Slava Novorossiya

Slava Novorossiya
Showing posts with label Suicide Assist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suicide Assist. Show all posts

Sunday, August 9, 2020

VIRGINIA RAPE SUSPECT, IBRAHIM BOUAICHI RELEASED AND KILLED HIS ACCUSER

Bouaichi’s release from jail and the slaying of Dominguez represent a tragic side effect of the pandemic. As the coronavirus erupted in America, civil liberties advocates called for the release of large numbers of prisoners from jails and prisons in order to keep them from being infected and possibly dying in necessarily confined spaces.

 Using Covid-19 as an excuse to free prisoners from jails, the ACLU now had blood on their hands for causing the death of a woman and many others.

   


Released prisoner accused of raping, killing Virginia woman has died

Ibrahim Bouaichi shot himself as police closed in on him Wednesday

By

Tom Jackman

August 9, 2020 at 8:33 a.m. GMT+8

A man accused of murdering an Alexandria woman, who had accused him of sexually assaulting her last fall, died Saturday from a self-inflicted gunshot wound that occurred as police tried to arrest him again on Wednesday. The man’s family issued a statement Saturday night saying they were grieving the loss of both lives.

Ibrahim E. Bouaichi, 33, had reportedly been in a relationship with Karla E. Dominguez, 31, before an allegedly violent incident in Dominguez’s Alexandria apartment on Oct. 10. Dominguez told police that Bouaichi broke into her apartment and sexually assaulted her. Bouaichi was charged with six felony counts, turned himself in to the Alexandria jail on Oct. 21, and was ordered held without bond.

Bouaichi maintained his innocence, and his lawyers pressed for a quick trial, but then the coronavirus pandemic struck and all trials were postponed. Bouaichi’s lawyers said visitation had been curtailed in the Alexandria jail, that they needed to meet with him before trial and that jails were potential coronavirus hot spots, although Alexandria’s jail had not had a case. They asked Alexandria Circuit Court Judge Nolan Dawkins to allow Bouaichi to post bond.

Released from jail at height of pandemic, Virginia rape suspect allegedly killed his accuser

On April 9, Dawkins agreed to set a secured bond for Bouaichi of $25,000, over Alexandria prosecutors’ objection. The judge ordered Bouaichi to stay in his Greenbelt home and not leave except to meet with his lawyers or pretrial services, and not to have any contact with Dominguez. The judge — who retired in June after 26 years and did not respond to a request for comment — did not order electronic monitoring for Bouaichi.

In early May, Greenbelt police found Bouaichi behind the wheel of his car at a Wendy’s restaurant drive-through, and they allege that he rammed one of their cruisers with his car. He was charged with multiple assault counts, drunken driving and multiple traffic charges, but was released on bond after one night in the Prince George’s County jail.

The Greenbelt incident would have triggered a motion from Alexandria prosecutors to revoke Bouaichi’s bond, Alexandria Commonwealth’s Attorney Bryan L. Porter said. But no one notified Alexandria that Bouaichi had been arrested again.

On July 29, Dominguez was found shot to death outside her apartment on South Greenmount Drive, in the Town Square at Mark Center Apartments. Two days later, Alexandria police obtained a murder warrant for Bouaichi.

But when they went to arrest him, he was gone. After several days of fruitless searching, the police issued a news release Tuesday saying Bouaichi had been charged in Dominguez’s killing, and asking for the public’s help in locating him.

The next morning, the U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force and Alexandria officers spotted Bouaichi’s car in Prince George’s County. As they moved in to arrest him, he shot himself, Alexandria police said.

He died Saturday at a local hospital, police said in a news release.

Bouaichi’s family released a statement Saturday evening: “Our brother and son Ibrahim died today, having taken his own life. We are incredibly saddened by Karla’s death and wish this tragedy had never happened. ... As we lay our son to rest, we ask for peace for everyone involved as we grieve our losses.”

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.washingtonpost.com/crime-law/2020/08/08/released-prisoner-accused-raping-killing-virginia-woman-has-died/

Virginia rape suspect released over coronavirus concerns kills accuser: Police

By Jessica Chasmar - The Washington Times

Monday, August 10, 2020


A Virginia rape suspect who was released from jail due to coronavirus concerns killed his accuser before fatally shooting himself, police said Saturday.

Ibrahm Elkahlil Bouaichi, 33, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head following a car chase with police Wednesday in Prince George’s County, Maryland, police said in a statement. Bouaichi was accused of fatally shooting 31-year-old Karla Elizabeth Dominguez Gonzalez, the woman who accused him of sexual assault last year, outside her apartment in Arlington, Virginia, on July 29, ABC 7 reported.

Gonzalez testified against Bouaichi in Alexandria District Court in December. He was charged with six felonies, including rape, and jailed without bond. When the pandemic hit in March, Bouaichi’s lawyers argued he should be freed while awaiting trial out of safety concerns.

