Saturday, April 20, 2019

Brittny Marie Adams

Name: Brittny Marie Adams
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: July 17, 2013
Date of arrest: July 17, 2013
Victim profile: Gary Bell Edens, 51
Method of murder: Shooting
Location: Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, USA
Status: Pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 155 months (nearly 13 years) in prison on February 27, 2014.

Brittny Marie Adams is an American woman convicted of the murder of 51-year-old Gary Bell Edens. She pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 155 months in prison in February 2014. Also convicted was Jonathan Rush, 29.

On July 17, 2013, Adams and Rush drove to Edens' home in search of her car. The couple testified that Adams had been abandoned in Topeka by two women who stole her car. When they arrived at the home in the 600 block of Michigan Street in Lawrence, they knocked on the door and were answered by Gary Edens. Also present was Edens' eldest son, Jeremy.

Soon after their arrival, Adams and Rush engaged in a violent altercation with both Gary and Jeremy Edens. During the fight, Adams and Rush both drew handguns; a struggle ensued to take control of the handguns, causing a shot to fire. Gary Edens fell to the floor as he had been shot in the head at close range. Adams and Rush then fled the scene in Rush's Pontiac Grand Am and made their way back to Topeka.

En route to Topeka, Adams had thrown her handgun from the window of the car along Interstate 70. She also discarded Rush's handgun from the window shortly before being stopped by a Shawnee County Sheriff's lieutenant about 20 minutes after the shooting. Both Adams and Rush denied it was their own gun that had fired.

Adams was arrested and charged with first-degree murder following a December preliminary hearing. This hearing featured testimony from a former cellmate who said that Adams had bragged about killing Edens. On January 17, 2014, Adams reached a plea agreement and pleaded guilty to intentional second-degree murder. As part of the plea agreement, Adams is required to serve her prison sentence without filing departure motions related to sentencing or requesting probation.

Rush, meanwhile, was arrested on suspicion of lesser charges, including aggravated assault, obstruction and criminal possession of a firearm. Douglas County was forced to dismiss these charges when the criminal firearm possession charge was taken up in federal court. Rush pleaded guilty to the federal charge on November 18, 2013, and was sentenced to a 40-month sentence in federal prison. Rush had a prior conviction for criminal possession of a firearm, in Shawnee County in 2005.


Thursday, April 18, 2019

Nicole Abusharif

Name: Nicole Abusharif
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: March 15, 2007
Date of arrest: March 17, 2007
Victim profile: Rebecca "Becky" Klein, 32 (her lesbian lover)
Method of murder: Suffocation with a plastic bag
Location: Villa Park, DuPage County, Illinois, USA
Status: Abusharif was sentenced to 50 years in prison, with no parole eligibility, on July 27, 2009

Nicole Abusharif is an American woman who was convicted of the murder of her lesbian lover, Rebecca "Becky" Klein. Abusharif was sentenced to 50 years in prison on July 27, 2009, and is being held at the Dwight Correctional Center in Nevada Township, Illinois. Before Klein's death, the couple had been together for 7 years.

Rebecca Klein's body was discovered in the trunk of her 1966 Ford Mustang on March 17, 2007, outside the couple's Oak Lawn apartment, after Abusharif had reported her partner missing. Klein was bound with duct tape, gagged with a bandana, blindfolded, and suffocated with a plastic bag which was still over her head. Four days after the body was found, Abusharif was charged with first-degree murder and concealing of a homicide. It is believed that Abusharif killed Klein two days before the body was found (March 15, 2007).

During the investigation, it was revealed that Abusharif was having an affair with 19-year-old Rose Sodaro, whom she met on MySpace. Investigators discovered that Abusharif had told Sodaro a number of lies about her life, including that she had been a New York firefighter during the 9/11 attacks, and that she had developed lung cancer due to her alcoholism. She took the cancer lie as far as taking Sodaro to a funeral home to pick out a casket for her funeral. Sodaro was also under the impression that Klein was Abusharif's roommate, not her life partner. On the day Klein was killed, Abusharif went bowling with Sodaro in Tinley Park, then returned to Abusharif's apartment and engaged in sexual intercourse.

