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Melanie Lyn McGuire (née Slate; born October 8, 1972) [3] is an American former nurse who was convicted of murdering her husband on April 28, 2004, in what media dubbed the "suitcase murder". [4] She was sentenced to life in prison on July 19, 2007, and is serving her sentence at the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women in Clinton , New ...
Related: Wife of Prominent Ga. Attorney Found Guilty of Murder and Burning His Body A Cherokee County jury found Melody guilty of killing her husband on Nov. 4. She was convicted on all charges ...
Murder of Mulugeta Seraw: Portland: 1988-11-13: Ethiopian student beaten to death by white supremacists [9] Michael Francke: Salem: 1989-01: Director or Oregon corrections department and murder victim, subject of film Without Evidence: Murder of Yolanda Panek: Portland: 1995-07-13: Woman disappeared from motel with mattress soaked in blood ...
The Breakthrough follows a double murder that took 16 years to solve — much like a real-life incident that occurred in Sweden in 2004.. Based on the 2021 novel of the same name, the Netflix ...
A Missouri woman who admitted to killing her husband because she couldn’t afford to divorce him has been sentenced to 10 years in prison. On Monday, Jan. 27, Melanie Biggins, 42, pleaded guilty ...
Additionally, Majczek stated that a certain James Zagata witnessed Molthrop's admission. Zagata was a witness to the murder and believed the wrong men had been convicted. McGuire was uncertain of the veracity of a judge having a private conversation with a convicted murderer—especially one convicted of killing a policeman.
A 70-year-old man indicted for murder in the brutal 1990 killing of a minister’s wife had his case dismissed due to an unexpected development, Florida investigators say.
The torture and murder of Sylvia Likens is widely regarded as one of the worst crimes in Indiana history and has been described by a senior investigator in the Indianapolis Police Department as the "most sadistic" case he had ever investigated in the 35 years he served with the Indianapolis Police. [2] [3]