Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ohio. Date apprehended. March 8, 2009 (for the final time) Imprisoned at. Chillicothe Correctional Institution. Anthony Kirkland (born September 13, 1968) [1] is an American serial killer. Between 2006 and 2009, Kirkland murdered two women and two girls in the Cincinnati area, following a 16-year prison term for the 1987 killing of his girlfriend.
Using FBI data for 2019, Cincinnati ranks 19th in the 100 most populous cities in the U.S. for overall crime rate (includes both violent and property crime). [6] Homicides reached a record high 94 in 2020, [7] and the record was matched in 2021. [8] There were 78 homicides in 2022; of those, 64 involved a firearm.
Dan Horn and Amber Hunt, Cincinnati Enquirer. March 20, 2024 at 10:39 PM. Police and prosecutors repeatedly used informants who traded their testimony for plea deals that cut years off their own ...
Died. August 4–6, 2006 (aged 3) Union Township, Clermont County, Ohio, United States. Cause of death. Hyperthermia. Known for. Child culpable homicide victim. Marcus Fiesel was an American 3-year-old child who was murdered in Clermont County, Ohio, in August 2006. Fiesel had recently been removed from his mother's care by child protective ...
Liz Carroll (murderer) Cincinnati Strangler. Joseph Lewis Clark. Russell Clark (criminal) Alton Coleman. Dellmus Colvin. Richard Cooey. Anthony and Nathaniel Cook. Bobby Cutts.
A record number of teens were shot in Cincinnati in 2023 while the city saw overall violent crime continue to fall. ... Violent crime includes homicide, robbery, rape and aggravated assault ...
Killing of Samuel DuBose. / 39.12322; -84.51319. On July 19, 2015, in Cincinnati, Ohio, Samuel DuBose, an unarmed man, was fatally shot by Ray Tensing, a University of Cincinnati police officer, during an off-campus traffic stop for not having the front license plate on the vehicle. After asking DuBose to get out of the vehicle, Tensing pulled ...
All 11 victims were buried in Arlington Memorial Gardens in Cincinnati, Ohio. A year later, the house was opened to the public and all of its contents were auctioned off. It was then cleaned, recarpeted, and rented to a family new to the area, whose members were unaware of the murders that had taken place there.