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After the murders, George Lowe won custody of his granddaughter Tasnim after a legal battle with her paternal family; she was raised by him and his elderly mother. Mehmood, who maintained his innocence, appealed his conviction in August 2002. [6] He appealed again in 2014, claiming to have been rehabilitated during his incarceration.
John Martin Scripps (9 December 1959 – 19 April 1996), also known as the Garden City Butcher, and "Tourist From Hell" [1] was an English serial killer who murdered three tourists—Gerard Lowe in Singapore, and Sheila and Darin Damude in Thailand—with another three potential (yet unconfirmed) victims.
The case recalled several murders in Singapore where the victims were also dismembered post mortem. One of them was the case of John Martin Scripps, a British serial killer who murdered and dismembered a South African tourist Gerard George Lowe in a hotel in Singapore. The killer disposed of Lowe's body parts in the nearby ocean.
George Wood - 22 June 1847 - Hanged at Hobart for the murder of William Taylor at Port Arthur; Charles Benwell – 14 September 1847 – Hanged at Hobart for murder of George Lowe near Green Ponds (Kempton). He was the brother of Eliza Benwell, hanged in 1845.
Lowe recorded dialog for the film Radioland Murders, produced by George Lucas, but his scenes were cut from the final film. Lowe appeared as Dick, the chief executive officer of the fictional Bebop Cola company, in a live-action segment of the Sealab 2021 episode "All That Jazz."
David Joseph Lowe, 29, is being held in Benton County jail in lieu of $1 million bail on suspicion of murder, assault and burglary. It’s been less than a year since he completed probation for ...
The jury found Lowe guilty of two counts of first-degree murder and two counts of aggravated child abuse. She received an "effective sentence of life imprisonment," the Court of Criminal Appeals ...
Nathan Freudenthal Leopold Jr. (November 19, 1904 – August 29, 1971) [1] and Richard Albert Loeb (/ ˈ l oʊ b /; June 11, 1905 – January 28, 1936), usually referred to collectively as Leopold and Loeb, were two American students at the University of Chicago who kidnapped and murdered 14-year-old Bobby Franks in Chicago, Illinois, United States, on May 21, 1924.