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Cold Cases - Arrests and Convictions William Devin Howell - Convicted WILLIAM DEVIN HOWELL pled guilty to killing five women and a man whose bodies were found in a wooded area of New Britain after he was previously convicted of manslaughter in the slaying of another woman. Howell entered pleas to six counts of Murder in New Britain Superior Court, where he was sentenced in November 2017 to 360 years in prison, or six consecutive life sentences. Howell was formally charged on September 18, 2015, in the deaths of three women whose identities under Connecticut state law are confidential because they were victims of sexual assault. He also was charged in the deaths of Marilyn Gonzalez, born October 16, 1976, who was last seen on May 16, 2003, in Waterbury; Mary Jane Menard, born May 7, 1963, and who went missing in October 2003; and Danny Lee Whistnant, born October 5, 1958, and who was reported missing on June 24, 2003.

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Howell is serving six sentences of life in prison. Under Connecticut law, life in prison is defined as 60 years with a mandatory minimum penalty of 25 years on each count, resulting in a total effective sentence of 360 years, 150 years of which are mandatory.

The remains of the six victims were found buried in a wooded area behind a shopping center on Hartford Road in New Britain. At the time he was charged in those deaths, Howell was in prison for his conviction for Manslaughter in the First Degree for the homicide of Nilsa Arizmendi. She was last seen alive on July 25, 2003, in Wethersfield. Her remains were found in the same wooded area of New Britain where the other victims were buried. His arrest was the result of an investigation by the Greater New Britain Serial Murder Task Force, which was established to investigate the cases.

The task force included members of the New Britain, Hartford, Wethersfield, Waterbury and East Hartford police departments, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Office of the Chief State's Attorney and the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of New Britain. The task force was assisted by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection Division of Scientific Services Forensic Science Laboratory, the University of North Texas Center for Human Identification, the Hampton Police Department in Virginia and the Bertie County Sheriff's Office in North Carolina. Rafael Ortiz - Arrested RAFAEL ORTIZ was arrested in October 2017 and charged with murder in the 2003 homicide of Benjamin 'Benji' Baez, who was shot to death while sitting in a parked car in the North End of Hartford. ORTIZ, age 39, who previously lived on Wilson Street in Hartford, was arrested in New York by Hartford Police detectives assigned to the Cold Case/Shooting Task Force Bureau in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney. Ortiz was charged with one count of Murder in the death of the 27-year-old victim, who was fatally wounded while sitting inside of a parked car in the area of 1305 Main Street in Hartford on June 11, 2003.

The arrest is the result of an investigation by the Hartford Police Department in conjunction with the Cold Case/Shooting Task Force Bureau. Ortiz waived extradition from New York, where he was incarcerated for an unrelated narcotics conviction. The charge is merely an accusation and he is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Baez’ slaying was featured in the fourth edition of the cold case playing cards produced in conjunction with the Department of Correction and sold to inmates in the Connecticut corrections system. Information on Baez’ death was described on the six of diamonds card.

The case is being prosecuted by the Cold Case/Shooting Task Force Bureau. Hakeem Atkinson - Arrested HAKEEM ATKINSON was arrested in September 2017 and charged with Murder in the slaying of Joseph 'Jabs' Bateman, who was fatally shot behind the Avalon Gates housing complex on Belden Avenue in Norwalk on February 3, 2012. According to the arrest warrant affidavit, Atkinson was 16 years old when Bateman was shot to death in a crime related to street gang activity in Norwalk.

Atkinson was 22 years old and living in Bridgeport at the time of his arrest. The arrest was the result of an intensive investigation by the Norwalk Police Department in conjunction with the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney and the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Stamford/Norwalk. Bateman’s death was featured in the fourth edition of the cold case playing cards produced in conjunction with the Department of Correction and sold to inmates in the Connecticut corrections system. Information on Bateman’s death was described on the nine of diamonds card.

The case will be prosecuted by the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Stamford/Norwalk and the Cold Case Unit. The charge is merely an accusation and Atkinson is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Ibo Boone - Arrested IBO BOONE, age 30, was arrested in September 2017 and charged with Murder in the death of Mic hael “Mizzy” Robinson, Jr., who was shot to death in the area of South Main Street and Grove Street in Norwalk on October 29, 2010. The arrest was the result of an intensive investigation by the Norwalk Police Department in conjunction with the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney and the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Stamford/Norwalk. According to the arrest warrant affidavit, Boone was 23 years old at the time of the homicide, which was related to street gang activity in Norwalk. The charges are merely accusations and he is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Robinson’s slaying was featured in the fourth edition of the cold case playing cards produced in conjunction with the Department of Correction and sold to inmates in the Connecticut corrections system. Information on Robinson’s death was described on the king of clubs card. Boone was 30 years old at the time of his arrest.

He most recently was living in Waterbury. The case will be prosecuted by the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Stamford/Norwalk and the Cold Case Unit. Harold Cook - Gerund Mickens - Terrell Hunter - Douglas Lee - Jesus Ashanti - Indicted A federal grand jury returned an indictment in April 2017 charging five men in the kidnapping and murder of Charles Teasley in January 2009. Each charged with one count of kidnapping resulting in death, one count of using a firearm during a kidnapping and causing a death and one count of using a firearm during a robbery and causing a death are: • HAROLD COOK, also known as 'Oink,' age 40, of Bloomfield; • GERUND MICKENS, also known as 'Breeze,' age 41, of Bloomfield; • TERRELL HUNTER, also known as 'Rell' and 'Killer,' age 35, of Hartford; • DOUGLAS LEE, also known as 'Fly,' age 42, of Hartford, and; • JESUS ASHANTI, also known as 'Black,' age 40, formerly of Hartford. The indictments stem from a long-term investigation being conducted by the FBI's Northern Connecticut Violent Crimes Task Force, the Hartford Police Department and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State's Attorney. An indictment is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt. Charges are only allegations, and each defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Teasley was found dead on January 12, 2009, in a car parked on Colebrook Street in Hartford. He had suffered multiple gunshot wounds to his head and face, and his hands were zip-tied behind his back. According to the indictment, Cook, Mickens, Hunter and Ashanti had kidnapped Teasley and forced him into his own vehicle. They then forced to make a telephone call directing his girlfriend to bring a safe he had hidden at his home. The four defendants then drove Teasley to a residential section of Hartford and murdered him, the indictment alleges.

Jesus 'Black' Ashanti Harold 'Oink' Cook Terrell 'Rell' Hunter Douglas 'Fly' Lee Gerund 'Breeze' Mickens The case is being prosecuted by the Office of the United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut. A prosecutor with the Cold Case Unit has been cross-designated as a Special Assistant U.S. Attorney for this matter.

Harold Patterson - Arrested HAROLD PATTERSON was arrested in December 2016 and charged with the fatal shooting of one man in the Hartford in June of 2008 and then using the same gun to kill two more men in an unrelated incident two months later. Patterson, age 34 at the time of his arrest, was arrested as a result of an investigation by the Cold Case Unit of the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney in conjunction with Hartford Police, the Office of the United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford.

He is charged with three counts of murder in the shooting death of Raymond “Flip” Hite on June 5, 2008, on Acton Street in Hartford and the unrelated shooting deaths of Lamar Gresham and Carlos Ortiz on August 25, 2008 on Edwards Street in Hartford. According to the arrest warrant affidavits, Hite, age 34, had been shot multiple times when police found him lying in the middle of Acton Street shortly before 12:30 a.m. On June 5, 2008. Gresham, age 21, and Ortiz, age 23, were found mortally wounded at approximately 3:15 a.m. In a drive-by shooting as they were walking along Edwards Street. According to the arrest warrants, subsequent investigation determined that shell casings found at the scene of all three homicides were fired from the same gun, which was also linked to two other shooting incidents in Hartford in June and August of 2008.

The gun has not been recovered, according to the warrant. The homicides of Gresham and Ortiz were featured on the five of clubs card in the third edition of the cold case playing cards produced in conjunction with the Department of Correction and sold to inmates in the Connecticut corrections system.

