Kenneth McDuff
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Born
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March 21, 1946
Rosebud, Texas |
Died
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November 17, 1998 (aged 52)
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Cause of death
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Lethal injection
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Other names
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The Broomstick Murderer
The Broomstick Killer |
Criminal penalty
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Death
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Conviction(s)
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Attempted Burglary
Burglary Murder |
Killings
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Number of victims
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9-14 +
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Span of killings
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August 6, 1966–March 1, 1992
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Country
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U.S.
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State(s)
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Texas
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Date apprehended
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For the final time
on May 4, 1992
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Kenneth Allen McDuff (March 21, 1946 – November 17, 1998) was an American
murderer. He was convicted of murdering sixteen-year-old Edna Sullivan, her
boyfriend, seventeen-year-old Robert Brand, and Robert’s cousin,
fifteen-year-old Mark Dunnam, who was visiting from California. They were all
strangers who McDuff abducted after noticing Sullivan; she was repeatedly raped
before having her neck broken with a broomstick. McDuff was given three death
sentences, and subsequently convicted of having offered a bribe to a member of
the parole board. He was freed in 1989. He was given a new death sentence and
executed for a murder committed after his release, he is suspected to have been
responsible many other killings. According to one reporter, "If there has ever been a good argument for the death
penalty, it's Kenneth McDuff."
Early
life and background
Kenneth
Allen McDuff was born at 201 Linden Street in the central Texas town of Rosebud
(Falls County), one of four children born to John and Addie McDuff. His father
worked as a farmer and mason.
McDuff's
mother, Addie, was known around their small town as "The pistol packin'
momma" due to her propensity toward violence and habit of carrying a
firearm. She has been characterized as domineering by Christopher Berry-Dee,
who authored a short biography of Kenneth McDuff as part of his book Talking
with Serial Killers.
McDuff
was known to fire at living creatures with a .22 rifle as a young boy as well
as to get into fights with boys older than he was. This led to his acquiring a
fearsome reputation in Rosebud, and it was not long before he became known to
the local Sheriff, Larry Pamplin.
Mug shot six years after the United States
Supreme Court overturned all death penalties in the case of Furman v Georgia.
Only 11 years later McDuff would be paroled from a prison where he was once on
Death Row. He is believed to be the only person in American History to have
ever had two different death row numbers,
(PHOTO SOURCE: http://murderpedia.org/male.M/m1/mcduff-kenneth-photos.htm)
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Earlier
criminal activities
His
criminal record began two years before his first murder conviction. In 1964
McDuff was convicted of 12 counts of burglary and attempted burglary in three
Texas counties: Bell, Milam, and Falls. He was sentenced to 12 four-year prison
terms, to be served concurrently; however, he was paroled in December 1965.
He
was briefly returned to prison after becoming involved in a fight but he was
shortly released.
While
he was not convicted of any murders at this time, his accomplice in the 1966
triple murder, Roy Dale Green, said that McDuff bragged openly about his
criminal record and claimed to have raped and killed two young women.
The most serious of McDuff's parole
violations took place in his hometown of Rosebud, Texas, where he made
"terroristic threats" to several African-American teenagers. McDuff
was sent back to prison exactly one year after he had been set free, but only
for a few weeks. His parole was reinstated by an administrator of the Board of
Pardons and Paroles.
(PHOTO SOURCE: http://murderpedia.org/male.M/m1/mcduff-kenneth-photos.htm)
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Broomstick
murders
On
August 6, 1966, McDuff and new friend Roy Dale Green, whom he had met around a
month earlier through a mutual acquaintance by the name of Richard Boyd, spent
the day pouring concrete for John McDuff, Kenneth's father.
At
approximately 5 p.m., once they had completed their work, McDuff and Green
decided to drive to Fort Worth in McDuff's new Dodge Coronet. They bought a
six-pack of beer from a 7-11 store and visited a mutual friend, Edith Turner,
at around 7 p.m. before buying a hamburger.
Their
soon-to-be victims had spent the evening at a drive-in movie, and at 10 p.m.
were parked on a baseball field in Everman, Texas, in Tarrant County. The trio
consisted of Robert Brand (aged 18), his girlfriend Edna Louise Sullivan (aged
16) and Brand's 16-year-old cousin Mark Dunman.
