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William J. Kreutzer Jr. (born 1969) is a former United States Army soldier who was convicted of killing one officer and wounding 18 other soldiers when he opened fire on a physical training formation on October 27, 1995, at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. [1]
William Kreutzer Jr. — killed an officer and wounded 18 fellow soldiers at Fort Liberty when he opened fire on them in the callisthenics field during a physical training formation. He was initially sentenced to death, but his death sentence was reduced to life in prison with the possibility of parole on appeal.
April 2, 2002 Daniel Lee Zirkle: 33 30 3 [19] 18 April 10, 2002 Paul W. Kreutzer: 30 20 10 Missouri [20] 19 Jose Santellan Sr. 40 31 9 Hispanic Texas [21] 20 April 11, 2002 William Kendrick Burns: 43 22 21 Black [22] 21 April 18, 2002 Gerald Dwight Casey: 47 34 13 White [23] 22 April 26, 2002 Alton Coleman: 46 28 18 Black Ohio [24] 23 April 30 ...
This category includes people who have been convicted of attempted murder, including failed assassination attempts. Pages in category "American people convicted of attempted murder" The following 173 pages are in this category, out of 173 total.
Police later found the crank and five guns at the murder scene. [4] Tommy Zeigler was also shot and wounded in the abdomen. Prosecutors later theorized he shot himself in an attempt to make it look like Mays and two other men (Edward Williams and Felton Thomas) committed the murders while robbing the furniture store. [1]
Bobby Gold is a homicide detective on the trail of Robert Randolph, a drug-dealer and cop-killer on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted List.En route to nab an accomplice of Randolph, Gold and his partner Tim Sullivan happen upon a murder scene: the elderly Jewish owner of a candy store in a ghetto has been gunned down, reportedly for a fortune hidden in her basement.
The murder of Tair Rada [a], a 13-year-old Israeli schoolgirl, was committed in 2006, in the girls' bathroom of her school in Katzrin. Roman Zdorov [ b ] , a Ukrainian national residing in Israel and working at the school as a floorer, was convicted of the murder and was sentenced to life imprisonment on September 14, 2010.
[13] [14] [15] He was found guilty in June 2019 of two counts of aggravated first-degree murder and sentenced to two sentences of life imprisonment without parole. [16] [17] On 7 December 2021, an appellate court overturned the conviction of William Earl Talbott II citing juror bias. Prosecutors were planning on holding a second trial. [18]