rape suspect.
10-11-2007 New York

A convicted sex offender shot himself in the head with a 12-gauge shotgun near a busy Canastota intersection as two sheriff's deputies and a police officer approached his car Tuesday night after a high-speed chase along Route 5.

Madison County Sheriff Ronald I. Cary said Earl Hartle, 47, of 8830 Eddy Road, Sullivan, was being sought for questioning in connection with a reported rape.

Cary said deputies responded to the rape call at around 7:31 p.m. A 60-year-old woman on Eddy Road told deputies that her hands were tied by a man and she was raped. The woman told police she knew the rapist and was able to describe the vehicle he was driving.

The county's emergency 911 dispatchers broadcast a description of the vehicle, a red 1989 Chrysler LeBaron convertible. Cary said a Chittenango police officer saw the car and attempted to pull it over. The driver refused to stop and the officer pursued the suspect's vehicle east on Route 5. The driver entered the town of Lenox, and at that point Madison County sheriff's deputies joined the chase.

Cameras inside the patrol cars recorded the chase. Cary said the video showed Hartle extending what appeared to be the barrel of a shotgun out the driver's side window while he was being pursued. Hartle's vehicle reached speeds of 77 mph during the chase.

Canastota village police set up tire-deflation devices across Route 5 as it enters the business section in Canastota. Both front tires on the car were deflated and the vehicle stopped about 200 feet from the intersection of Main Street, Cary said.

A second sheriff's patrol car arrived on the scene and deputies and the Chittenango officer approached the car from the rear.

Cary said it was then that Hartle discharged a 12-gauge shotgun inside his car in the presence of the officers. He died instantly and was pronounced dead at the scene by Madison County District Attorney Donald Cerio Jr., Cary said.

None of the police officers fired their weapons, Cary said.

Hartle's body was transported to the Onondaga County medical examiner's office in Syracuse for an autopsy, Cary said. The medical examiner ruled the death a suicide by a gunshot wound to the head.

Cary said Hartle had been convicted of first-degree attempted rape, assault, criminal possession of a weapon and driving while intoxicated. He said deputies recovered items from Hartle's car that linked him to the rape investigation. They also recovered unspent shotgun rounds from the suspect's pockets.

Cary said the rape victim was transported to Oneida Healthcare Center by Rural Metro Ambulance to be treated for injuries she sustained in the attack. ..more.. by Kathy Coffta Sims can be reached at kcoffta@syracuse.com or 470-3253.