Friday 12 April 2019


CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHS 


Click the words that are underlined for more info.
                                                
Sometimes I really question the wisdom of the Parole Boards when they release back into society violent killers.

David McGreavy, who in was a child killer who killed Paul Ralph, aged four, and his sisters Dawn, age two, and nine-month 0ld Samantha in their Worcester home in the United Kingdom in 1973. Paul had been strangled, Dawn was found with her throat cut, and Samantha died from a compound fracture to her skull.

McGreavy was a family friend and lodger, who after killing the three children, impaled their bodies on the spiked garden railings of a house in Gillam Street, Rainbow Hill. He claimed he killed the children because one of them would not stop crying.  

He was sentenced to life in prison for the three murders. The Parole Board later confirmed his release following an oral hearing This means that he served only 15 years in prison for each of the three small children he murdered.

The parole document said that over the 45 years this man was in prison, he had developed self-control, as well as a considerable understanding of the problems that he has had and what caused them. The psychologist identified a number of factors that while the triple child killer was in custody, he had has changed “considerably. “

I don’t doubt the diagnosed report of this killer however, did the mother of her three murdered  children get justice when the killer 0f her three children was sentenced to prison for life and later released after serving 45 years in prison? Was it fair that he didn’t serve his life sentence in prison when is three victims had their lives cut short when they were very small children?

The Parole Board said that he has also shown himself to be compliant and co-operative with authority, which suggests that he will comply with the conditions given to him by the Parole  Board after he is released.

According to statistics, less than half of those on parole actually completed their parole (around 49%) by committing more crimes or breaching other terms set down as conditions.



The parole Board was told that this child killer had learned  how to have self-control but how does anyone really know if a person who lost his temple in the past when he was upset, won’t lose his temper again when he is faced with a situation which makes him extremely angry?  Even this particular parolee can’t forecast what is going to happen to him in his future.     

 In September of 2018, nearly 200 Alabama inmates were granted parole and some district attorneys and crime victims feared some of the parolees would  re-offend.

It was learned that the Board of Pardons and Paroles has little statutory governance and full discretion on all criminal cases outside capital offenses where the prisoners are under a sentence of death.

Montgomery District Attorney Daryl Bailey was stunned when the board released Marquelle Sweeting that month, who’d only served six years of a 25-year sentence.

“Three Montgomery citizens, had a gun put to their heads, and one was shot and almost had his life taken away from him.  Sweeting pleaded guilty to three counts of first degree robbery and assault. While in prison, he was given disciplinary punishment multiple times, and including one incident for assaulting a corrections officer.

Parole Board rules and procedures state that inmates convicted of a Class A felony (serious crime) must serve 85 percent of their sentence or 15 years, whichever comes first. That means that Sweeting was up for parole nine years earlier than required. It’s a fraud on the whole system, considering that when judges pass appropriate sentences to violent criminals  they expect them to be in prison for a long time and not released back in society with only a small part of the sentence served. 

Generally in Alabama, prison inmates are not eligible for parole unless they’ve served one third of their sentence or 10 years – whichever comes first. Obviously, the Parole Board isn’t  following their own regulations.

A female prisoner in Alabama was given 235 years consecutive, you can’t get much more than that. She only served nine years, 11 months, and 22 days in prison That is not .a third or 10 years of her sentence.

Consider sentences for the more than 180 inmates paroled in September. of 2018. Here are three of many inmates given life sentences who were paroled—

Charlie Garrett – paroled after serving 15 years of a life sentence for murder. Fredricck Peoples served 16 years of 2 consecutive life sentences, was granted parole and Rondrell Wheeler, was paroled after serving 19 years for 2 consecutive life sentences.

Judges generally don’t sentence criminal to life in prison unless they committed a murder.

Every violent offender they released is going into some neighborhood and they are going to live by somebody.  The Board released one of the violent offenders in November 2018 who went to prison for stabbing his victim 27 times and slitting her throat. I certainly wouldn’t want anyone who stabbed someone 27 times living next door to me. But that parolee out there is living next door to somebody who isn’t even aware that a dangerous person is his or her next door neighbor.

The Board has blood on their hands after an incident earlier in 2018 involving parolee Jimmy O'Neal Spencer, who spent the greater part of his life in prison. The Board classified him as low to medium risk of re-offending.  

