Monsters Among Us: Kyle Robert Wolfe killed 79-year-old Margaret Jack Sliger; Sentenced to 25 years in prison


Margaret Jack Sliger

Margaret Jackson Sliger obituary
Find-A-Grave: Margaret Jackson “Margaret Jack” Sliger
Pastor remembers Margaret Jack Sliger
‘Pure evil’: Aunt describes horror of finding slain Margaret Jack
Juvenile charged in murder case of retired Hawkins Co. school teacher
Juvenile suspect arrested in Mooresburg murder case
Boy accused in murder of elderly NE Tennessee woman will be tried as an adult
15-year-old pleads guilty to murdering Hawkins County woman
Teen pleads guilty in brutal murder of Mooresburg woman
15-year-old boy pleads guilty in slaying of retired teacher
25 YEARS: Mooresburg teen sentenced as adult for 2015 murder of Margaret Jack Sliger
Tennessee teen is found guilty of fatally shooting and stabbing retired elementary school teacher after she confronted him for riding his four-wheeler on her property
Hawkins County teacher murder case to air on episode of “When Murder Comes to Town”
Murder of retired teacher to be featured on ID true crime series

Movies/Documentaries
Murder Comes to Town: The Sinner and the Saint

INMATE INFORMATION

Psycho For Love: John Hamilton killed his wife, Susan; Sentenced to LWOP


Susan Shibley Hamilton

Please read the first comment at the end of this post. If you can help, the family would be grateful.

Doctor arrested in wife’s death
Dr. Hamilton 911 call
Doctor, slain wife argued about affair, police say – Evidence taken from home where woman’s body found
Doctor leaves jail for funeral – Obstetrician permitted to attend wife’s services
Doctor accused in wife’s death to remain in jail
Suspect loses bail appeal – Doctor charged in wife’s death to remain in jail pending trial
Prosecutors say doctor abused wife
Hamilton to face charges
Hamilton trial opens
Daughter testifies slain woman was scared, upset
Colleagues say doctor was late for surgery on day wife was slain
Attack held intense violence
Autopsy photos in Hamilton trial make jurors cry
Doctor on trial tells of day wife was slain
Jury convicts doctor in wife’s killing
A Valentine’s Day Murder in Oklahoma

Movies/Documentaries
Dateline: The Valentine’s Day Mystery
True Crime with Aphrodite Jones: Loved To Death
Forensic Files: Deadly Valentine
American Monster: My Bloody Valentine

INMATE INFORMATION

JOHN B HAMILTON
ODOC# 413355

Appearance
White Male; 5 ft. 8 in. tall; 145 pounds; Gray hair; Blue eyes;

Body Marks
No data available

Sentence
CRF# County Offense Conviction Term Term Code Start End

2001-1147 OKLA Murder In The First Degree 01/08/2002 LIFEWOP Life w/o Parole 01/18/2002

Facility
Current Facility Phone# Reception Date Discharge Date Parole Hearing Date

Oklahoma State Penitentiary, Mcalester (918) 423-4700 01/18/2002 09/9999
Address City State Zip Contact

P.O. Box 97 Mcalester OK 74502 RANDY WORKMAN, WARDEN

Psycho For Love: Steven Vargas killed his wife, Rebecca; Convicted, sentenced to 5 years to life; Up for parole now

From Vargas’ appeal: In January 1994, Steven and Rebecca Vargas married each other for the second time.   Less than a month into the second marriage, Vargas was eating lunch at an Ogden restaurant with his aunt, Vicki Pubela.   Pubela noted her pleasure at seeing the couple back together and asked him what he would do if his marriage failed again.   Vargas told her he “would kill Rebecca first.”   Pubela then replied that he did not really mean that, to which he responded, “Oh, yes, I do.”