During the investigation, police charged a co-worker of Abusharif, Robert L. Edwards, with five counts of obstructing justice for allegedly lying about his whereabouts when Klein was thought to have been murdered. The focus was on Edwards because he had been present at Klein and Abusharif's apartment on March 16, during the search for Klein. It was later admitted by Edwards that he and Abusharif were "drug buddies who shared wild sex fantasies." Edwards was initially on a $1 million bail, which was later reduced to $500,000.

In addition to the motive of her relationship with Sodaro, police also believed Abusharif was motivated to murder Klein due to a $400,000 life insurance payout. Forensic scientists discovered Abusharif's fingerprints on the duct tape and plastic bag, as well as her DNA on the bandana, used to gag Klein. Four days after Klein's body was found, Abusharif was arrested and indicted on first-degree murder charges. She was held at DuPage County Jail on a $3 million bond, which was later lowered to $1 million. Abusharif was bailed out of jail and was put on home confinement. On April 25, 2008, Abusharif violated her bail by leaving her apartment to visit a family member next door. Although the Assistant State's Attorney asked for Abusharif's bail to be revoked, it was only increased by $100,000. She was returned to jail and was out on bail before her trial began in April 2009.

Robert L. Edwards went on trial in November 2008, charged with obstructing justice. Police did not believe he was involved in Klein's murder, but he was convicted of the obstruction charges. He was charged and sentenced to 75 days at the DuPage County, Illinois work camp.

Abusharif's trial started on April 20, 2009. Edwards did not testify on behalf of the prosecution, but Rose Sodaro did, as well as members of Klein's family. Abusharif also testified in her own defense. When she was confronted with the evidence against her, she admitted that she had lied during the police investigation. The defense's argument hinged on whether Abusharif was actually physically capable of killing Klein.

The defense attorneys maintained that Abusharif had a bad back, and would, therefore, have been unable to subdue Klein, who weighed roughly 40 pounds more than her. Abusharif's attorneys were skeptical of gaining an acquittal, but they were able to prove that Klein's murder was not "cold, calculated and premeditated," as claimed by the prosecution. This eliminated the possibility of a sentence of life in prison with no eligibility for parole.

On May 5, 2009, Abusharif was convicted of first-degree murder after thirteen hours of jury deliberation. She faced up to 60 years in prison, but the judge sentenced her to 50 years incarceration. She will have to serve 100 percent of her sentence before being eligible for parole, at the age of 76.

Abusharif appealed the conviction but the Second District of the Illinois Appellate Court affirmed the conviction on March 4, 2011.





Friday, April 12, 2019

Kristi Anne Abrahams

Name: Kristi Anne Abrahams
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: July 18, 2010
Date of arrest: April 22, 2011
Victim profile: Kiesha Weippeart, 6 (her daughter)
Method of murder: No cause of death was ever established
Location: Mount Druitt, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Status: Plead guilty and was sentenced to a 16-year non-parole period on July 18, 2013

Kristi Ann Abrahams was an Australian woman who was found guilty of the murder of her 6-year-old daughter in 2010. She was sentenced to 22 years and 6 months in prison and was ordered to serve at least 16 years before being eligible for parole; she will be eligible in 2027. Also convicted in the crime was Abrahams' partner, Robert Smith, who received a sentence of at least 12 years in prison and will be eligible for parole in 2023.

Biography
Little was publicly released about the early life of Kristi Anne Abrahams, but it is thought that the abuse she inflicted on her six-year-old daughter Kiesha may have stemmed back to her own difficulties as a child.

The court was told that Abrahams was the daughter of a violent and alcoholic man who spent a lot of time in police custody for various offenses. When Abrahams was 10 years old, she discovered her mother dead in their home; this event began a period of many years that Abrahams spent in and out of foster care.

On April 22, 2004, Abrahams gave birth to a little girl she named Kiesha. Kiesha's father was Christopher Weippeart, and the little girl was given his surname.

