Monday, November 9, 2009

The 13 Victim's of the DC Sniper

This is the memorial to the victim's of the DC area sniper. This case highlights a teenager that worked in tandem with an adult accomplice to committ horrific crimes. In the end, the sniper, Lee Boyd Malvo, killed 10 random innocent victims and wounded 3 others, ruining countless lives.


If the court or the legislators consider changing the existing life sentences for juvenile offenders, then Mr. Malvo would be eligible at some point for parole. Is it cruel and unjust to sentence an offender who was not an adult when they committed their crimes? Is it cruel and unjust to put these people's families through the pain of re-living such an unimaginable tragedy over and over again?


The victims are listed below, with our thoughts and prayers.


In Memory of the Murdered and in Tribute to the Wounded (chronological):

James Martin 55 Deceased October 2, 2002 at 6:04 PM Wheaton, Maryland

James Buchanan 39 Deceased October 3, 2002 at 7:41 AM Rockville, Maryland

Premkumar Walekar 54 Deceased October 3, 2002 at 8:12 AM Aspen Hill, MD

Sarah Ramos 34 Deceased October 3, 2002 at 8:37 AM Silver Spring, Maryland

Lori Ann Lewis-Rivera 25 Deceased October 3, 2002 at 9:58 AM Kensington, Maryland

Pascal Charlot 72 Deceased October 3, 2002 at 9:20 PM Washington, D.C.

Caroline Seawell 43 Living October 4, 2002 at 2:30 PM Spotsylvania, Virginia

Iran Brown 13 Living October 7, 2002 at 8:09 AM Bowie, Maryland

Dean Harold Meyers 53 Deceased October 9, 2002 at 8:18 PM Manassas, Virginia

Kenneth Bridges 53 Deceased October 11, 2002 at 9:40 AM Fredericksburg, Virginia

Linda Franklin 47 Deceased October 14, 2002 at 9:19 PM Falls Church, Virginia

Jeffrey Hopper 37 Living October 19, 2002 at 8:00 PM Ashland, Virginia

Conrad Johnson 35 Deceased October 22, 2002 at 5:55 AM Oxon Hill, Maryland

Friday, October 30, 2009

Media Release and Contact Information for Victim's of Juvenile Lifers

The National Organization of Victims of “Juvenile Lifers” – NOVJL
www.jlwopvictims.org

MEDIA ADVISORY

For Immediate Release October 28, 2009

CONTACT:
Daniel Horowitz 510-326-6957
Jennifer Bishop Jenkins 847-331-2704

VICTIMS OF JUVENILE KILLERS AND
VIOLENT TEENS TELL THEIR SIDE OF THE STORY REGARDING UPCOMING HIGH PROFILE SUPREME COURT CASE



Washington D.C. – On November 9, 2009 the Supreme Court of the United States will be hearing oral arguments on two of the most highly watched cases of this term, Sullivan v Florida and Graham v Florida. Up to now, a well-funded propaganda campaign on behalf of the juvenile killers and violent teens has dominated media coverage of the issue of juvenile life without parole prison sentences. Concerned victims’ families have organized, and are making themselves available to tell the truth about these horrific crimes, the offenders, and the associated prison sentences being debated nationally. The Juvenile Life without Parole (JLWOP) sentence has been under attack by offender advocacy groups ever since the Supreme Court decided the Roper v Simmons case in 2005 barring the execution of offenders under age 18.

Victims’ families will be at the Court on November 9, and can be arranged for media availability by calling Jennifer Bishop Jenkins, listed above. Also, victims’ family members in more than a dozen states around the nation have agreed to be available for the news media during this entire process. They share their powerful stories in a very articulate manner, providing facts and counterpoint to the campaign of misinformation that accompanies reports by offender advocates.

The Heritage Foundation at www.heritage.org has also published an important report on the issue of JLWOP sentencing, Adult Time for Adult Crime, and its author Charles “Cully” Stimson, a senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation is also available to the media to share his extensive legal expertise.

