Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Chabad Synagogue Bombing - 17th St., Santa Monica

Initial investigative conclusions have been revised, determining that an explosion at the Chabad House in Santa Monica on Thursday, April 7th, was, in fact, an intentional act caused by a pipe bomb. Officials are now searching for suspect Ron Hirsch (aka Israel Fisher), a transient known by police to frequent Jewish centers in the area, reports the Los Angeles Times.

"The blast sent a 300-pound metal pipe encased in concrete hurtling through the air and crashing through the roof of a home next door to Chabad House. Originally authorities had said they believed the explosion was a freak industrial accident. But on Friday, bomb technicians and detectives scouring the scene discovered evidence that the blast was caused by an explosive device, police said. Items found nearby were linked to Hirsch..."

Suspect Ron Hirsch (aka Israel Fisher)






http://santamonica.patch.com/articles/synagogue-bombing-suspect-located-police-have-set-up-barricade?ncid=wtp-patch-headline


http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-synagogue-pipe-bomb-20110410,0,7321645.story


http://laist.com/2011/04/09/increased_security_around_jewish_pl.php


http://www.latimes.com/news/la-mem-bomb-suspect-20110409-m,0,7403147.story?track=rss

Thursday, April 7, 2011

"Onion Field" Killer Gregory Powell Dies in Prison 2007

At Gregory Powell's parole-board hearing on January 27, 2010, he was denied parole. In a January 21, 2010 letter to state corrections officials, L.A. police union President Paul Weber urged the board to deny parole, calling Powell a "vicious murderer who has not yet paid his debt to society." Smith was initially released in 1982, but returned to prison several times on drug-related parole violations. In December 2006, he failed to report to his parole officer and a warrant was issued for his arrest. In February 2007, a man matching Smith's description was detained by police in Los Angeles' Skid Row area and eventually identified as Smith. He was arrested and charged with violating his parole, and sent to the Pitchess Detention Center in Castaic, California. On April 7, 2007, while in that facility, he died of an apparent heart attack at age 76.

Crime

On March 9, 1963, LAPD officers Campbell and Karl Hettinger pulled over a car containing two suspicious-looking men on a Hollywood street. The two men, Jimmy Lee Smith (aka "Jimmy Youngblood") and Gregory Ulas Powell, had recently committed a string of robberies. Powell, the driver, pulled a gun on Campbell and ordered Hettinger to surrender his gun to Smith. The two officers were then forced into Powell's car and driven to an onion field around Bakersfield where Campbell was fatally shot. Hettinger was able to escape, running nearly four miles to reach a farmhouse. The killing occurred primarily because Powell assumed that the kidnapping of the officers alone constituted a capital crime under the state's Little Lindbergh Law. However, Powell's interpretation was incorrect, as under the Little Lindbergh Law kidnapping became a capital crime only if the victim was harmed. (Today, kidnapping in California, where there is bodily harm short of death, is punishable either by imprisonment for 25-years-to-life, or by life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.)

Aftermath

Powell was arrested on the night of the murder. The following day, Smith was apprehended as well. The lead LAPD investigator on the case was Sergeant Pierce Brooks. Both suspects, convicted of murder and sentenced to death, ultimately received life-imprisonment sentences following a court decision that for a period abolished executions in California.

Though Hettinger was able to escape, he was scorned by his fellow officers and suffered severe emotional trauma for both the initial incident and following fellow treatment. Eventually a police training video was made using his experience as example of what not to do when stopping and approaching a vehicle.

Hettinger was forced to resign from the LAPD in 1966 after being accused of several acts of petty theft and abusing alcohol. Years later, Hettinger was appointed to serve as a Kern County Supervisor for Bakersfield, CA where he served multiple consecutive terms. He was later divorced and died of a liver disease in 1994 at the age of 59.

The Onion Field is a 1973 nonfiction book by Joseph Wambaugh, a sergeant for the Los Angeles Police Department, chronicling the kidnapping of two plainclothes LAPD officers by a pair of criminals during an evening traffic stop and the subsequent murder of Officer Ian James Campbell.