The charges are merely accusations and Patterson is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The case is being prosecuted by the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. Robert White - Arrested ROBERT WHITE, a serial sex offender already convicted of killing two women in Hartford, was arrested in September 2016 and charged with the slayings of two more women in the capital city. White is charged with one count of Capital Felony and one count of Murder in the 1997 slaying of Shiraleen Crawford and one count of Murder with Special Circumstances, one count of Felony Murder and one count of Murder in the 2012 slaying of Sonia Rivera. The arrest was the result of an investigation by the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State's Attorney in conjunction with the Hartford Police Department.

The charges are merely accusations and he is presumed innocent unless and until convicted. White is already serving a 50-year prison sentence for his conviction for Murder in the death of Sawarie Krichindath, who was found slain in her Hartford apartment on March 16, 2013.

He was previously convicted in 1980 of Manslaughter in the First Degree in the beating death of Betty Robertson, also in Hartford. According to the arrest warrant affidavits, White is a registered sex offender with a 'pattern of violence against women, often including violent sexual encounters.' Shiraleen Crawford, age 30, was found dead in her apartment on Martin Street in Hartford on August 14, 1997. An autopsy determined she died from blunt trauma to the head and also suffered stab wounds to the head, chest and neck. Sonia Rivera, age 48, was found unresponsive in an alley off Washington Street in Hartford on September 27, 2012.

The victim of trauma to her head and face, she died in the hospital on October 3, 2012. Capital Felony and Murder with Special Circumstances are both punishable by a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of release.

The maximum penalty for Murder and Felony Murder is life in prison, which under Connecticut law is defined as 60 years. The crime of Capital Felony is applicable to the homicide of Shiraleen Crawford because the crime occurred prior to the enactment of legislation that repealed that crime and classified such conduct as Murder with Special Circumstances. Jose Ramos - Convicted JOSE E. RAMOS was convicted of Murder for the 2008 homicide of Tynell 'Blue' Harwick in Norwich. Ramos was found guilty in February 2016 of one count of Murder following a jury trial in Norwich Superior Court. He was sentenced in April 2016 to serve 60 years in prison. In imposing the maximum sentence for Murder, the judge noted the defendant's complete lack of remorse and his dishonesty, and characterized the state's case as 'overwhelming.'

Ramos was arrested in Queens, N.Y., on September 25, 2012, and waived extradition to Connecticut. A 29-year-old resident of Norwich, Mr. Hardwick was with friends at Rumors Cafe at 88 Boswell Avenue in Norwich.

As he left the cafe at about 11:45 p.m. With his friend he was shot and killed by an unknown assailant. The case was one of those featured in the second edition of Cold Case playing cards produced by Cold Case investigators and distributed through the state’s correctional institutions.

The Hardwick case was featured on the Ace of Spades card. The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of New London. Arthur Stanley - Convicted ARTHUR STANLEY, also known as 'Wiggs,' 26, was convicted by a federal jury in December 2016 of the 2011 slaying of Keith Washington. At approximately 9:28 p.m. On July 15, 2011, Hartford police responding to a report of shots fired found an unconscious man on the front porch of the residence at 67 Oakland Terrace.

The victim, subsequently identified as Keith Washington of Windsor, was transported to the hospital where he died on July 17, 2011. Stanley, an active member of a Hartford street gang, is charged with engaging in a Violent Crime in Aid of Racketeering, namely the murder of Keith Washington. Stanley was found guilty by a jury following a trial in the United States District Court on December 19, 2016. He is scheduled to be sentenced on March 14, 2017, when he faces a mandatory term of life in prison. The investigation is ongoing and is being conducted by the FBI’s Northern Connecticut Violent Crimes Task Force, Hartford Police Department and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney.

The FBI Task Force includes members of the Hartford Police Department, East Hartford Police Department, Connecticut State Police and Connecticut Department of Correction. Vailette - Convicted JOHN VAILETTE, also known as 'John John' and 'Snagglepuss,' was convicted in October 2015 by a jury in the United States District Court of arson resulting in the death of Kathy Hardy in Branford. On March 7, 2006, at approximately 8:45 a.m., fire was set to the stairs leading to the second floor of the Branford house where Kathy Hardy was sleeping.

Investigators determined the fire was started by accelerants in the first floor living room and the staircase leading to the second floor. An autopsy determined the cause of death was smoke inhalation and the death was ruled a homicide.

On March 26, 2014, a federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Vailette in the arson. The case was investigated by the Office of the United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Branford Police Department and Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney, with the assistance of the Connecticut State Police Fire and Explosion Investigation Unit, and the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of New Haven. Hector Torres - Convicted HECTOR TORRES pled guilty in June 2015 to Murder for the slaying of Derrick Comrie, who was gunned down on January 10, 2006, outside of Bulkeley High School in Hartford after a basketball game at the school. Torres was arrested as the result of an investigation initiated after investigators received a tip through the cold case playing cards.

The cards, made available to inmates in Connecticut’s correctional institutions, include information on an unsolved homicide or missing persons case. Derrick Comrie was featured on the 9 of clubs card in the second deck of the cards, which are produced under a joint effort of the Department of Correction and the Cold Case unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney. Torres was sentenced in July 2015 to serve 37 years in prison for his conviction in the death of Derrick Comrie and for Murder and Conspiracy to Commit Murder charges for the slaying of Luis 'Berto' Benitez. James Raynor - Convicted - Kendel Jules - Arrested JAMES 'APE' RAYNOR was convicted of Assault in the Second Degree and Conspiracy in connection with the 2009 slaying of Kenneth Carter in Hartford.

The case of KENDEL 'YACHT' JULES, age 26, who is charged with Murder, is pending. Jules and Raynor were linked to a large-scale narcotics trafficking operation in the North End of Hartford, which was the focus of an investigatory grand jury.Carter was found with gunshot wounds to the neck and chest in a vehicle near 10 Liberty Street in Hartford shortly before 11 p.m. On July 25, 2009. Investigators determined that while attempting to drive away from the scene after being shot Carter’s vehicle struck two unoccupied parked vehicles.

He was taken to the hospital where he later died. Jules and Raynor were arrested as a result of an 18-month grand jury investigation conducted by Superior Court Judge Trial Referee John F.

The grand jury investigation was the key component of a major multijurisdictional investigation into violence in Hartford that also included the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford, Hartford Police, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State's Attorney. Raynor was arrested in February 2015 and pled guilty on April 21, 2015, to Assault in the Second Degree and Conspiracy to Commit Assault in the Second Degree. Jules was arrested March 30, 2015, in Staten Island, N.Y. The charge against him is merely an accusation and he is presumed innocent unless and until found guilty. The case is being prosecuted the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford.

Donald Raynor - Convicted DONALD “AMEN” RAYNOR is serving a 60-year prison sentence for the 2007 shooting death of Delano Gray in Hartford. The 22-year-old victim was found with multiple gunshot wounds lying in a driveway on Enfield Street in Hartford on June 18, 2007. Subsequent investigation determined that Mr. Gray was targeted by a rival group and was standing on the street when he was fired upon from a passing vehicle.

Raynor was 29 years old when he was convicted in March 2015 of Murder by a Hartford Superior Court jury. He was sentenced to life in prison, which is defined as 60 years under Connecticut law. Raynor was arrested in June 2013 as a result of an investigation initiated as a result of a tip received through the cold case playing card project, which sells prison inmates decks of playing cards with information about unsolved homicides and missing persons cases. The unsolved homicide of Delano Gray was described on the 8 of clubs card in the second issue of the playing cards, which are produced through a joint project of the Department of Correction and the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney. The case was part of a major multijurisdictional investigation into violence in the City of Hartford, including the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford, Hartford Police, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State's Attorney. Matthew Pugh - Convicted MATTHEW PUGH is serving a 60-year sentence for Murder and Burglary for the the homicide of Alexandra Ducsay. Ducsay was found deceased in her home on Booth Bay Street in Milford on May 19, 2006.