Green,
in a statement he gave to the police when he turned himself in on August 8,
stated that he and McDuff parked around 150 yards away from their victims' car.
McDuff took his Colt .38-caliber revolver with him. Once they arrived at the
vehicle, he ordered the occupants into the trunk of their car.
With
Green following in McDuff's car, McDuff drove the victims' Ford along a highway
and then onto a field. Here he ordered Edna Sullivan out of the trunk of the
Ford and instructed Green to put her into the trunk of his Dodge Coronet. At
this point, according to Green's statement, McDuff said he would have to
"knock 'em off"; he proceeded to fire six shots into the trunk of the
Ford in spite of Dunman and Brand's pleas not to.
McDuff
then instructed Green to wipe the fingerprints off the Ford. They then drove to
another location where first McDuff and then Green, allegedly under duress,
raped Sullivan. After he and Green had repeatedly raped Sullivan, McDuff asked
Green for something to strangle her with. Green gave him his belt. However, in
the end McDuff opted to use a 3-foot-long (0.91 m) piece of broomstick
from his car. He choked Sullivan, then he and Green dumped her body in some
bushes.
They
purchased some Coca-Cola from a Hillsboro gas station before driving to Green's
house to spend the night. The following day, McDuff buried his revolver beside
Green's garage and their mutual acquaintance Richard Boyd allowed McDuff to
wash his car at his house.
The
next day Green confessed to Boyd's parents, who told Green's mother, who
convinced him to hand himself in.
McDuff
received three death sentences and Green received a 25-year prison sentence.
However, McDuff's death sentences were commuted to a life sentence. At that time,
a life sentence in Texas meant serving a minimum of 10 years in prison before
being paroled.
Ultimately
Green served 13 years before being paroled. While incarcerated, McDuff was
twice sent to the electric chair, but both times received last minute stays of
execution.
Victims of Kenneth McDuff:
TOP ROW L TO R: Marcus Dunnam, Robert Brand, Louise Sullivan & Colleen Reed
SECOND ROW L TO R:
Melissa Ann Northrup, Regenia Moore, Brenda Thompson and Valencia Johnson
(PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.prodeathpenalty.com/pending/1998.htm)
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Post-release
crimes
As
a result of overcrowding in Texas prisons, McDuff was paroled on 11 October
1989 to Milam County, Texas.
Allegedly
McDuff's mother bribed the parole board into releasing him, but his release was
also part of a wider series of events. As a result of serious overcrowding in
Texas prisons, Governor Bill Clements ordered the Texas parole board to release
750 low risk offenders every week. Even after 60,000 'low-risk' inmates had
been paroled, the prison system was still overcrowded.
The
Texas parole board began releasing inmates hastily. McDuff was one of 20 former
death row inmates and 127 murderers to be paroled.
After
being released, he got a job at a gas station making $4 an hour and took a
class at Texas State Technical College in Waco.
Within
three days of his release, he began killing again. He killed 31-year-old
Sarafia Parker, whose body was discovered on October 14, 1989, in Temple, a
town 48 miles south of Waco along the I-35 corridor. However, he was soon
returned to prison on a parole violation for making death threats to a black
youth in Rosebud.
Addie
McDuff paid $1,500, plus an additional $700 for expenses, to two Huntsville
attorneys in return for them 'evaluating' her son's prospect of release. On
December 18, 1990, McDuff was again released from prison.
On
October 10, 1991, McDuff picked up a prostitute and drug addict named Brenda
Thompson in Waco. He tied her up, but his vehicle was stopped at Waco Police
Department checkpoint. McDuff stopped approximately 50 ft in before the
checkpoint. This led to one policeman walking toward McDuff's vehicle. On
seeing the police officer, Thompson repeatedly kicked at the windshield of
McDuff's truck, cracking it several times. McDuff accelerated very quickly and
drove at the officers. According to a statement filed by the officers later,
three of them had to jump to avoid being hit.