The book was adapted into an eponymous 1979 film directed by Harold Becker. It starred John Savage, James Woods, Franklyn Seales and Ted Danson.

The Onion FieldThe Onion Field

Monday, April 4, 2011

Actress Lana Turner's Daughter Kills Johnny Stompanato 1958

On April 4, 1958, Johnny Stompanato was stabbed to death at Lana Turner's Beverly Hills, California home. The assailant was Turner's then teenage daughter, Cheryl Crane. The girl claimed that Stompanato was attacking her mother and she had to defend her. The courts agreed, ruling Stompanato's death to be justifiable homicide. After the ruling, Stompanato's family sued Turner for $7 million. Gangster Mickey Cohen supposedly paid the family's legal costs. The case was finally settled out of court.

There have been endless rumors since 1958 that Turner was the actual killer. Her daughter supposedly took the blame because she was a minor and would face minimal judicial punishment under the circumstances. However there is no evidence to prove such claims.

Johnny Stompanato, Jr. also known as "Handsome Harry," "Johnny Stomp," "John Steele," and "Oscar" (October 9, 1925 – April 4, 1958) was a former United States Marine who became a bodyguard/enforcer for gangster Mickey Cohen. He was also the boyfriend of actress Lana Turner.

Early years

John "Jackie" R. Stompanato was born into an Italian-American family in predominantly Irish-American Woodstock, Illinois. Stompanato was the youngest of four children. His father John Sr. was a successful barber who owned a barber shop located on the historic Woodstock Square. It is now a bar restaurant called D.C Cobbs and features pictures of Johnny. The Stompanato family lived in a big clapboard house on Blakely Street with a garden with a florid statuary. John's mother died after his birth, and his father married a woman named Verena Freitag.

Wartime service

In 1940, after Stompanato's freshman year at Woodstock High School, his father sent him to Kemper Military School for boys in Boonville, Missouri, from which he graduated at the age of seventeen.

In 1943, Stompanato joined the U.S. Marines; he saw action in the South Pacific theater, in Peleliu and Okinawa, and then landed in China with the Marines, in 1945.

Marriage

Stompanato later claimed that he stayed in China after the war, operating night clubs and going bankrupt in the process.[citation needed] He may have also worked as a minor bureaucrat at a U.S. government office in Tianjin, China.[citation needed] While working for the government, he met and married a Turkish woman six years his senior, and converted to Islam. Soon the couple returned to Woodstock, Illinois, where Stompanato's son, John Stompanato III, was born. Stompanato worked as a bread salesman for a few months before leaving for Hollywood, California.

Boyfriend to a star

In Los Angeles, Stompanato owned and managed "The Myrtlewood Gift Shop" in Westwood, California. He sold inexpensive pieces of crude pottery and wood carvings as fine art. The few shoppers who entered the store were either served by a part-time clerk or ignored altogether. When he started dating Lana Turner, he wore a heavy gold-link bracelet on his wrist with "Lanita" inscribed inside. Turner's daughter with second husband J. Stephen Crane, Cheryl Crane, described Stompanato in her autobiography, Detour: A Hollywood Story (1988):

“ ... B-picture good looks ... thick set ... powerfully built and soft spoken ... and talked in short sentences to cover a poor grasp of grammar and spoke in a deep baritone voice. With friends, he seldom smiled or laughed out loud, but seemed always coiled, holding himself in ... had watchful hooded eyes that took in more than he wanted anyone to notice .... His wardrobe on a daily basis consisted of roomy, draped slacks, a silver buckled skinny leather belt and lizard shoes.”

However, the reality was that Stompanato was very jealous and possessive of Turner and severely abused her on many occasions. Turner attempted to end their relationship several times, but he always persuaded her not to do so.