An autopsy performed by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner determined that the cause of death was blunt force trauma and the manner of death was certified as homicide. Pugh, formerly of Hamden, was arrested in September 2012 as a result of a lengthy investigation conducted by detectives from the Milford Police Department in collaboration with the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State's Attorney and the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Ansonia-Milford. During the course of the investigation, the case was featured on the Cold Case Playing Cards distributed in the Connecticut corrections system. Pugh was convicted in March 2015 of Murder and Burglary on the First Degree after a jury trial in Milford Superior Court.

He was sentenced on May 11, 2015, to serve 60 years in prison. The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Ansonia-Milford. Jimel Frank - Karl Roye - Convicted JIMEL FRANK, also known as '30' and 'Velly,' pled guilty and KARL 'EAGLE' ROYE was convicted after a trial for the April 2011 homicide of Anthony 'Smooth' Parker in Hartford. Frank pled guilty in United States District Court to one count of Committing a Violent Crime in Aid of Racketeering, namely the death of Anthony Parker.

Roye was convicted following a federal jury trial of one count of Committing Violent Crime in Aid of Racketeering and one count of Conspiracy to Commit a Violent Crime in Aid of Racketeering. He was sentenced in November 2017 to a term of life imprisonment.

At approximately 10:47 a.m. On the morning of April 6, 2011, Hartford Police responding to a report of gunshots fired in the city's Blue Hills section found Mr.

Free Download Pinnacle Studio 12 Plus Crack. Parker in the driver's seat of a vehicle in the driveway at 15 Thomaston Street. The 24-year-old victim was unconscious and suffering from multiple gunshot wounds that subsequently proved fatal. Frank and Roye were arrested on federal complaints brought in February 2015 as a result of a long-term investigation into narcotics trafficking by the WestHell and Team Grease street gangs and gang-related violent activity.

The homicide of Anthony Parker was included in cold case playing cards sold to inmates in Connecticut’s state correctional facilities. Each card in the deck features a photograph and brief details about a homicide or missing person case and lists telephone, mail and e-mail contacts that inmates can use to supply information. This investigation was conducted by the FBI’s Northern Connecticut Violent Crimes Task Force, DEA, Hartford Police Department and Cold Case Unit of the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney.

The FBI Task Force includes members of the Hartford Police Department, East Hartford Police Department, Connecticut State Police and Connecticut Department of Correction. Lashawn 'B.I.' Cecil - Convicted LAWSHAWN 'B.I. Download Film Gaby Jauh Tinggal Kenangan. ' CECIL was convicted in February 2017 by a jury in New London Superior Court of Murder for the 2011 shooting death of Jaclyn Wirth in Norwich.

Cecil was also subsequently convicted of Criminal Possession of a Firearm in the same case. Twenty-six-year-old Jackie Wirth was fatally shot in her apartment on East Baltic Street in Norwich on December 14, 2011. Jackie left behind two young sons who were present when she was tragically killed. She had no known enemies and was devoted to raising her sons. Cecil was arrested in 2015 by members of the Southeastern Connecticut/New London County Cold Case Squad, working with the Norwich Police Department. The Norwich police had requested the assistance of the Cold Case Squad in August of 2014, and Jackie Wirth was featured on the Queen of Diamonds card in the third edition of the Connecticut Cold Case playing cards. At the time of his arrest in February 2015, Cecil was 33 years old and in the custody of the Connecticut Department of Correction on charges stemming from a series of shootings that occurred in Norwich in 2012.

He is scheduled to be sentenced on the Murder conviction in April 2017 when he faces up to 60 years in prison on that charge and up to 5 years for Criminal Possession of a Firearm. Noel Maldonado - Convicted NOEL MALDONADO was convicted of Accessory to Manslaughter in the First Degree with a Firearm in connection with the slaying of Luis 'Berto' Benitez.The 28-year-old victim was found wounded in the parking lot of a convenience store on New Britain Avenue in Hartford in the early morning hours of December 7, 2009. He died March 14, 2010, from injuries sustained in the attack, and his death was ruled a homicide. Maldonado, a 25-year-old Hartford resident at the time of the slaying, was arrested in January 2014 on a warrant issued as a result of a grand jury investigation into organized criminal activity, including homicides, in Hartford. He pled guilty in December 2017 to one count of Accessory to Commit Manslaughter in the First Degree with a Firearm and will be sentenced to serve 12 years in prison. Hector Torres - Convicted HECTOR TORRES was convicted in May 2015 of Murder and Conspiracy to Commit Murder in the slaying of Luis 'Berto' Benitez.

The 28-year-old victim was found wounded in the parking lot of a convenience store on New Britain Avenue in Hartford in the early morning hours of December 7, 2009. He died March 14, 2010, from injuries sustained in the attack, and his death was ruled a homicide.

Torres, a 26-year-old resident of Hartford at the time of the slaying, was arrested in January 2014 on a warrant issued as a result of a grand jury investigation into organized criminal activity, including homicides, in Hartford. He pled guilty to Murder and Conspiracy to Commit Murder in May 2015 and was sentenced in July 2015 to serve 37 years in prison for the Benitez homicide and the slaying of Derrick Comrie. Gerald Brian Tuttle - Convicted GERALD BRIAN TUTTLE pled guilty in August 2016 to the 1998 strangulation death of Gertrude 'Trudy' Ochankowski in East Hampton. Tuttle was arrested in December 2013 at his home in Surfside Beach, South Carolina, and charged as a result of an investigation conducted by the East Hampton Police Department in conjunction with the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Middlesex and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney. He pled guilty in Middlesex Superior Court to one count of Manslaughter in the First Degree and one count of Kidnapping in the Second Degree. Ms. Ochankowski was reported missing on January 11, 1998.

Her body was found the following day in a stream in an area known as Engel’s Falls. An autopsy determined she had been strangled.

Tuttle entered his guilty plea pursuant to the Alford doctrine under which a defendant does not admit guilt, but agrees that the state has enough evidence to get a conviction. He was sentenced on December 6, 2016, to an effective sentence of 30 years in prison to be followed by 5 years probation. Darius Armadore - Gerjuan Tyus - Convicted DARIUS ARMADORE and GERJUAN TYUS were convicted of Murder for the 2006 shooting death of Todd Thomas in New London. Armadore and Tyus were arrested as a result of an investigation by the New London Police Department in conjunction with the Southeastern Connecticut/New London County Cold Case Unit and also involving the FBI. The arrests were the first for the New London Police Department working in conjunction with the Cold Case Unit.

Thomas, age 30, was shot at approximately 12:15 a.m. On December 23, 2006, outside of a cafe located on Bank Street in New London. Investigators believe the shooting was in retaliation for an incident that occurred three weeks earlier in which Mr. Thomas is alleged to have shot Gerjuan Tyus in a dispute over jewelry.

Tyus suffered non-life threatening injuries in that incident. Armadore and Tyus were identified by investigators as gang members with ties to Dorchester, Mass. At the time of their arrests in the homicide case, both Armadore and Tyus were being held in the custody of the Connecticut Department of Correction on unrelated charges. Both were 32 years old at the time of their arrests. Both were convicted of Murder on November 19, 2015, by a jury following a trial in New London Superior Court.

The cases were prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of New London. Irene Reynolds - Convicted IRENE REYNOLDS pled no contest in December 2012 to one count of Manslaughter in the Second Degree in connection with the death of her adoptive mother, Bertha Reynolds, in Norwich on July 9, 1993. Irene Reynolds was arrested in May 2010 as a result of an investigation conducted by the Norwich Police Department in conjunction with the Southeastern Connecticut/New London County Cold Case Unit. She was charged in the death of her adoptive mother, Bertha Reynolds, who was found dead at the foot of the basement stairs in the victim's home on Laurel Hill Avenue in Norwich. An autopsy determined the 60-year-old victim had been beaten and strangled.

Irene Reynolds, who had been adopted as an infant by the victim and her husband, was 21 years old at the time of the crime. The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of New London. Dickie Anderson, Jr. - Convicted DICKIE E. ANDERSON, JR.

