|
Post by Helen Dagner on Apr 9, 2013 16:47:44 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Helen Dagner on Apr 10, 2013 22:32:05 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Helen Dagner on Apr 11, 2013 0:39:05 GMT -5
Posting of the Original search Warrant - Certainly - is a show cause for why Oakland County Law Enforcement-Should be awarded ---" THE LIFE TIME BACKFIRE IN YOUR FACE AWARD" Inaccurate Info in every warrant and every atopsey from day one of these cases-From Norbergs search warrant-(Why would Det. Gray put the sperm in his search warrant in 2008-when he knew it wasn't true-I will be telling you why..."Either Ray was confused or in error when he told you that," Halushka said Wednesday. The sperm reference "was directly written on the autopsy report," and transferred to the warrant request that Anger reviewed and approved, he said. Anger said he was unaware of errors in the warrant. Investigators have said the presence of sperm noted in the original autopsy report on the killer's first known victim, Mark Stebbins, was later determined to be incorrect. The hairs in Kristine Mihelich's mouth were eventually identified as her own, and an animal's, Anger said. Steven Lorch, laboratory director for the State Police Northville Forensic Laboratory that is preparing the evidence to be sent to the FBI lab in Washington, said he's unaware of DNA evidence other than the one hair.
|
|
|
Post by Helen Dagner on Apr 11, 2013 11:33:38 GMT -5
There are so many out and out Lies in the Busch Warrant-and since I will be covering this at a later date-I thought I would show you another warrant-(De Jebou) -All the Autopsy reports were also padded to bolster their preconceived scenario-But again I wiill cover all of this at a later date *** BY HUGH McDIARMID JR. FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER The suspect in the four Oakland County child killings whose body was exhumed Tuesday in Wyoming may be linked to a fifth murder and a child who has been missing for 20 years. According to a search warrant unsealed Wednesday in Campbell County, Wyo., Oakland County investigators believe David Norberg was involved in the murder of a Royal Oak girl whose body was found in an Ohio river in 1976, and a Warren girl who disappeared in 1979 and was never found. The warrant also says Norberg may have possessed three pieces of jewelry similar to those owned by three of the victims, and says Norberg sexually and physically abused his wife and sister -- sometimes in ways mimicking the abuse inflicted on some murder victims. Bone and tissue samples from Norberg were taken during Tuesday's exhumation in hopes of linking him through DNA testing to a strand of hair found on victim Timothy King. Two additional pieces of hair were found inside another victim's mouth, and sperm was recovered from another body, according to the warrant. But investigators said Wednesday that there was no such evidence. "The warrant may say that, but it's not correct," said Berkley Detective Ray Anger, who has led the exhumation and testing. The warrant says Jane Louise Allen, 13 at the time, disappeared in August 1976 after leaving her boyfriend's Pontiac house intending to hitchhike back to Royal Oak. Her body was found four days later in the Greater Miami River in Ohio. Her hands were tied behind her back with torn pieces of a T-shirt in a method identical to the way Norberg occasionally bound his wife, Sharon Norberg, the warrant says. "The T-shirt was torn into strips of cloth tied together to form a rope with knots tied every few inches along its length," states the warrant. "Sharon Norberg also said that David Norberg had, on occasion, bound her hands behind her back using a rope with knots tied every few inches." Norberg also abused his sister and wife, according to the warrant. He "would pinch their noses and cover their mouths with his hands until they almost lost consciousness," states the warrant -- a method likely used to kill 10-year-old Kristine Mihelich, one of the child killer's victims, according to the autopsy report. Kimberly King, a Warren 12-year-old who disappeared while walking in her neighborhood in September 1979, also could be linked to Norberg, according to the warrant. Norberg lived two streets from her. Sharon Norberg also told investigators that Norberg quit driving his blue Opel after investigators questioned him in the child killings. The Opel, like the blue Gremlin identified by a witness as possibly belonging to the killer, is a compact car. Norberg resumed driving the Opel after moving to sparsely populated Recluse, Wyo., in 1980. He was killed in a car wreck less than a year later. Sharon Norberg also recalled three pieces of jewelry in his belongings that she gave away after his 1981 death: A silver cross inscribed "Kristine" that has been identified by Mihelich's aunt as identical to one owned by Kristine Mihelich. Police recovered the cross from Norberg's sister. A St. Christopher's medal similar to one owned by victim Timothy King that hasn't been seen by his family since