Abrahams had been reported to the Department Of Child Safety several times due to threats she had made to hurt Kiesha, due to her frustrations with Kiesha's toilet training and "playing up at school." In 2005, Kiesha was temporarily removed from her mother's custody after receiving hospital treatment for a bite wound. Abrahams pleaded guilty to the assault in court and was ordered to complete an anger management course before Kiesha was returned to her in December 2006.

Signs of abuse on Kiesha were seen by several people -- but their concerns were not enough to save her from her violent mother. The little girl had only attended kindergarten classes four times, and despite efforts by education workers to fix this, Abrahams continued slamming the door in their face or refused to answer the door altogether.

In 2007, a DOCS worker pointed out a burn on Kiesha's body while talking to the girl away from her mother. The then-three-year-old explained that "mum did that" and "mum hit there."

According to court documents, Abrahams was "annoyed" by Kiesha's resemblance to her biological father, Chris Weippeart, and that was what triggered the abuse on the girl.

Neighbors and friends reported that Kiesha would "flinch" if Abrahams just raised her hand to speak casually and that she appeared to be scared of her mother.

In August 2010, six-year-old Kiesha was reported missing by her mother, Kristi, and her step-father Robert Smith. Reporters were told by Abrahams that she had put Kiesha to bed around 9:30pm, but she was gone by the following morning. Early on, homicide detectives believed there was a more sinister and disturbing truth behind Kiesha's disappearance.

The couple was arrested in April 2011, as they were visiting the gravesite of little Kiesha in Shalvey bushland on what would have been the little girl's seventh birthday. A few days earlier, Abrahams told an undercover officer the true story behind Kiesha's final hours -- and the steps she and Smith took to conceal the crime.

She informed the officer that rather than putting Kiesha to bed, the little girl had instead been injured on her bedroom floor after she resisted putting on her pajamas. She insisted she had just "nudged" the little girl with her foot, causing her to fall and hit her head on the bed. Abrahams said her daughter felt "like jelly" and was unresponsive when placed in the shower. The next morning, she was dead.

Abrahams and Smith placed Kiesha's body into a suitcase and left it sitting in the house for several days, before deciding they needed to dispose of the remains. The couple called for a taxi one evening, traveled to Shalvey, walked into the bushland and discarded the remains. After digging a shallow grave, Smith set fire to Kiesha's body before burying her.

When the couple was arrested, the body was unearthed and taken for autopsy. The burning of the body meant that an exact cause of death was not able to be found. A dental expert told the court that Kiesha had damage "equivalent to a sporting injury," which contradicted Abrahams' report that she had just "nudged" her daughter with her foot. The autopsy also showed the girl had received as many as five blows to the jaw before her death.

Robert Smith pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to at least 12 years in prison. He will be eligible for parole in 2023. Abrahams put in a plea of guilty to manslaughter in May 2011, but the plea was rejected by prosecutors, forcing her to go to trial. The morning the trial was due to start (June 17), Abrahams pleaded guilty to murder; she was sentenced to 22-and-a-half years in prison and must serve 16 years before being eligible for parole. She will be eligible for parole in 2027.

Sada Abe

Name: Sada Abe
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: May 18, 1936
Date of arrest: May 21, 1936
Victim profile: Kichizo Ishida, 42 (her lover)
Method of murder: Strangulation
Location: Tokyo, Japan
Status: Convicted of second-degree murder and mutilation of a corpse on December 21, 1936, and sentenced to 6 years in prison. Her sentence was commuted on November 10, 1940; she was released May 17, 1941. She died sometime after 1970.

Sada Abe (阿部 定 Abe Sada) was a Japanese woman convicted of murdering her lover by erotically asphyxiating him. After killing him, she severed his penis and testicles with a kitchen knife and carried them around with her until her arrest three days later.

Biography
Sada Abe (born May 28, 1905) was the seventh of eight children, born to Shigeyoshi and Katsu Abe, an upper-middle-class couple in the Kanda neighborhood of Tokyo. Only four of the Abe children lived to adulthood, with Sada being the youngest of the survivors.

Sada's siblings were known to behave questionably. Her brother Shintaro was known as a womanizer and ran away with his parents' money after his marriage. Her sister Teruko was also known to have several lovers. As punishment for this, Shigeyoshi Abe sent Teruko to work in a brothel, a common punishment for sexual promiscuity.

