Sponsored Links
-->

Senin, 16 Juli 2018

Faryion Wardrip Sentence Appeal Latest
src: media.texomashomepage.com

Faryion Edward Wardrip (born March 6, 1959) is an American rapist and serial killer who assaulted and murdered a total of five women. Four of the women were killed in Wichita Falls, Texas and the surrounding counties. One woman was murdered in Fort Worth, Texas approximately a two-hour drive southwest of Wichita Falls. The killing spree began at the end of 1984 and lasted until the middle of 1986. All of Wardrip's female victims were between the ages of twenty and twenty-five, White, weighed less than 120 lbs. and were under five and a half feet tall.

With the killings occurring across multiple jurisdictions, officials from three law enforcement agencies - the Wichita Falls Police Department, the Wichita County Sheriff's Department and the Archer County Sheriff's Department - initially led isolated murder investigations. These investigations were for three of the murders that occurred within a five-mile radius of each other. This separation led to multiple news agencies reporting that the isolated investigations led to the delay in the capture of Wardrip.

Within 72 hours of the May 6, 1986 murder of Tina Kimbrew, Wardrip called authorities and confessed to her murder. The 21-year-old waitress had apparently been severely beaten and had died of strangulation. For this murder he was convicted and sentenced to 35 years in prison. His prison disciplinary records showed that he was disciplined while incarcerated for creating a disturbance and fighting without a weapon. After serving less than one-third of his sentence he was released from prison, and placed on parole in December 1997. Wardrip's parole required him to wear an ankle monitor allowing authorities to constantly track his location; he was restricted to movements for work, home and church.

In 1999, the Wichita County District Attorney's Office re-opened the murder cases of the victims that occurred in their jurisdiction. DNA evidence found at the scene of two murders were linked to the same killer. Due to Wardrip's murder of Tina Kimbrew occurring in 1986, the lead detective became suspicious that Wardrip may have been the assailant of the unsolved murder cases. With Wardrip being out on parole and the absence, at the time, of the American national database of Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) profiles for violent offenders, authorities immediately launched surveillance of Wardrip. This is when the lead detective was able to use a successful tactic and gathered his DNA. Once the department had his DNA they were able to match it to the DNA of two victims. He later confessed to the murders of the third and fourth victims. In 1999, at 40-years-old, Wardrip was sentenced to death by lethal injection for the first murder, and three life terms for the other three killings.


Video Faryion Wardrip



Background

Faryion Edward Wardrip was born on March 6, 1959 in Salem, Indiana to George and Diana Wardrip, he was his parents first born child and has one brother. There are no news articles or television reports of Wardrip experiencing any type of mental or physical abuse during his childhood. He dropped out of high school in the twelfth grade.

At the age of 19, Wardrip joined the United States National Guard in 1978. After six years of service, in 1984 Wardrip was released from the National Guard under a less-than-honorable discharge. The discharge was due to smoking marijuana, disorderly conduct and multiple absences without leave (AWOL). During his military service he was not deployed into combat duty.

In March 1983 at 24-years-old he married his first wife 20-year-old Johnna D. Jackson, the couple had two children together. The marriage was tarnished by Wardrip's drug and alcohol abuse. This same year he worked as a janitor at the Wichita Falls General Hospital and within twelve months he was promoted from janitor to orderly. But due to his addictions he was unable to maintain employment and was bouncing between jobs. Johhna's parents helped the couple financially, by paying their rent and buying their groceries. Tired of Wardrip's lack of responsibility and addictions in December 1985, Johnna separated from Wardrip taking the children with her. She soon filed for divorce which was granted in October 1986.


Maps Faryion Wardrip



Murders

Terry Sims

Leza Boone, Terry Lee Sims friend and co-worker, had finished working their evening shifts at Bethania Hospital in Wichita Falls at approximately 11:00 pm on the night of December 20, 1984. Sims was a part-time EKG specialist at the Hospital and a student at Midwestern State University, also in Wichita Falls. When leaving work, Sims rode with Boone to a mutual friend's house to exchange Christmas gifts. Sims was going to spend the night at Boone's residence on Bell street, so Boone could help Sims study for her final exam the following day. Unexpectedly, Boone received a call to return to the hospital to work the mid-night shift. She drove Sims to her residence and gave Sims the key to her apartment, and then dropped her off at approximately 12:30 am on December 21, 1984.

On the morning of December 21, 1984, Boone returned to her home at approximately 7:30 am after pulling a double shift at Bethania Hospital. After repeatedly knocking on the locked front door, Boone went to the landlord and was given a key to her residence. When she gained entry, the living room had been severely ransacked. Boone immediately ran back to her landlord's residence asking for help to find her friend Terry. The landlord entered the apartment and found Sims dead body lying on the bathroom floor in a pool of her own blood.