Similarly, about eight months later, the Vargases had a fight at the North East Flagging Company, where the couple worked.   Immediately afterward, Steven Vargas told several witnesses, “If she ever leaves me again, I’ll kill her.”   Finally, in October of 1995, Steven Vargas and Gary Heward, a deputy Weber county attorney were discussing the O.J. Simpson murder trial, when Vargas stated, “If a black man can do that and get away with it, so can a Mexican.”

A month before Vargas’s conversation with Heward, Rebecca Vargas told Melinda McClain, Steven Vargas’s youngest sister, that she was considering leaving her husband.   Two months later, in November 1995, the couple told the Vargas family that they were divorcing.

On December 22, 1995, Robert Escobel, Steven Vargas’s half-brother, called Steven Vargas to arrange a visit.   During the conversation, “out of the blue,” Vargas asked Escobel if he would kill his wife:  “All you gotta do is, I’ll fly you down here, you can hit her over the head with a bat a couple of times.   She’s so small, she’ll die.   I’ll fly you right back.   You’ll be in and out in a few hours.”   Escobel refused, and his brother responded, “If you don’t do it, I’ve got something else in the works.”

Rebecca Vargas met with McClain three days later, on Christmas, at a local bowling alley and bar, Ben Lomond Lanes, for drinks.   The two were joined by Monty Vorwaller, a police officer whom Rebecca Vargas was dating.   Rebecca Vargas told McClain that in three days (December 28) she would be moving out of the trailer house in which she was then living with her husband and Mike Reid, his nephew, and into an apartment.

On December 27, Rebecca Vargas called Vorwaller and told him she was moving that day.   Around noon, Reid helped her load some cleaning supplies into her Jeep. She then drove to her new apartment, which was one of three apartments she and her husband maintained and managed.   After cleaning there for several hours, she returned to the trailer house, and Reid drove the Jeep to work.

After working until about 5:00 p.m. on that same day, Steven Vargas went to the Sand Trap, a private club, and then to Ben Lomond Lanes, where he talked with Garrett Bell and told him he was breaking up with his wife.   At about 6:15, Steven Vargas went home.   Before leaving, he told Bell he would be back at around 7:30 that evening to meet a woman;  however, he did not return.

At about 6:30 p.m., the Vargases and their two children ate dinner at a buffet restaurant in Ogden.   From this point until about 10:30 that evening, there are two versions of events.1  According to Steven Vargas, after eating dinner, the family went to a theater and watched the movie “Toy Story.”   At 9:00 p.m., they went to another restaurant to get drinks and returned home at about 9:30 p.m. At this time, Rebecca Vargas left to go check on her apartment.

However, the State contends that between 6:30 and 7:00 that evening, Steven Vargas’s nephew, Ryan Hawley, arrived at the trailer house to babysit the couple’s two children so that they could go out for the evening.2  Because Reid had driven the Jeep to work, the Vargases left in their other vehicle, an Oldsmobile.   At trial, the State theorized that sometime that evening between 7:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m., Steven Vargas attacked and seriously wounded his wife outside her new apartment, then left her for dead.   Afterward, he returned to the trailer house alone, arriving at about 10:00 p.m. He told Hawley that his wife had gone to make some minor repairs at her apartment.   Hawley left shortly afterward.

Both sides agree that at about 10:30 p.m., Steven Vargas telephoned Melinda McClain, asking if Rebecca Vargas was with her.   On learning that she was not there, Vargas asked McClain to check on her at the apartment, explaining he was unable to do so himself because Reid had taken the Jeep to work and his wife had taken the Oldsmobile to the apartment.   McClain agreed to go to the apartment.

At about 11:00 p.m., Melinda McClain and her husband David arrived at the Vargases’ trailer house.   Reid had just returned with the Jeep, as well.   The McClains told Steven Vargas that they had driven by the apartment and had seen the Oldsmobile parked out front. After talking for about forty-five minutes, the McClains prepared to leave, telling Steven Vargas they would drive by Ben Lomond Lanes to see if Rebecca Vargas had gone there, and, if they did not see her car there, they would again drive by the apartment.