Katsu Abe doted on Sada and let her do as she pleased. Sada was encouraged to take lessons in singing and shamisen (a traditional three-stringed Japanese instrument), both activities which were closely related with geishas and prostitutes at the time. Geishas were considered glamorous celebrities, and Abe wanted to follow their image, skipping school for these lessons, and began wearing stylish make-up. As problems with her siblings continued at home, Sada was often sent out of the home alone; she soon fell in with a group of similarly-independent teenagers.

When Sada was 15, she was raped by one of her acquaintances. Despite the support of her mother and father, she became a difficult teen. As Sada became more irresponsible and uncontrollable, Sada's parents sold her to a geisha house in Yokohama in 1922, hoping she would gain some direction in society. Later on, Toku Abe, Sada's oldest sister, testified that Sada wished to become a geisha. However, Sada claimed her father made her a geisha as punishment for her promiscuity.

Sada's experiences with the world of the geishas proved frustrating and disappointing; to become a true geisha required apprenticeship from childhood and years of studying arts and music. She wound up a low-ranking geisha, her main duty to provide sex. After working in capacity for five years, Sada eventually contracted syphilis. This meant she had to undergo regular examinations, like legally licensed prostitutes, were required to do. It wasn't long before Sada decided to enter the better-paying profession of prostitution.

Sada began working as a prostitute in Osaka's Tobita brothel district, but soon gained the reputation of a trouble-maker. She stole money from clients, and she tried to leave the brothel several times but was tracked down by the well-organized legal prostitution system.

After two years in the prostitution industry, Sada escaped and began working as a waitress. However, Sada was dissatisfied with the wages she got as a waitress, and went back to working as a prostitute; the only difference is she was now unlicensed. She began working in the unlicensed brothels of Osaka in 1932.

Sada's mother died in 1933, and Sada returned to Tokyo to visit her father and her mother's grave. During the visit, she entered the prostitution industry in Tokyo and became a mistress for the first time. When Shigeyoshi Abe became seriously ill in January 1934, Sada nursed him for ten days until he died.

In October 1934, Sada was arrested during a police raid on an unlicensed brothel. Kinnosuke Kasahara, a well-connected friend of the brothel owner, arranged to have Sada released. Kasahara was attracted to Sada and made her his mistress; he set up a house for her on December 20, 1934, and provided her with money.

Kasahara claimed Sada wasn't satisfied unless they had sex 2-4 times a night, which he found exhausting. Sada asked Kasahara to let her take a lover, but he refused. After that, their relationship ended, and Sada left for Nagoya.

In 1935, Sada intended to enter the sex industry again, and began working as a maid at a restaurant. She soon became romantically involved with Goro Omiya, a customer who was a banker and a professor. Knowing that the restaurant would not tolerate a maid having relations with a client, Sada returned to Tokyo in June 1935. After a suggestion from Omiya, Sada accepted an apprenticeship in a restaurant owned by Kichizo Ishida.

Not long after she began working at the restaurant, Ishida began making advances toward Sada. In mid-April, Ishida and Sada began their sexual relationship in the restaurant, accompanied by the singing of a romantic ballad by one of the restaurant's geishas.

On April 23, 1936, Sada and Ishida met for a sexual encounter at a teahouse - the equivalent of a love hotel - in the Shibuya neighborhood. Although it was only planned to be a short fling, the couple remained in bed for four days.

On April 27, 1936, the couple moved to another teahouse in the Futako Tamagawa neighborhood. They continued drinking and having sex, sometimes accompanied by a geisha singing; the couple would even continue when the maids entered the room to serve sake.

On May 9, 1936, Sada watched a play in which a geisha attacks her lover with a kitchen knife. Sada decided afterward to threaten Ishida with a knife on their next meeting. She pawned some of her clothes on May 11, 1936, and used the money to buy sushi and a knife. She drew the knife on Ishida later that night and threatened him (due to him wearing a kimono to apparently please one of his favorite customers); she said Ishida backed away slightly, but he seemed delighted.