Spencer's victims weren't notified that he was paroled to the Jimmy Hale Mission. He walked away weeks later. The shelter says they contacted Spencer’s parole officer, but didn’t hear back. Spencer was in the wind for months before murdering three people in Marshall County. Those three victims would be alive today if the Board hadn’t foolishly released this dangerous offender from prison.

The Board never put out an alert or warrant for Spencer. He came into contact with the law two times. Both times they contacted the Parole Board and never heard back so they released him.  On July 13th 2018 he was in court in Marshall County that morning at 10 a.m., they contacted the parole board and asked if they should keep him. All they knew was he was out on parole and had committed another crime. The parole board was told that that they had no comment. That day he police found the three bodies including the body of a little 7-year-old boy. If he had been kept in custody that morning he wouldn’t have killed them that day.  If the parole board had called the official back, those victims wouldn’t have been killed.

Many years ago in the Province of Quebec in Canada a man sexually abused and then murdered a number of small children. He was sentenced to death but later his sentence was changed to life in prison. He was paroled again and then he again sexually  abused more small children and then murdered them. He was again sentenced to life in prison.  Some prison inmates decided that he should have been put to death after murdering the first group of children so they decided that he had to die. They killed him.  They didn’t want the Parole Board releasing that serial killer again so that he could kill more children. 

Why did prison inmates have to bring justice to the families of their dead children?

John Miller in California killed an infant in 1957 and was convicted of murder, 1958. He was paroled in 1975 and then he killed his parents 1975. He was given a life sentence for that crime.  

Michael Lawrence in Florida, killed his  robbery victim. He was given a life sentence in 1976. He was later paroled and in 1985. he killed another robbery victim. In 1990, he was sentenced to death.

John McRae in Florida was sentenced to life for the murder of 8-year-old boy. The pedophile was paroled in 1971. Then he was Convicted of another murder of a boy after he was paroled in Michigan 1998. Charges are pending on two other counts of murder in Florida. This man should have been executed for the first murder.

Timothy Buss murdered a five-year-old girl. He was sentenced to 25 years in 1981. He was paroled 1993.  He then murdered a 10-year-old boy. For that crime, he was condemned to death in  1996. 


Arthur J. Bomar, Jr. -- released from prison in Nevada on parole in 1990. Bomar had served 11 years of his  sentence for killing a man over an argument about a parking space. Six years later afer he was aroled  in Pennsylvania, Bomar brutally kidnapped, raped and murdered George Mason University star athlete Aimee Willard. 


Dwain Little of Oregon,  raped and stabbed a 16-year-old girl. H was given a life senence. term 1966. He was paroled in 1974. He was eturned to prison as a parole violator in 1975. Again he was released in 1977. He then murdered a family of 4. He was given three consecutive life terms for rape and murder 1980. 


Arthur Shawcross referred to as the 'Monster of the Rivers' was released after serving a 25 year sentence for the murder of a child. After his release, he turned to murdering prostitutes at least 10 of them. all. He is now serving ten consecutive sentences of 25 years to life which is  250 years.

Darrell Pandeli after being released from prison after a conviction for murder, he murdered a prostitute, cut off her nipples and flushed them down the toilet. He is now on death row in Arizona for that second recidivist murder.


Chad Allen Lee. He was sentenced to life in prison for a muder he committed. He was eventually released and went on murder spree. by murdering Linda Reynolds, a pizza delivery person, and 9 days later robbed and murdered David Lacey, a taxi cab driver. Lee then robbed a mini-market 7 days after shooting the owner, Harold Drury, multiple times without reason. was convicted of capital murder and sentenced  to death.

Scott Lehr was convicted of murder and sentenced to prison for life.  Later he was released. After his release on parole between February 1991 and February 1992, he lured 10 different female victims, between the ages of 10 and 48-years-old, into his car. Raping and beating them unconscious, stripping them  and abandoned them in the desert. Three of his victims died in those acts. He was captured, tried for the three murders and sentenced to death.

Michael Murdaugh was convicted of murder. Sentenced to life, he was eventually.  Later  he was released on parole.  After his release.  he murdered David Reynolds by beating him to death. After 'dumping' the body, Murdaugh severed Reynold's head and hands, pulled out his teeth, and buried the body parts. After his capture, he was sentenced to death.

Charles Daniels was convicted and sentenced to life for the the  1965 rape and murder of a Louisiana woman. Later having his sentence commuted, he was release on parole and he again killed another woman, 32-year-old Debbie Tatum.