Not finding the Oldsmobile at the bowling alley, Melinda and David McClain returned to the apartment.   They parked behind the Oldsmobile, which was still there, and knocked on the apartment door. When nobody answered, Melinda McClain began to walk around the building.   Before getting all the way around the building, however, she heard moaning.   She brought her husband to the northeast corner of the porch to listen.   In addition to the moaning, they also heard a low, calm, indiscernible, masculine voice.3  Melinda McClain also thought she saw somebody crouched over in the bushes;  however, her husband believed she was simply imagining things.   Based on what they heard, the McClains concluded Rebecca Vargas was having sexual relations with someone.   It was now about 12:30 a.m. The McClains left, went to a nearby convenience store, and called Steven Vargas, telling him his wife was at the apartment and “it sounded like she was having sex with someone.”   Vargas told them to “let her have her fun” and go home.

Instead of going home, the McClains returned to the apartment for the third time that night.   This time they heard nothing.   They went to Ben Lomond Lanes and then returned, once more, to the apartment.   It was now about 1:00 a.m. As the McClains approached the apartment, they discovered the Vargases’ Jeep parked next to the Oldsmobile.   They drove to an adjacent street and waited. Shortly afterward, Steven Vargas walked out from the east side of the apartment building wearing his robe and shaking his head.   As he approached the Jeep, he ducked down and appeared to wipe something off himself.   The McClains drove away without confronting him, but he saw the couple stopped at a nearby intersection.   Vargas pulled over in the Jeep, and the McClains got out of their car to speak with him.   He stated that he did not want his wife to think he was spying on her and asked them to not “tell anybody I was here.”   As they parted, he reiterated, “Don’t tell anybody I was here, and whatever happens, don’t tell anybody I was here.”   The McClains again returned to the apartment, for the fifth time that night, but heard nothing and went home.

At about 6:00 that morning, Vargas called the McClains and once more asked them to check on his wife.   Melinda McClain told him to call the police and ask them to go to the apartment.   He did so, but the police refused to send anyone over because Vargas said he had no reason to believe Rebecca was in danger.   He again called the McClains and they went to the apartment.

Melinda McClain knocked on the door and, after getting no response, entered the apartment.   She did not find Rebecca Vargas inside.   She then began searching outside the building.   As she came around the east side of the building, she found Rebecca Vargas’s body lying on the ground.   Rebecca Vargas was lying on her back.   Her sweatshirt and bra had both been pulled up to her chin, exposing her chest and abdomen.   The temperature that morning was about 20 degrees, and Rebecca Vargas’s hair, face, and clothes were covered with frozen blood.   There was a pool of blood by her head and a larger pool at her feet.   Nearby was a battery-operated lantern, a set of keys, and a cigarette lighter.   The lantern was covered in her blood and a clump of her hair.   Later investigation revealed that Steven Vargas owned a similar lantern;  however, it could not be found at his trailer house after the murder.   Steven Vargas’s fingerprints were identified on the lantern’s battery.

Rebecca Vargas died from repeated blows to the top of her head, which extensively fractured her skull and resulted in swelling of the brain and loss of blood, as well as hypothermia.   Some of the blows were inflicted while she was either standing or sitting upright.   These injuries were located toward the back half of the top of the skull, and the weapon that inflicted these injuries was not found.   The more serious injuries, however, were located toward the front of the skull and were inflicted while she was lying on the ground or pressed against a stationary object, such as a wall.   Dr. Maureen Frikke, a forensic pathologist and the State’s expert witness, testified that these injuries could have come from the lantern found at the scene.   Dr. Frikke could not determine whether the injuries were all inflicted in one attack or in two separate attacks, as the State contended at trial.4

Dr. Frikke concluded that Rebecca Vargas likely survived for several hours after the initial attack and was lying on her stomach for some time.   She was discovered lying on her back, however, and the pool of blood at her feet was several feet away from any of her injuries at the time she was discovered.   Thus, someone had moved her body after the initial attack but before Melinda McClain discovered it.   Again, at trial, the State contended that this occurred when Vargas returned to the scene of the crime at about 1:00 a.m. Additionally, Dr. Frikke found that some of the injuries to Rebecca Vargas’s face occurred after her death.

Shortly after the discovery of the body, the McClains went to the Ogden police station.   At about 8:30 that same morning, Steven Vargas also went to the police station, explaining that he was there to pay traffic tickets and fees for expired license tags for the McClains.   Upon Vargas’s arrival, Officer Scott McGregor told him that he needed to talk to him.   Vargas agreed to answer questions, but was not informed of his wife’s death.

For six hours, the police intermittently, but extensively, questioned him about his whereabouts the previous night and his relationship with Rebecca Vargas.   He never asked about his wife or why he was being questioned, although he was read his rights and asked how to contact Rebecca’s family.   Vargas confirmed that he had driven by the apartment the previous night, but asserted that he had remained in his car and not stopped.   Later, however, he stated that he did get out of the car and went around to the east side of the building.

A subsequent search of the trailer house and Jeep revealed that the clothes Steven Vargas wore to the apartment the night before had been cleaned.   Additionally, in the Jeep, police noted that the driver’s side floor mat was “unusually free of leaves and cleaner than the rest of the jeep’s floor areas, including the other floor mats.”   Nevertheless, the police found leaf fragments under the driver’s side floor mat.   On one of the fragments, they found blood that matched Rebecca’s DNA.

Steven Vargas was later arrested and held in the county jail.   While there, two inmates alleged that he confessed to the killing.   Don Baize was in jail on a charge of attempted murder.   Following a conversation with Vargas, Baize asked his probation officer to talk to prosecutors about a plea bargain in exchange for information.   The State agreed, and Baize gave a statement that Vargas had told him, “I knew Becky was going to leave, she was seeing someone else, it drove me crazy, and that is why I killed the f* * *ing bitch, I beat the f* * * out of the bitch.”   The other inmate, Jeff Combe, was a previous acquaintance of Vargas’s and was in jail on forgery charges.   According to Combe, Vargas confessed the killing to him to “get it off his chest.”   He allegedly told Combe that “I won’t put up with her leaving me for a cop [i.e., Vorwaller].   I warned her if you ever leave me again I will kill you.”

A jury convicted Vargas of murder, and he appeals.

Ogden man arrested in wife’s bludgeoning death
Vargas found guilty of 1st-degree murder in December 1995 beating death of wife
Man seeking parole in wife’s death says he killed her
Man gets 5-to-life term for killing his wife a year ago
Stephen Vargas admits to killing wife years after her beating death in 1995
Next parole hearing for Ogden killer Stephen Vargas set for 2026
State of Utah v Stephen 2001 (conviction and sentence affirmed)

Movies/Documentaries
American Monster: Backyard Daddy

INMATE INFORMATION

Offender Number: 121479
Offender Name: STEPHEN ELLIARD VARGAS
DOB: Tue, 6 Sep 1955
Height: 5 Feet 9 Inches
Weight: 230
Sex: M
Location: UTAH STATE PRISON
Housing Facility: WASATCH
Parole Hearing:
Aliases:
LEFT FIELD
STEPHEN ELLIARD VARGAS

Execution Alert: Jose Antonio Jimenez for the murder of 63-year-old Phyllis Minas


Phyllis Minas

Victims
Marie Debas, [10/19/1990 Miami Beach, FL] (mp [picture 😦 )
Phyllis Minas, 63 [10/02/1992 Dade County, FL]

Find-a-Grave: Marie Debas
Find-a-Grave: Phyliss Manas
Governor signs death warrant in ’92 murder
More than 25 years after she was killed, her killer will be executed
Florida man awaits execution in stabbing of elderly woman
Florida man scheduled to be executed for 1992 murder of North Miami woman
Florida man schedule to be executed for 1992 murder
Florida man executed for 1992 murder of 63-year-old court clerk
South Florida Man Convicted Of Stabbing Elderly Woman 26 Years Ago Executed
Crime and Punishment: Jose Antonio Jimenez – Florida Execution – August 14, 2018 (has a lot of information including a timelime)
Murderpedia: Jose Antonio Jimenez

INMATE INFORMATION

DC Number: 406677
Name: JIMENEZ, JOSE A
Race: WHITE
Sex: MALE
Hair Color: BROWN
Eye Color: BROWN
Height: 5’09”
Weight: 302 lbs.
Birth Date: 10/12/1963
Initial Receipt Date: 07/01/1998
Current Facility: FLORIDA STATE PRISON
Current Custody: MAXIMUM
Current Release Date: DEATH SENTENCE

Murder In The Family: Christopher D. Looney killed his parents, Harvey and Valerie Looney, while robbing their business, Pizza Plus; Sentenced to LWOP


Harvey and Valerie Looney

Harvey Looney obituary
Valerie Looney obituary
Tazewell County couple’s deaths still unsolved
Son charged in parents’ brutal 2009 slaying
Four years later, son arrested in Pizza Plus murders
Virginia prosecutor says son killed parents for $240K life insurance
Man charged in 2009 slayings ‘always was a suspect,’ sheriff says
Man pleads no contest in deaths of arents
Son gets life for Pizza Plus murders
Christopher Dean Looney is sentenced in the murder of his parents at a Claypool Hill Pizza Plus

Movies/Documentaries
Murder Comes to Town: Something’s Not Right

INMATE INFORMATION

OFFENDER ID NUMBER: 1484378
OFFENDER NAME: Christopher Dean Looney
SEX: Male
RACE: Caucasian
VADOC RELEASE DATE: Multiple Life Sentences
LOCATION: Sussex I State Prison

Monsters Among Us: John D. Miller raped and killed of 8-year-old April Tinsley; Sentenced to 80 years in prison


April Tinsley

Find-A-Grave: April Marie Tinsley
Grabill man charged with the cold-case murder of April Tinsley
Police make arrest in April Tinsley murder, 1988 Fort Wayne cold case
Police make arrest in April Tinsley case
Arrest made in notorious April Tinsley cold case
Man arrested in notorious April Tinsley cold case
Man arrested in connection with 30-year-old cold case rape and murder of 8-year-old April Tinsley
DNA evidence credited for arrest in April Tinsley’s 1988 killing
Cold Case Confession: April Marie Tinsley’s Killer Caught, Say Police
Community reacts to Tinsley case arrest
Indiana child killer who taunted police featured on Investigation Discovery
DNA evidence credited for arrest in April Tinsley’s 1988 killing
Indiana man who taunted police pleads guilty to 1988 murder of April Tinsley
Murder suspect in 30-year-old case pleads guilty
John D. Miller sentenced to 80 years in April Tinsley case
National crime show to feature April Tinsley murder cold case

Movies/Documentaries
On the Case with Paula Zahn: Notes from a Killer
Predator at Large: I Will Kill Again
The Genetic Detective: The Deadly Playdate

INMATE INFORMATION

DOC Number 264854
First Name JOHN
Middle Name D
Last Name MILLER
Suffix
Date of Birth 07/07/1959
Gender Male
Race White
Facility/Location New Castle Correctional Annex
Earliest Possible Release Date 07/15/2058

Sentence Information
Date of Sentence 12/21/2018
Description MURDER
Term in Years / Months / Days 50 00 00000
Type of Conviction M
Indiana Citation Code 35-42-1-1
Cause Number 02D06-1807-MR-15
County of Conviction ALLEN
Projected Release Date 07/15/2043

Sentence Information
Date of Sentence 12/21/2018
Description CHILD MOLESTING
Term in Years / Months / Days 30 00 00000
Type of Conviction FA
Indiana Citation Code 35-42-4-3
Cause Number 02D06-1807-MR-15
County of Conviction ALLEN
Projected Release Date 07/15/2058