In May 1936, Ishida and Sada returned to the Ogu neighborhood, where they remained until Ishida's death. During this session of love-making, Sada placed the aforementioned knife at the base of Ishida's penis, and said she would make sure he never played around with another woman; Ishida laughed at this. Two nights into their sex marathon, Sada began choking Ishida, and he told her to continue, saying that it increased the pleasure he felt. He also performed the same act on Sada.

On May 16, 1936, Sada used her obi sash to temporarily cut off Ishida's breathing during orgasm, and they both enjoyed it. After repeating this for two more hours, Ishida's face became distorted, and he began suffering a lot of pain. Ishida ingested 30 pills of sedative (Calmotin) in an attempt to soothe his pain. Before passing out, he said, "You'll put the cord around my neck and squeeze it again while I'm sleeping, won't you... If you start to strangle me, don't stop, because it is so painful afterward."

Around 2am on May 18, 1936, while Ishida was asleep, Sada wrapped her obi sash twice around his neck and strangled him to death. She later said she felt as if "a heavy burden" had been lifted from her and she felt a sense of "clarity." She stayed lying in bed with Ishida's body for several hours, before severing his genitalia with the kitchen knife and wrapped them in a magazine cover. When asked why she severed Ishida's genitals, she replied, "Because I couldn't take his head or body with me. I wanted to take the part of him that brought back to me the most vivid memories." 

With the blood, she wrote, "Sada, Kichi Futari-kiri" ("Sada, Kichi together") on Ishida's left thigh, and on a bed sheet. She then carved 定 (the character for her name) into his left arm. She then donned Ishida's underwear, and left the inn around 8am, telling staff not to disturb Ishida. After Ishida's body was found, newspapers picked up the story, and a nationwide search for Sada began.

On May 20, 1936, Sada stayed in an inn in Shinagawa, where she received a massage and drank three bottles of beer. She spent the day writing farewell letters to friends and family. She was planning to commit suicide one week later and began practicing necrophilia with Ishida's severed penis and testicles.

At 4pm, police detectives who were suspicious of the alias Sada had used, came to her room at the inn. She greeted them with, "Don't be so formal. You're looking for Sada Abe, right? Well, that's me. I am Sada Abe." The police were not convinced, so Sada unveiled Ishida's genitalia as proof.

Sada was arrested and interrogated over eight sessions. When asked about her motive for killing Ishida, her answer was: "I loved him so much, I wanted him all to myself. But since we were not husband and wife, as long as he lived he could be embraced by other women. I knew that if I killed him no other woman could ever touch him again, so I killed him..."

The story became a nationwide phenomenon and was picked up by several branches of the media industry. After Sada's arrest, Ishida's penis and testicles were moved to Tokyo University Medical School's pathology museum. They were put on public display shortly after the end of World War II, but have since disappeared.

Sada's trial began on November 25, 1936, and crowds of people were gathered outside at 5am to attend the hearing. The trial ended on December 21, 1936, when Abe was convicted of second-degree murder and mutilation of a corpse. Although the prosecution demanded a 10-year sentence, and with Sada claiming she wanted the death penalty, she was in fact sentenced to just six years in prison. She was imprisoned in Tochigi Women's Penitentiary.

On November 10, 1940, Sada's sentence was commuted; she was released 6 months later on May 17, 1941, five years to the day after the murder of Kichizo Ishida.

After her release from prison, Sada assumed an alias. She moved to Ibaraki Prefecture and wrote her memoirs while the mistress of a woman she referred to simply as "Y." Shortly afterward, she moved to Saitama Prefecture. When Y's friends and family found out about Sada's true identity, she broke off the relationship.

For the remainder of her life, Sada Abe kept a low profile, although she occasionally gave interviews in popular magazines, and appeared for several years in a traveling stage production. Her story has been the base of both films and stage productions. She lived in Tokyo's Shitaya neighborhood for the next 20 years, and the neighborhood restaurant association gave her a "model employee" award.

Sada Abe disappeared from the public eye for good in 1970. In the mid-1970s, director Nagisa Oshima apparently sought out and found Sada while planning out his film In the Realm of the Senses. When he apparently found her, her hair was shorn off, and she was living in a Kansai nunnery.