For more information, see our website at www.jlwopvictims.org or contact NOVJL President Daniel Horowitz, or NOVJL founder Jennifer Bishop Jenkins above to arrange victims’ families to speak in the media. Daniel Horowitz is a nationally renowned defense attorney who is a frequent guest analyst on national news media, including CNN, MSNBC, Fox and other stations.
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Thursday, October 29, 2009

Kristina Grill

That's my sister, Krissy, as I called her. This is the last picture I have of her, it was taken at school about a week before she was killed. It came in the mail from the school about two weeks after the funeral. She never saw it, but you can...




As the holiday of Halloween draws near, it felt like the right time to tell my own family experience with a Juvenile serving Life without Parole. I distinctly recall throwing away the candy she collected trick or treating a week before she was murdered, so the two stay together in my mind.

It was a difficult time for my 15 year old sister. She had been secretly seeing a boy from school, as she was sure my family would not accept him. They were together for several months before he broke it off. Unfortunately, by the time he broke it off, she was pregnant. She carried that secret for a few months, and finally decided she had to tell my Mom the truth. I remember being 15 and thinking that if you ignored stuff that bothered you it would just go away. This wasn't that kind of problem...

My sister set up a meeting in a school yard with her former boyfriend, who she still loved, to talk about the baby. She had resolved that she would meet with him, and then tell our Mom that night. That never happened, we found out about the pregnancy, and the boyfriend from the Pittsburgh Police Department. We found out the details from her diary, which also led them to her murderer.

Her killer, also 15 at the time, brought a kitchen knife to the meeting. He would later tell police he planned to kill himself after the meeting. I don't know what was said at that meeting, I've often wondered how she spent those last few minutes of her life before he attacked her.

At some point, he lashed out at her with the knife he "just happened to have with him". He proceeded to stab her 11 times about the neck area and punched and kicked her repeatedly. After he had stabbed her to the point that she would bleed to death in that school yard, he zipped up her jacket, watched her 'twitching' on the ground and departed for home. A seven year old neighborhood boy would find my sister dead in that school yard and go tell his Mom.

When my Mom reported her missing that evening, her friends lied about where she was. They thought they were doing her a favor. Shortly after calling the Police, they came to my Mother's home with a ring my sister had been wearing to do a preliminary ID. That is the moment, the point where all the air is sucked out of your life and it sort of becomes like you are watching a movie. We then had to decide who would go do the identification, thankfully my sister's step mother volunteered. The media was calling our homes and knocking on doors looking for quotes. We had to keep the funeral quiet to avoid news cameras at the grave site.

The strain and emotional impact this had on my Mother was just too much. She was just 54 years old when I buried her with my sister.It was 9 months after my sister's death, and one day before the trial started.

The trial process is intended to help you find closure and justice. In some ways that is true. But, the reality is, it is just day after day of pain and revisiting the most painful thing you've ever experienced. Shortly after the preliminary hearings, the District Attorney told us she'd be pursuing adult charges and a life sentence due to the violence and premeditation of the crime.

We sat through juror selection, trying to find people who hadn't heard all of this on the news and formed an opinion. And then the trial began. I can still vividly describe the images of my sister's body that the coroner used during his testimony. I actually had nightmares about it for months after the trial ended. The police explained that they were able to identify shoe prints on her pregnant belly from her killer. He, had gone home, showered, and went about his day after leaving her, with his child inside her, to bleed to death in the school yard.

In the end, after several weeks in court, he was found guilty, and subsequently sentenced to Life without Parole. We all walked away with the relief that the justice system had provided the best they could for us to move on. We believed that we would never have to revisit the judicial process for her case. We thought we could try to find our way out of the emotional abyss this had created. We accepted the word of the justice system that he would never be free.

As I write this, the momentum and media focus on the 'poor' kids serving these sentences is rampant. Both the Federal and State governments are investigating changes to these laws that allow life sentences to Juveniles offenders. It is perfectly understandable that people who have never heard a coroner describe their loved ones last moments might support this kind of action. If it must be that the courts will go that way, it is morally imperative that any such decision not be retroactive. We had our verdict, and it was just, we should not have to testify and relive that pain every year, or every so many years in order to preserve what the law promised us to be.

