8chan/8kun QResearch Posts (2)
#18942471 at 2023-06-02 22:42:08 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #23255: Ebaker Edition
Judge blasts 'evil' murderer during sentencing: 'Try to commit suicide … so you don't kill people and try to rape 5-year-olds'
A judge in Michigan did not hold back when issuing a sentence to a man who had recently pled no contest to several brutal crimes, including murder and assault. The judge told the man he should have committed suicide rather than harm others the way he did.
The details of the man's crimes are truly horrific. At around 4 a.m. on September 23, 2022, Arthur Williamson, 55, went to the home that his acquaintance Nicole Guertin shared with her longtime boyfriend, Jim Nicolai, and their two young children. Nicolai was an overnight news anchor on WWJ 950, an AM news and talk radio station for metro-Detroit, and while on air he was known as Jim Matthews.
Guertin later testified that she allowed Williamson, whom she referred to as "Smokey," to come over to her home in Chesterfield Township, about 35 miles north of Detroit, so that they could smoke crack and use heroin together. Nicolai was not yet home from work.
At some point in the evening, Williamson asked Guertin to engage in "role play," but Guertin refused. Her refusal reportedly enraged Williamson. He suddenly pulled out a knife and began slashing at her. He managed to restrain her physically before tying her up with zip ties.
Nicolai returned from work around 6 a.m. As soon as he entered the home, he greeted Williamson and then began screaming as Williamson bludgeoned him repeatedly with a hammer, Guertin said. In addition to the hammer, Williamson also attacked Nicolai with the knife, eventually slitting the man's throat and killing him.
After the attack on Nicolai, Guertin, whose wrists and ankles were still tied, remained helpless as she saw Williamson go after her children, who had been asleep. Williamson bound her 10-year-old son with duct tape and began striking him with a hammer, repeatedly yelling at the boy who was whimpering and begging Williamson to stop.
Then, to her horror, Guertin overheard Williamson lubricate himself before grabbing her 5-year-old daughter, who had been awakened by the noise, and then raping her. The little girl also noticed her father's lifeless body. "Is that my dad?" the girl reportedly asked Williamson. "Did you kill my dad?"
At some point, Guertin managed to free herself from her bonds. She grabbed hold of her daughter and ran out of the home and called for help. When police arrived, they discovered Williamson in the basement. He had suffered self-inflicted injuries and had also attempted to kill himself by overdosing on heroin. However, he was administered Narcan and taken to the hospital for treatment. He was later arrested.
Guertin had stab wounds all over her body, and her son was found in a closet "left for dead," though he survived as well.
About a month ago, Williamson pled no contest to one count of first-degree premeditated murder, two counts of assault with intent to commit murder, and three counts of unlawful imprisonment.
At a sentencing hearing on Thursday, Macomb County Circuit Court Judge James Biernat excoriated Williamson for his vicious crimes and his indifference to human life. "You're a pedophile, you're a murderer, and you're the embodiment of evil," Judge Biernat began. "The only thing that's amazing is you didn't kill all of them."
But Biernat still had more to say. "Try to commit suicide before you do any of this," the judge added, according to reports. "Take yourself out so you don't kill people and try to rape 5-year-olds."
https://www.theblaze.com/news/judge-blasts-evil-murderer-during-sentencing-try-to-commit-suicide-so-you-dont-kill-people-and-try-to-rape-5-year-olds
#14782066 at 2021-10-14 04:06:48 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #18697: Evil Is Everywhere, Stand Up Complain in Writing Then Protest Edition
>>14782064
The day after Jonelle disappeared, Pankey took his then-wife and child on a surprise road trip to California to visit family. On the drive back, he listened to the radio obsessively for information about the girl's case, Rourke said. When they arrived home, he drove his wife to a grocery store, asked her to pick up the last few days' newspapers, and then had her read aloud, in the car, all of the stories about Jonelle. Over the next few days, he dug in his front yard and a car on his property burst into flames, Rourke said.
Within weeks, Pankey went to the FBI, claimed he was a minister (he was not) and said he'd learned information about the killing through a pastoral confession. The FBI dismissed the claims as unimportant, Rourke said. But it was the start of a decades-long obsession for Pankey.
Data downloaded from Pankey's electronic devices shows he conducted thousands of online searches on Jonelle's case. In August 2019, a month after Jonelle's body was discovered, he clicked on a news article that noted there was no DNA in the case, Rourke said.
"Two days later he voluntarily picks up the phone and says, 'I want to voluntarily give my DNA' - after he knows there is no DNA in this case."
Viorst told the jury that a man named Norris Drake was the actual killer of Jonelle. Drake's mother lived across the street from the family, and he'd visited for dinner on the night Jonelle disappeared, Viorst said. He said a witness described Drake leaving his mother's house around the time Jonelle was home alone, and not returning until early the next morning.
Drake was known to have a sexual interest in young girls, Viorst said, suggesting that Drake lured Jonelle out of her house - perhaps gaining her trust by saying he was the son of her neighbor - and then killed her. Drake, who is dead, was never charged with Jonelle's kidnapping or murder.
Jonelle's parents and sister took the stand Wednesday. Jim Matthews described his daughter, who was adopted, as an outgoing girl.
"Strong-willed, (she) liked the attention, had lots of friends," he said. "If Jonelle was in the room, you knew she was in the room. And (she was) very proud of her Latino background. And just a very lively young lady."
Jonelle's mother, Gloria Matthews, who flew to California before Jonelle disappeared on Dec. 20, 1984, described calling her husband to let him know she'd arrived safely, only to hear from him that Jonelle was missing.
"And right away, I had this feeling in my stomach that things weren't right," she said. "Because Jonelle would have written a note or something...I hung up and all I did was cry for the rest of the night."
She flew home the next day, cutting her trip short. For Christmas dinner, Gloria Matthews set a place at the table for her missing daughter.
"Like she was coming home," she said.