A Phone Call That Likely Saved Many Young Lives

Image Courtesy: CNN

Image Courtesy: CNN

Many of us hesitate to get involved when faced with potentially dangerous situations. Maybe when we see someone driving erratically or even witness an accident, we assume someone else will call the police. If we notice an individual engaging in what appears to be suspicious activity, we may not want to speak up in case we are bothering an innocent person or if this person is not innocent, we could be putting ourselves in danger by pointing him out. But one woman in a small town in Minnesota did choose to get involved, and she likely saved dozens of lives.

Chelsie Shellhas saw a young man struggling to get inside a storage shed while she was in her home washing dishes last week. She eventually saw him disappear inside the shed and her gut told her something was not quite right, so she called the authorities.

The police who arrived on the scene found seventeen-year-old John LaDue sitting amongst a large supply of gunpowder and chemicals and a pressure cooker. The warrant then ordered for his home revealed that LaDue had bomb materials and many guns in his bedroom.

LaDue admitted to authorities that he had planned to kill his family, set a fire as a diversion, and then head to the Waseca Junior/Senior High with the goal of killing as many people as possible. The aftermath of such a plot being successful is horrific to imagine.

Shellhas observed activity that struck her as odd and did something about it. Are we as aware of our surroundings? I wonder if I would have made the same call if I noticed some teenage kid messing around near a storage locker. While I don’t want to walk around imagining the likelihood of every man and woman on the street being some sort of criminal, this story and Chelsie Shellhas’ quick thinking certainly has reminded me that we all have a responsibility to be aware of our surroundings and to look out for one another in our communities.

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Was There a Rush to Convict in Nation’s Oldest Cold Case?

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Photo Courtesy: DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department

I want all of those who commit violent crimes, particularly those who harm children and others who are the most innocent among us, to be held accountable for their actions. But, I also want to know that the justice that they face is done fairly and that guilt is proven beyond a reasonable doubt, as our legal system demands. I read about a man convicted in 2012 of a decades-old cold case for whom it seems a verdict and sentence was handed down with too many questions remaining.

Jack Daniel McCullough was convicted in September 2012 for the kidnapping and murder of Maria Ridulph back in 1957, making it our nation’s oldest cold case to be solved. The crime occurred in Sycamore, Illinois while the seven-year-old girl was out playing with a friend in the snow. Her body was not found until the following spring. I can only imagine what Maria’s family and that entire town went through first not knowing where the little girl was and then making that awful discovery.

McCullough has now filed an appeal, stating that much of the evidence that would exonerate him was not allowed to be introduced at trial. His alibi of being miles away with military recruiter, the police interviews done decades ago, and the determination by an investigator about twenty years ago that another man, since deceased, had committed the crime were all deemed inadmissible because the members of law enforcement associated with these details had all since passed away and would not be able to provide affirming witness testimony.

On the other side of the courtroom, Mc Cullough argues that his mother’s deathbed confession of her son’s guilt was vague and not reliable as she was heavily medicated and confused. And the girl with whom Maria was playing that day did not identify a photograph of McCullough as the assailant until more than five decades after the crime was committed.

I encourage you to check out the entire piece about McCullough’s appeal and read some other articles on the case. It is a really thought-provoking situation that weighs our justifiable anger at crimes against children with the need to make sure we have all the facts and rights to the accused are afforded in full. It is very likely that McCullough did murder this young girl—there is evidence to support it—but his appeal arguments are compelling as well.

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DeadBurn_Gold_Action_covRecent Reviews of DEAD BURN:

“Fast paced, leave no stone unturned and the story is equivalent to the caliber of Vince Flynn reads. “

“Author Jennifer Chase knocks the ball right out of the park with this story. Reminiscent of Daniel Silva reads the author creates a powerful story that twists and turns – keeping me white knuckled more than once.”

“I really enjoyed this book. It has all the ingredients of a good suspense, mystery story, and it’s well written. “

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Woman Killed Her Own Hit Man but Now Fears Ex-Husband’s Release

blogpostI like reading stories about strong women who fight for justice, whether it is in their own lives or behalf of those around them. In fact, such depictions are so important to me that I created protagonist Emily Stone, a woman who acts as a vigilante crime solver in her efforts to rid communities of the most heinous criminals, to star in a series of my novels.

For this reason, I am captured by the story of Susan Walters, an emergency room nurse who came home from work one day in 2006 to find a man waiting to kill her with a hammer. Despite being struck in the head, Walters fought back, eventually gaining control of the hammer and the upper hand on her assailant. As she had her hands around his neck, she offered him the opportunity to save his life by telling her why he had been sent to kill her. He declined. As she shared in a recent interview, “I didn’t choose my attacker’s death for him. I chose my life.”

As it turns out, she did not need the confession of her attacker, later identified as Edward Haffey. Authorities were able to determine that Walters own husband, Michael Kuhnhausen, had paid Haffey $50,000 to kill his wife. Apparently Kuhnhausen was not pleased with Walters’ decision to seek a divorce after seventeen years of marriage.

Walters agreed to a plea deal that put her estranged husband in jail for ten years, but he now is preparing for release after only eight years due to good behavior. Walters is understandably nervous about Kuhnhausen’s imminent return to society and is speaking out in hopes that authorities will put measures in place to protect her should Kuhnhausen decide to finish the job that he started.

Susan Walters showed great courage and calm resolve, both when fighting for her life and again when facing her ex-husband in court. I hope that she is granted the sense of security that will allow her to live without constant fear.

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Check out the Award-winning EMILY STONE THRILLER SERIES available at Amazon, Amazon UK, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Sony, iTunes, Smashwords, and most online and book retailers.

