Daniel Jones | |
---|---|
Born | Daniel Oliver Jones September 26, 1969 Kansas City, Missouri, U.S. |
Criminal status | Incarcerated |
Conviction(s) | First degree murder Second degree murder (3 counts) Forcible rape Armed criminal action |
Criminal penalty | Life imprisonment without parole |
Details | |
Victims | 4 |
Span of crimes | 1998–2001 |
Country | United States |
State(s) | Missouri |
Date apprehended | March 8, 2001 |
Daniel Oliver Jones (born September 26, 1969) is an American serial killer who raped and stabbed four young women to death in Kansas City, Missouri, between 1998 and 2001. He was arrested shortly after the final murder, and DNA evidence linked him to the previous crimes, after which he confessed and was given multiple life sentences. [1]
Jones was born on September 26, 1969. A native of Kansas City, Jones attended Raytown South High School in Raytown, Missouri. While a student, he built a reputation as a disrupter in class and was frequently in trouble. [2] On May 20, 1987, Jones attacked a 32-year-old teacher in her classroom and dragged her into the school's auditorium where he raped and threatened to kill her. After approximately 15 minutes, the teacher was able to escape, and Jones was arrested three days later when the victim identified him from the school yearbook. He pleaded innocent at his arraignment when he was indicted on one count of forcible rape. [3] [4]
In 1988, Jones was found guilty and was sentenced to ten years in prison. In 1989, he attempted to appeal his sentence by claiming that prosecutors should have been prohibited from using his inappropriate school behavior as evidence, but the appeal was rejected. [2] Jones was paroled after serving eight years of his sentence on August 27, 1996, [5] and registered as a Level 3 sex offender. [1] [6]
On December 2, 1998, Jones broke into the apartment of 19-year-old Jenai Douglas, a lifelong acquaintance of his. He brandished a knife and fatally stabbed Douglas numerous times in her bedroom. [1] He left the apartment soon after the murder without stealing any items, and later that day Douglas was discovered by a roommate. [7] According to Kim Douglas, the victim's mother, Jones would visit her house on multiple occasions to offer condolences after Jenai's killing. [1] In February 2000, shortly after the first anniversary of Jenai's murder, a reward of $3,000 was offered for information leading to an arrest. Kim Douglas had added an extra $2,000 to the standard $1,000 in hopes of better media attention to the case. [8]
On March 10, 1999, Jones broke into the home of 21-year-old Kaliquah Gilliam on Arleta Boulevard, brandishing a knife and fatally stabbing her a total of 36 times. [1] Her body was discovered later that day by her visiting cousin. [9] At the time, Gilliam was involved in a legal case for allegedly being the getaway driver in the robbery of a U-Haul center in January. [10] In the months after, Jones befriended and began a sexual relationship with 21-year-old Roxanne Colley, despite her having a boyfriend. Jones would later claim that her having a boyfriend and constantly cheating angered him, and on August 16, he smashed Colley's back patio window to enter her apartment. Armed with a knife, he restrained Colley, sexually assaulted her, and stabbed her repeatedly before slashing her throat, ultimately killing her. [1]
In late 2000, Jones began a relationship with Candriea White, an 18-year-old mother of two, but their relationship stalled in early 2001 and by March the two had separated. [11] On March 6, armed with a knife, Jones broke into White's Linden Hill apartment and restrained her in the kitchen, proceeding to stab her 14 times and slit her throat, but choosing not to harm her infant children, he fled the scene. [12] Later that afternoon, a neighbor noticed White's front door ajar and peeked in only to notice her body lying in a corner. [13]
On March 8, Jones was arrested after a bloody palm print of White's killer matched a print Jones had on file. [14] While in jail, a sample of his DNA was collected and submitted into the state database, and in July investigators were notified when his DNA was matched to the semen evidence left behind at Roxanne Colley's murder. [15] Jones appointed Horton Lance to defend him during his trial, who argued that Jones had an alibi the day of White's murder as his family members testified that he was with them that afternoon. Lance also cast doubt on the fingerprinting evidence that was used to charge Jones, saying that the prosecutors lacked witnesses, a confession, and a motive. [16] On August 21, 2002, the jury found Jones guilty of White's murder, subsequently imposing the sentence of life imprisonment without parole. [1]
Jones was then due to await trial for the murder of Colley, for which he could have faced the death penalty. [12] During this time, investigators noted how similar the killings of Douglas and Gilliam were to Jones' modus operandi. [17] His DNA was also taken and compared to physical evidence left at the murders of Douglas and Gilliam, but the samples were not enough to identify him as the killer. [1] Nevertheless, circumstantial evidence led to prosecutors filing murder charges in early 2004. In April, Jones confessed to killing Colley, Douglas and Gilliam and offered to plead guilty to all charges to avoid a possible death sentence. Gilliam's grandmother said that, while she was frustrated with Jones, she did not want him to be sentenced to death because, according to her, he was just a young man. [1] Jones is currently serving his sentence at the Crossroads Correctional Center.