I pray that no one else ever has to go through this experience, and if they do that the justice system is there to offer them what is just.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Jennifer Bishop Jenkins Speaks out about JLWOP

Elizabeth Olten

This is Elizabeth Olten in an undated photo provided by the Sherif's Department. She was 9 years old when she left this earth at the hands of a juvenile murderer.



It all started on a Wednesday evening, when Elizabeth never came home after leaving a friends house on foot. The police were called after she never showed up. The family described her as shy, and that she was afraid of the dark. Their immediate reaction was that something bad had happened, and they were correct.

There are still many details to come in this case. The police were able to track the killer through 'written evidence' that has yet to be revealed.

On October 24th, 2009 a 15 year old was arrested as a suspect in the murder of this 9 year old girl. Under current law, the suspect will start out in the Juvenile system and if warranted, be moved to the adult system. The charges are First Degree Murder.

This 9 year old will never have another birthday, never see another day, and has family and loved ones who have to deal with that void everyday. This 9 year old was taken from this earth by a 15 year old individual who should and shall be held accountable for their actions.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Adult Time for Adult Crime: Eric Hancock » The Foundry

Adult Time for Adult Crime: Eric Hancock » The Foundry


The Heritage Foundation is spotlighting Juvenilles serving LWOP. Take a look. This particular crime also happens to be in Pittsburgh.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Richard, Nancy, and Baby Langert

Meet Richard and Nancy Langert, a young twenty something couple with everything to live for. In addition to their love for each other, they were expecting their first child...



The concept of a random act of violence is a frightening one. The more terrifying version is a world where a stranger breaks in to your home and murders you, just because.

It was a time to celebrate, Nancy 25 and Richard 28, were expecting their first child. Upon returning home from a Saturday night out, they were ambushed by their killer. He proceeded to handcuff Richard and force the couple in to the basement of their home. In that basement, the killer shot Richard point-blank in the back of his head with a 357 Magnum.

At that point, the killer turned the gun on Nancy and her unborn child. As she crossed her arms to cover her unborn baby, the killer fired twice directly in to her belly. The impact of those shots was so powerful that the unborn baby was, as described by the coroner, exploded. The sex of the unborn baby couldn't be determined.

Nancy was left in that basement to bleed to death. Evidence suggests that while she bled to death, she tried to make it upstairs to phone for help, made noise to try to draw help, and finally crawled to where her husband lay dead. In her own blood she drew a heart and the letter u with the last of her life here on earth.

Love You.

The perpetrator of this crime was 16 at the time of this crime. It took several months for the police to locate the killer, because he had no real ties to the couple. Once he was identified, police found the gun he used to kill the couple, press clippings about the murder, and poems about killing them. He was subsequently tried and sentenced to Life without Parole.

The reason this individual chose to kill Nancy and Richard? They lived across the street from a Police station. The killer killed them because he wanted to see what it would feel like to shoot someone. He wanted to execute this sinister plan across the street from the police station because he could do it right under the Police's nose.

It is incomprehensible the grief this family must have suffered at the hands of what can only be described as a monster. Is it really a compelling argument to ponder whether this individual was fully developed mentally? That he somehow did not understand the consequences of his actions?

As the Supreme Court decision comes closer regarding juvenile sentencing, we all need to remain aware and vigilant that this type of perpetrator is impacted by decisions that examine what you may consider lesser crimes.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Alan and Diane Johnson

Meet Alan and Diane Johnson....



A happily married husband and wife from Idaho with 2 children. Their lives came to a brutal and tragic end on September 2, 2003. When police arrived at the home they found to quote one officer "There was blood and hair on the carpet. It was on the ceiling. It was on all the walls. There was part of a skull cap in the hallway." They had been shot to death in their beds with a Winchester Rifle. Alan Johnson was shot in the chest, while Diane was shot in the head. Their killer leaving their bedroom a bloody testament to the rage it took to commit this crime.

The individual sentenced to 2 life terms in prison for killing this couple was 16 at the time of the crimes. She is a Juvenile offender serving a life sentence. She is also the daughter of these victims. She had a dispute over her personal life, that police say led her to cold blooded murder.

Police found her pink bath robe along with gloves in the trash while investigating the crime. After this 'child' had shot her parents point blank, she hid this evidence in the trash. Family members described her as upset that police had cut her nails after the murder. She was fixated on getting her nails done for the funeral service, rather than grieving the murders.