On one occasion, Stompanato stormed onto a movie set in the UK and pointed a gun at actor Sean Connery, her costar in Another Time, Another Place, only to have Connery take the gun from him and force him from the movie set. Stompanato was deported for this offense, as unlicensed handguns were (and are) illegal in the UK. Rumours flew after Stompanato's death that the mob held Connery responsible; the actor allegedly laid low until things blew over.

Lana Turner's Beverly Hills Home - Site of Johnny Stompanato MurderDeath

On April 4, 1958, Johnny Stompanato was stabbed to death at Turner's Beverly Hills, California home. The assailant was Turner's then teenage daughter, Cheryl Crane. The girl claimed that Stompanato was attacking her mother and she had to defend her. The courts agreed, ruling Stompanato's death to be justifiable homicide. After the ruling, Stompanato's family sued Turner for $7 million; gangster Mickey Cohen supposedly paid the family's legal costs. The case was finally settled out of court.

There have been endless rumors since 1958 that Turner was the actual killer. Her daughter supposedly took the blame because she was a minor and would face minimal judicial punishment under the circumstances. However there is no evidence to prove such claims.

Johnny Stompanato is interred at Oakland Cemetery in Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois. He is buried between his mother, Carmela (1890–1925) to the north, and his father John (1890–1952) and his step mother Verena (1901–1967) to the south. His brother, Carmine (1912–1961) is buried across the small road, to the west from Johnny.

Lana Turner's Beverly Hills Home - Site of Johnny Stompanato MurderSee also

Brad Lewis, Hollywood's Celebrity Gangster: The Incredible Life and Times of Mickey Cohen (New York: Enigma Books, 2007) ISBN 978-1-929631-65-0

In popular culture

In the film adaptation of L.A. Confidential, Stompanato was portrayed by Italian actor Paolo Seganti. In the novel L.A. Confidential, Johnny Stompanato is one of the alleged gunmen in the Nite Owl Massacre, but is murdered before he could be prosecuted.
A previously announced film featuring Keanu Reeves as Stompanato has been cancelled.
The Tom Russell song "Tijuana Bible" was allegedly set around Stompanato's death.
In 1979 Rene Ricard wrote one of his most well known poems, "The Death of Johnny Stompanato," published in Italian translation in 1981, and republished in Rene Ricard, Love Poems, CUZ Editions, 1999.
In November 2009 a BBC Radio 4 original play "A Night with Johnny Stompanato" was first broadcast.

Further reading

Detour: A Hollywood Story by Cheryl Crane with Cliff Jahr (Arbor House/William Morrow, 1988)

References

1.^ Granta: 'In Lana Turner's Bedroom' by Gaby Wood
2.^ All about Lana Turner and Johnny Stompanato, by Mark Gribben
3.^ http://www.total-movies.com/content_pages/000710_a.asp
4.^ Who Is James Bond?
5.^ http://www.granta.com/Magazine/86/In-Lana-Turners-Bedroom/ From Granta Magazine
6.^ All about Lana Turner and Johnny Stompanato, by Mark Gribben
7.^ http://www.keanu-reeves.net/upcoming.php


Lana Turner died in her Century City condo on July 29, 1995.

Lana Turner's Century City CondoLana Turner's Century City Condo
Detour: A Hollywood StoryLANA: The Memories, the Myths, the MoviesDetour: A Hollywood StorySlightly DangerousThe Postman Always Rings TwicePeyton PlaceThe Bad and the BeautifulImitation of Life (Two Movie Collection) 1934/1959The Golden Girls of MGM: Greta Garbo, Joan Crawford, Lana Turner, Judy Garland, Ava Gardner, Grace Kelly and OthersAnother Time, Another PlaceThe Private Diary of My Life With Lana

Friday, April 1, 2011

Musician Marvin Gaye Shot by Father 1984

 
Marvin Pentz Gay, Jr. (April 2, 1939 – April 1, 1984), better known by his stage name Marvin Gaye, was an American singer-songwriter and instrumentalist with a three-octave vocal range. Starting as a member of the doo-wop group The Moonglows in the late fifties, he ventured into a solo career after the group disbanded in 1960 signing with the Tamla subsidiary of Motown Records. After starting off as a session drummer, Gaye ranked as the label's top-selling solo artist during the sixties.

