Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
George Richey and Tammy Wynette married on July 6, 1978. [4] Richey then became Wynette's full-time manager and also took control of her finances. [1] Georgette Jones, Wynette's daughter by former husband, George Jones, has claimed that Richey attempted to keep Wynette away from her children and close friends.
Gaskins was convicted of 10 known murders, including Tyner’s; he confessed to 15 and reportedly was suspected in still more. He pointed authorities to the buried bodies of at least 13 people.
Gaskins claims to have poisoned Martha Ann Dicks, Jr. (also known as "Clyde"), 20, in March 1971 or 1972, [27] either because of a rumor Pee Wee was the father of her unborn child (she generally dated only women but was known to “mess around” with men from time to time) or out of revenge because she was an alleged drug dealer who supplied ...
The family of Tammy Wynette’s fifth husband, George Richey, is not happy with the way he was portrayed in the Showtime miniseries George & Tammy. Richey’s widow, Sheila Slaughter Richey, and ...
The family of Tammy Wynette’s fifth husband George Richey has filed a lawsuit against Showtime, alleging that the network’s George & Tammy limited series disparaged Richey as a “villain.”
Reinaldo Javier Rivera (born September 13, 1963) is a Spanish-born American serial killer who abducted, raped, and killed four women in South Carolina and Georgia between 1999 and 2000, all in the Augusta metropolitan area. He was convicted in one of those deaths and sentenced to death in the latter state, where he still remains on death row. [1]
William Vosler, 68, and his wife 66-year-old Eileen Vosler, their son Shane Vosler, 33, and his girlfriend Sue Bin Lee, 34, were found dead in a Puyallup, Wa., home on Dec. 31, the Pierce County ...
In 1998, Hennis and his family, who were now joined by their six-year-old son Andrew, moved to Fort Lewis, Washington. Hennis became the scoutmaster of Andrew's scouting troop, leading them on hiking expeditions. In 2004, Hennis retired from the U.S. Army with the rank of master sergeant and found work at a waste treatment plant. [2]