Was convicted in April 2012 of Murder for the homicide of Renee Pellegrino. The 41-year-old victim was found dead by Waterford Police on June 25, 1997, on Waterford Parkway South, a dead-end street in a rural area of Waterford. Anderson was arrested on June 1, 2010, as a result of an investigation conducted by the Southeastern Connecticut Cold Case Unit. He was convicted of Murder on April 4, 2012, following a trial by a jury in the Superior Court for the Judicial District of New London. An autopsy conducted by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner determined Ms. Pellegrino had been strangled, and her death was ruled a homicide. Anderson, a resident of New London, was 27 years old at the time of the crime and age 40 at the time of his arrest.

The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of New London. Luis Sanchez - Convicted LUIS SANCHEZ was convicted in October 2013 for the slaying of one person and wounding of two others outside of a club on Franklin Avenue in Hartford on October 7, 2010. Sanchez, who was 22 years old at the time of his arrest, was found guilty by a Hartford Superior Court jury of Murder and two counts of Assault in the First Degree. He was sentenced in January 2014 to serve 65 years in prison - 55 years for the Murder conviction and five years on each count of assault. The terms will run consecutively.

He was arrested in February 2012 as a result of an investigation by the Major Crimes Division of the Hartford Police Department in conjunction with the Hartford Shooting Task Force and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney. According to testimony at his trial, Sanchez opened fire on a group of individuals outside of 451 Franklin Avenue in Hartford shortly before 1 a.m. On October 7, 2010. Jeanna Flores, age 27, died from a single gunshot wound to the head. Two men with her were wounded.

Also convicted on charges related to the investigation were SANTOS GONZALEZ, found guilty of Hindering Prosecution in the Second Degree and GINA COLON, convicted of Hindering Prosecution in the Second Degree and Tampering with a Witness. The cases were prosecuted by the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. Rodriguez - Convicted LUIS ANTONIO RODRIGUEZ was convicted in August 2013 in the strangulation death of Kelsey Monahon, who was found mortally wounded in her Milford home on May 25, 2001.

Rodriguez pled guilty to Manslaughter in the First Degree and is expected to be sentenced to serve 20 years in prison. Monahon, 28, was found unresponsive, the victim of an apparent burglary and robbery in her home on Bittersweet Avenue in the Wildemere Beach neighborhood of Milford. She died three days later in Bridgeport Hospital without regaining consciousness. An autopsy conducted by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner determined she was the victim of strangulation and her death was ruled a homicide. An arrest warrant was issued in January 2011 charging Rodriguez as a result of an investigation conducted by Milford Police Department in conjunction with the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State ’s Attorney and the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Ansonia-Milford. Rodriguez, age 53 at the time of his conviction, was extradited to Connecticut in June 2013 from Oklahoma where he was serving a federal prison sentence in an unrelated case. The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Ansonia-Milford.

Bruce Gathers - Convicted BRUCE GATHERS pled guilty in March 2013 to Manslaughter in the First Degree with a Firearm in the 2006 shooting death of Sean R. Hill in Norwich. He was sentenced in June 2013 to serve 10-1/2 years in prison to be followed by 4-1/2 years of special parole. Gathers was incarcerated on related charges at the time of his arrest in 2010 following an investigation by the Norwich Police Department and the Southeastern Connecticut/New London County Cold Case Unit. Gathers pled guilty in New London Superior Court pursuant to the Alford doctrine under which a defendant does not admit guilt, but agrees that the state has enough evidence to get a conviction. Gathers and Gregory Smith were previously convicted and sentenced to prison for their roles in a robbery and assault that occurred before Sean Hill was mortally wounded in the area of Boswell Avenue and Lake Street in Norwich minutes after midnight on June 3, 2006. The 19-year-old victim was hit by a shot that rang out after a man he was with that night fled a Boswell Avenue apartment where he had been assaulted and robbed.

The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of New London. Gregory Smith - Convicted GREGORY SMITH was convicted in 2013 of Manslaughter in the Second Degree in the death of Sean R. Smith and Bruce Gathers were previously convicted and sentenced to prison for their roles in a robbery and assault that occurred before Sean Hill was mortally wounded in the area of Boswell Avenue and Lake Street in Norwich minutes after midnight on June 3, 2006. The 19-year-old victim was hit by a shot that rang out after a man he was with that night fled a Boswell Avenue apartment where he had been assaulted and robbed. Smith was arrested in 2010. He was convicted in 2013 of Manslaughter in the Second Degree and sentenced to six years in prison.

The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of New London. Gathers pled guilty in March 2013 to Manslaughter in the First Degree with a Firearm. Peter Waraksa - Convicted PETER WARAKSA pled guilty on October 11, 2012, to criminal charges stemming from the deaths of an East Windsor couple found dead in their home following a fire in 1986. Waraksa was sentenced to serve eight years and eight months in prison to be followed by ten years of special parole in the deaths of Orie “Harold” Weeks, age 59, and his wife, Assunta Weeks, age 57. Waraksa was a member of the Warehouse Point Fire Department at the time of the fatal fire on October 7, 1986, at the Weeks’ home at 17 Broadview Lane in East Windsor.

Waraksa pled guilty in Hartford Superior Court to two counts of Negligent Homicide and one count each of Arson in the Third Degree and Burglary in the Second Degree. He was arrested in July 2010 – more than 23 years after the crime -- as a result of an investigation conducted by the East Windsor Police Department in conjunction with the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney.

The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. Quan Morgan - Convicted QUAN MORGAN was convicted in October 2011 of the murder of Shawn Dudley some five years earlier in Hartford.

Morgan was arrested in February 2011 as a result of information received through 'cold case' playing cards distributed to inmates throughout the Connecticut prison system. Dudley, 19, was fatally shot in the early morning hours of September 24, 2006, while attending a party at the West Indian Social Club at 3340 Main Street in Hartford. He was confronted on the dance floor by several males, one of whom pulled a handgun and shot him once in the chest. “A break came in the investigation when Shaun Dudley’s homicide was recently highlighted as the Nine of Diamonds in the “,” said Hartford Police Major Crimes Supervising Sergeant Brandon O’Brien. “The information received is what broke the case open for us leading to Morgan’s arrest.” The arrest was the first resulting from information received as a result of the distribution of the cards, which feature the names and photographs of victims of unsolved homicides, missing persons and unidentified remains cases. Morgan pled guilty in Hartford Superior Court on October 12, 2011, to one count of Murder for the Dudley homicide. At the time of his arrest, he was being held in the custody of the Department of Correction in the unrelated shooting death of Edward Haslam in Hartford on October 3, 2009, for which he has since been convicted.

That arrest also resulted from an investigation by Hartford Police and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State's Attorney. Antwan Sease - Quan Morgan - Convicted ANTWAN SEASE and QUAN MORGAN were convicted in the 2009 shooting death of Edward Haslam in Hartford. On October 3, 2009, Hartford Police received a report of a man shot at Main and Montville streets.

Responding officers found Mr. Haslam, age 41, in his car suffering from a single gunshot wound to the chest in the parking lot of 'Club Vibz' at 3155 Main Street. Haslam died of his injuries. An autopsy performed by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner determined the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the chest and the case was ruled a homicide. Subsequent investigation determined that Mr.

Haslam was shot as he attempted to drive away while being robbed. His car crashed into a fence and utility pole where it was found by emergency personnel responding to the scene. Quan Morgan was arrested on May 21, 2010. On May 17, 2011, he pled guilty in Hartford Superior Court to one count each of Felony Murder, Robbery in the First Degree and Conspiracy to Commit Robbery in the First Degree. Morgan was 21 years old at the time of his arrest.

Antwan Sease, a 21-year-old resident of Enfield at the time of his arrest in July 2010, was convicted in June 2011 by a jury in Hartford Superior Court of one count each of Felony Murder, Robbery in the First Degree and Conspiracy to Commit Robbery in the First Degree. He is serving a 60-year prison term.

The investigation was conducted by the Hartford Police Department and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State's Attorney. All charges will be prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. Paul Davis - Convicted PAUL DAVIS was convicted in March 2013 of Accessory to Murder, Conspiracy to Commit Murder and Criminal Attempt to Commit Murder in the death of a Hartford teenager who was gunned down with a friend in a 2006 drive-by shooting.