20-year-old, Terry Sims, was found stabbed and sexually assaulted. While Boone was away at work, Sims had heard Wardrip causing a disturbance outside and he lunged toward her as she went outside to investigate. Wardrip stated he targeted her for "no apparent reason" and broke her door down after she locked him out. Waldrip standing at six foot six and two hundred-twenty pounds grabbed Sims and began slamming her petite five three, ninety-four pound body. Because of her resistance, Wardip bound the victim's hands with an electrical cord. Sims was estimated to have lived minutes after the attack was over. Police officers preserved a semen sample and a fingerprint found on Sims's shoe for future analysis. Over a decade later, the print and semen were positively identified to be those of Wardrip.

Sims was buried at Crestview Memorial Park in Wichita Falls.

Toni Gibbs

Toni Jean Gibbs, 23, disappeared on January 19, 1985, while employed at Wichita General Hospital. Gibbs was no more than five-feet, one-inch tall and weighed ninety-four pounds. Wardrip came across Gibbs at about six o'clock in the morning, after he had been out walking all night. He knew Gibbs because she was a registered nurse (RN) at the same hospital where he worked as an orderly. Gibbs offered Wardrip a ride and after he got in her car, he began hurling her around and screaming at her. He then forced Gibbs to drive down an isolated dirt road to a field.

Two days after her abduction, her car was found within a few miles of the hospital. On February 15, utility workers found her naked body in a field at the southwest corner of West Gents Road and Highway 281 in Archer County, one mile south of the Wichita county line, a day after she would have turned 24. Gibbs had been sexually assaulted and stabbed. Gibbs had a total of eight stab wounds: three stabs on her back, three stabs on her chest, and two defensive wounds on her left forearm and thumb. Near her body, police found an abandoned school bus, where her murderer likely conducted the attack. Authorities discovered Gibbs' clothing inside the bus. Gibbs had initially survived the assault and, stripped of her clothing, she had managed to crawl one hundred feet before she died. After the killing Wardrip then abandoned her vehicle, after legally parking it at the intersection of Van Buren and McGregor Streets in Wichita Falls, less than a mile from his residence. Four days after Gibbs's body was discovered, Wardrip quit his job at the Wichita General Hospital.

Danny Laughlin, 24, was initially suspected of Gibbs' murder because he often rode his motorcycle near the area where she was killed and because he had met her at a nightclub days before she was killed. He also failed a lie detector test and made suspicious statements. Laughlin was then tried, even though a comparison of Laughlin's DNA with DNA from the semen at the murder scene was unsuccessful and only circumstantial evidence was available. After two days of deliberation, the jury was deadlocked, which resulted in his release from custody. Since only one of the twelve jurors believed Laughlin was guilty, prosecutors decided not to retry Laughlin.

Gibbs was buried at the Clayton Cemetery in New Mexico.

Debra Taylor

Two months after he murdered Toni Gibbs, Wardrip traveled to Fort Worth, Texas, with the intention of looking for a job. While in Fort Worth he killed Debra Sue Taylor (née Huie), 25. He had met her in the early morning hours of March 24, 1985 while at a bar on East Lancaster Street, after her husband had left due to fatigue. Wardrip approached Taylor the five-feet, four-inch tall, one-hundred-ten-pound lady and asked her to dance. She accepted his request and spent time together in the club. He then asked to drive her home, which she agreed to. While outside, he attempted to make advances, which she rejected, and he killed her. He then left her body at a construction site, near Loop 820 and Randall Mill Road in east Fort Worth. Her body was found by two construction workers on March 29, 1985. When she failed to return home by the next morning, she was reported missing by her husband, Ken Taylor. Taylor's murder was not believed to be related to the other four cases, until Wardrip confessed to her murder during questioning after his 1999 arrest.

Prior to Wardrip's confession, Taylor's husband had been believed to be the culprit. He had passed three polygraph tests but was still considered a suspect by police. Suspicions about Taylor had "destroyed his life" as members of his own and his wife's family "turned against him".

Taylor was buried at Shannon Rose Hill Memorial Park in Fort Worth; date of death is listed as March 24, 1985.

Ellen Blau

Eight months after the death of Toni Gibbs, on September 20, 1985 Ellen Blau, 21, was abducted by Wardrip. The abduction occurred as Blau was walking alone to her vehicle, after leaving her evening job as a waitress. She was also a student at Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls. Once abducted, Wardrip forced Blau to drive them to a secluded area where he eventually killed her by strangulation, although he stated in a Cold Case Files episode that he had broken her neck. Leaving her body in the secluded area, he drove her car back into Wichita Falls and abandoned it along with her purse. Her blood was also discovered on the inside of the vehicle. A county road crew employee found Blau's body in a field in Wichita County on October 10, 1985. Once her body was found, it was in a very advanced state of decomposition, to the point where she could only be identified by comparing dental information. She may have been sexually assaulted, as her underwear had been pulled downward, but the condition of her remains prevented accurate analysis, since no semen samples were available. One of her friends had lived in the same apartment complex as Wardrip and had stated that she felt uncomfortable around him.

Blau was buried at Bnai Jacob Memorial Park in New Haven, Connecticut; date of death is listed as September 20, 1985.