***

DeadBurn_Gold_Action_covRecent Reviews of DEAD BURN:

“Fast paced, leave no stone unturned and the story is equivalent to the caliber of Vince Flynn reads. “

“Author Jennifer Chase knocks the ball right out of the park with this story. Reminiscent of Daniel Silva reads the author creates a powerful story that twists and turns – keeping me white knuckled more than once.”

“I really enjoyed this book. It has all the ingredients of a good suspense, mystery story, and it’s well written. “

***

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Man Who Allegedly Murdered His Family Nearly Forty Years Ago is Newest Addition to Most Wanted List

blogpostIt is a cold case that is filled with horrific acts of brutality, clues left in multiple states, and a possible element of international mystery. And, the FBI is hoping that by highlighting its suspect on the Ten Most Wanted list, a murderer who has remained free for nearly forty years finally will be brought to justice.

William Bradford Bishop is wanted by the Montgomery County Police Department in Maryland for the murder of five of his family members. He allegedly left work early one day and, after stopping at the local mall to make purchases including a gas can and metal mallet, headed home to kill his wife, his three sons and his mother. It is believed that Bishop then loaded the bodies into the family’s station wagon and drove to North Carolina. The five bodies were found by a park ranger burning in a shallow grave.

While Bishop’s vehicle eventually was found at the Great Smokey Mountains National Park in Tennessee, the man himself has so far evaded capture. With his background working for both the State Department and CIA, Bishop is fluent in five languages and easily could make himself comfortable in another country.

As was noted in an article on The Huffington Post about this decision to add Bishop to the list, more than ninety percent of the 501 people who have been placed on the Most Wanted list since its inception have been found. One of the D.C. news stations interviewed a police officer, Sheriff Darren Popkin, who has spent nearly his entire career on this case, and who is still haunted by images of the bloody crime scene. For his sake, and for the sake of the woman and three young boys who were murdered, I hope that this decision by the FBI has its intended results.

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Assessing the Psychopath

blogpostHave you ever gotten frustrated with someone’s indifferent reaction or maybe even the harmful way one person treated another and thought, “That person is a psychopath!” Merriam Webster defines “psychopath” as “a person who is mentally ill, who does not care about other people, and who is usually dangerous or violent; a person affected with antisocial personality disorder.” According to an assessment by Dr. Robert Hare, a criminal psychologist, more of us may fall somewhere on this spectrum than we would like to admit.

Hare developed the PCL-R, which looks at twenty characteristics and scores individuals based on if each characteristic partially of fully applies to them. The highest possible score is 40, with a score of at least 30 qualifying for the diagnosis of psychopathy. Some of the traits include; grandiose sense of self-worth, impulsivity, emotional shallowness, juvenile delinquency, and promiscuous sexual behavior. Most of the men and women who earn at least some scoring on this test function well at work and in relationships, even using their personality as an advantage in fields like business, sports and the military.

I strongly recommend you read the entire article written for The Telegraph by writer Tom Chivers highlighting this assessment and some of the recent conversations about its use. The piece includes an interview with neuroscientist James Fallon, who recognized his own psychopathic traits following a review of his brain scan, an encounter that Chivers describes as a “strange experience.” Chivers also looks into legal and medical analysis of what should be done with the knowledge that a person has psychopathic tendencies. How do we best protect innocent people who may become victims of these individuals without violating a person’s rights just because his brain may be wired to a certain disposition?

With so much about the brain still unknown even to top experts, every glimpse into that most complicated of organs is fascinating.

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Following the Clues of Forensic Anthropology

jchasenovelist's avatarAuthor Jennifer Chase

One of the more interesting aspects of forensic science, at least for me, is the study of forensic anthropology.  It entails the analysis of human skeletal remains that is within the context of a legal investigation. 

During my academic studies, I took forensic anthropology as one of the requirements for my bachelor’s degree in police forensics.  I thoroughly enjoyed the class and it made me view skeletal remains in more of a scientific way.  I was surprised how I learned to establish the gender of a skeleton from major bones, such as the femur, cranium, mandible, and pelvis.    

In both of my novels, Compulsion and Dead Game, the heroine Emily Stone unearths human remains in some of her investigations.  In a few different chapters of both books, Emily tracks down the serial killer and the rural burial grounds of the victims.  She uses her ingenuity and experience to carefully…

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Former Homicide Detective Shares How He Got Criminals to Talk

Law and Order: SVU

Law and Order: SVU

It is always exciting to come upon an article about someone whose career offers me insight and inspiration as I constantly strive to learn more about criminal psychology and use that knowledge to be a better writer. For this reason, the CNN piece and accompanying documentary featuring retired Miami homicide detective Marshall Frank was perfect for me.

Since retiring from the force nearly a quarter of a century ago, after thirty years of service, Frank has been researching and writing crime novels. You know I love that! What a wonderful perspective he offers to the genre! He also has been sharing some of what he learned while trying to get confessions out of the most dangerous killers in Florida. His number one piece of advice? Make friends.

Frank says it is important to remember that the typical television scene depicting a barren, darkened room with multiple police officers tag teaming their efforts of yelling in an accused’s face is not what happens in real life. Frank, who had a highly successful and accurate career in reading the language and behavior of criminals in determining their guilt, shares that a detective must take the time needed to build up trust and get the person sitting across from him to want to tell his story.

In the article I read, Marshall Frank details some of his other encounters with violent and sick members of his community and explains the reversal he has taken on the death penalty. He no longer believes it to be a just punishment, and credits the research he has done for his books as bringing about the change in his outlook.

I encourage you to read the entire article. It offers a fascinating inside look into a world for which I have the highest level of respect.  I would love to hear your comments.

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