Davis and Ackeem Riley were arrested in August 2009 and charged in the homicide of 15-year-old Kerry Foster and wounding of a second, 14-year-old teenager in a drive-by shooting that occurred in front of 50 Clark Street in Hartford on May 28, 2006. Charges against Riley are pending in Hartford Superior Court. Davis was sentenced in May 2013 to serve a total effective sentence of 100 years in prison. The case was investigated by the Major Crimes Division of the Hartford Police Department in conjunction with the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney and the State of Connecticut Department of Correction. The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. At the time of his arrest, Davis was in the custody of the Department of Correction serving a 9-year sentence for an unrelated crime.

Officers ascertained that the victims had been standing in front of 50-52 Clark Street when a vehicle or vehicles pulled up and numerous gunshots were fired at both teenagers. The vehicle or vehicles then sped off.

Officers found expended 9 mm casings and projectiles in front of 50-52 Clark Street. Ackeem Riley - Convicted ACKEEM RILEY pled no contest and was found guilty in April 2015 of Accessory to Murder in the homicide of Kerry Foster on May 28, 2006, in Hartford. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison plus an additional 15 years for another shooting that also occurred in 2006. The sentences will run concurrent to his sentence for the murder of Tray Davis. At approximately 11:24 p.m.

On May 28, 2006, Hartford Police responded to a report of a drive-by shooting in front of 50 Clark Street. Fifteen-year-old Kerry Foster was suffering from gunshot wounds to the head and chest. The second victim, a 14-year-old Hartford resident, was suffering from gunshot wounds to the back and groin. Kerry Foster was transported to Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center where he was pronounced dead at 11:53 p.m. Officers ascertained that the victims had been standing in front of 50-52 Clark Street when a vehicle or vehicles pulled up and numerous gunshots were fired at them. The vehicle or vehicles then sped off.

Riley was 16 years old at the time of the shootings. Another man charged in the case, Paul Davis, was convicted in March 2013 following a trial in Hartford Superior Court. Ackeem Riley - Convicted ACKEEM RILEY was convicted on March 3, 2009, in the 2006 shooting death of 16-year-old Tray Davis in Hartford.

Tray was shot on November 17, 2006, at approximately 5:59 p.m., outside 714 Garden Street. Two other victims, a 13-year-old male and a 21-year-old male, were also discovered at the scene. All three were transported by ambulance to area hospitals. Tray was pronounced dead a short time later. On December 5, 2007, Riley, then age 18, was arrested by Hartford Police and charged in connection with the homicide. He was convicted on March 3, 2009, following a jury trial in the Superior Court for the Judicial District of Hartford of being an Accessory to Murder, Conspiracy to Commit Murder, two counts of Criminal Attempt to Commit Murder and two counts of being an Accessory to Assault in the First Degree.

Tray was visiting his grandmother on November 17th and had been outside in the neighborhood and socializing with friends when he was killed. A quiet boy with a strong bond to his twin sister, he appears to have been an innocent bystander. The case was investigated by the Hartford Police Department and the Cold Case Unit of the Chief State's Attorney's Office with the assistance of the Bloomfield Police Department. Pedro Miranda - Convicted PEDRO MIRANDA, a registered sex offender from New Britain, was convicted on April 26, 2011, of four counts in the 1988 murder of Carmen Lopez in Hartford. A jury in the Superior Court for the Judicial District of Hartford found Miranda guilty of one count of Capital Felony, one count of Murder, one count of Felony Murder and one count of Kidnapping in the First Degree. He was sentenced to serve life in prison without the possibility of release on the Capital Felony charge and 100 years on the other charges.

Lopez, age 17, was last heard from by relatives on January 2, 1988. She was found strangled on January 5, 1988, in an apartment on Nelton Court in Hartford. The Cold Case Unit initiated its investigation of the homicide in July 2008 after new information was brought to the attention of the Office of the State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford by the Connecticut Innocence Project of the State of Connecticut Division of Public Defender Services.

A Petition for a New Trial was granted on December 19, 2008, in the Superior Court for the Judicial District of Hartford for another individual who had been convicted in the homicide of Carmen Lopez. That conviction has since been vacated. Pedro Miranda - Convicted PEDRO MIRANDA was convicted on March 5, 2015, of Murder for the death of Mayra Cruz, whose body was found in a wooded area of East Windsor on November 8, 1987. Miranda was found guilty by a jury in Hartford Superior Court where he was sentenced in April 2015 to sixty years in prison. He is already incarcerated for his conviction for the Murder of Carmen Lopez. Mayra Cruz, age 13, was reported missing when she did not return home from school in Hartford on October 8, 1987.

Miranda, who was age 51 at the time of his arrest in 2008, was required to register on the State of Connecticut Sex Offender Registry as a result of his conviction for the May 29, 1998, sexual assault of a 24-year-old woman in West Hartford. Alexander Torres - Samuel Quiles - Convicted ALEXANDER TORRES and SAMUEL QUILES were convicted in connection with the homicide of Efrain Rodriguez, who was fatally wounded outside of a Hartford restaurant on November 10, 2007. Torres, who was 16 years old at the time of the crime, was arrested on August 1, 2008. He subsequently pled guilty to Manslaughter in the First Degree and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Torres was arrested following an investigatory grand jury investigation into the Rodriguez homicide.

Quiles, a resident of Middletown who was 25 years old when arrested on October 7, 2009, was sentenced in March 2010 to five years in prison for Carrying a Pistol Without a Permit, Possession of Narcotics and Perjury for lying to the investigatory grand jury. At approximately 1:45 a.m.

On November 10, 2007, Hartford police officers on patrol in the area of 1995 Park Street heard several gunshots coming from the MiBar restaurant. Officers located a 19-year-old male lying on the sidewalk suffering from a single gunshot wound to the leg.

He was transported to Hartford Hospital for treatment of a non-life threatening injury. Rodriguez, a 30-year-old resident of Avon, Connecticut, was subsequently found in the parking lot suffering from a gunshot wound to the chest.

He was transported to St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center where he was pronounced dead at 2:04 a.m. The case was investigated by the Major Crimes Division of the Hartford Police Department and the Cold Case Unit in the Office of the Chief State's Attorney. The cases were prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. Duane Foster - Convicted DUANE FOSTER pled guilty in April 2010 to one count of Kidnapping in the First Degree for the January 1988 kidnapping, robbery and sexual assault of a Hartford woman. Foster was arrested in November 2008 as a result of a Cold Case investigation by the Major Crimes Division of the Hartford Police Department, the State of Connecticut Department of Correction and the Cold Case Unit of the Chief State's Attorney's Office.

Foster was 47 years old at the time of his arrest and incarcerated in Virginia for an unrelated crime. Also known as LEONARD MARTIN, ANTHONY MARTIN and DWAYNE FOSTER, he lived near the location on Charter Oak Avenue in Hartford where the then-26-year-old victim of the 1988 kidnapping was beaten, robbed of her jewelry and money and then sexually assaulted. Police found the victim in the early morning hours of January 22, 1988, bleeding profusely from her face. Her injuries required seven stitches over one eye. The law applicable to the case placed a five-year statute of limitations on the prosecution of Sexual Assault and Robbery committed in 1988.

However, there is no statute of limitations on the prosecution of Kidnapping in the First Degree, the offense to which Foster pled guilty more than twenty years after the crime was committed. He was sentenced in April 2010 to serve 11 years in prison for the kidnapping conviction. The sentence is addition to the sentence he received for other offenses. The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. Edwin Snelgrove, Jr. - Convicted - Case Closed EDWIN SNELGROVE, Jr., was convicted of Murder in February 2005 following a lengthy trial in Hartford Superior Court for the slaying of Carmen Rodriguez. On April 15, 2005, Snelgrove was sentenced to life in prison, which is defined.