his murder. A green worm pin similar to one owned by victim Jill Robinson that hasn't been seen by her family since her killing. The ex-wife said she forgot to whom she gave the medal and the pin, the warrant said. Reference to the sperm and additional hair samples in the warrant came directly from original investigative documents, said Jim Halushka, chief of warrants for the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office. He said that if that evidence doesn't exist -- as Anger contends -- it's news to him. "Either Ray was confused or in error when he told you that," Halushka said Wednesday. The sperm reference "was directly written on the autopsy report," and transferred to the warrant request that Anger reviewed and approved, he said. Anger said he was unaware of errors in the warrant. Investigators have said the presence of sperm noted in the original autopsy report on the killer's first known victim, Mark Stebbins, was later determined to be incorrect. The hairs in Kristine Mihelich's mouth were eventually identified as her own, and an animal's, Anger said. Steven Lorch, laboratory director for the State Police Northville Forensic Laboratory that is preparing the evidence to be sent to the FBI lab in Washington, said he's unaware of DNA evidence other than the one hair. "That's all there is," he said. HUGH McDIARMID Jr. can be reached at 248-
|
|
|
Post by Helen Dagner on Apr 12, 2013 2:36:35 GMT -5
Child-killer task force cites clues
9 police agencies in 29-year-old case February 19, 2005 BY FRANK WITSIL FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
New information is turning up the heat on a case opened 29 years ago today when police found the body of a 12-year-old Ferndale boy -- and later, the bodies of three other children -- all abducted and then killed, police said Friday.
"This case will not be closed until we find out who did it," Michigan State Police Detective Sgt. Garry Gray said, officially announcing that nine police agencies plan to pursue the case of the Oakland County child killings with renewed vigor and optimism. "We have not given up."
Gray said the new information surfaced within the past month. However, he declined to discuss the new leads, saying only that they appear credible and consistent and that disclosing them now might dissuade the tipster from talking.
For years, police have been seeking a suspect originally described as a professional white man -- possibly driving a blue AMC Gremlin.
"He may still be in the area," Gray said. "He may still be alive."
But, police also said, the new search may challenge detectives to rethink what they have thought for years.
Flanked by police officers from eight other police agencies at the State Police Oak Park Post, Gray said that in addition to the new tips, new technology -- computerized databases and new methods of DNA and fingerprint matching -- could help solve the case.
Among the evidence, he said, is a smudged fingerprint and a hair found on one of the victims.
In the meantime, Gray said, he is seeking a federal grant to pay for the database, which could take a year to develop, and detectives installed a hotline for anyone with information to call. "The tip line has been ringing off the hook," Gray said.
The four children who were killed in 1976 and 1977 -- Mark Stebbins, 12, of Ferndale; Jill Robinson, 12, of Royal Oak; Kristine Mihelich, 10, of Berkley; and Timothy King, 11, of Birmingham -- were abducted while alone and held for several days and left on roadsides.
Their bodies, police said, appeared to have been washed before they were placed near roads.
The cases were linked to a single suspect because they seemed to fit a similar pattern.
Barry King, the father of Timothy King, the last victim found, sat quietly while Gray talked about the case. King attended the announcement to show his support for police efforts, Gray said, but he declined to discuss his son's death because the memories were too painful.
Shortly after the slayings, police set up a task force of about 250 police officers to investigate. Patrols were assigned to watch certain areas and tens of thousands of tips were collected -- but none pointed to the killer.
In the months and years that followed the deaths, the county was gripped by fear, police said.
Berkley Police Sgt. Ray Anger and Ferndale Police Det. George Hartley, police officers who were involved in the investigation after the bodies were found and have continued to pursue a killer, said the suspect's description came from a woman who said she saw Timothy King talking to in a Birmingham parking lot just before he disappeared. She also reported seeing a blue Gremlin.
However, the detectives said, the man might not be the killer at all and the description that the woman gave of him -- and the car -- might have been wrong.
"Maybe she's right," Anger said. "But what it's going to take to solve this case is for someone to call in -- and that one right person will have the information we need."
Police are asking anyone with information to call 248-584-5755 anytime.
|
|