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Heath Stocks [1] is a long-time victim of sexual and psychological abuse by his former Scoutmaster Charles "Jack" Walls III. [2] For years prior to the murders of his family, Heath had a strained relationship with his father, mainly due to the interference of Walls, who exploited the difficulties in Heath and his father's relationship.
On September 30, 2024, the Alma police chief stated that there had been a “significant development” in the case and a press conference would take place the following day. On October 1, 2024, a press conference was held by the Alma police department to announce new DNA evidence linked a member of the Nick family to the interior of a red ...
Harmon also soon lost the trust of the parents, as he is also said to have prevented the case from being solved. [3] The FBI took over the case in 1994, but came to no conclusion and the investigation was dropped in 1995, allegedly due to political pressure. [7] The Arkansas State Police investigation also came to no results. [8]
Ebby Jane Steppach (March 31, 1997 - October 25, 2015) [2] was an American teenager who disappeared under mysterious circumstances in Little Rock, Arkansas. [3] Days before her disappearance, she had accused four men of gang-raping her at a party she had attended. On October 25, 2015, she placed an erratic phone call to her older brother ...
BATESVILLE, Ark. — Hunter Biden, the son of President Joe Biden, appeared in an Arkansas court Monday for a hearing in a paternity case.
He is the most prolific mass murderer in Arkansas history. [1] Simmons was sentenced to death in two separate trials, and after refusing to appeal his sentence, was executed on June 25, 1990. His refusal to appeal was the subject of a 1990 US Supreme Court case, Whitmore v. Arkansas.
Jersey Dianne Bridgeman (November 14, 2006 – November 20, 2012) was born and grew up in the city of Bentonville, Arkansas. Following her parents’ divorce, her father and stepmother, David and Jana Bridgeman, began to chain her to a dresser in an apparent bid to stop her from wandering at night and, per their statements, getting into medication.
Kenneth Dewayne Williams (February 23, 1979 – April 27, 2017) [1] was an American serial killer who killed four people in Arkansas and Missouri.Originally sentenced to life without parole in Arkansas for killing a cheerleader in 1998, Williams escaped from prison in a 500-gallon barrel of pig slop in 1999.