The conviction was affirmed by the Connecticut Supreme Court, which in September 2008 rejected an appeal brought on behalf of Snelgrove challenging the jury's guilty verdict. The victim was last seen with Snelgrove leaving a bar on Capitol Avenue in Hartford on September 21, 2001. Her body was discovered in Hopkinton, Rhode Island, in January of 2002. The Hartford Police Department, Hopkinton (R.I.) Police Department, Rhode Island State Police and Connecticut State Police engaged in a joint investigation. The Cold Case Unit of the Office of the Chief State's Attorney joined the investigation in October 2002.

The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. Snelgrove was arrested in 2003. He has previous convictions for Manslaughter and Attempted Murder from two separate incidents that occurred in New Jersey in the 1980s. Matthew Johnson - Convicted - Case Closed MATTHEW JOHNSON was convicted in February 2004 of three counts of Murder for the slayings of three women who were found murdered in the Asylum Hill neighborhood of Hartford. He was arrested as a result of an investigation by the Cold Case Unit, Connecticut State Police, the State Police Forensic Laboratory DNA Section, the State of Connecticut Department of Correction and the Hartford Police Department into the deaths of nine women in the Hartford area over the course of seven years. Five deaths occurred in a particular area of Asylum Hill, and three of the victims were tied to Johnson by DNA evidence.

Johnson was convicted in the deaths of Aida Quinones, whose body was found April 16, 2000 at 85 Laurel Street, Hartford; Rosali Jimenez, whose body was found August 29, 2000 at 50-52 Cedar Street, Hartford; and Alesia Ford, whose body was found on July 22, 2001, at 1 Myrtle Street, Hartford. The cases were prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of Hartford. Omar Ali - Convicted - Case Closed OMAR ALI (also known as Herbert L. ) was convicted on August 19, 2003, of Felony Murder and Murder for the 1980 stabbing death of Darrel K. Ashton in Burlington, Connecticut.

Ali, who lived in Waterbury, Connecticut, at the time of his arrest, was arrested in November 2000. Ashton was found dead in his Burlington home on May 11, 1980. An autopsy determined the cause of death to be multiple stab wounds and also showed that the 44-year-old victim had suffered asphyxia by strangulation.

The arrest and conviction of Omar Ali was the result of an investigation conducted by the Cold Case Unit of the Office of the Chief State's Attorney and the Connecticut State Police. Instrumental to the case was fingerprint and DNA evidence recovered from the scene of the crime and analyzed by the State Police Forensic Laboratory. Ali was sentenced in November 2000 to a term of 25 years to life imprisonment. The Connecticut Appellate Court rejected an appeal filed on his behalf and upheld his conviction in a decision officially released on November 29, 2005.

Gregory McArthur - Convicted - Case Closed GREGORY McARTHUR was convicted on December 13, 2002, of Felony Murder, Manslaughter in the First Degree, Kidnapping in the First Degree and Larceny in the Third Degree in the January 1998 slaying of Ann Marie Cusano of Shelton, Connecticut. Cusano was reported missing on January 4, 1998.

Investigation by the Shelton Police Department led police investigating her disappearance to the Hartford apartment where McArthur lived. The Hartford Police Department joined the investigation. The crime scene was processed and police were subsequently able to obtain an arrest warrant for McArthur before her remains were found. McArthur subsequently led detectives to the victim's remains in a wooded area of Suffield, Connecticut, in 2000. The Connecticut Appellate Court upheld his conviction in June 2006.

Jeanette Poulin - Convicted - Case Closed JEANETTE POULIN pleaded guilty under the Alford Doctrine on October 15, 2002, to Manslaughter in the First Degree for the August 1986 death of her infant son, Daniel Poulin, in Bristol, Connecticut. Poulin was arrested at her home in New York City on March 2, 2001, and subsequently extradited to Connecticut. The Office of the Chief State Medical Examiner had initially attributed the death of the six-week-old child to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, but the cause of death was reclassified as 'undetermined' after investigators reviewed a previously sealed case report from the State of Connecticut Department of Children and Families. A law enacted in 1996 gave investigators access to those files. The investigation by the Cold Case Unit and the Bristol Police Department determined that Daniel Poulin had been suffocated. Poulin is serving a 15-year prison sentence. Nicole Pelletier - Convicted - Case Closed NICOLE PELLETIER was convicted on May 20, 2002, of Murder as an Accessory in the beating death of her husband, Olidor Pelletier.

The 31-year-old victim died 13 days after he was found severely beaten in the family home in the Terryville section of Plymouth, Connecticut, on October 2, 1989. Shortly after her husband's death, Ms.

Pelletier returned to her native New Brunswick, Canada. The State of Connecticut successfully extradited her in July 2001 on a warrant charging her with Murder as an Accessory.

Her arrest followed an investigation by the Cold Case Unit and the Plymouth Police Department, which determined that Ms. Pelletier planned the murder with her then-boyfriend, Jose Rubert. Rubert, who was sentenced to a 30-year prison term for the murder, testified against Ms. Pelletier at her trial.

She is now serving a 60-year prison sentence. Edward Grant - Convicted - Case Closed EDWARD GRANT was convicted on May 28, 2002, of Murder for the homicide of Concetta 'Penny' Serra. The jury's guilty verdict in New Haven Superior Court came some twenty-nine years after the 21-year-old dental assistant was found stabbed to death in a New Haven parking garage on July 16, 1973. The verdict also concluded one of the most widely publicized homicide investigations in recent state history, which involved the New Haven Police Department, Connecticut State Police and the Cold Case Unit. Grant's conviction was upheld by the Connecticut Supreme Court, which denied his appeal in a decision issued in April 2008. Grant, an auto body mechanic, was living in Waterbury, Connecticut, when he was arrested on a warrant issued in June 1999. He was connected to the crime through DNA analysis of evidence found at the scene and analyzed by the State Police Forensic Laboratory.

DNA analysis found there was a less than a one in 878 million chance that DNA found on a bloodstain recovered from the scene came from someone other than the defendant. Grant was sentenced in September 2002 to serve 20 years in prison. The case was prosecuted by the Office of the State's Attorney for the Judicial District of New Haven. Gino Gentile - Edgar DeJesus - Convicted - Case Closed GINO GENTILE and EDGAR DeJESUS were both convicted in the March 17, 1997, robbery and slaying of San Chiu Wong as a result of a Cold Case investigation by the New Britain Police Department and the Cold Case Unit. The victim was shot to death at the Chinese restaurant he owned in New Britain, Connecticut. Witnesses testified that Gentile shot the victim in the head to avoid being identified in the robbery. At the time of his conviction, Gentile was serving a 40-year prison sentence for two homicides in Patterson, New Jersey.

In the subsequent investigation of the New Britain homicide, firearms experts from the Connecticut State Police Forensic Laboratory were able to prove conclusively that the same handgun was used in the New Jersey and New Britain homicides. Gentile was sentenced to 100 years in prison on his convictions for Murder, Robbery in the First Degree and Conspiracy to Commit Robbery in the First Degree. DeJesus, the 'wheelman' in the robbery, pleaded guilty to Manslaughter in the Second Degree and was sentenced in April 2002 to 19 years in prison.

Bill Roy Henderson - Convicted - Case Closed BILL ROY HENDERSON was convicted on November 5, 2001, of Murder as an Accessory, Conspiracy to Commit Murder and Tampering with a Witness for the July 24, 1996, killing of 19-year-old Hayfield Hemley on Adam Street in Hartford. The evidence produced during his trial before a jury in Hartford Superior Court revealed that Henderson enlisted MICHAEL WRIGHT to murder Mr. Wright pleaded guilty to Manslaughter in the First Degree and was sentenced to a total of 48 years imprisonment for crimes against Mr. Following his conviction, Wright cooperated with the prosecution and testified against Henderson. Another defendant, FRANZ MURRAY, pleaded guilty to Conspiracy and Accessory to Assault charges. He was sentenced to twenty years in prison, suspended after seven years served, and five years' probation.

