Monday, May 7, 2018

Dating Women Pictures

Julia MariaAnastasia

Ex-Cop Joseph James Deangelo Sacramento the Golden State Killer and Plan to kill the Chief

The former Northern California police chief who fired suspected "Golden State Killer" Joseph DeAngelo said investigators told him the accused serial killer had come to his home one night to kill him.

Nick Willick used to be the chief of the Auburn Police Department. He fired DeAngelo from the force in 1979 for stealing dog repellant and a hammer. Willick said DeAngelo later filed a lawsuit against the department.

"The investigator told me that Joseph had gone to my house one night to kill me, and said that he walked around the house looking in the windows but couldn't find my bedroom," Willick said. "I just never saw him as a person who could, you know, kill somebody."




'Golden State Killer' suspect once planned to kill ex-police chief who fired him



The former California police chief who fired suspected 'Golden State Killer' Joseph DeAngelo said investigators told him DeAngelo had once planned to kill him.


The former Northern California police chief who fired suspected "Golden State Killer" Joseph DeAngelo said investigators told him the accused serial killer had come to his home one night to kill him.

Nick Willick used to be the chief of the Auburn Police Department. He fired DeAngelo from the force in 1979 for stealing dog repellant and a hammer. Willick said DeAngelo later filed a lawsuit against the department.

"The investigator told me that Joseph had gone to my house one night to kill me, and said that he walked around the house looking in the windows but couldn't find my bedroom," Willick said. "I just never saw him as a person who could, you know, kill somebody."

VIDEO: Tracking Joseph James DeAngelo and the 'Golden State Killer'
EMBEDMORE NEWS VIDEOS

Here's a look at the parallel life paths of suspect Joseph James DeAngelo and the man who was one of California's most feared serial killers and rapists.


Willick gave his account during an interview that aired on "Good Morning America" Thursday.

"A short time after he had been fired, I woke up one morning. My 4-year-old daughter was laying alongside the bed. She said, 'Dad, last night there was someone looking in my bedroom window with a flashlight,'" Willick said.

Willick said he feels guilt and embarrassment over the fact that a suspected serial killer was right under his nose, and he slipped away.

TIMELINE: A look back at the Golden State Killer's crime spree that lasted a decade
EMBEDMORE NEWS VIDEOS

The first crime committed by the East Area Rapist occurred in mid-1976 in the Sacramento area. Over the next decade, more than 45 women were raped and 12 people were murdered by the man later called the Golden State Killer.

"I just wish we, it could have, you know, been stopped a long time ago," Willick said.

The former police chief also said years ago, DeAngelo once gave him a tour of his home, explaining that he and his wife slept in separate bedrooms. Willick said he wondered if that living arrangement may have enabled DeAngelo to sneak out of his house in the middle of the night.
DeAngelo , 72, is expected to appear in a Sacramento courtroom Thursday to fight prosecutors' efforts to collect more of his DNA.

His public defender, Diane Howard, has filed a motion to block efforts by the district attorney to take DNA, fingerprints and photos of DeAngelo's body. Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert got a warrant last week to gather the samples and photographs.

DeAngelo was arrested last week and identified as the suspect in at least a dozen murders and more than 50 rapes between 1976 and 1986.

VIDEO: 'I'll Be Gone in the Dark': Inside Michelle McNamara's quest to nab Golden State Killer


Thursday, May 3, 2018

Jury hands down DEATH sentence for ‘Walmart monster’ Donald Smith

Man, 62, sentenced to death for rape and murder of girl, eight


Donald Smith sat emotionless as he was sentenced to death in Jacksonville, Florida, on Wednesday. In 2013, he abducted eight-year-old Cherish Perrywinkle from a Walmart where he had taken her with her sisters and mother under the pretense of buying them clothes. Cherish's mother had met him hours earlier at a different store where he approached them and asked if they needed new outfits. He lied that he had a $100 gift card for Walmart and convinced them to go with him there, claiming his 'wife' would meet them at the store.


Cherish Perrywinkle and Donald Smith

Jury hands down DEATH sentence for ‘Walmart monster’ Donald Smith, who raped, kidnapped Cherish Perrywinkle

A Duvall County, Florida, jury unanimously decided on Wednesday afternoon that convicted child killer, Donald Smith, will face death.
On the third day of the penalty phase for 61-year-old Donald Smith, both the prosecution and defense made closing arguments before the jury left the courtroom for deliberations. The jury decided that the prosecution provided enough evidence to warrant the death sentence for Smith.
Under Florida law, the entire jury has to agree to the sentence. All 12 jurors agreed on the sentence. The suspect said emotionless as the verdict was read by Judge Mallory D. Cooper.

What You Need to Know

As CrimeOnline previously reported, on June 21, 2013, Smith, then 57,  approached single, struggling mother, Rayne Perrywinkle, at the Dollar General store on Edgewood Avenue West in Jacksonville. Smith offered to buy the mom a dress, then offered to buy her a $150 gift card, to which she agreed, according to court documents. When he found out Perrywinkle didn’t have a car of her own, he somehow convinced her to ride with him to pick up the gift card at a nearby Walmart after talking with her for a few hours about his own past financial struggles.
Smith drove Perrywinkle and her daughter, 8-year-old Cherish, along with her two other little girls to the Walmart off of Lem Turner Road, claiming that his wife would meet them there and help them shop for clothing. The family loaded into Smith’s white van, lined with dark curtains on the inside.
At around 11 p.m., while they shopped inside Walmart, Smith’s wife still hadn’t arrived. It’s still unclear whether she ever existed, as Perrywinkle never once saw her. Smith then suggested getting food at the McDonald’s inside the store while waiting for his wife, and asked Cherish to accompany him and pick out the food she wanted. Perrywinkle, assuming that her daughter was safe inside a store with surveillance cameras an numerous employees, allowed Cherish to accompany him.
After 30 minutes passed and her daughter hadn’t returned, Perrywinkle became frantic and called the police after an employee allowed her to use their phone.
http://www.crimeonline.com/