 
Due to solo hits including "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)," "Ain't That Peculiar," "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" and his duet singles with singers such as Mary Wells and Tammi Terrell, he was crowned "The Prince of Motown" and "The Prince of Soul."

Notable for fighting the hit-making but restrictive Motown process in which performers and songwriters and producers were kept separate, Gaye proved with albums like his 1971 What's Going On and his 1973 Let's Get It On that he was able to produce music without relying on the system, inspiring fellow Motown artists such as Stevie Wonder and Michael Jackson to do the same.


His mid-1970s work including the Let's Get It On and I Want You albums helped influence the quiet storm, urban adult contemporary and slow jam genres. After a self-imposed European exile in the early eighties, Gaye returned on the 1982 Grammy-winning hit, "Sexual Healing" and the Midnight Love album before his death. Gaye was shot dead by his father on April 1, 1984. He was posthumously inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.

In 2008, the American music magazine Rolling Stone ranked Gaye #6 on its list of The Greatest Singers of All Time, and ranked #18 on 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.


Comeback and sudden death: 1982–84

On the advice of Belgian concert promoter Freddy Cousaert, Gaye moved to Ostend, Belgium, in early 1981 where he enjoyed a brief period of sobriety from drug abuse. Still upset over Motown's decision to release In Our Lifetime, he negotiated a release from the label and signed with Columbia Records in 1982, releasing the Midnight Love album late that year. The album included "Sexual Healing" which was Gaye's last hit. He wrote it during his 2 month stay in the village Moere, near Ostend. Gaye's friend and lawyer Curtis Shaw calls this Moere-period "the best thing that ever happened to Marvin." The video clip of "Sexual Healing" is recorded in the Casino-Kursaal in Ostend.

The single reached number one on Billboard's RB chart, where it stayed for ten weeks, later crossing to number three on Billboard's Hot 100. The single sold two million copies in the U.S. earning a platinum certification. The song also gave Gaye his first two Grammy Awards (Best R&B Male Vocal Performance, Best R&B Instrumental) in February 1983. It was nominated for Best R&B Song but lost to George Benson's "Turn Your Love Around".

The following year, he was nominated for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance again, this time for the Midnight Love album. In February 1983, Gaye performed "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the NBA All-Star Game, held at The Forum in Inglewood, California, accompanied by Gordon Banks who played the studio tape from stands. In March 1983, he gave his final performance in front of his old mentor Berry Gordy and the Motown label for Motown 25, performing "What's Going On." He then embarked on a U.S. tour to support his album. The tour, ending in August 1983, was plagued by health problems and Gaye's bouts with depression, and fear over an attempt on his life.

When the tour ended, he isolated himself by moving into his parents' house. He threatened to commit suicide several times after bitter arguments with his father. On April 1, 1984, Gaye's father fatally shot him after an argument that started after his parents squabbled over misplaced business documents. Gaye attempted to intervene, and was killed by his father using a gun that Marvin Jr. had given him four months before. Marvin Gaye would have turned 45 the next day. Marvin Sr. was sentenced to five years of probation after pleading guilty to voluntary manslaughter. Charges of first-degree murder were dropped after it was revealed that Marvin Sr. had been beaten by Marvin Jr. before the killing. Doctors discovered Marvin Sr. had a brain tumor but was deemed fit for trial. Spending his final years in a retirement home, he died of pneumonia in 1998.

In 1987, Marvin Gaye Jr. was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He was also inducted to Hollywood's Rock Walk in 1989 and was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1990.

In 2005, Marvin Gaye Jr. was inducted into the Michigan Rock and Roll Legends Hall of Fame. In 2007, two of Gaye's most important recordings, "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" and "What's Going On", were voted Legendary Michigan Songs.


Every Great Motown Hit of Marvin GayeWhat's Going OnThe Very Best of Marvin Gaye