GARY SIMMS, also known as DONYELL RUTHERFORD, was arrested on April 19, 2006, in New Britain. In 2008 he pled guilty to Tampering with a Witness and Conspiracy to Commit Assault in the First Degree. The case was investigated by the Cold Case Unit, the Major Crimes Division of the Hartford Police Department and the State of Connecticut Department of Correction. Angela Dressel - Lisette Carrucini - Convicted - Case Closed On October 15, 1997, shortly before 1 a.m., Michael Gratic was found on the sidewalk on Sergeant Street in Hartford by police responding to a report of a person stabbed. Gratic, who was the victim of an attempted robbery, was transported to the hospital where he was pronounced dead. The case went unsolved until 2001/2002 when a unit consisting of the Hartford Police Department, Cold Case Unit, State of Connecticut Department of Correction and Connecticut State Police arrested ANGELA DRESSEL and LISETTE CARRUCINI, who was also was known by the name Torres. Angela Dressel pleaded guilty in December 2004 to Manslaughter and was sentenced to twenty years’ incarceration, suspended after fifteen years served, and five years’ probation.

Lisette Carrucini pleaded guilty in February 2005 to Conspiracy to Commit Robbery in the First Degree and was sentenced to ten years in prison. Orville Owens - Earl Josephs - Convicted - Case Closed On June 10, 1998, the body of Lizzette Hamilton was found inside her apartment on Morris Street in Hartford. The victim was bound by duct tape about the face, wrists and ankles and had been stabbed numerous times. The homicide was investigated by a task force that included the Office of the Chief State's Attorney, the Hartford Police Department, FBI, Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut. Fingerprints were obtained from the duct tape which led to ORVILLE OWENS. Owens and a second individual, EARL JOSEPHS, were arrested on Federal charges. Both pled guilty in Federal court.

Dale Stewart - Convicted - Case Open On June 9, 1998, two bodies were found in penthouse apartments on Main Street in Hartford. The bodies were badly mutilated and the victims appeared to have been tortured.

The victims were identified as Audley Palmer and Samantha Mitto, both of whom were Jamaican nationals. Subsequent investigation disclosed that Mr.

Palmer was involved in drug trafficking and that an individual identified as DALE STEWART had worked for him. The further investigation revealed that Stewart and another man robbed, tortured and killed both victims. Stewart was arrested and convicted in federal court. The arrest and conviction were the result of the investigation by the Office of the Chief State's Attorney, the Hartford Police Department, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), State of Connecticut Department of Correction, Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The second suspect is still unidentified.

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• • • • • Basketball career Atlantic City Seagulls (USBL) Personal information Listed height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) Listed weight 200 lb (91 kg) Career information Playing career 1997–1999 Position / Number 12 Career highlights and awards • 3× (1997, 1998, 1999) Robert Sylvester 'R' Kelly (born January 8, 1967) is an American singer, songwriter, record producer, and former professional basketball player. A native of, Kelly began performing during the late 1980s and debuted in 1992 with the group. In 1993, Kelly went solo with the album. He is known for a collection of major hit singles including ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', and the '. In 1998, Kelly won three for '. His distinctive sound and style has influenced numerous and artists.

Kelly became the first musician to play professional, when he was signed in 1997. Kelly has written, produced, and songs and albums for many artists, including 's 1994 debut album. In 1996, Kelly was nominated for a Grammy for writing 's song '. In 2002 and 2004, Kelly released collaboration albums with rapper and has been a guest vocalist for other hip hop artists like,, and The (RIAA) has recognized R. Kelly as one of the best-selling music artists in the United States with 40 million albums sold as well as only the fifth black artist to crack the top 50 of the same list.

In March 2011, R. Kelly was named the most successful artist of the last 25 years. Kelly has released 12 solo studio albums, and sold over 100 million records worldwide making him the most successful male artist of the 1990s. He has been credited for helping redefine and, earning the 'King of R&B' and 'King of Pop-Soul'. He is listed by Billboard as the most successful R&B/Hip Hop artist of the past 25 years (1985-2010) and also the most successful R&B artist in history. Throughout his career, Kelly has won numerous awards, including a as well as countless other awards like,,,,, and.

Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Early life Robert Sylvester Kelly was born on January 8, 1967 at in. Kelly is the third of four children. Kelly's single mother, Joanne, was a singer. She raised her children. Kelly's father was absent throughout his son's life. Kelly's family lived in the project in Chicago's neighborhood. Kelly's high school music teacher described Kelly's childhood home: 'It was bare.

One table, two chairs. There was no father there, I knew that, and they had very little'. Kelly began singing in the church choir at age eight.

Kelly grew up in a house full of women, whom he said would act differently when his mother and grandparents were not home. At a young age Kelly was often sexually abused by a woman who was at least ten years older than himself. 'I was too afraid and too ashamed,' Kelly wrote in his autobiography about why he never told anyone. At age 11, he was shot in the shoulder while riding his bike home; the bullet is reportedly still lodged in his shoulder. Kelly was eight years old when he had his first girlfriend. They would hold hands and eat make-believe meals inside their playhouse built from cardboard, where they 'vowed to be boyfriend and girlfriend forever.' Their last play date turned tragic when, after fighting with some older children over a play area by a creek, Lulu was pushed into the water.

A fast-moving current swept her away while she screamed Kelly's name. Shortly after, she was found dead downstream. Kelly calls Lulu his very first musical inspiration. Kelly was a under the tracks. Kelly entered in Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood in the fall of 1981, where he met his music teacher, who encouraged Kelly to perform the classic ' in a high school talent show. McLin encouraged a young Kelly to leave the basketball team. She said he was furious at first, but after his performance at the school talent show, he changed his mind.

Kelly played high school basketball with the late basketball player. He sang ' at Ben Wilson's funeral.

As a teenager, Kelly began street performing under the tracks before he eventually formed a group with his friends Marc McWilliams, Vincent Walker, and Shawn Brooks. In 1989, Kelly, McWilliams, Walker, and Brooks formed the group MGM (Musically Gifted Men).

In 1990, MGM recorded and released their first single 'Why You Wanna Play Me'; after releasing the single, the group disbanded. In 1991, Kelly signed with and teamed with a new group from Chicago called.

Kelly's mother Joanne died in 1993. [ ] Career 1992–96: Born Into the 90's, 12 Play and R. Kelly got his breakthrough in 1989 when he, along with Marc McWilliams, Vincent Walker and Shawn Brooks, participated on the talent TV show Big Break, hosted. Kelly went on to win the $100,000 grand prize. Subsequently, Kelly's debut album was released in early 1992 (credited as R.

Released during the period of the early nineties, the album yielded the R&B hits 'She's Got That Vibe', ', 'Dedicated', and 'Slow Dance (Hey Mr. DJ)', all of which were led by Kelly.

During late 1992, Kelly and Public Announcement embarked on a tour called '60653', whose title was the of Kelly's neighborhood. This would be the only album co-credited with Public Announcement. Kelly separated from the group in January 1993. Kelly's biggest influence is the,. Kelly's music took root in, and. One of Kelly's earliest musical memories is listening to his mother, Joanne Kelly sing.

As a young child, he was influenced by the work of musicians such as,,,,, and. Although had a substantial influence on Kelly,, and are Kelly's greatest inspirations. In reference to Hathaway, Kelly declared: 'A guy like Donny Hathaway had a focused, sexual texture in his voice that I always wanted in mine,' Kelly said. 'He had smooth, soulful tones, but he was spiritual at the same time.'

Kelly was heavily influenced by Marvin Gaye's R&B Lothario image. 'I had to make a baby-makin' album. If Marvin Gaye did it, I wanted to do it,' Kelly said.

Worked with Kelly during his debut at the tail-end of the era, as they managed to further sustain its sound. While Kelly has created a smooth, professional mixture of hip-hop beats, soulman crooning, and funk, the most distinctive element of his music is its explicit carnality.

', ', ', and ' are considered examples, as their productions were seductive enough to sell such blatant come-ons. Kelly's crossover appeal was also sustained by his development of a flair for pop balladry. Vocal style and lyrical themes Kelly's voice easily shifts from booming to seductive. Love and sex are the topics of the majority of Kelly's lyrical content, although he has written about a wide variety of themes such as inspiration and. Kelly has said that he writes from everyday experiences and prides himself in being versatile. Larry Khan, Senior VP of Jive's urban marketing/promotion has said that Kelly's musical compass is second to none.