Bouaichi was released from jail on $25,000 bond on April 9. Alexandria Circuit Court Judge Nolan Dawkins, who retired in June, ordered Bouaichi to stay in his Greenbelt home except when meeting with his lawyers or during pretrial services, but he did not order electronic monitoring for the suspect, The Washington Post reported.

Gonzalez was notified of his release the same day, according to the Alexandria Sheriff’s office.

Her death marked the first homicide in Arlington this year. A GoFundMe page set up for her family surpassed $10,000 Monday.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://m.washingtontimes.com/news/2020/aug/10/ibrahim-bouaichi-virginia-rape-suspect-released-ov/

OTHER LINKS:

Released from jail at height of pandemic, Alexandria rape suspect allegedly killed his accuser. Ibrahim Bouaichi then shot himself as police closed in Wednesday, leaving him in critical condition

https://www.facebook.com/VictimsFamiliesForTheDeathPenalty/posts/3108425509279394

August 7, 2020 - https://www.facebook.com/VictimsFamiliesForTheDeathPenalty/posts/3007648672690412

https://www.washingtonpost.com/crime-law/2020/08/06/released-jail-height-pandemic-alexandria-rape-suspect-allegedly-killed-his-accuser/

Saturday, November 2, 2019

SERIAL KILLER FROM CHICAGO: ANDREW URDIALES (JUNE 4, 1964 TO NOVEMBER 2, 2018)


            On Friday, November 2, 2018, Serial Killer, Andrew Urdiales was found unresponsive in his cell in the Adjustment Center of San Quentin State Prison. He will be another murderer that bit the dust, he will never live to kill again and also not have the advantage of life over death of his victim.

Andrew Urdiales mugshot
  

Andrew Urdiales
Born
June 4, 1964
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Died
November 2, 2018 (aged 54)

Criminal penalty
Death; commuted to life imprisonment without parole
Details
Victims
8
Span of crimes
1986–1996
Country
State(s)
Date apprehended
April 23, 1997
Andrew Urdiales (June 4, 1964 – November 2, 2018) was an American serial killer, who was convicted in Illinois in 2002 of killing three women, and convicted in California in 2018 of killing five women. He was sentenced to death in California, and committed suicide a few months later in California's San Quentin Prison.
Urdiales also attacked another woman in 1992, but she escaped. Authorities did not believe her when she reported the incident.

Life

Early life

Little is known about Andrew Urdiales' childhood. In June 1977, shortly before his 12th birthday, he fiercely beat the family dog with a baseball bat and told his parents that the animal had been fatally injured in a fall. After successfully completing high school, Urdiales joined the United States Marine Corps. Between 1984 and 1991 he was stationed at the Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton in California. Here Urdiales completed combat training, which he then used to kill women. He was trained as a Radio Operator at Marine Corps base Twentynine Palms and then served in Desert Storm. 

Serial killer ex-Marine convicted of murdering three women in Illinois in 2001 is now found guilty of killing FIVE more women in California two decades ago

Murder series

Urdiales committed his first murder on the evening of January 18, 1986. At the Saddleback Community College campus in Mission Viejo, he stalked 23-year-old communication arts student Robbin Brandley and stabbed her forty-one times with a knife; she died on the spot. 

Two years later, on July 17, 1988, he shot 29-year-old sex worker Julie McGhee with a .45 ACP caliber pistol. Her body was found in a ditch near Cathedral City. Two months later, Urdiales struck in San Diego, killing 31-year-old sex worker Mary Ann Wells, whose body was found by police on September 25, 1988, in an abandoned warehouse. His fourth victim, 18-year-old Tammy Erwin, was found on the streets of Palm Springs on April 17, 1989. 

In 1991, he was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps and moved back to his parents' home in Chicago. In September 1992, however, he returned to California for a holiday. On September 27, 1992, 19-year-old Jennifer Asbenson met Urdiales when he offered to take her to work. The next day, Urdiales lurked nearby until Asbenson's shift ended around 6 a.m. and persuaded her to get in his car. He drove her out to the desert, hit her head against the dashboard, twined her hands, raped her, then put her in his trunk and drove off (presumably in an attempt to find a place to kill her). When he stopped at an intersection, Asbenson managed to open the lid of the trunk and flee. She reported the incident to police but they did not take her seriously. Urdiales returned his rental car the same day and flew back to Illinois. 

For three years he committed no murders due to fear of being discovered. When he returned to California in March 1995, he happened upon 32-year-old sex worker Denise Maney in Cathedral City

Urdiales forced her into his car and drove her into the California desert. There he shot her, undressed her, and left the corpse for scavengers. 

Urdiales now believed that he could just as easily commit murders in Illinois and the surrounding area. As a security guard in a Chicago mall, he enjoyed great trust among customers and in his family environment. He crossed the state line into Bloomington, Indiana, in April 1996, where he murdered 25-year-old Laura Ulyaki. Her body was found on April 14 in Wolf Lake, on the border of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois and Hammond, Indiana. On July 14, 1996, police found the body of 21-year-old Cassandra Corum in the Vermilion River mountains in Livingston County

Urdiales' death toll increased on August 2, 1996, when the body of 22-year-old Lynn Huber was found in Wolf Lake. Huber is presumed to have been Urdiales' last victim. 

