♫anna♫
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Aug 18 2017 - Always In Our Hearts
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Post by ♫anna♫ on Mar 9, 2009 3:54:27 GMT
.... .... Esme KenneyViolent Predators should be permanently segregated or exiled from society and not allowed to prowl again like Esme Kenney's murderer was! www.wlwt.com/cnn-news/18879648/detail.html quote: CINCINNATI -- Cincinnati police have made an arrest in the death of a 13-year-old girl. Earlier Sunday, the family of Esme Kenney confirmed that police had found her body after a search that ran into the early morning. A family member released a statement saying, "Our hearts are broken by this tragic end to a wonderful young spirit. We would like to thank everyone for their support, and ask that donations be made in Esme Kenney’s name to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children." Detectives said they have arrested and charged Anthony Kirkland, 40, in connection with Kenney’s death. News 5 has learned that Kirkland was wanted by police and had an open warrant in relation to a stabbing case in Avondale. Police records also show that Kirkland is a Tier 1 sex offender. He was convicted of importuning in 2007 and sentenced to one year in prison. Winton Hills police said they located her body at about 3:30 a.m. in a wooded area near the 5900 block of Winton Road. Kenney was last seen at about 3:45 p.m. Saturday jogging along Winton Ridge Lane. Northbound Winton Road was closed between Dutch Colony Drive and North Bend Road as police conducted an investigation. Winton Ridge Lane was also closed between Dutch Colony and Winton Road. Officers said they didn’t believe the girl was in any danger until they found a man near the search area along Winton Road. "Once we discovered this person of interest, we immediately went to a critical missing, and that's when we initiated the Amber Alert process," Lt. Mark Briede said. Investigators told News 5 that the person of interest has since been released. Crime scene investigators are continuing to collect evidence to piece together what happened the afternoon Kenney disappeared. Part of the reason the evidence collection is taking so long is because the crime scene with which they're dealing is about 30 yards off the road in thick underbrush. Kenney was enrolled as a seventh-grader at the School for the Creative and Performing Arts. She was a dual major in vocal and instrumental music. She performed in the choir and was a cellist in the junior high orchestra. Administrators said that they are devastated by the news. Counselors will be on hand at the school starting at 7:30 a.m. The district has also decided to delay testing for the Ohio Graduation Test.
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Post by beth on Mar 9, 2009 4:31:44 GMT
This is so horribly sad and should never have happened. We have driven through that area in Cincinnati. It is not a place that would seem high risk. Obviously, her parents felt comfortable for her to be jogging alone. Just a reminder that there is no "safe neighborhood" because all kinds of people pass through.
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Post by mindy on Mar 9, 2009 14:57:26 GMT
Just another case of what could have been an avoidable crime had this creep stayed locked up the first time like he should have been! These creeps need to not be released back into society when they are CLEARLY a danger to society. Now another beautiful and brilliant life has been lost. What a shame.
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Post by Alpha Hooligan on Mar 9, 2009 20:39:11 GMT
Absolutely. These sub human filth should be locked away FOREVER after their first offence...I am sick to death of hearing about sex offenders with previous convictions being allowed attack innocent women and children AGAIN.
If this is a reflection of the so called "civilised western society", then give me barbarism and hanging the bastards from cranes after their FIRST conviction...worthless scum.