Kenneth McDuff was sentenced to the death penalty, but it overturned by the US Supreme Court threw out capital punishment across the country, ruling death sentences had been imposed in an arbitrary way. Subsequently he was released, and murdered as many as 19 young women after his release. Finally he was executed in 1998 for the murder of Melissa Ann Northrup one of the 19 women murdered by this serial killer.

Darryl Kemp was sentenced to the death penalty but the sentenced was overturned by the Supreme Court. Subsequently he was released prison.  Authorities now say that he raped and strangled a woman jogging, less than 4 months after his release on parole.


Howard Allen had murdered an elderly woman, Opal Cooper, in August 1974, and was sentenced to 21 years in prison. By January 1985, less than ten years after being incarcerated, Howard Allen was released on parole.  On May 20, 1987 Howard Allen broke into the home of eighty-seven year old Laverne Hale, and savagely beat her to death. Six weeks later Allen struck again. On July 13, 1987 Howard Allen knocked on the door of Ernestine Griffin. At lunchtime the following day she was found murdered. On June 11, 1988 Allen was found guilty was found guilty of Ernestine’s murder. 
 Allen was resentenced to 60 years imprisonment for the murder on the grounds of mental retardation.


Melvin Geary was  originally sentenced to lifw without paraole for the stabbing death of a woman in 1973 with a boning knife. The sentence was changed to life with possibility of parole.  After his release, Geary was subsequently convicted of murdering 71-year-old Edward Colvin again with a boning knife after Colvin took him in. 

William Coday Jr. was convicted of murdering 19-year-old Lisa Hullinger in September 1978. After spending just 15 months in a German prison, he was released. In April 2002, he was convicted of having murdered Gloria Gomez on 13 July, 1997. 

Corey R. Barton -in 1983 he murdered 16-year-old Shari-Ann Merton. He received 18 years in prison. He was released after serving 9 years and 8 months. In November 1998, he murdered 27 year-old Sally Harris of North Carolina. 


Jack Henry Abbott, who had murdered a fellow prison inmate, was released early from a Utah prison. On July 18, 1981, six-weeks after his release, Abbott stabbed actor Richard Adan to death in New York.
murderers.

Leroy Schmitz -- convicted of strangling his live-in girlfriend in 1986, during an argument. He was sentenced to 18-20 years for that homicide. He was later convicted of murdering his wife, in Whitefish, Montana in 1999.
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Vernon Sattiewhite -- In 1977, Sattiewhite had been sentenced to five years for a murder but was paroled two years later and granted clemency. In 1984, he was convicted of robbery and sentenced to two years in prison but was paroled after less than six months. Soon after he murdered his ex-girlfriend, Sandra Sorrell.
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Tomas G. Ervin -- Sentenced to death in 1990, after conviction of the December 1988 murders of Mildred L. Hodges, 75, and her son, Richard E. Hodges. Bert Hunter, who was arrested along with Ervin pleaded guilty to the first-degree murder charges. Hunter and Ervin had met in the Missouri State Penitentiary, where they were both serving life sentences for previous murders.
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William Michael "Billy the Kid" Mason -- killed his wife three weeks after he was paroled on another murder conviction.
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Daniel Joe Hittle -- convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death for murdering a police officer Hittle, 40, was described by witnesses as a man who gleefully killed or tortured animals and who routinely beat women and children. He was on parole for the killings of his adoptive parents in Minnesota when he shot Garland police officer Gerald Walker during a traffic stop. Hittle then sped to East Dallas, where he fatally shot Mary Alice Goss, 39; Richard Joseph Cook Jr., 36; Raymond Scott Gregg, 19; and Goss' 4-year-old daughter Christy Condon.
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Tony Walker -- Texas. Convicted of murder in 1978. Sentenced to 5 years. Murdered a 66 year-old woman and her 81 year-old husband in 1992. Jerome Butler -- Found guilty of the shooting of cab driver Nathan Oakley, 67. Oakley had been a Houston cab driver for 30 years. Butler had an extensive criminal history, including a 1959 conviction on two counts of robbery and assault in New York City. Butler had previously served about 10 years of a 30-year sentence after pleading guilty to the murder of A.C. Johnson, age 69.
Dalton Prejean  killed a taxi driver when he was 14, . When he was 17, he gunned down a state trooper in Lafayette, Louisiana. Despite protests from the American Civil Liberties Union and other abolitionist groups, Prejean was executed for the second murder on May 18, 1990. 