Tina Kimbrew

On May 6, 1986 Wardrip killed a waitress, Tina Elizabeth Kimbrew, 21, a recent friend of his. He had gone to her apartment and suffocated her with a pillow because she "reminded him of his ex-wife". Prior to the discovery of her body, neighbors told police that they had seen a white man, 6 feet 2 inches tall, with dark brown hair and wearing a baseball cap leave the complex. Danny Laughlin (who had been suspected in the death of Toni Gibbs) was ruled out as a suspect because he did not fit this description. A few days later, on May 9, Wardrip called the police from across the state in Galveston, threatening to commit suicide. Once the police arrived he confessed to the murder. He was sentenced to 35 years in prison. He was paroled in December 1997 and he moved to Olney, TX where he remarried and became an active supporter of the local church, gaining a good reputation. He eventually got a job at a screen door factory.

Kimbrew was buried at Wilbarger Memorial Park in Vernon.


57 People Share Their Horrifying Real-Life Encounters With Famous ...
src: thoughtcatalog.files.wordpress.com


1999 convictions

In 1999, a Wichita Falls detective, John Little, began a cold case investigation of the unsolved cases of Terry Sims, Toni Gibbs, and Ellen Blau. Samples of DNA from the scenes where Sims and Gibbs were found, were later matched, indicating that both victims had been killed by the same person. Little had known Gibbs personally, as had his wife, and he had also participated in the search for her body. He began to believe that the murders of these women were linked, but such a linkage had not yet been investigated because the murders had occurred in different jurisdictions and therefore different police departments had investigated each case. Little's investigation revealed a previously unknown link between Wardrip and Blau. One of Little's fellow officers had stated that Wardrip had admitted to knowing Blau while he was on trial for Tina Kimbrew's murder. This lead had not been investigated at the time it emerged. Wardrip himself stated that the agency would have been able to find a suspect much sooner if they had "paid a little bit more attention."

Little then found additional evidence linking Wardrip to the three unsolved murders: Blau had lived one block away from Sims, and Wardrip had been employed as an orderly at the same hospital where Gibbs had worked as a nurse.

At the time, police had no DNA sample from Wardrip, so Little used a simple ploy to obtain one: Wardrip had been convicted for the murder of Tina Kimbrew, but in 1997 he was paroled and was working at a factory. During Wardrip's work break, Little approached Wardrip and asked him for the paper cup from which Wardrip had been drinking, in order to spit out the tobacco that Little had been chewing. An analysis of Wardrip's DNA from the cup matched the suspect's DNA in the cases of Terry Sims and Toni Gibbs. Wardrip was arrested, and while he was in custody, he confessed to the murders of Sims, Gibbs, Blau, and one additional murder in Fort Worth of Debra Taylor, 25.

In 1999, Wardrip was sentenced to death for the murder of Sims, and three life terms for the other killings. In 2008, a federal magistrate recommended that the death penalty be overturned because Wardrip received ineffective defense in his trial. On June 14, 2011, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a lower court ruling that ordered the State of Texas to either give Wardrip a new sentencing trial, or agree to giving him a life sentence. The case will be sent back to the U.S. District Court for reconsideration. Wardrip remains on death row at Polunsky Unit near Livingston.


Serial Killer - Faryion Edward Wardrip - Video Dailymotion
src: s1-ssl.dmcdn.net


In popular culture

Books

  • A true crime book based on Wardrip's crimes, Body Hunter, was written by Patricia Springer in 2001.
  • The book Dark Dreams: A Legendary FBI Profiler Examines Homicide and the Criminal Mind, Chapter 11, "A Serial Killer" profiles Wardrip's crimes, written by Roy Hazelwood and Stephen G. Michaud, ISBN 9780312253424, publisher: St. Martin's Press, 2001.
  • Scream at the Sky, another book about Wardrip's crimes and related investigations, was written by Carlton Stowers in 2003.The title originated from Wardrip's account of Terry Sims' murder.
  • The book Criminal Cold Cases, chapter: "Cold Sweat", section: "Faryion Wardrip: The Silver-Tongued Preacher", outlines Wardrip's religious efforts while on parole and his crimes, written by Charlotte Greig, ISBN 9781848587007, publisher: Arcturus Publiching Limited, 2011.

Television

  • A 2001 episode of Discovery Channel's The New Detectives, titled "To Kill Again", Season 6, Episode 8, 50 minutes, highlighted the forensics used to capture Wardrip.
  • A&E Television's Cold Case Files also covered the case titled "Killer in the County", Season 1, Episode 16, 42 minutes, air date: March 2001.
  • The TruTV series Forensic Files covered the case in 2002, Season 7, Episode 25, 22 minutes, titled: "Sip of Sins".

Faryion Wardrip - The blog killers love!
src: 78.media.tumblr.com


See also

  • List of death row inmates in the United States

Caution Faryion Wardrip's victims and crime scene -#Trigger 10 ...
src: i.pinimg.com


References

Source of article : Wikipedia