AH
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Post by beth on Mar 18, 2009 2:46:52 GMT
news.cincinnati.com/article/20090317/NEWS0107/303170030 Anthony Kirkland indicted for the murder of Esme Kenney, 2 others Anthony Kirkland should be executed for killing 13-year-old Esme Kenney earlier this month and two women in 2006, Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters said today after a grand jury indicted Kirkland on three aggravated murder charges. Deters announced his office would seek the death penalty against Kirkland, 40. “He’s a serial killer. He deserves nothing less than execution,” Deters said during his late afternoon press conference. Kirkland was charged with abducting Esme as she jogged March 7 near her Winton Hills home, sexually assaulting her and strangling her, perhaps with her own clothing. Kirkland then used those clothes, officials said, to try to burn Esme’s body. Officials said Kirkland exhibited an animalistic anger when he so violently strangled the 5-foot, 4-inch, 100-pound girl that the capillaries in her cheeks and eyes burst. While the charges involving Esme are the most recent and well-known, Kirkland also is charged with killing two other women, and like he allegedly did with Esme, burning their bodies to cover up evidence. Those women are: Casonya “Sharee” Crawford, 14, whose body was found May 11, 2006, in Avondale in a pile of burned tires. One tire was around her neck. Mary Jo Newton, 45, a mother of two, whose body was found June 15, 2006. Newton’s body was so badly burned that dental records were required to identify her. Deters said his office would seek the death penalty in the deaths of Esme Kenney and Sharee Crawford. /snip
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Post by beth on Mar 29, 2009 4:12:26 GMT
Were police too unconcerned when they turned the killer loose on the streets several days before Esme Kenney was murdered? Questions in Esme Kenney's killing Police Chief Tom Streicher's decision to review Cincinnati police procedures in the wake of the Esme Kenney killing is a welcome development in the wake of this tragic case. Could the 13-year-old Winton Hills girl have been saved if police had responded instantly to her parents' report that she was missing? That's unknown. The teenager was less than half an hour late returning home from a jog when her parents called the police March 7. Esme's body was found in nearby woods the next day. Anthony Kirkland, a previously convicted killer and sex offender, has been charged in her death. Her family questioned why the police did not immediately issue an Amber Alert or send officers to search the area as soon as the parents called to report her missing. The police response does not seem unreasonable, given what they knew at the time. But officers should be flexible and not bound by rigid timelines when responding to such reports. Of greater concern was the way police reacted a week earlier when they responded to the Volunteers of America halfway house in Over-the-Rhine where Kirkland was then living. Staff members had called police because they said Kirkland had hit another resident. When officers arrived, the other resident refused to press charges, but the Volunteers of America wanted to evict Kirkland. So the police escorted him from the building at 11:15 p.m., and turned him loose on the street. The halfway house specializes in sex offenders, and Kirkland had been there since being released from prison a few months earlier after serving a year for importuning a 13-year-old. He was not on parole, but living in the halfway house was a condition of his post-release supervision. Also in Kirkland's background was 16 years in prison for killing and burning another woman. Did the police know all of this when they released a convicted sex offender with a violent history onto the street with no place to go in the middle of the night? The answer to that question should be a key part of the review Streicher announced Wednesday. The next obvious question: What could the officer have done differently? Kirkland was not charged with a crime and he had completed his prison sentence. Could the police have called the parole authority and had him jailed for violating the terms of his supervision? Could they have taken him to some other shelter? Could they have done anything else? All good questions to ask when it is clear that existing procedures just aren't good enough. It's too late to help Esme Kenney, but it is unthinkable to say nothing can be done to keep such a thing from happening again. news.cincinnati.com/article/20090327/EDIT01/903270370
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Post by iamjumbo on Mar 29, 2009 13:33:17 GMT
Absolutely. These sub human filth should be locked away FOREVER after their first offence...I am sick to death of hearing about sex offenders with previous convictions being allowed attack innocent women and children AGAIN. If this is a reflection of the so called "civilised western society", then give me barbarism and hanging the bastards from cranes after their FIRST conviction...worthless scum. AH exactly. had the trash been properly disposed of the first time, this girl, and the other victims, would be alive and prospering today. we have the nutjobs who try to claim that garbage such as this are just poor misunderstood fellows who should be treated and released so that they can continue to rape and murder, to thank for this
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Post by chefmate on Mar 29, 2009 14:28:23 GMT
I believe if we try to execute the rapists we will have more children muirdered simply to keep them quiet so a life sentence without POSSIBILITY of parole should be given to child predators.
We have a beautiful area in town where the homes are expensive and the subdivision is a wonder of beauty with a paseo to walk or jog but a woman was attacked last year while jogging just before evening so nowhere is safe anymore.
This subdivision is located about two miles away from town but a street person had made his way over there to lay in wait for some unsuspecting female to come along that he could grab and rape...this female fought her way away from him and was able to get away but it proved nowhere is safe
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