Kelly never writes any lyrics down; he freestyles everything in the studio. He states: 'I never write anything down, since I've been in the song writing business – 20 years, I never write anything on paper, everything comes off the top of my head. I get in there, do the track, and whatever the track feels like, that's what I do.' Other ventures Rockland Records. Main article: Kelly launched his own label, the -distributed Rockland Records. The label's roster included artists,, Talent, Vegas Cats, Lady, Frankie, Secret Weapon, and Rebecca F.

In 1998, the label's first artist, Sparkle released her debut self-titled album,. In addition to producing and writing the project, Kelly made vocal contribution to the hit duet 'Be Careful,' which contributed largely to the album's success. The album was certified platinum in December 2000. In 1999, Kelly wrote and produced the to the and movie, which features tracks from,,, and. The soundtrack was released on Rockland label. Rockland artists Sparkle, Talent, and Vegas Cats all appeared on the soundtrack. Boo & Gotti and Vegas Cats appeared on R.

Kelly's albums, and, as well as a from Boo & Gotti on, making several references to Rockland. The label is currently inactive but Kelly still owns the Rockland Records imprint. Personal life Relationships In 1996, Kelly married, his former backup dancer and mother to his three children. He built a house in and moved in in 1997. In January 2009, it was reported that Kelly's divorce was finalized.

His Olympia Fields house became the subject of a foreclosure lawsuit in 2011, and has since been bought. Philanthropy Kelly has contributed to various charities throughout his career. In 1995, Kelly donated £20,000 to ex-footballer representative for a UK charity. In 2003, Kelly donated $50,000 to the Texas Military Family Foundation after the fund raising gig he staged for them.

Kelly has also been in charity events in efforts to bring awareness for the fight against breast cancer. In 2003, Kelly released the single ' and donated all the proceeds of the song to the families of the American soldiers. In 2007, Kelly released the song 'Rise Up' for Virginia Tech and 100% of the net proceeds went to families of the massacre's victims.

Kelly performed at a benefit concert for the Special Olympics of Angola and donated several specially-designed wheelchairs and the same year he also penned the song ' for the and all proceeds benefited African charities. Kelly performed at a charity event in Chicago benefiting Clara's House, a program designed to build employment, housing, health care, and education in the projects of Chicago. In 2016, Kelly donated cases of water to the. Legal issues After a July 1996 brawl at a health club involving Kelly and his entourage, Kelly was placed on a year's unsupervised probation starting August 13, 1997, after being found guilty of battery. One of the victims, Christopher Mahoney, needed 110 facial stitches. Also that year, 20-year-old Tiffany Hawkins sued Kelly for $10 million and accused him of having sexual relations with her when he was 24 and she was 15.

Kelly settled the lawsuit in 1998 for $250,000, according to the. On April 8, 1998, Kelly was arrested on three misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct, including one charge on violating noise ordinance for playing his music extremely loud from his car. Prosecutors from the district attorney's office dropped the first two charges on May 7 and the noise charge on July 22 that year. Illegal marriage According to and the Chicago Sun-Times, Kelly and a then 15-year-old singer protege were illegally married in a secret wedding ceremony on August 31, 1994 in Cook County conducted by Reverend Nathan J. Edmond from Chicago.

Kelly was introduced to Aaliyah by her uncle,, just three years prior when she was 12 years old. The marriage was annulled in February 1995 at the behest of Aaliyah's family by a Michigan judge. Kelly and Aaliyah, however, both denied that the marriage occurred and even denied that their relationship had ever moved beyond friendship. Despite denials of marriage, in May 1997 Aaliyah filed a lawsuit in Cook County to have the marriage records expunged.

This action occurred in the midst of a suit filed by Tiffany Hawkins, who was seeking to use the marriage documents in her case. Aaliyah stated in court documents that she was underage at the time of marriage and, under Illinois state law, could not legally enter into marriage without parental consent. Sex tape allegations. Kelly's Miami On February 3, 2002, a video surfaced allegedly showing Kelly engaging in sex with, and, an girl. The story, which was released by an unknown source, was sent to the Chicago Sun-Times, the newspaper that broke the story on February 8, 2002. This news surfaced as Kelly was to perform at the opening ceremony of the. In interviews with television of Chicago and, Kelly said that.

In June 2002, Kelly was indicted in Chicago on 21 counts of child pornography. That same month, Kelly was apprehended by on a Chicago arrest warrant, and Sheriff's Office conducted a search of Kelly's residence in. During the search, officers recovered 12 images of an alleged underage girl on a digital camera – wrapped in a towel in a duffel bag – which allegedly depicted Kelly 'involved in sexual conduct with the female minor.' According to the Chicago Sun-Times, the girl in the images obtained from Kelly's Florida home also appears in the videotape which got Kelly indicted in Chicago. Kelly was arrested in January 2003 on those charges.

In March 2004, these charges were dropped due to a lack of probable cause for the search warrants. After a number of delays, on October 27, 2006, a court hearing for pre-trial motions set the date of the actual trial to February 7, 2007.

On the date of the trial, Kelly's lawyer informed the court that his client was unable to attend because he was 'undergoing surgery for a burst appendix'. He also announced that Kelly was 'in good condition and was expected to be released from the hospital later in the day.'

Kelly's attorney stated that Kelly (who pleaded not guilty) would be in attendance on the next trial date of February 21, 2007. It had previously been announced by the court that the videotape that allegedly showed Kelly performing sex acts with an underage woman would be publicly shown as evidence in the trial. The trial, however, was delayed due to disputes over when the tape was made and to give medical recuperation time to the sitting judge following a fall resulting in broken bones. Later the case was set for a September 17 date.

It took more than six months for the case to go to trial. Jury selection began on May 9, 2008, and the trial officially started on May 20 with opening statements from the prosecution and defense. After two weeks, the prosecution's case wrapped on June 3 while the defense's wrapped on June 9. After less than a day of deliberations, on June 13, a Chicago jury found Kelly not guilty of all 14 counts.

Allegations of cult leadership On July 17, 2017, reported in that Kelly was accused by three sets of parents of holding their daughters in an 'abusive cult'. Kelly and the alleged victims deny the allegations. Legacy and Influence. Kelly is known for often wearing a. Kelly is considered to be one of the most successful R&B artists of the last 25 years.

He is also one of the best-selling music artists in the United States with over 30 million albums sold as well as only the fifth black artist to enter the top 50 of the same list. Magazine called him 'arguably the most important R&B figure of the 1990s and 2000s.' Music executive described Kelly as 'the modern-day, although there's a bit of in him, and a bit of.'

Kelly's work has influenced numerous artists including,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, and many more. Kelly has mentored and produced for the likes of,,,, and, and reignited the careers of,,,, and more. Artists from many genres have covered Kelly's music. In addition to his solo and collaboration success, Kelly has also written and produced several hit songs, such as ' for, ' for, ' for, ' for, and many more. Kelly has been compared to artists like and. Kelly's music has been used in numerous film soundtracks including,,, and. He has also been featured in video games, including.

Countless hip hop and R&B artists have sampled his music. Honors and awards. Main article: Headlining tours • The 12 Play Very Necessary Tour (w/ ) (1994) • The Down Low Top Secret Tour (w/,, and Solo) (1996) • The Get Up on a Room Tour (w/,,, and ) (1999) • The TP-2.com Tour (w/ & ) (2001) • The Key in the Ignition Tour (w/ ) (2003) • (2006) • The Double Up Tour (w/ & ) (2007) • The Ladies Make Some Noise Tour (w/ ) (2009) • (w/ & ) (2011) • The Single Ladies Tour (w/ ) (2012–13) • (2016) Co-headlining tours • 60653 Tour (w/ ) (1993) • (w/ ) (2004) Promotional concerts • (2014–16) See also. • Brian Warner (November 19, 2009).. Celebrity Net Worth. Retrieved October 27, 2014. Retrieved March 11, 2015.

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