This family has lost two of its members to murder, and then had to see another sentenced to life in prison. At the time of the sentencing the family told the media that they were satisfied that a life sentence without parole was appropriate for the crime. If there was a change to retrospective sentencing of juvenile offenders, it is possible that this family would have to rip open all of these wounds and revisit this gruesome and troubling part of their lives.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Dymia...

This is Dymia Woody. Dymia was just 8 years old when her life on this earth ended.


The person responsible for taking her life was 14 years old at the time of the crime.

A day after her mother reported her missing Dymia's body was found in a vacant trailer. The coroner's findings were that she died of asphyxiation. She was kidnapped, raped, and murdered by a 14 year old boy. The boy subsequently put her body in a closet in that abandoned trailer. As the search for the missing girl mounted, the killer even pretended to search for Dymia with the search parties. All the while knowing the truth about her fate and where she was.



This past week in Greenville, SC where the case will be tried, it was determined that the killer would be charged as an adult. The reasoning, the crime was far more adult than that of a 14 year old, and the likelihood of the perpetrator being rehabilitated in the 5 years it will take before he would have to be released is highly unlikely.

The courts will prosecute him as an adult. Under the possible prosecution on the table he could end up serving anywhere from 30 years to life in prison. The family, is reported to be relieved the case will move to adult court.

The 8 year old girl looking at you with those beautiful, trusting eyes is no longer on this earth. Her parents, family, and other loved ones have to live everyday with the reality that she is no longer here, because of the actions of another person. The justice system cannot offer her life back, it cannot ease that pain, it can only offer them the comfort of knowing the individual responsible for the kidnapping, rape, and brutal murder of an 8 year old girl will spend his time in prison and not have the opportunity to bring that kind of pain to any other families.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Danni...

I'd like to introduce you all to Danni. She was the oldest of three children in a happy, loving home in Allentown, Pa. She hoped to someday to work with animals, perhaps as a Veterinarian. She loved her parents, her siblings, and the freedom to go outside and play with her friends, always adhering to the curfew her parents had set. Then one day, she didn't come home when she was expected.


It had been only 11 days earlier that her family had celebrated her 12th birthday. She was a 6th grader at a local school. She was at that age, you remember, when you're teetering on the edge between childhood and your teenage years. She had the whole world in front of her for the taking...

But, then she missed curfew. She had checked in once, and was expected home sharply at 5:30pm. Her parents knew immediately that something was wrong. It's a sense parents have about their children. If you have children, you know what I'm talking about. When she was two hours late, they formed their own search party and tried to locate her, while waiting for the police to arrive. In what had to seem utterly surreal, her family searched frantically for her, while asking her friends if they had seen her. The stories were all the same, she had been seen with a 17 year old teenager from the neighborhood. When Danni's father questioned the boy, he flatly lied to the man's face, telling him he hadn't seen her for hours.

After hours of waiting and wondering, with police helicopters and dogs all around, Dawn and Darryl got the news no parent should ever have to hear. The police needed a photograph of Danni, because they thought they had found her in a nearby river and needed to identify her body. What followed were weeks, months, and even years of disbelief and pain. They buried their 12 year old girl, and tried to find a way to make it through the days.

The case is one of the most infamous in their hometown of Allentown. The District Attorney worked closely with the family to provide them the support and justice they deserved. The prosecution was actually planning on proceeding with a death penalty charge when a plea was struck for life in prison for the perpetrator. This sentence, was agreed to by Danni's family in good faith. With an understanding that this killer would never set foot outside of prison. It is incomprehensible that a contemplation of retroactive sentencing could allow this individual to go free and put Danni's family through more pain.

The killer, it turns out, was the teenager Danni's Dad spoke with during the search. He had plotted in great detail exactly what he would do to Danni on that fateful day. He sent a younger boy to the door to see if Danni could play, knowing he would not be able to call on her himself. The killer, you see, was 17 years old, no parent was going to let her go off with him. But, by sending the younger boy, he was able to lure her to the playground without arousing suspicion.

