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![]() "-L." wrote in message ups.com... Bo Raxo wrote: snip Nope, you say we might as well throw that life away as garbage. Must be great to be able to see in to the future and know with such certainty whether a person will ever be able to change and ever be able to do any good for his fellow man. I don't know where one finds such certainty about human nature and the future, but somehow I think it comes from a place to which I wouldn't want to go. Bo Raxo I am normally anti-death penalty, but I have one name for you. Timothy Buss. Google it. -L. And then google Kenneth McDuff. Kenneth Mcduff was arrested May 4th, 1992. He was arrested when he should have been dead. Kenneth McDuff was convicted of the 1966 shooting deaths of two boys and the vicious rape-strangulation of their 16-year-old female friend. A Fort Worth jury ruled that McDuff should die in the electric chair, a sentence changed to life in prison in 1972 after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the death penalty. In 1989, with Texas officials under fire from the federal judiciary, McDuff was quietly turned loose on an unsuspecting society. Within days, a naked body of a woman turned up. Prostitute Sarafia Parker, 31, had been beaten, strangled and dumped in a field near Temple. In early 1991, McDuff enrolled at Texas State Technical College in Waco. Soon, Central Texas prostitutes began disappearing. One, Valencia Joshua, 22, was last seen alive Feb. 24, 1991. Her naked, decomposed body later was discovered in a shallow grave in woods behind the college. Another of the missing women, Regenia Moore, was last seen kicking and screaming in the cab of McDuff's pickup truck. During the Christmas holidays of 1991, Colleen Reed disappeared from an Austin car wash. Witnesses reported hearing a woman scream that night and seeing two men speeding away in a yellow or tan Thunderbird. Little more than two months later, on March 1, 1992, Melissa Northrup, pregnant with a third child, vanished from the Waco convenience store where she worked. McDuff's beige Thunderbird, broken down, was discovered a block from the store. Fifty-seven days later, a fisherman found the young woman's nearly nude body floating in a gravel pit in Dallas County, 90 miles north of Waco. By then, McDuff was the target of a nationwide manhunt. Just days after Mrs. Northrup's funeral, McDuff was recognized on television's "America's Most Wanted'' and arrested May 4 in Kansas City. In 1993, a Houston jury ordered him executed for the kidnap-slaying of 22-year-old Melissa Northrup, a Waco mother of two. In 1994, a Seguin jury assessed him the death penalty for the abduction-rape-murder of 28-year-old Colleen Reed, an Austin accountant. Pamplin's son Larry, the current sheriff of Falls County, appeared at McDuff's Houston trial for the 1992 abduction and murder of Melissa Northrup. "Kenneth McDuff is absolutely the most vicious and savage individual I know,'' he told reporters. "He has absolutely no conscience, and I think he enjoys killing.'' If McDuff had been executed as scheduled, he said, "no telling how many lives would have been saved.'' At least nine, probably more, Texas authorities suspect. His riegn of terror finally ended on November 17, 1998 when Kenneth McDuff was put to death by the state of Texas by Lethal Injection. May his victims rest in peace. Now here we are, 14 years after his arrest and people want to abolish the death penalty again. They want to set in motion the events that led to the deaths of these women. When are people going to learn. http://www.sherdog.net/forums/showthread.php?p=9389559 td |
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