The
policemen gave chase, but it was nighttime and McDuff eluded them by turning
off his lights and traveling the wrong way down one-way streets. Ultimately he
parked his truck in a wooded area near US 84. He inflicted a torturous death
upon Thompson. Her body was not discovered until 1998.
Five
days later, on October 15, 1991, McDuff and a 17-year-old prostitute named
Regenia DeAnne Moore were witnessed having an argument at a Waco motel. Shortly
thereafter, the pair drove in McDuff's pickup truck to a remote area beside
Highway 6, near Waco. McDuff tied her arms and legs with stockings before
killing her. She had been missing from home for seven years by the time her
body was discovered on September 29, 1998.
McDuff
is also believed to have murdered Cynthia Renee Gonzalez. Gonzalez, 23, was
found dead Sept. 21, 1991, some six days after she was reported missing in
Arlington, in a creek bed near CR 313 in heavily wooded terrain one mile west
of I-35.
He
killed again on December 29, 1991. His victim was Colleen Reed, a Louisiana
native. He and an accomplice, Alva Hank Worley, drove to an Austin carwash
where Reed was. McDuff kidnapped her in plain sight of eyewitnesses, and he and
Worley drove her away. Worley admitted in an April 1992 interview with the Bell
County Sheriff's Dept. that he had raped Reed, but stated that he did not
participate in her murder.
His
next victim was Valencia Joshua, a prostitute and fellow student at Texas State
Technical College in Waco. Crucially she was last seen alive knocking on
McDuff's door. While a student, McDuff had taken up drug dealing, selling crack
cocaine, LSD, methamphetamine and marijuana to fellow students to supplement
his student grant.
McDuff
strangled Joshua on February 24, 1992. Her body was discovered on March 15 at a
golf course near their college.
McDuff's
next victim was Melissa Northrup, a 22-year-old store clerk at a Waco Quik-pak.
It was Ms. Northrup's murder that McDuff was actually executed for committing.
She was pregnant at the time of her death on March 1. He had also taken $250
from the cash register. During the investigation into Northrup's disappearance
(her body was found by a fisherman on April 26, 1992) a college friend of
McDuff's told police officers that McDuff, who was already a suspect due to
having been seen in the vicinity of the Quik-pak at the time of Northrup's
disappearance, had attempted to enlist his help in robbing the store.
A
major problem for investigators was that McDuff's post-release victims were
spread out across several Texas counties. This made a single coordinated
investigation into him difficult. However, the police had learned that McDuff
was peddling drugs and had an illegal firearm, both federal offenses.
Consequently on March 6, 1992, a local State Attorney issued a warrant for
McDuff's arrest.
In
April 1992 the police made a major breakthrough. Bell County Sheriff's
Department investigators had brought in Alva Hank Worley for questioning, on
the basis that he was a known acquaintance of McDuff. Worley admitted to his
involvement in the kidnapping of Colleen Reed. He was held in a Travis County
jail while the police continued their search for McDuff.
McDuff
had moved to Kansas City, where he was working at a refuse collection company
and living under the assumed name of Richard Fowler. On May 1, 1992, a coworker
of his named Gary Smithee watched an American television program entitled America's
Most Wanted. Smithee noticed how similar McDuff, who was featured on the
program, was to his new coworker. After discussing the matter with another
coworker, Smithee telephoned the Kansas City Police.
The
Kansas City Police searched Fowler's name and found he had been arrested, and
fingerprinted, for soliciting prostitutes. Comparing the fingerprints taken
from Fowler to those from McDuff showed they were the same.
On
May 4, 1992, a surveillance team of six officers arrested McDuff as he drove to
a landfill south of Kansas City.
McDuff
is a possible suspect in the Missouri disappearance of 30-year-old Cheryl Ann
Kenney and the abduction of 20-year-old Angela Marie Hammond.
U.S.
Marshal Parnell McNamara, who helped instigate the search that led to the
arrest, conviction, and execution of Kenneth McDuff, also played an
instrumental role in uncovering many of McDuff's victims.
During a live lineup for a witness to the
abduction of Colleen Reed, McDuff refused to shave and get a haircut in an
obvious attempt to confuse the witness. The witness positively identified
McDuff anyway.