In preparation for the day he took Danni's life, this 'child' had put great thought in to what would happen. He had created a list entitled "23 things to do to a girl in the woods". The list included among other things : beat her, rape her, dress her back up, kill her, and throw her in the river. It breaks my heart to tell you he succeeded on completing all the tasks he had compiled in that list on that day.

The tragic story of Danni is one I, nor you, should ever forget. This vibrant, beautiful child was brutally taken from this world and her loved ones by a teenager. There are plenty of reports and studies that tell you that a teenager isn't fully developed or able to be held accountable for their actions. How can we, any of us, live in a world where a psychological theory on child development could ever weigh more than the life of Danni?

Any consideration of changes to Juvenile sentencing laws that is not prospective only, will make it likely that Danni's family will have to continue to go back to the court system to fight for the justice they thought they had already received.

I find more and more, that people tell me that the cases I am familiar with are 'extreme' and not the focus of the sentencing opponents. I am fairly certain, as I meet more families like Danni's that the 'extreme' is a lot more common than any of you would like to believe. If you believe that a teenager, any teenager, is capable of such a brutal, premeditated act, you have to accept it could happen to your family too. It's a lot easier to just believe it is a rare and unique situation. I pray you are right, but I beg you to remember Danni when you contemplate life without parole for juvenile offenders.

Friday, August 7, 2009

About Victim's of Juvenile Life without Parole

Welcome!
I recently heard the group of people who follow this issue referred to as 'the club noone wants to belong to'. That is such an appropriate description for the people who are concerned with JLWOP, probably on both sides of the issue.

In the United States, there are a ~ 2200 people serving life sentences in prisons for crimes they committed as children. The focus on this issue has been increasing as both information becomes more readily available online, and human rights groups get involved in the discussion. The movement to parole some of these people and alter legislation that allows this type of sentence for juveniles is in full swing. In the next session of the United States Supreme Court, they will argue life sentences without parole for 2 different Juvenile offenders. As that case begins to take shape, it is with a touch of sadness and a sense of purpose that the people who lost loved ones to those juvenile offenders have to stand up and fight back.

If you search the web for JLWOP, you will find all sorts of sources about why it is cruel, unusual, and unjust to incarcerate a child for the length of their life. They were just kids, didn't we all make mistakes, don't we all deserve a second chance? I think it's fair to say that most of us DID make mistakes as a child we are truly sorry for and would like to take back, but you can't take it back. Now, imagine that the 'mistake' the person made was to take another person's life? All the remorse and regret in the world will not undo that act. The lives that are touched and destroyed by your actions in that case are never the same. In theory, a person can be rehabilitated, ask for forgiveness, and learn from their mistakes. But, when a crime is so heinous that it was eligible for this type of sentence in the first place, the concept of justice requires that the perpetrator serve their sentence, as a means of serving that justice, which is one of the few things victims in these scenarios have left to hold on to.

Our missions here is a simple one, but one that has not really been served in the age of the internet. For many of these offenders for whom you are asked to have mercy there are dead parents, siblings, children, and loved ones. Those people, the true victims, cannot speak for themselves. They did not get a second chance at life. They are gone, often leaving loved ones who try desperately to cling to their positive memories while attempting to forget the tragedy of their deaths. What is intended here, is to provide a voice to those victims. To put a face and some humanity on those victims. When you read the human rights studies, you will see the numbers, with the crimes diminished to a statistical measure. What I ask, is that you realize that with each of those numbers in a chart, there is a person, who had dreams, hopes, and loved ones that is no longer on this earth.

If there is a need to change legislation regarding sentincing laws, there needs to be both consideration for the crime on an individual basis and those changes should be prospective. Any changes to any sentincing laws that are retrospective would shatter many lives that have already been pieced together.

Starting with my next post, I'll introduce you to some of the victims of the folks serving JLWOP. You can put a face and a name and the circumstances to those statistics you see in reports. I'll also try to keep you updated on issues or news stories that talk about the issue.

If you haven't done so, please visit The National Organization of Victims of Juvenile Lifers It is a great place to meet other family members who lost loved ones to Juveniles.

Thanks for reading. It is truly my belief that together we can make a difference. Please contact me if you would like further information or would like to have your loved one profiled here.