Albert Henry DeSalvo was an American murderer and rapist who was active in Boston, Massachusetts, in the early 1960s. He is known to have confessed to being the "Boston Strangler", a serial killer who murdered thirteen women in the Boston area between 1962 and 1964. Lack of physical evidence supported his confession, and he was only prosecuted in 1967 for a series of unrelated rapes, for which he was convicted and imprisoned until his death in 1973. His confessing to having murdered multiple women was disputed, and debates continued regarding which crimes he truly had committed.
Randall Brent Woodfield is an American serial killer, serial rapist, kidnapper, robber, burglar and former football player who was dubbed the I-5 Killer or the I-5 Bandit by the media due to the crimes he committed along the Interstate 5 corridor running through Washington, Oregon and California. Before his capture, Woodfield was suspected of multiple sexual assaults and murders. Though convicted in only one murder, he has been linked to a total of 18 murders and is suspected of having killed up to as many as 44 people.
Chester Dewayne Turner is an American serial killer and sex offender who was sentenced to death for sexually assaulting and murdering fourteen women and an unborn baby in Los Angeles between 1987 and 1998.
Richard Francis Cottingham is an American serial killer who was convicted in New York of six murders committed between 1972 and 1980 and convicted in New Jersey of twelve murders committed between 1967 and 1978. He was nicknamed by media as the Torso Killer and the Times Square Ripper, since some of the murders he was convicted of included mutilation.
Ann Marie Harrison was a 15-year-old American girl who was kidnapped, raped, and murdered by two men in Raytown, Missouri. On March 22, 1989, Harrison was abducted from outside her home as she waited for the school bus. She was taken to a house where she was raped by her abductors before being stabbed to death in the trunk of a car. Her two killers: Michael Anthony Taylor and Roderick Nunley were executed for the crime by the state of Missouri via lethal injection, in 2014 and 2015, respectively.
Lorenzo Jerome Gilyard Jr., known as The Kansas City Strangler, is an American serial killer. A former trash-company supervisor, Gilyard is believed to have raped and murdered at least 13 women and girls from 1977 to 1993. He was convicted of six counts of murder on March 16, 2007.
Jack Owen Spillman III is an American rapist and serial killer from Spokane, Washington. He is known as the Werewolf Butcher.
Terry Anthony Blair was an American serial killer who was convicted of killing seven women of various ages in Kansas City, Missouri, although investigators believed that there were additional unidentified victims.
Rodney James Alcala was an American serial killer and sex offender who was sentenced to death in California for five murders committed between 1977 and 1979. He also pleaded guilty and received a sentence of 25 years to life for two further murders committed in New York and was also indicted with a murder in Wyoming, although charges were dropped due to a technicality. While he has been conclusively linked to eight murders, Alcala's true number of victims remains unknown and could be much higher – the actual number could be as high as 130.
Lucious Boyd is an American convicted murderer, rapist, and suspected serial killer who is currently on death row in Florida. Boyd was sentenced to death for the 1998 rape and murder of 21-year-old Dawnia Dacosta and is a suspect in at least ten other homicides and disappearances. He was acquitted of the 1993 murder of a man whom he claimed he stabbed in self-defense. He was profiled on Forensic Files.
