Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Blanchard's body was found in Macon County, Alabama, one month after her disappearance. [1] The cause of death was determined to be a gunshot wound. [2] A suspect, Ibraheem Yazeed—who was out on bail on charges of kidnapping, attempted murder, and robbery at the time of the murder—was arrested and charged with Blanchard's murder. Yazeed was ...
Alabama executed Derrick Dearman on Thursday, eight years after he massacred five family members of his girlfriend with an ax and a gun in the middle of the night.. Dearman, 36, was convicted of ...
Alabama death row inmate Carey Dale Grayson on Thursday became the third inmate in the U.S. to be executed by nitrogen gas.. Grayson, 50, was executed for the torture, bludgeoning and mutilation ...
In February 2024, Mahogany Jackson, a 20-year-old woman from Birmingham, Alabama, was tortured, raped, and subsequently murdered. Jackson was taken captive on the night of February 24, and was assaulted repeatedly for several hours. In the early hours of February 25, Jackson messaged her mother that she was being held hostage and to send police.
After spending all day Thursday on the witness stand under questioning by his defense lawyer, Charlie Adelson will resume his testimony Friday morning in his murder trial. Live Charlie Adelson ...
The murders of J.B. Beasley and Tracie Hawlett were a double child murder that occurred in Ozark, Alabama, on August 1, 1999, [4] [5] in which two high school students named J.B Beasley and Tracie Hawlett—both 17—from Dothan, Alabama, disappeared after leaving their homes to celebrate Beasley's birthday on July 31, 1999.
A convicted killer on death row in Alabama told NBC News he no longer wants to delay justice for the families of the five people he murdered eight years ago and is ready to pay the ultimate price ...
Prior to his trial for murdering Kamarie Holland, on March 13, 2024, Jeremy Williams pleaded guilty to multiple counts of capital murder, rape and other offences preferred against him in his upcoming trial. However, under Alabama law, Williams had to undergo a jury trial to determine his guilt before his potential conviction.