Phillip Jablonski -- Carol Spadoni married Jablonski on June 16, 1982, while he was serving a prison sentence for the 1979 murder of his third wife, Melinda Kimball. After she became his pen-pal correspondent in prison. Jablonski murdered his prison pen-pal wife and her mother. And the day before those murders he had murdered Fathyma Vann, 38, in Indio, about 25 miles from Palm Springs, Vann was found shot and sexually mutilated in the desert with ``I love Jesus'' carved in her back." Now GET THIS. It seems that Phillip Jablonski, now in prison after all those murders, placed an ad for a pen-pal—"Jewish Death Row inmate, white, 51 years old, seeking understanding and open female or male for honest correspondence. Amateur poet, artist. Will answer all correspondence received. PHILLIP JABLONSKI, C-02477/SE95, San Quentin, CA 94974" 


Jerry Michael Ward who was originally sentenced to die in the electric chair, for committing murder with malice in the rape and murder of a Houston school girl. His sentence was commuted to life in prison when the U.S. Supreme Court abolished the death penalty in 1972. Although the death penalty was reinstated, the sentence was not. He was subsequently paroled in 1984 after serving 18 years in prison. He was the number one suspect in two new cases, involving the disappearance of Connie Sue Cooke, and the murder of Brenda Maureen Hackett. But although police were on the verge of arresting him, Ward committed suicide in a self-inflicted execution. 


David Maust in Hammond, Illinois. murdered a 15-year-old boy in 1981. After being paroled from prison, he murdered three more teenage boys, in circumstances similar to John Wayne Gacy by burying their bodies in concrete in his basement.


James Homer Elledge was sent to prison for life in 1975 after beating a Seattle motel owner to death with a ball-peen hammer. In the years that followed, he won parole 3 times, most recently in August 1995. prosecutors later charged Elledge with 1st-degree murder for stabbing and strangling Eloise Jane Fitzner, aged 47, in a church basement. 

Zeno E. Sims was sent to prison for eight years for the murder of a 24-year-old-man. Released on parole, in Kansas City, he then murdered DeAntreia L Ashley, a 15-year-old-girl, after being involved in a minor traffic accident.

On November 9, 1983 Associate U.S. Attorney General D. Lowell Jensen told a Senate subcommittee that it is impossible to punish or even deter such prison murders because, without a death sentence, a violent life-termer has free rein "to continue to murder as opportunity and his perverse motives dictate
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Clifford Robert Olson Jr. born in January 1, 1940 was a convicted Canadian serial killer who confessed to murdering 11 children and young adults between the ages of 9 and 18 years in the early 1980s

He was sentenced to life in prison. He was never released on parole and subsequently, he died in prison on September 30, 2011.

Robert William Pickton was born on October 24, 1949.  He is a Canadian serial killer convicted in 2007 of the second-degree murders of six women. He was charged with the deaths of an additional 20 women,[3] many of them from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. But these charges were stayed by the Crown in 2010.[4] In December 2007, Pickton was sentenced to life in prison, with no possibility of parole for 25 years – the longest sentence then available for murder under Canadian law. That doesn’t necessarily mean that he will them be set free. He can still be kept in prison as a dangerous offender. Had he killed the women in 2011 or after that year, he would be sentenced to six consecutive prison sentences of 25 years which would equal to 150 years.

Another convicted Canadian seral killer murdered his father, then a man for his truck, and later still, his ex-girlfriend. He was sentence to 3 consecutive sentences of 25 years in prison.

Canadian McArthur, aged 66, was charged with first-degree murder of eight men in Toronto. The evidence against him is solid.  At the time of this writing, he is serving a sentence of  eight consecutive sentence of 25 years in prison. the totality  of the sentences is 200 years.

The longest sentence to be awarded to a murderer was 3000 years. It was 1000 years for each of the three persons he killed. He appealed the sentence stating that the sentence was outrageous. The court of appeal agreed. It subsequently reduced his sentence to 1,500 years.

The shortest sentence for a serial killer in Peru was 12 years. He murdered several hundred children. He was released afer serving the 12 years.

In my opinion, I believe that anyone who is found guilty of first degree murder in which the evidence isn’t based on eye witness identification (which is often mistaken) should be executed.

There have been far too many instances were lifers have killed prisoners or prison guards and staff and especially after they have been paroled  Giving parole to first degree murderers is a risk to all members of society.

All human beings have a right to life if they aren’t terrorists or first degree murderers. Why should terrorists and first degree murders be permitted to live when their victims are in their graves? If they are not executed, they should be imprisoned for the rest of their natural lives.

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