Stolen Voices, Buried Secrets is an American true crime television series on the Investigation Discovery Network. The program is different from other true-crime series because the murders are portrayed from the omniscient point-of-view of the victim using "fictionalized dialogue". While the all-seeing narrator knows who was responsible, the series allows viewers to piece together who is the culprit based on clues from investigators, family and friends as each story unfolds. Stolen Voices, Buried Secrets has been compared to the 2009 film The Lovely Bones in which a 13-year-old girl is murdered and views from heaven as her family copes with the tragedy. The program is known as I Was Murdered in the United Kingdom, and at the beginning of the third season, which began airing in 2013, the show adopted that title.
The Gypsy Hill killings were a group of five homicides of young women and girls in San Mateo County, California, during early 1976. The killer became known in the media as the "San Mateo Slasher." It was later proven that there were at least two different perpetrators with Rodney Halbower convicted of the murders of Baxter, Cascio and Michelle Mitchell and Leon Seymour being convicted in the sole murder of Lampe. It is believed Blackwell and Booth were killed by Halbower, but there's no evidence yet to tie him to those cases and Friedman's murder is also unsolved with these killings being partially unresolved.
Anthony Cook and Nathaniel Cook are American brothers and serial killers who committed at least nine rape-murders between 1973 and 1981. They were active in Toledo, Ohio, and surrounding areas with most of their victims being young couples. Anthony was arrested and convicted for the final murder, but his and Nathaniel's guilt in the other killings would not be uncovered until Nathaniel was detained for a misdemeanor in 1998, after which DNA profiling exposed their involvement. Both brothers were later convicted and sentenced to long terms of imprisonment; Anthony received multiple life sentences, while Nathaniel was sentenced to 75 years with a minimum of fifteen years served, and he was paroled after eighteen years in 2018.
Montie Ralph Rissell, also known as Monte, is an American serial killer and rapist who raped and murdered five women between 1976 and 1977 in Alexandria, Virginia, where he lived.
Lorenzo Fayne is an American serial killer and rapist who, between 1989 and 1993, murdered one woman and five children in the states of Wisconsin and Illinois. In 2001, he was convicted and sentenced to death, but the following year, in response to numerous miscarriages of justice in other cases, the Governor of Illinois George Ryan imposed a moratorium on capital punishment, commuting all prisoners' sentences to life imprisonment.
Clifton Lee Ray Jr. is an American serial killer, responsible for at least three murders in Kansas City, Missouri between 1987 and 1992, and is suspected in six other murders. Ray was convicted of murdering his neighbor in 1995, and was soon going to be eligible for parole until DNA profiling exposed his responsibility in the murders of Deborah Taylor and Joycie Flowers. In October 2007, Ray was convicted of both murders and was sentenced to life imprisonment.
John Dwight Canaday was an American serial killer who raped and killed three young women in Seattle from 1968 to 1969. He was initially sentenced to death for two murders, but that was later commuted to two life sentences, and he was given a third life sentence in 2004 after he confessed to the third killing. He died while incarcerated at Clallam Bay Prison in 2012.
Norman Keith Flowers is an American serial killer who killed three women by beating and strangling them in their Las Vegas apartments from March to May 2005. DNA left at each crime scene eventually linked him to the killings and he was arrested. Flowers was tried in 2008 and convicted, receiving a life sentence without parole. He entered an alford plea for the remaining charges in 2011 and received two more life sentences.
Billy Lee Chadd is an American serial killer and rapist. Raised by two alcoholics, he began committing crimes at a young age, first getting into trouble with the law for a rape he committed when he was 15. Between 1974 and 1978, he raped and fatally stabbed two women in California. After being arrested for those crimes, he confessed to murdering a man at an apartment in Nevada and a male hitchhiker in Kansas, the latter claim never being verified. Initially sentenced to death for one of his murders, his sentence was appealed, and he was sentenced to life imprisonment at his retrial. He is now serving his sentences at a California state prison.
Emanuel Lovell Webb, known as The East End Killer, is an American serial killer who raped and killed four women in Bridgeport, Connecticut, from 1990 to 1993. After the murders were connected and a search for the killer was underway, Webb moved to Georgia, where he raped and killed a woman in Vidalia in 1994. He was convicted of that murder and sentenced to 20 years in prison, being paroled in 2001. He was detained for a parole violation in 2005 and afterwards DNA evidence linked him to the Bridgeport murders. He was extradited to Connecticut and pled no contest in 2008 and was sentenced to 60-years in prison.