(PHOTO SOURCE: http://murderpedia.org/male.M/m1/mcduff-kenneth-photos.htm)
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Kenneth McDuff had no allegiance to any
group. This photo was taken by the Waco Police Department when McDuff offered
his services as a snitch. Undoubtedly, he would have then demanded
"protection" money from the drug dealers he promised to turn in. The
Waco Police Department wisely declined his offer.
(PHOTO SOURCE: http://murderpedia.org/male.M/m1/mcduff-kenneth-photos.htm)
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Security around the federal courthouse during
McDuff's arraignment was as tight as anything ever seen in the history of Waco.
The security, however, was to protect McDuff from the very large crowds
assembled outside of the courthouse and airport.
(PHOTO SOURCE: http://murderpedia.org/male.M/m1/mcduff-kenneth-photos.htm)
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In March of 1998, Judge George Allen set an
execution date as McDuff sat in silence and while the families of victims
looked on. After one stay, Kenneth McDuff was executed in Huntsville on
November 17, 1998.
(PHOTO SOURCE: http://murderpedia.org/male.M/m1/mcduff-kenneth-photos.htm)
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Trial
and execution
McDuff
was indicted on one count of capital murder for the death of Melissa Northrup
in McLennan County, Texas, on June 26, 1992. He was found guilty. In Texas,
juries determine whether or not an individual convicted of capital murder
receives life imprisonment or the death penalty.
On
February 18, 1993, the jury, in a special punishment hearing, opted to sentence
him to death. His case was automatically taken to the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals, which affirmed the sentence on April 28, 1997.
McDuff
filed a writ of certiorari to the US Supreme Court, but this was rejected on
January 12, 1998. A state writ of habeas corpus was also rejected on April 15,
1998.
On
April 29, 1998, the original court of sentencing in McLennan County set the
execution date as October 21, 1998. However, on July 8, McDuff filed a federal
writ of habeas corpus. This had the effect of delaying his execution as his
case was considered again.
Finally,
on October 15, 1998, the Western District Court denied habeas corpus relief and
rescheduled the execution date for November 17, 1998. He filed a Notice of
Appeal on October 23, but on October 26 his request for a certificate of
appealability was denied by the Western District Court, and he was duly
executed on November 17. He gave up Colleen Reed's burial location a couple of
weeks before his execution. Before giving up where she was buried, McDuff
reasoned that he would not be treated right if he told them the location of her
body and that his rights while awaiting execution would be removed. He
eventually released where she was buried after officials assured him that his
rights would remain. McDuff told them where she was, the Brazos river.
Authorities had a difficult and ultimately, unsuccessful time finding the body,
so instead they chose to have McDuff be transported to the location. He was
successful in locating her, merely telling them to move one blade-length before
they discovered and removed her body from its burial place of seven years.
McDuff
is buried in the Captain Joe Byrd Cemetery, also known as "Peckerwood
Hill," in Huntsville, Texas. Prisoners buried there are those whose family
choose not to claim their remains. His headstone contains only his date of
execution, 11-17-98, as well as a "X" meaning he was executed by the
State of Texas, and the number 99905. His final meal according to death row
chef Brian Price was a hamburger fashioned to resemble his request of a steak.
Kenneth Allen McDuff is buried in the Captain
Joe Byrd Cemetery, also known as "Peckerwood Hill," in Huntsville,
Texas. Prisoners buried there are those without family choosing to claim their
remains. The 11-17-98 refers to his execution date. The "X" means he
was executed by the State of Texas, and the 999055 was his death row number.
(PHOTO SOURCE: http://murderpedia.org/male.M/m1/mcduff-kenneth-photos.htm)
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OTHER LINKS:
MY THOUGHTS:
I
did a search for ‘Kenneth McDuff’ on Anti-Death Penalty websites but I cannot
find his name on it. It is most probably, the abolitionists are too embarrassed
by his crimes to put his name on their websites. He was a recidivist murderer
who murdered and was paroled to kill more people again.