In December 1996, Urdiales was arrested for possession of an unlicensed weapon but was released after paying a fine. 

His last attempted murder occurred in April 1997, when a prostitute he had threatened with a pistol and attempted to handcuff escaped from his vehicle.

Arrest and procedures

Andrew Urdiales was again arrested on April 23, 1997, when the police wanted to check his gun in connection to the ongoing series of murders. While ballistics tests were still ongoing, Urdiales made a full confession to all 8 murders. The subsequent lab tests supported Urdiales' confession and his involvement in the murders of Ulyaki, Corum and Huber. In collaboration with the California police, Illinois law enforcement agencies began drafting the indictment. Urdiales had no rational motive and said he was agitated when the women had begged for their lives. 

On April 29, 1997, an indictment was brought against Urdiales. However, legal and political debates delayed the trial opening for four years. The question was whether Urdiales should be punished with the death penalty. At that time in Illinois there was discussion as to whether the death penalty should be completely abolished. On April 30, 2001, the prosecutor decided to apply Urdiales for the death penalty. His trial opened on April 8, 2002 for the murders of Ulyaki and Huber. Urdiales was found guilty of two murders on May 23, 2002, and sentenced to death seven days later, on May 30, 2002. 

The case of Andrew Urdiales became a political issue for a short time. After a study by Northwestern University, Illinois, that some death row inmates had been innocent, and that innocence could no longer be judicially recognized, the Governor of Illinois, George Ryan, determined on January 11, 2003, that all 167 people sentenced to death in Illinois at that time would have their sentences commuted to life imprisonment. Andrew Urdiales also fell under this commutation. 

Now, the prosecution prepared for indictment of the previously unresolved Cassandra Corum murder case. The process was opened on April 24, 2004. Urdiales, encouraged by defender Stephen Richards, changed his tactics, pleading guilty but claiming that he was mentally ill. Presiding Judge Harold Frobish nonetheless re-sentenced Urdiales to death on May 10, 2004. This death sentence was commuted to life in prison in March 2011 when Governor Pat Quinn signed into law legislation that abolished the death penalty in Illinois. 

At this time, Urdiales was incarcerated in the Menard Correctional Center in Chester, Illinois.

California prosecution

On May 23, 2018, Urdiales was convicted in the murders of five Southern California women. Wednesday, June 13, 2018, a jury recommended the death penalty for Urdiales. The jury deliberated for one day. On October 5, 2018, Urdiales was sentenced to death.

Death

On Friday, November 2, 2018, at around 11:15 PM, Urdiales was found unresponsive in his cell in the Adjustment Center of San Quentin State Prison. Urdiales was alone in his cell, and prison officials said the apparent cause of death was suicide. 

2 serial killers found dead within hours on California's death row

Sources and further literature

  • Michael Newton: The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. 5. updated and expanded edition. Graz 2009, 534 Seiten, ISBN 978-3-85365-240-4.
  • Peter Murakami, Julia Murakami: Dictionary of serial killers. 450 case studies of a pathological killing type. Ullstein Tb, München März 2000, 639 Seiten, ISBN 3-548-35935-3.
  • “Confessions of a Serial Killer Part 1 and 2”, Inside Evil with Chris Quomo, HLN (parent company CNN), 6/30/2019, American Pay Television News Channel.
OTHER LINKS:

  "Serial killer Andrew Urdiales' victims". CBS News. 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2018-05-24.
   "Serial killer may face death penalty a third time". Chicago Tribune. March 10, 2011. Retrieved June 19, 2018.
   "O.C. wants killer after death sentence lifted". The Orange County Register. March 10, 2011. Retrieved June 19, 2018.
   "Killer Escapes Death In Illinois, But Still May Be Executed". CBS Chicago. March 10, 2011. Retrieved June 19, 2018.
   "Ex-Marine Convicted of First-Degree Murder in SoCal Serial Killings". NBC Los Angeles. May 23, 2018. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
   "Jury recommends death penalty for serial killer Andrew Urdiales". ABC7 Los Angeles. 13 June 2018.
   "Ex-Marine Andrew Urdiales Sentenced to Death for California Serial Killings". NBC Los Angeles. October 5, 2018. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
   "Serial killer Andrew Urdiales sentenced to death in murders of 5 women in Southern California". ABC7 Los Angeles. October 5, 2018. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
   "Ex-Marine Serial Killer Who Slayed 5 SoCal Women Gets Death Penalty". CBS Los Angeles. October 5, 2018. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
10.    "Convicted SoCal killers Andrew Urdiales, Virendra Govin found dead in San Quentin". ABC7 Los Angeles. November 5, 2018. Retrieved November 5, 2018.

INTERNET SOURCE: