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Richardson's seventh-grade yearbook photo, c. 2005–2006. Jasmine Richardson (born October 21, 1993) was born to parents Debra (née Doolan) and Jean-Marc Richardson in Ontario, Canada. The Richardsons were recovering drug addicts who had met three years previously at a gymnasium in Sudbury and married the following year. Jasmine's younger ...
Chelsea Richardson's trial began in May 2005. Chelsea's fellow prison inmates testified at her trial that she had admitted her role in the murders. [3] Susana Toledano also testified that Chelsea told her to kill the Wamsleys so they could share in the family's estate. [6] After three hours of deliberation Chelsea was convicted of capital murder.
Daniel Winfrey, who was 15 years old at the time, confessed to the murder in the presence of police and his parents. He pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and forcible rape and testified against the other three in their trials. He received a 30-year sentence. He testified that Clemons and Richardson were the ones who had pushed the two girls.
The prosecution in the Delphi, Indiana, double murder trial showed the jury more than 40 crime scene photos, some of them graphic, on the third day of the proceedings. The photos, which caused ...
A man who took care of the dogs at Alex Murdaugh’s property has testified about strange details in crime scene photos at the disgraced legal scion’s murder trial. ... the family’s dogs ...
Alex Murdaugh could be seen weeping at the defense table as a Colleton County sheriff’s deputy who arrived the night of the murders described to the jury what he saw.
An important member of the Richardson gang was George Cornell.Cornell was heavily involved in drug dealing, in purple hearts and dexys, uppers, downers and cannabis.He was also involved in pornography and may have been associated with criminal Jimmy Humphreys, whose arrest led to the exposure of corrupt police officials in 1971, including Commander Ken Drury of the Flying Squad.
Harpootlian brought attention to markings seen in crime scene photos on Maggie’s calf, which he characterized as “not natural” and a possible foot impression. Worley disputed that assertion.