Whenever
you mention Kenneth McDuff to any abolitionists, they will be too embarrass to
talk about it. Kenneth McDuff is a great shame to abolitionist. Most probably,
he is burning in hell with other murderers!
The mistake of advocates for more lenient sentences to criminals is to ignore the experience of other countries in their policies on crime. For 4 years I am in contact on line with Jennifer Bishop Jenkins, I must point out that Jennifer is a veteran fighter against the death penalty for 3 years but had to leave when an abolitionist group found that abolitionism had intended to abolish LWOP last. You’re right That Soros is a disaster for Penal Reform That Takes Into account the Victims. Clear That abolishing death after the “reformers” would seek to attack next LWOP, Then Any Longer prison sentences. Amnesty International Campaigns IN Japan to Abolish the Death Penalty Oppose enter LWOP But Also … That is the funny thing According To Japanese law a life sentence dog Apply for parole only after 10 years And Also Those under 20 years or Be Sentenced events to the life sentence …
ReplyDeleteIt is true That the lobby in USA PRO-CRIMINAL is ambiguous on LWOP But this is Merely a tactic expect to deletion of the death penalty … to demand the release of Convicted murderers to life Imprisonment. So has-been the case with French, Germain, Spanish, etc.
it is comforting to know That USA is the hidden agenda of groups like The Sentencing Project or edited by Prison Legal News Paul Wright, an ex-con. I have a recommendation, the defenders of the human rights of Victims Should Know to book: A Land Fit for Criminals: An Insider’s View of Crime, Punishment and Justice in the UK, Which Exposes the Fallacies of the Movement Against the prison, the MOST That is dramatic in Spain penals Laws Are Even Worse Than the Inglés: no life sentence, conjugal visits, gymnasiums, swimming pools (sic) in prisons …
USA and Spain Had too many killers eleven Who Were Sentenced to Death for Murders initial, kill again after HAVING Been Spared execution: Kenneth Allen McDuff, Darryl Kemp, Joe Morse, Harvey Louis Carrignan, Bennie Demps, Eddie Simon Wein, Mad Dog Taborsky and on and on. These killers and rapists Had Been Executed the first time around, Many innocents Would Have Lived.
Please, I deeply respect for human rights activists of the victims also fight against the death penalty but want to keep the LWOP. I just want that victims are not deceived as happened in Spain.
Sincerely,
Alfonso
Portugal, Spain and Norway have softer penal systems in the world, in fact these are the only European Union countries that have no life imprisonment.
ReplyDeleteThere is not life in Spain. In Spain, the fanaticism of defenders of the rights of criminals is so great life imprisonment that oppose even when there is a possibility of parole. In 1975 the criminal law in Spain professors penal law demanded the abolition of the death penalty and prohibition of all sentences of more Than 20 years. Spain Currently the maximum penalty is 20 years for first degree murder, if it is a multiple murder the maximum sentence is 25 years however Penal Reform in 2003 raises the maximum compliance in a case 40 years. Terrorism important to note That Were These penalties Fully never implemented; In 25 years, When the subject has been convicted of two or more Crimes and Punisher is one of Them by law with Imprisonment of up to 20 years.
In 30 years, When the subject has been convicted of two or more crimes and some of Them by punisher by law is 20 years Imprisonment Exceeding.
40, When the subject has Been Convicted of two or more Crimes and at least two of Them Are Legally punisher by Imprisonment Exceeding 20 years.
40, When the subject has Been Convicted of two or more Crimes of Terrorism in the second section of Chapter V of Title XXII of Book II of this Code and Any of Them by punisher by law is 20 years Imprisonment Exceeding.
You See That Follows the Principle Applies Above here, Though INSTEAD of the limit of 20 years Establishing the 40, But The Substance Remains The Same: Do Not care to kill three to thirty-three or three hundred thirty-three people.
Currently in use there are powerful lobby groups who seek the Abolition of the prison along models to Spain and other European countries: Prison Reform International, Prison Legal News, Human Rights Watch, ACLU, they are generously funded by Ford Foundation, George Soros Open Society … that’s why I was pleasantly surprised when I reported that the Heritage Foundation here to victims unite to combat the anti-incarceration movement here.
Thanks
Alfonso.